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1 remedy
A n Med, fig remède m (for à, contre) ; Jur recours m ; to be beyond (all) remedy être irrémédiable or sans remède.desperate diseases require desperate remedies aux grands maux les grands remèdes. -
2 remedy
I ['remədɪ]II ['remədɪ]beyond (all) remedy — irrimediabile, senza rimedio
verbo transitivo rimediare a* * *['remədi] 1. plural - remedies; noun(a cure for an illness or something bad: I know a good remedy for toothache.) rimedio2. verb(to put right: These mistakes can be remedied.) rimediare a- remedial* * *I ['remədɪ]II ['remədɪ]beyond (all) remedy — irrimediabile, senza rimedio
verbo transitivo rimediare a -
3 ♦ all
♦ all /ɔ:l/A a.1 tutto, tutta; tutti, tutte: all day, tutto il giorno; all the year round, (per) tutto l'anno; This is all the food we have, questo è tutto il cibo che abbiamo; in all honesty, in tutta onestà; with all my heart, con tutto il cuore; all my things, tutte le mie cose; all those books, tutti quei libri; all the others, tutti gli altri; all five candidates, tutti e cinque i candidati; DIALOGO → - In a sandwich bar- That's £2.80 all together please, sono £2,80 in tutto, pregoB pron.1 tutto: All was quiet in the house, in casa tutto taceva; That's all I want, è tutto ciò che voglio; All is not lost, non tutto è perduto; You're all I have left, tu sei tutto quel che mi rimane; She has it all, ha tutto quello che si può desiderare; He jumped into the river, clothes and all, si è gettato nel fiume, vestiti e tutto; eleven in all, undici in tutto2 tutti, tutte: They all told me the same thing, mi hanno detto tutti la stessa cosa; as you all (o all of you) know, come voi tutti (o tutti voi) sapete; We are all very glad, siamo tutti molto contenti; with us all (o with all of us) con noi tutti; con tutti noiC avv.1 del tutto; completamente; tutto, tutta, ecc.: all alone, tutto solo; tutto da solo; all worn out, completamente sfinito; She was dressed all in white, era vestita tutta di bianco; He's done it all by himself, l'ha fatto tutto da soloD n.– one's all, il massimo ( che uno può fare); di tutto: to do one's all, fare di tutto; fare l'impossibile; to give (o to put) one's all, impegnarsi al massimo; mettercela tutta● all and sundry, tutti; cani e porci (spreg.) □ all along, fin dal principio; fin dall'inizio, sempre: I knew it all along, lo sapevo fin dal principio; l'ho sempre saputo; He's been planning it all along, ha cominciato a progettarlo (o lo stava progettando) fin dall'inizio □ all-American, americano al cento per cento (o fino al midollo); tipicamente americano; americanissimo; ( anche) composto di soli americani; ( sport, di atleta universitario) che si è classificato come il miglior dilettante a livello nazionale □ ( USA) all around = all round ► sotto □ all at once, tutto a un tratto; di colpo: The vision disappeared all at once, la visione è sparita tutto a un tratto □ all but (+ agg.), quasi; pressoché; quasi del tutto: all but impossible, pressoché impossibile; The fog has all but lifted, la nebbia si è quasi del tutto diradata □ all one can do not to, molto difficile non (fare qc.): It was all I could do not to answer back, è stato molto difficile (o ho fatto fatica a) non ribattere □ all-clear ( sign), (segnale di) cessato allarme; (fig.) via libera, permesso di cominciare □ all-comers, tutti (quelli che vengono); chiunque venga; tutti i partecipanti; chiunque voglia partecipare: open to all-comers, aperto a tutti □ ( sport) all-comers record, miglior prestazione registrata su un territorio nazionale, o regionale, ecc. □ all-consuming, divorante; smodato □ all-day, che dura un giorno intero; che dura tutto il giorno □ all-embracing, onnicomprensivo; globale □ all-English, esclusivamente inglese; tutto d'inglesi □ to be all ears, essere tutto orecchie □ to be all eyes, essere tutt'occhi □ (fam. USA) all-fired, a. e avv., terribile; indiavolato; moltissimo: all-fired hurry, fretta indiavolata; all-fired mad, furibondo □ All Fool's Day, il primo d'aprile (giorno del «pesce d'aprile») □ (fam.) all for, decisamente a favore di; d'accordissimo con □ all get out = as all get out ► sotto □ (relig.) All Hallows, All-Hallowmass, Ognissanti □ all-important, di somma importanza; cruciale □ (fam.) all in, a. pred., stanco morto; sfinito; a pezzi □ all in, avv., all-in, a., tutto incluso; tutto compreso; complessivo: £350 all in, 350 sterline tutto compreso; all-in price, prezzo tutto compreso □ all in all, tutto sommato; tutto considerato; nel complesso □ all-in-one, tutto in uno; in un unico pezzo □ ( sport) all-in wrestling, lotta libera □ all-inclusive, comprensivo di tutto; tutto compreso: all-inclusive tour, «inclusive tour»; viaggio tutto compreso □ all-knowing, onnisciente □ all-male, per (o di) soli uomini □ all-night, che dura tutta la notte; aperto (o che funziona) tutta la notte □ ( USA) all-nighter, attività ( festa, ecc.) che dura tutta la notte; nottata ( di lavoro, studio, ecc.), tirata notturna; locale che resta aperto tutta la notte; uno che fa le ore piccole, nottambulo: to pull an all-nighter, lavorare (o studiare) tutta la notte; fare una tirata notturna □ all of, non meno di; almeno; come minimo: It'll cost you all of $80, ti costerà come minimo 80 dollari □ all of a sudden, tutt'a un tratto; improvvisamente □ all one, lo stesso; tutt'uno: It's all one to me, per me fa lo stesso (o è tutt'uno) □ all or nothing, senza via di mezzo: It's all or nothing!, o la va o la spacca!; an all-or-nothing attempt, un tentativo in cui ci si gioca tutto □ all out, avv. a tutta forza; mettendocela tutta; a più non posso; a oltranza; ( anche) completamente: to go all out for st. (o to do st.) mettercela tutta per ottenere qc. □ (fam.) all-out, a. totale; incondizionato; a oltranza; a fondo; energico; accanito: all-out attack, attacco a fondo; attacco in piena regola; all-out defence, difesa a oltranza; all-out effort, sforzo massimo; all-out support, appoggio incondizionato; all-out strike, sciopero a oltranza □ all over, dappertutto; dovunque; completamente; da cima a fondo: We looked all over for it, l'abbiamo cercato dappertutto; It's green all over, è tutto verde; all over the floor, su tutto il pavimento; all over France, dovunque in Francia; in tutta la Francia; The news was all over the town in no time, in men che non si dica la notizia fece il giro della città; all over the place (o, fam., the map, the shop), (sparso) dappertutto; in disordine; scompigliato; sconclusionato; caotico; (fam.) That's him all over!, è proprio da lui!; come lo riconosco! □ (fam.) to be all over sb., fare un sacco di feste a q.; soffocare di abbracci, ecc.; ( anche) sbaciucchiare; ( anche, sport) dominare, imporsi su □ (fam.) It's all over with him., per lui è finita; è spacciato □ all-over, su tutta la superficie; completo, integrale: an all-over pattern, un motivo che copre tutta la superficie; an all-over tan, un'abbronzatura integrale □ (polit.) all-party, di tutti i partiti; paritetico: all-party support, appoggio di tutti i partiti; all-party talks, trattative a cui partecipano tutti i partiti; all-party committee, commissione paritetica □ all-pervading, generale; generalizzato □ ( polizia, USA) all-points bulletin (abbr. APB) avviso a tutte le unità; allarme generale □ all-powerful, onnipotente; onnipossente □ all-purpose, multiuso; polivalente; per uso generale; comune: an all-purpose tool, un attrezzo multiuso; all-purpose flour, farina comune; all-purpose remedy, un rimedio generale □ all right, all-right ► all right, all-right □ (ass.) all-risk policy, polizza comprensiva di tutti i rischi □ all round, complessivamente □ all-round, eclettico; versatile; completo; polivalente; ( anche) generale, globale, a tutto campo: an all-round artist, un artista versatile; an all-round athlete, un atleta completo; all-round competence, competenza in ogni campo; all-round price, prezzo tutto incluso; prezzo globale □ all-rounder, persona eclettica, versatile; ( sport) atleta completo □ (relig.) All Saints' Day, Ognissanti □ (GB) all-seater, ( di stadio, ecc.) con solo posti a sedere □ all-seeing, onniveggente □ (fam. GB) all-singing all-dancing, multifunzionale; ( anche) spettacolare □ (relig.) All Souls' Day, il Giorno dei morti □ all-star, (cinem., TV, teatr.) composto di attori famosi; ( sport) composto di campioni: an all star cast, un cast di attori famosi □ all-terrain bicycle, mountain bike □ (trasp.) all-terrain vehicle, fuoristrada □ all the (+ compar.), tanto più; ancor più: The task is all the more difficult because…, il compito è reso ancor più difficile dal fatto che…; all the better [worse], tanto meglio [peggio]; All the more reason for coming, ragion di più per venire; all the more so because, tanto più che □ all the same, ugualmente; lo stesso; ciononostante; tuttavia; comunque: He was punished all the same, è stato punito lo stesso; All the same, you shouldn't have answered back, comunque tu non avresti dovuto replicare a quel modo □ It's all the same to me, per me è uguale (o non fa differenza) □ all the way, fino in fondo; senza riserve: I'm with you all the way, sono con te fino in fondo; to go all the way, andare fino in fondo (fig.); ( slang USA) avere rapporti sessuali completi □ all-time, di tutti i tempi; storico; massimo; assoluto: all-time high, livello massimo mai raggiunto; massimo storico; all-time record, primato assoluto; my all-time favourite singer, il mio cantante preferito in assoluto □ all told, in tutto: There were twenty, all told, ce n'erano venti in tutto □ all too, fin troppo: all too obvious, fin troppo evidente □ (aeron.) all-traffic service, servizio promiscuo □ (aeron.) all-up weight, peso lordo ( di aereo) □ (fam.) Is' all up with him, è finita per