wind in my head at whom. Prost. Prejudice About a frivolous, windy, frivolous person. Mikhail decided to carry the hay now, while the road has not yet sailed ... Otherwise, no one will forgive him - neither Lukashin, nor the collective farmers. “Here, they will say, they put a guy, and he has a wind in his head”(F. Abramov. Two winters and three summers). - How are you with your studies? - Yes, not very well. - I always tell him, - put in the teacher, - you could study a hundred times better. But here's the problem - the wind in my head walks(Ch. Aitmatov. Early cranes).

Phrasebook Russian literary language. - M.: Astrel, AST. A. I. Fedorov. 2008 .

Synonyms:

See what "Wind in the Head" is in other dictionaries:

    wind in my head- childish, windy, undistinguished, frivolous, careless, wind-blown, windy head, anemone, unfounded, naughty, lives today, lives a minute, empty, lives one day, unusual lightness in thoughts, a breeze ... ... Synonym dictionary

    wind in my head- WIND, wind (wind), about the wind, in the wind, pl. s, ov and a, ov, m. Movement, air flow in a horizontal direction. Wind speed. Strong, lightweight. Traveling in. Stand in the wind (where the wind blows). In the wind or in the wind to dispel something. How… Dictionary Ozhegov

    wind in my head- Ve / ter in the head (walks) in someone About a frivolous person ... Dictionary of many expressions

    Who. Prost. Prejudice About a frivolous, windy, frivolous person. Mikhail decided to bring hay now, while the road has not yet sailed ... Otherwise, neither Lukashin nor the collective farmers will forgive him. “Here, they will say, they put a guy in jail, and he has a wind in his head” (F ... Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language

    Wind in the head [whistles, walks, walks]- who. Razg. Unapproved About a frivolous, frivolous person. FSRYA, 62; BTS, 122, 234; POS 3, 124; F 1, 57 ... Big Dictionary Russian sayings

    wind- The wind in the head of someone (colloquial disdain) about an empty, frivolous person. The wind in my head walks, he just wants to walk. To stand in the wind (colloquial) where a strong wind blows. Grandfather stood in the wind. Go to the wind (colloquial region) for ... ... Phraseological dictionary of the Russian language

    WIND- WIND, winds, pl. winds (winds are simple.), winds of winds, husband. 1. Air flow movement. Strong wind. Gusty wind. Weak wind. West wind. The wind got stronger. A breath of wind. Through wind. Favourable wind. 2. only pl. Gases, ... ... Explanatory Dictionary of Ushakov

    wind- A whiff, a breeze, a storm, a snowstorm, a whirlwind, wrap, a blizzard, a blizzard, a blizzard; (trade winds, simum, sirocco, tornado, typhoon, hurricane, cyclone, storm, aquilon, windstorm, marshmallow). It carries, blows through the window; through wind. See frivolous .. throwing money down the drain, in ... ... Synonym dictionary

    WIND- WIND, wind (wind), about the wind, in the wind, pl. s, ov and a, ov, husband. Movement, air flow in a horizontal direction. Wind speed. Strong, lightweight. Traveling in. Stand in the wind (where the wind blows). To dispel something in the wind or in the wind ... ... Explanatory dictionary of Ozhegov

    wind- n., m., use. very often Morphology: (no) what? wind and wind, what? wind, (see) what? wind what? wind about what? about the wind and in the wind; pl. what? winds and winds, (no) what? winds and winds, why? winds and winds, (see) what? winds and winds, ... ... Dictionary of Dmitriev

Books

  • Wind in the head, Heljo Mänd. The hero of the story "Wind in the Head", a seven-year-old boy Henna Kivi, heard enough from his older friend Peeter that it is terribly difficult to study at school. "The more you do, the worse you get...

The wind in my head is walking at whom. Prost. Prejudice About a frivolous, windy, frivolous person. Mikhail decided to carry the hay now, while the road has not yet sailed ... Otherwise, no one will forgive him - neither Lukashin, nor the collective farmers. “Here, they will say, they put a guy, and he has a wind in his head”(F. Abramov. Two winters and three summers). - How are you with your studies? - Yes, not very well. - I always tell him, - put in the teacher, - you could study a hundred times better. But here's the problem - the wind in my head walks(Ch. Aitmatov. Early cranes).

Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language. - M.: Astrel, AST. A. I. Fedorov. 2008 .

See what "Wind in the head walks" in other dictionaries:

    Who. Prost. Prejudice About a frivolous, windy, frivolous person. Mikhail decided to bring hay now, while the road has not yet sailed ... Otherwise, neither Lukashin nor the collective farmers will forgive him. “Here, they will say, they put a guy in jail, and he has a wind in his head” (F ... Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language

    wind in my head- Ve / ter in the head (walks) in someone About a frivolous person ... Dictionary of many expressions

    Wind in the head [whistles, walks, walks]- who. Razg. Unapproved About a frivolous, frivolous person. FSRYA, 62; BTS, 122, 234; POS 3, 124; F 1, 57 ...

    wind- n., m., use. very often Morphology: (no) what? wind and wind, what? wind, (see) what? wind what? wind about what? about the wind and in the wind; pl. what? winds and winds, (no) what? winds and winds, why? winds and winds, (see) what? winds and winds, ... ... Dictionary of Dmitriev

    WIND- Side wind. Jarg. Corner. Shulersky reception lateral support. SRVS 2, 27; TSUZH, 22; Baldaev 1, 41. Throw / throw (throw / throw, let / let, throw / throw) into the wind. Razg. Unapproved 1. what. Waste, spend in vain, recklessly ... ... Big dictionary of Russian sayings

    wind- tra (true), proposition. about the wind, in the wind; pl. winds, ov and winds, ov; m. The movement of air flow in a horizontal direction. Weak, gusty, hurricane, storm c. Northern, southwestern c. Sharp in. The wind picked up suddenly. V. verse, ... ... encyclopedic Dictionary

    wind- tra (true), suggestion; about ve / tre, in the wind /; pl. ve / try, ov and, wind /, about / in; m. see also. windmill, breeze, windmill, windmill, wind ... Dictionary of many expressions

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at whom. Prost. Prejudice About a frivolous, windy, frivolous person. Mikhail decided to carry the hay now, while the road has not yet sailed ... Otherwise, no one will forgive him - neither Lukashin, nor the collective farmers. “Here, they will say, they put a guy, and he has a wind in his head”(F. Abramov. Two winters and three summers). - How are you with your studies? - Yes, not very well. - I always tell him, - put in the teacher, - you could study a hundred times better. But here's the problem - the wind in my head walks(Ch. Aitmatov. Early cranes). Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language. - M.: Astrel, AST A. I. Fedorov 2008


Meanings in other dictionaries

All out

who. Razg. Express. Extremely, extremely frank, direct in the manifestation of his feelings, thoughts, moods, etc. The trifle upset him, the trifle amused him: he was all outward, he said everything that did not occur to him (A. Odoevsky. Witness). She cannot have secrecy, she is all out (Chernyshevsky. Diary, March 1853). [With her father] she was, as she is, all out, without hiding, open ...

All the world

Obsolete Express. Everything. [Chatsky:] Who do you love? [Sophia:] Ah! My God! the whole world! (Griboyedov. Woe from Wit). When he is afraid of a coward, He thinks that the whole world looks at him with his eyes (Krylov. Mouse and Rat). Varvara Mikhailovna did not agree and claimed that it was known to the whole world that no one except Vasily Petrovich would say that a single groom is worse than a family one (S. Aksakov. Natasha). ...

The wind in my head is walking

who. Prost. Prejudice About a frivolous, windy, frivolous person. Mikhail decided to carry the hay now, while the road has not yet sailed ... Otherwise, no one will forgive him - neither Lukashin, nor the collective farmers. “Here, they will say, they put a guy in jail, and he has a wind in his head” (F. Abramov. Two winters and three summers). - How are you studying? - Yes, not very well. “I always tell him,” the teacher put in, “you could study a hundred times ...