Перевод: с русского на английский

с английского на русский

men's clothes

  • 1 мужской

    Русско-английский словарь Смирнитского > мужской

  • 2 мужской

    мужско́й пол — male sex

    мужско́е пла́тье — men's clothes pl

    мужско́й портно́й — (gentlemen's) tailor

    мужска́я шко́ла — boys' school

    ••

    мужска́я ри́фма лит. — single / male / masculine rhyme

    мужско́й род грам.masculine (gender)

    Новый большой русско-английский словарь > мужской

  • 3 одежда

    м
    clothes pl, AE apparel sg

    ве́рхняя оде́жда — outdoor clothes

    мужска́я/же́нская оде́жда — men's/ladies' wear/AE apparel

    Русско-английский учебный словарь > одежда

  • 4 Р-252

    ХОДИТЬ/ПОЙТИ ПО РУКАМ2 coll VP subj: human, female usu. pfv) to have sexual relations with one man after another
    X пошла по рукам = X began (has been) sleeping around
    X went (has been going) from one man to another (in limited contexts) X began (has been) living off men.
    «Мать, говорит, воровка, по магазинам промышляет, а она сама с пятнадцати по рукам пошла, но разденется, есть на что посмотреть!» (Максимов 1). "She said her mother's a thief, goes around stealing from shops, and that she herself has been living off men since she was fifteen, but when she took her clothes off, she was something to look atr (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > Р-252

  • 5 пойти по рукам

    I
    ХОДИТЬ/ПОЙТИ ПО РУКАМ
    [VP; subj: concr, often a noun denoting a written or printed work; more often impfv; fixed WO]
    =====
    to be passed from one person to another:
    - X ходил по рукам X was passed from hand to hand;
    - X (was) circulated.
         ♦ Тогда же я прочла "Разговоры со Сталиным" Милована Джиласа. Австралийское издание этой книги... кто-то привёз в Москву, и она ходила по рукам (Аллилуева 2). It was at this time that I read Milovan Djilas' Conversations with Stalin. Someone had brought to Moscow the Australian version of this book, and it was passed from hand to hand (2a).
         ♦ Ходили по рукам полемические сочинения, в которых объяснялось, что горчица есть былие [= былье], выросшее из тела девки-блудницы... (Салтыков-Щедрин 1). Polemical compositions were handed around, explaining that mustard was a green which grew from the body of a fornicatress.. (1a).
         ♦ [Твардовский] боялся другого, он еще с лета угрожающе выпытывал, не ходит ли роман по рукам? (Солженицын 2). [Tvardovsky's] fears were quite different. That summer he had begun asking menacingly whether the novel was going the rounds (2a).
         Роман "Доктор Живаго" в рукописи несколько лет ходил в Москве по рукам, официально обсуждался в наших редакциях... (Гладков 1). The novel [Doctor Zhivago] had been circulating in Moscow in manuscript copies for several years, it had been officially under consideration by Soviet publishers., (1a)
    II
    ХОДИТЬ/ПОЙТИ ПО РУКАМ coll
    [VP; subj: human, female; usu. pfv]
    =====
    to have sexual relations with one man after another:
    - X пошла по рукам X began (has been) sleeping around;
    - [in limited contexts] X began (has been) living off men.
         ♦ "Мать, говорит, воровка, по магазинам промышляет, а она сама с пятнадцати по рукам пошла, но разденется, есть на что посмотреть!" (Максимов 1). "She said her mother's a thief, goes around stealing from shops, and that she herself has been living off men since she was fifteen, but when she took her clothes off, she was something to look atr (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > пойти по рукам

