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121 ♦ news
♦ news /nju:z, USA nu:z/n. [u] (col verbo al sing.)1 notizia, notizie; nuove; novità; novella (lett.): Have you heard the news?, hai sentito la notizia?; sai la novità?; to impart news to sb., comunicare notizie a q.; to spread news, propagare notizie; DIALOGO → - Business trip 2- That's excellent news!, è un'ottima notizia!; I've had no news of him, non ho avuto sue notizie; Is there any news?, ci sono notizie?; ci sono novità?; DIALOGO → - Bereavement and time off work- He's not coming in to work today, he's had some terrible news, non viene al lavoro oggi, ha avuto una notizia terribile; a news item, una notizia; a piece of news, una notizia; the latest news, l'ultima notizia, le ultime notizie; (giorn., TV) le recentissime; DIALOGO → - Business trip 2- There was some good news as well, ci sono state anche delle buone notizie; home news, notizie dall'interno; foreign news, notizie dall'estero; local news, notizie d'interesse locale (o di cronaca cittadina); bad news, brutte notizie; grim news, notizie deprimenti; glad news, buone notizie; notizie di politica interna; to break the news to sb., dare una cattiva notizia a q.; in the news, sui giornali; al telegiornale2 ( radio, TV) notiziario; giornale radio; telegiornale: the evening news, il telegiornale della sera● news agency, agenzia d'informazioni; agenzia di stampa □ ( radio) news bulletin, notiziario; giornale radio □ news conference, conferenza stampa □ (giorn., TV) news desk, redazione □ news editor, capocronista □ ( radio, TV) news headlines, titoli delle notizie; notizie in breve, notiziario ( a ore fisse) □ (fam.) news hound, giornalista; reporter □ news release, comunicato stampa □ (comput.) news server, server di newsgroup □ news service, agenzia d'informazioni; agenzia di stampa □ news writer, cronista; reporter □ ( di una cosa) to be big news, fare notizia □ What's the news this morning?, che c'è di nuovo stamani? □ (prov.) No news is good news, nessuna nuova, buona nuova NOTA D'USO: - new o news?-. -
122 play
play [pleɪ]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. noun4. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. noun• there was some good play in the second half on a assisté à du beau jeu pendant la deuxième mi-temps• to bring or call sth into play faire intervenir qchb. ( = movement) jeu mc. ( = drama) pièce f (de théâtre)• to be in a play [actor] jouer dans une piècea. [+ game, sport] jouer à• what position does she play? à quelle place joue-t-elle ?• don't play games with me! ne vous moquez pas de moi !• to play ball with sb ( = cooperate) coopérer avec qn• to play the game ( = play fair) jouer le jeu• he gave up playing the field and married a year ago il a cessé de papillonner et s'est marié il y a un anb. [+ opponent] rencontrerc. [+ chess piece, card] jouerf. ( = direct) [+ hose, searchlight] dirigera. jouer► play + preposition• what's he playing at? (inf) à quoi il joue ?• how much time do we have to play with? (inf) combien de temps avons-nous ?4. compounds► play-off noun (after a tie) ≈ match m de barrage (départageant des concurrents à égalité) ; (US) (for championship) match m de qualification[+ tape] réécouter( = minimize importance of) [+ significance] minimiser ; [+ situation, attitude] dédramatiser[+ sb's emotions, good nature] jouer sur( = give trouble) the engine is playing up le moteur fait des siennesa. ( = give trouble to) his leg is playing him up sa jambe le tracasseb. ( = magnify importance of) exagérer (l'importance de)* * *[pleɪ] 1.2) (amusement, recreation)3) Sport, Gamesthe ball is out of play/in play — la balle est hors jeu/en jeu
4) fig (movement, interaction) jeu m2.transitive verb1) jouer à [game, match, cards]; jouer [card]to play goal — ( in football) être gardien de but
to play the ball to somebody — ( in basketball) passer la balle à quelqu'un
2) Music jouer de [instrument]; jouer [tune, symphony, chord]3) ( act out) Theatre interpréter, jouer [role]4) Audio mettre [tape, video, CD]5) Finance3.to play the stock market — boursicoter (colloq)
1) [children] jouer ( with avec)2) figwhat does he think he's playing at? — GB (colloq) qu'est-ce qu'il fabrique (colloq)?
