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41 время
ср.1) timeза это время — in this (interval of) time, in this period
сколько времени? — how long?; what's the time?
время терпит — there is no hurry, there is plenty of time
время не позволяет — time forbids, there is no time
всему свое время — there is time for everything, everything is good in its season
тянуть время — to stall for time, to temporize
в свободное время — at leisure, in one's spare time
в скором времени — in a short time, shortly, before long, in the near future
время закрытия — (магазинов, учреждений и т. п.) closing-time
все время — all the time, always, constantly, at all times
до того времени — till then, up to that time
дополнительное время — спорт extra time, overtime
к тому времени — by that time, by then
к этому времени — by this, by now
ко времени — on time, at the right/proper time
летнее время — summer-time, summertime
много времени — a long time/while; much time, plenty of time
на время — for a (certain) time, for a while, temporarily; in (the long) run
свободное время — spare/free time
со временем — in (the course of) time, with time, as time goes by
2) (эпоха) time; times мн. ч.в наше время — in our time, nowadays
во времена оно — архаич. или шутл. of yore, in the old days
во времена — (кого-л./чего-л.) in (smb.'s) time
по тем временам — for those times/days
3) грам. tense•время, необходимое для (чего-л./кого-л. чтобы сделать что-л.) — the time it takes for (smth./smb. to do smth)
недолго осталось ждать того времени, когда — it should not be long before
до последнего времени — until (very) recently, until (very) recent times
••первое время — (тж. в первое время)
последнее время — (тж. за/в последнее время)
в данное время — at (the) present (moment), today
в свое время — in one's time ( раньше); in due time/course ( в нужное время)
в то время как — whereas, while
в то же время — at the same time, while, yet
во время — during, at the time of
время от времени, по временам — from time to time, (every) now and then, sometimes, at times, now and again
на первое время — for the initial period, initially
раньше времени — prematurely, too soon
самое время — разг. just the time (to/for)
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42 فترة
فَتْرَة \ period: a length of time: a short period: a period of three hours. spell: a period of time: a long spell of fine weather. while: a period: I waited a long while. He arrived a short (or a little) while ago. \ فَتْرَة \ interval: a space (in time or distance) between two things: an interval of ten minutes between two parts of a play; a wire fence, with posts at three metre intervals. \ See Also مسافَة فاصِلة \ فَتْرَة ازدِحام الطُّرق والمُواصَلات \ rush hour: the time when crowds of people are travelling to or from work: Buses are packed full during the rush hours. \ فَتْرَة انْتِظار \ wait: a time or act of waiting: We missed the bus and had a long wait for the next one. \ فَتْرَة انقِطاع \ intermission: a short pause or rest before sth. continues (as between acts in the theatre). \ فَتْرَة رَاحَة \ respite: a short period of rest or escape: There was no respite from the continual firing of the guns. \ فَتْرَة زمنية \ lapse: (of time) a period that has passed without sth. happening: There was a lapse of two years between his visits. time: a particular moment: Last time I saw him (When I last saw him), he looked ill. \ See Also مرة (مَرَّة) \ فَتْرَة الصَّوْم الكبير قبل عيد الفِصْح \ Lent: (in the Christian religion) a period of forty days before Easter. \ فَتْرَة عشر سَنَوات \ decade: a period of ten years. \ لِفَتْرَةٍ طَويلَةٍ \ for ages: infml., for a long time: I haven’t seen him for ages. \ لِفَتْرَةٍ قَصِيرَةٍ \ a while: for a short time: Let’s wait a while. -
43 द्वि _dvi
द्वि num. a. (Nom. du. द्वौ m., द्वे f., द्वे n.) Two, both; सद्यः परस्परतुलामधिरोहतां द्वे R.5.68. (N. B. In comp. द्वा is sub- stituted for द्वि necessarily before दशन्, विंशति and त्रिंशत् and optionally before चत्वारिंशत्, पञ्चाशत्, षष्टि, सप्तति and नवति, द्वि remaining unchanged before अशीति.) [cf. L. duo, bis or bi in comp.; Gr. duo, dis; Zend dva; A. S. twi.]-Comp. -अक्ष a. two-eyed, binocular. द्व्यक्षीं त्र्यक्षीं ललाटाक्षीम् Mb.-अक्षर a. dissyllabic. (-रः) a word of two syllables.-अङ्गुल a. two fingers long. (-लम्) two fingers' length.-अणुकम् an aggregate or molecule of two atoms, a diad. विषयो द्व्यणुकादिस्तु ब्रह्माण्डान्त उदाहृतः Bhāṣāparichchheda.-अन्तर a. separated by two inter- mediate links.-अर्थ a.1 having two senses.-2 ambi- guous, equivocal.-3 having two objects in view. ˚कर a. accomplishing two objects; आम्रश्च सिक्तः पितरश्च तृप्ता एका क्रिया द्व्यर्थकरीह लोके Vāyu P. ˚त्वम् the state of having to convey two senses; द्व्यर्थत्वं विप्रतिषिद्धम् MS.7.1.6.-अर्ध a. 1<?>.- अवर a. at least two; द्व्यवरान् भोजयेद् विप्रान् पायसेन यथोचितम् Bhāg.8.16.43.-अशीत a. eighty-second.-अशीतिः f. eighty-two.-अष्टम् copper. ˚सहस्रम् 16.-अहः a period of two days.-आत्मक a.1 having a double nature.-2 being two.-आत्मकाः m. (pl.) the signs of the zodiac Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius and Pisces.-आमुष्यायणः 'a son of two persons or fathers', an adopted son who remains heir to his natural father though adopted by another.-आम्नात a. twice men- tioned.-आहिक a. recurring every day (fever).-ऋचम् (द्वृचम् or द्व्यर्चम्) a collection of two verses or riks.-एकान्तर a. separated by two or by one (degree); द्व्येकान्तरासु जातानां धर्म्यं विद्यादिमं विधिम् Ms.1.7.कः, -ककारः 1 crow (there being two 'Ka's in the word काक).-2 the ruddy goose (there being two 'Ka's in the word कोक).-ककुद् m. a camel.-कर a. Yielding two senses, serving two purposes; तत्र द्विकरः शब्दः स्यात् । न च सकृदुच्चरितः शक्तो ŚB. on MS.12.1.4.-कार्षापणिक a. worth two कार्षापणs-कौडविक a. containing or worth two कुडवs.-गत a ambiguous.-गु a. exchanged or bartered for two cows. (-गुः) a subdivision of the Tatpuruṣa compound in which the first member is a numeral; द्वन्द्वो द्विगुरपि चाहम् Udb.-गुण a. double, twofold; पितुर्वधव्यसनमिदं हि येन मे चिरादपि द्विगुणमिवाद्य वर्धते Mu.5.6 (द्रिगुणाकृ to plough twice; द्विगुणीकृ to double, increase; द्विगुणीभूत a. double, augmented).-गुणित a.1 doubled, multiplied by two; वैरोचनैर्द्विगुणिताः सहसा मयूखैः Ki.5.46.-2 folded double.-3 enveloped.-4 doubly increased, doubled.- चरण a. having two legs, two-legged; द्विचरणपशूनां क्षितिभुजाम् Śānti.4.15.-चत्वारिंश a. (द्वि-द्वा-चत्वारिंश) fortysecond.-चत्वारिंशत् f. (द्वि-द्वा चत्वारिंशत्) forty-two.-चन्द्रधी, -मतिः The illusion of seeing two moons due to an eye disease called Timira; N.13.42.-जः 'twice-born'1 a man of any of the first three castes of the Hindus (a Brāh- maṇa, Kṣatriya or Vaiśya); मातुर्यदग्रे जायन्ते द्वितीयं मौञ्जिबन्धनात् । ब्राह्मणक्षत्रियविशस्तस्मादेते द्विजाः स्मृताः Y.1.39.-2 Brāhmaṇa (over whom the Saṁskāras or purifi- catory rites are performed); जन्मना ब्राह्मणो ज्ञेयः संस्कारै- र्द्विज उच्यते.-3 any oviparous animal, such as a bird, snake, fish &c.; Mb.12.361.5. (द्विजश्रेष्ठ = द्विजाना- मण्डजानां सर्पाणां श्रेष्ठ); स तमानन्दमविन्दत द्विजः N.2.1; Ś.5.22; R.12.22; Mu.1.11; Ms.5.17.-4 a tooth; कीर्णं द्विजानां गणैः Bh.1.13. (where द्विज means 'a Brāhmaṇa' also).-5 A star; L. D. B.-6 A kind of horse; जलोद्भवा द्विजा ज्ञेयाः Aśvachikitsā.-7 A Brahmachārī; Bhāg.11.18.42. ˚अग्ऱ्य a Brāhmaṇa. ˚अयनी the sacred thread worn by the first three castes of the Hindus. ˚आलयः1 the house of a dvija.