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81 ἀγερρακάβος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: σταφυλή H.Other forms: ἀγγεράκομον σταφυλήν H. ; ἀγράκαβος σταφυλή Η.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Latte rejects two of these forms (how to decide which?), as does Fur. 221. I think this is not allowed. The word is anyhow Pre-Greek, like many words concerning wine (e.g. ἀρασχάδες); note the element - αβ-. The - ε- is a prop vowel, Fur. 378ff. (thus these forms are real forms); variation α\/ο and β\/μ are well known (thus these are not mistakes); the γγ may be prenasalization, one of the clearest characteristics of Pre-Greek words (thus the form is real).Page in Frisk: --Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἀγερρακάβος
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82 μέλας
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `dark-coloured, black' (Il.); μελάν-τερος (Il.), - τατος (IA.), late μελανώτερος Str.), μελαινοτάτη ( Epigr. Gr., AP; Leumann Mus. Helv. 2,9f. = Kl.Schr. 223f.).Compounds: Very often as 1. member, e.g. μελάγ-χροος (pl. - ες), - χροιής, - χρής, - χρως- μελανό-χροος etc. `with dark skin' (see Sommer Nominalkomp. 21ff.; also Treu Von Homer zur Lyrik 52 a. 80); μελαγ-χιμος `dark, black' (A., E., X.), with faded 2. member, cp. δύσ-χιμος and Sommer 71ff.; μελάν-δετος prob. `dark-striped' or `with dark bands' (O713, A., E.; Trümpy Fachausdrücke 62, Risch 189); μελάν-δρυ-ος `of black wood (δόρυ)' (A. Fr. 251), n. `heart-wood, marrow' (Thphr., Strömberg Theophrastea 128), pl. `piece of tunny', with which μελάν-δρυς m. `tunny' (Pamphil.; Strömberg Fischnamen 128); μελάμ-πυρον n. (- ος m.) `ball-mustard, Neslia paniculata' (Thphr., Gal.); with the form. cf. διόσπυρον (s.v.), on the meaning Carnoy REGr. 71, 96; μελαγ-κάλαμον n. dvandva `ink and pen' (pap. Vp, Maas Glotta 35, 299f.). Often in PN, with as shortnames e.g. Μελαινεύς, Μελανεύς, Μελανθεύς, Μέλανθος (Boßhardt 95, 101, 154, Schwyzer 263).Derivatives: 1. μελαιν-άς f. name of a dark-coloured fish (Cratin. [?]; Strömberg Fischnamen 22); - ίς f. name of a sea-shell (Sophr., Herod., Xenokr.), also name of Aphrodite in Corinth (Ath.). 2. μελάν-ιον n. `ink' (pap., Edict. Diocl.; from μέλαν, Georgacas Glotta 36, 169). 3. μελαν-ία f. `blackness, black shadow, black colour' (X., Arist.), - ότης f. `blackness' (Arist.: λευκότης). 4. μελανός = μέλας (Sp.), - όν n. `black pigment' ( Sammelb. IVp); after κελαινός, ὀρφνός etc.; μελαιναῖος `id.' ( Orac. Sib.; after κνεφαῖος a.o.; Chantraine Form. 47); μελανώδης `blackish' (EM). -- Denominative verbs: 1. μελαίνομαι, -ω `become, make dark, black' (Il.); from this μέλανσις f. `blackening' (Arist.), μέλασ-μα n. `black spot, black paint' (Hp.), - μός m. `blackening, black spot' (Hp., Plu.), μελαντηρ-ία f. `black pigment, blackness' (IG 22, 1672, Arist.), - ιον `stain' (sch.). 2. μελάνω `become (make?) black' (H 64; Schwyzer 700, Shipp Studies 37). 3. μελανέω intr. `id.' (Thphr., A. R., Call.)Etymology: To μέλᾱς \< *μέλᾰν-ς, μέλαινα (\< - αν- ι̯α), μέλᾰν is τάλᾱς, τάλαινα, τάλαν a parallel, where it must be noted that τάλας seems to be an orig. ντ-stem. --The identification of μέλαινα with Skt. f. malinī (supp. IE *melh₂n-i̯ǝ), to which a consonantic m. μελαν- was innovated for an older *μέλανος = Skt. malina-'dirty' (Schwyzer IF 30, 446ff. after Brugmann Grundr. 