English » Polish

I . one [wʌn] N

1. one (number):

one

2. one (symbol):

one

3. one (joke):

one
kawał m

Phrases:

to be sth and sth [all] in one

II . one [wʌn] ADJ

1. one (single, indicating number):

one
one hundred
sto

3. one (sole):

III . one [wʌn] pers pron

2. one (person):

one of them
no one
every one
dzieci ntpl
the one who...
ten, który...

3. one (particular thing, person):

this one
ten
which one?
any one
the bigger one
the one on the table

I . one-to-one ADJ

1. one-to-one lesson:

2. one-to-one MATH:

II . one-to-one ADV

no one PRON

no one → nobody

See also nobody

I . nobody [ˈnəʊbədi, Am ˈnoʊbɑ:-] PRON indef pron

II . nobody [ˈnəʊbədi, Am ˈnoʊbɑ:-] N inf

one-horse ADJ

Phrases:

one-liner N

1. one-liner (joke):

dowcip m

2. one-liner (remark):

I . one-off N Brit inf

one-time ADJ

one-upmanship N no pl inf

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
He was also a good hit-and-run man, and one of the best bunters in the league.
en.wikipedia.org
One situation where starch may be less effective than glucose or sucrose is when a person is taking acarbose.
en.wikipedia.org
All teams present were instructed to pair off, with one team from each pair going to each destination.
en.wikipedia.org
This climb at that time was reputed to be one of the hardest in the Alps.
en.wikipedia.org
The opposite approach is known as semasiology: here one starts with a word and asks what it means, or what concepts the word refers to.
en.wikipedia.org
One night shortly before the battle, a powerful dust storm destroyed many of the dummy vehicles.
en.wikipedia.org
That means that every human being is capable, if so desiring, to change one's own life and character and earns one's own bliss.
en.wikipedia.org
Some think that he's one of the pioneers of his generation and stands among the nation's most talented poets and novelists.
en.wikipedia.org
Adjustable focus eyeglasses have one focal length, but it is variable without having to change where one is looking.
en.wikipedia.org
Though this grouping is often encountered in the literature, it is an areal grouping rather than a genetic one.
en.wikipedia.org

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