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embarrassingly

  • 1 ошеломляюще

    embarrassingly
    * * *

    Новый русско-английский словарь > ошеломляюще

  • 2 ошеломляюще

    Русско-английский синонимический словарь > ошеломляюще

  • 3 באופן מביך

    embarrassingly, bafflingly, puzzlingly, bewilderingly, intriguingly

    Hebrew-English dictionary > באופן מביך

  • 4 בצורה מביכה

    embarrassingly, bafflingly, puzzlingly, bewilderingly, intriguingly

    Hebrew-English dictionary > בצורה מביכה

  • 5 trapně

    Czech-English dictionary > trapně

  • 6 embarazosamente

    • embarrassingly
    • with difficulty

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > embarazosamente

  • 7 vergonzosamente

    • embarrassingly
    • ingesting
    • ingloriousness
    • shamefacedly
    • shamefully

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > vergonzosamente

  • 8 embarazosamente

    adv.
    1 difficultly, cumbersomely.
    2 with difficulty.
    3 embarrassingly.
    * * *
    ADV (=molestamente) awkwardly, inconveniently; (=violentamente) embarrassingly
    * * *
    Ex. Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    * * *

    Ex: Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.

    * * *
    embarrassingly

    Spanish-English dictionary > embarazosamente

  • 9 beschämend

    I Part. Präs. beschämen
    II Adj.
    1. (schändlich) shameful; stärker: disgraceful
    2. (demütigend) humiliating, shaming; es ist beschämend auch it’s a disgrace; es ist ein beschämendes Gefühl it makes you feel ashamed; beschämend für jemanden sein auch put s.o. to shame
    III Adv. shamefully; (peinlich) auch embarrassingly; beschämend wenig / naiv shamefully little / embarrassingly naive; es kamen beschämend wenige Zuschauer there were shamefully few visitors
    * * *
    shameful
    * * *
    be|schä|mend
    1. adj
    1) (= schändlich) shameful

    es war beschä́mend für seine ganze Familie — it brought shame on or to his whole family

    2) (= vorbildlich) shaming; Großzügigkeit embarrassing
    3) (= demütigend) humiliating, shaming
    2. adv
    (= schändlich) disgracefully, shamefully
    * * *
    be·schä·mend
    1. (schändlich) shameful, disgraceful
    2. (demütigend) humiliating
    ein \beschämendes Gefühl a feeling of shame
    * * *
    1.
    1) (schändlich) shameful
    2) (demütigend) humiliating
    2.
    adverbial shamefully
    * * *
    A. ppr beschämen
    B. adj
    1. (schändlich) shameful; stärker: disgraceful
    2. (demütigend) humiliating, shaming;
    es ist beschämend auch it’s a disgrace;
    es ist ein beschämendes Gefühl it makes you feel ashamed;
    beschämend für jemanden sein auch put sb to shame
    C. adv shamefully; (peinlich) auch embarrassingly;
    beschämend wenig/naiv shamefully little/embarrassingly naive;
    es kamen beschämend wenige Zuschauer there were shamefully few visitors
    * * *
    1.
    1) (schändlich) shameful
    2) (demütigend) humiliating
    2.
    adverbial shamefully
    * * *
    adj.
    abashing adj.
    blameful adj.
    shameful adj. adv.
    abashedly adv.
    blamefully adv.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > beschämend

  • 10 lamentablemente

    adv.
    1 lamentably.
    2 regrettably, deplorably, sadly enough, lamentably.
    * * *
    1 regrettably
    * * *
    ADV regrettably, unfortunately
    * * *
    = regrettably, unfortunately, pitifully, sadly, regretfully, lamentably, embarrassingly.
    Ex. There is an extensive theory of the evaluation of indexes and indexing, but regrettably there is not space to treat this topic at any length in this work.
    Ex. Unfortunately, these factors simultaneously make the resolution of the situation more intractable.
    Ex. To sell books is still more special than to sell groceries even though the profits may be pitifully low and to be a bookshop proprietor is a much more middle-class status than is that of grocer, haberdasher or vendor of garden implements.
    Ex. Sadly, the information network has not so far been able to respond adequately to the special needs of business.
    Ex. In the library I used to work at, they recently -- and regretfully -- discarded the card catalogs.
    Ex. The 1960's are often viewed as lamentably as the 1950's are memorably.
    Ex. Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    ----
    * lamentablemente + Adjetivo = woefully + Adjetivo.
    * * *
    = regrettably, unfortunately, pitifully, sadly, regretfully, lamentably, embarrassingly.

