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faculty

  • 1 faculty

    ['fækəlti]
    plural - faculties; noun
    1) (a power of the mind: the faculty of reason.) διανοητική ικανότητα,δύναμη
    2) (a natural power of the body: the faculty of hearing.) ικανότητα
    3) (ability or skill: She has a faculty for saying the right thing.) ικανότητα,χάρισμα
    4) ((often with capital) a section of a university: the Faculty of Arts/Science.) πανεπιστημιακή σχολή

    English-Greek dictionary > faculty

  • 2 Faculty

    subs.
    Capacity: P. and V. δναμις, ἡ.
    Power, licence: P. and V. ἐξουσία, ἡ.
    The faculties of the body: P. αἱ δυνάμεις.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Faculty

  • 3 faculty

    διεύθυνση

    English-Greek new dictionary > faculty

  • 4 faculties

    plural; see faculty

    English-Greek dictionary > faculties

  • 5 Fancy

    subs.
    Imagination ( the faculty): P. φαντασία, ἡ.
    Conceit, notion: P. and V. δόξα, ἡ, δόκησις, ἡ, δόξασμα, τό, ἔννοια, ἡ, V. δόκημα, τό, Ar. and P. νόημα, τό.
    Imagination ( as opposed to reality): P. and V. δόξα, ἡ, δόκησις, ἡ.
    False picture ( as opposed to truth): P. εἴδωλον, τό.
    Heard ye a cry or has some vain fancy cozened me: V. βοῆς ἠκούσατʼ ἢ δοκὼ κενὴ ὑπῆλθέ με (Eur., El. 747).
    Castle in the air: P. εὐχή, ἡ.
    Mind: P. and V. νοῦς, ὁ, Ar. and P. δινοια, ἡ, Ar. and V. φρήν, ἡ, or pl. (rare P.); see Mind.
    Suspicion: P. and V. πόνοια, ἡ, ποψία, ἡ.
    Speculation: P. θεωρία, ἡ.
    Take a fancy ( to things): P. and V. ἐπιθυμεῖν (gen.); see Desire, Like.
    Take a fancy ( to persons): P. φιλοφρονεῖσθαι (acc.).
    Take ( a person's) fancy: use attract, please.
    ——————
    v. trans.
    P. and V δοξάζειν, Ar. and V. δοκεῖν (rare P.) (absol.).
    Suspect: P. and V. ποπτεύειν, πονοεῖν.
    Like: P. ἡδέως ἔχειν (dat.); see Like.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Fancy

  • 6 Function

    subs.
    Task: P. and V. ἔργον, τό, V. χρέος, τό, τέλος, τό.
    Duty: P. and V. τάξις, ἡ; see Task.
    Faculty: P. and V. δναμις, ἡ.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Function

  • 7 Imagination

    subs.
    The faculty: P. φαντασία, ἡ (Plat.).
    Fancy, conceit: P. and V. δόξα, ἡ, δόκησις, ἡ, δόξασμα, τό, ἔννοια, ἡ, V. δόκημα, τό.
    Opposed to reality: P. and V. δόξα, ἡ, δόκησις, ἡ.
    He was at Mycenae in imagination: V. ἦν ἐν Μυκήναις τῷ λόγῳ (Eur., H.F. 963).
    False picture ( as opposed to truth): P. εἴδωλον, τό.
    Mind: P. and V. νοῦς, ὁ, Ar. and P. δινοια, ἡ, Ar. and V. φρήν, ἡ, or pl.; see Mind.
    Suspicion: P. and V. πόνοια, ἡ, ποψία, ἡ.
    Speculation: P. θεωρία, ἡ.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Imagination

  • 8 Organ

    subs.
    Organ of sight, hearing, etc.: P. ὄργανον, τό (Plat., Theaet. 185A).
    Faculty: P. δύναμις, ἡ.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Organ

