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  • 1 Paul, Lewis

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    d. April 1759 Brook Green, London, England
    [br]
    English inventor of hand carding machines and partner with Wyatt in early spinning machines.
    [br]
    Lewis Paul, apparently of French Huguenot extraction, was quite young when his father died. His father was Physician to Lord Shaftsbury, who acted as Lewis Paul's guardian. In 1728 Paul made a runaway match with a widow and apparently came into her property when she died a year later. He must have subsequently remarried. In 1732 he invented a pinking machine for making the edges of shrouds out of which he derived some profit.
    Why Paul went to Birmingham is unknown, but he helped finance some of Wyatt's earlier inventions. Judging by the later patents taken out by Paul, it is probable that he was the one interested in spinning, turning to Wyatt for help in the construction of his spinning machine because he had no mechanical skills. The two men may have been involved in this as early as 1733, although it is more likely that they began this work in 1735. Wyatt went to London to construct a model and in 1736 helped to apply for a patent, which was granted in 1738 in the name of Paul. The patent shows that Paul and Wyatt had a number of different ways of spinning in mind, but contains no drawings of the machines. In one part there is a description of sets of rollers to draw the cotton out more finely that could have been similar to those later used by Richard Arkwright. However, it would seem that Paul and Wyatt followed the other main method described, which might be called spindle drafting, where the fibres are drawn out between the nip of a pair of rollers and the tip of the spindle; this method is unsatisfactory for continuous spinning and results in an uneven yarn.
    The spinning venture was supported by Thomas Warren, a well-known Birmingham printer, Edward Cave of Gentleman's Magazine, Dr Robert James of fever-powder celebrity, Mrs Desmoulins, and others. Dr Samuel Johnson also took much interest. In 1741 a mill powered by two asses was equipped at the Upper Priory, Birmingham, with, machinery for spinning cotton being constructed by Wyatt. Licences for using the invention were sold to other people including Edward Cave, who established a mill at Northampton, so the enterprise seemed to have great promise. A spinning machine must be supplied with fibres suitably prepared, so carding machines had to be developed. Work was in hand on one in 1740 and in 1748 Paul took out another patent for two types of carding device, possibly prompted by the patent taken out by Daniel Bourn. Both of Paul's devices were worked by hand and the carded fibres were laid onto a strip of paper. The paper and fibres were then rolled up and placed in the spinning machine. In 1757 John Dyer wrote a poem entitled The Fleece, which describes a circular spinning machine of the type depicted in a patent taken out by Paul in 1758. Drawings in this patent show that this method of spinning was different from Arkwright's. Paul endeavoured to have the machine introduced into the Foundling Hospital, but his death in early 1759 stopped all further development. He was buried at Paddington on 30 April that year.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1738, British patent no. 562 (spinning machine). 1748, British patent no. 636 (carding machine).
    1758, British patent no. 724 (circular spinning machine).
    Further Reading
    G.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, London, App. This should be read in conjunction with R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester, which shows that the roller drafting system on Paul's later 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 the early mills).
    E.Baines, 1835, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, London (this publication must be mentioned, but is now out of date).
    A.Seymour-Jones, 1921, "The invention of roller drawing in cotton spinning", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 1 (a more modern account).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Paul, Lewis

  • 2 Paul, Robert William

    [br]
    b. 3 October 1869 Highbury, London, England
    d. 28 March 1943 London, England
    [br]
    English scientific instrument maker, inventor of the Unipivot electrical measuring instrument, and pioneer of cinematography.
    [br]
    Paul was educated at the City of London School and Finsbury Technical College. He worked first for a short time in the Bell Telephone Works in Antwerp, Belgium, and then in the electrical instrument shop of Elliott Brothers in the Strand until 1891, when he opened an instrument-making business at 44 Hatton Garden, London. He specialized in the design and manufacture of electrical instruments, including the Ayrton Mather galvanometer. In 1902, with a purpose-built factory, he began large batch production of his instruments. He also opened a factory in New York, where uncalibrated instruments from England were calibrated for American customers. In 1903 Paul introduced the Unipivot galvanometer, in which the coil was supported at the centre of gravity of the moving system on a single pivot. The pivotal friction was less than in a conventional instrument and could be used without accurate levelling, the sensitivity being far beyond that of any pivoted galvanometer then in existence.
    In 1894 Paul was asked by two entrepreneurs to make copies of Edison's kinetoscope, the pioneering peep-show moving-picture viewer, which had just arrived in London. Discovering that Edison had omitted to patent the machine in England, and observing that there was considerable demand for the machine from show-people, he began production, making six before the end of the year. Altogether, he made about sixty-six units, some of which were exported. Although Edison's machine was not patented, his films were certainly copyrighted, so Paul now needed a cinematographic camera to make new subjects for his customers. Early in 1895 he came into contact with Birt Acres, who was also working on the design of a movie camera. Acres's design was somewhat impractical, but Paul constructed a working model with which Acres filmed the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race on 30 March, and the Derby at Epsom on 29 May. Paul was unhappy with the inefficient design, and developed a new intermittent mechanism based on the principle of the Maltese cross. Despite having signed a ten-year agreement with Paul, Acres split with him on 12 July 1895, after having unilaterally patented their original camera design on 27 May. By the early weeks of 1896, Paul had developed a projector mechanism that also used the Maltese cross and which he demonstrated at the Finsbury Technical College on 20 February 1896. His Theatrograph was intended for sale, and was shown in a number of venues in London during March, notably at the Alhambra Theatre in Leicester Square. There the renamed Animatographe was used to show, among other subjects, the Derby of 1896, which was won by the Prince of Wales's horse "Persimmon" and the film of which was shown the next day to enthusiastic crowds. The production of films turned out to be quite profitable: in the first year of the business, from March 1896, Paul made a net profit of £12,838 on a capital outlay of about £1,000. By the end of the year there were at least five shows running in London that were using Paul's projectors and screening films made by him or his staff.
    Paul played a major part in establishing the film business in England through his readiness to sell apparatus at a time when most of his rivals reserved their equipment for sole exploitation. He went on to become a leading producer of films, specializing in trick effects, many of which he pioneered. He was affectionately known in the trade as "Daddy Paul", truly considered to be the "father" of the British film industry. He continued to appreciate fully the possibilities of cinematography for scientific work, and in collaboration with Professor Silvanus P.Thompson films were made to illustrate various phenomena to students.
    Paul ended his involvement with film making in 1910 to concentrate on his instrument business; on his retirement in 1920, this was amalgamated with the Cambridge Instrument Company. In his will he left shares valued at over £100,000 to form the R.W.Paul Instrument Fund, to be administered by the Institution of Electrical Engineers, of which he had been a member since 1887. The fund was to provide instruments of an unusual nature to assist physical research.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Fellow of the Physical Society 1920. Institution of Electrical Engineers Duddell Medal 1938.
    Bibliography
    17 March 1903, British patent no. 6,113 (the Unipivot instrument).
    1931, "Some electrical instruments at the Faraday Centenary Exhibition 1931", Journal of Scientific Instruments 8:337–48.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1943, Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers 90(1):540–1. P.Dunsheath, 1962, A History of Electrical Engineering, London: Faber \& Faber, pp.
    308–9 (for a brief account of the Unipivot instrument).
    John Barnes, 1976, The Beginnings of Cinema in Britain, London. Brian Coe, 1981, The History of Movie Photography, London.
    BC / GW

