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by an early death

  • 1 передчасна смерть

    early death, premature death

    Українсько-англійський юридичний словник > передчасна смерть

  • 2 печат

    1. seal
    прен. (отпечатък) stamp
    държавен печат state/great seal
    гумен печат rubber-stamp
    слагам/удрям печат на (rubber-)stamp, put/set/affix a. seal to
    слагам печата си на прен. leave an impress on
    нося печата на прен. bear the stamp/seal/impress of; be marked for
    той носи печата на ранна смърт he is marked for early death
    2. (печатане) print (ing), press
    под печат in the press, at the printer's
    приготвям за печат prepare for the printer's
    подписвам за печат sign/stamp "ready for printing"
    пращам за печат send to press/to the printer's
    бивам даден за печат go to press/the printer's
    излизам от печат come off the press, leave the printer's, come out, be published
    3. (шрифт) print, type, ( вид печат) printing
    дребен/ситен/едър печат small/large print
    колона със ситен печат a closely printed column
    висок letterpress/relief printing, дълбок печат intaglio printing
    плосък печат flat (-bed)/plane printing
    цветен печат colour printing
    чист печат fine printing
    4. (периодичен печат, преса) press
    свобода на печата freedom of the press
    отдел за печата news-department
    пропаганда, чрез печат а и радиото propaganda by press and radio
    * * *
    печа̀т,
    м., -и, (два) печа̀та 1. seal; прен. ( отпечатък) stamp; гумен \печат rubber-stamp; държавен \печат state seal; контролен \печат hallmark; слагам \печата си на прен. leave an impress on; слагам/удрям \печат на stamp, put/set/affix a seal to; той носи \печата на ранна смърт he is marked for early death;
    2. само ед. ( печатане) print(ing), press; бивам даден за \печат go to press/the printer’s; излизам от \печат come off the press, come out, be published; книгата е под \печат the book is now printing; под \печат in the press, at the printer’s; подготвям за \печат prepare for the printer’s; току-що излязъл от \печат just off the press;
    3. само ед. ( шрифт) print, type, ( вид печат) printing; висок \печат letterpress/relief printing; дребен/ситен/едър \печат small/large print; дълбок \печат intaglio printing; колона със ситен \печат closely printed column; плосък \печат flat(-bed)/plane printing; цветен \печат colour printing; чист \печат fine printing;
    4. само ед. ( периодичен печат, преса) press; закон за \печата press law; отдел за \печата news-department; получавам благоприятни отзиви в \печата have/get a good/favourable press; преглед на \печата press review.
    * * *
    seal: put a печат to... - слагам печат на...; cachet; chop; press (и вестници): go of the печат - излизам от печат, send to press - изпращам за печат, make a печат review - правя преглед на печата; impress (и прен.); mark; print; stamp (и прен.)
    * * *
    1. (периодичен печат, преса) press 2. (печатане) print(ing), press 3. (шрифт) print, type, (вид печат) printing 4. seal 5. бивам даден за ПЕЧАТ go to press/ the printer's 6. висок letterpress/relief printing, дълбок ПЕЧАТ intaglio printing 7. гумен ПЕЧАТ rubber-stamp 8. дребен/ситен/едър ПЕЧАТ small/large print 9. държавен ПЕЧАТ state/great seal 10. закон за ПЕЧАТа a press law 11. излизам от ПЕЧАТ come off the press, leave the printer's, come out, be published 12. колона със ситен ПЕЧАТ a closely printed column 13. нося ПЕЧАТа на прен. bear the stamp/seal/impress of;be marked for 14. отдел за ПЕЧАТа news-department 15. периодичен ПЕЧАТ periodicals. 16. плосък ПЕЧАТ flat(-bed)/plane printing 17. под ПЕЧАТ in the press, at the printer's 18. подписвам за ПЕЧАТ sign/stamp "ready for printing" 19. получавам благоприятни отзиви в ПЕЧАТа have/get a good/favourable press 20. пращам за ПЕЧАТ send to press/to the printer's 21. преглед на ПЕЧАТa a press review 22. прен. (отпечатък) stamp 23. приготвям за ПЕЧАТ prepare for the printer's 24. пропаганда, чрез ПЕЧАТ а и радиото propaganda by press and radio 25. свобода на ПЕЧАТа freedom of the press 26. слагам ПЕЧАТа си на прен. leave an impress on 27. слагам/удрям ПЕЧАТ на (rubber-)stamp, put/set/affix a. seal to 28. той носи ПЕЧАТa на ранна смърт he is marked for early death 29. току що излязъл от ПЕЧАТ just off the press 30. цветен ПЕЧАТ colour printing 31. чист ПЕЧАТ fine printing