3) Sport, Games jouer5) Cinema, Theatre [play] se jouer; [film] passer; [actor] jouershe's playing opposite him in ‘Macbeth’ — elle lui donne la réplique dans ‘Macbeth’
6) [fountain, water] couler; Music [record] jouer•Phrasal Verbs:- play off- play on- play out- play up••all work and no play (makes Jack a dull boy) — Prov il n'y a pas que le travail dans la vie
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123 stuff
stuff [stʌf]1. noun• that's the stuff! bravo !• stuff and nonsense! (inf!) balivernes !( = fill) [+ cushion, toy] rembourrer ( with avec ) ; [+ animal] empailler ; [+ sack, pockets] remplir ( with de ) ; [+ chicken, tomato] farcir ( with avec ) ; ( = cram) [+ objects, clothes, books] fourrer• to stuff o.s. with food se gaver de nourriture* * *[stʌf] 1.noun [U]1) ( unnamed substance) truc (colloq) mexpensive stuff, caviar — ça coûte cher, le caviar
it's strong stuff — c'est costaud (colloq)
2) (colloq) ( unnamed objects) trucs (colloq) mpl; ( implying disorder) bazar (colloq) m; ( belongings) affaires fpl3) (colloq) (content of speech, book, film etc)who wrote this stuff? — gen qui a écrit ça?; pej qui a écrit cette chose?
do you believe all that stuff about his private life? — tu crois à tout ce qu'on dit sur sa vie privée?
4) ( fabric) lit étoffe f; fig essence f2.transitive verb1) (fill, pack) garnir, rembourrer ( with de); ( implying haste) bourrer ( with de); ( block up) boucher ( with avec)2) ( pack in) fourrer (colloq)3) Culinary farcir4) [taxidermist] empailler3.stuffed past participle adjective Culinary farci; [toy animal] en peluche; [bird, fox] empailléPhrasal Verbs:- stuff up••a bit of stuff — (colloq) péj une gonzesse (colloq) pej
to do one's stuff — (colloq) faire ce qu'on a à faire
to know one's stuff — (colloq) connaître son affaire (colloq)
that's the stuff! — (colloq) c'est bon!
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124 stuff
[stʌf] 1. сущ.1)а) материал, состав, вещество (из чего что-л. состоит)He is made of sterner stuff than his father. — У него более решительный характер, чем у его отца.
б) материал, субстанция2) преим. брит. материал для вязания ( особенно шерсть)3) разг.а) дрянь, хлам, фигняThis book is poor stuff. — Это никчёмная книжонка.
Syn:rubbish 1.б) чепуха, болтовня4) штука, штуковина; всё такое прочееThis is the sort of stuff to give them. — Только так и надо поступать с ними; они не заслуживают лучшего обращения.
Apples, oranges, this kind of stuff. — Так, апельсины, яблоки, всякое такое.
5)а) разг.; = doctor's stuff состав, лекарство (о порошках, микстурах; особенно самодельных)Your very kind letter did me more good, I think, than any of my doctor's stuff. (Warner) — Думаю, что твоё приветливое письмо помогло мне больше, чем любая микстура.
б) нарк. наркотаHe was on the stuff. — Он сидел на игле.
Syn:6) тех. набивка, наполнитель7)а) шотл. запасы продовольствия ( особенно зёрна)б) личная собственность; имущество, вещиSyn:8)а) разг. обращение, поведениеб) характер, натура, внутренние качества, свойство ( о человеке)There is some good football stuff in that player. — Этот игрок прирождённый футболист.
9) продукты, напитки (всё, что употребляется в пищу)green / garden stuff — овощи
10) разг. наличные ( о деньгах)Syn:11)а) что-л. украденное или провезённое контрабандойб) оборудование, оснащение, оснастка; уст. военное снаряжениеSyn:2. гл.1)а) набивать; запихивать, засовыватьI simply can't stuff any more clothes into this case. — Я просто не могу больше ничего запихнуть в этот чемодан.
She stuffed her things into a suitcase. — Она запихнула свои вещи в чемодан
They stuffed their suitcases with all sorts of things. — Они набили свои чемоданы кучей всяких вещей.
б) разг. заполнять грузом контейнерThose containers must be stuffed with miscellaneous general stuff. — Эти контейнеры следует заполнить всяким смешанным грузом.
2) служить набивкой, использоваться для набивки3)а) набивать чучело животного или птицы; делать работу таксидермистаб) кул. начинять, фаршироватьStuff the rabbits and roast them. — Нафаршируйте тушки кроликов и зажарьте их в духовке.
4) = stuff up затыкатьHe stuffed his fingers into his ears. — Он заткнул уши пальцами.
My nose is stuffed up. — У меня нос заложен.
Syn:5) мед. пломбировать зуб6)а) объедаться, жадно естьб) закармливать, кормить на убой прям. и перен.Syn:gorge 2.7)а) переполнять, перегружать (информацией, идеями)б) втискивать, засовыватьHe was standing with hands stuffed into his front pockets. — Он стоял, засунув руки в передние карманы.
