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101 meilenweit
II Adv. for miles (and miles); meilenweit entfernt von auch fig. miles (away) from; meilenweit voneinander entfernt miles apart; fig. auch worlds apart* * *mei|len|weit1. adjof many milesméílenweite Sandstrände — miles and miles of sandy beaches
2. advfor milesméílenweit auseinander/entfernt (lit, fig) — miles apart/away
* * *mei·len·weit[ˈmailənvait]\meilenweit entfernt miles [and miles fam] away* * *1. 2.adverbial for milesmeilenweit entfernt — (auch fig.) miles away ( von from)
* * *in meilenweiter Entfernung many miles awayB. adv for miles (and miles);meilenweit entfernt von auch fig miles (away) from;meilenweit voneinander entfernt miles apart; fig auch worlds apart* * *1. 2.adverbial for milesmeilenweit entfernt — (auch fig.) miles away ( von from)
* * *präp.for miles expr. -
102 mil
adj.1 thousand, a thousand.2 thousandth.f. & m.thousand.dos mil two thousandmil años/pesos a thousand years/pesosmil cien one thousand one hundredmil y una/uno (figurative) a thousand and onemil y un detalles a hundred and one detailstengo mil cosas que hacer I've got loads of things to do;m.thousand, a thousand.* * *► adjetivo1 thousand2 (milésimo) thousandth1 a thousand, one thousand\el año dos mil the year two thousandlas Mil y Una Noches the Arabian Nights* * *1. adj. 2. noun m.a thousand, one thousand* * *ADJ INV PRON SM a o one thousandseismil veces — a thousand times, thousands of times
* * *Iadjetivo invariable/pronombre thousandmil quinientos pesos — fifteen hundred pesos, one thousand five hundred pesos
20 mil millones — 20 billion (AmE), 20 thousand million (BrE)
IIestar/ponerse a mil — (Col, Ven fam) ( nervioso) to be/get uptight (colloq); ( furioso) to be/get hopping mad (colloq)
masculino (number) one thousandse lo he dicho miles de veces — I've told him hundreds o thousands of times
* * *= thousand.Ex. They have literally changed thousands of sexist job titles.----* a las mil maravillas = marvellously [marvelously, -USA], famously, like a house on fire.* cientos de miles = hundreds of thousands, tens of thousands.* dar cien mil vueltas = beat + Nombre + hands down, win + hands down.* darle cien mil vueltas a Alguien = knock + spots off + Nombre.* decenas de miles = tens of thousands.* durante miles de años = for aeons and aeons, for aeons.* funcionar a las mil maravillas = work + a treat, work like + a charm.* hace miles de años = aeons ago.* ir a las mil maravillas = go + great guns, go from + strength to strength, grow from + strength to strength, be fine and dandy.* llevarse a las mil maravillas con + Nombre = get on with + Nombre + swimmingly.* llevarse a las mis maravillas = get along/on + like a house on fire.* marchar a las mil maravillas = go + great guns, go from + strength to strength, grow from + strength to strength, be fine and dandy.* miles = oodles.* miles de = thousands of, myriad, many hundreds of.* miles de años = aeon [eon], thousands of years.* mil millones = billion.* ponerse de mil colores = go + bright red.* que no se rompe en mil pedazos = shatterproof.* salir a las mil maravillas = work + a treat, come up + a treat, go down + a treat.* una imagen vale más que mil palabras = a picture is worth more than ten thousand words.* una imagen vale mil palabras = every picture tells a story.* uno entre mil = one of a thousand.* * *Iadjetivo invariable/pronombre thousandmil quinientos pesos — fifteen hundred pesos, one thousand five hundred pesos
20 mil millones — 20 billion (AmE), 20 thousand million (BrE)
IIestar/ponerse a mil — (Col, Ven fam) ( nervioso) to be/get uptight (colloq); ( furioso) to be/get hopping mad (colloq)
masculino (number) one thousandse lo he dicho miles de veces — I've told him hundreds o thousands of times
* * *= thousand.Ex: They have literally changed thousands of sexist job titles.
* a las mil maravillas = marvellously [marvelously, -USA], famously, like a house on fire.* cientos de miles = hundreds of thousands, tens of thousands.* dar cien mil vueltas = beat + Nombre + hands down, win + hands down.* darle cien mil vueltas a Alguien = knock + spots off + Nombre.* decenas de miles = tens of thousands.* durante miles de años = for aeons and aeons, for aeons.* funcionar a las mil maravillas = work + a treat, work like + a charm.* hace miles de años = aeons ago.* ir a las mil maravillas = go + great guns, go from + strength to strength, grow from + strength to strength, be fine and dandy.* llevarse a las mil maravillas con + Nombre = get on with + Nombre + swimmingly.* llevarse a las mis maravillas = get along/on + like a house on fire.* marchar a las mil maravillas = go + great guns, go from + strength to strength, grow from + strength to strength, be fine and dandy.* miles = oodles.* miles de = thousands of, myriad, many hundreds of.* miles de años = aeon [eon], thousands of years.* mil millones = billion.* ponerse de mil colores = go + bright red.* que no se rompe en mil pedazos = shatterproof.* salir a las mil maravillas = work + a treat, come up + a treat, go down + a treat.* una imagen vale más que mil palabras = a picture is worth more than ten thousand words.* una imagen vale mil palabras = every picture tells a story.* uno entre mil = one of a thousand.* * *mil1adj inv/pronthousandmil quinientos pesos fifteen hundred pesos, one thousand five hundred pesosel año mil the year one thousandLas mil y una noches ( Lit) the Arabian Nightsse lo he dicho una y mil veces I've told him a thousand timestengo mil cosas que hacer I have a thousand and one things to doa las mil quinientas or a las mil y una very lateestar/ponerse a mil ( Col fam) (nervioso) to be/get uptight ( colloq) (furioso) to be/get hopping mad ( colloq)mil2(number) one thousandel dos por mil de la población two per thousand of the population, zero o nought point two percent of the populationse lo he dicho miles de veces I've told him hundreds o thousands of times* * *
mil adj inv/pron
thousand;
20 mil millones 20 billion (AmE), 20 thousand million (BrE);
tengo mil cosas que hacer I have a thousand and one things to do
■ sustantivo masculino
(number) one thousand
mil adjetivo & sustantivo masculino thousand
mil millones, a billion
mil personas, a o one thousand people
' mil' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
A
- acoquinar
- acto
- alcanzar
- alistar
- alistarse
- amotinarse
- amotinar
- aterrorizar
- avanzadilla
- baja
- bajo
- base
- batirse
- billete
- brecha
- brigada
- caballería
- cabeza
- cabida
- cabo
- cadete
- caída
- caído
- cambio
- campaña
- campo
- cañón
- capacidad
- capitán
- capitana
- capitanear
- capitular
- capitulación
- capote
- carga
- carro
- catapulta
- cerca
- cerco
- civil
- clavar
- cobertura
- columna
- comandante
- comando
- combate
- comodoro
- compañía
- conflagración
English:
about-face
- about-turn
- action
- advance
- airborne
- and
- anonymous
- antipersonnel
- arena
- arm
- assault
- AWOL
- barracks
- barrage
- base
- baton
- battle
- be
- beat
- billion