  • 6 ходить по рукам

    I
    ХОДИТЬ/ПОЙТИ ПО РУКАМ
    [VP; subj: concr, often a noun denoting a written or printed work; more often impfv; fixed WO]
    =====
    to be passed from one person to another:
    - X ходил по рукам X was passed from hand to hand;
    - X (was) circulated.
         ♦ Тогда же я прочла "Разговоры со Сталиным" Милована Джиласа. Австралийское издание этой книги... кто-то привёз в Москву, и она ходила по рукам (Аллилуева 2). It was at this time that I read Milovan Djilas' Conversations with Stalin. Someone had brought to Moscow the Australian version of this book, and it was passed from hand to hand (2a).
         ♦ Ходили по рукам полемические сочинения, в которых объяснялось, что горчица есть былие [= былье], выросшее из тела девки-блудницы... (Салтыков-Щедрин 1). Polemical compositions were handed around, explaining that mustard was a green which grew from the body of a fornicatress.. (1a).
         ♦ [Твардовский] боялся другого, он еще с лета угрожающе выпытывал, не ходит ли роман по рукам? (Солженицын 2). [Tvardovsky's] fears were quite different. That summer he had begun asking menacingly whether the novel was going the rounds (2a).
         Роман "Доктор Живаго" в рукописи несколько лет ходил в Москве по рукам, официально обсуждался в наших редакциях... (Гладков 1). The novel [Doctor Zhivago] had been circulating in Moscow in manuscript copies for several years, it had been officially under consideration by Soviet publishers., (1a)
    II
    ХОДИТЬ/ПОЙТИ ПО РУКАМ coll
    [VP; subj: human, female; usu. pfv]
    =====
    to have sexual relations with one man after another:
    - X пошла по рукам X began (has been) sleeping around;
    - [in limited contexts] X began (has been) living off men.
         ♦ "Мать, говорит, воровка, по магазинам промышляет, а она сама с пятнадцати по рукам пошла, но разденется, есть на что посмотреть!" (Максимов 1). "She said her mother's a thief, goes around stealing from shops, and that she herself has been living off men since she was fifteen, but when she took her clothes off, she was something to look atr (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > ходить по рукам

  • 7 На чужую одежду плохая надежда

    It is not reliable to count on someone's goods Cf.:
    Borrowed clothes (garments) never fit (Am.). Borrowed garments fit not (never fit well) (Br.). Не goes long barefoot that waits for dead men's shoes (Br.). Не that waits for a dead man's shoes may long go barefoot (Am.). Не that waits for dead men's shoes may go a long time barefoot (Am.). You can't get warm on another's fur coat (Am.)

    Русско-английский словарь пословиц и поговорок > На чужую одежду плохая надежда

  • 8 гардероб

    2) Aviation: coat rack, coat room
    3) Engineering: checkroom
    4) Rare: garderobe
    5) Architecture: cloakroom (помещение)
    6) Cinema: cloak room
    7) Forestry: robe
    8) Advertising: outfit
    9) Chemical weapons: (women's/men's) changing room
    10) Makarov: coatroom

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > гардероб

  • 9 одежда

    1) General subject: apparel, carpet (дороги), clobber, clothes, clothing, costume, creature comforts, dress, garb, garment, gear, graith, habit (для специальных целей), investment, outwall, rig, rig out, robing, tailoring, the outward men, thing, things, tire, togs, turnout, vestiture, wardrobe, wear, wear (-wear,как компонент сложных слов), wearing, wearing apparel, garments
    2) Colloquial: bib and tucker, rig-out, rigging, tog (обыкн. pl), toggery (особ. специальная)
    3) American: dry goods, dry-goods
    4) Obsolete: burnie
    5) Poetical language: raiment
    6) Military: attire, dressing, (крутости, бруствера) revetment
    7) Engineering: facing (откоса), insulation, jacket, lining, pavement, protection, revetment, top dressing, topping
    8) Bookish: caparison, habiliment, habit
    11) Construction: chemise, cladding
    12) Religion: chiton, coat
    13) Australian slang: mocker, mokker
    14) Arabian language: tobe
    15) Mining: cloth
    16) Road works: surface, surfacing
    17) Rhetoric: vestment
    18) Scottish language: claes
    19) Textile: cloths, garmenture, vesture
    20) Jargon: diaper, diapers, duds, set of drapes, vines (особенно красивая, модная или хипповая), silks (I gotta get some new silks before spring. Я должна приобрести какую-нибудь новую одежду до весны.), fronts (I need some new fronts. Мне нужна какая-нибудь новая одежда.), weeds (These weeds came right out of the wish book Would you believe? Это одежда поступила непосредственно из каталога. Можешь поверить?)
    21) Business: get-up
    22) Aviation medicine: suit
    23) Makarov: back, facing (напр. оросит. каналов), habit (для спец. целей), lining (канала или водохранилища), outfit, revetment (канала)
    24) Taboo: kit