    Ex: There is an extensive theory of the evaluation of indexes and indexing, but regrettably there is not space to treat this topic at any length in this work.

    Ex: Unfortunately, these factors simultaneously make the resolution of the situation more intractable.
    Ex: To sell books is still more special than to sell groceries even though the profits may be pitifully low and to be a bookshop proprietor is a much more middle-class status than is that of grocer, haberdasher or vendor of garden implements.
    Ex: Sadly, the information network has not so far been able to respond adequately to the special needs of business.
    Ex: In the library I used to work at, they recently -- and regretfully -- discarded the card catalogs.
    Ex: The 1960's are often viewed as lamentably as the 1950's are memorably.
    Ex: Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    * lamentablemente + Adjetivo = woefully + Adjetivo.

    * * *
    sadly, regrettably
    * * *
    unfortunately, sadly
    * * *
    adv regretfully
    * * *
    : unfortunately, regrettably

    Spanish-English dictionary > lamentablemente

  • 11 penosamente

    adv.
    sorrowfully, sorely, painfully, grievously.
    * * *
    1 (con trabajo) laboriously
    2 (con pena) painfully
    * * *
    ADV arduously, laboriously, with great difficulty
    * * *
    adverbio with difficulty, laboriously
    * * *
    = dreadfully, embarrassingly.
    Ex. However, economic resources are dreadfully finite.
    Ex. Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    * * *
    adverbio with difficulty, laboriously
    * * *
    = dreadfully, embarrassingly.

    Ex: However, economic resources are dreadfully finite.

    Ex: Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.

    * * *
    with difficulty, laboriously
    * * *
    adv with difficulty

    Spanish-English dictionary > penosamente

  • 12 vergonzosamente

    adv.
    shamefully, bashfully; confoundedly.
    * * *
    1 shamefully, ignominiously
    * * *
    ADV
    1) (=con timidez) bashfully, shyly; (=con modestia) modestly
    2) (=deshonrosamente) shamefully, disgracefully
    * * *
    = sheepishly, self-consciously, disgracefully, shamefully, abjectly, embarrassingly.
    Ex. 'Trouble slithering underfoot in the Garden of Eden?', the librarian shook his head sheepishly.
    Ex. 'Thanks a bunch!' he said, smiling self-consciously.
    Ex. The increasing efficiency of machine printing did reduce the average price of reprints and of popular works but new literature remained disgracefully expensive.
    Ex. He maintains that indexers are shamefully treated, their pay is disgraceful and they are almost never acknowledged in the book.
    Ex. The author examines the dominance of liberal anticommunism in McCarthyism, when professed liberals ' abjectly betrayed their own principles'.
    Ex. Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    * * *
    = sheepishly, self-consciously, disgracefully, shamefully, abjectly, embarrassingly.

    Ex: 'Trouble slithering underfoot in the Garden of Eden?', the librarian shook his head sheepishly.

    Ex: 'Thanks a bunch!' he said, smiling self-consciously.
    Ex: The increasing efficiency of machine printing did reduce the average price of reprints and of popular works but new literature remained disgracefully expensive.
    Ex: He maintains that indexers are shamefully treated, their pay is disgraceful and they are almost never acknowledged in the book.
    Ex: The author examines the dominance of liberal anticommunism in McCarthyism, when professed liberals ' abjectly betrayed their own principles'.
    Ex: Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.

    * * *
    A (tímidamente) shyly, bashfully
    B (ignominiosamente) disgracefully, shamefully
    * * *
    1. [sin honra] shamefully, disgracefully
    2. [con timidez] bashfully

    Spanish-English dictionary > vergonzosamente

  • 13 żenująco

    adv. [zachowywać się] embarrassingly
    - żenująco naiwna książka a lamentably naive book
    * * *
    adv.
    embarrassingly, painfully.

