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1 got to
عَلَيْه أَنْ \ must, had to, needn’t, don’t/didn’t need to; don’t/didn’t have to): need to: You must go now, mustn’t you? Yes, I must. No, I needn’t go yet. have: (with to; also with got to in the present tense) to be forced, by need or duty: I have (got) to go now. Do you have to go (or Have you got to go)? I shall have to go soon. I didn’t have to go, but I chose to go., (Note in negative forms): You don’t have to come or, You haven’t got to come, but rarely, You haven’t to come. shall: (stressed) with any subject, to express the speaker’s firm intention He shall go, whether he wants to or not., (Use must in reported speech: I said that he must go.). -
2 not
[nɔt] adverb1) ( often abbreviated to n't) a word used for denying, forbidding, refusing, or expressing the opposite of something:Isn't he coming?
We're going to London, not Paris
لا، لن: كَلِمَه تُسْتَعْمَل للنَّفيThat's not true!
2) used with certain verbs such as hope, ~seem, ~believe, ~expect and also with be afraid:"Have you got much money?" "I"m afraid not'
لا، لَن"Is he going to fail his exam?" "I hope not".
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3 not a stroke of work
لا شَيء \ nil: (in some sports) nothing: We won the match three-nil (usu. written as 3-0). no: (with a comparative adj. or adv.) not at all: There is no more food, not any I have no money. none: not any; not one: None of the food was left. How much money have we got? None at all. not a stroke of work: no work at all: He has not done a stroke of work this week. nothing: no thing; not anything: He has nothing to eat. Our plans are made and nothing can change them now. There’s nothing wrong with her. nought, zero: the figure 0 in a number: ‘Point nought one’ is written. 01; ‘nought point one’ is written 0.1. zero: the figure 0 and the number it stands for: It was 5 below zero last night. -
4 göt
,-tü vulg. 1. ass, bottom, buttocks. 2. asshole, anus. 3. guts, nerve, courage, pluck. 4. stupid ass, asshole, idiot, fool. -ü açık wearing patched and seedy clothes, down-at-the-heels. - altına gitmek to get screwed up for nothing. -ten bacak/bacaklı short, short-legged (person). (rahat) -üne batmak /ın/ to be stupid enough not to appreciate (one´s comfort or good fortune) (said sarcastically). (bir şey yapmaya) - ister. It takes guts (to do something). -üne kına yak! Kick him now that he´s down! (said sarcastically). -üne mi düşmüş? How can he/she have the nerve? - tokuşturmak /la/ to get very chummy (with). -ü trampet çalmak to be delighted. - üstü oturmak to be left speechless in a dispute. -ü varsa if he has the nerve. -ünü yalamak /ın/ to brownnose, butter up. -
5 have got to
وَجَبَ (على...) \ have got to: to must: You’ve got to be more careful. must: (p.t.. had to neg.. mustn’t) to have to; ought to: We must take care of our children. You mustn’t hit that little boy. ought: (oughtn’t; no other forms) v. aux. (showing what is one’s duty, or what is right or usual or probable) should: You ought to help your father. She ought to be asleep by now. He doesn’t work as hard as he ought (or ought to, or ought to do). shall: (stressed) with any subject, to express the speaker’s firm intention: He shall go, whether he wants to or not., (Use must in reported speech: I said that he must go). Other forms can be used but may be confusing. -
6 get, got, gotten
أَدْخَلَ \ admit: to let sb. enter: The cinema will not admit you without a ticket. enter: to write (a name, an amount of money, etc.) on a list: Have you entered (your name) for the next race? Did you enter that payment in your accounts?. get, got, gotten: (with various adverbs and prepositions); to cause sb. or sth. to move or go: Can you get your arm through that hole?. incorporate: to make sth. (a country, a company, a report, etc.) part of sth. larger; include: Your ideas were incorporated in our plans. insert: to put (sth.) into sth.; put (sth.) between two things: Please insert this notice in your newspaper. Insert the key in the lock. Insert my name in the list, between yours and his. introduce: to bring in (sth. new): Tobacco was introduced into Europe from America, about 400 years ago. -
7 get, got, gotten
كَسَبَ \ come by: to obtain sth: How did you come by that book?. earn: to obtain in return for one’s work: He earns $6000 a year. make: to gain (friends, money, etc.). pay one’s way: to earn enough for one’s needs; not get into debt. profit: to gain: We can profit (gain wisdom or skill) by experience. win: to gain (sth. esp. by hard work, by good fortune, by risking money or by doing better than others): We won a free holiday through a newspaper competition. I won $10 at the horse races. Our team has won every match. gain: to obtain (sth. useful, necessary, wanted etc.). get, got, gotten: to obtain (sth. that one wants): I must get a new car. \ See Also حصل (حَصَّلَ)، جنى (جَنَى)، ربح (رَبِحَ) -
8 get (got, gotten)
دَخَلَ \ enter: to come in or go in: You must pay before you enter (the cinema), become a member of (a school, etc.). get (got, gotten): (with various adverbs and prepositions) to move or go: He could not get past the guard. run: to make (sth.) go somewhere: He ran a sword through his enemy’s body. -
9 get, (got, gotten)
مَرَّ \ get, (got, gotten): (with various adverbs and prepositions) move or go: He could not get past the guard. pass: to come up to (sb. or sth.) and go beyond: I passed his car on the way home (We were going the same way, and I came from behind him and went on; or We were going opposite ways, and we crossed; or His car was standing at the roadside, and I went by), go away The danger has passed. I had a sudden pain but it soon passed, (as get but with various preps. or advs.) to go We passed through (the town). An aeroplane passed over (our heads). He passed by (me) without speaking. roll: (of lifeless things) to move steadily: The years rolled past. -
10 Er kam mit knapper Not davon.
He got away by the skin of his teeth.Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > Er kam mit knapper Not davon.
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11 müssen
I Modalv.; muss, musste, hat... müssen1. bes. bei äußerer Notwendigkeit, Verpflichtung: have to, have got to; bes. bei innerer Überzeugung: must; ich muss I have to, I’ve got to, I must; ich muss unbedingt I really must; ich musste I had to; ich werde müssen I’ll have to; ich müsste ( eigentlich) I ought to; er muss nicht hingehen (von außen bestimmt) he doesn’t have to go; (weil ich es so bestimme) he needn’t go; er musste nicht gehen he didn’t have to go; er hätte nicht gehen müssen (brauchen) he needn’t have gone; er hätte hier sein müssen he ought to ( oder should) have been here; was sein muss, muss sein that’s just the way it is, that’s life; muss das sein? is that really necessary?; (hör doch auf) do you have to?; wenn es ( unbedingt) sein muss if there’s no other way, if you etc. (absolutely) must; es muss nicht sein it’s not absolutely necessary; das muss man gesehen haben you’ve got to see it, you mustn’t miss it; man glaubt es sonst nicht: you’ve got to see it to believe it; kein Mensch muss müssen hum. nobody really has to do anything; siehe auch sollen1 1-3, sollen2 12. bei innerem Zwang: ich musste ( einfach) lachen I couldn’t help laughing, I just had to laugh; sie musste ihrem Ärger Luft machen she had to give vent to her anger; ich musste sie immerzu ansehen I just had to go on looking at her, I couldn’t take my eyes off her; er muss immer alles wissen he’s always got to know about everything3. bei (sicherer) Annahme, in logischer Konsequenz: must; Vergangenheit: must have; er muss verrückt sein he must be mad; er muss es gewesen sein it must have been him; es muss nicht stimmen it doesn’t have to be right; ich muss es vergessen haben I must have forgotten; sie müssen bald kommen they’re bound to be here soon; der Zug müsste längst hier sein the train should have arrived long ago; so wie es aussieht, muss es bald regnen it looks as if we’re in for some rain; das muss 1998 gewesen sein it must have been in 1998; das musste ja passieren that was bound to ( oder just had to) happen; das musste natürlich jetzt passieren iro. it 'would have to happen now4. im Konj., um einen Wunsch auszudrücken: man müsste mehr Zeit haben there ought to be more time, we ought to have more time (for that sort of thing); Geld müsste man haben if only we had plenty of money; so müsste es immer sein it should always be like this; das müsste sie eigentlich wissen she really ought to know that5. umg., verneint (dürfen): du musst doch nicht gleich die Wut kriegen there’s no need to go straight into a rage; das musst du nicht tun you mustn’t do that; du musst nicht traurig sein you mustn’t be sadII v/i (hat gemusst)1. have to; (gezwungen werden) auch be forced to; bei innerer Überzeugung: must; ich muss! I’ve got no choice; muss ich ( wirklich)? do I (really) have to?; ich muss nach Hause I have to go home, I must go home; er muss zur Schule he has to go to school; das Auto muss heute noch in die Werkstatt the car has to go into the garage today; sie hat zum Chef gemusst she had to go and see the boss; ich muss mal ( aufs Klo) umg. I must go to the loo, Am. I have to go to the bathroom; Kinderspr. I need to do a wee2. umg. (an der Reihe sein) wer muss heute? whose turn is it today?* * *ought to; must; to have to; to be due to* * *mụ̈s|sen ['mʏsn]1. modal aux vb pret mu\#sste,['mʊstə] ptp mü\#ssen1) (Zwang) to have to; (Notwendigkeit) to need to, to have toich muss (Zwang) — I have to, I must only pres, I've got to (esp Brit); (Notwendigkeit auch) I need to
ich muss nicht (Zwang) — I don't have to, I haven't got to (esp Brit); (Notwendigkeit auch) I don't need to, I needn't
das hat er tun/nicht tun müssen — he had to/didn't have to do it
es musste ins Haus gebracht werden — it had to be brought inside
das muss irgendwann mal gemacht werden — it will have to be done some time
er sagte, er müsse bald gehen — he said he would have to go soon
dafür müssen/müssten Sie einen Polizisten fragen — you'll/you'd have or need to ask a policeman about that
ich muss jeden Tag um sechs Uhr aufstehen — I have to get up at six every day
ich muss jetzt gehen or weg (inf) — I must be going now or be off now, I must go now, I'll have to go now
man musste lachen/weinen etc — you couldn't help laughing/crying etc, you had to laugh/cry etc
wir müssen Ihnen leider mitteilen, dass... — we regret to (have to) inform you (that)...
muss das ( denn) sein? — is that (really) necessary?; must you/he?, do you/does he have to?
das muss sein — it's necessary; I do/he does have to
mal vorstellen! — (just) imagine that!, think of it!
jetzt muss ich dir mal was sagen — now let me tell you something
2)(= sollen)
das müsste ich/müsstest du eigentlich wissen — I/you ought to know that, I/you should know thatich hätte es gestern tun müssen — I ought to or should have done it yesterday
das musst du nicht tun! — you oughtn't to do that, you shouldn't do that
3)es muss geregnet haben — it must have rainedes muss wahr sein — it must be true, it has to be true, it's got to be true
er muss es gewesen sein — it must have been him, it has to have been him, it's got to have been him
es müssten zehntausend Zuschauer im Stadion gewesen sein — there must have been ten thousand spectators in the stadium
was müssen bloß die Leute (von uns) denken! — what must people think (of us)
was muss bloß in ihm vorgehen? — what goes on in his mind?
