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1 Short
adj.At so short a distance: P. διὰ τοσούτου.Concise: P. and V. σύντομος, βραχύς.Of stature: P. and V. μικρός, σμικρός.Deficient: P. and V. ἐνδεής, P. ἐλλιπής.Except: P. and V. πλήν (gen.).Less than: with numerals use participle, P. δέων (gen.).Come short, v.: P. ἐλασσοῦσθαι; see also lack.Come short of.Be deficient in: P. and V. ἐλλείπειν (gen.), ἀπολείπεσθαι (gen.), V. λείπεσθαι (gen.).Fall short of, be inferior to: P. ἐλλείπειν (gen.), ὑστερίζειν (gen.), ὑστερεῖν (gen.), P. and V. ἡσσᾶσθαι (gen.), λείπεσθαι (gen.) (rare P.).They reflected how far they had fallen short of their covenant: P. ἐσκόπουν ὅσα ἐξελελοίπεσαν τῆς συνθήκης (Thuc. 5, 42).If you persist in sitting idle, letting your zeal stop short at murmuring and commending: P. εἰ καθεδεῖσθε ἄχρι τοῦ θορυβῆσαι καὶ ἐπαινέσαι σπουδάζοντες (Dem. 109).At short notice P. and V. φαύλως; see off-hand.In short: see Shortly.To sum up: P. ὅλως, P. and V. ἁπλῶς.Cut short, abridge, v.: P. and V. συντέμνειν.To cut a long story short: P. ἵνα, ὡς ἐν κεφαλαίῳ εἰπεῖν, συντέμω.Cut short, shorten: P. and V. συντέμνειν, συστέλλειν, κολούειν.Short of breath: V. δύσπνους.Short comings, subs.: P. ἐλλείματα, τά.You will make up for your past short comings: P. τὰ κατερρᾳθυμημένα πάλιν ἀναλήψεσθε (Dem. 42).Short cut: P. ἡ σύντομος (Xen.).By the shortest cut: P. τὰ συντομώτατα (Thuc. 2, 97).Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Short
См. также в других словарях:
short — adj. 1) short in (short in stature) 2) short of (short of funds; to run short of food; to fall short of one s goal) 3) (misc.) to be caught short ( to find oneself in acute need ); and: (BE; colloq.) ( to feel the need to go to the toilet ) * * * … Combinatory dictionary
stature — [[t]stæ̱tʃə(r)[/t]] 1) N UNCOUNT: usu with poss, of supp N, in N Someone s stature is their height. It s more than his physical stature that makes him remarkable... Mother was of very small stature, barely five feet tall... She was a little short … English dictionary
stature — stat|ure [ˈstætʃə US ər] n [U] written [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: Latin statura, from status; STATE1] 1.) the degree to which someone is admired or regarded as important of world/international/national stature ▪ Armstrong was a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
stature — noun (C, U) formal 1 the degree to which someone is admired or regarded as important: Louis Armstrong was a musician of world stature. 2 someone s height or size: short in stature … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Short stature homeobox gene — or SHOX is a gene on the X chromosome and Y chromosome which is associated with short stature in humans if mutated or present in only one copy (haploinsufficiency). PathologyThe gene was first found during a search for the cause of short stature… … Wikipedia
SHORT — stature, hyperextensibility of joints or hernia or both, ocular depression, Rieger anomaly, teething delayed … Medical dictionary
short-FRAME — short stature facial anomalies Rieger anomaly midline anomalies enamel defects [syndrome] … Medical dictionary
SHORT — • short stature, hyperextensibility of joints or hernia or both, ocular depression, Rieger anomaly, teething delayed … Dictionary of medical acronyms & abbreviations
short-FRAME — • short stature facial anomalies Rieger anomaly midline anomalies enamel defects [syndrome] … Dictionary of medical acronyms & abbreviations
Short stature — Infobox Disease Name = PAGENAME Caption = DiseasesDB = 18756 ICD10 = ICD10|E|34|3|e|20 ICD9 = ICD9|783.43 ICDO = OMIM = MedlinePlus = 003271 eMedicineSubj = ped eMedicineTopic = 2087 MeshID = Short stature refers to a height of a human being… … Wikipedia
stature — noun 1 height ADJECTIVE ▪ imposing, tall ▪ diminutive, short, slight, small ▪ physical VERB + STATURE … Collocations dictionary