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1 Attendance
subs.Service: P. διακονία, ἡ, Ar. and P. ὑπηρεσία, ἡ, P. and V. λατρεία, ἡ (Plat.), θεραπεία, ἡ ; see Tendance.Attendance on children: P. and V. παιδαγωγία, ἡ.Attendance (at course of teaching, etc.): P. συνουσία, ἡ.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Attendance
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2 attendance
noun His attendance (= the number of times he attends) at school is poor; Attendances (= the number of people attending) at the concerts went down after the price of tickets increased.) παρουσία -
3 attendance
παρουσία -
4 in attendance
(in the position of helping or serving: There was no doctor in attendance at the road accident.) παρών (για παροχή βοήθειας ή υπηρεσιών) -
5 attend
[ə'tend]1) (to go to or be present at: He attended the meeting; He will attend school till he is sixteen.) παρίσταμαι2) ((with to) to listen or give attention to: Attend carefully to what the teacher is saying!) παρακολουθώ3) (to deal with: I'll attend to that problem tomorrow.) επιμελούμαι4) (to look after; to help or serve: Two doctors attended her all through her illness; The queen was attended by four ladies.) φροντίζω•- attendant
- in attendance -
6 Tendance
subs.P. and V. θεραπεία, ἡ (Eur., I T. 314), θεράπευμα, τό (Eur., H. F. 633), V. κηδεύματα, τά (Eur., Or. 795); see Attendance.Care: P. ἐπιμέλεια, ἡ.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Tendance
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7 irregular
[i'reɡjulə]1) (not happening etc regularly: His attendance at classes was irregular.) ακανόνιστος2) (not formed smoothly or evenly: irregular handwriting.) ανώμαλος3) (contrary to rules.) αντικανονικός4) ((in grammar) not formed etc in the normal way: irregular verbs.) ανώμαλος•- irregularity -
8 obligatory
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9 register
['re‹istə] 1. noun((a book containing) a written list, record etc: a school attendance register; a register of births, marriages and deaths.) κατάλογος, μητρώο, πρωτόκολλο2. verb1) (to write or cause to be written in a register: to register the birth of a baby.) δηλώνω, εγγράφω2) (to write one's name, or have one's name written, in a register etc: They arrived on Friday and registered at the Hilton Hotel.) δηλώνομαι, δήλώνω άφιξη3) (to insure (a parcel, letter etc) against loss in the post.) στέλνω συστημένο4) ((of an instrument, dial etc) to show (a figure, amount etc): The thermometer registered 25°C.) καταγράφω•- registrar
- registry
- register office / registry office
- registration number -
10 Medical
adj.P. ἰατρικός.Medical man, subs.: see Doctor.Medical attendance: P. and V. θεραπεία, ἡ.Medical science: P, ἡ ἰατρική.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Medical
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11 Nursing
subs.Wet nursing: P. τιτθεία, ἡ.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Nursing
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12 Tender
subs.Small boat in attendance on a ship: P. ὑπηρετικόν, τό.——————v. trans.Offer: P. and V. προτείνειν, ἐκτείνειν, ὀρέγειν.Afford: P. and V. παρέχειν, προσφέρειν.Tender an oath to: P. ἐξορκοῦν (acc. or absol.).——————adj.V. τέρην.Gentle: P. also V. πρᾶος, ἤπιος; see Gentle.A tender glance of the eye: V. ὄμματος θελκτήριον τόξευμα (Æsch., Supp. 1004).Of tender years: use young.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Tender
См. также в других словарях:
attendance — at‧tend‧ance [əˈtendəns] noun [countable, uncountable] 1. the number of people who attend something such as a meeting, or who go to see an event such as a football match etc: • Seven jobs were axed at the zoo after a 50% drop in attendances. 2.… … Financial and business terms
Attendance — At*tend ance, n. [OE. attendance, OF. atendance, fr. atendre, F. attendre. See {Attend}, v. t.] 1. Attention; regard; careful application. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Till I come, give attendance to reading. 1 Tim. iv. 13. [1913 Webster] 2. The act of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
attendance — late 14c., act of attending to one s duties, from O.Fr. atendance attention, wait, hope, expectation, from atendant, prp. of atendre (see ATTEND (Cf. attend)). Meaning action of waiting on someone dates from late 14c. (to dance attendance on… … Etymology dictionary
attendance — [n1] being present appearance, attending, being in evidence, being there, participation, presence; concept 388 Ant. absence attendance [v2] people present at event assemblage, assembly, audience, box office, company, congregation, crowd, draw,… … New thesaurus
attendance — I noun accompaniment, ministration, presence II index service (assistance) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
attendance — ► NOUN 1) the action of attending. 2) the number of people present at a particular occasion … English terms dictionary
attendance — [ə ten′dəns] n. 1. the act of attending 2. the persons or number of persons attending 3. the degree of regularity in attending … English World dictionary
attendance — n. persons present number of persons present 1) to check attendance; to take attendance (in school) 2) average; daily; low, poor; perfect attendance 3) attendance has gone up; attendance has fallen, gone down presence 4) attendance at (attendance … Combinatory dictionary
attendance — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ good, large, record ▪ It was a record attendance for a midweek game. ▪ low, poor, sparse (esp. AmE), spotty (Am … Collocations dictionary
attendance — [[t]əte̱ndəns[/t]] attendances 1) N UNCOUNT: usu with supp Someone s attendance at an event or an institution is the fact that they are present at the event or go regularly to the institution. Her attendance at school was sporadic. 2) N VAR: usu… … English dictionary
attendance — at|tend|ance [əˈtendəns] n 1.) [U and C] the number of people who attend a game, concert, meeting etc ▪ We have an average attendance of 4000 fans per game. ▪ Last year s fair saw attendance figures of 32,000. 2.) [U and C] when someone goes to a … Dictionary of contemporary English