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1 crowd
1. noun1) (a number of persons or things gathered together: A crowd of people gathered in the street.) multitud, muchedumbre2) (a group of friends, usually known to one another: John's friends are a nice crowd.) grupo, peña
2. verb1) (to gather in a large group: They crowded round the injured motorcyclist.) agolparse, congregarse, reunirse2) (to fill too full by coming together in: Sightseers crowded the building.) abarrotar, atestar, llenar hasta los topes•- crowdedcrowd1 n muchedumbre / multitudcrowd2 vb apiñarsetr[kraʊd]1 (large number of people) multitud nombre femenino, muchedumbre nombre femenino, gentío; (at match, concert, etc) público2 familiar (push, put pressure on) acosar, hostigar1 apiñarse, aglomerarse, agolparse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto follow the crowd / move with the crowd seguir a la mayoría, dejarse llevar por la corrientecrowd control control nombre masculino de multitudescrowd scene SMALLCINEMA/SMALL escena de masascrowd ['kraʊd] vi: aglomerarse, amontonarsecrowd vt: atestar, atiborrar, llenarcrowd n: multitud f, muchedumbre f, gentío mn.• agolpamiento s.m.• apiñadura s.f.• bulla s.f.• caterva s.f.• cofradía s.f.• enjambre s.m.• gentío s.m.• manada s.f.• montón s.m.• muchedumbre s.f.• multitud s.f.• tropa s.f.• turba s.f.v.• apañuscar v.• apiñar v.• apretujar v.• atestar v.kraʊd
I
a) ( gathering of people) muchedumbre f, multitud f, gentío mb) (masses, average folk) (pej)to go with o follow the crowd — seguir* (a) la manada, dejarse arrastrar or llevar por la corriente
to stand out from/rise above the crowd — destacar(se)*
c) (group, set) (colloq)I thought she was one of Jane's crowd — creí que era de la pandilla or del grupo de Jane
d) ( large number) (colloq) (no pl) montón m
II
1.
intransitive verb aglomerarse
2.
vt \<\<people\>\> \<\<hall/entrance\>\> llenar, abarrotar[kraʊd]don't try to crowd everything onto one page — no trates de meter todo en una página; see also crowded
1. N1) (=mass of people) multitud f, muchedumbre fhe disappeared into the crowd — desapareció entre la multitud or la muchedumbre or el gentío
she lost him in the crowd — lo perdió de vista entre la multitud or la muchedumbre or el gentío
she's the sort of person who stands out in a crowd — es la típica persona que (se) destaca en un grupo de gente
a crowd of 10,000 watched the parade — 10.000 espectadores presenciaron el desfile
the away/home crowd — (Ftbl) los seguidores del equipo visitante/de casa
he certainly draws the crowds — [performer] no cabe duda de que atrae mucho público
3) * (=social group) gente fall the old crowd have come out for the occasion — la antigua pandilla ha salido para celebrar la ocasión
4) (=common people)the crowd: she's just one of the crowd — es del montón
to follow the crowd — (fig) dejarse llevar por los demás or por la corriente
2. VT1) (=fill) [+ place] atestar, llenardemonstrators crowded the streets — los manifestantes atestaron or llenaron las calles
new buildings crowd the narrow lanes of the old town — los nuevos edificios se apiñan en los estrechos callejones del casco viejo
2) (=squeeze, force) apiñar3) (=press against) empujar4) (fig) (=harass) agobiarI do things at my own pace, so don't crowd me — deja de agobiarme, me gusta trabajar a mi ritmo
3.VI (=gather together) apiñarsedense vegetation crowded in on both sides of the road — la vegetación crecía espesa a ambos lados de la carretera
we all crowded into her little flat — todos nos metimos en su pisito, abarrotándolo de gente
thousands of people have crowded into the capital — miles de personas han llegado en tropel a la capital
to crowd around or round sth/sb — apiñarse alrededor de algo/algn
4.CPDcrowd control N — control m de masas
crowd scene N — (Cine, Theat) escena f masiva or multitudinaria
* * *[kraʊd]
I
a) ( gathering of people) muchedumbre f, multitud f, gentío mb) (masses, average folk) (pej)to go with o follow the crowd — seguir* (a) la manada, dejarse arrastrar or llevar por la corriente
to stand out from/rise above the crowd — destacar(se)*
c) (group, set) (colloq)I thought she was one of Jane's crowd — creí que era de la pandilla or del grupo de Jane
d) ( large number) (colloq) (no pl) montón m
II
1.
intransitive verb aglomerarse
2.
vt \<\<people\>\> \<\<hall/entrance\>\> llenar, abarrotardon't try to crowd everything onto one page — no trates de meter todo en una página; see also crowded
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2 thousand
1. adjective1) tausenda or one thousand — eintausend
two/several thousand — zweitausend/mehrere tausend
one and a half thousand — [ein]tausendfünfhundert
a or one thousand and one — [ein]tausend[und]eins
a or one thousand and one people — [ein]tausendundeine Person
2)a thousand [and one] — (fig.): (innumerable) tausend (ugs.)
2. nouna thousand thanks — tausend Dank. See also academic.ru/23561/eight">eight 1.
1) (number) tausenda or one/two thousand — ein-/zweitausend
a thousand and one — [ein]tausend[und]eins
2) (symbol, written figure) Tausend, die; (in adding numbers by columns) Tausender, der (Math.); (set or group) Tausend, das3) (indefinite amount) thousands Tausende. See also eight 2. 1)* * *1. plurals - thousand, thousands; noun2) (the figure 1,000.) die Tausend2. adjective- thousand-- thousandth
- thousands of* * *thou·sand[ˈθaʊzənd]I. npage/number one \thousand Seite/Nummer [ein]tausendone \thousand/two \thousand [ein]tausend/zweitausendas a father, he's one in a \thousand er ist ein fantastischer Vatertwo \thousand and one [das Jahr] zweitausend und einsa \thousand pounds [ein]tausend Pfund▪ \thousands Tausende pla crowd of \thousands watched the procession mehrere tausend Menschen kamen zu der ProzessionI've said it a \thousand times ich habe es jetzt unzählige Male gesagt▶ the sixty-four \thousand dollar question die [alles] entscheidende Frage* * *['TaUzənd]1. adjtausenda thousand and one/two — tausend(und)eins/-zwei
I have a thousand and one ( different) things to do (inf) —
2. nTausend ntthere were thousands of people present the year three thousand — es waren Tausende or tausende (von Menschen) anwesend das Jahr dreitausend
* * *thousand [ˈθaʊznd]A adj1. tausend:a (one) thousand (ein)tausend;The Thousand and One Nights Tausendundeine Nachta) vor Scham fast in den Boden sinken,b) tausend Ängste ausstehen;B s1. Tausend n (Einheit):thousands Tausende;many thousands of times vieltausendmal;one in a thousand ein(er, e, es) unter tausend2. Tausend f (Zahl)* * *1. adjective1) tausenda or one thousand — eintausend
two/several thousand — zweitausend/mehrere tausend
one and a half thousand — [ein]tausendfünfhundert
a or one thousand and one — [ein]tausend[und]eins
a or one thousand and one people — [ein]tausendundeine Person
2)a thousand [and one] — (fig.): (innumerable) tausend (ugs.)
