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1 Card Cutting
To punch the holes in jacquard cards, according to specified designs, and in the order they are to operate the needles. There are two types of machines used, the plate and the piano. Plate Machine - The operation on this machine is slow, the plate being usually reset for every distinct pick in the design; but if there are many similar picks in the design it is obviously the quicker, as one setting of the plate will enable all similar picks to be cut in a few moments. Piano Machine - This machine feeds the card into the line of 8, 10, or 12 cutting punches controlled by the fingers, so that the fingers indicate the correct punches; one foot cuts and the other foot (or treadle) controls the movement forward of the card. A good cutter will cut from 100 up to 120 cards per hour (300's cards). The sketch shows this machine -
2 Card Fettlings
Wool waste removed from the card cylinders and is matted and dirty. Is not a remanufactured material, when, after re-scouring, is again carded. Usually this waste is used as a raw material by the woollen manufacturers. -
3 card
[kaːd] noun1) thick paper or thin board:بِطاقَهshapes cut out from card.
2) ( also ˈplaying card ) a small piece of such paper etc with designs, used in playing certain games:وَرَقَةُ اللعِب (الشدّه)a pack of cards.
3) a similar object used for eg sending greetings, showing membership of an organization, storing information etc:بِطاقَهa business card.
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4 red card
■ Strongest possible disciplinary sanction for a player during a match, shown, amongst other things, for extremely unsporting conduct, for serious foul play, for a foul by the last defender in front of goal, for insulting behaviour or for a second cautionable offence, which results in the immediate sending-off of the player concerned from the field of play.► A player, substitute or substituted player who has been sent off and shown the red card must leave the vicinity of the field of play and the technical area.■ Höchste Spielstrafe, die unter anderem bei äußerst unsportlichem Verhalten, bei grobem Foulspiel, bei einer Notbremse, bei Beleidigungen oder bei einer zweiten Verwarnung im selben Spiel verhängt wird und einen sofortigen Platzverweis nach sich zieht.► Ein Spieler, Ersatzspieler oder ausgewechselter Spieler, der durch Zeigen der Roten Karte des Feldes verwiesen wurde, muss die Umgebung des Spielfelds und die Technische Zone verlassen. -
5 Filleting Card
Wire surfaced card clothing in strip form from 1 to 3-in. wide used to cover the rollers and cylinders of carding engines. -
6 affinity card
Fina credit card issued to members of a particular group, for example, past students of a college, owners of a particular make of car, or supporters of a particular charity. The organization may benefit from a donation upon issue or first use, and a small percentage of the card’s subsequent turnover. Other cards give benefits such as frequent flyer miles. -
7 debit card
Fina card issued by a bank or financial institution and accepted by a merchant in payment for a transaction. Unlike the procedure with a credit card, purchases are deducted from the cardholder’s account, as with a check, when the transaction takes place. -
8 abheben
(trennb., -ge-)I v/t (hat)2. (Masche) slipII v/i3. (hat) beim Kartenspiel: cut the cardsIII v/refl (hat): sich abheben von contrast with, stand out from; sich gegen etw. abheben stand out ( oder be set off) against s.th.* * *das Abheben(Flugzeug) takeoff;(Rakete) liftoff* * *ạb|he|ben sep1. vt1) (= anheben) to lift (up), to raise; (= abnehmen) to take off; Telefonhörer to pick up, to lift (up); Telefon to answer; (beim Stricken) Masche to slip2) (CARDS) to take, to pick up3) Geld to withdraw2. vi2) (= ans Telefon gehen) to answer; (beim Stricken) to sliplass es doch klingeln, du brauchst nicht abzuheben — let it ring, you don't have to answer (it)
3) (= Geld abheben) to withdraw moneydu kannst nicht dauernd abheben! — you can't keep on withdrawing money or drawing money out
4)abheben (form, Jur) — to emphasize sth
See:→ auch abgehoben3. vrsich von jdm/etw abheben — to stand out from sb/sth
sich gegen jdn/etw abheben — to stand out against sb/sth
nur um sich von anderen or gegen andere abzuheben — just to be different (from other people), just to make oneself stand out
sich wohltuend gegen etw abheben — to make a pleasant contrast with sth, to contrast pleasantly with sth
* * *1) (to divide (a pack of cards).) cut2) (to take (money) from a bank: I drew out $40 yesterday.) draw out3) ( of a rocket etc) to leave the ground (noun lift-off) lift off* * *ab|he·benI. vi1. LUFT2. (den Hörer abnehmen) to answer [the phone]ich heb' ab! I'll get it!3. KARTEN to pick [up]du bist mit A\abheben dran! it's your turn to pick up!▪ darauf \abheben, dass... to concentrate [or focus] on the fact that...ein Rolls Royce?! jetzt hebst du aber ab! a Rolls Royce?! you must be joking!II. vt irreg1. FINGeld [von seinem Konto] \abheben to withdraw money [from one's account]2. KARTENeine Karte vom Stapel \abheben to take [or pick] a card from the packeine Masche \abheben to cast off a stitchIII. vr* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives, auch intransitives Verb[den Hörer] abheben — answer [the telephone]
