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1 visionary
tr['vɪʒənərɪ]1 (showing vision) con visión de futuro2 (unrealistic) visionario,-anoun (pl visionaries)1 visionario,-avisionary ['vɪʒə.nri] adj1) farsighted: visionario, con visión de futuro2) utopian: utópico, poco realistaadj.• quimerista adj.• visionario, -a adj.n.• iluminado s.m.• quimerista s.m.,f.• visionario s.m.
I 'vɪʒəneri, 'vɪʒənria) ( farsighted) <leader/plan> con visión de futurob) ( unrealistic) utópico
II
a) ( dreamer) visionario, -ria m,fb) ( seer) iluminado, -da m,f, visionario, -ria m,f['vɪʒǝnǝrɪ]1. N1) (=original thinker) visionario(-a) m / f2) (=dreamer) soñador(a) m / f2. ADJ1) (=farsighted) [person, plan] con visión de futuro, visionario2) (=impractical) [idea, plan] utópico, quimérico3) (=idealistic) [person] idealista4) (=religious, supernatural) [experience] sobrenatural* * *
I ['vɪʒəneri, 'vɪʒənri]a) ( farsighted) <leader/plan> con visión de futurob) ( unrealistic) utópico
II
a) ( dreamer) visionario, -ria m,fb) ( seer) iluminado, -da m,f, visionario, -ria m,f -
2 far-sighted
tr[fɑː'saɪtɪd]1 previsor,-raadj.• longividente adj.• previsor adj.• présbita adj.'fɑːr'saɪtəd, ˌfɑː'saɪtɪda) ( showing foresight) < person> con visión de futuro, clarividente; < decision> con visión de futurob) (AmE Med) hipermétrope['fɑː'saɪtɪd]ADJ1) (US) (Med) hipermétrope2) (fig) [person] clarividente; [plan, decision, measure] con visión de futuro* * *['fɑːr'saɪtəd, ˌfɑː'saɪtɪd]a) ( showing foresight) < person> con visión de futuro, clarividente; < decision> con visión de futurob) (AmE Med) hipermétrope -
3 poor
1. n собир. бедные, бедняки, беднота; неимущиеpoor but honest — беден, но честен
2. a бедный, неимущий, малоимущийalas! poor Yorick! — увы, бедный Йорик!
piss poor — страшно бедный, жалкий, убогий
3. a бедный, несчастныйpoor fellow — бедняга, несчастный
4. a диал. покойный, умерший5. a ирон. шутл. часто скромный; жалкий, ничтожный6. a незначительный, небольшой, жалкий7. a недостаточный, скудный; плохой8. a бедный, скудныйpoor design — плохо выполненный, бедный, бедного рисунка
9. a плохой, низкого качества; скверныйpoor reception — радио, плохой приём
poor road — скверная дорога; дорога в плохом состоянии
poor accuracy — низкая точность; недостаточная точность
a poor set of players — плохая команда, плохие игроки
10. a плохой, слабый11. a неприятный, плохой, не доставляющий удовольствия12. a дурной, низкий, неблагородный13. a неплодородный14. a непитательный15. a слабый, плохой16. a худой, тощий17. a поношенный, износившийсяСинонимический ряд:1. abject (adj.) abject; base; cowardly; mean2. bad (adj.) amiss; bad; dissatisfactory; rotten; unsatisfactory; up; wrong3. barren (adj.) barren; fruitless; sterile; unfertile; unproductive4. beggared (adj.) beggared; broke; depleted; destitute; dirt poor; distressed; flat; fortuneless; hard up; impecunious; impoverished; indigent; insolvent; low; necessitous; needy; penniless; penurious; poverty-stricken; stone-broke; stony; strapped; underprivileged; unprosperous5. cheap (adj.) cheap; cheesy; common; paltry; rubbishing; rubbishly; rubbishy; shoddy; sleazy; tatty; trashy; trumpery6. humble (adj.) humble; unpretentious7. inferior (adj.) declasse; faulty; hack; inadequate; inferior; jerry-built; low-grade; mediocre; schlock; second-class; second-drawer; second-rate; seedy; shabby; substandard8. meager (adj.) deficient; exiguous; incomplete; insufficient; lacking; meager; puny; scant; scanty; scrimp; scrimpy; skimp; skimpy; spare; sparse; stingy9. miserable (adj.) miserable; wretched10. underfed (adj.) emaciated; gaunt; hungry; lank; lean; meagre; shrunk; skinny; underfed11. unlucky (adj.) commiserable; doomed; hapless; luckless; pathetic; piteous; pitiable; pitiful; rueful; star-crossed; unluckyАнтонимический ряд:affluent; ample; bold; brave; complete; considerable; copious; fertile; fortunate; large; liberal; lucky; moneyed; rich; superior -