lui; non c'è più speranza per lui, è spacciato □ It's all very well, but…, d'accordo, ma…; va benissimo, ma… □ ( radio) all-wave receiver, ricevitore multibanda □ all-weather, per tutte le stagioni; (tecn.) ognitempo: (aeron.) all-weather aircraft, aereo ognitempo □ (autom., USA) all-wheel drive, trazione integrale □ ( slang USA) all wet, sbagliato; fuori strada; sballato □ all-year, che si trova (o che si può fare) tutto l'anno □ above all, soprattutto; prima di ogni altra cosa □ after all, dopo tutto; alla fin fine; in conclusione □ (fam. USA) as all get out, moltissimo; da morire; da pazzi: as furious as all get out, infuriato nero; imbufalito □ at all, (in frase neg.) affatto, assolutamente; (in frase condiz. o interr.) qualche, per caso: He is not at all clever, non è affatto intelligente; I don't agree with you at all, non sono affatto d'accordo con te; for no reason at all, senza alcun motivo; del tutto inspiegabilmente; in no time at all, immediatamente; in men che non si dica; If you have any doubts at all…, se ti venisse qualche dubbio…; If he had any sense at all…, se avesse un po' di buon senso…; Is it at all possible to…?, è per caso possibile…? □ for all, nonostante; a dispetto di; pur con: for all my efforts, a dispetto di tutti i miei sforzi; for all that, nonostante tutto □ for all I care, per quel che m'importa □ for all I know, per quel che so io; a quanto ne so io □ not all that, non così (come si potrebbe credere); non (poi) tanto: It's not all that easy, non è così facile; I am not all that old, non sono poi tanto vecchio □ (fam.) not all there, non tutto giusto; che ha qualche rotella fuor di posto; che non ci sta tutto con la testa □ of all people, of all things ► people, thing □ on all fours, a quattro zampe; carponi; gattoni □ when all is said and done, in fin dei conti; alla fin fine; tutto considerato □ (prov.) All's well than ends well, tutto è bene quel che finisce bene.NOTA D'USO: - all but- -
4 remedy
'remədi 1. plural - remedies; noun(a cure for an illness or something bad: I know a good remedy for toothache.)2. verb(to put right: These mistakes can be remedied.) rette/bøte på, gjøre godt igjen- remedialhjelpemiddel--------kur--------legemiddel--------oppreisningIsubst. \/ˈremɪdɪ\/1) ( medisin) legemiddel, legeråd, behandling2) (bote)middel, (hjelpe)råd3) ( jus) rettslig tvangsmiddel, rettsmiddel, kompensasjon4) ( myntpressing) tillatt avvik, toleransebe beyond\/past remedy være hinsides all hjelpfind a remedy for finne et botemiddel for\/motin remedy of som hjelp motjudicial remedy ( jus) rettsmiddelthere is no remedy but... det finnes ingen annen løsning enn...IIverb \/ˈremɪdɪ\/1) bøte på, hjelpe på, råde bot på, (av)hjelpe, rette på2) kurere, helbrede -
5 remedy
ˈremɪdɪ
1. сущ.
1) а) средство от болезни, медикамент, лекарство( от - for) to prescribe a remedy ≈ выписать лекарство to resort to a remedy ≈ прибегать к лекарству sure remedy, reliable remedy, certain remedy ≈ верное, испытанное средство cold remedy ≈ лекарство от простуды cough remedy ≈ лекарство от кашля effective remedy ≈ эффективное средство efficacious remedy ≈ эффективное средство folk remedy ≈ народное средство homeopathic remedy ≈ гомеопатическое средство Syn: drug, medicine б) применение лекарства;
лечение, уход Syn: application, treatment
2) средство, мера (против чего-л.) to apply remedies ≈ принять меры, использовать средства extraordinary remedy ≈ необычные средства
3) юр. средство судебной защиты, средство защиты права equitable remedy ≈ средство судебной защиты по праву справедливости to exhaust all legal remedies ≈ исчерпать все судебные средства to pursue a legal remedy ≈ добиваться судебной защиты
2. гл.
1) исправлять (положение, вещь) remedy the defects ≈ исправить дефекты Syn: put right, rectify
2) редк. вылечивать, излечивать, исцелять Syn: heal, cure I
2.
3) возмещать to remedy the deficiency ≈ возместить дефицит Syn: make good лекарство;
лечебное средство - household * домашнее средство - * against poison противоядие - a good * for a cold хорошее средство от простуды средство, мера (против чего-л.) - your only * is to go to law единственный выход для вас - обратиться в суд - * for pollution средство борьбы с загрязнением (окружающей среды) - it is beyond /past/ * тут уж ничем не поможешь, этого уже не исправишь (юридическое) средство судебной защиты, средство защиты права (тж. legal * вылечивать исправлять - to * an evil исправить зло - that cannot be remedied этого уже не исправишь judicial ~ средство судебной защиты legal ~ средство правовой защиты legal ~ средство судебной защиты по общему праву prejudgment ~ судебная защита до рассмотрения дела provisional ~ предварительное средство судебной защиты (в порядке обеспечения иска) remedy возмещение ~ восстанавливать ~ редк. вылечивать ~ вылечивать ~ исправлять ~ исправлять ~ предоставлять средство правовой защиты ~ сглаживать ~ средство, мера (против чего-л.) ~ средство от болезни, лекарство ~ средство правовой защиты ~ юр. средство судебной защиты, средство защиты права ~ средство судебной защиты, средство защиты права ~ средство судебной защиты ~ at law средство правовой защиты ~ for loss возмещение убытков -
