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1 the situation has a tendency toward deterioration
Дипломатический термин: обстановка имеет тенденцию к ещё большему ухудшениюУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > the situation has a tendency toward deterioration
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2 the situation has a tendency toward deterioration
Англо-русский дипломатический словарь > the situation has a tendency toward deterioration
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3 the situation has a tendency toward deterioration
English-russian dctionary of diplomacy > the situation has a tendency toward deterioration
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4 tendency
noun(inclination) Tendenz, diehave a tendency to do something — dazu neigen, etwas zu tun
there is a tendency for everyone to get complacent — die Leute neigen dazu, selbstzufrieden zu werden
* * *plural - tendencies; noun (likelihood; inclination: He has a tendency to forget things.) der Hang* * *ten·den·cy[ˈtendən(t)si]she showed musical tendencies from an early age schon von früh an ließ sie eine Neigung zur Musik erkennenhe has always had a \tendency towards fast cars er hatte schon immer einen Hang zu schnellen Autosalarming \tendency alarmierende Tendenzhereditary \tendency erbliche Veranlagung* * *['tendənsɪ]nTendenz f (geh); (= physical predisposition) Neigung fto have a tendency to be/do sth — gern or gewöhnlich etw sein/tun; (person, style of writing also) dazu neigen or tendieren, etw zu sein/zu tun
he had an annoying tendency to forget things — er hatte die ärgerliche Angewohnheit, alles zu vergessen
a strong upward tendency (St Ex) — eine stark steigende Tendenz
* * *tendency [ˈtendənsı] s1. allg Tendenz f:a) Richtung f, Strömung ftoward[s], to zu)d) BIOL Anlage f2. Gang m, Lauf m:* * *noun(inclination) Tendenz, diehave a tendency to do something — dazu neigen, etwas zu tun
there is a tendency for everyone to get complacent — die Leute neigen dazu, selbstzufrieden zu werden
* * *n.Absicht -en f.Drang ¨-e m.Hang ¨-e m.Tendenz -en f. -
5 toward
[tə'wo:d(z), ]( American[) to:rd(z)]1) ((moving, facing etc) in the direction of: He walked toward the door; She turned towards him.) proti2) (in relation to: What are your feelings towards him?) do3) (as a contribution or help to: Here's $3 towards the cost of the journey.) (kot prispevek) za4) ((of time) near: Towards night-time, the weather worsened.) proti* * *I [tóuəd]adjective ( towardly adverb)ki je v teku, ki se mora zgoditi; obsolete prihajajoč, bližnji; obsolete pripravljen, voljan, poslušen; obetavenII [təwɔ:d], American [tɔ:rd]preposition (krajevno) k, proti, v smeri, v bližinihe lives toward London — stanuje v bližini Londona; (časovno) proti, okoli, približno okolitoward noon — proti poldnevu; nasproti, proti, k; kar se tiče, gledéadjective tendency toward co-operation — tendenca h kooperaciji -
6 be in the habit of
Синонимический ряд:be inclined (verb) be apt to; be disposed; be inclined; be wont to; gravitate toward; have a tendency; incline towards; lean; tend -
7 совершенно очевиден
•The tendency toward negative values is quite marked (or obvious, or evident, or pronounced).
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > совершенно очевиден
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8 тенденция
•The tendency for a decrease...
•The tendency to leak is a serious defect.
•The tendency toward instability...
•Today the trend is to unitized construction.
•The trend today is to differential counting.
