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Hb Antoine

  • 1 Antoine

    Czech-English dictionary > Antoine

  • 2 Antoine Lavoisier

    m.
    Antoine Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent Lavoisier.

    Spanish-English dictionary > Antoine Lavoisier

  • 3 Antoine

    [ɑ̃twan] nom propre

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > Antoine

  • 4 Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent

    SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology
    [br]
    b. 26 August 1743 Paris, France
    d. 8 May 1794 Paris, France
    [br]
    French founder of the modern science of chemistry.
    [br]
    As well as receiving a formal education in law and literature, Lavoisier studied science under some of the leading figures of the day. This proved to be an ideal formation of the man in whom "man of science" and "public servant" were so intimately combined. His early work towards the first geological map of France and on the water supply of Paris helped to win him election to the Royal Academy of Sciences in 1768 at the youthful age of 25. In the same year he used some of his private income to buy a part-share in the "tax farm", a private company which leased from the Government the right to collect certain indirect taxes.
    In 1772 Lavoisier began his researches into the related phenomena of combustion, respiration and the calcination or oxidation of metals. This culminated in the early 1780s in the overthrow of the prevailing theory, based on an imponderable combustion principle called "phlogiston", and the substitution of the modern explanation of these processes. At the same time, understanding of the nature of acids, bases and salts was placed on a sounder footing. More important, Lavoisier defined a chemical element in its modern sense and showed how it should be applied by drawing up the first modern list of the chemical elements. With the revolution in chemistry initiated by Lavoisier, chemists could begin to understand correctly the fundamental processes of their science. This understanding was the foundationo of the astonishing advance in scientific and industrial chemistry that has taken place since then. As an academician, Lavoisier was paid by the Government to carry out investigations into a wide variety of practical questions with a chemical bias, such as the manufacture of starch and the distillation of phosphorus. In 1775 Louis XVI ordered the setting up of the Gunpowder Commission to improve the supply and quality of gunpowder, deficiencies in which had hampered France's war efforts. Lavoisier was a member of the Commission and, as usual, took the leading part, drawing up its report and supervising its implementation. As a result, the industry became profitable, output increased so that France could even export powder, and the range of the powder increased by two-thirds. This was a material factor in France's war effort in the Revolution and the Napoleonic wars.
    As if his chemical researches and official duties were not enough, Lavoisier began to apply his scientific principles to agriculture when he purchased an estate at Frechines, near Blois. After ten years' work on his experimental farm there, Lavoisier was able to describe his results in the memoir "Results of some agricultural experiments and reflections on their relation to political economy" (Paris, 1788), which holds historic importance in agriculture and economics. In spite of his services to the nation and to humanity, his association with the tax farm was to have tragic consequences: during the reign of terror in 1794 the Revolutionaries consigned to the guillotine all the tax farmers, including Lavoisier.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1862–93, Oeuvres de Lavoisier, Vols I–IV, ed. J.B.A.Dumas; Vols V–VI, ed. E.Grimaux, Paris (Lavoisier's collected works).
    Further Reading
    D.I.Duveen and H.S.Klickstein, 1954, A Bibliography of the Works of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier 1743–1794, London: William Dawson (contains valuable biographical material).
    D.McKie, 1952, Antoine Lavoisier, Scientist, Economist, Social Reformer, London: Constable (the best modern, general biography).
    H.Guerlac, 1975, Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, Chemist and Revolutionary, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons (a more recent work).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent

  • 5 Saint-Antoine

    Saint-Antoine npr croix de Saint-Antoine Saint Anthony's cross, tau cross.