4)2. vi pret mu\#sste,ptp gemu\#sst1) ['mʊstə](= weggehen, - fahren müssen) to have to go[gə'mʊst]ich muss jetzt zur Schule — I must go to school now, I've got to (esp Brit) or I have to go to school now
wann müsst ihr zur Schule? —
der Brief muss heute noch zur Post® — the letter must be or has to be posted (Brit) or mailed (esp US) today
2) (inf = austreten müssen)ich muss mal — I need to go to the loo (Brit inf) or bathroom (esp US)
3) (= gezwungen sein) to have tokein Mensch muss müssen (hum) — there's no such thing as `must'
* * *1) (used with another verb to express need: We must go to the shops to get milk.) must2) (used, usually with another verb, to suggest a probability: They must be finding it very difficult to live in such a small house.) must3) (used, usually with another verb, to express duty, an order, rule etc: You must come home before midnight; All competitors must be under 15 years of age.) must4) (to be obliged: You need to work hard if you want to succeed; They don't need to come until six o'clock; She needn't have given me such an expensive present.) need5) (used as a form of command: You shall go if I say you must.) shall* * *müs·sen[ˈmʏsn̩]I. modal vb<musste, müssen>1. (jd ist gezwungen, verpflichtet)▪ etw tun \müssen to have to do sthmuss ich das wirklich tun? do I really have to do it?ich/er muss es tun I/he must do it, I have/he has to do itich/er muss es nicht tun I don't/he doesn't have to do itich/er musste es tun, ich habe/er hat es tun \müssen I/he had to do itdas habe ich/hat er nicht tun \müssen I/he didn't have to do itich/er hatte es tun \müssen I/he had had to do itich muss/du musst jetzt gehen I/you must [or have to] leave nowdu musst mich unbedingt anrufen you must phone medu musst endlich damit aufhören you really must stop thatmuss ich mir das gefallen lassen? do I have to put up with that?jetzt muss ich dir mal was sagen... now let me tell you something...wir müssen Ihnen leider mitteilen, dass... we regret to [have to] inform you...wir werden zurückkommen \müssen we shall have to come backwir werden das Ganze noch einmal schreiben \müssen we'll have to write the whole lot againer sagte, er müsse bald gehen he said he would have to leave soonwas habe ich da hören \müssen? what's this I hear?sie musste ins Haus gebracht werden she had to be brought insideich hätte es sonst allein tun \müssen otherwise I would have had to do it aloneheiraten \müssen (euph fam) to have to get married2. (etw ist notwendig, unabänderlich)▪ etw [nicht] sein/tun \müssen to [not] need to be/do sthmuss das [denn] sein? is that really necessary?du willst wieder in die Politik? muss das sein? you want to get back into politics? do you have to?es muss nicht sein it is not essentialirgendwann muss es ja mal gemacht werden after all, it's got to be done some timewarum nur muss es heute regnen? why does it have to rain today?warum muss das ausgerechnet mir passieren? why does it have to happen to me, of all people?ich musste einfach lachen/weinen I couldn't help laughing/cryingdas musste ja so kommen that had [or was bound] to happen▪ etw nicht tun \müssen to not have to do sthdu musst das nicht tun you don't have to do thatdu musstest nicht kommen you didn't have to comedas muss nicht unbedingt stimmen that needn't be truedarüber musst du dich nicht wundern that's not surprisingdu musst nicht alles glauben, was er sagt you must not believe everything he saysdu musst doch nicht weinen! please don't cry!das müssen Sie nicht sagen! don't say such a thing!das musst du nicht tun! you oughtn't [or shouldn't] do that!das muss man sich mal vorstellen! [just] imagine that!, think of that!das muss man gesehen haben! you mustn't miss it!, it's not to be missed!; (iron) it's a sight not to be missed!▪ jd/etw müsste etw sein/tun sb/sth should [or ought to] be/do sthdas müsstest du eigentlich wissen you ought to [or should] know thatdas müsste doch möglich sein it ought to be possibleso müsste es immer sein it ought to be like this all the time, this is how it should always be▪ jd hätte etw tun \müssen sb should [or ought to] have done sthich hätte es gestern tun \müssen I should have done it yesterdayich hätte es ahnen \müssen! I should have known!6. (Vermutung, Wahrscheinlichkeit)das muss wohl stimmen that must be truees muss ja nicht stimmen it is not necessarily truedas muss 1999 gewesen sein it must have been in 1999er muss gleich hier sein he will [or is bound to] be here at any momentes muss geregnet haben it must have rainedsie muss es gewesen sein it must have been herso muss es gewesen sein that's how it must have beenwas müssen bloß die Leute von uns denken! what must people think of us!es müssten etwa 50 Gäste auf der Party gewesen sein there must have been about 50 guests at the partyes müsste jetzt acht Uhr sein it must be eight o'clock nowes müsste bald ein Gewitter geben there should be a thunderstorm soonsie müsste inzwischen da sein she should be here by now7. (Wunsch)▪ man müsste... sein if only one could be...man müsste noch mal zwanzig sein! oh, to be twenty again!Geld müsste man haben! if only I were rich!man müsste noch mal von vorn anfangen können! if only one could begin again!II. vi<musste, gemusst>1. (gezwungen, verpflichtet sein) to have tomusstest du? did you have to?muss ich das denn wirklich tun? — ja, du musst! do I really have to do that? — yes, you do!hast du gewollt? — nein, gemusst did you want to? — no, I had tokein Mensch muss there's no such thing as ‘must’2. (gezwungen sein, sich zu begeben)▪ [irgendwohin] \müssen to have to go [somewhere]ich muss zur Arbeit/nach Hause I must [or have to] go to work/go homewann musst du zur Schule? when do you have to go to school?3. (notwendigerweise gebracht werden)▪ irgendwohin \müssen to have to get somewhereder Koffer hier muss zum Bahnhof this suitcase has to get [or be taken] to the stationdieser Brief muss heute noch zur Post this letter has to be posted today4.ich muss mal! I need [or have [got]] to go to the loo!* * *1.unregelmäßiges Modalverb; 2. Part. müssen1) (gezwungen, verpflichtet sein) have toer muss es tun — he must do it; he has to or (coll.) has got to do it
er muss es nicht tun — he does not have to do it; he has not got to do it (coll.)
er musste es tun od. hat es tun müssen — he had to do it
muss er es tun? — must he do it?; does he have to or (coll.) has he got to do it?
wir müssen Ihnen leider mitteilen, dass... — we regret to have to inform you that...
2.er muss gleich hier sein — he will be here or he is bound to be here at any moment
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) (gehen, fahren, gebracht werden usw. müssen) have to goich muss zur Arbeit/nach Hause — I have to or must go to work/go home
2)ich muss mal — (fam.) I've got to or need to spend a penny (Brit. coll.) or (Amer. coll.) go to the john
3) (gezwungen, verpflichtet sein)muss er? — does he have to?; has he got to? (coll.)
er muss nicht — he doesn't have to or (coll.) hasn't got to
* * *A. v/mod; muss, musste, hat … müssen1. besonders bei äußerer Notwendigkeit, Verpflichtung: have to, have got to; besonders bei innerer Überzeugung: must;ich muss I have to, I’ve got to, I must;ich muss unbedingt I really must;ich musste I had to;ich werde müssen I’ll have to;ich müsste (eigentlich) I ought to;er muss nicht hingehen (von außen bestimmt) he doesn’t have to go; (weil ich es so bestimme) he needn’t go;er musste nicht gehen he didn’t have to go;er hätte nicht gehen müssen (brauchen) he needn’t have gone;er hätte hier sein müssen he ought to ( oder should) have been here;was sein muss, muss sein that’s just the way it is, that’s life;muss das sein? is that really necessary?; (hör doch auf) do you have to?;wenn es (unbedingt) sein muss if there’s no other way, if you etc (absolutely) must;es muss nicht sein it’s not absolutely necessary;das muss man gesehen haben you’ve got to see it, you mustn’t miss it; man glaubt es sonst nicht: you’ve got to see it to believe it;ich musste (einfach) lachen I couldn’t help laughing, I just had to laugh;sie musste ihrem Ärger Luft machen she had to give vent to her anger;ich musste sie immerzu ansehen I just had to go on looking at her, I couldn’t take my eyes off her;er muss immer alles wissen he’s always got to know about everythinger muss verrückt sein he must be mad;er muss es gewesen sein it must have been him;es muss nicht stimmen it doesn’t have to be right;ich muss es vergessen haben I must have forgotten;sie müssen bald kommen they’re bound to be here soon;der Zug müsste längst hier sein the train should have arrived long ago;so wie es aussieht, muss es bald regnen it looks as if we’re in for some rain;das muss 1998 gewesen sein it must have been in 1998;das musste ja passieren that was bound to ( oder just had to) happen;das musste natürlich jetzt passieren iron it 'would have to happen now4. im konjkt, um einen Wunsch auszudrücken:man müsste mehr Zeit haben there ought to be more time, we ought to have more time (for that sort of thing);Geld müsste man haben if only we had plenty of money;so müsste es immer sein it should always be like this;das müsste sie eigentlich wissen she really ought to know thatdu musst doch nicht gleich die Wut kriegen there’s no need to go straight into a rage;das musst du nicht tun you mustn’t do that;du musst nicht traurig sein you mustn’t be sadB. v/i (hat gemusst)ich muss! I’ve got no choice;muss ich (wirklich)? do I (really) have to?;ich muss nach Hause I have to go home, I must go home;er muss zur Schule he has to go to school;das Auto muss heute noch in die Werkstatt the car has to go into the garage today;sie hat zum Chef gemusst she had to go and see the boss;ich muss mal (aufs Klo) umg I must go to the loo, US I have to go to the bathroom; kinderspr I need to do a wee2. umg (an der Reihe sein)wer muss heute? whose turn is it today?* * *1.unregelmäßiges Modalverb; 2. Part. müssen1) (gezwungen, verpflichtet sein) have toer muss es tun — he must do it; he has to or (coll.) has got to do it
er muss es nicht tun — he does not have to do it; he has not got to do it (coll.)
er musste es tun od. hat es tun müssen — he had to do it
muss er es tun? — must he do it?; does he have to or (coll.) has he got to do it?
wir müssen Ihnen leider mitteilen, dass... — we regret to have to inform you that...
2.er muss gleich hier sein — he will be here or he is bound to be here at any moment
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) (gehen, fahren, gebracht werden usw. müssen) have to goich muss zur Arbeit/nach Hause — I have to or must go to work/go home
2)ich muss mal — (fam.) I've got to or need to spend a penny (Brit. coll.) or (Amer. coll.) go to the john
3) (gezwungen, verpflichtet sein)muss er? — does he have to?; has he got to? (coll.)
er muss nicht — he doesn't have to or (coll.) hasn't got to
* * *aux.must modal v.(§ p.,pp.: mußte, gemußt)= to be obliged expr.to have got to expr.to have to v.to want v. -
12 FÁ
* * *I)(fæ; fekk, fengum; fenginn), v.1) to grasp with the hands, get hold of;hón hefir fengit einn stein, she has taken a stone;2) to take, capture (fengu þeir Gunnar);3) to get, gain, win;sá fær er frjár, he that woos wins;fá fljóðs ást to win a woman’s love;hann bað konunnar ok fekk heitit hennar, he asked the woman in marriage and got the promise of her hand;fá sitt eyrindi, to accomplish one’s errand;fá haærra hlut, to get the better of it;fá góðar viðtökur, to get a good reception;fá skilning á e-u, to get knowledge of;4) to suffer endure;fá úsigr, to be defeated;fá skaða, to suffer harm;fá úvit, to fall senseless, to faint;fá líflát, to fall lifeless;fá bana, to come by one’s death;5) to get, procure;hann fekk sér gott kvánfang, he got a good wife;6) to give, deliver to one, put into one’s hands;fá mér (give me) leppa tvá ór hári þinu;fáit nú konungi festu (give the king bail) þá er honum líki;fá e-m sök, to charge one;var sá sveinn fenginn í hendr okkr, delivered into our hands;fá e-m e-t at geyma, to give a thing into one’s charge (= fá e-m e-t til geymslu);7) with pp. following, to be able to;fá e-n veiddan, to be able to catch one;hon fœr með engu móti vakit þá, she could by no means awaken them;þeir munu mik aldri fá sótt, they will never be able to overcome me;fengu þeir honum ekki nát, they could not catch him: skaltu hvergi fá undan hokat, thou shall have no chance of sneaking away;hann fekk þó eigi víss orðit, he could not make out for certain;8) with gen., to get, take, gain, win;þeir fengu fjár mikils, they took a rich booty;vel er þess fengit, it is well earned, well done;hann var eigi skáld, ok hann hafði ei þeirrar listar fengit, he had not received that gift: fá verðar, to take a meal;hann tekk sér sveitar (he raised a band) ok gørðist illvirki;fá konu, to get a wife, marry (hon var átján vetra, er þorsteinn fekk hennar);9) to conceive, of sheep and cattle (fá burðar, lambs);10) to touch, affect;þat fekk mikils hinum hertekna manni, it touched the captive deeply, þá fær þorbirni svá. mjök (Th. was so much moved), at hann grætr;11) impers., one can get or find;vápn svá góð, at eigi fær önnur slík, that the like are not to be got;at varla fái vitrara mann, that a wiser man is hardly to be found;also, one may or can (do something);þat skip fær vel varit eldi, that ship can well be guarded against fire;12) with preps.:fá af sér (with infin.) to bring oneself to;þeir fengu af verra, they got the worse of it;fá at veizlu, brúkaupi, blóti, to get provisions for a feast (hann fekk at blóti miklu);sá dagr er at jólum skal fá, the day when preparations are to be made for Yule (cf. atfangadagr);fá á e-u, to get hold of, grasp with the hand;faðir Móða fekk á þremi, the father of M. caught hold of the brim;fá e-n, to touch, affect one, move (opt fá á horskan lostfagrir, litir);láta e-t á sik fá, to be (deeply) affected by, take it to heart;drykkr fær á e-n, the drink intoxicates one (er drykkr fekk á Hákon jarl);fá í e-t, to take hold of, grasp with the hand (= fá á e-u);forðuðu fingrum, fengu í snœri, they took hold of the strings;fá e-t or e-s til, to get, procure (var kirkja gör ok kennimanna til fengit);fá e-n til at gøra e-t, to get one to do a thing;þeir fengu menn til at ryðja skip sitt, they got men to clear their ship fá til e-s, to lay hold of;þar var fjöld fjár, fengu til margir, there was wealth of money, and many took a share of it;13) refl., fást í e-u, to be busy, exert oneself, engage in a matter (dróttningin mátti þar ekki í fást);Helgi leitaði þá, ef Sigurðr vildi í fást við Þorvald, if S. would try with Th.;segir hann ljúga ok fást í rógi, and deal in slander;fást við e-t = f. í e-u;f. við e-n, to have to do with, to contend with one (H. segist þá vilja … fást eigi við fjánda þenna);to wrestle (grapple) with one (skaltu fást við blámann várn).