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1 Pine Pattern
The cone pine design of Persian origin and used as the basis of the artistic designs seen in Cashmere and Paisley shawls, carpets, printed dress goods, etc. -
2 Pine Wool
Pine leaf fibres for knitting into underwear or woven into coarse cloth. The fibre is spun like cotton and is claimed to be flexible and of good strength. -
3 pine
anguish, torture* * *I. (en) pain,F torment;[ gøre pinen kort] get it over quickly; get it over and done with;[ holde pinen ud] stick it (out), sweat it out;[ trække pinen ud] prolong the agony.II. *( tortere) torture;( volde smerter) pain,F torment,( stærkere) torture;(fig: pine og plage) torment ( fx tormented with suspicions),( tynge, F) prey on one's mind ( fx the thought of his failure preyed on his mind; there is something that preys on his mind);[ det piner mig] it gives me pain ( fx to see him so depressed);[ pine livet af en] make life a burden to somebody, worry somebody to death;[ pine frem] force ( fx a smile);[ pine maden i sig] force the food down;[ pine en tilståelse ud af ham] extort a confession from him. -
4 pine
الصَّنَوْبَر (شَجَر) \ pine: an evergreen tree with needle-like leaves and white wood; the wood of this tree. \ شَجَر \ pine: an evergreen tree with needle-like leaves and white wood; the wood of this tree. \ See Also خَشَب الصَّنَوْبَر \ ضَمَرَ \ pine: to become thin and weak. \ ضَنِيَ \ pine: to become thin and weak. \ See Also هزل (هَزَلَ) -
5 pine
I [paɪn] noun1) any of several kinds of evergreen trees with cones (ˈpine-cones) and needlelike leaves ( ˈpine-needles).صنوبَر2) its wood:خَشَب الصّنوبَر II [paɪn] verb( also adjective) a pine table.
1) ( often with away) to lose strength, become weak (with pain, grief etc):يَهْزُل، يَهِن، يَضْعُفSince his death she has been pining (away).
2) ( usually with for) to want (something) very much; to long (for someone or something, or to do something):يَذوب حَسْرَةً ، يَشْتاقHe knew that his wife was pining for home.
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6 Forest Wool (Pine)
The fibres extracted from pine needles and sometimes mixed with cotton and wool and used for coarse blankets.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Forest Wool (Pine)
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7 lo peor
• The Pine Tree State• the place governs the act• the very same image• the Virgin Mary• the world to come• the worst that could ever happen is that• the worst thing that can happen is that• the worst-case scenario -
8 lo mejorcito
• The Cotton State• the cream of the crop• the elderly• The Empire State• the petition is denied• The Pine Tree State -
9 pino
adj.steep.m.1 pine.2 bowling pin, pin.* * *\estar en el quinto pino familiar to be in the back of beyondhacer el pino to do a handstand* * *noun m.pine, pine tree* * *ISM1) (Bot) pine, pine tree- vivir en el quinto pinopino marítimo, pino rodeno — cluster pine
2) [en gimnasia]IIADJ steepen pino — (=vertical) upright, vertical; (=de pie) standing
* * *en el quinto pino — (Esp fam) miles away
2) (Esp) ( en gimnasia)3) (Méx) ( en bolos) pin4) (Chi) (Coc) fried ground beef and onion* * *= pine.Ex. The distinctive feature of the library is the dome-shaped ceiling with cross beams in stained pine = La característica distintiva de la biblioteca es el techo en forma de cúpula con vigas cruzadas de pino teñido.----* acícula del pino = pine needle.* aguja de pino = pine needle.* bosque de pinos = pine forest.* en el quinto pino = in the arse of nowhere.* hoja de pino = pine needle.* pino blanco = white pine.* pino Oregón = Douglas-fir.* quinto pino, el = back of beyond, the.* * *en el quinto pino — (Esp fam) miles away
2) (Esp) ( en gimnasia)3) (Méx) ( en bolos) pin4) (Chi) (Coc) fried ground beef and onion* * *= pine.Ex: The distinctive feature of the library is the dome-shaped ceiling with cross beams in stained pine = La característica distintiva de la biblioteca es el techo en forma de cúpula con vigas cruzadas de pino teñido.
