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1 современный автор
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2 инструментальные средства автора
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > инструментальные средства автора
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3 современный автор
киносценарист, автор рабочего сценария — continuity writer
автор, работающий на другое лицо — ghost writer
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > современный автор
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4 moderne
c black moderne [mɔdεʀn]1. adjective2. masculine nounc black b. ( = peintre) modern painter━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✎ Le mot anglais s'écrit sans e à la fin.* * *mɔdɛʀnadjectif modern* * *mɔdɛʀn adj* * *moderne adj ( tous contextes) modern; je n'aime pas le (mobilier) moderne I don't like modern furniture.[mɔdɛrn] adjectif1. [actuel, récent - mobilier, bâtiment, technique, théorie] modernles temps modernes, l'époque moderne modern timesle mode de vie moderne modern living, today's way of lifec'est une grand-mère très moderne she's a very modern ou up-to-date grandmother5. LINGUISTIQUE [langue, sens] modern————————[mɔdɛrn] nom masculin et féminin————————[mɔdɛrn] nom masculina. [genre] modern styleb. [mobilier] modern furniture -
5 современный
1. coeval2. up to data3. updated4. currentсовременное положение; текущий момент — current situation
современные фасоны; последняя мода — current fashions
5. neoteric6. nowaday7. nowaday's8. present9. present-day10. state-of-the-art11. today's12. up-to-date13. modern; present-day; up-to-date14. contemporaneous15. contemporary16. up to dateсовременное общество устроено так, что женщины вовлекаются в трудовую деятельность — modern society is geared to get women into jobs
Синонимический ряд:нынешний (прил.) нынешний; теперешний -
6 современный
1. up-to-date2. up-to-dately3. modern -
7 contemporain
contemporain, e [kɔ̃tɑ̃pɔʀɛ̃, εn]adjectivemasculine noun* * *
1.
contemporaine kɔ̃tɑ̃pɔʀɛ̃, ɛn adjectif contemporary
2.
nom masculin, féminin contemporary (de of)* * *kɔ̃tɑ̃pɔʀɛ̃, ɛn contemporain, -e1. adjun auteur contemporain — a contemporary writer, a modern writer
2. nm/f* * *A adj1 ( du présent) [art, histoire] contemporary;2 ( du même temps) [personne] contemporary; il était contemporain de Dickens he was Dickens's contemporary; roman/événement contemporain de novel/event contemporaneous with.B nm,f contemporary (de of).( féminin contemporaine) [kɔ̃tɑ̃pɔrɛ̃, ɛn] adjectif1. [de la même époque] contemporary————————, contemporaine [kɔ̃tɑ̃pɔrɛ̃, ɛn] nom masculin, nom fémininmon/son contemporain my/his contemporary -
8 Personal Essay
The hallmark of the personal essay is its intimacy. The writer seems to be speaking directly into your ear, confiding everything from gossip to wisdom. Through sharing thoughts, memories, desires, complaints, and whimsies, the personal essayist sets up a relationship with the reader, a dialogue-a friendship, if you will, based on identification, understanding, testiness, and companionship.At the core of the personal essay is the supposition that there is a certain unity to human experience. As Michel de Montaigne, the great innovator and patron saint of personal essayists, put it, "Every man has within himself the entire human condition."...In the final analysis, the personal essay represents a mode of being. It points a way for the self to function with relative freedom in an uncertain world. Skeptical yet gyroscopically poised, undeceived but finally tolerant of flaws and inconsistencies, this mode of being suits the modern existential situation, which Montaigne first diagnosed. His recognition that human beings were surrounded by darkness, with nothing particularly solid to cling to, led to a philosophical acceptance that one had to make oneself up from moment to moment. (Lopate, 1994, pp. xxiii, xliv)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Personal Essay
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9 fashionable
adjectivemodisch [Kleider, Person, Design]; vornehm [Gegend, Hotel, Restaurant]; Mode[farbe, -krankheit, -wort, -autor]* * *adjective (following, or in keeping with, the newest style of dress, way of living etc: a fashionable woman; a fashionable part of town.) modern* * *fash·ion·able[ˈfæʃənəbl̩]a suit of a \fashionable cut ein modisch geschnittener Anzuga \fashionable couple ein Paar nt aus dem Jetset* * *['fʃnəbl]adjclothes, look, person modisch; restaurant, shop, area schick; idea, artist zurzeit beliebtfashionable writer — Modeschriftsteller( in) m(f)
to become fashionable — in Mode kommen, modern werden
it's fashionable to do that — es ist modern or (in) Mode, das zu tun
Michelle is super fashionable (inf) — Michelle hat supermoderne Klamotten (inf)
the fashionable set or people — die Schickeria
* * *A adj (adv fashionably)1. modisch, modern2. vornehm, elegant3. a) in Mode:be fashionable again wieder modern oder aktuell seinb) Mode…:fashionable complaint Modekrankheit f;fashionable writer Modeschriftsteller(in)B s eleganter Herr, elegante Dame:the fashionables pl die Schickeria* * *adjectivemodisch [Kleider, Person, Design]; vornehm [Gegend, Hotel, Restaurant]; Mode[farbe, -krankheit, -wort, -autor]it isn't fashionable any more — es ist nicht mehr modern od. in Mode
* * *adj.elegant adj.modern adj.modisch adj. -
10 dotado
adj.gifted, endowed, endued, privileged.past part.past participle of spanish verb: dotar.* * *1→ link=dotar dotar► adjetivo1 (equipado) equipped, provided2 (con dotes) gifted3 argot (genitales) well-hung* * *ADJ1) [persona] gifted, exceptional (EEUU)un hombre muy bien dotado — * a well-endowed man *
•
dotado de algo, María está dotada de talento musical — Maria is musically talented o gifted•
dotado para algo, Adela no está muy dotada para el deporte — Adela does not have great sporting ability o a great talent for sport2) [máquina, edificio]dotado de algo: un hospital dotado de todos los adelantos técnicos — a hospital equipped with all the latest technology
3) [premio, certamen]* * *es una chica muy bien dotada — (hum) she's very well-endowed (hum)
estar dotado de algo — persona to be blessed with something; cocina/oficina to be equipped with something
* * *= gifted.Ex. She must try to convince him that no single individual, no matter how gifted, can any longer grasp the innumerable facets of modern corporate effort.----* bien dotado = well-equipped, well-endowed, well-resourced.* bien dotado de medios = well-resourced.* bien dotado de personal = well-staffed.* bien dotado de recursos = well-resourced.* dotado de = possessed of.* dotado de ruedas = wheeled.* dotado de tecnología moderna = modern-equipped.* pobremente dotado = under-resourced.* * *es una chica muy bien dotada — (hum) she's very well-endowed (hum)
estar dotado de algo — persona to be blessed with something; cocina/oficina to be equipped with something
* * *= gifted.Ex: She must try to convince him that no single individual, no matter how gifted, can any longer grasp the innumerable facets of modern corporate effort.
