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101 γλαῦξ
γλαῦξ, - κόςGrammatical information: f.Meaning: `the little owl, Athene noctua' (Com., Arist.).Other forms: LSJ notes γλαύξ. There is also a γλαύξ `wart cress' (Dsc.) which is also given as γλάξ (Hdn. Gr. 1.395 etc.)Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]X [probably]Etymology: By the ancients derived from γλαυκός; rejected by Thompson Birds s. v. as folketymology; thus also Pötscher (s.s.v. γλαυκῶπις). Some bird names with k-suffix noted by Specht Ursprung 204 (IE?); note πέρδιξ and the many Pre-Greek words in -ξ (Beekes, Pre-Greek on word end). Etym. unknown. The variation in the word for `cress' points to a Pre-Greek word (which is anyhow probable), but it is not sure that the words have the same origin.Page in Frisk: 1,311Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > γλαῦξ
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102 Язык до добра не доведет
See Язык мой - враг мой (Я)Var.: Язык до добра не доведёт болтунаCf: Don't cut off your head with your tongue (Am.). Let not your tongue cut your throat (Am.). Many words, many buffets (Br.). Nothing ruins a duck but (like) his bill (Am.). An ox is taken by the horns, and a man by the tongue (Am., Br.). Tongue double brings trouble (Am.). The tongue talks at the head's cost (Br.)Русско-английский словарь пословиц и поговорок > Язык до добра не доведет
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103 lige
I sg - lígen, pl - lígeподо́бие сII 1. aúden líge — не име́ющий себе́ ра́вного, бесподо́бный
прямо́й; ра́вныйen líge línje — пряма́я ли́ния
líge réttigheder — ра́вные права́
2. advi líge mǻde — взаи́мно, и вам та́кже
пря́мо; одина́ково; как разdet er mig líge méget — мне э́то всё равно́
han er líge gǻet — он то́лько что ушёл
líge i begýndelsen — в са́мом нача́ле
* * *cleanly, directly, equal, even, evenly, exactly, flat, just, level, right, share and share alike, square, straight* * *I. (en -)( sidestykke) like, match;( ligemand) equal, peer;[ uden lige](neds) unheard-of,F unprecedented ( fx rudeness);( rosende) unequalled,F peerless.II. adj( ret) straight ( fx line);( ens; ligeberettiget) equal ( fx opportunities, pay, rights; all men are equal);( jævnbyrdig) even ( fx match);( jævn) even ( fx distribution);( om tal) even;( i tennis) deuce;[ alt andet lige] other things being equal;[ alle borgere er lige for loven] all citizens are equal before the law;[ give lige for lige] give as good as one gets;T it was tit for tat;(omtr =) fair is fair![ i lige linie] in a straight line, as the crow flies,( om nedstamning) in direct line of descent;[ holde ved lige], se vedligeholde;III. adv( direkte, ikke skævt) straight ( fx go straight home; walk straight);( ligeligt) equally ( fx divide it equally between them);( jævnt) evenly ( fx distribute it evenly);( præcis, netop) just ( fx just here (, there); it is just two o'clock; just what I said); exactly ( fx exactly 20 pounds; exactly the opposite; he is exactly the right man),T right ( fx right here (, there); right in the middle);T right ( fx right over our heads; right in front of us; right after lunch);( om tid: for lidt siden) just ( fx I've just seen him; he had just left);( helt, hele vejen) all the way ( fx to London),T right ( fx right to the end; right from childhood);( i høflig anmodning) would you mind,(+ -ing, fx would you mind waiting here?),(T ved bydemåde) just ( fx just wait here!);[ vil du ikke lige vente] won't you just wait;(ved adj: i lige grad) equally ( fx good, mad, strong, thick);[ lige gamle] the same age; of an equal age;[ lige høje] the same height, of equal height;[ lige lange] the same length ( fx they are the same length), of equal length; equal ( fx cut it into