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1 Ethel
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2 Этель
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3 Этель
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4 Merman
f.Merman, Ethel Merman.m.Merman, Ethel Merman.pres.indicat.3rd person plural (ellos/ellas) present indicative of spanish verb: mermar. -
5 Waters
f.Waters, Ethel Waters.m.Waters, Ethel Waters. -
6 Овод
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7 Этел
General subject: Ethel (женское имя) -
8 вотчина
1) General subject: barony, patrimony, ancestral lands (феодальная земельная собственность, родовое поместье на Руси ( до XVIII в. передававшиеся по наследству), home territory, inherited estate2) History: ethel, (чья-л.) feoff, (чья-л.) fief, fiefdom (тж. перен.)3) leg.N.P. patrimonial estate, votchina -
9 женоподобный мужчина
1) General subject: effeminate, sissy2) American: pinkling3) Botanical term: pansy boy4) Australian slang: big girl's blouse, nancy boy5) Jargon: boy, fairy, lily, limp wrist, ma (обычно добавляют имя), mother, pansy, panty-waist, poof, pretty-boy, Lizzie, capon, nance, queerie, twink, weak sister6) Taboo: Casper Milquetoast, Ethel, Fauntleroy, Goldielocks, Hollywood Indian, Jenny Willocks, Jessie, Joe-boy, Joey, Mabel, Miss Molly, Miss Nancy, Nancy homey (обыч. гомосексуалист), Percy, Peter Pansy, angel, angel face, babe, baby face, betty, big thithy, bird, boy scout, buttercup, capon (обыч. гомосексуалист), chicken, chorus boy (по аналогии с chorus girl хористка, артистка кордебалета, символ доступной женщины), collar and cuff, cot betty, cream puff, cupcake, dearie, drugstore cowboy, duckie, effie, fag, fancy pants, fanny merchant, ferblet, flit, fluff, freak, fuddyduddy, fugitive from a daisy chain gang, gentlemiss (игра слов на gentleman и miss), geranium, girl, goody, gussie, half-and-half, hash, hen-hussy, hesh, himmer (от him и (h)er), hitchy-koo, homie, it, jelly bean, ladyfinger, lavendered boy, lemon-sucker, lisper, little Lord Fauntleroy (по имени героя одноименного романа), ma (обычно стоит впереди имени человека, напр. Ma Jones), maama man, mamma's baby, man's man, milquetoast, moll, molly, muff, nan-boy, nancy, neuter gender, no bullfighter, nola, one of the boys, one of those, painted Willie, patsy, pee Willy, petal (см. pansy), pollyanny, pood, powder puff, pretty, prissy, punce, pussy, pussyfoot, queen, queer one, queerie (не гомосексуалист; употребляется редко из-за путаницы с queer q.v.), quim, she-he, she-man, sis, siss, sissie, sissie boy, soft-heel, some relation to a girl, spurge, swish-siss, tame cat, tea-hound, thing, third sexer, thithy, three-letter man, toots (sing), tutti-fruttie (см. fruit), tutz (искаженное toots q.v.), twilight personality, what?, whoops boy, willie, winking Willie, woman, woman's home companion, works (pl), yoo-hooУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > женоподобный мужчина
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10 женственный мужчина
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > женственный мужчина
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11 овод
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12 родовое поместье
1) General subject: patrimony, ancestral home2) History: ethel -
13 трус