•Two major patterns appear to be followed.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > тенденция
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9 тенденция
tendency, inclination, trend, bias• В результате существовала тенденция... - As a result, there has been a tendency to...• Данной тенденции противостоит... - This tendency is opposed by...• Имелась также нарастающая тенденция... - There was also an increasing tendency to...• Наблюдалась тенденция в направлении... - The trend has been toward bigger and more sophisticated computers.• Один источник заблуждения - это тенденция... - One source of confusion is the tendency to...• Подобная тенденция видна повсюду в области... - A similar tendency is seen throughout the whole range of...• Существует общая тенденция для... - There is a general tendency for... -
10 tendencia
f.1 tendency.tener tendencia a hacer algo to have a tendency to do somethingtendencia a la depresión tendency to get depressed2 trend (corriente).las últimas tendencias de la moda the latest fashion trends3 bias.* * *1 (inclinación) tendency, inclination, predisposition, leaning; (movimiento) trend\tener tendencia a hacer algo to tend to do something, have a tendency to do somethingtendencia del mercado market trends plural* * *noun f.1) tendency2) trend* * *SF tendency, trendla tendencia hacia el socialismo — the tendency o trend towards socialism
tener tendencia a hacer algo — to have a tendency o to tend to do sth
tengo tendencia a engordar — I have a tendency o I tend to put on weight
tendencia al alza, tendencia alcista — upward trend
tendencia imperante — dominant trend, prevailing tendency
* * *femenino tendencytendencias homosexuales — homosexual tendencies o leanings
tendencia a la baja/al alza — downward/upward trend
tendencia a + inf — tendency to + inf
* * *= bias [biases, -pl.], penchant, push towards, stream, tendency, tide, trend, strand, push, streak, leaning, stripe.Ex. The place of publication may also warn of biases in approach or differences in terminology that arise in the text.Ex. Our penchant to organize is perhaps as close to a biological imperative as any form of human behavior is likely to come.Ex. In the frenetic push towards international cooperation among research libraries, the library needs of the nonscholar are easily overlooked.Ex. If no such standards can be observed then, it would seem, romantic fiction along with westerns and detective stories must be regarded as some sort of cul-de-sac and rather stagnant backwater quite separate from the main stream of 'literature'.Ex. In this case we find a tendency to ignore the author's identity as found in the document, and to prefer instead a real name to a pseudonym.Ex. What has happened is that yet another institution has so overlapped with our own that we are being swept along on the tide of the technological revolution.Ex. Current trends favour cataloguing practices which can be applied to a variety of library materials.Ex. This article gives a brief history of the two main strands in the development of bibliotherapy, or healing through books, in the USA.Ex. The key issue to note here is that the global push to describe and document Indigenous knowledge is gaining momentum.Ex. The secret of his success is an obsessive streak in his personality combined with business aggression.Ex. Finally, this new philosophy did not conflict with the librarian's elitist leanings.Ex. The field of computational linguistics is exciting insomuch as it permits linguists of different stripes to model language behaviour.----* análisis de tendencias = trend analysis.* de acuerdo con la tendencia hacia = in the trend towards.* de tendencia socialista = socialistic.* en la tendencia principal de = in the mainstream of.* existir la tendencia a = there + be + a tendency (to/for).* informe de tendencias = trends report.* proyección de tendencias = trend projection.* tendencia actual = current trend.* tendencia alcista = bouyancy.* tendencia al olvido = forgetfulness.* tendencia de agrupamiento = clustering tendency.* tendencia de clustering = clustering tendency.* tendencia de la época, la = trend of the times, the.* tendencia demográfica = population trend.* tendencia inflacionista = inflationary spiral, inflationary trend, deflationary spiral.* tendencia natural = in-built tendency.* tendencia opuesta = countertendency.* tendencia social = social trend, social trend.* tener una tendencia hacia = have + a tendency to.* * *femenino tendencytendencias homosexuales — homosexual tendencies o leanings
tendencia a la baja/al alza — downward/upward trend
tendencia a + inf — tendency to + inf
* * *= bias [biases, -pl.], penchant, push towards, stream, tendency, tide, trend, strand, push, streak, leaning, stripe.Ex: The place of publication may also warn of biases in approach or differences in terminology that arise in the text.
