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from the men of

  • 1 men

    I.
    iz.
    1. reach; eskuaren \menean within a hand's reach; \men-\menean duzu you've got it at your very fingertips
    b. possession, power; zure \menean dituzun ondasunak the possessions you have at your command; haien \menean erori zen he fell into their {grasp || clutches}
    c. power, control; deabruaren \menetik ateratzeko in order to save him from the devil's grasp; bere \menera ekarriko du he'll bring him under his thumb | he'll come to dominate him; pairatu zen Pilatusen \menean he suffered under the command of Pilate; ez da bere \menean horren egitea (I) it is not within his {power || jurisdiction}
    2. ( formaltasuna) propriety; \men-\menetik daki hori egiten he knows how to do that quite properly io.
    1. obedient, compliant, yielding; seme \mena an obediant son; lehengo gurasoek gaur baino askoz \menago bazi zituzten euren umeak parents before used to raise their children to be more obedient than they do today
    2. ( serioa) proper, seemly; gizon zuhur, zintzo, \menak proper, honest, and wise men
    II.
    iz.
    1. ( kinka larria) difficult moment; urgency, gravity, critical moment; orduan da \mena, orduan da mina, orduan da azken adina then comes the critical juncture, then the critical moment, then the final age
    2. ( zoria, puntua) point, verge; menditik erortzeko \menean nengoen I was on the verge of falling off the mountain; dena erortzeko \menean dago everything's on the point of collapse
    b. ( azkenekoa) end; Jainkoak on derizku, maite gaitu, Bere odolaz erosi gaitu, \men-\menean gaitezenean eztia zaigu falta God cares for us, He loves us, he has redeemed us with His blood, when we are at the very end we lack serenity
    III.
    iz. ( beharra) need; hori ez da nehoren \men he is in need of no one; nehoren \men gabe without needing anyone; ez naiz haien \men I don't need them | I don't have any need for them
    IV.
    iz. ( zentzua) sense

    Euskara Ingelesa hiztegiaren > men

  • 2 men

    I sg - menen (menet), pl - men
    тра́вма ж, уве́чье с, теле́сное поврежде́ние
    II
    но, а, же, одна́ко

    vel..., men —...хотя́..., но...

    ja, men..., — но ведь...

    ikke blot..., men øgså... — не то́лько..., но и...

    * * *
    but, if, only
    * * *
    I. (en) injury;
    [ varig men] injury of a permanent character; permanent injury (el.
    ill-effects);
    [ endnu have men af] still be suffering from the after-effects of.
    II. (et -ner) but;
    [ jeg tænkte jo nok der var et men!] I thought there was a catch (el. snag) somewhere!
    III. conj but;
    [ men dog!] tut-tut! dear me!

    Danish-English dictionary > men

  • 3 from

    مِن \ by: (showing how sth. is done): We hold things by the handle. We know people by name. We learn by experience. We earn money by working. from: showing the time that sth. started: I waited from six o’clock till eight, showing where sth. began or was obtained Are men descended from monkeys? He read aloud from the newspaper, showing cause He suffered from stomach pains, showing the lower limit of costs, numbers, etc. New bicycles cost from $60 to $90 each, showing a change The price rose from 20 pence to 25 pence, showing difference I don’t know one from the other, showing the place that one has left He arrived from Glasgow. of: (after a noun) showing contents, amount, kind, etc.: a cup of coffee (a cup that contains coffee); a cupful of coffee (enough coffee to fill a cup); a pound of sugar (sugar that weighs a pound); a piece of bread (not a whole loaf), (after an adj. or verb) concerning; about: I’m sure of it. She’s afraid of mice, (after a verb) showing a cause He died of hunger, (after an adj.) showing who did sth. and how he did it It was kind of your father to invite me (Your father was kind...), (after a participle) showing how sth. is formed a dress made of silk. than: used in comparing two objects; here the second subject and verb are always left out: I like you better than him (I like you better than I like him), used in comparing two subjects; it is better to put in the second verb, although some writers leave it out He is taller than I (am). He runs faster than I (do).