6 repair
1. transitive verb2) (remedy) wieder gutmachen [Schaden, Fehler]; beheben [Schaden, Mangel]2. noun1) (restoring, renovation) Reparatur, diebe beyond repair — sich nicht mehr reparieren lassen
be in good/bad repair — in gutem/schlechtem Zustand sein
* * *[ri'peə] 1. verb1) (to mend; to make (something) that is damaged or has broken down work again; to restore to good condition: to repair a broken lock / torn jacket.) reparieren2) (to put right or make up for: Nothing can repair the harm done by your foolish remarks.) wiedergutmachen2. noun1) ((often in plural) the act of repairing something damaged or broken down: I put my car into the garage for repairs; The bridge is under repair.) die Reparatur2) (a condition or state: The road is in bad repair; The house is in a good state of repair.) der Zustand•- academic.ru/61524/repairable">repairable- reparable
- reparation
- repairman* * *re·pair[rɪˈpeəʳ, AM -ˈper]I. vt1. (restore)▪ to \repair sth etw reparierento \repair a road eine Straße ausbessernto \repair a puncture eine Reifenpanne behebento \repair the ravages wrought by war die Kriegsschäden beseitigen2. (put right)▪ to \repair sth etw [wieder] in Ordnung bringento \repair the damage den Schaden wiedergutmachento \repair a friendship eine Freundschaft kitten famII. n▪ \repairs pl Reparaturarbeiten pl, Instandsetzungsarbeiten pl form (to an + dat); (specific improvement) Reparaturstelle, ausgebesserte Stelle fmy car is in the garage for \repairs mein Auto ist zur Reparatur in der Werkstattthe motorway will be under \repair until January an der Autobahn werden bis Januar Ausbesserungsarbeiten durchgeführtin need of \repair reparaturbedürftig\repair service Reparaturdienst mto make \repairs to sth etw ausbessernbeyond \repair irreparabelto be in good/bad \repair in gutem/schlechtem Zustand seinstate of \repair of building baulicher Zustandto be in an excellent/a terrible state of \repair in einem ausgezeichneten/schlimmen Zustand seinto keep sth in [very] good \repair etw [sehr gut] instand halten* * *I [rɪ'pɛə(r)] reparieren; tyre also, clothes flicken; roof, wall also, road ausbessern; (fig) error, wrong, damage wiedergutmachen; image, relations wiederherstellen2. n1) (lit) Reparatur f; (of tyre also, clothes) Flicken nt; (of roof, wall also, road) Ausbesserung f; (fig of relationship) Kitten ntto be under repair (car, ship, machine) — in Reparatur sein
the road is under repair — an der Straße wird gerade gearbeitet
beyond repair — nicht mehr zu reparieren/zu flicken/auszubessern
damaged beyond repair — irreparabel, nicht mehr zu reparieren
"road repairs" — "Straßenbauarbeiten"
"repairs while you wait" — "Sofortdienst", "Sofortreparaturen"
2) no plII(= condition)
to be in good/bad repair — in gutem/schlechtem Zustand seinvi(liter: go) sich begeben (to nach)* * *repair1 [rıˈpeə(r)]A v/t1. reparieren, (wieder) instand setzen, einen Schaden beseitigen2. ausbessern3. jemandes Gesundheit etc wiederherstellen4. ein Unrecht etc wiedergutmachen5. einen Verlust ersetzen, Schadenersatz leisten fürB s1. Reparatur f, Instandsetzung f:beyond repair nicht mehr zu reparieren, irreparabel;be under repair in Reparatur sein, repariert werden;repair bill Reparaturrechnung f;2. pl Instandsetzungsarbeiten pl, Reparaturen pl:I do all the repairs on my car ich repariere an meinem Wagen alles selbst3. Ausbesserung f4. Wiederherstellung fin good repair in gutem Zustand;a) betriebsunfähig,b) baufälligrepair2 [rıˈpeə(r)]A v/i1. (to)b) sich wenden (an akk)2. oft oder in großer Zahl gehenB s1. Zufluchtsort m, (beliebter) Aufenthaltsort2. Treffpunkt m* * *1. transitive verb1) (restore, mend) reparieren; ausbessern [Kleidung, Straße]2) (remedy) wieder gutmachen [Schaden, Fehler]; beheben [Schaden, Mangel]2. noun1) (restoring, renovation) Reparatur, die2) no pl., no art. (condition)be in good/bad repair — in gutem/schlechtem Zustand sein
* * *n.Ausbesserung f.Reparatur f. v.ausbessern v.instandsetzen v.nachbessern v.reparieren v. -
7 help
1. transitive verb1)help oneself — sich (Dat.) selbst helfen
can I help you? — was kann ich für Sie tun?; (in shop also) was möchten Sie bitte?
2) (serve)help oneself — sich (Dat.) nehmen; sich bedienen
help oneself to something — sich (Dat.) etwas nehmen; (coll.): (steal) etwas mitgehen lassen (ugs.)
3) (avoid)if I/you can help it — wenn es irgend zu vermeiden ist
not if I can help it — nicht wenn ich es verhindern kann
I can't help it — (remedy) ich kann nichts dafür (ugs.)
4) (refrain from)I can't help thinking or can't help but think that... — ich kann mir nicht helfen, ich glaube,...