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > одежда

  • 10 окрестить

    1) General subject: christen
    2) Literal: tag ("The flamboyant Mr Haughey quickly became the foremost member of a group tagged the "men in mohair suits" for their smart clothes and brash ways." (The Economist) - которых окрестили)
    3) Jocular: dub
    4) Religion: Christianize, baptize

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > окрестить

  • 11 В-142

    ВИДАТЬ (ВИДЫВАТЬ) ВИДЫ coll VP usu. this WO
    1. Also: ВИДАТЬ (ВИДЫВАТЬ) ВСЯКИЕ ВИДЫ
    subj: human often active past Part) to have experienced much in life, endured various troubles
    X видал виды - X has been through plenty (in his time (life, lifetime))
    X has seen much (a great deal, a lot) in his time (day, life, lifetime) X has seen all sorts (kinds) of things (in his time etc) X has been through the mill X has been around (around the block) X is schooled in the ways of the world
    видавший виды — seasoned
    battle-scarred.
    Фомин с силой сжал ногами бока коня, послал его в толпу. Народ шарахнулся в разные стороны. В широком кругу осталась одна вдова. Она видала всякие виды и потому спокойно глядела на оскаленную морду фоминского коня, на бледное от бешенства лицо всадника (Шолохов 5). Fomin dug his heels into his horse's flanks and rode into the crowd It drew back, leaving only the widow in the middle of a wide circle. She had seen much in her time, so she looked up imperturbably at the horse's bared teeth and the furious face of its rider (5a).
    Они слушали неумолчную трескотню словоохотливой и видавшей виды девушки (Пастернак 1)....They listened to the incessant chatter of the garrulous girl, who had seen a great deal in her life (1a)
    У Моей был неистовый темперамент южанина и не вполне безукоризненная биография мальчишки, видавшего за свои двадцать три года всякие виды (Катаев 1). Mosya had the violent temperament of a southerner, and the not entirely faultless biography of a gamin who had seen all sorts of things in the course of his twenty-three years (1a).
    ...Кирпиченко вдруг увидел, что ей (Ларисе) под тридцать, что она видала виды (Аксёнов 5)....Kirpichenko suddenly saw that she (Larisa) was getting on for thirty and that she had been around (5a).
    И кому-то нужно с таким человеком (, как Никандров,) связываться?.. Видавшие виды дамы просто обязаны предупреждать молодёжь женского пола: «И не вздумайте! Кроме головной боли, ничего не маячит!» (Залыгин 1). Who needed to get involved with a man like him (Nikandrov)? Seasoned women had a duty to warn the younger of their sex about men like him: "Don't even think about it! You'll get yourself nothing but a headache!" (1a).
    2. ( subj: concr) (of various devices, machines etc, often of furniture, clothes, footwear etc) to have been used a great deal, show signs of much wear
    X видал виды - X looks (is) the worse for wear
    X has seen better days X is timeworn (worn-out, well-worn, shabby).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > В-142

  • 12 С-723

    НА СЧЕТУ1 PrepP Invar
    1. \С-723 (у кого) ( subj-compl with бытыз ( subj: any count noun)
    if subj: sing, it is usu. preceded by каждый) every person (or thing) is taken into consideration, is important, valued, significant: (y Y-a) каждый X на счету = every X counts (for Y) every X is precious (to Y) every X means something (a lot, a great deal) (to Y).
    ...Кто-то выпустил Абдула, он, кажется, не покусал никого, но напугал сильно и одежду порвал. Лёвке-то что, а у Антона всякая тряпочка была на счету (Трифонов 2). One of them let Abdul off the leash, and although he didn't actually bite anyone, he gave the victims a bad fright and tore their clothes. This didn't bother Lev too much, but to Anton every scrap of clothing was precious (2a).
    2. \С-723 (укого) ( subj-compl with бытье (subj: human, often pl, or collect)) a person or group is kept under observation (often by s.o. in a position of authority who believes that that person or group has done sth. illegal, reprehensible etc): все Х-ы на счету (у Y-a) = all Xs are monitored by Y
    Y keeps tab(s) (an eye) on all Xs Y keeps track of all Xs all Xs live (fall) under the watchful eye of Y.
    Мать Лены хотела поскорее выдать дочь замуж, и все потенциальные женихи были у неё на счету. Lena's mother wanted to marry her off as soon as possible and kept track of all eligible young men.
    Городок у нас маленький, все наркоманы на счету у милиции. Our town is small, and all the drug addicts live under the watchful eye of the militia.
    3. - чьёмy (у) кого ( subj-compl with бытье ( subj: count abstr or concr, usu. pi) or obj-compl with иметь ( obj: count abstr or concr, usu. pi)) ( s.o. has the specified achievements or, occas., undesirable actions) as part of his past experience: у X-a на счету много Y-ов = X has many Ys under his belt
    X has many Ys to his name (his credit) X has racked up (accumulated etc) a lot ofYs.
    У Дмитрия на счету больше ста изобретений. Dmitry has more than one hundred inventions under his belt.

