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41 У-98
ДЕРЖАТЬ В УМЕ (В ГОЛОВЕ) coll VP subj: human1. \У-98 кого-что to think about s.o. or sth. constantlyX держит Y-a в уме - X keeps thinking about YX dwells on thing Y.2. \У-98\У-98 что to retain sth. in one's memoryX держит в уме Y X keeps (stores) Y in X's headX's mind holds Y.В секретариате (Ежов) проявил себя хорошо, помнил, кто, где, когда, на каком месте работал, держал в голове сотни фамилий (Рыбаков 2). Не (Yezhov) had proved himself at the secretariat. He had remembered who had worked where, when, and on what, and he kept hundreds of names in his head (2a).Как-то он (Иван) сказал писателю, чтобы тот перестал записывать и держал бы в уме свои жизненные наблюдения (Аксёнов 1). Once he (Ivan) told the writer to stop writing things down and to store his observations in his head (1a).Занимая неприметную и низкооплачиваемую должность колхозного кладовщика, Гладышев зато имел много свободного времени для пополнения знаний и держал в своей маленькой голове столько различных сведений из различных областей, что люди, знакомые с ним, только вздыхали завистливо и уважительно - вот это, мол, да! (Войнович 2). Though he held the undistinguished and low-paying position of kolkhoz warehouseman, Gladi-shev did have a lot of free time for supplementing his knowledge, and his mind held such diverse information from such diverse fields that people who knew him could only sigh with envy and respect. He's really something! they'd say (2a).3. - что (often negoften foil. by a что-clause) to think or think up sth. and retain it in one's headX держит Y в уме = X has Y in mindX has Y in his headNeg X и в уме не держал Y-a = X never even imagined (dreamed of) YX never even thought (of) Y Y never (even) occurred to X."...Ресслих эта шельма, я вам скажу, она ведь что в уме держит: я наскучу, жену-то брошу и уеду, а жена ей достанется, она её и пустит в оборот...» (Достоевский 3). "...This Resslich woman's a sly old devil, let me tell you, and look what she has in mind: I'll get fed up, abandon my wife and go away, and then she'll get the wife and put her into circulation..." (3a). -
42 держать в голове
• ДЕРЖАТЬ В УМЕ < В ГОЛОВЕ> coll[VP; subj: human]=====1. держать в голове кого-что to think about s.o. or sth. constantly:- X dwells on thing Y.2. держать в голове что to retain sth. in one's memory:- X's mind holds Y.♦ В секретариате [Ежов] проявил себя хорошо, помнил, кто, где, когда, на каком месте работал, держал в голове сотни фамилий (Рыбаков 2). Не [Yezhov] had proved himself at the secretariat. He had remembered who had worked where, when, and on what, and he kept hundreds of names in his head (2a).♦ Как-то он [ Иван] сказал писателю, чтобы тот перестал записывать и держал бы в уме свои жизненные наблюдения (Аксёнов 1). Once he [Ivan] told the writer to stop writing things down and to store his observations in his head (1a).♦ Занимая неприметную и низкооплачиваемую должность колхозного кладовщика, Гладышев зато имел много свободного времени для пополнения знаний и держал в своей маленькой голове столько различных сведений из различных областей, что люди, знакомые с ним, только вздыхали завистливо и уважительно - вот это, мол, да! (Войнович 2). Though he held the undistinguished and low-paying position of kolkhoz warehouseman, Gladishev did have a lot of free time for supplementing his knowledge, and his mind held such diverse information from such diverse fields that people who knew him could only sigh with envy and respect. He's really something! they'd say (2a).⇒ to think or think up sth. and retain it in one's head:- Y never (even) occurred to X.♦ "...Ресслих эта шельма, я вам скажу, она ведь что в уме держит: я наскучу, жену-то брошу и уеду, а жена ей достанется, она её и пустит в оборот..." (Достоевский 3). "...This Resslich woman's a sly old devil, let me tell you, and look what she has in mind: I'll get fed up, abandon my wife and go away, and then she'll get the wife and put her into circulation..." (3a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > держать в голове
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43 держать в уме
• ДЕРЖАТЬ В УМЕ < В ГОЛОВЕ> coll[VP; subj: human]=====1. держать в уме кого-что to think about s.o. or sth. constantly:- X dwells on thing Y.2. держать в уме что to retain sth. in one's memory:- X's mind holds Y.♦ В секретариате [Ежов] проявил себя хорошо, помнил, кто, где, когда, на каком месте работал, держал в голове сотни фамилий (Рыбаков 2). Не [Yezhov] had proved himself at the secretariat. He had remembered who had worked where, when, and on what, and he kept hundreds of names in his head (2a).♦ Как-то он [ Иван] сказал писателю, чтобы тот перестал записывать и держал бы в уме свои жизненные наблюдения (Аксёнов 1). Once he [Ivan] told the writer to stop writing things down and to store his observations in his head (1a).♦ Занимая неприметную и низкооплачиваемую должность колхозного кладовщика, Гладышев зато имел много свободного времени для пополнения знаний и держал в своей маленькой голове столько различных сведений из различных областей, что люди, знакомые с ним, только вздыхали завистливо и уважительно - вот это, мол, да! (Войнович 2). Though he held the undistinguished and low-paying position of kolkhoz warehouseman, Gladishev did have a lot of free time for supplementing his knowledge, and his mind held such diverse information from such diverse fields that people who knew him could only sigh with envy and respect. He's really something! they'd say (2a).⇒ to think or think up sth. and retain it in one's head:- Y never (even) occurred to X.♦ "...Ресслих эта шельма, я вам скажу, она ведь что в уме держит: я наскучу, жену-то брошу и уеду, а жена ей достанется, она её и пустит в оборот..." (Достоевский 3). "...This Resslich woman's a sly old devil, let me tell you, and look what she has in mind: I'll get fed up, abandon my wife and go away, and then she'll get the wife and put her into circulation..." (3a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > держать в уме