- blank
- bombshell
- bowdlerize
- brass
- brief
- bunker
- cadet
- call up
- capture
- casualty
- charge
- colour
- command
- commander
- commanding officer
- cool
- corporal
- corps
- cruise missile
- decorate
- deploy
- depot
- desert
- desertion
- detachment
- detail
- dig in
- disarmament
- disengage
- dispatch
* * *mil númthousand;dos mil two thousand;mil pesos a thousand pesos;miles de dólares thousands of dollars;mil cien one thousand one hundred;miles (de) [gran cantidad] thousands (of);tengo mil cosas que hacer I've got loads of things to do;RP Fama mil: estar a mil to be rushed off one's feet;ponerse a mil to go flat out;ver también treinta* * *I adj thousandII m thousand;a miles by the thousands* * *mil adj: thousandmil nm: one thousand, a thousand* * *mil num thousandmiles de... thousands of... -
103 kilometerweit
Adj. kilometerlang* * *ki|lo|me|ter|weit1. adjmiles longin kilométerweiter Entfernung — miles away in the distance
2. advfor miles (and miles)man konnte kilométerweit sehen — you could see for miles (and miles)
* * *ki·lo·me·ter·weitsie machen gern[e] \kilometerweite Wanderungen they like taking walks which last for many miles [or walking for milesII. adv for miles [and miles]von der Bergkuppe kann man \kilometerweit sehen you can see for kilometres [or miles] from the top of the mountain* * *1. 2.adverbial for miles [and miles]* * ** * *1.Adjektiv; nicht präd2.adverbial for miles [and miles] -
104 La vitesse
En anglais, on mesure couramment la vitesse des trains, des avions et des automobiles en miles à l’heure, même si les compteurs indiquent aussi les kilomètres.30 miles à l’heure valent environ 50 km/h50 miles à l’heure valent environ 80 km/h80 miles à l’heure valent environ 130 km/h100 miles à l’heure valent environ 160 km/hNoter qu’on écrit -metre en anglais britannique, et -meter en anglais américain.50 kilomètres à l’heure= 50 kilometres an hour ou 50 kilometres per hour100 km/h100 miles à l’heure= 100 mph ( dire miles an hour), = 160 km/hà quelle vitesse la voiture roulait-elle?= what speed was the car going at? ou how fast was the car going?elle roulait à 150 km/h= it was going at 150 kphelle roulait à quatre-vingts à l’heure= it was going at fifty (50 miles à l’heure), it was going at 80 kphla voiture faisait du combien?= what was the car doing?elle faisait du 160 (km/h)= it was doing a hundred (mph), it was doing 160 kphfaire du 160 à l’heure= to do a hundred (mph) ou to do 160 kphà une vitesse de 80 km/h= at a speed of 50 mph, at a speed of 80 kphNoter l’absence d’équivalent anglais de la préposition française de avant le chiffre dans:la vitesse de la voiture était de 160 km/h= the speed of the car was 100 mph, the speed of the car was 160 kphà peu près 80 km/h= about 50 mph, about 80 kphpresque 80 km/h= almost 50 mph, almost 80 kphplus de 70 km/h= more than 45 mph, more than 70 kphmoins de 85 km/h= less than 55 mph, less than 85 kphA va plus vite que B= A is faster than BB roulait moins vite que A= B was going slower than AA va aussi vite que B= A is as fast as BA roulait à la même vitesse que B= A was going at the same speed as BA et B vont à la même vitesse= A and B go at the same speedLa vitesse du son et de la lumièrele son se déplace à 330 m/s= sound travels at 330 metres per second ( dire three hundred and thirty metres per second)la vitesse de la lumière est de 300 000 km/s= the speed of light is 186,300 miles per second -
105 aguas territoriales
f.pl.territorial waters, home waters, maritime waters, territorial sea.* * *(n.) = territorial waters, territorial waters, home watersEx. With the present trend to extending territorial waters, from three miles to twelve miles to two hundred miles, cataloguers are going to need a geopolitical atlas to make some decisions, together with an accurate ruler.Ex. Territorial waters is a belt of coastal waters extending at most twelve nautical miles from a country's coast.Ex. It is not surprising, quite the contrary, that the war has at last been brought to our home waters.* * *(n.) = territorial waters, territorial waters, home watersEx: With the present trend to extending territorial waters, from three miles to twelve miles to two hundred miles, cataloguers are going to need a geopolitical atlas to make some decisions, together with an accurate ruler.
Ex: Territorial waters is a belt of coastal waters extending at most twelve nautical miles from a country's coast.Ex: It is not surprising, quite the contrary, that the war has at last been brought to our home waters. -
106 Telford, Thomas
[br]b. 9 August 1757 Glendinning, Dumfriesshire, Scotlandd. 2 September 1834 London, England.[br]Scottish civil engineer.[br]Telford was the son of a shepherd, who died when the boy was in his first year. Brought up by his mother, Janet Jackson, he attended the parish school at Westerkirk. He was apprenticed to a stonemason in Lochmaben and to another in Langholm. In 1780 he walked from Eskdale to Edinburgh and in 1872 rode to London on a horse that he was to deliver there. He worked for Sir William Chambers as a mason on Somerset House, then on the Eskdale house of Sir James Johnstone. In 1783–4 he worked on the new Commissioner's House and other buildings at Portsmouth dockyard.In late 1786 Telford was appointed County Surveyor for Shropshire and moved to Shrewsbury Castle, with work initially on the new infirmary and County Gaol. He designed the church of St Mary Magdalene, Bridgnorth, and also the church at Madley. Telford built his first bridge in 1790–2 at Montford; between 1790 and 1796 he built forty-five road bridges in Shropshire, including Buildwas Bridge. In September 1793 he was appointed general agent, engineer and architect to the Ellesmere Canal, which was to connect the Mersey and Dee rivers with the Severn at Shrewsbury; William Jessop was Principal Engineer. This work included the Pont Cysyllte aqueduct, a 1,000 ft (305 m) long cast-iron trough 127 ft (39 m) above ground level, which entailed an on-site ironworks and took ten years to complete; the aqueduct is still in use today. In 1800 Telford put forward a plan for a new London Bridge with a single cast-iron arch with a span of 600 ft (183 m) but this was not built.In 1801 Telford was appointed engineer to the British Fisheries Society "to report on Highland Communications" in Scotland where, over the following eighteen years, 920 miles (1,480 km) of new roads were built, 280 miles (450 km) of the old military roads were realigned and rebuilt, over 1,000 bridges were constructed and much harbour work done, all under Telford's direction. A further 180 miles (290 km) of new roads were also constructed in the Lowlands of Scotland. From 1804 to 1822 he was also engaged on the construction of the Caledonian Canal: 119 miles (191 km) in all, 58 miles (93 km) being sea loch, 38 miles (61 km) being Lochs Lochy, Oich and Ness, 23 miles (37 km) having to be cut.In 1808 he was invited by King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden to assist Count Baltzar von Platen in the survey and construction of a canal between the North Sea and the Baltic. Telford surveyed the 114 mile (183 km) route in six weeks; 53 miles (85 km) of new canal were to be cut. Soon after the plans for the canal were completed, the King of Sweden created him a Knight of the Order of Vasa, an honour that he would have liked to have declined. At one time some 60,000 soldiers and seamen were engaged on the work, Telford supplying supervisors, machinery—including an 8 hp steam dredger from the Donkin works and machinery for two small paddle boats—and ironwork for some of the locks. Under his direction an ironworks was set up at Motala, the foundation of an important Swedish industrial concern which is still flourishing today. The Gotha Canal was opened in September 1832.In 1811 Telford was asked to make recommendations for the improvement of the Shrewsbury to Holyhead section of the London-Holyhead road, and in 1815 he was asked to survey the whole route from London for a Parliamentary Committee. Construction of his new road took fifteen years, apart from the bridges at Conway and over the Menai Straits, both suspension bridges by Telford and opened in 1826. The Menai bridge had a span of 579 ft (176 m), the roadway being 153 ft (47 m) above the water level.In 1817 Telford was appointed Engineer to the Exchequer Loan Commission, a body set up to make capital loans for deserving projects in the hard times that followed after the peace of Waterloo. In 1820 he became the first President of the Engineers Institute, which gained its Royal Charter in 1828 to become the Institution of Civil Engineers. He was appointed Engineer to the St Katharine's Dock Company during its construction from 1825 to 1828, and was consulted on several early railway projects including the Liverpool and Manchester as well as a number of canal works in the Midlands including the new Harecastle tunnel, 3,000 ft (914 m) long.Telford led a largely itinerant life, living in hotels and lodgings, acquiring his own house for the first time in 1821, 24 Abingdon Street, Westminster, which was partly used as a school for young civil engineers. He died there in 1834, after suffering in his later years from the isolation of deafness. He was buried in Westminster Abbey.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRSE 1803. Knight of the Order of Vasa, Sweden 1808. FRS 1827. First President, Engineers Insitute 1820.Further ReadingL.T.C.Rolt, 1979, Thomas Telford, London: Penguin.C.Hadfield, 1993, Thomas Telford's Temptation, London: M. \& M.Baldwin.IMcN -
107 Tachometerstand
m mileage, odometer reading, number of kilomet|res (Am. -ers) ( oder miles) on the clock; beim Tachometerstand von 10.000 km at 10000 km ( oder 6000 miles), after clocking up 10,000 km ( oder 6000 miles)* * *Ta|cho|me|ter|stand1. m Ta|cho|stand2. m (inf)mileage, number of kilometres (Brit) or kilometers (US)/miles on the clockbeim Tachométerstand von 10.000 km — at 10,000 km, after clocking up 10,000 km
* * *Ta·cho·me·ter·standm speedometer-reading* * *Tachometerstand m mileage, odometer reading, number of kilometres (US -ers) ( oder miles) on the clock; -
108 ido
adj.1 absent-minded, distracted.2 lost.past part.past participle of spanish verb: ir.* * *► adjetivo1 (loco) mad2 (despistado) absent-minded\* * *SM ABR Esp= Instituto de Denominaciones de Origen* * *ida adjetivo [estar]a) ( distraído)b) (fam) ( loco) crazy* * *= potty [pottier -comp., pottiest -sup.], daffy [daffier -comp., daffiest -sup.], daft [dafter -comp., daftest -sup.].Ex. The press may be free, but the system is potty.Ex. This isn't as daffy as it seems to us as we hustle about on the verge of the third millennium.Ex. Ranking among the dafter exercises sometimes imposed on children is the one that requires them to describe a screwdriver or a vase or the desks they sit at, or any familiar object.* * *ida adjetivo [estar]a) ( distraído)b) (fam) ( loco) crazy* * *= potty [pottier -comp., pottiest -sup.], daffy [daffier -comp., daffiest -sup.], daft [dafter -comp., daftest -sup.].Ex: The press may be free, but the system is potty.
Ex: This isn't as daffy as it seems to us as we hustle about on the verge of the third millennium.Ex: Ranking among the dafter exercises sometimes imposed on children is the one that requires them to describe a screwdriver or a vase or the desks they sit at, or any familiar object.* * *ido, ida1 [ ESTAR](distraído): ¿pero qué te pasa? estás como ido what's the matter with you? you seem to be miles awayuna mirada ida a faraway lookel pobre está ido the poor guy's crazy o ( colloq) not all there* * *
Del verbo ir: ( conjugate ir)
ido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
ido
ir
ido,
estás como ido you seem miles away
ir ( conjugate ir) verbo intransitivo
1
iban a caballo/a pie they were on horseback/on foot;
ido por mar to go by sea;
¡Fernando! — ¡voy! Fernando! — (just) coming! o I'll be right there!;
el ido y venir de los invitados the coming and going of the guests;
vamos a casa let's go home;
¿adónde va este tren? where's this train going (to)?;
ido de compras/de caza to go shopping/hunting;
ya vamos para allá we're on our way;
¿por dónde se va a …? how do you get to …?;
ido por or (Esp) a por algo/algn to go to get sth/sb;
voy (a) por pan I'm going to get some bread
ya va al colegio she's already at school
2 ( expresando propósito) ido a + inf:◊ ¿has ido a verla? have you been to see her?;
ve a ayudarla go and help her;
ver tb ido v aux 1
3 (al arrojar algo, arrojarse):◊ tírame la llave — ¡allá va! throw me the key — here you are o there you go!;
tírate del trampolín — ¡allá voy! jump off the board! — here I go/come!
4 [ comentario]:
eso va por ti también that goes for you too, and the same goes for you
1 (+ compl) ( sin énfasis en el movimiento):
¿van cómodos? are you comfortable?;
íbamos sentados we were sitting down;
vas muy cargada you have a lot to carry;
yo iba a la cabeza I was in the lead
2 ( refiriéndose al atuendo):
voy a ido de Drácula I'm going to go as Dracula;
iba de verde she was dressed in green
3 ( en calidad de) ido de algo to go (along) as sth;
1 [camino/sendero] ( llevar) ido a algo to lead to sth, to go to sth
2 (extenderse, abarcar):
el período que va desde … hasta … the period from … to …
1 (marchar, desarrollarse):◊ ¿cómo va el nuevo trabajo? how's the new job going?;
va de mal en peor it's going from bad to worse;
¿cómo te va? how's it going?, how are things? (colloq), what's up? (AmE colloq);
¿cómo les fue en Italia? how was Italy?, how did you get on in Italy?;
me fue mal/bien en el examen I did badly/well in the exam;
¡que te vaya bien! all the best!, take care!;
¡que te vaya bien (en) el examen! good luck in the exam
2 ( en competiciones):◊ ¿cómo van? — 3-1 what's the score? — 3-1;
voy ganando yo I'm ahead, I'm winning
3 ( en el desarrollo de algo):◊ ¿por dónde van en historia? where have you got (up) to in history?;
¿todavía vas por la página 20? are you still on page 20?
