Betekenis van:
see red

to see red
Werkwoord
    • become angry

    Synoniemen

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. I see a red car ahead.
    2. Can you see something red down below?
    3. You will see a red house over there.
    4. He lives in the house the red roof of which you see over there.
    5. Dr Tamura and his colleagues wanted to see why red wine and fish was disagreeable to the palate.
    6. Why are you telling me about hippos all of the sudden? I don't see the connection between that and your twelve red goldfishes.
    7. see Military Goods Controls for Inhibited Red Fuming Nitric Acid (IRFNA);
    8. SEE MILITARY GOODS CONTROLS FOR Inhibited Red Fuming Nitric Acid (IRFNA);
    9. The light emitted from normal production lamps shall be red (see also note 4).
    10. See Military Goods Controls for Inhibited Red Fuming Nitric Acid (IRFNA);
    11. A previously deleted alternative (see point 2.1) or an item previously without entry (see point 2.3) shall be underlined in red.
    12. for the visibility of a red light towards the front: there is no direct visibility of a red light if viewed by an observer moving within zone 1 in a transverse plane situated 25 m in front of the tractor (see Appendix 2, Figure 1);
    13. Agglutination of R. solanacearum cells in bacterial ooze or symptomatic tissue extracts is best observed using validated antibodies (see Appendix 3) labelled with appropriate coloured markers such as red Staphylococcus aureus cells or coloured latex particles.
    14. Typical R. solanacearum colonies on SMSA medium are milky white, flat, irregular and fluidal and after three days incubation develop pink to blood-red coloration in the centre with internal streaking or whorling. (see website http://forum.europa.eu.int/Public/irc/sanco/Home/main).
    15. In case of transport in containers or boxes, the total number, their registration and seal numbers, if present, shall be indicated under point 5.3.(5) As laid down in Article 2.2 of Council Directive 95/70/EC.(6) As applicable.(7) Known susceptible species, see table below.DiseasePathogenSusceptible host species (*)BonamiosisBonamia exitiosaTiostrea chilensis and Ostrea angasiMikrocytos roughleyiSaccostrea (commercialis) glomerataMarteiliosisMarteilia sydneyiSaccostrea (commercialis) glomerataMicrocytosisMikrocytos mackiniCrassostrea gigas; C. virginica; Ostrea edulis; O. conchaphilaPerkinsosisPerkinsus marinusCrassostrea virginica and C. gigasPerkinsus olseni/atlanticusHaliotis ruber, H. cyclobates; H. scalaris; H. laevigata; Ruditapes philippinarum and R. decussatusMSX diseaseHaplosporidium nelsoniCrassostrea virginica and C. gigasSSO diseaseHaplosporidium costaleCrassostrea virginicaWithering syndromeof abalonesCandidatus Xenohaliotis californiensisMembers of the genus Haliotis including black abalone (H. cracherodii), red abalone (H. rufescens), pink abalone (H. corrugata), green abalone (H. fulgens) and white abalone (H. sorenseni).(*) And any other species referred to in the most recent edition of the OIE International Aquatic Animal Health Code as being susceptible for the pathogen/disease in question.(8) World Organisation for Animal Health.(9) Only applicable to live molluscs for further growth, fattening or relaying.