Перевод: с исландского на английский

с английского на исландский

angels

  • 1 ÁRR

    I)
    (pl. ærir and árar, acc. áru and ára), m.
    1) messenger, servant;
    2) pl. angels (ærir ok höfuðærir).
    a. early (at árum degi).
    * * *
    m. [Ulf. airus; Hel. eru; A. S. ar; cp. Icel. eyrindi, A. S. ærend, Engl. errand], a messenger; old gen. árar (as ásar from áss); dat. æri (Fms. xi. 144); acc. pl. áru, Hkv. 1. 21, Og. 25, Greg. 35, later ára; nom. pl. ærir, Pd. 35 (12th century), later árar, v. Lex. Poët.: very rare and obsolete in prose, except in a bad sense, but freq. in old poetry: also used in the sense of a servant, Lat. minister, famulus; konungs árr, Guðs árr, Lex. Poët.; Ásu úrr, Ýt. 25.
    2. theol., in pl.:
    α. the angels; Guð görir anda áru sína, Greg. 35; engla sveitir, þat eru ærir ok höfuð-ærir, id.
    β. evil spirits; now almost exclusively used in this sense; fjandinn ok hans árar, Fms. vii. 37; satan með sínum árum, ii. 137; cp. djöfli, viti, ár (dat.) og álf, öldin trúði sú, Snót 140.
    γ. used of the number eleven, ærir eru ellefu, Edda 108.

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  • 2 FALL

    * * *
    n.
    1) fall; f. er fararheill a fall bodes a lucky journy; koma e-m til falls, to cause one to fall; föll berast á e-n, one begins to reel or stagger;
    2) fall, death in battle (í flótta er í. veist);
    3) carcase of a slaughtered animal (cf. nautsfall, ‘sauðarfall’);
    4) frequent deaths from plague (ef mýss gørðu mein á mat eða klæðum, þá kom f. í þær);
    5) heavy sea (reis f. mikit alit frá grunni);
    6) sin, transgression;
    7) downfall, ruin, decay; f. engla, the fall of angels; gózin eru at falli komin, the estates are dilapidated;
    8) quantity (of a vowel or syllable);
    9) gramm., case.
    * * *
    n., pl. föll, [common to all Teut. idioms except Goth.], a fall:—defined in law, þat er fall ef maðr styðr niðr kné eðr hendi, Grág. ii. 8, Ísl. ii. 246, Al. 76, Sd. 143: the proverb, fall er farar heill, a fall bodes a lucky journey, Fms. vi. 414 (of king Harold at Stamford-bridge), viii. 85, 403, Sverr. S.; sá er annarr orðs-kviðr at fall er farar heill, ok festir þú nú fætr í landi, Fb. i. 231, cp. Caesar’s ‘teneo te, Africa;’ falls er ván að fornu tré, Stj. 539; stirð eru gamalla manna föll; flas er falli næst, flurry is nigh falling: föll berask á e-n, one begins to reel, stagger. Fas. iii. 429; koma e-m til falls, to cause one to fall, Edda 34; reiddi hann til falls, he reeled, Eb. 220. 2. a fall, death in battle, Lat. caedes, Fms. i. 11, 43, 89, Nj. 280, Eg. 37, 106, Ó. H. 219, passim; the proverb, í flótta er fall vest, Fms. viii. 117; val-fall, Lat. strages; mann-fall, loss of men in battle.
    β. the ‘fall,’ a plague in cattle or beasts, murrain, 655. 2, Bs. i. 97, 245, 456.
    γ. the carcase of a slaughtered animal; baulu-fall, sauðar-fall, nauts-fall, hrúts-fall, Stj. 483.
    3. medic. in compds, brot-fall, the falling sickness, epilepsy; blóð-fall, klæða-föll, bloody flux; lima-fall, paresis.
    β. childbirth, in the phrase, vera komin að falli, to be in an advanced state, (komin að burði is used of sheep, cows.)
    4. the fall or rush of water; vatns-fall, a waterfall, large river; sjávar-föll, tides; að-fall, flood-tide; út-fall, ebb-tide; boða-fall, a breaker, cp. Bs. ii. 51.
    5. in gramm. a case, Lat. casus, Skálda 180, 206: quantity, 159, 160, Edda 126: a metric. fault, a defective verse, dropping of syllables, Fb. iii. 426.
    II. metaph. downfall, ruin, decay; fall engla, the fall of the angels, Rb. 80; til falls ok upprisu margra í Ísrael, Luke ii. 34; hafa sér e-t til falls, to run risk of ruin, Hrafn. 30; gózin eru at falli komin, the estates are dilapidated, Mar.; á-fall, a shock; frá-fall, death; ó-fall, mishap; jarð-fall, an earth-slip.
    2. eccl. a sin, transgression, Bs. i. 686, Mar. 77 (Fr.)
    3. a law term, breach, failure, non-fulfilment, in eið-fall, vegar-fall, Gþl. 416; messu-fall, orð-fall, veizlu-fall.
    4. mod. a case, occasion.