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > żenująco

  • 14 anticuado

    adj.
    old-fashioned, archaic, out-of-date, antiquated.
    f. & m.
    old-fashioned person, fuddy-duddy, fuddy, lame.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: anticuar.
    * * *
    1 antiquated, old-fashioned, obsolete, out-of-date
    * * *
    (f. - anticuada)
    adj.
    old-fashioned, outdated
    * * *
    ADJ [maquinaria, infraestructura, tecnología] antiquated; [moda] old-fashioned, out-of-date; [técnica] obsolete
    * * *
    I
    - da adjetivo old-fashioned
    II
    - da masculino, femenino
    * * *
    = antiquated, backwater, out of date [out-of-date], outdated [out-dated], stale, old-fashioned, outworn, musty [mustier -comp., mustiest -sup.], timed, fossilised [fossilized, -USA], passé, atavistic, moth-eaten, mothy [mothier -comp., mothiest -sup.], dowdy [dowdier -comp., dowdiest -sup.], fuddy-duddy, daggy [daggier -comp., daggiest -sup], long in the tooth.
    Ex. Almost without exception these problems occurred in libraries with antiquated or inadequate ventilation without air-conditioning.
    Ex. When he was younger he really turned the library around, from a backwater, two-bit operation to the respected institution it is today.
    Ex. It is for this reason that many special libraries have constructed their own indexing language; they have avoided being tied to a possibly out of date published list.
    Ex. For example, the outdated subject heading 'Female emancipation' could be changed to the newer term 'Women's liberation' with this function.
    Ex. Does the library continue a stale tradition, or does it interpret social change?.
    Ex. One is tempted to say that the enthusiasts for postcoordinate systems, being forced to admit reluctantly that control was necessary, couldn't bear to use the old-fashioned term 'list of subject headings'.
    Ex. This advertisement was part of a publicity campaign which was based on a presentation of Europe so outworn as to be almost meaningless.
    Ex. Only if we continuously redefine our goals in accordance with the developments in our societies will we remain dynamic libraries and not turn into musty institutions.
    Ex. Librarians need to be vociferous about achievements and services offered in order to dispel ideas about the stereotype librarian, timed and out of touch with contemporary society.
    Ex. The article deals with matters of image and status, professional associations, cultural policies, collections, censorship, outdated infrastructure and fossilised mentalities.
    Ex. By conscious or unconscious fixation on this single, already passé, facet of data processing technology we risk totally ignoring the other functions of a catalog.
    Ex. Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    Ex. He said: 'The outer shell of democracy is, no doubt, intact but it appears to be moth-eaten from inside'.
    Ex. So, he cleaned the bird cage from top to bottom and threw out all the mothy bird seed.
    Ex. This article shows how the dowdy and boring image of the stereotypical librarian as presented in fiction, taints the portrayal of all who work in libraries.
    Ex. According to him, tea as a category has lacked innovation and upgradation in recent years and hence has a very fuddy-duddy image.
    Ex. What wearing daggy clothes is all about for me is feeling relaxed, knowing I can wear them around people I'm comfortable with.
    Ex. Training would be needed for the reception staff, who all said they were a bit long in the tooth for learning how to use a computer.
    ----
    * estar anticuado = dated.
    * estar un poco anticuado = be some years old.
    * quedarse anticuado = date.
    * * *
    I
    - da adjetivo old-fashioned
    II
    - da masculino, femenino
    * * *
    = antiquated, backwater, out of date [out-of-date], outdated [out-dated], stale, old-fashioned, outworn, musty [mustier -comp., mustiest -sup.], timed, fossilised [fossilized, -USA], passé, atavistic, moth-eaten, mothy [mothier -comp., mothiest -sup.], dowdy [dowdier -comp., dowdiest -sup.], fuddy-duddy, daggy [daggier -comp., daggiest -sup], long in the tooth.

    Ex: Almost without exception these problems occurred in libraries with antiquated or inadequate ventilation without air-conditioning.

