-
41 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) propriedade* * *pro.pri.e.ty[prəpr'aiəti] n 1 adequação, retidão, justeza. 2 decoro, decência, boas maneiras. 3 proprieties pl etiqueta, convenções sociais. propriety of conduct boa conduta, bom comportamento. the proprieties as normas do decoro. -
42 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) pieklājība; uzvedības normas; piedienība* * *pamatotība, pareizība -
43 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) padorumas, teisingumas, elgesio normos -
44 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) správnost, slušnost* * *• vhodnost• způsobilost• zdvořilost• případnost• příhodnost• slušnost• slušné chování• správnost• korektnost• náležitost -
45 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) (bună-)cuviinţă; decenţă -
46 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) ευπρέπεια,καλή συμπεριφορά -
47 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) slušnosť -
48 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) bienséance -
49 propriety
(correctness of behaviour; decency; rightness.) conveniência -
50 outrage
1. noun(deed of violence, violation of rights) Verbrechen, das; (during war) Gräueltat, die; (against good taste or decency) grober od. krasser Verstoß; (upon dignity) krasse od. grobe Verletzung ( upon Gen.)be an outrage against good taste/decency — den guten Geschmack/Anstand in grober od. krasser Weise verletzen
2. transitive verban outrage against humanity — ein Verbrechen gegen die Menschheit
1) empörenbe outraged at or by something — über etwas (Akk.) empört sein
2) (infringe) in grober od. krasser Weise verstoßen gegen [Anstand, Moral]* * *1. noun(a wicked act, especially of great violence: the outrages committed by the soldiers; The decision to close the road is a public outrage.) der Frevel2. verb(to hurt, shock or insult: She was outraged by his behaviour.) verletzten- academic.ru/52486/outrageous">outrageous- outrageously
- outrageousness* * *ˈout·rageI. nto express \outrage sich akk entsetzt [o empört] zeigento provoke public \outrage öffentliche Empörung auslösenanti-semitic \outrages antisemitische Ausschreitungenterrorist \outrage Terroranschlag mII. vt1. (arouse indignation)2. (violate)▪ to \outrage sth etw gröblich verletzen [o mit Füßen treten]to \outrage a law/principle gegen ein Gesetz/Prinzip gröblich verstoßen* * *['aʊtreɪdZ]1. n1) (= wicked, violent deed) Untat f; (cruel) Gräueltat f; (by police, demonstrators etc) Ausschreitung fan outrage against the State — ein schändliches or ruchloses (liter) Verbrechen gegen den Staat
it's an outrage to waste food — es ist ein Skandal or Frevel, Essen verkommen zu lassen
an outrage against humanity — ein Verbrechen nt gegen die Menschlichkeit
an outrage to common decency — eine empörende Verletzung des allgemeinen Anstandsgefühls
an outrage against public morality — ein empörender Verstoß gegen die guten Sitten or die öffentliche Moral
he reacted with (a sense of) outrage — er war empört or entrüstet
2. vt[aʊt'reɪdZ] morals, conventions ins Gesicht schlagen (+dat), Hohn sprechen (+dat), hohnsprechen (+dat) (geh); sense of decency beleidigen; ideals mit Füßen treten; person empören, entrüstenpublic opinion was outraged by this cruelty/injustice — die öffentliche Meinung war über diese Grausamkeit/Ungerechtigkeit empört
he deliberately set out to outrage his critics — er hatte es darauf angelegt, seine Kritiker zu schockieren
* * *outrage [ˈaʊtreıdʒ]A s1. a) Schandtat fb) Gräueltat fc) Ausschreitung f2. Skandal m:an outrage against ein Verbrechen gegen (die Menschlichkeit etc), eine grobe Verletzung (des Anstands etc), eine Vergewaltigung (der Gerechtigkeit etc)B v/t1. sich vergehen an (dat), Gewalt antun (dat), vergewaltigen (auch fig)2. Gefühle, den Anstand etc mit Füßen treten, grob verletzen3. empören:* * *1. noun(deed of violence, violation of rights) Verbrechen, das; (during war) Gräueltat, die; (against good taste or decency) grober od. krasser Verstoß; (upon dignity) krasse od. grobe Verletzung ( upon Gen.)2. transitive verbbe an outrage against good taste/decency — den guten Geschmack/Anstand in grober od. krasser Weise verletzen
1) empörenbe outraged at or by something — über etwas (Akk.) empört sein
2) (infringe) in grober od. krasser Weise verstoßen gegen [Anstand, Moral]* * *n.Freveltat f.Gewalttat f.Gewalttätikeit f. -
51 common
'komən
1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) corriente2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) común3) (publicly owned: common property.) público4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) ordinario5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) corriente6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) común
2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) tierras comunales- commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common
common adj comúntr['kɒmən]1 (ordinary, average) corriente2 (usual, not scarce) común, corriente■ it's quite common for mothers to suffer from postnatal depression es bastante común que las madres padezcan una depresión posparto3 (shared, joint) común■ for the common good por el bien común, por el bien de todos4 pejorative (vulgar) ordinario,-a1 (land) campo comunal, terreno comunal, tierras nombre femenino plural comunales\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLas common as dirt / as common as muck muy ordinario,-acommon or garden normal y corrientein common en comúnin common with (like) al igual queto be common knowledge ser de dominio públicoto have something in common with somebody tener algo en común con alguiento make common cause with somebody hacer causa común con alguiencommon decency educación nombre femeninocommon denominator denominador nombre masculino comúncommon factor factor nombre masculino comúncommon law derecho consuetudinarioCommon Market Mercado Comúncommon noun nombre nombre masculino comúncommon room SMALLBRITISH ENGLISH/SMALL sala de reunióncommon sense sentido comúncommon time SMALLMUSIC/SMALL cuatro por cuatrothe common touch el contacto con el pueblocommon ['kɑmən] adj1) public: común, públicothe common good: el bien común2) shared: comúna common interest: un interés común3) general: común, generalit's common knowledge: todo el mundo lo sabe4) ordinary: ordinario, común y corrientethe common man: el hombre medio, el hombre de la callecommon n1) : tierra f comunal2)in common : en comúnadj.• adocenado, -a adj.• burdo, -a adj.• común adj.• consuetudinario, -a adj.• frecuente adj.• genérico, -a adj.• ramplón, -ona adj.• regular adj.• usual adj.
I 'kɑːmən, 'kɒmən1)a) (widespread, prevalent) común, corriente(to be) in common use — (ser*) de uso corriente
b) (average, normal) < soldier> rasothe common man — el hombre medio or de la calle
c) (low class, vulgar) ordinario2)a) (shared, mutual) comúncommon ground — puntos mpl en común or de coincidencia
to be common TO something — ser* común a algo
b) ( public)the common good — el bien común or de todos
II
1) u (in phrases)to have something in common (with somebody) — tener* algo en común (con alguien)
['kɒmǝn]in common with — (as prep) al igual que; see also Commons
1. ADJ1) (=usual, ordinary) [event, experience, name, species] común, corriente; [misconception, mistake] común, frecuentethis butterfly is common in Spain — esta mariposa es común or corriente en España
it is common for these animals to die young — es corriente or frecuente que estos animales mueran jóvenes
•
it is a common belief that... — es una creencia extendida or generalizada que...common belief has it that... — según la opinión generalizada...
