- (the) rumour has it that ...
- the rumour has it that .../the rumour runs that ... ходят слухи, что ...
Большой англо-русский учебный словарь сочетаемости. Кауль М.Р., Хидекель С.С. 2010.
Большой англо-русский учебный словарь сочетаемости. Кауль М.Р., Хидекель С.С. 2010.
rumour has it that — rumour/word/legend/has it that phrase used for showing that you are reporting something that you have heard when you are not sure whether it is really true Rumour has it that her husband is not the father of the child. Thesaurus: expressions used … Useful english dictionary
rumour has it that — rumour has it (that) ► used to say what many people are saying: »Rumour has it that you re going to be the next managing director. Main Entry: ↑rumour … Financial and business terms
rumour has it — (that) ► used to say what many people are saying: »Rumour has it that you re going to be the next managing director. Main Entry: ↑rumour … Financial and business terms
Rumour Has It (song) — Infobox Single Name = Rumour Has It Artist = Donna Summer from Album = Once Upon a Time B side = * Once Upon A Time (UK) * A Man Like You (Italy) * Say Something Nice (Germany) Released = 1978 Format = 7 single Recorded = Genre = Disco, Pop, Soul … Wikipedia
word has it that — rumour/word/legend/has it that phrase used for showing that you are reporting something that you have heard when you are not sure whether it is really true Rumour has it that her husband is not the father of the child. Thesaurus: expressions used … Useful english dictionary
legend has it that — rumour/word/legend/has it that phrase used for showing that you are reporting something that you have heard when you are not sure whether it is really true Rumour has it that her husband is not the father of the child. Thesaurus: expressions used … Useful english dictionary
a lie is halfway round the world before the truth has got its boots on — The speed with which falsehood travels was a classical commonplace; e.g. VIRGIL Aeneid iv. 174 Fama, malum qua non aliud velocius alium, Rumour, than whom no other evil thing is faster. This whole passage was imitated by Shakespeare in the… … Proverbs new dictionary
rumour — ru‧mour [ˈruːmə ǁ ər] , rumor noun [countable, uncountable] information that is passed from one person to another and which may or may not be true: • A spokesman denied rumours that the company was considering abandoning the U.S. market. * * *… … Financial and business terms
rumour — (BrE) (AmE rumor) noun ADJECTIVE ▪ malicious, nasty, scurrilous, ugly, vicious ▪ baseless, false, unconfirmed, u … Collocations dictionary
rumour — ru|mour BrE rumor AmE [ˈru:mə US ər] n [U and C] [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: rumour, from Latin rumor] 1.) information or a story that is passed from one person to another and which may or may not be true rumour about/of ▪ I ve heard… … Dictionary of contemporary English
rumour */*/ — UK [ˈruːmə(r)] / US [ˈrumər] noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms rumour : singular rumour plural rumours unofficial information that may or may not be true rumour about: He d heard rumours about some big financial deal. rumour of: Now there… … English dictionary