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > Saint-Antoine

  • 6 Lumière, Charles Antoine

    [br]
    b. 13 March 1840 Ormoy, France
    d. 16 April 1911
    [br]
    French photographer and photographie manufacturer.
    [br]
    Orphaned when his parents died of cholera, at the age of 14 he was taken by his elder sister to live in Marcilly-le-Hayer. Apprenticed to a joiner, he was also interested in chemistry and physics, but his great love was drawing and painting. The leading water-colourist Auguste Constantin took him into his Paris home as an apprentice and taught him the whole business of painting. He was able to earn his living as a sign-painter, and numbered among his clients several photographers. This led to an interest in photography, which caused him to abandon the safe trade of sign-painter for that of photographer.
    Lumière took a post with a photographer in Besançon in 1862. He set up business on his own account in 1865 and moved to Lyons c.1870, joining his friend and fellow photographer Emile Lebeau. The business prospered; in 1879 he installed an electricity generator in his studio to run the newly invented Van de Weyde electric arc lamp, permitting portraiture in all weathers and at all times. With the arrival of the dry-plate process c. 1880, the Lumière business looked to employ the new medium. His second son, Louis Lumière (b. 5 October 1864 Besançon, France; d. 6 June 1948 Bandol, France; see under Lumière, Auguste), fresh from college, experimented with emulsions with which his 12-year-old sister coated glass plates. While still running the studio, Antoine started marketing the plates, which were the first to be made in France, and production was soon up to 4,000 plates a day. Under his guidance A.Lumière et ses Fils acquired a worldwide reputation for the quality and originality of its products.
    After his retirement from business, when he handed it over to his sons, Auguste (see Lumière, Auguste) and Louis, he took up painting again and successfully exhibited in several Salons. He was a Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur, a recognition of his participation in the 1893 World's Colombian Exposition in Chicago.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Guy Borgé, 1980, Prestige de la photographie, Nos. 8 and 9, Paris.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Lumière, Charles Antoine

  • 7 Chevenard, Pierre Antoine Jean Sylvestre

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 31 December 1888 Thizy, Rhône, France
    d. 15 August 1960 Fontenoy-aux-Roses, France
    [br]
    French metallurgist, inventor of the alloys Elinvar and Platinite and of the method of strengthening nickel-chromium alloys by a precipitate ofNi3Al which provided the basis of all later super-alloy development.
    [br]
    Soon after graduating from the Ecole des Mines at St-Etienne in 1910, Chevenard joined the Société de Commentry Fourchambault et Decazeville at their steelworks at Imphy, where he remained for the whole of his career. Imphy had for some years specialized in the production of nickel steels. From this venture emerged the first austenitic nickel-chromium steel, containing 6 per cent chromium and 22–4 per cent nickel and produced commercially in 1895. Most of the alloys required by Guillaume in his search for the low-expansion alloy Invar were made at Imphy. At the Imphy Research Laboratory, established in 1911, Chevenard conducted research into the development of specialized nickel-based alloys. His first success followed from an observation that some of the ferro-nickels were free from the low-temperature brittleness exhibited by conventional steels. To satisfy the technical requirements of Georges Claude, the French cryogenic pioneer, Chevenard was then able in 1912 to develop an alloy containing 55–60 per cent nickel, 1–3 per cent manganese and 0.2–0.4 per cent carbon. This was ductile down to −190°C, at which temperature carbon steel was very brittle.
    By 1916 Elinvar, a nickel-iron-chromium alloy with an elastic modulus that did not vary appreciably with changes in ambient temperature, had been identified. This found extensive use in horology and instrument manufacture, and even for the production of high-quality tuning forks. Another very popular alloy was Platinite, which had the same coefficient of thermal expansion as platinum and soda glass. It was used in considerable quantities by incandescent-lamp manufacturers for lead-in wires. Other materials developed by Chevenard at this stage to satisfy the requirements of the electrical industry included resistance alloys, base-metal thermocouple combinations, magnetically soft high-permeability alloys, and nickel-aluminium permanent magnet steels of very high coercivity which greatly improved the power and reliability of car magnetos. Thermostatic bimetals of all varieties soon became an important branch of manufacture at Imphy.
    During the remainder of his career at Imphy, Chevenard brilliantly elaborated the work on nickel-chromium-tungsten alloys to make stronger pressure vessels for the Haber and other chemical processes. Another famous alloy that he developed, ATV, contained 35 per cent nickel and 11 per cent chromium and was free from the problem of stress-induced cracking in steam that had hitherto inhibited the development of high-power steam turbines. Between 1912 and 1917, Chevenard recognized the harmful effects of traces of carbon on this type of alloy, and in the immediate postwar years he found efficient methods of scavenging the residual carbon by controlled additions of reactive metals. This led to the development of a range of stabilized austenitic stainless steels which were free from the problems of intercrystalline corrosion and weld decay that then caused so much difficulty to the manufacturers of chemical plant.
    Chevenard soon concluded that only the nickel-chromium system could provide a satisfactory basis for the subsequent development of high-temperature alloys. The first published reference to the strengthening of such materials by additions of aluminium and/or titanium occurs in his UK patent of 1929. This strengthening approach was adopted in the later wartime development in Britain of the Nimonic series of alloys, all of which depended for their high-temperature strength upon the precipitated compound Ni3Al.
    In 1936 he was studying the effect of what is now known as "thermal fatigue", which contributes to the eventual failure of both gas and steam turbines. He then published details of equipment for assessing the susceptibility of nickel-chromium alloys to this type of breakdown by a process of repeated quenching. Around this time he began to make systematic use of the thermo-gravimetrie balance for high-temperature oxidation studies.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, Société de Physique. Commandeur de la Légion d'honneur.
    Bibliography
    1929, Analyse dilatométrique des matériaux, with a preface be C.E.Guillaume, Paris: Dunod (still regarded as the definitive work on this subject).
    The Dictionary of Scientific Biography lists around thirty of his more important publications between 1914 and 1943.
    Further Reading
    "Chevenard, a great French metallurgist", 1960, Acier Fins (Spec.) 36:92–100.
    L.Valluz, 1961, "Notice sur les travaux de Pierre Chevenard, 1888–1960", Paris: Institut de France, Académie des Sciences.
    ASD

