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1 Common Velvets
COMMON VELVETS, or SLIPSSee Velvets. ————————SLIPS, or COMMON VELVETSIn this type of velvet only every alternate float is cut. The cutting is done on the -" long-run " frames and generally in pairs: that is the cutter has a piece of the velvet cloth stretched on a frame on either side and cuts one while walking in one direction and cuts the other on the return. -
2 RÚN
f., pl. rúnar: [rún, raun, reyna are all kindred words, and a lost strong verb, rúna, raun, meaning to enquire, may be presumed; the original notion is scrutiny, mystery, secret conversation; Gotb. runa, by which Ulf. several times renders the Gr. μυστήριον and συμβούλιον (once, Matth. xxvii. 1), βουλή (twice, Luke vii. 30, 1 Cor. iv. 5); A. S. rún = a ‘rowning’ mystery, but also = writing, charter; Hel. rûna = colloquium, and geruni = loquela (Schmeller); cp. Old Engl. to rown, Germ. raunen; Gr. ἐ-ρευνάω is also supposed to be a kindred word (Bugge). In Scandin. writers and poets rún is chiefly used of magical characters, then of writing, whereas the derivative word raun means trial, enquiry, and rúni and rúna = a friend or counsellor.]B. A secret, hidden lore, mystery; frá jötna rúnum ok allra goða segðú it sannasta, Vþm. 42, 43; kenna rúnar, to teach wisdom, Rm. 33; dæma um rúnar ok regin-dóma, Hm. 112; minnask á fornar rúnar, Vsp. 59: saws, segja sannar rúnir, to tell true saws, Fas. ii. 302 (in a verse): a ‘rowning’ speech, vifs rúnir, a woman’s whispering, Bm.; heita e-n at rúnum, to consult one, Gh. 12, Skv. 3. 14, 43; hniga at rúnum, Gkv. 3. 4.II. a Rune or written character; the earliest Runes were not writing in proper sense, but fanciful signs possessing a magical power; such Runes have, through vulgar superstition, been handed down even to the present time, for a specimen of them see Ísl. Þjóðs. i.435, 436, and Arna-Magn. Nos. 687. 4 to, and 434. 12 mo (Ísl. Þjóðs.pref. ix); the classical passages for these spell-Runes are, Hm. 133 sqq., Sdm. 5 sqq., Skm. 29, 36, Eg. ch. 44, 61, 75, Yngl. S. ch. 7, Grett. ch. 85, N. G. L. iii. 286, 300, Vsp. 59; cp. also the phrase, rísta trénið, Grág., Fs. 56. The phrase in the old Danish Ballads, kaste runer, to throw Rúnes, i. e. chips (see hlaut, hlautviðr), may be compared to the Lat. sortes, Mommsen’s Hist, of Rome, vol. i. p. 187, foot-note (Engl. Ed.), or the Sibylline leaves in the Aeneid.2. Runes as writing;the word was first applied to the original Northern alphabet, which at an early time was derived from the common Phœnician, probably through Greek or Roman coins in the first centuries of our era. From these Runes were subsequently formed two alphabets, the old Scandinavian (whence again the Anglo-Saxon), as found on the Golden horn and the stone in Tune, and the later Scandinavian, in which the inscriptions in the greater number of the Swedish and Danish stone monuments are written, most being of the 10th (9th?) and following centuries.—A curious instance of the employment of Runes is their being written on a kefli (a round piece of wood) as messages (cp. the Gr. σκυτάλη), as is freq. recorded in the Sagas, e. g. Gísl. 45, 67, Fms. ix. 390, 490, Grett. 154 new Ed., Fb. i. 251 (of the deaf and dumb Oddny). It is doubtful whether poems were ever written in this way, for almost the only authority for such a statement is Eg. 605, where we read that the Sonatorrek was taken down on a Runic stick, the other instances being mostly from romances or fabulous Sagas, Grett. 144, Örvar Odds S.