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21 puntare
1. v/t pin (su to)( scommettere) bet (su on)fig puntare i piedi dig one's heels inpuntare a successo, matrimonio aspire to, set one's sights onpuntare su contare su rely on* * *puntare1 v.tr.1 ( dirigere, volgere) to point; to direct (anche fig.); ( volgere e prendere la mira) to point, to aim, to sight, to level: puntò il bastone verso di me, he pointed the stick at me; puntare l'attenzione su qlco., qlcu., to direct one's attention to sthg., s.o.; puntare un cannocchiale, ( dirigerlo) to point (o to train) a pair of field glasses, ( metterlo a fuoco) to focus a pair of field glasses; puntare il dito verso qlcu., to point at (o to) s.o.; puntò la torcia verso l'alto, he directed (o pointed) the torch upwards; puntare i propri sforzi su qlco., to concentrate one's efforts on sthg. (o to direct one's efforts towards sthg. o to aim at sthg.); puntò il fucile contro la tigre, he aimed (o levelled) his gun at the tiger; devi puntare con cura prima di sparare, you must take careful aim (o aim carefully) before shooting // egli puntò alla lepre e sparò, he aimed at the hare and fired; mi puntò gli occhi addosso, he fixed his eyes on me // puntare un orologio, to set a clock2 ( spingere, appoggiare con forza) to push, to thrust*, to plant: puntò il remo alla riva per allontanare la barca, he pushed the boat away from the bank (o he thrust away from the bank) with the oar; puntò l'asta della bandiera in terra, he planted the flagstaff in the ground; puntare i gomiti sulla tavola, to put one's elbows on the table3 ( scommettere) to bet*, to wager, to put*, to stake: ho puntato novanta euro su quel cavallo, I have bet (o put) ninety euros on that horse // hanno puntato tutto sulla campagna pubblicitaria, (fig.) they've staked everything on the advertising campaign4 (fam.) ( appuntare) to fix: puntò l'orlo con quattro spilli, he fixed the hem with four pins; ha puntato il messaggio alla bacheca, he pinned the message to the board◆ v. intr.1 ( dirigersi) to head; ( spingersi) to press: puntammo verso la città, we pressed on towards the city; puntavamo a nord, we were heading north; puntavano diritti su Londra, they were heading straight for London2 ( aspirare a qualcosa) to aspire, to aim: punta alla carica di primo ministro, he aspires (o aims) to be prime minister; è uno che punta in alto, he aims high.puntare2 v.tr.1 ( di cane da caccia) to set*, to point: puntare una lepre, to point a hare; il cane puntò, poi si lanciò sulla preda, the dog pointed (o set) and then dashed on the prey2 (estens.) ( guardare fissamente) to stare at (s.o., sthg.); to eye (s.o., sthg.): puntare una ragazza, to stare at a girl* * *[pun'tare]1. vt1) (arma) to point, aim, (cannocchiale, dito) to pointpuntare il dito verso qn/qc — to point (one's finger) at sb/sth
puntare l'attenzione su qn/qc — to turn one's attention to sb/sth
2) (piantare: gomiti, piedi) to plant3)puntare su — to bet on4) (sogg : cane) to point to1)puntare su, puntare verso — (aereo, nave) to make for, head for
puntare a qc/a fare qc — (mirare) to aim for sth/to do sth
2)puntare su qn/qc — to rely on sb/sth, count on sb/sth* * *[pun'tare] 1.verbo transitivo1) (appoggiare con forza) to rest, to lean, to bracepuntare i gomiti sul tavolo — to lean o rest one's elbows on the table
puntare i piedi — to brace one's feet against the ground; fig. to dig in one's heels
2) (dirigere) to aim, to point, to direct [ arma] ( contro at); to turn, to point [telecamera, telescopio] (su at)puntare una pistola alla testa di qcn. — to hold a gun to sb.'s head
puntare il dito contro qcn. — fig. to point the finger at sb.
3) (scommettere) to bet*, to place a bet, to gamble (su on)puntare tutto su qcs. — to stake one's all on sth
4) sart. to pin [ vestito]5) venat. [ cane] to point2.1) (dirigersi) to headpuntare verso nord, verso un'isola — to head north, for an island
puntare su qcn., qcs. — to count on sb., sth
3) (tendere)puntare a qcs., a fare — to aim at sth., at doing
* * *puntare/pun'tare/ [1]1 (appoggiare con forza) to rest, to lean, to brace; puntare i gomiti sul tavolo to lean o rest one's elbows on the table; puntare le racchette (da sci) to plant the ski poles; puntare i piedi to brace one's feet against the ground; fig. to dig in one's heels2 (dirigere) to aim, to point, to direct [ arma] ( contro at); to turn, to point [telecamera, telescopio] (su at); puntare una pistola alla testa di qcn. to hold a gun to sb.'s head; puntare il dito contro qcn. fig. to point the finger at sb.; puntare la sveglia alle to set the alarm clock for3 (scommettere) to bet*, to place a bet, to gamble (su on); puntare tutto su qcs. to stake one's all on sth.4 sart. to pin [ vestito]5 venat. [ cane] to point(aus. avere)1 (dirigersi) to head; puntare verso nord, verso un'isola to head north, for an island2 (fare affidamento) puntare su qcn., qcs. to count on sb., sth.3 (tendere) puntare a qcs., a fare to aim at sth., at doing; puntare in alto to aim high; puntare troppo in alto to set one's sights too high. -
22 East Timor
Colony of Portugal from the 16th century to December 1975, with an area of 40,000 square kilometers (18,989 square miles). East Timor is located on the eastern portion of the island of Timor in the Indonesian archipelago. From 1975 to August 1999, when it was forcibly annexed and occupied by Indonesia, until May 2002, when it achieved full independence, East Timor was, in effect, a ward of the United Nations.In the 16th century, the Portuguese established trading posts on the island, but for centuries few Portuguese settled there, and the "colony" remained isolated and neglected. After the Dutch won control of Indonesia, there was a territorial dispute with Portugal as to who "owned" what on the island of Timor. In 1859, this question was decided as the Dutch and Portuguese governments formally divided the island into a Dutch portion (west) and the Portuguese colony (east) and established the frontier. From the late 19th century to World War I, Portugal consolidated its control of East Timor by means of military campaigns against the Timorese tribes. In addition to colonial officials, a few Portuguese missionaries and merchants occupied East Timor, but few Portuguese ever settled there.East Timor's geographic location close to the north coast of Australia and its sharing of one island in the Dutch colony catapulted it into world affairs early in World War II. To forestall a Japanese invasion of Timor, a joint Dutch-Australian expedition landed on 17 December 1941; the Portuguese authorities neither resisted nor cooperated. In February 1942, when Japanese troops landed in Timor, the small allied force fled to the hills and later was evacuated to Australia. Japan occupied all of Timor and the remainder of the Dutch East Indies until Japan's surrender in September 1945. Portugal soon reassumed control.After the Revolution of 25 April 1974, East Timorese nationalist parties hoped for rapid decolonization and independence with Lisbon's cooperation. But on 28 November 1975, before a preoccupied Portugal could work out a formal transfer of power, the Revolutionary Front of Independent East Timor (FRETILIN), then in control of the former colony's capital, declared independence, and, on 7 December 1975, Indonesian armed forces swiftly invaded, occupied, and annexed East Timor. In the following years, a tragic loss of life occurred. Portugal refused to recognize Indonesia's sovereignty over East Timor and claimed legal sovereignty before the United Nations.As Indonesia persistently and brutally suppressed Timorese nationalist resistance, world media attention focused on this still remote island. Several sensational international and Indonesian events altered the status of occupied East Timor, following the continuation of FRETILIN guerrilla resistance. In November 1991, world media disseminated information on the Indonesian forces' slaughter of East Timorese protesters at a cemetery demonstration in the capital of Dili. In 1996, two East Timorese, Bishop Belo and José Ramos Horta, each a symbol of East Timorese resistance and the desire for independence, shared the Nobel Peace Prize. Then, in 1998, in Indonesia, the Suharto regime collapsed and was replaced by a more democratic government, which in January 1999 pledged a free referendum in East Timor. On 30 August 1999, the referendum was held, and nearly 80 percent of the East Timorese voters voted for independence from Indonesia.However, Indonesian armed forces and militias reacted brutally, using intimidation, murder, mayhem, and razing of buildings to try to reverse the people's will. Following some weeks of confusion, a United Nations (UN) armed forces, led by Australia, took control of East Timor and declared it a UN protectorate, to last until East Timor was secure from Indonesian aggression and prepared for full independence. East Timor had changed from a Portuguese colony to an Indonesian protectorate/colony to a fledgling nation-in-the-making.The status of East Timor as a ward of the UN was made official on 25 October 1999, as the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor began to prepare the country for independence. Appalling conditions prevailed: 70 percent of the country's buildings had been destroyed and nearly half of the population of 800,000 had been driven out of East Timor into uneasy refuge in West Timor, under Indonesian control. A territory without an economy, East Timor lacked police, civil servants, schools, and government records.With UN assistance, general elections were held in the spring of 2002; the majority of parliamentary seats were won by FRETILIN, and José "Xanana" Gusmão was elected the first president. On 20 May 2002, East Timor became independent. World luminaries adorned the independence celebrations: UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, former U.S. president Bill Clinton, and other celebrities attended. But East Timor's travails continued with civil strife and uncertainty. -
23 Introduction