2: 1, 256 n. 1), fails because malinī is known only as a gloss and in the sense of `menstruating woman'; masc. malina- is further an ep.-class. deriv. from Ved. mála- n. `dirt'; s. Sommer Nominalkomp. 25, Wackernagel-Debrunner II: 2, 351 f. Of the many words cited under the words mel- indicating colour in WP. 2, 293 f., Pok. 720 f. only a few Baltic formations with n-suffix are interesting, Latv. męl̃ns `black' (see Fraenkel Gnomon 22, 237), OPr. melne `blue spot', mīlinan acc. f. `spot' (further Fraenkel Wb. s. mė́las 2). -- Further s. μολύνω, also μελίνη and μώλωψ.Page in Frisk: 2,198-199Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μέλας
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83 στρεβλός
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `turned, twisted, crooked, cunning' (IA.)Derivatives: - ότης f. `crook, perversity' (Plu. a.o.). - όω, also w. δια-, κατα-, `to twist, to dislocate, to torture, to torment' (IA.) with - ωσις, - ωμα, - ωτήριος; also - ευμα n. (: *στρεβλεύω) `perversion' (Sm.). Also στρέβλη f. `winch, roll, screw', also as instrument of torture (A., Arist., Plb. etc.); formation as σμί-λη a.o., backformation from στρεβλόω or substant. of στρεβλός? -- A. With o-vowel: στρόβος m. `whirl' (A. Ag. 657, H.). From this 1. στρόβ-ῑλος m. `top, whirlwind, whirlpool, fir-cone etc.' (Att., hell. a. late; cf. ὅμ-ῖλος a.o.) with - ίλιον, - ιλίτης, - ιλέα, - ιλᾶς, - ιλεών, - ίλινος, - ιλώδης, - ιλίζω, - ιλόω (all late). 2. - ίλη f. `cone made of lint' (Hp.). 3. - εύς m. name of a fuller's instrument (sch.). 4. - εία f. `fullery?' (Delos IIIa). 5. στροβελός σοβαρός, τρυφερός; - ελόν σκολιόν, καμπύλον H. 6. στροβανίσκος τρίπους H. 7. στροβάζων συνεχῶς στρεφόμενος H. 8. στροβέω, somet. w. δια- a.o., `to turn around in circles, to move violently, to distract' (A., Ar., hell. a. late), prob. old deverbat. Here wit nasal infix στρόμβος m. `top' (Ξ 413), `whirlwind' (A. Pr. 1084), `snail-shell, snail etc.' (Arist., hell. poet.) with - ο-ειδής, - ώδης (Arist. a.o.), - εῖον, - ιλος, - ηδόν, - έω, - όω (rae a. late). -- B. With α-vowel (zero grade?): στραβός `squinting' (medic.), with - ων `id.' ( Com. Adesp.), also PN, - αξ PN, - ότης f. `squint' (Orib. a.o.), - ίζω `to squint' (H., EM) with - ισμός (Gal. a.o.). The orig. meaning still in στραβο-πόδης `with twisted feet' (Hdn.). Further στράβηλος m. f. `wild olive-tree' (Pherecr. in lyr.), name of a snail (S. Fr. 324, Arist. a.o.); στραβαλός ὁ στρογγυλίας καὶ τετράγωνος ἄνθρωπος. Άχαιοί H.; στραβεύς κωπεύς H. (Chantraine Étrennes Benveniste 17). On ἀστραβής s. v. -- C. On themselves stand some forms wit - οι-: στροῖβος δῖνος H. ( στροιβός δεινός cod.); Στροῖβος also Att. PN; πολύ-στροιβος `rich of whirls', of θάλασσα, Νεῖλος (Nic.), after πολύ-φλοισβος; from there the simplex στροῖβος etc.? Further στροι-βᾶν ἀντιστρέφειν, στροίβηλος ἔπαρμα πληγῆς ἐν κεφαλῃ̃H. Also with - ει- in Thess. Στρειβουνείοι (: *Στρείβων) ? s. Bechtel Dial. 1, 210. -- Lat. LW [loanword] strabus, strabō, strambus, also scriblĩta f. des. of a cake from *στρεβλίτης ( ἄρτος); s. W.-Hofmann s.v. and Leumann Sprache 1, 206f. (= Kl. Schr. 173).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin] (V)Etymology: As so many words in - β- the above group as a whole has a popular-expressive character. The primary verb that belongs here has an aspirate, s. στρέφω. -- I don't think that the word has anything to do with στρέφω. The word is rather Pre-Greek (note the prenasalization in στóμβος; the suffix in στραβ-αλ-, στροβ-αν-; the suffix - ιλ- is frequent in Pre-Greek. The variation α\/ο\/οι is unknown to me. None of the words is discussed by Furnée.)Page in Frisk: 2,806-807Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στρεβλός
