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1 literally or figuratively
Общая лексика: буквально или фигуральноУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > literally or figuratively
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2 literally: horseman. Figuratively: hothead, troublemaker
Общая лексика: джигитУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > literally: horseman. Figuratively: hothead, troublemaker
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3 figuratively
figuratively adv [speak, mean] au (sens) figuré ; figuratively speaking,… métaphoriquement parlant,… ; literally and figuratively au sens propre comme au figuré. -
4 literally
literally ['lɪtərəlɪ]∎ to take sth literally prendre qch au pied de la lettre ou à la lettre;∎ to translate literally faire une traduction littérale;∎ literally speaking à proprement parler;∎ he was literally bleeding to death il se vidait de son sang(b) (in exaggeration) littéralement;∎ we've had literally hundreds of letters nous avons reçu littéralement des centaines de lettres -
5 [literally] rear, [but figuratively also] buck
Американский английский: вставать на дыбыУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > [literally] rear, [but figuratively also] buck
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6 twist arm
1) Общая лексика: оказывать давление на (кого-л.), брать за жабры (кого-либо), взять за жабры2) Разговорное выражение: выламывать суставы (насильственными средствами, пытками добиваться чего-л. от кого-л. (в прямом и переносном смыслах) to get smb. to do smth. by using violence or torture (literally and figuratively))3) Макаров: выкручивать (кому-л.) руку, давить, принуждать, оказывать давление (на кого-л.), выворачивать (кому-л.) руку (пытка) -
7 unloading
1) Общая лексика: выброс на рынок, выгрузка, разгружать, разгрузка, разряд2) Военный термин: разряжание3) Техника: отгрузка, разгрузочный, разрядка, разряжение, снятие нагрузки4) Химия: разгружающий5) Математика: (оперативной памяти) roll-out разгрузка, разгрузка (literally or figuratively)6) Автомобильный термин: съём (обрабатываемого изделия со станка)7) Телевидение: выброс8) Нефть: опорожнение, откачивание (для понижения уровня жидкости в скважине), слив9) Банковское дело: выброс на рынок финансовых инструментов или валюты в связи с необходимостью получения средств11) Бурение: откачка (для понижения уровня жидкости в скважине)13) Пластмассы: разгрузка (образца для испытания) -
8 boil
I boil verb1) (to turn rapidly from liquid to vapour when heated: I'm boiling the water; The water's boiling.) hervir2) (to cook by boiling in water etc: I've boiled the potatoes.) hervir, hacer hervir, cocer•- boiler- boiling-point
- boil down to
- boil over
II boil noun(an inflamed swelling on the skin: His neck is covered with boils.) furúnculoboil vb1. hervir2. cocertr[bɔɪl]1 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL furúnculo, forúnculo————————tr[bɔɪl]2 figurative use (undulate, seeth) bullir\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto bring to the boil llevar a la ebulliciónto be on the boil estar hirviendoto come to the boil empezar a hervirto keep something on the boil (literally) mantener algo hirviendo 2 (figuratively) no dejar que algo se enfríeit makes my blood boil me da rabiato boil with rage estar hecho,-a una fieraboil ['bɔɪl] vi1) : hervir2)to make one's blood boil : hervirle la sangre a unoboil vt1) : hervir, hacer hervirto boil water: hervir agua2) : cocer, hervirto boil potatoes: cocer papasboil n1) boiling: hervor m2) : furúnculo m, divieso m (in medicine)n.• divieso s.m.• ebullición s.f.• furúnculo s.m.• hervor s.m.v.• borbotear v.• bullir v.• cocer v.• hervir v.bɔɪl
I
1) ( Med) furúnculo m2) ( boiling point)on the boil: the vegetables are on the boil las verduras se están haciendo; he has another project on the boil tiene otro proyecto entre manos; to bring something to the boil: bring the water to the boil dejar que el agua rompa el hervor; they have brought the issue back to the boil han vuelto a poner el tema sobre el tapete; to go off the boil: interest in the affair has gone off the boil — ha decaído el interés en el asunto
II
1.
a) ( be at boiling point) \<\<water/vegetables\>\> hervir*b) ( be excited)he was boiling with rage — le hervía la sangre de rabia
2.