    Arabic-English glossary > from

  • 4 men-

    4 vb. "go" VT47:11, cf. VT42:30, VT49:23, attested in the aorist menë in the sentence imbi Menel Cemenyë menë Ráno tië "between Heaven and Earth goes the path of the Moon". In the verb nanwen- “return” or go/come back, -men- is changed to -wen- following nan- “back” etymological form cited as nan-men-, PE17:166. – In examples from VT49:23, 24, Tolkien used men- in the sense of “go as far as”: 1st person sg. aorist menin menin coaryanna “I arrive at or come/get to his house”, endingless aorist menë, present tense ména- “is on point of arrival, is just coming to an end”, past tense mennë “arrived, reached”, in this tense usually with locative rather than allative mennen sís “I arrived here”, perfect eménië “has just arrived”, future menuva “will arrive”. All of these examples were first written with the verb as ten- rather than men-, Tolkien then emending the initial consonant.

    Quettaparma Quenyallo (Quenya-English) > men-

  • 5 men who rapidly slides down a rope from a helicopter to the ground

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > men who rapidly slides down a rope from a helicopter to the ground

  • 6 jarðar-men

    n. [Dan. jordsmon], a sod, turf, Lat. caespes, Landn. 293 (in a verse), Eb. (in a verse); ganga undir jarðarmen: for the heathen rite of creeping under a sod partially detached from the earth and letting the blood mix with the mould, see Gísl. 11, Fbr. 6 new Ed.: as an ordeal, Ld. ch. 18: as a disgrace, similar to the Lat. jugum subire, Nj. 181, Vd. ch. 33.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > jarðar-men

  • 7 not available for fucking, meaning straight men (the original meaning of the abbreviation)

    General subject: naff (from Polari, a secret language of gay men in Britain in the middle of the 20th century)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > not available for fucking, meaning straight men (the original meaning of the abbreviation)

  • 8 not available for fucking, meaning straight men

    General subject: (the original meaning of the abbreviation) naff (from Polari, a secret language of gay men in Britain in the middle of the 20th century)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > not available for fucking, meaning straight men

  • 9 van deze hoogte kan men de hele vlakte overkijken

    van deze hoogte kan men de hele vlakte overkijken

    Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > van deze hoogte kan men de hele vlakte overkijken

  • 10 ἀποσκευή

    -ῆς N 1 18-6-0-2-6=32 Gn 14,12; 15,14; 31,18; 34,29; 43,8
    baggage, household Nm 16,27; id. (including pers. as well as inanimate objects) Gn 14,12; a man’s wife, children and other members of the household Ex 10,24; all persons apart from the full-grown men or apart from the men fit for military service Ex 12,37; impedimenta Jdt 7,2
    Cf. HARL 1986a, 64; HOLLEAUX 1942 15-26; KIESSLING 1927, 240-247; LE BOULLUEC 1989, 39; LEE, J.
    1983, 101-107; →LSJ Suppl; LSJ RSuppl