3) (von einem Konto) withdraw < money>2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb < balloon> rise; <aircraft, bird> take off; < rocket> lift off3.unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb stand out; contrastsich von od. gegen etwas/von jemandem abheben — stand out against or contrast with something/somebody
* * *abheben (trennb, -ge-)A. v/t (hat)2. (Masche) slip3. (Geld) draw (von from)4. (unterstreichen) set apart (von from)5. TECH:Späne abheben remove the chipsB. v/iumg, figdu brauchst nicht gleich abzuheben don’t let it go to your head2. (hat) Telefon: answer the phone;kannst du mal abheben? auch can you get it?3. (hat) beim Kartenspiel: cut the cards4. (hat) (hinweisen):C. v/r (hat):sich abheben von contrast with, stand out from;sich gegen etwas abheben stand out ( oder be set off) against sth* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives, auch intransitives Verb1) lift off <lid, cover, etc.>[den Hörer] abheben — answer [the telephone]
3) (von einem Konto) withdraw < money>2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb < balloon> rise; <aircraft, bird> take off; < rocket> lift off3.unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb stand out; contrastsich von od. gegen etwas/von jemandem abheben — stand out against or contrast with something/somebody
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9 robar
v.1 to steal (object).me han robado la moto my motorbike's been stolenrobar a alguien to rob somebodyrobar el corazón a alguien to steal somebody's heartla contabilidad me roba mucho tiempo doing the accounts takes up a lot of my timeEllos roban dinero They steal money.Ellos roban de noche They purloin at night.2 to draw.3 to rob (cobrar caro).en esa tienda te roban the prices in that shop are daylight robberyEllos roban pan They rob bread.4 to steal from, to rob, to burglarize, to burgle.María le roba a su vecina Mary steals from her neighbor.Ellos roban casas They burglarize homes.5 to rob of.* * *2 (raptar) to kidnap3 (en naipes) to draw4 figurado (cobrar muy caro) to rip off5 figurado (corazón, alma) to steal* * *verb1) to rob, steal2) abduct* * *1. VT1) [+ objeto, dinero] to steal; [+ banco] to rob¡nos han robado! — we've been robbed!
tuve que robarle horas al sueño para acabar el trabajo — I had to work into the night to finish the job
robarle el corazón a algn — liter to steal sb's heart
2) [+ atención] to steal, capture; [+ paciencia] to exhaust; [+ tranquilidad] to destroy, take away; [+ vida] to take, steal3) (=estafar) to cheat, roben ese negocio te han robado — you've been cheated o robbed in that deal
4) [+ naipes] to take, drawroba una carta de la baraja — take o draw a card from the deck
5) frm [río, corriente] to carry away6) †† (=raptar) to kidnap, abduct2. VI1) (=sisar) to stealno robarás — (Biblia) thou shalt not steal
2) (Naipes) to take a card, draw a card* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <dinero/bolso> to steal; < banco> to rob2) ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)¿$300? te robaron! — $300? you were conned! (colloq)
3) (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)2.robar vi to stealrobaron en la casa de al lado — the house next door was burglarized (AmE) o (BrE) was burgled
* * *= steal, rob, raid, thieve, steal off, pilfer, filch, break into, break in, mug, plunder, rifle, snatch, nick, hold up.Ex. In imposing penalties for book stealing libraries are particularly helpless.Ex. This article contrasts a range of principles with the widely prevailing system of polygraphic marking which requires much manual, specialised work and which robs the resulting text of good visual presentation = Este artículo contrasta una serie de principios con el sistema prevalente de marcas poligráficas que necesita mucho trabajo manual y especializado que roba al texto resultante una buena presentación visual.Ex. The article ' Raiding the World Bank' explains how the World Bank operates, shareholding, the initiation of loan proposals, and lending to education projects.Ex. But it was no less misguided than the commonplace practice of setting passages thieved from literature for comprehension exercises.Ex. I have nothing against Aussies but I do have something against parasites who steal off someone else's ideas.Ex. In his work, Al pilfers fragments from a wide array of sources and glues them into collages.Ex. Even in poems written directly out of his own experience, he is likely to use notions, phrases, and musical ideas