English » Polish

I . tackle [ˈtækl̩] VB trans

2. tackle (deal with):

tackle
to tackle sb about sth

3. tackle (overcome):

tackle

II . tackle [ˈtækl̩] N

1. tackle:

tackle (in football)
tackle (in rugby)

2. tackle no pl (equipment):

fishing tackle
shaving tackle

3. tackle (for lifting):

tackle

fishing-tackle N no pl

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
He recorded 10 double-digit tackle outings in the 15 games that he played.
en.wikipedia.org
The other ends were pushed on by means of block and tackle attached to the hull and overhead beams and hauled on by sailors.
en.wikipedia.org
A special arrangement to help new pupils to acclimatize themselves enables the school to tackle problems connected with a change of school at an early stage.
en.wikipedia.org
Its ambitions were high: to tackle the problem of radical evil, and to innovate at a metaphysical level, in particular to correct dualism.
en.wikipedia.org
Are we on track to fulfill our commitments to reduce carbon pollution and tackle climate disruption, or destined to fall short?
www.theglobeandmail.com
He began as a quarterback, but quickly moved over to offensive tackle where he was a four-year starter.
en.wikipedia.org
Rather than consider pre-digested summaries of company situations, students tackle "raw cases" packed with original data.
www.usnews.com
We've had crickets for feeding snakes and worms for fishing tackle, which is rotten after a few days.
www.irishexaminer.com
He asked the council to consider flushing rat poison through the sewerage system to tackle the problem.
www.independent.ie
He stressed the vast scale of famine and the inadequacy of government attempts to tackle it.
en.wikipedia.org

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