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1 in great straits
Общая лексика: в бедственном положении -
2 in great straits
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3 in great straits
dalam keadaan sangat sulit -
4 in great straits
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5 be in great straits
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6 keep in great straits for money
Общая лексика: стеснять (кого-л.) в деньгахУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > keep in great straits for money
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7 to be in great straits
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > to be in great straits
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8 to be in great (dire) straits
Общая лексика: быть в очень трудном положении (в стеснённых обстоятельствах, в большой нужде), быть в очень финансовом положении (в стеснённых обстоятельствах, в большой нужде)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > to be in great (dire) straits
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9 в бедственном положении
Русско-английский политический словарь > в бедственном положении
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10 dalam keadaan sangat sulit
in great straits -
11 strait
streɪt сущ.
1) часто мн. пролив
2) обыкн. мн. затруднительное положение, стесненные обстоятельства, нужда in desperate strait ≈ в отчаянном положении desperate strait dire strait financial strait (узкий) пролив - the Strait of Magellan Магелланов пролив - the Straits of Dover Па-де-Кале( редкое) перешеек( редкое) узкий проход( устаревшее) (литературоведение) тесный - * is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life тесны врата и узок путь, ведущие в жизнь затруднительное положение;
стесненные обстоятельства, нужда - financial *s финансовые затруднения - to be in great /dire/ *s быть в очень трудном (финансовом) положении /в стесненных обстоятельствах, в большой нужде/ - to be in desperate * быть в отчаянном положении - to keep smb. in great *s for money стеснять кого-л. в деньгах строгий, требовательный нуждающийся, неимущий прижимистый, скуповатый strait (обыкн. pl) затруднительное положение, стесненные обстоятельства, нужда;
in great straits в бедственном положении strait (обыкн. pl) затруднительное положение, стесненные обстоятельства, нужда;
in great straits в бедственном положении ~ редк. перешеек ~ (часто pl) пролив -
12 strait
I1. [streıt] n1. обыкн. pl (узкий) пролив2. редк. перешеек3. редк. узкий проход2. [streıt] a арх., лит.тесныйIIstrait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life - тесны врата и узок путь, ведущие в жизнь
1. [streıt] n обыкн. plзатруднительное положение; стеснённые обстоятельства, нуждаto be in great /dire/ straits - быть в очень трудном (финансовом) положении /в стеснённых обстоятельствах, и большой нужде/
to keep smb. in great straits for money - стеснять кого-л. в деньгах
2. [streıt] a1. строгий, требовательный2. нуждающийся, неимущий3. прижимистый, скуповатый -
13 strait
[streit]1) ((often in plural) a narrow strip of sea between two pieces of land: the straits of Gibraltar; the Bering Strait.) estreito2) ((in plural) difficulty; (financial) need.) apuros•- strait-laced* * *[streit] n 1 arch (também straits pl) estreito. 2 istmo. 3 dificuldade, necessidade, apuro, dilema. I am in great straits ou in a great strait for money / estou em grandes dificuldades financeiras. • adj 1 arch estreito, apertado. 2 restrito. the straits of Gibraltar o Estreito de Gibraltar. -
14 AKA
* * *(ek, ók, ókum, ekinn), v.1) to drive (a vehicle or animal drawing a vehicle), with dat.: gott er heilum vagni heim at a., it is good to get home safe and sound; a. þrennum eykjum, with three yoke of horses;2) to carry or convey in a vehicle, to cart, with dat. or acc. (hann ók heyjum sínum á yxnum; hann ók skarni á hóla); a. saman hey, to cart hay; líkin váru ekin í sleða, carried in a sledge;3) with the prep. í or á; Freyr ók í kerru með gelti; ríðr Þ. hesti þeim, er hann hafði ekit á;4) absol., to drive in a vehicle (fóru þeir í sleðann ok óku alla nóttina); with acc. of the road (óku úrgar brautir);5) naut., to trim the sail (aka seglum at endilöngum skipum);6) to remove, with dat.; ók hann af sér fjötrinum, worked it off by rubbing; ók Oddr sér þar at, worked himself thither (of a fettered prisoner); a. e-m á bug or a. bug;á e-n, to make one give way, repel; intrans. = ‘akast’, to move slowly; hvárrgi ók (gave way) fyrir oðrum; a. undan, to retire, retreat;7) impers., hart ekr at e-m, one is in great straits; ekr nú mjók at, I am hard pressed; e-m verðr nær ekit, one gets into straits, is hard pressed;refl., e-m ekst e-t í tauma, one is thwarted in a thing.