    Biographical history of technology > Paul, Robert William

  • 3 Paul

    1) Общая лексика: (мужское имя) Поль, Павел, (Italian Pope from 1464 to 1471. A patron of scholars and also a collector of antiquities and a restorer of monuments, he is responsible for founding the first printing presses at Rome, where he had built the celebrated Palace of St. Mark) Па, (Italian Pope of the Roman Catholic church - reigned 1963-78 - during a period including most of the second Vatican Council and the immediate postconciliar era, in which he issued directives and guidance to a changing Roman Catholic church) П, Пол
    2) Религия: (Italian Pope from 1555 to 1559, whose anti-Spanish policy renewed the war between France and the Habsburgs) Павел IV, (Italian noble who was the last of the Renaissance Popes - reigned 1534-49 -and the first Pope of the Counter-Reformation) Павел III
    3) Связь: (An outstanding figure in the history of Christianity, early Christian apostle and missionary and author of several New Testament epistles) апостол Павел
    4) Имена и фамилии: Пауль (имя, м, 100%, датский, ударение на первый слог), Пол (имя) (м, 100%, английский)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Paul

  • 4 paul

    1) Общая лексика: (мужское имя) Поль, Павел, (Italian Pope from 1464 to 1471. A patron of scholars and also a collector of antiquities and a restorer of monuments, he is responsible for founding the first printing presses at Rome, where he had built the celebrated Palace of St. Mark) Па, (Italian Pope of the Roman Catholic church - reigned 1963-78 - during a period including most of the second Vatican Council and the immediate postconciliar era, in which he issued directives and guidance to a changing Roman Catholic church) П, Пол
    2) Религия: (Italian Pope from 1555 to 1559, whose anti-Spanish policy renewed the war between France and the Habsburgs) Павел IV, (Italian noble who was the last of the Renaissance Popes - reigned 1534-49 -and the first Pope of the Counter-Reformation) Павел III
    3) Связь: (An outstanding figure in the history of Christianity, early Christian apostle and missionary and author of several New Testament epistles) апостол Павел
    4) Имена и фамилии: Пауль (имя, м, 100%, датский, ударение на первый слог), Пол (имя) (м, 100%, английский)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > paul

  • 5 Paul (Italian noble who was the last of the Renaissance Popes - reigned 1534-49 -and the first Pope of the Counter-Reformation)

    Религия: Павел III

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Paul (Italian noble who was the last of the Renaissance Popes - reigned 1534-49 -and the first Pope of the Counter-Reformation)

  • 6 Merica, Paul Dyer

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 17 March 1889 Warsaw, Indiana, USA
    d. 20 October 1957 Tarrytown, New York, USA
    [br]
    American physical metallurgist who elucidated the mechanism of the age-hardening of alloys.
    [br]
    Merica graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1908. Before proceeding to the University of Berlin, he spent some time teaching in Wisconsin and in China. He obtained his doctorate in Berlin in 1914, and in that year he joined the US National Bureau of Standards (NBS) in Washington. During his five years there, he investigated the causes of the phenomenon of age-hardening of the important new alloy of aluminium, Duralumin.
    This phenomenon had been discovered not long before by Dr Alfred Wilm, a German research metallurgist. During the early years of the twentieth century, Wilm had been seeking a suitable light alloy for making cartridge cases for the Prussian government. In the autumn of 1909 he heated and quenched an aluminium alloy containing 3.5 per cent copper and 0.5 per cent magnesium and found its properties unremarkable. He happened to test it again some days later and was impressed to find its hardness and strength were much improved: Wilm had accidentally discovered age-hardening. He patented the alloy, but he made his rights over to Durener Metallwerke, who marketed it as Duralumin. This light and strong alloy was taken up by aircraft makers during the First World War, first for Zeppelins and then for other aircraft.
    Although age-hardened alloys found important uses, the explanation of the phenomenon eluded metallurgists until in 1919 Merica and his colleagues at the NBS gave the first rational explanation of age-hardening in light alloys. When these alloys were heated to temperatures near their melting points, the alloying constituents were taken into solution by the matrix. Quenching retained the alloying metals in supersaturated solid solution. At room temperature very small crystals of various intermetallic compounds were precipitated and, by inserting themselves in the aluminium lattice, had the effect of increasing the hardness and strength of the alloy. Merica's theory stimulated an intensive study of hardening and the mechanism that brought it about, with important consequences for the development of new alloys with special properties.
    In 1919 Merica joined the International Nickel Company as Director of Research, a post he held for thirty years and followed by a three-year period as President. He remained in association with the company until his death.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1919, "Heat treatment and constitution of Duralumin", Sci. Papers, US Bureau of Standards, no. 37; 1932, "The age-hardening of metals", Transactions of the American Institution of Min. Metal 99:13–54 (his two most important papers).
    Further Reading
    Z.Jeffries, 1959, "Paul Dyer Merica", Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Science 33:226–39 (contains a list of Merica's publications and biographical details).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Merica, Paul Dyer

  • 7 Ehrlich, Paul

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 14 March 1854 Strehlen, Silesia, Germany
    d. 20 August 1915 Homburg, Saarland, Germany
    [br]
    German medical scientist who laid the foundations of intra-vital staining in histology, and of chemotherapy.
    [br]
    After studying medicine at a number of schools in Germany, Ehrlich graduated from Leipzig in 1878. After some years at the Charite in Berlin, an attack of tuberculosis compelled a three-year sojourn in Egypt for treatment. Upon his return in 1890, he was invited by Koch to work at the new Institute for Infectious Diseases. There he commenced his work on immunity, having already, while a student, discovered the mast cells in the blood (1877) and then developed the techniques of differential staining which identified the other white cells of the blood. In 1882 he established the diazo reaction in the urine of typhoid patients, and in the same year he identified the acid-fast staining reactions of the tubercle bacillus. He then moved to the study of immunity in infectious disease, which led him to the search for synthetic chemical substances which would act on the causative organism without harming the patient's tissue. The outcome of his specific investigation of syphilis was the discovery of the first two specific chemotherapeutic agents: salvarsan (being the 606th compound to be tested); and the later, but less toxic, neosalvarsan (the 909th). In 1896 he became Director of the State Institute for Serum Research, and in 1906 Director of the new Royal Institute for Experimental Therapy at Frankfurt-am-Main. He received numerous awards and honours from governments and learned societies.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Nobel Prize for Medicine or Physiology (jointly with E.Metchnikov) 1908.
    Bibliography
    1879, "Beiträge für Kentnis der granulierten Bindegewabszellen und der Eosinophilen Leucocythen" Arch. Anat. Physiol. Abt.
    1914, Paul Ehrlich: eine Darstellung seines wissenschaftlichen Wirkens, Festschrift zum
    60. Geburtstage des Forschers.
    Further Reading
    M.Marquardt, 1924, Paul Ehrlich als Mensch und Arbeiter.
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Ehrlich, Paul