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44 hard
1. adjective1) (firm; solid; not easy to break, scratch etc: The ground is too hard to dig.) duro; sólido2) (not easy to do, learn, solve etc: Is English a hard language to learn?; He is a hard man to please.) difícil3) (not feeling or showing kindness: a hard master.) severo; rudo; seco4) ((of weather) severe: a hard winter.) duro, severo, riguroso5) (having or causing suffering: a hard life; hard times.) duro, difícil6) ((of water) containing many chemical salts and so not easily forming bubbles when soap is added: The water is hard in this part of the country.) dura
2. adverb1) (with great effort: He works very hard; Think hard.) duro, con ahínco2) (with great force; heavily: Don't hit him too hard; It was raining hard.) fuerte, fuertemente3) (with great attention: He stared hard at the man.) fijamente4) (to the full extent; completely: The car turned hard right.) completamente, totalmente•- harden- hardness
- hardship
- hard-and-fast
- hard-back
- hard-boiled
- harddisk
- hard-earned
- hard-headed
- hard-hearted
- hardware
- hard-wearing
- be hard on
- hard at it
- hard done by
- hard lines/luck
- hard of hearing
- a hard time of it
- a hard time
- hard up
hard1 adj1. duro2. difícilhard2 adv1. mucho2. duro / fuertehit him hard! ¡pégale duro!tr[hɑːd]2 (difficult) difícil3 (harsh) severo,-a4 (work) arduo,-a, penoso,-a, agotador,-ra5 figurative use cruel, rudo,-a6 (fight, match) reñido,-a, disputado,-a; (decision) injusto,-a8 (final decision) definitivo,-a, irrevocable; (person) severo,-a, inflexible9 SMALLLINGUISTICS/SMALL fuerte1 (forcibly) fuerte; (diligently) mucho, de firme, concienzudamente, con ahínco\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLhard of hearing duro,-a de oídoto be hard done by sentirse mal tratado,-a, ser tratado,-a injustamenteto be hard hit by figurative use quedar muy afectado,-a porto be hard on somebody figurative use tratar a alguien con severidad, tratar a alguien con durezato be hard on somebody's heels figurative use pisar los talones a alguiento be hard pushed to do something figurative use verse apurado,-a para realizar algoto be hard up familiar estar sin blancato drive a hard bargain figurative use negociar con durezato have a hard time familiar pasarlo canutas, pasarlo malto take something very hard tomar algo muy a pecho, encajar algo muy malto work hard trabajar muchohard drinker bebedor,-ra empedernido,-ahard evidence pruebas nombre femenino plural definitivashard labour trabajos nombre masculino plural forzadoshard luck mala suertehard ['hɑrd] adv1) forcefully: fuerte, con fuerzathe wind blew hard: el viento sopló fuerte2) strenuously: duro, muchoto work hard: trabajar duro3)to take something hard : tomarse algo muy mal, estar muy afectado por algohard adj1) firm, solid: duro, firme, sólido2) difficult: difícil, arduo3) severe: severo, duroa hard winter: un invierno severo4) unfeeling: insensible, duro5) diligent: diligenteto be a hard worker: ser muy trabajador6)hard liquor : bebidas fpl fuertes7)hard water : agua f duraadj.• arduo, -a adj.• calloso, -a adj.• dificultoso, -a adj.• difícil adj.• duro, -a adj.• endurecido, -a adj.• firme adj.• fuerte adj.• laborioso, -a adj.• peliagudo, -a adj.• recio, -a adj.• rudo, -a adj.• sólido, -a adj.• terco, -a adj.• tieso, -a adj.adv.• apretadamente adv.• difícilmente adv.• duro adv.• mucho adv.• recio adv.• tieso adv.
I hɑːrd, hɑːdadjective -er, -est1)a) (firm, solid) <object/surface> duroto set hard — endurecerse*
to freeze hard — helarse*
b) ( forceful) <push/knock> fuerte2)he's hard to please — es difícil de complacer, es exigente
b) ( severe) <winter/climate/master> duro, severoto give somebody a hard time — hacérselas* pasar mal a alguien
c) (tough, cynical) <person/attitude> duro, insensible3) (concentrated, strenuous)to take a long hard look at something — analizar* seriamente algo
5) (sharp, harsh) <light/voice> fuerte; < expression> duro6)a) ( in strongest forms)hard drugs — drogas fpl duras
hard liquor — bebidas fpl (alcohólicas) fuertes
b) ( Fin)hard currency — divisa f or moneda f fuerte
c) < water> durod) ( Ling) <sound/consonant> fuerte
II
adverb -er, -est1)a) ( with force) <pull/push> con fuerza; < hit> fuerteb) ( strenuously) < work> mucho, duro, duramenteto be hard put o (BrE also) pushed to + inf: you'd be hard put (to it) to find a better doctor — sería difícil encontrar un médico mejor
2) ( heavily) <rain/snow> fuerte, mucho; <pant/breathe> pesadamente3) ( severely)[hɑːd]to be/feel hard done by: she thinks she has been o she feels hard done by — piensa que la han tratado injustamente
1. ADJ(compar harder) (superl hardest)1) (=not soft) [object, substance, cheese, skin] duro; [ground, snow] duro, compacto•
to become or go hard — ponerse duro, endurecerse•
the water is very hard here — aquí el agua es muy dura or tiene mucha cal- be as hard as nails- as hard as a rocknut2) (=harsh, severe) [climate, winter, person] duro, severo; [frost] fuerte; [words, tone] duro, áspero; [expression, eyes, voice] serio, duro; [drink, liquor] fuerte; [drugs] duro; [fact] concreto; [evidence] irrefutable•
a hard blow — (fig) un duro golpe•
to take a long hard look at sth — examinar algo detenidamente•
to be hard on sb — ser muy duro con algn, darle duro a algn (LAm)don't be so hard on him, it's not his fault — no seas tan duro con él, no es culpa suya
aren't you being a bit hard on yourself? — ¿no estás siendo un poco duro contigo mismo?
