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John said he

  • 1 вступиться за друга (контекстуальный перевод / He's not such a bad fellow, John said loyally — Не такой уж он и плохой, — вступился за друга Джон.)

    General subject: say loyally

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > вступиться за друга (контекстуальный перевод / He's not such a bad fellow, John said loyally — Не такой уж он и плохой, — вступился за друга Джон.)

  • 2 ‘John Henry’

    «Джон Генри», народная песня о забойщике рельсовых костылей [steel-driving man] Джоне Генри. Общеизвестны ее слова:

    John Henry said to his captain,


    A man ain't nothin' but a man,


    And before I'd let your steam drill


    beat me down,


    I'd die with the hammer in my hand,


    Lord, Lord!


    I'd die with the hammer in my hand

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > ‘John Henry’

  • 3 John Farson

    сущ.; собст.; SK, DT 4
    Бандит, захвативший власть в ряде феодов Альянса, и начавший войну против оплота Альянса Гилеада. Фарсон был известен также под именем Благодетель ( the Good Man)
    ср. тж good man

    “Ye speak as though the Good Man were a real threat. He’s just a bandit, surely, frosting his thefts and murders with talk of ‘democracy’ and ‘equality’?” / Dearborn shrugged, and she thought for a moment that would be his only comment on the matter, but then he said, reluctantly: “ ‘Twas once so, perhaps. Times have changed. At some point the bandit became a general, and now the general would become a ruler in the name of the people.” He paused, then added gravely, “The Northern and West’rd Baronies are in flames, lady.” — Вы так говорите, словно Благодетель – реальная угроза. Разве он не обычный бандит, прикрывающий убийства и грабежи разглагольствованиями о “демократии” и “равенстве”? / Диаборн пожал плечами, и Сюзан уже подумала, что других комментариев не последует, но юноша, пусть и с неохотой, заговорил: – Когда-то, возможно, так и было. Но времена изменились. В какой-то момент этот бандит стал генералом, а теперь генерал превращается в правителя, который выступает от лица людей. – Он помолчал, потом с грустью добавил: – Северные и западные феоды в огне, леди. (ТБ 4)

    English-Russian dictionary of neologisms from a series of books by Stephen King "Dark Tower" > John Farson

  • 4 Lombe, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. c. 1693 probably Norwich, England
    d. 20 November 1722 Derby, England
    [br]
    English creator of the first successful powered textile mill in Britain.
    [br]
    John Lombe's father, Henry Lombe, was a worsted weaver who married twice. John was the second son of the second marriage and was still a baby when his father died in 1695. John, a native of the Eastern Counties, was apprenticed to a trade and employed by Thomas Cotchett in the erection of Cotchett's silk mill at Derby, which soon failed however. Lombe went to Italy, or was sent there by his elder half-brother, Thomas, to discover the secrets of their throwing machinery while employed in a silk mill in Piedmont. He returned to England in 1716 or 1717, bringing with him two expert Italian workmen.
    Thomas Lombe was a prosperous London merchant who financed the construction of a new water-powered silk mill at Derby which is said to have cost over £30,000. John arranged with the town Corporation for the lease of the island in the River Derwent, where Cotchett had erected his mill. During the four years of its construction, John first set up the throwing machines in other parts of the town. The machines were driven manually there, and their product helped to defray the costs of the mill. The silk-throwing machine was very complex. The water wheel powered a horizontal shaft that was under the floor and on which were placed gearwheels to drive vertical shafts upwards through the different floors. The throwing machines were circular, with the vertical shafts running through the middle. The doubled silk threads had previously been wound on bobbins which were placed on spindles with wire flyers at intervals around the outer circumference of the machine. The bobbins were free to rotate on the spindles while the spindles and flyers were driven by the periphery of a horizontal wheel fixed to the vertical shaft. Another horizontal wheel set a little above the first turned the starwheels, to which were attached reels for winding the silk off the bobbins below. Three or four sets of these spindles and reels were placed above each other on the same driving shaft. The machine was very complicated for the time and must have been expensive to build and maintain.
    John lived just long enough to see the mill in operation, for he died in 1722 after a painful illness said to have been the result of poison administered by an Italian woman in revenge for his having stolen the invention and for the injury he was causing the Italian trade. The funeral was said to have been the most superb ever known in Derby.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Samuel Smiles, 1890, Men of Invention and Industry, London (probably the only biography of John Lombe).
    Rhys Jenkins, 1933–4, "Historical notes on some Derbyshire industries", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 14 (provides an acount of John Lombe and his part in the enterprise at Derby).
    R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (briefly covers the development of early silk-throwing mills).
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (includes a chapter on "Lombe's Silk Machine").
    P.Barlow, 1836, Treatise of Manufactures and Machinery of Great Britain, London (describes Lombe's mill and machinery, but it is not known how accurate the account may be).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Lombe, John