* bien dotado = well-equipped, well-endowed, well-resourced.* bien dotado de medios = well-resourced.* bien dotado de personal = well-staffed.* bien dotado de recursos = well-resourced.* dotado de = possessed of.* dotado de ruedas = wheeled.* dotado de tecnología moderna = modern-equipped.* pobremente dotado = under-resourced.* * *dotado -da1 ‹persona› giftedun músico dotado a gifted musiciandotado DE algo:dotado de gran habilidad artística endowed o blessed with great artistic abilityuna cocina dotada de todos los adelantos modernos a kitchen equipped with all the latest appliancesun nuevo material dotado de gran resistencia al calor a new, highly heat-resistant material, a new material which has excellent heat-resisting properties2 ‹premio›el primer premio está dotado con cien mil euros the first prize is worth a hundred thousand eurosun torneo dotado con $60.000 en premios a tournament worth $60,000 in prize money* * *
Del verbo dotar: ( conjugate dotar)
dotado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
dotado
dotar
dotado
estar dotado de algo [ persona] to be blessed with sth;
[cocina/oficina] to be equipped with sth
dotar ( conjugate dotar) verbo transitivoa) (frml) ‹institución/organismo› dotado (a) algo de or con algo ‹ de fondos› to provide sth with sth;
‹de técnica/maquinaria› to equip sth with sth;
‹ de poderes› to invest sth with sthb) [naturaleza/Dios] dotado a algn de or con algo to endow o bless sb with sth
dotado,-a adjetivo
1 (con un don especial) gifted: está dotada para la danza, she has a gift for dancing
2 (surtido, provisto) equipped: está dotado de un gran sentido del humor, he has a great sense of humour
un coche dotado de aire acondicionado, a car fitted with air conditioning
3 (un premio) el premio está dotado con tres millones, the prize is worth three million
dotar verbo transitivo
1 (conceder) dotar de, to provide with
2 (un premio, etc) to assign
3 (a una mujer) to give a dowry
' dotado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
dotada
English:
accomplished
- endow
- equipped
- gift
- gifted
- talented
- well-hung
* * *dotado, -a adj1. [persona] gifted;es un escritor muy dotado he's a very gifted writer;estar dotado para algo to have a gift for sth;está dotado para el jazz he has a talent for jazz;dotado de blessed with;un hombre dotado de un gran sentido del humor/de una increíble paciencia a man who's blessed with a fine sense of humour/incredible patience;necesitamos gente dotada de experiencia we need people who have experience;Humun hombre bien dotado a well-endowed o well-hung man;Humestá muy bien dotada she's very well-endowedtejidos dotados de gran elasticidad fabrics which have great elasticity* * *adj1 gifted;dotado para las lenguas with a gift for languages2:dotado de algo equipped with sth* * *dotado, -da adj1) : gifted2)dotado de : endowed with, equipped with* * *dotado adj1. (con talento) gifted2. (poseedor) endowed3. (equipado) equipped -
11 en los últimos tiempos
= latterly, in recent times, in modern times, in recent memoryEx. During its first decade, TEX has been at home mainly in the academic world, but latterly it has spread into industry = Durante su primera decada, TEX se ha utilizado principalmente en el mundo académico, aunque recientemente se ha difundido a la industria.Ex. School libraries as they have evolved in recent times share certain similarities the world over.Ex. In modern times, the term 'ecology' has had exclusive reference to a scientific discipline and not a branch of philosophy.Ex. Bravo to writer/director Wayne Kramer for sticking to his guns and delivering one of the most uncompromising, memorable and downright brutal thrillers in recent memory.* * *= latterly, in recent times, in modern times, in recent memoryEx: During its first decade, TEX has been at home mainly in the academic world, but latterly it has spread into industry = Durante su primera decada, TEX se ha utilizado principalmente en el mundo académico, aunque recientemente se ha difundido a la industria.
