Слово англійською: odd
Прикметник
Переклад odd українською: ди́вний, непа́рний (про число́), непа́рний (череви́к)
Детальний опис
odd
adjective /ɑːd/
(comparative odder, superlative oddest)
strange
- strange or unusual
- They're very odd people.
- There's something odd about that man.
- That painting looks very odd.
- a teenage girl with rather odd hair
- After a while she noticed something quite odd.
- When we got inside something struck me as odd.
- It's an odd little movie.
- it is/seems odd that… It seems odd that nobody noticed anything wrong.
- It's most odd that (= very odd that) she hasn't written.
- The odd thing was that he didn't recognize me.
- it is odd to do something It's odd to think I will never see her again.
compare peculiar
odd-
- (in compounds) strange or unusual in the way mentioned
- an odd-looking house
- an odd-sounding name
numbers
- (no comparative or superlative) (of numbers) that cannot be divided exactly by the number two
- 1, 3, 5 and 7 are odd numbers.
- Each section may have an odd or even number of players.
opposite even not regular/often
the odd
[only before noun] (no comparative or superlative) happening or appearing occasionally; not happening often synonym occasional- He makes the odd mistake—nothing too serious.
various
- [only before noun] (no comparative or superlative) of no particular type or size; various
- decorations made of odd scraps of paper
not matching
- [usually before noun] (no comparative or superlative) not with the pair or set that it belongs to; not matching
- You're wearing odd socks!
available
- [only before noun] available; that somebody can use synonym spare
- Could I see you when you've got an odd moment?
approximately
- (no comparative or superlative; usually placed immediately after a number) approximately or a little more than the number mentioned
- How old is she—seventy odd?
- He's worked there for twenty-odd years.
Word OriginMiddle English (in the numerical sense): from Old Norse odda-, found in combinations such as odda-mathr ‘third or odd man’, from oddi ‘angle’.
Idioms - a person or thing that is different from others or does not fit easily into a group or set
- At school he was always the odd man out.
- Dog, cat, horse, shoe—which is the odd one out?
- (old-fashioned, British English) a person who is slightly strange or crazy