vt1) ( bring to boiling point) hervir*; ( keep at boiling point) hervir*, dejar hervir; ( cook in boiling water) \<\<vegetables\>\> cocer*, hervir*boil the eggs for three minutes — cocer or hervir los huevos tres minutos
2) boiled past p <potatoes/rice> hervido; < ham> cocido; < egg> ( soft) pasado por agua; ( hard) duroboiled sweet — (BrE) caramelo m de fruta
•Phrasal Verbs:- boil up
I
[bɔɪl]N (Med) divieso m, furúnculo m, chupón m (And), postema f (Mex)
II [bɔɪl]1.Nto be on the boil — estar hirviendo; (fig) [situation] estar a punto de estallar; [person] estar furioso
to bring to the boil, bring to a boil — (US) calentar hasta que hierva, llevar a ebullición
to come to the boil, come to a boil — (US) comenzar a hervir; (fig) entrar en ebullición
2.VT hervir, hacer hervir, calentar hasta que hierva; (Culin) [+ liquid] hervir; [+ vegetables, meat] herventar, cocer; [+ egg] pasar por agua3. VI1) hervirto boil dry — quedarse sin caldo/agua
2) (fig)blood- boil up* * *[bɔɪl]
I
1) ( Med) furúnculo m2) ( boiling point)on the boil: the vegetables are on the boil las verduras se están haciendo; he has another project on the boil tiene otro proyecto entre manos; to bring something to the boil: bring the water to the boil dejar que el agua rompa el hervor; they have brought the issue back to the boil han vuelto a poner el tema sobre el tapete; to go off the boil: interest in the affair has gone off the boil — ha decaído el interés en el asunto
II
1.
a) ( be at boiling point) \<\<water/vegetables\>\> hervir*b) ( be excited)he was boiling with rage — le hervía la sangre de rabia
2.
vt1) ( bring to boiling point) hervir*; ( keep at boiling point) hervir*, dejar hervir; ( cook in boiling water) \<\<vegetables\>\> cocer*, hervir*boil the eggs for three minutes — cocer or hervir los huevos tres minutos
2) boiled past p <potatoes/rice> hervido; < ham> cocido; < egg> ( soft) pasado por agua; ( hard) duroboiled sweet — (BrE) caramelo m de fruta
•Phrasal Verbs:- boil up -
9 hundred
1. noun1) ((plural hundred) the number 100: Ten times ten is a hundred; more than one/a hundred; There must be at least six hundred of them here.) cien2) (the figure 100.) cien3) (the age of 100: She's over a hundred; a man of a hundred.) cien años4) ((plural hundred) a hundred pounds or dollars: I lost several hundred at the casino last night.) cientos (de)
2. adjective1) (100 in number: six hundred people; a few hundred pounds.) cientos2) (aged 100: He is a hundred today.) cien años, centenario•- hundred-- hundredfold
- hundredth
- hundreds of
hundred num1. cien / ciento2. centenarwe have hundreds of friends tenemos cientos de amigos / tenemos centenares de amigostr['hʌndrəd]1 cien\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL■ a hundred per cent of the votes have been counted el ciento por ciento de los votos han sido escrutadoshundred ['hʌndrəd] adj: cien, cientoadj.• cien (to) adj.n.• centena s.f.• centenar s.m.• cien s.m.'hʌndrədnoun cien ma/one hundred — cien
a/one hundred and one — ciento uno
they are sold by the hundred o in hundreds — se venden de a cien or (Esp) de cien en cien
a/one hundred thousand/million — cien mil/millones
['hʌndrɪd]I've got a hundred and one things to do — tengo cientos or miles de cosas que hacer
1. N1)a or one hundred — (before noun, or used alone) cien; (before numbers up to 99) ciento
a or one hundred people — cien personas
to count up to a or one hundred — contar hasta cien
a hundred and one/two — ciento uno/dos
a or one hundred and ten — ciento diez
a or one hundred thousand — cien mil
2) (=figure) ciento m3) (=large number)in hundreds, by the hundred — a centenares
I've told you hundreds of times — te lo he dicho cientos or centenares de veces
2.CPDHUNDRED
"Ciento" or "cien"?
► Use cien before a {noun} (even when it follows mil):
... a or one hundred soldiers...... cien soldados...