five equal pieces);[ lige store] the same size ( fx they are the same size), of equal size; equal ( fx divide it into five equal parts);[ forskellige forb:][ det var lige alt det vi kunne løfte den] it was all we could do to lift it, we were hardly able to lift it;[ lige da] just as;[ lige meget] the same quantity (of) ( fx they bought the same quantity(of wheat));( i lige grad) equally, alike;( alligevel) all the same, even so,( ligegyldigt) no matter ( fx no matter what you say I'll do it);[ det er lige meget] it doesn't matter; never mind![ det er mig lige meget] I don't mind (el. care), it is all the same to me;[ lige netop], se netop;[ stille lige med] place on an equal footing with;(mht løn) give parity with;[ stå lige](fig) be equal ( fx the votes are equal), be even (el. level) ( fxthe two teams (, parties) are even (el. level)),T be all square ( fx the two teams (, their scores) are allsquare);[ chancerne står lige] the chances are fifty-fifty;[ lige så] as;[ lige så rig som] (just) as rich as;[ ikke lige så rig som] not so rich as;[ lige så lidt som] no more than;[ vil du så lige komme her!] come here this minute![ med præp & adv:][ lige efter] immediately after;[ lige foran huset] just (el. immediately) in front of the house;T right in front of the house;[ lige fra]( sted) straight from,( tid) ever since,T right from;[ lige frem] straight on, straight ahead;(se også ligefrem);[ lige før] just now ( fx you said just now that...);[ lige før krigen] just (el. immediately) before the war;[ det var lige før hun slog mig] she very nearly hit me;[ lige i midten] right in the middle, in the very middle;[ lige ind i] straight into;[ lige ned] straight down;[ lige nu] just now; this very moment;( om kjole) straight up and down;[ lige på og hårdt] straight from the shoulder;[ lige på det rigtige sted] just on the right spot;[ lige siden] ever since;[ lige til]( om tid) up to,T right to;(dvs helt) all the way to London;[ gå lige til sagen] come straight to the point;[ skulle lige til at], se skulle h;(se også ligetil);[ jeg gik lige tilbage] I walked right back;[ lige ud] straight on,(fig) point-blank, outright,T straight out ( fx tell (, ask) him point-blank (etc));[ 50 kroner lige ud] exactly 50 kroner;[ han sagde det ikke lige ud men] he did not tell me in so many words but;[ lige ved]( i nærheden) near by, nearby;( nærmere) close by ( fx he lives near by (etc));( i nærheden af) near, close to ( fx live near (, close to) thestation);( om tal) close on;[ være lige ved at], se ved i;[ lige ved siden af ham] right beside him. -
104 introducirse
1 (entrar) to go in, get in, enter* * *VPR1) (=meterse) [astilla, cristal] to lodgeintroducirse en algo — to get into sth, enter sth
cuando el virus se introduce en el organismo — when the virus gets into o enters the organism
hemos logrado introducirnos en el mercado europeo — we've managed to break o get into the European market
muchas palabras se introducen en nuestro idioma procedentes del inglés — many words pass into our language from English
2) (=entrometerse) to interfere, meddle* * *(v.) = creep (up) (in/into), enter into, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto)Ex. Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.Ex. Information in machine-readable form can be entered into and extracted from the DOBIS/Leuven files.Ex. Although electronic books (eBooks) are beginning to make their way into libraries collections, the question remains as to why it has taken so long for this to happen.* * *(v.) = creep (up) (in/into), enter into, make + Posesivo + way (into/onto)Ex: Abstracting may not always be accorded a high priority by volunteer abstractors and undesirable delays may creep into the preparation of abstracts.