  • 5 Wyatt, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy, Textiles
    [br]
    b. April 1700 Thickbroom, Weeford, near Lichfield, England
    d. 29 November 1766 Birmingham, England
    [br]
    English inventor of machines for making files and rolling lead, and co-constructor of a cotton-spinning machine.
    [br]
    John Wyatt was the eldest son of John and Jane Wyatt, who lived in the small village of Thickbroom in the parish of Weeford, near Lichfield. John the younger was educated at Lichfield school and then worked as a carpenter at Thickbroom till 1730. In 1732 he was in Birmingham, engaged by a man named Heely, a gunbarrel forger, who became bankrupt in 1734. Wyatt had invented a machine for making files and sought the help of Lewis Paul to manufacture this commercially.
    The surviving papers of Paul and Wyatt in Birmingham are mostly undated and show a variety of machines with which they were involved. There was a machine for "making lead hard" which had rollers, and "a Gymcrak of some consequence" probably refers to a machine for boring barrels or the file-making machine. Wyatt is said to have been one of the unsuccessful competitors for the erection of London Bridge in 1736. He invented and perfected the compound-lever weighing machine. He had more success with this: after 1744, machines for weighing up to five tons were set up at Birmingham, Chester, Gloucester, Hereford, Lichfield and Liverpool. Road construction, bridge building, hydrostatics, canals, water-powered engines and many other schemes received his attention and it is said that he was employed for a time after 1744 by Matthew Boulton.
    It is certain that in April 1735 Paul and Wyatt were working on their spinning machine and Wyatt was making a model of it in London in 1736, giving up his work in Birmingham. The first patent, in 1738, was taken out in the name of Lewis Paul. It is impossible to know which of these two invented what. This first patent covers a wide variety of descriptions of the vital roller drafting to draw out the fibres, and it is unknown which system was actually used. Paul's carding patent of 1748 and his second spinning patent of 1758 show that he moved away from the system and principles upon which Arkwright built his success. Wyatt and Paul's spinning machines were sufficiently promising for a mill to be set up in 1741 at the Upper Priory, Birmingham, that was powered by two asses. Wyatt was the person responsible for constructing the machinery. Edward Cave established another at Northampton powered by water while later Daniel Bourn built yet another at Leominster. Many others were interested too. The Birmingham mill did not work for long and seems to have been given up in 1743. Wyatt was imprisoned for debt in The Fleet in 1742, and when released in 1743 he tried for a time to run the Birmingham mill and possibly the Northampton one. The one at Leominster burned down in 1754, while the Northampton mill was advertised for sale in 1756. This last mill may have been used again in conjunction with the 1758 patent. It was Wyatt whom Daniel Bourn contacted about a grant for spindles for his Leominster mill in 1748, but this seems to have been Wyatt's last association with the spinning venture.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    G.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, London (French collected many of the Paul and Wyatt papers; these should be read in conjunction with Hills 1970).
    R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (Hills shows that the rollerdrafting system on this spinning machine worked on the wrong principles). A.P.Wadsworth and J.de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, 1600–1780, Manchester (provides good coverage of the partnership of Paul and Wyatt and of the early mills).
    E.Baines, 1835, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, London (this publication must be mentioned, although it is now out of date).
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a more recent account).
    W.A.Benton, "John Wyatt and the weighing of heavy loads", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 9 (for a description of Wyatt's weighing machine).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Wyatt, John

  • 6 from John o'Groat's to Land's End

    (from John o'Groat's to Land's End (тж. from Land's End to John o'Groat's))
    с севера до юга ( или с юга до севера) Англии, с одного конца страны до другого [Джон-о'Гротс - крайняя северная точка Великобритании, названная по имени Яна Гроота, выходца из Голландии, поселившегося у северной оконечности Шотландии при Иакове IV (1473-1513)]; см. тж. Land's End

    I could have organised entertainments at shore establishments anywhere from John o'Groat's to Land's End... (N. Coward, ‘Future Indefinite’, part IV, ch. I) — я мог бы организовать показ развлекательных программ по всему побережью от севера до юга...

