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61 круто падать
•The curve slopes (or falls) steeply down.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > круто падать
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62 unemployment
nбезработица, незанятость ( рабочей силы)to alleviate unemployment — снижать / сокращать / уменьшать безработицу
to bring down unemployment from... to... — снижать уровень безработицы с... до...
- chronic unemploymentto decrease unemployment — снижать / сокращать / уменьшать безработицу
- concealed unemployment
- cyclical unemployment
- disguised unemployment
- elimination of unemployment
- exporting unemployment
- fall in unemployment
- floating unemployment
- frictional unemployment
- general unemployment
- growing unemployment
- hard-core unemployment
- hidden unemployment
- high rate of unemployment
- incipient unemployment
- increase in unemployment
- increasing unemployment
- involuntary unemployment
- latent unemployment
- long-term unemployment
- mass unemployment
- massive unemployment
- mounting unemployment
- open unemployment
- permanent unemployment
- pocket of unemployment - rise in unemployment
- rising unemployment
- seasonal unemployment
- stagnant unemployment
- structural unemployment
- technological unemployment
- teenage unemployment
- unemployment is at its highest level
- unemployment is down
- unemployment is falling steeply
- unemployment is on the up
- unemployment is on the way down
- unemployment is rampant
- unemployment is rife
- unemployment is rising steeply
- unemployment is running at 22 per cent
- unemployment is steadily declining
- unemployment reaches 50%
- unprecedented unemployment
- voluntary unemployment -
63 bajar
bajar ( conjugate bajar) verbo intransitivo 1 ( acercándose) to come down;◊ bajar por las escaleras to go/come down the stairs;ya bajo I'll be right down ‹ de coche› to get out of sth; ‹de caballo/bicicleta› to get off sth 2 [ hinchazón] to go down; [ temperatura] to fall, drop [ calidad] to deteriorate; [ popularidad] to diminish; verbo transitivo 1 ‹escalera/cuesta› to go down 2 ‹brazo/mano› to put down, lower 3a) bajar algo (de algo) ‹de armario/estante› to get sth down (from sth);‹ del piso de arriba› ( traer) to bring sth down (from sth); ( llevar) to take sth down (to sth) 4 ‹ ventanilla› to open 5 ‹ precio› to lower; ‹ fiebre› to bring down; ‹ volumen› to turn down; ‹ voz› to lower bajarse verbo pronominal 1 ( apearse) bajarse de algo ‹de tren/autobús› to get off sth; ‹ de coche› to get out of sth; ‹de caballo/bicicleta› to get off sth; ‹de pared/árbol› to get down off sth 2 ‹ pantalones› to take down; ‹ falda› to pull down
bajar
I verbo transitivo
1 (descender) to come o go down: bajé corriendo la cuesta, I ran downhill ➣ Ver nota en ir 2 (llevar algo abajo) to bring o get o take down: baja los disfraces del trastero, bring the costumes down from the attic
3 (un telón) to lower (una persiana) to let down (la cabeza) to bow o lower
4 (reducir el volumen) to turn down (la voz) to lower
5 (los precios, etc) to reduce, cut
6 (ropa, dobladillo) tengo que bajar el vestido, I've got to let the hem down
7 Mús tienes que bajar un tono, you've got to go down a tone
II verbo intransitivo
1 to go o come down: bajamos al bar, we went down to the bar
2 (apearse de un tren, un autobús) to get off (de un coche) to get out [de, of]: tienes que bajarte en la siguiente parada, you've got to get off at the next stop
3 (disminuir la temperatura, los precios) to fall, drop: ha bajado su cotización en la bolsa, its share prices have dropped in the stock exchange ' bajar' also found in these entries: Spanish: abaratarse - basura - descender - guardia - irse - a - bandera - hundir - mirada - poder - vista - volumen English: boil over - bow - bring down - climb down - come down - decline - decrease - deflate - descend - dip - down - downgrade - downstairs - draw - drop - fall - force down - get down - get off - go below - go down - guard - hang - heave - inflammation - jump down - jump off - let down - let off - lift down - lower - mark down - move down - pull down - relegate - send down - slide down - slip - slip down - spiral down - steeply - subside - swoop - take down - turn down - walk down - wind down - bring - can - come -
64 круто падать
•The curve slopes (or falls) steeply down.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > круто падать
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65 steep
I adjective1) steil2) (rapid) stark [Preissenkung]; steil [Preisanstieg]II transitive verbthe bill is [a bit] steep — die Rechnung ist [ziemlich] gesalzen (ugs.)
