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1 wakes
Волновые -
2 wakes
Диалект: храмовой, престольный праздник -
3 wakes
v. Tsa sawvn. Ntau txoj kab lw; ntau kev zaum zov -
4 wakes up
Sawv saum txaj los; sawv los; tsa sawv -
5 wakes
• probouzí -
6 wakes
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7 wakes
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8 wakes
vიღვიძებს, ფხიზლობა -
9 Orphic religion (One of the mystery religions, according to which the soul is a sort of stranger loosely inhabiting the body, which sleeps while the body is active, but wakes when the body sleeps)
Религия: орфические культыУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > Orphic religion (One of the mystery religions, according to which the soul is a sort of stranger loosely inhabiting the body, which sleeps while the body is active, but wakes when the body sleeps)
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10 nature wakes in spring
Общая лексика: природа воскресает весной, природа оживает весной, природа пробуждается веснойУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > nature wakes in spring
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11 self-gravity wakes
Астрономия: автогравитационные вихри -
12 nature wakes
daba mostas -
13 all\ nature\ wakes
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14 probouzí
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15 wachten
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16 itiqtuq
wakes up -
17 évenként megtartott ünnep
wakes -
18 réveil
réveil [ʀevεj]masculine nouna. ( = réveille-matin) alarm clock• à mon réveil, je vis qu'il était parti when I woke up I found he was already gone* * *ʀevɛjnom masculin1) ( après un somme) waking (up)au réveil/dès son réveil — when he wakes up/as soon as he wakes up
2) (après un malaise, une anesthésie)3) (de la nature, d'un sentiment) reawakening; (de nation, mouvement) resurgence; ( de la foi) revival; ( de douleurs) return, recurrence; ( de la conscience) awakening; ( de volcan) return to activity4) ( retour à la réalité) awakening5) Armée reveilleréveil en fanfare — fig rousing start to the day
6) ( pendule) alarm clock* * *ʀevɛj nm1) [dormeur] waking up no pl2) MILITAIRE3) (= pendule) alarm clock, alarm* * *réveil nm1 ( après un somme) waking (up); à mon réveil, il neigeait when I woke up, it was snowing; au réveil/dès son réveil, il allume la radio on waking up/as soon as he wakes up, he turns on the radio; les cauchemars provoquent des réveils en sursaut nightmares wake you up with a start;2 (après malaise, anesthésie) j'ai eu des nausées au réveil I felt nauseous when I came to ou when I regained consciousness; salle de réveil recovery room;3 (de la nature, la passion, d'un sentiment) reawakening; (de nation, mouvement) resurgence; ( de la foi) revival; ( de douleurs) return, recurrence; ( de la conscience) awakening; ( de volcan) return to activity; le réveil des minorités the new activism of minorities; le réveil du nationalisme the revival ou resurgence of nationalism;4 ( retour à la réalité) awakening; le réveil a été brutal après le boom des années 80 it was a rude awakening after the boom of the eighties;5 Mil reveille; sonner le réveil to sound the reveille; réveil en fanfare fig rousing start to the day;6 ( pendule) alarm clock; remonter un réveil to wind up an alarm (clock); mettre le réveil pour 7 h to set the alarm for 7 (o'clock).réveil automatique reminder call; réveil par téléphone alarm call (through the operator); réveil de voyage travel alarm (clock).[revɛj] nom masculinj'attendrai ton réveil pour partir I'll wait until you have woken up ou until you are awake before I leavej'ai des réveils difficiles ou le réveil difficile I find it hard to wake up2. [prise de conscience] awakeningj'ai eu droit à un réveil en fanfare, ce matin! (figuré) I was treated to a very noisy awakening this morning!4. [de la mémoire, de la nature] reawakening5. [pendule] alarm (clock) -
19 DANZ
mod. dans, n. a word of for. origin; [cp. mid. Lat. dansare; Fr. danser; Ital. danzare; Engl. dance; Germ. tanz, tanzen.] This word is certainly not Teutonic, but of Roman or perhaps Breton origin: the Icel. or Scandin. have no genuine word for dancing,—leika means ‘to play’ in general: the word itself (danza, danz, etc.) never occurs in the old Sagas or poetry, though popular amusements of every kind are described there; but about the end of the 11th century, when the Sagas of the bishops (Bs.) begin, we find dance in full use, accompanied by songs which are described as loose and amorous: the classical passage is Jóns S. (A. D. 1106–1121), ch. 13. Bs. i. 165, 166, and cp. Júns S. by Gunnlaug, ch. 24. Bs. i. 237—Leikr sá var kær mönnum áðr en hinn heilagi Jón varð biskup, at kveða skyldi karlmaðr til konu í danz blautlig kvæði ok rægilig; ok kona til karlmanns mansöngs vísur; þenna leik lét hann af taka ok bannaði styrkliga; mansöngs kvæði vildi hann eigi heyra né kveða láta, en þó fékk hann því eigi af komið með öllu. Some have thought that this refers to mythical (Eddic) poetry, but without reason and against the literal sense of the passage; the heathen heroic poems were certainly never used to accompany a dance; their flow and metre are a sufficient proof of that. In the Sturl. (Hist. of the 12th and 13th century) dancing is mentioned over and over