Ex: Our penchant to organize is perhaps as close to a biological imperative as any form of human behavior is likely to come.Ex: In the frenetic push towards international cooperation among research libraries, the library needs of the nonscholar are easily overlooked.Ex: If no such standards can be observed then, it would seem, romantic fiction along with westerns and detective stories must be regarded as some sort of cul-de-sac and rather stagnant backwater quite separate from the main stream of 'literature'.Ex: In this case we find a tendency to ignore the author's identity as found in the document, and to prefer instead a real name to a pseudonym.Ex: What has happened is that yet another institution has so overlapped with our own that we are being swept along on the tide of the technological revolution.Ex: Current trends favour cataloguing practices which can be applied to a variety of library materials.Ex: This article gives a brief history of the two main strands in the development of bibliotherapy, or healing through books, in the USA.Ex: The key issue to note here is that the global push to describe and document Indigenous knowledge is gaining momentum.Ex: The secret of his success is an obsessive streak in his personality combined with business aggression.Ex: Finally, this new philosophy did not conflict with the librarian's elitist leanings.Ex: The field of computational linguistics is exciting insomuch as it permits linguists of different stripes to model language behaviour.* análisis de tendencias = trend analysis.* de acuerdo con la tendencia hacia = in the trend towards.* de tendencia socialista = socialistic.* en la tendencia principal de = in the mainstream of.* existir la tendencia a = there + be + a tendency (to/for).* informe de tendencias = trends report.* proyección de tendencias = trend projection.* tendencia actual = current trend.* tendencia alcista = bouyancy.* tendencia al olvido = forgetfulness.* tendencia de agrupamiento = clustering tendency.* tendencia de clustering = clustering tendency.* tendencia de la época, la = trend of the times, the.* tendencia demográfica = population trend.* tendencia inflacionista = inflationary spiral, inflationary trend, deflationary spiral.* tendencia natural = in-built tendency.* tendencia opuesta = countertendency.* tendencia social = social trend, social trend.* tener una tendencia hacia = have + a tendency to.* * *tendencysus tendencias homosexuales his homosexual tendencies o leaningsun grupo de tendencia marxista a group with Marxist tendencies o leaningspara frenar esta tendencia expansiva to slow down this tendency o trend toward(s) expansiontendencia A algo trend TOWARD(S) sthtendencia a la baja/al alza downward/upward trendtendencia A + INF tendency to + INFtiene tendencia a exagerar she has a tendency to exaggerate, she tends to exaggerate* * *
tendencia sustantivo femenino
tendency;◊ tendencias homosexuales homosexual tendencies o leanings;
tendencia a algo trend toward(s) sth;
tiene tendencia a exagerar she has a tendency to exaggerate;
existe una tendencia a la centralización there is a trend toward centralization
tendencia sustantivo femenino
1 (propensión) tendency: tiene tendencia a sentirse culpable, he is prone to feeling guilty
2 Pol tendency, leaning
3 (del mercado, moda, etc) trend
' tendencia' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
corriente
- frenar
- imperante
- inclinarse
- malicia
- novelera
- novelero
- orientación
- rumbo
- alcista
- ascendente
- baja
- contener
- cuenta
- dictar
- dominante
- dominar
- golpista
- inclinación
- pronunciado
- tónica
English:
bent
- bias
- buoyancy
- counter
- craze
- dispose to
- downward
- inclination
- incline
- inclined
- movement
- propensity
- run
- self-destructiveness
- strand
- tend
- tendency
- thievishness
- trend
- liable
- orientation
- sulky
* * *tendencia nf1. [inclinación] tendency;un diario de marcada tendencia conservadora a very conservative newspaper;tener tendencia a hacer algo to tend o have a tendency to do sth;tiene tendencia a meterse en líos she tends to get herself into trouble;tiene tendencia a la depresión he has a tendency to depression2. [corriente] trend;las últimas tendencias de la moda the latest fashion trends;hay tendencias reformistas dentro del partido there are reformist tendencies within the party;tendencia al alza/a la baja upward/downward trendEcon tendencias del mercado market trends* * *f1 tendency;tener tendencia a have a tendency to2 ( corriente) trend;tendencia al alza/a la baja upward/downward trend* * *tendencia nf1) propensión: tendency, inclination2) : trend* * *2. (de moda) trend -
11 neigen
III v/i: neigen zu fig. tend to (+ Inf.), have a tendency to (+ Inf.) ( oder toward(s) [+ Ger.] oder s.th.); (anfällig sein) be susceptible to s.th., be prone to s.th. (oder + Inf., + Ger.); zu Unfällen neigen be accident-prone; zum Kommunismus etc. neigen have communist etc. leanings; er neigt zu Übertreibungen he tends to exaggerate; ich neige zu der Ansicht, dass... I’m inclined to think (that)..., I rather think (that)...; geneigt* * *to tend; to incline; to tilt; to trend; to stoop;sich neigento slope down; to dip; to verge* * *nei|gen ['naign]1. vt(= beugen) Kopf, Körper to bend; (zum Gruß) to bow; (= kippen) Behälter, Glas to tip, to tilt, to inclinedie Bäume néígen ihre Zweige bis zur Erde (geh) — the trees bow their branches to the ground
2. vr(Ebene) to slope, to incline; (Mensch) to bend; (liter = sich verneigen) to bow; (unter Last Bäume etc) to bow, to bend; (Gebäude etc) to lean; (= kippen) to tip (up), to tilt (up); (Schiff) to list; (liter Tag, Leben) to draw to a close or an endsich nach vorne/nach hinten/zur Seite néígen (Mensch) — to lean or bend forward/backwards/to one side
mit seitwärtsgeneigtem Kopf — with his/her head held on or to one side
die Waagschale neigt sich zu seinen Gunsten (geh) — the scales are tipping or the tide is turning in his favour (Brit) or favor (US)
3. vizu etw néígen — to tend toward(s) sth, to have a tendency toward(s) sth
er neigt zum Alkohol — he has a tendency to drink
er neigt zum Sozialismus — he tends or leans toward(s) socialism, he has socialist leanings
zu der Ansicht or Annahme néígen, dass... — to tend or lean toward(s) the view that..., to be inclined to take the view that...