1) (soak) einweichen2) (bathe) baden* * *I [sti:p] adjective1) ((of eg a hill, stairs etc) rising with a sudden rather than a gradual slope: The hill was too steep for me to cycle up; a steep path; a steep climb.) steil2) ((of a price asked or demand made) unreasonable or too great: He wants rather a steep price for his house, doesn't he?; That's a bit steep!) gepfeffert•- academic.ru/70567/steepness">steepness- steeply II [sti:p](to soak thoroughly.) einweichen* * *steep1[sti:p]1. (sharply sloping) steil\steep ramp steile Rampe\steep slope abschüssiger Hang\steep steps hohe Stufen2. (dramatic) drastisch, dramatisch\steep climb Steilflug m\steep decline deutliche Abnahme, starke Senkung\steep dive Sturzflug m\steep increase steiler Anstieg, enormer Zuwachs\steep increase in prices drastische Preissteigerung3. (unreasonably expensive) überteuert\steep bill gepfefferte [o gesalzene] Rechnung fam\steep demand unverschämte Forderung\steep membership fees überzogene Mitgliedsbeiträge\steep taxes überhöhte Steuernsteep2[sti:p]I. vt1. (soak in liquid)the college is \steeped in tradition die Tradition spielt am College eine große Rolle\steeped in history geschichtsträchtigto be \steeped in work in der Arbeit versunken seinII. vi einweichenleave the cloth to \steep in the dye overnight legen Sie den Stoff in die Farblösung und lassen Sie sie über Nacht einwirken* * *I [stiːp]adj (+er)1) steil; fall tiefit's a steep climb — es geht steil hinauf
IIit seems a bit steep that... — es ist ein starkes Stück, dass...
1. vt2) (fig)steeped in vice/prejudice —
a scholar steeped in the classics — ein Gelehrter, der sich in die Klassiker versenkt hat
2. vito leave sth to steep — etw einweichen; (in marinade, dye) etw ziehen lassen
* * *steep1 [stiːp]A adj (adv steeply)1. steil, jäh, abschüssig2. fig jäh3. umga) happig, gepfeffert (Preise)b) enorm (Aufgabe etc)c) toll, unglaublich (Geschichte etc)d) unverschämt (Forderung etc):that’s a bit steep! das ist allerhand!B s steiler Abhangsteep2 [stiːp]A v/t1. eintauchen, -weichen, Tee aufbrühen2. (durch)tränken, imprägnieren ( beide:in, with mit)steep o.s. in a subject sich ganz in ein Thema versenken;steeped in versunken in (dat);steeped in history geschichtsträchtigB s1. Einweichen n, -tauchen n2. a) Lauge f, Bad nb) Einweichgefäß n* * *I adjective1) steil2) (rapid) stark [Preissenkung]; steil [Preisanstieg]II transitive verbthe bill is [a bit] steep — die Rechnung ist [ziemlich] gesalzen (ugs.)