    Български-английски речник > печат

  • 3 malogro

    m.
    1 disappointment, miscarriage, failure, waste.
    2 fiasco, failure.
    pres.indicat.
    1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: malograr.
    * * *
    SM
    1) (=fracaso) failure; (=desperdicio) waste
    2) (=muerte) early death, untimely end
    * * *
    a) (de un plan, esfuerzo) failure
    b) ( de una persona) untimely death
    c) ( de la cosecha) failure
    * * *
    a) (de un plan, esfuerzo) failure
    b) ( de una persona) untimely death
    c) ( de la cosecha) failure
    * * *
    1 (de un plan, esfuerzo) failure
    2 (de una persona) untimely death
    3 (de la cosecha) failure
    * * *
    1) : untimely death
    2) fracaso: failure

    Spanish-English dictionary > malogro

  • 4 безвременно скончаться

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > безвременно скончаться

  • 5 преждевременная смерть

    1) Medicine: untimely death
    2) Makarov: premature death
    3) Healthcare: early death

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > преждевременная смерть

  • 6 אנינה

    אֲנִינָהf. (אָנַן) grief, retired mourning, esp. the status of the mourner between death and burial of a kinsman, contrad. to אֲבֵילָה, אֲבֵילוּת. Lam. R. introd. (R. Abbahu 4) א׳ מבפנים ăninah is indoor (retired) grief. Y.Hor.III, 48a top איזהו א׳וכ׳ what is ăninah?The time from death to Y.Pes.VII, 35a top לילה תורה אֲנִינַת observance of ăninah by night is biblical. Gen. R. s. 85 he is named Onan שהביא א׳ לעצמו because he brought mourning over his early death.

    Jewish literature > אנינה

  • 7 אֲנִינָה

    אֲנִינָהf. (אָנַן) grief, retired mourning, esp. the status of the mourner between death and burial of a kinsman, contrad. to אֲבֵילָה, אֲבֵילוּת. Lam. R. introd. (R. Abbahu 4) א׳ מבפנים ăninah is indoor (retired) grief. Y.Hor.III, 48a top איזהו א׳וכ׳ what is ăninah?The time from death to Y.Pes.VII, 35a top לילה תורה אֲנִינַת observance of ăninah by night is biblical. Gen. R. s. 85 he is named Onan שהביא א׳ לעצמו because he brought mourning over his early death.

    Jewish literature > אֲנִינָה

  • 8 безвременная смерть

    1) General subject: premature death, untimely grave
    2) Makarov: early death

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > безвременная смерть

  • 9 умереть рано

    1) General subject: die an early die

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > умереть рано

  • 10 요사

    n. early death, death at a young age

    Korean-English dictionary > 요사

  • 11 festino

    festīno, āvi, ātum, 1, v. n. and a. [cf. Gr. theinô; Lat. -fendo in defendo, offendo, -festus in manifestus, etc., and fustis, Corss. Ausspr. 2, 190; Curt. Gr. Etym. p. 255].
    I.
    Neutr., to hasten, make haste, hurry, be quick (class.; not in Caes.; syn.: propero, celero, maturo): aliud est properare, aliud festinare. Qui unum quid mature transigit, is properat: qui multa simul incipit neque perficit, is festinat, Cato ap. Gell. 16, 14, 2; id. ap. Paul. ex Fest. s. v. properare, p. 235 Müll.; ap. Non. 441, 22:

    propemodum quid illic festinet sentio,

    Plaut. Trin. 3, 1, 14:

    aput nos eccillam festinat cum sorore uxor tua,

    id. Stich. 4, 1, 30:

    quid festinas?

    Ter. Eun. 4, 3, 8; cf.:

    quamquam festinas, non est mora longa,

    Hor. C. 1, 28, 35; Sall. Fragm. ap. Don. Ter. Eun. 4, 3, 8:

    ibi,

    Plaut. Stich. 5, 3, 4:

    plura scripsissem, nisi tui festinarent,

    Cic. Fam. 12, 22, 4; cf. id. Att. 6, 2 fin.:

    solent nautae festinare quaestus sui causa,

    id. Fam. 16, 9, 4:

    esseda festinant, pilenta, petorrita, naves,

    Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 192:

    in provinciam festinare,

    Quint. 6, 3, 39:

    ad portas,

    Sall. J. 69, 2; cf.:

    ad singulare Antonii factum festinat oratio,

    Cic. Phil. 1, 1, 3:

    ad probationem,

    Quint. 4, 3, 8; cf. id. 4, 5, 10:

    quis te festinare jubet?

