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1 small print
Gen Mgtdetails in an official document such as a contract that are usually printed in a smaller size than the rest of the text and, while often important, may be overlooked. Items often referred to as “small print” can include deliberately hidden charges, unfavourable terms, or loopholes. -
2 мелкая деталь
фрагмент, деталь — detail of design
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3 Detail
[de’tai] n; -s, -s; geh. detail; die kleinen Details the finer points, the fine details; ins Detail gehen go into detail; bis ins kleinste Detail (down) to the last detail; Teufel* * *das Detailparticular; detail* * *De|tail [de'tai, de'taːj]nt -s, -sdetail; (= Filmeinstellung) big close-upins Detail gehen — to go into detail(s)
bis ins kleinste Detail — (right) down to the smallest or last detail
etw mit allen Details berichten — to report sth in full detail, to give a fully detailed account of sth
die Schwierigkeiten liegen im Detail — it is the details that are most difficult
See:→ Teufel* * *(a small part or an item: She paid close attention to the small details.) detail* * *De·tail<-s, -s>[deˈtai, deˈta:j]nt detail▪ die \Details the details [or particulars]im \Detail in detaildie Schwierigkeiten liegen im \Detail it's the details that are most difficultin allen \Details in the greatest detailetw in allen \Details berichten to report sth in full detail, to give a fully detailed account of sthins \Detail gehen to go into detail[s]; (sich daranmachen) to get down to details* * *das; Details, Details detail* * *die kleinen Details the finer points, the fine details;ins Detail gehen go into detail;* * *das; Details, Details detail* * *-s n.detail n. -
4 мелочи
1) General subject: dribs and drabs, little things, minutiae, nothing, nothings, notion (о нитках, булавках), small beer, sundries (при покупках), trivial matters, triviality, small details (THE small details: Sometimes, the small details make all the difference. - Иногда именно мелочи решают всё.), subtle things (THE subtle things: "Sometimes it is the subtle things that make the difference between love and hate in personal relationships.")3) Chemistry: fines4) Jargon: ins and outs5) Oil: minor items6) Makarov: pigs and whistles7) Taboo: crap8) Phraseological unit: small potatoes (These aren't small potatoes, my dear.) -
5 irascible
adj.1 irascible.2 angry, crabby, gnarled, morose.* * *► adjetivo1 irascible, irritable* * *ADJ irascible frm* * *adjetivo irascible* * *= tetchy [tetchier -comp., tetchiest -sup.], peevish, irascible, crabby [crabbier -comp., crabbiest, -sup.], short, short-tempered, off-hand [offhand], ornery, waspish, explosive, testy [testier -comp., testiest -sup.].Ex. CC uses this device in Literature, where authors are specified by their date of birth (though Ranganathan has a rather tetchy note about the difficulty of establishing this in some cases).Ex. In 1912 a group of women library students were accused of lacking a sense of proportion, being peevish and being absorbed in small details.Ex. He was a rag-and-bone man living with his irascible father in a junkyard with only their horse for company.Ex. The normally perky and intrepid Cristina is flat out crabby these days.Ex. He first spotted trouble when she started being short with users and so he solved the problem by scaling back her workload.Ex. A medical doctor had told him that the reason why women have faster pulse beats is because they are short-tempered.Ex. The osteopath was accused of being off-hand with a female patient and not putting her at ease.Ex. My mama says that alligators are ornery because they got all them teeth and no toothbrush.Ex. But as you read this sentence, you cannot fail to hear his voice, cosy, waspish, inimitable.Ex. The explosive Cameron Shepherd then brought the Wallabies to within a point of France with the team's second try five minutes later.Ex. We're assailed by doubts, mortified by our own shortcomings, surrounded by freaks, testy over silly details.* * *adjetivo irascible* * *= tetchy [tetchier -comp., tetchiest -sup.], peevish, irascible, crabby [crabbier -comp., crabbiest, -sup.], short, short-tempered, off-hand [offhand], ornery, waspish, explosive, testy [testier -comp., testiest -sup.].Ex: CC uses this device in Literature, where authors are specified by their date of birth (though Ranganathan has a rather tetchy note about the difficulty of establishing this in some cases).