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > С-723

  • 13 видать виды

    [VP; usu. this WO]
    =====
    1. Also: ВИДАТЬ (ВИДЫВАТЬ) ВСЯКИЕ ВИДЫ [subj: human; often active past Part]
    to have experienced much in life, endured various troubles:
    - X видал виды X has been through plenty (in his time <life, lifetime>);
    - X has seen much (a great deal, a lot) in his time (day, life, lifetime);
    - X has seen all sorts (kinds) of things (in his time etc);
    - battle scarred.
         ♦ Фомин с силой сжал ногами бока коня, послал его в толпу. Народ шарахнулся в разные стороны. В широком кругу осталась одна вдова. Она видала всякие виды и потому спокойно глядела на оскаленную морду фоминского коня, на бледное от бешенства лицо всадника (Шолохов 5). Fomin dug his heels into his horse's flanks and rode into the crowd It drew back, leaving only the widow in the middle of a wide circle. She had seen much in her time, so she looked up imperturbably at the horse's bared teeth and the furious face of its rider (5a).
         ♦ Они слушали неумолчную трескотню словоохотливой и видавшей виды девушки (Пастернак 1)....They listened to the incessant chatter of the garrulous girl, who had seen a great deal in her life (1a)
         ♦ У Моей был неистовый темперамент южанина и не вполне безукоризненная биография мальчишки, видавшего за свои двадцать три года всякие виды (Катаев 1). Mosya had the violent temperament of a southerner, and the not entirely faultless biography of a gamin who had seen all sorts of things in the course of his twenty-three years (1a).
         ♦...Кирпиченко вдруг увидел, что ей [Ларисе] под тридцать, что она видала виды (Аксёнов 5)....Kirpichenko suddenly saw that she [Larisa] was getting on for thirty and that she had been around (5a).
         ♦ И кому-то нужно с таким человеком [, как Никандров,] связываться?.. Видавшие виды дамы просто обязаны предупреждать молодёжь женского пола: "И не вздумайте! Кроме головной боли, ничего не маячит!" (Залыгин 1). Who needed to get involved with a man like him [Nikandrov]? Seasoned women had a duty to warn the younger of their sex about men like him: "Don't even think about it! You'll get yourself nothing but a headache!" (1a).
    2. [subj: concr]
    (of various devices, machines etc, often of furniture, clothes, footwear etc) to have been used a great deal, show signs of much wear:
    - X видал виды X looks (is) the worse for wear;
    - X is timeworn (worn-out, well-worn, shabby).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > видать виды