* acícula del pino = pine needle.* aguja de pino = pine needle.* bosque de pinos = pine forest.* en el quinto pino = in the arse of nowhere.* hoja de pino = pine needle.* pino blanco = white pine.* pino Oregón = Douglas-fir.* quinto pino, el = back of beyond, the.* * *en el quinto pino ( Esp fam) (en un lugar lejano) miles away; (en un lugar aislado) in the back of beyond ( colloq), in the boondocks ( AmE colloq)Compuestos:Monterey pinecluster o maritime pinestone o umbrella pine● pino tealoblolly pineB( Esp) (en gimnasia): hacer el pino (apoyando — las manos) to do a handstand; (— la cabeza) to do a headstand, to stand on one's headC ( Méx) (en bolos) pinCompuesto:kingpin* * *
Multiple Entries:
pino
piño
pino sustantivo masculino
1 (Bot) ( árbol) pine (tree);
( madera) pine
2 (Esp) ( en gimnasia):
3 (Méx) ( en bolos) pin
pino m Bot pine
♦ Locuciones: hacer el pino, to do a handstand
en el quinto pino, in the back of beyond
' pino' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
nudosa
- nudoso
- piña
- madera
English:
handstand
- middle
- pine
- stick
- back
- hand
- head
- stand
* * *pino nm1. [árbol] pine (tree);Esp Famen el quinto pino way out in the sticks, Br in the back of beyondpino albar Scots pine;pino carrasco Aleppo pine;pino insigne Monterey pine;pino marítimo pinaster;pino piñonero stone pine;pino silvestre Scotch pinehacer el pino [sin apoyar la cabeza en el suelo] to do a handstand;[apoyando la cabeza en el suelo] to stand on one's head3.Los Pinos [en México] = official residence of the Mexican presidentLOS PINOSLos Pinos (“The Pine Trees”) has been the official home of the Mexican president since 1934, when president Lázaro Cárdenas moved there in preference to the nearby Chapultepec Castle, which he felt was too grand, and which he had turned into a national museum. Recently, Los Pinos iteself has been opened to public tours for the first time. By extension, Los Pinos is used to refer to the Mexican government: “según el portavoz de los Pinos…” (according to the president's spokesperson…)* * *m BOT pine;hacer el pino do a handstand;vivir en el quinto pino fam live out in the boondocks fam* * *pino nm: pine, pine tree* * *pino n1. (árbol) pine tree2. (madera) pine -
10 pinus
pīnus, ūs and i (dat. pinu, Prop. 3, 19, 19; abl. sing. only pinu; gen. and abl. plur. pinorum and pinis), f., = pitus.I.Lit., a pine, pine-tree; a fir, fir-tree: Pinus silvestris, Linn.; Plin. 16, 20, 33, § 79; 16, 25, 40, § 95:B.ex altā pinu,
Verg. G. 2, 389:pinos loquentes,
id. E. 8, 22:evertunt actas ad sidera pinus,
id. A. 11, 136:Idaeae sacro de vertice pinus,
id. ib. 10, 230:gummi in cerasis, resina pinis,
Plin. 37, 3, 11, § 42.—The pine was sacred to Cybele,
Ov. M. 10, 103; Macr. S. 6, 9; Phaedr. 3, 17, 4;to Diana,
Hor. C. 3, 22, 1; Prop. 2, 15, 17 (3, 12, 19);Pan was represented with a pinewreath,
Ov. M. 14, 638; Sil. 13, 331; so,too, Faunus,
Ov. H. 5, 137. The victors at the Isthmian games were also crowned with a pine-wreath, Plin. 15, 10, 9, § 36.—Acc. to the fable, Pitys, i. e. pinus, was beloved by Pan;hence, pinus amica Arcadio deo,
Prop. 1, 18, 29 (20).—The stone-pine, which bears an edible fruit, Plin. 16, 10, 16, § 38.—II.Transf., any thing made of pine-wood or pine-trees.1.A ship:2.quos Mincius infestā ducebat in aequora pinu,
Verg. A. 10, 206; Hor. Epod. 16, 57:quamvis Pontica pinus Silvae filia nobilis,
id. C. 1, 14, 11:orbata praeside pinus,
Ov. M. 14, 88.—A pine torch:3. 4.atque manum pinu flagranti fervidus implet,