Ex: In 1912 a group of women library students were accused of lacking a sense of proportion, being peevish and being absorbed in small details.Ex: He was a rag-and-bone man living with his irascible father in a junkyard with only their horse for company.Ex: The normally perky and intrepid Cristina is flat out crabby these days.Ex: He first spotted trouble when she started being short with users and so he solved the problem by scaling back her workload.Ex: A medical doctor had told him that the reason why women have faster pulse beats is because they are short-tempered.Ex: The osteopath was accused of being off-hand with a female patient and not putting her at ease.Ex: My mama says that alligators are ornery because they got all them teeth and no toothbrush.Ex: But as you read this sentence, you cannot fail to hear his voice, cosy, waspish, inimitable.Ex: The explosive Cameron Shepherd then brought the Wallabies to within a point of France with the team's second try five minutes later.Ex: We're assailed by doubts, mortified by our own shortcomings, surrounded by freaks, testy over silly details.* * *irascible* * *
irascible adjetivo irascible, irritable, short-tempered
' irascible' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
temperamental
English:
cantankerous
- hot-headed
- irascible
- quicktempered
- crusty
- hot
- quick
- snappy
* * *irascible adjirascible* * *adj irascible* * *irascible adj: irascible, irritable♦ irascibilidad nf -
6 kleinteilig
klein|tei|lig1. adjStruktur divided into small sectionskléínteiliges Denken — excessive concern with small details
2. advein kléínteilig angelegter Park — a park laid out in small sections
kléínteilig denken — to be excessively concerned with small details
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7 деталь
1. ж. detail2. ж. piece, part, component, memberкомплектующая деталь — accessory; component
конструктивная деталь — structural member; design feature
сменная деталь — change part; replacement part
детали, притягиваемые магнитом — parts attractable by magnet
Синонимический ряд:подробность (сущ.) мелочь; подробность; тонкость; частность -
8 относительно деталей
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > относительно деталей
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9 desagradable
adj.1 unpleasant.2 disagreeable, distasteful, unpleasant, displeasing.* * *► adjetivo1 disagreeable, unpleasant* * *adj.unpleasant, disagreeable* * *ADJ unpleasant, disagreeable más frm* * *adjetivo <respuesta/comentario> unkind; <ruido/sensación> unpleasant, disagreeable; <escena/sorpresa> unpleasant; <tiempo/clima> unpleasant, horribleno seas tan desagradable! — don't be so mean o unkind!
* * *= off-putting, unwelcome, unpleasant, disagreeable, unkind, obnoxious, peevish, distasteful, unappealing, seamy [seamier -comp., seamiest -sup.], unsavoury [unsavory, -USA], unpalatable, unsightly, minging, abrasive, nasty [natier -comp., nastiest -sup.], unwholesome, insalubrious, invidious, ill-natured.Ex. Some children are prepared to patronize the shop, and use it in quite a different way, when they find the library (however well run) stuffy or off-putting.Ex. The faithful adherents of the ideology of the finding catalog were determined to combat the unwelcome intrusion of Panizzi's scheme before the Royal Commission.Ex. And, as if by way of indicating that he had thrown down the gauntlet, he added, 'I can be unpleasant. I warn you'.Ex. Then I came within this disagreeable person's atmosphere, and lo! before I know what's happened I'm involved in an unpleasant altercation.Ex. The enumeration at 940.5316: Children and other noncombatants; Pacifists; Enemy sympathizers