Ex: School libraries as they have evolved in recent times share certain similarities the world over.Ex: In modern times, the term 'ecology' has had exclusive reference to a scientific discipline and not a branch of philosophy.Ex: Bravo to writer/director Wayne Kramer for sticking to his guns and delivering one of the most uncompromising, memorable and downright brutal thrillers in recent memory. -
12 lengua
f.1 tongue.lengua de víbora o viperina (figurative) malicious tonguelengua de tierra tongue of landlas malas lenguas dicen que… according to the gossip…ir/llegar con la lengua fuera (informal) to go along/arrive puffing and pantingmorderse la lengua to bite one's tonguese le trabó la lengua she stumbled over her words2 language (idioma, lenguaje).lengua materna mother tonguelengua muerta dead language* * *1 ANATOMÍA tongue2 (idioma) language3 (de tierra) strip\con la lengua fuera familiar with one's tongue hanging outdarle a la lengua familiar to chatdicen las malas lenguas que... gossip has it that...hacerse lenguas de algo to rave about somethingirse de la lengua familiar to let the cat out of the bagno tener pelos en la lengua figurado not to mince one's wordstener algo en la punta de la lengua figurado to have something on the tip of one's tonguetener la lengua muy larga familiar to have a loose tonguetener una lengua viperina to have a vicious tonguetirar de la lengua a alguien familiar to pump somebody for informationtrabarse la lengua to get tongue-tiedlengua de gato langue de chatlengua d'oc langue d'oclengua d'oíl langue d'oïllengua de trapo babblinglengua madre parent languagelengua materna mother tongue* * *noun f.1) tongue2) language* * *SF1) (Anat) tongue•
beber con la lengua — to lap up•
mala lengua — gossipsegún las malas lenguas... — according to gossip...
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sacar la lengua, abra la boca y saque la lengua — open your mouth and put o stick your tongue out- ¿te ha comido la lengua el gato?largo 1., 1), trabar 3.lengua viperina — sharp tongue, vicious tongue
2) [de campana] tongue, clapper3) (Geog)lengua de tierra — spit of land, tongue of land
4) (Ling) language, tongue; Esp (Escol) Spanish language ( as a school subject)LENGUAS COOFICIALES Under the Spanish constitution catalán, euskera and gallego are lenguas oficiales and enjoy the same status as castellano in the autonomous regions in which they are spoken. These languages are also known as lenguas cooficiales to show they enjoy equal status with Spanish. The regional governments actively promote their use through the media and the education system.hablar en lengua — And to speak Quichua
See:ver nota culturelle CATALÁN in catalán,ver nota culturelle EUSKERA in euskera,ver nota culturelle GALLEGO in gallego* * *1)a) (Anat) tonguecon la lengua fuera — (fam)
darle a la lengua — (fam) to chatter
desatársele la lengua a alguien — to start to talk
irse de la lengua or írsele la lengua a alguien — (fam)
no te vayas a ir de la lengua — make sure you don't tell anybody; malo I
morderse la lengua — to bite one's tongue
soltar la lengua — to spill the beans
¿te comieron la lengua los ratones? — (fam & hum) has the cat got your tongue? (colloq)
tirarle de or (AmL) tirarle or jalarle la lengua a alguien: hay que tirarle (de) la lengua you have to drag everything out of him; sé mucho sobre ti así que no me tires (de) la lengua — I know a lot about you, so don't provoke me
b) (Coc) tongue2) (Ling) language••• Cultural note:The regional languages of Spain, catalán, euskera, and gallego, which now have equal status with Castilian in the regions where they are spoken. Banned under Franco, they continued to be spoken privately. They are now widely used in public life, education, and the media, cinema and literature* * *= language, tongue.Ex. A paraphrase is an interpretation of the concepts featured in a document, written in the language of the writer of the paraphrase.Ex. Although I do at times write with my tongue between my lips (the standard attitude of deep concentration), there are other times when it is equally firmly in my cheek.----* Asociación de Lenguas Modernas (MLA) = Modern Language Association (MLA).* darle a la lengua = shoot + the breeze, shoot + the bull.* decían las malas lenguas que = rumour had it that.* de lengua árabe = Arabic speaking.* dicen las malas lenguas que = rumour has it that.* dominio de una lengua extranjera = language proficiency.* en diversas lenguas = multilingually.* en dos lenguas = bilingually.* enfermedad de la lengua azul = bluetongue disease.* enredo de lengua = slip of the tongue.* entre varias lenguas = cross-lingual.* en varias lenguas = cross-lingual, cross-language, multilingually.* hablar con lengua de serpiente = talk with + a twisted tongue.* hablar con lengua de serpiente = speak with + a twisted tongue, speak with + a split tongue, speak with + a forked tongue.* hablar en lengua desconocida = speak in + tongues, talk in + tongues.* humedecer con la lengua = lick.* irse de la lengua = spill + the beans, shoot + Posesivo + mouth off, let + the cat out of the bag, blow + the gaff.* lengua autóctona = indigenous language.* lengua bífida = forked tongue, split tongue.* lengua de fuego = tongue of fire.* lengua de intercambio = exchange language.* lengua escrita = written language.* lengua extinta = extinct language.* lengua extranjera = foreign language.* lengua flexionada = inflected language.* lengua franca = lingua franca.* lengua hablada = spoken language.* lengua indígena = indigenous language.* lengua inglesa = English language.