4 ( estar en camino):◊ ¡vamos para viejos! we're getting on o old!;
va para los cincuenta she's going on fifty;
ya va para dos años que … it's getting on for two years since …
5 (sumar, hacer):
con este van seis six, counting this one
6 ( haber transcurrido): en lo que va del or (Esp) de año/mes so far this year/month
1 ( deber colocarse) to go;◊ ¿dónde van las toallas? where do the towels go?;
¡qué va! (fam): ¿has terminado? — ¡qué va! have you finished? — you must be joking!;
¿se disgustó? — ¡qué va! did she get upset? — not at all!;
vamos a perder el avión — ¡qué va! we're going to miss the plane — no way!
2a) ( combinar) ido con algo to go with sthb) (sentar bien, convenir) (+ me/te/le etc):
te idoá bien un descanso a rest will do you good
3 (Méx) (tomar partido por, apoyar) idole a algo/algn to support sth/sb;
1◊ vamosa) (expresando incredulidad, fastidio):◊ ¡vamos! ¿eso quién se lo va a creer? come off it o come on! who do you think's going to believe that?b) (intentando tranquilizar, animar, dar prisa):◊ vamos, mujer, dile algo go on, say something to him;
¡vamos, date prisa! come on, hurry up!c) (al aclarar, resumir):◊ eso sería un disparate, vamos, digo yo that would be a stupid thing to do, well, that's what I think anyway;
vamos, que no es una persona de fiar basically, he's not very trustworthy;
es mejor que el otro, vamos it's better than the other one, anyway
2◊ vayaa) (expresando sorpresa, contrariedad):◊ ¡vaya! ¡tú por aquí! what a surprise! what are you doing here?;
¡vaya! ¡se ha vuelto a caer! oh no o (colloq) damn! it's fallen over again!b) (Esp) ( para enfatizar):◊ ¡vaya cochazo! what a car!
ido v aux ido a + inf:
1a) (para expresar tiempo futuro, propósito) to be going to + inf;
va a hacer dos años que … it's getting on for two years since …b) (en propuestas, sugerencias):◊ vamos a ver ¿cómo dices que te llamas? now then, what did you say your name was?;
bueno, vamos a trabajar all right, let's get to work
2 (al prevenir, hacer recomendaciones):
cuidado, no te vayas a caer mind you don't fall (colloq);
lleva el paraguas, no vaya a ser que llueva take the umbrella, in case it rains
3 ( expresando un proceso paulatino):
ya puedes ido haciéndote a la idea you'd better get used to the idea;
la situación ha ido empeorando the situation has been getting worse and worse
irse verbo pronominal
1 ( marcharse) to leave;◊ ¿por qué te vas tan temprano? why are you leaving o going so soon?;
vámonos let's go;
bueno, me voy right then, I'm taking off (AmE) o (BrE) I'm off;
no te vayas don't go;
vete a la cama go to bed;
se fue de casa/de la empresa she left home/the company;
vete de aquí get out of here;
se han ido de viaje they're away, they've gone away
2 (consumirse, gastarse):◊ ¡cómo se va el dinero! I don't know where the money goes!;
se me va medio sueldo en el alquiler half my salary goes on the rent
3 ( desaparecer) [mancha/dolor] to go;
(+ me/te/le etc)◊ ¿se te ha ido el dolor de cabeza? has your headache gone?
4 (salirse, escaparse) [líquido/gas] to escape;◊ se le está yendo el aire al globo the balloon's losing air o going down
5 (caerse, perder el equilibrio) (+ compl):◊ idose de boca/espaldas to fall flat on one's face/back;
me iba para atrás I was falling backwards;
frenó y nos fuimos todos para adelante he braked and we all went flying forwards
ido,-a adjetivo
1 (ausente, distraído) absent-minded
2 fam (loco) crazy, nuts
3 LAm drunk
ir
I verbo intransitivo
1 (dirigirse a un lugar) to go: ¡vamos!, let's go!
voy a París, I'm going to Paris ➣ Ver nota en go
2 (acudir regularmente) to go: va al colegio, he goes to school
van a misa, they go to church
3 (conducir a) to lead, go to: el sendero va a la mina, the path goes to the mine
esta carretera va a Londres, this road leads to London
4 (abarcar) to cover: la finca va desde la alambrada al camino, the estate extends from the wire fence to the path
las lecciones que van desde la página 1 a la 53, the lessons on pages 1 to 53
5 (guardarse habitualmente) va al lado de éste, it goes beside this one
6 (mantener una posición) to be: va el primero, he's in first place
7 (tener un estado de ánimo, una apariencia) to be: iba furioso/radiante, he was furious/radiant
vas muy guapa, you look very smart o pretty
8 (desenvolverse) ¿cómo te va?, how are things? o how are you doing?
¿cómo te va en el nuevo trabajo?, how are you getting on in your new job?
9 (funcionar) to work (properly): el reloj no va, the clock doesn't go o work
10 (sentar bien) to suit: ese corte de pelo no te va nada, that haircut doesn't suit you at all
11 (combinar) to match, go: el rojo no va con el celeste, red doesn't go with pale blue
12 (vestir) to wear
ir con abrigo, to wear a coat
ir de negro/de uniforme, to be dressed in black/in uniform
la niña irá de enfermera, the little girl will dress up as a nurse
13 fam (importar, concernir) to concern: eso va por ti también, and the same goes for you
ni me va ni me viene, I don't care one way or the other
14 (apostar) to bet: va un café a que no viene, I bet a coffee that he won't come
15 (ir + de) fam (comportarse de cierto modo) to act
ir de listo por la vida, to be a smart ass
(tratar) to be about: ¿de qué va la película?, what's the film about?
16 (ir + detrás de) to be looking for: hace tiempo que voy detrás de un facsímil de esa edición, I've been after a facsimile of that edition for a long time
17 (ir + por) ir por la derecha, to keep (to the) right
(ir a buscar) ve por agua, go and fetch some water
(haber llegado) voy por la página noventa, I've got as far as page ninety
18 (ir + para) (tener casi, estar cercano a) va para los cuarenta, she's getting on for forty
ya voy para viejo, I'm getting old
(encaminarse a) iba para ingeniero, she was studying to be an engineer
este niño va para médico, this boy's going to become a doctor
II verbo auxiliar
1 (ir + gerundio) va mejorando, he's improving
ir caminando, to go on foot
2 (ir + pp) ya van estrenadas tres películas de Almodóvar, three films by Almodovar have already been released
3 ( ir a + infinitivo) iba a decir que, I was going to say that
va a esquiar, she goes skiing
va a nevar, it's going to snow
vas a caerte, you'll fall
♦ Locuciones: a eso iba, I was coming to that
¡ahí va!, catch!
en lo que va de año, so far this year
¡qué va!, of course not! o nothing of the sort!