Verg. A. 9, 72.—An oar, Luc. 3, 531.—5.A wreath of pineleaves, Ov. M. 14, 638; id. F. 1, 412; Sil. 13, 331.—6.A pine forest:Gallinaria pinus,
Juv. 3, 307. -
11 πίτυς
A pine, esp. Pinus Laricio, Corsican pine,π. βλωθρή, τήν τ' οὔρεσι τέκτονες ἄνδρες ἐξέταμον Il.13.390
;μακρῇσίν τε πίτυσσιν ἰδὲ δρυσίν Od.9.186
; also, Aleppo pine, P. halepensis, Thphr.HP3.9.5, Nic.Al. 301, Paus.2.1.3, Gp.2.8.2 (calledπ. ἀγρία Thphr.HP1.9.3
, 3.3.1, Paus.5.6.4); stone pine, P. pinea, Theoc.5.49, Dsc.1.69, 72 (π. ἥμερος Paus.6.9.1
); small-seeded pine, P. brutia,π. φθειροποιός Thphr.HP2.2.6
, cf. Plin.HN16.49; the Isthmian pine was one species, Callix.2, Plu.2.675e: prov., πίτυος τρόπον ἐκτρίβειν like a pine, i.e. utterly, because the pine when cut down never grows again, Hdt.6.37 (but this is attributed to the πεύκη, and not to the πίτυς, by Thphr.HP3.9.5). -
12 pineum
pīnĕus, a, um, adj. [id.], of the pine, piny, pine-:II.pinea velamina,
pine-wreaths, Lucr. 4, 587:ardor,
a fire of pine-wood, Verg. A. 11, 786:silva,
id. ib. 9, 85:plaga pinea,
a piny tract, id. ib. 11, 320:claustra,
i. e. of the wooden horse before Troy, id. ib. 2, 258:fert avidas in pinea Turnus Texta faces,
i. e. into the ships, Ov. M. 14, 530; so,pinea moles,
a ship, Prop. 4 (5), 6, 20:compages,
Mart. 9, 76, 4:nuclei,
Cels. 6, 11; 2, 22:nuces,
Plin. 15, 10, 9, § 35.—Subst.: pīnĕa, ae, f., a pine-nut, a pine-cone:2.pineam serere,
Col. 5, 10; so id. 10, 239; Lampr. Commod. 9.—pīnĕum, i, n. (late Lat.), a pine-cone; plur., Vulg. 2 Par. 2, 8. -
13 pineus
pīnĕus, a, um, adj. [id.], of the pine, piny, pine-:II.pinea velamina,
pine-wreaths, Lucr. 4, 587:ardor,
a fire of pine-wood, Verg. A. 11, 786:silva,
id. ib. 9, 85:plaga pinea,
a piny tract, id. ib. 11, 320:claustra,
i. e. of the wooden horse before Troy, id. ib. 2, 258:fert avidas in pinea Turnus Texta faces,
i. e. into the ships, Ov. M. 14, 530; so,pinea moles,
a ship, Prop. 4 (5), 6, 20:compages,
Mart. 9, 76, 4:nuclei,
Cels. 6, 11; 2, 22:nuces,
Plin. 15, 10, 9, § 35.—Subst.: pīnĕa, ae, f., a pine-nut, a pine-cone:2.pineam serere,
Col. 5, 10; so id. 10, 239; Lampr. Commod. 9.—pīnĕum, i, n. (late Lat.), a pine-cone; plur., Vulg. 2 Par. 2, 8. -
14 piñon
Any of various dwarf pines that produce edible nuts. Watts gives Pinus edulis, P. monophylla, and P. parryana as examples and notes that Indians made the nuts of these trees part of their diets. The term also refers to the nuts of these trees. The DRAE glosses piñón as the seed of the pine tree and as a shrub of the euphorbiacous family, which grows in warm regions of the Americas to a height of about six and one-half to sixteen feet. It has heart-shaped leaves, petiolate and divided into lobules. It produces flowers on stalks and fleshy fruit with oily seeds, which are used medicinally as a purgative and commercially for their oil. The roots of the plant are made into a violet-colored dye. Santamaría references it as the purgative fruit of various species of the Jathophas species, especially J. curcas, J. multifida, and Curcas purgans. The name also refers to the plant itself, which produces a drupe or small nut, about three-quarters of an inch long, with strong oily, emetic, and poisonous properties. Cobos references piñon as the nut pine and its edible seed. It is common in the (Old) West.Alternate forms: pinion, pinyon. -
15 πεύκη