    ‘That there pillion-ridin’, said Mr. Raper, ‘is a national danger... Showin' off their legs from Land's End to John o'Groat's...’ (R. Aldington, ‘The Colonel's Daughter’, part II, ch. 1) — - Вот эти мотоциклистки, - сказал мистер Рейпер, - национальная опасность... Показывают свои ноги всем и каждому от одного конца страны до другого...

    Large English-Russian phrasebook > from John o'Groat's to Land's End

  • 7 Smalley, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. c. 1729 England
    d. 28 January 1782 Holywell, Wales.
    [br]
    English helped Arkwright to build and finance the waterframe.
    [br]
    John Smalley of Preston was the second son of John, a chapman of Blackburn. He was a distant relative of Richard Arkwright through marrying, in 1751, Elizabeth Baxter, whose mother Ellen was the widow of Arkwright's uncle, Richard. In the Preston Guild Rolls of 1762 he was described as a grocer and painter, and he was also Landlord of the Bull Inn. The following year he became a bailiff of Preston and in 1765 he became a Corporation steward. On 14 May 1768 Arkwright, Smalley and David Thornley became partners in a cotton-spinning venture in Nottingham. They agreed to apply for a patent for Arkwright's invention of spinning by rollers, and Smalley signed as a witness. It is said that Smalley provided much of the capital for this new venture as he sold his business at Preston for about £1,600, but this was soon found to be insufficient and the partnership had to be enlarged to include Samuel Need and Jedediah Strutt.
    Smalley may have helped to establish the spinning mill at Nottingham, but by 28 February 1771 he was back in Preston, for on that day he was chosen a "Councilman in the room of Mr. Thomas Jackson deceased" (Fitton 1989:38). He attended meetings for over a year, but either in 1772 or the following year he sold the Bull Inn, and certainly by August 1774 the Smalleys were living in Cromford, where he became Manager of the mill. He soon found himself at logger-heads with Arkwright; however, Strutt was able to smooth the dispute over for a while. Things came to a head in January 1777 when Arkwright was determined to get rid of Smalley, and the three remaining partners agreed to buy out Smalley's share for the sum of £10,751.
    Although he had agreed not to set up any textile machinery, Smalley moved to Holywell in North Wales, where in the spring of 1777 he built a cotton-spinning mill in the Greenfield valley. He prospered there and his son was later to build two more mills in the same valley. Smalley used to go to Wrexham to sell his yarn, and there met John Peers, a leather merchant, who was able to provide a better quality leather for covering the drawing rollers which came to be used in Lancashire. Smalley died in 1782, shortly before Arkwright could sue him for infringement of his patents.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    R.S.Fitton, 1989, The Arkwrights, Spinners of Fortune, Manchester (draws together the fullest details of John Smalley).
    R.L.Hills, 1969, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (includes details of the agreement with Arkwright).
    A.H.Dodd, 1971, The Industrial Revolution in North Wales, Cardiff; E.J.Foulkes, 1964, "The cotton spinning factories of Flintshire, 1777–1866", Flintshire Historical Society
    Journal 21 (provide more information about his cotton mill at Holywell).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Smalley, John

