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61 The Decider
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > The Decider
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62 The Decider-In-Chief
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > The Decider-In-Chief
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63 The Leaker-in-Chief
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > The Leaker-in-Chief
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64 The Shrub
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > The Shrub
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65 The Velcro President
Одна из кличек президента США Джорджа Буша (подробнее см. список кличек ниже)Dubya — From the Texan pronunciation of 'W', this originated as a family nickname to distinguish him from his father43 or Bush 43, Bush the Younger, Bush II, and Bush fils — All used to distinguish George W. Bush from George H.W. BushBushie — Also used to refer to wife LauraThe Shrub or simply Shrub — Coined by Molly Ivins. Bush Junior is notably smaller than his father, and a little bush is a shrub.Temporary — Bush's nickname in Skull and Bones, never altered by BushKing George (II) — Based on comparisons to George III of the United Kingdom, who is often known to Americans simply as "King George" for his association with the American Revolution. The "II" may refer either to Bush's being a successor (though not directly) to a father with the same name (the "first George") or to a misconception that George III was the first English king with that name, thus making Bush the "second."Uncurious George or Incurious George or Spurious George — Comparing him with the monkey character Curious GeorgeAWOL Bush — Often rendered as aWol Bush: referring to an alleged period of unauthorized leave of absence by Bush during his Vietnam War service in the Texas National GuardThe Decider and The Decider-In-Chief — Bush said "I'm the decider" in remarks about Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on April 18, 2006The Commander Guy — Bush gave himself this nickname on May 2, 2007, saying "My position is clear — I'm the commander guy."Resident BushThe Leaker-in-Chief — In April, 2006, former White House official Lewis Libby claimed that President Bush had authorized him to leak from an intelligence document about Weapons of Mass Destruction in IraqThe Velcro President — A contrast to the "Teflon" nicknames given to Reagan and Clinton; most scandals appear to "stick" to Bush.Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > The Velcro President
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66 the common run of...
заурядный, обыкновенный, обычный; см. тж. out of the common runShe was not like the common run of store-girls. (Th. Dreiser, ‘Sister Carrie’, ch. VII) — Она не была похожа на обычных продавщиц.
And after all it is with the common run of men that we writers have to deal; kings, dictators, commercial magnates are from our point of view very unsatisfactory. (W. S. Maugham, ‘The Summing Up’, ch. 2) — И в конце концов, нам, писателям, приходится иметь дело с обыкновенными людьми; короли, диктаторы, промышленные магнаты, с нашей точки зрения, мало чем нас могут порадовать.
‘Son,’ he said, ‘always be a good Stroup as long as you live. There's no finer family in the whole world than us Stroups, and we don't want nothing to happen that would make folks think we are a common run of humans like everybody else.’ (E. Caldwell, ‘Georgia Boy’, ch. XIII) — - Сынок, - сказал дядя Нед, - будь настоящим Страупом до конца дней своих. Второй такой семьи во всем мире не сыщешь. Мы, Страупы, не допустим, чтобы нас ставили на одну доску со всякой прочей мелюзгой.
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67 all kinds of something
adj infml esp AmEThe new dictionary of modern spoken language > all kinds of something
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68 the author edited out all references to his own family
Общая лексика: автор вычеркнул всякое упоминание о своей семьеУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > the author edited out all references to his own family
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69 lay it on the line
преим.; амер.(lay (или put) it on the line (тж. lay или put smth. on the line))1) разг. заплатить, истратить, выложить‘A Million? They tell me it takes that to elect a Governor today.’ ‘They tell you low. It took two million to elect this one and a little more besides. That's a lot of money to lay on the line for a thirty-thousand-a-year job.’ (E. O'Connor, ‘All in the Family’, ch. XI) — - Миллион долларов? Говорят, для того, чтобы стать губернатором штата, нужно потратить не меньше миллиона. - Гораздо больше. Выборы теперешнего губернатора обошлись в два с лишним миллиона долларов. Какая огромная сумма! А ведь губернатор получает тысяч тридцать в год.
2) разг. говорить прямо, откровенно, выложить всёI'll lay it on the line-I thought you had double-crossed me in a particularly unpleasant way. (M. Wilson, ‘Meeting at a Far Meridian’, ch. 2) — Говоря откровенно, я считал, что вы обманули меня, и притом довольно подло...
Look, Charlie, let me lay it on the line... You're on the spot. (F. Knebel and Ch. Bailey, ‘Convention’, ch. 2) — Послушайте, Чарли, если хотите знать мое откровенное мнение... вы попали в трудное положение.