Portugal is a small Western European nation with a large, distinctive past replete with both triumph and tragedy. One of the continent's oldest nation-states, Portugal has frontiers that are essentially unchanged since the late 14th century. The country's unique character and 850-year history as an independent state present several curious paradoxes. As of 1974, when much of the remainder of the Portuguese overseas empire was decolonized, Portuguese society appeared to be the most ethnically homogeneous of the two Iberian states and of much of Europe. Yet, Portuguese society had received, over the course of 2,000 years, infusions of other ethnic groups in invasions and immigration: Phoenicians, Greeks, Celts, Romans, Suevi, Visigoths, Muslims (Arab and Berber), Jews, Italians, Flemings, Burgundian French, black Africans, and Asians. Indeed, Portugal has been a crossroads, despite its relative isolation in the western corner of the Iberian Peninsula, between the West and North Africa, Tropical Africa, and Asia and America. Since 1974, Portugal's society has become less homogeneous, as there has been significant immigration of former subjects from its erstwhile overseas empire.Other paradoxes should be noted as well. Although Portugal is sometimes confused with Spain or things Spanish, its very national independence and national culture depend on being different from Spain and Spaniards. Today, Portugal's independence may be taken for granted. Since 1140, except for 1580-1640 when it was ruled by Philippine Spain, Portugal has been a sovereign state. Nevertheless, a recurring theme of the nation's history is cycles of anxiety and despair that its freedom as a nation is at risk. There is a paradox, too, about Portugal's overseas empire(s), which lasted half a millennium (1415-1975): after 1822, when Brazil achieved independence from Portugal, most of the Portuguese who emigrated overseas never set foot in their overseas empire, but preferred to immigrate to Brazil or to other countries in North or South America or Europe, where established Portuguese overseas communities existed.Portugal was a world power during the period 1415-1550, the era of the Discoveries, expansion, and early empire, and since then the Portuguese have experienced periods of decline, decadence, and rejuvenation. Despite the fact that Portugal slipped to the rank of a third- or fourth-rate power after 1580, it and its people can claim rightfully an unusual number of "firsts" or distinctions that assure their place both in world and Western history. These distinctions should be kept in mind while acknowledging that, for more than 400 years, Portugal has generally lagged behind the rest of Western Europe, although not Southern Europe, in social and economic developments and has remained behind even its only neighbor and sometime nemesis, Spain.Portugal's pioneering role in the Discoveries and exploration era of the 15th and 16th centuries is well known. Often noted, too, is the Portuguese role in the art and science of maritime navigation through the efforts of early navigators, mapmakers, seamen, and fishermen. What are often forgotten are the country's slender base of resources, its small population largely of rural peasants, and, until recently, its occupation of only 16 percent of the Iberian Peninsula. As of 1139—10, when Portugal emerged first as an independent monarchy, and eventually a sovereign nation-state, England and France had not achieved this status. The Portuguese were the first in the Iberian Peninsula to expel the Muslim invaders from their portion of the peninsula, achieving this by 1250, more than 200 years before Castile managed to do the same (1492).Other distinctions may be noted. Portugal conquered the first overseas empire beyond the Mediterranean in the early modern era and established the first plantation system based on slave labor. Portugal's empire was the first to be colonized and the last to be decolonized in the 20th century. With so much of its scattered, seaborne empire dependent upon the safety and seaworthiness of shipping, Portugal was a pioneer in initiating marine insurance, a practice that is taken for granted today. During the time of Pombaline Portugal (1750-77), Portugal was the first state to organize and hold an industrial trade fair. In distinctive political and governmental developments, Portugal's record is more mixed, and this fact suggests that maintaining a government with a functioning rule of law and a pluralist, representative democracy has not been an easy matter in a country that for so long has been one of the poorest and least educated in the West. Portugal's First Republic (1910-26), only the third republic in a largely monarchist Europe (after France and Switzerland), was Western Europe's most unstable parliamentary system in the 20th century. Finally, the authoritarian Estado Novo or "New State" (1926-74) was the longest surviving authoritarian system in modern Western Europe. When Portugal departed from its overseas empire in 1974-75, the descendants, in effect, of Prince Henry the Navigator were leaving the West's oldest empire.Portugal's individuality is based mainly on its long history of distinc-tiveness, its intense determination to use any means — alliance, diplomacy, defense, trade, or empire—to be a sovereign state, independent of Spain, and on its national pride in the Portuguese language. Another master factor in Portuguese affairs deserves mention. The country's politics and government have been influenced not only by intellectual currents from the Atlantic but also through Spain from Europe, which brought new political ideas and institutions and novel technologies. Given the weight of empire in Portugal's past, it is not surprising that public affairs have been hostage to a degree to what happened in her overseas empire. Most important have been domestic responses to imperial affairs during both imperial and internal crises since 1415, which have continued to the mid-1970s and beyond. One of the most important themes of Portuguese history, and one oddly neglected by not a few histories, is that every major political crisis and fundamental change in the system—in other words, revolution—since 1415 has been intimately connected with a related imperial crisis. The respective dates of these historical crises are: 1437, 1495, 1578-80, 1640, 1820-22, 1890, 1910, 1926-30, 1961, and 1974. The reader will find greater detail on each crisis in historical context in the history section of this introduction and in relevant entries.LAND AND PEOPLEThe Republic of Portugal is located on the western edge of the Iberian Peninsula. A major geographical dividing line is the Tagus River: Portugal north of it has an Atlantic orientation; the country to the south of it has a Mediterranean orientation. There is little physical evidence that Portugal is clearly geographically distinct from Spain, and there is no major natural barrier between the two countries along more than 1,214 kilometers (755 miles) of the Luso-Spanish frontier. In climate, Portugal has a number of microclimates similar to the microclimates of Galicia, Estremadura, and Andalusia in neighboring Spain. North of the Tagus, in general, there is an Atlantic-type climate with higher rainfall, cold winters, and some snow in the mountainous areas. South of the Tagus is a more Mediterranean climate, with hot, dry, often rainless summers and cool, wet winters. Lisbon, the capital, which has a fifth of the country's population living in its region, has an average annual mean temperature about 16° C (60° F).For a small country with an area of 92,345 square kilometers (35,580 square miles, including the Atlantic archipelagos of the Azores and the Madeiras), which is about the size of the state of Indiana in the United States, Portugal has a remarkable diversity of regional topography and scenery. In some respects, Portugal resembles an island within the peninsula, embodying a unique fusion of European and non-European cultures, akin to Spain yet apart. Its geography is a study in contrasts, from the flat, sandy coastal plain, in some places unusually wide for Europe, to the mountainous Beira districts or provinces north of the Tagus, to the snow-capped mountain range of the Estrela, with its unique ski area, to the rocky, barren, remote Trás-os-Montes district bordering Spain. There are extensive forests in central and northern Portugal that contrast with the flat, almost Kansas-like plains of the wheat belt in the Alentejo district. There is also the unique Algarve district, isolated somewhat from the Alentejo district by a mountain range, with a microclimate, topography, and vegetation that resemble closely those of North Africa.Although Portugal is small, just 563 kilometers (337 miles) long and from 129 to 209 kilometers (80 to 125 miles) wide, it is strategically located on transportation and communication routes between Europe and North Africa, and the Americas and Europe. Geographical location is one key to the long history of Portugal's three overseas empires, which stretched once from Morocco to the Moluccas and from lonely Sagres at Cape St. Vincent to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is essential to emphasize the identity of its neighbors: on the north and east Portugal is bounded by Spain, its only neighbor, and by the Atlantic Ocean on the south and west. Portugal is the westernmost country of Western Europe, and its shape resembles a face, with Lisbon below the nose, staring into theAtlantic. No part of Portugal touches the Mediterranean, and its Atlantic orientation has been a response in part to turning its back on Castile and Léon (later Spain) and exploring, traveling, and trading or working in lands beyond the peninsula. Portugal was the pioneering nation in the Atlantic-born European discoveries during the Renaissance, and its diplomatic and trade relations have been dominated by countries that have been Atlantic powers as well: Spain; England (Britain since 1707); France; Brazil, once its greatest colony; and the United States.Today Portugal and its Atlantic islands have a population of roughly 10 million people. While ethnic homogeneity has been characteristic of it in recent history, Portugal's population over the centuries has seen an infusion of non-Portuguese ethnic groups from various parts of Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Between 1500 and 1800, a significant population of black Africans, brought in as slaves, was absorbed in the population. And since 1950, a population of Cape Verdeans, who worked in menial labor, has resided in Portugal. With the influx of African, Goan, and Timorese refugees and exiles from the empire—as many as three quarters of a million retornados ("returned ones" or immigrants from the former empire) entered Portugal in 1974 and 1975—there has been greater ethnic diversity in the Portuguese population. In 2002, there were 239,113 immigrants legally residing in Portugal: 108,132 from Africa; 24,806 from Brazil; 15,906 from Britain; 14,617 from Spain; and 11,877 from Germany. In addition, about 200,000 immigrants are living in Portugal from eastern Europe, mainly from Ukraine. The growth of Portugal's population is reflected in the following statistics:1527 1,200,000 (estimate only)1768 2,400,000 (estimate only)1864 4,287,000 first census1890 5,049,7001900 5,423,0001911 5,960,0001930 6,826,0001940 7,185,1431950 8,510,0001960 8,889,0001970 8,668,000* note decrease1980 9,833,0001991 9,862,5401996 9,934,1002006 10,642,8362010 10,710,000 (estimated) -