  • 8 Jobs, Steven Paul

    [br]
    b. 24 February 1955 San Francisco, California, USA
    [br]
    American engineer who, with Stephen Wozniak, built the first home computer.
    [br]
    Moving with his family to Mountain View, Palo Alto, in 1960, Jobs entered Homestead High School, Cupertino, in 1968. At about the same time he joined the Explorers' Club for young engineers set up by Hewlett-Packard Company. As a result of this contact, three years later he met up with Stephen Wozniak, who was working at Hewlett-Packard and helped him with the construction of the first home computer based on the 8-bit MOS Technology 6502 microprocessor. In 1973 he went to Reid College, Portland, Oregon, to study engineering, but he dropped out in the second semester and spent time in India. On his return he obtained a job with Atari to design video games, but he soon met up again with Wozniak, who had been unable to interest Hewlett-Packard in commercial development of his home computer. Together they therefore founded Apple Computer Company to make and market it, and found a willing buyer in the Byte Shop chain store. The venture proved successful, and with the help of a financial backer, Mike Markkula, a second version, the Apple II, was developed in 1976. With Jobs as Chairman, the company experienced a phenomenal growth and by 1983 had 4,700 employees and an annual turnover of US$983 million. The company then began to run into difficulties and John Sculley, a former president of Pepsi-Cola, was brought in to manage the business while Jobs concentrated on developing new computers, including the Apple Macintosh. Eventually a power struggle developed, and with Sculley now Chairman and Chief Executive, Jobs resigned in 1985 to set up his own computer company, NeXt.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    First National Technology Medal (with Wozniak) 1985.
    Further Reading
    J.S.Young, 1988, Steve Jobs: The Journey is the Reward: Scott Foresman \& Co. (includes a biography and a detailed account of Apple Company).
    M.Moritz, 1984, The Little Kingdom. The Private Story of Apple Computers.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Jobs, Steven Paul

  • 9 Yost, Paul Edward

    SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace
    [br]
    b. 30 June 1919 Bristow, Iowa, USA
    [br]
    American designer of balloons who reintroduced the hot-air balloon.
    [br]
    After the early hot-air balloons of the Montgolfier brothers in the 1780s, this branch of ballooning was superseded by hydrogen, coal gas and helium balloons. Following the research by Auguste Piccard into cosmic radiation during the 1930s, a renewed interest in this branch of research arose in the United States from 1947 onwards, using helium-filled balloons. Modern plastics were available by this time, and polythene was used for the envelopes.
    Paul E.Yost developed an improved form of envelope using nylon fabric laminated with mylar plastic film. This provided a strong impermeable material that was ideal for balloons. Using this material for the envelope, Yost produced the Vulcoon in 1960. He also reintroduced the use of hot air to inflate his balloon and developed an easily controlled gas burner fuelled by propane gas, which was readily available in cylinders for portable cooking stoves. Yost's company, Raven Industries, developed these very basic balloons as a military project. The pilot was suspended in a sling, but they improved the design by fitting wicker or aluminium baskets and turned to a market in the field of sport. After a slow start, hot-air ballooning became popular as a sport. In 1963 Yost made the first crossing of the English Channel in a hot-air balloon, accompanied by Donald Piccard, nephew of the balloonist Auguste Piccard, and Charles Dollfus, the eminent French aviation historian. Yost's attempt to cross the Atlantic in his balloon Silver Fox during 1976 failed and he was rescued from the sea near the Azores. The popularity of hot-air ballooning increased during the 1970s, and evolved into a very original form of advertising with unusual shapes for the envelopes, including a house, a bottle and an elephant.
    JDS

    Biographical history of technology > Yost, Paul Edward

  • 10 Malouin, Paul-Jacques

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 29 June 1701 Caen, France
    d. 3 January 1778 Versailles, France
    [br]
    French medical practitioner who suggested producing tin plate with zinc.
    [br]
    Setting out to study law, Malouin turned to scientific studies, settling in Paris to teach and practice medicine. He retained his scientific interest in the field of chemistry, producing memoirs on zinc and tin, and. as early as 1742 suggested that a type of tin plate might instead be produced with zinc. A method of zinc-coating hammered-iron saucepans was introduced briefly at Rouen in the early 1780s.
    His contribution to early volumes of Diderot's Encyclopédie included those on "Alchemy", "Antimony", "Acid" and "Alkali". Malouin also applied his scientific knowledge to articles on milling and baking for the Academy in Descriptions des arts et métiers.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Elected to Academy 1742. FRS 1753.
    Further Reading
    J.R.Partington, 1961, A History of Chemistry, Vol. III (refers to Malouin's work in chemistry).
    John Percy, 1864, Metallurgy: Iron and Steel, London: John Murray, 155 (provides brief references to his theories on zinc coatings).
    JD

    Biographical history of technology > Malouin, Paul-Jacques

  • 11 Nipkow, Paul Gottlieb

    [br]
    b. 22 August 1860 Lauenburg, Pommern (now Lebork, Poland)
    d. 24 August 1940 Berlin, Germany
    [br]
    Polish electrical engineer who invented the Nipkow television scanning disc.
    [br]
    In 1884, while still a student engineer, Nipkow patented a mechanical television pick-up device using a disc with a spiral of twenty-four holes rotating at 600 rpm in front of a selenium cell. He also proposed a display on an identical synchronous disc in conjunction with a light-modulator based on the Faraday effect. Unfortunately it was not possible to realize a working system at the time because of the slow response of selenium cells and the lack of suitable electronic-sig-nal amplifiers; he was unable to pay the extension fees and so the patent lapsed. Others took up the idea, however, and in 1907 pictures were sent between London and Paris by wire. Subsequently, the principle was used by Baird, Ives, and Jenkins.
    For most of his working life after obtaining his doctorate, Nipkow was employed as an engineer by a company that made railway-signalling equipment, but his pioneering invention was finally recognized in 1934 when he was made Honorary President of the newly formed German Television Society.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, German Television Society 1934.
    Bibliography
    1884, German patent no. 30,105 (Nipkow's pioneering method of television image-scanning).
    Further Reading
    R.W.Hubbell, 1946, 4,000 Years of Television, London: G.Harrap \& Co.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Nipkow, Paul Gottlieb

