- nȁpram(a)
- nȁpram(a) prij. {{c=0}}prema {{/c}}[∼ kući]
Veliki rječnik hrvatskoga jezika. 2013.
Veliki rječnik hrvatskoga jezika. 2013.
Pram (Oberösterreich) — Pram … Deutsch Wikipedia
Pram (Fluss) — Pram Die Pram in SchärdingVorlage:Infobox Fluss/KARTE fehlt DatenVorla … Deutsch Wikipedia
Pram — steht für: Schiffe ohne eigenen Antrieb #Prahm, ähnlich einem Ponton geographisch: Pram (Oberösterreich), Marktgemeinde in Oberösterreich Pram (Bayerbach), Ortsteil der Gemeinde Bayerbach bei Ergoldsbach, Bayern Pram (Fluss), Nebenfluss des Inn… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Pram — may refer to:* A conveyance for baby transport, perambulator in full * A term used for a stretcher within emergency medical services * Pram suit, a one piece garment for infants * Pram (band), an electronica band formed in the 1990s * Pram (ship) … Wikipedia
pram — pram1 [präm] n. [Du praam < MLowG prom < Czech prám, ult. < IE base * per , to go (see FARE) > FERRY] a small, flat bottomed boat usually with a square bow; now sometimes, specif., a sailboat made like this pram2 [pram] n. [altered… … English World dictionary
Pram — (pr[a^]m), Prame Prame (pr[=a]m), n. (Naut.) See {Praam}. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Pram — (pr[a^]m), n. a {perambulator[3]}; British informal shortened form. [PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Pram Point — is the location of New Zealand s Scott Base. It is located in Antarctica, near McMurdo Sound. It was named by Robert Scott s 1902 expedition when they kept a Norwegian pram dinghy there to get from the shore of Ross Island to the Ross Ice Shelf … Wikipedia
pram — ● pram nom masculin (norvégien pram) Bateau de pêche norvégien, non ponté … Encyclopédie Universelle
pram — S3 [præm] n BrE a small vehicle with four wheels in which a baby can lie down while it is being pushed American Equivalent: baby carriage →↑buggy ▪ a young woman pushing a pram … Dictionary of contemporary English
pram — (n.) baby carriage, 1884, shortening of PERAMBULATOR (Cf. perambulator), perhaps influenced by pram flat bottomed boat (1540s), from O.N. pramr, from Balto Slavic (Cf. Pol. prom, Rus. poromu ferryboat ) … Etymology dictionary