2. nouna thousand thanks — tausend Dank. See also eight 1.
1) (number) tausenda or one/two thousand — ein-/zweitausend
a thousand and one — [ein]tausend[und]eins
2) (symbol, written figure) Tausend, die; (in adding numbers by columns) Tausender, der (Math.); (set or group) Tausend, das* * *adj.tausend adj. -
3 herausfinden
(unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)I v/t1. (Geheimnis, Täter) find out; (Fehler, Ursache etc.) find; herausfinden, warum / wie / wo etc. ... find out why / how / where etc....; sie fand heraus, dass... she found out that...2. aus einem Haufen / unter Tausenden etc. herausfinden discover among ( oder unearth from among) a pile of things / pick out from a crowd of thousands etc.II v/i und v/refl1. find one’s way out ( aus of)2. fig. get out (of)* * *to work out* * *he|raus|fin|den sep1. vtFehler, Fakten, Täter etc to find out; (= herauslesen) Gesuchtes to pick out (aus from (among)), to find (aus( from) among)er hat herausgefunden, dass... — he has found out or discovered that...
2. virto find one's way out ( aus of)* * *1) (to understand: I can't figure out why he said that.) figure out2) (to discover: I found out what was troubling her.) find out3) (to recognize or pick out: No-one watching the play was able to spot the murderer.) spot* * *he·raus|fin·denI. vt1. (dahinterkommen)▪ etw \herausfinden to find out [or discover] sthII. viich begleite Sie noch zur Tür! — danke, ich finde selbst heraus I'll accompany you to the door — thank you, but I can find my own way out* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb2.man fand heraus, dass... — it was found or discovered that...
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb find one's way out ( aus of)* * *herausfinden (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)A. v/therausfinden, warum/wie/wo etc… find out why/how/where etc …;sie fand heraus, dass … she found out that …2.aus einem Haufen/unter Tausenden etcherausfinden discover among ( oder unearth from among) a pile of things/pick out from a crowd of thousands etcB. v/i & v/r1. find one’s way out (aus of)2. fig get out (of)* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (entdecken) find out; trace < fault>2.man fand heraus, dass... — it was found or discovered that...
unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb find one's way out ( aus of)* * *v.to find out v.to spot v.to spy out v. -
4 wielotysięczny
adj* * *a.(o tłumie, manifestacji) of thousands.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > wielotysięczny
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5 thousand
thou·sand [ʼɵaʊzənd] npage/number one \thousand Seite/Nummer [ein]tausend;one \thousand/two \thousand [ein]tausend/zweitausend;as a father, he's one in a \thousand er ist ein fantastischer Vatertwo \thousand and one [das Jahr] zweitausend und einsa \thousand pounds [ein]tausend Pfund\thousands Tausende pl;a crowd of \thousands watched the procession mehrere tausend Menschen kamen zu der Prozession adjdet, attr, inv ( numbering 1000) tausend;I've said it a \thousand times ich habe es jetzt unzählige Male gesagt;PHRASES:the sixty-four \thousand dollar question die [alles] entscheidende Frage -
6 duizendkoppig
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7 een duizendkoppige menigte
een duizendkoppige menigteVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > een duizendkoppige menigte
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8 Schar
f; -, -en; (Menschenmenge) (great) crowd, swarms Pl. (of people); von Vögeln: flock; von Rebhühnern: covey; von Mädchen, Rehen, Lerchen: bevy; von Ameisen: army; von Engeln: host; eine Schar von Kindern etc. auch a horde of children etc.; in ( hellen) Scharen in droves; die Rockfans kamen in Scharen auch hundreds ( oder thousands) of rock fans flocked there, rock fans came in their hundreds ( oder thousands); Pflugschar* * *die Scharregiment; troop; posse; crew; bevy; band; drove; flock; covey* * *I [ʃaːɐ]f -, -encrowd, throng (liter); (von Vögeln) flock; (von Insekten, Heuschrecken etc) swarm; (= Reiterschar, Soldatenschar etc) band, company; (von Jägern) party; (von Pfadfindern) company, troop; (von Engeln) host, band, throng (liter)Scháren von Hausfrauen stürzten sich auf die Sonderangebote — hordes or crowds of housewives descended on the special offers
die Fans verließen das Stadion in (hellen) Scháren — the fans left the stadium in droves
der Partei laufen die Mitglieder in Scháren davon — members are leaving the party in droves
IIdie Menschen kamen in (hellen) Scháren nach Lourdes — people flocked to Lourdes
f -, -en(= Pflugschar) (plough)share (Brit), (plow)share (US)* * *die1) (a group of people: She has cohorts of admirers.) cohort2) (a crowd or collection (of people or animals): A troop of visitors arrived.) troop* * *Schar1<-, -en>[ʃa:ɐ̯]in [hellen] \Scharen in droves [or swarms]Schar2<-, -en>[ʃa:ɐ̯]* * *die; Schar, Scharen crowd; horde; (von Vögeln) flockin [hellen] Scharen — in swarms or droves
