Перевод: со словенского на английский

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incorrect

  • 1 lixъ

    lixъ Grammatical information: adj. o Proto-Slavic meaning: `superfluous, incorrect'
    Page in Trubačev: XV 99-102
    Old Church Slavic:
    lixъ `excessive, superfluous' [adj o]
    Russian:
    lixój `brave, quick, swift, evil, heavy, difficult' [adj o];
    lixój (dial.) `sharp, strong' [adj o]
    Czech:
    lichý `lonesome, isolated, empty' [adj o]
    Old Czech:
    lichý `unequal, wrong, evil, simple, empty' [adj o]
    Slovak:
    lichý (lit.) `deceptive, empty, incorrect' [adj o];
    lichý (dial.) `deceptive, empty, incorrect, poor, insignificant' [adj o]
    Polish:
    lichy `poor, miserable, insignificant, mean, (dial.) evil' [adj o]
    Old Polish:
    lichy `incorrect, evil, poor, pitiful, insignificant' [adj o]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    lȉh `exclusive' [adj o];
    lȋh `unnecessary, false, empty, odd (number)' [adj o]
    Slovene:
    lȋh `uneven, odd (number)' [adj o]
    Indo-European reconstruction: leikʷ-so-
    Page in Pokorny: 669

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > lixъ

  • 2 napačen

    false, incorrect, mistaken, wrong

    Slovenian-english dictionary > napačen

  • 3 blizna

    blizna; blizno Grammatical information: f. ā; n. o
    Page in Trubačev: II 118-120
    Russian:
    blízna (dial.) `missing thread in fabric, flaw in home-spun material' [f ā];
    blizná `knot in linen resulting from an incorrect arrangement of the warp' [f ā];
    bliznó `flaw in fabric, absence of one or two threads' [n o];
    bljuzná `flaw in fabric' [f ā]
    Old Russian:
    blizna `scar' [f ā]
    Belorussian:
    bljuzná `flaw in fabric' [f ā]
    Ukrainian:
    blýzna `wound, scar' [f ā];
    blyzná `defect in linen' [f ā]
    Czech:
    blizna `stigma (bot.)' [f ā]
    Polish:
    blizna `scar, gash, seam, cicatrice, trace left by a fallen leaf' [f ā]
    Old Polish:
    bluzna `cicatrice, stigma, stamp' [f ā]
    Kashubian:
    blïzna `cicatrice' [f ā]
    Upper Sorbian:
    bɫuzna `scar, birth-mark' [f ā]
    Lower Sorbian:
    bluzna `scar, bruise' [f ā]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    blȉzna `two threads put into a reed (instead of one);
    ruptured thread in weft or warp' [f ā], blȋznī [Nom p];
    blȋzna `scar' [f ā];
    blȉzno `gap' [n o]
    Bulgarian:
    blizná `place in fabric where a thread is torn or missing' [f ā]
    Proto-Balto-Slavic reconstruction: bliʔź-n-
    Lithuanian:
    blyžė̃ `rip in fabric' [f ē] 4
    Latvian:
    blîznis2 `pile of broken trees in a forest' [f ē]
    Indo-European reconstruction: A formation with an n-suffix derived from *bʰliǵ- `beat', cf. Lat. flīgere `hit'.
    IE meaning: scar
    Page in Pokorny: 160
    Comments: The forms that seemingly reflect *bl'uzna must be secondary.

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > blizna

  • 4 blizno

    blizna; blizno Grammatical information: f. ā; n. o
    Page in Trubačev: II 118-120
    Russian:
    blízna (dial.) `missing thread in fabric, flaw in home-spun material' [f ā];
    blizná `knot in linen resulting from an incorrect arrangement of the warp' [f ā];
    bliznó `flaw in fabric, absence of one or two threads' [n o];
    bljuzná `flaw in fabric' [f ā]
    Old Russian:
    blizna `scar' [f ā]
    Belorussian:
    bljuzná `flaw in fabric' [f ā]
    Ukrainian:
    blýzna `wound, scar' [f ā];
    blyzná `defect in linen' [f ā]
    Czech:
    blizna `stigma (bot.)' [f ā]
    Polish:
    blizna `scar, gash, seam, cicatrice, trace left by a fallen leaf' [f ā]
    Old Polish:
    bluzna `cicatrice, stigma, stamp' [f ā]
    Kashubian:
    blïzna `cicatrice' [f ā]
    Upper Sorbian:
    bɫuzna `scar, birth-mark' [f ā]
    Lower Sorbian:
    bluzna `scar, bruise' [f ā]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    blȉzna `two threads put into a reed (instead of one);
    ruptured thread in weft or warp' [f ā], blȋznī [Nom p];
    blȋzna `scar' [f ā];
    blȉzno `gap' [n o]
    Bulgarian:
    blizná `place in fabric where a thread is torn or missing' [f ā]
    Proto-Balto-Slavic reconstruction: bliʔź-n-
    Lithuanian:
    blyžė̃ `rip in fabric' [f ē] 4
    Latvian:
    blîznis2 `pile of broken trees in a forest' [f ē]
    Indo-European reconstruction: A formation with an n-suffix derived from *bʰliǵ- `beat', cf. Lat. flīgere `hit'.
    IE meaning: scar
    Page in Pokorny: 160
    Comments: The forms that seemingly reflect *bl'uzna must be secondary.