- be as hard as nailsfeeling3) (=strenuous, tough) [work, day] duro; [fight, match] muy reñidophew, that was hard work! — ¡uf!, ¡ha costado lo suyo!
coping with three babies is very hard work — tres bebés dan mucha tarea or mucho trabajo, arreglárselas con tres bebés es una dura or ardua tarea
it's hard work getting her to talk about herself — cuesta mucho or resulta muy trabajoso hacerla hablar sobre sí misma
4) (=difficult) [exam, decision, choice] difícilto be hard to do: it's hard to study on your own — es difícil estudiar por tu cuenta
I find it hard to believe that... — me cuesta (trabajo) creer que...
bargain, play 3., 4)to be hard to please — ser muy exigente or quisquilloso
5) (=tough, unpleasant) [life, times] duroit's a hard life! — ¡qué vida más dura!
those were hard times to live in — aquellos eran tiempos duros, la vida era dura en aquellos tiempos
- take a hard line against/over sthgoing, hard-line, hard-linerhard lines! — ¡qué mala suerte!, ¡qué mala pata! *
6) (=forceful) [push, tug, kick] fuerte7) (Phon, Ling) [sound] fuerte; [consonant] oclusivo2. ADV(compar harder) (superl hardest)1) (=with a lot of effort) [work] duro, mucho; [study] muchohe had worked hard all his life — había trabajado duro or mucho toda su vida
he works very hard — trabaja muy duro, trabaja mucho
he was hard at work in the garden — estaba trabajando afanosamente or con ahínco en el jardín
•
he was breathing hard — respiraba con dificultad•
we're saving hard for our holidays — estamos ahorrando todo lo que podemos para las vacaciones, estamos ahorrando al máximo para las vacaciones•
to try hard, she always tries hard — siempre se esfuerza muchoI can't do it, no matter how hard I try — no puedo hacerlo, por mucho que lo intente
to be hard at it —
Bill was hard at it in the garden * — Bill se estaba empleando a fondo en el jardín, Bill estaba dándole duro al jardín *
2) (=with force) [hit] fuerte, duro; [pull, push, blow] con fuerza; [snow, rain] fuerte, mucho•
the government decided to clamp down hard on terrorism — el gobierno decidió tomar medidas duras contra el terrorismo•
she was feeling hard done by — pensaba que la habían tratado injustamenteto hit sb hard — (fig) ser un duro golpe para algn
California has been (particularly) hard hit by the crisis — California (en particular) se ha visto seriamente afectada por la crisis
•
I would be hard pushed or put to think of another plan — me resultaría difícil pensar en otro planwe'll be hard pushed or put to finish this tonight! — ¡nos va a ser difícil terminar esto esta noche!
•
to take sth hard — tomarse algo muy mal *he took it pretty hard — se lo tomó muy mal, fue un duro golpe para él, le golpeó mucho (LAm)
•
to be hard up * — estar pelado *, no tener un duro (Sp) *hard-pressedto be hard up for sth — estar falto or escaso de algo
3) (=solid)•
to freeze hard — quedarse congelado4) (=intently) [listen] atentamente; [concentrate] al máximo•
to look hard (at sth) — fijarse mucho (en algo)•
think hard before you make a decision — piénsalo muy bien antes de tomar una decisiónI thought hard but I couldn't remember his name — por más que pensé or por más vueltas que le di no pude recordar su nombre
5) (=sharply)6) (=closely)•
hard behind sth — justo detrás de algoI hurried upstairs with my sister hard behind me — subí las escaleras corriendo con mi hermana que venía justo detrás
heelthe launch of the book followed hard upon the success of the film — el lanzamiento del libro se produjo justo después del éxito de la película
3.CPDhard centre, hard center (US) N — relleno m duro
hard cider (US) N — sidra f
hard copy N — (Comput) copia f impresa
hard-corethe hard core N — (=intransigents) los incondicionales, el núcleo duro
hard court N — (Tennis) cancha f (de tenis) de cemento, pista f (de tenis) de cemento
hard currency N — moneda f fuerte, divisa f fuerte
hard disk N — (Comput) disco m duro
hard goods NPL — productos mpl no perecederos
hard hat N — (=riding hat) gorra f de montar; [of construction worker] casco m; (=construction worker) albañil mf
hard landing N — aterrizaje m duro
the hard left N — (esp Brit) la extrema izquierda, la izquierda radical
hard luck N — mala suerte f
•
to be hard luck on sb, it was hard luck on him — tuvo mala suertehard luck! — ¡(qué) mala suerte!