  • 8 McAdam, John Loudon

    [br]
    b. 21 September 1756 Ayr, Ayrshire, Scotland
    d. 26 November 1836 Moffat, Dumfriesshire, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish road builder, inventor of the macadam road surface.
    [br]
    McAdam was the son of one of the founder of the first bank in Ayr. As an infant, he nearly died in a fire which destroyed the family's house of Laywyne, in Carsphairn parish; the family then moved to Blairquhan, near Straiton. Thence he went to the parish school in Maybole, where he is said to have made a model section of a local road. In 1770, when his father died, he was sent to America where he was brought up by an uncle who was a merchant in New York. He stayed in America until the close of the revolution, becoming an agent for the sale of prizes and managing to amass a considerable fortune. He returned to Scotland where he settled at Sauchrie in Ayrshire. There he was a magistrate, Deputy-Lieutenant of the county and a road trustee, spending thirteen years there. In 1798 he moved to Falmouth in Devon, England, on his appointment as agent for revictualling of the Royal Navy in western ports.
    He continued the series of experiments started in Ayrshire on the construction of roads. From these he concluded that a road should be built on a raised foundation with drains formed on either side, and should be composed of a number of layers of hard stone broken into angular fragments of roughly cubical shape; the bottom layer would be larger rocks, with layers of progressively smaller rocks above, all bound together with fine gravel. This would become compacted and almost impermeable to water by the action of the traffic passing over it. In 1815 he was appointed Surveyor-General of Bristol's roads and put his theories to the test.
    In 1823 a Committee of the House of Commons was appointed to consider the use of "macadamized" roads in larger towns; McAdam gave evidence to this committee, and it voted to give him £10,000 for his past work. In 1827 he was appointed Surveyor-General of Roads and moved to Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire. From there he made yearly visits to Scotland and it was while returning from one of these that he died, at Moffat in the Scottish Borders. He had married twice, both times to American women; his first wife was the mother of all seven of his children.
    McAdam's method of road construction was much cheaper than that of Thomas Telford, and did much to ease travel and communications; it was therefore adopted by the majority of Turnpike Trusts in Britain, and the macadamization process quickly spread to other countries.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1819. A Practical Essay on the Scientific Repair and Preservation of Roads.
    1820. Present State of Road-Making.
    Further Reading
    R.Devereux, 1936, John Loudon McAdam: A Chapter from the History of Highways, London: Oxford University Press.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > McAdam, John Loudon

  • 9 Taylor, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 16 August 1703 Norwich, England
    d. 17 September 1772 Prague, Bohemia
    [br]
    English oculist and exponent of surgical treatment of squint and cataract.
    [br]
    In 1722, employed as an apothecary's assistant, he studied surgery and especially diseases of the eye under Cheselden at St Thomas's Hospital, London. He returned to Norwich to practise, but in 1727 he assumed the role of itinerant surgeon oculist, with a particular reputation for putting eyes straight; at first he covered the major part of the British Isles and then he extended his activities to Europe.
    He obtained MDs from Basle in 1733, and from Liège and Cologne in 1734. In 1736 he was appointed Oculist to George II. It is likely that he was responsible for Johann Sebastian Bach's blindness, and Gibbon was one of his patients. The subject of considerable obloquy on account of his self-advertisement in the crudest and most bombastic terms, it is none the less certain that he had developed a technique, probably related to couching, which was considerably in advance of that of other practitioners and at least offered a prospect of assistance where none had been available.
    Dr Johnson declared him "an instance of how far impudence will carry ignorance". Without justification, he styled himself "Chevalier". He is said, not improbably having regard to his age, to have become blind himself later in life. His son carried on his practice.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Further Reading
    1761, The History of the Travels and Adventures of the Chevalier John Taylor, Ophthalmiater, London.
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Taylor, John

  • 10 The object is said to be an instance of the class

    Общая лексика: Говорят, что объект является экземпляром класса (см. Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software by Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, John M. Vlissides)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > The object is said to be an instance of the class