* * *Schar f; -, -en; (Menschenmenge) (great) crowd, swarms pl (of people); von Vögeln: flock; von Rebhühnern: covey; von Mädchen, Rehen, Lerchen: bevy; von Ameisen: army; von Engeln: host;in (hellen) Scharen in droves;die Rockfans kamen in Scharen auch hundreds ( oder thousands) of rock fans flocked there, rock fans came in their hundreds ( oder thousands); → Pflugschar* * *die; Schar, Scharen crowd; horde; (von Vögeln) flockin [hellen] Scharen — in swarms or droves
* * *nur sing. f.band n.flock n.shoal n.troop n. -
9 Masse
f; -, -n1. (Materie, ungeformter Stoff) mass2. umg. (große Menge) masses ( oder loads) Pl. of; von Dingen: auch umg. heaps ( oder piles) of; sie verdient eine Masse Geld she earns stacks of money; in Massen in masses; sie kommen in Massen they come in droves; ... in Massen masses of...; Dinge: auch loads ( oder heaps, piles) of...; die Masse bringts it’s quantity that counts3. (Großteil) bulk, majority4. (Menschenmasse) crowd, mass of people; die breite Masse the great mass of the population; die arbeitende Masse the working masses Pl.5. ETECH. earth, Am. ground; etw. an Masse legen earth (Am. ground) s.th.7. PHYS. mass8. JUR. Erbmasse, Konkursmasse etc.; mangels* * *die Masse(Elektrizität) ground; earth;(Menschenmenge) crowd; the masses;(Substanz) mass;(Volumen) shoal; bulk* * *Mạs|se ['masə]f -, -n1) (= Stoff) mass; (COOK) mixtureeine ganze Masse (inf) — a lot, a great deal
sie kamen in wahren Massen — they came in droves, they came in their thousands
die Masse muss es bringen (Comm) — the profit only comes with quantity
die wenigen guten Bücher gehen in der Masse der Neuerscheinungen unter — the few good books are lost in the mass of new titles
3) (= Menschenmenge) crowdin der Masse untertauchen — to disappear into the crowd
der Geschmack der Masse — the taste of the masses
mit der Masse gehen — to go with the flow (inf)
* * *die1) (a mass: a huge body of evidence.) body2) ((great) size or mass: the bulk of a parcel; His huge bulk appeared round the corner.) bulk3) (a large quantity or number: lots of people; She had lots and lots of food left over from the party.) lots4) (a large lump or quantity, gathered together: a mass of concrete/people.) mass5) (a large quantity: I've masses of work / things to do.) mass7) (amount: A large volume of work remains to be done.) volume* * *Mas·se<-, -n>[ˈmasə]f1. (breiiges Material) masseine klebrige/träge \Masse a sticky/viscous mass2. (Backteig) mixture\Massen von Tauben hundreds/thousands, etc. [or fam loads] of pigeonsin \Massen in droves, in their [or AM by the] hundreds/thousands, etc.eine [ganze] \Masse [etw] (fam) a lot [or great deal] [of sth]mangels \Masse ÖKON for lack of assets4. (Mehrheit) majority5. PHYS mass* * *die; Masse, Massen1) mass; (Kochk.) mixture2) (Menge) massdie Masse macht's — (ugs.) it's quantity that's important
sie kamen in Massen — they came in their masses or in droves
das ist eine ganze Masse — (ugs.) that's a lot (coll.) or a great deal
die breite Masse — the bulk or broad mass of the population
4) (Physik) mass* * *1. (Materie, ungeformter Stoff) masssie verdient eine Masse Geld she earns stacks of money;in Massen in masses;sie kommen in Massen they come in droves;die Masse bringts it’s quantity that counts3. (Großteil) bulk, majority4. (Menschenmasse) crowd, mass of people;die breite Masse the great mass of the population;die arbeitende Masse the working masses pl5. ELEK earth, US ground;etwas an Masse legen earth (US ground) sth7. PHYS mass* * *die; Masse, Massen1) mass; (Kochk.) mixture2) (Menge) massdie Masse macht's — (ugs.) it's quantity that's important
sie kamen in Massen — they came in their masses or in droves
das ist eine ganze Masse — (ugs.) that's a lot (coll.) or a great deal
die breite Masse — the bulk or broad mass of the population
4) (Physik) mass* * *-n (elektrisch) f.earth n.ground (US) n. -n f.bulk n.majority n.mass n.(§ pl.: masses)masses n. -
10 remolino
m.1 eddy, whirlpool.2 throng, mass.3 confusion.4 cowlick.5 whirl, eddy, swirl, whirlpool.6 pinwheel.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: remolinar.* * *2 (de pelo) tuft, US cowlick3 (de gente) throng, crowd, mass* * *SM1) [de agua] [pequeño] swirl, eddy; [grande] whirlpool2) [de aire] [pequeño] eddy; (=grande) whirlwind; [de humo, polvo] whirl, cloud3) [de pelo] cowlick4) [de gente] crowd, throng5) (=conmoción) commotion* * *1)a) ( de viento) eddy, whirlb) ( de agua) eddy; ( más violento) whirlpool2) ( en el pelo) cowlick3) (CS) ( juguete) pinwheel (AmE), windmill (BrE)* * *= swirl, whirlpool, whirl.Ex. The spiral begins its downward swirl very early in life when a child has difficulty learning to read.Ex. The most recent drawings refer explicitly to landscapes, with waterfalls, mountains, and whirlpools.Ex. Like a whirl of shiny flakes sparkling in a snow globe, Hubble catches an instantaneous glimpse of many hundreds of thousands of stars.----* formar remolinos = swirl.* remolino de polvo = dust cloud.* * *1)a) ( de viento) eddy, whirlb) ( de agua) eddy; ( más violento) whirlpool2) ( en el pelo) cowlick3) (CS) ( juguete) pinwheel (AmE), windmill (BrE)* * *= swirl, whirlpool, whirl.Ex: The spiral begins its downward swirl very early in life when a child has difficulty learning to read.