1) (soak) einweichen2) (bathe) baden* * *adj.abschüssig adj. -
66 precipitously
pre·cipi·tous·ly[prɪˈsɪpɪtəsli, AM -t̬-]1. (steeply) steilthe cliff face fell away \precipitously to the raging sea below die Vorderfront der Klippe fiel jäh zu der tosenden See hin abto drop \precipitously schlagartig abfallento rise \precipitously sprunghaft ansteigen* * *[prI'sIpItəslɪ]adv1) (= steeply) steilto fall away precipitously (ground etc) — senkrecht or jäh abfallen
2) (= hastily) überstürzt* * *adv.abschüssig adv. -
67 abruptly
adverb bruscamentetr[ə'brʌptlɪ]1 (suddenly) repentinamente, de repente2 (rudely) bruscamente, de manera ariscaadv.• abruptamente adv.• bruscamente adv.• con aspereza adv.• repentinamente adv.ə'brʌptlia) ( suddenly) <end/stop> repentinamente, súbitamente; <rise/fall> bruscamente, abruptamenteb) ( curtly) <speak/act> abruptamente, con brusquedad[ǝ'brʌptlɪ]ADV1) (=suddenly) [stop, end, leave] bruscamente, repentinamente; [brake] bruscamente2) (=brusquely) [say, ask] bruscamente3) (=steeply) abruptamente* * *[ə'brʌptli]a) ( suddenly) <end/stop> repentinamente, súbitamente; <rise/fall> bruscamente, abruptamenteb) ( curtly) <speak/act> abruptamente, con brusquedad -
68 steigen
to climb; to arise; to rise; to prance; to ascend; to go up* * *stei|gen ['ʃtaign] pret stieg [ʃtiːk] ptp gestiegen [gə'ʃtiːgn] aux sein1. vi1) (= klettern) to climbauf einen Berg/Turm/Baum/eine Leiter stéígen — to climb (up) a mountain/tower/tree/ladder
aufs Fahrrad stéígen — to get on(to) the/one's bicycle
aufs Pferd stéígen — to get on(to) or mount the/one's horse
ins Bett/in die Straßenbahn stéígen — to get into bed/on the tram
in die Badewanne stéígen — to climb or get into the bath
in die Kleider stéígen (inf) — to put on one's clothes
vom Fahrrad/Pferd stéígen — to get off or dismount from the/one's bicycle/horse
aus dem Wasser/der Badewanne/dem Bett stéígen — to get out of the water/the bath/bed
aus dem Zug/Bus/Flugzeug stéígen — to get off the train/bus/plane
in den Zug/Bus stéígen — to get on the train/bus
wer hoch steigt, fällt tief (Prov) — the bigger they come the harder they fall (prov)
2) (= sich aufwärtsbewegen) to rise; (Vogel) to rise, to soar; (Flugzeug, Straße) to climb; (= sich erhöhen) (Preis, Zahl, Gehalt etc) to increase, to go up, to rise; (Fieber) to go up; (= zunehmen) (Chancen, Misstrauen, Ungeduld etc) to increase; (Spannung) to increase, to mount; (= sich aufbäumen Pferd) to rear; (= sich auflösen Nebel) to liftDrachen stéígen lassen — to fly kites
der Gestank/Duft stieg ihm in die Nase — the stench/smell reached his nostrils
das Blut stieg ihm in den Kopf/das Gesicht — the blood rushed to his head/face
stéígen — to rise in sb's estimation
3) (inf = stattfinden) to besteigt die Demo/Prüfung oder nicht? — is the demo/exam on or not?
2. vtTreppen, Stufen to climb (up)* * *1) (to rise or ascend.) climb2) ((of the tide) to rise: The boat left the harbour when the tide began to flow.) flow3) (to increase in size, value etc: The temperature/price has gone up.) go up4) (to rise in level: Prices are mounting steeply.) mount5) (to become greater, larger, higher etc; to increase: Food prices are still rising; His temperature rose; If the river rises much more, there will be a flood; Her voice rose to a scream; Bread rises when it is baked; His spirits rose at the good news.) rise6) (the act or rising: the rising of the sun.) rising7) ((the) act of rising: He had a rapid rise to fame; a rise in prices.) rise* * *stei·gen<stieg, gestiegen>[ˈʃtaign̩]I. vi Hilfsverb: sein1. (klettern) to climbdurchs Fenster \steigen to climb through the window2. (besteigen)aufs Fahrrad \steigen to get on the bikeauf ein Pferd \steigen to get on[to] [or mount] a horse3. (absteigen)vom Fahrrad \steigen to get off the bikevon einer Leiter \steigen to come down off a laddervon einem Pferd \steigen to get off a horse, to dismount4. (einsteigen)er stieg in seine Hose (fam) he put on his trousersin die Badewanne \steigen to climb [or get] into the bathin einen Zug \steigen to get on [or board] a train, to entrain liter5. (aussteigen)aus dem Bett \steigen to get out of bedauf die Bremse/aufs Gas \steigen to step on the brakes/on the accelerator [or fam gas]jdm auf den Fuß \steigen to tread on sb's footdie Tränen stiegen ihr in die Augen her eyes welled up with tearsdas Blut stieg ihm ins Gesicht the blood rushed to his face, he blushedder Sekt ist mir zu Kopf gestiegen the sparkling wine has gone to my headder Duft stieg ihm in die Nase the smell reached his nostrilsin die Luft \steigen to rise [up] [or soar] into the air; Flugzeug to climb [into the air]▪ etw \steigen lassen to fly sthDrachen \steigen lassen to fly kites [or go kite-flying]Luftballons \steigen lassen to release balloons into the airins Examen \steigen to take one's exam9. (sich erhöhen) to rise, to go up; Temperatur a. to climb; Popularität to grow; Preis, Wert to increase, to rise; Flut to swell, to riseder Preis dieses Artikels ist um 10% auf €22 gestiegen the price of this article has risen by 10% to €22in jds Achtung \steigen to rise in sb's estimationdas S\steigen und Sinken der Kurse the rise and fall of prices [or rates11. (sich bessern) Chancen, Stimmung to improvemeine Stimmung stieg my spirits roseheute Abend steigt das Fest des Sportvereins the sport club's having a party tonight13. (sich aufbäumen) Pferd to rearII. vt Hilfsverb: seinStufen/Treppen \steigen to climb [up] steps/stairs* * *1.