Polish English Dictionary

język polski - English

wyrwać in English:

1. wrest



English word "wyrwać"(wrest) occurs in sets:

Fiszki z książki - "The Hero in Man" (A.E.)
Fiszki z książki - "Hymen" (Hilda Doolittle)
Fiszki z książki - "The Deserted City" (Francis Sh...
Fiszki z książki - "Tales of Ind And Other Poems" ...
Fiszki z książki - "The Wreck of the Golden Mary" ...

2. tear out



English word "wyrwać"(tear out) occurs in sets:

Game pattern

3. to wrench



4. rip


Don't rip me off!
One lot steals a goat from another lot, before you know it they're ripping each other to pieces.
After a minute of free fall he pulled the rip cord and out came the parachute.
Oi you, that's too much of a rip off by anyone's count! 6:4 is more than enough. Of course I'm the '6'.
Or, "Oh my gosh, we have a rip in our hot tub cover.
countries ripped apart by fighting’
I left the room when he took the guitar and started to rip - it was terrible.
This rip is killing me!
Cats will rip open rubbish bags more often than foxes and dogs are always digging holes everywhere.
As he stretched his arms, his shirt ripped.
wish the old fireplaces hadn't been ripped out. We ripped up the carpets and laid a new wooden floor.
The beast ripped a hole in the wall and walked slowly away.
The false advertising campaign ripped off a lot of people who bought the product.
The driver was lucky that the shark didn't rip him to shreds
He let rip.

English word "wyrwać"(rip) occurs in sets:

pamietniki v

5. pluck out



6. to tear up



English word "wyrwać"(to tear up) occurs in sets:

Eastern Promises
FCE Gold III

7. snatch


Somebody snatched my wallet.
Be careful that nobody snatches your bag while you're walking in the city.
Love is something that you can neither snatch away nor express.
He'd pop up and snatch the glasses off a classmate's face, or spit at the teacher.
There were six snatches in Las Vegas alone last night.
(snatch [sth] vtr) 1) to pull, grab or take sth away from someone with a quick, often violent, movement SYN grab (arrancar, arrebatar). 2) to quickly steal something from someone (coloquial) robar, afanar.
We have to protect him to prevent a snatch.
He snatched the letter from the man's hand. He snatched my wallet while I was out shopping.
He snatched the old man's briefcase and ran out of the cafe. We snatched the chance for a few hours together.
Sometimes I overheard snatches of their conversation.
He snatched the ​photos out of my ​hand before I had a ​chance to ​look at them.
She had her purse snatched from her arm / The little dog snatched the hotdog out of the boy's hand, and ran off.
Somebody might snatch your phone – snatch means to take something quickly
somebody just snatch your phone
You have to snatch at happiness when you can.

English word "wyrwać"(snatch) occurs in sets:

The six senses

8. snatch out