¡vamos a ver!, let's see!
van a lo suyo, they look after their own interests
¡vaya!, fancy that
¡vaya cochazo!, what a car!
ir a parar, to end up
' ido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
curso
- hasta
- ida
- mínimamente
- nunca
- pesar
- seguida
- seguido
- cabeza
- con
- después
- encontrar
- ir
- parar
- seguir
English:
can
- chance
- fetch
- fizz
- flat
- for
- go
- go for
- have
- moonstruck
- scribble
- theater
- theatre
- wish
- at
- by
- clear
- further
- which
- year
* * *ido, -a adjFam1. [loco] mad, touched2. [despistado] distracted;caminaba con un aire un poco ido she was walking along rather distractedly;estar ido to be miles away* * *I part → irII adj fam ( chiflado) nuts fam ;estar ido be miles away fam* * * -
109 redonda
f.1 semibreve(British), whole note (United States) (Music).2 neighborhood, neighbourhood.3 whole note.* * *1 (comarca) region1 MÚSICA semibreve, US whole note\a la redonda around■ la explosión se oyó en varios kilómetros a la redonda the explosion could be heard several kilometres away* * *f., (m. - redondo)* * *SF1) (Mús) semibreve, whole note (EEUU)2) (Tip) roman3)a la redonda: en muchas millas a la redonda — for many miles around
* * *1) (Impr) Roman character2) (Mús) semibreve3)a la redonda: en diez metros a la redonda within a ten meter radius; se oyó a varios kilómetros a la redonda — it could be heard for miles around
* * *1) (Impr) Roman character2) (Mús) semibreve3)a la redonda: en diez metros a la redonda within a ten meter radius; se oyó a varios kilómetros a la redonda — it could be heard for miles around
* * *A ( Impr) Roman characterimpreso en redondas printed in Roman typeB ( Mús) semibreveCa la redonda: no había una sola casa en dos kilómetros a la redonda there wasn't a single house within a two kilometer radiusse oyó a varios kilómetros a la redonda it could be heard for miles aroundlos gritos se oían cuadras a la redonda ( AmL); the shouts could be heard blocks o streets away* * *
redonda sustantivo femenino
1 (Mús) semibreve
2◊ a la redonda: en diez metros a la redonda within a ten meter radius;
se oyó a varios kilómetros a la redonda it could be heard for miles around
redondo,-a adjetivo
1 (cosa, forma, número) round
2 (perfecto) perfect, complete
un negocio redondo, a great deal
♦ Locuciones: caer redondo, to collapse, keel over
girar en redondo, to turn (right) around
negarse en redondo, to refuse point blank
redonda f Mús semibreve
♦ Locuciones: a la redonda, around: en cuatro metros a la redonda, within a four metre radius
' redonda' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
granadilla
- melocotón
- mesa
- pecera
English:
blast
- round-table meeting
- around
- round-
- round
- semibreve
- whole
* * *♦ nf2. Imprenta roman character;en redonda in roman (type)♦ a la redonda loc adven 15 kilómetros a la redonda within a 15 kilometre radius;la explosión se oyó en muchos kilómetros a la redonda the explosion was heard for miles around* * *f:a la redonda around, round about* * *redonda nf1) : region, surrounding area2)a la redonda alrededor: aroundde diez millas a la redonda: for ten miles around* * *redonda n -
110 kilometerlang
ki·lo·me·ter·lang adjstretching for miles pred;eine \kilometerlange Autoschlange/ Fahrzeugschlange/ein \kilometerlanger Stau a line of cars/vehicles/a traffic jam stretching [back] [or (Brit a.) tailback stretching] for miles;ein \kilometerlanger Strand a beach stretching for miles [and miles]adv for miles [and miles], for miles on end -
111 kilometerweit
ki·lo·me·ter·weit adjfor miles [and miles] pred;sie machen gerne \kilometerweite Wanderungen they like taking walks which last for many miles [or walking for miles]adv for miles [and miles];von der Bergkuppe kann man \kilometerweit sehen you can see for kilometres [or miles] from the top of the mountain -
112 Berg
m; -(e)s, -e1. einzelner: mountain; kleiner: hill, hillock; über Berg und Tal over hill and dale; Berge versetzen ( können) fig. move mountains; jemandem goldene Berge versprechen fig. promise s.o. the world; über den Berg sein umg., fig. be out of the wood(s), be over the worst; ( längst) über alle Berge sein umg. be over the hills and far away, be miles away; mit etw. nicht hinterm Berg halten fig. make no bones about s.th., not beat about ( oder around) the bush with s.th.; mit etw. hinterm Berg halten fig. keep quiet about s.th., not come forward with s.th.; wenn der Berg nicht zum Propheten kommen will, muss der Prophet zum Berge gehen Sprichw. if the mountain will not come to Muhammad, then Muhammad must go to the mountain; da stehen einem / mir die Haare zu Berge it makes your hair stand on end3. meist Pl.; (eine große Menge): Berge von Schnee, Akten, Papier etc. piles of / heaps of / a huge pile of / a mountain of alle umg.4. meist Pl.; BERGB. dirt Sg., rubbish Sg.* * *der Bergmountain; hill* * *Bẹrg [bɛrk]m -(e)s, -e[-gə]1) hill; (größer) mountainwenn der Berg nicht zum Propheten kommt, muss der Prophet zum Berg kommen (Prov) — if the mountain won't come to Mahomet, then Mahomet must go to the mountain (Prov)
Berge versetzen ( können) — to (be able to) move mountains
mit etw hinterm Berg halten (fig) — to keep sth to oneself, to keep quiet about sth; mit seinem Alter to be cagey about sth
über Berg und Tal — up hill and down dale
über den Berg sein (inf) — to be out of the woods
über alle Berge sein (inf) — to be long gone, to be miles away (inf)
jdm goldene Berge versprechen — to promise sb the moon
die Haare standen ihm zu Berge — his hair stood on end
See:→ Ochs3) (inf = Bergwerk) pit* * *der1) (a mountain: Mount Everest.) Mount2) (a high hill: Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world; ( also adjective) a mountain stream.) mountain* * *<-[e]s, -e>[bɛrk]mden \Berg hinauf/hinunter uphill/downhill\Berg Heil! good climbing to you!am \Berg liegen to lie at the foot of the hill [or mountain]; s.a. Glaube2. pl\Berge von Papier mountains of papereinen \Berg von Briefen erhalten to receive a flood of letters4.▶ jdm goldene \Berge versprechen to promise sb the moon▶ mit etw dat hinterm \Berg halten to keep quiet about sth [or sth to oneself], to not let the cat out of the bag▶ wenn der \Berg nicht zum Propheten kommt, muss der Prophet zum \Berge kommen (prov) if the mountain won't come to Mahomet, [then] Mahomet must go to the mountain prov▶ der \Berg kreißt und gebiert eine Maus (selten geh) the mountain laboured and brought forth a mouse▶ noch nicht über den \Berg sein to be not out of the woods [or out of danger] yetdie Patientin ist noch nicht über den \Berg the patient's state is still critical* * *der; Berg[e]s, Berge1) hill; (im Hochgebirge) mountainBerg Heil! — greeting between mountaineers
mit etwas hinter dem od. hinterm Berg halten — (fig.) keep something to oneself
über den Berg sein — (ugs.) be out of the wood (Brit.) or (Amer.) woods; < patient> be on the mend, have turned the corner
[längst] über alle Berge sein — (ugs.) be miles away
2) (Haufen) enormous or huge pile; (von Akten, Abfall auch) mountain* * *über Berg und Tal over hill and dale;Berge versetzen (können) fig move mountains;jemandem goldene Berge versprechen fig promise sb the world;über den Berg sein umg, fig be out of the wood(s), be over the worst;mit etwas nicht hinterm Berg halten fig make no bones about sth, not beat about ( oder around) the bush with sth;mit etwas hinterm Berg halten fig keep quiet about sth, not come forward with sth;wenn der Berg nicht zum Propheten kommen will, muss der Prophet zum Berge gehen sprichw if the mountain will not come to Muhammad, then Muhammad must go to the mountain;da stehen einem/mir die Haare zu Berge it makes your hair stand on enddie Berge the mountains;in die Berge fahren drive (up in)to the mountains4. meist pl; BERGB dirt sg, rubbish sg* * *der; Berg[e]s, Berge1) hill; (im Hochgebirge) mountainBerg Heil! — greeting between mountaineers
mit etwas hinter dem od. hinterm Berg halten — (fig.) keep something to oneself
über den Berg sein — (ugs.) be out of the wood (Brit.) or (Amer.) woods; < patient> be on the mend, have turned the corner
[längst] über alle Berge sein — (ugs.) be miles away
2) (Haufen) enormous or huge pile; (von Akten, Abfall auch) mountain* * *-e m.mount n.mountain n. -
113 aguas jurisdiccionales
f.pl.territorial waters.* * *territorial waters* * *(n.) = territorial waters, jurisdictional watersEx. With the present trend to extending territorial waters, from three miles to twelve miles to two hundred miles, cataloguers are going to need a geopolitical atlas to make some decisions, together with an accurate ruler.Ex. All vernal pools contained within or adjacent to other jurisdictional waters or wetlands are themselves jurisdictional.* * *(n.) = territorial waters, jurisdictional watersEx: With the present trend to extending territorial waters, from three miles to twelve miles to two hundred miles, cataloguers are going to need a geopolitical atlas to make some decisions, together with an accurate ruler.