    Lust (λαγνεία) > ἀποσκευή

  • 11 ὀρσοθύρη

    Grammatical information: f.
    Meaning: esp. a side-door or side-opening at the back, leading from the men's hall in the λαύρη to the rooms upstairs (χ 126, 132, 333); s. Wace Journ ofHellStud. 71, 203ff. w. lit., Bérard REGr. 67, 18 ff.); also sens. obsc. (Semon. 17).
    Origin: XX [etym. unknown]
    Etymology: Explanation debated. One is tempted to identify the first element with ὄρρος, ὄρσος `hindmost' (Doederlein Hom. Gloss. 2. 340; thus v. Wilamowitz Eur. Her. 376 n., Wackernagel Unt. 226, Lasso de la Vega Emer. 23, 114ff.). This interpretation is as regards the matter and stile without objections; cf. παλίν-ορσος, ἄψ-ορρος and Wackernagel l.c. Others explain it as "high door" connecting either Skt. r̥ṣvá- `high' or varṣ- in várṣ-man- n. `culmen' (Froehde BB 3, 19 ff., Kalén Quaest. gramm. gr. 75ff., extensice w. lit., also on εἰρεθύρη [H.] and ἔρθυρις [EM], WP. 1,138; similar Büchner RhM 83, 97 ff., not convincing; s. also Risch IF 59, 20). -- In the same sphere belongs ὀρρόση-λος ὀδός (cod. ὁδ-). Ίταλιῶται H.; after Kalén l.c. "high threshold". -- With ὀρσο- also: ὀρσο-λόπος surn. of Ares (Anacr. 70) with ὀρσολοπ-εύω (metr. for - έω) `attack, revile' (h. Merc. 308, Max. 102), - έομαι `be teased, disquieted' (A. Pers. 10); ὀρσο-λόπος therefore `attacker v.t.', prop. = ὁ λέπων τὸν ὄρρον (sc. τοῦ φυγόντος πολεμίου); s. Schwyzer Glotta 12, 21ff. (with Müller-Strübing), Lasso de la Vega a.o. Diff. Kalén l.c. ("Hochprahler"). -- ὀρσο-δάκνη f. name of an insect that eats buds (Arist.); naming motive unknown. Unclear also ὀρσοί τῶν ἀρνῶν οἱ ἔσχατοι γενόμενοι H.; the similarity with ἕρσαι (s.v.) jas long been observed (to be rejected Lasso de la Vega l.c).
    Page in Frisk: 2,428

    Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὀρσοθύρη

  • 12 φόρος

    -ου + N 2 0-25-0-6-13=44 Jos 19,48a; JgsA 1,28.29.30.31
    tribute 2 Sm 20,24; levy 1 Kgs 5,27; paying of tribute Jos 19,48a
    *1 Kgs 10,15 τῶν φόρων the tributes (of)-ישׁמענ for MT ישׁמאנ from the men of
    Cf. BICKERMAN 1980, 58-59; DANIEL, S. 1966, 222; LLEWELYN 1994 127(n.60); →NIDNTT; TWNT

    Lust (λαγνεία) > φόρος

  • 13 mabeyin

    ,-yni 1. relations between two people. 2. formerly room, hall, or suite separating the women´s quarters from the men´s quarters (in a large house or palace).