again; and danz is used of popular ballads or songs of a satirical character (as those in Percy’s ballads): flimt ( loose song) and danz are synonymous words; the Sturl. has by chance preserved two ditties (one of A. D. 1221, running thus—Loptr liggr í Eyjum, bítr lunda bein | Sæmundr er á heiðum, etr berin ein. Sturl. ii. 62, and one referring to the year 1264—Mínar eru sorgirnar þungar sem blý, Sturl. iii. 317) sufficient to shew the flow and metre, which are exactly the same as those of the mod. ballads, collected in the west of Icel. (Ögr) in the 17th century under the name of Fornkvæði, Old Songs, and now edited by Jon Sigurdsson and Svend Grundtvig. Danz and Fornkvæði are both of the same kind, and also identical with Engl. ballads, Dan. kæmpeviser. There are passages in Sturl. and B.S. referring to this subject — færðu Breiðbælingar Lopt í flimtun ok görðu um hann danza marga, ok margskonar spott annat, Sturl. ii. 57, cp. 62; Danza-Bergr, the nickname of a man (Stud, ii), prob. for composing comic songs; danza-görð, composing comic songs; fylgðar-menn Kolbeins fóru með danza-görð, … en er Brandr varð varr við flimtan þeirra, iii. 80; þá hrökti Þórðr hestinn undir sér, ok kvað danz þenna við raust, 317.β. a wake, Arna S. ch. 2; in Sturl. i. 23; at the banquet in Reykhólar, 1119, the guests amused themselves by dancing, wrestling, and story-telling; þá var sleginn danz í stofu, ii. 117; í Viðvík var gleði mikil ok gott at vera; þat var einn Drottins dag at þar var danz mikill; kom þar til fjöldi manna; ok ríðr hann í Viðvík til danz, ok var þar at leik; ok dáðu menn mjök danz hans, iii. 258, 259; honum var kostr á boðinn hvat til gamans skyldi hafa, sögur eða danz um kveldit, 281;—the last reference refers to the 21st of January, 1258, which fell on a Sunday (or wake-day): in ballads and tales of the Middle Ages the word is freq.:—note the allit. phrase, dansinn dunar, Ísl. Þóðs. ii. 8: the phrases, stiga danz; ganga í danz; brúðir í danz, dansinn heyra; dans vill hun heyra, Fkv. ii. 7. Many of the burdens to the mod. Icel. ballads are of great beauty, and no doubt many centuries older than the ballads to which they are affixed; they refer to lost love, melancholy, merriment, etc., e. g. Blítt lætur veröldin, fölnar fögr fold | langt er síðan mitt var yndið lagt í mold, i. 74; Út ert þú við æginn blá, eg er hér á Dröngum, | kalla eg löngum, kalla eg til þin löngum; Skín á skildi Sól og sumarið fríða, | dynur í velli er drengir í burtu riða, 110; Ungan leit eg hofmann í fögrum runni, | skal eg í hljóði dilla þeim mér unm; Austan blakar laufið á þann linda, 129; Fagrar heyrða eg raddirnar við Niflunga heim; Fagrt syngr svanrinn um sumarlanga tíð, | þá mun list að leika sér mín liljan fríð, ii. 52: Einum unna eg manninum, á meðan það var, | þó hlaut eg minn harm að bera í leyndum stað, 94; Svanrinn víða. svanurinn syngr viða, 22; Utan eptir firðinum, sigla fagrar fleyr | sá er enginn glaður eptir annan þreyr, 110; Svo er mér illt og angrsamt því veldur þú, | mig langar ekki í lundinn með þá jungfrú, Espol. Ann. 1549. The earliest ballads seem to have been devoted to these subjects only; of the two earliest specimens quoted in the Sturl. (above), one is satirical, the other melancholy; the historical ballads seem to be of later growth: the bishops discountenanced the wakes and dancing (Bs. l. c., Sturl. iii), but in vain: and no more telling proof can be given of the drooping spirits of Icel. in the last century, than that dancing and wakes ceased, after having been a popular amusement for seven hundred years. Eggert Olafsson in his poems still speaks of wakes, as an eyewitness; in the west of Icel. (Vestfirðir) they lasted longer, but even there they died out about the time that Percy’s ballads were published in England. The Fornkvæði or songs are the only Icel. poetry which often dispenses with the law of alliteration, which in other cases is the light and life of Icel. poetry; vide also hofmaðr, viki-vakar, etc. In the 15th century the rímur (metrical paraphrases of romances) were used as an accompaniment to the danz, höldar danza harla snart, ef heyrist vísan mín; hence originates the name man-söngr ( maid-song), minne-sang, which forms the introduction to every ríma or rhapsody; the metre and time of the rímur are exactly those of ballads and well suited for dancing. An Icel. MS. of the 17th century, containing about seventy Icel. Fornkvæði, is in the Brit. Mus. no. 11,177; and another MS., containing about twenty such songs, is in the Bodl. Libr. no. 130. -
20 stirs
Синонимический ряд:1. ados (noun) ados; bustles; flurries; fusses; pothers; whirlpools; whirls; whirlwinds2. motions (noun) motions; movements; moves3. arouses (verb) arouses; awakens; awakes; bestirs; challenges; excites; kindles; prompts; provokes; rallies; rouses; stimulates; wakens; wakes; whets4. causes (verb) breeds; causes; engenders; generates; hatches; induces; spawns; touch off5. combines (verb) admixes; amalgamates; blends; combines; compounds; fuses; intermingles; intermixes; merges; mingles; mixes6. fires (verb) animates; fires; inspires; kindles7. moves (verb) budges; moves8. seethes (verb) boils; bubbles; churns; ferments; seethes; simmers; smolders9. wakes (verb) awakens; awakes; rouses; wakens; wakes
См. также в других словарях:
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