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21 have
have [hæv]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━2. modal verb4. noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. avoir━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► avoir is the auxiliary used with most verbs to form past tenses. For important exceptions see below.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• haven't you grown! comme tu as grandi !━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► Note the agreement of the past participle with the preceding direct object.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• if I had seen her I would have spoken to her si je l'avais vue, je lui aurais parlé━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When describing uncompleted states or actions, French generally uses the present and imperfect where English uses the perfect and past perfect.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• I have lived or have been living here for 10 years/since January j'habite ici depuis 10 ans/depuis janvier• I had lived or had been living there for 10 years j'habitais là depuis 10 ans► to have just... venir de...b. être━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► être is the auxiliary used with all reflexives, and the following verbs when used intransitively: aller, arriver, descendre, devenir, entrer, monter, mourir, naître, partir, passer, rentrer, rester, retourner, revenir, sortir, tomber, venir.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• you've seen her, haven't you? vous l'avez vue, n'est-ce pas ?• he hasn't told anyone, has he? il n'en a parlé à personne, n'est-ce pas ?d. (in tag responses) he's got a new job -- oh has he? il a un nouveau travail -- ah bon ?• you've dropped your book -- so I have! vous avez laissé tomber votre livre -- en effet !━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► (mais) si or (mais) non are used to contradict.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• you haven't seen her -- yes I have! vous ne l'avez pas vue -- (mais) si !• you've made a mistake -- no I haven't! vous vous êtes trompé -- mais non !━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• have you met him? -- yes I have est-ce que tu l'as rencontré ? -- oui• has he arrived? -- no he hasn't est-ce qu'il est arrivé ? -- none. (avoiding repetition of verb) have you ever been there? if you have... y êtes-vous déjà allé ? si oui,...• have you tried it? if you haven't... est-ce que vous avez goûté ça ? si vous ne l'avez pas fait,...2. modal verb━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► falloir is always used in the third person singular, in an impersonal construction. Note that falloir que is always followed by the subjunctive.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• you're going to have to work hard! tu vas devoir travailler dur ! il va falloir que tu travailles dur !• I'll have to leave now or I'll miss the train il faut que je parte, sinon je vais rater mon train• don't you have to get permission? est-ce qu'on ne doit pas demander la permission ?• do you have to go now? est-ce que vous devez partir tout de suite ?• we've had to work late twice this week nous avons dû rester travailler tard deux fois cette semaine• what kind of equipment would you have to have? quel type de matériel vous faudrait-il ?• it has to be the biggest scandal this year c'est sans aucun doute le plus gros scandale de l'année• do you have to make such a noise? tu ne pourrais pas faire un peu moins de bruit ?► don't/doesn't have to + infinitive━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• you didn't have to tell her! tu n'avais pas besoin de le lui dire !• I don't have to do it je ne suis pas obligé or forcé de le fairea. avoir• I have or I've got three books j'ai trois livres• have you got a suitcase? avez-vous une valise ?• have you got this jumper in black? est-ce que vous avez ce pull en noir ?b. ( = eat, drink, take) he had an egg for breakfast il a mangé un œuf au petit déjeuner• shall we have a coffee? on prend un café ?► will you have...? (in offers)will you have tea or coffee? vous prendrez du thé ou du café ?c. ( = spend) passer• what sort of day have you had? est-ce que tu as passé une bonne journée ?d. ( = smoke) fumere. ( = catch) tenir• I've got him where I want him! (inf) je le tiens !► to let sb have ( = give) donner à qn• I'll let you have it for $100 je vous le cède pour 100 dollars► must have or have to have• I must have £50 at once il me faut 50 livres immédiatement• I must or have to have them by this afternoon il me les faut pour cet après-midi► won't have ( = refuse to accept)I won't have this nonsense! je ne tolérerai pas ces enfantillages !• I won't have it! je ne tolérerai pas ça !• I won't have him risking his neck on that motorbike je ne veux pas qu'il risque sa vie sur cette moto► would have ( = wish)what would you have me do? que voulez-vous que je fasse ?• he had his worst fears confirmed ses pires craintes se sont réalisées► to have sb do sth faire faire qch à qn• she soon had them all reading and writing elle a réussi très rapidement à leur apprendre à lire et à écrire► had better ( = should)4. nouna. faire venira. [+ clothes] porterb. (British = have planned) I've got so much on this week that... j'ai tant de choses à faire cette semaine que...d. Richard has nothing on him! (inf) Richard ne lui arrive pas à la cheville !• the police have nothing on me (inf) la police n'a pas de preuve contre moi► have out separable transitive verb[+ friends, neighbours] inviter* * *[hæv, həv] 1.transitive verb ( uses not covered in NOTE)1) ( possess) avoir2) ( consume) prendre3) ( want) vouloir, prendrewhat will you have? — qu'est-ce que vous prendrez or voulez?