•
the common man — el hombre de la calle, el hombre medio•
it is common practice in the USA — es una práctica común en EE.UU.•
pigeons are a common sight in London — es corriente or frecuente ver palomas en Londres2) (=shared) [cause, aim, language] comúnto work for a common aim — cooperar para un mismo fin or para un objetivo común
•
for the common good — para el bien común, para el bien de todos•
they discussed several issues of common interest — hablaron de varios asuntos de interés común or de interés mutuo•
it is common knowledge that... — es del dominio público que...•
the desire for freedom is common to all people — todo el mundo comparte el deseo de la libertad4) (Zool, Bot) común2. N1) (=land) campo m comunal, ejido m2) (Brit)(Pol) house 1., 3)3)in common: we have a lot in common (with other people) — tenemos mucho en común (con otra gente)
in common with many other companies, we advertise in the local press — al igual que otras muchas empresas, nos anunciamos en la prensa local
3.CPDcommon cold N — resfriado m común
common core N — (Scol) (also: common-core syllabus) asignaturas fpl comunes
common currency N —
to become/be common currency — [idea, belief] convertirse en/ser moneda corriente
common denominator N — (Math) común denominador m
Common Entrance N — (Brit) (Scol) examen de acceso a un colegio de enseñanza privada
common factor N — (Math) factor m común
common land N — propiedad f comunal
common-lawcommon law N — (Jur) (established by custom) derecho m consuetudinario; (based on precedent) jurisprudencia f
common noun N — nombre m común
common ownership N — (=joint ownership) copropiedad f ; (Pol) (=collective ownership) propiedad f colectiva
common room N — (esp Brit) (for students) sala f de estudiantes; (for teachers) sala f de profesores
common salt N — sal f común
commonsensecommon sense N — sentido m común
common stock N — (US) (St Ex) acciones fpl ordinarias
common time N — (Mus) cuatro m por cuatro
COMMON LAW Se llama common law o case law (derecho consuetudinario o jurisprudencia), al conjunto de leyes basadas en el fallo de los tribunales, a diferencia de las leyes establecidas por escrito en el Parlamento. El derecho consuetudinario inglés se desarrolló después de la conquista normanda, cuando los jueces basaban sus decisiones en la tradición o en el precedente judicial. La jurisprudencia sigue usándose como base del sistema legal anglosajón, aunque va perdiendo vigencia por el desarrollo del derecho escrito.common wall N — pared f medianera
See:see cultural note ACT OF PARLIAMENT in act,see cultural note CONSTITUTION in constitution* * *
I ['kɑːmən, 'kɒmən]1)a) (widespread, prevalent) común, corriente(to be) in common use — (ser*) de uso corriente
b) (average, normal) < soldier> rasothe common man — el hombre medio or de la calle
c) (low class, vulgar) ordinario2)a) (shared, mutual) comúncommon ground — puntos mpl en común or de coincidencia
to be common TO something — ser* común a algo
b) ( public)the common good — el bien común or de todos
II
1) u (in phrases)to have something in common (with somebody) — tener* algo en común (con alguien)
in common with — (as prep) al igual que; see also Commons
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52 spark
1. noun1) Funke, dera spark of generosity/decency — (fig.) ein Funke[n] Großzügigkeit/Anstand
3)2. transitive verba bright spark — (clever person; also iron.) ein schlauer Kopf
see academic.ru/111534/spark_off">spark offPhrasal Verbs:* * *1. noun1) (a tiny red-hot piece thrown off by something burning, or when two very hard (eg metal) surfaces are struck together: Sparks were being thrown into the air from the burning building.) der Funke2) (an electric current jumping across a gap: a spark from a faulty light-socket.) der Funke3) (a trace (eg of life, humour): a spark of enthusiasm.) der Funke2. verb1) (to give off sparks.) Funken sprühen2) ((often with off) to start (a row, disagreement etc): Their action sparked off a major row.) auslösen* * *[spɑ:k, AM spɑ:rk]I. nthere was a \spark of decency in them sie besaßen einen Rest von Anstanda \spark of hope ein Fünkchen nt Hoffnunga \spark of inspiration ein Hauch m an Inspirationa \spark of sympathy eine Spur [von] Mitgefühlnot a \spark of vitality nicht die geringste Spur von Lebendigkeit6.▶ when the \sparks fly wenn die Funken fliegenII. vt▪ to \spark sth etw entfachen a. figto \spark interest Interesse weckento \spark an outrage Empörung hervorrufento \spark problems Probleme verursachento \spark a protest einen Protest auslösen2. (provide stimulus)to \spark sb into action jdn zum Handeln bewegenIII. vi Funken sprühen* * *[spAːk]1. nnot a spark of life —
a spark of interest — ein Fünkchen or Funke(n) Interesse
a few sparks of wit toward(s) the end of the speech — ein paar geistreiche Bemerkungen am Ende der Rede
a bright spark (iro) — ein Intelligenzbolzen m (iro); (clumsy) ein Tollpatsch m
2. vtentzünden; explosion verursachen; (fig) auslösen; quarrel entfachen; interest, enthusiasm weckento spark a fire — ein Feuer entzünden or entfachen; (by accident) ein Feuer auslösen or verursachen
3. viFunken sprühen; (ELEC) zünden* * *spark1 [spɑː(r)k]A s2. fig Funke(n) m, Spur f (of [von] Intelligenz, Leben etc):spark of hope Hoffnungsfunke4. ELEKa) (elektrischer) Funkeb) Entladung fc) (Licht)Bogen m5. AUTO (Zünd)Funke m:advance (retard) the spark die Zündung vorstellen (zurückstellen)6. RADIOB v/i1. Funken sprühen2. funkeln3. TECH zündenspark2 [spɑː(r)k]A s1. flotter (junger) MannB v/t jemandem den Hof machen* * *1. noun1) Funke, derthe sparks [begin to] fly — (fig.) es funkt (ugs.)
a spark of generosity/decency — (fig.) ein Funke[n] Großzügigkeit/Anstand
3)2. transitive verba bright spark — (clever person; also iron.) ein schlauer Kopf
Phrasal Verbs:* * *n.Funke -n m. -
53 cross
I 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (shape) croce f.the Cross — relig. la Croce
to put a cross against — segnare con una croce [name, item]
"put a cross in the box" — "sbarrate la casella", "segnate la casella con una croce"
a cross between Hitler and Napoleon — fig. un incrocio fra Hitler e Napoleone
3) sart. sbieco m.to cut sth. on the cross — tagliare qcs. di sbieco
4) sport (in football) cross m., traversone m.2.1) (angry) arrabbiato, irritato, di cattivo umoreto be cross with sb. — essere seccato con qcn.
to be cross about sth. — essere di cattivo umore per qcs.
to get cross — arrabbiarsi o adirarsi ( with con)
2) (transverse) [ timber] trasversale, obliquo3) (contrary to general direction) [breeze, swell] contrario••II 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (go across) attraversare [road, country, room]; passare, attraversare [ river]; superare, oltrepassare [border, line, mountains]; [ bridge] attraversare, scavalcare [river, road]; [road, railway line, river] tagliare, attraversare [country, desert]; [ line] attraversare, tagliare [ page]2) fig. superare, oltrepassare [limit, boundary]3) (meet) [road, railway line] incrociare, intersecare [road, railway line, river]4) (place in shape of a cross) incrociareto cross one's legs — incrociare o accavallare le gambe
5) biol. bot. zool. incrociare, ibridare7) (draw line across) (s)barrare [ cheque]2.1) (anche cross over) (go across) fare una traversata3.to cross oneself — relig. segnarsi, farsi il segno della croce
••* * *[kros] I adjective(angry: I get very cross when I lose something.)- crosslyII 1. plural - crosses; noun1) (a symbol formed by two lines placed across each other, eg + or x.)2) (two wooden beams placed thus (+), on which Christ was nailed.)3) (the symbol of the Christian religion.)4) (a lasting cause of suffering etc: Your rheumatism is a cross you will have to bear.)5) (the result of breeding two varieties of animal or plant: This dog is a cross between an alsatian and a labrador.)6) (a monument in the shape of a cross.)7) (any of several types of medal given for bravery etc: the Victoria Cross.)2. verb1) (to go from one side to the other: Let's cross (the street); This road crosses the swamp.)2) ((negative uncross) to place (two things) across each other: He sat down and crossed his legs.)3) (to go or be placed across (each other): The roads cross in the centre of town.)4) (to meet and pass: Our letters must have crossed in the post.)5) (to put a line across: Cross your `t's'.)6) (to make (a cheque or postal order) payable only through a bank by drawing two parallel lines across it.)7) (to breed (something) from two different varieties: I've crossed two varieties of rose.)8) (to go against the wishes of: If you cross me, you'll regret it!)•- cross-- crossing
- crossbow
- cross-breed
- cross-bred
- crosscheck 3. noun(the act of crosschecking.) controllo accurato, riscontro- cross-country skiing
- cross-examine
- cross-examination
- cross-eyed
- cross-fire
- at cross-purposes
- cross-refer
- cross-reference
- crossroads
- cross-section
- crossword puzzle
- crossword
- cross one's fingers