Ex: Information in machine-readable form can be entered into and extracted from the DOBIS/Leuven files.Ex: Although electronic books (eBooks) are beginning to make their way into libraries collections, the question remains as to why it has taken so long for this to happen.* * *vprintroducirse en to get into;los ladrones se introdujeron en la casa por la ventana the burglars got into the house through the window;el balón se introdujo lentamente en la portería the ball trickled into the goal;se ha introducido un mosquito en la habitación a mosquito has got into the room;se está introduciendo agua en la mochila water is getting into the rucksack;se introdujo en la organización a los veinte años she joined the organization at twenty;poco a poco se ha introducido en el mundo del teatro she has gradually established a footing in the world of theatre;una costumbre que se introdujo el siglo pasado a custom introduced during the last century* * *v/r:introducirse en get into;introducirse en un mercado gain access to o break into a market* * *vr: to penetrate, to get into* * *introducirse vb to get in -
105 अनल्प _analpa
अनल्प a.1 Numerous.-2 Not a little; not small, liberal, noble (as mind &c.); इति क्षमं नैतदनल्पचेतसाम् Ki.14.18; much; जल्पन्त्यनल्पाक्षरम् Pt.1.136 profusely, in many words; विकसितवदनामनल्पजल्पे$पि Bv.1.1;2. 138.-Comp. -घोष a. very clamorous or noisy.-मन्यु a. greatly enraged. -
106 BEISL
n. a bridle, freq. in old vellum MSS. spelt beils, Fs. 128, 62, Fms. x. 86, xi. 256 C; with z, beizl or mod. beizli, Sks. 84, 87 new Ed., N. G. L. ii. 115, Grett. 122, Fms. viii. 52, v. 1., Fas. ii. 508; beisl (wilh s), Karl. 4, Grág. i. 439 (Kb. and Sb.), Stj. 206, Nj. 33, Fms. x. 86, Flov. 26, etc. The word is not to be derived from bíta; this may with certainty be inferred from comparison with the other Teut. idioms, and even in the Roman tongues we find r after the first letter: A. S. bridle and bridels; O. H. G. brittill; Dutch bridel; Engl. bridle; these forms seem to point to the Lat. frenum; the Scandin. idioms seem to have elided the r; Swed. betsel; Dan. bidsel; Icel. beils and beisl or beizl; many words referring to horse taming and racing are not genuine Scandinavian, but of foreign extraction; so is söðull, saddle, derived from A. S. saðol, Lat. sedile.COMPDS: beislál, beislhringr, beisltamr, beisltaumar. -
107 tartiner
I.v. trans. & intrans.1. To 'waffle', to talk and talk about something.2. To write a lengthy article or report where the main purpose of the exercise seems to be to put as many words on paper as possible.3. To appeal for a 'sub', usually with a long tale of woe.II.v. pronom. S'en tartiner: To 'not give a fig' about something, not to 'care two hoots', to be totally indifferent to something. Ses histoires à la mords- moi-le-machin, je m'en tartine! His cockand-bull stories really leave me cold! -
108 ἀγών
ἀγών [ᾰ], ῶνος, ὁ, [dialect] Aeol. [full] ἄγωνος, ου, ὁ, Alc.121 (also [name] E.ap.Sch.Il. Oxy.1087.60); Elean dat. pl.A : ([etym.] ἄγω):—gathering, assembly,ἵζανεν εὐρὺν ἀ. Il.23.258
;λῦτο δ' ἀ. 24.1
, cf. Od.8.200;νεῶν ἐν ἀγῶνι Il.15.428
, cf. Eust.1335.57: esp. assembly met to see games, freq. in Il.23; Ὑπερβορέων ἀ. Pi P.10.30;κοινοὺς ἀ. θέντες A. Ag. 845
.2 place of contest, lists, course,βήτην ἐς μέσσον ἀ. Il.23.685
, cf. 531, Od.8.260, Hes.Sc. 312, Pi.P.9.114, and esp. Th.5.50: prov., ἔξω ἀγῶνος out of the lists or course, i.e. beside the mark, Pi. P.1.44, Luc.Anach.21: pl.,κατ' ἀγῶνας Od.8.259
.II assembly of the Greeks at the national games,ὁ ἐν Ὀλυμπίῃ ἀ. Hdt.6.127
;ὁ Ὀλυμπικὸς ἀ. Ar.Pl. 583
;Ἑλλάδος πρόσχημ' ἀ. S.El. 682