... eleven hundred metres...... mil cien metros... NOTE: Don't translate numbers like e leven hundred literally. Translate their equivalent in thousands and hundreds instead. ► Use cien before mil and millón:
... a or one hundred thousand dollars...... cien mil dólares...
... a or one hundred million euros...... cien millones de euros... ► But use cie nto before another {number}:
... a or one hundred and sixteen stamps...... ciento dieciséis sellos... ► When hun dred follows another number, use the compound forms (doscientos, -as, trescientos, -as {etc}) which must agree with the noun:
... two hundred and fifty women...... doscientas cincuenta mujeres... For further uses and examples, see main entry* * *['hʌndrəd]noun cien ma/one hundred — cien
a/one hundred and one — ciento uno
they are sold by the hundred o in hundreds — se venden de a cien or (Esp) de cien en cien
a/one hundred thousand/million — cien mil/millones
I've got a hundred and one things to do — tengo cientos or miles de cosas que hacer
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10 flip the bird
1) Разговорное выражение: показать фигу (диалект. показать дулю, дать дулю), кукиш показать (Секретарша показала своему начальнику кукиш в кармане. The secretary thumbed her nose at her boss behind his back.; не согласиться, отказать to disagree or reject smb. in a rude way (figuratively and literally))2) Сленг: показать фак (flip the bird at smbd; flip smbd the bird), показать поднятый средний палец при сжатых в кулак остальных; сделать неприличный жест по чьему-л. адресу (см. "flip smb. the bird")3) Современное выражение: показать средний палец -
11 hole
həul
1. noun1) (an opening or gap in or through something: a hole in the fence; holes in my socks.) agujero2) (a hollow in something solid: a hole in my tooth; Many animals live in holes in the ground.) cavidad3) ((in golf) (the point scored by the player who takes the fewest strokes to hit his ball over) any one of the usually eighteen sections of the golf course between the tees and the holes in the middle of the greens: He won by two holes; We played nine holes.) hoyo
2. verb1) (to make a hole in: The ship was badly holed when it hit the rock.) agujerear2) (to hit (a ball etc) into a hole: The golfer holed his ball from twelve metres away.) meter en el hoyo•- hole outhole n1. agujero2. bachetr[həʊl]1 (gen) agujero; (in ground) hoyo2 (golf) hoyo3 (in road) bache nombre masculino7 (a tight spot) aprieto, apuro1 (make holes - small) agujerear; (large) hacer un boquete en2 (at golf) meter en el hoyo1 (at golf) meter la pelota en el hoyo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL■ the rent for this month will make a hole in my salary el alquiler de este mes se comerá gran parte de mi sueldoto be in a hole estar en apurosto pick holes in something encontrar defectos en algo, criticar algohole ['ho:l] n: agujero m, hoyo mn.• agujero s.m.• bache s.m.• boquete s.m.• caja s.f.• cavidad s.f.• foso s.m.• hoya s.f.• hoyo s.m.• hueco s.m.• orificio s.m.• punto s.m.• rotura s.f.• socavón s.m.
I həʊl1)a) (in belt, material, clothing) agujero m; ( in ground) hoyo m, agujero m; ( in road) bache m; ( in wall) boquete m; ( in defenses) brecha fto make a hole in something — hacer* un agujero en algo, agujerear algo
that made a hole in their savings — eso se llevó or se comió buena parte de sus ahorros
in the hole — (AmE)
we're $10,000 in the hole to the bank — le debemos 10.000 dólares al banco
money just burns a hole in his/her pocket — el dinero le quema las manos
to need something like a hole in the head: I need a visit from him like I need a hole in the head — lo único que me faltaba! que él viniera a verme!