* * *ók, óku, ekit; pres. ek. It also occurs in a weak form, að, Fagrsk. 104, which form is now perhaps the most common. [Neither Ulf. nor Hel. use this word, which appears also to be alien to the South-Teut. idioms. The Germans say fahren; the English to drive, carry; cp. Engl. yoke. In Latin, however, agere; Gr. άγειν] Gener. to move, drive, transport, carry:I. to drive in harness in a sledge or other vehicle (where the vehicle is in dat.), as also the animal driven; bryggjur svá breiðar, at aka mátti vögnum á víxl, ‘briggs’ (i. e. wharfs or piers,, cp. ‘Filey Brigg’) so broad, that wains might meet and pass each other, Hkr. ii. 11; gott er heilum vagni heim at aka, ‘tis good to drive home with a whole wain, to get home safe and sound, cp. Horace solve senescentem, Orkn. 464, Al. 61; þórr á hafra tvá, ok reið þá er hann ekr, in which he drives, Edda 14, Ób. adds í (viz. reið þá er hekr i), which may be the genuine reading.β. with the prep. í; Freyr ók ok í kerru með gelti, Edda 38.γ. absol. to drive, i. e. travel by driving; þeir óku upp á land, Eg. 543; fóru þeir í sleðann ok óku nóttina alia, drove the whole night, Fms. iv. 317. With the road taken in acc.; aka úrgar brautir, Rm. 36; báðu hennar ok heim óku (dat. henni being understood), carrying a bride home, 37. 20.II. to carry or cart a load, ( to lead, in the north of England):—in Iceland, where vehicles are rare, it may perhaps now and then be used of carrying on horseback. The load carried is commonly in dat. or acc.:α. acc.: aka saman hey, to cart hay, Eb. 150; saman ok hann heyit, Ísl. ii. 330; hann ok saman alla töðu sína, Landn. 94; þá tekr Gísli eyki tvá, ok ekr fé sitt til skógar, Gísl. 121; but absol., ok ekr til skógar með fjárhlut sinn, l. c. 36; þá let konungr aka til haugsins vist ok drykk, then the king let meat and drink be carted to the ‘how’ ( barrow), Fms. x. 186; vill hann húsit ór stað færa, ok vill hann aka þat, carry it away, Grág. ii. 257; líkin váru ekin í sleða, carried in a sledge, Bs. i. 144.β. dat. more freq., as now; hann ók heyjum sínum á öxnum, carried his hay on oxen, Fbr. 43 new Ed.; einn ók skarni á hóla, carted dung alone on the fields, Nj. 67, Rd. 277.γ. with the animals in dat., Þórólfr let aka þrennum eykjum um daginn, with three yoke of oxen, Eb. 152; or with the prep. á, ríðr Þórðr hesti þeim er hann hafði ekit á um aptaninn, Ísl. ii. 331, Fbr. 43; ef maðr ekr eðr berr klyfjar á, leads or carries on packsaddles, Grág. i. 441.δ. absol., þat mun ek til finna, at hann ok eigi í skegg ser, that he did not cart it on his own beard, Nj. 67.ε. part., ekinn uxi, a yoked, tamed ox, Vm. 152.III. used by sailors, in the phrase, aka segli, to trim the sail; aka seglum at endilöngum skipum, Fms. vii. 94; bað hann þá aka skjótt seglunum, ok víkja út í sund nokkut, 131. In mod. Icel. metaph., aka seglum eptir vindi, to set one’s sail after ( with) the wind, to act according to circumstances; cp. aktaumar.IV. metaph. in a great many proverbs and phrases, e. g. aka heilum vagni heim, v. above; aka höllu fyrir e-m, to get the worst of it, Ld. 206; aka undan (milit), to retire, retreat slowly in a battle; óku þeir Erlingr undan ofan með garðinum, Fms. vii. 317; akast undan (reflex.), id., 278; þeir ökuðust undan ok tóku á skógana, they took to the woods, Fagrsk. 174 (where the weak form is used); sumir Norðmenn óku undan á hæli ofan með sjónum, x. 139: aka e-m á bug, the figure probably taken from the ranks in a battle, to make one give way, repel, en ef Ammonite aka, þér á bug, if they be too strong for thee, Stj. 512. 