    Ex: When he was younger he really turned the library around, from a backwater, two-bit operation to the respected institution it is today.
    Ex: It is for this reason that many special libraries have constructed their own indexing language; they have avoided being tied to a possibly out of date published list.
    Ex: For example, the outdated subject heading 'Female emancipation' could be changed to the newer term 'Women's liberation' with this function.
    Ex: Does the library continue a stale tradition, or does it interpret social change?.
    Ex: One is tempted to say that the enthusiasts for postcoordinate systems, being forced to admit reluctantly that control was necessary, couldn't bear to use the old-fashioned term 'list of subject headings'.
    Ex: This advertisement was part of a publicity campaign which was based on a presentation of Europe so outworn as to be almost meaningless.
    Ex: Only if we continuously redefine our goals in accordance with the developments in our societies will we remain dynamic libraries and not turn into musty institutions.
    Ex: Librarians need to be vociferous about achievements and services offered in order to dispel ideas about the stereotype librarian, timed and out of touch with contemporary society.
    Ex: The article deals with matters of image and status, professional associations, cultural policies, collections, censorship, outdated infrastructure and fossilised mentalities.
    Ex: By conscious or unconscious fixation on this single, already passé, facet of data processing technology we risk totally ignoring the other functions of a catalog.
    Ex: Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    Ex: He said: 'The outer shell of democracy is, no doubt, intact but it appears to be moth-eaten from inside'.
    Ex: So, he cleaned the bird cage from top to bottom and threw out all the mothy bird seed.
    Ex: This article shows how the dowdy and boring image of the stereotypical librarian as presented in fiction, taints the portrayal of all who work in libraries.
    Ex: According to him, tea as a category has lacked innovation and upgradation in recent years and hence has a very fuddy-duddy image.
    Ex: What wearing daggy clothes is all about for me is feeling relaxed, knowing I can wear them around people I'm comfortable with.
    Ex: Training would be needed for the reception staff, who all said they were a bit long in the tooth for learning how to use a computer.
    * estar anticuado = dated.
    * estar un poco anticuado = be some years old.
    * quedarse anticuado = date.

    * * *
    anticuado1 -da
    ‹persona/ideas› old-fashioned, antiquated; ‹ropa› old-fashioned; ‹sistema/aparato› antiquated
    anticuado2 -da
    masculine, feminine
    eres un anticuado you're so old-fashioned
    * * *

    Del verbo anticuarse: ( conjugate anticuarse)

    anticuado es:

    el participio

    anticuado
    ◊ -da adjetivo

    old-fashioned
    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino: eres un anticuado you're so old-fashioned
    anticuado,-a adjetivo & sustantivo masculino y femenino old-fashioned, antiquated

    ' anticuado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    anticuada
    - apolillada
    - apolillado
    - antiguo
    - atrasado
    - pasado
    - zanahoria
    English:
    antiquated
    - date
    - fuddy-duddy
    - old
    - old-fashioned
    - outdated
    - outmoded
    - dated
    - out
    - time
    * * *
    anticuado, -a
    adj
    [persona, ropa] old-fashioned;
    esa técnica está anticuada that method is out of date;
    mi módem se ha quedado anticuado my modem is out of date
    nm,f
    old-fashioned person;
    mi madre es una anticuada my mother is very old-fashioned
    * * *
    adj antiquated
    * * *
    anticuado, -da adj
    : antiquated, outdated
    * * *
    anticuado adj old fashioned

    Spanish-English dictionary > anticuado

  • 15 atávico

    adj.
    atavistic, backward, atavic, regressive.
    * * *
    1 atavistic
    * * *
    * * *
    - ca adjetivo atavistic
    * * *
    Ex. Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    * * *
    - ca adjetivo atavistic
    * * *

    Ex: Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.

    * * *
    atavistic
    * * *

    atávico,-a adjetivo atavistic
    ' atávico' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    atávica
    * * *
    atávico, -a adj
    atavistic

    Spanish-English dictionary > atávico

  • 16 gobierno transitorio

    Ex. The following transitory government floundered and flip-flopped embarrassingly in trying to respond to the Persian Gulf crisis.
    * * *

    Ex: The following transitory government floundered and flip-flopped embarrassingly in trying to respond to the Persian Gulf crisis.

