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(in)+that+year

  • 121 разлететься прахом

    ИДТИ/ПОЙТИ <РАССЫПАТЬСЯ/РАССЫПАТЬСЯ, РАЗЛЕТАТЬСЯ/РАЗЛЕТЕТЬСЯ, ЛЕТЕТЬ/ПОЛЕТЕТЬ> ПРАХОМ
    [VP; more often pfv]
    =====
    1. [subj: abstr (надежды, планы, дела, жизнь etc, often все), or заведение, предприятие etc; more often this WO]
    (of hopes, plans, affairs, s.o.'s life etc, or an establishment, a business etc) to collapse totally, suffer failure:
    - X пошел прахом X went to rack and ruin;
    - [in limited contexts] X went to the dogs;
    - [of plans, hopes etc only] X came to nothing (to naught).
         ♦ Говорят, именно в тот год дела его пошли прахом (Искандер 3). They say that his affairs went to rack and ruin that year (3a).
         ♦ "Обидно, Сергей Платонович!.. Обидно, что не придется поглядеть, как распотрошат ваши капиталы и вас вспугнут из тёплого гнёздышка... Всё же, знаете, приятно будет видеть, как все пойдет прахом" (Шолохов 3). "It's such a shame, Sergei Platonovich!...Such a shame that I shan't live to see your capital done away with and you flushed out of your cosy little nest.... After all, you know, it would be nice to see everything go up in smoke" (3a).
    2. [subj: a quantit NP denoting a period of time]
    to pass without yielding hoped-for results:
    - X пойдет прахом X will go (be) (all) for nothing (naught);
    - X will go down the drain.
         ♦...Сделай я что-нибудь политически скандальное, меня начисто выметут из ибанской [попсе word] истории. Двадцать лет труда пойдет прахом (Зиновьев 1)....If I do anything politically scandalous I'll simply be swept out of the history of Ibansk. TVventy years of work will go for nothing (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > разлететься прахом

  • 122 рассыпаться прахом

    ИДТИ/ПОЙТИ <РАССЫПАТЬСЯ/РАССЫПАТЬСЯ, РАЗЛЕТАТЬСЯ/РАЗЛЕТЕТЬСЯ, ЛЕТЕТЬ/ПОЛЕТЕТЬ> ПРАХОМ
    [VP; more often pfv]
    =====
    1. [subj: abstr (надежды, планы, дела, жизнь etc, often все), or заведение, предприятие etc; more often this WO]
    (of hopes, plans, affairs, s.o.'s life etc, or an establishment, a business etc) to collapse totally, suffer failure:
    - X пошел прахом X went to rack and ruin;
    - [in limited contexts] X went to the dogs;
    - [of plans, hopes etc only] X came to nothing (to naught).
         ♦ Говорят, именно в тот год дела его пошли прахом (Искандер 3). They say that his affairs went to rack and ruin that year (3a).
         ♦ "Обидно, Сергей Платонович!.. Обидно, что не придется поглядеть, как распотрошат ваши капиталы и вас вспугнут из тёплого гнёздышка... Всё же, знаете, приятно будет видеть, как все пойдет прахом" (Шолохов 3). "It's such a shame, Sergei Platonovich!...Such a shame that I shan't live to see your capital done away with and you flushed out of your cosy little nest.... After all, you know, it would be nice to see everything go up in smoke" (3a).
    2. [subj: a quantit NP denoting a period of time]
    to pass without yielding hoped-for results:
    - X пойдет прахом X will go (be) (all) for nothing (naught);
    - X will go down the drain.
         ♦...Сделай я что-нибудь политически скандальное, меня начисто выметут из ибанской [попсе word] истории. Двадцать лет труда пойдет прахом (Зиновьев 1)....If I do anything politically scandalous I'll simply be swept out of the history of Ibansk. TVventy years of work will go for nothing (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > рассыпаться прахом