I wouldn't have him/her any other way — c'est comme ça que je l'aime
4) (receive, get) recevoir [letter, information]5) ( hold) faire [party, celebration]; tenir [meeting]; organiser [competition, ballot, exhibition]; avoir [conversation]; mener [enquiry]6) (exert, exhibit) avoir [effect, influence]; avoir [courage, courtesy] ( to do de faire)7) ( spend) passerto have a nice day/evening — passer une journée/soirée agréable
to have a hard ou bad time — traverser une période difficile
8) ( be provided with) (also have got)I have ou I've got letters to write — j'ai du courrier à faire
9) (undergo, suffer) avoirto have (the) flu/a heart attack — avoir la grippe/une crise cardiaque
to have an interview — avoir or passer un entretien
10) ( cause to be done)they would have us believe that... — ils voudraient nous faire croire que...
I would have you know that... — je voudrais que vous sachiez que...
11) ( cause to become)we'll soon have everything ready/clean — nous aurons bientôt fini de tout préparer/nettoyer
if you're not careful you'll have that glass over — si tu ne fais pas attention tu vas renverser le verre
12) ( allow) tolérer13) ( physically hold) tenirshe had him by the throat/by the arm — elle le tenait à la gorge/par le bras
14) ( give birth to) [woman] avoir [child]; [animal] mettre bas, avoir [young]15) ( as impersonal verb)over here, we have a painting by Picasso — ici vous avez un tableau de Picasso
what we have here is a small group of extremists — ce à quoi nous avons affaire ici, est un petit groupe d'extrémistes
16) ( puzzle)you have ou you've got me there! — là tu me poses une colle! (colloq)
17) ( have at one's mercy) (also have got)2.I've got you/him now! — maintenant je te/le tiens!
modal auxiliary1) ( must)I have (got) to leave now — je dois partir maintenant, il faut que je parte maintenant
2) ( need to)you don't have to ou you haven't got to leave so early — tu n'as pas besoin de or tu n'es pas obligé de partir si tôt
3) ( for emphasis)3.this has (got) to be the most difficult decision I've ever made — c'est sans doute la décision la plus difficile que j'aie jamais eu à prendre
1) gen avoir; ( with movement and reflexive verbs) être2) ( in tag questions etc)you've seen the film, haven't you? — tu as vu le film, n'est-ce pas?
you haven't seen the film, have you? — tu n'as pas vu le film?
you haven't seen my bag, have you? — tu n'as pas vu mon sac, par hasard?
‘he's already left’ - ‘has he indeed!’ — ‘il est déjà parti’ - ‘vraiment!’
4.‘you've never met him’ - ‘yes I have!’ — ‘tu ne l'as jamais rencontré’ - ‘mais si!’
having auxiliary verb1) ( in time clauses)having finished his breakfast, he went out — après avoir fini son petit déjeuner, il est sorti
2) (because, since)•Phrasal Verbs:- have in- have on- have up••this car/TV has had it — (colloq) cette voiture/télé est foutue (colloq)
when your father finds out, you've had it! — (colloq) ( in trouble) quand ton père l'apprendra, ça va être ta fête! (colloq)
I can't do any more, I've had it! — (colloq) ( tired) je n'en peux plus, je suis crevé! (colloq)
I've had it (up to here) with... — (colloq) j'en ai marre de... (colloq)
to have it in for somebody — (colloq) avoir quelqu'un dans le collimateur (colloq)
she has/doesn't have it in her to do — elle est capable/incapable de faire
and the ayes/noes have it — les oui/non l'emportent
...and what have you —...etc
there is no milk/there are no houses to be had — on ne trouve pas de lait/de maisons
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22 have no part nor lot in smth.
(have no (или neither) part nor lot in smth.)не принимать участия, не участвовать в чём-л., не иметь ничего общего с чем-л. [этим. библ. Acts VIII, 21]...she would have neither part nor lot in his dishonest career. (OED) —...она не имеет никакого отношения к его грязным делам.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have no part nor lot in smth.
