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1 Mus
puréeWENDUNGEN: -
2 mus
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3 mūs
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4 mus an
mus am before that, lest, ere, for mu'n, mu'm -
5 MÚS
* * *(pl. mýss), f.1) mouse (svá hræddr sem m. í skreppu);2) the biceps muscle in the arm (kom ein ör í handlegginn í músina).* * *f., pl. mýss, acc. mýs, mod. mýs; [A. S. mûs, pl. mýs; Engl. mouse, pl. mice; O. H. G. mûs; Germ. maus, pl. mäuser; Dan. muus; Lat. mus; Gr. μυς]:—a mouse, H. E. i. 482, Al. 169, Stj. 23; spilltu mýss kornum ok ökrum, var þar víða jörð hol ok full af músum, Bs. i. 293; mús hljóp áðan á kinn mér, Fs. 140; sér köttrinn músina? Ísl. ii. 309; svá hræddr sem mús í skreppu, Fms. vii. 21; hlaupa hingat ok þangat sem mýss í holur, viii. 39; veiða mýs, to catch mice; mýss svá stórar sem kettir, Ó. H. 109 ( rats?); þá sá hann mýs tvær aðra hvíta en aðra svarta, Barl. 56; mýss Valkar, Welsh mice, strange mice = rats, Fms. xi. 279; whence mod. Icel. valska, q. v.; flæðar-mús, skógar-mús, a wood-mouse, mus sylvaticus, Eggert Itin.: allit., maðr og mús, thus in Danish if a ship is lost, ‘med mand og muus,’ i. e. with all hands. In tales mice are said to pass over rivers on cakes of cow-dung (skán), steering with their tails, see Eggert Itin. ch. 329, and Ísl. Þjóðs., which reminds one of the witch who sails ‘like a rat without a tail’ in Shakespeare’s Macbeth. For the fabulous tales of wizards keeping a flæðar-mús that it may always provide them with money see Maurer’s Volks.; when the wizard dies, the mouse breaks loose into the sea and a tempest arises, called Músar-bylr, mouse-tempest; that a similar superstition existed in olden times may be inferred from the name Músa-Bölverkr, Landn.2. the name of a mouse-gray young cow, Ísl. ii. 401.COMPDS: músarbragð, músarbróðir, músarrindill, músareyra, músagangr, músagildra.B. Metaph. the biceps muscle in the arm; þá flaug ör ein ok kom í hönd Hákoni konungi upp í músina fyrir neðan öxl, Hkr. i. 159; kom ein ör í handlegginn í músina, Bs. i. 781: mûs in A. S. and O. H. G. is used in a similar sense; cp. also Lat. musculus = a little mouse, whence muscle: the chief muscles of the body were named from lively animals, thus fiskr of the cheek (kinn-fiskr), mús of the arm, kálfi ( calf) of the leg. -
6 Mus
n, Dial. auch m; -es, -e; (Brei) mush; aus Früchten etc.: puree; (Pflaumenmus) (plum) jam; zu Mus schlagen oder machen umg., fig. beat to a pulp, make mincemeat of* * *das Musmush; gruel* * *[muːs]nt or m -es, -emush; (= Apfelmus, Kartoffelmus) puree; (= Pflaumenmus) jam (Brit), jelly (US)Mús aus Kartoffeln machen — to cream or mash potatoes
sie wurden fast zu Mús zerdrückt or zerquetscht (inf) — they were (nearly) squeezed to death
jdn zu Mús schlagen (inf) — to make mincemeat of sb (inf)
* * *<-es, -e>[ˈmu:s, pl ˈmu:zə]* * *das od. der; Muses, Muse purée* * *machen umg, fig beat to a pulp, make mincemeat of* * *das od. der; Muses, Muse purée* * *-e n.mash n.puree n. -
7 mus
m.1 card game.2 card game.* * ** * *ISM a card gameII* SMtus II* * ** * ** * ** * *
mus sustantivo masculino: a Spanish card game
' mus' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
A
- acompañamiento
- acorde
- aire
- arco
- arreglo
- audición
- baja
- bajar
- bajista
- bajo
- banda
- bandoneón
- baqueta
- batería
- batuta
- bemol
- blanca
- bombo
- bongó
- boquilla
- cadencia
- caja
- cámara
- cancionero
- canon
- cantar