    Biographical history of technology > Chevenard, Pierre Antoine Jean Sylvestre

  • 8 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

  • 9 Pixii, Antoine Hippolyte

    SUBJECT AREA: Electricity
    [br]
    b. 1808 France
    d. 1835
    [br]
    French instrument maker who devised the first machine to incorporate the basic elements of a modern electric generator.
    [br]
    Mechanical devices to transform energy from a mechanical to an electrical form followed shortly after Faraday's discovery of induction. One of the earliest was Pixii's magneto generator. Pixii had been an instrument maker to Arago and Ampère for a number of years and his machine was first announced to the Academy of Sciences in Paris in September 1832. In this hand-driven generator a permanent magnet was rotated in close proximity to two coils on soft iron cores, producing an alternating current. Subsequently Pixii adapted to a larger version of his machine a "see-saw" switch or commutator devised by Ampère, in order to obtain a unidirectional current. The machine provided a current similar to that obtained with a chemical cell and was capable of decomposing water into oxygen and hydrogen. It was the prototype of many magneto-electric machines which followed.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Academy of Sciences, Paris, Gold Medal 1832.
    Further Reading
    B.Bowers, 1982, A History of Electric Light and Power, London, pp. 70–2 (describes the development of Pixii's generator).
    C.Jackson, 1833, "Notice of the revolving electric magnet of Mr Pixii of Paris", American Journal of Science 24:146–7.
    GW

    Biographical history of technology > Pixii, Antoine Hippolyte

  • 10 אנטואן ואטו

    Antoine Watteau (1684-1721), Jean-Antoine Watteau, French painter known for his Rococo style

    Hebrew-English dictionary > אנטואן ואטו

  • 11 אנטואן אנרי בקרל

    Antoine Henri Becquerel (1852-1908), French physicist, winner of the Nobel prize in Physics in 1903 (discovered radioactivity in uranium)

    Hebrew-English dictionary > אנטואן אנרי בקרל

  • 12 אנטואן דה סנט-אכזופרי

    Antoine de Saint-Exupery (1900-1944), French aviator and writer, author of "the Little Prince"

    Hebrew-English dictionary > אנטואן דה סנט-אכזופרי

  • 13 Антуан

    Новый русско-английский словарь > Антуан

  • 14 moteado

    adj.
    speckled, spotted, mottled, patched.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: motear.
    * * *
    1 dotted, speckled
    * * *
    (f. - moteada)
    adj.
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) [piel] (=con manchas pequeñas) speckled; (=con manchas grandes) dappled, mottled
    2) [tela] [de forma irregular] flecked; (=con lunares) dotted
    * * *
    - da adjetivo < tela> ( jaspeado) flecked; ( a lunares) dotted, spotted; < piel> mottled

    los cerros moteados de blanco — (liter) the hills dotted with white (liter)