filched from other recent poems.Ex. A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed.Ex. The hacker broke in on the university dial-in lines through the library system.Ex. In that time, she relates, she had been mugged at gunpoint, punched in the face, and harassed.Ex. Close on such paradeground excitements comes the popular sport of plundering for projects.Ex. English, on the other hand, has been accused of waylaying other languages in dark alleys and rifling their pockets for loose vocabulary.Ex. The thieves broke into the museum using a hydraulic jack and snatched both paintings in 3 minutes.Ex. It's more advisable to have a cheap and skanky bike for pootling around town, the idea being that no-one would want to nick a nasty looking bike.Ex. The film starts with two small-time thieves who spontaneously decide to hold up a restaurant.----* robar en una tienda = shoplift.* robar ganado = rustle + cattle.* robar la credibilidad = destroy + credence.* robarle tiempo al sueño = burn + the candle at both ends.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <dinero/bolso> to steal; < banco> to rob2) ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)¿$300? te robaron! — $300? you were conned! (colloq)
3) (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)2.robar vi to stealrobaron en la casa de al lado — the house next door was burglarized (AmE) o (BrE) was burgled
* * *= steal, rob, raid, thieve, steal off, pilfer, filch, break into, break in, mug, plunder, rifle, snatch, nick, hold up.Ex: In imposing penalties for book stealing libraries are particularly helpless.
Ex: This article contrasts a range of principles with the widely prevailing system of polygraphic marking which requires much manual, specialised work and which robs the resulting text of good visual presentation = Este artículo contrasta una serie de principios con el sistema prevalente de marcas poligráficas que necesita mucho trabajo manual y especializado que roba al texto resultante una buena presentación visual.Ex: The article ' Raiding the World Bank' explains how the World Bank operates, shareholding, the initiation of loan proposals, and lending to education projects.Ex: But it was no less misguided than the commonplace practice of setting passages thieved from literature for comprehension exercises.Ex: I have nothing against Aussies but I do have something against parasites who steal off someone else's ideas.Ex: In his work, Al pilfers fragments from a wide array of sources and glues them into collages.Ex: Even in poems written directly out of his own experience, he is likely to use notions, phrases, and musical ideas filched from other recent poems.Ex: A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed.Ex: The hacker broke in on the university dial-in lines through the library system.Ex: In that time, she relates, she had been mugged at gunpoint, punched in the face, and harassed.Ex: Close on such paradeground excitements comes the popular sport of plundering for projects.Ex: English, on the other hand, has been accused of waylaying other languages in dark alleys and rifling their pockets for loose vocabulary.Ex: The thieves broke into the museum using a hydraulic jack and snatched both paintings in 3 minutes.Ex: It's more advisable to have a cheap and skanky bike for pootling around town, the idea being that no-one would want to nick a nasty looking bike.Ex: The film starts with two small-time thieves who spontaneously decide to hold up a restaurant.* robar en una tienda = shoplift.* robar ganado = rustle + cattle.* robar la credibilidad = destroy + credence.* robarle tiempo al sueño = burn + the candle at both ends.* * *robar [A1 ]vtA1 ‹dinero/joya/bolso› to steal; ‹banco› to roble robó dinero a su padre he stole some money from his fatherles robaron todos los ahorros they were robbed of all their savings, all their savings were stolenentraron pero no robaron nada they broke in but didn't steal o take anything¿quién me ha robado la regla? who's taken o stolen o ( colloq) swiped my ruler?me robó el corazón she stole my heartle robó un beso he stole a kiss from herle roba horas al sueño para poder estudiar he does o goes without sleep so that he can studyno te quiero robar más tiempo I don't want to take up any more of your time2 (raptar) ‹niño› to abduct, kidnap¿$300? ¡te robaron! $300? what a rip-off! o you were conned! ( colloq)■ robarvito stealno robarás ( Bib) thou shalt not stealrobaron en la casa de al lado the house next door was broken into o was burglarized ( AmE) o ( BrE) was burgled¡me han robado! I've been robbed!* * *
robar ( conjugate robar) verbo transitivo
1
‹ banco› to rob;
robarle algo a algn to steal sth from sb;
le robaron el bolso she had her bag stolen
2 ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)
3 (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)
verbo intransitivo
to steal;
¡me han robado! I've been robbed!