seems a little unkind, if nothing else.Ex. During the war a law was passed to limit the consumption of newsprint by ' obnoxious newspapers' and even reducing it to nil = Durante la guerra se aprobó una ley para limitar el consumo de papel de periódico por los llamados "periódicos detestables" e incluso reducirlo a cero.Ex. In 1912 a group of women library students were accused of lacking a sense of proportion, being peevish and being absorbed in small details.Ex. The physical effort of keeping tabs on people as well as the distasteful practice of checking up on staff output achieves nothing and may do considerable damage.Ex. In addition, it is pointed out that tourists often have a strange fascination for tragic, macabre or other equally unappealing historical sights.Ex. In general, the writer explains, crimes are depicted in such a way that they are associated with seamy characters who have little regard for conventional morality.Ex. Despite the unsavory characters, bawdiness, and amorality in several of his plays, Middleton was more committed to a single theological system than, for example, Shakespeare.Ex. The article is entitled 'Spam is unpalatable any way it's served up: things you can do to reduce the amount of unwanted e-mail'.Ex. He went on to explain that while there were no unsightly slums, there was a fairly large district of rather nondescript homes intermingled with plain two- and three-family brick and frame dwellings, principally in the eastern reaches of the city.Ex. Everyone is attractive to someone, there is no such thing as a minger, but there are many people who I think are minging.Ex. She wanted to say: 'You are a conceited, obstinate, inflexible, manipulative, pompous, close-minded, insensitive, abrasive, opinionated, platitudinous oaf!'.Ex. Anthony Datto thanked them for having permitted him to unburden himself and after a few desultory remarks about the nasty weather and nothing in particular, they parted.Ex. The text raises the possibility that there might be something unwholesome in the Buddhist obsession with hell.Ex. Specific actions are those which are intended to reinforce the fight against specific medical conditions related to insalubrious living.Ex. Within the ranks of authorship therefore there are many types of author and it is invidious to claim that one sort is necessarily 'better' than another.Ex. Always snivelling, coughing, spitting; a stupid, tedious, ill-natured fellow, who was for ever fatiguing people.----* algo desagradable a la vista = a blot on the landscape.* darle a Uno escalofríos por Algo desagradable = make + Nombre + flinch.* de sabor desagradable = unpalatable.* desagradable a la vista = eyesore.* encontrarse con una sorpresa desagradable = rude awakening + be in store, be in for a rude awakening.* esperar una sorpresa desagradable = rude awakening + be in store, be in for a rude awakening.* lo desagradable = unpleasantness.* situación desagradable = unpleasantness.* sorpresa desagradable = rude awakening.* * *adjetivo <respuesta/comentario> unkind; <ruido/sensación> unpleasant, disagreeable; <escena/sorpresa> unpleasant; <tiempo/clima> unpleasant, horribleno seas tan desagradable! — don't be so mean o unkind!
* * *= off-putting, unwelcome, unpleasant, disagreeable, unkind, obnoxious, peevish, distasteful, unappealing, seamy [seamier -comp., seamiest -sup.], unsavoury [unsavory, -USA], unpalatable, unsightly, minging, abrasive, nasty [natier -comp., nastiest -sup.], unwholesome, insalubrious, invidious, ill-natured.Ex: Some children are prepared to patronize the shop, and use it in quite a different way, when they find the library (however well run) stuffy or off-putting.
