| Fråga   | Svar   | 
        
        |  börja lära sig Mark Gardiner, a glazier from Hastings, |  |  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I wouldn't presume to claim that this is what happens to every lottery winner, but I think that, whatever your problems are, money magnifies them. |  |   2. to think that sth is true, although you are not certain [assume], Pol. sądzić, przypuszczać  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I wouldn't presume to claim that this is what happens to every lottery winner, but I think that, whatever your problems are, money magnifies them. |  |   3. to make something seem bigger or louder, especially using special equipment, to make something seem more important than it really is [exaggerate]  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I was adopted and this made me a troubled young man |  |   4. an ____ child has been legally made part of a family that they were not born into  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig My adoptive mother used to ram home to me the importance of caring for family |  |   5. to make sure someone fully understands something by emphasizing it and by providing a lot of examples, proof etc  |  |  | 
|   shoot yourself in the foot   börja lära sig my mum told me I was no son of hers. Two weeks later, I won the lottery and I think she realised she'd shot herself in the foot. |  |   6. to say or do something stupid that will cause you a lot of trouble  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Mum sold her story to a newspaper, saying I was a reckless drunk who would drink my winnings away. |  |  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig In doing that she contradicted everything she had raised me to believe. |  |   8. to disagree with something, especially by saying that the opposite is true  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Mum sold her story to a newspaper, saying I was a reckless drunk who would drink my winnings away. |  |   9. not caring or worrying about the possible bad or dangerous results of your actions  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig This woman who had walked me to school and stayed up nights with me when I was ill, was talking rubbish about me for a few hundred quid. |  |  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig For the previous few months I had been clubbing together with my friend and business partner, Paul Maddison, to buy £50 of tickets each week, always using the same numbers. |  |   11. if people_____, they share the cost of something  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig we got together for a game of bowls and |  |   12. British English [plural] an outdoor game played on grass in which you try to roll big balls as near as possible to a small ball  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig when he heard the shop owner congratulating Paul, he nipped outside to phone the press. |  |   13. British English informal to go somewhere quickly or for a short time [pop]  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   14. a group of ships, or all the ships in a navy, Pol. flota  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I was being called a 'lottery rat' and 'wife beater'. |  |   15. someone who hits his wife, especially someone who does this often  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Camelot moved us to a different hotel each day just in case our location was leaked to the press |  |   16. to deliberately give secret information to a newspaper, television company etc  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig she had received sack loads of begging letters and marriage proposals. |  |  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig She chucked the letters away and kept the money to buy tea |  |   18. to throw something in a careless or relaxed way  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig a former girlfriend who claimed I was the father of her child and wanted money for the child's upkeep. |  |   19. the cost or process of looking after a child or animal and giving them the things they need  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I had to endure many court cases over the next few years |  |   20. to be in a difficult or painful situation for a long time without complaining  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig people who felt entitled to a slice of the money I had won. |  |   21. to give someone the official right to do or have something  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig "he chucked his pint of beer all over me. I didn't know what to think - it was bizarre." |  |   22. very unusual or strange  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I also bought houses for my four closest friends, all in the same cul-de-sac, so that we could be close |  |   23. a road which is closed at one end, so that there is only one way in and out  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig so that we could be close and they could help shield me from unwanted attention. |  |   24. to protect someone or something from being harmed or damaged  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig One by one, they took advantage of me - the manager of my glazing company, for example, started skiving off work. |  |   25. Pol. wykorzystać kogoś  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig One by one, they took advantage of me - the manager of my glazing company, for example, started skiving off work. |  |   26. to avoid work or school by staying away or leaving without permission  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I wasn't running off with younger women |  |   27. to secretly go away with someone in order to marry them or live with them - used to show disapproval  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig By the end we were bickering about the smallest things. |  |   28. to argue, especially about something very unimportant  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Even if he hadn't been careless verifying our ticket, people would still have found out - you can't hide good fortune |  |   29. to discover whether something is correct or true  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Even if he hadn't been careless verifying our ticket, people would still have found out - you can't hide good fortune |  |   30. the good or bad things that happen in life  |  |  |