- cross out* * *cross (1) /krɒs/n.1 croce ( segno, oggetto, simbolo): Maltese Cross, croce di Malta; the Cross and the Crescent, la Croce e la Mezzaluna; (mil., in GB) the Distinguished Service Cross, la Croce al Valor Militare; to mark with a cross, segnare con una croce; to put a cross against a name, segnare un nome con una croce4 (zool., bot.) incrocio; ibrido: The mule is a cross between a mare and an ass, il mulo è l'incrocio d'una cavalla con un asino5 (fig.) incrocio; via di mezzo; (un) misto: The taste is a cross between yoghurt and cream cheese, il sapore è una via di mezzo tra lo yogurt e il formaggio burroso7 (mecc.) crociera; raccordo a croce● (relig.) cross-bearer, portatore di croce; crocifero □ cross-shaped, cruciforme □ to make one's cross, fare una croce ( in luogo della firma) □ on the cross, diagonalmente; ( anche sartoria) di sbieco; (fam. USA) (in modo) disonesto □ (stor.) to take the cross, farsi crociato □ (fig.) to take up one's cross, accettare (con rassegnazione) la propria croce.cross (2) /krɒs/a.1 arrabbiato; irritato; di cattivo umore; iroso: to be cross with sb., essere arrabbiato con q.; a cross word, una parola irosa● ( Si veda anche sotto i singoli lemmi) (leg.) cross appeal, appello incidentale □ (naut.) cross bearing, rilevamento incrociato □ (geol.) cross-bedding, stratificazione incrociata □ (polit., GB) cross bench, banco di deputato indipendente ( alla Camera dei Lord) □ (polit., GB) cross-bencher, deputato indipendente □ cross-border, transfrontaliero; tra Stati confinanti; con l'estero; estero; straniero: (fin.) cross-border merger, incorporazione di società straniere; cross-border worker, frontaliere □ (edil.) cross bracing, controvento □ (leg.) cross-claim, domanda riconvenzionale □ (comput.) cross compiler, compilatore incrociato □ ( boxe) cross counter, colpo d'incontro □ (GB) cross-curricular, multidisciplinare □ cross-dating, datazione incrociata □ (med.) cross-dominance, lateralità incrociata □ (rag.) cross entry, trasferimento d'una somma ad altro conto □ cross hairs, reticolo ( di arma da fuoco o su schermo di computer) □ (mecc.) cross-head screwdriver, giravite a testa obliqua □ (fin.) cross holding, partecipazione incrociata □ (chim.) cross link, legame trasversale □ (med.) cross-matching technique, tecnica della prova crociata ( del sangue) □ (fin.) cross participation, partecipazione incrociata □ (mecc.) cross-peen hammer, martello da meccanico □ (mat.) cross product, prodotto vettoriale □ (fin.) cross rate, corso ( di cambio) indiretto; parità indiretta □ (mat.) cross ratio, birapporto □ ( sport) cross shot, ( calcio) tiro trasversale, traversone; ( tennis, ecc.) tiro angolato □ ( USA) cross street, (strada) traversa □ cross stroke, frego ( a penna); ( sport: golf, ecc.) tiro trasversale □ (polit.) cross voting, voto trasversale □ cross wires, reticolo □ (fam. GB) as cross as two sticks, irritatissimo; d'umore nero □ at cross purposes, senza capirsi; fraintendendosi: to talk at cross purposes, parlare senza capirsi; fraintendersi.♦ (to) cross /krɒs/A v. t.1 attraversare: to cross a road [the sea], attraversare una strada [il mare]2 attraversare; passare su; passare per: A worried look crossed her face, un'espressione preoccupata le si disegnò sul viso; It has never crossed my mind, non mi è mai passato per la testa3 oltrepassare; superare: to cross the gender divide, superare le differenze di sesso; to cross the bounds of decency, superare i limiti della decenza4 incrociare; intersecare; tagliare; sbarrare: to cross two wires, incrociare due fili; Broadway crosses Seventh Avenue at Times Square, Broadway interseca la Settima Avenue a Times Square; to cross one's «t's», tagliare le (o fare il taglietto alle) «t»; to cross one's arms, incrociare le braccia; to cross one's legs, incrociare le gambe; ( su una sedia) accavallare le gambe; to cross one's fingers, incrociare le dita ( per scaramanzia); My previous letter crossed yours, la mia lettera precedente ha incrociato la tua; to cross each other, incrociarsi; intersecarsi5 fare una croce su; sbarrare: to cross a name, fare una croce su un nome; to cross a ballot paper, mettere la croce su una scheda elettorale; ( banca) to cross a cheque, sbarrare un assegno6 contrariare; contrastare; opporsi a: Nobody likes to be crossed, a nessuno piace essere contrariato; to cross sb. 's plans, contrastare i piani di q.7 (bot., zool.) incrociare, ibridareB v. i.1 fare una traversata: I crossed by hovercraft from Ramsgate to Calais, feci la traversata sull'hovercraft da Ramsgate a Calais2 andare, recarsi ( attraversando un confine, il mare, ecc.); passare; entrare: We crossed into Austria, siamo entrati in Austria3 incrociarsi: We crossed on the street, ci siamo incrociati per strada; Our letters crossed in the post, le nostre lettere si sono incrociate● Cross!, avanti! ( ai semafori pedonali) □ (polit., GB) to cross the floor, passare all'opposizione (o dalla parte del governo); votare per il partito avverso □ to cross sb. 's hand = to cross sb.'s palm ► sotto □ to cross one's heart, mettersi una mano sul cuore ( per asseverare): Cross my heart ( and hope to die)!, mi venga un colpo ( se non è vero, se sono stato io, ecc.) □ (relig.) to cross oneself, farsi il segno della croce; segnarsi □ (fig.) to cross sb. 's palm with silver, dare soldi a ( una chiromante, ecc., che legge la mano); (scherz.) ungere q., allungare una bustarella a q. □ to cross sb. 's path, trovarsi sulla strada di q.; sbarrare la strada a q. □ (fig.) to cross one's «t's» and dot one's «i's», controllare tutti i dettagli; essere molto preciso □ ( anche fig.) to cross swords with sb., incrociare la spada con q. □ (fig.) We'll cross that bridge when we come to it, ci occuperemo di quella faccenda quando sarà il momento.* * *I 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (shape) croce f.the Cross — relig. la Croce
to put a cross against — segnare con una croce [name, item]
"put a cross in the box" — "sbarrate la casella", "segnate la casella con una croce"
a cross between Hitler and Napoleon — fig. un incrocio fra Hitler e Napoleone
3) sart. sbieco m.to cut sth. on the cross — tagliare qcs. di sbieco
4) sport (in football) cross m., traversone m.2.1) (angry) arrabbiato, irritato, di cattivo umoreto be cross with sb. — essere seccato con qcn.
to be cross about sth. — essere di cattivo umore per qcs.
to get cross — arrabbiarsi o adirarsi ( with con)
2) (transverse) [ timber] trasversale, obliquo3) (contrary to general direction) [breeze, swell] contrario••II 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (go across) attraversare [road, country, room]; passare, attraversare [ river]; superare, oltrepassare [border, line, mountains]; [ bridge] attraversare, scavalcare [river, road]; [road, railway line, river] tagliare, attraversare [country, desert]; [ line] attraversare, tagliare [ page]2) fig. superare, oltrepassare [limit, boundary]3) (meet) [road, railway line] incrociare, intersecare [road, railway line, river]4) (place in shape of a cross) incrociareto cross one's legs — incrociare o accavallare le gambe
5) biol. bot. zool. incrociare, ibridare7) (draw line across) (s)barrare [ cheque]2.1) (anche cross over) (go across) fare una traversata3.to cross oneself — relig. segnarsi, farsi il segno della croce
•• -
54 sense
sens
1. noun1) (one of the five powers (hearing, taste, sight, smell, touch) by which a person or animal feels or notices.) sentido2) (a feeling: He has an exaggerated sense of his own importance.) sensación, sentido3) (an awareness of (something): a well-developed musical sense; She has no sense of humour.) sentido4) (good judgement: You can rely on him - he has plenty of sense.) sentido común, juicio, sensatez5) (a meaning (of a word).) significado6) (something which is meaningful: Can you make sense of her letter?) sentido
2. verb(to feel, become aware of, or realize: He sensed that she disapproved.) sentir, percibir- senselessly
- senselessness
- senses
- sixth sense
sense1 n1. sentidothe five senses are: hearing, sight, taste, touch and smell los cinco sentidos son: el oído, la vista, el gusto, el tacto y el olfato2. sentido común / juicio / sensatezdon't be stupid, use your common sense no seas estúpido, usa tu sentido comúnsense2 vb notar / sentir / darse cuentatr[sens]1 (faculty) sentido2 (feeling - of well-being, loss) sensación nombre femenino; (awareness, appreciation - of justice, duty) sentido3 (wisdom, judgement) sentido común, juicio, sensatez nombre femenino, tino4 (reason, purpose) sentido■ what's the sense in driving there? ¿qué sentido tiene conducir hasta allí?■ there's no sense in crying ¿de qué sirve llorar?1 (feel, perceive) sentir, percibir, presentir, intuir; (apprehend, detect) percibir, darse cuenta de2 (machine) detectar1 (normal state of mind) juicio m sing\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin a sense hasta cierto punto, en cierto sentidoin no sense de ninguna manerato be out of one's senses no estar en sus cabalesto bring somebody to their senses hacer a alguien entrar en razónto come to one's senses recobrar el juicioto have a sense of occasion tener sentido de la ocasiónto make sense out of something entender algoto see sense entrar en razónto take leave of one's senses perder el juicioto talk sense hablar con juiciosense organ órgano del sentidohe sensed danger: se dio cuenta del peligrosense n1) meaning: sentido m, significado m2) : sentido mthe sense of smell: el sentido del olfato3)to make sense : tener sentidoadj.• sensitivo, -a adj.n.• juicio s.m.• mollera s.f.• opinión s.f.• sensación s.f.• sentido s.m.• testa s.f.v.• detectar (Teléfono) v.• percibir v.• sentir v.• sospechar v.