2. nounI can't help laughing — ich muss einfach lachen
Hilfe, diebe of [some]/no/much help to somebody — jemandem eine gewisse/keine/eine große Hilfe sein
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/34412/help_out">help out* * *[help] 1. verb1) (to do something with or for someone that he cannot do alone, or that he will find useful: Will you help me with this translation?; Will you please help me (to) translate this poem?; Can I help?; He fell down and I helped him up.) helfen2) (to play a part in something; to improve or advance: Bright posters will help to attract the public to the exhibition; Good exam results will help his chances of a job.) beitragen zu3) (to make less bad: An aspirin will help your headache.) lindern5) ((with can(not), could( not)) to be able not to do something or to prevent something: He looked so funny that I couldn't help laughing; Can I help it if it rains?) verhindern2. noun1) (the act of helping, or the result of this: Can you give me some help?; Your digging the garden was a big help; Can I be of help to you?) die Hilfe2) (someone or something that is useful: You're a great help to me.) die Hilfe3) (a servant, farmworker etc: She has hired a new help.) die (Aus-)Hilfe4) ((usually with no) a way of preventing something: Even if you don't want to do it, the decision has been made - there's no help for it now.) die Abhilfe•- helper- helpful
- helpfully
- helpfulness
- helping
- helpless
- helplessly
- helplessness
- help oneself
- help out* * *[help]I. ndo you need any \help with those boxes? soll ich dir mit diesen Kisten helfen?can I be of \help to you? kann ich Ihnen irgendwie helfen?the victims were beyond \help den Opfern war nicht mehr zu helfenthis guy is beyond \help! dem Typ ist nicht mehr zu helfen!there's no \help for it, I'll have to call the police ich werde wohl doch die Polizei rufen müssento give \help to sb jdm helfento run [or go running] for \help Hilfe suchen▪ to be of \help to sb für jdn eine Stütze [o Hilfe] sein▪ to be a \help helfento be a big \help with sth bei etw dat eine große Hilfe sein▪ the \help + sing/pl vb das Personalto be short of \help wenig Personal habenII. interj▪ \help! Hilfe!III. viis there any way that I can \help? kann ich irgendwie behilflich sein?IV. vt1. (assist)▪ to \help sb jdm helfen [o beistehen]\help me! Hilfe![how] can I \help you? was kann ich für Sie tun?; (in shop) kann ich Ihnen behilflich sein?nothing can \help her now ihr ist nicht mehr zu helfenI wonder if you could \help me vielleicht könnten Sie mir weiterhelfenso \help me God so wahr mir Gott helfeto \help sb down the stairs/into a taxi jdm die Treppe hinunterhelfen/in ein Taxi helfento \help sb through their depression/a difficult time jdm über eine Depression/eine schwierige Zeit hinweghelfen▪ to \help sb/sth [to] do sth jdm/etw dabei helfen, etw zu tuncould you \help me with my coat? würden Sie mir in den Mantel helfen?2. (improve)a little make-up would \help your appearance a lot mit ein bisschen Make-up würdest du viel besser aussehen3. (contribute)the drought has \helped to make this a disastrous year for Somalia die Dürre war auch ein Grund dafür, dass dies ein katastrophales Jahr für Somalia wurde4. (prevent)I can't \help it [or myself] ich kann nicht andersstop giggling! — I can't \help it! hör auf zu kichern! — ich kann nichts dagegen machen!he can't \help his looks er kann nichts für sein AussehenI can't \help thinking that... ich denke einfach, dass...she couldn't \help wondering whether... sie musste sich wirklich fragen, ob...I couldn't \help staring at the strange man ich musste den seltsamen Mann einfach anstarrennot if I can \help it nicht wenn ich es irgendwie verhindern kann5. (take)please \help yourself bitte bedienen Sie sichhe \helped himself from the sweets tray er nahm sich etwas aus der Bonbonschale7.* * *[help]1. n no plHilfe f; (= person with pl) Hilfe fhis help with the project —
we need all the help we can get — wir brauchen jede nur mögliche Hilfe
to ask sb for help — jdn um Hilfe bitten
to be of help to sb — jdm helfen; (person also) jdm behilflich sein; (thing also) jdm nützen
there's no help for it — da ist nichts zu machen
2. vt1) helfen (+dat)to help sb (to) do sth — jdm (dabei) helfen, etw zu tun
to help sb with the cooking/his bags — jdm beim Kochen/mit seinen Taschen helfen
help! — Hilfe!, zu Hilfe!
this will help the pain/your headache — das wird gegen die Schmerzen/gegen Ihr Kopfweh helfen
it will help the crops to grow — es wird das Wachstum des Getreides fördern
God helps those who help themselves (Prov) — hilf dir selbst, so hilft dir Gott
a man is helping the police with their inquiries (form euph) — ein Mann wird zurzeit von der Polizei vernommen
2)take some water to help the pill down — trinken Sie etwas Wasser, damit die Tablette besser rutscht
to help sb on/off with his/her etc coat —
he helped her out of the car — er half ihr aus dem Auto
to help sb through a difficult time (belief, hope, pills etc) — jdm in einer schwierigen Zeit durchhelfen; (person also) jdm in einer schwierigen Zeit beistehen
to help sb up (from floor, chair etc) — jdm aufhelfen or (up stairs etc) hinaufhelfen
I helped him in with his cases — ich half ihm mit seinem Gepäck
3)she helped him to potatoes/meat — sie gab ihm Kartoffeln/Fleisch
to help oneself to sth — sich (dat) etw nehmen; ( inf
help yourself! —
4)he can't help it, he's only a baby — er kann nichts dafür, er ist doch noch ein BabyI can't help being clever — (ich kann nichts dafür,) ich bin nun mal ein Genie or so schlau (inf)
don't say more than you can help — sagen Sie nicht mehr als unbedingt nötig
not if I can help it — nicht, wenn es nach mir geht
I couldn't help laughing — ich konnte mir nicht helfen, ich musste (einfach) lachen
I had to do it, I couldn't help it or myself — ich konnte mir nicht helfen, ich musste es einfach tun
I couldn't help thinking or but think... — ich konnte nicht umhin zu denken...
one cannot help wondering whether... — man muss sich wirklich fragen, ob...