24 gratis
adj.free, free of charge, give-away, costless.adv.free, for nothing.ser gratis to be freeme salió gratis el viaje the journey didn't cost me anything* * *► adverbio1 free* * *adj.* * *1.ADV free, for nothingte lo arreglarán gratis — they'll fix it (for) free o for nothing
comimos gratis — we ate for free o nothing
2.ADJ free* * *Iadjetivo freeIIadverbio free* * *= free, freely, free of charge, giveaway [give-away], gratis, complimentary, without charge, pro bono, at no cost, no cost(s), free of cost, cost free, freebie, for free, without cost, freely available, costless, free for the taking, at no charge, on a complimentary basis.Ex. Late in 1986, the Medical Library took advantage of Cambridge Scientific Abstracts' free trial offer of its compact Medline on CD-ROM.Ex. The imposition of fee-based services may radically curtail the breadth of resources available to library users where historically information has been offered freely.Ex. Law centres employ qualified lawyers and they receive a waiver from the Law Society that allows them to provide their services free of charge.Ex. HUD publications range from give-away pamphlets to multi-volume research tomes = Las publicaciones HUD van desde los folletos gratuitos a tomos de investigaciones en varios volúmenes.Ex. Answers were obtained from 102 centres, 1/2 of which provide information services gratis, but some charges for photocopying.Ex. This is a classified, annotated guide to magazines which fall into the general category of house magazines available to libraries on a complimentary basis.Ex. There is a drop-in centre with a fully equipped sound recording studio and video editing suite offering guitar tuition and rehearsal space to local teenagers without charge.Ex. Pro bono work should be a part of professional duty, not looked on as a charitable act = El trabajo desinteresado debería formar parte de los deberes profesionales y no considerarse como un acto caritativo.Ex. Some commercial information providers are giving away a little information at no cost in order to attract customers onto the system.Ex. Respondents who preferred CD-ROM searching did so because they liked doing their own searches and the fact that there were no costs involved.Ex. An annexure reviews electronic journals available free of cost.Ex. In an attempt to overcome this problem, a group of small health related libraries responded by forming a cost free cooperative called GRATIS in 1982.Ex. The article 'Professional reference service with ' freebie' librarians' discusses the free online reference service offered by the Internet Public Library.Ex. In addition, most or all of the contents of the resources listed are available for free.Ex. The author looks at how 'free' information really is and whether we can continue to expect high quality information to be available without cost.Ex. Thus, resources should be freely available, or at the very last charge only nominal fees for their use.Ex. Another property of DSMA protocols is a provision for a graceful dynamic reconfiguration and costless protocol recovery after a lost token.Ex. The short answer of course is 'yes,' simply because we now live in a world where these resources are expected to be there, and many expect them to be there free for the taking.Ex. This latest move makes available at no charge more than 150 electronic publications for which fees were previously charged.Ex. Mountain bikes are available on a complimentary basis for guests who wish to explore the scenic north coast of the island.----* billete gratis = free ticket.* de forma gratis = on a complimentary basis.* de pago o gratis = fee or free, fee versus free.* entrada gratis = free ticket.* nada es gratis = nothing comes without a cost.* nada es gratis en la viña del Señor = there is no such thing as a free lunch, there is no such thing as a free ride.* obtener gratis = obtain + free.* recibir gratis = get + free.* servicio gratis = frill.* * *Iadjetivo freeIIadverbio free* * *= free, freely, free of charge, giveaway [give-away], gratis, complimentary, without charge, pro bono, at no cost, no cost(s), free of cost, cost free, freebie, for free, without cost, freely available, costless, free for the taking, at no charge, on a complimentary basis.Ex: Late in 1986, the Medical Library took advantage of Cambridge Scientific Abstracts' free trial offer of its compact Medline on CD-ROM.
Ex: The imposition of fee-based services may radically curtail the breadth of resources available to library users where historically information has been offered freely.Ex: Law centres employ qualified lawyers and they receive a waiver from the Law Society that allows them to provide their services free of charge.Ex: HUD publications range from give-away pamphlets to multi-volume research tomes = Las publicaciones HUD van desde los folletos gratuitos a tomos de investigaciones en varios volúmenes.Ex: Answers were obtained from 102 centres, 1/2 of which provide information services gratis, but some charges for photocopying.Ex: This is a classified, annotated guide to magazines which fall into the general category of house magazines available to libraries on a complimentary basis.Ex: There is a drop-in centre with a fully equipped sound recording studio and video editing suite offering guitar tuition and rehearsal space to local teenagers without charge.Ex: Pro bono work should be a part of professional duty, not looked on as a charitable act = El trabajo desinteresado debería formar parte de los deberes profesionales y no considerarse como un acto caritativo.Ex: Some commercial information providers are giving away a little information at no cost in order to attract customers onto the system.Ex: Respondents who preferred CD-ROM searching did so because they liked doing their own searches and the fact that there were no costs involved.Ex: An annexure reviews electronic journals available free of cost.Ex: In an attempt to overcome this problem, a group of small health related libraries responded by forming a cost free cooperative called GRATIS in 1982.Ex: The article 'Professional reference service with ' freebie' librarians' discusses the free online reference service offered by the Internet Public Library.Ex: In addition, most or all of the contents of the resources listed are available for free.Ex: The author looks at how 'free' information really is and whether we can continue to expect high quality information to be available without cost.Ex: Thus, resources should be freely available, or at the very last charge only nominal fees for their use.Ex: Another property of DSMA protocols is a provision for a graceful dynamic reconfiguration and costless protocol recovery after a lost token.Ex: The short answer of course is 'yes,' simply because we now live in a world where these resources are expected to be there, and many expect them to be there free for the taking.Ex: This latest move makes available at no charge more than 150 electronic publications for which fees were previously charged.Ex: Mountain bikes are available on a complimentary basis for guests who wish to explore the scenic north coast of the island.* billete gratis = free ticket.* de forma gratis = on a complimentary basis.* de pago o gratis = fee or free, fee versus free.* entrada gratis = free ticket.* nada es gratis = nothing comes without a cost.* nada es gratis en la viña del Señor = there is no such thing as a free lunch, there is no such thing as a free ride.* obtener gratis = obtain + free.* recibir gratis = get + free.* servicio gratis = frill.* * *freela entrada es gratis entrance is freeeste folleto es gratis this brochure is free (of charge) o gratisfreeme lo arregló gratis he fixed it for me freeentramos gratis we got in free o for nothing* * *
gratis adj/adv
free;
entramos gratis we got in free o for nothing
gratis
I adv inv free: le salió gratis la matrícula, his registration was free
II adjetivo free: hay un billete gratis para ir al cine, we have a free ticket for the movies
' gratis' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
balde
- gratuidad
- gratuita
- gratuito
- pesetera
- pesetero
English:
bonus
- charge
- complimentary
- delivery
- free
- mooch
- nothing
- toll-free
- wangle
* * *♦ adj invfree;ser gratis to be free;entrada gratis [en letrero] entrance free♦ adv(for) free, for nothing;entré gratis al concierto I got into the concert (for) free o for nothing;me salió gratis el viaje the journey didn't cost me anything* * *adj & adv free* * *gratis advgratuitamente: free, for free, gratisgratis adjgratuito: free, gratis* * *gratis adv1. (sin pagar) free2. (sin cobrar) for nothing -
25 part
1. I1) they refused to part они не пожелали расстаться2) the crowd parted and let us through толпа расступилась и дала нам пройти; the curtain parted занавес раздвинулся; the clouds parted между туч наметился просвет; the roads (the stream, etc.) parted дороги и т.д. расходятся3) the rope parted веревка порвалась; cable parted кабель лопнул.2. II1) part in some manner part amicably (meekly, formally, suddenly, slowly, quickly, airily, etc.) расставаться мирно /полюбовно/ и т.д.; they'll part no more они больше не будут разлучаться2) part somewhere our roads part here здесь наши пути расходятся; part in some manner the crowd parted right and left to make way for the soldiers толпа отступила вправо и влево и освободила путь для солдат3. III1) part smb., smth. part friends а) разлучать друзей; б) расставаться друзьями; we parted the best of friends мы расстались лучшими друзьями; part company a) расходиться или разъезжаться; б) ссориться, перестать дружить2) part smb., smth. part fighters (combatants, etc.) разнимать дерущихся и т.д.; I parted the fighting dogs я разнял сцепившихся собак; the soldiers (the policemen on horseback, etc.) parted the crowd солдаты и т.д. заставили толпу расступиться; an islet parts the stream речка разделяется островком; а smile parted her lips ее губы раскрылись в улыбке; part one's hair расчесывать волосы на пробор3) part smth. part a rope (a cable, etc.) рвать веревку и т.д.; the strain parted the rope веревка лопнула от напряжения4. IV1) part smb. in some manner part smb. cruelly безжалостно разлучить кого-л.2) part smth. in some manner part one's hair carefully тщательно расчесывать волосы ни пробор5. XI1) be parted the lovers were parted влюбленных разлучили; friends were parted друзей заставили расстаться2) be parted in some manner his hair was parted exactly in the middle пробор у него был /шел/ точно посередине; он аккуратно расчесывал волосы на прямой пробор; her heir was parted at the side она расчесывала волосы на косой пробор; our garden is parted from theirs by a low fence наш сад отделен от их сада низким забором6. XIIIpart to do smth. the crowd parted to let him through толпа расступилась и дала ему пройти7. XVI1) part at (in, on, etc.) smth. part at the corner (at the gate, on the quay, in the square, etc.) расставаться на углу и т.