* lengua mandarina = Mandarin.* lengua materna = mother tongue.* lengua minoritaria = minority language.* lengua muerta = dead language, dead tongue.* lengua nacional = national language.* lengua nativa = native language, native tongue.* lengua negra = hairy tongue.* lengua oficial común = working language.* lengua oscurecida = black hairy tongue.* lengua peluda = hairy tongue.* lengua romance = romance language.* lengua vernácula = vernacular, vernacular language.* lengua /conocimiento de lengua = language skill.* mojar con la lengua = lick.* morderse la lengua = stay + Posesivo + tongue, hold + Posesivo + tongue, bite + Posesivo + tongue, bite + Posesivo + lip.* no morderse la lengua = call + a spade a spade.* no tener pelos en lengua = call + a spade a spade.* país cuya lengua oficial no es el inglés = non-English-speaking country.* persona que sólo habla una lengua = monoglot.* piercing para la lengua = tongue stud.* recuperación de información en varias lenguas = cross-language information retrieval (CLIR).* sin pelos en la lengua = outspokenly.* soltársele a Uno la lengua = tongue + be unloosed.* tener pelos en la lengua = mince + words.* TOEFL (Examen de Inglés como Segunda Lengua) = TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language).* * *1)a) (Anat) tonguecon la lengua fuera — (fam)
darle a la lengua — (fam) to chatter
desatársele la lengua a alguien — to start to talk
irse de la lengua or írsele la lengua a alguien — (fam)
no te vayas a ir de la lengua — make sure you don't tell anybody; malo I
morderse la lengua — to bite one's tongue
soltar la lengua — to spill the beans
¿te comieron la lengua los ratones? — (fam & hum) has the cat got your tongue? (colloq)
tirarle de or (AmL) tirarle or jalarle la lengua a alguien: hay que tirarle (de) la lengua you have to drag everything out of him; sé mucho sobre ti así que no me tires (de) la lengua — I know a lot about you, so don't provoke me
b) (Coc) tongue2) (Ling) language••• Cultural note:The regional languages of Spain, catalán, euskera, and gallego, which now have equal status with Castilian in the regions where they are spoken. Banned under Franco, they continued to be spoken privately. They are now widely used in public life, education, and the media, cinema and literature* * *= language, tongue.Ex: A paraphrase is an interpretation of the concepts featured in a document, written in the language of the writer of the paraphrase.
Ex: Although I do at times write with my tongue between my lips (the standard attitude of deep concentration), there are other times when it is equally firmly in my cheek.* Asociación de Lenguas Modernas (MLA) = Modern Language Association (MLA).* darle a la lengua = shoot + the breeze, shoot + the bull.* decían las malas lenguas que = rumour had it that.* de lengua árabe = Arabic speaking.* dicen las malas lenguas que = rumour has it that.* dominio de una lengua extranjera = language proficiency.* en diversas lenguas = multilingually.* en dos lenguas = bilingually.* enfermedad de la lengua azul = bluetongue disease.* enredo de lengua = slip of the tongue.* entre varias lenguas = cross-lingual.* en varias lenguas = cross-lingual, cross-language, multilingually.* hablar con lengua de serpiente = talk with + a twisted tongue.* hablar con lengua de serpiente = speak with + a twisted tongue, speak with + a split tongue, speak with + a forked tongue.* hablar en lengua desconocida = speak in + tongues, talk in + tongues.* humedecer con la lengua = lick.* irse de la lengua = spill + the beans, shoot + Posesivo + mouth off, let + the cat out of the bag, blow + the gaff.* lengua autóctona = indigenous language.* lengua bífida = forked tongue, split tongue.* lengua de fuego = tongue of fire.* lengua de intercambio = exchange language.* lengua escrita = written language.* lengua extinta = extinct language.* lengua extranjera = foreign language.* lengua flexionada = inflected language.* lengua franca = lingua franca.* lengua hablada = spoken language.* lengua indígena = indigenous language.* lengua inglesa = English language.* lengua mandarina = Mandarin.* lengua materna = mother tongue.* lengua minoritaria = minority language.* lengua muerta = dead language, dead tongue.* lengua nacional = national language.* lengua nativa = native language, native tongue.* lengua negra = hairy tongue.* lengua oficial común = working language.* lengua oscurecida = black hairy tongue.* lengua peluda = hairy tongue.* lengua romance = romance language.* lengua vernácula = vernacular, vernacular language.* lengua /conocimiento de lengua = language skill.* mojar con la lengua = lick.* morderse la lengua = stay + Posesivo + tongue, hold + Posesivo + tongue, bite + Posesivo + tongue, bite + Posesivo + lip.* no morderse la lengua = call + a spade a spade.* no tener pelos en lengua = call + a spade a spade.* país cuya lengua oficial no es el inglés = non-English-speaking country.* persona que sólo habla una lengua = monoglot.* piercing para la lengua = tongue stud.* recuperación de información en varias lenguas = cross-language information retrieval (CLIR).* sin pelos en la lengua = outspokenly.* soltársele a Uno la lengua = tongue + be unloosed.* tener pelos en la lengua = mince + words.* TOEFL (Examen de Inglés como Segunda Lengua) = TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language).