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `pine', esp. `Pinus Laricio' (Il.), metaph. `torch' (trag.).Derivatives: πευκ-ήεις, Dor. - άεις `made of pine, belonging to the torch, stinging, sharp' (trag. in lyr., D. P., Opp.); - ινος `made of pine' (S., E., Plb.); - ών, - ῶνος m. `forest of pines' (Hdn. Gr.); - ία f. `taste of pitch' (Tz.; prob. after πικρία, Scheller Oxytonierung 40). -- Besides πευκάλιμος adjunct of φρένες (Il.), also of πραπίδες, μήδεα (Orac. ap. D. L., inscr.); πευκεδανός adi. of πόλεμος (Κ 8), of βέλεμνα, ἀσπίς (Orph.), of θάλασσα (Opp.); with opposit. acc. πευκέδανον name of a bitter umbellifera, `sulphur weed' (Thphr.; Strömberg 147).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [828] *peuḱ- `sting'Etymology: Resembling names of the pine and the fir are found in Balt., Germ. and Celt.: OPr. peuse f. (IE *peuḱ-), Lith. pušìs (IE *puḱ-); uncertain on the stemformation Specht KZ 63, 96; after Skardzius IF 62, 162 old rootnoun; with t-enlargement OHG fiuhta, MIr. ochtach f. (IE *peuḱ-t- resp. *puḱ-tākā). If, as probable, to the 2. member in ἐχε-πευκής, περι-πευκής `stinging, sharp' (prop. *'provided with a sting, point'), πεύκη can be understood as a subst. adj. f. "the sharp, the stinging" from *πευκός `sharp, stinging' as λεύκη f. `white poplar' from λευκός; in Germ. OHG fiuhta `fine' as lioht `light'. Here also the islandname Πεύκη (in the Donau-delta; Skymn.; Mayer Glotta 24, 195) and the Illyr. PN Peucetii (Illyria, southern Italy; Krahe Die Spr. d. Illyr. 1, 112 f.) with formation like Gaul. Leucetius surn. of Mars, Lat.-Osc. Lūcetius surn. of Iupiter. -- ἐχε-πευκής may contain a noun *πεῦκος n. `stinging, point' (cf. s.v.); formation then like Av. raočah- n. `light' (IE * leukos). To this the adj. πευκάλιμος and πευκεδανός, for which a meaning `sharp, intrusive' resp. `sharp, stinging, bitter' must be posited; cf. e.g. εἰδάλιμος (: εἶδος) a.o. (Arbenz 28, Benveniste Origines 45 f.); λ-suffix also in πευκαλέον ξηρόν (as αὑαλέος a.o.), πευκαλεῖται ξηραίνεται H.; for πευκεδανός cf. ῥιγεδανός (: ῥῖγος) a.o. (Chantraine Form. 362 w. lit., Specht Ursprung 199 a. 345). -- WP. 2, 15, Pok. 828, Fraenkel s. pušìs w. further forms a. lit., Porzig Gliederung 118f.; older lit. also in Bq s. ἐχε-πευκές. On IIr. cognates s. Morgenstierne NTS 13(1942) 229 and Turner A comp. dict. of the Indo-Aryan languages (1966) No 8407 *pōśi. -- A byform with voiced velar in πυγμή (s. v.) a.o.Page in Frisk: 2,523-524Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πεύκη
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16 mocho
adj.1 dehorned, hornless.2 blunt.3 prudish, goody-goody, puritan.f. & m.prude, bigot, prig.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: mochar.* * *► adjetivo1 (de la escopeta) butt————————1 (de la escopeta) butt* * *mocho, -a1. ADJ1) (=desafilado) blunt, short2) [árbol] lopped, pollarded; [vaca] hornless, polled; [torre] flat-topped; [muñón] stubby4) And (=grande) big, huge2. SM / F1) CAm * (=huérfano) orphan3. SM1) [de utensilio] blunt end, thick end; [de cigarrillo] butt* * *I- cha adjetivo (fam) <buey/toro> with its horns cut off; <lápiz/cuchillo> bluntII- cha masculino, femenino1) (Col, Méx, Ven)2) (Méx) ( mojigato) prude* * *= mop-head.Ex. Beginning in the far corner of the room, apply a thin coating of floor wax with a new (or perfectly clean) mop-head.----* mocho de fregona = mop-head.* * *I- cha adjetivo (fam) <buey/toro> with its horns cut off; <lápiz/cuchillo> bluntII- cha masculino, femenino1) (Col, Méx, Ven)2) (Méx) ( mojigato) prude* * *= mop-head.Ex: Beginning in the far corner of the room, apply a thin coating of floor wax with a new (or perfectly clean) mop-head.