(fine). This writing on a kefli is mentioned in the Latin line, Barbara ‘fraxineis’ sculpatur runa ‘tabellis,’ Capella (5th century). In later times (from the 13th century) Runic writing was practised as a sort of curiosity; thus calendars used to be written on sticks, of which there is a specimen in the Bodl. Library in Oxford; they were also used for inscriptions on tombstones, spoons, chairs, and the like: there even exists in the Arna-Magn. Library a Runic MS. of an old Danish law, and there is a Runic letter in Sturl. (of the year 1241); Runes carved on an oar occur in Fs. 177: a hidden treasure in a chest is labelled with Runes, Fms. vi. 271, Sd. 146, cp. also the interesting record in Bs. i. 435 (sex manna bein vóru þar hjá honum ok vax ok rúnar þær er sögðu atburð lifláts þeirra).3. the word rún is also, though rarely, applied to the Latin alphabet; ef hann er á þingi þá skal hann rísta nafn hans ef hann kann rúnar, N. G. L. i. 171; or generally, ræki ek eigi hvárt þú rítr ø þitt eðr o, eða a, ę eða e, y eða u, en ek svara svá, eigi er þat rúnanna kostr þó at þú lesir vel eða ráðir vel at líkindum, þar sem rúnar visa óskírt, heldr er þat þinn kostr, Thorodd 162; þessi er upphaf allra hátta svá sem málrúnar eru fyrir öðrum minum, Edda (Ht.) 121.III. in pr. names, Rún-ólfr: as the latter part in pr. names of women, Guð-rún, Sig-rún, Öl-rún, Landn., Nj., Bs., Sturl., Sæm.COMPDS: rúnakefli, rúnamál, Rúnameistari, rúnastafr. -
3 обыкновенные люди
«маленькие люди» — the little
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > обыкновенные люди
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4 звичайні люди
the common run of men; ordinary (common, plain) people -
5 la Confederación
• the common run of men• the Confederacy• The Constitution State -
6 el pueblo
• the coast isn't clear• the common run of men -
7 la plebe
• the coast isn't clear• the common run of men -
8 commun
commun, e1 [kɔmœ̃, yn]1. adjectivea. ( = collectif, de tous) common ; ( = fait ensemble) [décision, effort, réunion] jointb. ( = partagé) [élément] common ; [pièce, cuisine] communalc. ( = comparable) [goût, intérêt, caractère] commond. ( = ordinaire) [erreur] common ; [opinion] commonly helde. (pejorative = vulgaire) common2. masculine noun* * *
1.
commune kɔmœ̃, yn adjectif1) ( venant de plusieurs personnes) [travail, œuvre] collaborative; [désir, accord, conception] common; [candidat, politique, projet] joint (épith)2) ( appartenant à plusieurs) [pièce, équipement, souvenirs] shared; [langue, passé] common; [biens] joint (épith)3) ( semblable) [intérêts, traits] common (à to); [ambition, objectifs] sharedles événements d'hier sont sans commune mesure avec les précédents — yesterday's events are on an altogether different scale from previous ones
4) ( courant) common5) ( ordinaire) pej [goût, personne] common péj; [visage] plainc'est/il est d'un commun! — it's/he's so common!
2.
nom masculin ordinary
3.
en commun locution adverbiale [écrire, produire] jointly, togethermettre ses moyens or ressources en commun — to pool one's resources
4.
* * *kɔmœ̃, yn commun, -e1. adj1) (problème, intérêts, passion) common, (amis) mutualNous avons des intérêts communs. — We have interests in common., We have common interests.
Je l'ai appris par des amis communs. — I heard it from mutual friends.
Ils ont beaucoup de points communs. — They have a lot in common.
c'est sans commune mesure avec... — there's no possible comparison with...
2) (pièce, services) communal, sharedSee:être commun à [pièce, services] — to be shared by
3) (réunion, effort, travail) jointIls ont décidé d'un commun accord d'abandonner le projet. — They decided by mutual agreement to drop the project.
4) (= courant) (fait, plante) common, commonplaceCe genre de problème est tout à fait commun. — This kind of problem is very common., This kind of problem is very commonplace.