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23 part
part [pɑ:t]partie ⇒ 1 (a) rôle ⇒ 1 (b) pièce ⇒ 1 (c) quartier ⇒ 1 (d) episode ⇒ 1 (e) mesure ⇒ 1 (f) s'entrouvrir ⇒ 3 (a) s'ouvrir ⇒ 3 (a) se quitter ⇒ 3 (b) entrouvrir ⇒ 4 (a) écarter ⇒ 4 (a) séparer ⇒ 4 (b)1 noun(a) (gen → portion, subdivision) partie f;∎ the exam is in two parts l'examen est en deux parties;∎ see part one, section two voir première partie, section deux;∎ the parts of the body les parties fpl du corps;∎ (a) part of the garden is flooded une partie du jardin est inondée;∎ (a) part of me strongly agrees with them sur un certain plan, je suis tout à fait d'accord avec eux;∎ that's only part of the problem ce n'est qu'un des aspects du problème;∎ it's very much part of the game/of the process ça fait partie du jeu/du processus;∎ it's all part of growing up c'est ce qui se passe quand on grandit;∎ we've finished the hardest part nous avons fait le plus dur;∎ I haven't told you the best part yet je ne t'ai pas encore dit le plus beau ou la meilleure;∎ the best/worst part was when he started laughing le mieux/le pire ça a été quand il s'est mis à rire;∎ in the early part of the week au début ou dans les premiers jours de la semaine;∎ for the best or greater part of five years (to wait, last etc) presque cinq ans;∎ the greater part of the population la plus grande partie de la population;∎ to be (a) part of sth (be involved with) faire partie de qch;∎ he desperately wants to be a part of her organization il veut à tout prix faire partie de son organisme;∎ to form part of sth faire partie de qch;∎ to be part and parcel of sth faire partie (intégrante) de qch∎ who played the part of Hamlet? qui a joué le rôle de Hamlet?;∎ figurative he's just playing a part il joue la comédie;∎ to know one's part connaître son texte;∎ work plays a large part in our lives le travail joue un rôle important dans notre vie;∎ she played a large part in persuading the company to relocate c'est surtout elle qui a persuadé l'entreprise de se relocaliser;∎ to take part (in sth) prendre part ou participer (à qch);∎ she takes an active part in decision-making elle participe activement au processus de prise de décision;∎ I had no part in that affair je n'ai joué aucun rôle dans cette affaire;∎ he has no part in the running of the company il ne participe pas à ou il n'intervient pas dans la gestion de la société;∎ Joe had no part in it Joe n'y était pour rien;∎ I want no part in or of their schemes je ne veux pas être mêlé à leurs projets;∎ to do one's part y mettre du sien;∎ to dress the part se mettre en tenue de circonstance;∎ to look the part avoir la tenue de circonstance;∎ for my/his part pour ma/sa part(c) (component → of machine) pièce f;∎ spare parts pièces fpl détachées ou de rechange;∎ parts and labour warranty garantie f pièces et main-d'œuvre(d) (area → of country, town etc)∎ which part of England are you from? vous êtes d'où en Angleterre?, de quelle région de l'Angleterre venez-vous?;∎ in some parts of Sydney/Australia dans certains quartiers de Sydney/certaines régions de l'Australie;∎ it's a dangerous part of town c'est un quartier dangereux;∎ are you new to these parts? vous êtes nouveau ici?;∎ they are not from our part of the world ils ne sont pas de chez nous;∎ she's travelling in foreign parts elle est en voyage à l'étranger∎ don't miss part two! (of serial) ne manquez pas le deuxième épisode!; (of programme in two parts) ne manquez pas la deuxième partie!∎ one part of pastis and four parts of water une mesure de pastis et quatre mesures d'eau;∎ Chemistry a concentration of six parts per million une concentration de six pour un million;∎ the bottle was three parts empty la bouteille était aux trois quarts vide∎ he always takes his mother's part il prend toujours le parti de sa mère;∎ to take sth in good part bien prendre qch∎ the vocal/violin part la partie vocale/(pour) violon;∎ to sing in three parts chanter à trois voix2 adverben partie, partiellement;∎ the jacket is part cotton, part polyester la veste est un mélange de coton et de polyester ou un mélange coton-polyester;∎ he's part English, part Chinese il est moitié anglais, moitié chinois;∎ a mythical creature, part woman, part