    * * *
    = foxing, mottled, mottled, mottling, pied, dappled.
    Ex. Foxing refers to the spots of various sizes and intensity, usually brownish in colour, that disfigure paper and are caused by varying combinations of fungi, paper impurities, and dampness.
    Ex. The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.
    Ex. The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.
    Ex. Variations in aeration and moisture content have resulted in mottling, which has become less prevalent as the soils develop.
    Ex. West African indigenous pigs are black, white, black and white or pied in colour with well developed hair coat and erect ears.
    Ex. Bathed in dappled sunlight, our peaceful, gorgeous garden is the background for your private dream!.
    ----
    * moteado de = dotted with.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo < tela> ( jaspeado) flecked; ( a lunares) dotted, spotted; < piel> mottled

    los cerros moteados de blanco — (liter) the hills dotted with white (liter)

    * * *
    = foxing, mottled, mottled, mottling, pied, dappled.

    Ex: Foxing refers to the spots of various sizes and intensity, usually brownish in colour, that disfigure paper and are caused by varying combinations of fungi, paper impurities, and dampness.

    Ex: The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.
    Ex: The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.
    Ex: Variations in aeration and moisture content have resulted in mottling, which has become less prevalent as the soils develop.
    Ex: West African indigenous pigs are black, white, black and white or pied in colour with well developed hair coat and erect ears.
    Ex: Bathed in dappled sunlight, our peaceful, gorgeous garden is the background for your private dream!.
    * moteado de = dotted with.

    * * *
    moteado -da
    ‹tela› (jaspeado) flecked; (a lunares) dotted, spotted; ‹piel› mottled
    los cerros moteados de blanco ( liter); the hills dotted with white ( liter)
    * * *

    Del verbo motear: ( conjugate motear)

    moteado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    moteado    
    motear
    moteado
    ◊ -da adjetivo ‹ tela› ( jaspeado) flecked;


    ( a lunares) dotted, spotted;
    piel mottled
    moteado,-a adjetivo
    1 (tela, etc, con lunares) dotted
    2 (la piel) mottled
    ' moteado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    moteada
    English:
    mottled
    - speckled
    - fleck
    * * *
    moteado, -a adj
    speckled
    * * *
    moteado, -da adj
    : dotted, spotted, dappled

    Spanish-English dictionary > moteado

  • 15 гемоглобин Сен-Антуан

    1. hemoglobin St. Antoine
    2. Hb Antoine

     

    гемоглобин Сен-Антуан
    Нестабилен, имеет нормальное сродство к кислороду; делетированы аминокислоты в 74-м и 75-м положениях (глицин и лейцин) β-цепи.
    [Арефьев В.А., Лисовенко Л.А. Англо-русский толковый словарь генетических терминов 1995 407с.]

    Тематики

    EN

    Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > гемоглобин Сен-Антуан

  • 16 гемоглобин Сен-Антуан

    Genetics: Antoine, hemoglobin St. Antoine (нестабилен, имеет нормальное сродство к кислороду; делетированы аминокислоты в 74-м и 75-м положениях (глицин и лейцин) -цепи)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > гемоглобин Сен-Антуан

  • 17 ז'אן-אנטואן ואטו

    Jean-Antoine Watteau (1684-1721), Antoine Watteau French painter known for his Rococo style

    Hebrew-English dictionary > ז'אן-אנטואן ואטו

  • 18 disparar

    v.
    1 to shoot, to fire (with weapon).
    disparar al aire to shoot in the air
    disparar a matar to shoot to kill
    disparar contra el enemigo to shoot o fire at the enemy
    tengo varias preguntas para ti — ¡dispara! (figurative) I have several questions for you — fire away! o shoot!
    El chico le dispara a los conejos The boy shoots rabbits.
    2 to shoot, to take a photograph (with camera).
    3 to fire a shot, to shoot, to fire off.
    4 to trigger, to detonate, to let off, to set off.
    El chico disparó la explosión The boy triggered the explosion.
    5 to pay.
    * * *
    1 (arma) to fire; (bala, flecha) to shoot
    2 (lanzar) to hurl, throw
    3 DEPORTE to shoot
    1 figurado (disparatar) to talk nonsense
    1 (arma) to go off, fire; (despertador) to go off
    2 figurado (correr) to dash off, rush off
    3 figurado (precios) to shoot up
    4 figurado (saltar fuera de razón) to blow up, explode
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    1. VT
    1) [+ arma de fuego, proyectil, tiro] to fire; [+ flecha] to shoot; [+ gatillo] to pull
    2) (Dep) [+ penalti, falta] to take
    3) (Fot)