I sens1)a) c ( physical faculty) sentido mthe sense of hearing/smell/taste/touch — el (sentido del) oído/olfato/gusto/tacto
b) senses pl ( rational state)no one in his (right) senses would do something like that — una persona en su (sano) juicio or en sus cabales no haría una cosa así
to take leave of one's senses — perder* el juicio, volverse* loco
2)a) ( impression) (no pl) sensación fI felt a sense of belonging/betrayal — me sentí aceptadoaicionado
b) c u ( awareness) sentido msense of direction/rhythm — sentido de la orientación/del ritmo
sense of humor — sentido m del humor
3) ua) ( common sense) sentido m comúnshe had the (good) sense to leave her phone number — tuvo la sensatez or el tino de dejar su número de teléfono
I'm going to knock o beat some sense into him! — voy a hacerlo entrar en razón
b) (point, value) sentido m4) ca) ( meaning) sentido m, significado mthe different senses of the word — las distintas acepciones or los distintos significados de la palabra
he is a professional in the full sense (of the term) — es un profesional en toda la extensión de la palabra
b) (aspect, way)in a sense they're both correct — en cierto modo or sentido ambos tienen razón
it must in no sense be taken as the final offer — no debe de ningún modo or de ninguna manera interpretarse como la oferta final
a) ( be comprehensible) tener* sentidob) ( be sensible)to make sense of something — entender* algo
II
a) ( be aware of) sentir*, notar[sens]I sensed that they weren't very happy — sentí or intuí que no estaban muy contentos
1. N1) (bodily) sentido msense of hearing/smell/taste/touch — sentido m del oído/olfato/gusto/tacto
sense of sight — sentido m de la vista
•
sixth sense — sexto sentido2) (=feeling) sensación f•
have you no sense of shame? — ¿es que no tienes vergüenza?•
there is a sense of space in his paintings — sus cuadros transmiten una sensación de espacio3) (=good judgement) sentido m comúnshe has more sense than to go out on her own — tiene el suficiente sentido común como para no salir sola
I thought you would have had more sense — pensé que eras más sensato or tenías más sentido común
•
to make sb see sense — hacer que algn entre en razón•
to talk sense — hablar con sentido común, hablar con juicio4)• to make sense — (=be advisable) ser conveniente; (=be comprehensible, logical) tener sentido
it doesn't make sense or it makes no sense — no tiene sentido
•
to make sense of sth, I could make no sense of what he was saying — no entendía nada de lo que decía, no podía sacar nada en claro de lo que decía5) (=point, use) sentido mwhat's the sense of having another meeting? — ¿qué sentido tiene celebrar otra reunión?
6) senses (=sanity)•
I hope this warning will bring him to his senses — espero que esta advertencia le haga entrar en razón•
to come to one's senses — entrar en razón•
no-one in his right senses would do that — nadie (que esté) en su sano juicio haría eso•
have you taken leave of your senses? — ¿has perdido el juicio?it has several senses — tiene varias acepciones or varios significados
in what sense are you using the word? — ¿qué significado le das a la palabra?
•
in a sense — en cierto modo•
in every sense (of the word) — en todos los sentidos (de la palabra)•
in the full sense of that word — en toda la extensión de la palabra•
in no sense can it be said that... — de ninguna manera se puede decir que...•
in one sense — en cierto modo•
in the strict/ true sense of the word — en el sentido estricto/en el verdadero sentido de la palabra8) (=awareness) sentido m•
she has very good business sense — tiene muy buen ojo para los negocios•
they have an exaggerated sense of their own importance — se creen bastante más importantes de lo que son•
where's your sense of occasion? — tienes que estar a la altura de las circunstancias or la ocasión•
we must keep a sense of proportion about this — no debemos darle a esto más importancia de la que tiene•
one must have some sense of right and wrong — uno tiene que tener cierta noción de lo que está bien y lo que está mal9) (=opinion) opinión fwhat is your sense of the mood of the electorate? — ¿qué opinión le merece el clima que se respira entre el electorado?
2. VT1) (=suspect, intuit) presentirhe looked about him, sensing danger — miró a su alrededor, presintiendo peligro
2) (=be conscious of) percibir3) (=realize) darse cuenta de3.CPDsense organ N — órgano m sensorial
* * *
I [sens]1)a) c ( physical faculty) sentido mthe sense of hearing/smell/taste/touch — el (sentido del) oído/olfato/gusto/tacto
b) senses pl ( rational state)no one in his (right) senses would do something like that — una persona en su (sano) juicio or en sus cabales no haría una cosa así
to take leave of one's senses — perder* el juicio, volverse* loco
2)a) ( impression) (no pl) sensación fI felt a sense of belonging/betrayal — me sentí aceptado/traicionado
b) c u ( awareness) sentido msense of direction/rhythm — sentido de la orientación/del ritmo
sense of humor — sentido m del humor
3) ua) ( common sense) sentido m comúnshe had the (good) sense to leave her phone number — tuvo la sensatez or el tino de dejar su número de teléfono
I'm going to knock o beat some sense into him! — voy a hacerlo entrar en razón
b) (point, value) sentido m4) ca) ( meaning) sentido m, significado mthe different senses of the word — las distintas acepciones or los distintos significados de la palabra
he is a professional in the full sense (of the term) — es un profesional en toda la extensión de la palabra
b) (aspect, way)in a sense they're both correct — en cierto modo or sentido ambos tienen razón
it must in no sense be taken as the final offer — no debe de ningún modo or de ninguna manera interpretarse como la oferta final
a) ( be comprehensible) tener* sentidob) ( be sensible)to make sense of something — entender* algo
II
a) ( be aware of) sentir*, notarI sensed that they weren't very happy — sentí or intuí que no estaban muy contentos
-
55 bound
I 1. nounwithin the bounds of possibility or the possible — im Bereich des Möglichen
go beyond the bounds of decency — die Grenzen des Anstands verletzen
something is out of bounds [to somebody] — der Zutritt zu etwas ist [für jemanden] verboten
2. transitive verb, usu. in pass. II 1. intransitive verbkeep within the bounds of reason/propriety — vernünftig/im Rahmen bleiben
(spring) hüpfen; springen2. nounbound into the room — ins Zimmer stürzen
(spring) Satz, derIII predicative adjectivebe bound for home/Frankfurt — auf dem Heimweg/nach Frankfurt unterwegs sein
IVhomeward bound — auf dem Weg nach Hause
see academic.ru/6975/bind">bind 1., 2.* * *past tense, past participle; = bind* * *bound1[baʊnd]to \bound out of bed aus dem Bett springen▶ by leaps and \bounds sprunghaftbound2[baʊnd]II. n▪ \bounds pl Grenze fto be outside the \bounds of acceptable behaviour die Grenze akzeptablen Verhaltens überschritten habento be within the \bounds of the law sich akk im Rahmen des Gesetzes bewegento go beyond the \bounds of possibility die Grenzen des Möglichen überschreitento keep sth within \bounds etw in [vernünftigen] Grenzen haltento know no \bounds keine Grenzen kennenBritain's fate is inextricably \bound with Europe's das Schicksal Großbritanniens ist eng mit dem Schicksal Europas verbundenbound3[baʊnd]adj inv▪ to be \bound for X unterwegs nach X seinwhere is this ship \bound for? wohin fährt dieses Schiff?bound4[baʊnd]II. adj pred, inv1. (certain)she's \bound to come sie kommt ganz bestimmtyou're \bound to forget people's names occasionally man vergisst zwangsläufig ab und zu die Namen anderer Leuteto be \bound to happen zwangsläufig geschehenit was \bound to happen das musste so kommen2. (obliged) verpflichtet▪ to be \bound to do sth verpflichtet sein, etw zu tun3.▶ to be \bound and determined AM [fest] entschlossen sein* * *I [baʊnd] Grenze fto keep within the bounds of propriety — den Anstand wahren, im Rahmen bleiben
2. vt usu passcountry begrenzen; area also abgrenzen II1. nSprung m, Satz m → leapSee:→ leap2. vispringen; (rabbit) hoppelnIII pret, ptp of bindto bound in/away/back — herein-/weg-/zurückspringen
adj1) gebundenbound hand and foot — an Händen und Füßen gebunden
2) book gebunden3)(= sure)
to be bound to do sth — etw bestimmt tunit's bound to happen — das muss so kommen
but I'm bound to say... (inf) — aber ich muss schon sagen...
if you say X then you're bound to say that... — wenn Sie X behaupten, müssen Sie zwangsläufig sagen, dass...