Yam: "A real attack... put it right on the line... and let 'em have it!" (E. Albee, ‘Fain and Yam’) — Ям: "Эта статья откроет наступление... В ней будут приведены только факты... Пусть попробуют опровергнуть их."
3) подвергать что-л. опасности, рисковать чем-л., поставить что-л. под угрозу, под ударLeppert might demand all kinds of medical proof... before he'd lay his own reputation as a doctor on the line. (P. Knebel, ‘Night of Camp David’, ch. 19) — Лепперту потребуются многочисленные медицинские справки доказательства безумия президента... прежде чем он рискнет своей репутацией врача.
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70 on the cuff
разг.1) в долг, в кредит; в рассрочку [первонач. амер.]Fatty fed me one meal a day on the cuff. Finding a job seemed impossible. (P. Abrahams, ‘Tell Freedom’, book III, ch. II) — Фэтти кормил меня раз в день в кредит. Найти работу было просто невозможно.
2) амер. бесплатноThe press agent gets no pay but only a certain (sic) am't [= amount] of drinks on the cuff. (J. O'Hara, ‘Pal Joey’) — Агент по печати и рекламе заработной платы не получает, а только (sic!) определенное количество спиртных напитков бесплатно.
There are six guys in this town who hate to eat at home. They spend all their time getting together dinners to honor other phonies just so they can eat out and on the cuff. (E. O'Connor, ‘All in the Family’, ch. XII) — В этом городе есть шестеро парней, которые терпеть не могут обедать дома. Они тратят все свое время на устройство обедов в честь таких же прохвостов, как они сами. Так что обедают они всегда на стороне и за это никогда не платят.
3) амер. конфиденциально, между намиBut strictly on the cuff I'm willing to bet he never did see it... (R. Chandler, ‘The Lady in the Lake’, ch. 12) — Но строго между нами - я готов держать цари, что Билл никогда этого не видел...
4) амер. экспромтом, без подготовкиI grant you, I started this leaflet on the cuff. I didn't know what I was letting myself in for. (S. Heym, ‘The Crusaders’, book I, ch. 2) — Уверяю вас, я взялся писать эту листовку не подумав. Я не представлял себе, на что иду.
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71 down the line
1) сверху донизу, вниз по инстанциям, вниз по иерархической лестнице (обыкн. употр. с гл. to go)At that point everything was his idea: we just sat and listened. He went right down the line, ticking off the possibilities. (E. O'Connor, ‘All in the Family’, ch. XI) — Отец все продумал. Мы только сидели и слушали. Он прошелся по списку сверху донизу, отмечая возможности всех тех, кто был включен в него, оказать содействие его сыну.
2) амер. целиком, полностью, во всех отношениях (тж. right down the line)We're with Governor Wilcox right down the line, of course... (F. Knebel and Ch. Bailey, ‘Convention’, ch. 10) — Конечно, мы полностью поддерживаем губернатора Уилкокса...
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72 go to the mat
(go to the mat (with...))ожесточённо спорить, полемизировать (с...)Once again Dave flatly refused, but this time Ginnie wasn't taking any no for answer and they went to the mat with it - their first real fight, first real conflict. (J. Jones, ‘Some Came Running’, book VI, ch. LXXII) — Снова Дейв решительно отказался идти в церковь, но на этот раз Джинни не примирилась с его отказом, и они начали ожесточенно спорить. Это было их первое столкновение, их первый настоящий конфликт.
It's a little hard to believe that he'd go to the mat with you on anything as trivial as that. (E. O'Connor, ‘All in the Family’, ch. XII) — Трудно поверить, что Фил сцепится с тобой из-за такого пустяка.