д.; part from /with/ smb. part from a friend (with one's child, etc.) расставаться /прощаться/ с другом и т.д.; I parted from him reluctantly я неохотно расстался с ним; part in smth. part in anger разойтись, разругавшись; part from smb. at smth. I parted from him at Tokyo station я расстался /распрощался/ с ним на вокзале в Токио; part for some time part for a year расставаться на год; part for ever расставаться навсегда2) part with smb. part with one's secretary (with one's agent, etc.) отпускать /увольнять/ секретаря и т.д., давать расчет секретарю и т.д.; part with smth. part with one's property отказываться от своей собственности; part with one's house покинуть или продать свой дом; I wouldn't part with that book at any price эту книгу я не отдам ни за какие деньги; he hates to part with his money он терпеть не может платить3) part under smth. the rope parted under the strain (under the pressure, etc.) веревка лопнула от напряжения и т.д.8. XX1part as smb. part as friends расставаться /расходиться/ друзьями9. XXI11) part smth. into smth. the island parts the river into two branches остров делит реку на два рукава; part smth., smb. from smth., smb. part an island from the mainland (North America from Asia, calves from the herd, etc.) отделять остров от материка и т.д.; Bering Strait parts North America from Asia от Азии Северную Америку отделяет Берингов пролив2) part smb. from smb. the war parted them from their families война разлучала их с семьями If part company with smb. расставаться с кем-л.; I am afraid I must part company with you боюсь, что я должен с вами распрощаться -
26 Breite
f; -, -n1. seitliche Ausdehnung: width, breadth; eines Schiffs: beam; es hat eine Breite von sechs Metern it is six met|res (Am. -ers) wide; das Volumen ist Länge mal Breite mal Höhe volume equals length times width times height; ein Schrank mit zwei Meter Breite und 64 Zentimeter Tiefe a cupboard two met|res (Am. -ers) wide and 64 centimet|res (Am. -ers) deep; der Breite nach hinlegen, nehmen breadthwise, breadthways2. bes. große Ausdehnung: von ungeheurer Breite extremely wide; in die Breite gehen Person: put on weight, grow broad, spread out umg.; in seiner vollen Breite vor jemandem stehen stand smack ( oder straight) in front of s.o.3. ASTRON., GEOG. latitude; astronomische / geografische Breite astronomic(al) / terrestrial latitude; etwa auf der Breite von Rom at about the latitude of Rome; auf dem 25. Grad südlicher / nördlicher Breite liegen lie at latitude 25 degrees south / north5. nur Sg.; fig. breadth, scope, range; (Weitschweifigkeit) longwindedness; die Breite des Angebots the breadth of the range; in epischer Breite in great ( oder epic) detail; zu sehr in die Breite gehen Darstellung etc.: be rather long-winded* * *die Breitelatitude; breadth; broadness; width* * *Brei|te ['braitə]f -, -n1) breadth; (von Dialekt, Aussprache) broadness; (esp bei Maßangaben) width; (von Angebot) breadth; (von Interessen) breadth, wide rangeder Bréíte nach — widthways
etw in aller Bréíte erklären — to explain sth in great detail
in voller Bréíte vor jdm — smack in front of sb (inf)
in die Bréíte gehen — to go into detail; (inf
in südlichere Bréíten fahren (inf) — to travel to more southerly climes or parts
es liegt ( auf) 20° nördlicher/südlicher Bréíte — it lies 20° north/south
in unseren Bréíten — in our area
* * *die1) (width; size from side to side: the breadth of a table.) breadth2) (a distance equal to the width (of a swimming-pool etc).) breadth3) (size from side to side: What is the width of this material?; This fabric comes in three different widths.) width* * *Brei·te<-, -n>[ˈbraitə]f1. (die breite Beschaffenheit) widthvon x cm \Breite x cm in width, with a width of x cm[jdm] etw in aller \Breite erklären to explain sth [to sb] in great detailin die \Breite gehen (fam) to put on weight2. (Ausgedehntheit) wide rangedie \Breite des Angebots the wide range on offer3. (Gedehntheit) breadth4. (von Dialekt, Aussprache) broadness5. (Breitengrad) latitudein südlichere \Breiten fahren to travel to more southerly climesdie Insel liegt [auf] 34° nördlicher \Breite the island lies 34° northin unseren/diesen \Breiten in our part/these parts of the world* * *die; Breite, Breiten1) s. breit 1. 1): width; breadthin die Breite gehen — (ugs.) put on weight
2) (Geogr.) latitudeauf/unter 50° nördlicher Breite — at/below latitude 50° north
in diesen Breiten — in these latitudes
* * *es hat eine Breite von sechs Metern it is six metres (US -ers) wide;das Volumen ist Länge mal Breite mal Höhe volume equals length times width times height;ein Schrank mit zwei Meter Breite und 64 Zentimeter Tiefe a cupboard two metres (US -ers) wide and 64 centimetres (US -ers) deep;der Breite nach hinlegen, nehmen breadthwise, breadthwaysvon ungeheurer Breite extremely wide;in seiner vollen Breite vor jemandem stehen stand smack ( oder straight) in front of sb3. ASTRON, GEOG latitude;astronomische/geografische Breite astronomic(al)/terrestrial latitude;etwa auf der Breite von Rom at about the latitude of Rome;auf dem 25. Grad südlicher/nördlicher Breite liegen lie at latitude 25 degrees south/north4. nur pl; GEOG:in gemäßigten Breiten in temperate climes;in diesen Breiten in these latitudesdie Breite des Angebots the breadth of the range;in epischer Breite in great ( oder epic) detail;* * *die; Breite, Breiten1) s. breit 1. 1): width; breadthin die Breite gehen — (ugs.) put on weight
2) (Geogr.) latitudeauf/unter 50° nördlicher Breite — at/below latitude 50° north
* * *-en f.breadth n.broadness n.gauge (railway track) n.latitude n.width n. -
27 barraca
f.1 shack.2 stall.3 thatched farmhouse (in Valencia and Murcia).4 hut, cabin.5 shanty, cubbyhole, badly built hut or cabin, cottage.6 amusement park ride, ride.* * *1 (casita) cottage (typical in Valencia and Murcia)2 (puesto) stall; (caseta de feria) booth3 (chabola) shack* * *ISF1) (=cabaña) hut, cabin; [de obreros] workmen's hut; [en Valencia] small farmhouse2) (=chabola) shanty, hovel3) [en feria] stall, boothuna barraca de feria — a fairground stall o booth
barraca persa — Cono Sur cut-price store
5)IISF LAm (Mil) barracks* * *2) (Mil) barrack hut3) ( casa) adobe house ( typical of Valencia and Murcia)4) (CS) ( de materiales de construcción) builders merchant o yard* * *= shack, hut, cabin.Ex. In another survey which examined the information needs of residents of new black urban communities, townships and shack settlements identified problems associated with the labor market and transport.Ex. Robinson Crusoe kept his books in a hut which seems quite unsatisfactory in view of the tropical climate of the island.Ex. Stopping a few miles north of where the Lewark meets the great Modoc River in what is now called the American midwest, they constructed a humble cabin and began trading with river men and friendly Indians.* * *2) (Mil) barrack hut3) ( casa) adobe house ( typical of Valencia and Murcia)4) (CS) ( de materiales de construcción) builders merchant o yard* * *= shack, hut, cabin.Ex: In another survey which examined the information needs of residents of new black urban communities, townships and shack settlements identified problems associated with the labor market and transport.
Ex: Robinson Crusoe kept his books in a hut which seems quite unsatisfactory in view of the tropical climate of the island.Ex: Stopping a few miles north of where the Lewark meets the great Modoc River in what is now called the American midwest, they constructed a humble cabin and began trading with river men and friendly Indians.* * *B ( Mil) barrack hutC (casa) cottage ( typical of Valencia and Murcia)D (CS) (de materiales de construcción) builders' merchant o yard* * *
barraca sustantivo femenino
( caseta) boothb) (Mil) barrack hut
barraca sustantivo femenino
1 (chabola) shack, hut
2 (caseta de feria) stall
3 Esp thatched cottage from Valencia
' barraca' also found in these entries:
English:
hut
- shed
- stand
- booth
- lumber
* * *barraca nf1. [chabola] shack2. [de feria] [caseta] booth;[puesto] stall3. [en Valencia y Murcia] thatched farmhouse4. RP [tienda] builders' merchant's* * *f1 ( chabola) shack3 L.Am. ( depósito) shed4:barracas pl L.Am. shanty town sg* * *barraca nf1) cabaña, choza: hut, cabin2) : booth, stall* * *barraca n1. (chabola) shack2. (de feria) stall -
28 cabaña
f.1 cabin, hut, barrack, log cabin.2 goal, score point.* * *1 (choza) cabin, hut, shack2 (conjunto de ganados) livestock* * *noun f.cabin, hut* * *SF1) (=choza) hut, cabin; [pobre] hovel, shack2) (Billar) baulk3) (Agr) (=rebaño) (large) flock; (=ganado) livestock4) Cono Sur (=estancia) cattle-breeding ranch* * *1) ( choza) cabin, shack2) (Agr) (RPl) ( estancia) cattle-breeding ranch3) (Méx) (Dep) goal* * *= cottage, cabin, hut, lodge, rondavel, shack, log house.Ex. Tom Jones hiding in a particular copse with Molly Seagrim, Marvell lying in a certain garden, Dimitri Karamazov in that prison cell, Will and Anna in that cottage bedroom.Ex. Stopping a few miles north of where the Lewark meets the great Modoc River in what is now called the American midwest, they constructed a humble cabin and began trading with river men and friendly Indians.Ex. Robinson Crusoe kept his books in a hut which seems quite unsatisfactory in view of the tropical climate of the island.Ex. Dinner will be served in the boma at the Lodge, where you will again spend the night.Ex. Accommodation comprises 200 fully equipped, self-catering rondavels with own bathroom, kitchen and braai facilities.Ex. In another survey which examined the information needs of residents of new black urban communities, townships and shack settlements identified problems associated with the labor market and transport.Ex. In this little town of about a dozen log houses, they were initiated into the mysteries, pleasures, and sufferings of a gold-digger's life.----* cabaña de cazadores = hunting-lodge.* cabaña de madera = log cabin, wood cabin.* cabaña de troncos de madera = log cabin, wood cabin.* * *1) ( choza) cabin, shack2) (Agr) (RPl) ( estancia) cattle-breeding ranch3) (Méx) (Dep) goal* * *= cottage, cabin, hut, lodge, rondavel, shack, log house.Ex: Tom Jones hiding in a particular copse with Molly Seagrim, Marvell lying in a certain garden, Dimitri Karamazov in that prison cell, Will and Anna in that cottage bedroom.