* * *lenguas cooficiales (↑ lengua a1)A1 [ Vocabulary notes (Spanish) ] ( Anat) tonguesaca la lengua put out your tongueme sacó la lengua he stuck his tongue out at mese me traba la lengua I get tongue-tiedtengo la lengua pastosa or estropajosa I have a cotton mouth ( AmE colloq), I've got a furry tongue ( BrE colloq)andar en lenguas ( fam); to be the subject of gossipcon la lengua fuera ( fam): llegamos a casa con la lengua fuera by the time we got home our tongues were hanging out ( colloq)todos se hacen lenguas de su belleza everyone raves about how beautiful she isirse de la lenguaor írsele la lengua a algn ( fam): no debía haber dicho eso pero se me fue la lengua I shouldn't have said that but it just slipped outquiero que sea una sorpresa así que no te vayas a ir de la lengua I want it to be a secret so don't go and let the cat out of the bag ( colloq)morderse la lengua to bite one's tonguesoltar la lengua to spill the beanssoltarle la lengua a algn to make sb talk¿te comieron la lengua los ratones? o ( Esp) ¿te ha comido la lengua el gato? ( fam hum); has the cat got your tongue? ( colloq), have you lost your tongue? ( colloq)tener una lengua viperina or de víbora to have a sharp tonguetirarle or ( AmL) jalarle (de) la lengua a algn: hay que tirarle de la lengua para que te cuente nada you have to drag everything out of him o you have to pump him, otherwise he doesn't tell you anythingsé mucho sobre tus negocios sucios así que no me tires de la lengua I know a lot about your shady deals, so don't provoke me …2 ( Coc) tongue3 (de tierra) spit, tongue4 (de fuego) tongueCompuesto:langue de chatB ( Ling) languagela lengua y el habla langue and parolelengua de trapo baby talkCompuestos:target language● lengua de oc/d'oillangue d'oc/d'oïlsource language● lengua madre or maternamother tonguetarget language, object languagedead languagetarget language, object languageliving language* * *
lengua sustantivo femenino
1a) (Anat) tongue;◊ se me traba la lengua I get tongue-tied (colloq);
irse de la lengua or írsele la lengua a algn (fam): no debía haberlo dicho pero se me fue la lengua I shouldn't have said it but it just slipped out;
no te vayas a ir de la lengua make sure you don't tell anybody;
See Also→ malo2b) (Coc) tongue
( de fuego) tongue
2 (Ling) language;
lengua sustantivo femenino
1 Anat tongue
figurado tener la lengua afilada, to have a sharp tongue
lengua viperina, poisonous tongue
mala lengua, gossip: dicen las malas lenguas que se casó con ella por interés, rumour has it that he married her for selfish reasons
2 Ling language
lengua materna, native o mother tongue
lengua muerta, dead language
segunda lengua, second language
3 (franja estrecha) spit, tongue: una lengua de mar se adentra en la costa, a spit of land cuts into the coast
4 (badajo) clapper
♦ Locuciones: con la lengua fuera: terminamos el examen con la lengua fuera, by the end of the exam we were exhausted
fam fig irse de la lengua, to spill the beans
morderse uno la lengua, to bite one's tongue: tuve que morderme la lengua para no decir lo que pensaba, I had to bite my tongue to stop myself from blurting it out
familiar tener la lengua muy larga, to be a bigmouth: tu hermana tiene la lengua muy larga, your sister is a bigmouth
fam fig tirarle a alguien de la lengua, to try to drag sthg out of sb
' lengua' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
academia
- achicharrarse
- autóctona
- autóctono
- bífida
- bífido
- chascar
- chasquear
- chasquido
- contaminar
- ELE
- habla
- hablar
- materna
- materno
- pastosa
- pastoso
- pelo
- punta
- sacar
- sarro
- trabarse
- vernácula
- vernáculo
- viperina
- viperino
- afilado
- clásico
- conocer
- corromper
- corrupción
- enriquecer
- manejo
- nativo
- quemar
- románico
- sucio
- trabar
- transmitir
- vivo
English:
bite
- bite back
- click
- draw out
- first language
- fur
- guttural
- language
- mince
- mother tongue
- origin
- put out
- Romanic
- second language
- specially
- stick out
- thrust out
- tip
- tongue
- venomous
- assistant
- hang
- lick
- mother
- out
- sharp
- stumble
- TEFL
- tut
- vernacular
* * *lengua nf1. [órgano] tongue;sacarle la lengua a alguien to stick one's tongue out at sb;se le trabó la lengua she stumbled over her words;también Figmorderse la lengua to bite one's tongue;Famdarle a la lengua to chatter;Fam Famir/llegar con la lengua fuera to go along/arrive puffing and panting;Famser largo de lengua, tener la lengua muy larga to be a gossip;las malas lenguas dicen que… according to the gossip…;lo tengo en la punta de la lengua I've got it on the tip of my tongue;Fam¿(se) te ha comido la lengua el gato?, Am [m5]¿te comieron la lengua los ratones? has the cat got your tongue?;Famtirar a alguien de la lengua to draw sb outlengua de buey [planta] bugloss;lengua de ciervo [planta] hart's-tongue fern;lengua de fuego tongue of flame;Esp lengua de gato [de chocolate] langue de chat; Fig lengua de víbora malicious tongue; Fig lengua viperina malicious tongue2. [de tierra] tongueGeol lengua glaciar glacier tongue3. [idioma, lenguaje] languagelengua culta educated speech;lengua de destino target language;lengua escrita written language;lengua estándar standard language;lengua franca lingua franca;lengua fuente source language;lengua hablada spoken language;lengua de llegada target language;lengua materna mother tongue;mi lengua materna no es el español I'm not a native speaker of Spanish;lengua meta target language;lenguas modernas modern languages;lengua muerta dead language;lengua normativa standard language;lengua de oc langue d'oc;lengua de oíl langue d'oïl;lengua original original o source language;lengua romance Romance language;lengua románica Romance language;lengua viva living language;lengua vulgar vulgar o coarse language* * *f tongue;darle a la lengua fam chatter;de doble filo sharp tongue;tirar a alguien de la lengua get information out of s.o.;con la lengua fuera fig with one’s tongue hanging out;irse de la lengua let the cat out of the bag;morderse la lengua fig bite one’s tongue;sacar la lengua a alguien stick one’s tongue out at s.o.;lo tengo en la punta de la lengua it’s on the tip of my tongue* * *lengua nf1) : tonguemorderse la lengua: to bite one's tongue2) idioma: languagelengua materna: mother tongue, native languagelengua muerta: dead language* * *lengua n1. (del cuerpo) tongue2. (idioma) languagelengua materna native language / mother tongue -