Syn:thrust 2.8) толпиться, тесниться; заполнять (какое-л. пространство)The long waggon hired for the day, was stuffed with black damsels. (C. Rose) — Длинный крытый фургон, взятый напрокат на день, был до отказа заполнен негритянскими девушками.
Syn:9)а) разг. мистифицировать, разыгрывать; обманывать, вешать лапшу на ушиSyn:б) амер. наполнять избирательные урны фальшивыми бюллетенямиThe interval had been devoted to stuffing the ballot-boxes. (Q. Rev.) — А перерыв был использован для того, чтобы наполнить избирательные урны фальшивыми бюллетенями.
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125 stuff
I n1) infml2) infml3) infml4) infmlShow him what kind of stuff you are made of — Покажи ему, на что ты способен
5) infml6) AmE slWhen he came out of jail he seemed to be off the stuff — Когда он вышел из тюрьмы, он, казалось, завязал с наркотиками
7) AmE vulg slII vi BrE infml III vtWe'll go to Irene's. Classiest stuff, girls all sizes, all colors — Мы пойдем к Ирен. У нее девочки что надо, на любой вкус
1) infml2) taboo sl esp BrEIf he was stuffing this dumb bunny all this time, there was going to be trouble — Если он все это время трахал ту дурочку, то скандала не избежать
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126 Theater, Portuguese
There are two types of theater in Portugal: classical or "serious" theater and light theater, or the Theater of Review, largely the Revistas de Lisboa (Lisbon Reviews). Modern theater, mostly but not exclusively centered in Lisbon, experienced an unfortunate impact from official censorship during the Estado Novo (1926-74). Following laws passed in 1927, the government decreed that, as a cultural activity, any theatrical presentations that were judged "offensive in law, in morality and in decent customs" were prohibited. One consequence that derived from the risk of prohibition was that directors and playwrights began to practice self-censorship. This discouraged liberal and experimental theatrical work, weakened commercial investment in theater, and made employment in much theater a risky business, with indifferent public support.Despite these political obstacles and the usual risks and difficulties of producing live theater in competition first with emerging cinema and then with television (which began in any case only after 1957), some good theatrical work flourished. Two of the century's greatest repertory actresses, Amélia Rey-Colaço (1898-1990) and Maria Matos (1890-1962), put together talented acting companies and performed well-received classical theater. Two periods witnessed a brief diminution of censorship: following World War II (1945-47) and during Prime Minister Marcello Caetano's government (1968-74). Although Portuguese playwrights also produced comedies and dramas, some of the best productions reached the stage under the authorship of foreign playwrights: Shakespeare, George Bernard Shaw, Arthur Miller, and others.A major new phase of Portuguese serious theater began in the 1960s, with the staging of challenging plays by playwrights José Cardoso Pires, Luis Sttau Monteiro, and Bernardo Santareno. Since the Revolution of 25 April 1974, more funds for experimental theater have become available, and government censorship ceased. As in so much of Western European theater, however, the general public tended to favor not plays with serious content but techno-hits that featured foreign imports, including musicals, or homegrown musicals on familiar themes. Nevertheless, after 1974, the theater scene was enlivened, not only in Lisbon, but also in Oporto, Coimbra, and other cities.The Theater of Review, or light theater, was introduced to Portugal in the 19th century and was based largely on French models. Adapted to the Portuguese scene, the Lisbon reviews featured pageantry, costume, comic skits, music (including the ever popular fado), dance, and slapstick humor and satire. Despite censorship, its heyday occurred actually during the Estado Novo, before 1968. Of all the performing arts, the Lisbon reviews enjoyed the greatest freedom from official political censorship. Certain periods featured more limited censorship, as cited earlier (1945-47 and 1968-74). The main venue of the Theater of Review was located in central Lisbon's Parque Mayer, an amusement park that featured four review theaters: Maria Vitória, Variedades, Capitólio, and ABC.Many actors and stage designers, as well as some musicians, served their apprenticeship in the Lisbon reviews before they moved into film and television. Noted fado singers, the fadistas, and composers plied their trade in Parque Mayer and built popular followings. The subjects of the reviews, often with provocative titles, varied greatly and followed contemporary social, economic, and even political fashion and trends, but audiences especially liked satire directed against convention and custom. If political satire was not passed by the censor in the press or on television, sometimes the Lisbon reviews, by the use of indirection and allegory, could