  • 12 Aquila and Priscilla (A Jewish couple who became Paul's lifelong friends after he met them at Corinth)

    Религия: Аквила и Присцилла

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Aquila and Priscilla (A Jewish couple who became Paul's lifelong friends after he met them at Corinth)

  • 13 Jambres (The name under which St. Paul referred to the two magicians of Pharoah who imitated some of the miracles of Moses. 2Tm:3:8)

    Религия: Иамврий

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Jambres (The name under which St. Paul referred to the two magicians of Pharoah who imitated some of the miracles of Moses. 2Tm:3:8)

  • 14 Jannes (The name under which St. Paul referred to the two magicians of Pharoah who imitated some of the miracles of Moses. 2Tm:3:8)

    Религия: Ианний

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Jannes (The name under which St. Paul referred to the two magicians of Pharoah who imitated some of the miracles of Moses. 2Tm:3:8)

  • 15 comment

    comment [kɔmɑ̃]
    adverb
       a. ( = de quelle façon) how
    comment a-t-il fait ? how did he do it?
    comment s'appelle-t-il ? what's his name?
    comment appelles-tu cela ? what do you call that?
    comment vas-tu ? how are you?
    comment est-il, ce type ? (inf) what sort of guy (inf) is he?
    comment faire ? how shall we do it?
    comment se fait-il que... ? how is it that...?
    comment se peut-il que... ? how can it be that...?
       b. (répétition, surprise) comment ? I beg your pardon?
    comment ça ? what do you mean?
    comment, il est mort ? what? he's dead?
    * * *

    I kɔmɑ̃

    comment, peux-tu répéter? — sorry, could you say that again?

    comment trouvez-vous ma robe? — what do you think of my dress?, how do you like my dress?

    4) (indignation, surprise)

    comment ça se fait? — (colloq) how come? (colloq), how is that?

    5) ( intensif)

    ‘c'était bon?’ - ‘et comment (colloq)!’ — ‘was it nice?’ - ‘it certainly was!’


    II kɔmɑ̃
    Lorsqu'il signifie ‘de quelle manière’, comment se traduit généralement par how: comment vas-tu au travail? = how do you get to work?; comment as-tu fait pour arriver avant moi? = how did you manage to get here before me?; je ne comprends pas comment tu as pu te perdre = I don't understand how you managed to get lost; dis-moi comment elle a réagi = tell me how she reacted; comment résoudre le problème? = how can this problem be solved?; as-tu compris comment faire? do you understand how to do it?; il ne sait même pas comment faire cuire un œuf au plat he doesn't even know how to fry an egg
    Attention: certains verbes comme appeler, nommer etc ont une construction différente en anglais: comment appelles-tu cet objet? = what do you call this object? On se reportera au verbe
    Lorsqu'il peut-être remplac é par ‘pourquoi’, comment se traduit par why: comment ne m'a-t-on pas averti? = why wasn't I told?
    Lorsqu'il sert à exprimer l'indignation ou la surprise, comment se traduit par what: comment? il est marié? = what? he's married?
    Lorsqu'il sert à faire répéter une information, comment se traduit par pardon: comment? qu'est-ce que tu dis? = pardon? what did you say?

    ••
    Lorsqu'il signifie ‘de quelle manière’, comment se traduit généralement par how: comment vas-tu au travail? = how do you get to work?; comment as-tu fait pour arriver avant moi? = how did you manage to get here before me?; je ne comprends pas comment tu as pu te perdre = I don't understand how you managed to get lost; dis-moi comment elle a réagi = tell me how she reacted; comment résoudre le problème? = how can this problem be solved?; as-tu compris comment faire? do you understand how to do it?; il ne sait même pas comment faire cuire un oeuf au plat he doesn't even know how to fry an egg
    Attention: certains verbes comme appeler, nommer etc ont une construction différente en anglais: comment appelles-tu cet objet? = what do you call this object? On se reportera au verbe
    Lorsqu'il peut-être remplac é par ‘pourquoi’, comment se traduit par why: comment ne m'a-t-on pas averti? = why wasn't I told?
    Lorsqu'il sert à exprimer l'indignation ou la surprise, comment se traduit par what: comment? il est marié? = what? he's married?
    Lorsqu'il sert à faire répéter une information, comment se traduit par pardon: comment? qu'est-ce que tu dis? = pardon? what did you say?
    * * *
    kɔmɑ̃
    1. adv

    comment se fait-il que...? — how come...?, how is it that...?

    comment dit-on "pomme" en anglais? — how do you say "pomme" in English?

    comment? (= que dites-vous?) — pardon?, what did you say?

    2. nm
    * * *
    I.
    comment ⇒ Note d'usage adv
    1 ( de quelle manière) comment le sais-tu? how do you know (that)?; comment ça s'écrit? how do you spell it?; comment allez-vous? how are you?; comment veux-tu que je me débrouille? how do you expect me to manage?; comment faire? how can it be done?; montre-moi comment show me how; comment t'y prendras-tu? how will you go about it? ; il faut voir comment il nous a parlé/nous a traités! you should have seen the way he spoke to us/treated us!; comment s'étonner qu'il ait échoué? it's hardly surprising that he failed!; ⇒ importer B;
    2 ( pour faire répéter) comment, peux-tu répéter? sorry, could you say that again?; Paul comment? Paul who?;
    3 ( évaluation) comment est leur maison/fils? what's their house/son like?; comment trouvez-vous ma robe/son mari? what do you think of my dress/her husband?, how do you like my dress/her husband?;
    4 (indignation, surprise) comment cela? what do you mean?; comment se fait-il qu'il soit parti? how is it that ou how come he's gone?; comment se peut-il que…? how can it be that…?; comment ça se fait ? how come?, how is that?; comment? tu voudrais des excuses? what? you expect me to apologize?; comment donc! but of course!; et comment! most certainly!, and how!; ‘tu l'as éjecté?’-‘et comment!’ ‘you threw him out?’-‘I certainly did!’ ou ‘did I ever!’ ou ‘I sure didUS; ‘c'était bon?’-‘et comment!’ ‘was it nice?’-‘it certainly was!’ ou ‘was it ever!’ ou ‘it sure wasUS.
    II.
    comment nm le comment the how.
    [kɔmɑ̃] adverbe
    1. [de quelle manière] how
    comment lui dire que...? how am I/are we etc. going to tell him that...?
    et les enfants, comment ça va? and how are the children?
    2. [pour faire répéter]
    comment sorry?, what (was that)?
    3. [exprimant l'indignation, l'étonnement]
    comment, c'est tout ce que tu trouves à dire? what! is that all you can say?
    comment, ce n'est pas encore prêt? you mean it's still not ready?
    comment ça, tu pars? (familier) what do you mean, you're leaving?
    ————————
    [kɔmɑ̃] nom masculin