Ex: All vernal pools contained within or adjacent to other jurisdictional waters or wetlands are themselves jurisdictional.* * *territorial waters -
114 distraído
adj.1 absent-minded, absentminded, abstracted, distracted.2 untidy.past part.past participle of spanish verb: distraer.* * *1→ link=distraer distraer► adjetivo1 (desatento) absent-minded2 (entretenido) entertaining, fun► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 absent-minded person\hacerse el/la distraído,-a to pretend not to notice* * *(f. - distraída)adj.1) distracted3) entertained, amused* * *distraído, -a1. ADJ1) (=despistado)a) [con estar]siempre está distraído en clase — he's always daydreaming in class, he never pays attention in class
me miró distraída — she glanced absently at me, she glanced at me absent-mindedly
b) [con ser]2) (=entretenido) entertained, amused3) Esp (=divertido) entertaining, amusinges un juego muy distraído — it's a very entertaining o amusing game
4) (=disoluto) dissolute2.SM / F* * *- da adjetivoa) [ser] < persona> absentminded, vagueb) [estar]perdona, estaba distraído — sorry, I wasn't paying attention
* * *= absent-minded, distracted, unfocused [unfocussed], dreamy [dreamier -comp., dreamiest -sup.], moony [moonier -comp., mooniest -sup.].Ex. The academic library is the natural habitat of the absent-minded professor.Ex. A class may be keen, alert, contributive, except for one child who is withdrawn, distracted, unresponsive.Ex. They may be unfocused, underprepared, and not of a frame of mind to devote time and thoughtful energy to library research.Ex. Puberty, he describes as ' dreamy and sentimental' and though this may seem a far cry from the teenagers we would recognize that adolescence brings an awakening of emotions, idealism and commitment to a romantic ideal.Ex. I know for certain I was moony and lonely, feeling dissatisfied with myself, and wanted only to be alone that night.* * *- da adjetivoa) [ser] < persona> absentminded, vagueb) [estar]perdona, estaba distraído — sorry, I wasn't paying attention
* * *= absent-minded, distracted, unfocused [unfocussed], dreamy [dreamier -comp., dreamiest -sup.], moony [moonier -comp., mooniest -sup.].Ex: The academic library is the natural habitat of the absent-minded professor.
Ex: A class may be keen, alert, contributive, except for one child who is withdrawn, distracted, unresponsive.Ex: They may be unfocused, underprepared, and not of a frame of mind to devote time and thoughtful energy to library research.Ex: Puberty, he describes as ' dreamy and sentimental' and though this may seem a far cry from the teenagers we would recognize that adolescence brings an awakening of emotions, idealism and commitment to a romantic ideal.Ex: I know for certain I was moony and lonely, feeling dissatisfied with myself, and wanted only to be alone that night.* * *distraído -da‹persona/aire/mirada›iba distraído y no se fijó que había un escalón he was miles away and didn't see the step ( colloq)es muy distraído he's very absentmindedperdona, estaba distraído sorry, I wasn't paying attention o I wasn't concentrating o my mind was elsewhere* * *
Del verbo distraer: ( conjugate distraer)
distraído es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
distraer
distraído
distraer ( conjugate distraer) verbo transitivo
distraído a algn de algo ‹de trabajo/estudios› to distract sb from sth ‹ de preocupaciones› to take sb's mind off sth
distraerse verbo pronominal
b) ( entretenerse):
se distrae con cualquier cosa she doesn't need much to keep amused
distraído◊ -da adjetivo
b)◊ estaba/iba distraído he was miles away (colloq)
distraer verbo transitivo
1 (entretener) to entertain: la televisión distrae a la abuela, the television keeps Grandmother amused
2 (desviar la atención) to distract
distraído,-a adjetivo
1 (entretenido) entertaining
2 (despistado) absent-minded
' distraído' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abstraída
- abstraído
- distraída
- ida
- ido
- atontado
- ausente
- desatento
English:
absent-minded
- distracted
- dreamy
- vague
- absent
- inattentive
* * *distraído, -a♦ adj1. [entretenido] [libro] readable;[programa de TV, película] watchable; [persona] amusing, entertaining;una tarde/conversación distraída quite a nice afternoon/conversation;pasamos un rato muy distraído jugando a las cartas we had a good time playing cards;los niños estaban muy distraídos con los dibujos animados the children were very involved in the cartoonses un tipo muy distraído he's a very absent-minded guy;estar distraído to be distracted;estaba distraído y me quitaron la maleta I wasn't paying attention o I let my attention wander and I had my suitcase stolen;lo siento, estaba distraído, ¿qué decías? sorry, I was miles away;* * *I part → distraerII adj absent-minded; temporalmente distracted* * *distraído, -da adj1) : distracted, preoccupied2) despistado: absentminded* * *distraído adj1. (despistado) absent mindedperdona, estaba distraído sorry, I was miles away2. (divertido) enjoyable -
115 geopolítico
adj.geopolitical.* * *► adjetivo1 geopolitical* * *ADJ geopolitical* * *- ca adjetivo geopolitical* * *= geopolitical.Ex. With the present trend to extending territorial waters, from three miles to twelve miles to two hundred miles, cataloguers are going to need a geopolitical atlas to make some decisions, together with an accurate ruler.* * *- ca adjetivo geopolitical* * *= geopolitical.Ex: With the present trend to extending territorial waters, from three miles to twelve miles to two hundred miles, cataloguers are going to need a geopolitical atlas to make some decisions, together with an accurate ruler.