get by with subtle critiques of some personalities in politics and society. A humorous stereotyping of customs of "the people," usually conceived of as Lisbon street people or naive "country bumpkins," was also popular. To a much greater degree than in classical, serious theater, the Lisbon review audiences steadily supported this form of public presentation. But the zenith of this form of theater had been passed by the late 1960s as audiences dwindled, production expenses rose, and film and television offered competition.The hopes that governance under Prime Minister Marcello Caetano would bring a new season of freedom of expression in the light theater or serious theater were dashed by 1970-71, as censorship again bore down. With revolution in the offing, change was in the air, and could be observed in a change of review show title. A Lisbon review show title on the eve of the Revolution of 25 April 1974, was altered from: 'To See, to Hear... and Be Quiet" to the suggestive, "To See, to Hear... and to Talk." The review theater experienced several difficult years after 1980, and virtually ceased to exist in Parque Mayer. In the late 1990s, nevertheless, this traditional form of entertainment underwent a gradual revival. Audiences again began to troop to renovated theater space in the amusement park to enjoy once again new lively and humorous reviews, cast for a new century and applied to Portugal today. -
127 one
1. noun1) (the number or figure 1: One and one is two (1 + 1 = 2).) en, et; ett(all)2) (the age of 1: Babies start to talk at one.) ettårsalder2. pronoun1) (a single person or thing: She's the one I like the best; I'll buy the red one.) den(ne)/det(te); den/det røde osv.2) (anyone; any person: One can see the city from here.) en, man3. adjective1) (1 in number: one person; He took one book.) en2) (aged 1: The baby will be one tomorrow.) ett (år gammel)3) (of the same opinion etc: We are one in our love of freedom.) som én, av samme mening•- one-- oneself
- one-night stand
- one-off
- one-parent family
- one-sided
- one-way
- one-year-old 4. adjective((of a person, animal or thing) that is one year old.) ettårs-, ettårig- all one- be one up on a person
- be one up on
- not be oneself
- one and all
- one another
- one by one
- one or two Isubst. \/wʌn\/1) ettall2) ener3) enhetby ones en og en, en av gangenby ones and twos enkeltvis og to av gangen, en og en og to og tonever a one ( hverdagslig) ikke en eneste enyou are a one! ( hverdagslig) du er en fin en!IIdeterm. \/wʌn\/1) en, et, ett2) eneste3) den ene, det ene4) (en og) sammeat one enige, i harmoniat one with i ett medbe all one to somebody være det samme for noen, komme ut på ett for noenbecome one bli ettbe one of være en av, høre tilbe one with være ett med, høre sammen med være enig medfor one for noens vedkommende, hva noen angårfor one thing for det første, først og fremst for eksempelget something in one ( hverdagslig) greie noe ved første forsøk gjette riktig med det samme(all) in one (alt) i ett i forening, i samstemmighet til sammen i en og samme personnot one ikke en eneste enone after another eller one after the other den ene etter den andre, etter hverandreone and a half en og en halv, halvannenone and all hver eneste en, alle sammen, alle som enone and another både den ene og den andrethe one and only...! den\/det eneste ene...!, den uforlignelige!one at a time eller one at the time en og en, en av gangenone by one en og en, en av gangen den ene etter den andreone half of halvparten av, halvdelen avone or other den ene eller den andre, en eller annenone or the other en av delene, ett av to• marry her or leave her, one or the otherone or two et par (stykker), to-tre (stykker)(the) one... the other (det) ene.. det andre, en... en annen, den første... den nesteone thing and\/with another det ene med det andreone with another det ene med det andre i gjennomsnitt, stort setttell (the) one from the other skjelne det ene fra det andre, skjelne noe fra hverandreIIIpron. \/wʌn\/1) man, en2) ( refleksiv) seg3) en (viss)• one Mr. John Smith4) en, noen, noe, den• where is my umbrella? - you didn't bring one• he is not a great man, but he hopes to become onehan er ingen stor mann, men han håper på å bli det5) (etter adjektiv og som adjektiv brukt som substantiv, ofte uten tilsvarende i norsk) en, (som) sådan• take the red box, not the black oneta den røde boksen, ikke den svarte• do you want hard pears or soft ones?• pick me out a good one!• give me some good ones!han var en soldat, og en tapper sådanbe one for something å like, å være glad iget one on the jaw ( hverdagslig) få seg en på tyggaget something in one lykkes med noe på første forsøkhave one on me! ta en drink, jeg spanderer!lay about one slå om segthe little one den lillelittle ones smårollinger, små, ungermy dear ones mine kjæreone's ens, sin, sitt, sineone too many en (alkoholholdig drink) for mye• the party was good, but I had one too many, I'm afraidfesten var bra, men jeg er redd jeg drakk for myethat one den derthat was one for you! ett poeng til deg! den satt!that was one on you! der fikk du!, den var myntet på deg!which one hvilken• which ones do you like? -