  • 14 видать всякие виды

    [VP; usu. this WO]
    =====
    1. Also: ВИДАТЬ (ВИДЫВАТЬ) ВСЯКИЕ ВИДЫ [subj: human; often active past Part]
    to have experienced much in life, endured various troubles:
    - X видал виды X has been through plenty (in his time <life, lifetime>);
    - X has seen much (a great deal, a lot) in his time (day, life, lifetime);
    - X has seen all sorts (kinds) of things (in his time etc);
    - battle scarred.
         ♦ Фомин с силой сжал ногами бока коня, послал его в толпу. Народ шарахнулся в разные стороны. В широком кругу осталась одна вдова. Она видала всякие виды и потому спокойно глядела на оскаленную морду фоминского коня, на бледное от бешенства лицо всадника (Шолохов 5). Fomin dug his heels into his horse's flanks and rode into the crowd It drew back, leaving only the widow in the middle of a wide circle. She had seen much in her time, so she looked up imperturbably at the horse's bared teeth and the furious face of its rider (5a).
         ♦ Они слушали неумолчную трескотню словоохотливой и видавшей виды девушки (Пастернак 1)....They listened to the incessant chatter of the garrulous girl, who had seen a great deal in her life (1a)
         ♦ У Моей был неистовый темперамент южанина и не вполне безукоризненная биография мальчишки, видавшего за свои двадцать три года всякие виды (Катаев 1). Mosya had the violent temperament of a southerner, and the not entirely faultless biography of a gamin who had seen all sorts of things in the course of his twenty-three years (1a).
         ♦...Кирпиченко вдруг увидел, что ей [Ларисе] под тридцать, что она видала виды (Аксёнов 5)....Kirpichenko suddenly saw that she [Larisa] was getting on for thirty and that she had been around (5a).
         ♦ И кому-то нужно с таким человеком [, как Никандров,] связываться?.. Видавшие виды дамы просто обязаны предупреждать молодёжь женского пола: "И не вздумайте! Кроме головной боли, ничего не маячит!" (Залыгин 1). Who needed to get involved with a man like him [Nikandrov]? Seasoned women had a duty to warn the younger of their sex about men like him: "Don't even think about it! You'll get yourself nothing but a headache!" (1a).
    2. [subj: concr]
    (of various devices, machines etc, often of furniture, clothes, footwear etc) to have been used a great deal, show signs of much wear:
    - X видал виды X looks (is) the worse for wear;
    - X is timeworn (worn-out, well-worn, shabby).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > видать всякие виды

  • 15 видывать виды

    [VP; usu. this WO]
    =====
    1. Also: ВИДАТЬ (ВИДЫВАТЬ) ВСЯКИЕ ВИДЫ [subj: human; often active past Part]
    to have experienced much in life, endured various troubles:
    - X видал виды X has been through plenty (in his time <life, lifetime>);
    - X has seen much (a great deal, a lot) in his time (day, life, lifetime);
    - X has seen all sorts (kinds) of things (in his time etc);
    - battle scarred.
         ♦ Фомин с силой сжал ногами бока коня, послал его в толпу. Народ шарахнулся в разные стороны. В широком кругу осталась одна вдова. Она видала всякие виды и потому спокойно глядела на оскаленную морду фоминского коня, на бледное от бешенства лицо всадника (Шолохов 5). Fomin dug his heels into his horse's flanks and rode into the crowd It drew back, leaving only the widow in the middle of a wide circle. She had seen much in her time, so she looked up imperturbably at the horse's bared teeth and the furious face of its rider (5a).
         ♦ Они слушали неумолчную трескотню словоохотливой и видавшей виды девушки (Пастернак 1)....They listened to the incessant chatter of the garrulous girl, who had seen a great deal in her life (1a)
         ♦ У Моей был неистовый темперамент южанина и не вполне безукоризненная биография мальчишки, видавшего за свои двадцать три года всякие виды (Катаев 1). Mosya had the violent temperament of a southerner, and the not entirely faultless biography of a gamin who had seen all sorts of things in the course of his twenty-three years (1a).
         ♦...Кирпиченко вдруг увидел, что ей [Ларисе] под тридцать, что она видала виды (Аксёнов 5)....Kirpichenko suddenly saw that she [Larisa] was getting on for thirty and that she had been around (5a).
         ♦ И кому-то нужно с таким человеком [, как Никандров,] связываться?.. Видавшие виды дамы просто обязаны предупреждать молодёжь женского пола: "И не вздумайте! Кроме головной боли, ничего не маячит!" (Залыгин 1). Who needed to get involved with a man like him [Nikandrov]? Seasoned women had a duty to warn the younger of their sex about men like him: "Don't even think about it! You'll get yourself nothing but a headache!" (1a).
    2. [subj: concr]
    (of various devices, machines etc, often of furniture, clothes, footwear etc) to have been used a great deal, show signs of much wear:
    - X видал виды X looks (is) the worse for wear;
    - X is timeworn (worn-out, well-worn, shabby).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > видывать виды