  • 11 Lawes, Sir John Bennet

    [br]
    b. 28 December 1814 Rothamsted, Hertfordshire, England
    d. 31 August 1900 Rothamsted, Hertfordshire, England
    [br]
    English scientific agriculturalist.
    [br]
    Lawes's education at Eton and Oxford did little to inform his early taste for chemistry, which he developed largely on his own. By the age of 20 he had fitted up the best bedroom in his house as a fully equipped chemical laboratory. His first interest was in the making of drugs; it was said that he knew the Pharmacopoeia, by heart. He did, however, receive some instruction from Anthony Todd Thomson of University College, London. His father having died in 1822, Lawes entered into possession of the Rothamsted estate when he came of age in 1834. He began experiments with plants with uses as drugs, but following an observation by a neighbouring farmer of the effect of bones on the growth of certain crops Lawes turned to experiments with bones dissolved in sulphuric acid on his turnip crop. The results were so promising that he took out a patent in 1842 for converting mineral and fossil phosphates into a powerful manure by the action of sulphuric acid. The manufacture of these superphosphates became a major industry of tremendous benefit to agriculture. Lawes himself set up a factory at Deptford in 1842 and a larger one in 1857 at Barking Creek, both near London. The profits from these and other chemical manufacturing concerns earned Lawes profits which funded his experimental work at Rothamsted. In 1843, Lawes set up the world's first agricultural experiment station. Later in the same year he was joined by Joseph Henry Gilbert, and together they carried out a considerable number of experiments of great benefit to agriculture, many of the results of which were published in the leading scientific journals of the day, including the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. In all, 132 papers were published, most of them jointly with Gilbert. A main theme of the work on plants was the effect of various chemical fertilizers on the growth of different crops, compared with the effects of farm manure and of no treatment at all. On animal rearing, they studied particularly the economical feeding of animals.
    The work at Rothamsted soon brought Lawes into prominence; he joined the Royal Agricultural Society in 1846 and became a member of its governing body two years later, a position he retained for over fifty years. Numerous distinctions followed and Rothamsted became a place of pilgrimage for people from many parts of the world who were concerned with the application of science to agriculture. Rothamsted's jubilee in 1893 was marked by a public commemoration headed by the Prince of Wales.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Baronet 1882. FRS 1854. Royal Society Royal Medal (jointly with Gilbert) 1867.
    Further Reading
    Memoir with portrait published in J. Roy. Agric. Soc. Memoranda of the origin, plan and results of the field and other experiments at Rothamsted, issued annually by the Lawes Agricultural Trust Committee, with a list of Lawes's scientific papers.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Lawes, Sir John Bennet

  • 12 Pierce, John Robinson

    [br]
    b. 27 March 1910 Des Moines, Iowa, USA
    [br]
    American scientist and communications engineer said to be the "father" of communication satellites.
    [br]
    From his high-school days, Pierce showed an interest in science and in science fiction, writing under the pseudonym of J.J.Coupling. After gaining Bachelor's, Master's and PhD degrees at the California Institute of Technology (CalTech) in Pasadena in 1933, 1934 and 1936, respectively, Pierce joined the Bell Telephone Laboratories in New York City in 1936. There he worked on improvements to the travelling-wave tube, in which the passage of a beam of electrons through a helical transmission line at around 7 per cent of the speed of light was made to provide amplification at 860 MHz. He also devised a new form of electrostatically focused electron-multiplier which formed the basis of a sensitive detector of radiation. However, his main contribution to electronics at this time was the invention of the Pierce electron gun—a method of producing a high-density electron beam. In the Second World War he worked with McNally and Shepherd on the development of a low-voltage reflex klystron oscillator that was applied to military radar equipment.
    In 1952 he became Director of Electronic Research at the Bell Laboratories' establishment, Murray Hill, New Jersey. Within two years he had begun work on the possibility of round-the-world relay of signals by means of communication satellites, an idea anticipated in his early science-fiction writings (and by Arthur C. Clarke in 1945), and in 1955 he published a paper in which he examined various possibilities for communications satellites, including passive and active satellites in synchronous and non-synchronous orbits. In 1960 he used the National Aeronautics and Space Administration 30 m (98 1/2 ft) diameter, aluminium-coated Echo 1 balloon satellite to reflect telephone signals back to earth. The success of this led to the launching in 1962 of the first active relay satellite (Telstar), which weighed 170 lb (77 kg) and contained solar-powered rechargeable batteries, 1,000 transistors and a travelling-wave tube capable of amplifying the signal 10,000 times. With a maximum orbital height of 3,500 miles (5,600 km), this enabled a variety of signals, including full bandwidth television, to be relayed from the USA to large receiving dishes in Europe.
    From 1971 until his "retirement" in 1979, Pierce was Professor of Electrical Engineering at CalTech, after which he became Chief Technologist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratories, also in Pasadena, and Emeritus Professor of Engineering at Stanford University.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Morris N.Liebmann Memorial Award 1947; Edison Medal 1963; Medal of Honour 1975. Franklin Institute Stuart Ballantine Award 1960. National Medal of Science 1963. Danish Academy of Science Valdemar Poulsen Medal 1963. Marconi Award 1974. National Academy of Engineering Founders Award 1977. Japan Prize 1985. Arthur C.Clarke Award 1987. Honorary DEng Newark College of Engineering 1961. Honorary DSc Northwest University 1961, Yale 1963, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute 1963. Editor, Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 1954–5.
    Bibliography
    23 October 1956, US patent no. 2,768,328 (his development of the travelling-wave tube, filed on 5 November 1946).
    1947, with L.M.Field, "Travelling wave tubes", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio
    Engineers 35:108 (describes the pioneering improvements to the travelling-wave tube). 1947, "Theory of the beam-type travelling wave tube", Proceedings of the Institution of
    Radio Engineers 35:111. 1950, Travelling Wave Tubes.
    1956, Electronic Waves and Messages. 1962, Symbols, Signals and Noise.
    1981, An Introduction to Information Theory: Symbols, Signals and Noise: Dover Publications.
    1990, with M.A.Knoll, Signals: Revolution in Electronic Communication: W.H.Freeman.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Pierce, John Robinson