robar verbo transitivo
1 (cosas materiales) to steal: robar algo a alguien, to steal sthg from sb
(a una persona, un banco) to rob: me robaron en la calle, I was robbed in the street
(en una casa) to burgle: anoche robaron en casa de mi vecino, my neighbour's house was burgled last night
2 (el tiempo) to take up: debo robarte unos minutos para que me expliques este problema, may I take a few minutes of your time and ask you to explain this problem to me?
le roba horas al estudio para ver la televisión, he spends hours of his study time watching TV
3 (metros de un espacio) to take off
4 Naipes to draw, pick up
To steal se aplica a lo que el ladrón se lleva (dinero, joyas, etc.). To rob se refiere al lugar desde donde se lo lleva (un banco, una casa). To burgle significa entrar en una casa con la intención de robar.
persona acto verbo
ladrón robo robar
thief theft
robber robbery to rob
to steal
burglar burglary to burgle
' robar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ladrón
- ladrona
- limpiar
- pillar
- quitar
- robo
- bolsear
- chingar
- chorear
- chorrear
- clavar
- desvalijar
- escamotear
- guindar
- soplar
- volar
English:
accuse
- appropriate
- break in
- break into
- burglar
- burglarize
- burglary
- burgle
- cop
- fall in with
- gunpoint
- have up
- make off
- nick
- pinch
- poach
- rip off
- rob
- robber
- robbery
- rustle
- scavenge
- scoop
- snatch
- steal
- stick up
- stoop
- take
- theft
- thief
- thievishness
- break
- plunder
- rip
- wrong
* * *♦ vt1. [objeto] to steal;[casa] to burgle; [banco] to rob;robar a alguien to rob sb;me han robado la moto my motorbike's been stolen;nos robaron el partido we were robbed;le robó el corazón she stole his heart;Famel que roba a un ladrón, tiene cien años de perdón it's no crime to steal from a thief2. [niño, mujer] to abduct, to kidnap3. [tiempo] to take up;te robaré sólo un minuto I'll only take up a minute of your time;la contabilidad me roba mucho tiempo doing the accounts takes up a lot of my time4. [espacio] to take away;con esta reforma le robamos unos metros al garaje this alteration will take a few square metres away from the garage5. [naipe] to draw6. [cobrar caro] to rob;en esa tienda te roban the prices in that shop are daylight robbery♦ vi1. [sustraer] to steal;han robado en una tienda del centro there's been a robbery in a shop in the town centre2. [tomar un naipe] to draw* * *v/t2 naipe take, pick up* * *robar vt1) : to steal2) : to rob, to burglarize3) secuestrar: to abduct, to kidnap4) : to captivaterobar virobar en : to break into* * *robar vb3. (casa) to burgle -
10 trump
[tramp]1. nounin some card games, any card of a suit which has been declared to rank higher than the other suits:This time, hearts are trumps
وَرَقَةٌ رابِحَه في وَرق اللعب( also adjective) a trump card.
2. verbto defeat (an ordinary card) by playing a card from the trump suit:يأخُذ ورقَةً رابِحَة من أوراق اللعبHe trumped (my king) with a heart.
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11 πέκω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to comb (oneself), to card, to shear' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. poka \/pokē\/, Killen Par. del Pass. 17, 26ff., DELG.Compounds: Also w. ἀπο-. Compp., z.B. πόκ-υφος m. `wool weaver' (pap. IIa); εἰρο-πόκος (s. εἶρος), εὔ-ποκος `with fair wool' (A.); with referenc to the verb νεό-ποκος `newly shorn' ( μαλλός, S.).Derivatives: 1. πόκος m. `plucked, shorn off sheep's wool, fleece' (Μ 451, hell.). ποκ-άριον ( Sammelb. III--IVp), - άδες pl. f. `lock or tuft of wool or hair' (Ar.), Πόκιος m. "shearing month", Locr. monthname (inscr.); verbs: ποκ-ίζομαι `to shear wool' (Theoc.) with - ισμός, - ιστί (pap.); - άζω `id.' (sch., Suid.); - όομαι `to be covered like with a fleece' (AP). 