-2 a nest. ˚इन्द्रः, ˚ईशः1 the moon; द्विजेन्द्रकान्तं श्रितवक्षसं श्रिया Śi.12.3.-2 an epithet of Garuḍa.-3 camphor. ˚दासः a Sūdra. ˚देवः1 a Brāhmaṇa; Bhāg.8.15.37.-2 a sage; Bhāg.3.1.23.-3 N. of Brahmadeva; Bhāg. 5.2.16. ˚पतिः, ˚राजः an epithet of1 the moon; इत्थं द्विजेन द्विजराजकान्तिः R.5.23.-2 Garuḍa.-3 camphor. ˚प्रपा1 a trench or basin round the root of a tree for holding water.-2 a trough near a well for watering birds, cattle &c. ˚प्रियः kind of khadira. ˚प्रिया the Soma plant. ˚बन्धुः, ˚ब्रुवः1 a man who pretends to be a Brāh- maṇa.-2 one who is 'twice-born' or a Brāhmaṇa by name and birth only and not by acts; cf. ब्रह्मबन्धु. ˚मुख्यः a Brāhmaṇa. ˚लिङ्गिन् m.1 a Kṣatriya.-2 a pseudo- Brāhmaṇa, one disguised as a Brāhmaṇa. ˚वाहनः an epithet of Viṣṇu (having Garuḍa for his vehicle). ˚सेवकः a Sūdra.-जन्मन् a.1 having two natures.-2 regenerated.-3 oviparous (-m.).-जातिः m.1 a man of any of the first three castes of the Hindus; एतान् द्विजातयो देशान् संश्रयेरन् प्रयत्नतः Ms.2.24.-2 a Brāhmaṇa. Ki.1.39; Ku.5.4. गुरुरग्निर्द्विजातीनां वर्णानां ब्राह्मणो गुरुः H.-3 a bird.-4 a tooth.-5 A kind of horse; लक्षणद्वयसम्बन्धाद् द्विजातिः स्यात् तुरङ्गमः Yuktikalpataru.-जातीय a.1 belonging to the first three castes of the Hindus.-2 of a twofold nature.-3 of mixed origin, mongrel. (-यः) a mule.-जानि a having two wives.-जिह्व a. double-tongued (fig. also).-2 insincere.(-ह्वः) 1 a snake; परस्य मर्माविधमुज्झतां निजं द्विजिह्वतादोषमजिह्मगामिभिः Śi.1.63; R.11.64;14.41; Bv.1.2.-2 an informer, a slan- derer, tale-bearer.-3 an insincere person-4 a thief.-5 particular disease of the tongue.-ज्या the sine of an arc.-ठः 1 the sign visarga consisting of two dots.-2 N. of Svāhā, wife of Agni.-त्र a. (pl.) two or three; द्वित्राण्यहान्यर्हसि सोढुमर्हन् R.5.25; सूक्ष्मा एव पतन्ति चातकमुखे द्वित्राः पयोबिन्दवः Bh.2.121.-त्रिंश (द्वात्रिंश) a.1 thirty second.-2 consisting of thirty two.-त्रिंशत् (द्वात्रिंशत्) f. thirty-two. ˚लक्षण a. having thirty-two auspicious marks upon the body.-दण्डि ind. stick against stick.-दत् a. having two teeth (as a mark of age).-दन्तः an elephant.-दल a. having two parts, two-leafed.-दश a. (pl.) twenty.-दश a.(द्वादश) 1 twelfth; गर्भात् तु द्वादशे विशः Ms.2.36.-2 consisting of twelve.-दशन् (द्वादशन्) a. (pl.) twelve. ˚अंशुः, ˚अर्चिस् m. an epithet of1 the planet Jupiter.-2 Bṛihaspati, the preceptor of the gods. ˚अक्षः, ˚करः, ˚लोचनः epithets of Kārtikeya ˚अक्षरमन्त्रः- विद्या the mantra ऊँ नमो भगवते वासुदेवाय; गन्धधूपादिभिश्चार्चेद्वाद- शाक्षरविद्यया Bhāg.8.16.39. ˚अङ्गुल a measure of twelve fingers. ˚अध्यायी N. of Jaimini's Mimāṁsā in twelve Adhyāyas. ˚अन्यिक a. committing twelve mistakes in reading. ˚अस्र a dodecagon. ˚अहः1 a period of twelve days; शुध्येद् विप्रो दशाहेन द्वादशाहेन भूमिपः Ms.5.83;11.168.-2 a sacrifice lasting for or completed in twelve days. ˚अक्षः, ˚आख्यः a Buddha. ˚आत्मन् m. the sun; N.1.52. ˚आदित्याः (pl.) the twelve suns; see आदित्य. ˚आयुस् m. a dog. ˚लक्षणी f. the मीमांसासूत्र of जैमिनि (so called because it comprises twelve chapters); धर्मो द्वादशलक्षण्या व्युत्पाद्यः ŚB. on MS. ˚वार्षिक a.1 twelve years old, lasting for twelve years; Pt.1. ˚विध a. twelve-fold. ˚सहस्र a. consisting of 12.-दशी (द्वादशी) the twelfth day of a lunar fortnight.-द्वादशान्यिक (द्वादशापपाठा यस्य जाताः द्वादशान्यिकः).-दशम् (द्वादशम्)) a collection of twelve, ˚आदित्याः Twelve Ādityas:- विवस्वान्, अर्यमा, पूषन्, त्वष्टा, सविता, 3भग, धाता, विधाता, वरुण, मित्र, रुद्र, विष्णु. ˚पुत्रा Twelve types of sons according to Dharmaśāstra:-- औरस, क्षेत्रज, दत्तक, कृत्रिम, गूढोत्पन्न, अपविद्ध, कानीन, सहोढ, क्रीत, पौनर्भव, स्वयंदत्त, पारशव.-दाम्नी a cow tied with two ropes.-दिवः a ceremony lasting for two days.-देवतम् the constel- lation विशाखा.-देहः an epithet of Gaṇesa.-धातुः an epithet of Gaṇeśa.-नग्नकः a circumcised man.-नवत (द्वि-द्वा-नवत) a. ninety-second.-नवतिः(द्वि-द्वा-नवतिः) f. ninety-two.-पः an elephant; यदा किञ्चिज्ज्ञो$हं द्विप इव मदान्धः समभवम् Bh.3.31; विपूर्यमाणश्रवणोदरं द्विपाः Śi. ˚अधिपः Indra's elephant. ˚आस्य an epithet of Gaṇesa.-पक्षः 1 a bird.-2 a month.-पञ्चाश (द्वि-द्वा-पञ्चाश) a. fifty-second.-पञ्चाशत् f. (द्वि-द्वा-पञ्चाशत्) fifty-two.-पथम् 1 two ways.-2 a cross-way, a place where two roads meet.-पद् see द्विपाद् below.-पद a. having two feet (as a verse).-पदः a biped man.-पदिका, -पदी a kind of Prākṛita metre.-पाद्, a. two footed; द्विपाद बहुपादानि तिर्यग् गतिमतीनि च Mb.14.37.-पादः 1 a biped, man.-2 a bird.-3 a god.-पाद्यः, -द्यम् a double penalty.-पायिन् m. an elephant.-फालबद्धः hair parted in two; N.1.16.-बाहुः man; Ks.53.94.-बिन्दुः a Visarga (:).-भातम् twilight.-भुजः an angle.-भूम a. having two floors (as a palace).-भौतिकः a horse possessing two ele- ments out of the five; द्वयोर्लक्षणसंबन्धात् तुरगः स्याद् द्विभौतिकः Yuktikalpataru.-मातृ, -मातृजः an epithet of1 Gaṇesa.-2 king Jarāsandha.-मात्रः a long vowel (having two syllabic instants); एकमात्रो भवेद् ह्रस्वो द्विमात्रो दीर्घ उच्यते Śikṣā.-मार्गी a cross-away.-मुखा 1 a leech.-2 kind of water-vessel; ˚अहिः, ˚उरगः a double- mouthed snake.-रः 1 a bee; cf. द्विरेफ.-2 = बर्बर q. v.-मुनि ind. the two Munis, Pāṇini and Kātyāyana; द्विमुनि व्याकरणस्य, विद्याविद्यावतारभेदाद् द्विमुनिव्याकरणमित्यपि साधु Sk.-मूर्वा N. of a plant, presumably some hemp. Mātaṅga. L.9.2.-यामी Two night-watches = 6 hours.-रदः an elephant; सममेव समाक्रान्तं द्वयं द्विरदगामिना R.4.4; Me.61. ˚अन्तकः, ˚अराति, ˚अशनः1 a lion.-2 the Śarabha.-रसनः a snake.-रात्रम् two nights.-रूप a.1 biform.-2 written in two ways.-3 having a different shape.-4 bi-colour, bipartite.(-पः) 1 a variety of interpre- tation or reading.-2 a word correctly written in two ways.-रेतस् m. a mule.-रेफः a large black bee (there being two 'Ra's in the word भ्रमर); अनन्तपुष्पस्य मधोर्हि चूते द्विरेफमाला सविशेषसङ्गा Ku.1.27;3.27,36.-लयः (in music) double time (?); साम्य of two things (like गीत and वाद्य); द्विलयान्ते चर्चरी V.4.35/36.-वक्त्रः 1 a double-mouthed serpent.-2 a kind of demon; एकवक्त्रो महावक्त्रो द्विवक्त्रो कालसंनिभः Hariv.-वचनम् the dual num- ber in grammar.-वज्रकः a kind of house or structure with 16 angles (sides).-वर्गः The pair of प्रकृति and पुरुष, or of काम and क्रोध; जज्ञे द्विवर्गं प्रजहौ द्विवर्गम् Bu. Ch.2.41.-वाहिका a wing.-विंश (द्वाविंश) a. twenty-second.-विंशतिः f. (द्वाविंशति) twenty-two.-विध a. of two kinds or sorts; द्विविधः संश्रयः स्मृतः Ms.7.162.-वेश(स)रा a kind of light carriage drawn by mules.-व्याम, -व्यायाम a. two fathoms long.-शतम् 1 two hundred.-2 one hundred and two.-शत्य a. worth or bought for two hundred.-शफ a. clovenfooted. (-फः) any cloven-footed animal.-शीर्षः an epithet of Agni; also द्विशीर्षकः; सप्तहस्तः चतुःशृङ्गः सप्तजिह्वो द्विशीर्षकः Vaiśvadeva.-श्रुति a. comprehending two intervals.-षष् a. (pl.) twice six, twelve.-षष्ट (द्विषष्ट, द्वाषष्ट) a. sixty-second.-षष्टिः f. (-द्विषष्टिः, द्वाषष्टिः) sixty-two.-सन्ध्य a. having a morning and evening twi-light.-सप्तत (द्वि-द्वा-सप्तत) a. seventy-second.-सप्ततिः f. (द्वि-द्वा सप्ततिः) seventy two.-सप्ताहः a fortnight.-सम a. having two equal sides.-समत्रिभुजः an isosceles triangle.-सहस्राक्षः the great serpent Śeṣa.-सहस्र, -साहस्र a. consisting of 2. (-स्रम्) 2.-सीत्य, -हल्य a. ploughed in two ways, i. e. first length-wise and then breadth-wise.-सुवर्ण a. worth or bought for two golden coins.-स्थ (ष्ठ) a. conveying two senses; भवन्ति चद्विष्ठानि वाक्यानि यथा श्वेतो धावति अलम्बुसानां यातेति ŚB. on MS.4.3.4.-हन् m. an elephant.-हायन, -वर्ष a. two years old; शुके द्विहायनं कत्सं क्रौञ्चं हत्वा त्रिहायनम् Ms.11.134.-हीन a. of the neuter gender.-हृदया a pregnant woman.-होतृ m. an epithet of Agni. -