(fá, fáða, fáðr), v. to draw, paint;fá rúnar, to draw runes or magic characters;vér höfum fáða unga brúði á vegg, we have painted the young bride on the wall;gulli fáðr, gilded.* * *1.pret. sing. fékk, sometimes spelt feck or fieck, pl. fengu; pres. fæ, 2nd pers. fær, mod. færð, pl. fám, mod. fáum; pret. subj. fengja, mod. fengi; pres. fá, mod. fái; imperat. fá; sup. fengit; part. fenginn: the forms fingit, finginn, and pret. fingu (cp. Germ. fingen) are obsolete, but occur in some MSS. (e. g. Arna-Magn. 132 and 122 A): the poets rhyme— Erlingr var þar finginn; with the neg. suff., fær-at, fékk-at, Lex. Poët.: [Goth. fahan and gafahan = πιάζειν, καταλαμβάνειν; A. S. fón; Hel. fâhan; Germ. fahen, whence fahig = capax; in the Germ., however, the nasal form fangen prevailed, but in the Scandin., Swed., and Dan. få or faae; the Dan. fange is mod. and borrowed from Germ.; Icel. fanga is rare and unclass. and only used in the sense to capture, whereas fá is a standing word; the ng reappears in pl. pret. and part. pass. fengu, fengit, vide above; cp. Old Engl. fet, mod. fetch]:—to fetch, get, etc.1. to fetch, catch, seize; fengu þeir Gunnar, they fetched, caught G., Akv. 18; Hildibrandr gat fengit kirkju-stoðina, Sturl. i. 169; hón hefir fengit einn stein, she has fetched a stone, Ísl. ii. 394; fá á e-u, to get hold of, grasp with the hand, faðir Móða fékk á þremi, Hým. 34.β. also, fá í e-t, to grasp; fengu í snæri, they grasped the bow-strings, bent the bow, Am. 42; hann fékk í öxl konungi, he seized the king’s shoulder, Fms. viii. 75.γ. to take, capture, but rare except in part.; hafði greifi Heinrekr fengit Valdimar, Fms. ix. 324; verða fanginn, to be taken, Germ. gefangen werden, i. 258, Stj. 396.2. to get, gain, win, with acc. of the thing; sá fær er frjár, he who wooes will win (a proverb), Hm. 91; hann skal fá af Svart-álfum, he shall get, obtain from S., Edda 69; fá brauð, mat, drykk, Fms. x. 18; þat fékk hann eigi af föður sínum, xi. 14; bað konunnar ok fékk heitið hennar, he wooed the woman and got her hand, Edda 23; fá sitt eyrindi, to get one’s errand done, Fms. i. 75; fa fljóðs ást, to win a woman’s love, Hm. 91; fá hærra hlut, to get the better, 40; ek ætla at fá at vera yðvarr farþegi, Ld. 112; hence fá, or fá leyfi, to get leave to do a thing: eg fæ það, fékk það ekki, fá að fara, etc.: Icel. also say, eg fæ það ekki af mér, I cannot bring myself to do it.β. to suffer, endure; fá úsigr, to get the worst of it, Fms. iv. 218; sumir fengu þetta ( were befallen) hvern sjaunda vetr, Sks. 113; fá skaða, to suffer a loss, Hkr. ii. 177; fá úvit, to fall senseless, Nj. 195; fá líflát, to fall lifeless, Grág. i. 190; fá bana, to come by one’s death, Nj. 110.γ. fá góðar viðtökur, to get a good reception, Eg. 460, 478, Fms. iv. 219; sá mun sæll er þann átrúnað fær, blessed is he that gets hold of that faith, Nj. 156; hann hafði fingit úgrynni fjár, Fms. xi. 40; fá skilning á e-u, to get the knowledge of a thing, i. 97.3. to get, procure; þá fékk konungr sveitar-höfðingja þá er honum sýndisk, Eg. 272; ek skal fá mann til at biðja hennar, Fs. 88; þeir fengu menn til at ryðja skip, they got men to clear the ship, Nj. 163; mun ek fá til annann mann at göra þetta, I will get another man to do it, 53; fá sér bjargkvið, Grág. i. 252; hann fékk sér gott kván-fang, Fms. i. 11; fám oss ölteiti nökkura, let us get some sport, vii. 119; fá sér (e-m) fari, to take a passage, vide far; fengu þeir ekki af mönnum, they could fetch no men, ix. 473; þeir hugðusk hafa fengit ( reached) megin-land, vii. 113.4. fá at veizlu, blóti, to get provisions for a feast, etc.; hann fékk at blóti miklu, Landn. 28; lét Þorri fá at blóti, Orkn. 3; Þórólfr Mostrar-skegg fékk at blóti miklu, Eb. 8; er fengit at mikilli veizlu, Fas. i. 242; var síðan at samkundu fingit, a meeting was brought about, 623. 52; sá dagr er at Jólum skal fá, the day when preparations are to be made for Yule, K. Þ. K. 110, hence atfanga-dagr, the day before a feast, q. v.; þá var fengit at seið, Hkr. Yngl. S. ch. 17.II. to give, deliver to one, put into one’s hands; hér er eitt sverð, er ek vil fá þér, Ísl. ii. 44; fá mér (fetch me, give me) leppa tvá ór hári þínu, Nj. 116; þá er keisarinn hafði fingit honum til föru-neytis, Fms. xi. 40; konungr fær honum veizlur, Eg. 27; horn þat er Bárðr hafði fingit Ölvi, 207; fáit nú konungi festu ( give the king bail) þá er honum líki, Fms. iv. 268; fá e-m sök, to charge one, Sks. 708; var sá sveinn fenginn í hendr okkr, delivered into our hands, Fms. i. 113; fékk hann búit í hendr Valgerði, iii. 24, Nj. 4; honum fékk hverr maðr penning til, Íb. 5; hon fékk biskupinum tuttugu mánaða mataból, B. K. 125; fá e-m e-t at geyma, to give a thing into one’s charge, Stj. 177; fá þá sonum þínum í hendr til geymslu, id.III. metaph. with a following pass. part. or sup. to be able to do; hón fær með engu móti vakit þá, she could by no means awaken them, Fms. i. 9; þú fékkt ekki leikit þat er mjúkleikr var í, vii. 119; þeir munu mik aldri fá sótt, they will never be able to overcome me, Nj. 116; ok fáit þér hann eigi veiddan, if you cannot catch him, 102; hann fékk engi knút leyst, Edda 29; fengu þeir honum ekki náð, they could not catch him, Fagrsk. 167; at Vagn mun fá yfir-kominn Sigvalda, that V. will overcome S., Fms. xi. 96: skulu vér þá freista at vér fáim drepit þá, i. 9; skaltú hvergi fá undan hokat, thou shalt have no chance of sneaking away, xi. 61; fá gaum gefinn at e-u, to take heed to a thing. Fas. ii. 517; menn fingu hvergi rétt hann né hafit, Eg. 396; at þeir mundu komit fá til lands hvalnum, Grág. ii. 381; en fékk þó eigi víss orðit …, but he could not make out for certain …, Fms. x. 170.β. to grow, get, become; Hjörleif rak vestr fyrir land, ok fékk hann vatnfátt, he became short of water, Landn. 34: of travellers, to fall in with, etc., þar fengu þeir keldur blautar mjök, they got into bogs, Eb. 266; þeir fengu hvergi blautt um Valbjarnar-völlu, Sturl. ii. 50; fengu þeir veðr stór, they met with foul weather, Eg. 160.IV. with gen.,1. to take, gain, earn, win; renna þeir á land upp, ok fá mikils fjár, Fms. v. 164; þeir fengu fjár mikils, they took a rich booty, Nj. 137; gáðu þeir eigi fyrir veiðum at fá heyjanna, ok dó allt kvikfé þeirra um vetrinu, Landn. 30; vel er þess fengit, it is well earned, well done, 7; nú mun ek fara þessa ferð ef þú vill; hann segir, vel er þess fengit, well done, said he, Fas. ii. 517; hann var eigi skáld, ok hann hafði eigi þeirrar listar fengit, he had not got that gift, Fb. i. 214; at þá mundi þykkja fengit betr, people would think that it suited better, Nj. 75; fá verðar, to take a meal, Hm. 33; hann fékk sér sveitar ( raised a band) ok görðisk illvirki, 623. 15: but chiefly in the phrase, fá konu, to get a wife, marry; Haraldr fékk þeirrar konu, Fms. i. 4; at ek munda fá þín, that I should get thy hand, Nj. 24; betr er þá séð fyrir kosti systur minnar at þú fáir hennar (gen., i. e. that thou marry her), en víkingar fái hana (acc., i. e. to fetch, capture her) at herfangi, Fs. 8; hón var átján vetra er Þorsteinn fékk hennar, Ísl. ii. 191.2. to conceive, of sheep, cattle; fá burðar, Stj. 97; er hann (sauðrinn) fær lambs, Skálda 162: absol., við þeim hafði hón (the mare) fengit, Landn. 195; at eigi fái ær við, Grág. i. 418, (cp. fang, fetus.)3. denoting to affect, touch, etc.; þat fékk mikils hinum hertekna menni, it touched much the captive, Orkn. 368: svá fékk honum mikils, at hans augu vóru full af tárum, Fms. i. 139; henni fékk þetta mikillar áhyggju, it caused her great care, iv. 181; fær honum þat mikillar áhyggju ok reiði. Nj. 174; nú fær mér ekka (gen.) orð þat þú mælir, Skv. 1. 20; fá e-m hlægis, to make one a laughing-stock, Hm. 19: even with acc. or an adv., þá fær Þorbirni svá mjök (Th. was so much moved) at hann grætr, Hrafn. 13.β. fá á e-n, to affect, chiefly of intoxicating liquors; er drykkr fékk á Hákon jarl, when the drink told on earl Hacon, Magn. 508; fær á þá mjök drykkrinn, Fms. xi. 108; aldregi drakk ek vín eðr annan drykk svá at á mik megi fá, Stj. 428; en er á leið daginn ok drykkr fékk á menn, Fms. vii. 154; drykkr hefir fengit yðr í höfuð, Fas. i. 318; á-fengr or á-fenginn, q. v.γ. opt fá á ( entice) horskan, er á heimskan né fá, lostfagrir lítir, Hm. 92.V. impers. to be got, to be had, cp. Germ. es giebt; vápn svá góð, at eigi fær önnur slík (acc.), so good, that the like are not to be got, Nj. 44; at varla fái vitrara mann, a wiser man is hardly to be found, Sks. 13; eigi fær þat ritað, it cannot be recorded, viz. being so voluminous, Fms. viii. 406; þat skip fær vel varit eldi, that ship can well be guarded against fire, ix. 368; svá mikill herr at varla fékk talit, a host so great that it could hardly be numbered, xi. 261 (Ed. fékst wrongly).VI. reflex. in the phrase, fásk í e-u, to be busy, exert oneself in a matter; drottningin mátti þar ekki í fásk, Fms. x. 102; Helgi leitaði þá ef Sigurðr vildi í fásk við Þorvald, if S. would try with Th., Fb. i. 379; vildir þú fásk í því sem þér er ekki lánat, 215; segir hana ljúga ok fásk í rógi, ( and deal in slander) fyrir höfðingjum, Karl. 552.β. fásk við e-n, to struggle against; ef nokkut væri þat er hann mætti við fásk, which he could try, Grett. 74 new Ed.: to wrestle with, skaltú fásk við blámann várn, Ísl. ii. 444; um fangit er þú fékksk við Elli, when thou strugglest against Elli, Edda 34; at Þorleikr ætti lítt við elli at fásk, Ld. 160; fámsk vér eigi við skrafkarl þenna, let us have naught to do with this landlouper, Háv. 52; ok fásk eigi við fjánda þenna lengr, Ísl. ii. 45; fást um e-t, to make a fuss about a thing: the passage, Hrólfi fékksk hugr, Fas. iii. 203, is prob. an error for Hrólfi gékksk hugr, H. was moved: the phrase, fásk þú at virði vel, take thou a good meal, Hm. 117.2. as a pass., esp. in the sense to be gotten; sumt lausa-féit hafði fengisk ( had been gotten) í hernaði, Fms. i. 25; at honum fengisk engi fararbeini, that no means of conveyance could be got, Grág. i. 298; eigu þeir þat allt er á (aðilðunum) fæsk, all the fines that accrue from the aðilð, 281; fékksk þat, it was obtained, Jb. 17; er hljóð fékksk, when silence was obtained, so that he could speak, Fms. i. 34: ef þeir fásk eigi, if they cannot be taken, Odd. 12 (very rare); sem úviða muni þinn jafningi fásk, thy match is not easily to be got, Nj. 46.VII. part. fenginn as adj. given to, fit to; ok er hann vel til þess fenginn, Fms. vi. 389; Jón var mjök fenginn ( given) fyrir kvenna ást, Bs. i. 282; fæsk eigi því níta, it cannot be denied, Am. 32.2. again, fanginn denotes captured, hence taken by passion; fanginn í ílsku, Fb. i. 280.2.ð, part. fát, fáð or fáið, cp. fáinn or fánn; a contracted verb = fága:—to draw, paint, Fms. v. 345; gulli fáðr, gilded, Gísl. 21; fá rúnar, to draw runes, magic characters, Hm. 143; vér höfum fáða unga brúði á vegg, we have painted the young bride on the wall, Landn. 248 (from a verse about the middle of the 10th century): of precious stuffs, fáð ript, Skv. 3. 63. -
13 superar
