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1 The Lusiads
Portugal's national epic poem of the Age of Discoveries, written by the nation's most celebrated poet, Luís de Camões. Published in 1572, toward the end of the adventurous life of Camões, Os Lusíadas is the most famous and most often-quoted piece of literature in Portugal. Modeled in part on the style and format of Virgil's Aeneid, Os Lusíadas is the story of Portugal's long history, and features an evocation of the Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama's epic discovery of the sea route from Portugal to Asia. Part of the epic poem was composed when Camões was in royal service in Portugal's Asian empire, including in Goa and Macau. While the dramatic framework is dominated by various deities from classical literature, much of what is described in Portugal, Africa, and Asia is real and accurately rendered by the classically educated (at Coimbra University) Camões, who witnessed both the apogee and the beginning of decline of Portugal's seaborne empire and world power.While the poet praises imperial power and greatness, Camões features a prescient naysayer: "The Old Man of Restelo," on the beach where Vasco da Gama is about to embark for Indian adventures, criticizes Portuguese expansion beyond Africa to Asia. Camões was questioning the high price of an Asian empire, and gave voice to those anti-imperialists and "Doubting Thomases" in the country who opposed more overseas expansion beyond Africa. It is interesting to note that in the Portuguese language usage and tradition since the establishment of The Lusiads as a national poem, "The Old Man of Restelo" ("O Velho do Restelo") came to symbolize not a wise Cassandra with timely warnings that Portugal would be fatally weakened by empire and might fall prey to neighboring Spain, but merely a Doubting Thomas in popular sentiment. The Lusiads soon became universally celebrated and accepted, and it has been translated into many languages. In the history of criticism in Portugal, more has been written about Camões and The Lusiads than about any other author or work in Portuguese literature, now more than a thousand years in the making. -
2 style
style [stil]masculine noun• style direct/indirect direct/indirect style* * *stilnom masculin1) Art, Littérature, Sport styleelle est du style à passer une nuit blanche pour finir un article — she's the kind that would stay up all night to finish an article
il m'a répondu quelque chose du style ‘on vous téléphonera’ — he told me they'd phone me, or something like that
2) ( de mobilier)meubles de style — ( anciens) period furniture; ( copiés) reproduction period furniture
3) Linguistique speech formstyle direct/indirect — direct/indirect ou reported speech
4) ( tige de cadran solaire) style5) Botanique, Zoologie style* * *stil nm* * *style nm1 Art, Littérat, Sport style; style journalistique journalistic style, journalese péj; style télégraphique telegraphic style, telegraphese péj; style de vie lifestyle; avoir du style to have style; manquer de style to lack style; n'achète pas ce chapeau, ce n'est vraiment pas ton style don't buy this hat, it's just not your style; elle joue de la guitare dans le style flamenco she plays the guitar flamenco style; il excelle dans un comique du style Laurel et Hardy he's at his best in Laurel and Hardy style comedy; elle veut se donner le style Marilyn Monroe she's trying to cultivate the Marilyn Monroe look; ça, c'est bien (dans) ton style! that's you all over○!; c'est bien (dans) ton style de faire it's typical of you ou it's just like you to do; elle est du style à passer une nuit blanche pour finir un article she's the kind that would stay up all night to finish an article; il m'a répondu qch du style ‘on vous téléphonera’ he told me they'd phone me, or something like that;2 ( de mobilier) meubles de style ( anciens) period furniture; ( copiés) reproduction period furniture; mobilier de style Louis XV ( ancien) Louis XV furniture; ( copié) reproduction Louis XV furniture;4 ( tige de cadran solaire) style;5 Antiq stylus;[stil] nom masculin1. [d'un écrivain, d'un journal] stylec'est écrit dans le plus pur style administratif/journalistique it's written in purest bureaucratic jargon (péjoratif)/journalese (péjoratif)son style de jeu his (particular) way of playing, his stylestyle gothique/Régence Gothic/Regency style4. [genre, ordre d'idée] styledis-lui que tu vas réfléchir, ou quelque chose dans ou de ce style tell him you'll think about it, or something along those lines ou in that vein5. (familier) [manière d'agir] styletu aurais pu l'avoir dénoncé — ce n'est pas mon style you could have denounced him — it's not my style ou that's not the sort of thing I'd do10. LINGUISTIQUEstyle direct/indirect direct/indirect speech————————de style locution adjectivale[meuble, objet] period (modificateur) -
3 stylé
style [stil]masculine noun• style direct/indirect direct/indirect style* * *stilnom masculin1) Art, Littérature, Sport styleelle est du style à passer une nuit blanche pour finir un article — she's the kind that would stay up all night to finish an article
il m'a répondu quelque chose du style ‘on vous téléphonera’ — he told me they'd phone me, or something like that
2) ( de mobilier)meubles de style — ( anciens) period furniture; ( copiés) reproduction period furniture
3) Linguistique speech formstyle direct/indirect — direct/indirect ou reported speech
4) ( tige de cadran solaire) style5) Botanique, Zoologie style* * *stil nm* * *style nm1 Art, Littérat, Sport style; style journalistique journalistic style, journalese péj; style télégraphique telegraphic style, telegraphese péj; style de vie lifestyle; avoir du style to have style; manquer de style to lack style; n'achète pas ce chapeau, ce n'est vraiment pas ton style don't buy this hat, it's just not your style; elle joue de la guitare dans le style flamenco she plays the guitar flamenco style; il excelle dans un comique du style Laurel et Hardy he's at his best in Laurel and Hardy style comedy; elle veut se donner le style Marilyn Monroe she's trying to cultivate the Marilyn Monroe look; ça, c'est bien (dans) ton style! that's you all over○!; c'est bien (dans) ton style de faire it's typical of you ou it's just like you to do; elle est du style à passer une nuit blanche pour finir un article she's the kind that would stay up all night to finish an article; il m'a répondu qch du style ‘on vous téléphonera’ he told me they'd phone me, or something like that;2 ( de mobilier) meubles de style ( anciens) period furniture; ( copiés) reproduction period furniture; mobilier de style Louis XV ( ancien) Louis XV furniture; ( copié) reproduction Louis XV furniture;4 ( tige de cadran solaire) style;5 Antiq stylus;[personnel] well-trained -
4 Style
As related to clothes, style pertains to the motif, the treatment or the design, in contrast with fashion, which refers to the popularity of a certain style, the common trend, the prevailing mode. -
5 STYLE
• Style is the man (The) - Видать птицу по полету (B) -
6 style
طَرِيقَة \ approach: a way (to a place, of doing sth.): Every approach to the town was guarded. This problem requires a different approach. fashion: manner: It was done in a careless fashion. manner: the way in which sth. is done: It was tied in a very strange manner. means: the way by which a result may be obtained: There is (or are) no means of finding out where he is. A donkey is a slow means of travel. method: a way of doing sth.: modern methods of building. style: a particular way of doing sth.: a writer’s style; a swimmer’s style; the latest style of dress. way: manner: That’s the wrong way to do it. Foreigners don’t understand our ways (our customs). She is in no way (not at all) to blame. \ See Also أسلوب (أسلوب)، نمط (نَمَط)، منهاج (مِنْهَاج)، وسيلة (وَسِيلَة) -
7 style
أُسْلُوب \ fashion: manner: It was done in a careless fashion. manner: the way in which sth. is done: It was tied in a very strange manner. method: a way of doing sth.: modern methods of building. process: (in factories, etc.) a way of making or treating sth.: Colour films are printed by a special chemical process. style: a particular way of doing sth.: a writer’s style; a swimmer’s style; the latest style of dress. way: manner: That’s the wrong way to do it. Foreigners don’t understand our ways (our customs). -
8 style
[staɪl]1. noun1) a manner or way of doing something, eg writing, speaking, painting, building etc:What kind of style are you going to have your hair cut in?
أسْلوبa new hairstyle.
زي، موضَهI don't like the new style of shoe.
3) elegance in dress, behaviour etc:أناقَهShe certainly has style.
2. verb1) to arrange (hair) in a certain way:يُرَتِّب بطريقَةٍ ماI'm going to have my hair cut and styled.
2) to design in a certain style:يُصَمِّم بأسلوبٍ ماThese chairs/clothes are styled for comfort.
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9 style
تَرَف \ luxury: the possession and enjoyment of very expensive things: Most rich people live in luxury, sth. that is greatly enjoyed because one does not have such pleasure all the time the luxury of sleep after a hard day’s work. style: a grand or fine manner: He lives in style, with several servants. -
10 style
فَخَامَة \ majesty: the qualities of a king or queen (grand, noble, calm, powerful) that earn respect. splendour, splendor: grand appearance; glory: the splendour of the sunset. style: a grand or fine manner: He lives in style, with several servants. -
11 Manueline architectural style
An innovative, unique architectural and art style named after King Manuel I (r. 1495-1521). In the middle of the 19th century, Portuguese romantic writers, including the great Almeida Garrett, began to describe the unusual architectural style developed during Manuel's reign as "Manueline." In recent years, some scholars have termed the style "Atlantic baroque" instead, because it combines themes of maritime life and a grotesque, even wild look. The style continued some years after Manuel's death in 1521. Both civil and religious architecture were affected by the style. It appears in private houses, as well as in historical monuments such as Jerónimos Monastery and the famous "Tomar Window" of the Order of Christ Chapel in Tomar. Typical of Manueline decorations are sea life and maritime themes of coral, ropes, buoys, cork, ship rigging, seaweeds and other sea plant life; tropical fruits and vegetables; and figures of mariners, all rendered in stone.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Manueline architectural style
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12 Peter the Great (Pyotr Alekseyevich Romanov)
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 10 June 1672 (30 May 1672 Old Style) Moscow, Russiad. 8 February 1725 (28 January 1725 Old Style) St Petersburg, Russia[br]Russian Tsar (1682–1725), Emperor of all the Russias (1722–5), founder of the Russian Navy, shipbuilder and scientist; as a shipbuilder he was known by the pseudonym Petr Mikhailov.[br]Peter the Great was a man with a single-minded approach to problems and with passionate and lifelong interests in matters scientific, military and above all maritime. The unusual and dominating rule of his vast lands brought about the age of Russian enlightenment, and ensured that his country became one of the most powerful states in Europe.Peter's interest in ships and shipbuilding started in his childhood; c. 1687 he had an old English-built day sailing boat repaired and launched, and on it he learned the rudiments of sailing and navigation. This craft (still preserved in St Petersburg) became known as the "Grandfather of the Russian Navy". In the years 1688 to 1693 he established a shipyard on Lake Plestsheev and then began his lifelong study of shipbuilding by visiting and giving encouragement to the industry at Archangelsk on the White Sea and Voronezh in the Sea of Azov. In October 1696, Peter took Azov from the Turks, and the Russian Fleet ever since has regarded that date as their birthday. Setting an example to the young aristocracy, Peter travelled to Western Europe to widen his experience and contacts and also to learn the trade of shipbuilding. He worked in the shipyards of Amsterdam and then at the Naval Base of Deptford on the Thames.The war with Sweden concentrated his attention on the Baltic and, to establish a base for trading and for the Navy, the City of St Petersburg was constructed on marshland. The Admiralty was built in the city and many new shipyards in the surrounding countryside, one being the Olonez yard which in 1703 built the frigate Standart, the first for the Baltic Fleet, which Peter himself commanded on its first voyage. The military defence of St Petersburg was effected by the construction of Kronstadt, seawards of the city.Throughout his life Peter was involved in ship design and it is estimated that one thousand ships were built during his reign. He introduced the building of standard ship types and also, centuries ahead of its time, the concept of prefabrication, unit assembly and the