Ex: The faithful adherents of the ideology of the finding catalog were determined to combat the unwelcome intrusion of Panizzi's scheme before the Royal Commission.Ex: And, as if by way of indicating that he had thrown down the gauntlet, he added, 'I can be unpleasant. I warn you'.Ex: Then I came within this disagreeable person's atmosphere, and lo! before I know what's happened I'm involved in an unpleasant altercation.Ex: The enumeration at 940.5316: Children and other noncombatants; Pacifists; Enemy sympathizers seems a little unkind, if nothing else.Ex: During the war a law was passed to limit the consumption of newsprint by ' obnoxious newspapers' and even reducing it to nil = Durante la guerra se aprobó una ley para limitar el consumo de papel de periódico por los llamados "periódicos detestables" e incluso reducirlo a cero.Ex: In 1912 a group of women library students were accused of lacking a sense of proportion, being peevish and being absorbed in small details.Ex: The physical effort of keeping tabs on people as well as the distasteful practice of checking up on staff output achieves nothing and may do considerable damage.Ex: In addition, it is pointed out that tourists often have a strange fascination for tragic, macabre or other equally unappealing historical sights.Ex: In general, the writer explains, crimes are depicted in such a way that they are associated with seamy characters who have little regard for conventional morality.Ex: Despite the unsavory characters, bawdiness, and amorality in several of his plays, Middleton was more committed to a single theological system than, for example, Shakespeare.Ex: The article is entitled 'Spam is unpalatable any way it's served up: things you can do to reduce the amount of unwanted e-mail'.Ex: He went on to explain that while there were no unsightly slums, there was a fairly large district of rather nondescript homes intermingled with plain two- and three-family brick and frame dwellings, principally in the eastern reaches of the city.Ex: Everyone is attractive to someone, there is no such thing as a minger, but there are many people who I think are minging.Ex: She wanted to say: 'You are a conceited, obstinate, inflexible, manipulative, pompous, close-minded, insensitive, abrasive, opinionated, platitudinous oaf!'.Ex: Anthony Datto thanked them for having permitted him to unburden himself and after a few desultory remarks about the nasty weather and nothing in particular, they parted.Ex: The text raises the possibility that there might be something unwholesome in the Buddhist obsession with hell.Ex: Specific actions are those which are intended to reinforce the fight against specific medical conditions related to insalubrious living.Ex: Within the ranks of authorship therefore there are many types of author and it is invidious to claim that one sort is necessarily 'better' than another.Ex: Always snivelling, coughing, spitting; a stupid, tedious, ill-natured fellow, who was for ever fatiguing people.* algo desagradable a la vista = a blot on the landscape.* darle a Uno escalofríos por Algo desagradable = make + Nombre + flinch.* de sabor desagradable = unpalatable.* desagradable a la vista = eyesore.* encontrarse con una sorpresa desagradable = rude awakening + be in store, be in for a rude awakening.* esperar una sorpresa desagradable = rude awakening + be in store, be in for a rude awakening.* lo desagradable = unpleasantness.* situación desagradable = unpleasantness.* sorpresa desagradable = rude awakening.* * *‹respuesta/comentario› unkind; ‹sabor/ruido/sensación› unpleasant, disagreeable; ‹escena› horribleestuvo realmente desagradable conmigo he was really unpleasant to me¡no seas tan desagradable! dale una oportunidad don't be so mean o unkind! give him a chance¡qué tiempo más desagradable! what nasty o horrible weatherhacía un día bastante desagradable the weather was rather unpleasant, it was a rather unpleasant dayse llevó una sorpresa desagradable she got a nasty o an unpleasant surprise* * *
desagradable adjetivo
unpleasant;
‹respuesta/comentario› unkind
desagradable adjetivo unpleasant, disagreeable: hay un olor desagradable, there's an unpleasant smell
es una persona muy desagradable, he's really disagreeable
' desagradable' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
escopetazo
- fresca
- fresco
- graznido
- grosera
- grosero
- gustillo
- horrorosa
- horroroso
- impresión
- marrón
- palma
- sensación
- terrible
- terrorífica
- terrorífico
- chocante
- ingrato
- mal
- shock
English:
bullet
- business
- creep
- dirty
- disagreeable
- distasteful
- emptiness
- filthy
- hard
- ill-natured
- miserable
- nasty
- off
- off-putting
- rude
- thankless
- ugly
- unkind
- unpleasant
- unsavory
- unsavoury