hard palate N — paladar m
the hard right N — (esp Brit) la extrema derecha, la derecha radical
hard rock N — (Mus) rock m duro
hard sell tactics — táctica fsing de venta agresiva
hard sell techniques — técnicas fpl de venta agresiva
hard shoulder N — (Brit) (Aut) arcén m, hombrillo m
hard stuff * N — (=alcohol) alcohol m duro, bebidas fpl fuertes; (=drugs) droga f dura
hard top N — (=car) coche m no descapotable; (=car roof) techo m rígido
hard water N — agua f dura, agua f con mucha cal
* * *
I [hɑːrd, hɑːd]adjective -er, -est1)a) (firm, solid) <object/surface> duroto set hard — endurecerse*
to freeze hard — helarse*
b) ( forceful) <push/knock> fuerte2)he's hard to please — es difícil de complacer, es exigente
b) ( severe) <winter/climate/master> duro, severoto give somebody a hard time — hacérselas* pasar mal a alguien
c) (tough, cynical) <person/attitude> duro, insensible3) (concentrated, strenuous)to take a long hard look at something — analizar* seriamente algo
5) (sharp, harsh) <light/voice> fuerte; < expression> duro6)a) ( in strongest forms)hard drugs — drogas fpl duras
hard liquor — bebidas fpl (alcohólicas) fuertes
b) ( Fin)hard currency — divisa f or moneda f fuerte
c) < water> durod) ( Ling) <sound/consonant> fuerte
II
adverb -er, -est1)a) ( with force) <pull/push> con fuerza; < hit> fuerteb) ( strenuously) < work> mucho, duro, duramenteto be hard put o (BrE also) pushed to + inf: you'd be hard put (to it) to find a better doctor — sería difícil encontrar un médico mejor
2) ( heavily) <rain/snow> fuerte, mucho; <pant/breathe> pesadamente3) ( severely)to be/feel hard done by: she thinks she has been o she feels hard done by — piensa que la han tratado injustamente
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45 bite the hand that feeds you
отплатить черной неблагодарностью; рубить сук на котором сидишь (наказать самого себя)The man had worked for the company for several years. When he was caught stealing, his employer felt that he had bitten the hand that fed him.
She felt that her protégé had bitten the hand that fed him by making unkind remarks about her in public.
Англо-русский словарь идиом и фразовых глаголов > bite the hand that feeds you
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46 catch it in the neck
разг.1) испытать на своей шкуре; получить по шее, получить нагоняй, хорошую взбучку; ≈ досталось на орехи [первонач. амер.]The shareholders had a grievance, of course; and some one had to get it in the neck to satisfy their sense of equity. (J. Galsworthy, ‘The White Monkey’, part III, ch. XIV) — Конечно, пайщики были в обиде; кто-нибудь должен был получить по шее, чтобы удовлетворить их чувство справедливости.
If you stay on here, I'll see you get it in the neck. (A. J. Cronin, ‘Shannon's Way’, book II, ch. 9) — Если только вы здесь останетесь, я уж позабочусь о том, чтоб вам дали хорошую взбучку.
What I said and how I said it I have no idea, but immediately I sat down, up got Moses. ‘Now for it,’ I thought. ‘I'm going to get it in the neck like all the others,’ for nobody ever heard Moses say a good word for anyone. (H. Pollitt, ‘Serving My Time’, ch. 2) — Не помню, что и как я говорил, но как только я сел, немедленно поднялся Моузес. "Сейчас начнется, - промелькнуло в моем сознании, - задаст он мне, как и другим, по первое число". Ибо никто не слышал, чтобы Моузес сказал о ком-нибудь доброе слово.
Huge profits are bein' made out of the war, and the workers are gettin' it in the neck. (K. S. Prichard, ‘Golden Miles’, ch. 33) — Война приносит огромные прибыли, а рабочий расплачивается за них своей шкурой.
2) вылететь, быть вышвырнутым с работыHe had worked there for years, but finally got it in the neck when the company moved away. (RHD) — Он работал в этой компании много лет, но, когда компания переехала, его выгнали в три шеи.
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47 odd jobs
разная, случайная работаHe had had no means and had worked his way through by doing odd jobs during the vacations. (W. S. Maugham, ‘Complete Short Stories’, ‘Rain’) — Мистер Давидсон был беден, но все-таки смог закончить курс, чем только не подрабатывая в каникулы.
He hangs around the waterfront and does odd jobs... (E. Hemingway, ‘To Have and Have Not’, part I, ch. I) — Он вечно слоняется по берегу и промышляет чем придется...