  • 13 Woolrich, John Stephen

    SUBJECT AREA: Electricity, Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1821 Birmingham, England
    d. 27 February 1850 King's Norton, England
    [br]
    English chemist who found in the electroplating process one of the earliest commercial applications of the magneto-electric generator.
    [br]
    The son of a Birmingham chemist, Woolrich was educated at King Edward's Grammar School, Birmingham, and later became a lecturer in chemistry. As an alternative to primary cells for the supply of current for electroplating, he devised a magneto generator.
    His original machine had a single compound permanent magnet; the distance between the revolving armature and the magnet could be varied to adjust the rate of deposition of metal. A more ambitious machine designed by Woolrich was constructed by Thomas Prime \& Sons in 1844 and for many years was used at their Birmingham electroplating works. Faraday, on a visit to see the machine at work, is said to have expressed delight at his discovery of electromagnetic induction being put to practical use so soon. Similar machines were in use by Elkington's, Fern and others in Birmingham and Sheffield. One of Woolrich's machines is preserved in the Birmingham Science Museum.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1 August 1842, British patent no. 9,431 (the electroplating process; describes the magnetic apparatus and the electroplating chemicals).
    Further Reading
    1843, Mechanics Magazine 38:145–9 (fully describes the Woolrich machine). 1889, The Electrician 23:548 (a short account of a surviving Woolrich machine constructed in 1844 and its subsequent history).
    S.Timmins, 1866, Birmingham and the Midland Hardware District, London, pp. 488– 94.
    GW

    Biographical history of technology > Woolrich, John Stephen

  • 14 радуясь (said John , glad to get in a word-сказал Джон , радуясь возможности вставить слово)

    General subject: glad

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > радуясь (said John , glad to get in a word-сказал Джон , радуясь возможности вставить слово)

  • 15 indeed

    in'di:d
    1. adverb
    1) (really; in fact; as you say; of course etc: `He's very talented, isn't he?' He is indeed; `Do you remember your grandmother?' `Indeed I do!')
    2) (used for emphasis: Thank you very much indeed; He is very clever indeed.) realmente; efectivamente, claro

    2. interjection
    (used to show surprise, interest etc: `John said your idea was stupid.' `Indeed!') ¿de verdad?, ¡no me digas!
    indeed adv
    1. realmente
    2. en efecto / efectivamente
    did you really hit him? I did indeed ¿es verdad que le pegaste? Efectivamente
    tr[ɪn'diːd]
    1 (yes, certainly) efectivamente, en efecto
    are you Mr Fox? yes, indeed ¿es el Sr Fox? sí, efectivamente
    do you like chocolates? yes, indeed I do ¿te gustan los bombones? sí, mucho
    did you hear that bang? indeed I did! ¿has oído esa explosión? ¡ya lo creo!
    may I? indeed you may ¿puedo? claro que puedes
    2 (intensifier) realmente, de veras, de verdad
    3 formal use (in fact) realmente, en realidad, de hecho; (what is more) es más
    I was happy, indeed delighted, that you won me alegré, en realidad me encantó, tu victoria
    1 (showing surprise, disbelief, etc) ¿de verdad?, ¿de veras?, ¡no me digas!
    he said you gave it to him - did he indeed? dijo que se lo habías regalado - ¿de veras?
    a new car indeed! whatever next! ¡un coche nuevo dices! ¡vaya, vaya!
    indeed [ɪn'di:d] adv
    1) truly: verdaderamente, de veras
    thank you very much indeed: muchísimas gracias
    3) of course: claro, por supuesto
    adv.
    de veras adv.
    ello adv.
    en efecto adv.
    por cierto adv.
    adv.
    verdaderamente adv.

