1. stir
stir until salt is dissolved
Plans for the motorway created quite a stir among locals.
Stir the soup.
Martini, shaken, not stirred.
I began to stir about 4:30 in the morning, but I didn't get up until 6:00.
Stir once every fifteen minutes.
I'm sure she'll cause a stir in the Tokyo fashion world.
Stir the mixture until it foams, then set it aside.
I like pea pods in my stir fry.
Stir, and you are a dead man.
There's no telling what kind of trouble this proposal might stir up. The result is certainly going to be something to see.
i still stir
It was early when I left the house and no one was stirring as they were all fast asleep.
She stirred her coffee with a plastic spoon
"nothing stirred except the wind"
Angielskie słowo "हलचल" (stir) występuje w zestawach:
one word substitution2. bustling
People are bustling about.
Tokyo is bustling with life.
full of people moving about in a busy way - a bustling city
If a place is bustling, it is full of busy activity: This used to be a bustling town but a lot of people have moved away over recent years. The house, usually bustling with activity, was strangely silent.
Subdued girls are generally the prettiest I reckon. The loud, bustling ones are awful.
... of so many people bustling in street- side workshops...
If a place is bustling, it is full of busy activity
The bustling children next door woke me at 6.30
With the addition of the two other schools, the building is bustling.
A bustling place is full of noise and activity and is usually pleasant and interesting.
bustling streets
we went to a bustling restaurant
Pop-up shops first popped up in the UK in the early 2000s, with the economy booming and the high streets bustling.
The bustling city centre with its ubiquitous smell of cannabis is a fascinating place, not for everyone, though.
The sleepy town has been transformed into a bustling city.