2. πόκτος m. `id.' ( Lyr. Adesp. 73, Hdn.), like φόρτος (Schwyzer 704 n. 6), if not to πεκτέω. 3. πέκος n. `id.' (An. Ox. 3, 358), πεῖκος ἔριον, ξάμμα H. (cf. πείκ-ετε, - ειν above). 4. πεκτήρ (Suid.), ποκτήρ (pap. IIp; after πόκος) m. `shearer'. -- Enlarged form πεκ-τέω `id.' (Ar.; not πέκτω, Peruzzi Par. del Pass. 18, 396 n. 2); on the formation Schwyzer 705f. -- On κτείς s. v.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [797] *peḱ- `pluck, card'Etymology: Identical with Lith. pešù, pèšti `pluck, pull out, drew by the hairs'; the τ-enlargement in πεκτ-έω also in Lat. pectō `comb, card'; formal = Gerrn., e.g. OHG fehtan ' fech-ten' (prop. *'pluck each other'?). The very rare πέκος agrees phonetically with Lat. pecus n. `cattle, small cattle, sheep', which would be therefore a concretized verbal abstract (Porzig Satzinhalte 292; also Specht KZ 66, 36f.). The old widespread u-stem in Lat. pecu n., Germ., e.g. OHG fihu n., Skt. páśu- n., -úḥ m. etc. `cattle' is wanting in Greek; on the other hand πόκος is isolated, so prob. innovation. IE o -vowel also in Arm. asr, gen. asu `sheepwool, fleece' (IE *poḱu-). OWNo. fær, OSwed. fār n. `sheep', often equated with πόκος, is uncertain. -- Orig. meaning prob. `pluck, card', from where `shear, comb' (diff. Peruzzi Par. del Pass. l.c. n. 3 against Specht KZ 68, 206). -- WP. 2, 16f., Pok. 797, W.-Hofmann s. pectō and pecū, Fraenkel s. pèšti `pluck' w. further forms a. rich lit.Page in Frisk: 2,492-493Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πέκω
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12 souvenir
souvenir [suv(ə)niʀ]1. masculine nouna. ( = réminiscence) memory• elle a gardé de lui un bon/mauvais souvenir she has good/bad memories of him• avoir or garder le souvenir de qch to remember sth• je n'ai pas souvenir d'avoir... (formal) I have no recollection of having...b. ( = objet à valeur sentimentale) keepsake ; (pour touristes, marque d'un événement) souvenir• boutique or magasin de souvenirs souvenir shopc. ( = formule de politesse) amical souvenir yours ever• meilleur or amical souvenir de Rome (sur une carte) greetings from Rome2. ➭ TABLE 22 reflexive verb• se souvenir de qch/d'avoir fait qch/que... to remember sth/doing sth/that...• autant que je m'en souvienne... as far as I remember...• tu m'as fait souvenir que... you have reminded me that...• je m'en souviendrai ! (menace) I won't forget!* * *
I
1. suvniʀse souvenir verbe pronominalse souvenir de quelqu'un/quelque chose — to remember somebody/something
2.
verbe impersonnelil me souvient que — liter I recollect that
II suvniʀnom masculin1) ( pensée du passé) memorygarder un bon/mauvais souvenir de quelque chose — to have happy/bad ou unhappy memories of something
2) ( mémoire) memory3) ( objet) (rappelant un lieu, un événement) souvenir (de of); ( rappelant une personne) memento (de from)en souvenir — gén as a souvenir; ( avec valeur affective) as a memento; ( cadeau ayant valeur affective) as a keepsake
boutique de souvenirs — souvenir shop GB ou store US
4) ( salutation)croyez à mon bon or fidèle or meilleur souvenir — yours ever
* * *suv(ə)niʀ nm1) (= réminiscence) memoryen souvenir de — in memory of, in remembrance of
2) [personne] keepsake, memento3) [voyage] souvenir4) (formule)avec mes affectueux souvenirs,... — with love from,...
avec mes meilleurs souvenirs,... — with regards,..., best regards,...