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  • 3 fylgja

    * * *
    I)
    (-ða, -t), v.
    1) to accompany, help, with dat.; f. e-m at, f. e-s málum, to side with one, take one’s part;
    2) to lead, guide one (yðr var fylgt í kornhlöðu eina);
    3) to pursue (f. fast flóttamönnum);
    4) to follow, be about one (konungr lét sveininn f. móður sinni);
    5) to follow, observe (f. e-s ráðom, f. hirðsiðum);
    6) to belong, or pertain to (segl ok reiði er fylgðu skipinu);
    7) láta f., to add; þat lét hann f., at, he added that;
    8) refl., fylgjast, to follow one another; fig. to hold together (hann bað sína menn f. vel, hold well together).
    f.
    1) guidance (beiða e-n fylgju);
    2) female guardian spirit; attendant spirit in animal form (þú munt vera feigr maðr ok muntu hafa sét fylgju þína).
    * * *
    n, f. = fylgð, Grág. i. 343; bjóða e-m fylgju sína, ii. 56, v. l., Ísl. ii. 340; í förum ok fylgju með e-m, Stj. 135, 222; koma í fylgju með e-m, Rb. 356.
    II. metaph. a fetch, a female guardian spirit of the heathen age, whose appearance foreboded one’s death, cp. Hkv. Hjörv. (the prose); þú munt vera feigr maðr ok muntú séð hafa fylgju þína, Nj. 62, Hallfr. S. ch. 11: also whole families had a fylgja (kyn-f., ættar-f.), get ek at þetta hafi engar konur verit aðrar en fylgjur yðrar frænda, Fms. ii. 195; eigi fara litlar fylgjur fyrir þér, x. 262, Vd. ch. 36; nú sækja at fylgjur Úsvífs, Nj. 20; manna-fylgjur, Bjarn. 48, Lv. 69; fuglar þeir munu vera manna-fylgjur, Ísl. ii. 196; marr ( a horse) er manns fylgja, Fs. 68; liggja fylgjur þínar til Íslands, thy guardian angels, good angels, point to Iceland, i. e. thou wilt go thither, Orkn. 14; þínar fylgjur mega eigi standask hans fylgjur, Gullþ. 11, Lv. 104; hafa þeir bræðr rammar fylgjur, Fs. 50:—in mod. lore (as also sometimes in the Sagas, e. g. Nj. l. c.) fylgja means a ‘fetch,’ an appearance in the shape of an animal, a crescent, or the like going before a person, only a ‘fey’ man’s fylgja follows after him.
    2. = Lat. secundinae, a baby’s caul, cp. Germ. glückshaube; barns-f., Bs. ii. 168, freq. in mod. usage, cp. Ísl. Þjóðs. i. 354.
    III. in pl. a law phrase, kvenna-fylgjur, abduction or elopement, Grág. i. 342 (cp. fylgja l. 4. below).
    COMPDS: fylgjuengill, fylgjukona.