44 tijd
1 [als ononderbroken eenheid; tijdsduur] time2 [tijdstip; juiste/geschikte moment] time5 [taalkunde] tense♦voorbeelden:in de helft van de tijd • in half the timein een jaar tijd • (with)in a yearna bepaalde tijd • after some/a time, eventuallygeruime tijd • a considerable time, a good whilede hele tijd • all the time, the whole timeeen hele tijd geleden • quite a while agohet is hoog tijd om te vertrekken • it's high time we leften dat is hoog tijd ook! • and about time too!het is de hoogste tijd! • 〈 in kroeg〉 time, (gentlemen,) please!een tijd lang • for a while/timeik heb haar lange tijd niet gezien • I haven't seen her for/in ages/quite a whileeen lange/korte tijd duren • last a long/short timevoor onbepaalde tijd • indefinitely, for an indefinite periodsedert onheuglijke tijden • since time immemorial〈 sport〉 een scherpe tijd neerzetten • record/run a fast timevrije tijd • spare/free time, time off, leisure (time)waar blijft de tijd? • where's the time gone (to)?het zal mijn tijd wel duren • I won't be around to see ithet duurde een tijdje voor ze eraan gewend was • it was/took a while before/until she got used to itik ben niet aan tijd gebonden • I'm not pressed for timeik geef je vijf seconden de tijd • I'm giving you five secondsje moet jezelf de tijd geven • take your timeiemand de tijd geven/gunnen • give someone timezich de tijd niet gunnen (om) • not take the time (to)heb je even tijd? • have you got a moment/a sec?die tijd heb ik gehad • I'm past that now, I've been through thatgeen/genoeg tijd hebben om … • have no/enough time to …tijd genoeg hebben • have plenty of/enough timede tijd hebben • have timewe hebben hem een tijd niet gezien • we haven't seen him for a/some while/some timewe hebben de tijd aan onszelf • our time is our ownweinig tijd hebben • not have got much time, be pressed for timeje hebt nog 14 dagen de tijd • you've got 14 days lefttijd kosten • take timeals je geen tijd hebt, maak je maar tijd • if you haven't got time, make timede tijd nemen voor iets • take one's time about/over somethingtijd opnemen • record the timeer is geen tijd te verliezen • there's no time to lose/to be lostde tijd verstrijkt • time passesdat was me nog eens een tijd! • what a time that was!, those were the days!mijn tijd zit erop • ±I've done my stintin de baas zijn tijd • during/on the boss's timeuw tijd is om • your time is upbinnen afzienbare tijd • within the foreseeable futurebinnen niet al te lange tijd • (with)in the not too distant future, before (too) longbinnen de kortst mogelijke tijd • in (next to) no timehet heeft in tijden niet zo geregend • it hasn't rained like this for agesmet de tijd breidde de hongersnood zich uit • as time went on the famine spreaddit zal met de tijd wel beter gaan • it'll probably get better in timemet zijn tijd geen raad weten • have time on one's handsna korte tijd lukte het ons om … • we soon managed to …sinds enige tijd • for some time (past)een tijd van 11 seconden • a time of 11 secondshet is maar voor korte tijd • it's only for a short whilevoor de tijd van • for a period ofvorig jaar om dezelfde tijd • (at) the same time last yearde plaatselijke tijd • local timede tijd is rijp om … • the time is ripe to …heeft u de tijd ? • have you got the time?'t is allang tijd geweest • it's long past/ 〈 informeel〉way past/way over timeals de tijd daar is • when the time/day comesde tijd verdrijven/korten/doden • kill timeeindelijk! het werd tijd • at last! it was about time (too)!het wordt tijd dat … • it is (high) time that …〈 pregnant〉 het wordt mijn tijd • I must be off, it's time for me to gobij tijd en wijle • now and again/thenmorgen/gisteren om deze tijd • (about/ Aaround) this time tomorrow/yesterdaytijd om te eten/te slapen • time to eat/to go to bedop vaste tijden • at set/fixed timesnet op tijd • just in timeop tijd • in time 〈om iets te doen/voorkomen〉; on time 〈 volgens een bepaald tijdschema, afspraak e.d.〉de bussen lopen precies op tijd • the buses run to/on time/scheduleruim op tijd • with plenty of time to spareop tijd naar bed gaan • not go to bed latezij is over tijd • she's late with her period, her period's late/overduerond die tijd • around then/that timesinds korte tijd • recently, latelyte allen tijde • at all timeste zijner tijd • in due course, when appropriatetegen die tijd • by that time, by thenten tijde van hun huwelijk • at the time of their marriageten tijde van Hendrik VIII • in the days/time/age of Henry VIIIvan tijd tot tijd • from time to timevan die tijd af • from that time (on/onward(s), (ever), since (that time)een tijd van komen en een tijd van gaan • ±nothing lasts foreverwarm voor de tijd van het jaar • warm for the/this time of yearsterven voor zijn tijd • die before one's time/prematurelyje moet de eerste tijd nog rustig aandoen • to begin with/at first you must take it easyin minder dan geen tijd • in (less than) no timeeen tijdje • a whileveel tijd in beslag nemen • take up a lot of timetijd te kort komen • run out/run short of time3 betere tijden gekend hebben • have known better times/seen better dayseen dure tijd • a time/period when the cost of living is highgoede/slechte tijden • good/bad timesde laatste tijd • lately, recentlyhij heeft een moeilijke tijd gehad • he's been through/had a hard timede goede oude tijd • the good old daysdat is allemaal verleden tijd • that's all in the past/water under the bridgezijn (beste) tijd gehad hebben • be past one's best/prime, have seen better daysdie tijd is geweest/‘voorbij’ • those days are gone/past/overer is een tijd geweest dat … • there was a time when …niet met zijn tijd meegaan • be behind the timesde tijden zijn veranderd • times have changedbij tijden • at times/intervals(goed) bij de tijd zijn • be right up to date, be on the ballin tijden van oorlog • in times of warin deze/onze tijd • in these times, nowadaysin deze tijd van het jaar • at this time of (the) yearin vroeger tijd • in earlier times/the pastmet zijn tijd meegaan • keep up with/move with the timesuit de tijd raken • go/get/become out of date; become outdateddie muziek is uit de tijd • that music is out of date/old-fashioneddat was voor mijn tijd • that was before my time/daydat was voor die tijd heel ongebruikelijk • in/for those days it was most unusualvóór die tijd was het een klooster • it used to be/previously it was a monasteryvóór de tijd van de auto • before the era of the car5 de tegenwoordige/verleden tijd • the present/past tense〈 figuurlijk〉 dat is voltooid verleden tijd • that's over and done with, that's ancient history -
45 Brunel, Isambard Kingdom