    Juv. 14, 212.—Prov.: festina lente (speude bradeôs), Suet. Aug. 25.
    II.
    Transf., as v. a., to make haste with a thing, to hasten, hurry, accelerate, do speedily.
    (α).
    With an object-clause (class.):

    ut migrare tanto opere festines,

    Cic. Fam. 7, 23 fin.:

    ne festinaret abire,

    Sall. J. 64, 4:

    ultum ire injurias,

    id. ib. 68, 1:

    finem imponere,

    Quint. 9, 4, 146:

    sequi,

    Curt. 6, 6, 25:

    componere lites,

    Hor. Ep. 1, 2, 12:

    quae laedunt oculum, festinas demere,

    id. ib. 1, 2, 38:

    terris advertere proram,

    Verg. G. 4, 117:

    aram congerere arboribus,

    id. A. 6, 177; cf.:

    callidus id modo festinabat, Bocchi pacem imminuere, ne, etc.,

    Sall. J. 81 fin.:

    universis prodesse festinet,

    Inscr. Orell. 775.—
    (β).
    With acc. (not in Cic.): festivum festinant diem, hasten to celebrate, Enn. ap. Serv. Verg. A. 9, 401 (Trag. v. 434 ed. Vahl.):

    ni id festinaret,

    Sall. J. 77, 1:

    ad bellum cuncta,

    id. ib. 73, 1: soleas festinate (sc. dare), id. Fragm. ap. Serv. Verg. A. 12, 425:

    festinare fugam,

    Verg. A. 4, 575:

    vias,

    Stat. Th. 2, 478:

    poenas,

    Hor. Ep. 1, 2, 61:

    pyram,

    Sil. 8, 52:

    vestes,

    Stat. S. 2, 1, 128:

    caedes, patibula, ignes, cruces,

    Tac. A. 14, 33:

    mortem in se,

    to bring on speedily, id. ib. 4, 28:

    pyram,

    prepares in haste, Sil. 8, 52.—In pass.:

    quod animo cupienti nihil satis festinatur,

    Sall. J. 64 fin.:

    ea cuncta per idoneos ministros festinabantur,

    Tac. H. 2, 82:

    cum belli civilis praemia festinarentur,

    id. ib. 3, 37:

    nec virgines festinantur,

    are not married early, id. G. 20:

    adoptio festinatur,

    id. A. 12, 25; 6, 50; id. H. 3, 37.—In part. perf., hastened, accelerated:

    festinata maturitas,

    Quint. 6 praef. § 10;

    iter,

    Ov. P. 4, 5, 8:

    missio,

    Tac. A. 1, 52:

    casus,

    id. ib. 6, 44:

    nuptiae,

    Suet. Aug. 69:

    honores,

    i. e. obtained before the proper time, Luc. 8, 24; Plin. Pan. 69, 5:

    festinatis annis raptus,

    by an early death, Mart. 7, 40, 7; cf.:

    festinatis lictorum manibus in carcerem raptus,

    Tac. A. 6, 40:

    mors domini gladiis tam festinata,

    prematurely inflicted, Juv. 4, 96.—
    * (γ).
    With se, to make haste, Gell. 14, 2, 9.—Hence,
    1.
    festīnans, antis, P. a., hasty, in haste:

    ille properans, festinans, mandata vestra conficere cupiens,

    Cic. Phil. 9, 3, 6:

    haec festinans scripsi in itinere atque agmine,

    id. Att. 6, 4 fin. —Adv.: festīnanter, hastily, speedily, quickly (class.):

    improbe, turbide, festinanter, rapide omnia videtis esse suscepta, Cic. Scaur. § 37: nimium festinanter dictum,

    id. Fin. 5, 26, 77.— Comp.:

    compositius cuncta quam festinantius agerent,

    Tac. A. 15, 3:

    factum quid,

    Gell. 10, 11, 8:

    publicatum,

    Suet. Aug. 29:

    germinant,

    Plin. 17, 11, 15, § 78.— Sup.:

    festinantissime,

    Aug. Ep. 250.—
    2.
    festīnāto, adv., hastily, hurriedly (post-Aug.):

    quam nihil praeparato, nihil festinato fecisse videtur Milo,

    Quint. 4, 2, 58; Suet. Claud. 16; Vulg. Gen. 44, 11 al.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > festino