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  • 4 stóll

    * * *
    I)
    (-s, -ar), m.
    1) stool, chair (setjast á stól);
    2) bishop’s see or residence (fór biskup heim til stóls síns); sitja at stóli, to be bishop; vera at stóli, to reside (skal annarr biskup vera at stóli í Skálaholti);
    3) a king’s throne or residence (S. konungr setti stól sinn ok höfuðstað í Konungahellu);
    m. a kind of table (hann tók borðbúnað af stólnum).
    m. stock (cf. skipastóll).
    * * *
    m. [Gr. στόλος?], a stock; in compds, skipa-stóll, a stock of ships, a fleet, see skip; höfuð-stóll, funds, stock.
    2. plur. stólar, eccl. hosts of angels, Hom. 133; stóla-fylki, a host of cherubim, Greg. 37 (from the white gown ‘stóla’?).

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  • 5 andi

    * * *
    m.
    1) breath, breathing; a. Ingimundar er ekki góðr, his breath smells, is foul;
    2) current of air (a handar þinnar);
    3) gramm., aspiration (linr, snarpr a.);
    4) soul (guð skapaði líkamann ok andann); gjalda guði sinn anda, to die;
    5) spirit, spiritual being; úhreinn a., an unclean spirit; heilagr a., the Holy Ghost.
    * * *
    a, m.
    1. prop. breath, breathing; af anda fisksins, Edda 19; cp. hverr andalauss lifir, who lives without breathing, in the Riddles of Gestumblindi, Fas. i. 482; af anda hans, Greg. 20, Sks. 41 B; andi er Ingimundar, ekki góðr á bekkinn, of foul breath, Sturl. i. 21 (in a verse).
    2. a current of air; andi handar þinnar, air caused by the waving of the hand, 623. 33: now freq. of a soft breeze.
    3. (gramm.) aspiration; linr, snarpr a., Skálda 175, 179.
    II. metaph. and of Christian origin, spirit. In the Icel. translation of the N. T. andi answers to πνευμα, sál to ψυχή (cp. Luke i. 46, 47); Guð skapaði líkamann ok andann, Mar. 656; taki þér við líkamanum en Drottinn við andanum, id.; gjalda Guði sinn anda, Mar. 39 (Fr.); hjarta, andi ok vizka, id. In some of these cases it may answer to ψυχή, but the mod. use is more strict: as a rule there is a distinction between ‘önd,’ f. anima, and ‘andi,’ m. animus, yet in some cases both are used indifferently, thus Luke xxiii. 46 is translated by ‘andi,’ yet ‘önd’ is more freq., Pass. 44. 21, 45. I.
    2. spirit, spiritual being (önd is never used in this sense); John iv. 24, Guð er andi, and, tilbiðja í anda, ἐν πνευματι.
    3. the Holy Ghost, Nj. 164, Rb. 80.
    4. angels; þessháttar eldr brennir andana, Stj. 41.
    5. in a profane sense; álfr eða a., Fas. i. 313.
    6. spiritual gift; í krapti ok í anda Heliæ, Hom. 104. Luke i. 17, Sks. 565.
    COMPDS: andagipt, andakast, andaliga, andaligr.

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  • 6 ARR

    I)
    (pl. ærir and árar, acc. áru and ára), m.
    1) messenger, servant;
    2) pl. angels (ærir ok höfuðærir).
    a. early (at árum degi).
    * * *
    n. [Sanskr. arus, Engl. and Scot. arr], a scar, v. örr.

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  • 7 árr

    I)
    (pl. ærir and árar, acc. áru and ára), m.
    1) messenger, servant;
    2) pl. angels (ærir ok höfuðærir).
    a. early (at árum degi).
    * * *
    adj., Lat. matutinus; at arum degi, Hom. 121. Cp. ár (adv.) II.