* * *geopolítico -cageopolitical* * *geopolítico, -a adjgeopolitical* * *geopolítico, -ca adj: geopolitical -
116 километър
kilometerвървяхме с километри we walked for miles and miles* * *киломѐтър,м., -ри, (два) киломѐтъра kilometre, амер. kilometer; вървяхме с \километърри we walked for miles and miles.* * *kilometer* * *1. kilometer 2. вървяхме с километри we walked for miles and miles -
117 Edison, Thomas Alva
SUBJECT AREA: Architecture and building, Automotive engineering, Electricity, Electronics and information technology, Metallurgy, Photography, film and optics, Public utilities, Recording, Telecommunications[br]b. 11 February 1847 Milan, Ohio, USAd. 18 October 1931 Glenmont[br]American inventor and pioneer electrical developer.[br]He was the son of Samuel Edison, who was in the timber business. His schooling was delayed due to scarlet fever until 1855, when he was 8½ years old, but he was an avid reader. By the age of 14 he had a job as a newsboy on the railway from Port Huron to Detroit, a distance of sixty-three miles (101 km). He worked a fourteen-hour day with a stopover of five hours, which he spent in the Detroit Free Library. He also sold sweets on the train and, later, fruit and vegetables, and was soon making a profit of $20 a week. He then started two stores in Port Huron and used a spare freight car as a laboratory. He added a hand-printing press to produce 400 copies weekly of The Grand Trunk Herald, most of which he compiled and edited himself. He set himself to learn telegraphy from the station agent at Mount Clements, whose son he had saved from being run over by a freight car.At the age of 16 he became a telegraphist at Port Huron. In 1863 he became railway telegraphist at the busy Stratford Junction of the Grand Trunk Railroad, arranging a clock with a notched wheel to give the hourly signal which was to prove that he was awake and at his post! He left hurriedly after failing to hold a train which was nearly involved in a head-on collision. He usually worked the night shift, allowing himself time for experiments during the day. His first invention was an arrangement of two Morse registers so that a high-speed input could be decoded at a slower speed. Moving from place to place he held many positions as a telegraphist. In Boston he invented an automatic vote recorder for Congress and patented it, but the idea was rejected. This was the first of a total of 1180 patents that he was to take out during his lifetime. After six years he resigned from the Western Union Company to devote all his time to invention, his next idea being an improved ticker-tape machine for stockbrokers. He developed a duplex telegraphy system, but this was turned down by the Western Union Company. He then moved to New York.Edison found accommodation in the battery room of Law's Gold Reporting Company, sleeping in the cellar, and there his repair of a broken transmitter marked him as someone of special talents. His superior soon resigned, and he was promoted with a salary of $300 a month. Western Union paid him $40,000 for the sole rights on future improvements on the duplex telegraph, and he moved to Ward Street, Newark, New Jersey, where he employed a gathering of specialist engineers. Within a year, he married one of his employees, Mary Stilwell, when she was only 16: a daughter, Marion, was born in 1872, and two sons, Thomas and William, in 1876 and 1879, respectively.He continued to work on the automatic telegraph, a device to send out messages faster than they could be tapped out by hand: that is, over fifty words per minute or so. An earlier machine by Alexander Bain worked at up to 400 words per minute, but was not good over long distances. Edison agreed to work on improving this feature of Bain's machine for the Automatic Telegraph Company (ATC) for $40,000. He improved it to a working speed of 500 words per minute and ran a test between Washington and New York. Hoping to sell their equipment to the Post Office in Britain, ATC sent Edison to England in 1873 to negotiate. A 500-word message was to be sent from Liverpool to London every half-hour for six hours, followed by tests on 2,200 miles (3,540 km) of cable at Greenwich. Only confused results were obtained due to induction in the cable, which lay coiled in a water tank. Edison returned to New York, where he worked on his quadruplex telegraph system, tests of which proved a success between New York and Albany in December 1874. Unfortunately, simultaneous negotiation with Western Union and ATC resulted in a lawsuit.Alexander Graham Bell was granted a patent for a telephone in March 1876 while Edison was still working on the same idea. His improvements allowed the device to operate over a distance of hundreds of miles instead of only a few miles. Tests were carried out over the 106 miles (170 km) between New York and Philadelphia. Edison applied for a patent on the carbon-button transmitter in April 1877, Western Union agreeing to pay him $6,000 a year for the seventeen-year duration of the patent. In these years he was also working on the development of the electric lamp and on a duplicating machine which would make up to 3,000 copies from a stencil. In 1876–7 he moved from Newark to Menlo Park, twenty-four miles (39 km) from New York on the Pennsylvania Railway, near Elizabeth. He had bought a house there around which he built the premises that would become his "inventions factory". It was there that he began the use of his 200- page pocket notebooks, each of which lasted him about two weeks, so prolific were his ideas. When he died he left 3,400 of them filled with notes and sketches.Late in 1877 he applied for a patent for a phonograph which was granted on 19 February 1878, and by the end of the year he had formed a company to manufacture this totally new product. At the time, Edison saw the device primarily as a business aid rather than for entertainment, rather as a dictating machine. In August 1878 he was granted a British patent. In July 1878 he tried to measure the heat from the solar corona at a solar eclipse viewed from Rawlins, Wyoming, but his "tasimeter" was too sensitive.Probably his greatest achievement was "The Subdivision of the Electric Light" or the "glow bulb". He tried many materials for the filament before settling on carbon. He gave a demonstration of electric light by lighting up Menlo Park and inviting the public. Edison was, of course, faced with the problem of inventing and producing all the ancillaries which go to make up the electrical system of generation and distribution-meters, fuses, insulation, switches, cabling—even generators had to be designed and built; everything was new. He started a number of manufacturing companies to produce the various components needed.In 1881 he built the world's largest generator, which weighed 27 tons, to light 1,200 lamps at the Paris Exhibition. It was later moved to England to be used in the world's first central power station with steam engine drive at Holborn Viaduct, London. In September 1882 he started up his Pearl Street Generating Station in New York, which led to a worldwide increase in the application of electric power, particularly for lighting. At the same time as these developments, he built a 1,300yd (1,190m) electric railway at Menlo Park.On 9 August 1884 his wife died of typhoid. Using his telegraphic skills, he proposed to 19-year-old Mina Miller in Morse code while in the company of others on a train. He married her in February 1885 before buying a new house and estate at West Orange, New Jersey, building a new laboratory not far away in the Orange Valley.Edison used direct current which was limited to around 250 volts. Alternating current was largely developed by George Westinghouse and Nicola Tesla, using transformers to step up the current to a higher voltage for long-distance transmission. The