* * *souvenir verb table: venirA nm1 ( pensée du passé) memory; garder un bon/mauvais souvenir de qch to have happy/bad ou unhappy memories of sth; ce n'est plus qu'un mauvais souvenir it's just a bad memory; je conserve or garde un horrible souvenir de cette année à Londres I have very bad memories of that year in London; le souvenir que je conserve or garde de lui est encore très clair I still remember him very clearly; souvenirs d'école/de l'armée/de captivité memories of schooldays/of the army/of captivity; souvenirs de guerre wartime memories; souvenirs d'enfance childhood memories; chercher dans ses souvenirs to sift through one's memories; avoir (le) souvenir de qch to remember sth; ne pas avoir souvenir de to have no recollection of; n'avoir qu'un souvenir confus de qch to remember something only dimly; perdre le souvenir de qch to forget sth; au souvenir de at the memory of;2 ( mémoire) memory; s'effacer du souvenir de qn to fade from sb's memory; rappeler qn au (bon) souvenir de qn to remember sb to sb; envoie une carte de temps en temps pour te rappeler à leur bon souvenir send them a card from time to time to keep in touch;3 ( objet) (rappelant un lieu, un événement) souvenir (de of); ( rappelant une personne) memento (de from); c'est un souvenir de voyage it's something I brought back from one of my trips; en souvenir gén as a souvenir; ( avec valeur affective) as a memento; ( cadeau ayant valeur affective) as a keepsake; il me l'a donné en souvenir he gave it to me as a keepsake; boutique de souvenirs souvenir shop GB ou store US;4 ( salutation) croyez à mon bon or fidèle or meilleur souvenir yours ever; mon bon souvenir à remember me to.B se souvenir vpr se souvenir de qn/qch to remember sb/sth; bien se souvenir de qch to remember sth well; je m'en souviens mal I can't remember it very well; se souvenir (d')avoir fait to remember doing; se souvenir que to remember that.C v impers il me souvient que littér I recollect that; autant qu'il m'en souvienne if my memory serves me right.I[suvnir] nom masculinvotre opération ne sera bientôt plus qu'un mauvais souvenir your operation will soon be nothing but a bad memoryn'avoir aucun souvenir de to have no remembrance ou recollection ofelle n'en a qu'un vague souvenir she has only a dim ou vague recollection of itau souvenir de ces événements, il se mit à pleurer when he thought back to the events, he started to cryavoir le souvenir de to have a memory of, to remember2. [dans des formules de politesse]3. [objet - donné par quelqu'un] keepsake ; [ - rappelant une occasion] memento ; [ - pour touristes] souveniren souvenir de locution prépositionnelle[afin de se remémorer]prenez ce livre en souvenir de cet été/de moi take this book as a souvenir of this summer/as something to remember me byII[suvnir]se souvenir de verbe pronominal plus préposition[personne, lieu] to rememberje ne me souviens jamais de son adresse I keep forgetting ou I can never remember his addressje ne me souviens pas de l'avoir lu I can't remember ou I don't recall ou I don't recollect having read itje m'en souviendrai, de ses week-ends reposants à la campagne! (familier & ironique) I won't forget his restful weekends in the countryside in a hurry!mais si, souviens-toi, elle était toujours au premier rang come on, you must remember her, she was always sitting in the front row————————il me souvient verbe impersonnel,il lui souvient etc. verbe impersonnelil me souvient un détail/de l'avoir aperçu I remember a detail/having seen him -
13 Stechen
n; -s, kein Pl.* * *(Biene) to sting;(Nadel) to prickle; to prick;(Stock) to jab* * *Stẹ|chen ['ʃtɛçn]nt -s, -2) (= Schmerz) sharp pain* * *1) (to poke or prod: He jabbed me in the ribs with his elbow; She jabbed the needle into her finger.) jab2) (to pierce slightly or stick a sharp point into: She pricked her finger on a pin; He pricked a hole in the paper.) prick3) (to push with something pointed; to poke: He prodded her arm with his finger.) prod4) (to wound or hurt by means of a sting: The child was badly stung by nettles/mosquitoes; Do those insects sting?) sting5) (to wound or pierce with a pointed instrument or weapon: He stabbed him (through the heart / in the chest) with a dagger.) stab6) (to push (something sharp or pointed) into or through something: She stuck a pin through the papers to hold them together; Stop sticking your elbow into me!) stick7) (to defeat (an ordinary card) by playing a card from the trump suit: He trumped (my king) with a heart.) trump8) (a sudden sharp pain: He felt a twinge (of pain) in his neck; a twinge of regret.) twinge* * *Ste·chen<-s, ->[ˈʃtɛçn̩]nt1. (stechender Schmerz) sharp [or stabbing] pain, stitch2. (beim Reiten) jump-off* * *das; Stechens, Stechen (Sport) jump-off* * ** * *das; Stechens, Stechen (Sport) jump-off* * *- n.pang n.twinge n. -
14 stechen