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  • 8 BÚI

    m.
    1) dweller, inhabitant, esp. in compds. (bergbúi, hellisbúi, einbúi);
    helvítis búar, inhabitants of hell;
    himna búar, inhabitants of heaven, angels;
    * * *
    a, m. [búa].
    I. a dweller, inhabitant, only in compds as haug-búi, hellis-búi, berg-búi, a dweller in cairns, caves, rocks, of a ghost or a giant; ein-búi, an anchorite, a bachelor; himin-búi, an inhabitant of heaven, an angel; lands-búi, Lat. incola; ná-búi, a neighbour; í-búi or inn-búi, incola, Snót 71; stafn-búi, q. v.
    II. a neighbour = nábúi; kom Steinn at máli við Þorbjörn búa sinn, Krók. 36; við Bárðr búi minn, Nj. 203; þau sýndu búum sínum úþokkasvip, Fs. 31; Steinólfr b. hans, Landn. 269; cp. búi-sifjar, búi-graðungr, búi-maðr (below), rare in this sense.
    2. hence a law term in the Icel. Commonwealth, a neighbour acting as juror; the law distinguishes between neighbours of place and person; as, vetfangs-búar, neighbours of the place where (e. g.) a manslaughter was committed; or neighbours either of defendant or plaintiff, e. g. heimilis-búar, home-neighbours, opposed to dómstaðar-búar, Grág. ii. 405, and þingvallar-búar, neighbours of court or parliament: the number of the neighbours summoned was various; in slight cases, such as compensation for damage or the like, they were commonly five—sem búar fimm meta; in cases liable to outlawry they were usually nine, Grág. ii. 345; the verdict of the neighbour is called kviðr, the summoning kvöð, and kveðja búa, to summon neighbours; the cases esp. in the Grágás and Njála are almost numberless. The standing Icel. law phrase ‘sem búar meta’ reminds one of the English mode of fixing compensation by jury. According to Konrad Maurer, the jury is of Scandinavian origin, and first appears in English law along with the Normans after the Conquest; but this does not preclude an earlier usage in the Scandinavian parts of England. In the old Danish law they were called ‘nævnd,’ in Sweden ‘nämd;’ cp. esp. Nj. ch. 142 sqq. and Grág. Þ. Þ. and Vígslóði. The classical reference for this institution, Grág. i. 167, Kb. ch. 85, is quoted p. 58 s. v. bera B. I. 1.
    COMPDS: búakviðburðr, búakviðr, búakvöð, búavirðing.
    III. a pr. name of a man, Jómsv. S.; mod. Dan. ‘Boye’ or ‘Boy,’ hence the mod. Icel. Bogi, Feðga-æfi, 27.

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  • 9 EÐLI

    (in old MSS. written øðli), n.
    1) nature; manns eðli, mannligt eðli, human nature; arnar eðli, the eagle’s nature; þat er í móti náttúrligu eðli, it is against the order of nature;
    2) origin, extraction (hann var valskr at ætt ok eðli);
    3) fœtus (þótti henni kviknat hafa eðli sitt).
    * * *
    n., akin to and derived from óðal, q. v.; old MSS. also always use the form øðli (eyðli, D. I. l. c.), Fms. x. 301, Hom. 47, 118, Greg. 48, O. H. L. 86, Eluc. 16, Hkr. i. 225, Hbl. 9, Bs. i. 335, 342; eðli is more modern, but öðli is still preserved:
    1. nature; mannligt e., human nature or character, 623. 19, Eb. 110, Fms. x. 301; náttúrligt e., human condition, Mag. (Fr.); vera í e. sinu, to be in one’s own nature or frame of mind, Fs. 59; eptir e., natural, ordinary, Fms. iii. 118; móti e., against nature, extraordinary; með líkindum ok e., Edda 69; undruðusk er jörðin ok dýrin ok fuglarnir höfðu saman e. í sumum hlutum, 144. (pref.); eðli and náttúra ( natura) are used synonymously, id.; engla öðli, the nature of angels, Eluc. 16; arnar öðli, the eagle’s nature, Hom. 47; allt mannkyns öðli, Greg. 48; öðrlez (= öðlis) skepna, O. H. L. 86.
    2. birth, origin, extraction, in the alliterative phrases, ætt ok öðli, Fms. i. 149; hann var Valskr ( Welsh) at ætt ok eðli, vii. 56; Danskr at öðli, Danish by origin, Hom. 118; nafn ok öðli, name and family, Hbl. 9: the phrase, at alda-öðli, for ever and ever, D. I. i. 266: in mod. usage, frá alda öðli, from the birth of time, from the beginning, only used of ‘past time;’ the Dan. ‘fra Arildstid’ is probably a corruption of the same phrase.
    3. embryo, Lat. fetus, Mar. 156.
    COMPDS: eðlisfræði, eðlishættir, eðlisskapan.