  • 12 ὠκύμορος

    A quickly dying, dying early, of Achilles, Il.1.417, 18.95, 458;

    ὠκυμορώτατος ἄλλων 1.505

    ; of the suitors, Od.1.266, al.; of φιτρός of Meleager, B.5.141; in Epitaphs, Epigr.Gr. 527 ([place name] Beroea), 540 ([place name] Thrace), al.; so in later Prose, Ph.2.45; of flowers, Philostr.Ep.4: of things, transient, J.AJ11.3.6, Ph.1.478: neut. pl. as Adv., Supp.Epigr.6.501 ([place name] Isaura).
    II [voice] Act., bringing a quick or early death,

    ἰοί Il.15.441

    , Od.22.75;

    φαρμάκων δυνάμεις Plu.Ant.71

    ;

    κώνειον -ώτατον Id. Dio58

    .

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ὠκύμορος

  • 13 Böttger, Johann Friedrich

    [br]
    b. 4 February 1682 Scheiz, Germany
    d. 13 March 1719 Dresden, Germany
    [br]
    German inventor of Meissen porcelain.
    [br]
    After the early death of his father, Böttger spent his childhood in Magdeburg, where he received instruction in mathematics, fortification and pyrotechnics. He spent twelve years with the apothecary F.Zorn in Berlin, where there was a flourishing colony of alchemists. Böttger became an adept himself and claimed to have achieved transmutations into gold by 1701.
    In March 1702 Böttger moved near to Dresden, in the service of August II, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland. While there, he made friends with E.W.von Tschirnhaus (1651–1708), scientist and possessor of glass-and ironworks. It was this association that led eventually to the founding of the celebrated Meissen porcelain factory. By 1708, Böttger had succeeded in making fine red stoneware by adding a flux, alabaster or marble, to infusible Saxony clay. By varying his raw materials, and in particular in using white china clay from the Erzgebirge, he obtained the first European true, hard, white porcelain, which had eluded European workers for centuries. At the same time he improved the furnace to achieve a temperature of around 1,350°C. To exploit his discovery, the Meissen factory was set up in 1710 and its products began to be marketed in 1713. Böttger managed the factory until his death in 1719, although throughout the period of experimentation and exploitation he had worked in conditions of great secrecy, in a vain attempt to preserve the secret of the process.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    C.A.Engelhardt, 1837, J.F.Böttger: Erfinder des sachsischen Porzellan, Leipzig; reprinted 1982, Verlag Weidlich (the classic biography).
    K.Hoffman, 1985, Johann Friedrich Böttger: von Alchemistengold zum weissen
    Porzellan, Berlin: Verlag Neues Leben.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Böttger, Johann Friedrich

  • 14 Krupp, Alfred

    [br]
    b. 26 April 1812 Essen, Germany
    d. 14 July 1887 Bredeney, near Essen, Germany
    [br]
    German manufacturer of steel and armaments.
    [br]
    Krupp's father founded a small cast-steel works at Essen, but at his early death in 1826 the firm was left practically insolvent to his sons. Alfred's formal education ended at that point and he entered the ailing firm. The expansion of trade brought about by the Zollverein, or customs union, enabled him to increase output, and by 1843 he had 100 workers under him, making steel springs and machine parts. Five years later he was able to buy out his co-heirs, and in 1849 he secured his first major railway contract. The quality of his product was usefully advertised by displaying a flawless 2-ton steel ingot at the Great Exhibition of 1851. Krupp was then specializing in the manufacture of steel parts for railways and steamships, notably a weldless steel tire for locomotives, from which was derived the three-ring emblem of the Krupp concern. Krupp made a few cannon from 1847 but sold his first to the Khedive of Egypt in 1857. Two years later he won a major order of 312 cannon from the Prussian Government. With the development of this side of the business, he became the largest steel producer in Europe. In 1862 he adopted the Bessemer steelmaking process. The quality and design of his cannon were major factors in the victory of the Prussian artillery bombardment at Sedan in the Franco- Prussian War of 1870. Krupp expanded further during the boom years of the early 1870s and he was able to gain control of German coal and Spanish iron-ore supplies. He went on to manufacture heavy artillery, with a celebrated testing ground at Osnabrück. By this time he had a workforce of 21,000, whom he ruled with benevolent but strict control. His will instructed that the firm should not be divided.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    P.Batty, 1966, The House of Krupp (includes a bibliography). G.von Klass, 1954, Krupp: The Story of an Industrial Empire.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Krupp, Alfred