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) <person, animal, aircraft, etc.> climb; <mist, smoke, sun, object> rise; < balloon> climb, riseauf eine Leiter/die Leiter steigen — climb a ladder/get on to the ladder
aus der Wanne/in die Wanne steigen — get out of/into the bath
in den/aus dem Zug steigen — board or get on/get off or out of the train
ins/aus dem Flugzeug steigen — board/leave the aircraft
der Duft steigt mir in die Nase — the scent gets up my nose; s. auch Kopf 1)
2) (ansteigen, zunehmen) rise (auf + Akk. to, um by) <price, cost, salary, output> increase, rise; <debts, tension> increase, mount; < chances> improvein jemandes Achtung steigen — (fig.) go up or rise in somebody's estimation
3) (ugs.): (stattfinden) be on2.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb; mit sein climb <stairs, steps>* * *steigen; steigt, stieg, ist gestiegenA. v/iauf einen Baum/Berg etcsteigen climb (up) a tree/mountain etc;in den Keller/die Schlucht steigen climb ( oder go) down into the cellar/ravine;aufs Pferd steigen mount ( oder get on) one’s horse;vom Pferd steigen dismount (from one’s horse), get off one’s horse;aufs Fahrrad steigen get on ( oder mount) one’s bicycle;vom Fahrrad steigen get off ( oder dismount from) one’s bicycle;aus dem Wasser steigen come out of the water;in die/aus der Wanne steigen climb ( oder get) into/out of the bath;ins/aus dem Bett steigen umg get into/out of bed;mit jemandem ins Bett steigen umg get into bed with sb;auf den Thron steigen ascend the throne;einen Drachen/Ballon steigen lassen fly a kite/send up a balloon;2. umg (treten) step;auf die Bremse steigen slam the brakes on, step on the brakes;aufs Gas steigen step on the gas (Br auch accelerator);ins Examen steigen fig take an exam3.das Blut stieg ihr ins Gesicht the blood rushed to her face;Tränen stiegen ihr in die Augen tears welled up in her eyes;etwas steigt jemandem in die Nase sth gets up ( oder into) sb’s nose4. (höher werden) auch Spannung: rise; Fieber, Temperatur, Thermometer: auch go up; (zunehmen) go up, increase; bedrohlich: escalate; WIRTSCH, Preise, Kurse etc: rise (bis zu to), go up;die Stimmung stieg merklich the general mood improved noticeably, everyone’s spirits rose markedly;die Ansprüche/Aussichten sind gestiegen demands have grown/prospects have improved5. Pferd: (sich aufbäumen) rear6. umg (stattfinden):heute Abend steigt eine Fete there’s a party (on) tonight, there’s going to be a party tonight;der Coup/Banküberfall steigt am Freitag the coup will happen/the bank heist is going down on Friday; → Achtung 2, Dach, Kopf 5, Wert etcB. v/t:Treppen steigen climb stairs* * *1.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) <person, animal, aircraft, etc.> climb; <mist, smoke, sun, object> rise; < balloon> climb, riseauf eine Leiter/die Leiter steigen — climb a ladder/get on to the ladder
aus der Wanne/in die Wanne steigen — get out of/into the bath
in den/aus dem Zug steigen — board or get on/get off or out of the train
ins/aus dem Flugzeug steigen — board/leave the aircraft
der Duft steigt mir in die Nase — the scent gets up my nose; s. auch Kopf 1)
2) (ansteigen, zunehmen) rise (auf + Akk. to, um by) <price, cost, salary, output> increase, rise; <debts, tension> increase, mount; < chances> improvein jemandes Achtung steigen — (fig.) go up or rise in somebody's estimation
3) (ugs.): (stattfinden) be on2.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb; mit sein climb <stairs, steps>* * *- n.rise n. -
69 decrease
<tech.gen> (sudden reduction, steep decline; e.g. of voltage, pressure) ■ Abfall m<tech.gen> (reduction; e.g. of accidents, sales, turnover) ■ Rückgang m ; Dekrement n wiss.rarvi <tech.gen> (steeply, suddenly; e.g. pressure, voltage) ■ abfallen vivi <tech.gen> (e.g. pressure, temperature) ■ abnehmen vivi <tech.gen> (properties; e.g. quality, strength) ■ nachlassen vivt <tech.gen> ■ erniedrigen vtvt <tech.gen> (cost, expenses) ■ senken vt -
70 pic
pic [pik]masculine nouna. [de montagne, courbe] peak• arriver or tomber à pic (inf) to come just at the right timeb. ( = pioche) pickaxec. ( = oiseau) pic(-vert) (green) woodpecker* * *pik
1.