1) General subject: blancher, capon, chicken liver, chicken-heart, chicken-liver, cissy, coward, craven, dastard, faint heart, faint-heart, funk, milksop, nervous Nellie ( Nelly), niddering, piker, poltroon, quitter, rabbit, scuttler, turnback, turntail, yellow belly, quakebuttock (насмешливо-презрительно)2) Zoology: rat (убегающий как крыса с тонущего корабля)4) American: yellow dog6) Religion: trembler8) Diplomatic term: white feather10) Jargon: Caspar, chickenheart, dancer, deuce, lollipop, puff, yellow-belly, yellow-belly coward, chickenshit, Ethel (о спортсмене), chicken, cock sucker (прозвище вызывающего антипатию мужчины), patsy, ring-tail, weak sister11) Taboo: candy ass, pucker-ass, pussy clot, yellow bastard, yellowbelly -
14 אתל
n. Ethel, female first name -
15 AÐAL
n. nature, disposition.* * *[O. H. G. adal, genus; cp. also A. S. éðele, nobilis; Old Engl. and Scot. ethel; Germ. edel; eðla- and eðal- came from mod. Dan. into Icel. aðall, nobility. It does not occur in old writings in this sense.]I. n. nature, disposition, inborn native quality, used only in poetry; jóðs a., childish, Ýt. 13; ósnotrs aðal, foolish, insipid, Hm. 106; args a., dastardly, Ls. 23, 24; drengs a., noble, Km. 23; ódyggs a., bad, Hsm. 19. 2. in the sense of offspring; aðul Njarðar (where it is n. pl.?), the gods, the offspring of Njord, Hallfred in a poem, vide Fs. 59.II. used in a great many COMPDS, chief-, head-. aðal-akkeri, n. sheet-anchor, Fms. x. 130:β. metaph., Bs. i. 756. aðal-bjórr, s, m. prime beaver skin, Eb. (in a verse). aðal-borinn, part., v. óðalborinn. aðal-ból, n. a manor-house, farm inhabited by its master, opp. to tenant farms, Grág. (Kb.) ii. 150; also the name of a farm, Hrafn. 4. aðal-festr, f., v. alaðsfestr. aðal-fylking, f. main force, main body, Hkr. ii. 361. aðal-haf, n. the main, Fms. iv. 177. aðal-henda, u, f., v. alhenda. aðal-hending, f. full, complete rhymes, such as all— hall, opp. to skot-hending, q. v., Edda (Ht.) aðal-hendr, adj. verse in full rhyme, Edda, id. aðal-kelda, u, f. chief well, Karl. 442. aðal-kirkja, ju, f. chief part of a church, viz. choir and nave, opp. to forkirkja, Sturl. ii. 59. aðalliga, adv. completely, thoroughly; a. dauðr, quite dead, 656 C. 31, Fms. ii. 313; a. gamall, quite old, iii. 171. aðal-mein, n. great pain, Fms. vi. (in a verse), aðal-merki, n. the head-standard, Pr. 177. aðal-ritning, f. chief writing, Sks. 13. aðal-skáli, a, m. the chief apartment of a skáli, the hall, as distinguished from a forhús, Eb. 43. aðal-tré, n. trunk of a tree; eigi munu kvistir betri en a. (a proverb), Fms. iv. 33. aðal-troll, n. downright ogre, Fas. iii. 179. aðal-túlkr, s, m. chief advocate, Bs. i. 445. aðal-túpt, f. esp. in pl. ir = óðals-toptir, the ground on which a manor-bouse is built, toft of an allodial farm (Norse), flytja hús af aðaltóptum, remove it, N. G. L. i. 379. -
16 ÓÐAL
(pl. óðul), n. ancestral property, patrimony, inheritance (in land); family homestead; native place; flýja óðul sín, to abandon one’s home, go into exile.* * *n., pl. óðul; in Norse MSS. it is usually contracted before a vowel (whence arose the forms öðli eðli), and owing to a peculiarity in the Norse sound of ð an r is inserted in contracted forms, örðla, orðlom, N. G. L. passim: [akin to aðal, öðli, eðli, = nature; öðlask = adipisci; oðlingr, q. v.; A. S. êðel = patrimony; it is also the parent word of Germ. edel, adel, = noble, nobility, for the nobility of the earliest Teut. communities consisted of the land-owners. From this word also originated mid. Lat. allodium, prob. by inverting the syllables for the sake of euphony (all-od = od-al); oðal or ethel is the vernacular Teut. form, allodium the Latinised form, which is never found in vernacular writers; it may be that the transposition of syllables was due to the th sound in oðal; and hence, again, the