5) péjoratif (manières, personne) commonSee:2. nm1)2)avoir en commun [intérêts] — to have in common
Ils n'ont rien en commun. — They've got nothing in common.
mettre en commun [biens, services] — to share, [ressources] to pool
Nous mettons tous nos livres en commun. — We share all our books.
3. communs nmpl(= bâtiments) outbuildings4. nfSee:* * *A adj1 ( venant de plusieurs personnes) [travail, œuvre] collaborative; [désir, volonté, accord, préoccupation, conception] common; [candidat, politique, projet, revendication, stratégie] joint ( épith); d'un commun accord by mutual agreement;2 ( appartenant à plusieurs) [cour, pièce, équipement, fonds, souvenirs, expérience] shared; [ami] mutual; [ancêtre, langue, passé, dénominateur, facteur] common; [biens] joint ( épith); nous avons des amis communs we have mutual friends, we have friends in common; pour le bien commun for the common good; dans l'intérêt commun in the common interest; la cuisine est commune aux locataires the kitchen is shared by the tenants; époux communs en biens Jur couple who have become joint owners of property through marriage; après dix ans de vie commune after living together for ten years;3 ( semblable) [caractéristiques, intérêts, traits] common (à to); [ambition, objectifs] shared; une politique commune aux deux partis a policy common to both parties; n'avoir plus rien de commun avec qch/qn no longer to have anything in common with sth/sb; les événements d'hier sont sans commune mesure avec les précédents yesterday's events are on an altogether different scale from previous ones;4 ( courant) [attitude, opinion, faute, maladie, espèce] common; il est commun de faire it's common to do; ce n'est pas un prénom très commun that's a rather unusual name; elle est d'une beauté peu commune she's uncommonly beautiful;5 ( ordinaire) pej [goût, personne] common péj; [visage] plain; c'est/il est d'un commun! it's/he's so common!B nm ordinary; sortir du commun to be out of the ordinary; les gens du commun ordinary people; le commun des mortels ordinary ou common mortals (pl); le commun des auditeurs/lecteurs the ordinary listener/reader; tomber dans le commun to become commonplace ou run-of-the-mill; hors du commun exceptional.C en commun loc adv [écrire, travailler, produire] jointly, together; prendre ses repas en commun to eat together; avoir qch en commun to have sth in common (avec qn with sb); mettre ses moyens or ressources en commun to pool one's resources; nous mettons tout en commun we share everything.E commune nf1 Admin ( village) village; ( ville) town, district; dans la commune de Melay in the village of Melay;2 Hist la Commune (de Paris) the (Paris) Commune.ⓘ Commune The smallest administrative unit, headed by a maire and a conseil municipal. Each village, town and city is a commune, of which there are 36,000 nationwide.( féminin commune) [kɔmœ̃, yn] adjectifle court de tennis est commun à tous les propriétaires the tennis court is the common property of all the residents[en communauté]la vie commune [conjugale] conjugal life, the life of a couplenous avons des problèmes communs we share the same problems, we have similar problemsil n'y a pas de commune mesure entre... there's no similarity whatsoever between...c'est sans commune mesure avec... there's no comparison with...il est d'un courage peu commun he's uncommonly ou exceptionally bravecommun nom masculinun homme hors du commun an exceptional ou unusual man————————communs nom masculin plurield'un commun accord locution adverbialetous d'un commun accord ont décidé que... they decided unanimously that...————————en commun locution adverbiale -
9 comune
