Englishئاساسىي لۇغەت
patch
Universal Words
noun, verb
noun
small area
1 a small area of sth, especially one which is different from the area around it:
a black dog with a white patch on its back * a bald patch on the top of his head * damp patches on the wall * patches of dense fog * We sat in a patch of shade under a tree.
piece of material
2 a small piece of material that is used to cover a hole in sth or to strengthen a weak area:
I sewed patches on the knees of my jeans.
3 a piece of material that you wear over an eye, usually because the eye is damaged:
He had a black patch over one eye.
seealsoEYEPATCH
4 (especially AmE) (BrE usually badge) a piece of material that you sew onto clothes, etc. as a decoration or as part of a uniform
5 a piece of material that people can wear on their skin to help them to stop smoking:
nicotine patches
piece / area of land
6 a small piece of land, especially one used for growing vegetables or fruit:
a vegetable patch
7 (BrE, informal) an area that sb works in, knows well or comes from:
He knows every house in his patch. * She has had a lot of success in her home patch.
difficult time
8 (informal, especially BrE) a period of time of the type mentioned, usually a difficult or unhappy one:
to go through a bad / difficult / sticky patch
seealsoPURPLEPATCH
IDIOMS
be not a patch on sb/sth (informal, especially BrE) to be much less good, attractive, etc. than sb/sth else:
This book isn't a patch on her others. * She was no great beauty. Not a patch on Martha.
verb [VN] ~ sth (with sth) to cover a hole or a worn place, especially in clothes, with a piece of cloth or other material:
patched jeans * to patch a hole in the roof
PHRASALVERBS
patch sb/sth through (to sb/sth) to connect telephone or electronic equipment temporarily:
She was patched through to London on the satellite link.
patch sth<->together to make sth from several different parts, especially in a quick careless way:
They hope to be able to patch together a temporary settlement.
patch sth/sb<->up
1 to repair sth especially in a temporary way by adding a new piece of material or patch:
Just to patch the boat up will cost 」10000.
2 to treat sb's injuries, especially quickly or temporarily:
The doctor will soon patch you up.
3 to try to stop quarrelling with sb and be friends again:
They've managed to patch up their differences. * Have you tried patching things up with her?
4 to agree on sth, especially after long discussions and even though the agreement is not completely satisfactory:
They managed to patch up a deal.