See:→ auch geneigt* * *(to bow (one's head etc).) incline* * *nei·gen[ˈnaign̩]I. vr1. (sich beugen)sich akk nach hinten/vorne/rechts/links/zur Seite \neigen to lean backwards/forwards/to the right/left/side2. (schräg abfallen)▪ etw neigt sich sth slopes [or inclinesdie Tannenzweige neigten sich [tief] zur Erde the pine branches bowed [low] to the ground4. (kippen)II. vt1. (beugen)▪ etw \neigen to bend sthden Oberkörper leicht nach vorne geneigt his/her torso [or upper body] slightly bent forwards▪ etw \neigen to tilt sthIII. vi1. (anfällig für etw sein)2. (tendieren)du neigst zu Übertreibungen you tend to exaggerate▪ dazu \neigen, etw zu tun to be inclined [or tend] [or have a tendency] to do sthich neige zu der Ansicht, dass... I tend [or lean] towards the view that...* * *1.transitives Verb tip, tilt <bottle, glass, barrel, etc.>; incline <head, upper part of body>2.reflexives Verb2) (schräg abfallen) < meadows> slope down3.intransitives Verb1)zu Erkältungen neigen — be susceptible or prone to colds
zur Korpulenz/Schwermut neigen — have a tendency to put on weight/tend to be melancholy
2) (tendieren) tendzu der Ansicht neigen, dass... — tend towards the view that...
* * *C. v/i:neigen zu fig tend to (+inf), have a tendency to (+inf) ( oder toward(s) [+ger] oder sth); (anfällig sein) be susceptible to sth, be prone to sth (oder +inf, +ger);zu Unfällen neigen be accident-prone;zum Kommunismus etcneigen have communist etc leanings;er neigt zu Übertreibungen he tends to exaggerate;* * *1.transitives Verb tip, tilt <bottle, glass, barrel, etc.>; incline <head, upper part of body>2.reflexives Verb2) (schräg abfallen) < meadows> slope down3.intransitives Verb1)zu Erkältungen neigen — be susceptible or prone to colds
zur Korpulenz/Schwermut neigen — have a tendency to put on weight/tend to be melancholy
2) (tendieren) tendzu der Ansicht neigen, dass... — tend towards the view that...
* * *v.to incline v. -
12 Hang
m; -(e)s, Hänge2. nur Sg.; fig. (Neigung) (natural) inclination (zu to s.th., to + Inf.), bent (zu for s.th., for + Ger.), tendency (zu toward[s] s.th. oder + Ger., to + Inf), propensity (zu to s.th. oder + Inf., for + Ger.), penchant (for s.th.); (Vorliebe) partiality (zu for s.th.); (auch Zuneigung) fondness (for, of s.th.); (Anfälligkeit) proneness (zu to s.th.)* * *der Hang(Abhang) slope; hillside; inclination; brae;(Vorliebe) inclination; tendency; bias; penchant* * *Hạng [haŋ]m -(e)s, -e['hɛŋə]1) (= Abhang) slope2) no pl (= Neigung) tendencyer hat einen (deutlichen) Hang zur Kriminalität — he has a (marked) tendency toward(s) criminality
* * *der1) (the side or slope of a hill: The hillside was covered with new housing.) hillside2) (a slope (of a hill): a mountain-side.) side3) (a surface with one end higher than the other: The house stands on a gentle slope.) slope4) (likelihood; inclination: He has a tendency to forget things.) tendency* * *<-[e]s, Hänge>[haŋ, pl ˈhɛŋə]m1. (Abhang) slopeeinen \Hang zu jdm/etw haben to have a penchant for sb/sthsie hat einen deutlichen \Hang zu Übertreibungen she has a marked tendency to exaggerateden \Hang haben, etw zu tun to be inclined to do sth* * *der; Hang[e]s, Hänge1) (BergHang) slope; hillside/mountainside; (SkiHang) slopedas Haus am Hang — the house on the hillside
2) (Neigung) tendencyeinen Hang zum Träumen/Lügen usw. haben — have a tendency to dream/lie etc.
3) (Turnen) hang* * *1. slope;2. nur sg; fig (Neigung) (natural) inclination (zu to sth, to +inf), bent (zu for sth, for +ger), tendency (zu toward[s] sth oder +ger, to +inf), propensity (zu to sth)in den Hang gehen hang from the bar* * *der; Hang[e]s, Hänge1) (BergHang) slope; hillside/mountainside; (SkiHang) slope2) (Neigung) tendencyeinen Hang zum Träumen/Lügen usw. haben — have a tendency to dream/lie etc.