I'm not bound to agree — ich muss nicht zwangsläufig zustimmen
See:→ honour5)IVadj predthe plane/all passengers bound for London will... — das Flugzeug/alle Passagiere nach London wird/werden...
where are you bound for? — wohin geht die Reise?, wohin wollen Sie?
we were northward-/California-bound — wir waren nach Norden/Kalifornien unterwegs
See:→ homeward* * *bound1 [baʊnd]B adj2. verpflichtet:he is bound to tell me er muss es mir sagen;he is bound to come er kommt bestimmt;he is bound to be late er muss ja zu spät kommen;the plan was bound to fail der Plan musste fehlschlagen;it is bound to happen one day eines Tages passiert es bestimmt4. I’ll be bound! umg obs darauf möchte ich wetten!, da bin ich mir ganz sicher!5. entschlossen (on doing, to do zu tun)homeward (outward) bound SCHIFF auf der Heimreise (Ausreise) befindlich;where are you bound for? wohin reisen oder gehen Sie?bound3 [baʊnd]A s1. meist pl Grenze f, fig auch Schranke f:the least upper bound of a sequence MATH die obere Grenze einer Folge;keep sth within bounds etwas in (vernünftigen) Grenzen halten;know no bounds keine Grenzen kennen;set bounds to sth einer Sache eine Grenze setzen, etwas in Schranken halten;beyond all bounds über alle Maßen, maßlos, grenzenlos;the village is out of bounds das Dorf ist Sperrgebiet2. meist pl Bereich m:within the bounds of possibility im Bereich des Möglichen3. meist pl eingegrenztes LandB v/t1. be-, eingrenzen:be bounded by grenzen an (akk)2. fig beschränken, in Schranken halten3. die Grenze bilden vonbound4 [baʊnd]A son the bound beim AufspringenB v/i1. springen, einen Satz machen, hüpfen2. aufprallen, aufspringen (Ball etc)bd abk1. board* * *I 1. nounwithin the bounds of possibility or the possible — im Bereich des Möglichen
something is out of bounds [to somebody] — der Zutritt zu etwas ist [für jemanden] verboten
keep within the bounds of reason/propriety — vernünftig/im Rahmen bleiben
2) (of territory) Grenze, die2. transitive verb, usu. in pass. II 1. intransitive verb(spring) hüpfen; springen2. noun(spring) Satz, derIII predicative adjectiveat or with one bound — mit einem Satz
IVbe bound for home/Frankfurt — auf dem Heimweg/nach Frankfurt unterwegs sein
* * *adj.gebunden adj. n.Schranke -n f. v.begrenzen v.beschränken v. -
56 common
1. adjective,1) (belonging equally to all) gemeinsam [Ziel, Interesse, Sache, Unternehmung, Vorteil, Merkmal, Sprache]2) (belonging to the public) öffentlicha common belief — [ein] allgemeiner Glaube
3) (usual) gewöhnlich; normal; (frequent) häufig [Vorgang, Erscheinung, Ereignis, Erlebnis]; allgemein verbreitet [Sitte, Wort, Redensart]common honesty/courtesy — [ganz] normale Ehrlichkeit/Höflichkeit
4) (without rank or position) einfach5) (vulgar) gemein; gewöhnlich (abwertend), ordinär (ugs. abwertend) [Ausdrucksweise, Mundart, Aussehen, Benehmen]2. noun2)have something/nothing/a lot in common [with somebody] — etwas/nichts/viel [mit jemandem] gemein[sam] haben
* * *['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) gewöhnlich2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) gemeinsam3) (publicly owned: common property.) allgemein4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) gewöhnlich, gemein5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) einfach6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) Gattungs-...2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) das Gemeindeland- academic.ru/14625/commoner">commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common* * *com·mon[ˈkɒmən, AM ˈkɑ:-]I. adj<-er, -est or more \common, most \common>1. (often encountered) üblich, gewöhnlicha \common name ein gängiger [o weit verbreiteter] Namea \common saying ein verbreiteter Spruch2. (normal) normalit is \common practice... es ist allgemein üblich...\common courtesy/decency ein Gebot nt der Höflichkeit/des Anstandsit's \common courtesy... es gehört sich einfach...\common salt Kochsalz nt3. (widespread) weit verbreitetit is \common knowledge that... es ist allgemein bekannt, dass...a \common ailment ein weit verbreitetes Übela \common disease eine weit verbreitete Krankheit\common area allgemeiner Bereichby \common assent/consent mit allgemeiner Zustimmung/Einwilligung\common bathroom Gemeinschaftsbad ntto make \common cause with sb mit jdm gemeinsame Sache machenfor the \common good für das Gemeinwohlto be on \common ground with sb jds Ansichten teilen\common interests gemeinsame Interessentenancy in \common Bruchteilsgemeinschaft fin \common gemeinsamto have sth in \common [with sb] etw [mit jdm] gemein habenwe've got a lot of interests in \common wir haben viele gemeinsame Interessen5. ZOOL, BOT sparrow, primrose gemein6.<-er, -est>a \common slut eine ordinäre Schlampe pej fam7. (ordinary) einfacha \common criminal ein gewöhnlicher Verbrecher/eine gewöhnliche Verbrecherin peja \common thief ein gemeiner Dieb/eine gemeine Diebina \common labourer ein einfacher Arbeiter/eine einfache Arbeiterinthe \common man der Normalbürger [o Durchschnittsbürger]\common people einfache Leutea \common soldier ein einfacher Soldat* * *['kɒmən]1. adj (+er)1) (= shared by many) gemeinsam; property also Gemein-, gemeinschaftlichcommon land — Allmende f
it is common knowledge that... —
it is to the common advantage that... — es ist von allgemeinem Nutzen, dass...
very little/no common ground — kaum eine/keine gemeinsame Basis
to find common ground (with sb) — eine gemeinsame Basis finden (mit jdm)
sth is common to everyone/sth — alle haben/etw hat etw gemein
2) (= frequently seen or heard etc) häufig; word also weitverbreitet, weit verbreitet, geläufig; experience also allgemein; animal, bird häufig pred, häufig anzutreffend attr; belief, custom, animal, bird (weit)verbreitet, weit verbreitet; (= customary, usual) normalit's quite a common sight — das sieht man ziemlich häufig
it's common for visitors to feel ill here —
nowadays it's quite common for the man to do the housework — es ist heutzutage ganz normal, dass der Mann die Hausarbeit macht
3) (= ordinary) gewöhnlichthe common people —
a common soldier — ein einfacher or gemeiner (dated) Soldat
he has the common touch —
it's only common decency to apologize — es ist nur recht und billig, dass man sich entschuldigt
4) (= vulgar, low-class) gewöhnlich2. n1) (= land) Anger m, Gemeindewiese f2)3)to have sth in common (with sb/sth) — etw (mit jdm/etw) gemein haben
to have a lot/nothing in common — viel/nichts miteinander gemein haben, viele/keine Gemeinsamkeiten haben
in common with many other people/towns/countries — (ebenso or genauso) wie viele andere (Leute)/Städte/Länder...
I, in common with... — ich, ebenso wie...