1. adj commonamico mutual( ordinario) ordinary, commonin comune in commonnon comune unusual, uncommonfuori del comune out of the ordinary2. m municipalitypalazzo m del comune town hall* * *comune1 agg.1 common; ( reciproco) mutual: comune a tutti, common to everyone; lingua comune, common language; proprietà comune, common property; interesse comune, mutual interest; è nel nostro comune interesse che tu parta, it is in our mutual interest that you should leave; un amico comune, a mutual friend; opinione comune, common opinion; uso comune, common (o usual) practice; è uso comune farsi regali a Natale, exchanging gifts at Christmas is common (o usual practice); terreno comune, common land; (fig.) common ground; non avevano un terreno comune su cui fondare il loro dialogo, they had no common ground on which they could base their dialogue // senso comune, common sense // luogo comune, commonplace (o cliché o platitude): è un brano pieno di luoghi comuni, it is a passage full of commonplaces (o clichés o platitudes) // (econ.) Mercato comune Europeo, European Common Market // (banca) conto comune, joint account // (gramm.) nome comune, common noun // (mat.): denominatore comune, common denominator; massimo comune divisore, highest (o greatest) common divisor; minimo comune multiplo, lowest (o least) common multiple // far causa comune con qlcu., to join forces with s.o. // mal comune mezzo gaudio, (prov.) trouble shared is trouble halved2 poco comune, uncommon3 ( ordinario) common; ordinary: vino ( di tipo) comune, ordinary wine; articolo, merce comune, common (o ordinary) goods; gente comune, ordinary people; intelligenza comune, ordinary (o average) intelligence; mi sembra una persona piuttosto comune, I think he's rather ordinary◆ s.m.1 ( regola generale) common run: fuori del comune, out of the common run, ( insolito) unusual, uncommon, ( eccezionale) exceptional: un piatto fuori del comune, an unusual dish; una persona fuori del comune, an exceptional person // avere qlco. in comune con qlcu., to have sthg. in common with s.o.: non abbiamo niente in comune, we have nothing in common; queste due camere hanno il bagno in comune, these two bedrooms share the same bathroom // mettere qlco. in comune, to put sthg. together (o to pool sthg.), ( condividere) to share: mettiamo in comune tutto il denaro che abbiamo, let's put all our money together; mettiamo in comune le spese?, shall we share expenses? // la vita in comune può essere difficile, life together may prove to be difficult; far vita in comune, to spend most of one's time together (o to see a lot of each other): in crociera abbiamo fatto vita in comune, we spent most of our time together on the cruise2 (mar.) ordinary seaman◆ s.f. (teatr.) main stage door: andarsene, uscire dalla comune, to exit by main stage door; (fig.) to abandon the scene.comune2 s.m.1 (amm.) ( in Italia, Francia, Belgio) commune; ( negli altri Stati) municipality // Palazzo del comune, town (o spec. amer. city) hall; Ostia è comune di Roma, Ostia is in the municipal district of Rome; gli impiegati del comune, local government (o municipal) employees2 ( autorità municipali) municipality, town council: il Comune ha deciso di far costruire una nuova scuola, the town council decided to have a new school built3 (st.) commune; city-state: al tempo dei Comuni, at the time of the communes; l'età dei comuni, the age of the Italian city-states◆ s.f.1 (st.) the Commune2 ( in Cina) commune (anche estens.) // vivere in una comune femminile, to live in a women's commune.* * *I [ko'mune]1. aggè un problema molto comune — it's a very common o widespread problem
mal comune, mezzo gaudio — a trouble shared is a trouble halved
2) (ordinario) ordinary, (di livello medio) average2. sm1)avere qc in comune — to have sth in common, share sthavere il bagno in comune — to share a bathroom, have a communal bathroom
mettere le provviste in comune — to pool o share one's provisions
2)II [ko'mune] sm(Amm : sede) town hall, (autorità) town councildevi andare al comune per richiedere il certificato — you have to go to the town hall to get the certificate
la Camera dei Comuni; i Comuni Brit Pol — the House of Commons, the Commons