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84 Язык до добра не доведет
See Язык мой - враг мой (Я)Var.: Язык до добра не доведёт болтунаCf: Don't cut off your head with your tongue (Am.). Let not your tongue cut your throat (Am.). Many words, many buffets (Br.). Nothing ruins a duck but (like) his bill (Am.). An ox is taken by the horns, and a man by the tongue (Am., Br.). Tongue double brings trouble (Am.). The tongue talks at the head's cost (Br.)Русско-английский словарь пословиц и поговорок > Язык до добра не доведет
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85 BÝSN
* * *n. and f. wonder, portent (þetta eru stór býsn).* * *n. [cp. A. S. bysen, bisen, which means example, whilst the Icel. word means] a wonder, a strange and portentous thing; commonly Used in pl., urðu hverskonar býsn, 625. 42; þar sem þessi býsn (acc. pl.) bar fyrir, Fms. xi. 13; þetta eru stór býsn, 64; slíkt eru banvæn býsn, Fas. iii. 13 (in a verse); sing., Fms. xi. 10, 64: in mod. use fem. sing., Fb. i. 212, Pr. 76, 91; býsna-veðr, portentous weather, Fms. iii. 137; býsna-vetr, a winter of portents, when many ghosts and goblins were about, Bs., Sturl. i. 115; býsna-sumar, in the same sense, Ann. 1203. In mod. use býsna- is prefixed to a great many words in the sense of pretty, tolerably, Germ. ziemlich; býsna-vel, b. góðr, langr, fljótr, pretty well, pretty good, etc. in early writers the sense is much stronger. -
86 так
1. нареч.1) so; thus, like this, (in) this way; in such a way; ( указание на точное соответствие оригиналу) sic лат.так же, как и — as well as, along with, as also
так же..., как и — as... as
вот так! — that's the way!, that's right!
вся неделя так прошла — the whole week passed thus, the whole week passed like that
он говорил так, как будто — he spoke as though
он так говорил, что — he spoke in such a way that
я так и сказал ему, что — I told him in so many words that
он отвечал так — he answered thus, he answers as follows, this is the answer he gave
здесь что-то не так — there is smth. wrong here
так, как это было — how it was, the it was
будьте так добры (повел.) — please (повел.)
будьте так добры (делать что-л.) — would you be so kind (to do smth.)
так ли это? — is that (really) the case?, is that so?
так и есть — so it is; such, indeed, is the case
я так и не узнал — I never found out, I never learnt
если это так — if so, if this is the case
так же (как) — just as; the same way as
так чтобы не — (делать что-л.) so as not
так чтобы — (делать что-л.) so as, so that, in such a way as to
это не так — such/this is not the case
ты не пойдешь, так я пойду — if you don't go, then I shall
не тут, так там — if (it is) not here, then (it is) there
•2. союзОни должны быть одного размера, а на самом деле это не так —They should be of the same size, which they are not.
1) then (иногда не переводится)ты не спросишь его, так я спрошу — if you won't ask him, then I will
ехать, так ехать — if we are going, let's go
не сегодня, так завтра — if not today, then tomorrow
2) so3. частицаnothing in particular, nothing specialчто тебе не понравилось там? - так, общее положение — what did you not like there? - Nothing in particular, just the set-up in general
- и так- так и••и т.д. — etc.