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48 Böttger, Johann Friedrich
SUBJECT AREA: Domestic appliances and interiors[br]b. 4 February 1682 Scheiz, Germanyd. 13 March 1719 Dresden, Germany[br]German inventor of Meissen porcelain.[br]After the early death of his father, Böttger spent his childhood in Magdeburg, where he received instruction in mathematics, fortification and pyrotechnics. He spent twelve years with the apothecary F.Zorn in Berlin, where there was a flourishing colony of alchemists. Böttger became an adept himself and claimed to have achieved transmutations into gold by 1701.In March 1702 Böttger moved near to Dresden, in the service of August II, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland. While there, he made friends with E.W.von Tschirnhaus (1651–1708), scientist and possessor of glass-and ironworks. It was this association that led eventually to the founding of the celebrated Meissen porcelain factory. By 1708, Böttger had succeeded in making fine red stoneware by adding a flux, alabaster or marble, to infusible Saxony clay. By varying his raw materials, and in particular in using white china clay from the Erzgebirge, he obtained the first European true, hard, white porcelain, which had eluded European workers for centuries. At the same time he improved the furnace to achieve a temperature of around 1,350°C. To exploit his discovery, the Meissen factory was set up in 1710 and its products began to be marketed in 1713. Böttger managed the factory until his death in 1719, although throughout the period of experimentation and exploitation he had worked in conditions of great secrecy, in a vain attempt to preserve the secret of the process.[br]Further ReadingC.A.Engelhardt, 1837, J.F.Böttger: Erfinder des sachsischen Porzellan, Leipzig; reprinted 1982, Verlag Weidlich (the classic biography).K.Hoffman, 1985, Johann Friedrich Böttger: von Alchemistengold zum weissenPorzellan, Berlin: Verlag Neues Leben.LRDBiographical history of technology > Böttger, Johann Friedrich
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49 Craufurd, Henry William
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]fl. 1830s[br]English patentee of the process of coating iron with zinc (galvanized iron).[br]Although described as Commander of the Royal Navy, other personal details of Craufurd appear to be little known. His process for coating sheet iron with a protective layer of zinc, conveyed as a communication from abroad, was granted a patent in 1837. The details closely resembled, indeed are believed to have been based upon, those developed and patented in France in 1836 by Sorel, who had worked in collaboration with Ledru. There had been French interest in substituting zinc for tin as a coating for iron from 1742 with work by Malouin. Zinc-coated iron saucepans were produced in Rouen in the 1780s, but the work was later abandoned. Craufurd's patent directed that iron objects should be dipped into molten zinc, protected from volatilization by a layer of sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride, NH4Cl which also served as a flux. The quite misleading term "galvanizing" had already been introduced by Sorel for his process. Later its pro-tective properties were discovered to depend for effectiveness on the formation of a thin layer of zinc-iron alloy between the iron sheet and its zinc coating. Craufurd's patent was infringed in England soon after being granted, and was followed by several improvements, particularly those of Edmund Morewood, collaborating with George Rogers in five patents, of which four referred to methods of corrugation. The resulting production of zinc-coated iron implements, together with corrugated iron sheeting quickly adopted for building purposes, developed into an important industry of the West Midlands, Bristol, London and other parts of Britain.[br]Bibliography1837, British patent no. 7,355 (coating sheet iron with zinc).Further ReadingH.W.Dickinson, 1943–4, "A study of galvanised and corrugated sheet metal", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 24:27–36 (the best and most concise account).JDBiographical history of technology > Craufurd, Henry William
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50 Paxton, Sir Joseph
[br]b. 3 August 1801 Milton Bryant, Bedfordshire, Englandd. 8 June 1865 Sydenham, London, England[br]English designer of the Crystal Palace, the first large-scale prefabricated ferrovitreous structure.[br]The son of a farmer, he had worked in gardens since boyhood and at the age of 21 was employed as Undergardener at the Horticultural Society Gardens in Chiswick, from where he went on to become Head Gardener for the Duke of Devonshire at Chatsworth. It was there that he developed his methods of glasshouse construction, culminating in the Great Conservatory of 1836–40, an immense structure some 277 ft (84.4 m) long, 123 ft (37.5 m) wide and 67 ft (20.4 m) high. Its framework was of iron and its roof of glass, with wood to contain the glass panels; it is now demolished. Paxton went on to landscape garden design, fountain and waterway engineering, the laying out of the model village of Edensor, and to play a part in railway and country house projects.The structure that made Paxton a household name was erected in Hyde Park, London, to house the Great Exhibition of 1851 and was aptly dubbed, by Punch, the Crystal Palace. The idea of holding an international exhibition for industry had been mooted in 1849 and was backed by Prince Albert and Henry Cole. The money for this was to be raised by public subscription and 245 designs were entered into a competition held in 1850; however, most of the concepts, received from many notable architects and engineers, were very costly and unsuitable, and none were accepted. That same year, Paxton published his scheme in the Illustrated London News and it was approved after it received over-whelming public support.Paxton's Crystal Palace, designed and erected in association with the engineers Fox and Henderson, was a prefabricated glasshouse of vast dimensions: it was 1,848 ft (563.3 m) long, 408 ft (124.4 m) wide and over 100 ft (30.5 m) high. It contained 3,300 iron columns, 2,150 girders. 24 miles (39 km) of guttering, 600,000 ft3 (17,000 m3) of timber and 900,000 ft2 (84,000 m) of sheet glass made by Chance Bros, of Birmingham. One of the chief reasons why it was accepted by the Royal Commission Committee was that it fulfilled the competition proviso that it should be capable of being erected quickly and subsequently dismantled and re-erected elsewhere. The Crystal Palace was to be erected at a cost of £79,800, much less than the other designs. Building began on 30 July 1850, with a labour force of some 2,000, and was completed on 31 March 1851. It was a landmark in construction at the time, for its size, speed of construction and its non-eclectic design, and, most of all, as the first great prefabricated building: parts were standardized and made in quantity, and were assembled on site. The exhibition was opened by Queen Victoria on 1 May 1851 and had received six million visitors when it closed on 11 October. The building was dismantled in 1852 and reassembled, with variations in design, at Sydenham in south London, where it remained until its spectacular conflagration in 1936.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1851. MP for Coventry 1854–65. Fellow Linnaean Society 1853; Horticultural Society 1826. Order of St Vladimir, Russia, 1844.Further ReadingP.Beaver, 1986, The Crystal Palace: A Portrait of Victorian Enterprise, Phillimore. George F.Chadwick, 1961, Works of Sir Joseph Paxton 1803–1865, Architectural Press.DY -
51 тщательно
•They examined the source more closely with the aid of the new telescope.