4 Maxwell, James Clerk
[br]b. 13 June 1831 Edinburgh, Scotlandd. 5 November 1879 Cambridge, England[br]Scottish physicist who formulated the unified theory of electromagnetism, the kinetic theory of gases and a theory of colour.[br]Maxwell attended school at the Edinburgh Academy and at the age of 16 went on to study at Edinburgh University. In 1850 he entered Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated four years later as Second Wrangler with the award of the Smith's Prize. Two years later he was appointed Professor at Marischal College, Aberdeen, where he married the Principal's daughter. In 1860 he moved to King's College London, but on the death of his father five years later, Maxwell returned to the family home in Scotland, where he continued his researches as far as the life of a gentleman farmer allowed. This rural existence was interrupted in 1874 when he was persuaded to accept the chair of Cavendish Professor of Experimental Physics at Cambridge. Unfortunately, in 1879 he contracted the cancer that brought his brilliant career to an untimely end. While at Cambridge, Maxwell founded the Cavendish Laboratory for research in physics. A succession of distinguished physicists headed the laboratory, making it one of the world's great centres for notable discoveries in physics.During the mid-1850s, Maxwell worked towards a theory to explain electrical and magnetic phenomena in mathematical terms, culminating in 1864 with the formulation of the fundamental equations of electromagnetism (Maxwell's equations). These equations also described the propagation of light, for he had shown that light consists of transverse electromagnetic waves in a hypothetical medium, the "ether". This great synthesis of theories uniting a wide range of phenomena is worthy to set beside those of Sir Isaac Newton and Einstein. Like all such syntheses, it led on to further discoveries. Maxwell himself had suggested that light represented only a small part of the spectrum of electromagnetic waves, and in 1888 Hertz confirmed the discovery of another small part of the spectrum, radio waves, with momentous implications for the development of telecommunication technology. Maxwell contributed to the kinetic theory of gases, which by then were viewed as consisting of a mass of randomly moving molecules colliding with each other and with the walls of the containing vessel. From 1869 Maxwell applied statistical methods to describe the molecular motion in mathematical terms. This led to a greater understanding of the behaviour of gases, with important consequences for the chemical industry.Of more direct technological application was Maxwell's work on colour vision, begun in 1849, showing that all colours could be derived from the three primary colours, red, yellow and blue. This enabled him in 1861 to produce the first colour photograph, of a tartan. Maxwell's discoveries about colour vision were quickly taken up and led to the development of colour printing and photography.[br]BibliographyMost of his technical papers are reprinted in The Scientific Papers of J.Clerk Maxwell, 1890, ed. W.D.Niven, Cambridge, 2 vols; reprinted 1952, New York.Maxwell published several books, including Theory of Heat, 1870, London (1894, 11th edn, with notes by Lord Rayleigh) and Theory of Electricity and Magnetism, 1873, Oxford (1891, ed. J.J.Thomson, 3rd edn).Further ReadingL.Campbell and W.Garnett, 1882, The Life of James Clerk Maxwell, London (the standard biography).J.J.Thomson (ed.), 1931, James Clerk Maxwell 1831–1931, Cambridge. J.G.Crowther, 1932, British Scientists of the Nineteenth Century, London.LRD -
5 flash
flæʃ
1. noun1) (a quick showing of a bright light: a flash of lightning.) destello2) (a moment; a very short time: He was with her in a flash.) instante3) (a flashlight.) flash4) ((often newsflash) a brief news report sent by radio, television etc: Did you hear the flash about the king's death?) noticia de última hora
2. verb1) ((of a light) to (cause to) shine quickly: He flashed a torch.) encender2) ((usually with by or past) to pass quickly: The days flashed by; The cars flashed past.) pasar como un rayo3) (to show; to display: He flashed a card and was allowed to pass.) enseñar rápidamente•- flashing- flashy
- flashily
- flashlight
flash1 n1. destello2. flashflash2 vb1. centellear / encenderse y apagarse2. hacer señales
flash /'flas/ sustantivo masculino (pl
flash m Fot flash ' flash' also found in these entries: Spanish: botepronto - cantar - centellear - destello - fogonazo - meter - ráfaga - relámpago - relampaguear - relumbrón - soplo - volar - cargar - centella - dos - presumir - resplandor - sofoco English: flash - flash flood - lightning - quick - come - hot - news - speed - winktr[flæʃ]1 (of light) destello, centelleo; (of lightning) relámpago2 (from firearm) fogonazo3 figurative use destello, rayo4 (photography) flash nombre masculino5 SMALLMILITARY/SMALL (patch) distintivo1 relampaguear, destellar2 figurative use (eyes) brillar3 (dash) pasar como un rayo4 (expose oneself) exhibirse1 (shine - light) dirigir, lanzar; (- torch) encender, dirigir2 (communicate with light) hacer señales con3 (transmit message) transmitir4 figurative use (look, smile) lanzar5 (show quickly) enseñar rápidamente\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin a flash / like a flash en un instante, como un relámpago, como un rayoflash card tarjetaflash in the pan triunfo fugaz, éxito pasajeronews flash flash nombre masculino, noticia de última horaflash point punto álgidoflash ['flæʃ] vi1) shine, sparkle: destellar, brillar, relampaguear2) : pasar como un relámpagoan idea flashed through my mind: una idea me cruzó la mente como un relámpagoflash vt: despedir, lanzar (una luz), transmitir (un mensaje)flash adjsudden: repentinoflash n1) : destello m (de luz), fogonazo m (de una explosión)2)flash of lightning : relámpago m3)in a flash : de repente, de un abrir y cerrar los ojosn.• intermitente (Informática) s.m.n.• alegrón s.m.• centella s.f.• destello s.m.• flash (Cámara fotográfica) (OPT) s.m.• instante s.m.• llamarada s.f.• mensaje urgente s.m.• momento s.m.• rayo s.m.• relumbrón s.m.• relámpago s.m.• ráfaga s.f.v.• arder v.• centellear v.• despedir luz v.• destellar v.• encandilar v.• fulgurar v.• lanzar destellos (Electricidad) v.• llamear v.• parpadear v.• relampaguear v.
I flæʃ1) ca) ( of light) destello m; ( from explosion) fogonazo ma flash in the pan — flor f de un día
(as) quick as a flash — como un rayo
in a flash: it came to me in a flash — de repente lo vi claro
b) ( burst)c) ( Phot) flash m2) c ( news flash) avance m informativo, flash m
II
1.
1)a) ( direct)to flash one's headlights at somebody — hacerle* una señal con los faros a alguien
b) ( communicate) \<\<news\>\> transmitir rápidamente2) ( show) \<\<money/card\>\> mostrar*, enseñar (esp Esp)
2.
vi1)a) ( emit sudden light) destellar, brillarthe lightning flashed — relampagueó, hubo un relámpago
b) ( Auto) hacer* una señal con los farosc) flashing pres p <sign/light> intermitente, que se enciende y se apaga; <eyes/smile> brillante2) ( expose oneself) (sl) exhibirse en público3) ( move fast) (+ adv compl)it flashed through my mind that... — se me ocurrió de repente que...
to flash by o past — \<\<train/car/person\>\> pasar como una bala or un rayo or un bólido
to flash by — \<\<time/vacation\>\> pasar volando, volar*
III
adjective ( ostentatious) (BrE colloq) ostentoso[flæʃ]1. Nhe saw a flash of green vanishing round the next bend — vio un destello verde que desaparecía en la siguiente curva
2) (=burst)a flash of anger — un arranque or un arrebato de cólera
a flash of inspiration — una ráfaga or un momento de inspiración
the affair was nothing more than a flash in the pan — el asunto no fue más que algo pasajero or flor de un día
their win was no flash in the pan — su victoria no se debió a un golpe de suerte, no ganaron por chiripa *
3) (=instant) instante min a flash — en un abrir y cerrar de ojos, en un instante
it all happened in a flash — todo sucedió en un abrir y cerrar de ojos or en un instante
quick as a flash — como un relámpago or un rayo
4) (=news flash) noticia f de última hora5) (Phot) flash m7) (Brit) (Mil) (=insignia) distintivo m8) (US) (=torch) linterna f2. VT1) (=direct) [+ look] lanzar; [+ smile] dirigir2) (=shine)to flash one's (head)lights — (Aut) hacer señales con las luces
3) (=send quickly) [+ news, information] transmitir rápidamente4) (=display briefly) mostrarthe screen flashes a message — aparece brevemente un mensaje en la pantalla, la pantalla muestra brevemente un mensaje
I flashed my card at the security guard — le enseñé or mostré brevemente mi tarjeta al guardia de seguridad
5) (=flaunt) hacer alarde de, fardar de *they're rich but they don't flash their money around — son ricos pero no van fardando de dinero por ahí *, son ricos pero no hacen alarde de su riqueza
3. VI1) (=shine) [light, eyes, teeth] brillar; [jewels] brillar, lanzar destelloscameras flashed as she stepped from the car — las cámaras disparaban los flashes cuando ella salía del coche
a police car raced past, lights flashing — pasó un coche de policía a toda velocidad, con las luces lanzando destellos
headaches accompanied by flashing lights — dolores mpl de cabeza acompañados de destellos de luz en la visión
2) (Aut)3) (=move quickly)to flash by or past — [vehicle, person] pasar a toda velocidad, pasar como un rayo; [time] pasar volando
the landscape flashed by in a blur — el paisaje iba pasando con velocidad, fundiéndose en una imagen borrosa
4) (Cine)5) * (=expose o.s.) exhibirse4.ADJ * (=showy) [car, clothes] llamativo, fardón *a flash restaurant — un restaurante ostentoso, un restaurante de esos impresionantes *
5.CPDflash bulb N — bombilla f de flash
flash card N — tarjeta f
flash drive N — memoria f flash, llave f de memoria
flash fire N — fuego m repentino
flash flood N — riada f
flash gun N — (Phot) disparador m de flash
flash memory N — memoria f flash
flash photography N — fotografía f con flash
* * *
I [flæʃ]1) ca) ( of light) destello m; ( from explosion) fogonazo ma flash in the pan — flor f de un día
(as) quick as a flash — como un rayo
in a flash: it came to me in a flash — de repente lo vi claro
b) ( burst)c) ( Phot) flash m2) c ( news flash) avance m informativo, flash m
II
1.
1)a) ( direct)to flash one's headlights at somebody — hacerle* una señal con los faros a alguien
b) ( communicate) \<\<news\>\> transmitir rápidamente2) ( show) \<\<money/card\>\> mostrar*, enseñar (esp Esp)
2.
vi1)a) ( emit sudden light) destellar, brillarthe lightning flashed — relampagueó, hubo un relámpago
b) ( Auto) hacer* una señal con los farosc) flashing pres p <sign/light> intermitente, que se enciende y se apaga; <eyes/smile> brillante2) ( expose oneself) (sl) exhibirse en público3) ( move fast) (+ adv compl)it flashed through my mind that... — se me ocurrió de repente que...