v.1 to beat.queremos superar los resultados del año pasado we want to improve on o beat last year's resultsme superó por dos décimas de segundo she beat me by two tenths of a secondsuperar algo/a alguien en algo to beat something/somebody for somethingnos superan en número they outnumber usme supera en altura/inteligencia he's taller/cleverer than me2 to overtake, to pass.3 to overcome.superar un examen to get through an examtener algo superado to have got over somethingEllos superan la adversidad They overcome adversity.4 to surpass, to exceed, to best, to excel.María supera a sus colegas Mary surpasses her colleagues.5 to outdo, to win over.* * *1 (exceder) to surpass, exceed, excel2 (obstáculo etc) to overcome, surmount1 (sobrepasarse) to excel oneself2 (mejorarse) to improve oneself, better oneself* * *verb1) to surpass2) overcome* * *1. VT1) (=aventajar) [+ contrincante, adversario] to overcome; [+ límite] to go beyond; [+ récord, marca] to breaksuperar a algn en algo: superó al adversario en cuatro puntos — she beat her opponent by four points
2) (=pasar con éxito) [+ dificultad] to overcome; [+ enfermedad, crisis] to get overha tenido que superar muchos obstáculos en su vida — she has had to overcome a lot of obstacles in her life
3) [+ etapa] to get past4) [+ prueba, examen] to pass2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (ser superior a, mayor que) to exceed, go beyond2)a) (vencer, sobreponerse a) <timidez/dificultad/etapa> to overcome; < trauma> to get overya hemos superado la etapa más difícil — we've already got(ten) through o over the most difficult stage
b) (frml) <examen/prueba> to pass2.superarse v pron to better oneself* * *= beat, circumvent, go beyond, outperform [out-perform], outweigh, overcome, overtake, score over, outgrow, surpass, survive, go far beyond, extend + far beyond, top, outbalance, outrank, weather, get through, one-up, outwit, outdo, outsmart, ride out, exceed, outfox, go + past, outrun [out-run], best, trump, move on from, go + one better.Ex. It would certainly beat the usual file clerk.Ex. Plainly, the familiarization stage is circumvented in a computer-based indexing system with machine-assigned terms.Ex. Maybe the answer is some kind of localized Ceefax or Oracle information service that could be obtained free through one's television set but went beyond the mainly trivia that these services currently provide.Ex. Numerous experiment have tried to determine if free-text searching outperform searching with the aid of a controlled index language.Ex. It may be decided that the practical impediments to the distribution and assignment of such numbers outweigh their potential usefulness.Ex. Analytical cataloguing seeks to overcome physical packaging.Ex. Why have card-based systems been overtaken by computer databases?.Ex. A Permuterm index scores over a Double-KWIC index in that it avoids repetitive printing of one title.Ex. The advantages of the system far surpass any disadvantages.Ex. The chairwoman of the board had decided that as part of the screening process those who had successfully survived the initial winnowing should furnish the board with tangible evidence of how they might perform on a specific assignment.Ex. These changes in the physical form of the catalog have implications which go far beyond changes in form or even in improvements in speed and convenience to the catalog user.Ex. We have seen that the relationships of the Publications Office with the institutions and other bodies of the European Communities may in theory, but do not yet in practice extend far beyond those with the six managing institutions.Ex. As public library circ declines, spending continues to top inflation.Ex. The large profits to be made in this field will outbalance the problems that may lie ahead.Ex. One node in the star graphic completely outranks the others, while the other six themselves are interchangeable.Ex. The small publishers seem to be weathering the industry changes, and have expectations of growth.Ex. I think that the so-called average person often exhibits a great deal of heroism in getting through an ordinary day.Ex. This remake of William Castle's action adventure adds a genuinely supernatural plot to the old story of the duplicitous wife scheming to kill her husband but being one-upped by his even more ingenious counterplots.Ex. Two dangerous trysts are spied upon by a third and hostile party, whose presence is detected by the lovers who act in consort to outwit him.Ex. This novel is narrated by William, an underachiever who is constantly outdone by his charming and lovable identical twin brother.Ex. Smart and speedy start-ups blindside mature companies with their inventiveness then grow up into mature companies and are outsmarted in their turn.Ex. Without any significant restructuring, the LIS programme in Iran will provide little in the way of riding out the rapid transition that the field is currently experiencing.Ex. In the same way, files of item record cards can be difficult to manage if the file size exceeds, say, 2000 cards.Ex. It also led to a continuing guerilla war between the authorities and caricaturists who sought to evade, outfox, or entirely defy them.Ex. Unfortunately, its conclusions are completely pedestrian, rarely going past the fact that there were old people in England in the late Middle Ages.Ex. But he was wiry and wily, too, and he could often out-run, track, back-track, double-back, and finally dodge unseen in the subway.Ex. Back in 2001, the tossed salad they prepared fed some 5,000, which then bested the record held by a community in Utah in the United States.Ex. If prejudice is allowed to trump the rights that all citizens should enjoy, then everyone's freedoms are ultimately endangered.Ex. He is moving on from the past and looking forward to a tremendous future helping to educate parents from his personal experiences.Ex. I think Murray will go one better than Wimbledon, but will lose to Federer again in the final.----* ayudar a superar = get + Nombre + through.* capaz de adaptarse y superar adversidades = resilient.* con el propósito de superarse uno mismo = self-improvement-oriented.* nada supera a = nothing beats....* no superar la prueba de = not stand the test of.* ser difícil de superar = take + some beating.* sin ser superado = unsurpassed.* superar Algo = put + Nombre + behind.* superar barreras = hurdle + barriers.* superar el intento = resist + effort.* superar el miedo = overcome + Posesivo + fear, conquer + fear.* superar el nerviosismo = overcome + nervousness.* superar el problema de credibilidad = overcome + credibility gap.* superar en número = outnumber.* superar la barrera del tiempo = cross + time barriers.* superar la etapa de = move on from.* superar las expectativas = exceed + expectations.* superarse a sí mismo = pull + Reflexivo + up(wards) by + Posesivo + (own) bootstraps.* superarse a Uno Mismo = make + the best of + Reflexivo.* superarse para hacer frente a Algo = rise to + meet.* superar una barrera = conquer + barrier.* superar una crisis = ford + crisis, survive + crisis.* superar una deficiencia = overcome + weakness.* superar una dificultad = overcome + difficulty, get over + difficulty.* superar una limitación = overcome + limitation, tackle + limitation.* superar un análisis minucioso = stand up to + scrutiny, stand up to + examination.* superar una situación difícil = weather + the bumpy ride, weather + the storm.* superar un examen = pass + examination, pass + an exam.* superar un obstáculo = overcome + obstacle, jump over + hurdle, overcome + barrier, conquer + barrier.* superar un peligro = overcome + danger.* superar un problema = surmount + problem, conquer + problem, get over + problem.* verse superado sólo por = be second only to.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) (ser superior a, mayor que) to exceed, go beyond2)a) (vencer, sobreponerse a) <timidez/dificultad/etapa> to overcome; < trauma> to get overya hemos superado la etapa más difícil — we've already got(ten) through o over the most difficult stage
b) (frml) <examen/prueba> to pass2.superarse v pron to better oneself* * *= beat, circumvent, go beyond, outperform [out-perform], outweigh, overcome, overtake, score over, outgrow, surpass, survive, go far beyond, extend + far beyond, top, outbalance, outrank, weather, get through, one-up, outwit, outdo, outsmart, ride out, exceed, outfox, go + past, outrun [out-run], best, trump, move on from, go + one better.Ex: It would certainly beat the usual file clerk.
Ex: Plainly, the familiarization stage is circumvented in a computer-based indexing system with machine-assigned terms.Ex: Maybe the answer is some kind of localized Ceefax or Oracle information service that could be obtained free through one's television set but went beyond the mainly trivia that these services currently provide.Ex: Numerous experiment have tried to determine if free-text searching outperform searching with the aid of a controlled index language.Ex: It may be decided that the practical impediments to the distribution and assignment of such numbers outweigh their potential usefulness.Ex: Analytical cataloguing seeks to overcome physical packaging.Ex: Why have card-based systems been overtaken by computer databases?.Ex: A Permuterm index scores over a Double-KWIC index in that it avoids repetitive printing of one title.Ex: The advantages of the system far surpass any disadvantages.Ex: The chairwoman of the board had decided that as part of the screening process those who had successfully survived the initial winnowing should furnish the board with tangible evidence of how they might perform on a specific assignment.Ex: These changes in the physical form of the catalog have implications which go far beyond changes in form or even in improvements in speed and convenience to the catalog user.Ex: We have seen that the relationships of the Publications Office with the institutions and other bodies of the European Communities may in theory, but do not yet in practice extend far beyond those with the six managing institutions.Ex: As public library circ declines, spending continues to top inflation.Ex: The large profits to be made in this field will outbalance the problems that may lie ahead.Ex: One node in the star graphic completely outranks the others, while the other six themselves are interchangeable.Ex: The small publishers seem to be weathering the industry changes, and have expectations of growth.Ex: I think that the so-called average person often exhibits a great deal of heroism in getting through an ordinary day.Ex: This remake of William Castle's action adventure adds a genuinely supernatural plot to the old story of the duplicitous wife scheming to kill her husband but being one-upped by his even more ingenious counterplots.Ex: Two dangerous trysts are spied upon by a third and hostile party, whose presence is detected by the lovers who act in consort to outwit him.Ex: This novel is narrated by William, an underachiever who is constantly outdone by his charming and lovable identical twin brother.Ex: Smart and speedy start-ups blindside mature companies with their inventiveness then grow up into mature companies and are outsmarted in their turn.Ex: Without any significant restructuring, the LIS programme in Iran will provide little in the way of riding out the rapid transition that the field is currently experiencing.Ex: In the same way, files of item record cards can be difficult to manage if the file size exceeds, say, 2000 cards.Ex: It also led to a continuing guerilla war between the authorities and caricaturists who sought to evade, outfox, or entirely defy them.Ex: Unfortunately, its conclusions are completely pedestrian, rarely going past the fact that there were old people in England in the late Middle Ages.Ex: But he was wiry and wily, too, and he could often out-run, track, back-track, double-back, and finally dodge unseen in the subway.Ex: Back in 2001, the tossed salad they prepared fed some 5,000, which then bested the record held by a community in Utah in the United States.Ex: If prejudice is allowed to trump the rights that all citizens should enjoy, then everyone's freedoms are ultimately endangered.Ex: He is moving on from the past and looking forward to a tremendous future helping to educate parents from his personal experiences.Ex: I think Murray will go one better than Wimbledon, but will lose to Federer again in the final.* ayudar a superar = get + Nombre + through.* capaz de adaptarse y superar adversidades = resilient.* con el propósito de superarse uno mismo = self-improvement-oriented.* nada supera a = nothing beats....* no superar la prueba de = not stand the test of.* ser difícil de superar = take + some beating.* sin ser superado = unsurpassed.* superar Algo = put + Nombre + behind.* superar barreras = hurdle + barriers.* superar el intento = resist + effort.* superar el miedo = overcome + Posesivo + fear, conquer + fear.* superar el nerviosismo = overcome + nervousness.* superar el problema de credibilidad = overcome + credibility gap.* superar en número = outnumber.* superar la barrera del tiempo = cross + time barriers.* superar la etapa de = move on from.* superar las expectativas = exceed + expectations.* superarse a sí mismo = pull + Reflexivo + up(wards) by + Posesivo + (own) bootstraps.* superarse a Uno Mismo = make + the best of + Reflexivo.