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering, Land transport, Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering, Ports and shipping, Public utilities, Railways and locomotives[br]b. 9 April 1806 Portsea, Hampshire, Englandd. 15 September 1859 18 Duke Street, St James's, London, England[br]English civil and mechanical engineer.[br]The son of Marc Isambard Brunel and Sophia Kingdom, he was educated at a private boarding-school in Hove. At the age of 14 he went to the College of Caen and then to the Lycée Henri-Quatre in Paris, after which he was apprenticed to Louis Breguet. In 1822 he returned from France and started working in his father's office, while spending much of his time at the works of Maudslay, Sons \& Field.From 1825 to 1828 he worked under his father on the construction of the latter's Thames Tunnel, occupying the position of Engineer-in-Charge, exhibiting great courage and presence of mind in the emergencies which occurred not infrequently. These culminated in January 1828 in the flooding of the tunnel and work was suspended for seven years. For the next five years the young engineer made abortive attempts to find a suitable outlet for his talents, but to little avail. Eventually, in 1831, his design for a suspension bridge over the River Avon at Clifton Gorge was accepted and he was appointed Engineer. (The bridge was eventually finished five years after Brunel's death, as a memorial to him, the delay being due to inadequate financing.) He next planned and supervised improvements to the Bristol docks. In March 1833 he was appointed Engineer of the Bristol Railway, later called the Great Western Railway. He immediately started to survey the route between London and Bristol that was completed by late August that year. On 5 July 1836 he married Mary Horsley and settled into 18 Duke Street, Westminster, London, where he also had his office. Work on the Bristol Railway started in 1836. The foundation stone of the Clifton Suspension Bridge was laid the same year. Whereas George Stephenson had based his standard railway gauge as 4 ft 8½ in (1.44 m), that or a similar gauge being usual for colliery wagonways in the Newcastle area, Brunel adopted the broader gauge of 7 ft (2.13 m). The first stretch of the line, from Paddington to Maidenhead, was opened to traffic on 4 June 1838, and the whole line from London to Bristol was opened in June 1841. The continuation of the line through to Exeter was completed and opened on 1 May 1844. The normal time for the 194-mile (312 km) run from Paddington to Exeter was 5 hours, at an average speed of 38.8 mph (62.4 km/h) including stops. The Great Western line included the Box Tunnel, the longest tunnel to that date at nearly two miles (3.2 km).Brunel was the engineer of most of the railways in the West Country, in South Wales and much of Southern Ireland. As railway networks developed, the frequent break of gauge became more of a problem and on 9 July 1845 a Royal Commission was appointed to look into it. In spite of comparative tests, run between Paddington-Didcot and Darlington-York, which showed in favour of Brunel's arrangement, the enquiry ruled in favour of the narrow gauge, 274 miles (441 km) of the former having been built against 1,901 miles (3,059 km) of the latter to that date. The Gauge Act of 1846 forbade the building of any further railways in Britain to any gauge other than 4 ft 8 1/2 in (1.44 m).The existence of long and severe gradients on the South Devon Railway led to Brunel's adoption of the atmospheric railway developed by Samuel Clegg and later by the Samuda brothers. In this a pipe of 9 in. (23 cm) or more in diameter was laid between the rails, along the top of which ran a continuous hinged flap of leather backed with iron. At intervals of about 3 miles (4.8 km) were pumping stations to exhaust the pipe. Much trouble was experienced with the flap valve and its lubrication—freezing of the leather in winter, the lubricant being sucked into the pipe or eaten by rats at other times—and the experiment was abandoned at considerable cost.Brunel is to be remembered for his two great West Country tubular bridges, the Chepstow and the Tamar Bridge at Saltash, with the latter opened in May 1859, having two main spans of 465 ft (142 m) and a central pier extending 80 ft (24 m) below high water mark and allowing 100 ft (30 m) of headroom above the same. His timber viaducts throughout Devon and Cornwall became a feature of the landscape. The line was extended ultimately to Penzance.As early as 1835 Brunel had the idea of extending the line westwards across the Atlantic from Bristol to New York by means of a steamship. In 1836 building commenced and the hull left Bristol in July 1837 for fitting out at Wapping. On 31 March 1838 the ship left again for Bristol but the boiler lagging caught fire and Brunel was injured in the subsequent confusion. On 8 April the ship set sail for New York (under steam), its rival, the 703-ton Sirius, having left four days earlier. The 1,340-ton Great Western arrived only a few hours after the Sirius. The hull was of wood, and was copper-sheathed. In 1838 Brunel planned a larger ship, some 3,000 tons, the Great Britain, which was to have an iron hull.The Great Britain was screwdriven and was launched on 19 July 1843,289 ft (88 m) long by 51 ft (15.5 m) at its widest. The ship's first voyage, from Liverpool to New York, began on 26 August 1845. In 1846 it ran aground in Dundrum Bay, County Down, and was later sold for use on the Australian run, on which it sailed no fewer than thirty-two times in twenty-three years, also serving as a troop-ship in the Crimean War. During this war, Brunel designed a 1,000-bed hospital which was shipped out to Renkioi ready for assembly and complete with shower-baths and vapour-baths with printed instructions on how to use them, beds and bedding and water closets with a supply of toilet paper! Brunel's last, largest and most extravagantly conceived ship was the Great Leviathan, eventually named The Great Eastern, which had a double-skinned iron hull, together with both paddles and screw propeller. Brunel designed the ship to carry sufficient coal for the round trip to Australia without refuelling, thus saving the need for and the cost of bunkering, as there were then few bunkering ports throughout the world. The ship's construction was started by John Scott Russell in his yard at Millwall on the Thames, but the building was completed by Brunel due to Russell's bankruptcy in 1856. The hull of the huge vessel was laid down so as to be launched sideways into the river and then to be floated on the tide. Brunel's plan for hydraulic launching gear had been turned down by the directors on the grounds of cost, an economy that proved false in the event. The sideways launch with over 4,000 tons of hydraulic power together with steam winches and floating tugs on the river took over two months, from 3 November 1857 until 13 January 1858. The ship was 680 ft (207 m) long, 83 ft (25 m) beam and 58 ft (18 m) deep; the screw was 24 ft (7.3 m) in diameter and paddles 60 ft (18.3 m) in diameter. Its displacement was 32,000 tons (32,500 tonnes).The strain of overwork and the huge responsibilities that lay on Brunel began to tell. He was diagnosed as suffering from Bright's disease, or nephritis, and spent the winter travelling in the Mediterranean and Egypt, returning to England in May 1859. On 5 September he suffered a stroke which left him partially paralysed, and he died ten days later at his Duke Street home.[br]Further ReadingL.T.C.Rolt, 1957, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, London: Longmans Green. J.Dugan, 1953, The Great Iron Ship, Hamish Hamilton.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Brunel, Isambard Kingdom
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46 Muybridge, Eadweard