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > comment

  • 16 δικαιόω

    δικαιόω fut. δικαιώσω; 1 aor. ἐδικαίωσα. Pass.: 1 fut. δικαιωθήσομαι; 1 aor. ἐδικαιώθην, subj. δικαιωθῶ, ptc. δικαιωθείς; pf. δεδικαίωμαι Ro 6:7; 1 Cor 4:4; ptc. δεδικαιωμένος Lk 18:14 (Soph., Hdt.; Aristot., EN 1136a; et al.; pap, LXX; En 102:10; TestAbr A 13 p. 93, 14 [Stone p. 34]; Test12Patr; ApcSed, 14:8 p. 136, 15 Ja.; Jos., Ant. 17, 206; Just.; Ath., R. 53, 1; 65, 14) to practice δικαιοσύνη.
    to take up a legal cause, show justice, do justice, take up a cause τινά (Polyb. 3, 31, 9 ὑμᾶς δὲ αὐτοὺς … δικαιώσεσθε ‘you will (find it necessary to) take up your own cause’ = you will sit in judgment on yourselves; Cass. Dio 48, 46 ‘Antony was not taking Caesar’s side’ in the matter; 2 Km 15:4; Ps 81:3) δικαιῶσαι δίκαιον take up the cause of an upright pers. 1 Cl 16:12 (Is 53:11); τινί χήρᾳ (χήραν v.l.) 8:4 (Is 1:17 ‘take up the cause of the widow’).
    to render a favorable verdict, vindicate.
    as activity of humans justify, vindicate, treat as just (Appian, Liby. 17 §70; Gen 44:16; Sir 10:29; 13:22; 23:11 al.) θέλων δ. ἑαυτόν wishing to justify himself Lk 10:29; δ. ἑαυτὸν ἐνώπιόν τινος j. oneself before someone=‘you try to make out a good case for yourselves before the public’ 16:15 (δ. ἐαυτόν as En 102:10; but s. JJeremias, ZNW 38, ’39, 117f [against him SAalen, NTS 13, ’67, 1ff]). ὁ δικαιούμενός μοι the one who vindicates himself before (or against) me B 6:1 (cp. Is 50:8). τελῶναι ἐδικαίωσαν τὸν θεόν βαπτισθέντες tax-collectors affirmed God’s uprightness and got baptized i.e. by ruling in God’s favor they admitted that they were in the wrong and took a new direction (opp. τὴν βουλὴν τ. θεοῦ ἀθετεῖν) Lk 7:29 (cp. PsSol 2:15; 3:5; 8:7, 23; 9:2).
    of experience or activity of transcendent figures, esp. in relation to humans
    α. of wisdom ἐδικαιώθη ἀπὸ τῶν τέκνων αὐτῆς is vindicated by her children (on δικ. ἀπό cp. Is 45:25. S. also Appian, Basil. 8: δικαιόω=consider someth. just or correct) Lk 7:35; also ἀπὸ τῶν ἔργων αὐτῆς Mt 11:19 (v.l. τέκνων). On this saying s. DVölter, NThT 8, 1919, 22–42; JBover, Biblica 6, 1925, 323–25; 463–65; M-JLagrange, ibid. 461–63. Of an angel Hm 5, 1, 7.
    β. of God be found in the right, be free of charges (cp. TestAbr A 13 p. 93, 14 [Stone p. 34] ‘be vindicated’ in a trial by fire) Mt 12:37 (opp. καταδικάζειν). δεδικαιωμένος Lk 18:14; GJs 5:1; δεδικαιωμένη (Salome) 20:4 (not pap). Ac 13:39 (but s. 3 below); Rv 22:11 v.l; Dg 5:14.—Paul, who has influenced later wr. (cp. Iren. 3, 18, 7 [Harv. II 102, 2f]), uses the word almost exclusively of God’s judgment. As affirmative verdict Ro 2:13. Esp. of pers. δικαιοῦσθαι be acquitted, be pronounced and treated as righteous and thereby become δίκαιος, receive the divine gift of δικαιοσύνη through faith in Christ Jesus and apart from νόμος as a basis for evaluation (MSeifrid, Justification by Faith—The Origin and Development of a Central Pauline Theme ’92) 3:20 (Ps 142:2), 24, 28; 4:2; 5:1, 9; 1 Cor 4:4; Gal 2:16f (Ps 142:2); 3:11, 24; 5:4; Tit 3:7; Phil 3:12 v.l.; B 4:10; 15:7; IPhld 8:2; Dg 9:4; (w. ἁγιάζεσθαι) Hv 3, 9, 1. οὐ παρὰ τοῦτο δεδικαίωμαι I am not justified by this (after 1 Cor 4:4) IRo 5:1. ἵνα δικαιωθῇ σου ἡ σάρξ that your flesh (as the sinful part) may be acquitted Hs 5, 7, 1; δ. ἔργοις by (on the basis of) works, by what one does 1 Cl 30:3; cp. Js 2:21, 24f (ἔργον 1a and πίστις 2dδ); διʼ ἐαυτῶν δ. by oneself=as a result of one’s own accomplishments 1 Cl 32:4. (cp. κατὰ νόμον Hippol., Ref. 7, 34, 1).—Since Paul views God’s justifying action in close connection with the power of Christ’s resurrection, there is sometimes no clear distinction between the justifying action of acquittal and the gift of new life through the Holy Spirit as God’s activity in promoting uprightness in believers. Passages of this nature include Ro 3:26, 30; 4:5 (on δικαιοῦν τὸν ἀσεβῆ cp. the warning against accepting δῶρα to arrange acquittal Ex 23:7 and Is 5:23; δικαιούμενοι δωρεάν Ro 3:24 is therefore all the more pointed); 8:30, 33 (Is 50:8); Gal 3:8; Dg 9:5. For the view (held since Chrysostom) that δ. in these and other pass. means ‘make upright’ s. Goodsp., Probs. 143–46, JBL 73, ’54, 86–91.
    to cause someone to be released from personal or institutional claims that are no longer to be considered pertinent or valid, make free/pure (the act. Ps 72:13) in our lit. pass. δικαιοῦμαι be set free, made pure ἀπό from (Sir 26:29; TestSim 6:1, both δικ. ἀπὸ [τῆς] ἁμαρτίας) ἀπὸ πάντων ὧν οὐκ ἠδυνήθητε ἐν νόμω Μωϋσέως δικαιωθῆναι from everything fr. which you could not be freed by the law of Moses Ac 13:38; cp. vs. 39. ὁ ἀποθανὼν δεδικαίωται ἀπὸ τ. ἁμαρτίας the one who died is freed fr. sin Ro 6:7 (s. KKuhn, ZNW 30, ’31, 305–10; EKlaar, ibid. 59, ’68, 131–34). In the context of 1 Cor 6:11 ἐδικαιώθητε means you have become pure.—In the language of the mystery religions (Rtzst., Mysterienrel.3 258ff) δικαιοῦσθαι refers to a radical inner change which the initiate experiences (Herm. Wr. 13, 9 χωρὶς γὰρ κρίσεως ἰδὲ πῶς τὴν ἀδικίαν ἐξήλασεν. ἐδικαιώθημεν, ὦ τέκνον, ἀδικίας ἀπούσης) and approaches the sense ‘become deified’. Some are inclined to find in 1 Ti 3:16 a similar use; but see under 4.
    to demonstrate to be morally right, prove to be right, pass. of God is proved to be right Ro 3:4; 1 Cl 18:4 (both Ps 50:6). Of Christ 1 Ti 3:16.—Lit. s. on δικαιοσύνη 3c.—HRosman, Iustificare (δικαιοῦν) est verbum causativum: Verbum Domini 21, ’41, 144–47; NWatson, Δικ. in the LXX, JBL 79, ’60, 255–66; CCosgrove, JBL 106, ’87, 653–70.—DELG s.v. δίκη. M-M. EDNT. TW. Spicq.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > δικαιόω