- cantata
- capilla
- capricho
- ceja
- charanga
- cinta
- clarín
- clarinete
- clave
- compás
- componer
- concierto
- conjunta
- conjunto
- contralto
- coral
- corchea
- cordaje
- cordal
- corista
- corno
- coro
- cuarta
English:
A
- accompaniment
- accompany
- alto
- arr
- arrange
- arrangement
- attune
- B
- backing
- band
- bar
- bass
- baton
- beat
- blues
- bow
- brass
- brassy
- C
- capo
- chamber music
- chant
- chart
- chord
- chorus
- clef
- coda
- compose
- concert
- concerto
- conduct
- conductor
- conservatory
- cornet
- cymbal
- D
- discord
- doh
- double bass
- drumstick
- duet
- duo
- E
- ensemble
- F
- fiddle
- flat
- fox trot
- funk
* * *mus nm inv= Spanish card game played in pairs with bidding and in which players communicate by signs* * *m card game, played with a partner -
8 Mus
1.mūs, mūris ( gen. plur. murum, Arn. 3, 3;II.usually murium,
Cic. N. D. 2, 63, 157; Plin. 8, 27, 41, § 98; v. Neue, Formenl. 1, 286 sq.), comm. [kindred to Greek mus; Sanscr. mūsh, the same, from mūsh, furari], a mouse:non solum inquilini, sed etiam mures migraverunt,
Cic. Att. 14, 9, 1:exiguus,
Verg. G. 1, 181:rusticus, urbanus,
Hor. S. 2, 6, 80 al. —Prov., v. mons, I.:neque enim homines murium aut formicarum causā frumentum condunt,
Cic. N. D. 2, 63, 158.—Compared with parasites:quasi mures semper edimus alienum cibum,
Plaut. Pers. 1, 2, 6.—The ancients included under this name the rat, marten, sable, er [p. 1179] mine, e. g. mures domestici, agrestes, aranei, Pontici, Libyci, marini, Plin. 8, 57, 82, § 221; 9, 19, 35, § 71; 10, 65, 85, § 185: pelles, perh. ermine, Amm. 31, 2, 5:Africani,
Plin. 30, 6, 14, § 43:odorati,
musk - rats, Hier. Ep. 127, 3.—As a term of abuse, you rat:videbo te in publicum, mus, imo terrae tuber,
Petr. 58.—As a term of endearment:cum me murem dicis,
my little mouse, Mart. 11, 29, 3.—Mus marinus, a kind of crustaceous sea - fish, Plin. 9, 19, 35, § 71; Enn. ap. App. Mag. p. 299 (Heduph. v. 2 Vahl.).2.Mūs, muris, m., a Roman surname, e. g. D. Decius Mus, Liv. 10, 14; Cic. Sest. 21, 48; id. Sen. 13, 43. -
9 mus
1.mūs, mūris ( gen. plur. murum, Arn. 3, 3;II.usually murium,
Cic. N. D. 2, 63, 157; Plin. 8, 27, 41, § 98; v. Neue, Formenl. 1, 286 sq.), comm. [kindred to Greek mus; Sanscr. mūsh, the same, from mūsh, furari], a mouse:non solum inquilini, sed etiam mures migraverunt,
Cic. Att. 14, 9, 1:exiguus,
Verg. G. 1, 181:rusticus, urbanus,
Hor. S. 2, 6, 80 al. —Prov., v. mons, I.:neque enim homines murium aut formicarum causā frumentum condunt,
Cic. N. D. 2, 63, 158.—Compared with parasites:quasi mures semper edimus alienum cibum,
Plaut. Pers. 1, 2, 6.—The ancients included under this name the rat, marten, sable, er [p. 1179] mine, e. g. mures domestici, agrestes, aranei, Pontici, Libyci, marini, Plin. 8, 57, 82, § 221; 9, 19, 35, § 71; 10, 65, 85, § 185: pelles, perh. ermine, Amm. 31, 2, 5:Africani,
Plin. 30, 6, 14, § 43:odorati,
musk - rats, Hier. Ep. 127, 3.—As a term of abuse, you rat:videbo te in publicum, mus, imo terrae tuber,
Petr. 58.—As a term of endearment:cum me murem dicis,
my little mouse, Mart. 11, 29, 3.—Mus marinus, a kind of crustaceous sea - fish, Plin. 9, 19, 35, § 71; Enn. ap. App. Mag. p. 299 (Heduph. v. 2 Vahl.).2.Mūs, muris, m., a Roman surname, e. g. D. Decius Mus, Liv. 10, 14; Cic. Sest. 21, 48; id. Sen. 13, 43. -
10 mus