building of part hulls in different places. Officially he was the designer of the ninety-gun ship Lesnoe of 1718, and this may have influenced him in instituting Rules for Shipbuilders and for Seamen. In 1716 he commanded the joint fleets of the four naval powers: Denmark, Britain, Holland and Russia.He established the Marine Academy, organized and encouraged exploration and scientific research, and on his edict the St Petersburg Academy of Science was opened. He was not averse to the recruitment of foreigners to key posts in the nation's service. Peter the Great was a remarkable man, with the unusual quality of being a theorist and an innovator, in addition to the endowments of practicality and common sense.[br]Further ReadingRobert K.Massie, 1981, Peter the Great: His Life and Work, London: Gollancz.Henri Troyat, 1979, Pierre le Grand; pub. in English 1988 as Peter the Great, London: Hamish Hamilton (a good all-round biography).AK / FMWBiographical history of technology > Peter the Great (Pyotr Alekseyevich Romanov)
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13 learning style
Gen Mgtthe way in which somebody approaches the acquisition of knowledge and skills. Learning styles have been divided into four main types by Peter Honey and Alan Mumford, in their Manual of Learning Styles (1982). The types of learners are: the activist, who likes to get involved in new experiences and enjoys the challenges of change; the theorist, who likes to question assumptions and methodologies and learns best when there is time to explore links between ideas and situations; the pragmatist, who prefers practicality and learns best when there is a link between the subject matter and the job in hand and when he or she can try out what he or she has learned; and the reflector, who likes to take his or her time and think things through, and who learns best from activities where he or she can observe and conduct research. One person can demonstrate more than one learning style, and the category or categories that best describe somebody can be determined through use of a learning styles questionnaire. -
14 in style
in a luxurious, elegant way without worrying about the expense:في تَرَفٍ ورَفاهِيَهThe bride arrived at the church in style, in a horse-drawn carriage.
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15 management style
Gen Mgtthe general manner, outlook, attitude, and behavior of a manager in his or her dealings with subordinates. Organizations may have, or seek to have, distinctive management styles, and sometimes train employees to try to ensure that a preferred style, fitting in with the desired corporate culture, is always used. Management styles can vary widely between extremes of control and consultation. The latter are generally thought to encourage degrees of employee participation in management with consequently improved employee commitment, employee involvement, and empowerment. More participatory styles are also usually related to more open organizational cultures and flatter organizational structures. One well-known instrument for distinguishing individual management styles is Robert Blake’s and Jane Mouton’s Managerial Grid™. -
16 Sá da Bandeira, the Marquis of
(1795-1876)Famous 19th-century career soldier turned politician, colonial reformer and planner, and statesman. Bernardo de Sá Nogueira de Figueiredo, later named the Marquis of Sá da Bandeira, was a soldier from the young age of 15 who fought against the armies of Napoleon in the Peninsular Wars. The historian Alexandre Herculano described him as "the most illustrious Portuguese of his century." Among the people, he was nicknamed "Sá-the one-handed or "one-armed," since he had lost his right arm in battle. Trained in engineering and mathematics, and with residence abroad, he first made a reputation as an outstanding military leader in the campaigns against the French in Portugal (1811) and in the civil wars of 1828-34.Devoted to the cause of King Pedro IV of maintaining Pedro's young daughter, Maria da Glória, on Portugal's throne, Sá da Bandei-ra's image and style seemed to be in conflict with those of a general more typical of the age of romanticism. Spare in body, methodical and frugal, and serene in spirit, he achieved the highest offices in government, following the triumph of the cause of constitutional monarchy by 1834. Concerned with Portugal's overseas empire, severely weakened by the loss of Brazil in 1822, Sá da Bandeira relentlessly pursued colonial reform plans and efforts to create for Portugal "another Brazil in Africa." Active in politics into his old age, in the 1870s, he worked to bring about reforms of the colonial economy, to move from an economy based on slave trade and slavery to one based on legitimate trade and industry, especially in Angola and Mozambique. This soldier and politician became, in effect, the heart and soul of Portugal's first modern colonial movement, 1835-75.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Sá da Bandeira, the Marquis of