, cf. 699:— hence, contest for a prize at the games, ἀ. γυμνικός, ἱππικός, μουσικός, Hdt.2.91, Pl.Lg. 658a, Ar.Pl. 1163, cf. Th.3.104;οἱ τῶν λαμπάδων ἀ. Arist.Ath.57.1
; ἀ. τῶν ἀνδρῶν contest in which the chorus was composed of men, opp. to παίδων or ἀγενείων (q.v.), D.21.18, etc.; ἀ. στεφανηφόρος or στεφανίτης contest where the prize is a crown, Hdt.5.102, Arist.Rh. 1357a19; ἀ. χάλκεος, where it is a shield of brass, Pi.N.10.22;ἀ. θεματικός IG14.739
([place name] Naples);ἀργυρίτης δωρίτης Plu.2.820d
:—hence many phrases, ἀγῶνα καταστῆσαι establish a contest, Isoc.4.1;τιθέναι Hdt.5.8
;ποιεῖν Th.3.104
;οὐ λόγων τοὺς ἀ. προθήσοντες Id.3.67
;προηγόρευέ τε ἀγῶνας καὶ ἆθλα προυτίθει X. Cyr.8.2.26
;προκαλούμενος ἑαυτὸν εἰς ἀ. Id.Mem.2.3.17
; τοὺς ἀ. νικᾶν ib.3.7.1;ἐν τοῖς ἀγῶσι Isoc.15.301
; of contests in general,εἰς ἀ. λόγων ἀφικέσθαι τινί Pl.Prt. 335a
; πρὸς τίν' ἀγῶνας τιθέμεσθ' ἀρετῆς; E. Ion 863 (lyr.);ἀ. σοφίας Ar.Ra. 883
.III generally, struggle, πολλοὺς ἀ. ἐξιών, of Hercules, S.Tr. 159;ξιφηφόρος ἀ. A.Ch. 584
;εἰς ἀ. τῷδε συμπεσὼν μάχης S.Tr.20
, etc;ὁ Φίλιππος, πρὸς ὀν ἦν ἡμῖν ὁ ἀ. D.18.67
;ποιέειν ἢ παθεῖν πρόκειται ἀ. Hdt.7.11
; ἀληθείην ἀσκέειν ἀ. μέγιστος ib. 209: pl.,πραγμάτων ἀγῶνας κεκτημένων Epicur.Sent.21
;ἄπορος ἀ. Lys.7.2
;ὅπλων ἔκειτ' ἀ. πέρι S.Aj. 936
; and without περί, τῶν Ἀχιλλείων ὅπλων ἀ. ib. 1240; ψυχῆς ἀ. τὸν προκείμενον πέρι struggle for life and death, E.Or. 847, cf. Ph. 1330;πολλοὺς ἀ. δραμέονται περὶ σφέων αὐτῶν Hdt.8.102
;λόγων γὰρ οὐ.. ἁγών, ἀλλὰ σῆς ψυχῆς πέρι S.El. 1492
, cf.infr.5.2 battle, action, Th.2.89, etc.3 action at law, trial, Antipho 6.21, etc., cf. A.Eu. 677, 744; , R. 494e;περὶ τῆς ψυχῆς εἰς ἀγῶνα καταστῆσαί τινα X.Lac.8.4
.4 speech delivered in court or before an assembly or ruler,πρεσβευτικοὶ ἀ. Plb.9.32.4
;τοὺς ἐπιφανεστάτους εἰρηκότος ἀ. τούς τε δικανικοὺς καὶ τοὺς δημηγορικούς D.H.Amm.1.3
, cf. OGI567 (Attalia, ii A.D.);ἀ. ἐσχηματισμένοι D.H. Rh.8.1
, al.b Rhet., main argument of a speech (opp.προοίμιον, ἐπίλογος), in pl., Syr.in Hermog.2.111, 170R., cf. Proll. Hermog.ap. Rh.4.12 W.5 metaph., οὐ λόγων ἔθ' ἁγών now is not the time for words, E.Ph. 588; οὐχ ἕδρας ἀ. 'tis no time for sitting still, Id.Or. 1291; ἀ. πρόφασιν οὐ δέχεται the crisis admits no dallying, Ar.Fr. 331, cf. Pl.Cra. 421d, Lg. 751d; μέγας ὁ ἀ... τὸ χρηστὸν ἢ κακὸν γενέσθαι the issue is great.., Id.R. 608b, cf. E.Med. 235; οὐ περί τινος ὁ ἀ. the question is not about.., Th.3.44.6 mental struggle, anxiety, Th.7.71, Plb.4.56.4, Ep.Col.2.1: in pl.,τρόμοι καὶ ἀ. Plu. Sol.7
.b of speakers, vehemence, power, Longin.15.1, cf. 26.3.IV personified, Ἀγών, divinity of the contest, Paus.5.26.3. -
109 κόπτω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `strike, smite, hew, hammer, disable, tire out'Other forms: Aor. κόψαι (Il.), pass. κοπῆναι (Att.), perf. κέκοφα (Att.), ep. ptc. κεκοπώς (Ν 60 with v. l. - φώς and - πών; Aeol.? Schwyzer 772; after Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 397 rather themat. aor.), midd. κέκομμαι (A.), fut. κόψω (Alc., Hippon.),Derivatives: (Classif. not always clear): 1. κόπος prop. *`stroke' (so in E. Tr. 794 for trad. κτύπος?; cf. also A. Ch. 23), `pain, trouble, labour' (IA.); with κοπώδης `tiring' (Hp., Arist., hell.), κοπηρός `id.' (Hdn.); κοπόομαι, - όω `get tired, tire' (J., Plu. usw.) with κόπωσις (LXX), κοπάζω `get tired, leave off' (Ion. hell.) with κόπασμα (Tz.), κοπιάω ( ἐγ-, συγ-, προ-) `get tired' (IA.) with κοπιαρός `tiring' (Arist., Thphr.), κοπιάτης `land-labourer, digger' (Cod. Theod., Just.), κοπιώδης = κοπώδης (Hp., Arist.), κοπίαι ἡσυχίαι H. - 2. ( ἀπο-, ἐκ-, παρα-, προ- etc.) κοπή `hewing etc.' (IA.) with κόπαιον (Alciphr.), κοπάδιον (Gloss.) `piece', κοπάριον `sort of probe' (medic.), ( ἐγ-, ἐκ-)κοπεύς `oilstamper, chisel ' (hell.; Boßhardt Die Nom. auf - ευς 73). - 3. κόμμα ( διά-, ἀπό-, περί-) `cut in, stamp, part' (IA.) with κομμάτιον `small part' (Eup.), κομματίας `who speaks in short sentences' (Philostr.), - ατικός `consisting of short sentences' (Luc.); 4. κομμός `beat the breast, dirge' (A., Arist.). - 5. κόπις, - ιδος m. `prater' (Heraklit. 