3) (Turnen) hang* * *¨-e m.hillside n.penchant n.slope n.tendency n. -
13 trend
1. noun1) Trend, derpopulation trends — die Bevölkerungsentwicklung
2. intransitive verbset the trend — den Trend bestimmen
1) (take a course) verlaufen2) (fig.): (move) sich entwickeln* * *[trend](a general direction or tendency: She follows all the latest trends in fashion; an upward trend in share prices.) der Trend- academic.ru/76490/trendy">trendy* * *[trend]I. ngeneral \trend allgemeiner Trendupward \trend Aufwärtstrend msurveys show a \trend away from home-ownership and towards rented accommodation Untersuchungen zeigen einen Trend weg vom Hausbesitz hin zu gemieteten Wohnungenthe latest \trend der letzte Schrei famto set a new \trend einen neuen Trend auslösenII. vibirth rates are \trending toward negative population growth die Geburtsraten tendieren zu einem negativen Bevölkerungswachstum* * *[trend]1. n1) (= tendency) Tendenz f, Richtung f, Trend mthe trend toward(s) violence — der Trend or die Tendenz zur Gewalttätigkeit
upward trend — steigende Tendenz, Aufwärtstrend m
the downward trend in the birth rate — die Rückläufigkeit or der Abwärtstrend der Geburtenrate
to set a trend — eine neue Richtung setzen, richtungweisend sein
2) (= fashion) Mode f, Trend mthat is the trend/the latest trend among young people — das ist bei jungen Leuten jetzt Mode/der letzte Schrei (inf)
to follow a trend — einem Trend folgen; (fashion) eine Mode mitmachen
2. viverlaufen ( towards nach)his views are trending toward(s) the anarchistic — seine Auffassungen neigen or tendieren zum Anarchismus
* * *trend [trend]A s1. (Ver)Lauf m (der Ereignisse etc)2. fig (allgemeine) Richtungthe trend of his argument was that … seine Beweisführung lief darauf hinaus, dass …4. Bestrebung f, Neigung f, Zug m:5. GEOL Streichrichtung fB v/itrend away from sich abzukehren beginnen von2. sich erstrecken, laufen (toward[s] nach Süden etc)3. GEOL streichen (to nach)* * *1. noun1) Trend, der2. intransitive verb1) (take a course) verlaufen2) (fig.): (move) sich entwickeln* * *n.Richtung -en f.Tendenz -en f.Trend -s m. -
14 Veranlagung
f1. charakterliche: disposition; (Neigung) inclination; (Talent) gift, talent; seine künstlerische / homosexuelle Veranlagung his artistic bent / homosexual tendencies Pl.; es ist Veranlagung it’s in his ( oder her) nature, he ( oder she) was made that way3. MED.: eine Veranlagung haben zu be prone to, suffer from; eine Veranlagung zur Fettsucht etc. haben be prone to obesity etc., have a tendency toward(s) obesity etc.4. steuerliche: assessment; i-e gemeinsame Veranlagung zur Einkommensteuer their joint assessment for income tax* * *die Veranlagung(Begabung) talent; gift;(Charakter) disposition;(Neigung) tendency; bent; inclination; idiosyncrasy;(Steuer) assessment* * *Ver|ạn|la|gungf -, -en1) (körperlich ESP MED) predisposition; (charakterlich) nature, disposition; (= Hang) tendency; (= allgemeine Fähigkeiten) natural abilities pl; (= künstlerisches, praktisches etc Talent) bent2) (von Steuern) assessment* * *die1) (personality: He has a pleasant disposition.) disposition2) (the set, or combination, of characteristics or ingredients that together form something, eg a personality; composition: Violence is just not part of his make-up.) make-up* * *Ver·an·la·gung<-, -en>f1. (angeborene Anlage) dispositioneine bestimmte \Veranlagung haben to have a certain benteine homosexuelle \Veranlagung haben to have homosexual tendencieseine künstlerische/artistische \Veranlagung haben to have an artistic/a musical benteine praktische \Veranlagung haben to be practically mindedgemeinsame/getrennte \Veranlagung joint/separate assessmentsteuerliche \Veranlagung tax assessment, assessment for tax purposes* * *die; Veranlagung, Veranlagungen1) [pre]dispositionseine homosexuelle / künstlerische / praktische / romantische Veranlagung — his homosexual tendencies pl./artistic bent/practical nature/romantic disposition
2) (Steuerw.) assessment* * *seine künstlerische/homosexuelle Veranlagung his artistic bent/homosexual tendencies pl;3. MED:eine Veranlagung haben zu be prone to, suffer from;4. steuerliche: assessment;i-e gemeinsame Veranlagung zur Einkommensteuer their joint assessment for income tax* * *die; Veranlagung, Veranlagungen1) [pre]dispositionseine homosexuelle / künstlerische / praktische / romantische Veranlagung — his homosexual tendencies pl./artistic bent/practical nature/romantic disposition
2) (Steuerw.) assessment* * *f.assessment n.habitude n.idiosyncrasy n.natural tendency (of) n.temper n. -
15 расположение
ср.