* superarse para hacer frente a Algo = rise to + meet.* superar una barrera = conquer + barrier.* superar una crisis = ford + crisis, survive + crisis.* superar una deficiencia = overcome + weakness.* superar una dificultad = overcome + difficulty, get over + difficulty.* superar una limitación = overcome + limitation, tackle + limitation.* superar un análisis minucioso = stand up to + scrutiny, stand up to + examination.* superar una situación difícil = weather + the bumpy ride, weather + the storm.* superar un examen = pass + examination, pass + an exam.* superar un obstáculo = overcome + obstacle, jump over + hurdle, overcome + barrier, conquer + barrier.* superar un peligro = overcome + danger.* superar un problema = surmount + problem, conquer + problem, get over + problem.* verse superado sólo por = be second only to.* * *superar [A1 ]vtA1 (ser superior a, mayor que) to exceed, go beyondun éxito que supera todas las expectativas a success which goes beyond o exceeds o surpasses all expectationsla realidad supera a la ficción fact o truth is stranger than fictionel horror de estas escenas supera todo lo imaginable the horror of these scenes goes beyond anything one could imaginenadie lo supera en experiencia ni habilidad nobody can surpass him in experience or skill, nobody can surpass his experience or skillnos superan en número they outnumber ussupera en estatura a su hermano mayor he's taller than his elder brothersupera en tres puntos la cifra de ayer it is three points higher than yesterday's figure, it surpasses yesterday's figure by three points2 (mejorar) to beatlogró superar su propio récord he managed to beat his own recordese método está totalmente superado that method has been completely supersededB1 (vencer, sobreponerse a) ‹timidez/dificultad/etapa› to overcometrata de superar estas diferencias try to overcome o get over these differencesno ha logrado superar el trauma que le supuso el accidente he has not got(ten) over the trauma of the accidentya hemos superado la etapa más difícil we've already got(ten) through o over the most difficult stagehace tres meses que rompimos pero ya lo tengo superado we split up three months ago but I've got(ten) over it o I'm over it now2 ( frml); ‹examen/prueba› to passto better oneself* * *
superar ( conjugate superar) verbo transitivo
1
nadie lo supera en experiencia no one has more experience than him;
supera en estatura a su hermano he's taller than his brother
2
‹ trauma› to get over
superarse verbo pronominal
to better oneself
superar verbo transitivo
1 (estar por encima de) to exceed: tu hermana te supera en altura, your sister is taller than you
la temperatura superó los treinta grados, the temperature rose above thirty degrees
(expectativas) esto supera todo lo imaginado, this defies the imagination
(un récord, una marca) to beat, break
2 (pasar, sobreponerse) to overcome
(un examen) to pass, get through
' superar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
atonía
- ganar
- sacar
- salir
- salvar
- sobreponerse
- vencer
- volver
- cabeza
- creces
- exceder
- marca
English:
beat
- beating
- carry through
- coast
- corner
- deal with
- excel
- get over
- get past
- handicap
- improve on
- outdo
- outnumber
- overcome
- overtake
- pull through
- surmount
- surpass
- top
- exceed
- get
- negotiate
- out
- over
- rise
- shrug
- survive
- transcend
* * *♦ vt1. [aventajar] to beat;superar algo/a alguien en algo to beat sth/sb for sth;nos superan en número they outnumber us;me supera en altura/inteligencia he's taller/cleverer than me2. [sobrepasar] [récord] to break;queremos superar los resultados del año pasado we want to improve on o beat last year's results;me superó por dos décimas de segundo she beat me by two tenths of a second3. [adelantar] to overtake, to pass;superó a su rival en la recta final she overtook her rival on the home straight5. [complejo, crisis, enfermedad] to overcome, to get over;no ha superado la pérdida de su mujer he has not overcome the loss of his wife;tener algo superado to have got over sth6. [examen, prueba] to pass* * ** * *superar vt1) : to surpass, to exceed2) : to overcome, to surmount* * *superar vb2. (pasar) to pass3. (ser mejor) to be better / to surpass4. (ser más) to be more / to be overel porcentaje de aprobados supera el 85% the percentage of passes is over 85% -
14 lange
f; -, -n1. length (auch zeitlich); (Größe) height; 20 Meter in der Länge, mit einer Länge von 20 Metern 20 met|res (Am. -ers) long ( oder in length), with a length of 20 met|res (Am. -ers); der Länge nach lengthwise; der Länge nach hinfallen fall flat on one’s face, go sprawling; in seiner vollen Länge senden etc. broadcast etc. in full; in die Länge ziehen fig. draw ( oder drag) out; (Erzählung) spin out; sich in die Länge ziehen drag on; auf die Länge umg. in the long run2. SPORT length; mit einer Länge gewinnen win by a length; um Längen gewinnen win by a mile; um Längen geschlagen werden be beaten out of sight3. (langweilige Stelle) longueur; der Film hatte Längen the film ( Am auch movie) had its dull patches5. GEOG., ASTRON., MATH. longitude; auf oder unter 10 Grad westlicher Länge liegen have a longitude of 10 degrees West, lie at 10 degrees West longitude* * *die Längelongitude; footage; tallness; length* * *lạn|ge I ['laŋə] (S Ger) [laŋ] (Aus)adv['lɛŋɐ] comp - er ['lɛŋɐ] ['lɛŋstə] superl am lä\#ngsten ['lɛŋstn]die Sitzung hat heute lange/nicht lange gedauert — the meeting went on (for) a long time/didn't go on (for) long today
wie lange lernst du schon Deutsch/bist du schon hier? — how long have you been learning German (for)/been here (for)?
es ist noch gar nicht lange her, dass wir diese Frage diskutiert haben — we discussed this question not long ago, it's not long since we discussed this question
er wird es nicht mehr lange machen (inf) — he won't last long, he's not got long to go
bis Weihnachten ist es ja noch lange hin — it's still a long time till Christmas, we're a long way from Christmas
lange nicht gesehen (inf) — long time no see (inf)
je länger, je lieber — the more the better; (zeitlich) the longer the better
2) (inf = längst)noch lange nicht — not by any means, not by a long chalk (Brit inf) or shot
lange nicht so... — nowhere near as..., not nearly as...
er verdient lange nicht so viel — he doesn't earn nearly as much, he doesn't earn anywhere near as much
II [laŋ]wenn er das schafft, kannst du das schon lange — if he can do it, you can do it easily
1. adj comp - er['lɛŋɐ] superl ['lɛŋɐ] -ste(r, s) ['lɛŋstə]1) long['lɛŋstn]; Film, Roman, Aufenthalt, Rede long, lengthydas war seit Langem geplant — it was planned a long time ago
in nicht allzu langeer Zeit — before too or very long, in the not too distant future
etw länger machen — to make sth longer, to lengthen sth
es ist eine langee Strecke bis Bristol, jedenfalls länger, als ich gedacht hatte — it's a long way to Bristol, at least, further than I thought
die Tage werden wieder länger — the days are drawing out, the days are getting longer
er machte ein langees Gesicht — his face fell
des Langen und Breiten — at great length
See:2) (inf = groß gewachsen) Mensch talleine langee Latte sein, ein langeer Lulatsch sein, ein langees Elend or Ende sein — to be a (real) beanpole (inf)
2. adv comp -er, superl am -stender lange ersehnte Tag/Urlaub — the longed-for day/holiday (esp Brit) or vacation (US)
lange gestreckt — long; Dorf auch strung-out
lange gezogen (Ton, Schrei) — long-drawn-out; Kurve long
nur einen Augenblick lange — only for a moment or second
mein ganzes Leben lange — all my life, my whole life
See:→ auch lange, entlang* * *die1) (the distance from one end to the other of an object, period of time etc: What is the length of your car?; Please note down the length of time it takes you to do this.) length2) (in racing, the measurement from end to end of a horse, boat etc: He won by a length; The other boat is several lengths in front.) length* * *Län·ge<-, -n>[ˈlɛŋə]f1. (räumliche Ausdehnung) lengthin die \Länge wachsen to shoot upauf eine \Länge von etw dat for sthdie Autobahn war auf eine \Länge von 45 Kilometern blockiert the motorway was blocked for 45 kilometresder \Länge nach lengthways, lengthwise; (in ganzer Länge) flat on one's facedie Frau fiel der \Länge nach hin the woman fell flat on her facedas Regal stürzte der \Länge nach zu Boden the shelf fell flat on the floorvon bestimmter \Länge of a certain lengthich benötige Pfähle von drei Metern \Länge I need posts three metres in length2. (zeitliche Ausdehnung) length, durationin voller \Länge in its entiretyetw in die \Länge ziehen to drag out sth seper zog das Gespräch in die \Länge he dragged the conversation outdie Verhandlungen zogen sich in die \Länge the negotiations dragged onwas hast du eigentlich für eine \Länge? how tall are you?6. (Abstand vom Nullmeridian) longitudedie Insel liegt 38° östlicher \Länge the longitudinal position of the island is 38° east* * *länger, am längsten Adverb1) a long timelange schlafen/arbeiten — sleep/work late
es ist noch gar nicht lange her, dass ich ihn gesehen habe — it's not long since I saw him; I saw him not long ago
sie wird es nicht mehr lange machen — (ugs.) she won't last much longer; s. auch länger 3.
2) (bei weitem)das ist [noch] lange nicht alles — that's not all by any means; that's not all, not by a long chalk or shot (coll.)
* * *1. zeitlich: for a long time;nicht lange darauf not long after(ward[s]);er braucht immer lange it always takes him a while; pej he’s very slow;das ist schon lange her that was a long time ago;es ist schon lange her, dass it’s been a long time since, umg it’s ages since;wie lange lernen Sie schon Englisch? how long have you been learning English?;so lange wie as long as;so lange bis till, until;da kannst du lange warten umg you can wait till the cows come home;du brauchst nicht lange zu fragen you don’t need to ask;er fragte nicht erst lange he didn’t stop to ask2. verstärkend:(noch) lange nicht fertig/gut genug etc not nearly ready/good enough etc;ist er fertig? - noch lange nicht umg has he finished? - nowhere near ( oder nothing like, iron you must be joking);das ist noch lange kein Grund, um aufzugeben that’s absolutely no reason for giving up, that certainly doesn’t mean you’ve got to give up;deswegen brauchst du dir noch lange nichts einzubilden you mustn’t go getting any ideas just because of that, don’t imagine that’s anything at all special* * *länger, am längsten Adverb1) a long timelange schlafen/arbeiten — sleep/work late
es ist noch gar nicht lange her, dass ich ihn gesehen habe — it's not long since I saw him; I saw him not long ago
sie wird es nicht mehr lange machen — (ugs.) she won't last much longer; s. auch länger 3.
2) (bei weitem)das ist [noch] lange nicht alles — that's not all by any means; that's not all, not by a long chalk or shot (coll.)
* * *-n f.footage n.length n.longitude n.tallness n. -
15 arriver
arriver [aʀive]➭ TABLE 1━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. intransitive verb• réveille-toi, on arrive ! wake up, we're almost there!• arriver le premier (à une course) to come in first ; (à une soirée, une réception) to arrive firstb. ( = approcher) [saison, nuit, personne, véhicule] to come• j'arrive ! I'm coming!• le lierre arrive jusqu'au 1er étage the ivy goes up to the 1st floor• et le problème des salaires ? -- j'y arrive and what about the wages problem? -- I'm just coming to thatd. ( = réussir) arriver à (+ infinitif) to manage to• tu y arrives ? how are you getting on?e. ( = atteindre une réussite sociale) to succeedf. ( = se produire) to happen• tu n'oublies jamais ? -- ça m'arrive don't you ever forget? -- yes, sometimes• cela ne m'arrivera plus ! I won't let it happen again!g. ► en arriver à ( = finir par) to come to• on n'en est pas encore arrivé là ! (résultat négatif) we've not reached that stage yet! ; (résultat positif) we've not got that far yet!• on en arrive à se demander si... it makes you wonder whether...► il arrive que/de• il m'est arrivé plusieurs fois de le voir I have seen him or it several times* * *aʀive
1.
verbe intransitif1) ( parvenir) [personne, avion, lettre] to arrive; ( s'acheminer) [personne, pluie] to comearriver dans les premiers — ( en compétition) to be among the first to finish; ( à une soirée) to be among the first to arrive
2) ( atteindre)arriver aux chevilles — [eau] to come up to one's ankles; [jupe] to come down to one's ankles
arriver (jusqu')à quelqu'un — [nouvelle, odeur] to reach somebody
‘qu'en est-il du chômage?’ - ‘j'y arrive’ — ‘what about unemployment?’ - ‘I'm coming to that’
3) ( réussir) ( socialement) to succeed; gén4) ( aboutir)j'en arrive à croire que... — I'm beginning to think that...
5) ( survenir) [accident, catastrophe] to happence sont des choses qui arrivent — these things happen, it's just one of those things
2.
verbe impersonnel* * *aʀive1. vi1) [train, visiteur, courrier] to arrivearriver à Paris — to get to Paris, to arrive in Paris
Il arrive à Paris à 8 h. — He gets to Paris at 8., He arrives in Paris at 8.