    para disparar la cámara, aprieta el botón — to take a photograph, press the button

    dispara el flash, que está oscuro — use the flash, it's dark

    4) [+ consumo, precio]
    5) (=hacer saltar) [+ alarma] to trigger, set off; [+ proceso, reacción] to spark, spark off
    2. VI
    1) [con un arma] to shoot, fire

    ¡quieto o disparo! — stop or I'll shoot o fire!

    le dispararon a la cabezathey shot o fired at his head

    ¡no dispares! — don't shoot!

    ¡disparad! — fire!

    2) (Dep) to shoot
    3) (Fot) to shoot

    ¡enfoca y dispara! — focus the camera and shoot

    4) Méx * (=gastar mucho) to spend lavishly
    3.
    See:
    * * *
    1.
    verbo intransitivo
    1)
    a) ( con arma) to shoot, fire

    disparar al aireto fire o shoot into the air

    disparar a quemarropa or a bocajarro — to fire at point-blank range

    disparar contra alguiento shoot o fire at somebody

    b) (Dep) to shoot
    2) (Méx fam) ( pagar) to pay
    2.
    1)
    a) <arma/flecha> to shoot, fire; <tiro/proyectil> to fire
    b) (Dep)
    c) (fam) < pregunta> to fire (colloq)
    2) (Méx fam) ( pagar) to buy
    3.
    dispararse v pron
    1)
    a) arma to go off
    b) (refl)
    2) (fam) precio to shoot up, rocket
    * * *
    = shoot, let + fly, fire + Posesivo + gun, fire + shot, fire.
    Ex. The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.
    Ex. In this way the fowler could work his way through the shallows to within gunshot of the fowl, so as to let fly with his rifle as they took off from the water.
    Ex. The history of warfare shows that less than one fifth of soldiers fire their guns at another human being.
    Ex. The town grew at an unprecedented pace, and when the first shot was fired at ft Sumter it was home for 30,000.
    Ex. The fighter pilot said he was ordered to fire a full salvo of rockets at the UFO moving erratically over the North Sea.
    ----
    * disparar a discreción = fire at + will.
    * disparar a matar = shoot to + kill.
    * disparar cartuchos vacíos = fire + blanks.
    * disparar munición de fogueo = fire + blanks.
    * disparar un arma = fire + weapon.
    * disparar un tiro = fire + shot.
    * disparar un tiro, hacer un disparo = fire + shot.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo intransitivo
    1)
    a) ( con arma) to shoot, fire

    disparar al aireto fire o shoot into the air

    disparar a quemarropa or a bocajarro — to fire at point-blank range

    disparar contra alguiento shoot o fire at somebody

    b) (Dep) to shoot
    2) (Méx fam) ( pagar) to pay
    2.
    1)
    a) <arma/flecha> to shoot, fire; <tiro/proyectil> to fire
    b) (Dep)
    c) (fam) < pregunta> to fire (colloq)
    2) (Méx fam) ( pagar) to buy
    3.
    dispararse v pron
    1)
    a) arma to go off
    b) (refl)
    2) (fam) precio to shoot up, rocket
    * * *
    = shoot, let + fly, fire + Posesivo + gun, fire + shot, fire.

    Ex: The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.

    Ex: In this way the fowler could work his way through the shallows to within gunshot of the fowl, so as to let fly with his rifle as they took off from the water.
    Ex: The history of warfare shows that less than one fifth of soldiers fire their guns at another human being.
    Ex: The town grew at an unprecedented pace, and when the first shot was fired at ft Sumter it was home for 30,000.
    Ex: The fighter pilot said he was ordered to fire a full salvo of rockets at the UFO moving erratically over the North Sea.
    * disparar a discreción = fire at + will.
    * disparar a matar = shoot to + kill.
    * disparar cartuchos vacíos = fire + blanks.
    * disparar munición de fogueo = fire + blanks.
    * disparar un arma = fire + weapon.
    * disparar un tiro = fire + shot.
    * disparar un tiro, hacer un disparo = fire + shot.