fish une créature mythique mi-femme, mi-poisson(a) (move apart → lips, curtains) s'entrouvrir; (→ legs) s'écarter, s'ouvrir; (→ crowd) s'ouvrir; (disengage → fighters) se séparer;∎ the clouds parted il y eut une éclaircie(b) (leave one another) se quitter;∎ they parted good friends ils se sont quittés bons amis∎ her lips were slightly parted ses lèvres étaient entrouvertes∎ the children were parted from their parents les enfants ont été séparés de leurs parents;∎ humorous he's not easily parted from his cash il ne se sépare pas facilement de son argent∎ her hair's parted in the middle elle a la raie au milieu(talents) talents mpl;∎ a man/woman of many parts un homme/une femme de talentdans l'ensemble;∎ the day will be sunny for the most part la journée sera ensoleillée dans l'ensemble;∎ for the most part we get along pretty well dans l'ensemble, nous nous entendons assez bienen partie;∎ it's true in part c'est en partie vrai;∎ it's in large part true c'est en grande partie vrai;∎ the problem stems in part from a misunderstanding le problème vient en partie d'un malentendupar endroits;∎ the book is good in parts le livre est bon par endroits, certains passages du livre sont bons;∎ in parts the text is almost illegible le texte est presque illisible par endroitsde la part de;∎ it was negligence on the part of the landlord c'était une négligence de la part du propriétaire►► Commerce part consignment expédition f partielle;Commerce part exchange reprise f;∎ they'll take your old TV set in part exchange ils vous font une reprise sur or ils reprennent votre ancien téléviseur;∎ will you take it in part exchange? voulez-vous le reprendre?;Commerce part load chargement m partiel;part music musique f d'ensemble;part owner copropriétaire mf;part ownership copropriété f;part payment acompte m, paiement m partiel;∎ I received £500 in part payment for the car j'ai reçu un acompte de 500 livres pour la voiture;Commerce part shipment expédition f partielle;part singing chant m polyphonique or à plusieurs voix;part song chant m polyphonique or à plusieurs voix;part of speech partie f du discours;British part work ouvrage m à fascicules;∎ they published it as a part work ils l'ont publié sous forme de fasciculesse séparer de;∎ we'll have to part with most of the furniture nous devrons nous séparer de presque tous les meubles;∎ he hates parting with his money il a horreur de dépenser son argentⓘ Reaches the parts that other beers can't reach Il s'agit du slogan d'une série de publicités pour la bière Heineken pendant les années 70 dans lesquelles la bière était censée conférer des pouvoirs spéciaux à ceux qui la consommaient. Aujourd'hui on utilise encore cette formule ("atteint les parties que les autres bières ne peuvent atteindre"), en remplaçant le mot beers par un autre pour décrire les qualités de quelque chose de façon humoristique. On dira par exemple she makes tea that reaches the parts that other tea cannot reach ("elle fait du thé vraiment excellent"), ou this tour reaches the parts of Scotland that others don't ("ce circuit touristique explore les coins d'Écosse que les autres ignorent"). -
24 have had one's day
(have had (или seen) one's day (тж. have known или seen better days))устареть, отслужить своё, выйти из употребления, отживать свой век; знавать лучшие временаMrs. Appleby: "...I've had my day and I've enjoyed it. It's only fair to give others a chance now." (W. S. Maugham, ‘Caesar's Wife’, act 3) — Миссис Эпплби: "...я взяла от жизни свое, я была счастлива. И, по справедливости, я должна уступить дорогу другим."
He had left his elegance behind in the Caribbean and wore a grey flannel suit which had seen better days. At home he didn't have to keep up appearances; he was part of grey January London. (Gr. Greene, ‘Our Man in Havana’, part I) — Оставив щегольство на берегах Карибского моря, он надел видавший виды серый фланелевый костюм. Дома незачем было пускать пыль в глаза. Он стал частицей тусклого январского Лондона.
It was a room that had seen better days. The paint was old and soiled, the rugs threadbare. (I. Shaw, ‘Lucy Crown’, ch. 15) — Эта комната знавала лучшие дни. А сейчас стены были грязные и потерявшие цвет, ковры потерты.