Ex: The most recent drawings refer explicitly to landscapes, with waterfalls, mountains, and whirlpools.Ex: Like a whirl of shiny flakes sparkling in a snow globe, Hubble catches an instantaneous glimpse of many hundreds of thousands of stars.* formar remolinos = swirl.* remolino de polvo = dust cloud.* * *A1 (de viento) eddy, whirl2 (de agua) eddy; (más violento) whirlpoolB (en el pelo) cowlick* * *
remolino sustantivo masculino
( más violento) whirlpool
remolino sustantivo masculino
1 (de agua) whirlpool
2 (de aire) whirlwind
3 (de polvo) swirl
4 (en el pelo) cowlick
5 (de gente) crowd, mass
' remolino' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
torbellino
- tragar
- vorágine
- indomable
English:
eddy
- suck in
- swirl
- whirl
- whirlpool
* * *remolino nm1. [de agua] eddy, whirlpool;[de viento] whirlwind; [de humo] swirl2. [de gente] throng, mass3. [de ideas] confusion4. [de pelo] cowlick5. RP [juguete] (toy) windmill* * *remolino de gente fig crowd of people* * *remolino nm1) : whirlwind2) : eddy, whirlpool3) : crowd, throng4) : cowlick -
11 multitud
f.1 crowd.multitud de cosas a huge number of things2 multitude, great number, great quantity, army.* * *1 (de personas) crowd2 (de cosas, ideas) multitude\baño de multitud walkabout* * *noun f.multitude, crowd* * *SF1) (=gentío) crowdla multitud — the crowd, the masses pl
2)multitud de: tengo multitud de cosas que hacer — I've got a mountain of things to do
* * *1) ( muchedumbre) crowd2)multitud DE algo — ( muchos)
* * *= crowd, multitude, throng, horde.Ex. The second example specifies, 'far adj3 crowd', that the two words, 'far' and 'crowd', must appear within 3 words of one another.Ex. It was 'exceedingly inconvenient' because placing the books where they are increases the bulk of the catalogue by occasioning a multitude of long crossreferences.Ex. IFLA-goers joined throngs of Brits to watch the military tattoo as kilted bagpipers and military units from around the world displayed their musical and marching skills.Ex. This article discusses the emergence of front-end computer software to facilitate the needs of the growing hordes of end-users = Este artículo trata de la aparición de los software de interfaz de usuario para facilitar las necesidades de una multitud cada vez mayor de usuarios.----* atraer a la multitud = pack in + the crowds.* atraer multitudes = draw + throngs.* control de multitudes = crowd control.* dirigirse en multitud = beat + the path to.* dos son compañía, tres multitud = two is a company, three is a crowd.* perderse entre la multitud = lose + Reflexivo + amid the crowd.* tres es una multitud = three is a crowd.* una multitud de = a swarm of.* * *1) ( muchedumbre) crowd2)multitud DE algo — ( muchos)
* * *= crowd, multitude, throng, horde.Ex: The second example specifies, 'far adj3 crowd', that the two words, 'far' and 'crowd', must appear within 3 words of one another.
Ex: It was 'exceedingly inconvenient' because placing the books where they are increases the bulk of the catalogue by occasioning a multitude of long crossreferences.Ex: IFLA-goers joined throngs of Brits to watch the military tattoo as kilted bagpipers and military units from around the world displayed their musical and marching skills.Ex: This article discusses the emergence of front-end computer software to facilitate the needs of the growing hordes of end-users = Este artículo trata de la aparición de los software de interfaz de usuario para facilitar las necesidades de una multitud cada vez mayor de usuarios.* atraer a la multitud = pack in + the crowds.* atraer multitudes = draw + throngs.* control de multitudes = crowd control.* dirigirse en multitud = beat + the path to.* dos son compañía, tres multitud = two is a company, three is a crowd.* perderse entre la multitud = lose + Reflexivo + amid the crowd.* tres es una multitud = three is a crowd.* una multitud de = a swarm of.* * *A (muchedumbre) crowduna multitud de usos an enormous variety of uses, a great many different uses* * *
multitud sustantivo femenino
1 ( muchedumbre) crowd
2 multitud DE algo ( muchos):
una multitud de usos an enormous variety of uses
multitud sustantivo femenino
1 (gente) crowd, mass: la multitud aclamó a los astronautas, the crowd applauded the astronauts
2 frml (gran cantidad) multitude: hay una multitud de oportunidades, there are numerous opportunities
' multitud' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acumularse
- agitar
- confundirse
- disgregar
- infinidad
- paso
- perderse
- regimiento
- revolver
- rugido
- sobresalir
- turba
- concentrar
- desbordarse
- disgregarse
- dispersar
- escabullirse
- legión
- romería
- tumulto
English:
admire
- break up
- cheer
- demonstrator
- dent
- flock
- herd
- horde
- host
- inflame
- jeer
- mass
- mob
- multitude
- myriad
- orderly
- pick out
- plough
- push through
- rabble
- roar
- scatter
- sea
- stream
- strong
- swell
- throng
- carry
- crowd
- fancy
- file
- move
* * *multitud nf1. [de personas] crowd2.una multitud de [gran cantidad] a huge number of;tengo una multitud de cosas que hacer I've got a huge number of things to do* * *f crowd;multitud de thousands of* * *multitud nfmuchedumbre: crowd, multitude* * *multitud n crowd -
12 number
I 1. ['nʌmbə(r)]1) numero m.odd, even number — numero dispari, pari
2) (in series) (of bus, house, page, telephone) numero m.3) (amount, quantity) numero m., quantità f.a number of people, times — un certo numero di persone, di volte
to come in large numbers — accorrere numerosi o in gran numero
many, few in number — molti, pochi
they were ten in number — erano dieci (di numero) o in dieci
any number of times — mille volte, molto sovente
4) (group)5) (issue) (of magazine, periodical) numero m.6) mus. (song) pezzo m., brano m.; teatr. numero m.7) colloq. (object of admiration)a little black number — (dress) un bel vestitino nero
8) ling. numero m.2.nome plurale numbers (in company, of army) effettivi m.; (in school) studenti m.; (of crowd) numero m.sing.to win by force o weight of numbers vincere per superiorità numerica; to make up the numbers — fare il conto
••your number's up! — colloq. è giunta la tua ora!