  • 15 Siemens, Dr Ernst Werner von

    [br]
    b. 13 December 1816 Lenthe, near Hanover, Germany
    d. 6 December 1892 Berlin, Germany
    [br]
    German pioneer of the dynamo, builder of the first electric railway.
    [br]
    Werner von Siemens was the eldest of a large family and after the early death of his parents took his place at its head. He served in the Prussian artillery, being commissioned in 1839, after which he devoted himself to the study of chemistry and physics. In 1847 Siemens and J.G. Halske formed a company, Telegraphen-Bauanstalt von Siemens und Halske, to manufacture a dial telegraph which they had developed from an earlier instrument produced by Charles Wheatstone. In 1848 Siemens obtained his discharge from the army and he and Halske constructed the first long-distance telegraph line on the European continent, between Berlin and Frankfurt am Main.
    Werner von Siemens's younger brother, William Siemens, had settled in Britain in 1844 and was appointed agent for the Siemens \& Halske company in 1851. Later, an English subsidiary company was formed, known from 1865 as Siemens Brothers. It specialized in manufacturing and laying submarine telegraph cables: the specialist cable-laying ship Faraday, launched for the purpose in 1874, was the prototype of later cable ships and in 1874–5 laid the first cable to run direct from the British Isles to the USA. In charge of Siemens Brothers was another brother, Carl, who had earlier established a telegraph network in Russia.
    In 1866 Werner von Siemens demonstrated the principle of the dynamo in Germany, but it took until 1878 to develop dynamos and electric motors to the point at which they could be produced commercially. The following year, 1879, Werner von Siemens built the first electric railway, and operated it at the Berlin Trades Exhibition. It comprised an oval line, 300 m (985 it) long, with a track gauge of 1 m (3 ft 3 1/2 in.); upon this a small locomotive hauled three small passenger coaches. The locomotive drew current at 150 volts from a third rail between the running rails, through which it was returned. In four months, more than 80,000 passengers were carried. The railway was subsequently demonstrated in Brussels, and in London, in 1881. That same year Siemens built a permanent electric tramway, 1 1/2 miles (2 1/2 km) long, on the outskirts of Berlin. In 1882 in Berlin he tried out a railless electric vehicle which drew electricity from a two-wire overhead line: this was the ancestor of the trolleybus.
    In the British Isles, an Act of Parliament was obtained in 1880 for the Giant's Causeway Railway in Ireland with powers to work it by "animal, mechanical or electrical power"; although Siemens Brothers were electrical engineers to the company, of which William Siemens was a director, delays in construction were to mean that the first railway in the British Isles to operate regular services by electricity was that of Magnus Volk.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Honorary doctorate, Berlin University 1860. Ennobled by Kaiser Friedrich III 1880, after which he became known as von Siemens.
    Further Reading
    S.von Weiher, 1972, "The Siemens brothers, pioneers of the electrical age in Europe", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 45 (describes the Siemens's careers). C.E.Lee, 1979, The birth of electric traction', Railway Magazine (May) (describes Werner Siemens's introduction of the electric railway).
    Transactions of the Newcomen Society (1979) 50: 82–3 (describes Siemens's and Halske's early electric telegraph instruments).
    Transactions of the Newcomen Society (1961) 33: 93 (describes the railless electric vehicle).
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Siemens, Dr Ernst Werner von