See:Cultural note: Comune The Comune is the smallest autonomous political and administrative unit. It keeps records of births, marriages and deaths and has the power to levy taxes and vet proposals for public works and town planning. It is run by a "Giunta comunale", which is elected by the "Consiglio Comunale". The Comune is headed by the "sindaco" (mayor) who since 1993 has been elected directly by the citizens. III [ko'mune] sf(comunità, anche) Storia commune* * *I 1. [ko'mune]1) (relativo a più persone) commondi comune accordo — by common o mutual consent
2) (corrente) [atteggiamento, opinione, errore, malattia] common; [espressione, parola] everydayluogo comune — fig. commonplace, cliché
3) (ordinario) [persona, vita] ordinaryla gente comune — common o ordinary people, the commonalty, the commons
4) ling.2.nome comune — appellative o common noun
sostantivo maschile1)fuori dal comune — uncommon, out of the way
2) in comune (condiviso) shared; (collettivamente) in common, communallyhanno molto in comune — they have lots o a great deal in common
II 1. [ko'mune]mettere in comune — to pool [informazioni, risorse, esperienze]
sostantivo maschile1) (paese, cittadina) village; (città) town, city2) amm. (organo amministrativo) township, municipality; (uffici, sede) town hall, city hall AEsposarsi in comune — to get married in the registry office o town hall
3) stor. Commune, city-state4) pol. (in Inghilterra)2.sostantivo femminile (comunità) commune* * *comune1/ko'mune/1 (relativo a più persone) common; il nostro comune amico our mutual friend; per il bene comune for the common good; di comune accordo by common o mutual consent; sforzo comune joint effort; mercato comune common market2 (corrente) [atteggiamento, opinione, errore, malattia] common; [espressione, parola] everyday; non è un nome molto comune that's a rather unusual name; luogo comune fig. commonplace, cliché; di uso comune in current use; di una bellezza non comune uncommonly beautiful3 (ordinario) [persona, vita] ordinary; l'uomo comune the man in the street; la gente comune common o ordinary people, the commonalty, the commons1 uscire dal comune to be out of the ordinary; fuori dal comune uncommon, out of the way2 in comune (condiviso) shared; (collettivamente) in common, communally; proprietà in comune communal ownership; dopo dieci anni di vita in comune after living together for ten years; hanno molto in comune they have lots o a great deal in common; mettere in comune to pool [informazioni, risorse, esperienze].————————comune2/ko'mune/I sostantivo m.2 amm. (organo amministrativo) township, municipality; (uffici, sede) town hall, city hall AE; sposarsi in comune to get married in the registry office o town hall3 stor. Commune, city-stateII sostantivo f.(comunità) commune. -
10 обыкновенные люди
1) General subject: the common people, the common run, the common run of men, the rank and file, the ranks, the run of mankind2) Diplomatic term: common people, rank and file -
11 необикновен
unusual, uncommon; out of the way; out of the common run; unaccustomed(странен) freakish(забележителен) outstanding, remarkable, exceptional, extraordinaryв това няма нищо необикновено there is nothing unusual/out of the way/out of the ordinary about itнеобикновено събитие a singular event/occurrenceнеобикновена чест a singular/distinct honour* * *необикновѐн,прил. unusual, uncommon; out of the way; out of the common (run); unaccustomed; ( странен) freakish, off-beat, kinky; ( забележителен) outstanding, remarkable, exceptional, extraordinary; в това няма нищо \необикновено there is nothing unusual/out of the way/out of the ordinary about it; \необикновена чест a singular/distinct honour; \необикновено събитие a singular event/occurrence.* * *different; exceptional; extraordinary: an необикновен situation - необикновена ситуация; extreme; novel{nOvl}; out of the way; phenomenal{fi`nOminxl}; portentous; rare{`rqx}: a необикновен bird - необикновена птица; remarkable: a необикновен event - необикновено събитие; strange; unaccustomed: There is nothing необикновен about it. - Няма нищо необикновено в това.; unwonted* * *1. (забележителен) outstanding, remarkable, exceptional, extraordinary 2. (странен) freakish 3. unusual, uncommon;out of the way;out of the common run;unaccustomed 4. НЕОБИКНОВЕНa чест a singular/distinct honour 5. НЕОБИКНОВЕНo събитие a singular event/occurrence 6. в това няма нищо НЕОБИКНОВЕНо there is nothing unusual/out of the way/out of the ordinary about it -