word feudal is a compd word, fee-odal, or an odal held as a fee or feif from the king, and answering to heið-launað óðal of the Norse law (heið = fee = king’s pay), N. G. L. i. 91.]B. Nature, inborn quality, property, = aðal, eðli, öðli, q. v.; this seems to be the original sense, þat er eigi at réttu mannsins óðal, Sks. 326 B; þat er helzt byrjar til farmanns óðals, a seaman’s life, 52; þat er kaupmanna óðal (= mercatorum est), 28; jörlum öllum óðal batni, Gh. 21.II. a law term, an allodium, property held in allodial tenure, patrimony. The condition which in the Norse law constitutes an oðal was either an unbroken succession from father to son (er afi hefir afa leift) through three or more generations, N. G. L. i. 91, 237, Gþl. 284; or unbroken possession for thirty or more years, N. G. L. i. 249; or sixty years, Gþl. 284; or it might be acquired through brand-erfð (q. v.), through weregild, barn-fóstr (q. v.); and lastly heið-launað óðal, an allodial fief, was granted for services rendered to the king, see N. G. L. i. 91: the oðal descended to the son, and was opp. to útjarðir ( out-lands), and lausa-fé ( movables), which descended to the daughter, Gþl. 233; yet even a woman, e. g. a baugrygr (q. v.), could hold an oðal, in which case she was called óðals-kona, 92, jörð komin undir snúð ok snældu = an estate come under the rule of the spindle, N. G. L. i. 237; the allit. phrase, arfr ok óðal, 31, Gþl. 250: brigða óðal, N. G. L. i. 86; selja óðal, to sell one’s óðal, 237. The oðal was in a certain sense inalienable within a family, so that even when parted with, the possessor still retained a title (land-brigð, máldagi á landi). In the ancient Scandin. communities the inhabited land was possessed by free oðalsmen (allodial holders), and the king was the lord of the people, but not of the soil. At a later time, when the small communities were merged into great kingdoms, through conquest or otherwise, the king laid hold of the land, and all the ancient oðals were to be held as a grant from the king; such an attempt of king Harold Fairhair in Norway and the earls of Orkney in those islands is recorded in Hkr. Har. S. Hárf. ch. 6, Eg. ch. 4, cp. Ld. ch. 2, Orkn. ch. 8, 30, 80 (in Mr. Dasent’s Ed.); cp. also Hák. S. Goða ch. 1. Those attempts are recorded in the Icel. Sagas as acts of tyranny and confiscation, and as one of the chief causes for the great emigration from the Scandinavian kingdoms during the 9th century (the question of free land here playing the same part as that of free religion in Great Britain in the 17th century). The attempt failed in Norway, where the old oðal institution remains in the main to the present day. Even the attempts of king Harold were, according to historians (Konrad Maurer), not quite analogous to what took place in England after the Conquest, but appear to have taken something like the form of a land-tax or rent; but as the Sagas represent it, it was an attempt towards turning the free odal institution into a feudal one, such as had already taken place among the Teutons in Southern Europe.III. gener. and metaph. usages, one’s native land, homestead, inheritance; the land is called the ‘oðal’ of the reigning king, á Danr ok Danpr dýrar hallir, æðra óðal, en ér hafit, Rm. 45; eignask namtú óðal þegna, allan Noreg, Gauta spjalli, Fms. vi. 26 (in a verse); banna Sveini sín óðul, St. Olave will defend his óðal against Sweyn, 426 (in a verse); flýja óðul sín, to fly one’s óðal, go into exile, Fms. iv. 217; flýja óðul eðr eignir, vii. 25; koma aptr í Noreg til óðala sinna, 196; þeim er