nom masculin1) (montagne, sommet) peak3) ( de courbe) peak4) ( oiseau) woodpecker
2.
à pic locution adjective [falaise] sheer; [ravin] very steep
3.
à pic locution adverbiale1) ( en pente raide)couler à pic — [personne, objet] to go straight down
2) (colloq) fig* * *pik nm1) (= instrument) pick, pickaxe Grande-Bretagne pickax USA2) (= montagne) peak3) fig, [courbe] peaklors des pics de pollution — when pollution levels peak, when pollution levels reach a peak
4) ZOOLOGIE woodpecker5)à pic (= à la verticale) — sheer, vertically
La falaise tombe à pic dans la mer. — The cliff drops sheer into the sea., The cliff drops vertically into the sea.
couler à pic [bateau] — to go straight down, to sink straight to the bottom
6)à pic (= à point nommé) — just at the right time
Tu es arrivé à pic. — You arrived just at the right time.
tomber à pic (= arriver à point nommé) — to come just at the right time
* * *A nm1 (montagne, sommet) peak;3 fig ( de courbe) peak; pic de natalité peak in the birthrate; pic de pollution air pollution peak;4 ( oiseau) woodpecker.C à pic loc adv1 ( en pente raide) s'élever à pic [paroi, falaise] to rise sheer; tomber à pic [falaise] to fall in a sheer drop; couler à pic [personne, objet] to go straight down ou straight to the bottom;2 ○[arriver, se trouver] ( juste à temps) in the nick of time; ( au bon moment) just at the right moment.[pik] nom masculin————————à pic locution adverbiale1. [verticalement] straight downcouler à pic to go straight down ou straight to the bottomtu tombes ou tu arrives à pic, j'allais t'appeler you've come just at the right time ou right on cue, I was about to call you -
71 ♦ rise
♦ rise /raɪz/n.1 aumento; crescita: a rise in prices (o a price rise) un aumento dei prezzi; a rise in temperature [unemployment], un aumento della temperatura [della disoccupazione]; Prices are on the rise, i prezzi sono in aumento; pay rise, aumento salariale; big rise, forte aumento; a sharp rise, un brusco rialzo; steady rise, continuo (o costante) aumento2 ascesa: the rise of a politician, l'ascesa di un uomo politico; rise to power [fame], ascesa al potere [al successo]; the rise and fall of the British Empire, l'ascesa e il declino dell'impero britannico5 (ingl.) aumento (di stipendio): I asked my employer for a rise, ho chiesto al mio principale un aumento (di stipendio)7 [u] ( di pesce) affioramento; il salire a fior d'acqua ( per cibarsi): I fished all day but didn't get a rise, ho pescato tutto il giorno ma non si è visto neanche un pesce8 [u] altezza; livello: The tidal rise is twenty feet, l'altezza della marea è di venti piedi ( sei metri)11 (teatr.) alzata del sipario● (geogr.) continental rise, rilievo continentale □ (naut.) the rise and fall of the tide, il movimento alterno della marea □ (naut.) the rise of the tide, il flusso della marea □ to give rise to, dare origine a: The proposition gave rise to an extensive debate, la proposta ha dato origine a un ampio dibattito □ (fam.) to take (o to get) a rise out of sb., far perdere la pazienza a q.; fare uscire dai gangheri q.