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  • 10 engla-fylki

    n, a host of angels, Stj., Hom. 133, Fms. v. 340, Mar. 656 A. 8.

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  • 11 engla-lið

    n. a host of angels, Greg. 37, Hom. 49, 154.

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  • 12 engla-líf

    n. life of angels, Hom. 16.

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  • 13 engla-sveit

    f. a host of angels, Hom. 154.

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  • 14 engla-sýn

    f. a vision of angels, 625. 84.

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  • 15 FLOKKR

    (-s, -ar), m.
    1) body of men (f. eru fimm menn);
    2) company, host (þeir gengu allir í einum flokki);
    3) band, troop, party; hefja, reisa, flokk, to raise a band; fylla flokk e-s, to join one’s party, to side with one;
    4) short poem, without refrains (opp. to drápa).
    * * *
    m. akin to fólk, [A. S. floc; Engl. flock; Dan. flok; Swed. flock]
    I. a body of men; in law five men make a flokkr; flokkr eru fimm menn, Edda 108; þat heitir f. er fimm menn eru saman, N. G. L. i. 61:—a company, host, party, þeir gengu allir í einum flokki, Nj. 100; engla flokkar, a host of angels, Greg. 34; marga flokka, Th. 3; hlaupa í gegn ór öðrum flokki, Grág. ii. 10: adverb., flokkum, in crowds, 656. 18; flokkum þeir fóru, Sl. 63:—a troop, band, hefja flokk, to raise a band, to rebel, Fms. viii. 273, ix. 4; ofríki flokkanna, vii. 293; fara með flokk, to roam about, 318:—a tribe, company, in a good sense, Stj. 321, 322, passim, and so in mod. usage.
    COMPDS: flokkaatvígi, flokkaferð, flokksforingi, flokkshöfðingi, flokksmaðr, flokksvíg.
    II. a short poem, Ísl. ii. 237, Fms. v. 227, vi. 391, xi. 203, 204: as the name of poems, Brands-flokkr, Sturl. iii. 90; Tryggva-f., Fms. iii. 54, 116; Kálfs-f., 123; Valþjófs-f., vi. 426; cp. esp. Gunnl. S. and Knytl. S. l. c., vide drápa.
    2. in mod. usage an epic poem consisting of several cantos is called flokkr or rímna-flokkr; thus Úlfars-rímur, Núma-rímur, Þrymlur, etc. are each of them a flokkr, but the Skíða-ríma or Ólafs-ríma, being single rhapsodies, are not so called.

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  • 16 RÖDD

    (gen. <b>raddar</b>, pl. <b>raddir</b>), f. voice; með skjálfandi röddu, with a trembling (faltering) voice.
    * * *
    f., gen. raddar, dat. röddu and rödd, pl. raddir; acc. roddo, as if from radda, Mork. 128; [Ulf. razda = λαλία and γλωσσα; O. H. G. rarta; A. S. reord; the Norse is an assimilated form; rödd and kvöddusk are made to rhyme in Hkr. i, in a verse of the 10th century]:— the voice; raddir ok orð, Stj. 67; hljóð þat er rödd heitir … en annat er eigi er rödd, … rödd er hljóð, Skálda 174; hverrar raddar, Sks. 635; þeir mæltu einni röddu, 656 A. ii. 5; manns rödd, the human voice, 655 xxii. B. 2; með skjálfandi röddu, Fms. viii. 8; kalla kaldri röddu, Akv. 2; kalla hárri röddu, Matth. xxvii. 46, Luke xxiii. 46; stilla röddu, Vkv. 15; ein rödd úr skýinu sagði, Matth. xvii. 5; rödd hrópanda í eyðimörku, John i. 23; röddin niðr af himni, Matth. iii. 17; engla raddir, angels’ voices;—with the notion of music, Skálda; af bar söngr hans ok rödd af öðrum mönnum, Bs. i. 127; fögr rödd, sætlig hljóð raddanna, 240:—reina rödd, Hkv. Hjörv.; dýrs rödd, Barl. 56; fugls rödd, Fms. vi. 445.
    COMPDS: raddargrein, raddarstafr, raddartól.