81 [?], E. Hec. 132 [lyr.], Lyc.), cf. ὠτοκοπεῖ κεφαλαλγει, ἐνοχλεῖ λαλῶν H., κόπτειν την ἀκρόασιν, δημο-κόπος = δημηγόρος (H.) etc. (Persson Beitr. 1, 162f.; s. also Fraenkel Nom. ag. 2, 48, v. Wilamowitz Herm. 62, 277f.; diff. on κόπις Pisani Acme 1, 324); here (or to κόπος?) κοπίζειν ψεύδεσθαι H.; 6. κοπίς, - ίδος f. `slaughtering knife, curved sabre' (Att.), also name of the meal on the first dayof the Hyacinthies in Sparta (Com.; cf. Nilsson Gr. Rel. 1, 531) with κοπίζω `celebrate the K.' (Ath.); 7. κοπάς, - άδος f. `pruned, lopped' (Thphr.), `bush' (hell. pap.), ἐπι-κοπ-άς `land cleared of wood' (pap.). - 8. κοπετός = κομμός (Eup., LXX, Act. Ap.; from κόπος?; cf. Schwyzer 501 and Chantraine Formation 300). - 9. πρό-, ἀπό-, πρόσ-κοψις etc. from προ-κόπτειν etc. (Sapph., Hp., Arist.). - 10. κόπανον `slaughtering knife, axe' (A. Ch. 890), `pestle' (Eust.), from where κοπανίζω `pound' (LXX, Alex. Trall.) with κοπανισμός, κοπανιστήριον H.; ἐπικόπανον `chopping block' (hell.). - 11. κοπτός `pounded' (Cratin., Antiph.; cf. Ammann Μνήμης χάριν 1, 18); κοπτή ( σησαμίς) `cake from pounded sesame' (hell. ep.), `Meerzwiebel, θαλάσσιον πράσον' (Ath.; which Fur. 318 A 5 considers as Pre-Greek), `pastille' (Dsc.); 12. ἐπι-, περι-κόπτης `satirist' resp. `stonecutter' (Timo resp. pap.), Προκόπτας = Προκρούστης (B. 18, 28); 13. ( ἀπο-, παρα-, προσ- usw.) κοπτικός (medic.) - 14. κόπτρα pl. `wages of a hewer' (Pap.); 15. κοπτήριον `threshing place' (hell. pap.). - 16. Two plant-names: κοπίσκος = λίβανος σμιλιωτός (Dsc. 1, 68, 1), κόπηθρον φυτὸν λαχανῶδες ἄγριον H. - Further verbal nouns like ἀπό-, ἐπί-, παρά-, ὑπέρ-κοπος etc. and compounds like δημο-κόπος (cf. 5. above); s. Sturtevant ClassPhil. 3, 435ff.; on - κόπος, - κοπῶ in NGr. Hatzidakis Glotta 2, 292f.Etymology: The present κόπτω can agree with Lith. kapiù (inf. kàpti) `hew, fell'; nasal present kampù (pret. kapaũ, inf. kàpti) `be cut down, get tired' (cf. κόπος `labour') and uncharacterized Alb. kep `hew', IE. * kopō (not * kapō); (acc. to Mann Lang. 26, 386 from *kopi̯ō, identical with κόπτω?). Further the secondary formation Lith. kapóju, -óti `hew, split, cut down' = Latv. kapãju, -ât `id.', also in Slav., e. g. Russ. kopájo, -átь `hew, dig'. The relation of these forms to the many words with initial sk-, e. g. σκάπτω, σκέπαρνος (s. vv.), is an unsolved question; cf. Pok. 930ff., and W.-Hofmann s. cāpō. - If to σκάπτω etc. the word might be Pre-Greek.Page in Frisk: 1,915-916Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κόπτω
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110 быть молчаливым, немногословным
General subject: not to be a person of many wordsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > быть молчаливым, немногословным
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111 не ножа бойся, а языка
Set phrase: many words hurt more than swords (дословно: Многие слова ранят сильнее, чем шпаги), the tongue is not steel, yet it cuts, the tongue is sharper than any swordУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > не ножа бойся, а языка
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112 non-
non(used with many words to change their meanings to the opposite; not.) no..., des..., in...nɑːn, nɒnprefix nonon-swimmers must... — las personas que no saben nadar deben...