•If we had worked more exhaustively (or laboriously) we would have succeeded in preparing...
•One enzyme that has been thoroughly explored is...
•Rate of fuel flow must be carefully (or closely) controlled.
II•Pulp particles and reagents are mixed much more intimately than is possible with open type agitators.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > тщательно
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52 free
fri:
1. adjective1) (allowed to move where one wants; not shut in, tied, fastened etc: The prison door opened, and he was a free man.) libre2) (not forced or persuaded to act, think, speak etc in a particular way: free speech; You are free to think what you like.) libre3) ((with with) generous: He is always free with his money/advice.) generoso4) (frank, open and ready to speak: a free manner.) abierto5) (costing nothing: a free gift.) gratuito, gratis6) (not working or having another appointment; not busy: I shall be free at five o'clock.) libre7) (not occupied, not in use: Is this table free?) libre8) ((with of or from) without or no longer having (especially something or someone unpleasant etc): She is free from pain now; free of charge.) libre de; librado de
2. verb1) (to make or set (someone) free: He freed all the prisoners.) liberar, poner en libertad2) ((with from or of) to rid or relieve (someone) of something: She was able to free herself from her debts by working at an additional job.) deshacerse de, librarse de•- freedom- freely
- free-for-all
- freehand
- freehold
- freelance
3. verb(to work in this way: He is freelancing now.) trabajar por cuenta propia- Freepost- free skating
- free speech
- free trade
- freeway
- freewheel
- free will
- a free hand
- set free
free1 adj1. libreare you free on Monday? ¿estás libre el lunes?2. gratis / gratuitofree of charge gratuito / gratuitamentefree2 vb soltar / poner en libertad / liberartr[friː]1 (gen) libre■ it's a free country, isn't it? es un país libre, ¿verdad?3 (not occupied) libre■ is that seat free? ¿está libre esa silla?■ do you know when the hall is free? ¿sabes cuando la sala está libre?4 (not busy) libre■ she'll be free after 4.00pm estará libre después de las 4.00■ are you free for dinner? ¿estás libre para comer?5 (translations) libre6 (in chemistry) libre1 (gratis) gratis2 (loose) suelto,-a3 (in free manner) libremente, con toda libertad1 (liberate, release - person) poner en libertad, liberar; (- animal) soltar2 (rid) deshacerse (of/from, de), librarse (of/from, de)3 (loosen, untie) soltar, desatar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLfeel free! ¡tú mismo,-a!for free gratisfree and easy despreocupado,-afree of charge gratuito,-a, gratisfree of tax libre de impuestosfree on board franco a bordoto be free from / be free of estar libre de, quedar libre deto be free with repartir generosamente, ser generoso,-a conto have a free hand in something tener carta blanca en algoto run free andar suelto,-ato set somebody free liberar a alguien, poner en libertad a alguienfree admission entrada librefree agent persona libre de hacer lo que quierafree enterprise libre empresafree fall caída librefree gift regalofree kick saque nombre masculino de faltafree love amor nombre masculino librefree market economy economía libre de mercadofree port puerto francofree speech libertad nombre femenino de expresiónfree ticket invitación nombre femeninofree trade libre cambiofree verse verso librefree vote voto librefree will libre albedríoFree World Mundo Libre1) liberate: libertar, liberar, poner en libertad2) relieve, rid: librar, eximir3) release, untie: desatar, soltar4) unclog: desatascar, destaparfree adv1) freely: libremente2) gratis: gratuitamente, gratis1) : librefree as a bird: libre como un pájaro2) exempt: libretax-free: libre de impuestos3) gratis: gratuito, gratis4) voluntary: espontáneo, voluntario, libre5) unoccupied: desocupado, libre6) loose: sueltoadj.• desahogado, -a adj.• descampado, -a adj.• desembarazado, -a adj.• desenfadado, -a adj.• exento, -a adj.• franco, -a adj.• gratis adj.• gratuito, -a adj.• holgado, -a adj.• inmune adj.• libre adj.• suelto, -a adj.adv.• gratis adv.• libremente adv.v.• desembarazar v.• escapar v.• eximir v.• libertar v.• librar v.• soltar v.• zafar v.
I friː1)a) ( at liberty) (usu pred) libreto be free — ser* libre
to set somebody free — dejar or poner* a alguien en libertad, soltar* a alguien
free to + INF: you're free to do what you think best eres dueño or libre de hacer lo que te parezca; please feel free to help yourself — sírvete con confianza, sírvete nomás (AmL)
b) <country/people/press> librethe right of free speech — la libertad f de expresión
c) ( loose) sueltoto come/work free — soltarse*
2) (pred)a) (without, rid of)free FROM o OF something — libre de algo
free of o from additives/preservatives — sin aditivos/conservantes
b) ( exempt)3) ( costing nothing) <ticket/sample> gratis adj inv, gratuito; <schooling/health care> gratuitoadmission free — entrada gratuita or libre
free on board — ( Busn) franco a bordo
4) ( not occupied) <table/chair> libre, desocupado; <time/hands> libreis this table free? — ¿está libre esta mesa?