n; -s, kein Pl.* * *(Biene) to sting;(Nadel) to prickle; to prick;(Stock) to jab* * *Stẹ|chen ['ʃtɛçn]nt -s, -2) (= Schmerz) sharp pain* * *1) (to poke or prod: He jabbed me in the ribs with his elbow; She jabbed the needle into her finger.) jab2) (to pierce slightly or stick a sharp point into: She pricked her finger on a pin; He pricked a hole in the paper.) prick3) (to push with something pointed; to poke: He prodded her arm with his finger.) prod4) (to wound or hurt by means of a sting: The child was badly stung by nettles/mosquitoes; Do those insects sting?) sting5) (to wound or pierce with a pointed instrument or weapon: He stabbed him (through the heart / in the chest) with a dagger.) stab6) (to push (something sharp or pointed) into or through something: She stuck a pin through the papers to hold them together; Stop sticking your elbow into me!) stick7) (to defeat (an ordinary card) by playing a card from the trump suit: He trumped (my king) with a heart.) trump8) (a sudden sharp pain: He felt a twinge (of pain) in his neck; a twinge of regret.) twinge* * *Ste·chen<-s, ->[ˈʃtɛçn̩]nt1. (stechender Schmerz) sharp [or stabbing] pain, stitch2. (beim Reiten) jump-off* * *das; Stechens, Stechen (Sport) jump-off* * *stechen; sticht, stach, hat gestochenA. v/t & v/i1. Nadel, Dorn etc: prick; Wespe etc: sting; Mücke: bite; mit einem Messer: stab; Wolle: prick, be prickly; Sonne: burn;mit dem Messer nach jemandem stechen stab at ( oder attack) sb with a knife;sich (dat)in den Daumen stechen prick one’s thumb;mich hat etwas gestochen sth has stung ( oder bitten) me2. fig:in die Nase stechen Geruch: sting one’s nose;jemandem in die Augen stechen strike sb, catch sb’s eyemit dem König den Buben stechen take ( oder trump) the jack with the kingB. v/t1. (Torf, Rasen, Spargel) cut2. (Schwein) stick3. (Aale) spear4. in Kupfer: cut, engrave (C. v/ibei Gleichstand müssen wir stechen if the scores are equal we will have to have a play-off2. (schmerzen):mein Herz sticht I’ve got a sharp ( oder pricking) pain in my heart3. unpers:mich im Rücken/in der Seite I’ve got a sharp ( wiederholt: stabbing) pain in my back/side; bei Seitenstechen: I’ve got a stitchD. v/r prick o.s. (an +dat on;mit with);Vorsicht, stich dich nicht! careful, don’t prick yourself!* * *das; Stechens, Stechen (Sport) jump-off* * *- n.pang n.twinge n. -
15 abheben
ab|he·ben irreg vi1) luft[von etw] \abheben to take off [from sth]2) ( den Hörer abnehmen) to answer [the phone];ich heb' ab! I'll get it!3) karten to pick [up];du bist mit A\abheben dran! it's your turn to pick up!darauf \abheben, dass... to concentrate [or focus] on the fact that...ein Rolls Royce?! jetzt hebst du aber ab! a Rolls Royce?! you must be joking!1) finGeld [von seinem Konto] \abheben to withdraw money [from one's account]2) karteneine Karte vom Stapel \abheben to take [or pick] a card from the pack3) ( beim Stricken)eine Masche \abheben to cast off a stitchvr -
16 montón
m.1 heap, pile, bunch, bunch of things.2 lot, great number, large number, bundle.* * *1 heap, pile\ser del montón to be nothing special, be one of the crowd* * *noun m.heap, pile* * *SM1) [gen] heap, pile; [de nieve] pileun hombre del montón — just an ordinary o average chap
2) * (=mucho)tenemos montones — we've got loads o masses *
un montón de — loads of *, masses of *
un montón de gente — loads of people *, masses of people *
a montones: ejemplos hay a montones — there is no shortage of examples
* * *a) ( pila) pile(ser) del montón — (fam)
b) (fam) ( gran cantidad)me duele un montón — it hurts like hell (colloq)
me gusta un montón — I'm crazy about her/it (colloq)
* * *= congeries, heap, stack, wadge, pile, stash, slew.Ex. To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.Ex. The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex. Examination reveals positions on the cards where the light passes through all the cards in a stack.Ex. By meeting authors cold print takes on a human voice; wadges of paper covered with words turn into treasure troves full of interest.Ex. However, it would be a time consuming task for the student or researcher to sit down with piles of periodicals, frantically scanning contents lists to try to trace articles on his chosen topic.Ex. It tells the story of a young detective who stumbles across a stash of jewel thieves hiding out in an abandoned house.Ex. His work includes 47 novels, and slews of essays, plays, reviews, poems, histories, and public speeches.----* ahorrar un montón = save + a bundle, save + a ton.* ahorrar un montón de dinero = save + a ton of money.* a montón = aplenty [a-plenty].* a montones = in droves, by the sackful.* costar un montón = cost + a bundle.* del montón = unimpressive, a dime a dozen.* desde hace un montón de tiempo = for yonks.* gastarse un montón de dinero = lash out (on), go to + town on.* hace un montón de tiempo = yonks.* montones = oodles, scores.* montones de = mountain(s) of, scores of, lashings of.* un montón = like crazy, like mad.* un montón de = a pile of, a stack of, a bundle of, a truckload of, a sackful of, a raft of.* un montón de dinero = a huge amount of money.* valer un montón = cost + a bundle.* * *a) ( pila) pile(ser) del montón — (fam)
b) (fam) ( gran cantidad)me duele un montón — it hurts like hell (colloq)
me gusta un montón — I'm crazy about her/it (colloq)
* * *= congeries, heap, stack, wadge, pile, stash, slew.Ex: To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.