    Saja Türkçe - İngilizce Sözlük > mabeyin

  • 14 FRÁ

    * * *
    I) prep. with dat.
    1) from (ganga frá lögbergi);
    2) away from (nökkut frá öðrum mönnum);
    3) of time, alit frá eldingu, all along from daybreak;
    dag frá degi, one day after another;
    4) from among, beyond;
    gera sik auðkendan frá öðrum mönnum, to make oneself conspicuous;
    frá líkindum, against likelihood;
    6) of, about;
    er mér svá frá sagt konungi, I am told so about the king;
    7) as adv. away;
    hverfa frá, to turn away;
    til ok frá, to and fro;
    héðan í frá, hence, henceforlh;
    þar út í frá, secondly, next.
    II) from fregna.
    * * *
    prep. with dat., sometimes with í or á prefixed, ífrá, áfrá, cp. Swed. ifrån; áfra, Fms. vi. 326, 439, viii. 25, ix. 508, x. 408; í frá, xi. 16, 137, 508, Grág. ii. 30, Nj. 83, 108, passim: [Goth. fram; A. S. fram, from; Engl. from; O. H. G. fram; again in the Scandin., Swed. från; Dan. fra; Ormul. fra; so also Engl. fro (in to and fro and froward) is a Dan. form, but from a Saxon]:—from, vide af, p. 3, col. 2; ganga frá lögbergi, Nj. 87; frá landi, Ld. 118; ofan frá fjöllum, Ísl. ii. 195; frá læknum, 339: with adv. denoting direction, skamt frá ánni, Nj. 94; skamt frá landi, Ld.; upp frá bæ Una, Fs. 33, Ld. 206; niðr frá Mælifells-gili, Landn. 71; ofan frá Merki-á, Eg. 100; ut frá Unadal, Fs. 31; norðr frá garði, Nj. 153; norðr frá dyrum, Fms. viii. 25; austr frá, ix. 402; suðr frá Noregi, x. 271; skamt frá vatninu, Ld. 268; allt frá ( all the way from) Gnúpu-skörðum, 124: ellipt., inn frá, útar frá, Nj. 50: with the indecl. particle er, vetfang þeim er frá ( from which) var kvatt, Grág. (Kb.)
    β. with names of hills, rivers, or the like, from, but ‘at’ is more freq., vide p. 26; frá Ósi, Eirekr frá Ósi, Þórð. 8 new Ed.; Þórðr frá Höfða, Ld. 188, 200; frá Mosfelli, frá Hlíðarenda, Landn., Nj. passim.
    2. denoting aloof; brott frá öðrum húsum, aloof from other houses, Eg. 203; nökkut frá ( aloof from) öðrum mönnum, Fas. i. 241; út í frá öðrum mönnum, aloof from other men, Hkr. i. 223.
    3. with adverbs denoting direction; Varbelgir eru hér upp frá yðr, Fms. ix. 512; stóðu spjót þeirra ofan frá þeim, Nj. 253; þangat frá garði, er …, in such a direction from the farm, that …, Grág. i. 82.
    4. with verbs, as vita, horfa, snúa frá, to look away from, Skálda 242; stafnar horfa frá landi, Fms. xi. 101; þat er frá vissi berginu, viii. 428.
    5. with gen. ellipt. cp. ‘at’ A. II. 7; frá riks manns, from a rich man’s [ house], Hom. 117; frá Arnórs, Bjarn. 35; frá frú Kristínar, Fms. ix. 407; frá bóanda þess, Grág. i. 300; frá Heljar, Edda (Ub.) 292; frá Bjarnar, Hkr. i. 190.
    6. temp., fjórtán nætr frá alþingi, Grág. i. 122; frá þessu, from that time, since; upp frá þessu, id., Ld. 50, Fms. xi. 334; frá hinni fyrstu stund, Sks. 559; allt frá eldingu, all along from daybreak, Hrafn. 7; frá öndverðu, from the beginning, Sks. 564; frá fornu ok nýju, of old and new, Dipl. iv. 14: adding upp, upp frá því, ever since, Bs. ii. 37.
    7. denoting succession; stund frá stund, from time to time, 656 A. i. 36; ár frá ári, year after year, Stj. 17; dag frá degi, Fms. ii. 230; hvern dag frá öðrum, one day after another, viii. 182; hvárt sumar frá öðru, one summer after another, Grág. i. 92; annan dag frá öðrum, Eg. 277: in other relations, maðr frá manni, man after man, Finnb. 228.
    II. metaph.,
    1. from among, above, beyond, surpassingly; göra sik auðkenndan frá öðrum mönnum, to distinguish oneself from ( above) other men, Fms. vii. 73, Fb. ii. 73: adding sem, frá því sem …, beyond that what …; frá því harðfengir ok íllir viðreignar sem aðrir, Fms. i. 171; herðibreiðr, svá at þat bar frá því sem aðrir menn vóru, Eg. 305; nú er þat annathvárt at þú ert frá því þróttigr ok þolinn sem aðrir menn, Fms. ii. 69: cp. frá-görðamaðr, frá-bær.
    2. with verbs denoting deprivation, taking away, forsaking, or the like; taka e-t frá e-m, to take a thing from one, Nj. 253; renna frá e-m, 264; deyja frá úmögum, to ‘die from orphans,’ i. e. leave orphans behind one, Grág. i. 249; segja sik ór þingi frá e-m, to secede from one, Nj. 166; liggja frá verkum, to be bedridden ‘from work,’ i. e. so as to be unable to work, Grág. i. 474; seljask arfsali frá úmögum, i. e. to shift one’s property from the minors, i. e. to cut them off from inheritance, 278.
    3. against; þvert frá mínu skapi, Fms. vii. 258, Hom. 158; frá líkindum, against likelihood, Eg. 769.
    4. denoting derivation from a person; í mikilli sæmd frá konungi, Ísl. ii. 394; njóta skaltu hans frá oss, Fbr. 58 new Ed.;—so also, kominn frá e-m, come of, descended from one, Eb. sub fin., Landn. passim.
    5. of, about, concerning; segja frá e-u, to tell of a thing, Fms. xi. 16, 137, Nj. 100, (frá-saga, frá-sögn, a story); verða víss frá e-m, to be informed about one, Fms. iv. 184; er mér svá frá sagt konungi, I am told so of the king, Eg. 20; lýgi hann mestan hlut frá, he lies for the most part, Ísl. ii. 145, cp. Nj. 32.
    III. adverb. or ellipt. away, off; hverfa frá, to turn away, Landn. 84; snúa í frá, Nj. 108; stukku menn frá, Eg. 289; hnekkjask Írar nú frá, Ld. 78; ok frá höndina, and the hand off, Nj. 160; falla frá, to fall off, to die (fráfall), Fms. x. 408; til ok frá, to and fro, Eg. 293, Fms. ix. 422, Pass. 3. 2; héðan í frá, hence ‘fro,’ Nj. 83; þaðan í frá, thence, Grág. ii. 30: þar ut í frá, secondly, next, Fms. vi. 326; outermost, 439:—temp., þaðan, héðan frá, thence, Grág. i. 204, ii. 30, Fms. ii. 231, Nj. 83, Vápn. 30: cp. the phrases, af og frá, by no means! vera frá, to be gone, done with, dead.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > FRÁ

  • 15 mendi

    [from *bendi ? or from * men-ti-] iz.
    1.
    a. ( gora) mountain; \mendi gorak high mountains; \mendiak igaro to go through the mountains; \mendian behera \\ gora down \\ up the mountain; \mendian gora doaz they're going up the mountain; \mendiaren oinean at the foot of the mountain; \mendiaren gailurrean at the top of the mountain; \mendiez haraindiko eskualdeetan in the areas beyond the mountains; \mendiz \mendi joan ziren they went through the mountains; \mendi {hemendiko || honunzko} beyond the mountains
    b. Ernio m\mendia Mt. Ernio; Everest m\mendia Mt. Everest; M\mendi Harritsuak the Rocky Mountains
    c. [ izenen aurrean ] mountain-; \mendigain batean on a mountain top; \mendi-orubeak saldu to sell mountain lots
    2.
    a. ( basoaldea) woodland
    b. ( mendialdea) country, wild country; \mendiko artzainak mountain herders; \menditik ibarrera jaitsi to come down to the valley from the mountains
    c. \mendira joan i. to go to the mountains ii. ( matxinadan) to head for the hills | to take for the hills; \mendira joaten da asteburuetan he goes to the {mountains || country} every weekend
    d. [ izenen aurrean ] country, wild, mountain; \mendi-mutilak gazte indartsuak dira young country boys are strong; \mendi-lanak mountain work | rural work

    Euskara Ingelesa hiztegiaren > mendi

  • 16 Logical Positivism

       There have been many opponents of metaphysics from the Greek sceptics to the empiricists of the nineteenth century. Criticisms of very diverse kinds have been set forth. Many have declared that the doctrine of metaphysics is false, since it contradicts our empirical knowledge. Others have believed it to be uncertain, on the ground that its problems transcend the limits of human knowledge. Many anti-metaphysicians have declared that occupation with metaphysical questions is sterile. Whether or not these questions can be answered, it is at any rate unnecessary to worry about them; let us devote ourselves entirely to the practical tasks which confront active men every day of their lives!
       The development of modern logic has made it possible to give a new and sharper answer to the question of the validity and justification of metaphysics. The researchers of applied logic or the theory of knowledge, which aim at clarifying the cognitive content of scientific statements and thereby the meanings of the terms that occur in the statements, by means of logical analysis, lead to a positive and to a negative result. The positive result is worked out in the domain of empirical science; the various concepts of the various branches of science are clarified; their formal, logical and epistemological connections are made explicit.
       In the domain of metaphysics, including all philosophy of value and normative theory, logical analysis yields the negative result that the al leged statements in this domain are entirely meaningless. Therewith a radical elimination of metaphysics is attained, which was not yet possible from the earlier anti-metaphysical standpoints. (Carnap, 1959, p. 60)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Logical Positivism