1) (размещение) arrangement, order, disposition
2) (местоположение) situation, location;
position воен. тж.
3) (порядок размещения чего-л.) arrangement, layout расположение нервов
4) (симпатия) inclination, favo(u) r, liking;
sympathies пользоваться чьим-л. расположением ≈ to enjoy smb.'s favo(u) r, be liked by smb.;
be in smb.'s good books идиом.
5) (к чему-л.) (наклонность) inclination (to, for, toward) ;
disposition (to, toward), propensity (to), bias (towards) ;
disposition (for), taste( for) (к музыке, искусству тж.) ;
tendency( toward)
6) (настроение) mind;
mood, disposition;
desire быть в хорошем расположении духа ≈ to be in a good/cheerful mood, to be cheerful;
to be in (good) spirits быть в плохом расположении духа ≈ to be in a bad humour расположение духа ≈ mood, humour;
frame of mindрасположени|е - с.
1. (размещение) arrangement;
2. (нахождение, пребывание) situation;
воен. position(s) ;
3. (порядок размещения чего-л.) arrangement, lay-out;
странное ~ комнат strange lay-out of the rooms;
4. (симпатия) sympathies pl., regard;
заслужить, снискать чьё-л. ~ win* smb.`s regard/sympathies;
gain smb.`s favour;
пользоваться чьим-л. ~ем be* in favour with smb. ;
5. (к дт.;
склонность) liking (for), taste (for) ;
inclination (toward) ;
(восприимчивость) tendency (to) ;
~ к чтению liking for reading;
~ к болезни, полноте tendency to fall ill, to get fat;
6. разг. (настроение) mood;
не иметь ~я (+ инф.) be* in no mood (+ to inf.) ;
~ духа frame of mind, mood;
быть в хорошем ~и духа be* in good spirits.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > расположение
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16 formación de usuarios
(n.) = information literacy, library instruction, information skills, library user education, bibliographic instruction (BI), user education, library user training, user instruction, user training, patron instruction, reader educationEx. This article describes an information literacy programme which aims to equip students with the knowledge and ability to effectively use the full range of available tools for accessing, retrieving and managing information.Ex. The advent of complex information technologies requires a new paradigm for library instruction and the instructional role of academic librarians.Ex. There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.Ex. Various recommendations are made for the improvement of the programmes, including the introduction of a course in library user education in the universities which will be taken by all first year students.Ex. Members of Iowa State University's graduating class of 1986 were surveyed about their attitudes toward having been required to take a course in bibliographic instruction.Ex. It seems natural to employ the microcomputer for user education, since computer-aided learning (CAL) is one of the principal ways in which microcomputers are used in schools and colleges.Ex. This article examines the benefits of a good sense of humour to librarians involved in library user training.Ex. And as has often been pointed out, the increased provision of user instruction has tended to strengthen rather than dispel the myth of reader self-sufficiency.Ex. The project will measure the need for user training in the use of electronic journals.Ex. It has been found that the larger the library, the greater the tendency for both formal and informal patron instruction to occur = Se ha descubierto que mientras más grande es la biblioteca, mayor es la tendencia a que se ofrezcan cursos de formación de usuarios tanto formal como informal.Ex. The data considered by the Review Committee strongly suggests that reader education will need to be a major priority in the next few years.* * *(n.) = information literacy, library instruction, information skills, library user education, bibliographic instruction (BI), user education, library user training, user instruction, user training, patron instruction, reader educationEx: This article describes an information literacy programme which aims to equip students with the knowledge and ability to effectively use the full range of available tools for accessing, retrieving and managing information.