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73 Jeffersons, The
"Семья Джефферсонов"Ситком [ sitcom] телекомпании Си-би-эс [ CBS], шел в 1975-85, выделился [spin-off] из телесериала "Дела семейные" [ All in the Family]. Его герои - негритянская семья Джефферсонов, бывшие соседи Арчи Банкера [ Archie Bunker], которые, разбогатев, переехали в зажиточный район и поселились в доме, где до тех пор жили только белыеEnglish-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Jeffersons, The
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74 Usage note : all
When all is used to mean everything, it is translated by tout:is that all?= c’est tout?all is well= tout va bienWhen all is followed by a that clause, all that is translated by tout ce qui when it is the subject of the verb and tout ce que when it is the object:all that remains to be done= tout ce qui reste à fairethat was all (that) he said= c’est tout ce qu’il a ditafter all (that) we’ve done= après tout ce que nous avons faitwe’re doing all (that) we can= nous faisons tout ce que nous pouvonsall that you need= tout ce dont tu as besoinWhen all is used to refer to a specified group of people or objects, the translation reflects the number and gender of the people or objects referred to ; tous is used for a group of people or objects of masculine or mixed or unspecified gender and toutes for a group of feminine gender:we were all delighted= nous étions tous ravis‘where are the cups?’ ‘they’re all in the kitchen’= ‘où sont les tasses?’ ‘elles sont toutes dans la cuisine’For more examples and particular usages see the entry all.As a determinerIn French, determiners agree in gender and number with the noun they precede. So all is translated by tout + masculine singular noun:all the time= tout le tempsby toute + feminine singular noun:all the family= toute la familleby tous + masculine or mixed gender plural noun:all men= tous les hommesall the books= tous les livresand by toutes + feminine plural noun:all women= toutes les femmesall the chairs= toutes les chaisesFor more examples and particular usages see the entry all.As an adverbmy coat’s all dirty= mon manteau est tout salehe was all alone= il était tout seulthey were all alone= ils étaient tout seulsthe girls were all excited= les filles étaient tout excitéesHowever, when the adjective that follows is in the feminine and begins with a consonant the translation is toute/toutes:she was all alone= elle était toute seulethe bill is all wrong= la facture est toute faussethe girls were all alone= les filles étaient toutes seulesFor more examples and particular usages see the entry all. -
75 get away from it all
сменить обстановку; бросить все делаThe politician tried to get away from it all at the weekend when he went with his family to the country.
Англо-русский словарь идиом и фразовых глаголов > get away from it all
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76 on the shady side of thirty
(on the shady (или wrong) side of thirty (forty, etc.))старше тридцати (сорока и т. д.), за тридцать (сорок и т. д.); см. тж. all sorts of......not that they are really young, the younger being somewhat on the shady side of thirty, but it has ever been the custom to call every member of the family young under fifty. (W. Irving, ‘Salmagundi’, NVI, ‘From My Elbow-Chair’) —...не то чтобы они действительно были молоды: младшей из них уже перевалило за тридцать. Но у них было принято считать каждого члена семьи молодым, пока ему не исполнится пятьдесят.
He was... on the wrong side of sixty. (M. West, ‘The Devil's Advocate’, ch. IX) — Отцу Ансельмо... шел уже седьмой десяток.
Large English-Russian phrasebook > on the shady side of thirty
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77 out of the box
австрал.; разг.необычный; исключительныйCome to think of it, both his brothers were something out of the box... Must have got all the brains of the family between them. (D. Cusack, ‘Southern Steel’, ch. IV) — По правде говоря, оба его брата были необычными людьми... Самые умные в семье.
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78 keep on the rails
соблюдать нормы поведения, приличия; не нарушать законовWe have all kept on the rails. There have been no scandals in the family: none of us have appeared in police-courts or gone to prison.... (ODCIE) — Мы всегда вели самую благопристойную жизнь. В нашей семье никогда не бывало скандальных историй, никто не попадал на скамью подсудимых, не сидел в тюрьме...
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79 close the ranks
сплотить ряды [первонач. тк. воен.]She needs the family terribly just now. We all need each other. We must close our ranks. (I. Murdoch, ‘An Accidental Man’) — Трейси сейчас особенно нужна семья. Мы все нужны друг другу. Семья должна сплотиться.
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80 and all
adv infml1)The whole of the fish may be eaten, head, tail, bones and all — В рыбе все можно есть - голову, хвост, кости и прочее
The whole family came, children and all — Они приехали всей семьей, включая детей
What with snow and all we hit the town late in the night — Из-за снега и прочего мы въехали в город поздно ночью
I wash and scrub and dust and all — И чего я только не делаю: и стираю, и мою, и пыль вытираю
They copied from one another as usual, I suppose, mistakes and all — Они списали друг у друга и, конечно, с ошибками
He jumped into the river, clothes and all — Он прыгнул в реку во всей одежде
2)You know he's my brother and all — Знаете ли, он все-таки мой брат
She is nice and all but I don't like her — Она, конечно, очень милая особа, но мне она не нравится
I have grown up in that country and all — Я, как-никак, вырос в этой стране
I won't and all — Не хочу, и все тут
He's smart and all — Вообще-то, он парень сообразительный
3)"Did they climb the mountain?" "Yes they did it and all" — "Они поднялись на эту гору?" - "Да, поднялись, вот так-то!"
См. также в других словарях:
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