  • 123 rigoler

    rigoler (inf) [ʀigɔle]
    ➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb
       a. ( = rire) to laugh
    quand il l'a su, il a bien rigolé when he found out, he had a good laugh (inf)
    il n'y a pas de quoi rigoler ! that's nothing to laugh about!
    quand tu verras les dégâts, tu rigoleras moins you'll be laughing on the other side of your face when you see the damage
       b. ( = s'amuser) to have a bit of fun
       c. ( = plaisanter) to joke
    tu rigoles ! you're kidding! (inf)
    * * *
    (colloq) ʀigɔle verbe intransitif
    1) ( rire) to laugh
    2) ( s'amuser) to have fun
    3) ( plaisanter) to joke, to kid (colloq)
    * * *
    ʀiɡɔle vi *
    1) (= rire) to laugh

    Elle a rigolé en le voyant tomber. — She laughed when she saw him fall.

    2) (= s'amuser) to have fun, to have a laugh, *

    On a bien rigolé hier soir. — We had fun last night., We had a laugh last night.

    3) (= plaisanter) to be joking, to be kidding

    Ne te fâche pas, je rigolais. — Don't get upset, I was only joking., Don't get upset, I was only kidding,

    pour rigoler — for a laugh, *

    * * *
    rigoler verb table: aimer vi
    1 ( rire) to laugh; on a bien rigolé we had a good laugh; faire rigoler qn to make sb laugh, to give sb a good laugh; ne me fais pas rigoler iron don't make me laugh; il n'y a pas de quoi rigoler there is nothing to laugh about, this is no laughing matter;
    2 ( s'amuser) to have fun; il aime bien rigoler he likes a laugh; ça ne rigole pas tous les jours ici it's not much fun here;
    3 ( plaisanter) to joke, to kid; il ne faut pas rigoler avec la sécurité you mustn't mess about ou fool around with security; il a dit ça pour rigoler he said it as a joke.
    [rigɔle] verbe intransitif
    1. [rire] to laugh
    tu me fais rigoler avec tes remords you, sorry? don't make me laugh!
    2. [plaisanter] to joke
    il a dit ça pour rigoler he said that in jest, he meant it as a joke
    3. [s'amuser] to have fun
    avec lui comme prof, tu ne vas pas rigoler tous les jours it won't be much fun for you having him as a teacher

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > rigoler

  • 124 HÖFUNDR

    (-ar, -ar), m.
    1) author, originator;
    2) judge (rare).
    * * *
    m., gen. ar; the masc. inflex. - undr reminds one of the Gothic (Gramm. p. xxxii. B. V); in old writers the word is found only four times, always in the sense of a judge, and referring chiefly to Gothland in Sweden; Höfundr (a mythol. pr. name) var manna vitrastr, ok svá réttdæmr, at hann hallaði aldri réttum dómi, … ok af hans nafni skyldi sá höfundr heita í hverju ríki er mál manna dæmdi, Fas. (Hervar. S.) i. 523, cp. 513: as also in Hrólfs S. Kraka (referring to Gothland), höfundr einn var þar til settr at skora þetta mál með sannindum, settusk margir í þetta sæti, ok kallaði höfundr öngum sæma, Þórir gengr seinastr ok sezk hann þegar í stólinn; höfundr mælti, þér er sætið hæfiligast, ok muntu dæmdr til þessarar stjórnar, Fas. i. 58: sigr-höfundr, the judge of victory, the Lord of battle, a name given to Odin by Egil, Stor. 21: lastly in Thorodd, skáld eru höfundar allrar rýnni eða máls-greina, sem smiðir málmgripa (?), eðr lögmenn laga, the poets are judges in all matters of grammar and syntax, as smiths in workmanship, and lawyers in law, Skálda (Thorodd) 164; this passage as well as the preceding is erroneously rendered in the earlier translations, as also in Lex. Poët.
    II. an author, originator; the revival of this ancient word, in quite a different sense, is curious; it does not occur in any of the earliest glossaries of the 17th century nor in the Bible nor in Vídalín, but, as it seems for the first time, in the Lexidion Islandico-Latinum, published at Copenhagen A. D. 1734, as a rendering of the Latin auctor, and was probably inserted by some learned philologer (Jon Ólafsson?) from the passage in Skálda, by a mistake.
    2. by the end of the century it came to be used = a writer, and is now freq. in that sense, either rit-höfundr or singly; but still in 1781, in the preface to Fél. of that year, ritsmiðr ( writ-smith) and höfundr are both used, shewing that the latter was not yet settled, though at present the use of this word is quite fixed.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > HÖFUNDR