mousse; ( konieczność) necessity, must (pot)* * *I.mus1mi(= przymus, konieczność) necessity, must; jak mus, to mus needs must when the devil drives; robić coś z musu do sth out of necessity l. under constraint; małżeństwo z musu shotgun marriage.II.mus2mi( deser) spumoni, mousse; ( owocowy ze śmietaną) fool; mus jabłkowy applesauce; mus czekoladowy/truskawkowy chocolate/strawberry mousse.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > mus
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11 mus
iz.1. Kartak. mus, famous Basque card game; \musean playing Mus; \musean egin to play Mus2. ( gainekoa, berokia) greatcoat -
12 mus
[from Fre mouche]: fly. Bann mus = Flies. Bann mus dimyel = Bees. -
13 MUS
( music)Développé par Coda Music, devenu ensuite FinaleMusic, le format MUS (abrégé du terme anglais "music", et dont l’extension de fichier est ".mus") est un format propriétaire de qualité pour la numérisation des partitions musicales. Il n’existe pas encore de format ouvert - à savoir librement utilisable par tous - offrant des caractéristiques équivalentes. Des partitions musicales sont disponibles en accès libre dans la catégorie Sheet Music du Projet Gutenberg, grande bibliothèque mondiale de textes électroniques, ou encore sur les sites du Mutopia Project et des Classical Archives.Voir aussi: numérisation, Projet Gutenberg. -
14 mus
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15 mus.
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16 muš
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17 muš-gu₇
wr. muš-gu7mušen "a bird" -
18 muš-u₂
wr. muš-u2ku6 "type of fish" -
19 muš-UD-LU
wr. muš-UD-LUmušen "a bird" -
20 mus
См. также в других словарях:
mus — mùs įv … Bendrinės lietuvių kalbos žodyno antraštynas
Mus — Mus … Deutsch Wörterbuch
müşəmmə’ — ə. müşəmbə … Klassik Azərbaycan ədəbiyyatında islənən ərəb və fars sözləri lüğəti
müşəmbələmə — «Müşəmbələmək»dən f. is … Azərbaycan dilinin izahlı lüğəti
Mus'ka — Origin Manila, Philippines Genres Pop, rock, OPM Occupations Singer, dancer, model Years active 2002–present MUS KA is a Philippine … Wikipedia
Mus — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. {{{image}}} Sigles d une seule lettre Sigles de deux lettres > Sigles de trois lettres … Wikipédia en Français
MUS — steht für: Mus, eine Speise regional für die Gattung der Mäuse Mus (Kartenspiel), ein spanisches Kartenspiel das Sternbild Fliege (lat. Musca) in der Nomenklatur der Fixsterne MUS ist die Abkürzung für: Management Unterstützungs Systeme, siehe… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mus — ist ein Brei oder Püree (französisch: Purée) aus gekochtem Obst, Gemüse, in manchen Gegenden auch aus anderen Lebensmitteln. Früher war Mus auch ein Synonym für jede gekochte Speise und wurde in der Alltagssprache oft nicht von Brei oder Suppe… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mus'ka — es un grupo de música pop de Filipinas creado en 2002, integrado por cinco miembros, Pierro Rodríguez III, Cyline Suntay, Myko Suntay, Jocel Escobal y Michelle Rodríguez. Firmado con Records Rosas y lanzado su primer álbum titulado La juventud… … Wikipedia Español
mūs — *mūs germ., Femininum: nhd. Maus, Oberarmmuskel; ne. mouse, thenar; Rekontruktionsbasis: got., an., ae., afries., as., ahd.; Etymologie: idg … Germanisches Wörterbuch
mūs — mūs English meaning: mouse Deutsche Übersetzung: “Maus” also “Muskel” Note: (older *mŭs, musós from *meus, musós) Material: O.Ind. mū ṣ m. “ mouse, Ratte”, Pers. mūš “ mouse “; Arm. mu kn “ mouse, muscle “; Gk. μῦς (μῠὸς,… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary