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61 только бровью шевельнуть
• (СТОИТ) ТОЛЬКО БРОВЬЮ < УСОМ> ПОВЕСТИ < ШЕВЕЛЬНУТЬ> (кому) coll[VP; impers, pres or past (var. with стоит; infin only, impers predic (var. without стоит); a clause in a compound sent or the main clause in a complex sent (foll by а как- or чтобы-clause)]=====⇒ a hint or indication from s.o. is sufficient (to get another to do sth.):- X-y стоит только бровью повести≈ all X has to do is < X need only> drop a hint <say the word, give the signal>;- [in limited contexts] X just has to snap his fingers.Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > только бровью шевельнуть
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62 только усом повести
• (СТОИТ) ТОЛЬКО БРОВЬЮ < УСОМ> ПОВЕСТИ < ШЕВЕЛЬНУТЬ> (кому) coll[VP; impers, pres or past (var. with стоит; infin only, impers predic (var. without стоит); a clause in a compound sent or the main clause in a complex sent (foll by а как- or чтобы-clause)]=====⇒ a hint or indication from s.o. is sufficient (to get another to do sth.):- X-y стоит только бровью повести≈ all X has to do is < X need only> drop a hint <say the word, give the signal>;- [in limited contexts] X just has to snap his fingers.Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > только усом повести
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63 только усом шевельнуть
• (СТОИТ) ТОЛЬКО БРОВЬЮ < УСОМ> ПОВЕСТИ < ШЕВЕЛЬНУТЬ> (кому) coll[VP; impers, pres or past (var. with стоит; infin only, impers predic (var. without стоит); a clause in a compound sent or the main clause in a complex sent (foll by а как- or чтобы-clause)]=====⇒ a hint or indication from s.o. is sufficient (to get another to do sth.):- X-y стоит только бровью повести≈ all X has to do is < X need only> drop a hint <say the word, give the signal>;- [in limited contexts] X just has to snap his fingers.Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > только усом шевельнуть
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64 не мудрено
• НЕ МУДРЕНО (, что...)[Invar; subj-compl with быть (subj: usu. a clause, occas. infin; usu. the main clause in a complex sent foll. by a что-clause; may be used as an indep. sent]=====⇒ it is natural, completely understandable:- (it's) no wonder (that...);- (it's) small wonder (that...);- it's not surprising (that...);- it comes as no surprise (that...);- it's only natural (that...);- you can see why...♦ Дядя Митя был и старше-то отца всего лет на десять, а что без зубов -то не мудрено, рассуждал Лёва... (Битов 2). Uncle Mitya was only about ten years older than Father, and if his teeth were gone it was no wonder, Lyova reasoned... (2a).♦ Впервые в жизни навстречу мне двинулась такая откровенная, смелая, поражающая своею меткостью ложь - не мудрено, что я растерялась (Каверин 1). It was the first time in my life that I had encountered such a blank, barefaced lie, so striking in its neatness; no wonder that I got confused (1a).♦ Консилиум четырёх шарлатанов на сцене шёл под величайший смех публики, и не мудрено, что ненависть к Мольеру среди врачей достигла после представления "Любви-целительницы" необыкновенной степени (Булгаков 5). The consultation of the four charlatans on the stage provoked endless outbursts of laughter in the theater, and it is small wonder that hatred of Molifcre among the physicians reached unprecedented proportions (5a).♦ "Всё взять от партии и не отдать ей ничего... вот, собственно, в двух словах, цель новой оппозиции. И не мудрено, что она... разлагается..." (Алешковский 1). "No, just take everything from the party and don't give anything back....In a word, that's the new opposition's aim. You can see why...it degenerates..." (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > не мудрено
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65 compliqué
compliqué, e [kɔ̃plike]• ne sois pas si compliqué ! don't make life so difficult!• puisque tu refuses, ce n'est pas compliqué, moi je pars since you refuse, that simplifies things - I'm leaving• il ne m'écoute jamais, c'est pas compliqué ! (inf) it's quite simple, he never listens to a word I say!* * *compliquée kɔ̃plike adjectif1) gén complicated; [esprit] tortuoussi tu ne t'arrêtes pas de pleurer, ce n'est pas compliqué (colloq), tu vas au lit! — it's quite simple, if you don't stop crying you'll go straight to bed!
2) Médecine [fracture] compound* * *kɔ̃plike adj compliqué, -e1) (mécanisme, processus) complicatedC'est une histoire compliquée. — It's a complicated story.
2) (personne) complicated* * *A pp ⇒ compliquer.B pp adj1 [appareil, exercice, dessin] complicated; [problème] complicated, difficult; [esprit] tortuous; [personne] complicated; ce n'est pourtant pas compliqué de changer un fusible it's not exactly hard to change a fuse; ce n'est quand même pas compliqué de ranger tes affaires it wouldn't take much effort to keep your things tidy; si tu ne t'arrêtes pas de pleurer, ce n'est pas compliqué, tu vas au lit○! it's quite simple, if you don't stop crying you'll go straight to bed!; si ça continue comme ça, ce n'est pas compliqué, je démissionne○ if things carry on as they are, I'll simply resign; ‘c'est de sa faute alors?’-‘c'est un peu plus compliqué que cela’ ‘so it's his fault?’-‘it's not quite as simple as that’;2 Méd [fracture] compound.( féminin compliquée) [kɔ̃plike] adjectif1. [difficile à comprendre - affaire, exercice, phrase] complicated ; [ - jeu, langue, livre, problème] difficult ; [ - plan] intricateregarde, ce n'est pourtant pas compliqué! look, it's not so difficult to understand!3. [qui manque de naturel - personne] complicated ; [ - esprit] tortuous————————, compliquée [kɔ̃plike] nom masculin, nom fémininta sœur, c'est une compliquée! your sister certainly likes complications! -
66 divers
divers, e [divεʀ, εʀs]adjectivea. (pl) ( = varié) [couleurs, opinions] various ; [coutumes] diverse ; ( = différent) [sens d'un mot, moments, occupations] different* * *
1.
diverse divɛʀ, ɛʀs adjectif1) (varié, plusieurs) variousà diverses reprises — on various ou several occasions
2) ( indéfini) [frais] miscellaneous
2.
Phrasal Verbs:* * *divɛʀ, ɛʀs divers, -e1. adj1) (= de plusieurs sortes) (raisons, degrés) variousles raisons en sont diverses: d'abord... — there are various reasons: first...
à des degrés divers — to varying degrees, to various degrees
"divers" (= rubrique) — "miscellaneous"
frais divers COMMERCE — sundries, miscellaneous expenses
2) (= distinct) different, various3) (= varié) (population, sujet, paysage) diverse2. dét(= plusieurs) various, severalDiverses personnes sont venues. — Several people came.
* * *A adj1 ( varié) various, diverse; ( plusieurs) various, several; pour des raisons diverses for various reasons; pour des raisons très diverses for very diverse reasons; par des moyens divers by various ou diverse means; des styles/matériaux divers diverse styles/materials; les divers aspects/résultats the various aspects/results; les résultats des diverses entreprises the results of the various companies; selon diverses sources according to various ou several sources; à diverses reprises on various ou several occasions; en divers endroits in various ou several places; elle connaît les gens les plus divers she knows all sorts of people;3 liter ( nuancé) [paysage] varied; le film a été accueilli avec un intérêt divers the film was met with varying degrees of interest.B nmpl ( rubrique) miscellaneous.( féminin diverse) [divɛr, ɛrs] déterminant (adjectif indéfini)en diverses occasions on several ou various occasions————————( féminin diverse) [divɛr, ɛrs] adjectifles divers droite/gauche other right/left-wing parties -
67 porte
porte [pɔʀt]1. feminine nouna. [de maison, voiture, meuble] door ; [de jardin, stade, ville] gate ; ( = seuil) doorstep ; ( = embrasure) doorway• Dijon, porte de la Bourgogne Dijon, the gateway to Burgundyb. [d'aéroport] gate• la porte ! (inf) shut the door!• mettre or flanquer qn à la porte (inf) (licencier) to fire sb (inf) ; (éjecter) to boot (inf) sb out• entrer par la petite/la grande porte (figurative) to start at the bottom/at the top• j'ai trouvé porte close (maison) no one answered the door ; (magasin, bâtiment public) it was closed• vous avez frappé à la bonne/mauvaise porte (figurative) you've come to the right/wrong place2. compounds* * *pɔʀt
1.
adjectif [veine] portal
2.
1) ( entrée) ( de bâtiment) door; (de parc, stade, ville) gateouvrir ses portes (au public) — [salon, exposition, magasin] to open (to the public)
mettre à la porte — ( exclure d'un cours) to throw [somebody] out; ( renvoyer) to expel [élève]; to fire, to sack (colloq) GB [employé]
ce n'est pas la porte à côté — (colloq) it's quite far
trouver porte close or de bois — to find nobody in
tu frappes à la bonne/mauvaise porte — you've come to the right/wrong place
2) ( moyen d'accès) gateway3) ( possibilité) door4) ( dans un aéroport) gate6) ( portière) doorune voiture à deux/cinq portes — a two-/five-door car
7) ( en électronique) gate•Phrasal Verbs:••entrer par la petite/grande porte — to start at the bottom/top
il faut qu'une porte soit ouverte ou fermée — Proverbe you've got to decide one way or the other
* * *pɔʀt nf1) [maison, pièce] doorFerme la porte, s'il te plaît. — Close the door, please.
à ma porte (= tout près) — on my doorstep
2) [ville, forteresse] gate3) (dans un aéroport) gateporte d'embarquement — departure gate, gate
Vol 432 à destination de Paris: porte numéro trois. — Flight 432 to Paris: gate 3.
4) SKI gatemettre à la porte — to throw out, (= licencier) to sack
prendre la porte — to leave, to go away
* * *A adj [veine] portal.B nf1 ( entrée) ( de bâtiment) door; (de parc, stade, jardin) gate; la porte de derrière/devant the back/front door; la porte du jardin the garden gate; devant la porte de l'hôpital outside the hospital; je me suis garée devant la porte I've parked right outside; avoir une gare à sa porte to have a station on one's doorstep; Grenoble est aux portes des Alpes Grenoble is the gateway to the Alps; aux portes du désert at the edge of the desert; passer la porte to enter the house; ouverture/fermeture des portes à 18 heures doors open/close at 6 o'clock; ouvrir sa porte à qn to let sb in; ouvrir la porte à la critique to invite criticism; c'est la porte ouverte à la criminalité it's an open invitation to crime; ouvrir/fermer ses portes (au public) [salon, exposition, magasin] to open/close (to the public); l'entreprise a fermé ses portes the company has gone out of business; la Communauté a ouvert ses portes au Portugal the Community has admitted Portugal; mettre à la porte ( exclure d'un cours) to throw [sb] out; ( renvoyer) to expel [élève]; to fire, to sack○ GB [employé]; ce n'est pas la porte à côté○ it's quite far; voir qn entre deux portes to see sb very briefly; trouver porte close or de bois to find nobody in; j'ai mis deux heures, de porte à porte it took me two hours (from) door to door;2 ( panneau mobile) (de maison, meuble, d'avion) door; (de jardin, parc, stade) gate; une porte en bois/fer a wooden/an iron door; se tromper de porte lit to get the wrong door; fig to come to the wrong place; frapper à la porte de qn lit, fig to knock at sb's door; frapper à la bonne/mauvaise porte to come to the right/wrong place;3 ( de ville fortifiée) gate; aux portes de la ville at the city gates;4 ( moyen d'accès) gateway; la porte des honneurs the gateway to honoursGB; la victoire leur ouvre la porte de la finale the victory clears the way to the final for them;5 ( possibilité) door; cela ouvre/ferme bien des portes it opens/closes many doors;6 ( dans un aéroport) gate; porte numéro 10 gate number 10;8 ( portière) door; une voiture à deux/cinq portes a two-/five-door car;9 Électron gate.porte basculante up-and-over door; porte bâtarde medium-sized door; porte battante swing door; porte coulissante sliding door; porte d'écluse lock gate; porte d'entrée ( de maison) front door; (d'église, hôpital, immeuble) main entrance; porte pliante folding door; porte de service tradesmen's entrance GB, service entrance; porte de sortie lit exit; fig escape route; porte à tambour revolving door; porte tournante = porte à tambour; porte vitrée glass door; les portes de l'Enfer Relig the gates of Hell; portes ouvertes open day GB, open house US; journée or opération portes ouvertes à l'école the school is organizing an open day GB ou open house US; les portes du Paradis Relig the gates of Heaven.prendre la porte to leave; entrer par la petite/grande porte to start at the bottom/top; enfoncer une porte ouverte to state the obvious; il faut qu'une porte soit ouverte ou fermée Prov you've got to decide one way or the other; ⇒ balayer.[pɔrt] nom féminin1. [d'une maison, d'un véhicule, d'un meuble] door[d'un passe-plat] hatchfermer ou interdire ou refuser sa porte à quelqu'un to bar somebody from one's housefermer ses portes [magasin] to close downouvrir ses portes [magasin, musée] to openun père magistrat, ça ouvre pas mal de portes a father who happens to be a magistrate can open quite a few doorsa. AUTOMOBILE [côté conducteur] driver doorb. [côté passager] front passenger doorporte de derrière/devant back/front doora. (sens propre) way out, exità ma/sa porte (sens propre & figuré) at my/his door, on my/his doorstepLyon, ce n'est pas la porte à côté it's a fair way to Lyonsentrer par la grande/petite porte: elle est entrée dans l'entreprise par la grande porte she went straight in at the top of the companycette décision ouvre toute grande la porte à l'injustice this decision throws the door wide open to injusticetrouver porte close: j'y suis allé mais j'ai trouvé porte close I went round but nobody was in ou at homeil a essayé tous les éditeurs, mais partout il a trouvé porte close he tried all the publishers, but without successil faut qu'une porte soit ouverte ou fermée (proverbe) it's either yes or no, one can't sit on the fence forever2. [passage dans une enceinte] gateles portes du paradis heaven's gates, the pearly gatesla porte de Versaillessite of a large exhibition complex in Paris where major trade fairs take place3. [panneau] door (panel)porte basculante/battante up-and-over/swing doorporte coulissante ou roulante sliding door5. INFORMATIQUE gate————————[pɔrt] adjectif————————à la porte locution adverbialea. [sans clefs] I'm locked outb. [chassé] I've been thrown out (of my home)a. [importun] to throw somebody outb. [élève] to expel somebodyc. [employé] to fire ou to dismiss somebodyde porte à porte locution adverbialede porte en porte locution adverbiale -
68 ÞAULAR
f. pl. complicated state of things; mæla sik í þaular, to talk oneself into troubles.* * *f. pl. [the etymology and exact sense of this word is not certain, perh. akin to þylja, referring to a lost strong pret. þaul, þulu]:—a long-winded and complex thing; it is, however, only used in metaph. phrases; svá lízk mér sem mínir menn muni hafa mælt sik í þaular um þetta mál meirr enn þú, would have talked themselves into troubles, Fb. i. 348; rekum af oss tjöldin, róum út ór þessum þaular-vági, reisum viðu ok siglum norðr undan, let us row out of this winding creek, hoist sail and stand out northwards! Fms. viii. 130: the mod. phrase, læra, lesa í þaula = læra í belg, to learn, read by rote; as also, þaul-lesinn, adj.; hann er þaullesinn, one who has read a thing through and through, got through a weary task: þaul-reið, f. a riding steadily on like a log, plodding wearily on: þaul-sætinn, adj. sitting log-like without stirring. -
69 Only
When used in a complex sentence, "only" might qualify any word in the sentence; always clarify! -
70 Cité
Proper name.2. (abbr. Cité Universitaire): Student residential complex in France. (The word refers principally to the Cite Universitaire built in the early 20th century in the south suburbs of Paris.) -
71 электронно-вычислительная машина
электронно-вычислительная машина; ЭВМУстрoйствo, выпoлняющee сeрии пoслeдoвaтeльных aрифмeтичeских и лoгичeскихoпeрaций с дaнными бeз вмeшaтeльствa чeлoвeкa.Примечание. B дaннoм дoкумeнтe тeрмин «ЭBM» мoжeт oзнaчaть вычислитeльный кoмплeкс, сoстoящий из oднoй или нeскoльких ЭBM и пeрифeрийнoгo oбoрудoвaния.A device which performs sequences of arithmetical and logical steps upon data without human intervention.Note.— When the word ‘computer’ is used in this document it may denote a computer complex, which includes one or more computers and peripheral equipment.(PANS-ATM)Official definition modified by Amdt 5 to PANS-RAC (10/11/1994).Русско-английский словарь международной организации гражданской авиации > электронно-вычислительная машина
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72 ЭВМ
электронно-вычислительная машина; ЭВМУстрoйствo, выпoлняющee сeрии пoслeдoвaтeльных aрифмeтичeских и лoгичeскихoпeрaций с дaнными бeз вмeшaтeльствa чeлoвeкa.Примечание. B дaннoм дoкумeнтe тeрмин «ЭBM» мoжeт oзнaчaть вычислитeльный кoмплeкс, сoстoящий из oднoй или нeскoльких ЭBM и пeрифeрийнoгo oбoрудoвaния.A device which performs sequences of arithmetical and logical steps upon data without human intervention.Note.— When the word ‘computer’ is used in this document it may denote a computer complex, which includes one or more computers and peripheral equipment.(PANS-ATM)Official definition modified by Amdt 5 to PANS-RAC (10/11/1994).Русско-английский словарь международной организации гражданской авиации > ЭВМ
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73 сложный
прл1) многообразный по составу complex, complicated, compoundсло́жное сло́во — compound word
сло́жный механи́зм — complicated device/machine
2) трудный difficult; запутанный complicated, involved; замысловатый intricate; требующий усилий challengingсло́жная зада́ча — difficult/complicated/challenging problem/ задание task
сло́жный сюже́т — intricate plot
сло́жный юриди́ческий вопро́с — intricate/involved legal issue/point
ему́ нра́вится сло́жная рабо́та — he likes/appreciates a challenging job/a job with a challenge
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74 σύνθετος
σύν-θετος, ον, also fem. συνθέτη (or συνθετή as in Lys.Fr.34, Arist.Ph. 265a21, Metaph. 1051b27, al.): ([etym.] συντίθημι):—A put together, compounded, composite, Pl.Phd. 78c, al.; of a centaur, διαιρετὸς.. καὶ πάλιν ς. X.Cyr.4.3.20, cf. Lys.l.c.; τὸ ς. the composite part of man, Arist.EN 1178a20;σ. ἐκ πολλῶν Pl.R. 611b
;ἐκ τῶν αὐτῶν Id.Phlb. 29e
; σ. ἀναγνώρισις complex, Arist.Po. 1455a12.2 σύνθετον, τό, compound, Id.Ph. 187b12; τὰ ς., opp. τὰ στοιχεῖα, Id.Cael. 306b20, cf. Metaph. 1070b8; so ἡ σύνθετος οὐσία ib. 1043a30; ἡ συνθέτη οὐσία ib. 1023b2, cf. de An. 412a16;αἱ μὴ σ. οὐσίαι Id.Metaph. 1051b27
; cf.σύγκειμαι 11.4
.3 in various technical senses,a in Grammar, φωνὴ ς. a. compound sound, i.e. a syllable, Id.Po. 1456b35; or a word, ib. 1457a11; φωνῶν αἱ μὲν ἁπλαῖ (e.g. Δίων) , αἱ δὲ ς. (e.g. Δίων περιπατεῖ) S.E.M.8.135; σ. ὀνόματα compound nouns, Arist.Rh.Al. 1434b34, Demetr.Eloc.91, Philomnest. 2;σ. σχῆμα D.T.635.21
; σ. προσηγορία (e. g. ὑπνώδης καταφορά) Gal.7.643. Adv.- τως Str.13.2.5
, Sor.2.26, Gal.6.549.b in Metre and Music, σ. ῥυθμός a compound foot, Pl.R. 400b; [διαστήματα] ς. Aristid.Quint.1.7, cf. Plu.2.1135b;ἁρμονίαν εἶναι σ. πρᾶγμα Pl.Phd. 92a
.c in Arithmetic, σ. ἀριθμός a number composed of several factors, Arist.Metaph. 1020b4, Euc.7 Def.14.d in Medicine, σύνθετα solid excrements, Hp.Coac. 109: also φάρμακον ς. compound drug,τὸ ξ. [φάρμακον] τὸ διὰ τῆς λιμνήστιδος καὶ εὐφορβίου καὶ πυρέθρου Aret.CD1.2
, cf. Hsch. s.v. φαρικόν.III metaph., agreed upon, covenanted, ὥσπερ ἐκ συνθέτου by agreement, Hdt.3.86.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > σύνθετος
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75 elьcь
elьcь Grammatical information: m. jo Proto-Slavic meaning: `dace'Page in Trubačev: VI 22-23Russian:eléc `dace' [m jo], el'cá [Gens]Ukrainian:jaléc' `bleak' [m jo]Czech:Slovak:Polish:Kashubian:i̯el `a fish' [m jo??]Lower Sorbian:Serbo-Croatian:jálac `dace' [m jo];Indo-European reconstruction: eliko-Certainty: -Page in Pokorny: 302-304Comments: As Trubačëv observes (VI: 305), the semantics of Pokorny's root *el- are capacious and complex. In my opinion, there is little evidence for a root *el- `light-coloured'. It is tempting to seek a connection between *jelьcь and OHG alunt `ide'. Pokorny identifies what is presumedly the root of the latter word with the first element of *albʰo- `white' and links it to *el-. Since the fish-names under discussion refer to shining, whitish species, this is semantically unproblematic. Nevertheless, it seems quite possible that the root *al/el (Slavic *el as a result of Rozwadowski's change?) originates from a substratum language. -
76 νομή
νομή, ῆς, ἡ (Hom. et al.; ins, pap, LXX; PsSol 17:40; TestSol 5:5; ApcEsdr 2:11 p. 26, 5 Tdf.; ApcEl [PSI I, 7 verso, 3] ‘flock’; ApcrEzk P1, verso 4; EpArist 112; Philo; Jos., Ant. 2, 18; 17, 249) gener. ‘pasturing-place’ or ‘grazing land’ (Soph., Hdt., X., Plut., pap), and freq. in ref. to the fodder or foraging-opportunity (Pla., Aristot.; 1 Ch 4:40) that such land provides.—In our lit. the word is used only in imagery① pasturage of one who follows Jesus. ν. εὑρίσκειν find pasture (lit. of hungry flocks 1 Ch 4:40; fig. of leaders who are like rams who find no forage La 1:6) J 10:9. Of the spiritual sustenance provided by God as Shepherd of the people (i.e. the Christians); the latter are called πρόβατα τῆς νομῆς σου sheep of your pasture (Ps 73:1; 78:13; cp. 99:3) 1 Cl 59:4; likew. 16:5 in a quot. fr. an unknown document (perh. En 89:56, 66f), called γραφή.② someth. rapaciously destructive, spreading (after the spreading out of a flock at pasturage; e.g. fire: Polyb. 1, 48, 5; τὸ πῦρ λαμβανει νομήν 11, 4 [5], 4; Philo, Aet. M. 127 [conjecture of Usener]) in medical simile spreading, as of an ulcer (since Hippocr.; Polyb. 1, 81, 6 νομὴν ποιεῖται ἕλκος; Memnon Hist. [I B.C./I A.D.]: 434 Fgm. 1, 2, 4 Jac. [ulcer]; cp. Jos., Bell. 6, 164 parts of the temple complex are compared to diseased body parts) ὁ λόγος αὐτῶν ὡς γάγγραινα νομὴν ἕξει their teaching will spread like a cancer 2 Ti 2:17.—DELG s.v. νέμω Ia. M-M. -
77 τέκνον
τέκνον, ου, τό (τίκτω ‘engender, bear’; Hom.+ ‘child’)① an offspring of human parents, childⓐ without ref. to sex Mt 10:21a (on the complete dissolution of family ties s. Lucian, Cal. 1; GrBar 4:17; ApcEsdr 3:14 p. 27, 23 Tdf.; Just., A I, 27, 3f; Orig., C. Cels. 6, 43, 25 [Job’s children]); Mk 13:12a; Lk 1:7; Ac 7:5; Rv 12:4. Pl. Mt 7:11; 10:21b; 18:25; 19:29; 22:24 (=σπέρμα, cp. Dt 25:5f, but σπ. and τ. are contrasted Ro 9:7); Mk 13:12b; Lk 1:17; 14:26; 1 Cor 7:14 (on the baptism of children s. HWood, EncRelEth II 392ff; JLeipoldt, D. urchr. Taufe 1928, 73–78; AOepke, LIhmels Festschr. 1928, 84–100, ZNW 29, 1930, 81–111 [against him HWindisch, ZNW 28, 1929, 118–42]; JJeremias, Hat d. Urkirche d. Kindertaufe geübt? ’38; 2d ed. ’49; Die Kindert. in d. ersten 4 Jhdtn. ’58; revisited D. Anfänge d. Kindert. ’62; s. also ZNW 40, ’42, 243–45. KAl-and, D. Saülingst. im NT u. in d. alten Kirche ’62, 2d ed. ’63; Die Stellung d. Kinder in d. frühe christl. Gemeinden, und ihre Taufe ’67. KBarth, Z. kirchl. Lehre v. d. Taufe2 ’43; D. Taufe als Begründung d. christlichen Lebens in Kirchliche Dogmatik IV, 4, ’67; for discussion of Barth’s views, s. EJüngel, K. Barths Lehre v. d. Taufe ’68; KViering (ed.), Zu K. Barth’s Lehre v. d. Taufe ’71; K. Aland, Taufe u. Kindertaufe ’71; HHubert, D. Streit um d. Kindertaufe, ’72. FFr̓vig, TTK 11, ’40, 124–31; EMolland, NorTT 43, ’42, 1–23; F-JLeenhardt, Le Baptème chrétien ’46; OCullmann, D. Tauflehre d. NT ’48; P-HMenoud, Verbum Caro 2, ’48, 15–26; HSchlier, TLZ 72, ’47, 321–26; GFleming, Baptism in the NT ’49; GBeasley-Murray, Baptism in the New Testament ’62; WKümmel, TRu 18, ’50, 32–47; GDelling, D. Taufe im NT ’63; EDinkler, Die Taufaussagen d. NT ’71 [in: KViering, s. above, 60–153]; JDidier, Le baptême des enfants ’59; HKraft, Texte z. Gesch. d. Taufe bes. d. Kindert. i. d. alten Kirche, Kl. T. no. 174, 2d ed. ’69); 2 Cor 12:14ab (simile); 1 Th 2:7 (simile), 11 (simile); 1 Ti 3:4, 12; 5:4 al. In the table of household duties (s. MDibelius Hdb. exc. after Col 4:1; KWeidinger, Die Haustafeln 1928) Eph 6:1 (τὰ τέκνα voc.), 4; Col 3:20 (τὰ τ. voc.), 21. In the case of φονεῖς τέκνων B 20:2; D 5:2, what follows shows that murders of their own children are meant.—The unborn fetus is also called τέκνον B 19:5; D 2:2 (like παιδίον: Hippocr., π. σαρκ. 6 vol. VIII 592 L. On Jesus’ attitude toward children, cp. JKalogerakos, Aristoteles’ Bild von der Frau: ΠΛΑΤΩΝ 46, ’94, 159–83, esp. p. 174 and notes [cp. Aristot., EN 1161b].).ⓑ The sex of the child can be made clear by the context, son (Herodian 7, 10, 7; PGen 74, 1ff; PAmh 136, 1f; POxy 930, 18; Jos., Ant. 14, 196; Just., D. 56, 5; 134, 4) Mt 21:28a; Phil 2:22 (simile); Rv 12:5; GJs 22;3. The voc. τέκνον as an affectionate address to a son Mt 21:28b; Lk 2:48; 15:31. In a more general sense the pl. is used for② descendants from a common ancestor, descendants, posterity Ῥαχὴλ κλαίουσα τὰ τέκνα αὐτῆς Mt 2:18 (Jer 38:15).—27:25; Ac 2:39; 13:33. A rich man is addressed by his ancestor Abraham as τέκνον Lk 16:25. τὰ τέκνα τῆς σαρκός the physical descendants Ro 9:8a.③ one who is dear to another but without genetic relationship and without distinction in age, childⓐ in the voc. gener. as a form of familiar address my child, my son (Herodian 1, 6, 4; ParJer 5:30; Achilles Tat. 8, 4, 3. Directed to fully grown persons, Vi. Aesopi G 60 P., where a peasant addresses Aesop in this way) Mt 9:2; Mk 2:5.ⓑ of a spiritual child in relation to master, apostle, or teacher (PGM 4, 475.—Eunap. p. 70 the sophist applies this term to his students) 2 Ti 1:2; Phlm 10. τέκνον ἐν κυρίῳ 1 Cor 4:17. τέκ. ἐν πίστει 1 Ti 1:2. τέκ. κατὰ κοινὴν πίστιν Tit 1:4. Pl. 1 Cor 4:14; 2 Cor 6:13; 3J 4. In direct address (voc.): sing. (on dir. address in the sing. cp. Sir 2:1 and oft.; Herm. Wr. 13, 2ab; PGM 13, 226; 233; 742; 755.—S. also Norden, Agn. Th. 290f; Boll 138f): 1 Ti 1:18; 2 Ti 2:1; D 3:1, 3–6; 4:1. Pl.: Mk 10:24; B 15:4.—1 Cl 22:1 understands the τέκνα of Ps 33:12 as a word of Christ to Christians. Cp. B 9:3. The address in Gal 4:19 is intended metaphorically for children for whom Paul is once more undergoing the pains of childbirth.—The adherents of false teachers are also called their τέκνα Rv 2:23.ⓒ of the members of a congregation 2J 1; 4; 13. In Hermas the venerable lady, who embodies the Christian communities, addresses the believers as τέκνα Hv 3, 9, 1. In Gal 4:31 οὐκ ἐσμὲν παιδίσκης τέκνα ἀλλὰ τῆς ἐλευθέρας posts a dramatic image = ‘we belong not to a community dependent on the rules of Sinai, but to one that adheres to the promises made to Abraham’.④ one who has the characteristics of another being, childⓐ of those who exhibit virtues of ancient worthies: children of Abraham Mt 3:9; Lk 3:8; J 8:39; Ro 9:7. True Christian women are children of Sarah 1 Pt 3:6.ⓑ of those who exhibit characteristics of transcendent entities: the believers are (τὰ) τέκνα (τοῦ) θεοῦ (cp. Is 63:8; Wsd 16:21; SibOr 5, 202; Just., D. 123, 9; 124, 1. On the subj. matter s. HHoltzmann, Ntl. Theologie I2 1911, 54; Bousset, Rel.3 377f; ADieterich, Mithrasliturgie 1903, 141ff; Hdb. on J 1:12; WGrundmann, Die Gotteskindschaft in d. Gesch. Jesu u. ihre relgesch. Voraussetzungen ’38; WTwisselmann, D. Gotteskindsch. der Christen nach dem NT ’39; SLegasse, Jésus et L’enfant [synopt.], ’69), in Paul as those adopted by God Ro 8:16f, 21; 9:7, 8b (opp. σπέρμα); Phil 2:15, s. also Eph 5:1; in John as those begotten by God J 1:12; 11:52; 1J 3:1f, 10a; 5:2. Corresp. τὰ τέκνα τοῦ διαβόλου 1J 3:10b (on this subj. s. Hdb. on J 8:44).—Cp. Ac 17:28, where the idea of kinship w. deity is complex because of semantic components not shared by polytheists and those within Israelite tradition.—Cp. 6 below.⑤ inhabitants of a city, children, an Hebraistic expression (Rdm.2 p. 28; Mlt-H. 441; s. Jo 2:23; Zech 9:13; Bar 4:19, 21, 25 al.; 1 Macc 1:38; PsSol 11:2) Mt 23:37; Lk 13:34; 19:44; Gal 4:25.⑥ a class of persons with a specific characteristic, children of. τ. is used w. abstract terms (for this Hebraism s. prec.; ἀνάγκης, ἀγνοίας Just., A I, 61, 10) τέκνα ἀγάπης B 9:7; ἀγ. καὶ εἰρήνης 21:9 (ἀγάπη 1bα). εὐφροσύνης 7:1 (s. εὐφροσύνη). δικαιοσύνης AcPlCor 2:19. κατάρας 2 Pt 2:14 (s. κατάρα). ὀργῆς Eph 2:3; AcPlCor 2:19. ὑπακοῆς 1 Pt 1:14. φωτός Eph 5:8; cp. IPhld 2:1. On the ‘children of wisdom’, i.e. those who attach themselves to her and let themselves be led by her Mt 11:19 v.l.; Lk 7:35 s. δικαιόω 2bα. Cp. 4b above.—Billerbeck I 219f, 371–74; BHHW II 947–49; III 1935–37.—DELG s.v. τίκτω. Frisk. M-M. EDNT. TW. Sv. -
78 Computer Metaphors
Within the AI community there is a growing dissatisfaction concerning the adequacy of sequential models to simulate the cognitive processes....For an example of the dissimilarity between computers and nervous systems, consider that in conventional computers... each piece of data [is] located in its own special space in the memory bank [and] can be retrieved only by a central processor that knows the address in the memory bank for each datum. Human memory appears to be organized along entirely different lines. For one thing, from a partial or a degraded stimulus human memory can "reconstruct" the rest, and there are associative relationships among stored pieces of information based on considerations of context rather than on considerations of location.... t now appears doubtful that individual neurons are so specific that they are tuned to respond to a single item and nothing else. Thus, connectionist models tend to devise and use distributed principles, which means that elements may be selective to a range of stimuli and there are no "grandmother cells."...Information storage, it appears, is in some ill-defined sense a function of connectivity among sets of neurons. This implies that there is something fundamentally wrong in understanding the brain's memory on the model of individual symbols stored at unique addresses in a data bank....A further source of misgivings about the computer metaphor concerns real-time constraints. Although the signal velocities in nervous systems are quite slow in comparison to those in computers, brains are nonetheless far, far faster than electronic devices in the execution of their complex tasks. For example, human brains are incomparably faster than any computer in word-nonword recognition tasks. (P. S. Churchland, 1986, pp. 458-459)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Computer Metaphors
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79 Mind
It becomes, therefore, no inconsiderable part of science... to know the different operations of the mind, to separate them from each other, to class them under their proper heads, and to correct all that seeming disorder in which they lie involved when made the object of reflection and inquiry.... It cannot be doubted that the mind is endowed with several powers and faculties, that these powers are distinct from one another, and that what is really distinct to the immediate perception may be distinguished by reflection and, consequently, that there is a truth and falsehood which lie not beyond the compass of human understanding. (Hume, 1955, p. 22)Let us then suppose the mind to be, as we say, white Paper, void of all Characters, without any Ideas: How comes it to be furnished? Whence comes it by that vast store, which the busy and boundless Fancy of Man has painted on it, with an almost endless variety? Whence has it all the materials of Reason and Knowledge? To this I answer, in one word, from Experience. (Locke, quoted in Herrnstein & Boring, 1965, p. 584)The kind of logic in mythical thought is as rigorous as that of modern science, and... the difference lies, not in the quality of the intellectual process, but in the nature of things to which it is applied.... Man has always been thinking equally well; the improvement lies, not in an alleged progress of man's mind, but in the discovery of new areas to which it may apply its unchanged and unchanging powers. (Leґvi-Strauss, 1963, p. 230)MIND. A mysterious form of matter secreted by the brain. Its chief activity consists in the endeavor to ascertain its own nature, the futility of the attempt being due to the fact that it has nothing but itself to know itself with. (Bierce, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 55)[Philosophy] understands the foundations of knowledge and it finds these foundations in a study of man-as-knower, of the "mental processes" or the "activity of representation" which make knowledge possible. To know is to represent accurately