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 9 April 1830 Kingston upon Thames, Englandd. 8 May 1904 Kingston upon Thames, England[br]English photographer and pioneer of sequence photography of movement.[br]He was born Edward Muggeridge, but later changed his name, taking the Saxon spelling of his first name and altering his surname, first to Muygridge and then to Muybridge. He emigrated to America in 1851, working in New York in bookbinding and selling as a commission agent for the London Printing and Publishing Company. Through contact with a New York daguerreotypist, Silas T.Selleck, he acquired an interest in photography that developed after his move to California in 1855. On a visit to England in 1860 he learned the wet-collodion process from a friend, Arthur Brown, and acquired the best photographic equipment available in London before returning to America. In 1867, under his trade pseudonym "Helios", he set out to record the scenery of the Far West with his mobile dark-room, christened "The Flying Studio".His reputation as a photographer of the first rank spread, and he was commissioned to record the survey visit of Major-General Henry W.Halleck to Alaska and also to record the territory through which the Central Pacific Railroad was being constructed. Perhaps because of this latter project, he was approached by the President of the Central Pacific, Leland Stanford, to attempt to photograph a horse trotting at speed. There was a long-standing controversy among racing men as to whether a trotting horse had all four hooves off the ground at any point; Stanford felt that it did, and hoped than an "instantaneous" photograph would settle the matter once and for all. In May 1872 Muybridge photographed the horse "Occident", but without any great success because the current wet-collodion process normally required many seconds, even in a good light, for a good result. In April 1873 he managed to produce some better negatives, in which a recognizable silhouette of the horse showed all four feet above the ground at the same time.Soon after, Muybridge left his young wife, Flora, in San Francisco to go with the army sent to put down the revolt of the Modoc Indians. While he was busy photographing the scenery and the combatants, his wife had an affair with a Major Harry Larkyns. On his return, finding his wife pregnant, he had several confrontations with Larkyns, which culminated in his shooting him dead. At his trial for murder, in February 1875, Muybridge was acquitted by the jury on the grounds of justifiable homicide; he left soon after on a long trip to South America.He again took up his photographic work when he returned to North America and Stanford asked him to take up the action-photography project once more. Using a new shutter design he had developed while on his trip south, and which would operate in as little as 1/1,000 of a second, he obtained more detailed pictures of "Occident" in July 1877. He then devised a new scheme, which Stanford sponsored at his farm at Palo Alto. A 50 ft (15 m) long shed was constructed, containing twelve cameras side by side, and a white background marked off with vertical, numbered lines was set up. Each camera was fitted with Muybridge's highspeed shutter, which was released by an electromagnetic catch. Thin threads stretched across the track were broken by the horse as it moved along, closing spring electrical contacts which released each shutter in turn. Thus, in about half a second, twelve photographs were obtained that showed all the phases of the movement.Although the pictures were still little more than silhouettes, they were very sharp, and sequences published in scientific and photographic journals throughout the world excited considerable attention. By replacing the threads with an electrical commutator device, which allowed the release of the shutters at precise intervals, Muybridge was able to take series of actions by other animals and humans. From 1880 he lectured in America and Europe, projecting his results in motion on the screen with his Zoopraxiscope projector. In August 1883 he received a grant of $40,000 from the University of Pennsylvania to carry on his work there. Using the vastly improved gelatine dry-plate process and new, improved multiple-camera apparatus, during 1884 and 1885 he produced over 100,000 photographs, of which 20,000 were reproduced in Animal Locomotion in 1887. The subjects were animals of all kinds, and human figures, mostly nude, in a wide range of activities. The quality of the photographs was extremely good, and the publication attracted considerable attention and praise.Muybridge returned to England in 1894; his last publications were Animals in Motion (1899) and The Human Figure in Motion (1901). His influence on the world of art was enormous, over-turning the conventional representations of action hitherto used by artists. His work in pioneering the use of sequence photography led to the science of chronophotography developed by Marey and others, and stimulated many inventors, notably Thomas Edison to work which led to the introduction of cinematography in the 1890s.[br]Bibliography1887, Animal Locomotion, Philadelphia.1893, Descriptive Zoopraxography, Pennsylvania. 1899, Animals in Motion, London.1901, The Human Figure in Motion, London.Further Reading1973, Eadweard Muybridge: The Stanford Years, Stanford.G.Hendricks, 1975, Muybridge: The Father of the Motion Picture, New York. R.Haas, 1976, Muybridge: Man in Motion, California.B.Coe, 1992, Muybridge and the Chromophoto-graphers, London.BC -
47 Zeit
Zeit f GEN time • in der Zeit von GEN over the period of • innerhalb der vorgeschriebenen Zeit GEN within the prescribed time • mit der Zeit gehen GEN be abreast of the times • seit langer Zeit GEN long-standing • um diese Zeit nächste Woche GEN this time next week (nächste Woche gleiche Zeit) • vor der Zeit GEN with time to spare • zu allen Zeiten GEN at all times • zu dieser Zeit im letzten Jahr GEN this time last year* * *f < Geschäft> time ■ in der Zeit von < Geschäft> over the period of ■ mit der Zeit gehen < Geschäft> be abreast of the times ■ seit langer Zeit < Geschäft> long-standing ■ um diese Zeit nächste Woche < Geschäft> nächste Woche gleiche Zeit this time next week ■ vor der Zeit < Geschäft> with time to spare ■ zu allen Zeiten < Geschäft> at all times ■ zu dieser Zeit im letzten Jahr < Geschäft> this time last year* * *Zeit
(Frist) term, (Stadium) stage, phase, (Stunden) hours, (Zeitraum) period, space of time, spell;
• auf Zeit forward, on term (credit), for time;
• auf unbegrenzte Zeit in perpetuity;
• für eine bestimmte Zeit for a fixed (definite) period, for a stated term;
• in absehbarer Zeit within reasonable time;
• in haushaltsknappen Zeiten in tight budget times;
• in der vorgeschriebenen Zeit within the required time;
• zu jeder beliebigen Zeit at any time;
• zu einer ungünstigen Zeit in an evil hour;
• zur festgesetzten Zeit at the fixed time;
• zur rechten Zeit in due course (time), in season, timely;
• zur verabredeten Zeit at the appointed time;
• nicht ausgenutzte Zeit dead time;
• für Botengänge benötigte Zeit run-around time;
• bestimmte Zeit designated time;
• betriebsbereite Zeit (Verfahrensforschung) readiness time;
• dienstfreie Zeit leisure time;
• fahrplanmäßige Zeit scheduled time (US);
• flaue Zeit slack (dull) time, dullness, flatness (Br.);
• freie (frei verfügbare) Zeit free (leisure, spare) time, off-time, free moment;
• geschäftslose Zeit dead season, dead time of the year, slackness of the market;
• mitteleuropäische (MEZ) Zeit Central European Time;
• osteuropäische Zeit (OEZ) Eastern European Time;
• ruhegehaltsfähige Zeit pensionable period;
• schlechte Zeiten hard (slack) times, blue period;