- unwelcome
- why
- home
- objectionable
- offensive
- painful
- peevish
- unpalatable
- unwholesome
* * *♦ adj1. [sensación, tiempo, escena] unpleasant;no voy a salir, la tarde está muy desagradable I'm not going to go out, the weather's turned quite nasty this afternoon;una desagradable sorpresa an unpleasant o a nasty surprise2. [persona, comentario, contestación] unpleasant;está muy desagradable con su familia he's very unpleasant to his family;no seas desagradable y ven con nosotros al cine don't be unsociable, come to the cinema with us♦ nmfson unos desagradables they're unpleasant people* * *adj unpleasant, disagreeable* * *desagradable adj: unpleasant, disagreeable♦ desagradablemente adv* * *desagradable adj unpleasant -
10 malhumorado
adj.bad-humored, cranky, bad-tempered, crabbed.past part.past participle of spanish verb: malhumorar.* * *► adjetivo1 bad-tempered\estar malhumorado,-a to be in a bad mood* * *(f. - malhumorada)adj.* * *ADJ bad-tempered, grumpy* * *- da adjetivoa) [SER] <persona/gesto> bad-temperedb) [ESTAR] < persona> in a bad mood* * *= sullen, surly [surlier -comp., surliest -sup.], crusty [crustier -comp., crustiest -sup.], truculent, peevish, morose, grumpy [grumpier -comp., grumpiest -sup.], ill-humoured [ill-humored, -USA], cranky [crankier -comp., crankiest -sup.], moody [moodier -comp., moodiest -sup.], curmudgeonly, cantankerous, bad-tempered, crabby [crabbier -comp., crabbiest, -sup.], short-tempered, hipped, ornery, mardy [mardier -comp., mardiest -sup.], grouch, in a grouch.Ex. He makes his feelings abundantly clear by sullen silences and glances that indicate complete disgust.Ex. He perceived that his life threatened to be an interminable succession of these mortifying interviews unless he could discover a way or ways to deal with her surly and terrorizing ferocity.Ex. For this crusty author as well as for that young one having fun being famous is what matters = Tanto para este autor hosco como para aquel autor joven, ser famoso es lo que importa.Ex. Senior staff members said that these fevers of truculent behavior had manifested themselves only within the past two or three years.Ex. In 1912 a group of women library students were accused of lacking a sense of proportion, being peevish and being absorbed in small details.Ex. His limber writing consequentializes the inconsequential, and there is not one morose moment in his work, no hint of sourness.Ex. That's despite grumpy comments like those of William Hartston who said it was 'surely one of the ugliest words ever to slither its way into our dictionaries'.Ex. The presence of this irony in ill-humored short articles from various journalistic sources is described.Ex. For example, you already know that living in a windowless room will make you cranky and out of sorts.Ex. Moody explorations of unexplained phenomenon can also be found = También se pueden encontrar exploraciones taciturnas de fenómenos inexplicables.Ex. Offended by the idea of an addict selling sneakers to kids, he launched into a curmudgeonly rant.Ex. To attain this order within the structure of chaos, Eros divided himself into two parts: Eros as amicable, social love and Eros as cantankerous, divisive discord.Ex. He was a brave novelist but also bad-tempered, churlish and subject to fits of rage.Ex. The normally perky and intrepid Cristina is flat out crabby these days.Ex. A medical doctor had told him that the reason why women have faster pulse beats is because they are short-tempered.Ex. His in danger of becoming hipped, a prey to his own doubts and fears, and unable to accomplish anything in life beyond catering to his own morbid fancies.Ex. My mama says that alligators are ornery because they got all them teeth and no toothbrush.Ex. They were be very mardy about it, but they accepted it, because if they hadn't their course grade would have suffered.Ex. We all have a grouch in our lives and if we wake up on the wrong side of the bed or take our daily mean pill, at the very nicest, we have been described as a ' grouch'.Ex. Life is too short to be in a grouch all the time.* * *- da adjetivoa) [SER] <persona/gesto> bad-temperedb) [ESTAR] < persona> in a bad mood* * *= sullen, surly [surlier -comp., surliest -sup.], crusty [crustier -comp., crustiest -sup.], truculent, peevish, morose, grumpy [grumpier -comp., grumpiest -sup.], ill-humoured [ill-humored, -USA], cranky [crankier -comp., crankiest -sup.], moody [moodier -comp., moodiest -sup.], curmudgeonly, cantankerous, bad-tempered, crabby [crabbier -comp., crabbiest, -sup.], short-tempered, hipped, ornery, mardy [mardier -comp., mardiest -sup.], grouch, in a grouch.Ex: He makes his feelings abundantly clear by sullen silences and glances that indicate complete disgust.