Ex: Stopping a few miles north of where the Lewark meets the great Modoc River in what is now called the American midwest, they constructed a humble cabin and began trading with river men and friendly Indians.Ex: Robinson Crusoe kept his books in a hut which seems quite unsatisfactory in view of the tropical climate of the island.Ex: Dinner will be served in the boma at the Lodge, where you will again spend the night.Ex: Accommodation comprises 200 fully equipped, self-catering rondavels with own bathroom, kitchen and braai facilities.Ex: In another survey which examined the information needs of residents of new black urban communities, townships and shack settlements identified problems associated with the labor market and transport.Ex: In this little town of about a dozen log houses, they were initiated into the mysteries, pleasures, and sufferings of a gold-digger's life.* cabaña de cazadores = hunting-lodge.* cabaña de madera = log cabin, wood cabin.* cabaña de troncos de madera = log cabin, wood cabin.* * *A (choza) cabin, shackB ( Agr)2 ( RPl) (estancia) cattle-breeding ranchC ( Art) pastoral* * *
cabaña sustantivo femenino ( choza) cabin, shack
cabaña sustantivo femenino
1 (refugio) cabin
2 (de ganado) la cabaña caballar de la zona es escasa, horse livestock in this area is scarce
' cabaña' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
indispensable
- vadear
English:
bunk
- cabin
- footpath
- hut
- lumber
- running
- shed
- tree-house
* * *cabaña nf1. [choza] hut, cabin;una cabaña de pastores a shepherd's hut2. [ganado] livestock;la cabaña bovina de Gales the national herd of Welsh cattle3.cabaña (de salida) [en billares] baulk4. RP [finca] cattle ranch* * *f1 cabin2 Méxen fútbol goal* * *cabaña nfchoza: cabin, hut* * *cabaña n hut -
29 round
raund
1. прил.
1) а) круглый;
шарообразный;
сферический round arch ≈ полукруглая арка round back, round shoulders ≈ сутулость round timber ≈ кругляк, круглый лесоматериал round hand round text Syn: cylindrical б) напоминающий по форме круг, овальный Syn: round face ≈ округлое лицо
2) круговой round game ≈ игра в карты, в которой принимает участие неограниченное количество игроков round towel ≈ = roller towel round trip, round tour, round voyage ≈ поездка в оба конца, поездка туда и обратно
3) полный, хорошо сложенный Syn: plump I
1., shapely
4) а) целый, завершенный a round dozen ≈ полная дюжина б) круглый (о числе) a round sum ≈ кругленькая сумма (большая сумма денег) в) приближенный, округленный( о вычислении, результате) ∙ Syn: complete, full, ample
5) а) высказанный, произнесенный вслух, прямой, резкий round oath ≈ крепкое ругательство in round terms ≈ в сильных выражениях б) закругленный, законченный( о фразе, предложении) в) гладкий, плавный( о стиле) Syn: outspoken
6) мягкий, низкий, бархатистый( о голосе)
7) быстрый, энергичный( о движении)
8) а) звонкий, звучный Syn: sonorous б) фон. огубленный, лабиализованный, округленный ( о качестве звука)
2. сущ.
1) а) круг, окружность( геометрические фигуры) б) перен. контур, очертание
2) круговое движение;
цикл
3) обход;
прогулка to go/make the round of ≈ обходить;
циркулировать to go for a good/long round ≈ предпринять длинную прогулку staff round, round of surgeons ≈ обход больных врачами
4) а) ряд, цикл, череда( однородных действий) б) автоматная очередь( череда выстрелов) to fire a round ≈ пустить очередь
5) одиночный представитель ряда одинаковых действий а) тур, круг ( в спортивных соревнованиях) б) раунд (название одной части состязания) в) рейс
6) а) кусочек, ломтик, долька б) порция a round of sandwiches ≈ (целый поднос) сандвичей he ordered another round of drinks ≈ он заказал еще по рюмочке для всех
7) ступенька стремянки (тж. round of a ladder)
8) воен. а) ракетный снаряд б) боевой патрон 50 rounds of ball cartridges ≈ 50 боевых патронов ∙ of cheers, round of applause ≈ взрыв аплодисментов
3. гл.
1) а) округлять(ся), делать(ся) круглым б) складывать губы трубочкой в) фон. округлять, огублять, лабиализовывать Syn: labialize
2) окружать, опоясывать, заключать в круг (тж. перен.) Syn: encircle, encompass
3) доводить до совершенства, завершать;
"округлять"
4) а) огибать, обходить кругом;
повертывать(ся) б) бывать во многих местах, путешествовать Syn: go around
5) мат. выражать в круглых цифрах, выражать в целых числах ∙ round down round in round into round off round upon round out round to round up
4. нареч.
1) вокруг;
кругом;
всюду, повсюду The wind has gone round to the north. ≈ Ветер повернул на север. round about ≈ вокруг (да около) round and round ≈ кругом;
со всех сторон all round, right round ≈ кругом all the year round ≈ круглый год long way round ≈ кружным путем
2) вспять, назад, обратно ∙ Syn: around
1.
5. предл.
1) вокруг, кругом
2) в течение, на всем протяжении round the year ≈ в течение года, весь год Syn: throughout
1. шар - this earthly * Земля небесный свод круг, предмет, имеющий форму круга ломтик (хлеба и т. п.) - a * of toast гренок - two *s of ham and one of beef два бутерброда с ветчиной и один с говядиной окружность, кольцо - to dance in a * двигаться по кругу( о танцующих) круговое движение;
кругооборот;
круговорот - the earth's yearly * годовое вращение Земли обход - doctor's * обход врачом больных - the night watchman makes his *s every hour ночной сторож совершает обход каждый час - to go /to make/ the * of совершать обход (военное) поверка караулов прогулка, поездка - to make a * of the country совершить поездку по стране ряд;
цикл;
серия - the daily * повседневные дела - a * of pleasures вихрь удовольствий - a * of duties круг обязанностей - to make a * of visits нанести ряд визитов - the whole * of knowledge весь цикл знаний тур, этап - second * второй тур (выборов и т. п.) раунд, тур (переговоров) круг, группа (людей) - a * of politicians группа политических деятелей хоровод;
круговой танец танец, в котором пары двигаются по кругу (вальс и т. п.) (the *) круглая скульптура огузок и кострец очередная порция спиртного - they had another * они выпили еще по одной - this * is on me моя очередь платить( за вино) (спортивное) игра, партия;
тур игры - to have a * of cards сыграть партию в карты пулька (фехтование) схватка, раунд (бокс) (военное) выстрел;
патрон - * of ammunition патрон, комплект выстрела взрыв( аплодисментов и т. п.) - a * of cheers несмолкаемые аплодисменты, овация круглая ступенька( стремянки) (реактивно-техническое) снаряд - ballistic * баллистический снаряд (горное) комплект шпуров > honour * (спортивное) круг почета > to go /to make/ the * of циркулировать (о слухах и т. п.) ;
переходить из уст в уста > the news quickly went the * of the village новость облетела всю деревню > in the * объемный;
видный со всех сторон;
всесторонне показанный или описанный круглый;
шарообразный, сферический - as * as a ball круглый как шар - the * world земной шар - * hand /text/ круглый почерк;
(полиграфия) шрифт рондо - * shoulders /back/ сутулость - * brackets круглые скобки - * timber( лесохозяйственное) кругляк - * arch (архитектура) полукруглая арка полный, пухлый, с округлыми формами - * cheeks пухлые щеки - * arms полные руки круговой - * game игра в карты, в которой каждый играет за себя - * towel полотенце на ролике грубый, приблизительный( о сумме и т. п.) - his year's profit was about $5000 as a * figure его годовой доход составлял приблизительно 5000 долларов круглый (о числе) - a * figure круглая цифра /-ое число/ - a * guess подсчет с округлением, приблизительный подсчет целый, без дробей (о числе) (эмоционально-усилительно) целый;
не меньше чем - a * ton целая тонна, не меньше тонны - * dozen целая дюжина большой, крупный, значительный( о сумме и т. п.) - a good * sum порядочная /кругленькая/ сумма - at a good * price по высокой цене быстрый, энергичный (о движении) - * pace быстрый темп - at a * trot крупной рысью мягкий, густой, звучный, глубокий( о голосе, звуке) приятный, нетерпкий( о вине) свободный, легкий, гладкий, плавный - * style гладкий слог закругленный;
законченный (о фразе, предложении) законченный, отделанный( о романе и т. п.) изображенный всесторонне, со всем правдоподобием;
полнокровный( об образе) прямой, откровенный;
искренний;
резкий - * unvarnished tale неприкрашенная история;
правда-матка - * oath крепкое ругательство - to scold smb. in * terms распекать кого-л., не стесняясь в выражениях - she tells you home truths in the *est manner она без обиняков говорит (вам) горькую истину (фонетика) лабиализованный (о звуке) наполненный( о парусе) потрошеный (о рыбе) > a * O круг;