b) (in argument, proposal) punto m débilto pick holes in something — encontrarle* defectos or faltas a algo
c) ( of animal) madriguera f2) ( Sport)a) ( in golf) hoyo mb) ( in US football) hueco m3)a) ( unpleasant place) (colloq)b) ( awkward situation) (colloq)to be in a hole — estar* en un apuro or aprieto
to get somebody out of a hole — sacar* a alguien de un apuro or aprieto
II
1) ( in golf) \<\<ball\>\> embocar*; \<\<putt/shot\>\> transformar2) \<\<ship\>\> abrir* una brecha en•Phrasal Verbs:- hole up[hǝʊl]1. N1) (gen) agujero m, hoyo m ; (in road) bache m ; (=gap, opening) boquete m ; (in wall, defences, dam) brecha f ; (=burrow) madriguera f ; (Golf) hoyo m•
to dig a hole — cavar un hoyo•
these socks are full of holes — estos calcetines están llenos de agujeros•
his injury leaves a hole in the team — su lesión deja un vacío en el equipo•
to make a hole in sth — hacer un agujero en algobuying the car made a hole in his savings — la compra del coche le costó una buena parte de sus ahorros
•
to pick holes in sth — (fig) encontrar defectos en algohole-in-the-wall•
to wear a hole in sth — agujerear algo2) * (fig) (=difficulty) aprieto m, apuro mto be in a hole * — estar en un apuro or aprieto
he got me out of a hole * — me sacó de un aprieto or apuro
3) * (=dwelling, room) cuchitril m, tugurio m (esp LAm); (=town) poblacho m, pueblo m de mala muerte *2. VT2) [+ ball] (Golf) meter en el hoyo; (Snooker) meter en la tronera3.VI(Golf)- hole up* * *
I [həʊl]1)a) (in belt, material, clothing) agujero m; ( in ground) hoyo m, agujero m; ( in road) bache m; ( in wall) boquete m; ( in defenses) brecha fto make a hole in something — hacer* un agujero en algo, agujerear algo
that made a hole in their savings — eso se llevó or se comió buena parte de sus ahorros
in the hole — (AmE)
we're $10,000 in the hole to the bank — le debemos 10.000 dólares al banco
money just burns a hole in his/her pocket — el dinero le quema las manos
to need something like a hole in the head: I need a visit from him like I need a hole in the head — lo único que me faltaba! que él viniera a verme!
b) (in argument, proposal) punto m débilto pick holes in something — encontrarle* defectos or faltas a algo
c) ( of animal) madriguera f2) ( Sport)a) ( in golf) hoyo mb) ( in US football) hueco m3)a) ( unpleasant place) (colloq)b) ( awkward situation) (colloq)to be in a hole — estar* en un apuro or aprieto
to get somebody out of a hole — sacar* a alguien de un apuro or aprieto
II
1) ( in golf) \<\<ball\>\> embocar*; \<\<putt/shot\>\> transformar2) \<\<ship\>\> abrir* una brecha en•Phrasal Verbs:- hole up -
12 a hundred per cent
(literally) ciento por ciento 2 (figuratively) totalmente -
13 to go off the boil
(literally) dejar de hervir 2 (figuratively) perder las ganas -
14 to keep something on the boil
(literally) mantener algo hirviendo 2 (figuratively) no dejar que algo se enfríe -
15 to make a hole in
(literally) agujerear 2 (figuratively) comerse gran parte, agotar gran parte -
16 sentido
Del verbo sentir: ( conjugate sentir) \ \
sentido es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: sentido sentir
sentido 1
◊ -da adjetivo1 ‹palabras/carta› heartfelt; ‹anhelo/dolor› deep; 2 [ESTAR] (AmL) ( ofendido) hurt, offended
sentido 2 sustantivo masculino 1a) (Fisiol) senseb) (noción, idea) sentido DE algo sense of sth;sentido común common sense; sentido del humor sense of humor( conjugate humor) 2 ( conocimiento) consciousness; el golpe lo dejó sin sentido he was knocked unconscious by the blow 3 ( significado) sense; en sentido literal in a literal sense; lo dijo con doble sentido he was intentionally ambiguous; el sentido de la vida the meaning of life; en cierto sentido … in a sense …; no le encuentro sentido a lo que haces I can't see any sense o point in what you're doing; esa política ya no tiene sentido that policy doesn't make sense anymore o is meaningless now; palabras sin sentido meaningless words 4 ( dirección) direction;◊ gírese en sentido contrario al de las agujas del reloj turn (round) in a counterclockwise (AmE) o (BrE) an anticlockwise direction;venían en sentido contrario al nuestro they were coming in the opposite direction to us; calle de sentido único or (Méx) de un solo sentido one-way street
sentir ( conjugate sentir) verbo transitivo 1◊ sentido hambre/frío/sed to feel hungry/cold/thirstysentido celos to feel jealous 2b) (esp AmL) ( percibir):le siento gusto a vainilla I can taste vanilla 3 ( lamentar): sentí mucho no poder ayudarla I was very sorry not to be able to help her; ha sentido mucho la pérdida de su madre she has been very affected by her mother's death sentirse verbo pronominal 1 (+ compl) to feel; no me siento con ánimos I don't feel up to it 2 (Chi, Méx) ( ofenderse) to be offended o hurt; sentidose CON algn to be offended o upset with sb