  • 125 идти под гору

    разг.
    1) (о чём-либо; развиваться в неблагоприятном направлении, резко ухудшаться) roll downhill; be on the decline; go to ruin; hit the skids; be slipping

    Дела его вовсе под гору пошли. Охотиться стало не на что, последние денежки перевелись, последние люди разбежались. (И. Тургенев, Записки охотника) — Everything went utterly to ruin. He had no money left for sport; the last of his meagre fortune was spent; the last of his few servants ran away.

    И как свалился [Сапегин], так и покатилось всё под гору: вымер от поветрия породистый скот, рухнули оранжереи с приколотыми к стенам шпалерными абрикосами, сквозь осыпь штукатурки в углу гостиной стало гнилое дерево проступать. (Л. Леонов, Русский лес) — When he died everything started rolling downhill. Infectious disease carried off his pedigree stock, the greenhouse with his trellised apricots fastened to the walls collapsed, and the rotting timber began to show through the crumbling plaster in a corner of the drawing-room.

    2) ( близиться к концу (о жизни)) be on the decline (of smb.'s life); go downhill

    Тихону Ильичу сравнялось уже пятьдесят. И мысль о том, что жизнь пошла под гору, опять стала овладевать им. (И. Бунин, Деревня) — Tikhon Ilyich was fifty that year. And again he was seized with the thought about his life going downhill.

    С этого дня жизнь Корчагина шла под уклон. О работе не могло быть и речи. Всё чаще он проводил дни в кровати. (Н. Островский, Как закалялась сталь) — From that day Pavel felt that his life was on the decline. Work was now out of the question. More and more often he was confined to his bed.

    Русско-английский фразеологический словарь > идти под гору

  • 126 Manuel I, king

    (1469-1521)
       King Manuel I, named "The Fortunate" in Portuguese tradition, ruled from 1495 to 1521, the zenith of Portugal's world power and imperial strength. Manuel was the 14th king of Portugal and the ninth son of Infante Dom Fernando and Dona Brites, as well as the adopted son of King João II (r. 1481-95). Manuel ascended the throne when the royal heir, Dom Afonso, the victim of a riding accident, suddenly died. Manuel's three marriages provide a map of the royal and international history of the era. His first marriage (1497) was to the widow of Dom Afonso, son of King João II, late heir to the throne. The second (1500) was to the Infanta Dona Maria of Castile, and the third marriage (1518) was to Dona Leonor, sister of King Carlos V (Hapsburg emperor and king of Spain).
       Manuel's reign featured several important developments in government, such as the centralization of state power and royal absolutism; overseas expansion, namely the decision in 1495 to continue on from Africa to Asia and the building of an Asian maritime trade empire; and innovation and creativity in culture, with the emergence of the Manueline architectural style and the writings of Gil Vicente and others. There was also an impact on population and demography with the expulsion or forcible conversion of the Jews. In 1496, King Manuel I approved a decree that forced all Jews who would not become baptized as Christians to leave the country within 10 months. The Jews had been expelled from Spain in 1492. The economic impact on Portugal in coming decades or even centuries is debatable, but it is clear that a significant number of Jews converted and remained in Portugal, becoming part of the Portuguese establishment.
       King Manuel's decision in 1495, backed by a royal council and by the Cortes called that year, to continue the quest for Asia by means of seeking an all-water route from Portugal around Africa to India was momentous. Sponsorship of Vasco da Gama's first great voyage (1497-99) to India was the beginning of an era of unprecedented imperial wealth, power, and excitement. It became the official goal to create a maritime monopoly of the Asian spice trade and keep it in Portugal's hands. When Pedro Álvares Cabral's voyage from Lisbon to India was dispatched in 1500, its route was deliberately planned to swing southwest into the Atlantic, thus sighting "The Land of the Holy Cross," or Brazil, which soon became a Portuguese colony. Under King Manuel, the foundations were laid for Portugal's Brazilian and Asian empire, from Calicut to the Moluccas. Described by France's King Francis I as the "Grocer King," with his command of the mighty spice trade, King Manuel approved of a fitting monument to the new empire: the building of the magnificent Jerónimos Monastery where, after his death in 1521, both Manuel and Vasco da Gama were laid to rest.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Manuel I, king