* mocho de fregona = mop-head.* * *A1 ( fam); ‹buey/toro› polled, with its horns cut off; ‹lápiz/cuchillo› bluntel jardinero dejó todos los pinos mochos the gardener lopped (the tops off) all the pine treestiene un brazo mocho he's missing an arm, he only has one armla máquina le dejó el dedo mocho the machine sliced o chopped the top off his finger2(Chi, Esp fam) (pelado): me dejaron mocho they chopped all my hair off ( colloq), they scalped me ( colloq)B ( Méx) (mojigato) prudishmasculine, feminineB ( Méx) (mojigato) prudese fue hecho la mocha he dashed offC* * *mocho, -a♦ adj1. [extremo, punta] blunt;[árbol] loppedla pata de la silla está mocha the chair has a leg missing;mi gato está mocho de una oreja my cat only has one ear♦ nm[fregona] mop♦ nm,fMéx Fam Pey1. [beato] holy Joe2. [mojigato]las mochas de la oficina se asustaron con mi escote the straight-laced old prudes at the office got a shock when they saw my neckline* * *I adj bluntII m (blunt) end -
17 сосновый
сосно́вая ро́ща — pine grove
сосно́вая смола́ — pine tar
сосно́вый бор — pine forest, pinery ['paɪ-]
сосно́вые дрова́ — pinewood sg
сосно́вая доска́ — deal board
2) мн. как сущ. бот. the pine family, the family Pinaceae -
18 κῶνος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `fruit of the pine-cone, cone also (f.) `pine'; `top' (Democr., Arist., Thphr., Theoc.).Other forms: κώνητες θύρσοι H., κώνης `the stave ending in a pine-cone of Bacchus and the Bacchantes'. Further cf. γονής νάρκισσος τὸ φυτόν H.; κῶνα = πίσσα; κώνα βέμβιξ H.Compounds: Compp., e.g. κωνο-φόρος f. `conifer' (Thphr.), κωνο-κόλουρος `truncated cone' beside κολουρό-κωνος `id.' (Hero; Risch IF 59, 284, Strömberg Wortstudien 8).Derivatives: Diminut. κωνίον, - ιον (Posidon., AP), κωνίς ὑδρίσκη H.; κωνῖτις πίσσα `pine-resin' (Rhian.; Redard Les noms grecs en - της 112), κωνίας ( οἶνος) `resinated wine' (Hp. ap. Gal.; Chantraine Formation 94 f.); κωνάω `resinate, pitch', also `spin' (Ar., H.), with κώνησις `resinating, pitching' (Arist.), - ητικός `suitable for pitching' (pap.); περι-κωνέω `smear with pitch' (Ar.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Since Bopp as inherited identified with Skt. śāṇa- m. (MInd. ṇ for n?) `whet-stone, touchstone'; from a verb `whet, sharpen' in Skt. śí-śā-ti (IE. *ḱi-ḱō-ti) ; further with Lat. cō-s, cä-tus etc. (WP. 1, 454f., Pok. 542, W.-Hofmann s. catus). Schwyzer 458 however, considers "nicht ohne Grund", foreign origin. This is confirmed by the variation adduced by Fur. 121.Page in Frisk: 2,62-63Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κῶνος
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19 πεύκινος
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > πεύκινος
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20 pīneus
pīneus adj. [pinus], of the pine, of pines, piny: ardor, a fire of pine-wood, V.: plaga, a piny tract, V.: claustra, i. e. of the wooden horse, V.: fert in pinea texta faces, i. e. into the ships, O.* * *pinea, pineum ADJof the pine, covered in pines
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