  • 17 IT

    IT
    1. IT [ˌaɪʼti:] n
    no pl comput abbrev of Information Technology IT f, Informationstechnologie f
    2. it [ɪt] pron
    1) ( thing) es;
    see my car over there? - \IT's brand new siehst du mein Auto da drüben? - es ist brandneu;
    fear grows - \IT obsesses you - you can't ignore \IT die Angst wächst - sie umfängt dich - du kannst sie nicht ignorieren;
    the computer hasn't broken down, has \IT? der Computer ist nicht kaputt, oder?;
    a room with two beds in \IT ein Raum mit zwei Betten darin;
    ( of unspecified sex) er, sie, es;
    she was holding the baby, cradling \IT and smiling into its face sie hielt das Baby, wiegte es und lächelte es an
    2) ( activity) es;
    have you gone windsurfing before? \IT's a lot of fun warst du schon früher Windsurfen? es macht großen Spaß;
    stop \IT - you're hurting me hör auf [damit] - du tust mir weh;
    to be at \IT an etw dat sein;
    that prank caller is at \IT again ich habe heute mehrere seltsame Anrufe bekommen - ich glaube, dieser Juxanrufer hat wieder angefangen;
    we heard some terrible music coming from the Smith's - I guess Mr Smith is at \IT again with the drums wir hörten grauenhafte Musik von den Smiths kommen - ich glaube, Mr. Smith ist wieder an den Trommeln
    3) (in time phrases: time, past dates) es;
    (day, date) heute;
    \IT's three o'clock es ist drei Uhr;
    what time is \IT? wie spät ist es?;
    \IT was Wednesday before I remembered that my birthday had been that Monday es war Mittwoch, bevor ich daran dachte, dass am Montag mein Geburtstag gewesen war;
    \IT's the fifth of March heute ist der fünfte März;
    what day/date is \IT? welcher Tag/welches Datum ist heute?
    \IT rained all day es regnete den ganzen Tag;
    \IT's cold - take a jacket es ist kalt - nimm eine Jacke mit;
    \IT gets dark so early these days es wird jetzt so früh finster
    how far is \IT to New Orleans? wie weit ist es bis New Orleans?;
    \IT's 10 miles until we're home bis nach Hause sind es 10 Meilen;
    \IT's just 15 minutes before we'll be there wir sind in nur 15 Minuten da;
    \IT's a day's walk to get to the town from the farm die Stadt liegt einen Tagesmarsch von dem Bauernhaus entfernt
    \IT is... to do sth;
    \IT isn't easy to find a cheap flat es ist nicht leicht, eine billige Wohnung zu finden;
    \IT's common to have that problem dieses Problem ist weit verbreitet;
    \IT is... doing sth;
    \IT's no use knocking, she can't hear you Klopfen hat keinen Sinn, sie hört dich nicht;
    \IT's pointless trying to talk to them when they're in that mood es ist sinnlos, mit ihnen zu sprechen zu versuchen, wenn sie in dieser Stimmung sind;
    \IT's nice having breakfast out on the balcony es ist angenehm, am Balkon zu frühstücken;
    \IT is... [that]...;
    \IT's unlikely that she will arrive on time es ist unwahrscheinlich, dass sie rechtzeitig kommt;
    \IT's true I don't like Sarah es stimmt, ich mag Sarah nicht;
    \IT's important that you should see a doctor du solltest unbedingt zu einem Arzt gehen;
    \IT's a shame I can't come es ist schade, dass ich nicht kommen kann;
    \IT is... + wh- word
    \IT's interesting how often she talks to him es ist interessant, wie oft sie mit ihm spricht object
    to find \IT... doing/ to do sth es... finden, etw zu tun;
    I find \IT difficult having two jobs ich finde es schwierig, zwei Jobs zu haben;
    I found \IT impossible to get to sleep last night ich konnte letzte Nacht einfach nicht einschlafen;
    to like \IT... when... es mögen... wenn...;
    I like \IT in the autumn when the weather is crisp and bright ich mag den Herbst, wenn das Wetter frisch und klar ist;
    to think \IT... that... es... finden, dass...;
    he thought \IT strange that she refused to talk to him er fand es seltsam, dass sie sich weigerte, mit ihm zu sprechen
    7) (form: in passive sentences with verbs of opinion, attitude) man;
    \IT is... that...;
    \IT is thought that he tried to contact his family on Friday man nimmt an, dass er am Freitag versuchte, seine Familie zu kontaktieren;
    \IT is said that she has left the country es heißt, dass sie das Land verlassen hat;
    8)( emph)
    \IT is... who/that...[, not...];
    \IT was Paul who came here in September, not Bob Paul kam im September, nicht Bob;
    \IT was in Paris where we met, not in Marseilles wir trafen uns in Paris, nicht in Marseilles
    9) ( situation) es;
    \IT appears that we have lost mir scheint, wir haben verloren;
    \IT looks unlikely that we shall get the order es ist unwahrscheinlich, dass wir den Auftrag bekommen;
    \IT sounds an absolutely awful situation das klingt nach einer schrecklichen Situation;
    \IT takes [me] an hour to get dressed in the morning ich brauche morgens eine Stunde, um mich anzuziehen;
    if you wait \IT out,... wenn du nur lange genug wartest,...;
    if \IT's convenient wenn es Ihnen/dir passt;
    they made a mess of \IT sie versauten es (sl)
    we had a hard time of \IT during the drought während der Dürre hatten wir es schwer
    that's absolutely \IT - what a great find! das ist genau das - ein toller Fund!;
    that's \IT! das ist es!;
    to think one is \IT sich akk für den Größten/die Größte halten
    to be in for \IT Probleme haben;
    to get \IT Probleme kriegen;
    that's not \IT das ist es nicht;
    do you think there was a short circuit? - no, that's not \IT glaubst du, es war ein Kurzschluss? - nein, das ist es nicht
    that's [or this is] \IT das war's;
    this is \IT, I'm going das war's, ich gehe
    to be \IT dran sein;
    so, John's \IT first John ist als erster dran
    14) (fam: sex) es;
    to do \IT es treiben
    PHRASES:
    go for \IT! ran mit dir!;
    go for \IT, girl! du schaffst es, Mädchen!;
    to have \IT in for sb es auf jdn abgesehen haben;
    this is \IT jetzt geht's los;
    to run for \IT davonlaufen;
    use \IT or lose \IT (\IT or lose \IT) wer rastet, der rostet;
    that's [or this is] \IT das ist der Punkt