to do sth. by the numbers — AE o
II 1. ['nʌmbə(r)]by numbers — fare qcs. pedissequamente
1) (allocate number to) numerare2) (amount to) contarethe regiment numbered 1,000 men — il reggimento contava 1.000 uomini
3) (include) includere, annoverare4) (be limited)2.* * *1. noun1) ((sometimes abbreviated to no - plural nos - when written in front of a figure) a word or figure showing eg how many of something there are, or the position of something in a series etc: Seven was often considered a magic number; Answer nos 1-10 of exercise 2.) numero2) (a (large) quantity or group (of people or things): He has a number of records; There were a large number of people in the room.) grande numero3) (one issue of a magazine: the autumn number.) numero4) (a popular song or piece of music: He sang his most popular number.) brano, pezzo2. verb1) (to put a number on: He numbered the pages in the top corner.) numerare2) (to include: He numbered her among his closest friends.) includere, annoverare3) (to come to in total: The group numbered ten.) ammontare a•- number-plate
- his days are numbered
- without number* * *I 1. ['nʌmbə(r)]1) numero m.odd, even number — numero dispari, pari
2) (in series) (of bus, house, page, telephone) numero m.3) (amount, quantity) numero m., quantità f.a number of people, times — un certo numero di persone, di volte
to come in large numbers — accorrere numerosi o in gran numero
many, few in number — molti, pochi
they were ten in number — erano dieci (di numero) o in dieci
any number of times — mille volte, molto sovente
4) (group)5) (issue) (of magazine, periodical) numero m.6) mus. (song) pezzo m., brano m.; teatr. numero m.7) colloq. (object of admiration)a little black number — (dress) un bel vestitino nero
8) ling. numero m.2.nome plurale numbers (in company, of army) effettivi m.; (in school) studenti m.; (of crowd) numero m.sing.to win by force o weight of numbers vincere per superiorità numerica; to make up the numbers — fare il conto
••your number's up! — colloq. è giunta la tua ora!
to do sth. by the numbers — AE o
II 1. ['nʌmbə(r)]by numbers — fare qcs. pedissequamente
1) (allocate number to) numerare2) (amount to) contarethe regiment numbered 1,000 men — il reggimento contava 1.000 uomini
3) (include) includere, annoverare4) (be limited)2. -
13 тысячный
1. thousandth, millesimal2. ( из нескольких тысяч) of many thousandsтысячная толпа — a crowd of many thousands, a crowd running into thousands
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14 тысячный
1) ( по счёту) thousandth [-zə-]я повторя́ю э́то в ты́сячный раз — I repeat a thousandth time
2) ( одна тысячная часть) millesimalты́сячная до́ля — one thousandth
3) ( из нескольких тысяч) of many thousands [-zə-] (после сущ.)ты́сячная толпа́ — a crowd of many thousands, a crowd running into thousands
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15 jam
1 noun∎ strawberry jam confiture f de fraises;(b) (traffic jam) bouchon m, embouteillage m, encombrement m∎ there was a great jam of people outside the theatre il y avait une foule énorme devant le théâtre∎ I'm in a bit of a jam je suis plutôt dans le pétrin(tart, pudding, sandwich) à la confiture∎ we were jammed in like sardines on était entassés ou serrés comme des sardines;∎ all my clothes are jammed into one drawer tous mes vêtements sont entassés dans un seul tiroir;∎ I was jammed (up) against the wall j'étais coincé contre le mur;∎ he jammed the gun into his pocket il fourra le pistolet dans sa poche;∎ she jammed her hat on elle enfonça ou vissa son chapeau sur sa tête;∎ to jam one's foot on the brake(s) écraser le frein ou la pédale de frein∎ she jammed the window shut with a wedge elle coinça ou bloqua la fenêtre avec une cale;∎ to jam a door open with a book maintenir une porte ouverte à l'aide d'un livre∎ a crowd of late arrivals jammed the entrance une foule de retardataires bloquait l'entrée;∎ the streets were jammed with cars les rues étaient embouteillées∎ the switchboard was jammed le standard était saturé∎ thousands of people jammed in for the concert des milliers de personnes se sont entassées pour assister au concert(b) (drawer, window, lift etc) se coincer, se bloquer; (gun, machine) s'enrayer, se bloquer; (brakes, wheel, paper in printer) se bloquer∎ I was just jamming c'était juste de l'impro(d) (in mountaineering) faire un verrou, coincer►► British familiar humorous jam sandwich (police car) voiture f de police□ ;familiar jam session bœuf m, jam-session f➲ jam in(a) (wedge in) coincer;∎ the crowd were jamming him in il était coincé par la foule;∎ her car was being jammed in by a large truck un gros camion était en train de la coincer∎ he had jammed as many quotations as he could find into the essay il avait farci sa dissertation de toutes les citations qu'il avait trouvées(crowd in) s'entasser;∎ they all jammed in (into train) ils s'y entassèrent tous;∎ we won't all be able to jam in at once nous n'allons jamais tous tenir à la fois∎ to jam on the brakes écraser le frein ou la pédale de frein(b) (lid, hat etc) enfoncer -
16 тысячная толпа
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > тысячная толпа
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17 turn out
1. transitive verb1) (expel) hinauswerfen (ugs.)turn somebody out of a room/out into the street — jemanden aus einem Zimmer weisen od. (ugs.) werfen/auf die Straße werfen od. setzen
2) (switch off) ausschalten; abdrehen [Gas]3) (incline outwards) nach außen drehen [Füße, Zehen]4) (equip) ausstaffieren6) (Brit.) (empty) ausräumen; ausschütten [Büchse]; leeren [Inhalt eines Koffers, einer Büchse]; stürzen [Götterspeise, Pudding] ( on to auf + Akk.); (clean) [gründlich] aufräumen; (get rid of) wegwerfen2. intransitive verbturn out one's pockets — seine Taschen umdrehen
1) (prove to be)somebody/something turns out to be something — jemand/etwas stellt sich als jemand/etwas heraus od. erweist sich als jemand/etwas
it turns out that... — es stellt sich heraus, dass...