  • 9 Reason

    subs.
    Rational faculty: P. and V. λόγος, ὁ; use mind.
    Cause: P. and V. αἰτία, ἡ, Ar. and P. αἴτιον, τό.
    Plea: P. and V. λόγος, ὁ, πρόφασις, ἡ, σκῆψις, ἡ.
    In reason: see Reasonably.
    Anything in reason: P. ὁτιοῦν τῶν δυνατῶν.
    It stands to reason: P. and V. εἰκός (ἐστι), εὔλογόν (ἐστι).
    By reason of: P. and V. δι (acc.), ἕνεκα (gen.), χριν (gen.) (Plat.), V. εἵνεκα (gen.), Ar. and V. ἕκατι (gen.), οὕνεκα (gen.), sometimes in P. παρά (acc.) (Dem. 545).
    For what reason? P. and V. δι τ; τοῦ χριν; V. ἐκ τνος λόγου; see Why.
    For no reason: V. ἐξ οὐδένος λόγου.
    For other reasons: P. and V. ἄλλως.
    For many reasons we may expect victory: P. κατὰ πολλὰ εἰκὸς ἐπικρατῆσαι (Thuc.).
    ——————
    v. intrans.
    P. and V. λογίζεσθαι, P. συλλογίζεσθαι.
    Reason rightly: P. and V. ὀρθῶς γιγνώσκειν.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Reason

См. также в других словарях:

  • Faculty — Fac ul*ty, n.; pl. {Faculties}. [F. facult?, L. facultas, fr. facilis easy (cf. facul easily), fr. fecere to make. See {Fact}, and cf. {Facility}.] 1. Ability to act or perform, whether inborn or cultivated; capacity for any natural function;… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Faculty — may refer to:In education: * Faculty (university), a division of a university or the academic staff of a university * A collective name for the teachers in schools in the United StatesIn other uses: * Faculty (instrument), an instrument or… …   Wikipedia

  • faculty — [fak′əl tē] n. pl. faculties [ME & OFr faculte < L facultas < facilis: see FACILE] 1. Obs. the power to do; ability to perform an action 2. any natural or specialized power of a living organism; sense [the faculty of hearing, speech, etc.]… …   English World dictionary

  • faculty — I (ability) noun ableness, adroitness, aptitude, capability, capacity, cleverness, competence, competency, cunning, deftness, dexterity, enablement, endowment, equipment, expertise, expertness, fitness, flair, gift, handiness, knack, know how,… …   Law dictionary

  • faculty — late 14c., ability, means, resources, from O.Fr. faculté (14c.) skill, accomplishment, learning, and directly from L. facultatem (nom. facultas) power, ability, wealth, from *facli tat s, from facilis (see FACILE (Cf. facile)). Academic sense… …   Etymology dictionary

  • faculty — [n1] ability, skill adroitness, aptitude, aptness, bent, capability, capacity, cleverness, dexterity, facility, flair, forte, genius, gift, instinct, intelligence, knack, knowing way around*, leaning, nose*, peculiarity, penchant, pistol*, power …   New thesaurus

  • faculty — ► NOUN (pl. faculties) 1) an inherent mental or physical power. 2) an aptitude or talent. 3) chiefly Brit. a group of university departments concerned with a major division of knowledge. 4) N. Amer. the teaching or research staff of a university… …   English terms dictionary

  • faculty — noun 1 natural ability of the body/mind ADJECTIVE ▪ higher ▪ the evolution of man s higher faculties ▪ cognitive, intellectual, mental, rational ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

  • faculty — n. division of a university (esp. BE; CE has school) 1) a faculty of education; law; medicine; science teaching staff (esp. AE) 2) on the faculty (she is on the faculty) 3) a college, university; school faculty 4) the standing ( permanent )… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • faculty — 01. An unknown businessperson has donated over $10 million towards the construction of a new medical [faculty] at the university. 02. Our French professor took the entire class to lunch at the [faculty] club. 03. Chocolate was only accepted by… …   Grammatical examples in English

  • faculty — fac|ul|ty [ˈfækəlti] n plural faculties [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: faculté, from Latin facultas ability ] 1.) a department or group of related departments within a university faculty of ▪ the Faculty of Law ▪ the Engineering Fac …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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