♦ (to) rise /raɪz/A v. i.1 ( spesso to rise up) salire: Thick black smoke was rising in the sky, uno spesso fumo nero si alzava nel cielo2 ( spesso to rise up) alzarsi: He rose from the chair [from the table], si è alzato dalla sedia [da tavola]; They rise at dawn, si alzano all'alba; to rise to one's feet, alzarsi in piedi; to rise to the surface, salire in superficie4 aumentare; salire; ( di fiume, ecc.) aumentare di livello: Prices are rising, i prezzi aumentano; Temperatures are rising steadily, le temperature continuano a salire; Our net income rose 10% last year, l'anno scorso il nostro utile netto è aumentato del 10%; to rise in price [value], aumentare di prezzo [di valore]; The dollar is rising against the euro, il dollaro sta salendo rispetto all'euro; In the flood the river rose three feet, con la piena il fiume è cresciuto di tre piedi; The Tiber is rising, il livello del Tevere sta salendo; The tide is rising, si sta alzando la marea; Tensions are rising in the Middle East, cresce la tensione in Medio Oriente; He felt anger rise in him, sentiva la rabbia crescere dentro di lui; Her spirits rose at the prospect of seeing him again, all'idea di rivederlo, le si è sollevato il morale5 (fig.) elevarsi; far carriera: to rise through the ranks, venire dalla gavetta; to rise to prominence [fame], raggiungere una posizione di rilievo [la notorietà]; to rise to power, salire al potere; to rise to the top, arrivare al vertice6 ( spesso to rise up) ( di una strada, del terreno, ecc.) essere in salita; ( di un edificio, una montagna, ecc.) ergersi; ( di capelli, peli) rizzarsi: The road rises fairly steeply past the bend, la strada diventa piuttosto ripida dopo la curva; A snow-capped mountain rose up on our left, un monte dalla cima innevata si ergeva alla nostra sinistra; a tree that rises twenty feet, un albero alto venti piedi; I felt the hairs rising on the back of my neck, mi si sono sentito rizzare i peli in testa7 (= to rise up) insorgere; sollevarsi: The people rose against their oppressors, il popolo è insorto contro gli oppressori; to rise up in rebellion, sollevarsi in rivolta8 ( di un fiume) nascere: The Thames rises in the Cotswold Hills, il Tamigi nasce nelle Cotswold Hills12 ( di un gonfiore, una vescica, ecc.) formarsi; spuntare: a skin disease in which blisters rise on slight pressure, una malattia della pelle in cui delle vesciche si formano a una lieve pressione13 ( dello stomaco) rivoltarsi: My stomach rose at the smell, mi si è rivoltato lo stomaco all'odoreB v. t.● to rise again, risorgere □ (fig.) to rise from the ashes, risorgere dalle ceneri □ to rise from the dead (o the grave), resuscitare □ to be rising forty, essere vicino ai quarant'anni □ Christ is risen, Cristo è risorto □ (fam.) Rise and shine!, sveglia!; in piedi! -
72 steep
I [stiːp]••II 1. [stiːp]that's a bit steep! — BE colloq. è un po' troppo!
2.to steep sth. in — immergere qcs. in
verbo intransitivo immergersi* * *I [sti:p] adjective1) ((of eg a hill, stairs etc) rising with a sudden rather than a gradual slope: The hill was too steep for me to cycle up; a steep path; a steep climb.)2) ((of a price asked or demand made) unreasonable or too great: He wants rather a steep price for his house, doesn't he?; That's a bit steep!)•- steeply II [sti:p](to soak thoroughly.)* * *I [stiːp] adj- er comp - est superl (gen) ripido (-a), (cliff) scosceso (-a), (increase, drop) drastico (-a), fig, (fam: price) alto (-a), (demands) eccessivo (-a), (story) inverosimileII [stiːp] vtit's a bit steep! fig fam — è un po' troppo!
to steep (in) — mettere a bagno (in), Culin lasciare in infusione
* * *I [stiːp]••II 1. [stiːp]that's a bit steep! — BE colloq. è un po' troppo!
2.to steep sth. in — immergere qcs. in
verbo intransitivo immergersi -
73 спадать
•Then the pulse decays ( away).
•The curve slopes down from 0°C toward the eutectic point.
•The charge and the voltage decay with the same time constant.