as it turned out, as things turned out — wie sich [nachher] herausstellte
2) (come to be eventually)see how things turn out — sehen, wie sich die Dinge entwickeln
everything turned out well/all right in the end — alles endete gut
3) (end)4) (appear) [Menge, Fans usw.:] erscheinenhe turns out every Saturday to watch his team — er kommt jeden Samstag, um seine Mannschaft zu sehen
* * *2) (to make or produce: The factory turns out ten finished articles an hour.) herstellen3) (to empty or clear: I turned out the cupboard.) ausräumen4) ((of a crowd) to come out; to get together for a (public) meeting, celebration etc: A large crowd turned out to see the procession.) herauskommen5) (to turn off: Turn out the light!) ausschalten6) (to happen or prove to be: He turned out to be right; It turned out that he was right.) sich herausstellen* * *◆ turn outI. vithings didn't really \turn out out the way we wanted die Dinge haben sich nicht so entwickelt, wie wir es uns gewünscht habenhow did it \turn out out? wie ist es gelaufen? famthank God everything \turn outed out well zum Glück war am Ende alles gutit depends how things \turn out out das kommt drauf an, wie sich die Dinge entwickelnthe evening \turn outed out pleasant es wurde ein netter Abendhe \turn outed out to be quite a nice guy am Ende war er doch eigentlich ganz nettit \turn outed out that... es stellte sich heraus, dass...3. (come to) erscheinenthousands \turn outed out for the demonstration against the government's new policy Tausende gingen auf die Straße, um gegen die neue Politik der Regierung zu demonstrierenII. vt1. (switch off)to \turn out out the gas das Gas abstellento \turn out out a lamp/the radio/the TV eine Lampe/das Radio/den Fernseher ausschalten [o ausmachen] [o SCHWEIZ a. abstellen]to \turn out out the light[s] das Licht ausmachen [o ÖSTERR abdrehen2. (kick out)3. (empty contents)▪ to \turn out out ⇆ sth etw [aus]leerento \turn out out one's pockets die Taschen umdrehen4. (manufacture, produce)▪ to \turn out out ⇆ sth etw produzieren▪ to \turn out out ⇆ sb specialists, experts jdn hervorbringenhe \turn outs out about ten articles a week for the paper er schreibt in der Woche etwa zehn Artikel für die Zeitungto \turn out out sth by the dozens/hundreds/thousands etw dutzendweise/in großer Zahl/in Unmengen produzieren5. FOOD▪ to \turn out out ⇆ sth cake, jelly etw stürzenshe \turn outs her feet out sie läuft nach außen7. (clean)8. MILto \turn out the guard out die Wache antreten lassenhe is normally \turn outed out very smartly meistens zieht er sich sehr schick an* * *A v/t1. hinauswerfen, wegjagen, vertreiben2. entlassen (of aus einem Amt etc)3. eine Regierung stürzen4. Vieh auf die Weide treiben5. seine Taschen umdrehen, -stülpen6. einen Schrank, ein Zimmer etc ausräumenb) pej Bücher etc produzierenc) fig Wissenschaftler etc hervorbringen (Universität etc):Oxford has turned out many statesmen aus Oxford sind schon viele Staatsmänner hervorgegangen10. ausstatten, herrichten, besonders kleiden:well turned-out gut gekleidet11. MILa) antreten lassenb) die Wache heraustreten lassenB v/i1. a) hinausziehen, -gehenb) MIL ausrücken (auch Feuerwehr etc)d) MIL antretene) WIRTSCH besonders Br in Streik tretenf) (aus dem Bett) aufstehen2. herauskommen (of aus)4. sich gestalten, gut etc ausgehen, ablaufen5. sich erweisen oder entpuppen als, sich herausstellen:he turned out (to be) a good swimmer er entpuppte sich als guter Schwimmer;she turned out to be right es stellte sich heraus, dass sie recht hatte;it turned out that he had never been there es stellte sich heraus, dass er nie dort gewesen war* * *1. transitive verb1) (expel) hinauswerfen (ugs.)turn somebody out of a room/out into the street — jemanden aus einem Zimmer weisen od. (ugs.) werfen/auf die Straße werfen od. setzen
2) (switch off) ausschalten; abdrehen [Gas]3) (incline outwards) nach außen drehen [Füße, Zehen]4) (equip) ausstaffieren5) (produce) produzieren; hervorbringen [Fachkräfte, Spezialisten]; (in great quantities) ausstoßen6) (Brit.) (empty) ausräumen; ausschütten [Büchse]; leeren [Inhalt eines Koffers, einer Büchse]; stürzen [Götterspeise, Pudding] ( on to auf + Akk.); (clean) [gründlich] aufräumen; (get rid of) wegwerfen2. intransitive verbsomebody/something turns out to be something — jemand/etwas stellt sich als jemand/etwas heraus od. erweist sich als jemand/etwas
it turns out that... — es stellt sich heraus, dass...
as it turned out, as things turned out — wie sich [nachher] herausstellte
see how things turn out — sehen, wie sich die Dinge entwickeln
everything turned out well/all right in the end — alles endete gut
3) (end)4) (appear) [Menge, Fans usw.:] erscheinenhe turns out every Saturday to watch his team — er kommt jeden Samstag, um seine Mannschaft zu sehen
* * *v.ausfallen v.hinauswerfen v.produzieren v. -
18 тысячная толпа
a crowd of many thousands, a crowd running into thousands of thousand(s) -
19 olor
m.1 smell.tener olor a to smell oflos niños acudieron al olor de la comida the children were drawn to the smell of cookingolor corporal body odor2 odor, fragrance, smell, perfume.* * *1 smell\al olor de attracted byen olor de santidad like a saintolor corporal body odour* * *noun m.odor, smell* * *SM1) [gen] smell (a of)mal olor — bad smell, nasty smell
olor a sudor — smell of sweat, body odour o (EEUU) odor, B.O. *
olor corporal — body odour o (EEUU) odor, B.O. *
2) (=atracción) smell3) (=fama)* * *masculino smelltomarle el olor a algo — (AmL) to smell something
en olor de multitud(es): fue recibido en olor de multitud he was welcomed by a huge crowd; en olor de santidad: vivir en olor de santidad to lead the life of a saint; morir en olor de santidad — to die a saint
* * *= smell, odour [odor, -USA], scent.Ex. Without the ability to select when faced with these choices we would be like demented dogs chasing every attractive smell that reaches our noses in complete confusion of purpose.Ex. Since 1946 multidimensional statistical methods have been applied to odour characterization and classification.Ex. Various animals, including humans, are able to distinguish among individuals by scent.----* con olor a ajo = garlicky.* con olor a cerrado = musty [mustier -comp., mustiest -sup.], mousy [mousier -comp., mousiest -sup.].* con olor a fruta = fruity [fruitier -comp., fruitiest -sup.].* con olor a humedad = musty [mustier -comp., mustiest -sup.], mousy [mousier -comp., mousiest -sup.].* con olor a orina = urinous.* con olor a polvo = dust smelling.* de olor agradable = sweet-smelling.* de olor a podrido = rotten smelling.* de olor fuerte = strong-smelling.* mal olor = stench.* olor a fruta = fruitiness.* olor corporal = body scent.* olor fuerte y penetrante = tang.* sin olor = odourless [odorless, -USA].* * *masculino smelltomarle el olor a algo — (AmL) to smell something
en olor de multitud(es): fue recibido en olor de multitud he was welcomed by a huge crowd; en olor de santidad: vivir en olor de santidad to lead the life of a saint; morir en olor de santidad — to die a saint
* * *= smell, odour [odor, -USA], scent.Ex: Without the ability to select when faced with these choices we would be like demented dogs chasing every attractive smell that reaches our noses in complete confusion of purpose.