(ровно) ничего > a * peg in a square hole, a square peg in a * hole человек не на своем месте > * dealing (сленг) честное отношение /-ая практика/ указывает на движение по кругу, спирали или на вращение кругом - to go * in a circle ходить по кругу - to run * бегать по кругу - to go * and * вертеться, кружиться - the wheels went /turned/ * колеса вертелись /вращались/ указывает на передачу чего-л. (по кругу), часто передается глагольными приставками об-, раз- - to hand /to pass/ smth. * передавать по кругу (чашу и т. п.) - to deal * сдавать( карты) - there is not enough to go * на всех не хватит;
всем раздать не удастся указывает на распространение чего-л. среди группы лиц;
передается глагольной приставкой раз- и др. - hand the papers * раздайте всем (письменные) работы - the news was soon carried * новость быстро распространилась - a money subscription is going * подписной лист ходит по рукам указывает на движение кружным путем, в обход, кругом;
часто передается глагольными приставками - don't come across, come * не ходите прямо, идите кругом /в обход, обойдите кругом/ - a (long) way * кружный путь - he took a long way * он сделал большой крюк указывает на нахождение рядом, по соседству - from every village * из всех окрестных деревень - what are you hanging * for? (разговорное) что вы здесь околачиваетесь /болтаетесь/? указывает на нахождение или распространение по всей площади, по всему району и т. п. по;
передается тж. глагольными приставками - all the country * по всей стране - all *, right * кругом, везде вокруг - there were blossoming shrubs all * вокруг были цветущие кусты - a garden with a wall all /right/ * сад, окруженный со всех сторон стеной - a room hung * with pictures комната, увешанная картинами - the peddler went * with his goods разносчик ходил со своим товаром из дома в дом или из деревни в деревню и т. п. указывает на осмотр дома, музея и т. п. по - to conduct smb. * провести кого-л. по дому, музею и т. п. - let's go into town and look * /have a look */ давайте пойдем в город и все осмотрим указывает на изменение направления или движение в противоположную сторону;
часто передается глагольными приставками - everyone turned * все обернулись - turn your chair * and face me поверни стул и сядь лицом ко мне - the wind has gone * to the north ветер повернул на север указывает на изменение позиции, точки зрения и т. п. - to talk smb. * переубедить кого-л. - to come * to smb.'s opinion присоединиться к чьему-л. мнению, согласиться с кем-л. - we soon won him * мы скоро привлекли /переманили/ его на свою сторону (разговорное) указывает на приход куда-л. или к кому-л., доставку чего-л. куда-л. - to ask smb. * for the evening пригласить кого-л. зайти вечерком - to bring smb. * привести кого-л. с собой - I'll call * at eight я зайду в восемь - send * for the doctor пошли(те) за доктором - come * and see me заходи(те) в гости - what will this year bring *? что принесет этот год? указывает на измерение объема в окружности, в обхвате - the town walls are 3000 yards * стены города имеют 3000 ярдов в окружности - her waist measures are thirty inches * объем ее талии тридцать дюймов указывает на измерение площади по радиусу: в радиусе - for a mile * в радиусе мили указывает на повторение чего-л. через определенные промежутки времени: опять, снова - winter came * опять /снова/ пришла зима указывает на протекание действия в течение всего периода времени - he worked the whole year * он проработал весь /целый/ год (американизм) (разговорное) указывает на неточное определение чего-л.: приблизительно, около - it happened somewhere * there это случилось где-то там - the child played * ребенок играл где-то неподалеку в сочетании - * about вокруг, кругом;
рядом;
обратно, в обратном направлении;
кружным путем, в обход;
вокруг да около - they worked in the villages * about они работали в окрестных деревнях - they turned * about and left они повернулись и ушли - to go * about to a place идти куда-л. кружным путем /в обход/ - he came * about and slowly to these conclusions не прямым путем и не сразу он пришел к этим выводам > taken all * в целом, в общем > taking it all * обсудив это со всех сторон;
приняв все во внимание > to argue * and * спорить не по существу;
вертеться вокруг да около > to bring smb. * привести кого-л. в чувство (после обморока) > to come * приходить в чувство /в себя/ (после обморока) ;
выздоравливать > to sleep the clock * проспать полсуток;
сочетания с др. словами см. под соответствующими словами округлять, делать круглым - amazement *ed her eyes от изумления ее глаза округлились округляться, полнеть - the little green apples grew and *ed and yellowed небольшие зеленые яблоки созрели, налились и пожелтели (фонетика) лабиализировать (звук) округлять (числа) надуваться, раздуваться, наполняться( о парусе) завершать, заканчивать;
закругляться - to * a phrase закруглить фразу (into) развиваться, превращаться в - a boy *s into manhood мальчик становится мужчиной (into) заканчиваться, завершаться( чем-л.) - the talk *ed into a plan беседа завершилась выработкой плана огибать, обходить кругом - to * a bend огибать /обходить/ поворот - to * (the) mark обходить знак "буй" (парусный спорт) - the ship *ed the cape корабль обогнул мыс - to * a corner свернуть за угол( разговорное) (on, upon) набрасываться, накидываться на кого-л.;
обрушивать поток брани - it took me by surprise to be *ed on in that way я никак не ожидал, что на меня так накинутся - his companion *ed on him with a torrent of abusive language попутчик обрушил на него поток брани (разговорное) (on, upon) доносить( на кого-л.) (разговорное) обойти, обвести, обмануть( кого-л.) подрезать уши (собаке) (редкое) повертывать (редкое) повертываться - he *ed to look at me он повернулся, чтобы посмотреть на меня - to * on one's heel резко повернуться( к кому-л.) спиной (морское) приводить к ветру указывает на движение вокруг чего-л. или вращение вокруг оси: вокруг - to row * the island объехать на лодке остров - the Moon revolves /turns/ * the Earth Луна вращается вокруг Земли - the wheel goes * an axle колесо вертится на оси - look * you посмотрите вокруг (себя) указывает на огибание предмета;
часто передается глагольной приставкой об- - to go * an obstacle обойти препятствие - her arm went * the child она обняла ребенка - * the corner за углом;
за угол - a store * the corner магазин за углом - to turn * the corner завернуть /повернуть, свернуть/ за угол указывает на движение по кривой: по - they did not sail across the bay, but went * it они поплыли не прямо через залив, а вдоль берега указывает на нахождение вокруг предмета: вокруг, кругом - the children were sitting * the table дети сидели вокруг стола - she had a necklace * her neck у нее на шее было ожерелье указывает на (разговорное) нахождение по соседству, рядом, в окрестности: около - it's somewhere * here это где-то здесь рядом - farms * Cleveland фермы в окрестностях Кливленда - there was a crowd * the church у церкви была толпа указывает на (часто all *) протекание действия по всему району, по всей территории: вокруг;
по - the toys were * the room игрушки были разбросаны по всей комнате - the shells were bursting all * us со всех сторон вокруг нас рвались снаряды указывает на движение в каком-л. пространстве: по - blood circulates * the body кровь циркулирует по всему телу - to hawk one's wares * the streets торговать вразнос указывает на осмотр дома, музея и т. п. - to go * the house осмотреть /обойти/ дом - to take /to show, to walk/ smb. * the town показывать кому-л. город - they went * the museum они осмотрели музей указывает на измерение объема, окружности: в - she measures 70 cm * the waist объем ее талии 70 см указывает на протекание процесса в течение всего периода времени - he worked * the day он проработал весь день указывает на приблизительное определение числа, суммы и т. п.: около - it will be somewhere * a hundred pounds это будет стоить около ста фунтов указывает на приблизительное определение времени: около - * midday около полудня - * 1960 примерно в 1960 году по поводу - to write an article * smth. написать статью по поводу чего-л., построить статью вокруг какого-л. факта в сочетании - * about вокруг, кругом;
со всех сторон;
вокруг;