Ex: The advent of complex information technologies requires a new paradigm for library instruction and the instructional role of academic librarians.Ex: There is no doubt that IT has transformed attitudes and heightened the awareness of academics towards the significance of inculcating information skills = No hay duda de que la TI ha transformado las actitudes y ha hecho que los académicos sean más consciente de la importancia de inculcar las destrezas relacionadas con la información.Ex: Various recommendations are made for the improvement of the programmes, including the introduction of a course in library user education in the universities which will be taken by all first year students.Ex: Members of Iowa State University's graduating class of 1986 were surveyed about their attitudes toward having been required to take a course in bibliographic instruction.Ex: It seems natural to employ the microcomputer for user education, since computer-aided learning (CAL) is one of the principal ways in which microcomputers are used in schools and colleges.Ex: This article examines the benefits of a good sense of humour to librarians involved in library user training.Ex: And as has often been pointed out, the increased provision of user instruction has tended to strengthen rather than dispel the myth of reader self-sufficiency.Ex: The project will measure the need for user training in the use of electronic journals.Ex: It has been found that the larger the library, the greater the tendency for both formal and informal patron instruction to occur = Se ha descubierto que mientras más grande es la biblioteca, mayor es la tendencia a que se ofrezcan cursos de formación de usuarios tanto formal como informal.Ex: The data considered by the Review Committee strongly suggests that reader education will need to be a major priority in the next few years. -
17 Art
Portugal did not produce an artist of sufficient ability to gain recognition outside the country until the 19th century. Domingos Antônio Segueira (1768-1837) became well known in Europe for his allegorical religious and historical paintings in a neoclassical style. Portuguese painting during the 19th century emphasized naturalism and did not keep abreast of artistic innovations being made in other European countries. Portugal's best painters lived abroad especially in France. The most successful was Amadeo Souza- Cardoso who, while living in Paris, worked with the modernists Modigliani, Georges Braque, and Juan Gris. Souza-Cardoso introduced modernism into Portuguese painting in the early 20th century. A sustained modernist movement did not develop in Portugal, however. Naturalism remained the dominant school, and Portugal remained isolated from international artistic trends, owing to Portugal's conservative artistic climate, which prevented new forms of art from taking root, and the lack of support from an artistically sophisticated, art-buying elite supported by a system of galleries and foundations.Interestingly, it was during the conservative Estado Novo that modernism began to take root in Portugal. As Prime Minister Antônio de Oliveira Salazar's secretary for national propaganda, Antônio Ferro, a writer, journalist, and cultural leader who admired Mussolini, encouraged the government to allow modern artists to create the heroic imagery of the Estado Novo following the Italian model that linked fascism with futurism. The most important Portuguese artist of this period was Almada Negreiros, who did the murals on the walls of the legendary café A Brasileira in the Chiado district of Lisbon, the paintings at the Exposition of the Portuguese World (1940), and murals at the Lisbon docks. Other artists of note during this period included Mário Eloy (1900-51), who was trained in Germany and influenced by George Grosz and Otto Dix; Domingos Alvarez (1906-42); and Antônio Pedro (1909-66).During the 1950s, the Estado Novo ceased to encourage artists to collaborate, as Portuguese artists became more critical of the regime. The return to Portugal of Antônio Pedro in 1947 led to the emergence of a school of geometric abstract painting in Oporto and the reawakening of surrealism. The art deco styles of the 1930s gave way to surrealism and abstract expression.In the 1960s, links between Portugal's artistic community and the international art world strengthened. Conscription for the wars against the nationalist insurgencies in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea- Bissau (1961-75) resulted in a massive exodus of Portugal's avante-garde artists to Europe to avoid military service. While abroad, artists such as Joaquin Rodrigo (1912-93), Paula Rego (1935-), João Cutileiro (1947-), and others forged links with British, French, Italian, and Spanish artistic communities.The Revolution of 25 April 1974 created a crisis for Portugal's artists. The market for works of art collapsed as left-wing governments, claiming that they had more important things to do (eliminate poverty, improve education), withdrew support for the arts. Artists declared their talents to be at the "service of the people," and a brief period of socialist realism prevailed. With the return of political stability and moderate governments during the 1980s, Portugal's commercial art scene revived, and a new period of creativity began. Disenchantment with the socialist realism (utopianism) of the Revolution and a deepening of individualism began to be expressed by Portuguese artists. Investment in the arts became a means of demonstrating one's wealth and social status, and an unprecedented number of art galleries opened, art auctions were held, and a new generation of artists became internationally