    * * *
    disparar [A1 ]
    vi
    A
    1 (con un arma) to shoot, fire
    disparar al aire to fire o shoot into the air
    le disparó a las piernas she shot at his legs
    disparan a matar they shoot to kill
    le disparó por la espalda he shot him in the back
    disparar a quemarropa or a bocajarro to fire at point-blank range
    ¡no disparen! don't shoot!
    ¡alto o disparo! stop or I'll shoot!
    dispararon sobre los soldados enemigos they fired on the enemy troops
    disparar CONTRA algn to shoot o fire AT sb
    2 ( Fot) to take photographs/a photograph
    3 ( Dep) to shoot
    B ( Méx fam) (pagar) to pay
    hoy disparo yo it's on me today ( colloq), I'm paying o buying today
    C ( RPl) (salir corriendo) to rush off ( colloq), to be off like a shot
    ■ disparar
    vt
    A
    1 ‹arma/flecha› to shoot, fire; ‹tiro/proyectil› to fire
    le dispararon un tiro en la nuca they shot him in the back of the head
    dispararán 21 cañonazos de saludo they will fire o there will be a 21-gun salute
    2 ( Fot) to take
    ¿cuántas fotos has disparado? how many photos o shots have you taken?
    3 ( Dep):
    disparar un penalty to take a penalty
    disparó el balón contra la barrera he shot against the wall
    4 ( fam); ‹pregunta› to fire ( colloq)
    B ( Méx fam) (pagar) to buy
    nos disparó un café he treated us to o bought us a cup of coffee
    yo disparo esta ronda I'll get this round, this round's on me ( colloq)
    A
    1 «arma» to go off
    2 ( refl):
    se disparó un tiro en la sien he shot himself in the head
    B ( fam); «precio» to shoot up, rocket
    * * *

     

    disparar ( conjugate disparar) verbo intransitivo

    disparar al aire to fire o shoot into the air;

    disparar a matar to shoot to kill;
    le disparó por la espalda he shot him in the back;
    disparar a quemarropa or a bocajarro to fire at point-blank range;
    disparar contra algn to shoot o fire at sb
    b) (Dep) to shoot

    verbo transitivo
    1
    a)arma/flecha to shoot, fire;

    tiro/proyectil to fire;

    b) (Dep):


    2 (Méx fam) ( pagar) to buy
    dispararse verbo pronominal
    1

    b) ( refl):


    2 (fam) [ precio] to shoot up, rocket
    disparar verbo transitivo
    1 (un arma de fuego) to fire
    (un proyectil) to shoot: le dispararon en el hombro, he was shot in the shoulder
    2 Ftb to shoot
    disparar a puerta, to shoot at goal
    ' disparar' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    tirar
    - bocajarro
    - comenzar
    - descargar
    - disparado
    - mansalva
    - quemarropa
    English:
    blast away
    - fire
    - point-blank
    - potshot
    - shoot
    - shoot off
    - trigger-happy
    - wildly
    * * *
    vt
    1. [arma, persona] to shoot;
    [tiro] to fire;
    ¿sabes disparar un arma? do you know how to fire a gun?;
    disparaban tiros al aire they fired (shots) into the air;
    nos disparaban flechas they were shooting arrows at us;
    ¡no me dispares! don't shoot!
    2. [fotografía] to take
    3. [penalti, falta, golpe de castigo] to take;
    disparar un libre directo to take a direct free kick
    4. Méx Fam [pagar]
    ven, te disparo un tequila go on, have a tequila on me
    vi
    1. [con arma] to shoot, to fire;
    disparar al aire to shoot in the air;
    disparar a matar to shoot to kill;
    disparar contra o [m5] sobre alguien to shoot o fire at sb;
    disparar contra el enemigo to shoot o fire at the enemy;
    disparaban sobre la población civil they were shooting at civilians;
    ¡no dispares! don't shoot!;
    tengo varias preguntas para ti – ¡dispara! I have several questions for you – fire away! o shoot!
    2. [con cámara] to shoot, to take a photograph;
    los fotógrafos no paraban de disparar the photographers kept on clicking their cameras
    3. [futbolista] to shoot;
    disparar a puerta to shoot at goal
    4. RP Fam [huir] to shoot off
    * * *
    I v/t
    1 tiro, arma fire
    2 foto take
    3 precios send (rocketing fam
    ) up
    3 en fútbol shoot
    II v/i
    1 shoot, fire;
    disparar al aire fire in the air
    2 en fútbol shoot
    * * *
    1) : to fire (a gun)
    2) Mex fam : to pay
    1) : to shoot
    2) : to rush off
    3) Mex fam : to treat to, to buy
    * * *
    1. (tiro, bala, flecha) to fire
    2. (a alguien) to shoot [pt. & pp. shot]
    3. (en deporte) to shoot [pt. & pp. shot]

