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121 положить свои головы
[VP; subj: human; usu. pfv]=====⇒ to perish, lose or sacrifice one's life (for s.o. or sth.):- X сложил голову (за Y-a) - X laid down his life (for Y);- X gave (up) his life (for Y).♦ Один [из ее сыновей] умер блестяще, окружённый признанием врагов... хотя и не за свое дело сложил голову (Герцен 1). One [of her sons] died gloriously, amid the esteem of his enemies...though it was not for his own cause he laid down his life (1a).♦ Другие в его [Юрочки] возрасте н в Берлине побывали, и черт знает еще где ("Кое-кто и голову там положил", - перебил его в этом месте Вадим Петрович, но он тут же ответил: "Положили, знаю, но было за что положить") (Некрасов 1). Other men of his [Yurochka's] age had been to Berlin and God knows where else ("Some of them gave their lives in Berlin," Vadim Petrovich interrupted him at this point, but Yurochka replied without hesitation: "They gave their lives, I know, but they had something to give them for") (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > положить свои головы
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122 положить свою голову
[VP; subj: human; usu. pfv]=====⇒ to perish, lose or sacrifice one's life (for s.o. or sth.):- X сложил голову (за Y-a) - X laid down his life (for Y);- X gave (up) his life (for Y).♦ Один [из ее сыновей] умер блестяще, окружённый признанием врагов... хотя и не за свое дело сложил голову (Герцен 1). One [of her sons] died gloriously, amid the esteem of his enemies...though it was not for his own cause he laid down his life (1a).♦ Другие в его [Юрочки] возрасте н в Берлине побывали, и черт знает еще где ("Кое-кто и голову там положил", - перебил его в этом месте Вадим Петрович, но он тут же ответил: "Положили, знаю, но было за что положить") (Некрасов 1). Other men of his [Yurochka's] age had been to Berlin and God knows where else ("Some of them gave their lives in Berlin," Vadim Petrovich interrupted him at this point, but Yurochka replied without hesitation: "They gave their lives, I know, but they had something to give them for") (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > положить свою голову
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123 сложить голову
[VP; subj: human; usu. pfv]=====⇒ to perish, lose or sacrifice one's life (for s.o. or sth.):- X сложил голову (за Y-a) - X laid down his life (for Y);- X gave (up) his life (for Y).♦ Один [из ее сыновей] умер блестяще, окружённый признанием врагов... хотя и не за свое дело сложил голову (Герцен 1). One [of her sons] died gloriously, amid the esteem of his enemies...though it was not for his own cause he laid down his life (1a).♦ Другие в его [Юрочки] возрасте н в Берлине побывали, и черт знает еще где ("Кое-кто и голову там положил", - перебил его в этом месте Вадим Петрович, но он тут же ответил: "Положили, знаю, но было за что положить") (Некрасов 1). Other men of his [Yurochka's] age had been to Berlin and God knows where else ("Some of them gave their lives in Berlin," Vadim Petrovich interrupted him at this point, but Yurochka replied without hesitation: "They gave their lives, I know, but they had something to give them for") (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > сложить голову
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124 сложить головы
[VP; subj: human; usu. pfv]=====⇒ to perish, lose or sacrifice one's life (for s.o. or sth.):- X сложил голову (за Y-a) - X laid down his life (for Y);- X gave (up) his life (for Y).♦ Один [из ее сыновей] умер блестяще, окружённый признанием врагов... хотя и не за свое дело сложил голову (Герцен 1). One [of her sons] died gloriously, amid the esteem of his enemies...though it was not for his own cause he laid down his life (1a).♦ Другие в его [Юрочки] возрасте н в Берлине побывали, и черт знает еще где ("Кое-кто и голову там положил", - перебил его в этом месте Вадим Петрович, но он тут же ответил: "Положили, знаю, но было за что положить") (Некрасов 1). Other men of his [Yurochka's] age had been to Berlin and God knows where else ("Some of them gave their lives in Berlin," Vadim Petrovich interrupted him at this point, but Yurochka replied without hesitation: "They gave their lives, I know, but they had something to give them for") (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > сложить головы
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125 сложить свои головы