Ex: He perceived that his life threatened to be an interminable succession of these mortifying interviews unless he could discover a way or ways to deal with her surly and terrorizing ferocity.Ex: For this crusty author as well as for that young one having fun being famous is what matters = Tanto para este autor hosco como para aquel autor joven, ser famoso es lo que importa.Ex: Senior staff members said that these fevers of truculent behavior had manifested themselves only within the past two or three years.Ex: In 1912 a group of women library students were accused of lacking a sense of proportion, being peevish and being absorbed in small details.Ex: His limber writing consequentializes the inconsequential, and there is not one morose moment in his work, no hint of sourness.Ex: That's despite grumpy comments like those of William Hartston who said it was 'surely one of the ugliest words ever to slither its way into our dictionaries'.Ex: The presence of this irony in ill-humored short articles from various journalistic sources is described.Ex: For example, you already know that living in a windowless room will make you cranky and out of sorts.Ex: Moody explorations of unexplained phenomenon can also be found = También se pueden encontrar exploraciones taciturnas de fenómenos inexplicables.Ex: Offended by the idea of an addict selling sneakers to kids, he launched into a curmudgeonly rant.Ex: To attain this order within the structure of chaos, Eros divided himself into two parts: Eros as amicable, social love and Eros as cantankerous, divisive discord.Ex: He was a brave novelist but also bad-tempered, churlish and subject to fits of rage.Ex: The normally perky and intrepid Cristina is flat out crabby these days.Ex: A medical doctor had told him that the reason why women have faster pulse beats is because they are short-tempered.Ex: His in danger of becoming hipped, a prey to his own doubts and fears, and unable to accomplish anything in life beyond catering to his own morbid fancies.Ex: My mama says that alligators are ornery because they got all them teeth and no toothbrush.Ex: They were be very mardy about it, but they accepted it, because if they hadn't their course grade would have suffered.Ex: We all have a grouch in our lives and if we wake up on the wrong side of the bed or take our daily mean pill, at the very nicest, we have been described as a ' grouch'.Ex: Life is too short to be in a grouch all the time.* * *malhumorado -da1 [ SER] ‹persona/gesto› bad-tempered2 [ ESTAR] ‹persona› in a bad moodhoy se ha levantado/anda muy malhumorado he has woken up/he is in a very bad mood today* * *
Del verbo malhumorar: ( conjugate malhumorar)
malhumorado es:
el participio
malhumorado◊ -da adjetivo
malhumorado,-a adjetivo bad-tempered
' malhumorado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
malencarada
- malencarado
- malhumorada
- colérico
- taimado
English:
crabby
- cross
- crotchety
- crusty
- grumpy
- ill-humoured
- ill-tempered
- mean
- moody
- morose
- peevish
- petulant
- stroppy
- bad
- sulky
- truculent
* * *malhumorado, -a adj1. [de mal carácter] bad-tempered2. [enfadado] in a bad mood* * *adj bad-tempered* * *malhumorado, -da adj: bad-tempered, cross* * * -
11 sentido de la proporción
(n.) = sense of proportionEx. In 1912 a group of women library students were accused of lacking a sense of proportion, being peevish and being absorbed in small details.* * *(n.) = sense of proportionEx: In 1912 a group of women library students were accused of lacking a sense of proportion, being peevish and being absorbed in small details.