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  • 17 skari

    * * *
    m. host, troop.
    * * *
    1.
    a, m. a snuffer, Pm. 31; elda-skari, Magn. Ólafsson.
    2.
    a, m. [Germ. schaar; Dan. skare], a host, troop, esp. a procession; Spes ok hennar skari, Grett. 161 A, Fas. iii. 359, Bs. ii. 122; engla skari, a host of angels, D. N. ii. 166, freq. in mod. usage.

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  • 18 STÓLL

    * * *
    I)
    (-s, -ar), m.
    1) stool, chair (setjast á stól);
    2) bishop’s see or residence (fór biskup heim til stóls síns); sitja at stóli, to be bishop; vera at stóli, to reside (skal annarr biskup vera at stóli í Skálaholti);
    3) a king’s throne or residence (S. konungr setti stól sinn ok höfuðstað í Konungahellu);
    m. a kind of table (hann tók borðbúnað af stólnum).
    m. stock (cf. skipastóll).
    * * *
    m. [common to all Teut. languages], a stool, chair; setjask á stól, Nj. 179; eptir endi-löngu vórn skipaðir stólar, Fms. x. 16; stólar tveir (in a church), Vm. 70.
    2. metaph. a bishop’s see or residence, Fms. ix. 2 (biskups-stóll); sitja at stóli, Bs. i. 171; for biskup heim til stóls síns, 508; skal annarr biskup vera at stóli í Skálaholti, K. Þ. K.; Hóla-stóll, Skálaholts-s, the see of H., Sc.: of the pope, a see, 625. 58: of a king, a throne; stól ok höfuðstað, Ó. H. 65, Fms. vii. 159, Stj.

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  • 19 Val-kyrja

    u, f. the chooser of the slain (kjósa val), the Valkyriur were a troop of northern goddesses, for whom see Edda 22, Gm., Em.; for the Valkyriur as guardian angels and tutors of the heroes, like Athene in the Odyssey, see Hkv., Vkv., Sdm.

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  • 20 englaflokkr

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  • angels — The Greek word aggelos means ‘messenger’ and as such angels are described as bearing messages from God to the patriarchs (e.g. Gen. 22:11). In the later (post exilic) literature (perhaps influenced by contact with Zoroastrianism) angels are… …   Dictionary of the Bible

  • Angels (EP) — Infobox Album Name = Angels E.P. Type = EP Artist = Whiskeytown Released = May 1995 Recorded = Genre = Alternative country Length = Label = Mood Food Producer = Reviews = Last album = This album = Angels (1995) Next album = Faithless Street… …   Wikipedia

  • ANGELS —    originally messengers of GOD in CHRISTIANITY, JUDAISM and ISLAM. Angels are believed to be divided between those who are GOOD angels and continue to serve God, and those who have rebelled against Him and become EVIL. MUSLIMS believe that God… …   Concise dictionary of Religion

  • angels — i. Atmospheric scatterers like water droplets in the form of clouds or rain, which cause clutter on the radar. These give the impression of targets with considerable depth, sometimes moving at quite high velocities. This is due to abnormal… …   Aviation dictionary

  • Angels —  Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différentes œuvres portant le même titre. Angels est le titre de plusieurs œuvres : Un single du groupe Within Temptation sur l album The Silent Force Un single du chanteur Robbie Williams sur l… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Angels —    (See Holy Angels.) It is also to be noted that the term Angels is used in the New Testament for the Bishops of the Church, as in the Epistles to the seven Churches of Asia (Rev. 2 and 3) which are addressed, unto the angel of the Church of , i …   American Church Dictionary and Cyclopedia

  • angels —  Investors in start up companies who contribute a small amount of capital and provide advice to the new entrepreneur.  ► “The increasing role of friends and acquaintances dubbed ‘angels’ in SILICON VALLEY provides a new funding spigot and means… …   American business jargon

  • ANGELS AND ANGELOLOGY — ANGELS AND ANGELOLOGY. The entry is arranged according to the following outline: bible terminology angels as a group the angel of the lord in the hagiographa silence of the prophets ezekiel and zechariah daniel apocrypha among the jewish sects… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Angels De Los Angeles D'Anaheim — Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim Fondation 1961 …   Wikipédia en Français

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