sentido,-a
I adjetivo
1 deeply felt: su muerte ha sido muy sentida, his death has been deeply felt
2 (susceptible) sensitive
es un chico muy sentido y a la mínima se ofende, he gets upset over the slightest things o he's a very sensitive child
II sustantivo masculino
1 sense
sentido del gusto/olfato, sense of taste/smell
2 (conocimiento, consciencia) recobrar/ perder el sentido, to regain/lose consciousness
3 (lógica, razón) sense: no tiene sentido que te despidas, it makes no sense to leave the job
4 (apreciación, capacidad) no tiene sentido de la medida, he has no sense of moderation
sentido común, common sense
sentido del humor, sense of humour
sexto sentido, sixth sense
5 (significado) meaning: la frase carece de sentido, the sentence has no meaning
6 Auto direction
de doble sentido, two-way
(de) sentido único, one-way
sentir
I sustantivo masculino
1 (juicio, opinion) opinion, view
2 (sentimiento) feeling
II verbo transitivo
1 to feel
sentir alegría/frío, to feel happy/cold
te lo digo como lo siento, I speak my mind ➣ Ver nota en feel
2 (oír, percibir) to hear: la sentí llegar de madrugada, I heard her come home in the small hours
3 (lamentar) to regret, be sorry about: siento haberte enfadado, I'm sorry I made you angry ' sentido' also found in these entries: Spanish: ácida - ácido - acusada - acusado - apelar - cabeza - cazar - coger - contraria - contrario - despertarse - dirección - dotada - dotado - economía - educar - encarar - esperar - figurada - figurado - fina - fino - hogareña - hogareño - inversa - inverso - juicio - nariz - olfato - paladar - penetrar - perder - pésame - rara - raro - realista - recobrar - recta - recto - recuperar - sentida - tacto - tener - trancazo - visión - vista - agudeza - agudizar - agudo - alto English: add up - advantage - anticlockwise - appeal - arguable - babble - break - civic - clockwise - common sense - counterclockwise - derogatory - direction - ear - feel - few - figurative - figuratively - flail - gumption - hearing - high - humour - iota - literally - little - make - meaning - meaningless - mindless - modicum - obscure - one-way - pointless - practicality - quite - reason - respect - scent - sense - senseless - sight - smell - strictly - taste - three-point turn - touch - two-way - U-turn - unconscious -
17 take4
1) take smb., smth. somewhere the train will take you there поезд довезет вас туда; the road (the stairs, the corridor, etc.) took him there (up, down, etc.) дорога и т.д. привела его туда и т.д.; the lift took us up мы поднялись на лифте; who will take the luggage up? кто отнесет наверх наши вещи /чемоданы/?; take the trunk down /downstairs/ снести сундук вниз; take one's things in внести вещи в дом или в квартиру; he helped me to take my things out он помог мне вынести вещи; take out one's pipe (a handkerchief, one's passport, etc.) вынимать трубку и т.д. (из кармана, сумки и т.п.); he didn't want them to hear what he was saying, so he took them out он не хотел, чтобы они слышали его слова, поэтому он вывел их на улицу; he took all his pay home он приносил всю получку домой; he took the girl home он проводил девушку домой; take me back отведите или отвезите меня назад; take this (your books, your things, your lawn-mower, etc.) back возьмите это и т.д. назад; I won't take that hat back я не возьму эту шляпу назад; take back one's word (one's statement, one's pledge, what I said, etc.) взять свое слово и т.д. назад, отказаться от своего слова и т.д.; he took me aside он отвел меня в сторону; he took his wife (his children, his car, etc.) abroad он увез свою жену и т.д. за границу; take me along возьмите меня с собой; you'd better take a lunch along прихвати-ка с собой завтрак || take smb. too far заводить кого-л. слишком далеко; it took me too far from the subject это увело меня от предмета разговора; what took you there? coll. как ты там оказался?, что тебя привело туда?2) take smth. in some manner take money (presents, a bribe, etc.) readily (unhesitatingly, gratefully, etc.) охотно и т.д. брать /принимать/ деньги и т.д..; take the offer unhesitatingly не задумываясь принять предложение; I won't take a halfpenny less я не уступлю ни гроша3) take smth., smb. in some manner take smth. coolly (in earnest, good-humouredly, graciously, etc.) реагировать на что-л. спокойно и т.д.; he took the news calmly он хладнокровно выслушал известие; he took the news well (badly) он стойко (тяжело) перенес это известие; I can't take him (his advice, this message, etc.) seriously я не могу принимать его и т.