it can't be helped — das lässt sich nicht ändern, das ist nun mal so
I can't help it if he's always late — ich kann nichts dafür, dass er immer zu spät kommt
3. vihelfenit helps (to) fight pollution — es trägt zur Bekämpfung der Umweltverschmutzung bei
* * *help [help]A s1. (Mit)Hilfe f, Beistand m, Unterstützung f:help! Hilfe!;he came to my help er kam mir zu Hilfe;it (she) is a great help es (sie) ist eine große Hilfe;not be (of) much help to sb jemandem keine große Hilfe sein;can I be of any help to you? kann ich Ihnen (irgendwie) helfen oder behilflich sein?2. Abhilfe f:there’s no help for it da kann man nichts machen, es lässt sich nicht ändernb) koll (Dienst)Personal n4. Hilfsmittel nB v/thelp sb (to) do sth jemandem helfen, etwas zu tun;help me think denk doch (mal) mit!;we help you look for accommodation wir sind Ihnen bei der Suche nach Unterkunft behilflich;help sb into their coat jemandem in den Mantel helfen;can I help you?a) werden Sie schon bedient?,b) kann ich Ihnen helfen oder behilflich sein?;help sb out of a difficulty jemandem aus einer Schwierigkeit (heraus)helfen;2. fördern, einer Sache nachhelfen, beitragen zu:help sb’s downfall;help solve a problem zur Lösung eines Problems beitragen3. lindern, helfen oder Abhilfe schaffen bei:a) jemandem zu etwas verhelfen,help o.s. sich bedienen (a. pej), zugreifen;help o.s. toa) sich bedienen mit, sich etwas nehmen,a) ich kann es nicht ändern,b) ich kann nichts dafür;it cannot be helped da kann man nichts machen, es ist nicht zu ändern;if I can help it wenn ich es vermeiden kann;don’t be late if you can help it komm möglichst nicht zu spät!;how could I help it?a) was konnte ich dagegen tun?,b) was konnte ich dafür?;she can’t help her freckles für ihre Sommersprossen kann sie nichts;I could not help laughing ich musste einfach lachen;I cannot help feeling ich werde das Gefühl nicht los, ich kann mich des Eindrucks nicht erwehren ( beide:that dass);one can’t help liking him man muss ihn einfach gernhaben;I can’t help thinking that … ich werde den Gedanken nicht los, dass …;I can’t help wondering where … ich frage mich ununterbrochen, wo …;a) ich kann nicht anders,b) ich kann es nicht lassenC v/i1. helfen, Hilfe leisten:every little helps jede Kleinigkeit hilft;nothing will help now jetzt hilft nichts mehr;2. don’t be longer than you can help bleib nicht länger als nötig!* * *1. transitive verb1)help somebody [to do something] — jemandem helfen [, etwas zu tun]
help oneself — sich (Dat.) selbst helfen
can I help you? — was kann ich für Sie tun?; (in shop also) was möchten Sie bitte?
2) (serve)help oneself — sich (Dat.) nehmen; sich bedienen
help oneself to something — sich (Dat.) etwas nehmen; (coll.): (steal) etwas mitgehen lassen (ugs.)
3) (avoid)if I/you can help it — wenn es irgend zu vermeiden ist
I can't help it — (remedy) ich kann nichts dafür (ugs.)
2. nounI can't help thinking or can't help but think that... — ich kann mir nicht helfen, ich glaube,...
Hilfe, diebe of [some]/no/much help to somebody — jemandem eine gewisse/keine/eine große Hilfe sein
Phrasal Verbs:- help out* * *n.Hilfe -n f.Mithilfe -n f. v.helfen v.(§ p.,pp.: half, geholfen) -
8 Philosophy
And what I believe to be more important here is that I find in myself an infinity of ideas of certain things which cannot be assumed to be pure nothingness, even though they may have perhaps no existence outside of my thought. These things are not figments of my imagination, even though it is within my power to think of them or not to think of them; on the contrary, they have their own true and immutable natures. Thus, for example, when I imagine a triangle, even though there may perhaps be no such figure anywhere in the world outside of my thought, nor ever have been, nevertheless the figure cannot help having a certain determinate nature... or essence, which is immutable and eternal, which I have not invented and which does not in any way depend upon my mind. (Descartes, 1951, p. 61)Let us console ourselves for not knowing the possible connections between a spider and the rings of Saturn, and continue to examine what is within our reach. (Voltaire, 1961, p. 144)As modern physics started with the Newtonian revolution, so modern philosophy starts with what one might call the Cartesian Catastrophe. The catastrophe consisted in the splitting up of the world into the realms of matter and mind, and the identification of "mind" with conscious thinking. The result of this identification was the shallow rationalism of l'esprit Cartesien, and an impoverishment of psychology which it took three centuries to remedy even in part. (Koestler, 1964, p. 148)It has been made of late a reproach against natural philosophy that it has struck out on a path of its own, and has separated itself more and more widely from the other sciences which are united by common philological and historical studies. The opposition has, in fact, been long apparent, and seems to me to have grown up mainly under the influence of the Hegelian philosophy, or, at any rate, to have been brought out into more distinct relief by that philosophy.... The sole object of Kant's "Critical Philosophy" was to test the sources and the authority of our knowledge, and to fix a definite scope and standard for the researches of philosophy, as compared with other sciences.... [But Hegel's] "Philosophy of Identity" was bolder. It started with the hypothesis that not only spiritual phenomena, but even the actual world-nature, that is, and man-were the result of an act of thought on the part of a creative mind, similar, it was supposed, in kind to the human mind.... The philosophers accused the scientific men of narrowness; the scientific men retorted that the philosophers were crazy. And so it came about that men of science began to lay some stress on the banishment of all philosophic influences from their work; while some of them, including men of the greatest acuteness, went so far as to condemn philosophy altogether, not merely as useless, but as mischievous dreaming. Thus, it must be confessed, not only were the illegitimate pretensions of the Hegelian system to subordinate to itself all other studies rejected, but no regard was paid to the rightful claims of philosophy, that is, the criticism of the sources