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25 have a fine time
(have a fine (good, high, амер. big) time (тж. make a time of it, have a fine, good или high old time))хорошо провести время, повеселиться [выражение have a good time, широко распространённое в Англии в XVI-XVII вв., в XVIII в. вышло там из употребления, но сохранилось в США, а в XIX в. было заимствовано уже из США в Англию]‘What do you all smart young people feel about life, nowadays, Fleur?..’ ‘Life?.. We just want to have a good time because we don't believe anything can last. But I don't think we know how to have it.’ (J. Galsworthy, ‘The White Monkey’, part II, ch. V) — - Как вы воспринимаете жизнь, Флер, вы - современная золотая молодежь?.. - Жизнь?.. Мы просто хотим пользоваться минутой, потому что знаем: все преходяще. Но мне кажется, мы не очень-то умеем пользоваться ею.
Matt and me are off to be married and have a high old time. (A. J. Cronin, ‘Hatter's Castle’, book III, ch. 4) — Мэтт и я покидаем эти места; мы поженимся и заживем счастливо, как в старое доброе время.
They had a big time... when he came home drunk. (DAE) — Он им устроил веселую жизнь, когда явился домой пьяным.
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26 have a crow to pick with smb.
(have a crow to pick (или to pluck) with smb.)сводить счёты с кем-л., иметь зуб против кого-лWhen they have taken their places, she said abruptly: ‘I have a crow to pluck with you.’ ‘With me?’ said Gabriel. She nodded her head gravely. ‘What is it?’ asked Gabriel, smiling at her solemn manner. (J. Joyce, ‘Dubliners’, ‘The Dead’) — Когда они сели, мисс Айворс вдруг сказала: - Мне надо свести с вами счеты. - Со мной? - спросил Габриел. Мисс Айворс с серьезным видом кивнула головой. - А в чем дело? - спросил он. Ее торжественный вид вызвал у него улыбку.
My winter hasn't been pleasant. I have a crow to pick with you on account of that. (V. Fisher, ‘Children of God’, part II, ch. XXI) — Зима для меня была не из приятных, и я имеют против вас зуб из-за этого.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have a crow to pick with smb.
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27 part
I 〈de〉♦voorbeelden:iemand parten spelen • play tricks on someoneII 〈 het〉1 [deel van een geheel] part♦voorbeelden:1 appels in parten snijden • cut apples in pieces/segments2 ieder krijgt zijn part • everyone gets his share/portionvoor mijn part • for all I care, as far as I'm concerned -
28 have a part in
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29 have as many lives as a cat
(have as many lives as a cat (тж. have nine lives like a cat или have more lives than a cat))быть живучим как кошка, отличаться поразительной живучестью; см. тж. care killed a cat, a cat has nine lives и a cat with nine lives‘Bless the little dog!’ exclaimed my aunt. ‘If he had as many lives as a cat, and was on the point of losing 'em all, he'd bark at me with his last breath, I believe!’ (Ch. Dickens, ‘David Copperfield’, ch. XLVIII) — - Вот негодная собачонка! - воскликнула моя тетушка. - Если бы у нее было столько жизней, сколько у кошки, и ей грозила опасность потерять их все, я думаю, она лаяла бы на меня при последнем издыхании.
She knew it was an absurd hope - and yet would not let it go... The silence of Dr. Raste had nearly killed it, but it could not be killed; it had more lives than a cat. (A. Bennett, ‘Riceyman Steps’ part IV, ch. V) — Она знала, что надеяться глупо, и все же надеялась... Молчание доктора Рейста нанесло удар этой надежде, но совсем ее не убило: надежду нельзя убить - она живучей кошки.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have as many lives as a cat
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30 have smb. in the palm of one's hand
(have (have got или hold) smb. (или smth.) in the palm of one's hand)держать кого-л. (или что-л.) в руках, заставить кого-л. беспрекословно слушаться, повиноваться (держать что-л. в своих руках)Kit was disturbed. Once he held his friend in the palm of his hand: now Jo was getting too independent. (P. H. Johnson, ‘The Survival of the Fittest’, part II, ch. I) — Кит был обеспокоен. Одно время он держал друга в руках, а сейчас тот становится слишком независимым.
He had Mason County in the palm of his hand... The one day Willie woke up and found himself running for Governor. (R. P. Warren, ‘All the King's Men’, ch. II) — Округ Мейзон был повержен к ногам Уилли... В одно прекрасное утро он проснулся кандидатом в губернаторы.
‘Look here,’ he said, ‘if I said what the position seemed like tonight - I should have to say that I've got it in the palm of my hand.’ (C. P. Snow, ‘Corridors of Power’, ch. XVIII) — - Послушайте, - сказал Роджер, - если бы меня спросили, как сегодня обстоят дела, я бы ответил, что все в моих руках.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have smb. in the palm of one's hand
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31 have a hand in smth.