12 необичаен
unusual, uncommon, striking, outlandish, unaccustomed, uncustomary, unwonted, out of the ordinary, out of the common runаз бях излязъл рано сутринта-нещо съвсем необичайно за мене contrary to my normal habit I had gone out carly in the morning* * *необича̀ен,прил., -йна, -йно, -йни unusual, uncommon, funny, funny-peculiar; striking, outlandish, unaccustomed, uncustomary, unwonted, out of the ordinary, out of the common run; аз бях излязъл рано сутринта нещо съвсем \необичаенйно за мене contrary to my normal habit I had gone out early in the morning.* * *extraordinary: необичаен weather - необичайно време; outlandish; rare{rqx}; striking; unaccustomed; unusual{Xn`yu;juxl}: It's an необичаен thing for me to do. - Това е нещо необичайно за мен.; unwonted* * *1. unusual, uncommon, striking, outlandish, unaccustomed, uncustomary, unwonted, out of the ordinary, out of the common run 2. аз бях излязъл рано сутринта - нещо съвсем необичайно за мене contrary to my normal habit I had gone out carly in the morning -
13 из ряда вон выходящий
О самих же себе гении почти всегда лучше других понимали, что они - нечто из ряда вон выходящее и что к ним поэтому неприложимы все те требования, те нравственные измерения, с которыми обычно к человеку подходят. (С. Залыгин, Мой поэт) — Geniuses almost always understand better than other people that they are something quite out of the common run and that therefore the demands and moral measures with which we approach most men are, in their cases, inapplicable.
Русско-английский фразеологический словарь > из ряда вон выходящий
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14 fuera de lo común
• out of ordinary• out of the common• out of the common run• out of the ordinary• rare• unordinary -
15 ряд
м.1. row; lineряд за рядом, за рядом ряд — row upon row
2. театр. row3. воен. ( в строю) file, rank4. (некоторое количество чего-л.) series sg. и pl.; a numberцелый ряд — a series, a number
5. (лавки, магазины) row of stalls♢
в рядах армии — in the ranks of the armyв первых рядах — in the first ranks, in the front line
из ряда вон выходящий — outstanding, extraordinary, unusual, out of the common (run)
стоять в ряду (рд.), стоять в одном ряду (с тв.) — rank (with)
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16 ряд
м.1) ( расположение в линию) row [rəʊ]; lineряд за рядом, за рядом ряд — row upon row
ряд автомаши́н — line of vehicles ['viːɪ-]
2) театр, кино rowпе́рвый ряд — front row
после́дний ряд — back row
3) воен. ( в строю) file, rankнепо́лный ряд — blind file
ряды́ вздвой! (команда) — form fours!
4) (рд.; некоторое число) a number (of)це́лый ряд — a whole number (of), quite a few
мо́жно привести́ це́лый ряд приме́ров — one can cite a whole number of examples
в це́лом ряде слу́чаев — in quite a number of [quite a few] cases
5) ( торговый) row of stallsры́бный ряд — row of fish stalls
6) ( в вязании) row7) мат. series••в ряда́х а́рмии — in the ranks of the army
в пе́рвых ряда́х — in the first ranks, in the front line
из ряда вон выходя́щий — outstanding, extraordinary [ɪk'strɔːdnrɪ], unusual [-ʒu-], out of the common (run)
стоя́ть в ряду́ (рд.), стоя́ть в одно́м ряду́ (с тв.) — rank (with)
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17 из ряда вон выходящий
[iz r'ada von vykilod'ashchy] Going out of the line. Outstanding, exceptional, out of the ordinary. Cf. Out of the common run.
Русские фразеологизмы в картинках (русско-английский словарь) > из ряда вон выходящий
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18 вон
1.1. нареч. ( прочь) outвыйти вон — go* out
выгнать вон (вн.) — drive* out (d.), turn out (d.)
2. как межд.:вон! — get / go away!
вон отсюда!, пошёл вон! — get out (of here)!, clear out!
♢
из рук вон плохо — thoroughly badсделать что-л. из рук вон плохо — bungle a job, make* a hash of smth.