  • 127 Borsig, Johann Carl Friedrich August

    [br]
    b. 25 June 1804 Breslau, Germany (now Wroclaw, Poland)
    d. 7 July 1854 Berlin, Germany
    [br]
    German pioneer manufacturer of locomotives and rails.
    [br]
    Borsig established a small works at Berlin in 1837 that ten years later had expanded sufficiently to employ 1,200 people. In that year it produced sixty-seven locomotives. Borsig copied the long-boiler type then popular in Britain and which had been exported to Germany by British manufacturers: it became the standard goods engine in Germany for many years, and the name Borsig became one of the famous names of locomotive building. In 1847 Borsig established an iron-works near Berlin that from 1851 started to produce good-quality rails; German railways previously had to import these from Britain.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Marshall, 1978, A Biographical Dictionary of Railway Engineers, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Borsig, Johann Carl Friedrich August

  • 128 Claudet, Antoine François Jean

    [br]
    b. 12 August 1797 France
    d. 27 December 1867 London, England
    [br]
    French pioneer photographer and photographic inventor in England.
    [br]
    He began his working life in banking but soon went into glassmaking and in 1829 he moved to London to open a glass warehouse. On hearing of the first practicable photographic processes in 1834, Claudet visited Paris, where he received instruction in the daguerreotype process from the inventor Daguerre, and purchased a licence to operate in England. On returning to London he began to sell daguerreotype views of Paris and Rome, but was soon taking and selling his own views of London. At this time exposures could take as long as thirty minutes and portraiture from life was impracticable. Claudet was fascinated by the possibilities of the daguerreotype and embarked on experiments to improve the process. In 1841 he published details of an accelerated process and took out a patent proposing the use of flat painted backgrounds and a red light in dark-rooms. In June of that year Claudet opened the second daguerreotype portrait studio in London, just three months after his rival, Richard Beard. He took stereoscopic photographs for Wheatstone as early as 1842, although it was not until the 1850s that stereoscopy became a major interest. He suggested and patented several improvements to viewers derived from Brewster's pattern.
    Claudet was also one of the first photographers to practise professionally Talbot's calotype process. He became a personal friend of Talbot, one of the few from whom the inventor was prepared to accept advice. Claudet died suddenly in London following an accident that occurred when he was alighting from an omnibus. A memoir produced shortly after his death lists over forty scientific papers relating to his researches into photography.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1853.
    Further Reading
    "The late M.Claudet", 1868, Photographic News 12:3 (obituary).
    "A.Claudet, FRS, a memoir", 1968, (reprinted from The Scientific Review), London: British Association (a fulsome but valuable Victorian view of Claudet).
    H.Gernsheim and A.Gernsheim, 1969, The History of Photography, rev. edn, London (a comprehensive account of Claudet's daguerreotype work).
    H.J.P.Arnold, 1977, William Henry Fox Talbot, London (provides details of Claudet's relationship with Talbot).
    JW

    Biographical history of technology > Claudet, Antoine François Jean

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