  • 17 ÖX

    from vaxa.
    * * *
    i. e. øx, f., gen. öxar, dat. and acc. öxi, pl. öxar, preserving the ö throughout; declined like heiðr, öx standing for öx-r; also spelt eyx and ex: in mod. usage declined like höfn, nom. öxi, gen. axar, dat. and acc. öx or öxi, pl. axir: [Goth. aqwisi; a word common to all Indo-European languages]:—an axe. Am. 39, Nj. 19, 70, Sturl. i. 63, Eg. 180, 183, Ld. 112, K. Þ. K. 170, and passim: öxar-egg, f., -skapt, n. the edge, haft of an axe, Sturl. ii. 91, Fms. vi. 212, Fær. 111: öxar-hamarr, m. the back of an axe, Nj. 253, Grág. ii. 14, Fær. 221: öxarhamars-högg, n. a blow with the back of an axe, Fms. ix. 469, Gþl. 177, Orkn., Lv. 86: öxar-hyrna, u, f. the hooked beak of an axe, such as a bill, halberd, or Lochaber-axe, Fær, 111, Fms. ii. 82, Lv. 82: öxar-stafr, m. a nickname, Lv. 86: öxar-talga, u, f. masonry, Stj.: öxa-tré, n., Sturl. i. 158: öxar-þæri, n., Grág., see þæri. The axe, rather than the sword, was the favourite national weapon of the old Norsemen and Danes, cp. the Nj.; Hel was the axe of king Magnus, and for various names of axes, see Edda (Gl.); breið-öx, bol-öx, hand-öx, tapar-öx, skegg-öx, tálg-öx, skar-öx; the ‘öx snaghyrnd’ or snaga (see p. 573) is prob. the same as the Scottish Lochaber-axe, see Sir Walter Scott, Waveriey, i. ch. 17, used for climbing walls, and compare the feat related in Fær. l. c., Eb. 310.
    II. in local names, Öxar-á, f. the Axe water, in Icel., the origin of the name is told in Sturl. i. 202: Öxar-fjörðr, m. Axefirth, Landn.: Öxfirðingar, m. pl. the men from Axefirth, Nj. 219, 223: Öxarár-þing, n. the assembly at Öxará = alþingi, Jb.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ÖX

  • 18 На ошибках других учимся

    The experience of others should be a good lesson to us not to repeat their mistakes. See Чужая беда научит (4)
    Cf: By others' faults wise men correct their own (Am., Br.). The folly of one man is the fortune of another (Am., Br.). From errors of others a wise man corrects his own (Am.). Learn from the mistakes of others (Am., Br.). Learn wisdom by the follies of others (Am., Br.). One man's fault is another man's lesson (Br.). Profit by the experience of others Br.). Profit by the folly of others (Am.)

    Русско-английский словарь пословиц и поговорок > На ошибках других учимся

  • 19 lo que se debe hacer

    • the apple does not fall far from the apple-tree
    • the Archenemy
    • the correct stuff
    • the corresponding thing
    • the proof of the pudding is in the eating
    • the pros and cons
    • the right person
    • the right stuff
    • the right thing to do
    • the right time
    • the thing is
    • the things you see
    • the Wise Men
    • The Wolverine State

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > lo que se debe hacer

  • 20 cerling

    men-cerling ogle. 2 look at from the corner of the eye.

    Malay-English dictionary > cerling

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