  • 16 видывать всякие виды

    [VP; usu. this WO]
    =====
    1. Also: ВИДАТЬ (ВИДЫВАТЬ) ВСЯКИЕ ВИДЫ [subj: human; often active past Part]
    to have experienced much in life, endured various troubles:
    - X видал виды X has been through plenty (in his time <life, lifetime>);
    - X has seen much (a great deal, a lot) in his time (day, life, lifetime);
    - X has seen all sorts (kinds) of things (in his time etc);
    - battle scarred.
         ♦ Фомин с силой сжал ногами бока коня, послал его в толпу. Народ шарахнулся в разные стороны. В широком кругу осталась одна вдова. Она видала всякие виды и потому спокойно глядела на оскаленную морду фоминского коня, на бледное от бешенства лицо всадника (Шолохов 5). Fomin dug his heels into his horse's flanks and rode into the crowd It drew back, leaving only the widow in the middle of a wide circle. She had seen much in her time, so she looked up imperturbably at the horse's bared teeth and the furious face of its rider (5a).
         ♦ Они слушали неумолчную трескотню словоохотливой и видавшей виды девушки (Пастернак 1)....They listened to the incessant chatter of the garrulous girl, who had seen a great deal in her life (1a)
         ♦ У Моей был неистовый темперамент южанина и не вполне безукоризненная биография мальчишки, видавшего за свои двадцать три года всякие виды (Катаев 1). Mosya had the violent temperament of a southerner, and the not entirely faultless biography of a gamin who had seen all sorts of things in the course of his twenty-three years (1a).
         ♦...Кирпиченко вдруг увидел, что ей [Ларисе] под тридцать, что она видала виды (Аксёнов 5)....Kirpichenko suddenly saw that she [Larisa] was getting on for thirty and that she had been around (5a).
         ♦ И кому-то нужно с таким человеком [, как Никандров,] связываться?.. Видавшие виды дамы просто обязаны предупреждать молодёжь женского пола: "И не вздумайте! Кроме головной боли, ничего не маячит!" (Залыгин 1). Who needed to get involved with a man like him [Nikandrov]? Seasoned women had a duty to warn the younger of their sex about men like him: "Don't even think about it! You'll get yourself nothing but a headache!" (1a).
    2. [subj: concr]
    (of various devices, machines etc, often of furniture, clothes, footwear etc) to have been used a great deal, show signs of much wear:
    - X видал виды X looks (is) the worse for wear;
    - X is timeworn (worn-out, well-worn, shabby).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > видывать всякие виды

  • 17 на счету

    I
    [PrepP; Invar]
    =====
    1. на счету кого) [subj-compl with быть (subj: any count noun); if subj: sing, it is usu. preceded by каждый]
    every person (or thing) is taken into consideration, is important, valued, significant:
    - (y Y-a) каждый X на счету every X counts (for Y);
    - every X means something (a lot, a great deal) (to Y).
         ♦...Кто-то выпустил Абдула, он, кажется, не покусал никого, но напугал сильно и одежду порвал. Лёвке-то что, а у Антона всякая тряпочка была на счету (Трифонов 2). One of them let Abdul off the leash, and although he didn't actually bite anyone, he gave the victims a bad fright and tore their clothes. This didn't bother Lev too much, but to Anton every scrap of clothing was precious (2a).
    2. на счету (,у кого) [subj-compl with быть (subj: human, often pi, or collect)]
    a person or group is kept under observation (often by s.o. in a position of authority who believes that that person or group has done sth. illegal, reprehensible etc):
    - все Х-ы на счету (у Y-a) all Xs are monitored by Y;
    - all Xs live (fall) under the watchful eye of Y.
         ♦ Мать Лены хотела поскорее выдать дочь замуж, и все потенциальные женихи были у неё на счету. Lena's mother wanted to marry her off as soon as possible and kept track of all eligible young men.
         ♦ Городок у нас маленький, все наркоманы на счету у милиции. Our town is small, and all the drug addicts live under the watchful eye of the militia.
    3. на счету чьём, (у) кого [subj-compl with быть (subj: count abstr or concr, usu. pl) or obj-compl with иметь (obj: count abstr or concr, usu. pl)]
    (s.o. has the specified achievements or, occas., undesirable actions) as part of his past experience:
    - у X-a на счету много Y-ов X has many Ys under his belt;
    - X has racked up (accumulated etc) alot of Ys.
         ♦ У Дмитрия на счету больше ста изобретений. Dmitry has more than one hundred inventions under his belt.
    II
    [PrepP; Invar; the resulting PrepP is subj-compl with copula (subj: human)]
    =====
    one is looked upon, perceived in the way specified:
    - X на хорошем <плохом и т.п.> счету( у Y-a) - X is in good <bad etc> standing (with Y);
    - X is in Y's good < bad> books;
    - X is well < ill> thought of (by Y);
    - X has a good <bad etc> reputation.
         ♦ В активистках в университете она не состояла, но была на хорошем счету (Мандельштам 2). Though not an activist at the university, she was nevertheless in good standing (2a).
         ♦ "А ты спроси у отрядного, что надо делать, чтобы быть на хорошем счету" (Марченко 1). "And you ask the company commander what one has to do in order to be in his good books" (1a).
         ♦ Во всё время пребывания в училище был он на отличном счету... (Гоголь 3). All the time he was at school he was well thought of... (3a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > на счету