J'arrive à l'école à huit heures. — I get to school at 8 o'clock., I arrive at school at 8 o'clock.
j'arrive! — I'm coming!, coming!
en arriver à faire — to end up doing, to get to the point of doing
2) (= survenir) to happenCe sont des choses qui arrivent. — These things happen.
3)arriver à terme [contrat] — to come to an end
4) (= réussir)arriver à [perfection, but] — to reach, to achieve
J'espère que je vais y arriver. — I hope I'm going to manage it.
2. vb impersIl m'arrive de dormir jusqu'à midi. — I sometimes sleep till midday.
* * *arriver verb table: aimerA vi1 ( dans l'espace) [personne, avion, train, colis, lettre] to arrive; [nuage, pluie] to come; arriver de [personne, train, bus] to come from; arriver par [eau, gaz] to come through; arriver ensemble to arrive together; elle n'est pas encore arrivée she hasn't arrived yet; arriver à 13 h à Paris to arrive in Paris at 1 pm; arriver dans le centre ville/sur la berge to reach the town centreGB/the bank; arriver par bateau/avion/le train to arrive by boat/plane/train; je suis arrivé chez moi I got home; j'arriverai chez toi dans l'après-midi/tard I'll get to ou arrive at your place in the afternoon/late; appelle-nous dès que tu seras arrivé give us a call as soon as you arrive ou get there; arriver en avance/en retard/à l'heure to arrive early/late/on time; arriver juste au bon moment to arrive ou come at just the right moment; je suis arrivée avant/après toi I got here before/after you; elle est arrivée au Japon en 1982 she came to Japan in 1982; dépêche-toi, le train arrive! hurry up, the train is coming!; regarde qui arrive look who's coming; le mauvais temps arrive par le nord the bad weather is coming from the north; l'eau arrive par ce tuyau the water comes in through this pipe; j'arrive! I'm coming!; j'arrive du centre ville I've just come from the city centreGB; j'arrive de Londres I've just come from London; arriver en courant to come running up; arriver sur qn [orage, cyclone] to hit sb; [personne] to descend on sb; l'eau nous arrivait aux chevilles the water came up to our ankles, we were ankle-deep in water; l'eau arrivait au niveau de la fenêtre the water came up to the window; ma jupe m'arrive aux chevilles my skirt comes down to my ankles; arriver (jusqu')à qn [nouvelle, rumeur, odeur] to reach sb; heureusement cela n'est pas arrivé jusqu'à lui or jusqu'à ses oreilles○ luckily it didn't reach him ou his ears; arriver sur scène [chanteur, acteur] to come on stage; arriver sur le marché [personnes, produits] to come on the market;2 ( dans le temps) arriver en tête/en queue to come first/last; en arrivant au ministère when he/she became minister; il est arrivé le premier he arrived first, he was the first to arrive; arriver dans les premiers ( en compétition) to be among the first to finish; ( à une soirée) to be among the first to arrive; de nombreux signes montrent qu'on arrive à la fin d'une période a number of signs show that we are coming to the end of an era; arriver à son terme [contrat] to expire; [projet] to come to an end; ce plan arrive au moment où this plan comes at a time when; maintenant j'arrive au problème de la drogue now, I'll come to the problem of drugs; ‘qu'en est-il du chômage?’-‘j'y arrive’ ‘what about unemployment?’-‘I'm coming to that’; tu arrives à un âge où you are getting to an age when;3 (avec un raisonnement, après une suite d'événements) arriver à une somme to come to an amount; arriver à des résultats to achieve results; arriver à une solution to find a solution; arriver à une conclusion to come to a conclusion; arriver à un accord to reach an agreement;4 ( réussir) arriver à faire to manage to do, to succeed in doing; je n'arrive pas à faire I can't do; il n'arrive plus à la suivre he can't keep up with her; j'essaie, mais je n'y arrive pas I'm trying, but I can't do it; je n'arrive à rien I'm getting nowhere; arriver à ses fins to achieve one's ends;5 ( aboutir) on en arrive à des absurdités you end up with nonsense; comment peut-on en arriver là? how could it have come to this?; (parlant d'un pays, d'une économie) how did things get into that state?; j'en arrive à croire que/à me demander si… I'm beginning to think that/to wonder if…;6 ( survenir) [accident, catastrophe] to happen; ce sont des choses qui arrivent these things happen, it's just one of those things; cela n'était pas arrivé depuis longtemps it hadn't happened for a long time; ça arrive mais c'est rare it does happen, but not very often; tout peut arriver anything can happen; ça n'arrive qu'aux autres it only happens to other people; on ne sait jamais ce qui peut arriver you never know what may happen; un accident est si vite arrivé accidents happen so easily; voilà ce qui arrive quand on ne fait pas attention that's what happens when you don't pay attention; la même chose m'est arrivée il y a un mois the same thing happened to me a month ago; tu vois, tout arrive! I told you, you should never give up hope!;7 ( réussir socialement) [personne] to succeed; faire n'importe quoi pour arriver to do anything to succeed.B v impers il est arrivé quelque chose something has happened (à to); il arrive toujours quelque chose something always happens; qu'est-il arrivé? what happened?; il n'est rien arrivé nothing happened; il n'arrive jamais rien ici nothing ever happens around here; il arrive un moment où there comes a time when; il arrive que qn fasse sometimes sb does; il m'arrive d'être en retard/d'aller à l'opéra sometimes I'm late/I go to the opera; est -ce qu'il arrive que le courrier se perde? does the mail ever go missing GB ou get lost?; est-ce qu'il t'arrive d'y penser? do you ever think about it?; qu'est-il arrivé à ta voiture? what happened to your car?; que t'arrive-t-il? what's wrong with you?; il m'est arrivé une chose bizarre something odd happened to me; quoi qu'il arrive whatever happens; je t'appellerai quoi qu'il arrive I'll call you whatever happens ou come what may; que peut-il arriver au pays? what can happen to the country?[arive] verbe intransitif (aux être)A.[DANS L'ESPACE]1. [parvenir à destination - voyageur, véhicule, courrier] to arrivearriver chez soi to get ou to arrive homedès que je suis arrivé au Canada as soon as I arrived in ou got to Canadamême en roulant vite ça nous fait arriver après minuit even if we drive fast we won't get there before midnightnous sommes bientôt ou presque arrivés we're almost therequi est arrivé après l'appel? [en classe] who came in after I called the register (UK) ou called roll (US)?être bien arrivé [personne, colis] to have arrived safelyvous voilà enfin arrivés, je m'inquiétaisa. [ici] here you are ou you've arrived at last, I was getting worriedb. [là-bas] you got there at last, I was getting worrieda. [ici] which way did you come?b. [là-bas] which way did you go?ils arrivent de Tokyo they've just arrived ou come from Tokyo2. [finir - dans un classement] to come (in)arriver le premier/derniera. [coureur] to come in first/last, to take first/last placeb. [invité] to arrive first/last, to be the first/last to arrivetu es prêt? — j'arrive tout de suite/dans une minute are you ready? — I'm coming/I'll be with you in a minutej'arrive, j'arrive! I'm coming!une odeur de chocolat arrivait de la cuisine a smell of chocolate wafted in ou came from the kitchenB.[DANS LE TEMPS]1. [événement, jour, moment] to comeNoël arrive bientôt Christmas will soon be here ou with usle jour arrivera où... the day will come when...la soixantaine/retraite est vite arrivée sixty/retirement is soon here2. [se produire] to happentu ne te décourages jamais? — si, ça m'arrive don't you ever get discouraged? — yes, from time to timetu es encore en retard. Que cela ne t'arrive plus! you're late again. Don't let it happen again!————————[arive] verbe impersonnel1. [venir]2. [aventure, événement]s'il m'arrivait quelque chose, prévenez mon père if anything happens ou should anything happen to me, let my father know3. [se produire parfois]il arrive que: ne peut-il pas arriver que l'ordinateur se trompe? couldn't the computer ever make a mistake?————————arriver à verbe plus préposition1. [niveau, taille, lieu]le fil du téléphone n'arrive pas jusqu'à ma chambre the phone cord doesn't reach ou isn't long enough to reach my bedroomla boue m'arrivait jusqu'aux genoux the mud came up to my knees, I was knee-deep in mudoù (en) étions-nous arrivés la semaine dernière? [dans une leçon] where did we get up to ou had we got to last week?j'arrive à un âge où... I've reached an age when...et ses tableaux? — j'y arrive/arrivais what about his paintings? — I'm/I was coming to that3. [rang, résultat] to get[succès] to achievetu as refait l'addition? — oui, j'arrive au même total que toi did you redo the calculations? — yes, I get the same result as yousi tu veux arriver if you want to get on ou to succeed in life4. [pouvoir, réussir à]arriver à faire quelque chose to manage to do something, to succeed in doing somethingtu n'arriveras jamais à la convaincre you'll never manage to convince her, you'll never succeed in convincing hertu m'aides? je n'y arrive pas! can you help me? I can't do ou manage it!5. (locution)(en) arriver à quelque chose [en venir à]: comment peut-on en arriver au suicide? how can anybody get to the point of contemplating suicide?j'en arrive à penser que... I'm beginning to think that...j'en arrive parfois à me demander si... sometimes I (even) wonder if...en arriver là: depuis, je ne lui parle plus — c'est malheureux d'en arriver là since then, I haven't spoken to him — it's a shame it has come to that -
16 Länge
f; -, -n1. length (auch zeitlich); (Größe) height; 20 Meter in der Länge, mit einer Länge von 20 Metern 20 met|res (Am. -ers) long ( oder in length), with a length of 20 met|res (Am. -ers); der Länge nach lengthwise; der Länge nach hinfallen fall flat on one’s face, go sprawling; in seiner vollen Länge senden etc. broadcast etc. in full; in die Länge ziehen fig. draw ( oder drag) out; (Erzählung) spin out; sich in die Länge ziehen drag on; auf die Länge umg. in the long run2. SPORT length; mit einer Länge gewinnen win by a length; um Längen gewinnen win by a mile; um Längen geschlagen werden be beaten out of sight3. (langweilige Stelle) longueur; der Film hatte Längen the film ( Am auch movie) had its dull patches5. GEOG., ASTRON., MATH. longitude; auf oder unter 10 Grad westlicher Länge liegen have a longitude of 10 degrees West, lie at 10 degrees West longitude* * *die Längelongitude; footage; tallness; length* * *lạn|ge I ['laŋə] (S Ger) [laŋ] (Aus)adv['lɛŋɐ] comp - er ['lɛŋɐ] ['lɛŋstə] superl am lä\#ngsten ['lɛŋstn]die Sitzung hat heute lange/nicht lange gedauert — the meeting went on (for) a long time/didn't go on (for) long today
wie lange lernst du schon Deutsch/bist du schon hier? — how long have you been learning German (for)/been here (for)?
es ist noch gar nicht lange her, dass wir diese Frage diskutiert haben — we discussed this question not long ago, it's not long since we discussed this question
er wird es nicht mehr lange machen (inf) — he won't last long, he's not got long to go
bis Weihnachten ist es ja noch lange hin — it's still a long time till Christmas, we're a long way from Christmas
lange nicht gesehen (inf) — long time no see (inf)
je länger, je lieber — the more the better; (zeitlich) the longer the better
2) (inf = längst)noch lange nicht — not by any means, not by a long chalk (Brit inf) or shot
lange nicht so... — nowhere near as..., not nearly as...
er verdient lange nicht so viel — he doesn't earn nearly as much, he doesn't earn anywhere near as much
II [laŋ]wenn er das schafft, kannst du das schon lange — if he can do it, you can do it easily
1. adj comp - er['lɛŋɐ] superl ['lɛŋɐ] -ste(r, s) ['lɛŋstə]1) long['lɛŋstn]; Film, Roman, Aufenthalt, Rede long, lengthydas war seit Langem geplant — it was planned a long time ago
in nicht allzu langeer Zeit — before too or very long, in the not too distant future
etw länger machen — to make sth longer, to lengthen sth
es ist eine langee Strecke bis Bristol, jedenfalls länger, als ich gedacht hatte — it's a long way to Bristol, at least, further than I thought
die Tage werden wieder länger — the days are drawing out, the days are getting longer
er machte ein langees Gesicht — his face fell
des Langen und Breiten — at great length
See:2) (inf = groß gewachsen) Mensch talleine langee Latte sein, ein langeer Lulatsch sein, ein langees Elend or Ende sein — to be a (real) beanpole (inf)
2. adv comp -er, superl am -stender lange ersehnte Tag/Urlaub — the longed-for day/holiday (esp Brit) or vacation (US)
lange gestreckt — long; Dorf auch strung-out
lange gezogen (Ton, Schrei) — long-drawn-out; Kurve long
nur einen Augenblick lange — only for a moment or second
mein ganzes Leben lange — all my life, my whole life
See:→ auch lange, entlang* * *die1) (the distance from one end to the other of an object, period of time etc: What is the length of your car?; Please note down the length of time it takes you to do this.) length2) (in racing, the measurement from end to end of a horse, boat etc: He won by a length; The other boat is several lengths in front.) length* * *Län·ge<-, -n>[ˈlɛŋə]f1. (räumliche Ausdehnung) lengthin die \Länge wachsen to shoot upauf eine \Länge von etw dat for sthdie Autobahn war auf eine \Länge von 45 Kilometern blockiert the motorway was blocked for 45 kilometresder \Länge nach lengthways, lengthwise; (in ganzer Länge) flat on one's facedie Frau fiel der \Länge nach hin the woman fell flat on her facedas Regal stürzte der \Länge nach zu Boden the shelf fell flat on the floorvon bestimmter \Länge of a certain lengthich benötige Pfähle von drei Metern \Länge I need posts three metres in length2. (zeitliche Ausdehnung) length, durationin voller \Länge in its entiretyetw in die \Länge ziehen to drag out sth seper zog das Gespräch in die \Länge he dragged the conversation outdie Verhandlungen zogen sich in die \Länge the negotiations dragged onwas hast du eigentlich für eine \Länge? how tall are you?6. (Abstand vom Nullmeridian) longitudedie Insel liegt 38° östlicher \Länge the longitudinal position of the island is 38° east* * *länger, am längsten Adverb1) a long timelange schlafen/arbeiten — sleep/work late
es ist noch gar nicht lange her, dass ich ihn gesehen habe — it's not long since I saw him; I saw him not long ago
sie wird es nicht mehr lange machen — (ugs.) she won't last much longer; s. auch länger 3.