    I ɪn'diːd
    1)
    b) ( emphatic)

    do you like champagne? - indeed I do o I do indeed — ¿te gusta el champán? - sí, mucho

    I believe we've met before - indeed we have, a couple of years ago — creo que nos conocemos - en efecto or así es, nos conocimos hace un par de años

    2)
    a) ( in fact)

    the wheel was indeed loose — en efecto, la rueda estaba suelta

    this may indeed be the case, but... — quizás sea así or no digo que no sea así, pero...

    c) ( what is more) (as linker)

    the situation hasn't improved; indeed it has worsened — la situación no ha mejorado; es más: ha empeorado

    a rare, indeed unique, example — un ejemplo, ya no poco común, sino único

    she says she's fat - fat indeed! — dice que está gorda - sí, ya, gordísima


    II
    [ɪn'diːd]
    ADV
    1) (=in fact) de hecho

    I feel, indeed I know, he is wrong — creo, de hecho sé or en realidad sé, que está equivocado

    we have nothing against diversity, indeed, we want more of it — no tenemos nada en contra de la diversidad, de hecho queremos que haya más

    if indeed he is wrong — si es que realmente se equivoca, si efectivamente se equivoca

    it is indeed true that... — es en efecto verdad que...

    that is praise indeed — eso es todo un elogio, eso sí es una alabanza

    very... indeed: to be very good/small/intelligent indeed — ser verdaderamente or realmente bueno/pequeño/inteligente

    "isn't it a beautiful day?" - "yes, indeed!" — -¿a que es un día precioso? -¡desde luego! or -¡y que lo digas! or -¡ya lo creo!

    "did you know him?" - "I did indeed" — -¿lo conocías? -sí que lo conocía or -claro que sí

    "are you Professor Ratburn?" - "indeed I am" or "I am indeed" — -¿es usted el profesor Ratburn? -sí, señor or -el mismo

    "may I go?" - "indeed you may not!" — -¿puedo ir? -¡claro que no! or -¡por supuesto que no!

    indeed?, is it indeed?, did you indeed? — ¿de veras?, ¿de verdad?, ¿ah, sí?

    5) (expressing disbelief, surprise, scorn)

    "I did the best I could" - "indeed!" — -lo hice lo mejor que pude -¡por supuesto! or -¡claro, claro! iro

    "he said he would do it" - "did he indeed?" — -dijo que lo haría -¿eso dijo? or -¿no me digas?

    "he said I was too short" - "too short indeed!" — -dijo que era demasiado bajo -¡sí, hombre, bajísimo! iro

    * * *

    I [ɪn'diːd]
    1)
    b) ( emphatic)

    do you like champagne? - indeed I do o I do indeed — ¿te gusta el champán? - sí, mucho

    I believe we've met before - indeed we have, a couple of years ago — creo que nos conocemos - en efecto or así es, nos conocimos hace un par de años

    2)
    a) ( in fact)

    the wheel was indeed loose — en efecto, la rueda estaba suelta

    this may indeed be the case, but... — quizás sea así or no digo que no sea así, pero...

    c) ( what is more) (as linker)

    the situation hasn't improved; indeed it has worsened — la situación no ha mejorado; es más: ha empeorado

    a rare, indeed unique, example — un ejemplo, ya no poco común, sino único

    she says she's fat - fat indeed! — dice que está gorda - sí, ya, gordísima


    II

    English-spanish dictionary > indeed

  • 16 indeed

    [in'di:d] 1. adverb
    1) (really; in fact; as you say; of course etc: `He's very talented, isn't he?' He is indeed; `Do you remember your grandmother?' `Indeed I do!') virkelig; sandelig
    2) (used for emphasis: Thank you very much indeed; He is very clever indeed.) virkelig
    2. interjection
    (used to show surprise, interest etc: `John said your idea was stupid.' `Indeed!') virkelig!
    * * *
    [in'di:d] 1. adverb
    1) (really; in fact; as you say; of course etc: `He's very talented, isn't he?' He is indeed; `Do you remember your grandmother?' `Indeed I do!') virkelig; sandelig
    2) (used for emphasis: Thank you very much indeed; He is very clever indeed.) virkelig
    2. interjection
    (used to show surprise, interest etc: `John said your idea was stupid.' `Indeed!') virkelig!