д. всерьез; I can't take it the way he used to я не могу к этому относиться так, как относился он; take smth. hard тяжело переживать что-л.; take smth. easy а) смотреть на вещи спокойно /просто/; б) не усердствовать; take smth. kindly благосклонно принимать что-л.; take smth. amiss /ill/ обижаться на что-л.; he took my words to heart он принял мои слова близко к сердцу || take smb. at his word ловить кого-л. на слове id take smth. in one's stride а) легко преодолеть трудности; б) спокойно относиться к чему-л.4) take smth. in some manner take the hedge (the ditch, the fence, etc.) easily легко перепрыгнуть через изгородь и т.д.; take the corner at full speed повернуть за угол /свернуть/ на большей скорости5) || take smb. long потребовать у кого-л. много времени; it did not take him long у него на это ушло немного времени, он быстро это сделал6) take smth. in some manner take smth. reluctantly (willingly, etc.) пить или есть что-л. неохотно и т.д.; take medicine internally принимать лекарство внутрь7) take smth. at some time take seats in advance покупать или доставать билеты заранее8) take smth. in some manner take his words (her message, his speech, etc.) literally (figuratively, correctly /rightly/, etc.) понимать его слова и т.д. буквально и т.д.; he took my words wrong /the wrong way/ он меня неправильно понял; он неправильно истолковал мои слова9) take smth. in some manner take cold easily легко простуживаться, быть подверженным простуде10) take smth. in some manner take dyes well хорошо краситься /поддаваться окраске/; the boat was taking water fast в лодку быстро набиралась вода; the wood that takes the nails easily дерево, в которое легко входят гвозди -
18 burn out
1. to burn completely; 2. to stop functioning (literally/figuratively) 1. выгореть, сгореть полностью, прекратить горение; 2. перегореть (буквально/фигурально)1. Several houses were burned out by the fire. 2. The light bulb in the kitchen is burned out, please replace it. After years of hard work he burned himself out.
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19 Anglo-Portuguese Alliance
The world's oldest diplomatic connection and alliance, an enduring arrangement between two very different nations and peoples, with important practical consequences in the domestic and foreign affairs of both Great Britain (England before 1707) and Portugal. The history of this remarkable alliance, which has had commercial and trade, political, foreign policy, cultural, and imperial aspects, can be outlined in part with a list of the main alliance treaties after the first treaty of commerce and friendship signed between the monarchs of England and Portugal in 1373. This was followed in 1386 by the Treaty of Windsor; then in 1654, 1661, 1703, the Methuen Treaty; and in 1810 and 1899 another treaty also signed at Windsor.Common interests in the defense of the nation and its overseas empire (in the case of Portugal, after 1415; in the case of England, after 1650) were partly based on characteristics and common enemies both countries shared. Even in the late Middle Ages, England and Portugal faced common enemies: large continental countries that threatened the interests and sovereignty of both, especially France and Spain. In this sense, the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance has always been a defensive alliance in which each ally would assist the other when necessary against its enemies. In the case of Portugal, that enemy invariably was Spain (or component states thereof, such as Castile and Leon) and sometimes France (i.e., when Napoleon's armies invaded and conquered Portugal as of late 1807). In the case of England, that foe was often France and sometimes Spain as well.Beginning in the late 14th century, England and Portugal forged this unusual relationship, formalized with several treaties that came into direct use during a series of dynastic, imperial, naval, and commercial conflicts between 1373 and 1961, the historic period when the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance had its most practical political significance. The relative world power and importance of each ally has varied over the centuries. During the period 1373-1580, the allies were similar in respective ranking in European affairs, and during the period 1480-1550, if anything, Portugal was a greater world power with a more important navy than England. During 1580-1810, Portugal fell to the status of a third-rank European power and, during 1810-1914, England was perhaps the premier world power. During 1914-61, England's world position slipped while Portugal made a slow recovery but remained a