и так далее — etceteras, and so on/forth
и так и сяк, и так и этак — this way and that, this way, that way and every way
как бы не так! — not likely!; nothing of the kind
как так? — how is that?, how do you mean?
так бы...! (взять бы да и..) — wouldn't I just...!
так или иначе — in any event, in any case; one way or another; in either event ( в том и другом случае)
так-то так, но — that's true, but
- а так- если так
- так и быть
- так и знайте
- так и знай
- так и так
- так называемый
- так например
- так себе -
87 εὐχαριστέω
εὐχαριστέω (s. χάρις) 1 aor. εὐχαρίστησα (ηὐχ-Ro 1:21 [edd. exc. t.r.] s. W-S. §12, 5b; Mlt-H. 191f); 1 aor. pass. subj. 3 sg. εὐχαριστηθῇ; ptc. εὐχαριστηθείς (Just.)① to show that one is under obligation, be thankful, feel obligated to thank. This mng. is common in diplomatic documents in which the recipient of a favor reciprocates with assurance of goodwill (e.g. decrees of the Byzantines in Demosth. 18, 91f, concluding: οὐκ ἐλλείψει εὐχαριστῶν καὶ ποιῶν ὅ τι ἄν δύνηται ἀγαθόν =the people of the Chersonesus ‘will never stop being grateful and doing whatever they can’ (for the people of Athens); cp. OGI 730, 11; IPriene 44, 8 et al.). In this sense ἐ. = χάριν διδόναι (in contrast to χάριν εἰδέναι, s. Phryn. p. 18 Lob.). This mng. has been suggested for Lk 18:11 (the Pharisee is interpreted as making requital in fasting and tithing vs. 12) and Ro 16:4 (in sense of indebtedness; this pass. is the only one in the NT that deals w. thankfulness toward humans [as 2 Macc. 12:31]), but both pass. fit equally well in 2.② to express appreciation for benefits or blessings, give thanks, express thanks, render/return thanks (as ‘render thanks’ since Polyb. 16, 25, 1; Posidon. 87, Fgm. 36 [in Athen. 5, 213e]; Diod S 20, 34, 5; Plut., Mor. 505d; Epict., ins, pap, LXX, Philo; Jos., Ant. 20, 12; cp. Phryn. p. 18 Lob.). Except for Ro 16:4 (cp. 2 Macc 12:31) εὐ. is used w. God as object (Diod S 14, 29, 4; 16, 11, 1 τοῖς θεοῖς περὶ τῶν ἀγαθῶν; Epict. 1, 4, 32; 1, 10, 3; 2, 23, 5 τῷ θεῷ; Artem. 4, 2 p. 206, 4 θῦε καὶ εὐχαρίστει; Herm. Wr. 1, 29 τ. θεῷ; SIG 995, 11 τ. θεοῖς; 1173, 9f; UPZ 59, 10 [168 B.C.] τ. θεοῖς; PTebt 56, 9; BGU 423, 6 τ. κυρίῳ Σεράπιδι; PGM 13, 706 [w. δέομαι]; Jdth 8:25; 2 Macc 1:11; 10:7; 3 Macc 7:16; EpArist 177 ὑμῖν, … τῷ θεῷ; Philo, Spec. Leg. 2, 204; 3, 6 θεῷ; TestSol 7:4 and Jos., Ant. 1, 193 τ. θεῷ; TestJos 8:5 τῷ κυρίω; TestAbr A 15 p. 95, 14 [Stone p. 38]; Ar. 15, 10 al.; Just., Orig., Hippol., Did.) αὐτῷ (of Jesus, who reveals himself as God in a miracle) Lk 17:16. τῷ θεῷ (μου) Ac 28:15; Ro 7:25 v.l.; 1 Cor 14:18; Phil 1:3; Col 1:3, 12; 3:17; Phlm 4; 1 Cl 38:4; 41:1 v.l.; B 7:1; IEph 21:1; Hv 4, 1, 4. εὐχαριστῶ σοι=God Lk 18:11 (cp. 1QH 2:20 al.אוֹדְכָה אֲדוֹנָי ‘I praise you, O Lord’). Elliptically Ro 1:21, where τῷ θεῷ is to be understood fr. the preceding ὡς θεόν (though εὐ. occasionally is used w. the acc. praise someone w. thanks SIG 1172, 3 εὐχαριστεῖ Ἀσκληπιόν; Cat. Cod. Astr. VII 177, 17); 1 Th 5:18; 2 Cl 18:1.—Esp. of thanksgiving before meals, w. dat. added τῷ θεῷ Ac 27:35; Ro 14:6 (cp. Ar. 15, 10); σοι D 10:3; ᾧ B 7:1. Abs. Mt 15:36; 26:27; Mk 8:6, 7 v.l.; 14:23; Lk 22:17, 19; J 6:11, 23; 1 Cor 11:24 (cp. Just., A I, 65, 5). W. mention of the obj., for which one gives thanks τινί τι (to) someone for someth. Hs 7:5 (εὐ. τι=‘thank for someth.’, a rare usage [Hippocr., Ep. 17, 46], s. 2 Cor 1:11 below; cp. Just., A I, 65, 5 τοῦ εὐχαριστηθέντος ἄρτου). περί τινος for someone, because of someone (Philo, Spec. Leg. 1, 211) 1 Th 1:2; for someth. Hs 5, 1, 1; also foll by ὅτι because (Ps.