I have no free time at all — no tengo ni un momento libre, no tengo nada de tiempo libre
are you free tomorrow? — ¿estás libre mañana?, ¿tienes algún compromiso mañana?
5) ( lavish) generosoto be free WITH something — ser* generoso con algo
she's too free with her advice — reparte consejos a diestra y siniestra or (Esp) a diestro y siniestro
II
a) ( without payment) gratuitamente, gratisI got in for free — (colloq) entré gratis or sin pagar or de balde
b) ( without restriction) <roam/run> a su (or mi etc) antojo
III
1)a) ( liberate) \<\<prisoner/hostage\>\> poner* or dejar en libertad, soltar*; \<\<animal\>\> soltar*; \<\<nation/people/slave\>\> liberarto free somebody to + INF — permitirle a alguien + inf
b) (relieve, rid)to free something OF something: he promised to free the country of corruption — prometió acabar or terminar con la corrupción en el país
2)a) (untie, release) \<\<bound person\>\> soltar*, dejar libre; \<\<trapped person\>\> rescatarb) (loose, clear) \<\<something stuck or caught\>\> desenganchar, soltar*•Phrasal Verbs:- free up[friː]1. ADJ(compar freer) (superl freest)1) (=at liberty) libre; (=untied) libre, desatado•
to break free — escaparse•
to get free — escaparse•
to let sb go free — dejar a algn en libertad•
to pull sth/sb free — (from wreckage) sacar algo/a algn; (from tangle) sacar or desenredar algo/a algn•
the screw had worked itself free — el tornillo se había aflojado2) (=unrestricted) libre; [choice, translation] libreto have one's hands free — (lit) tener las manos libres
•
"can I borrow your pen?" - " feel free!" — -¿te puedo coger el bolígrafo? -¡por supuesto! or -¡claro que sí!•
to be free to do sth — ser libre de hacer algo, tener libertad para hacer algo- give free rein to- give sb a free hand- have a free hand to do sth3) (=clear, devoid)•
free from or of sth, a world free of nuclear weapons — un mundo sin armas nuclearesto be free from pain — no sufrir or padecer dolor
4) (Pol) (=autonomous, independent) [country, state] librefree elections — elecciones fpl libres
it's a free country! * — ¡es una democracia!
5) (=costing nothing) [ticket, delivery] gratuito, gratis; [sample, offer, transport, health care] gratuito•
free on board — (Comm) franco a bordo•
free of charge — gratis, gratuito•
to get sth for free — obtener algo gratis- get a free ridetax-free6) (=not occupied) [seat, room, person, moment] libre; [post] vacante; [premises] desocupadois this seat free? — ¿está libre este asiento?, ¿está ocupado este asiento?
are you free tomorrow? — ¿estás libre mañana?
7) (=generous, open) generoso ( with con)•
to make free with sth — usar algo como si fuera cosa propia•
to be free with one's money — no reparar en gastos, ser manirroto *2. ADV1) (=without charge)I got in (for) free — entré gratis or sin pagar
2) (=without restraint)•
animals run free in the park — los animales campan a sus anchas por el parque3. VT1) (=release) [+ prisoner, people] liberar, poner en libertad; (from wreckage etc) rescatar; (=untie) [+ person, animal] desatar, soltarto free one's hand/arm — soltarse la mano/el brazo
2) (=make available) [+ funds, resources] hacer disponible, liberarthis will free him to pursue other projects — esto lo dejará libre para dedicarse a otros proyectos, esto le permitirá dedicarse a otros proyectos
3) (=rid, relieve)to free sb from pain — quitar or aliviar a algn el dolor
to free o.s. from or of sth — librarse de algo
4.N5.CPDfree agent N — persona f independiente
he's a free agent — tiene libertad de acción, es libre de hacer lo que quiere
free association N — (Psych) asociación f libre or de ideas
Free Church N — (Brit) Iglesia f no conformista
free clinic N — (US) (Med) dispensario m
free collective bargaining N — ≈ negociación f colectiva
to be in free fall — [currency, share prices] caer en picado or (LAm) picada
to go into free fall — empezar a caer en picado or (LAm) picada; see freefall
free flight N — vuelo m sin motor
free house N — (Brit) pub que es libre de vender cualquier marca de cerveza por no estar vinculado a ninguna cervecería en particular
free kick N — (Ftbl) tiro m libre
free labour N — trabajadores mpl no sindicados
see free-marketfree market N — (Econ) mercado m libre (in de)
free marketeer N — partidario(-a) m / f del libre mercado
free period N — (Scol) hora f libre
free radical N — (Chem) radical m libre
free running N — parkour m
free school N — escuela f especial libre
free speech N — libertad f de expresión
free spirit N — persona f libre de convencionalismos
free trade N — libre cambio m; see free-trade
free trader N — librecambista mf
free verse N — verso m libre
free vote N — (Brit) (Parl) voto m de confianza (independiente de la línea del partido)
free will N — libre albedrío m
the free world N — el mundo libre, los países libres
- free up* * *
I [friː]1)a) ( at liberty) (usu pred) libreto be free — ser* libre
to set somebody free — dejar or poner* a alguien en libertad, soltar* a alguien
free to + INF: you're free to do what you think best eres dueño or libre de hacer lo que te parezca; please feel free to help yourself — sírvete con confianza, sírvete nomás (AmL)
b) <country/people/press> librethe right of free speech — la libertad f de expresión
c) ( loose) sueltoto come/work free — soltarse*
2) (pred)a) (without, rid of)free FROM o OF something — libre de algo
free of o from additives/preservatives — sin aditivos/conservantes
b) ( exempt)3) ( costing nothing) <ticket/sample> gratis adj inv, gratuito; <schooling/health care> gratuitoadmission free — entrada gratuita or libre
free on board — ( Busn) franco a bordo
4) ( not occupied) <table/chair> libre, desocupado; <time/hands> libreis this table free? — ¿está libre esta mesa?