to flash by o past — \<\<train/car/person\>\> pasar como una bala or un rayo or un bólido
to flash by — \<\<time/vacation\>\> pasar volando, volar*
III
adjective ( ostentatious) (BrE colloq) ostentoso -
6 stereoscopic
adjective* * *[steriə'skopik]((of films, pictures etc) filmed, shown etc by an apparatus taking or showing two photographs at different angles, so that a three-dimensional image is produced.) stereoskopisch* * *ste·reo·scop·ic[ˌsteriə(ʊ)ˈskɒpɪk, AM ˌsteriəˈskɑ:-]adj inv stereoskopisch\stereoscopic photographs stereoskopische Fotografien* * *["sterIəU'skɒpIk]adjstereoskopisch* * *stereoscopic camera Stereokamera f;stereoscopic photograph Stereofoto(grafie) n(f);stereoscopic photography Stereofotografie f;* * *adjective* * *adj.stereoskopisch adj. -
7 the land of promise
(the land of promise (тж. the promised land))земля обетованная, вожделенный край [the land of promise этим. библ. Hebrews XI, 9]Hornby (with a little smile): "Well, are you enjoying the land of promise as much as you said I should?" Norah: "We've both made our bed and we must lie on it." (W. S. Maugham, ‘The Land of Promise’, act II) — Хорнби ( с улыбкой): "Ну что, вам нравится эта земля обетованная так же, как мне? Ведь мне она, по вашему мнению, должна очень понравиться." Нора: "Мы оба заварили эту кашу, и нам ее вместе расхлебывать."
There is not half enough of this type of propaganda to-day. We have all become so hard and practical that we are ashamed of painting the vision splendid - of showing glimpses of the promised land. (H. Pollitt, ‘Serving My Time’, ch. 2) — В последнее время мы совершенно недостаточно используем такого рода пропаганду. Занятые по горло текущими делами, мы так очерствели, что чуть ли не стыдимся рисовать сияющее будущее, хотя бы бегло показать картину земли обетованной.
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8 revelation
1. n открытие, раскрытие; разоблачение2. n рел. откровение, богооткровение3. n библ. откровение Иоанна Богослова; апокалипсисСинонимический ряд:1. disclosure (noun) announcement; betrayal; bombshell; disclosure; discovery; divulgement; divulgence; exposй; showing2. divine manifestation (noun) adumbration; apocalypse; divination; divine inspiration; divine manifestation; oracle; prophecy; sign from heaven; vision3. expose (noun) expose; unveiling -
9 seeing
1. n видение; способность или возможность видетьseeing is believing — увидеть — значит убедиться
2. n астр. видимость, обусловленная состоянием атмосферы3. prep книжн. из-за; в связи сhe was unfitted for the post seeing his inexperience — он не подходил для этой работы, так как не имел опыта
4. cj книжн. принимая во внимание, поскольку, так как; ввиду того, чтоseeing no other course was open to us — ввиду того, что у нас не было другого пути
seeing a crowd of people, I went to see what was toward — увидев толпу, я пошёл посмотреть, что случилось
Синонимический ряд:1. observant (adj.) alert; astute; heeding; noticing; noting; observant; perceiving; regarding; saying2. eye (noun) eye; eyesight; sight; vision3. beholding (verb) beholding; descrying; discerning; distinguishing; espying; marking; minding; noticing; noting; observing; perceiving; remarking; twigging; viewing4. discovering (verb) ascertaining; catching on; determining; discovering; finding out; hearing; learning; tumbling; unearthing5. foreseeing (verb) anticipating; divining; envisioning; foreknowing; foreseeing; visualizing6. guiding (verb) conducting; directing; escorting; guiding; leading; piloting; routing; showing; steering7. having (verb) experiencing; go through; having; knowing; meet with; suffering; sustaining; tasting; undergoing8. looking (verb) looking; minding; watching9. seeing (verb) accepting; apprehending; catching; compassing; comprehending; dating; fathoming; following; grasping; make out; making out; reading; seeing; take in; taking; taking in; taking out; tumbling to; understanding10. stopping (verb) calling; come by; drop by; drop in; look in; look up; pop in; run in; stopping11. thinking (verb) conceiving; envisaging; envisioning; fancying; fantasising; featuring; imaging; imagining; picturing; projecting; realizing; thinking; visioning; visualising12. visiting (verb) coming by; coming over; dropping by; dropping in; looking in; looking up; popping in; running in; stepping in; stopping by; stopping in; visiting13. because (other) as; because; considering; inasmuch as; since; whereas
См. также в других словарях:
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