what is outside the mind, so to understand the possibility and nature of knowledge is to understand the way in which the mind is able to construct such representation.... We owe the notion of a "theory of knowledge" based on an understanding of "mental processes" to the seventeenth century, and especially to Locke. We owe the notion of "the mind" as a separate entity in which "processes" occur to the same period, and especially to Descartes. We owe the notion of philosophy as a tribunal of pure reason, upholding or denying the claims of the rest of culture, to the eighteenth century and especially to Kant, but this Kantian notion presupposed general assent to Lockean notions of mental processes and Cartesian notions of mental substance. (Rorty, 1979, pp. 3-4)Under pressure from the computer, the question of mind in relation to machine is becoming a central cultural preoccupation. It is becoming for us what sex was to Victorians-threat, obsession, taboo, and fascination. (Turkle, 1984, p. 313)7) Understanding the Mind Remains as Resistant to Neurological as to Cognitive AnalysesRecent years have been exciting for researchers in the brain and cognitive sciences. Both fields have flourished, each spurred on by methodological and conceptual developments, and although understanding the mechanisms of mind is an objective shared by many workers in these areas, their theories and approaches to the problem are vastly different....Early experimental psychologists, such as Wundt and James, were as interested in and knowledgeable about the anatomy and physiology of the nervous system as about the young science of the mind. However, the experimental study of mental processes was short-lived, being eclipsed by the rise of behaviorism early in this century. It was not until the late 1950s that the signs of a new mentalism first appeared in scattered writings of linguists, philosophers, computer enthusiasts, and psychologists.In this new incarnation, the science of mind had a specific mission: to challenge and replace behaviorism. In the meantime, brain science had in many ways become allied with a behaviorist approach.... While behaviorism sought to reduce the mind to statements about bodily action, brain science seeks to explain the mind in terms of physiochemical events occurring in the nervous system. These approaches contrast with contemporary cognitive science, which tries to understand the mind as it is, without any reduction, a view sometimes described as functionalism.The cognitive revolution is now in place. Cognition is the subject of contemporary psychology. This was achieved with little or no talk of neurons, action potentials, and neurotransmitters. Similarly, neuroscience has risen to an esteemed position among the biological sciences without much talk of cognitive processes. Do the fields need each other?... [Y]es because the problem of understanding the mind, unlike the wouldbe problem solvers, respects no disciplinary boundaries. It remains as resistant to neurological as to cognitive analyses. (LeDoux & Hirst, 1986, pp. 1-2)Since the Second World War scientists from different disciplines have turned to the study of the human mind. Computer scientists have tried to emulate its capacity for visual perception. Linguists have struggled with the puzzle of how children acquire language. Ethologists have sought the innate roots of social behaviour. Neurophysiologists have begun to relate the function of nerve cells to complex perceptual and motor processes. Neurologists and neuropsychologists have used the pattern of competence and incompetence of their brain-damaged patients to elucidate the normal workings of the brain. Anthropologists have examined the conceptual structure of cultural practices to advance hypotheses about the basic principles of the mind. These days one meets engineers who work on speech perception, biologists who investigate the mental representation of spatial relations, and physicists who want to understand consciousness. And, of course, psychologists continue to study perception, memory, thought and action.... [W]orkers in many disciplines have converged on a number of central problems and explanatory ideas. They have realized that no single approach is likely to unravel the workings of the mind: it will not give up its secrets to psychology alone; nor is any other isolated discipline-artificial intelligence, linguistics, anthropology, neurophysiology, philosophy-going to have any greater success. (Johnson-Laird, 1988, p. 7)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Mind
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