2 Sam. x. 11. Mkv. 7; also metaph., aka bug á e-n, id.; mun oss þat til Birkibeinum, at þeir aki á oss engan bug, to stand firm, with unbroken ranks, Fms. viii. 412. It is now used impers., e-m á ekki ór að aka, of one who has always bad luck, probably ellipt., ór steini or the like being understood; cp. GÍsl. 54, the phrase, þykir ekki ór steini hefja, in the same sense, the figure being taken from a stone clogging the wheels; ok hann af sér fjötrinum, threw it off by rubbing, Fas. ii. 573; þá ekr Oddr sér þar at, creeps, rolls himself thither, of a fettered prisoner, id.; the mod. phrase, að aka sér, is to shrug the shoulders as a mark of displeasure: aka ór öngum, ex angustiis, to clear one’s way, get out of a scrape, Bjarn. 52; aka í moínn, to strive against, a cant phrase. Impers. in the phrase, e-m verðr nær ekit, is almost run over, has a narrow escape, varð honum svá nær ekit at hann hleypti inn í kirkju, he was so hard driven that he ran into the church, Fms. ix. 485; hart ekr at e-m, to be in great straits, ok er þorri kemr, þá ekr hart at mönnum, they were pressed hard, Ísl. ii. 132; ekr mi mjök at, I am hard pressed, GÍsl. 52; er honum þótti at sér aka, when death drew near,, of a dying man, Grett. 119 A. Reflex., e-m ekst e-t í tauma, to be thwarted in a thing, where the figure is taken from trimming the sail when the sheet is foul, Fms. xi. 121. In later Icelandic there is a verb akka, að, to heap together, a. e-u saman, no doubt a corruption from aka with a double radical consonant, a cant word. Aka is at present a rare word, and is, at least in common speech, used in a weak form, akar instead of ekr; akaði = ók; akat = ekit. -
15 быть в очень трудном положении
1) General subject: to be in great (dire) straits (в стеснённых обстоятельствах, в большой нужде)2) Colloquial: feel the pinch (в стеснённых обстоятельствах)3) Makarov: be in dire straits, be in great straits, feel the pinchУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > быть в очень трудном положении
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16 strait
[streɪt]сущ.1) обычно straits.; употр. с гл. в ед. пролив2) обычно straits затруднительное положение, стеснённые обстоятельства, нужда- financial strait3) узкая часть чего-л. -
17 strait
n2) pl затруднительное положение, трудности•- financial straits
- in great straits
- international strait -
18 Strait
subs.Narrow sea passage: P. and V. στενόν, τό, πορθμός, ὁ, πόρος, ὁ, V. γνάθος, ἡ, στενωπός, ἡ, αὐλών, ὁ, δίαυλος, ὁ.They shall inhabit the plans that front the straight between two continents: V. ἀντίπορθμα δʼ ἠπείροιν δυοῖν πέδια κατοικήσουσι (Eur., Ion, 1585).Straits, difficulties: P. and V. ἀπορία, ἡ, ἄπορον, τό, or pl., V. ἀμήχανον, τό, or pl., P. τὰ δυσχερῆ; see also misfortune.Into what straits of necessity have we fallen: V. εἰς οἷʼ ἀνάγκης ζεύγματʼ ἐμπεπτώκαμεν (Eur., I. A. 443).The maintenance of his mercenaries will land him in great straits: P. εἰς στενὸν κομιδῆ τὰ τῆς τροφῆς τοῖς ξένοις αὐτῷ κακαστήσεται (Dem. I5).——————adj.Narrow: P. and V. στενός, V. στενόπορος.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Strait
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19 strait
[streɪt]strait (обыкн. pl) затруднительное положение, стесненные обстоятельства, нужда; in great straits в бедственном положении strait (обыкн. pl) затруднительное положение, стесненные обстоятельства, нужда; in great straits в бедственном положении strait редк. перешеек strait (часто pl) пролив -
20 strait
{streit}
I. 1. тесен, ограничен
2. строг, взискателен
3. ам. труден, затрудняващ, затруднителен
II. 1. геогр. и рl пролив
2. обик. pl затруднение, затруднено положение, нужда
in dire STRAIT в бедствено положение, в беда* * *{streit} а ост. 1. тесен, ограничен; 2. строг, взискателен; З.(2) {streit} n 1. геогр. и рl пролив; 2. обик. pl затруднение,* * *теснина;* * *1. i. тесен, ограничен 2. ii. геогр. и рl пролив 3. in dire strait в бедствено положение, в беда 4. ам. труден, затрудняващ, затруднителен 5. обик. pl затруднение, затруднено положение, нужда 6. строг, взискателен* * *strait [streit] I. adj ост. 1. тесен, ограничен; 2. ост. строг, взискателен; 3. ам. затруднен; FONT face=Times_Deutsch◊ adv straitly; II. n 1. геогр. (и pl) пролив; 2. често pl затруднение; затруднено положение; нужда; to be in a \strait (in great \straits, in dire \straits, desperate \straits) намирам се в бедствено положение, загазил съм, в затруднение.
См. также в других словарях:
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