þar eru útlendir ok eigi eigu þar óðul, who are strangers and not natives there, Edda 3; öðlask Paradísar óðal, the inheritance of Paradise, 655 viii. 2; himneskt óðal, heavenly inheritance, Greg. 68; njóta þeirra gjafa ok óðala er Adam var útlægr frá rekinn, Sks. 512: allit., jarl ok óðal, earl (or franklin) and odal, Gh. 21.2. spec. phrase, at alda óðali, for everlasting inheritance, i. e. for ever and ever, D. N. i. 229: contr., at alda öðli, id., Grág. i. 264, D.I. i. 266; til alda óðals, for ever, iii. 88: mod., frá, alda öðli, from time immemorial.C. COMPDS: óðalsborinn, óðalsbréf, óðalsbrigð, óðalsjörð, óðalskona, óðalsmaðr, óðalsnautr, óðalsneyti, óðalsréttr, óðalsskipti, óðalstuptir, óðalsvitni. -
17 Allen
m.1 Allen, Allen Stewart Konigsberg.2 Allen, Grace Ethel Cecile Rosalie Allen.3 Allen, Ethan Allen. -
18 Barrymore
m.1 Barrymore, Maurice Barrymore.2 Barrymore, Georgiana Emma Barrymore.3 Barrymore, Lionel Barrymore.4 Barrymore, Ethel Barrymore.5 Barrymore, John Barrymore. -
19 Gracie
m.Gracie, Grace Ethel Cecile Rosalie Allen. -
20 ეტელი
nEthel
См. также в других словарях:
Ethel — ist ein weiblicher englischer Vorname. Herkunft und Bedeutung Der Name Ethel ist ein Kurzform von mit Ethel beginnenden englische Vornamen wie Etheldreda. Das Namenselement ethel entspricht dem deutschen adal und bedeutet „edel“.[1]… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Ethel — may refer to:* Œ, a letter formed from a ligature of o and e. * Ethel (string quartet) * Ethel, Ontario, Canada * Ethel the Frog, a British heavy metal band from the late 70 s * Ethel, Mississippi * Ethel, Missouri * Ethel, Washington * Ethel… … Wikipedia
Ethel — Ethel, MS U.S. town in Mississippi Population (2000): 452 Housing Units (2000): 208 Land area (2000): 0.600855 sq. miles (1.556206 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.600855 sq. miles (1.556206 sq … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Ethel — f English: 19th century revival of an Old English or Continental Germanic short form of the various female personal names beginning with the Germanic element ethel noble, including Ethelburga ‘noble fortress’, ETHELDREDA (SEE Etheldreda), and… … First names dictionary
Ethel, MO — U.S. town in Missouri Population (2000): 100 Housing Units (2000): 55 Land area (2000): 0.238479 sq. miles (0.617658 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.238479 sq. miles (0.617658 sq. km) FIPS code … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Ethel, MS — U.S. town in Mississippi Population (2000): 452 Housing Units (2000): 208 Land area (2000): 0.600855 sq. miles (1.556206 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.600855 sq. miles (1.556206 sq. km) FIPS… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Ethel — Eth el, a. [AS. e[eth]ele, [ae][eth]ele. See {Atheling}.] Noble. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Ethel — Ethel, tatarischer Name der Wolga … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Ethel — fem. proper name, originally a shortening of O.E. ETHELDRED (Cf. Etheldred), Ethelinda, etc., in which the first element means nobility … Etymology dictionary
Ethel — [eth′əl] n. [short for Ethelinda, Etheldred, and other names compounded < OE Æthelu < æthele, noble] a feminine name … English World dictionary
Ethel (XM) — Infobox Radio Station name = Ethel area = United States Canada branding = Ethel slogan = A.K. Alternative Gems airdate = 2001 frequency = XM 47 format = Alternative rock class = Satellite Radio Station owner = XM Satellite Radio website =… … Wikipedia