    English-Danish dictionary > indeed

  • 17 Direct speech

    Предложения с прямой речью - это предложения, дословно цитирующие чье-либо высказывание. (Ср.:"I will be home by eight o'clock," she said. - "Я вернусь домой к восьми часам", - сказала она).
    а) Прямая речь заключается в кавычки (двойные или одинарные) (см. Quotation marks). Закрывающие кавычки ставятся после всех прочих знаков препинания (точки, запятой, восклицательного или вопросительного знаков).
    б) Если слова автора находятся перед прямой речью, то они отделяются запятой (иногда также двоеточием, особенно если прямая речь представляет собой длинный текст).
    в) Если слова автора находятся после прямой речи, то после прямой речи ставится запятая.
    г) Тире при прямой речи не употребляется.

    John said, ‘We must go now.’

    ‘Okay,’ replied Martin, ‘I'll be ready in two minutes.’

    But Mary objected: ‘I can't go immediately. I have to wait for Jane. She promised to bring me a message from Tom.’

    ‘When should she come?’ asked John. —

    Джон сказал: "Нам надо идти".

    "Хорошо, - ответил Мартин. - Я буду готов через две минуты".

    Но Мэри возразила: "Я не могу идти сейчас. Мне нужно дождаться Джейн. Она обещала принести мне записку от Тома".

    "Когда она должна прийти?" - спросил Джон.

    2) Об инверсии глаголов, вводящих прямую речь, см. Inversion in reporting.

    — Непрямая речь см. Indirect speech.

    English-Russian grammar dictionary > Direct speech

  • 18 Future in the past

    Будущее время в прошедшем
    При описании события, которое интерпретируется говорящим как будущее по отношению к некоторому моменту времени в прошлом, используются, с некоторыми изменениями, те же средства, что и при описании событий, которые интерпретируются говорящим как будущие по отношению к настоящему. Изменения при этом сводятся к следующему:
    1) При образовании времен Future simple, Future continuous, Future perfect, Future perfect continuous вспомогательные глаголы will и shall меняются на глаголы would и should соответственно.

    He knew she would leave next week — Он знал, что она уедет на следующей неделе.

    She looked around the room, wondering where to put the pictures. She would put her favourite water-colour above the fireplace — Она оглядела комнату, раздумывая, куда бы повесить картины. Свою любимую акварель она повесит над камином.

    I thought he would be reading the article when I returned — Я думал, он будет читать статью, когда я вернусь.

    John said he would have taken his exams by the end of the month — Джон сказал, что уже сдаст все экзамены к концу месяца.

    He said that by the first of May he would have been working at that school for twenty years — Он сказал, что к первому мая он будет работать в этой школе уже двадцать лет.

    2) В конструкциях be going to, be to, be + ABOUT + to-infinitive, be + ON THE POINT OF +ing-form глагол be принимает форму прошедшего времени (was/were).

    She was excited because she was going to meet Jack the next day — Она была взволнована, потому что собиралась встретиться с Джеком на следующий день.

    He knew that this young bishop was to become Pope of Rome — Он знал, что этот юный епископ должен был стать Папой Римским.

    He looked at the clock: ten o'clock was about to strike — Он посмотрел на часы: вот-вот должно было пробить десять..

    She had to go to bed early that day because she was flying to London the next morning — Ей пришлось рано лечь в тот день, потому что на следующее утро она должна была лететь в Лондон.

    English-Russian grammar dictionary > Future in the past

  • 19 say loyally

    Общая лексика: вступиться за друга (контекстуальный перевод /"He's not such a bad fellow," John said loyally — Не такой уж он и плохой, — вступился за друга Джон./)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > say loyally

  • 20 bet one's boots

    идиом.
    быть абсолютно уверенным; не сомневаться

    || I would bet my boots on it. — В этом я совершенно уверен.

    John said he would bet his boots that he would pass the examination.

    Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > bet one's boots

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