* * *1. gemeinsam, gemeinschaftlich:common to all allen gemeinsam;that was common ground in yesterday’s debate darüber waren sich in der gestrigen Debatte alle einig;be common ground between the parties JUR von keiner der Parteien bestritten werden;they have sufficient common ground sie haben genügend Gemeinsamkeiten;2. a) allgemeinb) öffentlich:by common consent mit allgemeiner Zustimmung;3. Gemeinde…, Stadt…4. notorisch, berüchtigt (Verbrecher etc)5. a) allgemein (bekannt), alltäglich, gewöhnlich, normal, vertrautb) häufig:be common häufig vorkommen;it is a common belief es wird allgemein geglaubt;it is common knowledge (usage) es ist allgemein bekannt (üblich);a very common name ein sehr häufiger Name;common sight alltäglicher oder vertrauter Anblick;6. üblich, allgemein gebräuchlich:common salt gewöhnliches Salz, Kochsalz n8. allgemein zugänglich, öffentlich9. gewöhnlich, minderwertig, zweitklassig10. abgedroschen (Phrase etc)11. gewöhnlich, ordinär (Br besonders Person)12. gewöhnlich, ohne Rang:the common man der einfache Mann von der Straße;the common people das einfache Volk;B s3. Gemeinsamkeit f:(act) in common gemeinsam (vorgehen);in common with (genau) wie;with so much in common bei so vielen Gemeinsamkeiten;have sth in common with etwas gemein haben mit;we have nothing in common wir haben nichts miteinander gemein;they have many interests in common sie haben viele gemeinsame Interessen;hold sth in common etwas gemeinsam besitzenout of the common außergewöhnlich, -ordentlichcom. abk1. comedy2. comma3. commander4. commerce5. commercial6. commission7. commissioner8. committee9. common* * *1. adjective,1) (belonging equally to all) gemeinsam [Ziel, Interesse, Sache, Unternehmung, Vorteil, Merkmal, Sprache]2) (belonging to the public) öffentlicha common belief — [ein] allgemeiner Glaube
3) (usual) gewöhnlich; normal; (frequent) häufig [Vorgang, Erscheinung, Ereignis, Erlebnis]; allgemein verbreitet [Sitte, Wort, Redensart]common honesty/courtesy — [ganz] normale Ehrlichkeit/Höflichkeit
4) (without rank or position) einfach5) (vulgar) gemein; gewöhnlich (abwertend), ordinär (ugs. abwertend) [Ausdrucksweise, Mundart, Aussehen, Benehmen]2. noun2)have something/nothing/a lot in common [with somebody] — etwas/nichts/viel [mit jemandem] gemein[sam] haben
* * *adj.allgemein adj.allgemein bekannt adj.geläufig adj.gemeinsam adj.zusammen adj. n.verbreitet adj. -
57 grace
1. noun2) (attractive feature) Charme, derairs and graces — vornehmes Getue (ugs. abwertend); affektiertes Benehmen
3) (accomplishment)social graces — Umgangsformen Pl.
4) (decency) Anstand, derhave the grace to do something — so anständig sein und etwas tun; (civility)
with [a] good/bad grace — bereitwillig/widerwillig
he accepted my criticism with good/bad grace — er trug meine Kritik mit Fassung/nahm meine Kritik mit Verärgerung hin
he fell from grace — er fiel in Ungnade
7) (prayers) Tischgebet, das8) in address2. transitive verb1) (adorn) zieren (geh.); schmücken2) (honour) auszeichnen; ehren* * *[ɡreis] 1. noun1) (beauty of form or movement: The dancer's movements had very little grace.) die Anmut2) (a sense of what is right: At least he had the grace to leave after his dreadful behaviour.) der Anstand3) (a short prayer of thanks for a meal.) das Tischgebet4) (a delay allowed as a favour: You should have paid me today but I'll give you a day's grace.) der Aufschub5) (the title of a duke, duchess or archbishop: Your/His Grace.) Eure Hoheit6) (mercy: by the grace of God.) die Gnade•- academic.ru/31937/graceful">graceful- gracefully
- gracefulness
- gracious 2. interjection(an exclamation of surprise.) du liebe Güte!- graciously- graciousness
- with a good/bad grace
- with good/bad grace* * *[greɪs]I. nto do sth with [a] good/bad \grace etw anstandslos/widerwillig tunto have the [good] \grace to do sth den Anstand besitzen, etw zu tunsocial \graces gesellschaftliche Umgangsformento be in a state of \grace REL im Zustand der Gnade Gottes seindivine \grace göttliche Gnadeby the \grace of God durch die Gnade Gottes\grace and favour BRIT (house, apartment) kostenlose Unterbringung, die die Königliche Familie z.B. pensionierten Beamten gewährtto be in sb's good \graces bei jdm gut angeschrieben seinto get into sb's good \graces jds Gunst erlangento fall from [sb's] \grace [bei jdm] in Ungnade fallento say \grace ein Tischgebet sprechenwe're supposed to pay the bill this month, but we've been given a month's \grace wir müssten die Rechnung diesen Monat bezahlen, aber sie geben uns noch einen Monat Aufschub8. (Highness)Your/His/Her G\grace Euer/Seine/Ihre Gnaden veraltet▪ the G\graces die Grazien10. FIN\grace period [or period of \grace] Nachfrist f, Zahlungsfrist f1. (honour)to \grace sb/sth [with one's presence] jdn/etw [mit seiner Anwesenheit] beehren geh o hum2. (adorn)* * *[greɪs]1. n1) no pl (= gracefulness, graciousness) Anmut f; (of movement) Anmut f, Grazie f; (of monarch etc) Würde fwith grace —
to do sth with (a) good/bad grace — etw anstandslos/widerwillig or unwillig tun
he bore his defeat with good grace — er nahm seine Niederlage mit Fassung or anstandslos hin
he took it with bad grace — er war sehr ungehalten darüber
he had/didn't even have the (good) grace to apologize — er war so anständig/brachte es nicht einmal fertig, sich zu entschuldigen
2) (= pleasing quality) (angenehme) Eigenschaft3)(= favour)
to be in sb's good graces — bei jdm gut angeschrieben seina day's grace — ein Tag m Aufschub
5) (= prayer) Tischgebet nt6) (= mercy) Gnade fby the grace of God —
by the grace of God Queen... — Königin... von Gottes Gnaden
there but for the grace of God go I —
in this year of grace 1998 in a state of grace (Eccl) — im Jahre des Heils 1998 im Zustand der Gnade
8) (MYTH)the Graces — die Grazien pl
grace note — Verzierung f
2. vt1) (= adorn) zieren (geh)to grace the occasion with one's presence — sich (dat) die Ehre geben
* * *grace [ɡreıs]A s1. Anmut f, Grazie f, Reiz m, Charme m:the three Graces MYTH die drei Grazien2. Anstand m, Schicklichkeit f, Takt m:have the grace to do sth den Anstand haben oder so anständig sein, etwas zu tun3. Bereitwilligkeit f:with (a) good grace gern, bereitwillig;4. gute Eigenschaft, schöner Zug:social graces pl feine Lebensart;do grace to → B 35. MUS Verzierung f, Manier f, Ornament n6. Gunst f, Wohlwollen n, Gnade f:be in sb’s good graces in jemandes Gunst stehen, bei jemandem gut angeschrieben sein;be in sb’s bad graces bei jemandem in Ungnade sein, bei jemandem schlecht angeschrieben sein; → fall from8. RELa) Stand m der Gnadeb) Tugend f:grace of charity (Tugend der) Nächstenliebe fa) Eure Hoheit (Herzogin),b) Eure Exzellenz (Erzbischof)10. WIRTSCH, JUR Aufschub m, (Zahlungs-, Nach)Frist f:days of grace Respekttage;give sb a week’s grace jemandem eine Nachfrist von einer Woche gewähren11. Tischgebet n:say grace das Tischgebet sprechenB v/t1. zieren, schmücken2. ehren, auszeichnen:grace a party with one’s presence eine Gesellschaft mit seiner Anwesenheit beehren3. jemandem Ehre machen* * *1. noun2) (attractive feature) Charme, derairs and graces — vornehmes Getue (ugs. abwertend); affektiertes Benehmen
social graces — Umgangsformen Pl.