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > blizno

  • 5 kl̨učiti

    kl̨učiti Grammatical information: v. Proto-Slavic meaning: `lock'
    Page in Trubačev: X 50
    Old Church Slavic:
    ključiti sę `lock' [verb], ključǫ sę [1sg]
    Czech:
    klíčiti `lock' [verb]
    Slovincian:
    klëčëc `lock' [verb]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    kljùčiti `lock, peck' [verb];
    kljȕčiti `lock, peck' [verb]
    Slovene:
    kljúčiti `bend' [verb], kljȗčim [1sg] \{1\}
    Notes:
    \{1\} The form kljúčim (Pleteršnik I: 409) is incorrect (see o.c. II: V).

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > kl̨učiti

  • 6 màti

    màti Grammatical information: f. r Accent paradigm: a Proto-Slavic meaning: `mother'
    Page in Trubačev: XVII 254-259
    Old Church Slavic:
    mati `mother' [f r], matere [Gens]
    Russian:
    mat' `mother' [f r], máteri [Gens]
    Old Russian:
    mati `mother' [f r], matere [Gens]
    Old Czech:
    máti `mother' [f r], mateře [Gens]
    Old Polish:
    mać `mother' [f r], macierze [Gens]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    mȁti `mother' [f r], mȁterē [Gens];
    Čak. mȁti (Vrgada) `mother' [f r], mȁterē [Gens];
    Čak. mȁt (Novi, Orbanići) `mother' [f r], mȁteri [Gens]
    Slovene:
    máti `mother' [f r], mátere [Gens]
    Proto-Balto-Slavic reconstruction: máʔter-
    Lithuanian:
    mótė (OLith, dial.) `wife, mother' [f r] 1 \{1\}
    Latvian:
    mãte `mother' [f ē] \{2\}
    Old Prussian:
    mūti (Ench.) `mother' [f];
    mothe (EV) `mother' [f];
    muti (Gr.) `mother' [f]
    Indo-European reconstruction: meh₂ter-
    IE meaning: mother
    Certainty: +
    Page in Pokorny: 700ff
    Comments: The root stress in this word may be due to Hirt's law, cf. Skt. mātā́, but there is a distinct possibility that it is old, cf. Gk. μήτηρ.
    Other cognates:
    Skt. mātár- `mother' [f];
    Gk. μήτηρ `mother' [f];
    Lat. māter `mother' [f];
    OHG muoter `mother' [f];
    OIr. máthir `mother' [f];
    Alb. mótrë `sister' [f]
    Notes:
    \{1\} The oldest form of the genitive is móteres, which occurs, for instance, in DP and in dialects. The most important Standard Lithuanian derivatives are móteris `wife, mother' and mótina `mother'. The form motė̃, which frequently occurs in the older scholarly literature, does not exist. \{2\} The accentuation mâte (Pokorny) is incorrect.

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > màti

См. также в других словарях:

  • incorrect — incorrect, e [ ɛ̃kɔrɛkt ] adj. • 1421; de 1. in et correct 1 ♦ Qui n est pas correct. Édition incorrecte. ⇒ fautif. Spécialt Qui enfreint les règles de l usage, en matière de langage. Terme incorrect. ⇒ impropre; incorrection. ♢ Qui n est pas… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Incorrect — In cor*rect , a. [L. incorrectus: cf. F. incorrect. See {In } not, and {Correct}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Not correct; not according to a copy or model, or to established rules; inaccurate; faulty. [1913 Webster] The piece, you think, is incorrect.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • incorrect — incorrect, ecte (in ko rèkt , rè kt ; voy. CORRECT pour la prononciation de la finale) adj. Qui n est pas correct. Cette édition est fort incorrecte. Style incorrect. Dessin incorrect.    Il se dit aussi des personnes. Écrivain, auteur incorrect …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • Incorrect — means to not be correct and may also refer to:* Politically incorrect * Incorrectly formatted data, a computer erroree also* Correctness * Anomalously numbered roads in Great Britain * Disputes in English grammar (Incorrect… …   Wikipedia

  • Incorrect — (v. lat.), fehlerhaft; daher Incorrectheit, Fehlerhaftigkeit …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Incorrect — Incorrect, Incorrectheit, lat. dtsch., das Gegentheil von correct, s. d …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • incorrect — I adjective amiss, awry, erring, erroneous, fallacious, false, falsus, faulty, flawed, imperfect, imprecise, improbus, improper, inaccurate, inappropriate, inexact, miscalculated, misconstrued, misfigured, misjudged, misleading, mistaken,… …   Law dictionary

  • incorrect — (adj.) early 15c., uncorrected, from L. incorrectus uncorrected, from in not (see IN (Cf. in ) (1)) + correctus (see CORRECT (Cf. correct)). Sense of not in good style is from 1670s; that of factually wrong, erroneous, inaccurate is from 1610s… …   Etymology dictionary

  • incorrect — [adj] wrong counterfactual, erroneous, false, faulty, flawed, imprecise, improper, inaccurate, inappropriate, inexact, mistaken, not trustworthy, out*, specious, unfitting, unreliable, unseemly, unsound, unsuitable, untrue, way off*, wide of the… …   New thesaurus

  • incorrect — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ not in accordance with fact or standards; wrong. DERIVATIVES incorrectly adverb incorrectness noun …   English terms dictionary

  • incorrect — [in΄kə rekt′] adj. [ME < L incorrectus] not correct; specif., a) improper b) untrue; inaccurate; wrong; faulty incorrectly adv. incorrectness n …   English World dictionary

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