recognized. In 1984, a museum of modern art was built by the Gulbenkian Foundation adjacent to its offices on the Avenida de Berna in Lisbon. A national museum of modern art was finally built in Oporto in 1988.In the 1980s, Portugal's new generation of painters blended post-conceptualism and subjectivism, as well as a tendency toward decon-structionism/reconstructionism, in their work. Artists such as Cabrita Reis (1956-), Pedro Calapez (1953-), José Pedro Croft (1957-), Rui Sanches (1955-), and José de Guimarães (1949-) gained international recognition during this period. Guimarães crosses African art themes with Western art; Sarmento invokes images of film, culture, photography, American erotica, and pulp fiction toward sex, violence, and pleasure; Reis evolved from a painter to a maker of installation artist using chipboard, plaster, cloth, glass, and electrical and plumbing materials.From the end of the 20th century and during the early years of the 21st century, Portugal's art scene has been in a state of crisis brought on by a declining art trade and a withdrawal of financial support by conservative governments. Although not as serious as the collapse of the 1970s, the current situation has divided the Portuguese artistic community between those, such as Cerveira Pito and Leonel Moura, who advocate a return to using primitive, strongly textured techniques and others such as João Paulo Feliciano (1963-), who paint constructivist works that poke fun at the relationship between art, money, society, and the creative process. Thus, at the beginning of the 21st century, the factors that have prevented Portuguese art from achieving and sustaining international recognition (the absence of a strong art market, depending too much on official state support, and the individualistic nature of Portuguese art production) are still to be overcome. -
18 Drang
Imperf. dringen* * *der Drangpress; urge; pressure* * *Drạng [draŋ]m -(e)s, ordm;e['drɛŋə]1) (= Antrieb) urge (AUCH PHYSIOL), impulse; (= Sehnsucht) yearning (nach for); (nach Wissen) thirst (nach for)Drang nach Bewegung — urge or impulse to move
ich habe einen Drang (inf: zur Toilette) — I'm dying to go (inf)
See:→ Sturm2)der Drang zum Tor (Sport) — the surge (Brit) or drive (US) toward(s) the goal
3) (geh = Druck) pressureim Drang der Ereignisse — under the pressure of events
* * *(a strong impulse or desire: I felt an urge to hit him.) urge* * *<-[e]s, Dränge>[ˈdraŋ, pl ˈdrɛŋə]m1. (innerer Antrieb) longing, desire▪ jds \Drang, etw zu tun sb's urge [or itch] [or longing] to do sthein \Drang nach Bewegung an urge to do some [physical] exercise\Drang nach Wissen thirst for knowledge\Drang nach Freiheit longing [or liter yearning] for freedomein starker \Drang a strong desire [or urge], a great longingeinen \Drang haben[, etw zu tun] to feel an urge [to do sth], to have a desire [to do sth]2. (Harndrang) urgent need [or urge] to go to the toileteinem \Drang nachgeben to answer a call of natureder \Drang der Umstände the force of circumstances* * *der; Drang[e]s, Dränge urgeein Drang nach Bewegung/Freiheit — an urge to move/be free
* * *nach, zu for;zu +inf to +inf);Drang nach Freiheit urge for freedom;einen Drang zum Lügen haben auch be a compulsive liar;einen Drang nach Höherem haben aspire to higher things;einen (heftigen) Drang verspüren, etwas zu tun have ( oder feel) an urge to do sth;dem Drang widerstehen, etwas zu tun resist the urge to do sth;2. (Druck, Bedrängnis) pressure;im Drang der Ereignisse under the pressure of events* * *der; Drang[e]s, Dränge urgeein Drang nach Bewegung/Freiheit — an urge to move/be free
* * *¨-e m.desire n.drive n.instinct n.penchant n.tendency n.urge n. -
19 drang
Imperf. dringen* * *der Drangpress; urge; pressure* * *Drạng [draŋ]m -(e)s, ordm;e['drɛŋə]1) (= Antrieb) urge (AUCH PHYSIOL), impulse; (= Sehnsucht) yearning (nach for); (nach Wissen) thirst (nach for)Drang nach Bewegung — urge or impulse to move
ich habe einen Drang (inf: zur Toilette) — I'm dying to go (inf)
See:→ Sturm2)der Drang zum Tor (Sport) — the surge (Brit) or drive (US) toward(s) the goal
3) (geh = Druck) pressureim Drang der Ereignisse — under the pressure of events
* * *(a strong impulse or desire: I felt an urge to hit him.) urge* * *<-[e]s, Dränge>[ˈdraŋ, pl ˈdrɛŋə]m1. (innerer Antrieb) longing, desire▪ jds \Drang, etw zu tun sb's urge [or itch] [or longing] to do sthein \Drang nach Bewegung an urge to do some [physical] exercise\Drang nach Wissen thirst for knowledge\Drang nach Freiheit longing [or liter yearning] for freedomein starker \Drang a strong desire [or urge], a great longingeinen \Drang haben[, etw zu tun] to feel an urge [to do sth], to have a desire [to do sth]2. (Harndrang) urgent need [or urge] to go to the toileteinem \Drang nachgeben to answer a call of natureder \Drang der Umstände the force of circumstances* * *der; Drang[e]s, Dränge urgeein Drang nach Bewegung/Freiheit — an urge to move/be free
* * ** * *der; Drang[e]s, Dränge urgeein Drang nach Bewegung/Freiheit — an urge to move/be free
* * *¨-e m.desire n.drive n.instinct n.penchant n.tendency n.urge n. -
20 усиливать
•Various optical devices can be used to enhance the intensity of the laser beam. The sample solvent will further augment background radiation.
•A preamplifier is needed to boost the signal from the photomultiplier.
•To intensify the milk flavour,...
•Water waves cancel or reinforce each other.
•The designer strengthened the wing of the aircraft.
II•There are many potential neurological abnormalities which can aggravate a tendency toward immobility (мед.).
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > усиливать
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