(have (или take) a hand in smth. (тж. take a hand))участвовать в чём-л., приложить руку к чему-л., оказывать влияние на что-л., вмешиваться во что-л., быть замешанным в чём-л‘I don't believe he'll come of his free will.’ ‘In that case, God knows! I won't have a hand in caging him.’ (J. Galsworthy, ‘Maid in Waiting’, ch. XXVIII) — - Не думаю, чтобы Ферз пошел с нами добровольно. - В таком случае, ей-богу, не знаю, что и делать! Сажать его в клетку? Тут я не помощник.
I can't promise much, I'm not the only one that has a hand in things in this town. (Th. Dreiser, ‘The Financier’, ch. XXVII) — я не могу многого обещать. Ведь не я один имею вес в делах нашего города.
The argument became lively, and we all took a hand. (C. P. Snow, ‘The Masters’, part II, ch. 15) — Спор стал оживленным, мы все приняли в нем участие.
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32 have one's fingers crossed
стараться не сглазить (ср. плюнуть через левое плечо) [выражение восходит к народной примете: суеверные люди держат пальцы скрещёнными, считая, что это отвратит неудачу]Neat job so far. But keep the fingers crossed. (J. B. Priestley, ‘Festival’, part III, ch. 2) — Пока работа недурна. Но смотрите, как бы не сглазить.
‘Keep your fingers crossed, darling,’ she called to Bill. ‘Don't worry,’ Bill said lightly. ‘I'll be all right.’ (K. S. Prichard, ‘Winged Seeds’, ch. XXXII) — - Плюнь через левое плечо, милый! - крикнула она Биллу. - Не тревожься, все будет в порядке, - беззаботно ответил Билл.
Now I'm going to be first down that gangway. Keep yer fingers crossed for me. (D. Cusack, ‘Say No to Death’, ch. 1) — Ну а теперь побегу, чтобы первым поспеть к трапу. А ты тут меня ругай.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have one's fingers crossed
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33 have one's wits about one
(have (have got или keep) one's wits about one (тж. with one's или all one's wits about one))1) неплохо соображать, понимать что к чему; быть себе на умеMiss Figgis: "You all think I'm stupid and slow, but I've still got my wits about me." (P. H. Johnson, ‘Corinth House’, act III) — Мисс Фиджис: "Вы все думаете, что я глупа и медлительна, но я прекрасно понимаю что к чему."
2) не терять головы, сохранять самообладание; быть осторожным, бдительным; быть начеку, наготове (тж. need или want all one's wits about one)Strapper: "You were looking at a rainbow like a damned silly fool instead of keeping your wits about you; and we stole up on you and had you tight before you could draw a bead on us." (B. Shaw, ‘The Shewing-up of Blanco Posnet’) — Страппер: "Надо было быть настороже, а вы, как идиот, любовались радугой. Вот мы и подкрались и сцапали вас - вы даже и не успели прицелиться."
I need all my wits about me. For if you're right it might... in a way... alter our position. (A. J. Cronin, ‘The Northern Light’, part II, ch. 3) — Сейчас я должен быть предельно собранным. Ведь если ты прав, то это может... в известной мере... изменить наше положение.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have one's wits about one
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34 have smth. at one's fingers' ends
(have smth. at one's fingers' ends (finger-ends, finger tips или finger-tips))знать что-л. как свои пять пальцев, владеть чем-л. в совершенстве; ≈ собаку съесть на чём-лVicar: "I see you have the usual Rationalistic arguments at your fingers' ends." (W. S. Maugham, ‘The Unknown’, act 2) — Викарий: "Вы, как видно, мастер по части рационалистической аргументации."
Anderson was giving a course of lectures on the present business and... had all the figures at his finger-tips. (U. Sinclair, ‘Between Two Worlds’, ch. 37) — Андерсон читал курс лекций о современном капитализме и... приводил по памяти все цифры.
Nora had every detail of his banking and Stock Exchange transactions at her finger tips... (K. S. Prichard, ‘Winged Seeds’, ch. XIII) — Нора знала назубок все подробности биржевых и банковских сделок Фриско...
He had the scientific world at his finger-tips, and was one of the shrewdest men I knew... (C. P. Snow, ‘The Search’, part III, ch. VIII) — Макдональд знал ученый мир как свои пять пальцев и был одним из самых умных людей, каких я когда-либо встречал...