third- or fourth-rank power.The commercial elements of the alliance have always involved an exchange of goods between two seafaring, maritime peoples with different religions and political systems but complementary economies. The 1703 Methuen Treaty establ ished a trade link that endured for centuries and bore greater advantages for England than for Portugal, although Portugal derived benefits: English woolens for Portuguese wines, especially port, other agricultural produce, and fish. Since the signing of the Methuen Treaty, there has been a vigorous debate both in politics and in historical scholarship as to how much each nation benefited economically from the arrangement in which Portugal eventually became dependent upon England and the extent to which Portugal became a kind of economic colony of Britain during the period from 1703 to 1910.There is a vast literature on the Alliance, much of it in Portuguese and by Portuguese writers, which is one expression of the development of modern Portuguese nationalism. During the most active phase of the alliance, from 1650 to 1945, there is no doubt but that the core of the mutual interests of the allies amounted to the proposition that Portugal's independence as a nation in Iberia and the integrity of its overseas empire, the third largest among the colonial powers as of 1914, were defended by England, who in turn benefited from the use by the Royal Navy of Portugal's home and colonial ports in times of war and peace. A curious impact on Portuguese and popular usage had also come about and endured through the impact of dealings with the English allies. The idiom in Portuguese, "é para inglês ver," means literally "it is for the Englishman to see," but figuratively it really means, "it is merely for show."The practical defense side of the alliance was effectively dead by the end of World War II, but perhaps the most definitive indication of the end of the political significance of an alliance that still continues in other spheres occurred in December 1961, when the army of the Indian Union invaded Portugal's colonial enclaves in western India, Goa, Damão, and Diu. While both nations were now North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies, their interests clashed when it came to imperial and Commonwealth conflicts and policies. Portugal asked Britain for military assistance in the use of British bases against the army of Britain's largest former colony, India. But Portugal was, in effect, refused assistance by her oldest ally. If the alliance continues into the 21st century, its essence is historical, nostalgic, commercial, and cultural.See also Catherine of Braganza.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Anglo-Portuguese Alliance
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literally — adverb 1. in a literal sense (Freq. 5) literally translated he said so literally • Ant: ↑figuratively • Derived from adjective: ↑literal 2. (intensifier before a figurative expression) without exaggeration … Useful english dictionary
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figuratively / literally — Figuratively refers to metaphoric speech, not realistic or exact: To say, Horace died laughing, is to speak figuratively. Literally refers to realistic or exact speech: If Horace literally died laughing, he must be buried (but it was not… … Confused words
literally — [lit′ər əl ē] adv. in a literal manner or sense; specif., a) word for word; not imaginatively, figuratively, or freely [to translate a passage literally] b) actually; in fact [the house literally burned to the ground ]: now often used as an… … English World dictionary
literally — [adv] word for word; exactly actually, completely, correctly, direct, directly, faithfully, indisputably, letter by letter*, literatim, not figuratively, plainly, precisely, really, rightly, rigorously, sic*, simply, straight, strictly, to the… … New thesaurus
Literally — Lit er*al*ly, adv. 1. According to the primary and natural import of words; not figuratively; as, a man and his wife can not be literally one flesh. [1913 Webster] 2. With close adherence to words; word by word. [1913 Webster] So wild and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
literally — adverb /ˈlɪtəɹəli/ a) word for word; not figuratively; not as an idiom or metaphor When I saw on the news that there would be no school tomorrow because of the snowstorm, I literally jumped for joy, and hit my head on the ceiling fan. b) used as… … Wiktionary
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literally — See figuratively. See figuratively, literally … Dictionary of problem words and expressions