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12 подчеркивание деталей
Русско-английский словарь по информационным технологиям > подчеркивание деталей
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13 פרט
v. be changed (money)————————v. be given in detail, detailed, specified————————v. to change (money) ; divide into small parts————————v. to give in detail, detail, specify————————v. to play stringed instrument, strum, pluck, pinch————————detail; item, element, particular, datum; single, individual————————odd————————small change; small details -
14 detail
[ˈdiːteɪl] ( American also) [dɪˈteɪl] noun1) a small part or an item:تَفْصيلShe paid close attention to the small details.
2) all the small features and parts considered as a whole:تَفاصيلLook at the amazing detail in this drawing!
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15 Н-100
ДО (ПОСЛЕДНЕЙ) НИТКИ PrepP these forms only adv1. промокнуть, вымокнуть и т. п. - coll (to be, get etc) thoroughly wetX промок до нитки - X was (got) soaked to the skinX was (got) drenched (soaked) to the bone X was (got) wet to the bone X was (got) sopping (soaking) wet.В трёх верстах от станции*** стало накрапывать, и через минуту проливной дождь вымочил меня до последней нитки (Пушкин 3). Three versts from the posting-station at ***, a light drizzle began, a minute later it had changed to a driving rain and I was soaked to the skin (3b).2. обобрать кого, проиграть, пропить и т. п. - coll (to rob, gamble away, spend on drinking etc) absolutely all the money one or s.o. hasX обобрал Y-a - = X robbed Y blindX fleeced Y (down to Y's last kopeck (penny etc)) X cleaned Y outX проиграл все - = X gambled away everything down to the last kopeck (penny etc)X lost the shirt off his backX пропил всё - = X drank up every kopeck (penny etc) he had.Костю заметил Бейлис, главный бильярдист Москвы, ввел в лучшие бильярдные, где обыгрывались «фраера», денежные провинциалы, командировочные с казёнными деньгами. С ними Костя был беспощаден, заманивал первым лёгким выигрышем, а потом раздевал до нитки (Рыбаков 2). Не IKostya) had been spotted by Beilis, the top billiards player in Moscow. Beilis took him to the best billiards halls, where they hustled freeloaders, moneyed provincials visiting Moscow on government funds. Kostya was merciless with them. He would con them by losing the first game and then fleece them down to their last kopeck (2a).{extended usage) «Англия и Франция навязали Германии Версаль, репарации, раздели до нитки, отобрали колонии...» (Рыбаков 2). ( context transl) "England and France bound Germany hand and foot at Versailles, the reparations stripped her bare, they took her colonies..." (2a).3. рассказать что, разобрать(ся) в ком-чём, помнить что и т. п. - substand (to tell, analyze, remember etc sth.) completely, thoroughly, including the small details: (down) to the minutest (the smallest, the tiniest, the last) detailin every detail. -
16 до нитки
[PrepP; these forms only; adv]=====1. промокнуть, вымокнуть и т.п. до нитки coll (to be, get etc) thoroughly wet:- X was (got) sopping (soaking) wet.♦ В трёх верстах от станции *** стало накрапывать, и через минуту проливной дождь вымочил меня до последней нитки (Пушкин 3). Three versts from the posting-station at ***, a light drizzle began; a minute later it had changed to a driving rain and I was soaked to the skin (3b).2. обобрать кого, проиграть, пропить и т.п. до нитки coll (to rob, gamble away, spend on drinking etc) absolutely all the money one or s.o. has:- X fleeced Y (down to Y's last kopeck <penny etc>);♦ Костю заметил Бейлис, главный бильярдист Москвы, ввел в лучшие бильярдные, где обыгрывались "фраера", денежные провинциалы, командировочные с казёнными деньгами. С ними Костя был беспощаден, заманивал первым лёгким выигрышем, а потом раздевал до нитки (Рыбаков 2). Не [Kostya] had been spotted by Beilis, the top billiards player in Moscow. Beilis took him to the best billiards halls, where they hustled freeloaders, moneyed provincials visiting Moscow on government funds. Kostya was merciless with them. He would con them by losing the first game and then fleece them down to their last kopeck (2a).