4) (decency) Anstand, derhave the grace to do something — so anständig sein und etwas tun; (civility)
with [a] good/bad grace — bereitwillig/widerwillig
he accepted my criticism with good/bad grace — er trug meine Kritik mit Fassung/nahm meine Kritik mit Verärgerung hin
7) (prayers) Tischgebet, das8) in address2. transitive verb1) (adorn) zieren (geh.); schmücken2) (honour) auszeichnen; ehren* * *n.Anmut nur sing. f.Gnade -n f.Gunst nur sing. f.Liebreiz -e m. -
58 Cross
I 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (shape) croce f.the Cross — relig. la Croce
to put a cross against — segnare con una croce [name, item]
"put a cross in the box" — "sbarrate la casella", "segnate la casella con una croce"
a cross between Hitler and Napoleon — fig. un incrocio fra Hitler e Napoleone
3) sart. sbieco m.to cut sth. on the cross — tagliare qcs. di sbieco
4) sport (in football) cross m., traversone m.2.1) (angry) arrabbiato, irritato, di cattivo umoreto be cross with sb. — essere seccato con qcn.
to be cross about sth. — essere di cattivo umore per qcs.
to get cross — arrabbiarsi o adirarsi ( with con)
2) (transverse) [ timber] trasversale, obliquo3) (contrary to general direction) [breeze, swell] contrario••II 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (go across) attraversare [road, country, room]; passare, attraversare [ river]; superare, oltrepassare [border, line, mountains]; [ bridge] attraversare, scavalcare [river, road]; [road, railway line, river] tagliare, attraversare [country, desert]; [ line] attraversare, tagliare [ page]2) fig. superare, oltrepassare [limit, boundary]3) (meet) [road, railway line] incrociare, intersecare [road, railway line, river]4) (place in shape of a cross) incrociareto cross one's legs — incrociare o accavallare le gambe
5) biol. bot. zool. incrociare, ibridare7) (draw line across) (s)barrare [ cheque]2.1) (anche cross over) (go across) fare una traversata3.to cross oneself — relig. segnarsi, farsi il segno della croce
••* * *[kros] I adjective(angry: I get very cross when I lose something.)- crosslyII 1. plural - crosses; noun1) (a symbol formed by two lines placed across each other, eg + or x.)2) (two wooden beams placed thus (+), on which Christ was nailed.)3) (the symbol of the Christian religion.)4) (a lasting cause of suffering etc: Your rheumatism is a cross you will have to bear.)5) (the result of breeding two varieties of animal or plant: This dog is a cross between an alsatian and a labrador.)6) (a monument in the shape of a cross.)7) (any of several types of medal given for bravery etc: the Victoria Cross.)2. verb1) (to go from one side to the other: Let's cross (the street); This road crosses the swamp.)2) ((negative uncross) to place (two things) across each other: He sat down and crossed his legs.)3) (to go or be placed across (each other): The roads cross in the centre of town.)4) (to meet and pass: Our letters must have crossed in the post.)5) (to put a line across: Cross your `t's'.)6) (to make (a cheque or postal order) payable only through a bank by drawing two parallel lines across it.)7) (to breed (something) from two different varieties: I've crossed two varieties of rose.)8) (to go against the wishes of: If you cross me, you'll regret it!)•- cross-- crossing
- crossbow
- cross-breed
- cross-bred
- crosscheck 3. noun(the act of crosschecking.) controllo accurato, riscontro- cross-country skiing
- cross-examine
- cross-examination
- cross-eyed
- cross-fire
- at cross-purposes
- cross-refer
- cross-reference
- crossroads
- cross-section
- crossword puzzle
- crossword
- cross one's fingers
- cross out* * *(Surnames) Cross /krɒs, USA krɑ:s/* * *I 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (shape) croce f.the Cross — relig. la Croce
to put a cross against — segnare con una croce [name, item]
"put a cross in the box" — "sbarrate la casella", "segnate la casella con una croce"
a cross between Hitler and Napoleon — fig. un incrocio fra Hitler e Napoleone
3) sart. sbieco m.to cut sth. on the cross — tagliare qcs. di sbieco
4) sport (in football) cross m., traversone m.2.1) (angry) arrabbiato, irritato, di cattivo umoreto be cross with sb. — essere seccato con qcn.
to be cross about sth. — essere di cattivo umore per qcs.
to get cross — arrabbiarsi o adirarsi ( with con)
2) (transverse) [ timber] trasversale, obliquo3) (contrary to general direction) [breeze, swell] contrario••II 1. [krɒs] [AE krɔːs]1) (go across) attraversare [road, country, room]; passare, attraversare [ river]; superare, oltrepassare [border, line, mountains]; [ bridge] attraversare, scavalcare [river, road]; [road, railway line, river] tagliare, attraversare [country, desert]; [ line] attraversare, tagliare [ page]2) fig. superare, oltrepassare [limit, boundary]3) (meet) [road, railway line] incrociare, intersecare [road, railway line, river]4) (place in shape of a cross) incrociareto cross one's legs — incrociare o accavallare le gambe
5) biol. bot. zool. incrociare, ibridare7) (draw line across) (s)barrare [ cheque]2.1) (anche cross over) (go across) fare una traversata3.to cross oneself — relig. segnarsi, farsi il segno della croce
•• -
59 common
I 1. ['kɒmən]1) (land) terreno m. comune2) in common in comune2.to have sth. in common — avere qcs. in comune
1) (the people)2) pol. (anche Commons)II ['kɒmən]1) (frequent) [mistake, problem, reaction] comune, frequenteit is common among — è comune fra [children, mammals]
3) (ordinary) [ man] comunethe common herd — spreg. il gregge, la massa
4) spreg. (low-class) mediocre, ordinario5) (minimum expected) [ courtesy] normale; [ decency] elementare6) zool. bot. mat. comune••to be as common as muck — colloq. (vulgar) essere volgarissimo; (widespread) essere comunissimo
* * *['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) comune2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) comune3) (publicly owned: common property.) comune, pubblico4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) volgare5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) comune6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) comune2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) terreno comunale- commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common* * *I 1. ['kɒmən]1) (land) terreno m. comune2) in common in comune2.to have sth. in common — avere qcs. in comune
1) (the people)2) pol. (anche Commons)II ['kɒmən]1) (frequent) [mistake, problem, reaction] comune, frequenteit is common among — è comune fra [children, mammals]
3) (ordinary) [ man] comunethe common herd — spreg. il gregge, la massa
4) spreg. (low-class) mediocre, ordinario5) (minimum expected) [ courtesy] normale; [ decency] elementare6) zool. bot. mat. comune••to be as common as muck — colloq. (vulgar) essere volgarissimo; (widespread) essere comunissimo
-
60 any
'eni
1. pronoun, adjective1) (one, some, no matter which: `Which dress shall I wear?' `Wear any (dress)'; `Which dresses shall I pack?' `Pack any (dresses)'.) cualquier2) ((in questions and negative sentences etc) one, some: John has been to some interesting places but I've never been to any; Have you been to any interesting places?; We have hardly any coffee left.) algún; ningún
2. adjective(every: Any schoolboy could tell you the answer.) cualquier
3. adverb(at all; (even) by a small amount: Is this book any better than the last one?; His writing hasn't improved any.) en absoluto, para nada; algo- anybody- anyone
- anyhow
- anything
- anyway
- anywhere
- at any rate
- in any case
any1 adj1. algúnare there any messages for me? ¿hay algún recado para mí?have you got any cousins? ¿tienes primos?do you need any money? ¿necesitas dinero?2. ningún3. cualquierany2 advdo you feel any better? ¿te sientes mejor?any3 pron1. algunothose biscuits were delicious; are there any left? esas galletas eran deliciosas; ¿queda alguna?there's some lemonade; do you want any? hay limonada; ¿quieres?2. ningunoI wanted a sandwich, but there weren't any left quería un bocadillo, pero no quedaba ningunoI'm sorry, I haven't got any lo siento, no tengo3. cualquieratr['enɪ]1 (in questions) algún,-una■ are there any biscuits left? ¿queda alguna galleta?■ have you got any money/gloves? ¿tienes dinero/guantes?2 (negative) ningún,-una■ he hasn't bought any milk/biscuits no ha comprado leche/galletas3 (no matter which) cualquier,-ra1 (in questions) alguno,-a■ there are foxes round here, have you seen any? hay zorros por aquí, ¿has visto alguno?■ do you want any? ¿quieres?■ he's got lots of money, but does he ever spend any? tiene mucho dinero, pero ¿gasta algo alguna vez?2 (negative) ninguno,-a■ they're very cheap, but I haven't sold any son muy baratos, pero no he vendido ninguno■ I asked for snails/caviar, but they hadn't got any pedí caracoles/caviar pero no tenían■ brandy?, there isn't any ¿coñac?, no hay3 (no matter which) cualquiera■ do you want any more? ¿quieres más?■ I can't work any faster no puedo trabajar más deprisa Table 1SMALLNOTA/SMALL En preguntas y frases negativas no se usa any sino a o an con los sustantivos contables en singular /Table 1any ['ɛni] adv1) : algois it any better?: ¿está (algo) mejor?2) : para nadait is not any good: no sirve para nadaany adj1) : algunois there any doubt?: ¿hay alguna duda?call me if you have any questions: llámeme si tiene alguna pregunta2) : cualquierI can answer any question: puedo responder a cualquier pregunta3) : todoin any case: en todo caso4) : ningúnhe would not accept it under any circumstances: no lo aceptaría bajo ninguna circunstanciaany pron1) : alguno m, -na fare there any left?: ¿queda alguno?2) : ninguno m, -na fI don't want any: no quiero ningunoadj.• alguno adj.• algún adj.• cualquier adj.• todo, -a adj.adv.• algo adv.pron.• alguno pron.• cualquiera pron.