•When the speed falls (or drops) below this level,...
•The observation curves fall off steeply.
•The current grows to two maxima in opposite directions and dies away to two minima during each cycle.
IIРусско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > спадать
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74 steil abfallen
vi <tech.allg> ■ fall off steeply vi -
75 drop
<tech.gen> (sudden reduction, steep decline; e.g. of voltage, pressure) ■ Abfall m<tech.gen> (of a physical quantity, value) ■ Abnahme fpract <tech.gen> ■ Höhenunterschied m<tech.gen> (reduction; e.g. of accidents, sales, turnover) ■ Rückgang m ; Dekrement n wiss.rar<build.hydr> (across a dam, weir etc.) ■ Wasserspiegeldifferenz f ; Wasserspiegelunterschied m prakt ; Stau m< hydr> ■ Fallstufe fv <tech.gen> ■ tropfen vvi <tech.gen> (steeply, suddenly; e.g. pressure, voltage) ■ abfallen vivi <tech.gen> (go down suddenly; e.g. pressure, temperature) ■ fallen vi -
76 brat
abrupt, sharp, short* * *adj( stejl) steep ( fx slope),( stejlere, F) precipitous ( fx slope);( pludselig) sudden, abrupt ( fx transition, change; his dream came to an abrupt end); headlong ( fx fall);adv steeply, precipitously; suddenly, abruptly;[ standse brat] stop short,( omgående også) stop in one's tracks;( med objekt) bring up short;(se også opvågnen). -
77 discendere
descend( trarre origine) be a descendant (da of), be descended (da from)da veicoli, da cavallo alight (da from)* * *discendere v. intr.1 to go* down, to come* down, (form.) to descend: l'angelo discese dal cielo, the angel descended from heaven; il fiume discende verso il mare, the river runs down to the sea (o flows towards the sea) // discendere a terra, ( approdare) to land (o to go ashore); discendere da un'auto, to get out of a car; discendere da cavallo, to dismount; discendere dal treno, to get off (o to get out of) the train // discendere in basso, (fig.) to sink2 ( declinare) to descend, to slope down: il giardino discende verso il fiume, the garden descends (o slopes down) to the river; le montagne discendevano bruscamente verso ovest, the hills fell steeply away to the west3 ( di astri) to sink*, to set*5 ( trarre origine) to descend; to come* from: discendere da un re, to descend (o to be descended) from a king; discendere da una nobile famiglia, to come from a noble family6 ( conseguire) to follow, to proceed: ne discende che..., it follows that...◆ v.tr. to descend, to go* down, to come* down: discese le scale, he descended (o went down o came down) the stairs.* * *1. [diʃ'ʃendere]vb irreg vi (aus essere)1) (scendere) to come (o go) down, descenddiscendere da — (treno) to get off, (macchina) to get out of, (tetto) to get down from
discendere da cavallo — to dismount, get off one's horse
2)discendere da — to be descended from, come from2. vt(scale) to come (o go) down, descend* * *[diʃ'ʃendere] 1.verbo transitivo1) (scendere) to go* down [ scala]2) (percorrere) to come* down [ fiume]; to run* [ rapide]2.discendere in linea diretta da — to be a direct descendant of, to be directly descended from
2) (derivare)ne discende che... — it follows that
3) (scendere)4) (digradare) to descend, to slope down* * *discendere/di∫'∫endere/ [10]1 (scendere) to go* down [ scala](aus. essere)1 (avere origine) discendere da to descend from; discendere in linea diretta da to be a direct descendant of, to be directly descended from2 (derivare) ne discende che... it follows that...3 (scendere) discendere dal treno to get off the train4 (digradare) to descend, to slope down. -
78 ♦ steep