♦ [extended usage] "Англия и Франция навязали Германии Версаль, репарации, раздели до нитки, отобрали колонии..." (Рыбаков 2). [context transl] "England and France bound Germany hand and foot at Versailles, the reparations stripped her bare, they took her colonies..." (2a).3. рассказать что, разобрать(ся) в ком-чём, помнить что и т.п. - substand (to tell, analyze, remember etc sth.) completely, thoroughly, including the small details:- (down) to the minutest (the smallest, the tiniest, the last) detail;- in every detail.Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > до нитки
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17 до последней нитки
[PrepP; these forms only; adv]=====1. промокнуть, вымокнуть и т.п. до последней нитки coll (to be, get etc) thoroughly wet:- X was (got) sopping (soaking) wet.♦ В трёх верстах от станции *** стало накрапывать, и через минуту проливной дождь вымочил меня до последней нитки (Пушкин 3). Three versts from the posting-station at ***, a light drizzle began; a minute later it had changed to a driving rain and I was soaked to the skin (3b).2. обобрать кого, проиграть, пропить и т.п. до последней нитки coll (to rob, gamble away, spend on drinking etc) absolutely all the money one or s.o. has:- X fleeced Y (down to Y's last kopeck <penny etc>);|| X проиграл все до последней нитки ≈ X gambled away everything down to the last kopeck (penny etc);♦ Костю заметил Бейлис, главный бильярдист Москвы, ввел в лучшие бильярдные, где обыгрывались "фраера", денежные провинциалы, командировочные с казёнными деньгами. С ними Костя был беспощаден, заманивал первым лёгким выигрышем, а потом раздевал до нитки (Рыбаков 2). Не [Kostya] had been spotted by Beilis, the top billiards player in Moscow. Beilis took him to the best billiards halls, where they hustled freeloaders, moneyed provincials visiting Moscow on government funds. Kostya was merciless with them. He would con them by losing the first game and then fleece them down to their last kopeck (2a).♦ [extended usage] "Англия и Франция навязали Германии Версаль, репарации, раздели до нитки, отобрали колонии..." (Рыбаков 2). [context transl] "England and France bound Germany hand and foot at Versailles, the reparations stripped her bare, they took her colonies..." (2a).3. рассказать что, разобрать(ся) в ком-чём, помнить что и т.п. до последней нитки substand (to tell, analyze, remember etc sth.) completely, thoroughly, including the small details:- (down) to the minutest <the smallest, the tiniest, the last> detail;- in every detail.Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > до последней нитки
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18 gewissenhaft
Adj. conscientious; (zuverlässig) reliable; (gründlich) thorough; (übergenau) scrupulous; (sorgfältig) painstaking* * *faithful; exact; assiduous; precise; conscientious; religious; thorough; painstaking; scrupulous* * *ge|wịs|sen|haft1. adjMensch, Arbeit, Politik conscientious2. advconscientiously* * *1) (going to great trouble and taking great care: a painstaking student.) painstaking3) (careful and hard-working: a conscientious pupil.) conscientious4) ((of a person, his mind etc) capable of being accurate over small details: Accountants have to be very exact.) exact5) (thorough: a good clean.) good* * *ge·wis·sen·haftadj conscientious* * *1.Adjektiv conscientious2.adverbial conscientiously* * *gewissenhaft adj conscientious; (zuverlässig) reliable; (gründlich) thorough; (übergenau) scrupulous; (sorgfältig) painstaking* * *1.Adjektiv conscientious2.adverbial conscientiously* * *adj.conscientious adj.faithful adj.precise adj.religious adj.sedulous adj. adv.conscientiously adv. -
19 peinlich genau
meticulous; studious; punctilious* * *1) meticulously2) (very careful, almost too careful (about small details): He paid meticulous attention to detail.) meticulous* * *adj.meticulous adj.minute adj. adv.meticulously adv. -
20 ergoter
v. intrans. To 'quibble', to 'niggle', to argue over small details.
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