2) (bei weitem)das ist [noch] lange nicht alles — that's not all by any means; that's not all, not by a long chalk or shot (coll.)
* * *20 Meter in der Länge, mit einer Länge von 20 Metern 20 metres (US -ers) long ( oder in length), with a length of 20 metres (US -ers);der Länge nach lengthwise;der Länge nach hinfallen fall flat on one’s face, go sprawling;sich in die Länge ziehen drag on;auf die Länge umg in the long run2. SPORT length;mit einer Länge gewinnen win by a length;um Längen gewinnen win by a mile;um Längen geschlagen werden be beaten out of sight3. (langweilige Stelle) longueur;der Film hatte Längen the film ( Am auch movie) had its dull patches5. GEOG, ASTRON, MATH longitude;unter 10 Grad westlicher Länge liegen have a longitude of 10 degrees West, lie at 10 degrees West longitude* * *länger, am längsten Adverb1) a long timelange schlafen/arbeiten — sleep/work late
es ist noch gar nicht lange her, dass ich ihn gesehen habe — it's not long since I saw him; I saw him not long ago
sie wird es nicht mehr lange machen — (ugs.) she won't last much longer; s. auch länger 3.
2) (bei weitem)das ist [noch] lange nicht alles — that's not all by any means; that's not all, not by a long chalk or shot (coll.)
* * *-n f.footage n.length n.longitude n.tallness n. -
17 få
I a; ( komp -- fǽrre, superl -- fǽrrest)немно́гие; ма́ло, не́сколькоII vt, 4med få ord — кра́тко, немногосло́вно
получа́тьfå et brev — получи́ть письмо́
få at víde — узна́ть
få fat på méningen — улови́ть смысл
få fat i én — заста́ть [найти́] кого́-л.
få én til... — заста́вить кого́-л.
* * *derive, few, few and far between, gain, get, get into, handful, have, receive, take on, trickle* * *I. adj few;( især efter in, only, not, no more than, within:) a few ( fx he had only a few opponents);[ ikke (så) få] not a few, quite a few, quite a number;[ få eller ingen] few if any;[ for få] too few;[ have for få folk] be short-handed;[ kun få] only a few, not (very) many,F few;[ meget få] very few;[ kun meget få] only a very few;[ nogle få] a few, some few;[ med få ord] briefly;[ få penge] only a little money;[ nogle få udvalgte] a chosen few;[ få er udvalgte] few are chosen.II. vb (fik, fået)( modtage) get, receive; have ( fx a letter, a reply; you shall have the book tomorrow);F obtain;F acquire ( fx a taste for something, a reputation for something);( tjene) get, earn;( en sygdom) get,F contract ( fx pneumonia),( blive smittet af) catch,F contract ( fx malaria);( bringe til verden) have ( fx she had a child by him), get, bear;( om mad og drikke) have;( om straffe) get ( fx five years);( blive gift med) marry;(i forb med perf part: bevirke at) get, have ( fx get (el. have) one's hair cut; I had the table mended);( med besvær) manage to ( fx I managed to open the door);[ kunne fås]( om vare) be obtainable ( fx the book is obtainable from allbooksellers), be available ( fx the dresses are available in two lengths), come ( fx this wallpaper comes in white, green, and blue);[ det kan ikke fås længere] it is no longer obtainable;[ fås hos alle boghandlere] obtainable from all booksellers;[ være at få] be about (el. around) ( fx there aren't many jobs around);[ du får blive hjemme] you will have to stay at home;[ få hinanden] be married, marry each other;[ vi får se] we shall see;T (dvs han overdrev) he laid it on thick; he really put it on;[ få en lille] have a baby;[få ( sig) noget at spise] have something to eat;[ det får være som det vil] be that as it may;[ med præp & adv:][ få fat i (el. på)]( om ting også) get one's hands on;( hente) fetch ( fx fetch a doctor at once!);(dvs skaffe) hard to come by;[ få fat på meningen] catch the meaning,T get the idea;[ få en lektie for] be set a piece of homework;(se også penge);[ få ham fra det] make him drop it; talk him out of it;(dvs skille ad) get apart;[ han kan ikke få et ord frem] he cannot utter a word;[ få igen] = få tilbage;[ jeg fik ham med] I made him come, I brought him;(dvs gik glip af) I missed that;[ man kan få det med ham som man vil] you can have (it) your own way with him;[ få op](dvs åbne) get open, open ( fx a door, a window);(se også øje);( løse) undo ( fx a button), untie ( fx a knot);[ få en frakke på] get a coat on;[ hvad fik du til middag?] what did you have for dinner?[ få til at]( bevirke, F) cause to ( fx this caused him to leave the country),( formå) get to ( fx I got him to help me; I got the car to start),(T: lade) have ( fx I had him paint the house (, finish the job)for me),( tvinge) make ( fx they made him pay the money back);[ det er ikke til at få] it is not to be had,F it is not obtainable;[ jeg kunne ikke få mig selv til at gøre det] I could not get (el. bring) myself to do it;[ få noget tilbage] get something back,( noget tabt) recover something;[ få 60p tilbage] get 60p change ( på et pund for a pound);[ få tilbage på en fempundseddel] change a five-pound note;[ hvor er de penge du fik tilbage?] where is the change?[ han har ikke fået ret meget ud af det] he has not got much out of it;[ det fik han ikke noget ud af] that did not get him anywhere;[ jeg kunne ikke få noget ud af ham] I could not get anything out of him;[ han kunne ikke få den tanke ud af hovedet] he could not get that idea out of his head;[ få noget ud af tilværelsen] get something out of life. -
18 beaucoup
beaucoup [boku]adverb• beaucoup pensent que... a lot of people think that...• beaucoup d'entre eux a lot or many of them• il en reste beaucoup/il n'en reste pas beaucoup there is a lot left/there isn't much left• il a eu beaucoup de chance he's been very lucky► pas beaucoup de (quantité) not much ; (nombre) not many* * *boku
1.
1) ( modifiant un verbe) a lot; ( dans les phrases interrogatives et négatives) muchaimer beaucoup quelqu'un/quelque chose — to like somebody/something a lot ou a great deal
2) ( modifiant un adverbe) much, farelle va beaucoup mieux — she's much ou a lot better
beaucoup moins/plus d'argent — far ou much less/more money
beaucoup trop — far too much, much too much
beaucoup trop grand — far ou much too big
3) ( un grand nombre)beaucoup de — a lot of [objets, idées]; ( dans les phrases interrogatives et négatives) much, many; ( une grande quantité)
beaucoup de — a lot of, a great deal of [argent, eau, bruit]
il n'y a pas beaucoup de monde — there aren't many ou a lot of people
4) ( avec valeur pronominale) many
2.
de beaucoup locution adverbiale by far
3.
pour beaucoup locution adverbiale* * *boku1. adv1) (= en grande quantité) a lotIl boit beaucoup. — He drinks a lot.
Il ne boit pas beaucoup. — He doesn't drink much., He doesn't drink a lot.
2) (suivi de plus, moins, trop) much, a lotil est beaucoup plus grand — he is much taller, he is a lot taller
3)beaucoup de — a lot of, many
beaucoup d'étudiants — a lot of students, many students
beaucoup de touristes — a lot of tourists, many tourists
Elle fait beaucoup de fautes. — She makes a lot of mistakes.
Il y avait beaucoup de monde au concert. — There were a lot of people at the concert.
J'ai eu beaucoup de chance. — I was very lucky.
pas beaucoup de (nombre) — not many, not a lot of
Il n'y a pas beaucoup de touristes. — There aren't many tourists., There aren't a lot of tourists., (quantité) not much, not a lot of
Il n'a pas beaucoup d'argent. — He hasn't got much money., He hasn't got a lot of money.
4)2. pron1) (personnes) a lot of people, manyBeaucoup le savent. — A lot of people know that.
2) (choses) a lot, manyBeaucoup ont été endommagés durant le transport. — A lot were damaged in transport., Many were damaged in transport.