Ex: Since 1946 multidimensional statistical methods have been applied to odour characterization and classification.Ex: Various animals, including humans, are able to distinguish among individuals by scent.* con olor a ajo = garlicky.* con olor a cerrado = musty [mustier -comp., mustiest -sup.], mousy [mousier -comp., mousiest -sup.].* con olor a fruta = fruity [fruitier -comp., fruitiest -sup.].* con olor a humedad = musty [mustier -comp., mustiest -sup.], mousy [mousier -comp., mousiest -sup.].* con olor a orina = urinous.* con olor a polvo = dust smelling.* de olor agradable = sweet-smelling.* de olor a podrido = rotten smelling.* de olor fuerte = strong-smelling.* mal olor = stench.* olor a fruta = fruitiness.* olor corporal = body scent.* olor fuerte y penetrante = tang.* sin olor = odourless [odorless, -USA].* * *smell¡qué olor más bueno/horrible! what a lovely/horrible smell!tiene un olor raro it smells strange, it has a strange smell to ittomarle el olor a algo ( AmL); to smell sth¡qué rico olor! ( AmL); what a lovely smell!olor A algo smell OF sth¡qué olor a comida hay aquí! there's a strong smell of food (in) here!tiene olor a queso it smells of cheeseen olor de multitud: fue recibido en olor de multitud he was welcomed by a huge crowden olor de santidad: vivir en olor de santidad to lead the life of a saintmorir en olor de santidad to die a saintCompuesto:* * *
olor sustantivo masculino
smell;
tomarle el olor a algo (AmL) to smell sth;
olor A algo smell of sth
olor sustantivo masculino smell: el olor a humedad me disgusta, I don't like the smell of damp
estas rosas no tienen olor, these roses don't smell of anything
' olor' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ácida
- ácido
- acritud
- apestar
- apestosa
- apestoso
- atufar
- cantar
- corporal
- desagradable
- desprender
- echar
- estercolar
- graja
- grajo
- inconfundible
- olfatear
- penetrar
- penetrante
- peste
- soltar
- tufo
- agradable
- asqueroso
- clavo
- descomponer
- despedir
- feo
- fetidez
- fuerte
- ligero
- percibir
- pestilente
- podrido
- repugnante
- repulsivo
- rico
- sentir
- tumbar
English:
acrid
- cling
- detect
- detection
- distinct
- emit
- exude
- fishy
- fluid
- foul
- fruity
- give off
- linger
- lingering
- nasty
- obnoxious
- obtrusive
- odor
- odour
- of
- offensive
- overpower
- pervade
- pervasive
- powerful
- pungent
- put off
- scent
- sharp
- sickening
- smell
- smoky
- sweet
- sweetness
- unmistakable
- vile
- clove
- high
- stink
- tang
- waft
* * *olor nmlos niños acudieron al olor de la comida the children were drawn to the smell of cooking;miles de jóvenes aspirantes acuden a Hollywood al olor de la fama thousands of young hopefuls come to Hollywood looking for fame;Famen olor de multitudes enjoying popular acclaim;vivir/morir en olor de santidad to live/die like a saintRP Fam olor a chivo BO;olor corporal body odour* * *mscent2:en olor de santidad like a saint;fue acogido en olor de multitud(es) he was received by a huge crowd* * *olor nm: smell, odor* * *olor n smell -
20 ÞÚSUND
(pl. -ir), f. thousand.* * *f.; sérhverja þúsund, Stj. 298; á þúsund (dat.), Sks. 705; tvær, þrjár … þúsundir, 623. 53: in mod. usage it is mostly neut. (influenced by Latin?), but also fem. It is spelt þús-hund, Barl. 53; þús-hundum, Fms. vi. 409 (v. l.), Geisli 49; another form þús-hundrað (q. v.) is freq., esp. in Stj., Barl.; this double form -hund and -hundrað answers to the equally double form of ‘hundred,’ see p. 292, and is a proof that þúsund is a compound word, the latter part of which is ‘hund’ or ‘hundred;’ the etymology of the former part ‘þús’ is less certain; it is, we believe, akin to þysja, þyss, þaus-nir (a lost strong verb þúsa, þaus, þusu); þúsund would thus literally mean a swarm of hundreds: [in Goth. the gender varies, þûsundi, pl. þusundjos = χίλιοι, or þusundja, neut.; A. S. þûsend; Engl. thousand; O. H. G. dusunta; Germ. tausend, qs. dausend; Swed. tusende and tusen; Dan. tusinde; Dutch tuysend: this word is also common to the Slavon. languages: again, the Lapp, duhat and Finn. tuhat are no doubt borrowed from the Slavon. or Scandin.; the Gr., Lat., and Sansk. use other words]—a thousand.B. There is little doubt that with the ancient heathen Scandinavians (and perhaps all Teutons), before their contact with the civilised southern people, the notion of numbers was limited, and that their thousand was not a definite number, but a vague term, denoting a swarm, crowd, host (cp. the Gr. μυρίοι): in ancient lays it occurs thrice (Hkv., Em., Fas. i. 502), but indefinitely; hvat þrym er þar sem þúsund bifisk eðr mengi til mikit, what a din is there as if a thousand were shaking, or an over-mickle multitude, Em. 2; sjau þúsundir, Hkv. 1. 