use of AC gradually overtook the Edison DC system.In autumn 1888 he patented a form of cinephotography, the kinetoscope, obtaining film-stock from George Eastman. In 1893 he set up the first film studio, which was pivoted so as to catch the sun, with a hinged roof which could be raised. In 1894 kinetoscope parlours with "peep shows" were starting up in cities all over America. Competition came from the Latham Brothers with a screen-projection machine, which Edison answered with his "Vitascope", shown in New York in 1896. This showed pictures with accompanying sound, but there was some difficulty with synchronization. Edison also experimented with captions at this early date.In 1880 he filed a patent for a magnetic ore separator, the first of nearly sixty. He bought up deposits of low-grade iron ore which had been developed in the north of New Jersey. The process was a commercial success until the discovery of iron-rich ore in Minnesota rendered it uneconomic and uncompetitive. In 1898 cement rock was discovered in New Village, west of West Orange. Edison bought the land and started cement manufacture, using kilns twice the normal length and using half as much fuel to heat them as the normal type of kiln. In 1893 he met Henry Ford, who was building his second car, at an Edison convention. This started him on the development of a battery for an electric car on which he made over 9,000 experiments. In 1903 he sold his patent for wireless telegraphy "for a song" to Guglielmo Marconi.In 1910 Edison designed a prefabricated concrete house. In December 1914 fire destroyed three-quarters of the West Orange plant, but it was at once rebuilt, and with the threat of war Edison started to set up his own plants for making all the chemicals that he had previously been buying from Europe, such as carbolic acid, phenol, benzol, aniline dyes, etc. He was appointed President of the Navy Consulting Board, for whom, he said, he made some forty-five inventions, "but they were pigeonholed, every one of them". Thus did Edison find that the Navy did not take kindly to civilian interference.In 1927 he started the Edison Botanic Research Company, founded with similar investment from Ford and Firestone with the object of finding a substitute for overseas-produced rubber. In the first year he tested no fewer than 3,327 possible plants, in the second year, over 1,400, eventually developing a variety of Golden Rod which grew to 14 ft (4.3 m) in height. However, all this effort and money was wasted, due to the discovery of synthetic rubber.In October 1929 he was present at Henry Ford's opening of his Dearborn Museum to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the incandescent lamp, including a replica of the Menlo Park laboratory. He was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal and was elected to the American Academy of Sciences. He died in 1931 at his home, Glenmont; throughout the USA, lights were dimmed temporarily on the day of his funeral.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsMember of the American Academy of Sciences. Congressional Gold Medal.Further ReadingM.Josephson, 1951, Edison, Eyre \& Spottiswode.R.W.Clark, 1977, Edison, the Man who Made the Future, Macdonald \& Jane.IMcN -
118 поезд шёл со скоростью 50 миль в час
1) General subject: the train was going ( at) fifty miles an hourУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > поезд шёл со скоростью 50 миль в час
-
119 berg
m; -(e)s, -e1. einzelner: mountain; kleiner: hill, hillock; über Berg und Tal over hill and dale; Berge versetzen ( können) fig. move mountains; jemandem goldene Berge versprechen fig. promise s.o. the world; über den Berg sein umg., fig. be out of the wood(s), be over the worst; ( längst) über alle Berge sein umg. be over the hills and far away, be miles away; mit etw. nicht hinterm Berg halten fig. make no bones about s.th., not beat about ( oder around) the bush with s.th.; mit etw. hinterm Berg halten fig. keep quiet about s.th., not come forward with s.th.; wenn der Berg nicht zum Propheten kommen will, muss der Prophet zum Berge gehen Sprichw. if the mountain will not come to Muhammad, then Muhammad must go to the mountain; da stehen einem / mir die Haare zu Berge it makes your hair stand on end3. meist Pl.; (eine große Menge): Berge von Schnee, Akten, Papier etc. piles of / heaps of / a huge pile of / a mountain of alle umg.4. meist Pl.; BERGB. dirt Sg., rubbish Sg.* * *der Bergmountain; hill* * *Bẹrg [bɛrk]m -(e)s, -e[-gə]1) hill; (größer) mountainwenn der Berg nicht zum Propheten kommt, muss der Prophet zum Berg kommen (Prov) — if the mountain won't come to Mahomet, then Mahomet must go to the mountain (Prov)
Berge versetzen ( können) — to (be able to) move mountains
mit etw hinterm Berg halten (fig) — to keep sth to oneself, to keep quiet about sth; mit seinem Alter to be cagey about sth
über Berg und Tal — up hill and down dale
über den Berg sein (inf) — to be out of the woods
über alle Berge sein (inf) — to be long gone, to be miles away (inf)
jdm goldene Berge versprechen — to promise sb the moon
die Haare standen ihm zu Berge — his hair stood on end
See:→ Ochs3) (inf = Bergwerk) pit* * *der1) (a mountain: Mount Everest.) Mount2) (a high hill: Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world; ( also adjective) a mountain stream.) mountain* * *<-[e]s, -e>[bɛrk]mden \Berg hinauf/hinunter uphill/downhill\Berg Heil! good climbing to you!am \Berg liegen to lie at the foot of the hill [or mountain]; s.a. Glaube2. pl\Berge von Papier mountains of papereinen \Berg von Briefen erhalten to receive a flood of letters4.▶ jdm goldene \Berge versprechen to promise sb the moon▶ mit etw dat hinterm \Berg halten to keep quiet about sth [or sth to oneself], to not let the cat out of the bag▶ wenn der \Berg nicht zum Propheten kommt, muss der Prophet zum \Berge kommen (prov) if the mountain won't come to Mahomet, [then] Mahomet must go to the mountain prov▶ der \Berg kreißt und gebiert eine Maus (selten geh) the mountain laboured and brought forth a mouse▶ noch nicht über den \Berg sein to be not out of the woods [or out of danger] yetdie Patientin ist noch nicht über den \Berg the patient's state is still critical* * *der; Berg[e]s, Berge1) hill; (im Hochgebirge) mountainBerg Heil! — greeting between mountaineers
mit etwas hinter dem od. hinterm Berg halten — (fig.) keep something to oneself
über den Berg sein — (ugs.) be out of the wood (Brit.) or (Amer.) woods; < patient> be on the mend, have turned the corner
[längst] über alle Berge sein — (ugs.) be miles away
2) (Haufen) enormous or huge pile; (von Akten, Abfall auch) mountain* * *…berg m im subst1. allzu viele: huge number of;Arbeitslosenberg huge number ( oder mass) of unemployed2. ein Haufen: huge pile of;Abfallberg huge pile ( oder heap) of rubbish;Bücherberg huge pile of books;Wäscheberg huge pile of washing (US auch laundry)* * *der; Berg[e]s, Berge1) hill; (im Hochgebirge) mountainBerg Heil! — greeting between mountaineers
mit etwas hinter dem od. hinterm Berg halten — (fig.) keep something to oneself
über den Berg sein — (ugs.) be out of the wood (Brit.) or (Amer.) woods; < patient> be on the mend, have turned the corner
[längst] über alle Berge sein — (ugs.) be miles away
2) (Haufen) enormous or huge pile; (von Akten, Abfall auch) mountain* * *-e m.mount n.mountain n. -
120 Kilometerfresser
m umg. driver who covers long distances at high speeds; ein richtiger Kilometerfresser sein really burn up the miles* * *Ki|lo|me|ter|fres|ser(in)m(f) (inf)long-haul driverer ist ein richtiger Kilométerfresser — he really eats up the miles (inf)
* * *Ki·lo·me·ter·fres·ser* * *der (ugs.)* * *Kilometerfresser m umg driver who covers long distances at high speeds;ein richtiger Kilometerfresser sein really burn up the miles* * *der (ugs.)
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