    English-German students dictionary > IT

  • 18 it

    IT
    1. IT [ˌaɪʼti:] n
    no pl comput abbrev of Information Technology IT f, Informationstechnologie f
    2. it [ɪt] pron
    1) ( thing) es;
    see my car over there? - \it's brand new siehst du mein Auto da drüben? - es ist brandneu;
    fear grows - \it obsesses you - you can't ignore \it die Angst wächst - sie umfängt dich - du kannst sie nicht ignorieren;
    the computer hasn't broken down, has \it? der Computer ist nicht kaputt, oder?;
    a room with two beds in \it ein Raum mit zwei Betten darin;
    ( of unspecified sex) er, sie, es;
    she was holding the baby, cradling \it and smiling into its face sie hielt das Baby, wiegte es und lächelte es an
    2) ( activity) es;
    have you gone windsurfing before? \it's a lot of fun warst du schon früher Windsurfen? es macht großen Spaß;
    stop \it - you're hurting me hör auf [damit] - du tust mir weh;
    to be at \it an etw dat sein;
    that prank caller is at \it again ich habe heute mehrere seltsame Anrufe bekommen - ich glaube, dieser Juxanrufer hat wieder angefangen;
    we heard some terrible music coming from the Smith's - I guess Mr Smith is at \it again with the drums wir hörten grauenhafte Musik von den Smiths kommen - ich glaube, Mr. Smith ist wieder an den Trommeln
    3) (in time phrases: time, past dates) es;
    (day, date) heute;
    \it's three o'clock es ist drei Uhr;
    what time is \it? wie spät ist es?;
    \it was Wednesday before I remembered that my birthday had been that Monday es war Mittwoch, bevor ich daran dachte, dass am Montag mein Geburtstag gewesen war;
    \it's the fifth of March heute ist der fünfte März;
    what day/date is \it? welcher Tag/welches Datum ist heute?
    \it rained all day es regnete den ganzen Tag;
    \it's cold - take a jacket es ist kalt - nimm eine Jacke mit;
    \it gets dark so early these days es wird jetzt so früh finster
    how far is \it to New Orleans? wie weit ist es bis New Orleans?;
    \it's 10 miles until we're home bis nach Hause sind es 10 Meilen;
    \it's just 15 minutes before we'll be there wir sind in nur 15 Minuten da;
    \it's a day's walk to get to the town from the farm die Stadt liegt einen Tagesmarsch von dem Bauernhaus entfernt
    \it is... to do sth;
    \it isn't easy to find a cheap flat es ist nicht leicht, eine billige Wohnung zu finden;
    \it's common to have that problem dieses Problem ist weit verbreitet;
    \it is... doing sth;
    \it's no use knocking, she can't hear you Klopfen hat keinen Sinn, sie hört dich nicht;
    \it's pointless trying to talk to them when they're in that mood es ist sinnlos, mit ihnen zu sprechen zu versuchen, wenn sie in dieser Stimmung sind;
    \it's nice having breakfast out on the balcony es ist angenehm, am Balkon zu frühstücken;
    \it is... [that]...;
    \it's unlikely that she will arrive on time es ist unwahrscheinlich, dass sie rechtzeitig kommt;
    \it's true I don't like Sarah es stimmt, ich mag Sarah nicht;
    \it's important that you should see a doctor du solltest unbedingt zu einem Arzt gehen;
    \it's a shame I can't come es ist schade, dass ich nicht kommen kann;
    \it is... + wh- word
    \it's interesting how often she talks to him es ist interessant, wie oft sie mit ihm spricht object
    to find \it... doing/ to do sth es... finden, etw zu tun;
    I find \it difficult having two jobs ich finde es schwierig, zwei Jobs zu haben;
    I found \it impossible to get to sleep last night ich konnte letzte Nacht einfach nicht einschlafen;
    to like \it... when... es mögen... wenn...;
    I like \it in the autumn when the weather is crisp and bright ich mag den Herbst, wenn das Wetter frisch und klar ist;
    to think \it... that... es... finden, dass...;
    he thought \it strange that she refused to talk to him er fand es seltsam, dass sie sich weigerte, mit ihm zu sprechen
    7) (form: in passive sentences with verbs of opinion, attitude) man;
    \it is... that...;
    \it is thought that he tried to contact his family on Friday man nimmt an, dass er am Freitag versuchte, seine Familie zu kontaktieren;
    \it is said that she has left the country es heißt, dass sie das Land verlassen hat;
    8)( emph)
    \it is... who/that...[, not...];
    \it was Paul who came here in September, not Bob Paul kam im September, nicht Bob;
    \it was in Paris where we met, not in Marseilles wir trafen uns in Paris, nicht in Marseilles
    9) ( situation) es;
    \it appears that we have lost mir scheint, wir haben verloren;
    \it looks unlikely that we shall get the order es ist unwahrscheinlich, dass wir den Auftrag bekommen;
    \it sounds an absolutely awful situation das klingt nach einer schrecklichen Situation;
    \it takes [me] an hour to get dressed in the morning ich brauche morgens eine Stunde, um mich anzuziehen;
    if you wait \it out,... wenn du nur lange genug wartest,...;
    if \it's convenient wenn es Ihnen/dir passt;
    they made a mess of \it sie versauten es (sl)
    we had a hard time of \it during the drought während der Dürre hatten wir es schwer
    that's absolutely \it - what a great find! das ist genau das - ein toller Fund!;
    that's \it! das ist es!;
    to think one is \it sich akk für den Größten/die Größte halten
    to be in for \it Probleme haben;
    to get \it Probleme kriegen;
    that's not \it das ist es nicht;
    do you think there was a short circuit? - no, that's not \it glaubst du, es war ein Kurzschluss? - nein, das ist es nicht
    that's [or this is] \it das war's;
    this is \it, I'm going das war's, ich gehe
    to be \it dran sein;
    so, John's \it first John ist als erster dran
    14) (fam: sex) es;
    to do \it es treiben
    PHRASES:
    go for \it! ran mit dir!;
    go for \it, girl! du schaffst es, Mädchen!;
    to have \it in for sb es auf jdn abgesehen haben;
    this is \it jetzt geht's los;
    to run for \it davonlaufen;
    use \it or lose \it (\it or lose \it) wer rastet, der rostet;
    that's [or this is] \it das ist der Punkt