128 time
1. noun1) (the hour of the day: What time is it?; Can your child tell the time yet?) klukkan2) (the passage of days, years, events etc: time and space; Time will tell.) tíminn3) (a point at which, or period during which, something happens: at the time of his wedding; breakfast-time.) stund, tímapunktur4) (the quantity of minutes, hours, days etc, eg spent in, or available for, a particular activity etc: This won't take much time to do; I enjoyed the time I spent in Paris; At the end of the exam, the supervisor called `Your time is up!') tími5) (a suitable moment or period: Now is the time to ask him.) (rétt) augnablik, tækifæri6) (one of a number occasions: He's been to France four times.) sinnum7) (a period characterized by a particular quality in a person's life, experience etc: He went through an unhappy time when she died; We had some good times together.) tími, tímabil, stund(ir)8) (the speed at which a piece of music should be played; tempo: in slow time.) hraði, tempó2. verb1) (to measure the time taken by (a happening, event etc) or by (a person, in doing something): He timed the journey.) taka tímann á2) (to choose a particular time for: You timed your arrival beautifully!) tímasetja•- timeless- timelessly
- timelessness
- timely
- timeliness
- timer
- times
- timing
- time bomb
- time-consuming
- time limit
- time off
- time out
- timetable
- all in good time
- all the time
- at times
- be behind time
- for the time being
- from time to time
- in good time
- in time
- no time at all
- no time
- one
- two at a time
- on time
- save
- waste time
- take one's time
- time and time again
- time and again
См. также в других словарях:
Good Day — may refer to:In music: * Good Day (The Dresden Dolls song) * Good Day (Jewel song) * Good Day (Sean Maguire song) * Good Day , song by Angels Airwaves from We Don t Need to Whisper * Good Day , song by Tally Hall from Marvin s Marvelous… … Wikipedia
good — [[t]g ʊd[/t]] ♦ better, best 1) ADJ GRADED Good means pleasant or enjoyable. We had a really good time together... I know they would have a better life here... There s nothing better than a good cup of hot coffee... It s so good to hear your… … English dictionary
good — good1 W1S1 [gud] adj comparative better [ˈbetə US ər] superlative best [best] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(of a high standard)¦ 2¦(skilful)¦ 3¦(what you want)¦ 4¦(pleasant/enjoyable)¦ 5¦(successful/correct)¦ 6¦(suitable)¦ 7¦(useful)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
good — good1 [ gud ] (comparative better [ betər ] ; superlative best [ best ] ) adjective *** ▸ 1 of high quality/standard ▸ 2 able to do something well ▸ 3 with qualities to do something ▸ 4 honest & morally correct ▸ 5 giving pleasant feeling ▸ 6… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
good — I UK [ɡʊd] / US adjective Word forms good : adjective good comparative better UK [ˈbetə(r)] / US [ˈbetər] superlative best UK [best] / US *** 1) of a high quality or standard We saw a really good film last night. They were all dressed in their… … English dictionary
good-time Charley — n. a man who is always trying to have a good experience; an optimist. □ Wally is such a good time Charley. Who would believe the trouble he’s had? □ Some good time Charley is making a lot of noise … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
Good — • The moral good (bonum honestum) consists in the due ordering of free action or conduct according to the norm of reason, the highest faculty, to which it is to conform Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Good Good … Catholic encyclopedia
Good Shepherd (song) — Good Shepherd is a traditional song, most known as recorded by Jefferson Airplane on their 1969 album Volunteers. It was arranged and sung by the group s guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, who described their interpretation of it as psychedelic folk rock … Wikipedia
Good — Good, a. [Compar. {Better}; superl. {Best}. These words, though used as the comparative and superlative of good, are from a different root.] [AS. G[=o]d, akin to D. goed, OS. g[=o]d, OHG. guot, G. gut, Icel. g[=o][eth]r, Sw. & Dan. god, Goth.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Good breeding — Good Good, a. [Compar. {Better}; superl. {Best}. These words, though used as the comparative and superlative of good, are from a different root.] [AS. G[=o]d, akin to D. goed, OS. g[=o]d, OHG. guot, G. gut, Icel. g[=o][eth]r, Sw. & Dan. god, Goth … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Good cheap — Good Good, a. [Compar. {Better}; superl. {Best}. These words, though used as the comparative and superlative of good, are from a different root.] [AS. G[=o]d, akin to D. goed, OS. g[=o]d, OHG. guot, G. gut, Icel. g[=o][eth]r, Sw. & Dan. god, Goth … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English