of cognition, and the definition of the functions of the intellect. (Helmholz, quoted in Dampier, 1966, pp. 291-292)Philosophy remains true to its classical tradition by renouncing it. (Habermas, 1972, p. 317)I have not attempted... to put forward any grand view of the nature of philosophy; nor do I have any such grand view to put forth if I would. It will be obvious that I do not agree with those who see philosophy as the history of "howlers" and progress in philosophy as the debunking of howlers. It will also be obvious that I do not agree with those who see philosophy as the enterprise of putting forward a priori truths about the world.... I see philosophy as a field which has certain central questions, for example, the relation between thought and reality.... It seems obvious that in dealing with these questions philosophers have formulated rival research programs, that they have put forward general hypotheses, and that philosophers within each major research program have modified their hypotheses by trial and error, even if they sometimes refuse to admit that that is what they are doing. To that extent philosophy is a "science." To argue about whether philosophy is a science in any more serious sense seems to me to be hardly a useful occupation.... It does not seem to me important to decide whether science is philosophy or philosophy is science as long as one has a conception of both that makes both essential to a responsible view of the world and of man's place in it. (Putnam, 1975, p. xvii)What can philosophy contribute to solving the problem of the relation [of] mind to body? Twenty years ago, many English-speaking philosophers would have answered: "Nothing beyond an analysis of the various mental concepts." If we seek knowledge of things, they thought, it is to science that we must turn. Philosophy can only cast light upon our concepts of those things.This retreat from things to concepts was not undertaken lightly. Ever since the seventeenth century, the great intellectual fact of our culture has been the incredible expansion of knowledge both in the natural and in the rational sciences (mathematics, logic).The success of science created a crisis in philosophy. What was there for philosophy to do? Hume had already perceived the problem in some degree, and so surely did Kant, but it was not until the twentieth century, with the Vienna Circle and with Wittgenstein, that the difficulty began to weigh heavily. Wittgenstein took the view that philosophy could do no more than strive to undo the intellectual knots it itself had tied, so achieving intellectual release, and even a certain illumination, but no knowledge. A little later, and more optimistically, Ryle saw a positive, if reduced role, for philosophy in mapping the "logical geography" of our concepts: how they stood to each other and how they were to be analyzed....Since that time, however, philosophers in the "analytic" tradition have swung back from Wittgensteinian and even Rylean pessimism to a more traditional conception of the proper role and tasks of philosophy. Many analytic philosophers now would accept the view that the central task of philosophy is to give an account, or at least play a part in giving an account, of the most general nature of things and of man. (Armstrong, 1990, pp. 37-38)8) Philosophy's Evolving Engagement with Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive ScienceIn the beginning, the nature of philosophy's engagement with artificial intelligence and cognitive science was clear enough. The new sciences of the mind were to provide the long-awaited vindication of the most potent dreams of naturalism and materialism. Mind would at last be located firmly within the natural order. We would see in detail how the most perplexing features of the mental realm could be supported by the operations of solely physical laws upon solely physical stuff. Mental causation (the power of, e.g., a belief to cause an action) would emerge as just another species of physical causation. Reasoning would be understood as a kind of automated theorem proving. And the key to both was to be the depiction of the brain as the implementation of multiple higher level programs whose task was to manipulate and transform symbols or representations: inner items with one foot in the physical (they were realized as brain states) and one in the mental (they were bearers of contents, and their physical gymnastics were cleverly designed to respect semantic relationships such as truth preservation). (A. Clark, 1996, p. 1)Socrates of Athens famously declared that "the unexamined life is not worth living," and his motto aptly explains the impulse to philosophize. Taking nothing for granted, philosophy probes and questions the fundamental presuppositions of every area of human inquiry.... [P]art of the job of the philosopher is to keep at a certain critical distance from current doctrines, whether in the sciences or the arts, and to examine instead how the various elements in our world-view clash, or fit together. Some philosophers have tried to incorporate the results of these inquiries into a grand synoptic view of the nature of reality and our human relationship to it. Others have mistrusted system-building, and seen their primary role as one of clarifications, or the removal of obstacles along the road to truth. But all have shared the Socratic vision of using the human intellect to challenge comfortable preconceptions, insisting that every aspect of human theory and practice be subjected to continuing critical scrutiny....Philosophy is, of course, part of a continuing tradition, and there is much to be gained from seeing how that tradition originated and developed. But the principal object of studying the materials in this book is not to pay homage to past genius, but to enrich one's understanding of central problems that are as pressing today as they have always been-problems about knowledge, truth and reality, the nature of the mind, the basis of right action, and the best way to live. These questions help to mark out the territory of philosophy as an academic discipline, but in a wider sense they define the human predicament itself; they will surely continue to be with us for as long as humanity endures. (Cottingham, 