[nɒn]PREFIX no..., des..., in...* * *[nɑːn, nɒn]prefix nonon-swimmers must... — las personas que no saben nadar deben...
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113 caló
1 gypsy language* * *SM gipsy dialect, gypsy dialect* * *masculino gypsy slang* * *masculino gypsy slang* * *gypsy slangThe Indo-European language spoken by Spanish gypsies. It is not recognized as an official language, but there are many words of caló origin in colloquial Spanish, such as calé (gypsy) and payo, the gypsy word for non-gypsies. gitano (↑ gitano a1).* * *
Del verbo calar: ( conjugate calar)
calo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
caló es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
calar
caló
calar ( conjugate calar) verbo transitivo
1 [ líquido] ( empapar) to soak;
( atravesar) to soak through;
2 (fam) ‹persona/intenciones› to rumble (colloq), to suss … out (BrE colloq)
3 [ barco] to draw
4 (Esp) ‹coche/motor› to stall
verbo intransitivo
1 [ moda] to catch on;
[costumbre/filosofía] to take root
2 [zapatos/tienda de campaña] to leak, let water in
calarse verbo pronominal
1 ( empaparse) to get soaked, get drenched
2 (Esp) [coche/motor] to stall
caló sustantivo masculino
gypsy slang
calar
I verbo transitivo
1 (empapar) to soak, drench:
2 (atravesar) to pierce, penetrate
3 familiar (a alguien o sus intenciones) to rumble: ¡te tenemos calado!, we've got your number!
II verbo intransitivo
1 (permitir que pase el líquido) to let in water
2 (impresionar) to make an impression [en, on]
(penetrar) to catch on
3 Náut to draw
caló sustantivo masculino gypsy dialect
' caló' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
calarse
- calar
English:
size
* * *caló nm* * *m1 language spoken by Spanish gypsies2 Méxcriminal slang -
114 non-
[non](used with many words to change their meanings to the opposite; not.) ekki -
115 non-
[non](used with many words to change their meanings to the opposite; not.) nem- -
116 non-
[non](used with many words to change their meanings to the opposite; not.) não-* * *non-[nɔn] pref denota: 1 não. 2 falta de. -
117 non-
[non](used with many words to change their meanings to the opposite; not.)...-siz/sız, olmayan -
118 non-
[non](used with many words to change their meanings to the opposite; not.) ne-* * *[nɔn-]prefixne- (samo v sestavljenkah) -
119 non-
• epä-* * *non(used with many words to change their meanings to the opposite; not.) epä-, ei- -
120 SKÓR
* * *(pl. -ar), f.1) score, notch, incision;2) a rift in a rock or precipice (hleypr hann ofan fyrir skorina).* * *m., gen. skós, dat. and acc. skó; older plur. skúar, gen. skúa, dat. skóm, acc. skúa; later plur. forms are, skór, skóa, skóm, skó, and so too in mod. usage: [Ulf. skohs = ὑπόδημα; A. S. sceô; Engl. shoe; O. H. G. scuob; Germ’ schuh; Dan.-Swed. sko]:—a shoe; skúa (skuo Ed.) á fótum, Gísl. 113; skúar (skuor), 115; loðnir kálfskinns skúar, Sturl. iii. 199; uppháfir skúar, Fms. vi. 440; uppháfir ok lágir skúar, Rétt. 112; nppháfa svarta skúa, Nj. 184; hann hafði uppháfa skó, bundna at legg, Fms. iv. 76; háfa skúa, Ó. H. 30, l. c.; hann lét skera húð til skóa (gen. pl.) föru-nautum Þorvalds, Bs. i. 669; skylda ek skreyta ok skúa binda hersis kván hverjan morgin, Gkv. 1. 