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have smth. at one's fingers' ends
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35 have smth. up one's sleeve
(have (или keep) smth. up one's sleeve)иметь что-л. про запас, на всякий случай, скрывать что-л. до поры до времени; см. тж. an ace up one's sleeveBlanco: "Take care, Boozy. He hasn't finished with you yet. He always has a trick up his sleeve." (B. Shaw, ‘The Shewing-up of Blanco Posnet’) — Бланко: "Смотри, Бузи, осторожнее! Он еще не расквитался с тобой. А у него всегда есть что-нибудь наготове."
Again that indefinable mockery, as if he had something up his sleeve. (J. Galsworthy, ‘The White Monkey’, part III, ch. VII) — Снова чуть заметная ирония. Как будто он что-то скрывал.
‘Coffee,’ said Mrs. Marle, ‘I think we could do with it. I have something up my sleeve for lunch.’ (P. H. Johnson, ‘Night and Silence Who Is Here?’, ch. XXXIII) — - Кофе, - сказала миссис Марл, - всех устроит. Но у меня на завтрак есть еще кое-что.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have smth. up one's sleeve
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36 have the right ring about it
(have the right (или true) ring about it (тж. ring true))звучать искренне, правдиво; быть настоящим, подлинным [настоящие монеты отличали от фальшивых по звуку]; см. тж. have a hollow ringThe words rang true, but Soames did not drop his caution. (J. Galsworthy, ‘The White Monkey’, part II, ch. I) — Как будто говорит правду! Но осторожность не покидала Сомса.
I think I can tell a good story and I can create characters that ring true. (W. S. Maugham, ‘Cakes and Ale’, ch. I) — Я думаю, что могу рассказать интересную историю, создать действительно живые характеры.
He must be, Tuppence thought, a marvellous actor... His words to her that morning had rung so very true. (A. Christie, ‘N or M?’, ch. VI) — "Должно быть, этот Карл фон Дейним прекрасный актер", - подумала Тапенс. Его слова, сказанные ей сегодня утром, звучали так искренно.
‘I don't believe you,’ said Austin. ‘It doesn't ring true.’ (I. Murdoch, ‘An Accidental Man’) — - Я тебе не верю, - сказал Остин. - Очень уж это сомнительно.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have the right ring about it
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37 have an ear to the ground
(have (hold или keep) an (или one's) ear (тж. one's ears) (close) to the ground)"слушать, приложив ухо к земле", знать, что происходит вокруг или что может произойти, быть в курсе дела, прислушиваться к общественному мнениюHe knows what the people want because he listens to them and has his ear to the ground. (S. Heym, ‘The Eyes of Reason’, book I, ch. 6) — Крават понимает, чего хотят рабочие, и прислушивается к их голосу.
‘What's the gossip of the market, Tom? You fellows certainly do keep your ears to the ground.’ (Gr. Greene, ‘The Quiet American’, part III, ch. 1) — А что болтают насчет цен на товары, а, Том? Ведь ваш брат-газетчик всегда в курсе дела.
Yet he could not resist letting me know that he still had his ear to the ground. (C. P. Snow, ‘Homecomings’, ch. 34) — Но не дать мне почувствовать, что он по-прежнему держит ухо востро, было выше его сил.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > have an ear to the ground
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38 have smb. in tow
(have (или take) smb. in tow)1) взять на буксир, опекать кого-л.; иметь кого-л. на своём попечении или под своим покровительствомProfessor Cowey had published works through Theobald's father, and Theobald had on this account been taken in tow by Mrs. Cowey, from the beginning of his University career. (S. Butler, ‘The Way of All Flesh’, ch. X) — Отец Теобалда помог профессору Коуи опубликовать его работы, и поэтому миссис Коуи опекала Теобалда с первых дней его университетской жизни.
2) иметь кого-л. в числе своих поклонниковNow that she has the Buccaneer in tow, she doesn't care twopence about you, and you'll find it out. (J. Galsworthy, ‘The Man of Property’, part I, ch. V) — С тех пор, как Джун взяла на буксир этого "пирата", ей стало не до тебя, скоро ты сама в этом убедишься.
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39 part noch deel aan iets hebben
Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > part noch deel aan iets hebben
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40 part noch deel hebben aan iets
part noch deel hebben aan ietsVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > part noch deel hebben aan iets
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