1996, pp. xxi-xxii)10) The Distinction between Dionysian Man and Apollonian Man, between Art and Creativity and Reason and Self- ControlIn his study of ancient Greek culture, The Birth of Tragedy, Nietzsche drew what would become a famous distinction, between the Dionysian spirit, the untamed spirit of art and creativity, and the Apollonian, that of reason and self-control. The story of Greek civilization, and all civilizations, Nietzsche implied, was the gradual victory of Apollonian man, with his desire for control over nature and himself, over Dionysian man, who survives only in myth, poetry, music, and drama. Socrates and Plato had attacked the illusions of art as unreal, and had overturned the delicate cultural balance by valuing only man's critical, rational, and controlling consciousness while denigrating his vital life instincts as irrational and base. The result of this division is "Alexandrian man," the civilized and accomplished Greek citizen of the later ancient world, who is "equipped with the greatest forces of knowledge" but in whom the wellsprings of creativity have dried up. (Herman, 1997, pp. 95-96)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Philosophy
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9 cure
cure [kjʊə(r)]∎ he was cured of cancer il a été guéri du cancer;∎ the nap seems to have cured my headache on dirait que la sieste m'a fait passer mon mal de tête;∎ he cured himself of nailbiting il a réussi à arrêter de se ronger les ongles;∎ figurative his experiences in politics cured him of all his illusions son expérience de la politique lui a fait perdre toutes ses illusions;∎ proverb what can't be cured must be endured il faut prendre son mal en patience(b) (tobacco, meat, fish → gen) traiter; (→ with salt) saler; (→ by smoking) fumer; (→ by drying) sécher2 noun∎ a cure for the common cold un remède contre le rhume de cerveau;∎ there's no known cure on ne connaît pas de remède;∎ to take or to follow a cure faire une cure;∎ figurative a cure for all ills la panacée(b) (recovery) guérison f;∎ to be beyond or past cure (person) être incurable figurative (problem, situation) être irrémédiable∎ the cure of souls la charge d'âmes -
10 prove
1.his guilt/innocence was proved, he was proved [to be] guilty/innocent — er wurde überführt/seine Unschuld wurde bewiesen
prove somebody right/wrong — [Ereignis:] jemandem Recht/Unrecht geben
be proved wrong or to be false — [Theorie, System:] widerlegt werden
prove something to be true — beweisen, dass etwas wahr ist
prove one's/somebody's case or point — beweisen, dass man Recht hat/jemandem Recht geben
2. reflexive verb, p.p.it was proved that... — es stellte sich heraus od. erwies od. zeigte sich, dass...
3. intransitive verb, p.p.prove oneself intelligent/a good player — sich als intelligent/als [ein] guter Spieler erweisen
prove [to be] unnecessary/interesting/a failure — sich als unnötig/interessant/[ein] Fehlschlag erweisen
* * *[pru:v]1) (to show to be true or correct: This fact proves his guilt; He was proved guilty; Can you prove your theory?) beweisen2) (to turn out, or be found, to be: His suspicions proved (to be) correct; This tool proved very useful.) sich erweisen als•- academic.ru/58608/proven">proven* * *[pru:v]I. vt1. (establish)▪ to \prove sth etw beweisento \prove a point beweisen, dass man Recht hat2. (show)▪ to \prove oneself sb/sth:during the rescue she \proved herself to be a highly competent climber während der Rettungsaktion erwies sie sich als sehr geübte KletterinII. viworking with children \proved to require more patience than he'd expected mit Kindern zu arbeiten erforderte mehr Geduld, als er gedacht hatteto \prove successful sich akk als erfolgreich erweisen* * *[pruːv] pret proved, ptp proved or proven1. vthe proved that she did it — er bewies or er wies nach, dass sie das getan hat
whether his judgement was right remains to be proved or proven — es muss sich erst noch erweisen, ob seine Beurteilung zutrifft
it all goes to prove that... — das beweist mal wieder, dass...
he was proved right in the end — er hat schließlich doch recht behalten
2) (= test out, put to the proof) rifle, aircraft etc erproben; one's worth, courage unter Beweis stellen, beweisenhe did it just to prove a point — er tat es nur der Sache wegen
2. vi2)3. vr1) (= show one's value, courage etc) sich bewähren2)to prove oneself innocent/indispensable etc — sich als unschuldig/unentbehrlich etc erweisen
* * *prove [pruːv]A v/t prät proved, pperf proved, besonders US proven1. er-, nach-, beweisen:prove sth to sb jemandem etwas beweisen;prove to o.s. that … sich beweisen, dass …;prove adultery beweisen, dass Ehebruch vorliegt;prove one’s alibi sein Alibi nachweisen;prove one’s case beweisen, dass man recht hat;prove by chemical tests chemisch nachweisen;3. bekunden, unter Beweis stellen, zeigena proved remedy ein erprobtes oder bewährtes Mittel;prove o.s.a) sich bewähren,b) sich beweisen,5. MATH die Probe machen auf (akk)B v/i1. sich herausstellen oder erweisen als:he will prove (to be) the heir es wird sich herausstellen, dass er der Erbe ist;a) sich als richtig (falsch) herausstellen,2. sich bestätigen oder bewähren als3. ausfallen, sich ergeben:it will prove otherwise es wird anders kommen oder ausfallen4. aufgehen (Teig)* * *1.his guilt/innocence was proved, he was proved [to be] guilty/innocent — er wurde überführt/seine Unschuld wurde bewiesen
prove somebody right/wrong — [Ereignis:] jemandem Recht/Unrecht geben
be proved wrong or to be false — [Theorie, System:] widerlegt werden
prove something to be true — beweisen, dass etwas wahr ist
prove one's/somebody's case or point — beweisen, dass man Recht hat/jemandem Recht geben
2. reflexive verb, p.p.it was proved that... — es stellte sich heraus od. erwies od. zeigte sich, dass...
3. intransitive verb, p.p.prove oneself intelligent/a good player — sich als intelligent/als [ein] guter Spieler erweisen
prove [to be] unnecessary/interesting/a failure — sich als unnötig/interessant/[ein] Fehlschlag erweisen
* * *(ascertain) beyond doubt expr.zweifelsfrei beweisen (feststellen) ausdr. (to be) very useful expr.sich als nützlich erweisen ausdr. v.besagen v.beweisen v.erproben v.erweisen v.prüfen v.
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