• sendefreie (sendestille) Zeiten non-broadcasting hours;
• spannungsgeladene Zeit tense period;
• standgeldfreie Zeit free allowance time;
• stille (tote) Zeit dull time, off-season, (Bekleidungsindustrie) pinocle season (sl.), (Lohnausfall) dead time;
• tilgungsfreie Zeit (Anleihe) redemption-free period, (Kredit) grace period;
• unbewohnte Zeit void period;
• unproduktive Zeit non-productive time;
• üppige Zeiten flush times;
• vertraglich vereinbarte Zeit time as provided in the contract;
• frei verfügbare Zeit leisure time;
• verkehrsschwache Zeiten slack hours (period), off-peak hours;
• verkehrsstarke Zeit busy (peak) period, rush (heavy, US) hours;
• verlorene Zeit (Produktionsausfall) idle time;
• Zeit außergewöhnlichen Aufstiegs (Aufschwungs) boom-and-bust (US coll.);
• Zeiten geringster Belastung off-peak hours;
• Zeiten größter Belastung peak hours;
• Zeiten wirtschaftlicher Blüte prolonged boom, boom[ing] years;
• Zeit nach Börsenschluss afterhours;
• Zeiten konjunkturellen Rückgangs recession years;
• Zeit raubend time-consuming;
• Zeit sparend timesaving;
• verlorene Zeit aufholen to make up for lost time;
• zur fahrplanmäßigen Zeit eintreffen to arrive at the scheduled time (US);
• glänzenden Zeiten entgegensehen to be in for a period of prosperity;
• zur vorgegebenen Zeit eröffnen to open on schedule;
• Zeit und Ort für die nächste Sitzung festlegen to arrange time and place for the next meeting;
• Zeit feststellen (Arbeitswissenschaft) to time;
• auf Zeit kaufen to buy on credit (account), (Terminkauf) to buy forward (for future delivery, US);
• über seine Zeit verfügen können to dispose of one’s time;
• Zeit sparen to be economical of time;
• festgesetzte Zeit überschreiten to overrun the time stipulated;
• schlechte Zeiten gut überstehen to ride out bad times, to weather a storm;
• auf Zeit verkaufen (Terminverkauf) to sell forward (for future delivery, US);
• auf unbestimmte Zeit verschieben to defer sine die;
• sich auf unbestimmte Zeit vertagen to adjourn sine die;
• seine Schulden in der vereinbarten Zeit zurückzahlen to discharge one’s liabilities within the agreed period;
• Zeitabhängigkeit der Nachfrage- und Angebotselastizität time and elasticity;
• Zeitablauf lapse (passage, efflux) of time, elapsed time, (Fristablauf) expiration of time;
• Zeitabschnitt distance (segment) of time, period, spell;
• Zeitabsprachen für Zahlungen datings (US);
• in regelmäßigen Zeitabständen at regular time intervals;
• digitales Zeitalter digital age (era);
• konsumfreudiges Zeitalter consumer-orient[at]ed age;
• Zeitalter der Industriekonzerne trust-stage;
• Zeitangabe date;
• ohne Zeitangabe undated;
• mit Werbung verbundene Zeitansage time signal;
• Zeitarbeit job leasing. -
48 distanza
"distance;Zwischenraum;Abstand;intervalo"* * *f distance ( also fig)comando m a distanza remote control* * *distanza s.f.1 distance, space, interval, gap: ha coperto la distanza di 25 km in 3 ore, he covered 25 km in 3 hours; i tralicci sono a distanza di 50 metri l'uno dall'altro, the pylons are (spaced) 50 metres apart; i concorrenti partirono a distanza di 5 minuti l'uno dall'altro, the competitors left at intervals of five minutes; due eventi accaduti a grande distanza l'uno dall'altro, two events that happened with a long interval between them; una distanza di dieci anni separa i due eventi, a gap of ten years separates the two events; l'ho incontrato a distanza di un anno, I saw him a year later; distanza in linea d'aria, distance as the crow flies // a, in distanza, at a distance, in the distance: a distanza di vent'anni, at a distance of (o over) twenty years; alla distanza di circa tre miglia, about three miles away (o at a distance of about three miles); essere a distanza di tiro, to be within striking distance; sparare a breve distanza, to shoot at close range; seguire qlcu. a distanza, to follow s.o. at a distance; vedere qlco. a, in distanza, to see sthg. at (o in) the distance (o from afar); comando a distanza, remote control // (astr.) distanza polare, codeclination; (aut.) distanza di sicurezza, safety distance; (aer.) distanza d'arresto, pull-up distance; (dir.) rispettare le distanze legali, ( di costruzioni o proprietà) to observe the distance required by law; (mar., aer.) distanza di visibilità, range of visibility; (fis., mat.) distanza focale, focal length; distanza frontale, working distance; (fis., mat.) distanza visiva, optical range; (mar.) distanza per il traverso, distance on beam; (fot.) distanza principale, principal distance; (mecc.) distanza tra due centri, centre distance; (aer., astr.) distanza zenitale, zenith distance2 (fig.) distance; ( disuguaglianza) difference, disparity: colmare le distanze ideologiche, to fill the ideological gap; tra noi due c'è molta distanza, there is a great difference (o disparity) between you and me; mantenere le distanze, to keep one's distance; tenersi a debita distanza da qlcu., to keep at a safe distance from s.o.; tenere qlcu. a distanza, to keep s.o. at a distance (o to keep clear of s.o.); prendere le distanze da qlcu., qlco., to keep one's distance (o to keep aloof) from s.o., sthg.; ha preso le distanze dal partito, he has distanced himself from the party (o he is keeping the party at arm's length)3 (sport) distance: la corsa è sulla distanza di mille miglia, the race takes place over a distance of one thousand miles; un combattimento sulla distanza di 12 riprese, a fight over 12 rounds // vincere, venire fuori alla distanza, to win, to break away in the long run.* * *[dis'tantsa]sostantivo femminile1) (nello spazio) distance (da from; tra between)qual è la distanza fra Torino e Roma? — how far is it from Turin to Rome? what is the distance between Turin and Rome?
a che distanza è? — how far o what distance is it?
a breve distanza — at a short distance, within easy reach
a una certa distanza — at a o some distance
a 50 metri di distanza, a una distanza di 50 metri — 50 metres away o off
mantenete le -e (di sicurezza) — aut. keep your distance
a distanza — [comunicare, osservare] from a distance; [ comando] remote attrib.
a distanza ravvicinata — [ sparare] at close range
2) fig. distancetenere o mantenere qcn., qcs. a (debita) distanza to keep sb., sth. at a distance o at bay; tenere o mantenere le -e — [ superiore] to stand aloof
3) (nel tempo) gapsono morti a una settimana di distanza — their deaths were a week apart, they died within a week of each other
a distanza di tempo,... — with hindsight o now that time has passed
4) (divario, differenza) gap, difference•* * *distanza/dis'tantsa/sostantivo f.1 (nello spazio) distance (da from; tra between); qual è la distanza fra Torino e Roma? how far is it from Turin to Rome? what is the distance between Turin and Rome? a che distanza è? how far o what distance is it? a breve distanza at a short distance, within easy reach; a una certa distanza at a o some distance; ho corso su una distanza di due chilometri I ran for two kilometres; a 50 metri di distanza, a una distanza di 50 metri 50 metres away o off; vivono a 500 chilometri di distanza they live 500 kilometres apart; mantenete le -e (di sicurezza) aut. keep your distance; accorciare le -e to narrow the gap; a distanza [comunicare, osservare] from a distance; [ comando] remote attrib.; a distanza ravvicinata [ sparare] at close range2 fig. distance; prendere le -e da to distance oneself from; tenere o mantenere qcn., qcs. a (debita) distanza to keep sb., sth. at a distance o at bay; tenere o mantenere le -e [ superiore] to stand aloof3 (nel tempo) gap; sono morti a una settimana di distanza their deaths were a week apart, they died within a week of each other; a distanza di tempo,... with hindsight o now that time has passed,...4 (divario, differenza) gap, differencedistanza di sicurezza safety distance. -
