large
61large — See: at large, by and large …
62large — 1) n British one thousand, a grand. A shortening of large one(s) , used typically by criminals, market traders, gamblers, etc. ► I give him five large and asked him to get hold of some gear for me. 2) adj British excellent, powerful, exciting. A… …
63large it — vb British to enjoy oneself, behave boisterously. Together with large and give it large, this was a vogue term among devotees of rave and indie culture in 1994, although it had been recorded in London usage in 1991 and may originally have been… …
64large — 1. pregnant Occasional female use: It was when I was large with our Lizbeth. (EDD) 2. small Or smaller than jumbo or family in hypermarket hype: The smallest tube of toothpaste you can buy is the large size . (Jennings, 1965) …
65large — [12] Latin largus, a word of unknown origin, meant ‘abundant’ and also ‘generous’. It retained the latter meaning when it came into English via Old French large (‘the poor King Reignier, whose large style agrees not with the leanness of his… …
66large — adjective /lɑːʤ,lɑɹʤ/ Of considerable or relatively great size or extent. Russia is a large country. Syn: big, huge, giant, gigantic …
67large — See big. See big, large …
68Large — Rundelig, flot, storslået. se large, se stort, flot på det …
69large (2) — англ. [ла/адж] большой, крупный ◊ large side drum [ла/адж сайд драм] мал. барабан увелич. размера …
70large — One thousand, particularly dollars. That shipment of Beanie Babies will cost you forty large …