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Từ điển Việt Anh Việt 4in1 - English Vietnamese 4 in 1 Dictionary 
	
		   
 crow     
  I.crow1 /krəʊ $ kroʊ/ BrE  AmE  noun   [Sense 1,3: Language: Old English; Origin:  crawe]   [Sense 2: Date: 1200-1300; Origin:  ⇨ ↑crow2]   1.    [countable] a large shiny black bird with a loud cry   2.    [singular] the loud sound a ↑cock makes   3. as the crow flies in a straight line:         ten miles from here as the crow flies    ⇨ eat crow at ↑eat(7) II.crow2 BrE  AmE  verb [intransitive]   [Language: Old English; Origin: crawan]   1. if a ↑cock crows, it makes a loud high sound   2. to talk about what you have done in a very proud way – used to show disapproval    crow over/about        He was crowing over winning the bet.   3. written if someone, especially a baby, crows, they make a noise that shows they are happy:         Ben rushed to his father, crowing with pleasure.       • • •   THESAURUS     ▪ boast to talk too proudly about your abilities, achievements, or possessions because you want other people to admire you:  She’s always boasting about how good she is at languages.     ▪ brag to boast in a way that annoys other people. Brag is more informal than boast:  He was bragging about how many girlfriends he had had. |  I don’t think they have anything to brag about. |  The rebels have repeatedly bragged that their fighters have been responsible for the mounting attacks on policemen, 226 of whom were killed last year.     ▪ blow your own trumpet British English, blow your own horn American English spoken to talk a lot about your achievements – used especially when you want to mention your achievements but do not want to sound as if you are boasting:  I don’t want to blow my own trumpet, but it was me who came up with the idea for the project in the first place.     ▪ crow to boast about something you have achieved, when other people have been less lucky or successful:  Nordstrom and his supporters are still crowing about winning the lawsuit.     ▪ gloat to behave in a way that shows that you are proud of your own success and happy about someone else’s failure:  The Australians are still gloating over their victory over England. |  The liberals are gloating and celebrating all over town. |  I haven’t come to gloat! We all have to lose sometimes.     ▪ be full of yourself informal to show by your words and behaviour that you are very proud of your abilities and achievements - used when you dislike someone because of this:  ‘He’s so full of himself,’ Constance complained. ‘He thinks he can get away with anything.’ |  After the game she was really full of herself.
  c\\crowhu 
  crow A crow is a very smart black bird. |  |  |  |  |  | ◎ | [krou] |  | ※ | danh từ |  |   | ■ | con quạ |  |   | 〆 | as the crow flies |  |   | ✓ | theo đường chim bay |  |   | 〆 | to have a crow to pick (pluck) with somebody |  |   | ✓ | có chuyện lôi thôi với ai; có chuyện cãi cọ với ai |  |   | 〆 | stone the crows  |  |   | ✓ | xem stone |  | ※ | danh từ |  |   | ■ | tiếng gà gáy |  |   | ■ | tiếng trẻ con bi bô |  | ※ | nội động từ, thì quá khứ là crew hoặc crowed, động tính từ quá khứ là crowed  |  |   | ■ | gáy (gà) |  |   | ■ | nói bi bô (trẻ con) |  |   | 〆 | to crow over somebody/something |  |   | ✓ | thể hiện sự vui mừng chiến thắng |  |   | ☆ | she won the competition and won't stop crowing (over her rivals/her rivals' failure) |  |   | cô ta giành chiến thắng trong cuộc đua và sẽ không ngớt reo mừng (trước các đối thủ/sự thất bại của các đối thủ) |  
 
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