13 paleontológico
adj.paleontologic.* * *= palaeontologic [paleontologic, -USA], paleontological [palaeontological, -UK].Ex. Interest in a palaeontologic network is high, but a network is not realistic at this time.Ex. The writer discusses some literary and artistic allusions to paleontological discoveries and their relation to modern fossil finds.----* colección paleontológica = palaeontology collection.* * *= palaeontologic [paleontologic, -USA], paleontological [palaeontological, -UK].Ex: Interest in a palaeontologic network is high, but a network is not realistic at this time.
Ex: The writer discusses some literary and artistic allusions to paleontological discoveries and their relation to modern fossil finds.* colección paleontológica = palaeontology collection.* * *paleontológico -capaleontological* * *paleontológico, -a adjpalaeontological -
14 superficialidad
f.superficiality.* * *1 superficiality* * *SF1) [de herida] superficiality2) (=frivolidad) shallowness* * *1) ( de persona) superficiality, shallowness; (de charla, comentario) superficiality2) ( de herida) superficiality, superficial nature* * *= superficiality, shallowness, superfluousness.Ex. Their perception of the changing role of the librarian is based on unfounded generalisations and superficialities, not on the underlying functions of libraries.Ex. Even writing that we reject for its shallowness, its lack of penetration, demands in the very act of rejection that we match what we know of life, and of other literature, against what this writer offers = Incluso las lecturas que rechazamos por su superficialidad, por su falta de agudeza, requieren en el acto mismo del rechazo que comparemos lo que conocemos de la vida, y de otra literatura, con lo que nos ofrece su autor.Ex. Her notion of 'abjection' illuminates Arendt's claim that understanding the superfluousness of the modern human being is inseparable from grasping the emergence of radical evil.* * *1) ( de persona) superficiality, shallowness; (de charla, comentario) superficiality2) ( de herida) superficiality, superficial nature* * *= superficiality, shallowness, superfluousness.Ex: Their perception of the changing role of the librarian is based on unfounded generalisations and superficialities, not on the underlying functions of libraries.
Ex: Even writing that we reject for its shallowness, its lack of penetration, demands in the very act of rejection that we match what we know of life, and of other literature, against what this writer offers = Incluso las lecturas que rechazamos por su superficialidad, por su falta de agudeza, requieren en el acto mismo del rechazo que comparemos lo que conocemos de la vida, y de otra literatura, con lo que nos ofrece su autor.Ex: Her notion of 'abjection' illuminates Arendt's claim that understanding the superfluousness of the modern human being is inseparable from grasping the emergence of radical evil.* * *A (de una persona) superficiality, shallownessB (de una herida) superficiality, superficial nature* * *
superficialidad sustantivo femenino
1 superficiality
2 (de una persona) pey superficiality, shallowness
' superficialidad' also found in these entries:
English:
superficiality
* * *1. [de herida] superficiality2. [frivolidad] superficiality* * *f superficiality, shallowness* * *: superficiality -
15 vengarse
1 to avenge oneself, take revenge (de, on)* * ** * *VPR to take revenge, get one's revenge* * *(v.) = wreak + vengeance upon, get + even, exact + revenge, get + one back on, revenge, take + revenge, avenge, take + vengeance, wreak + revengeEx. Here was an opportunity to wreak vengeance upon him for his treatment of Kate Lespran.Ex. Our reactions to actual crime -- disbelief about the act committed, anger at the hurt caused, a desire to get even, and fear for ourselves and our children -- arrive in an indecipherable rush of emotion.Ex. Many modern horror stories involve characters who return from the dead to exact revenge, act as vigilantes, or fulfill a mission.Ex. This is mentioned only by clever dicks who want to get one back on pianists.Ex. Focusing on individual revenge, the writer examines what types of things can be revenged.Ex. The very same people who had caused him all this anguish, were suddenly delivered right into his hands, finally giving him an opportunity to take revenge.Ex. Moroccan families desiring to avenge their daughters have put a price on the journalist's head.Ex. This man was called 'the avenger of blood,' because he took vengeance for the blood of his relative, whether the one whom he slew deserved to die or not.Ex. It's the story of Heathcliff, an orphan who falls in love with a girl above his class, loses her, and devotes the rest of his life to wreaking revenge on her.* * *(v.) = wreak + vengeance upon, get + even, exact + revenge, get + one back on, revenge, take + revenge, avenge, take + vengeance, wreak + revengeEx: Here was an opportunity to wreak vengeance upon him for his treatment of Kate Lespran.