Ex: The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex: Examination reveals positions on the cards where the light passes through all the cards in a stack.Ex: By meeting authors cold print takes on a human voice; wadges of paper covered with words turn into treasure troves full of interest.Ex: However, it would be a time consuming task for the student or researcher to sit down with piles of periodicals, frantically scanning contents lists to try to trace articles on his chosen topic.Ex: It tells the story of a young detective who stumbles across a stash of jewel thieves hiding out in an abandoned house.Ex: His work includes 47 novels, and slews of essays, plays, reviews, poems, histories, and public speeches.* ahorrar un montón = save + a bundle, save + a ton.* ahorrar un montón de dinero = save + a ton of money.* a montón = aplenty [a-plenty].* a montones = in droves, by the sackful.* costar un montón = cost + a bundle.* del montón = unimpressive, a dime a dozen.* desde hace un montón de tiempo = for yonks.* gastarse un montón de dinero = lash out (on), go to + town on.* hace un montón de tiempo = yonks.* montones = oodles, scores.* montones de = mountain(s) of, scores of, lashings of.* un montón = like crazy, like mad.* un montón de = a pile of, a stack of, a bundle of, a truckload of, a sackful of, a raft of.* un montón de dinero = a huge amount of money.* valer un montón = cost + a bundle.* * *1 (pila) pileestá en ese montón de libros it's in that pile o stack of booksroba una carta del montón take a card from the pileel jardinero hacía montones con la hierba cortada the gardener was piling up the cut grassun montón de basura a trash heapes un escritor de los del montón he's not an outstanding o exceptional writer, he's rather a run-of-the-mill writeres una chica del montón she's (just) an ordinary girl2 ( fam)me duele un montón it hurts like hell ( colloq)me gusta un montón I'm crazy about her/it ( colloq)tiene discos a montones she's got heaps o stacks of records ( colloq)la gente los compra a montones people buy them by the barrelful o cartload* * *
montón sustantivo masculino
◊ del montón (fam) ordinary, averageb) (fam) ( gran cantidad):◊ un montón de gente loads of people (colloq);
me gusta un montón I like her/him/it a lot
montón sustantivo masculino
1 (pila, taco) heap, pile: haz un montón con ellas, make a pile of them
2 (gran cantidad) me duele un montón, it hurts a lot
un montón de, a load of, lots of
♦ Locuciones: familiar del montón, nothing special, ordinary
' montón' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alrededor
- buena
- bueno
- cargamento
- desparejada
- desparejado
- montaña
- pila
- potingue
- bola
- ropa
- tambache
English:
accumulation
- busywork
- dozen
- drift
- freebie
- heap
- host
- lash out
- load
- mass
- mound
- neat
- ordinary
- penny
- pile
- potted
- pump
- scrapheap
- snowdrift
- squash
- stack
- lot
- middle
- pack
- wad
- wood
* * *montón nm1. [pila] heap, pile;roba dos cartas del montón take two cards from the pile;Famdel montón ordinary, run-of-the-millme gusta un montón I'm mad about him;me duele un montón it hurts like mad;pregúntale a él que sabe un montón de astronomía ask him, he knows loads about astronomy;a montones by the bucketload;tiene dinero a montones she's got loads of money, she's loaded;en verano vienen turistas a montones in summer the place is crawling with tourists* * *m pile, heap;ser del montón fig be average, not stand out;montones de fam piles of fam, loads of fam ;tiene coches a montones she has loads of cars;había gente a montones there were loads of people;me gusta un montón fam I’m crazy about him/her fam* * *1) : heap, pileun montón de preguntas: a ton of questionsmontones de gente: loads of people* * *montón n1. (pila) pile2. (cantidad) lots -
17 взять карту из колоды
Makarov: draw a card from the packУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > взять карту из колоды
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18 вытянуть карту из колоды
Makarov: draw a card from the packУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > вытянуть карту из колоды
-
19 подтасовка карты
General subject: dealing a card from the bottom of the deck -
20 получить красную карточку
Football: be redcarded, receive the red card (from)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > получить красную карточку
См. также в других словарях:
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