* * *A adv1 ( modifiant un verbe) a lot; ( dans les phrases interrogatives et négatives) much; gagner/écrire/risquer beaucoup to earn/to write/to risk a lot ou a great deal; je vous remercie beaucoup thank you very much; aimer beaucoup qn/qch to like sb/sth a lot ou a great deal; elle va beaucoup au théâtre she goes to the theatreGB a lot ou a great deal; je n'apprécie pas beaucoup leur comportement I don't much care for their behaviourGB; la fin du roman surprend beaucoup the ending of the novel is very surprising; s'intéresser beaucoup à qch to be very interested in sth; il a beaucoup changé he has changed a lot ou a great deal; j'ai beaucoup aimé le concert I enjoyed the concert a lot ou very much ou a great deal; je n'ai pas beaucoup aimé le concert I didn't enjoy the concert very much; il n'écrit plus beaucoup he doesn't write much any more; a-t-il beaucoup joué ces derniers temps? has he played much recently?; beaucoup à boire a lot to drink; il a encore beaucoup à apprendre he still has a lot to learn; vous avez déjà fait beaucoup pour moi you've already done a lot ou a great deal for me; c'est beaucoup dire that's going a bit far; c'est beaucoup pour ton âge it's a lot for your age; ils sont 40 élèves par classe, c'est beaucoup there are 40 pupils in each class, that's a lot; c'est déjà beaucoup qu'elle soit venue it's already quite something that she came; c'est déjà beaucoup s'il ne nous met pas dehors it'll already be something if he doesn't throw us out;2 ( modifiant un adverbe) much, far; elle va beaucoup mieux she's much ou a lot better; beaucoup moins much less; beaucoup moins d'argent far ou much less money; beaucoup moins de gens/de livres far fewer people/books; c'est beaucoup moins difficile qu'avant it's much easier than before, it's much less difficult than before; beaucoup plus much more, a lot more; beaucoup plus d'argent far ou much more money; il travaille beaucoup plus vite que moi he works much faster than I do; beaucoup trop far too much, much too much; il est resté beaucoup trop longtemps he stayed far ou much too long; c'est beaucoup trop grand it's far ou much too big; j'en ai déjà beaucoup trop dit I've already said far ou much too much;3 ( un grand nombre) beaucoup de a lot of, lots of○ [objets, problèmes, idées]; ( dans les phrases interrogatives et négatives) much, many; ( une grande quantité) beaucoup de a lot of, a great deal of [argent, eau, bruit, chaleur] ; j'ai mangé beaucoup de cerises I've eaten a lot of cherries; il y a beaucoup de moustiques cette année there are a lot of mosquitoes this year; il ne reste plus beaucoup de places pour le concert there aren't many seats left for the concert; des gens intéressants j'en ai rencontré beaucoup au cours de mes voyages I met a lot of interesting people during my travels; a-t-il gagné beaucoup de matchs? did he win many matches?; cela ne m'a pas pris beaucoup de temps it didn't take me much time; il ne reste plus beaucoup de pain there isn't much bread left; il n'y a pas beaucoup de monde there aren't many ou a lot of people; avec beaucoup de gentillesse very kindly; avec beaucoup de soin very carefully, with great care; il a du courage et même beaucoup he has courage, and a lot of it;4 ( avec valeur pronominale) many; parmi ces gâteaux, beaucoup me tentent I find many ou a lot of these cakes tempting; beaucoup des lieux que nous avons visités many ou a lot of the places we visited; beaucoup de ces gens/d'entre eux many ou a lot of these people/of them; beaucoup sont retraités many are pensioners; le soir certains lisent, beaucoup regardent la télévision in the evenings some read, many watch television; beaucoup sont tentés de le croire many are inclined to believe it.B de beaucoup loc adv by far; elle le surpasse de beaucoup she surpasses him by far; elle est de beaucoup la plus intelligente she's by far the most intelligent; je préfère de beaucoup la musique baroque I prefer baroque music by far, I much prefer baroque music; ma montre retarde de beaucoup my watch is very slow; il s'en faut de beaucoup qu'elle ait le niveau she's nowhere near up to standard; il ne s'en est pas fallu de beaucoup qu'il remportât le championnat he came very close to winning the championship.C pour beaucoup loc adv il compte pour beaucoup dans la réussite du projet he counts for a lot in the success of the project; ta réussite est due pour beaucoup à your success is largely due to; être pour beaucoup dans to have a lot to do with.[boku] adverbeil travaille beaucoup he works a lot ou a great dealbeaucoup moins intéressant much ou a lot less interestingbeaucoup trop fort much ou far too loud[de nombreuses choses] a lotil n'y en a pas beaucoup qui réussissent not a lot of people ou not many succeednous étions beaucoup à le croire many ou a lot of us believed itil est pour beaucoup dans son succès he played a large part in ou he had a great deal to do with her success4. [modifiant un adjectif]imprudent, il l'est même beaucoup he's really quite careless————————beaucoup de locution déterminantebeaucoup d'entre nous many ou a lot of uselle a beaucoup de goût she has a lot of ou a great deal of tasteil y en a beaucoup there is/are a lot————————de beaucoup locution adverbiale1. [avec un comparatif ou un superlatif] by farelle est de beaucoup la plus douée she's the most talented by far, she is by far the most talented2. [avec un verbe]il te dépasse de beaucoup he's far ou much taller than youje la préfère, et de beaucoup I much prefer her -
19 UNDIR
* * *prep. with dat. and acc.I. with dat.1) under;þá brast í sundr jörð undir hesti hans, the earth burst asunder under his horse;þungr undir árum, heavy to row;þeir leita þeirra ok finna þá undir eyju einni, they seek for them and find them under an island;undir þeim hesti var alinn Eiðfaxi, that horse was the sire of E.;2) fig. (undir þeim biskupi eru ellifu hundruð kirkna);eiga undir sér, to have under one, in one’s power;eiga fé undir e-m, to have money in his hands, deposited with him;3) under, depending on;orlög vár eru eigi undir orðum þínum, our fate does not depend on thy words;hann á vin undir hverjum manni, he has a friend in every man;4) ellipt. or adverbial usages;vóru þau (Njáll ok Bergþóra) úbrunnin undir, they were unburned underneath;meðan töður manna eru undir, whilst the hay is lying (mown, but not got in);ef þér þœtti nökkut undir um mik, if thou hast cared at all for me;sól (dagr) er undir, the sun (day) is down, under the horizon;væri oss mikit undir, at vér fengim liðsinni hans, it were worth much to us to get his help;II. with acc.1) under, underneath, denoting motion (var settr undir hann stóll);2) of time;hrökk undir miðdegi, it drew close to midday;3) fig. leggja undir sik, to lay under oneself, to subjugate;þjóna undir e-n, to serve under one;þessa laxveiði gaf hann undir kirkjuna, he made it over to the church;bera fé undir e-n, to bribe one;leggja virðing konungs undir vápn mín, to let it depend on my weapons;ef undir oss skal koma kjörit, if the choice is to be left with us;Hjört þótti mér þeir hafa undir, H. me thought they got under;ef kona tekr mann undir bónda sinn, if she be untrue to her husband;bjóða fé í leigu undir sik, to offer to pay money for one’s passage.* * *prep. with dat. and acc.; an older monosyllabic und is often used in poets, Ls. 44, Hdl. 11, Þkv. 16, Hm. 58; und valkesti, und árum, Lex. Poët.; und hánum, Haustl.: unt = und, Akv. 26 (Bugge): [Ulf. undar; A. S., Engl., and Dan. under; O. H. G. untar; Germ. unter]:—under, underneath, below.A. With dat., undir hesti hans, Nj. 158; tréit u. honum, underneath him, 202; mána vegr und hánum, Haustl.; skipit undir þeim, Háv. 42, Ld. 78; troða undir fótum, Fms. ii. 172; bera undir hendi sér, Eg. 237, Nj. 200; sverðit brotnaði undir hjaltinu, 43; sitja undir borðum, 68; róa undir seglum, Fms. viii. 131; skip þungt undir árum, heavy to row. Eg. 354; undir túngarði, Ld. 138; u. veggnum, Háv. 49; u. haugnum, Eb. 94; u. heiðinni, Eg. 277; fjöll undir jöklum, Fb. i. 540; liggja undir nesi einu, Nj. 43; undir garðinum, Njarð. 374; und kvernum, Ls. 44: und Miðgarði, Hdl. 11; undir Þríhyrningi, Nj. 89, 114; undir Hrauni, Eb. 52; undir Felli, Nj. 16, of places seated under a fell, Landn. passim.2. hvárt þat fé hefði undir því kvikendi alizt, of a dam, Grág. ii. 312; undir þeim var alinn Freyfaxi, she ( the mare) was the dam of F., Landn. 195.II. metaph. usages; alla sem undir honum eru, Sks. 677 B; u. þeim biskupi eru ellifu hundrað kirkna, Rb. 332; búa u. e-m, Fms. i. 107; undir hendi, höndum e-m, hönd (B.I. fine); eiga undir sér, to have under one, in one’s power, Fms. iv. 271, Ld. 250, Vígl. 33, Sturl. i. 20; see eiga (A. IV. 2): eiga fé undir e-m, to have money in his hands, deposited with him, Nj. 101; taka tíu hundruð u. Eiríki bónda, ten hundred in E.’s keeping, Dipl. ii. 6; tvau hundruð u. sonum herra Stepháns, i. 11; þeim manni er féit er undir, Grág. i. 184; er und einum mér öll hodd Hniflunga, Akv. 26.2. under, depending on; svá var ávísat sem u. væri bani ykkar beggja, Am. 12; örlög vár eru eigi u. orðum þínum, Karl. 339; hans líf stendr þar u., Stj. 219; undir því væri, at ek hefða góð málalok, Nj. 47; hvárt þykkir þer u. því sem mest, 263; mikit þótti spökum mönnum undir, at …, Ld. 38; undir þínum þokka þykkir mér mest af þínum frændum, I am most concerned for what thou thinkest, Lv. 72.3. undir vitni e-s, 623. 15; u. handlagi e-s, Dipl. i. 11; hann á vin undir hverjum manni, he has a friend in every man, Fas. i. 290; jafnan er munr undir manns liði (= í manns liði), a man’s help is something, Bs. i; þó at smátt sé und einum, though one man (more or less) makes little difference, Hallfred; um þá gripi er görsemar eru undir, things of value, Gísl. 80; lítil eru tiðendi u. förum mínum, Fms. xi. 118; fela ván sína alla u. Guði, 686 B. 2; eiga traust u. e-m, Fms. i. 261; undir trausti, skjóli, hlífð … e-s, 623. 15; u. griðum, Grág. ii. 194; segja hvat honum er undir fréttinni, Grág. (Kb.) i. 51; mjök var undir heimboði við þik, at vér vildim, Ld. 236; hvat undir mun búa bæn þessi, Eg. 764; þat bjó mest undir ferð Áka, at …, Fms. xi. 45; jarl spyrr hvat undir kveðju sé, Fas. iii. 567.III. ellipt. or adverbial usages; vóru þau úbrunnin undir, underneath, Nj. 208; mér þótti hann vera í rauðum hosum undir, 214; var þar undir niðri skógr, Eg. 580; meðan töður manna eru undir, whilst the hay is down, of hay mown, but not got in, Nj. 192; hart mun þykkja u. at búa, 90.2. at þat sé eigi verr undir, enn vara, of not less value, substance, K. Þ. K. 172; ef mér þætti nökkut u. um mik, if I thought it mattered aught, Nj. 19; þykki mér mikit u., at …, does it matter much to thee? 65; hverjum manni muni þykkja nokkut undir, at …, Sturl. i. 176.B. With acc., under, underneath, Lat. sub, denoting motion; var settr undir hann stóll, Nj. 269; koma fótum undir sik, 202; fara undir skipit, Njarð. 376; kominn undir jarðar-menit, Ld. 60; renna u. hendr e-m, Háv. 41; þeim tók undir hendr, Ld. 38; kom u. kverk öxinni, Nj. 84; láta u. belti sér, 168; setjask u. borð, 176; heimtask út u. akkerin, Fms. ix. 44; stýra u. veðr, … beita undir veðr, Fb. i. 540; leggja út u. Eyjar, Nj. 125; riða austr u. Eyjafjöll, 216; sigla suðr u. England, Hkr. i. 129; leggjask niðr u. hauginn, Eb. 94; ganga u. hamar-skúta nökkurn, Nj. 264; hleypa heim undir Þríhyrning, 105.2. of time; hrökk undir miðdegi, it drew close to midday, Fas. i. 506; cp. the mod. phrase, það er komið undir dagmál, hádegi, … náttmál, of time, close to, hard upon.II. metaph. usages; gefa hann undir vápn yður, Njarð. 354; leggja virðing konungs undir vápn mín, to let it depend on, Fms. x. 199; jarl hverr skyldi hafa und sik þrjá hersa (= undir sér), 182; Hjört þótti mér þeir hafa undir, they had him under, had him on the ground, Nj. 95; leggja undir sik, to lay under oneself, subjugate, Fms. i. 3; skattgilda undir sik. Eg. 402; ganga undir e-n, to submit to, Fms. i. 37, 156, Ld. 166; játtask undir e-t, Fms. ix. 227; taka vel … u. e-t, Ld. 150; þjóna u. e-n, to serve under, Fms. x. 23; draga u. sik, Eg. 61; arf berr undir e-n, devolves upon, Grág. i. 179; þessa laxveiði gaf hann undir kirkjuna, he made it over to the church, Fms. i. 272; Sámsey er undir biskup, is under a bishop, xi. 230; þær eignir liggja undir þá ætt, vi. 432; leita ráðs u. e-n, xi. 80, MS. 686 B. 13; vikja máli u. e-n, Nj. 77; skírskota u. e-n, Ó. H. 86, Eg. 352, N. G. L. i. 348; bera fé u. e-n, to bribe, Ld. 114. Fms. v. 187; játa sik undir at gjalda, to engage oneself, Dipl. ii. 2; leggja e-t undir þegnskap sinn, upon one’s honour, Grág. (Kb.) i. 48; þá mælti Einarr svá undir málit, interrupt it, Sturl. i. 66 C.2. special phrases; ef kona tekr mann undir bónda sinn, if she be untrue to her husband, N. G. L. i. 351, H. E. i. 236; því fylgðu engir mann-lestir, þvíat ek tók engan mann undir Gísla, I was true to G., Gísl. 15; land styrkvara undir bú, at heyföngum, stronger in the way of household, yielding more crops, Sturl. iii. 271; bjóða fé í leigu u. sik, to offer money for a passage, Nj. 128; taka penning veginn u. blóðlát, for letting blood, Rétt. 2. 10; taka eyri u. hvert lispund, id.; líða undir lok, to come to-an end, Nj. 156.III. ellipt., sól er undir, the sun is under, Grág. i. 104; dagr er undir, Fb. iii. 384; slá u. sem mest má þessa viku, to mow as much as possible this week, so as to prepare for drying it the next, Eb. 150; standa undir með e-m, to back, Sturl. i. 20. -
20 похват
1. (умение) skill, knack, dexterity; sl. know-how2. (начин) method, way3. (средство) device; technique; mechanism; trickхудожествени/поетически похвати artistic devices, literary/poetic devices* * *похва̀т,м., -и, (два) похва̀та 1. ( умение) skill, knack, dexterity; имам \похват за be skilled in, have a knack for; нямам \похват be clumsy/awkward, have not got the right approach;2. ( начин) method, way; търговски \похвати salesmanship; style;3. ( средство) device; technique; mechanism; trick; художествени/поетически \похвати artistic devices, literary/poetic devices.* * *skill; knack; contrivance artistic похват - художествен похват; know-how; mechanism; process{`prousxs}; resource* * *1. (начин) method, way 2. (средство) device;technique: mechanism: trick 3. (умение) skill, knack, dexterity;sl. know-how 4. имам ПОХВАТ за be skilled in, have a knack for 5. нямам ПОХВАТ be clumsy/awkward, have not got the right approach 6. търговски ПОХВАТи salesmanship;style 7. художествени/поетически ПОХВАТи artistic devices, literary/poetic devices
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