из ряда вон выходящий — outstanding, extraordinary, unusual, out of the common (run)
2. частица (там)это у меня (совсем) из ума вон разг. — it quite escaped me, I had clean forgotten it
there, over thereвон он идёт — there he is / goes
♢
вон он какой! — so that's the sort of fellow he is, is it?вон оно что! разг. — so that's it!
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19 вон
I1) нареч. ( прочь) outвы́йти вон — go out
вы́гнать вон (вн.) — drive (d) out, turn (d) out
2) как межд.вон! — get / go away!
вон отсю́да!, пошёл вон! — get out (of here)!, clear out!
вон его́! — out with him!
••из рук вон пло́хо — thoroughly bad; as bad as ever
сде́лать что-л из рук вон пло́хо — bungle [botch up] a job, make a hash of smth
из ря́да вон выходя́щий — outstanding, extraordinary, unusual, out of the common (run)
э́то у меня́ (совсе́м) из ума́ вон разг. — it quite escaped me, I had clean forgotten it
II частица разг.с глаз доло́й - из се́рдца вон погов. — out of sight, out of mind
1) ( там) there, over thereвон он идёт — there he is / goes
2) ( вот) that's (+ who, what, how, etc)вон он како́й! — so that's the sort of fellow he is!
вон оно́ что! — so that's how it is!
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20 не такая, как все девушки
Makarov: not like the common run of girlsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > не такая, как все девушки
См. также в других словарях:
The common run — Run Run, n. 1. The act of running; as, a long run; a good run; a quick run; to go on the run. [1913 Webster] 2. A small stream; a brook; a creek. [1913 Webster] 3. That which runs or flows in the course of a certain operation, or during a certain … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
out of the common run — index eccentric, prodigious (amazing) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
(the) common, general, ordinary, usual run (of something) — the common, general, ordinary, usual run (of sth) idiom the average type of sth • He was very different from the general run of movie stars. Main entry: ↑runidiom … Useful english dictionary
At the long run — Run Run, n. 1. The act of running; as, a long run; a good run; a quick run; to go on the run. [1913 Webster] 2. A small stream; a brook; a creek. [1913 Webster] 3. That which runs or flows in the course of a certain operation, or during a certain … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
In the long run — Run Run, n. 1. The act of running; as, a long run; a good run; a quick run; to go on the run. [1913 Webster] 2. A small stream; a brook; a creek. [1913 Webster] 3. That which runs or flows in the course of a certain operation, or during a certain … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
The Common clay — Cleves Kinkead s manipulative tearjerker, produced by A. H. Woods, managed to run for 316 performances at the Republic Theatre, where it opened on 26 August 1915, after a run of 22 weeks in Boston. Jane Cowl played the housemaid, Ellen, who is … The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater
Run — Run, n. 1. The act of running; as, a long run; a good run; a quick run; to go on the run. [1913 Webster] 2. A small stream; a brook; a creek. [1913 Webster] 3. That which runs or flows in the course of a certain operation, or during a certain… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
The run — Run Run, n. 1. The act of running; as, a long run; a good run; a quick run; to go on the run. [1913 Webster] 2. A small stream; a brook; a creek. [1913 Webster] 3. That which runs or flows in the course of a certain operation, or during a certain … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
The run of the mill — Run Run, n. 1. The act of running; as, a long run; a good run; a quick run; to go on the run. [1913 Webster] 2. A small stream; a brook; a creek. [1913 Webster] 3. That which runs or flows in the course of a certain operation, or during a certain … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Democracy and the Common Wealth — Democracy and the Common Wealth: Breaking the Stranglehold of the Special Interests Author(s) Michael E. Arth … Wikipedia
In the long run — Long Long, a. [Compar. {Longer}; superl. {Longest}.] [AS. long, lang; akin to OS, OFries., D., & G. lang, Icel. langr, Sw. l[*a]ng, Dan. lang, Goth. laggs, L. longus. [root]125. Cf. {Length}, {Ling} a fish, {Linger}, {Lunge}, {Purloin}.] 1. Drawn … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English