Ex: Our reactions to actual crime -- disbelief about the act committed, anger at the hurt caused, a desire to get even, and fear for ourselves and our children -- arrive in an indecipherable rush of emotion.Ex: Many modern horror stories involve characters who return from the dead to exact revenge, act as vigilantes, or fulfill a mission.Ex: This is mentioned only by clever dicks who want to get one back on pianists.Ex: Focusing on individual revenge, the writer examines what types of things can be revenged.Ex: The very same people who had caused him all this anguish, were suddenly delivered right into his hands, finally giving him an opportunity to take revenge.Ex: Moroccan families desiring to avenge their daughters have put a price on the journalist's head.Ex: This man was called 'the avenger of blood,' because he took vengeance for the blood of his relative, whether the one whom he slew deserved to die or not.Ex: It's the story of Heathcliff, an orphan who falls in love with a girl above his class, loses her, and devotes the rest of his life to wreaking revenge on her.* * *
■vengarse verbo reflexivo to take o get revenge: María se vengó de él, Maria took revenge on him
' vengarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
jurar
- vengar
English:
pay back
- retaliate
- revenge
- vengeance
- out
* * *vprto take revenge (de on);me vengaré de él algún día I'll take my revenge o I'll get my own back on him some day;se vengó en sus hijos she took her revenge on his children* * *v/r take revenge (de on;por for)* * *vr: to get even, to revenge oneself* * * -
16 contemporary
1. adjectivezeitgenössisch; (present-day) heutig; zeitgenössisch2. nounA is contemporary with B — A und B finden zur gleichen Zeit statt
we were contemporaries or he was a contemporary of mine at university/school — er war ein Studienkollege od. Kommilitone/Schulkamerad von mir
they are contemporaries — sie sind gleichaltrig od. Altersgenossen
* * *[kən'tempərəri] 1. adjective1) (living at, happening at or belonging to the same period: That chair and the painting are contemporary - they both date from the seventeenth century.) gleichaltrig2) (of the present time; modern: contemporary art.) zeitgenössisch2. noun(a person living at the same time: She was one of my contemporaries at university.) der Altersgenosse/die Altersgenossin* * *con·tem·po·rary[kənˈtempərəri, AM -pəreri]I. nto be a \contemporary of sb ein Zeitgenosse m/eine Zeitgenossin von jdm sein1. (from same period) zeitgenössisch\contemporary accounts zeitgenössische Berichte2. (modern) modern, zeitgenössischit still has a \contemporary feel to it es könnte ebenso gut aus der heutigen Zeit stammen* * *[k\@n'tempərərI]1. adj1) (= of the same time) events gleichzeitig; records, literature, writer zeitgenössisch; (= of the same age) manuscript gleich altrecords contemporary with the invasion — Aufzeichnungen aus der Zeit der Invasion
2. nAltersgenosse m/-genossin f; (in history) Zeitgenosse m/-genossin f; (at university) Kommilitone m, Kommilitonin f* * *A adj (adv contemporarily)1. zeitgenössisch:a) heutig, unserer Zeit:b) der damaligen Zeit3. gleichalt(e)rigB s1. Zeitgenosse m, -genossin f2. Altersgenosse m, -genossin f3. gleichzeitig erscheinende Zeitung, Konkurrenzblatt n* * *1. adjectivezeitgenössisch; (present-day) heutig; zeitgenössisch2. nounwe were contemporaries or he was a contemporary of mine at university/school — er war ein Studienkollege od. Kommilitone/Schulkamerad von mir
they are contemporaries — sie sind gleichaltrig od. Altersgenossen
* * *(woman) n.Altersgenossin f. adj.zeitnah adj. n.Altersgenosse m. -
17 logrado
adj.successful.past part.past participle of spanish verb: lograr.* * *1→ link=lograr lograr► adjetivo1 (conseguido) successful* * *ADJ successful* * *- da adjetivo successful* * *= licked, slick.Ex. Modern art is often characterized by its overt acknowledgement of materials and process, whereas the licked surface of academic art is perceived as a sympton of pre-modern concerns.Ex. Whether conceived as a bookmark, newspaper tabloid, balloon, slick booklet, or some other format, the client-directed annual report conveys not only the information itself but also the intent to focus on the client's interest.* * *- da adjetivo successful* * *= licked, slick.Ex: Modern art is often characterized by its overt acknowledgement of materials and process, whereas the licked surface of academic art is perceived as a sympton of pre-modern concerns.