-Callisth. 2, 22, 11; Berl. pap: APF 12, ’37, 247; TestAbr A 15 p. 95, 14 [Stone p. 38]) Ro 1:8; 1 Cor 1:4f; 2 Th 1:3; 2:13. ὑπέρ τινος w. gen. of the pers. on whose behalf one thanks 2 Cor 1:11; Eph 1:16; Hs 2:6; also foll. by ὅτι because IPhld 11:1; ISm 10:1. ὑπέρ τινος w. gen. of thing for someth. (Philo, Congr. Erud. Gr. 96) 1 Cor 10:30; Eph 5:20; D 9:2f; 10:2. W. ἐπί τινι because of, for (IPergamon 224a, 14; Sb 7172, 25 [217 B.C.] εὐχαριστῶν τοῖς θεοῖς ἐπὶ τῷ συντελέσαι αὐτοὺς ἃ ἐπηγγείλαντο αὐτῷ; UPZ 59, 10f [168 B.C.]; Philo, Spec. Leg. 1, 67; TestGad 7:6 v.l. ἐπὶ πᾶσι τῷ κυρίῳ; Jos., Ant. 1, 193) 1 Cor 1:4; Hs 9, 14, 3. W. (τινί and) ὅτι foll. Lk 18:11 (cp. 1QH 2:20 al.); J 11:41; 1 Cor 1:14; 1 Th 2:13; Rv 11:17; 1 Cl 38:2; IPhld 6:3; D 10:3, 4. W. acc. of content εὐχαριστεῖν ὅσα θέλουσιν do the eucharistic prayer (in as many words as) the prophets choose D 10:7. Abs. σὺ εὐχαριστεῖς you offer a prayer of thanksgiving 1 Cor 14:17; in wordplay do the Eucharist οὕτως εὐχαριστήσατε D 9:1; εὐχαριστήσατε 14:1; cp. 10:1. As a parenthetical clause εὐχαριστῶ τῷ θεῷ thanks be to God 1 Cor 14:18. Pass. (cp. Dssm., B 119 [BS 122]; Philo, Rer. Div. Her. 174 ἵνα ὑπὲρ τ. ἀγαθῶν ὁ θεὸς εὐχαριστῆται) ἵνα ἐκ πολλῶν προσώπων τὸ εἰς ἡμᾶς χάρισμα διὰ πολλῶν εὐχαριστηθῇ ὑπὲρ ἡμῶν in order that thanks may be given by many persons on our behalf for the blessing granted to us 2 Cor 1:11 (on εὐ. τι s. above).—PSchubert, Form and Function of the Pauline Thanksgivings ’39. In a few passages the word could also mean③ pray gener. (PTebt 56, 9 [II B.C.] εὐχαριστῆσαι τοῖς θεοῖς; PLond II, 413, 3 p. 301 and II, 418, 3 p. 303 [both Christ., c. 346 A.D.]; BGU 954, 4).—1 Cl 62:2 v.l. (for εὐαριστεῖν).—FHort, Εὐχαριστία, εὐχαριστεῖν (in Philo): JTS 3, 1902, 594–98; TSchermann, Εὐχαριστία and εὐχαριστεῖν: Philol 69, 1910, 375–410; GBoobyer, ‘Thanksgiving’ and the ‘Glory of God’ in Paul, diss. Heidelb. 1929; JMRobinson, Die Hodajot-Formel in Gebet und Hymnus des Frühchristentums, in: Apophoreta (Festschr. EHaenchen) ’64, 194–235; HPatsch, ZNW 62, ’71, 210–31; RAC VI, 900–928.—B. 1166. DELG s.v. χάρις. New Docs 127–29. M-M. EDNT. TW. -
88 болтун
1) General subject: a leaky vessel, a man of many words, addle egg, babbler, bagpipe, big mouth, blab, blabber, bladder, blatherskite, bletherskate, cackler, chatterbox, chatterer, clacker, copious speaker, fiddle faddle, fiddle-faddle, fiddle-faddles, flibbertigibbet, gab-tongue, gabber, glib talker, gossip, gossiper, jay, mag, maggot pie, magpie, maunderer, parakeet, paraquet, perroquet, piffler, prater, prattler, quidnunc, ratchet jaw, rattle, rattle box, rattle-box, rattler, rattletrap, retailer, sieve, speechifier, talker, tattler, tattletale, telltale, twaddler, wind-egg (яйцо без зародыша), windjammer, windy, gabster, rattle-brain, gabbler, ringer, tale-bearer, chatty Cathy2) Colloquial: barber's cat, gas-bag, gasser, jackdaw, spouter, windbag, bag of wind, big gob, schmoozer3) American: loudmouth4) Ironical: speechmaker5) Jocular: leaky vessel (о человеке, не хранящем тайны), beggar (US), sand beggar (US), ringer (US)6) Australian slang: bilge artist, crap artist, earbasher, gasbag7) Diplomatic term: compulsive talker8) Scornful: ranter9) Scottish language: haverel10) Jargon: catamaran, ear-bender, gum-beater, hot-air artist, hot-air merchant, yakker, yapper, cojun box, flapjaw, jawbone, wind-jammer, windmill11) Simple: windback12) American English: fat-mouth13) Makarov: a hot-air salesman, a retailer of gossip, hot-air salesman, retailer of gossip14) Poultry breeding: runny egg (runny eggs - яйца-болтуны)15) Taboo: big-mouthed son of a bitch, bullshit-artist, man with a paper ass, man with a paper asshole16) Journalism: tatler (журнал о моде и светской жизни, основанный в Британии в 1901 году http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatler) -