♦ steep (1) /sti:p/A a.1 erto; ripido; scosceso: a steep hill, un erto colle; una salita ripida; a steep descent, una discesa ripida3 (fam.) eccessivo; esorbitante: a steep price, un prezzo esorbitante (o salato); DIALOGO → - Wrong bill- «What's the total?» DIALOGO → - Wrong bill- «£65? That's a bit steep!», «Quant'è il totale?» «£65? Ma è un po' troppo!»4 (fam.) assurdo; esagerato; illogico; inverosimile: a steep statement, un'affermazione esagerata; It seems a bit steep that…, mi sembra davvero assurdo (fam.: mi pare grossa) che…B n.erta; china; pendio; precipizio● steep fall, scoscendimento □ (autom., USA) «steep hill 15%» ( cartello), «pendenza del 15%» □ a steep incline, una forte pendenza; un'erta □ (fin.) a steep rate of interest, un altissimo tasso d'interessesteeply avv. steep (2) /sti:p/n. [uc]1 bagno; immersione(to) steep /sti:p/A v. t.1 bagnare; immergere ( anche fig.); inzuppare; tuffare: Steep the vegetables in water, tuffa la verdura nell'acqua!; The square was steeped in moonlight, la piazza era immersa nel chiarore lunare; steeped in slumber, immerso nel sonno2 imbevere ( anche fig.); impregnare; saturare: He was steeped in Indian philosophy, era imbevuto di filosofia indiana3 (ind.) macerareB v. i.1 essere in macerazione; macerarsi -
79 abruptly
abruptly [əˈbrʌptlɪ]a. [stop, move, turn] brusquementb. [say, ask] abruptementc. [rise, fall] en pente raide* * *[ə'brʌptlɪ]1) ( suddenly) brusquement2) ( curtly) avec brusquerie3) ( steeply) à pic -
80 steil abfallen
Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch der Elektrotechnik und Elektronik > steil abfallen
См. также в других словарях:
steeply — steep steep [stiːp] adjective 1. steep prices, charges etc are unusually expensive: • Consumers are paying relatively steep prices for dairy products. • Anyone caught fiddling their expenses will face steep fines. 2. a steep increase or rise in… … Financial and business terms
fall — 1 verb, past tense fell past participle fallen 1 MOVE DOWNWARDS (I) to move downwards from a higher position to a lower position: The rain had started falling again. (+out of/from/on): Wyatt fell from a second floor window. (+down): I m always… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Fall River, Massachusetts — Infobox Settlement official name = Fall River, Massachusetts imagesize = image caption = Downtown Fall River nickname = The Scholarship City motto = We ll Try image mapsize = 250px map caption = Location in Bristol County in Massachusetts… … Wikipedia
fall — fall1 W1S1 [fo:l US fo:l] v past tense fell [fel] past participle fallen [ˈfo:lən US ˈfo:l ] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(move downwards)¦ 2¦(stop standing/walking etc)¦ 3¦(decrease)¦ 4¦(become)¦ 5¦(belong to a group)¦ 6 fall short of something 7 fall victim/prey… … Dictionary of contemporary English
fall */*/*/ — I UK [fɔːl] / US [fɔl] verb [intransitive] Word forms fall : present tense I/you/we/they fall he/she/it falls present participle falling past tense fell UK [fel] / US past participle fallen UK [ˈfɔːlən] / US [ˈfɔlən] 1) to move quickly downwards… … English dictionary
Fall line — In geomorphology, a fall line (at times referred to as a fall zone) marks the area where an upland region (continental bedrock) and a coastal plain (coastal alluvia) meet. Technically, a fall line is an unconformity. A fall line is typically… … Wikipedia
fall — ▪ I. fall fall 1 [fɔːl ǁ fɒːl] verb fell PASTTENSE [fel] fallen PASTPART [ˈfɔːlən ǁ ˈfɒː ] 1. [intransitive] to go down to a lower price, level, amount etc: • Sales of new passenger cars in Europe fell 9.6% … Financial and business terms
fall — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 accident ADJECTIVE ▪ bad, nasty, terrible ▪ She took a bad fall while out riding. ▪ accidental VERB + FALL … Collocations dictionary
fall*/*/*/ — [fɔːl] (past tense fell [fel] ; past participle fallen [ˈfɔːlən] ) verb I 1) to move quickly downwards from a higher position by accident I keep falling off my bike.[/ex] It s not unusual for small children to fall out of bed.[/ex] 2) to go… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
steeply — adv. Steeply is used with these verbs: ↑ascend, ↑climb, ↑decline, ↑descend, ↑dip, ↑drop, ↑fall, ↑incline, ↑increase, ↑rise, ↑slope … Collocations dictionary
steeply — Ⅰ. steep [1] ► ADJECTIVE 1) rising or falling sharply; almost perpendicular. 2) (of a rise or fall in an amount) very large or rapid. 3) informal (of a price or demand) not reasonable; excessive. 4) informal (of a claim or account) exaggerated. ► … English terms dictionary