[VP; subj: human; usu. pfv]=====⇒ to perish, lose or sacrifice one's life (for s.o. or sth.):- X сложил голову (за Y-a) - X laid down his life (for Y);- X gave (up) his life (for Y).♦ Один [из ее сыновей] умер блестяще, окружённый признанием врагов... хотя и не за свое дело сложил голову (Герцен 1). One [of her sons] died gloriously, amid the esteem of his enemies...though it was not for his own cause he laid down his life (1a).♦ Другие в его [Юрочки] возрасте н в Берлине побывали, и черт знает еще где ("Кое-кто и голову там положил", - перебил его в этом месте Вадим Петрович, но он тут же ответил: "Положили, знаю, но было за что положить") (Некрасов 1). Other men of his [Yurochka's] age had been to Berlin and God knows where else ("Some of them gave their lives in Berlin," Vadim Petrovich interrupted him at this point, but Yurochka replied without hesitation: "They gave their lives, I know, but they had something to give them for") (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > сложить свои головы
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126 сложить свою голову
[VP; subj: human; usu. pfv]=====⇒ to perish, lose or sacrifice one's life (for s.o. or sth.):- X сложил голову (за Y-a) - X laid down his life (for Y);- X gave (up) his life (for Y).♦ Один [из ее сыновей] умер блестяще, окружённый признанием врагов... хотя и не за свое дело сложил голову (Герцен 1). One [of her sons] died gloriously, amid the esteem of his enemies...though it was not for his own cause he laid down his life (1a).♦ Другие в его [Юрочки] возрасте н в Берлине побывали, и черт знает еще где ("Кое-кто и голову там положил", - перебил его в этом месте Вадим Петрович, но он тут же ответил: "Положили, знаю, но было за что положить") (Некрасов 1). Other men of his [Yurochka's] age had been to Berlin and God knows where else ("Some of them gave their lives in Berlin," Vadim Petrovich interrupted him at this point, but Yurochka replied without hesitation: "They gave their lives, I know, but they had something to give them for") (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > сложить свою голову
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127 за дело
I[sent; Invar]=====⇒ (usu. used as a command or prompting) start working or let us start working:- (left) get to it < to work>!;- to work!♦ "Теперь за дело!" - прошептал один сообщник. "Ну нет, - заявила Мари, - я теперь займусь изучением [документов]". Слово это прозвучало торжественно, и все согласились, что без изучения приступить к делу нельзя (Федин 1). "Now to work!" whispered one accomplice. "Oh, no," announced Marie, "now I shall do some studying." This word rang out solemnly and all agreed that to get down to work without studying [the documents] was impossible (1a).II• ЗА ДЕЛО(!) наказать, наградить, посадить (в тюрьму) и т.п.[PrepP; Invar; adv]=====⇒ (to punish, reward, imprison etc s.o.) deservedly, in correspondence with s.o.'s deeds:- s.o. deserves (has earned) sth. <it>;- for what s.o. did;- for cause;- [in limited contexts] there is a real case against s.o.♦ [Фира:] Слушай, мы узнали - завтра день рождения Анны Сергеевны. [Олег:] Физички? [Фира:] Да, ей исполняется семьдесят лет... Надо срочно в стенгазету вклеить стихи - напиши. [Олег:] Ей? Ни за что! Она мне тройку... закатила. [Фира:] Так за дело!.. Ты же ничего не знал (Розов 2). [Е:] We've just heard that tomorrow is Anna Sergeyevna's birthday. [O.: ] The physics teacher? [F:] Yes, she'll be seventy....We must have some verses for the wall newspaper. We'll stick them in somehow. Write something. [O.:] To her? Never! She's...given me a "fair." [F:] But you deserved it!... You didn't know a thing (2a).♦ Он гордился тем, что, в отличие от массы политических заключённых, сидел за дело: написал статью под заголовком "Государство Ленина-Сталина" и давал её читать студентам (Гроссман 2). He was proud of the fact that, unlike the majority of the political prisoners, he was there [in the camp] for a reason: he had written an article entitled "The State of Lenin and Stalin" and distributed it to his students (2a).♦ "Я именно заслуженно пострадал... Словечко-то какое! Заслуженно! Меня посадили за дело" (Битов 2). "I suffered deservedly. What a word! De-serv-edly! They put me away for what I did" (2a).♦ "Случалось, [принц Ольденбургский] поваров палкой бивал, но всегда за дело" (Искандер 3). "Sometimes he [Prince Oldenburgsky] used to beat the cooks with his cane, but always for cause" (3a).♦ "Имейте в виду, в ссылке ни один человек не скажет вам правды: кто сидит за дело - делает вид, что сидит ни за что..." (Рыбаков 2). "Remember this: nobody in exile ever tells the truth-if someone's here because there was a real case against him, he makes out he's here for nothing..." (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > за дело
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128 за дело!