49 в срок
1. at maturity2. on maturityсрок; число; когда наступает срок — date of maturity
3. upon the terms4. within the timesв срок, вовремя — in time
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50 срок
1. date of maturity2. dayдни отсрочки; льготный срок — days respite
льготный срок; грационные дни — days of grace
крайний срок; окончательный срок — peremptory day
3. period4. lifeсрок службы долота; метраж проходки на долото — bit life
5. termsребёнок, родившийся в срок — term infant
короткий срок; краткосрочный — short term
6. the term of7. the terms ofсовпадающие, одновременно текущие сроки — concurrent terms
8. term; date; deadline; time; period9. space -
51 עונה I
עֹונָהI f. (עָנָה I) (turn, circle, period, 1) moment, esp. ‘Onah, the twenty-fourth part of an hour. Yalk. Deut. 942 ואין להרהר …אפי׳ ע׳ של כלים and you must not criticise Gods dealings with man even for a moment of the least duration; Sifré Deut. 307 (some ed. שנה, emended in ed. Pl. עוולה; corr. acc.). Tosef.Ber.I, 3 הע׳ … בשעה והעת … בע׳ an ‘Onah is the twenty-fourth part of an hour, and an ‘Eth the twenty-fourth part of an ‘Onah, and a Rega the twenty-fourth part of an ‘Eth; Y. ib. I, 2d top; Lam. R. to II, 18 (corr. acc.). 2) ‘Onah, a period of twelve astronomical hours, one half of the natural day and of the natural night, or (at solstice) natural day, or natural night. Y.Ab. Zar. V, end, 45b; Bab. ib. 75a; Nidd.65b. Y. Ab. Zar. l. c. כדי ע׳; Tosef.Toh. XI, 16 מלא ע׳ for the term of an ‘Onah; Ab. Zar. l. c. וכמה ע׳ how long? An ‘Onah. Yeb. 62b; Nidd.63b וכמה … ע׳ and how long before?… An ‘Onah. Ib. ע׳ אחריתי an additional ‘O. (day or eventually night). Ib. 65a ע׳ שלמה a complete ‘O., expl. ib. לילה וחצי יום, expl. ib. b אי לילהוכ׳ either the space of one night at solstice, or half a day and half a night, in midsummer or midwinter; a. fr.Pl. עוֹנוֹת. Mikv. VIII, 3; Tosef. ib. VI, 6; Sabb.86a. Ib. b; Y. ib. IX, 12a top ע׳ שלמות full ‘Onahs (not counting fractions); a. fr. 4) due season, period, stage. Peah IV, 8 עד שלא באו לעוֹנַת המעשרות before the harvested products have arrived at the stage when they are subject to tithes; Maasr. V, 5. Y.M. Kat. III, 83a top עוֹנַח קרית שמע the time of the day for reading the Shm‘a. Y.Shek.I, beg.45d כדי שיביאו … בעוֹנָתָן so that the Israelites might deliver their Shekels in due time. Y.Erub.VIII, end, 25b אם עונת הגשמים היא if it is during the rainy season; Y.Kil.IX, 32a. Y.Ber.II, 5c top בעל התאנה … עֹונָתָהּוכ׳ the owner of the fig tree knows when it is time for the figs to be picked; כךהקב״ה … עֹונָתָן שלוכ׳ so does the Lord know when it is time for the rightheous to be called away; Cant. R. to VI, 2. Ylamd. to Num. 23:10, quot. in Ar. עונת אשה marriageable age, v. עוֹפֶר; a. v. fr.Esp. (b. h. עֹנָה) the duty of marital visits at certain intervals, marital duty. Keth.V, 6 הע׳ האמורה בתורהוכ׳ the time for marital duties intimated in the Law (Ex. 21:10) is: for men of leisure ; Gen. R. s. 76; Yalk. ib. 131. Sabb.118b למימרא … מצות ע׳ לא קיים does this mean that R. J. neglected the regulations concerning the marital duty? Keth.62b; a. fr.Mekh. Mishp., s. 3 (ref. to Ex. l. c.) ועוֹנָתָהּ זו דרך ארץ her ‘onah refers to marital visits; (oth. opin.: ועזנתה לא יתןוכ׳ her ‘onah means, he must not give her summer apparel in winter, but כל אחד ואחד בעונתה each in its due season; anoth. opin.: עונתה זו מזונה her ‘onah means her sustenance (with ref. to ויענך Deut. 8:3; v. next w.); Keth.47b; Y. ib. V, 30b top. -
52 עֹונָה
עֹונָהI f. (עָנָה I) (turn, circle, period, 1) moment, esp. ‘Onah, the twenty-fourth part of an hour. Yalk. Deut. 942 ואין להרהר …אפי׳ ע׳ של כלים and you must not criticise Gods dealings with man even for a moment of the least duration; Sifré Deut. 307 (some ed. שנה, emended in ed. Pl. עוולה; corr. acc.). Tosef.Ber.I, 3 הע׳ … בשעה והעת … בע׳ an ‘Onah is the twenty-fourth part of an hour, and an ‘Eth the twenty-fourth part of an ‘Onah, and a Rega the twenty-fourth part of an ‘Eth; Y. ib. I, 2d top; Lam. R. to II, 18 (corr. acc.). 2) ‘Onah, a period of twelve astronomical hours, one half of the natural day and of the natural night, or (at solstice) natural day, or natural night. Y.Ab. Zar. V, end, 45b; Bab. ib. 75a; Nidd.65b. Y. Ab. Zar. l. c. כדי ע׳; Tosef.Toh. XI, 16 מלא ע׳ for the term of an ‘Onah; Ab. Zar. l. c. וכמה ע׳ how long? An ‘Onah. Yeb. 62b; Nidd.63b וכמה … ע׳ and how long before?… An ‘Onah. Ib. ע׳ אחריתי an additional ‘O. (day or eventually night). Ib. 65a ע׳ שלמה a complete ‘O., expl. ib. לילה וחצי יום, expl. ib. b אי לילהוכ׳ either the space of one night at solstice, or half a day and half a night, in midsummer or midwinter; a. fr.Pl. עוֹנוֹת. Mikv. VIII, 3; Tosef. ib. VI, 6; Sabb.86a. Ib. b; Y. ib. IX, 12a top ע׳ שלמות full ‘Onahs (not counting fractions); a. fr. 4) due season, period, stage. Peah IV, 8 עד שלא באו לעוֹנַת המעשרות before the harvested products have arrived at the stage when they are subject to tithes; Maasr. V, 5. Y.M. Kat. III, 83a top עוֹנַח קרית שמע the time of the day for reading the Shm‘a. Y.Shek.I, beg.45d כדי שיביאו … בעוֹנָתָן so that the Israelites might deliver their Shekels in due time. Y.Erub.VIII, end, 25b אם עונת הגשמים היא if it is during the rainy season; Y.Kil.IX, 32a. Y.Ber.II, 5c top בעל התאנה … עֹונָתָהּוכ׳ the owner of the fig tree knows when it is time for the figs to be picked; כךהקב״ה … עֹונָתָן שלוכ׳ so does the Lord know when it is time for the rightheous to be called away; Cant. R. to VI, 2. Ylamd. to Num. 23:10, quot. in Ar. עונת אשה marriageable age, v. עוֹפֶר; a. v. fr.Esp. (b. h. עֹנָה) the duty of marital visits at certain intervals, marital duty. Keth.V, 6 הע׳ האמורה בתורהוכ׳ the time for marital duties intimated in the Law (Ex. 21:10) is: for men of leisure ; Gen. R. s. 76; Yalk. ib. 131. Sabb.118b למימרא … מצות ע׳ לא קיים does this mean that R. J. neglected the regulations concerning the marital duty? Keth.62b; a. fr.Mekh. Mishp., s. 3 (ref. to Ex. l. c.) ועוֹנָתָהּ זו דרך ארץ her ‘onah refers to marital visits; (oth. opin.: ועזנתה לא יתןוכ׳ her ‘onah means, he must not give her summer apparel in winter, but כל אחד ואחד בעונתה each in its due season; anoth. opin.: עונתה זו מזונה her ‘onah means her sustenance (with ref. to ויענך Deut. 8:3; v. next w.); Keth.47b; Y. ib. V, 30b top. -
53 расположен
•When installing the thermometer, the tip should be arranged (or placed, or sited) as near as possible to...
•Loudspeakers are so disposed as to give a three-dimensional effect.
•Pollution sources should not be located in valleys.
•The luminous reaction zone occurs very close to the solid surface.
•The cabins may be placed (or located, or sited) near the mill.
•The thermocouple is positioned in the outflow pipe.
•The atomizers are positioned to apply a multi-colour finish.
•The screw is situated at the rear of the clamp.
•The turns are spaced 1/8 in. apart (or at 1/8 in. intervals).
•Four sets of burners are patterned around the inner periphery of each furnace section.
•When atoms are arranged in a solid...
•Volcanic islands often occur in long, straight chains.