    Spanish-English dictionary > gobierno transitorio

  • 17 quedar patas arriba

    (v.) = flip-flop
    Ex. The following transitory government floundered and flip-flopped embarrassingly in trying to respond to the Persian Gulf crisis.
    * * *
    (v.) = flip-flop

    Ex: The following transitory government floundered and flip-flopped embarrassingly in trying to respond to the Persian Gulf crisis.

    Spanish-English dictionary > quedar patas arriba

  • 18 secularizar

    v.
    to secularize.
    * * *
    1 to secularize
    * * *
    * * *
    verbo transitivo to secularize
    * * *
    = secularise [secularize, -USA].
    Ex. Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.
    * * *
    verbo transitivo to secularize
    * * *
    = secularise [secularize, -USA].

    Ex: Teaching lost its status when education became secularized as a tool for economic mobility, when concerns for the spiritual became embarrassingly atavistic.

    * * *
    vt
    to secularize
    * * *
    to secularize
    * * *
    v/t secularize

    Spanish-English dictionary > secularizar

  • 19 тест усложнённого параллелизма

    Information technology: EP test, embarrassingly parallel test

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > тест усложнённого параллелизма

  • 20 Ш-98

    РАЗЫГРЫВАТЬ (ИЗ СЕБЯ) ШУТА (ГОРОХОВОГО) СТРОИТЬ (ДЕЛАТЬ, КОРЧИТЬ) ИЗ СЕБЙ ШУТА coll, disapprov VP subj: human to behave in an absurd, ridiculous, outlandish way
    X разыгрывает из себя шута - X plays the clown (the fool, the buffoon)
    X acts like a clown (a fool, a buffoon)).
    (Митя) заметил только, надевая платье, что оно богаче его старого платья и что он бы не хотел «пользоваться». Кроме того, «унизительно узко. Шута, что ли, я горохового должен в нем разыгрывать... к вашему наслаждению!» (Достоевский 1). Не (Mitya) merely observed, as he was putting the clothes on, that they were more costly than his old ones, and that he did not want "to gain by it." And besides, "they're embarrassingly tight. Shall I play the buffoon in them...for your pleasure?" (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > Ш-98

См. также в других словарях:

  • embarrassingly — adverb a) In an embarrassing manner. He stumbled embarrassingly about the dance floor. b) To the point of embarrassment; to an extreme or bewildering degree. He soon became not merely tipsy, but embarrassingly drunk …   Wiktionary

  • embarrassingly — adverb Date: circa 1864 to an embarrassing degree ; so as to cause embarrassment < an embarrassingly messy house > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • embarrassingly — adv. Embarrassingly is used with these adjectives: ↑bad …   Collocations dictionary

  • embarrassingly — adverb causing embarrassment the great man was embarrassingly humble and self effacing • Derived from adjective: ↑embarrassing …   Useful english dictionary

  • Embarrassingly parallel — In the jargon of parallel computing, an embarrassingly parallel workload (or embarrassingly parallel problem) is one for which no particular effort is needed to segment the problem into a very large number of parallel tasks, and there is no… …   Wikipedia

  • embarrassingly — See embarrassedly. * * * …   Universalium

  • embarrassingly — adv. disconcertingly, in an embarrassing manner, discomposingly …   English contemporary dictionary

  • embarrassingly — See: embarrassing …   English dictionary

  • Parallel computing — Programming paradigms Agent oriented Automata based Component based Flow based Pipelined Concatenative Concurrent computing …   Wikipedia

  • Index calculus algorithm — In group theory, the index calculus algorithm is an algorithm for computing discrete logarithms. This is the best known algorithm for certain groups, such as mathbb{Z} m^* (the multiplicative group modulo m ).Dubious|date=April 2008 Description… …   Wikipedia

  • embarrassing — [[t]ɪmbæ̱rəsɪŋ[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED Something that is embarrassing makes you feel shy or ashamed. That was an embarrassing situation for me... Men find it embarrassing to be honest. Syn: uncomfortable, awkward Derived words: embarrassingly ADV… …   English dictionary

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