  • 18 мужской

    прл

    мужско́й род грамmasculine gender

    мужска́я оде́жда — man's clothes

    мужска́я компа́ния — male company, company of men

    мужско́й го́лос — male voice

    Русско-английский учебный словарь > мужской

  • 19 переодетый

    прл

    переоде́тый полице́йским/в полице́йскую фо́рму — disguised as a policeman

    переоде́тые в шта́тское операти́вники — plain-clothes men

    Русско-английский учебный словарь > переодетый

  • 20 туалет

    м
    1) одежда clothes pl, dress, attire lit
    2) уборная toilet, lavatory, loo coll; AE bathroom, restroom, washroom

    да́мский/мужско́й туале́т — the ladies/the gents coll, AE ladies'/men's room

    Русско-английский учебный словарь > туалет

См. также в других словарях:

  • men's clothes model — man who models men s clothing …   English contemporary dictionary

  • clothes — clothes, clothing, dress, attire, apparel, raiment are comparable when they denote a person s garments considered collectively. Clothes and clothing are general words which do not necessarily suggest a wearer or personal owner but sometimes a… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • clothes — W2S2 [kləuðz, kləuz US klouðz, klouz] n [plural] [: Old English; Origin: clathas, plural of clath; CLOTH] the things that people wear to cover their body or keep warm ▪ I enjoy shopping for clothes and shoes. ▪ What sort of clothes was he wearing …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Men and Women (album) — Men and Women Studio album by Simply Red Released March 1987 Recorded 1986 …   Wikipedia

  • Men on a Mission — Tag team Members Mabel Mo Oscar Name(s) Men on a Mission Harlem Knights Heights 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) – Mabel 6 ft& …   Wikipedia

  • Men Reading — Men Reading, 1821–1823. 125.3cm x 65.2cm, Oil on gesso transferred to linen. Museo del Prado, Madrid Men Reading or The Reading (Spanish: La Lectura) or Politicians are names given[1] to a fresco painting likely completed between 1820–1823 …   Wikipedia

  • Men in Fright — Directed by George Sidney Produced by Jack Chertok Written by Carl Dudley Marty Schwartz Hal Law Robert A. McGowan …   Wikipedia

  • Men|non|ite — «MEHN uh nyt», noun. a member of a Christian church opposed to infant baptism, taking oaths, holding public office that requires use of force, and military service. The Mennonites often wear very plain clothes and live simply. They are descended… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Clothes valet — For the Wikipedia Coatrack essay see Wikipedia:Coatrack Gentleman s oak valet.jpg Clothes valet, also called men s valet and valet stand, is an item of furniture on which clothes may be hung. Typical features of valets include trouser hangers,… …   Wikipedia

  • Clothes hanger — Wire (top) and wooden (bottom) clothes hangers …   Wikipedia

  • clothes — noun (plural) the things that people wear to cover their body or keep warm: I need some new clothes. | work/school clothes (=clothes suitable for work or school) USAGE NOTE: CLOTHES WORD CHOICE: clothes, clothing, piece/item of clothing, garment …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»