    English-German students dictionary > it

  • 19 Ταρσεύς

    Ταρσεύς, έως, ὁ (Apollodorus [II B.C.]: 244 Fgm. 55 Jac.; Strabo 14, 5, 14; Arrian, Anab. 2, 4, 7; Plut., Mar. 433 [46, 2] al.; ins [s. New Docs 4, 173]; 2 Macc 4:30) a pers. from Tarsus, a Tarsian of Paul, who (Ac 22:3) was born in Tarsus Ac 9:11; 21:39. Schürer III 133, on Paul’s citizenship.—M-M.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > Ταρσεύς

  • 20 ταπεινόω

    ταπεινόω (ταπεινός) fut. ταπεινώσω; 1 aor. ἐταπείνωσα. Pass.: 1 fut. ταπεινωθήσομαι; 1 aor. ἐταπεινώθην; pf. ptc. τεταπεινωμένος (Hippocr. et al.; LXX; En 106:1; EpArist 257; Philo, Joseph.) gener. ‘lower, make low’
    to cause to be at a lower point, lower (Diod S 1, 36, 8; Bar 5:7; En 1:6; PsSol 11:4) ὄρος, βουνόν level a mountain, hill Lk 3:5 (Is 40:4).
    to cause someone to lose prestige or status, humble, humiliate, abase, done esp. to slaves, fig. ext. of 1
    w. focus on reversal of status ταπ. ἑαυτόν humble oneself of Christ, who went voluntarily to his death Phil 2:8 (s. on the whole pass. the lit. s.v. ἁρπαγμός and κενόω 1b; also KThieme, D. ταπεινοφροσύνη Phil 2 u. Ro 12: ZNW 8, 1907, 9–33). Of Paul, who did not hesitate to work w. his hands degrade 2 Cor 11:7. ὅστις ταπεινώσει ἑαυτὸν ὑψωθήσεται (ταπ. … ὑψόω: Chilon in Diog. L. 1, 69) Mt 23:12b; cp. Lk 14:11b; 18:14b (s. also 2b below). Also the pass. (Hyperid. 6, 10; Jos., Ant. 18, 147) Mt 23:12a; Lk 14:11a; 18:14a (cp. X., An. 6, 3, 18 θεὸς τοὺς μεγαληγορήσαντας ταπεινῶσαι βούλεται).
    w. focus on shaming, w. acc. of pers. or thing treated in this manner (Diod S 8, 25, 1; Orig., C. Cels. 3, 62, 29) μὴ ταπεινώσῃ με ὁ θεὸς πρὸς ὑμᾶς that God may not humiliate me before you 2 Cor 12:21. κύριος ὁ θεὸς ἐταπείνωσέν με σφόδρα the Lord God has profoundly shamed me GJs 2:3. τὶ ἐταπείνωσας τὴν ψυχήν σοὺ; Why have you so disgraced yourself? GJs 13:2; 15:3.
    w. focus on punitive aspect (Diod S 13, 24, 6 Tyche [Fortune] ταπεινοῖ τοὺς ὑπερηφάνους; Cyranides p. 49, 12 ἐχθρούς) confound, overthrow τοὺς ὑψηλούς 1 Cl 59:3b; ὕβριν ὑπερηφάνων vs. 3a. Cp. B 4:4f (Da 7:24).—ταπεινόω can also refer to external losses, approx. = ‘hold down, harm’ (Petosiris, Fgm. 6 ln. 21 [act.] and 24 [pass.]).
    to cause to be or become humble in attitude, humble, make humble in a favorable sense (Philod., περὶ κακιῶν col. 22, 3 = p. 38 Jensen ἑαυτόν; Celsus 3, 62 αὑτόν) ὅστις ταπεινώσει ἑαυτὸν ὡς τὸ παιδίον τοῦτο Mt 18:4. So perh. also 23:12b; Lk 14:11b; 18:14b (s. 2a above). ταπεινοῦσθαι humble oneself, become humble (Menand., Fgm. 754, 6 Kö.=544, 6 Kock τὴν θεὸν ἐξιλάσαντο τῷ ταπεινοῦσθαι σφόδρα; Sir 18:21; GrBar 7:5 ἐταπεινώθην φόβῳ μεγάλῳ) ταπεινώθητε ἐνώπιον κυρίου Js 4:10. ταπεινώθητε ὑπὸ τὴν χεῖρα τοῦ θεοῦ bow down beneath the hand of God (cp. Gen 16:9) 1 Pt 5:6. καρδία τεταπεινωμένη a humbled heart 1 Cl 18:17 (Ps 50:19). ψυχὴ τεταπεινωμένη B 3:5 (Is 58:10.—Cp. Diod S 20, 53, 3 τῇ ψυχῇ ταπεινωθείς; 20, 77, 3 ἐταπεινώθη τὴν ψυχήν). Corresp. ὀστᾶ τεταπεινωμένα 1 Cl 18:8 (Ps 50:10).—KThieme, D. christl. Demut I (history of the word, and humility in Jesus) 1906; DFyffe, ET 35, 1924, 377–79. S. also πραΰτης, end.
    to subject to strict discipline, constrain, mortify. In accordance w. OT usage, ταπεινοῦν τὴν ἑαυτοῦ ψυχήν (Lev 16:29, 31; 23:27; Ps 34:13; Is 58:3 al.) or ταπεινοῦσθαι (Sir 34:26; 2 Esdr 8:21; the prayers for vengeance fr. Rheneia [Dssm., LO 353f, LAE 413ff=SIG 1181, 11] θεὸς ᾧ πᾶσα ψυχὴ ταπεινοῦται; s. Dssm., LO 357f, LAE 419) means to mortify oneself GJs 2:2; B 3:1, 3 (Is 58:5); Hm 4, 2, 2 (s. ταπεινοφροσύνη). οἶδα ταπεινοῦσθαι (opp. περισσεύειν) of an austere regimen: I know how to do w. little (cp. ταπεινός Pla. Leg. 762e; s. also Plut., Mor. 7e) Phil 4:12.—WCvanUnnik, Zur Bedeutung von ταπεινοῦν τὴν ψυχήν bei den Apost. Vätern, ZNW 44, ’52f, 250–55. On the whole word: ESchweizer, Erniedrigung u. Erhöhung bei Jesus u. s. Nachfolgern ’55.—DELG s.v. ταπεινός. M-M. EDNT. TW. Spicq. Sv.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > ταπεινόω

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