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17 Madder Style
Refers to the method of printing fabrics with thickened mordants, then drying, ageing, dunging and dyeing with alizarine or other colouring matters. -
18 Skin Of The Swan
A very fine silk fabric in a close weave and fine counts. Manufactured and finished in a glossy style by French makers. Made 8-shaft weave as illustrated, the weft crosses two ends and bright silk is used. The weft showing on the surface gives the crepe effect. An inferior Peau de Cygne is made with the 5-shaft warp satin weave with the weft floating over one end only at each intersection. The cloth made with this weave is really Messaline. -
19 Pigment Style
A method of printing fabrics used principally for cotton goods. Insoluble pigments are mixed with some medium to act as a thickener and this mixture is printed on the fabric. -
20 рекомендовать опохмелиться (The science of your hangover - http://www .independent.co.uk/life-style/food-and-drink/features/the-science-of-your-hangover-2159477.html)
General subject: swear by a hair of the dogУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > рекомендовать опохмелиться (The science of your hangover - http://www .independent.co.uk/life-style/food-and-drink/features/the-science-of-your-hangover-2159477.html)
См. также в других словарях:
The Style Invitational — The Style Invitational, or S.I., is a long running humor contest that ran first in the Style section of the Sunday Washington Post and currently is in Saturday s Style. Started in 1993, it has run weekly, except for a hiatus in late 1999. In that … Wikipedia
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You Got the Style — Infobox Single Name = You Got the Style Artist = Athlete from Album = Vehicles and Animals Released = 10 June 2002 22 September 2003 (re issue) Format = 10 , CD 7 , CD, DVD (re issue) Recorded = ? Genre = Alternative Length = 3:28 Label =… … Wikipedia
Introducing The Style Council — Infobox Album | Name = Introducing the Style Council Type = Album Artist = The Style Council Released = 1983 Recorded = June 1983 at La Studio Grand Armee, Paris, France Genre = Pop Length = 31:21 Label = Polydor Producer = Reviews = *Allmusic… … Wikipedia
Puttin' On the Style — was a 1957 hit for skiffle artist Lonnie Donegan. It was recorded live at the London Palladium and released as a double A side along with Gamblin Man and reached #1 in the UK charts in June and July 1957, where it spent two weeks in this position … Wikipedia
The Honourable — The prefix The Honourable or The Honorable (abbreviated to The Hon. or formerly The Hon ble ) is a style used before the names of certain classes of persons.UsageAustraliaIn Australia, all ministers in Commonwealth, states and the Northern… … Wikipedia
The MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers — (1977; 6th ed., 2003) is an academic documentation style guide widely used in the United States, Canada, and other countries, providing guidelines for writing and documentation of research in the humanities, especially in English studies; the… … Wikipedia
Style of the British sovereign — The precise style of British Sovereigns has varied over the years. The present style is: Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of … Wikipedia
The Ohio State University Marching Band — School The Ohio State University Location Columbus, Ohio Conference Big Ten Founded 1878 Director Jon R. Woods … Wikipedia
Style — Style, n. [OE. stile, F. style, Of. also stile, L. stilus a style or writing instrument, manner or writing, mode of expression; probably for stiglus, meaning, a pricking instrument, and akin to E. stick. See {Stick}, v. t., and cf. {Stiletto}.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Style of court — Style Style, n. [OE. stile, F. style, Of. also stile, L. stilus a style or writing instrument, manner or writing, mode of expression; probably for stiglus, meaning, a pricking instrument, and akin to E. stick. See {Stick}, v. t., and cf.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English