около, примерно - go * about the house обойди вокруг дома - the children danced * about the Christmas-tree дети танцевали вокруг елки - the shells were bursting * about him вокруг него рвались снаряды - the enemy took up positions * about the city неприятель занял позиции вокруг города - * about midday около полудня > * the clock двенадцать часов;
сутки > he slept * the clock он проспал (целые) сутки > to come /to get, to go/ * smb. обойти /обмануть, перехитрить/ кого-л. > to argue * (and *) a subject без конца обсуждать что-л.;
ходить вокруг да около (устаревшее) говорить таинственным шепотом - to * smb. in the ear шептать кому-л. на ухо all (или right) ~ кругом;
all the year round круглый год;
a long way round кружным путем to argue ~ and ~ the subject вертеться вокруг да около, говорить не по существу round быстрый, энергичный (о движении) ;
a round trot крупная рысь;
at a round pace крупным аллюром ~ ракетный снаряд;
ballistic round баллистический снаряд;
round of cheers (или applause) взрыв аплодисментов ~ цикл, ряд;
the daily round круг ежедневных занятий to go for a good (или long) ~ предпринять длинную прогулку;
visiting rounds проверка часовых;
дозор для связи ~ обход;
прогулка;
to go the rounds идти в обход, совершать обход;
to go (или to make) the round of обходить;
циркулировать ~ обход;
прогулка;
to go the rounds идти в обход, совершать обход;
to go (или to make) the round of обходить;
циркулировать ~ порция;
a round of sandwiches (целый) поднос сандвичей;
he ordered another round of drinks он заказал еще по рюмочке для всех ~ прямой, откровенный;
грубоватый, резкий;
a round oath крепкое ругательство;
in round terms в сильных выражениях licensing ~ этап лицензирования all (или right) ~ кругом;
all the year round круглый год;
a long way round кружным путем ~ towel = roller towel;
~ trip (или tour, voyage) поездка в оба конца towel: roller ~ полотенце на ролике round быстрый, энергичный (о движении) ;
a round trot крупная рысь;
at a round pace крупным аллюром ~ prep вокруг, кругом;
round the world вокруг света;
round the corner за угол, за углом ~ вокруг;
round about вокруг (да около) ;
round and round кругом;
со всех сторон ~ закругленный, законченный (о фразе) ;
гладкий, плавный (о стиле) ~ значительный ~ круг, окружность;
очертание, контур ~ круглый (о цифрах) ;
округленный (о числах) ~ круглый;
шарообразный;
сферический;
round back (или shoulders) сутулость;
round hand (или text) круглый почерк;
полигр. рондо ~ круглый ~ круговое движение;
цикл ~ круговой;
round game игра в карты, в которой принимает участие неограниченное количество игроков ~ кругом ~ крупный, значительный (о сумме) ~ ломтик, кусочек;
round of toast гренок, ломтик поджаренного хлеба;
round of beef ссек говядины ~ мягкий, низкий, бархатистый (о голосе) ~ обратно ~ обход;
прогулка;
to go the rounds идти в обход, совершать обход;
to go (или to make) the round of обходить;
циркулировать ~ огибать, обходить кругом;
повертывать(ся) ~ фон. округленный ~ фон. округлять;
round off округлять(ся), закруглять(ся) ;
to round off the evening with a dance закончить вечер танцами ~ округлять(ся) (тж. round off) ;
to round a sentence закруглить фразу ~ округлять ~ воен. патрон;
выстрел;
очередь;
20 rounds of ball cartridges 20 боевых патронов ~ полный ~ порция;
a round of sandwiches (целый) поднос сандвичей;
he ordered another round of drinks он заказал еще по рюмочке для всех ~ приблизительный ~ приятный (о вине) ~ прямой, откровенный;
грубоватый, резкий;
a round oath крепкое ругательство;
in round terms в сильных выражениях ~ ракетный снаряд;
ballistic round баллистический снаряд;
round of cheers (или applause) взрыв аплодисментов ~ раунд ~ ступенька стремянки (тж. round of a ladder) ~ тур;
раунд;
рейс ~ тур переговоров ~ ход ~ цикл, ряд;
the daily round круг ежедневных занятий ~ цикл ~ округлять(ся) (тж. round off) ;
to round a sentence закруглить фразу ~ вокруг;
round about вокруг (да около) ;
round and round кругом;
со всех сторон ~ вокруг;
round about вокруг (да около) ;
round and round кругом;
со всех сторон ~ timber кругляк, круглый лесоматериал;
round arch архит. полукруглая арка ~ круглый;
шарообразный;
сферический;
round back (или shoulders) сутулость;
round hand (или text) круглый почерк;
полигр. рондо ~ down вчт. округлить в меньшую сторону ~ down вчт. округлять в меньшую сторону ~ down округлять в меньшую сторону ~ круговой;
round game игра в карты, в которой принимает участие неограниченное количество игроков ~ круглый;
шарообразный;
сферический;
round back (или shoulders) сутулость;
round hand (или text) круглый почерк;
полигр. рондо ~ прямой, откровенный;
грубоватый, резкий;
a round oath крепкое ругательство;
in round terms в сильных выражениях ~ ломтик, кусочек;
round of toast гренок, ломтик поджаренного хлеба;
round of beef ссек говядины ~ ракетный снаряд;
ballistic round баллистический снаряд;
round of cheers (или applause) взрыв аплодисментов ~ порция;
a round of sandwiches (целый) поднос сандвичей;
he ordered another round of drinks он заказал еще по рюмочке для всех ~ of tenders раунд торгов ~ ломтик, кусочек;
round of toast гренок, ломтик поджаренного хлеба;
round of beef ссек говядины ~ фон. округлять;
round off округлять(ся), закруглять(ся) ;
to round off the evening with a dance закончить вечер танцами ~ off завершать ~ off закачивать ~ off округлять ~ фон. округлять;
round off округлять(ся), закруглять(ся) ;
to round off the evening with a dance закончить вечер танцами ~ on набрасываться, нападать( на кого-л.) ;
резко критиковать, распекать ~ up окружать, производить облаву;
round upon см. round on ~ out закруглять(ся), делать(ся) круглым;
round to мор. приводить к ветру ~ prep вокруг, кругом;
round the world вокруг света;
round the corner за угол, за углом ~ timber кругляк, круглый лесоматериал;
round arch архит. полукруглая арка ~ out закруглять(ся), делать(ся) круглым;
round to мор. приводить к ветру ~ towel = roller towel;
~ trip (или tour, voyage) поездка в оба конца ~ towel = roller towel;
~ trip (или tour, voyage) поездка в оба конца trip: ~ путешествие;
поездка, экскурсия, рейс;
round trip поездка туда и обратно;
business trip командировка;
to take a trip съездить round ~ круговой рейс round ~ рейс туда и обратно round быстрый, энергичный (о движении) ;
a round trot крупная рысь;
at a round pace крупным аллюром ~ up вчт. округлить в большую сторону ~ up вчт. округлять в большую сторону ~ up округлять в большую сторону ~ up окружать, производить облаву;
round upon см. round on ~ up сгонять (скот) ~ up окружать, производить облаву;
round upon см. round on ~ воен. патрон;
выстрел;
очередь;
20 rounds of ball cartridges 20 боевых патронов tendering ~ раунд предложений to go for a good (или long) ~ предпринять длинную прогулку;
visiting rounds проверка часовых;
дозор для связи the wheel turns ~ колесо вращается;
the wind has gone round to the north ветер повернул на север the wheel turns ~ колесо вращается;
the wind has gone round to the north ветер повернул на север -
30 northernmost
- ðən-adjective (being furthest north: the northernmost point of the coast.) más septentrionaltr['nɔːðənməʊst]1 más septentrional'nɔːrðərnməʊst, 'nɔːðənməʊstadjective (before n) <point/town/island> más septentrionalthe northernmost tip of the island — el extremo norte or septentrional de la isla
['nɔːðǝnmǝʊst]ADJ más septentrional, más al nortethe northernmost town in Europe — la ciudad más al norte or más septentrional de Europa
* * *['nɔːrðərnməʊst, 'nɔːðənməʊst]adjective (before n) <point/town/island> más septentrionalthe northernmost tip of the island — el extremo norte or septentrional de la isla
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31 de forma gratis
Ex. Mountain bikes are available on a complimentary basis for guests who wish to explore the scenic north coast of the island.* * *Ex: Mountain bikes are available on a complimentary basis for guests who wish to explore the scenic north coast of the island.
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32 de forma gratuita
Ex. Mountain bikes are available on a complimentary basis for guests who wish to explore the scenic north coast of the island.* * *Ex: Mountain bikes are available on a complimentary basis for guests who wish to explore the scenic north coast of the island.
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33 de modo gratuito
Ex. Mountain bikes are available on a complimentary basis for guests who wish to explore the scenic north coast of the island.* * *Ex: Mountain bikes are available on a complimentary basis for guests who wish to explore the scenic north coast of the island.