I 'eni1) adjectivea) (+ pl n)are there any questions? — ¿alguien tiene alguna pregunta?
does she have any children? — ¿tiene hijos?
b) (+ uncount n)do you need any help? — ¿necesitas ayuda?
do you want any more coffee? — ¿quieres más café?
c) (+ sing count n: as indef art) algún, -gunais there any chance they'll come? — ¿existe alguna posibilidad de que vengan?
a) (+ pl n)if you see any flowers, buy some — si ves flores, compra algunas
b) (+ uncount n)any rivalry between them soon disappeared — si había existido entre ellos alguna rivalidad, pronto desapareció
c) (+ sing count n)if any lawyer can help you, she can — si hay un abogado que te pueda ayudar, es ella
4) (with neg and implied neg)a) (+ pl n)aren't there any apples left? — ¿no queda ninguna manzana?, ¿no quedan manzanas?
b) (+ uncount n)didn't he give you any money at all? — ¿no te dio nada de dinero?
c) (+ sing count n) ningún, -guna5)a) ( no matter which)take any book you want — llévate cualquier libro or el libro que quieras
b) (every, all)in any large school, you'll find that... — en cualquier or todo colegio grande, verás que...
6) (countless, a lot)any number/amount of something — cualquier cantidad de algo
II
a) (referring to pl n) alguno, -nathose chocolates were nice, are there any left? — qué ricos esos bombones! ¿queda alguno?
b) (referring to uncount n)we need sugar; did you buy any? — nos hace falta azúcar ¿compraste?
is there any of that cake left? — ¿queda algo de ese pastel?
a) (referring to pl n)the advantages, if any, are marginal — las ventajas, si (es que) las hay, son marginales
if any of my friends calls, take a message — si llama alguno de mis amigos, toma el recado
b) (referring to uncount n)3) (with neg and implied neg)a) (referring to pl n)some children were here - I didn't see any — aquí había algunos niños - yo no vi (a) ninguno or no los vi
you'll have to go without cigarettes; I forgot to buy any — te vas a tener que arreglar sin cigarrillos porque me olvidé de comprar
b) (referring to uncount n)she offered me some wine, but I didn't want any — me ofreció vino, pero no quise
4) ( no matter which) cualquierawhich would you like? - any will do — ¿cuál quieres? - cualquiera (sirve)
III
do you feel any better now? — ¿te sientes (algo) mejor ahora?
2) ( at all) (AmE)['enɪ]have you thought about it any since then? — ¿has pensado en ello desde entonces?
1. ADJECTIVEWhen any modifies an uncountable noun in questions it is usually not translated:have you got any money? — ¿tienes dinero?
When any modifies a plural noun in questions it is often not translated. However, if a low number is expected in response, algún/alguna + singular noun is used:is there any sugar? — ¿hay azúcar?
are there any tickets left? — ¿quedan entradas?
did they find any survivors? — ¿hubo supervivientes?
do you speak any foreign languages? — ¿hablas algún idioma extranjero?
do you have any questions? — ¿alguna pregunta?
2) (+ negative, implied negative)When any modifies an uncountable noun it is usually not translated: When the translation is countable, [ningún]/[ninguna] + singular noun can be used: When [any] modifies a plural noun, it is either left untranslated or, for greater emphasis, translated using [ningún]/[ninguna] + singular noun:•
I won't do any such thing! — ¡no voy a hacer una cosa semejante!
Any + plural noun is often translated using algún/alguna + singular noun:if there are any problems let me know — si hay algún problema, me lo dices
if he had any decency he would apologize — si tuviera un poco de decencia, se disculparía
if it is in any way inconvenient to you... — si por cualquier razón le resultara inconveniente...
4) (=no matter which) cualquierbuy any two tins of soup and get one free — por cada dos latas de sopa cualesquiera que compre le regalamos otra
•
he's not just any violinist — no es un violinista cualquiera•
take any one you like — tome cualquiera, tome el que quiera•
it's much like any other seaside resort — es muy parecido a cualquier otro sitio costerowe can cater for up to 300 guests at any one time — podemos proveer hasta a 300 invitados en cada ocasión
day 1., 1), minute, moment, case II, 1., 3), rate I, 1., 2)•
any person who or that breaks the rules will be punished — se castigará a toda persona que no acate las reglas•
any amount of, they'll spend any amount of money to get it — se gastarán lo que haga falta para conseguirlo•
any number of, there must be any number of people in my position — debe haber gran cantidad de personas en mi situación2. PRONOUNWhen any refers to an uncountable noun in questions it is usually not translated:I fancy some soup, have we got any? — me apetece sopa, ¿tenemos?
When [any] refers to a plural noun in questions it is often translated using [alguno]/[alguna] in the singular:is there any milk left? — ¿queda (algo de) leche?
I need a stamp, have you got any? — necesito un sello, ¿tienes alguno?
do any of you know the answer? — ¿sabe alguno (de vosotros) la respuesta?
have any of them arrived? — ¿ha llegado alguno (de ellos)?
2) (+ negative, implied negative)When any refers to an uncountable noun it is usually not translated:When [any] refers to a plural noun, it is either left untranslated or, for greater emphasis, translated using [ningún]/[ninguna] in the singular:"can I have some bread?" - "we haven't any" — -¿hay pan? -no nos queda nada or no tenemos
"did you buy the oranges?" - "no, there weren't any" — ¿compraste (las) naranjas? -no, no había or no tenían
few, if any, survived — pocos, si alguno, sobrevivió
4) (=no matter which) cualquiera3. ADVERBwould you like any more soup? — ¿quieres más sopa?
is he any better? — ¿está (algo) mejor?
2) (+ negative)•
the room didn't look any too clean — la habitación no parecía muy limpia3) (esp US)* (=at all)does she sing any? — ¿sabe cantar de una forma u otra?
* * *
I ['eni]1) adjectivea) (+ pl n)are there any questions? — ¿alguien tiene alguna pregunta?
does she have any children? — ¿tiene hijos?
b) (+ uncount n)do you need any help? — ¿necesitas ayuda?
do you want any more coffee? — ¿quieres más café?
c) (+ sing count n: as indef art) algún, -gunais there any chance they'll come? — ¿existe alguna posibilidad de que vengan?
a) (+ pl n)if you see any flowers, buy some — si ves flores, compra algunas
b) (+ uncount n)any rivalry between them soon disappeared — si había existido entre ellos alguna rivalidad, pronto desapareció
c) (+ sing count n)if any lawyer can help you, she can — si hay un abogado que te pueda ayudar, es ella
4) (with neg and implied neg)a) (+ pl n)aren't there any apples left? — ¿no queda ninguna manzana?, ¿no quedan manzanas?
b) (+ uncount n)didn't he give you any money at all? — ¿no te dio nada de dinero?
c) (+ sing count n) ningún, -guna5)a) ( no matter which)take any book you want — llévate cualquier libro or el libro que quieras
b) (every, all)in any large school, you'll find that... — en cualquier or todo colegio grande, verás que...
6) (countless, a lot)any number/amount of something — cualquier cantidad de algo
II
a) (referring to pl n) alguno, -nathose chocolates were nice, are there any left? — qué ricos esos bombones! ¿queda alguno?
b) (referring to uncount n)we need sugar; did you buy any? — nos hace falta azúcar ¿compraste?
is there any of that cake left? — ¿queda algo de ese pastel?
a) (referring to pl n)the advantages, if any, are marginal — las ventajas, si (es que) las hay, son marginales
if any of my friends calls, take a message — si llama alguno de mis amigos, toma el recado
b) (referring to uncount n)3) (with neg and implied neg)a) (referring to pl n)some children were here - I didn't see any — aquí había algunos niños - yo no vi (a) ninguno or no los vi
you'll have to go without cigarettes; I forgot to buy any — te vas a tener que arreglar sin cigarrillos porque me olvidé de comprar
b) (referring to uncount n)she offered me some wine, but I didn't want any — me ofreció vino, pero no quise
4) ( no matter which) cualquierawhich would you like? - any will do — ¿cuál quieres? - cualquiera (sirve)
III
do you feel any better now? — ¿te sientes (algo) mejor ahora?
2) ( at all) (AmE)have you thought about it any since then? — ¿has pensado en ello desde entonces?
См. также в других словарях:
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decency — noun the quality of being decent; propriety … Wiktionary
decency — noun (plural decencies) 1》 decent behaviour. ↘(decencies) the requirements of acceptable behaviour: an appeal to common decencies. 2》 (decencies) things required for a reasonable standard of living … English new terms dictionary
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decency — [ˈdiːs(ə)nsi] noun [U] behaviour that is moral, good, or reasonable You should at least have the decency to say you re sorry![/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English