•The boxes are aligned (or arranged) parallel to the optic axis of the telescope.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > расположен
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54 на расстоянии
1) General subject: apart, beyond, distantly, remotely, over a distance2) Naval: clear off3) Railway term: aloof, long distance5) Advertising: at intervals6) Makarov: away (выражает отдалённость от какого-л. места), in the distance, spaced7) Gold mining: at a distance of8) Phraseological unit: at bay (at a distance.) -
55 постоянно
1) General subject: abidingly, at every turn, chronically, constantly, continuously, day and night, forever, hourly, in season and out of season, incessantly, invariably, night and day, on a continuous basis, perennially, permanently, right along, statedly, time after time, actually, all day and night, in an ongoing way, regularly, without interruption, the entire time, the whole time, non-stop, on a continuing basis, morning, noon and night, steadfastly, over the long haul, on a regular basis2) Obsolete: aye3) Mathematics: all the time, consistently, continually, perpetually, repeatedly4) Law: on an on-going basis5) Economy: step by step6) Music: sempre7) Deprecatingly: always8) Literature: all the right time9) Transport: period by period10) Advertising: on a going basis11) Business: ar regular intervals12) General subject: at all times14) Phraseological unit: brick by brick, around the clock -
56 Д-210
ИЗО ДНИ (ИЗО ДНЯ) В ДЕНЬ PrepP these forms only adv used with impfv verbs fixed WOevery day, one day after anotherday after dayfrom day to day day by day from one day to the next day in, day out (day in and day out) every single day.Мы только слышали пулеметные очереди через разные промежутки: та-та-та, та-та... Два года изо дня в день я слышал, и это стоит в моих ушах сегодня (Кузнецов 1). We could only hear bursts of machine-gun fire at various intervals: ta-ta-ta, ta-ta....For two long years I could hear them, day after day, and even now they still ring in my ears (1b).Машина проверяла качество работы и давала ей оценку. Итоги шли в Машину-Сумматор... И так - изо дня в день (Зиновьев 1). The Computer checked the quality of the work and gave it a mark. The results were then passed to the Totalising Computer....Thus it went on from day to day (1a).Возьмите очереди. Раз постоять - пустяк. Сто раз - пустяк. А если изо дня в день, из года в год?» (Зиновьев 2). "Take queues.То stand in line once is nothing. To stand in line a hundred times is nothing. But if it's day in day out, year in year out?" (2a). -
57 изо дня в день
• ИЗО ДНЯ < ИЗО ДНЯ> В ДЕНЬ[PrepP; these forms only; adv; used with impfv verbs; fixed WO]=====⇒ every day, one day after another:- day by day;- day in, day out (day in and day out);- every single day.♦ Мы только слышали пулеметные очереди через разные промежутки: та-та-та, та-та... Два года изо дня в день я слышал, и это стоит в моих ушах сегодня (Кузнецов 1). We could only hear bursts of machine-gun fire at various intervals: ta-ta-ta, ta-ta....For two long years I could hear them, day after day, and even now they still ring in my ears (1b).♦ Машина проверяла качество работы и давала ей оценку. Итоги шли в Машину-Сумматор... И так - изо дня в день (Зиновьев 1). The Computer checked the quality of the work and gave it a mark. The results were then passed to the Totalising Computer....Thus it went on from day to day (1a).♦ "Возьмите очереди. Раз постоять - пустяк. Сто раз - пустяк. А если изо дня в день, из года в год?" (Зиновьев 2). "Take queues. То stand in line once is nothing. To stand in line a hundred times is nothing. But if it's day in day out, year in year out?" (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > изо дня в день
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58 с шагом
С шагомThe array consists of 256 photodiodes each 0.02 mm wide by 0.4 mm long and spaced 0.02 mm center to center.Flush pressure taps are located at intervals of 2.54 cm along both the upstream and downstream side walls.The minimum thickness of A-304 stainless steel for a potentially totally elastic design is about 17 mm with a support spacing on 1-m centers.For the case of the support spacing being 2 m on center, the anchor reaction force for an aluminum vessel is 11.7 kN.The rods were located on 0.556-in centers.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > с шагом
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59 Abstand
Ab·stand1. Ab·stand m1) ( räumliche Distanz) distance;ein \Abstand von 20 Metern a distance of 20 metres [or (Am) -ers];der \Abstand von etw zu etw the distance between sth and sth;der Wagen näherte sich dem vorausfahrenden Fahrzeug bis auf einen \Abstand von einem Meter the car came to within a metre of the car in front;in einigem \Abstand at some distance;einen \Abstand einhalten to keep a distance;\Abstand [von jdm/etw] halten to maintain a distance [from sb/sth];fahr nicht so dicht auf, halte \Abstand! don't drive so close, leave a space!;mit \Abstand by a long way, far and away2) ( zeitliche Distanz) interval;in kurzen/ regelmäßigen Abständen at short/regular intervals3) ( innere Distanz) aloofness;die Dinge mit \Abstand sehen [o \Abstand [von etw] gewinnen] to distance oneself from sth4) sport margin;mit zwei Punkten \Abstand with a two-point margin;mit weitem \Abstand folgten die anderen Mannschaften there was a big gap between the leaders and the other teams;mit [großem] \Abstand führen to lead by a [wide] margin, to be [way] ahead ( fam)von etw \Abstand nehmen to decide against sth;davon \Abstand nehmen, etw zu tun to refrain from [or decide against] doing sth2. Ab·stand m -
60 bli|ski
Ⅰ adj. grad. 1. (sąsiedni) close, near- bliscy sąsiedzi close neighbours, all neighbours- kupuję gazety w najbliższym kiosku I buy my papers at the nearest kiosk- najbliższe okolice miasta są mi bardzo dobrze znane I know the city’s immediate environs very well- w bliskim sąsiedztwie in the (immediate) vicinity2. (niedaleki w czasie) (w przeszłości) [czasy, lata] recent; (w przyszłości) immediate- wydarzenia bliskie naszym czasom events occurring not long ago a. in the recent past- trzy wypadki kolejowe w bliskich odstępach three railway accidents at short intervals- bliskie plany immediate plans, plans for the near future- bliskie zamiary immediate intentions- najbliższa przyszłość the near(est) a. immediate future- najbliższe zadania immediate tasks3. (serdeczny, zażyły) [przyjaźń, stosunki, znajomość] close- bliski przyjaciel/znajomy a close friend/acquaintance- bliska współpraca close cooperation a. collaboration- najbliżsi współpracownicy/koledzy one’s closest co-workers- bliski krewny a close relative a. relation- (czyjaś) bliska rodzina sb’s close a. immediate family- zaprosił tylko najbliższą rodzinę/tylko bliskie osoby he only invited (his) close family/invited close friends and family- bliskie pokrewieństwo close blood ties, a close blood relationship- ta sprawa jest bliska memu sercu it’s a cause/subject (very) close to my heart- z biegiem lat stał mi się bardzo bliski he became very dear a. close to me over the years- utracił wszystko, co było mu bliskie i drogie he lost everything (that was) near and dear to him4. (zbliżony) close- bliski związek a close connection a. relationship- między tymi sprawami zachodzi bliski związek there’s a close connection between the two things- wartości bliskie zeru values close to zero- sceny filmowe bliskie realiom realistic film scenes- hipoteza bliska/bliższa prawdy a hypothesis close/closer to the truth- być bliskim płaczu to be close to tears, to be on the verge of tears- być bliskim omdlenia/załamania to be close to fainting/a breakdown, to be on the verge of fainting/a breakdown- być bliskim zwycięstwa to be close to winning a. victory, to be on the verge of winning a. victory- nasze stanowiska są w istocie bardzo bliskie actually our positions are very close (on this issue)- obyczaje bliskie polskiej tradycji customs close to Polish tradition- występ łyżwiarki był bliski ideału the skater’s performance was almost perfect a. close to ideal- patrzył na mnie w sposób bliski politowania he looked at me with an expression bordering on pityⅡ bliższy adj. comp. pot. bliższe szczegóły/informacje further details/further a. detailed information- czy wiesz coś bliższego o tej książce? do you know something more about that/this book?- podaj mi jakieś bliższe szczegóły na temat wyjazdu tell me about the trip in greater detail- przy bliższym poznaniu on closer acquaintance- mają teraz czas na bliższe poznanie (się) now they have time to get to know one another betterⅢ bliscy, najbliżsi plt family and friends, loved ones- być z dala od rodziny i bliskich a. najbliższych to be far from family and friends- spędzać święta Bożego Narodzenia w gronie najbliższych to spend Christmas with family and friends■ bliższa ciału koszula niż sukmana przysł. close sits my shirt, but closer my skin przysł., przest., near is my shirt, but nearer is my skin przysł., przest.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > bli|ski
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Long Valley Caldera — For the town in New Jersey, see Long Valley, New Jersey :Long Valley Caldera is a depression in eastern California that is adjacent to Mammoth Mountain. The valley is one of the largest calderas on earth, measuring about convert|32|km|mi long… … Wikipedia
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Long track speed skating — For related forms of competition, see Speed skating. Competitive speed skater Speed skating (also long track speed skating) is an Olympic sport where competitors are timed while crossing a set distance. It is also a sport for leisure. Sports such … Wikipedia
Native American long house — Longhouses were and are built by native peoples in various parts of North America, sometimes reaching over 100 meters long (330 ft) but generally around 5 to 7 meters wide (16 23 ft). The construction method was also different: the dominant… … Wikipedia
E. coli long-term evolution experiment — The E. coli long term evolution experiment (LTEE) is an ongoing study in experimental evolution led by Richard Lenski that has been tracking genetic changes in 12 initially nearly identical populations of asexual Escherichia coli bacteria since… … Wikipedia
interstadial — long intervals of desiccation between pluvial periods … Dictionary of ichthyology
time perception — Introduction experience or awareness of the passage of time. The human experience of change is complex. One primary element clearly is that of a succession of events, but distinguishable events are separated by more or less lengthy… … Universalium