89 бритва скребёт, а слово режет
Set phrase: many words hurt more than swords (дословно: Многие слова ранят сильнее, чем шпаги)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > бритва скребёт, а слово режет
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90 быть молчаливым, немногословным
General subject: not to be a person of many wordsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > быть молчаливым, немногословным
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91 велеречивый человек
General subject: a man of many wordsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > велеречивый человек
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92 здесь приводятся различные варианты произношения многих слов
General subject: variant pronunciations of many words are recorded hereУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > здесь приводятся различные варианты произношения многих слов
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93 лучше один раз увидеть
Information technology: a diagram worths many wordsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > лучше один раз увидеть
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94 многословный человек
General subject: a man of many wordsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > многословный человек
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95 намёком
General subject: hintingly, not in so many words -
96 не напрямую
General subject: not in so many words -
97 не ножа бойся, а языка
Set phrase: many words hurt more than swords (дословно: Многие слова ранят сильнее, чем шпаги), the tongue is not steel, yet it cuts, the tongue is sharper than any swordУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > не ножа бойся, а языка
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98 одна схема заменяет тысячу слов
Computers: a diagram worths many wordsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > одна схема заменяет тысячу слов
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99 откровенно
1) General subject: broadly, candidly, confessedly, frankly, in all honesty (Напр.: I got to tell you, in all honesty, this is the best summary of a breakfast meeting I've ever read.), in plain English, in so many words, mealy-mouthed, on the level, open heartedly, open-heartedly, openly, outspeak, outspokenly, plain, roundly, straight from the shoulder, straightforwardly, straightly, without reserve, unreservedly, (specifically analytical, specifically sad) specifically, blatantly, notoriously2) Jargon: up front -
100 прямо
1) General subject: ( as) clean as a whistle, aboveboard, antipodal, avowedly, baldly, bang, barely, before (smb.'s) face, blankly, bluntly, bolt upright, broadly, chuck steak, chucker, clean, directly, downright, due, endlong, endways, erect, fair, fair and square, flat, flat out, flat-out, flusher, forthright, foursquare, frankly, full, head on, in plain English, in so many words, live, on the level, on the square, on the straight, outright, outspokenly, plumb, plumb (smth.) (чем-л.), plump, point blank, point-blank, right, roundly, sheer, slap (to hit somebody slap in the eye - ударить кого-либо прямо в глаз), slick, smack, sock, souse, square, squarely, stark, starkly, straight, straight