    Spanish-English dictionary > disparar

  • 19 fingir estar muerto

    (v.) = feign + death
    Ex. The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.
    * * *
    (v.) = feign + death

    Ex: The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.

    Spanish-English dictionary > fingir estar muerto

  • 20 fusilar

    v.
    1 to execute by firing squad, to shoot.
    2 to plagiarize (informal) (plagiar).
    * * *
    1 (ejecutar) to shoot, execute
    2 (plagiar) to plagiarize
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    VT
    1) (=ejecutar) to shoot, execute ( by firing squad)
    2) Caribe (=matar) to kill; (Dep) [+ gol] to shoot
    3) * (=plagiar) (Literat, Cine) to pinch *, plagiarize; (Com) to pirate, copy illegally
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo
    1) (Mil) to shoot
    2) (fam) ( plagiar) to plagiarize, lift (colloq)
    2.
    fusilarse v pron (fam) <obra/novela> to plagiarize, lift (colloq)
    * * *
    = cannibalise [cannibalize, -USA], shoot.
    Ex. This article considers that the potential for cannibalising existing data base products should be a cause for concern for those database products planning to introduce information products based on CD-ROM = Este artículo considera que la posibilidad de " fusilar" las bases de datos existentes debería ser motivo de preocupación para aquellos productores que planean introducir productos informativos en CD-ROM.
    Ex. The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.
    ----
    * fusilar en el acto = shoot on + sight.
    * fusilar sobre la marcha = shoot on + sight.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo
    1) (Mil) to shoot
    2) (fam) ( plagiar) to plagiarize, lift (colloq)
    2.
    fusilarse v pron (fam) <obra/novela> to plagiarize, lift (colloq)
    * * *
    = cannibalise [cannibalize, -USA], shoot.

    Ex: This article considers that the potential for cannibalising existing data base products should be a cause for concern for those database products planning to introduce information products based on CD-ROM = Este artículo considera que la posibilidad de " fusilar" las bases de datos existentes debería ser motivo de preocupación para aquellos productores que planean introducir productos informativos en CD-ROM.

    Ex: The book has a blue mottled sheepskin binding signed by Antoine Menard, a famous bookbinder who was shot in Paris by a firing squad in 1871 but feigned death and escaped to Spain.
    * fusilar en el acto = shoot on + sight.
    * fusilar sobre la marcha = shoot on + sight.

    * * *
    fusilar [A1 ]
    vt
    A ( Mil) to shoot
    fue fusilado he was shot, he was executed by firing squad
    B ( fam) (plagiar) to plagiarize, lift ( colloq)
    ( fam); to plagiarize, lift ( colloq)
    * * *

    fusilar ( conjugate fusilar) verbo transitivo
    1 (Mil) to shoot;

    2 (fam) ( plagiar) to plagiarize, lift (colloq)
    fusilar verbo transitivo
    1 to shoot, execute
    2 fam (moda, costura) to copy
    ' fusilar' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    tronar
    English:
    shoot
    * * *
    1. [ejecutar] to execute by firing squad, to shoot
    2. Fam [plagiar] to plagiarize
    * * *
    v/t
    1 shoot
    2 fig fam ( plagiar) lift fam
    * * *
    1) : to shoot, to execute (by firing squad)
    2) fam : to plagiarize, to pirate
    * * *
    fusilar vb to shoot [pt. & pp. shot]

    Spanish-English dictionary > fusilar

См. также в других словарях:

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