I• ЗА ДЕЛО(!)'[sent; Invar]=====⇒ (usu. used as a command or prompting) start working or let us start working:- (left) get to it < to work>!;- to work!♦ "Теперь за дело!" - прошептал один сообщник. "Ну нет, - заявила Мари, - я теперь займусь изучением [документов]". Слово это прозвучало торжественно, и все согласились, что без изучения приступить к делу нельзя (Федин 1). "Now to work!" whispered one accomplice. "Oh, no," announced Marie, "now I shall do some studying." This word rang out solemnly and all agreed that to get down to work without studying [the documents] was impossible (1a).II• ЗА ДЕЛО(!) наказать, наградить, посадить (в тюрьму) и т.п.[PrepP; Invar; adv]=====⇒ (to punish, reward, imprison etc s.o.) deservedly, in correspondence with s.o.'s deeds:- s.o. deserves (has earned) sth. <it>;- for what s.o. did;- for cause;- [in limited contexts] there is a real case against s.o.♦ [Фира:] Слушай, мы узнали - завтра день рождения Анны Сергеевны. [Олег:] Физички? [Фира:] Да, ей исполняется семьдесят лет... Надо срочно в стенгазету вклеить стихи - напиши. [Олег:] Ей? Ни за что! Она мне тройку... закатила. [Фира:] Так за дело!.. Ты же ничего не знал (Розов 2). [Е:] We've just heard that tomorrow is Anna Sergeyevna's birthday. [O.: ] The physics teacher? [F:] Yes, she'll be seventy....We must have some verses for the wall newspaper. We'll stick them in somehow. Write something. [O.:] To her? Never! She's...given me a "fair." [F:] But you deserved it!... You didn't know a thing (2a).♦ Он гордился тем, что, в отличие от массы политических заключённых, сидел за дело: написал статью под заголовком "Государство Ленина-Сталина" и давал её читать студентам (Гроссман 2). He was proud of the fact that, unlike the majority of the political prisoners, he was there [in the camp] for a reason: he had written an article entitled "The State of Lenin and Stalin" and distributed it to his students (2a).♦ "Я именно заслуженно пострадал... Словечко-то какое! Заслуженно! Меня посадили за дело" (Битов 2). "I suffered deservedly. What a word! De-serv-edly! They put me away for what I did" (2a).♦ "Случалось, [принц Ольденбургский] поваров палкой бивал, но всегда за дело" (Искандер 3). "Sometimes he [Prince Oldenburgsky] used to beat the cooks with his cane, but always for cause" (3a).♦ "Имейте в виду, в ссылке ни один человек не скажет вам правды: кто сидит за дело - делает вид, что сидит ни за что..." (Рыбаков 2). "Remember this: nobody in exile ever tells the truth-if someone's here because there was a real case against him, he makes out he's here for nothing..." (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > за дело!
См. также в других словарях:
down on something — down on (someone/something) feeling angry or disappointed with someone or something. Dad s been down on me since I scraped the car backing out of the garage … New idioms dictionary
down through something — down through sth idiom (formal) during a long period of time • Down through the years this town has seen many changes. Main entry: ↑downidiom … Useful english dictionary
down with something — down with sb/sth idiom used to say that you are opposed to sth, or to a person • The crowds chanted ‘Down with NATO!’ Main entry: ↑downidiom … Useful english dictionary
down with something — 1. mod. comfortable with something; comfortable. (Usually with get.) □ Let’s get down with some good music. □ Pete wanted to get down with some grapes. 2. mod. ill with something; sick in bed with something. □ I was down with the flu for two… … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
down to something — … Useful english dictionary
bring the curtain down on something — bring down the curtain on something/bring the curtain down on something/mainly journalism phrase to end something They bring down the curtain on their African tour in Cape Town today. Thesaurus: to bring an end to somethingsynonym to kill a… … Useful english dictionary
count down to something — count down (to (something)) to count backwards to the time when something is expected to happen. They had a clock that counted down the days, hours, and minutes to the new year. If you re counting down, spring is just ten days away … New idioms dictionary
settle down to something — settle down to (something) to give something all of your attention. I settled down to read about the festival and what I could do there. Usage notes: often said about a meal: After work, we all settle down to a home cooked dinner … New idioms dictionary
(the) curtain comes down on something — the curtain comes down on (something) if the curtain comes down on something, especially a period of time, it ends. Last night, the curtain came down on 14 years of Tory rule … New idioms dictionary
get down to something — ˌget ˈdown to sth derived to begin to do sth; to give serious attention to sth • Let s get down to business. • I like to get down to work by 9 … Useful english dictionary
clamp down on something — clamp down on (something) to act to stop or limit something. Police here have finally clamped down on speeding … New idioms dictionary