ahead, straight from the shoulder, straight out, straightforward, straightforwardly, straightly, straightway, up and down, up-and-down, upright, direct (to go direct to London - поехать прямо в Лондон), harshly, plumply2) Computers: right up3) Colloquial: just, plunk, spang, it's straight ahead4) Dialect: plat5) Sports: upright adv6) Latin: in-situ7) Engineering: straight forward8) Rare: uprightly9) General subject: upfront10) British English: smack-bang11) Railway term: end-on-end (надпись на оборудовании)12) Law: specifically14) Simple: evendown15) leg.N.P. explicitly (as distinguished from impliedly, by implication, and tacitly), expressly, immediately16) Makarov: as clean as a whistle, butt, chuck, clean as a whistle, cleanly, directly (о направлении), directly (открыто), end up, endwise, flush, head-on, plainly, sincerely17) Emotional: dead
См. также в других словарях:
in so many words — phrasal 1. : in exactly those terms implied that such actions were criminal but did not say so in so many words 2. : in plain forthright language in so many words, she wasn t fit to be seen Jean Stafford * * * in so many words 1. Ex … Useful english dictionary
in so many words — {adv. phr.} 1. In those exact words. * /He hinted that he thought we were foolish but did not say so in so many words./ 2. or[in no uncertain terms] In an outspoken way; plainly; directly. * /I told him in so many words that he was crazy./ * /Bob … Dictionary of American idioms
in so many words — {adv. phr.} 1. In those exact words. * /He hinted that he thought we were foolish but did not say so in so many words./ 2. or[in no uncertain terms] In an outspoken way; plainly; directly. * /I told him in so many words that he was crazy./ * /Bob … Dictionary of American idioms
in\ so\ many\ words — adv. phr. 1. In those exact words. He hinted that he thought we were foolish but did not say so in so many words. 2. • in no uncertain terms In an outspoken way; plainly; directly. I told him in so many words that he was crazy. Bob was very late… … Словарь американских идиом
in so many words — phrasal 1. in exactly those terms < implied that such actions were criminal but did not say so in so many words > 2. in plain forthright language < in so many words, she wasn t fit to be seen Jean Stafford > … New Collegiate Dictionary
in so many words — directly or in a way that makes it very clear what you mean. Did he say we could stay with him? Well, not in so many words, but that s definitely what he meant. (usually negative) He told me, in so many words, to mind my own business … New idioms dictionary
in so many words — This phrase may be used to mean approximately or more or less . I think it may have a sarcastic connotation in that the individual listening needed so many words to get the point. It also may suggest the effort on the part of the speaker to… … The small dictionary of idiomes
in so many words — adverb Verbatim; using exactly the given words. In so many words, he asked me to give him the answers to the test … Wiktionary
in so many words — idi in unequivocal terms; explicitly: She told them in so many words to get out[/ex] … From formal English to slang
in so many words — ► in so many words precisely in the way mentioned. Main Entry: ↑word … English terms dictionary
How Many Words — Infobox Single Name = How Many Words Artist = Blake Lewis from Album = A.D.D. (Audio Day Dream) B side = Released = March 10, 2008 (U.S. radio) Format = Radio single Recorded = 2007 Genre = Pop Funk Hip hop Length = 3:34 Label = Arista Writer =… … Wikipedia