49, literally = seven thousands, but in fact meaning seven hosts of men.2. the dat. pl. þúsundum is, like huudruðum, used adverbially = by thousands, in countless numbers, Fms. vi. 409 (in a verse), Geisli 49.3. in the ancient popular literature, uninfluenced by southern writers, ‘þúsund,’ as a definite number, occurs, we think, not half-a-dozen times. As the multiple of ten duodecimal hundreds, ere the decimal hundred was adopted, ‘þnsund’ would mean twelve decimal hundreds; and such is its use in the Sverris Saga, Fms. viii. 40, where one vellum says ‘tvær þúsundir,’ whilst the others, by a more idiomatic phrase, call it ‘twenty hundreds.’II. in ecclesiastical writers, and in annals influenced by the Latin and the like, it is frequent enough; tíu þúsundir, fjórtán þúsundir, Fms. i. 107, 108 (annalistic records); fimm þúsundir, xi. 386, Al. 111; tíu þúsundum, Sks. 705; tíu þúsundum sinna hundrað þúsunda, Hom.; þúsund þúsunda, a thousand of thousands, i. e. a million, (mod.); hundrað þúsundir rasta ok átta tigir þúsunda, … hundrað þúsund mílna, Fb. i. 31 (in the legend of Eric the Far-traveller and Paradise, taken from some church-legend); fjórar þúsundir, Þiðr. 234: or of the years of the world, sex þúsundir vetra, Fs. 197; sjau þúsundir vetra, Landn. 34.C. REMARKS.—The popular way of counting high numbers was not by thousands, but by tens (decades) and duodecimal hundreds as factors; thus ten … twenty hundreds, and then going on three, four, five, six … tens of hundreds (a ‘ten of hundreds’ being = 1200). The following references may illustrate this—tíu hundruð, ellefu hundruð, tólf hundruð, þrettán hundruð, fimtán hundruð …, Íb. 17, Ó. H. 119, 201, Fms. vii. 295, xi. 383, 385. From twenty and upwards—tuttugu hundrað manna, twenty hundreds of men, Fms. vii. 324, viii. 40; hálfr þriðitugr hundraða skipa, two tens and a half hundreds of ships, i. e. twenty-five hundreds, Fas. i. 378; þrjá tigu hundraða manna, three tens of hundreds of men, Fms. viii. 311; var skorat manntal, hafði hann meirr enn þrjá tigu hundraða manna, vii. 204; þrír tigir hundraða, D. N. v. 18; user fjorir tigir hundraða manna, nearly four tens of hundreds of men, Fms. vii. 275; á fimta tigi hundraða, on the fifth ten of hundreds, i. e. from four to five tens of hundreds, viii. 321; sex tigir hundraða, six tens of hundreds, 311, xi. 390; sex tigu hundraða manna, Fb. ii. 518, D. I. i. 350,—all odd amounts being neglected. The highest number recorded as actually reckoned in this way is ‘six tens of hundreds’ (fimtán tigir hundraða, fifteen tens of hundreds, Fms. viii. 321, v. l., is a scribe’s error): it is probable that no reckoning exceeded twelve tens of hundreds. All high multiples were unintelligible to the ancients; the number of the Einherjar in Walhalla is in the old lay Gm. thus expressed,—there are ‘five hundred doors in Walhalla, and five tens beside (the ‘five tens’ are, by the way, merely added for alliteration’s sake), and eight hundred Einherjar will walk out of each door when they go out to fight the Wolf’ (on the Day of final Doom). There seems to have been some dim exaggerated notion of a definite thousand in an ancient lay, only preserved in a half alliterative prose paraphrase, Fas. i. 502, where a mythical host is given thus,—there were thirty-three phalanxes, each of five ‘thousand,’ each thousand of thirteen hundreds, each hundred four times counted. The armies in the battle of Brawalla, the greatest of the mythical age, are given, not in numbers, but by the space the ranks occupied, Skjöld. S. ch. 8. This resembles the story in Ó. H. ch. 59, of the two young brothers, king’s sons: when asked what they would like to have most of, the one said: ‘Cows.’ ‘And how many?’ ‘As many,’ said he, ‘as could stand packed in a row round the lake (Mjösen in Norway) and drink.’ ‘But you?’ they asked the other boy: ‘House-carles’ (soldiers), said he. ‘And how many?’ ‘As many,’ said he, ‘as would in one meal eat up all my brother’s cows.’ Add also the tale of the King and the Giant, and the number of the giant’s house-carles, Maurer’s Volksagen 306. No less elementary was the rule for division and fractions, of which a remarkable instance is preserved in an ancient Icelandic deed, called Spákonu-arfr, published in D. I. i. 305. See also the words tigr, hundrað, skor, skora, and the remarks in Gramm. p. xix. The Homeric numeration, as set forth in Mr. Gladstone’s Homeric Studies, vol. iii, p. 425 sqq., is highly interesting, and bears a striking resemblance to that of the ancient Scandinavians. We may notice that in Iceland land and property are still divided into hundreds (hundreds of ells = 120), see hundrað B; in this case a thousand is never used, but units and hundreds of hundreds as factors, thus, sex tögu hundraða, in Reykh. Máld, (a deed of the 12th century), and so still in mod. usage; a wealthy man of the 15th century is said to have bequeathed to his daughters in land, ‘tólf hundruð hundraða ok ellefu-tíu og tvau hundruð betr, en í lausafé fimm hundruð hundraða,’ i. e. twelve hundreds of hundreds and ‘eleventy’ and two hundreds, and in movables five hundreds of hundreds, Feðga-æfi 16 (by the learned Bogi Benidiktsson of Staðarfell in Iceland, A. D. 1771–1849); sjau hundruð hundraða og þrjátigi hundruð betr, 21; hann eptir-lét börnum sínum fjármuni upp á níu hundruð hundraða, 22,—a proof that in very remote times, when this valuation of land first took place, ‘thousand’ was still unknown as a definite number.
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Lajos Kossuth — (IPA2|ˈlɒjoʃ ˈkoʃut, Monok, September 19, 1802 ndash; Turin, March 20, 1894) was a Hungarian lawyer, politician and Regent President of Hungary in 1849. He was widely honored during his lifetime, including in the United Kingdom and the United… … Wikipedia