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34 GOÐI
m. heathen priest; chief (in Iceland during the republic).* * *a, m. [Ulf, renders ἱερεύς by gudja (ufar-gudja, ahumista-gudja, etc.), ἱερατεία by gudjinassus, ἱερατεύειν by gudjinôn; an Icel. gyði, gen. gyðja, would answer better to the Goth. form, but it never occurs, except that the fem. gyðja = goddess and priestess points not to goði, but to a masc. with a suppressed final i, gyði; a word coting occurs in O. H. G. glossaries, prob. meaning the same; and the form guþi twice occurs on Danish-Runic stones in Nura-guþi and Saulva-guþi, explained as goði by P. G. Thorsen, Danske Runem.; (Rafn’s explanation and reading of Nura-guþi qs. norðr á Gauði, is scarcely right): with this exception this word is nowhere recorded till it appears in Icel., where it got a wide historical bearing]:—prop. a priest, sacerdos, and hence a liege-lord or chief of the Icel. Commonwealth.A. HISTORICAL REMARKS.—The Norse chiefs who settled in Icel., finding the country uninhabited, solemnly took possession of the land (land-nám, q. v.); and in order to found a community they built a temple, and called themselves by the name of goði or hof-goði, ‘temple-priest;’ and thus the temple became the nucleus of the new community, which was called goðorð, n.:—hence hof-goði, temple-priest, and höfðingi, chief, became synonymous, vide Eb. passim. Many independent goðar and goðorð sprang up all through the country, until about the year 930 the alþingi (q. v.) was erected, where all the petty sovereign chiefs (goðar) entered into a kind of league, and laid the foundation of a general government for the whole island. In 964 A. D. the constitution was finally settled, the number of goðorð being fixed at three in each þing ( shire), and three þing in each of the three other quarters, (but four in the north); thus the number of goðar came to be nominally thirty-nine, really thirty-six, as the four in the north were only reckoned as three, vide Íb. ch. 5. On the introduction of Christianity the goðar lost their priestly character, but kept the name; and the new bishops obtained seats in the Lögrétta (vide biskup). About the year 1004 there were created new goðar (and goðorð), who had to elect judges to the Fifth Court, but they had no seats in the Lögrétta, and since that time the law distinguishes between forn ( old) and ný ( new) goðorð;—in Glúm. ch. 1 the word forn is an anachronism. It is curious that, especially in the 12th century, the goðar used to take the lesser Orders from political reasons, in order to resist the Romish clergy, who claimed the right of forbidding laymen to be lords of churches or to deal with church matters; thus the great chief Jón Loptsson was a sub-deacon; at last, about 1185, the archbishop of Norway forbade the bishops of Icel. to ordain any holder of a goðorð, unless they first gave up the goðorð, fyrir því bjóðum vér biskupum at vígja eigi þá menn er goðorð hafa, D. I. i. 291. In the middle of the 13th century the king of Norway induced the goðar to hand their power over to him, and thus the union with Norway was finally brought about in the year 1262; since that time, by the introduction of new codes (1272 and 1281), the name and dignity of goðar and goðorð disappeared altogether, so that the name begins and ends with the Commonwealth.B. DUTIES.—In the alþingi the goðar were invested with the Lögrettu-skipan (q. v.), that is to say, they composed the Lögrétta (the Legislative consisting of forty-eight members—on the irregularity of the number vide Íb. ch. 5), and were the lawgivers of the country; secondly, they had the dómnefna (q. v.), or right of naming the men who were to sit in the courts, vide dómr:—as to their duties in the quarter-parliaments (vár-þing) vide Grág. Þ. Þ. and the Sagas. The authority of the goðar over their liegemen at home was in olden times somewhat patriarchal, vide e. g. the curious passage in Hænsaþ. S. ch. 2; though no section of law relating to this interesting part of the old history is on record, we can glean much information from the Sagas. It is to be borne in mind that the goðar of the Saga time (10th century) and those of the Grágás and Sturlunga time (12th and 13th centuries) were very different; the former were a kind of sovereign chiefs, who of free will entered into a league; the latter had become officials, who for neglecting their duties in parliament might be fined, and even forfeit the goðorð to their liegemen, vide Grág. Þ. Þ. Neither þing (q. v.) nor goðorð was ever strictly geographical (such is the opinion of Konrad Maurer), but changed from time to time; the very word goðorð is defined as ‘power’ (veldi), and was not subject to the payment of tithe, K. Þ. K. 142. The goðorð could be parcelled out by inheritance or by sale; or they might, as was the case in the latter years of the Commonwealth, accumulate in one hand, vide esp. Sturl. passim, and Grág. The liegemen (þingmenn) were fully free to change their lords (ganga í lög með goða, ganga ór lögum); every franklin (þingmaðr) had in parliament to declare his þingfesti, i. e. to name his liegeship, and say to what goði and þing he belonged, and the goði had to acknowledge him; so that a powerful or skilful chief might have liegemen scattered all over the country. But the nomination to the courts and the right of sitting in the legislative body were always bound to the old names, as fixed by the settlement of the year 964; and any one who sought the name or influence of a goði had first (by purchase, inheritance, or otherwise) to become possessor of a share of one of the old traditionary goðorð; see the interesting chapter in Nj. The three goðar in one þing ( shire) were called sam-goða, joint-goðar; for the sense of allsherjar-goði vide p. 17.C. NAMES.—Sometimes a chief’s name referred to the god whom he especially worshipped, as Freys-Goði, Hrafn., Gísl., whence Freys-gyðlingar, q. v.; (the ör-goði is dubious); more frequently the name referred to the liegemen or county, e. g. Ljósvetninga-Goði, Tungu-Goði, etc.; but in the Saga time, goði was often added to the name almost as a cognomen, and with some, as Snorri, it became a part of their name (as Cato Censor in Latin); hann varðveitti þá hof, var hann þá kallaðr Snorri Goði, Eb. 42; seg, at sá sendi, er meiri vin var húsfreyjunnar at Fróðá en Goðans at Helgafelli, 332. Names on record in the Sagas:—men living from A. D. 874 to 964, Hallsteinn Goði, Landn., Eb.; Sturla Goði, Landn. 65; Jörundr Goði and Hróarr Tungu-Goði, id.; Ljótólfr Goði, Sd.; Hrafnkell Freys-Goði, Hrafn.; Oddr Tungu-Goði, Landn.; Þormóðr Karnár-Goði, Vd.; Áskell Goði, Rd.; Úlfr Ör-goði, Landn.; Grímkell Goði, Harð. S.; Þorgrímr Freys-goði, Gísl. 100, 110:—964 to 1030, Arnkell Goði, Landn., Eb.; Þorgrímr Goði, Eb.; Geirr Goði, Landn., Nj.; Runólfr Goði, id.; Þóroddr Goði, Kristni S.; Þormóðr Allsherjar-Goði, Landn.; Þorgeirr Goði, or Ljósvetninga-Goði, Nj., Landn.; (Þorkell Krafla) Vatnsdæla-Goði, Vd.; Helgi Hofgarða-Goði, Landn., Eb.; Snorri Hlíðarmanna-Goði, Lv.; Þórarinn Langdæla-Goði, Heiðarv. S.; and last, not least, Snorri Goði:—in the following period goði appears, though very rarely, as an appellative, e. g. Þormóðr Skeiðar-Goði (about 1100):—of the new goðar of 1004, Höskuldr Hvítaness-Goði, Nj.:—used ironically, Ingjaldr Sauðeyja-Goði, Ld.2. goðorð mentioned by name,—in the south, Allsherjar-goðorð, Landn. (App.) 336; Dalverja-goðorð, Sturl. ii. 48; Lundarmanna-goðorð, i. 223; Reykhyltinga-goðorð, 104, iii. 166, 169; Bryndæla-goðorð, Kjaln. S. 402: in the north, Ljósvetninga-goðorð, Lv. ch. 30; Möðruvellinga-goðorð, Bs. i. 488; Vatnsdæla-goðorð, Fs. 68; Fljótamanna-goðorð, Sturl. i. 138: in the west, Snorrunga-goðorð, 55; Jöklamanna-goðorð, iii. 166; Rauðmelinga-goðorð, Eb. 288; Reyknesinga-goðorð, Sturl. i. 9, 19; Þórsnesinga-goðorð, 198: the new godords of the Fifth Court, Laufæsinga-goðorð, Nj. 151; Melamanna-goðorð, id., Band., Sturl. i. 227. Passages in the Sagas and Laws referring to goðar and goðorð are very numerous, e. g. Íb. ch. 5, Nj. ch. 98, Grág., Lögréttu-þáttr, and Þ. Þ. passim, esp. ch. 1–5, 17, 35, 37, 39, 44, 58, 60, 61, Lv. ch. 4 (interesting), Vd. ch. 27, 41 (in fine), and 42, Vápn., Hrafn. ch. 2, Eb. ch. 10, 56, Sturl. iii. 98, 104, passim; for the accumulation of godords, see i. 227 (3, 22), Bs. i. 54; for the handing over the godords to the king of Norway, D. I. i; and esp. article 3 of the Sáttmáli, D. I. i. 631, 632. The godords were tithe-free, ef maðr á goðorð, ok þarf eigi þat til tíundar at telja, vald er þat en eigi fé:, K. Þ. K. 142.COMPDS: goðakviðr, goðalýrittr, goðaþáttr.II. = goð, i. e. good genius, in the Icel. game at dice called goða-tafl, with the formula, heima ræð eg goða minn bæði vel og lengi, … og kasta eg svo fyrir þig, cp. also ást-goði. -
35 אוקינאווה
n. Okinawa, island southwest of Japan in the north Pacific, largest island of the Ryukyu Islands, site of one of the last major campaigns of World War II in which American troops seized control of the Island (from the Japanese) -
36 Северная Америка
Северная Америка
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North America
A continent in the northern half of the western hemisphere, bounded by the Arctic Ocean in the north, by the Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea in the west, and by the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico in the east, connected to South America by the Isthmus of Panama, and including the United States, Canada, Mexico and several small island nations. (Source: INP)
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Русско-немецкий словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > Северная Америка
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37 северная часть Тихого океана
северная часть Тихого океана
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North Pacific Ocean
An ocean north of the equator between the eastern coast of Asia and the western coasts of the Americas, extending northward to the arctic region, with principal arms including the Gulf of Alaska, the Sea of Okhotsk, the Sea of Japan and the Bering, Yellow, East China, South China and Philippine seas, and islands including the Aleutian, Midway, Marshall and Hawaiian islands, the Japanese island arc and the Malay Archipelago. (Source: INP)
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Русско-немецкий словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > северная часть Тихого океана
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38 Amérique du Nord
Северная Америка
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North America
A continent in the northern half of the western hemisphere, bounded by the Arctic Ocean in the north, by the Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea in the west, and by the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico in the east, connected to South America by the Isthmus of Panama, and including the United States, Canada, Mexico and several small island nations. (Source: INP)
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > Amérique du Nord
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39 océan pacifique nord
северная часть Тихого океана
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North Pacific Ocean
An ocean north of the equator between the eastern coast of Asia and the western coasts of the Americas, extending northward to the arctic region, with principal arms including the Gulf of Alaska, the Sea of Okhotsk, the Sea of Japan and the Bering, Yellow, East China, South China and Philippine seas, and islands including the Aleutian, Midway, Marshall and Hawaiian islands, the Japanese island arc and the Malay Archipelago. (Source: INP)
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Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > océan pacifique nord
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40 Nordamerika
Северная Америка
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North America
A continent in the northern half of the western hemisphere, bounded by the Arctic Ocean in the north, by the Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea in the west, and by the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico in the east, connected to South America by the Isthmus of Panama, and including the United States, Canada, Mexico and several small island nations. (Source: INP)
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Немецко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > Nordamerika
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