  • 16 Torricelli, Evangelista

    [br]
    b. 15 October 1608 Faenza, Italy
    d. 25 October 1647 Florence, Italy
    [br]
    Italian physicist, inventor of the mercury barometer and discoverer of atmospheric pressure.
    [br]
    Torricelli was the eldest child of a textile artisan. Between 1625 and 1626 he attended the Jesuit school at Faenza, where he showed such outstanding aptitude in mathematics and philosophy that his uncle was persuaded to send him to Rome to a school run by Benedetto Castelli, a mathematician and engineer and a former pupil of Galileo Galilei. Between 1630 and 1641, Torricelli was possibly Secretary to Giovanni Ciampoli, Galileo's friend and protector. In 1641 Torricelli wrote a treatise, De motugravium, amplifying Galileo's doctrine on the motion of projectiles, and Galileo accepted him as a pupil. On Galileo's death in 1642, he was appointed as mathematician and philosopher to the court of Grand Duke Ferdinando II of Tuscany. He remained in Florence until his early death in 1647, possibly from typhoid fever. He wrote a great number of mathematical papers on conic sections, the cycloid, the logarithmic curve and other subjects, which made him well known.
    By 1642 Torricelli was producing good lenses for telescopes; he subsequently improved them, and attained near optical perfection. He also constructed a simple microscope with a small glass sphere as a lens. Galileo had looked at problems of raising water with suction pumps, and also with a siphon in 1630. Torricelli brought up the subject again in 1640 and later produced his most important invention, the barometer. He used mercury to fill a glass tube that was sealed at one end and inverted it. He found that the height of mercury in the tube adjusted itself to a well-defined level of about 76 cm (30 in.), higher than the free surface outside. He realized that this must be due to the pressure of the air on the outside surface and predicted that it would fall with increasing altitude. He thus demonstrated the pressure of the atmosphere and the existence of a vacuum on top of the mercury, publishing his findings in 1644. He later noticed that changes in the height of the mercury were related to changes in the weather.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1641, De motu gravium.
    Further Reading
    T.I.Williams (ed.), 1969, A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists, London: A. \& C.Black.
    Chambers Concise Dictionary of Scientists, 1989, Cambridge.
    A Dictionary of Scientific Biography, 1976, Vol. XIII, New York: C.Scribner's Sons.
    A.Stowers, 1961–2, "Thomas Newcomen's first steam engine 250 years ago and the initial development of steam power", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 34 (provides an account of his mercury barometer).
    W.E.Knowles Middleton, 1964, The History of the Barometer, Baltimore.
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Torricelli, Evangelista

  • 17 ein früher Tod

    1. an early death
    2. a premature death

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > ein früher Tod

  • 18 тяжело думать о его безвременной кончине

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > тяжело думать о его безвременной кончине

  • 19 Tragödie

    f; -, -n; LIT. tragedy (auch fig.); (Ereignis) auch tragic event; mach nicht gleich eine Tragödie draus umg. there’s no need to make a full-scale drama out of it, try not to get too het up about it; es ist eine Tragödie mit ihr / diesem Computer umg. she’s absolutely hopeless / this computer’s an absolute disaster; das ist doch keine Tragödie umg., fig. that’s not the end of the world
    * * *
    die Tragödie
    tragedy
    * * *
    Tra|gö|die [tra'gøːdiə]
    f -, -n(LITER fig)
    tragedy

    es ist eine Tragö́die mit ihm/dieser Maschine — he/this machine is a disaster

    * * *
    die
    1) ((a) drama about unfortunate events with a sad outcome: `Hamlet' is one of Shakespeare's tragedies.) tragedy
    2) (an unfortunate or sad event: His early death was a great tragedy for his family.) tragedy
    * * *
    Tra·gö·die
    <-, -n>
    [traˈgø:di̯ə]
    f
    1. LIT, THEAT tragedy
    eine/keine \Tragödie sein (fam) to be/not to be the end of the world fam, to be a/no great tragedy fam
    eine \Tragödie aus etw dat machen (fam) to make a mountain out of a molehill fam
    * * *
    die; Tragödie, Tragödien tragedy
    * * *
    Tragödie f; -, -n; LIT tragedy (auch fig); (Ereignis) auch tragic event;
    mach nicht gleich eine Tragödie draus umg there’s no need to make a full-scale drama out of it, try not to get too het up about it;
    es ist eine Tragödie mit ihr/diesem Computer umg she’s absolutely hopeless/this computer’s an absolute disaster;
    das ist doch keine Tragödie umg, fig that’s not the end of the world
    * * *
    die; Tragödie, Tragödien tragedy
    * * *
    -n f.
    tragedy n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Tragödie

  • 20 tragedy

    [ˈtrædʒədɪ] plural ˈtragedies noun
    1) (a) drama about unfortunate events with a sad outcome:

    "Hamlet" is one of Shakespeare's tragedies.

    مأساة، رِوايَةٌ مأساوِيَّه
    2) an unfortunate or sad event:

    His early death was a great tragedy for his family.

    حادِث مأساوي، مأساه

    Arabic-English dictionary > tragedy

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