Ex: Whether conceived as a bookmark, newspaper tabloid, balloon, slick booklet, or some other format, the client-directed annual report conveys not only the information itself but also the intent to focus on the client's interest.* * *logrado -dasuccessfuluno de los aspectos más or mejor logrados de la obra one of the most successful aspects of the workun logrado busto del escritor a lifelike bust of the writeruna recreación muy lograda del ambiente de la época a very authentic recreation of the atmosphere of the period* * *
Del verbo lograr: ( conjugate lograr)
logrado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
logrado
lograr
logrado◊ -da adjetivo ( satisfactorio) successful;
( verosímil) ‹retrato/personaje› lifelike
lograr ( conjugate lograr) verbo transitivo ‹ objetivo› to attain, achieve;
‹ éxito› to achieve;
logrado hacer algo to manage to do sth
lograr verbo transitivo
1 to obtain: logró hacerse escuchar, he managed to make himself heard
logrará su propósito, he'll achieve his purpose
no logro conciliar el sueño, I can't sleep ➣ Ver nota en manage 2 (medalla, reconocimiento) to win
' logrado' also found in these entries:
English:
attain
- pull off
- slick
- accomplished
- achievement
- do
- set
* * *logrado, -a adj[bien hecho] accomplished;es una imitación muy lograda it is a very authentic imitation* * *adj excellent* * *logrado, -da adj: successful, well done -
18 Klassiker
m; -s, -1. classical author; Komponist: classical composer; die antiken Klassiker the classical authors ( Künstler: artists) of antiquity2. fig. (großer Künstler, Autor etc.) great artist ( Autor: author, Komponist: composer etc.) with classic status3. fig. (Werk) classic; „Zwölf Uhr mittags“ - ein Klassiker des Westerns „High Noon“, a classic western* * *der Klassikerclassic* * *Klạs|si|ker ['klasikɐ]1. m -s, -, Klas|si|ke|rin[-ərɪn]2. f -, -nenclassicein Klassiker des Jazz — a jazz classic
ein Klassiker der modernen Musik — a classic of modern music
* * *(an established work of literature of high quality: I have read all the classics.) classical* * *Klas·si·ker(in)<-s, ->[ˈklasikɐ]1. (klassischer Schriftsteller) classical writer2. (klassischer Komponist) classical composer3. (maßgebliche Autorität) leading authority4. (zeitloses Werk) classicdieses Buch ist ein echter \Klassiker this book is a real classic* * *der; Klassikers, Klassiker classic; (Schriftsteller) classic; classical writer; (Komponist) classic; classical composer* * *1. classical author; Komponist: classical composer;die antiken Klassiker the classical authors ( Künstler: artists) of antiquity2. fig (großer Künstler, Autor etc) great artist ( Autor: author, Komponist: composer etc) with classic status3. fig (Werk) classic;* * *der; Klassikers, Klassiker classic; (Schriftsteller) classic; classical writer; (Komponist) classic; classical composer* * *m.classic n.classical author n. -
19 Literature
The earliest known examples of literary writing in the Portuguese language is a collection of songbooks ( cancioneiros) that date from the 12th century, written by anonymous court troubadours, aristocrats, and clerics with poetic and musical talent. In the 13th and 14th centuries, ballads ( romanceiros) became popular at court. One of these written after the battle of Aljubarrota is considered to be the Portuguese equivalent of the English Arthurian legend. Literary prose in Portuguese began in the 14th century, with the compilation of chronicles ( chrónicos) written by Fernão Lopes de Castenhada who was commissioned by King Duarte (1430-38) to write a history of the House of Aviz.During the 15th and 16th centuries, Portuguese chroniclers turned their attention to the discoveries and the Portuguese overseas empire. The Portuguese discoveries in India and Asia were chronicled by João de Barros, whose writing appeared posthumously under the pen name of Diogo Do Couto; Fernão Lopes de Castenhade wrote a 10-volume chronicle of the Portuguese in India. The most famous chronicle from this period was the Peregrinação (Pilgrimage), a largely true adventure story and history of Portugal that was as popular among 17th-century readers in Iberia as was Miguel de Cer-vantes's Don Quixote. Portugal's most celebrated work of national literature, The Lusiads ( Os Lusíadas), written by Luís de Camões chronicled Vasco da Gama's voyage to India (1497-99) within the context of the history of Portugal.During the period when Portugal was under Spanish domination (1580-1640), the preferred language of literary expression was Castilian Spanish. The greatest writer of this period was Francisco Manuel de Melo, who wrote in Castilian and Portuguese. His most famous work is an eyewitness account of the 1640 Catalan revolt against Castile, Historia de los Movimientos y Separación de Cata-luna (1645), which allowed the Portuguese monarchy to regain its independence that same year.Little of note was written during the 17th century with the exception of Letters of a Portuguese Nun, an enormously popular work in the French language thought to have been written by Sister Mariana Alcoforado to a French officer Noel Bouton, Marquise de Chamilly.Modern Portuguese writing began in the early 19th century with the appearance of the prose-fiction of João Baptista de Almeida Garrett and the historian-novelist Alexandre Herculano. The last half of the 19th century was dominated by the Generation of 1870, which believed that Portugal was, due to the monarchy and the Catholic Church, a European backwater. Writers such as José Maria Eça de Queirós dissected the social decadence of their day and called for reform and national renewal. The most famous Portuguese poet of the 20th century is, without doubt, Fernando Pessoa, who wrote poetry and essays in English and Portuguese under various names. António Ferro (1895-1956) published best-selling accounts of the right-wing dictatorships in Italy and Spain that endeared him to Prime Minister António de Oliveira Salazar, who made him the Estado Novo's secretary of national propaganda.The various responses of the Portuguese people to the colonial African wars (1961-75) were chronicled by António Lobo Antunes. In 1998, the noted Portuguese novelist, poet, essayist, and travel writer, José Saramago was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, the first writer in the Portuguese language of whatever nationality to be so honored. His most famous novels translated into English include: Baltazar and Blimunda (1987), The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis (1991), and The History of the Siege of Lisbon (1996). -
20 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.
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