9; hann kippti skóm á fætr sér, Nj. 28; hann hafði leyst af sér skúa sína … hann batt skó sinn, Eg. 719; skúar, Hom. 85 (twice); gera skó (acc. sing.), stíga í skó, N. G. L. i. 31: referring to the ceremony of adoption, see hemingr.2. a horse-shoe; skórnir, skóna, aur-skór, Fb. i. 524; þótt skúarnir hryti undan hestum þeirra, Fms. vii. 95; hest-skór, a horse-shoe. ☞ The proper shoeing of horses was probably unknown to the ancients even of the Saga time; they used to cover the hoof with a kind of low shoe, whence the name; this may be seen from the description in Fms. v. 181, vii. l. c.; as also from words as hóf-gullinn, golden hoof.3. the tip of a sheath, as in dögg-skór, q. v.II. phrases, hafa slitið barns-skónum, to have worn out one’s bairn’s-shoes = to be past one’s youth; hann slítr ekki mörgum skónum, he will not wear out many shoes, of an old man on the verge of the grave, as in the story of the merman (marmennill, q. v.) and the ‘fey’ man with the bundle of shoes, Ísl. Þjóðs. i. 132, compared with the Engl. romance of Merlin, p. 434.
См. также в других словарях:
(not) in so many words — (not) in so/as many ˈwords idiom (not) in exactly the same words as sb says were used • ‘Did she say she was sorry?’ ‘Not in so many words.’ • He didn t approve of the plan and said so in as many words. Main entry: ↑word … Useful english dictionary
(not) in as many words — (not) in so/as many ˈwords idiom (not) in exactly the same words as sb says were used • ‘Did she say she was sorry?’ ‘Not in so many words.’ • He didn t approve of the plan and said so in as many words. Main entry: ↑word … Useful english dictionary
not in so many words — phrase used for saying that someone says something in a very indirect way ‘Did he say he was unhappy?’ ‘Not in so many words.’ Thesaurus: words used to describe comments and remarkshyponym Main entry: word … Useful english dictionary
not in so many words — used for saying that someone says something in a very indirect way Did he say he was unhappy? Not in so many words … English dictionary
in so many words — phrasal 1. : in exactly those terms implied that such actions were criminal but did not say so in so many words 2. : in plain forthright language in so many words, she wasn t fit to be seen Jean Stafford * * * in so many words 1. Ex … Useful english dictionary
in so many words — {adv. phr.} 1. In those exact words. * /He hinted that he thought we were foolish but did not say so in so many words./ 2. or[in no uncertain terms] In an outspoken way; plainly; directly. * /I told him in so many words that he was crazy./ * /Bob … Dictionary of American idioms
in so many words — {adv. phr.} 1. In those exact words. * /He hinted that he thought we were foolish but did not say so in so many words./ 2. or[in no uncertain terms] In an outspoken way; plainly; directly. * /I told him in so many words that he was crazy./ * /Bob … Dictionary of American idioms
in so many words — directly or in a way that makes it very clear what you mean. Did he say we could stay with him? Well, not in so many words, but that s definitely what he meant. (usually negative) He told me, in so many words, to mind my own business … New idioms dictionary
in\ so\ many\ words — adv. phr. 1. In those exact words. He hinted that he thought we were foolish but did not say so in so many words. 2. • in no uncertain terms In an outspoken way; plainly; directly. I told him in so many words that he was crazy. Bob was very late… … Словарь американских идиом
in so many words — phrasal 1. in exactly those terms < implied that such actions were criminal but did not say so in so many words > 2. in plain forthright language < in so many words, she wasn t fit to be seen Jean Stafford > … New Collegiate Dictionary
many — / meni/ quantifier 1 (used especially in formal English, or in ordinary written or spoken English when in questions and negative sentences) a large number of people or things: many people/things/places etc: Many people find this kind of movie… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English