I have no free time at all — no tengo ni un momento libre, no tengo nada de tiempo libre
are you free tomorrow? — ¿estás libre mañana?, ¿tienes algún compromiso mañana?
5) ( lavish) generosoto be free WITH something — ser* generoso con algo
she's too free with her advice — reparte consejos a diestra y siniestra or (Esp) a diestro y siniestro
II
a) ( without payment) gratuitamente, gratisI got in for free — (colloq) entré gratis or sin pagar or de balde
b) ( without restriction) <roam/run> a su (or mi etc) antojo
III
1)a) ( liberate) \<\<prisoner/hostage\>\> poner* or dejar en libertad, soltar*; \<\<animal\>\> soltar*; \<\<nation/people/slave\>\> liberarto free somebody to + INF — permitirle a alguien + inf
b) (relieve, rid)to free something OF something: he promised to free the country of corruption — prometió acabar or terminar con la corrupción en el país
2)a) (untie, release) \<\<bound person\>\> soltar*, dejar libre; \<\<trapped person\>\> rescatarb) (loose, clear) \<\<something stuck or caught\>\> desenganchar, soltar*•Phrasal Verbs:- free up -
53 ingeniar
v.1 to invent, to devise.2 to engineer, to conceive, to invent, to contrive.* * *1 to devise1 to manage, find a way, contrive■ habrá que ingeniárselas para que nos dejen pasar gratis we'll have to find some way of getting in free* * *1.VT to devise, think up2.See:* * *verbo transitivo <método/sistema> to devise, think upingeniárselas — (fam)
no sé cómo se las ingenia — I don't know how she does it
* * *= engineer.Ex. So, in telephone transmission the bandwidth of each speech circuit is engineered to be 4kHz.----* cómo nos las ingeniamos para = how in the world....* ingeniarse = contrive, devise.* ingeniarse el modo de = dream up + ways to.* ingeniárselas = manage to, finesse, get by.* ingeniárselas para = figure out how.* ingeniárselas para escapar = contrive + an escape.* * *verbo transitivo <método/sistema> to devise, think upingeniárselas — (fam)
no sé cómo se las ingenia — I don't know how she does it
* * *= engineer.Ex: So, in telephone transmission the bandwidth of each speech circuit is engineered to be 4kHz.
* cómo nos las ingeniamos para = how in the world....* ingeniarse = contrive, devise.* ingeniarse el modo de = dream up + ways to.* ingeniárselas = manage to, finesse, get by.* ingeniárselas para = figure out how.* ingeniárselas para escapar = contrive + an escape.* * *ingeniar [A1 ]vt‹método/sistema› to devise, think uphabía ingeniado una manera de escaparse de clase he had worked out o thought up o devised a way of getting out of classingeniárselas ( fam): no sé cómo se las ingenia para vivir con ese sueldo I don't know how he manages to survive on that salaryse las ingenió para arreglarlo he worked out how to fix it, he found a way to fix it, he managed to fix it* * *
ingeniar ( conjugate ingeniar) verbo transitivo ‹método/sistema› to devise, think up;◊ ingeniárselas (fam): se las ingenió para arreglarlo he managed to fix it
ingeniar verbo transitivo to invent, devise
♦ Locuciones: ingeniárselas para hacer algo, to manage to do sthg: me las voy a ingeniar para conocerle mejor, I'm going to figure out how to get to know him better
' ingeniar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
discurrir
* * *♦ vtto invent, to devise* * *ingeniar vt: to devise, to think up* * * -
54 work over
sl отметелить, отдубасить, избить, ограбитьWhen they had worked him over for some minutes, they left him for dead, and escaped.
Matthew was worked over by the hoodlums in the park right after midnight.
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55 work up
v.to work up enthusiasm/interest for something ir entusiasmándose con/interesándose por algohe had worked up an appetite ya le había entrado el apetito2 (excitar, estimular)to get worked up (about something) alterarse (por algo)3 excitar, apasionar.4 maquinar. -
56 Hornblower, Jonathan
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. 1753 Cornwall (?), Englandd. 1815 Penryn, Cornwall, England[br]English mining engineer who patented an early form of compound steam engine.[br]Jonathan came from a family with an engineering tradition: his grandfather Joseph had worked under Thomas Newcomen. Jonathan was the sixth child in a family of thirteen whose names all began with "J". In 1781 he was living at Penryn, Cornwall and described himself as a plumber, brazier and engineer. As early as 1776, when he wished to amuse himself by making a small st-eam engine, he wanted to make something new and wondered if the steam would perform more than one operation in an engine. This was the foundation for his compound engine. He worked on engines in Cornwall, and in 1778 was Engineer at the Ting Tang mine where he helped Boulton \& Watt erect one of their engines. He was granted a patent in 1781 and in that year tried a large-scale experiment by connecting together two engines at Wheal Maid. Very soon John Winwood, a partner in a firm of iron founders at Bristol, acquired a share in the patent, and in 1782 an engine was erected in a colliery at Radstock, Somerset. This was probably not very successful, but a second was erected in the same area. Hornblower claimed greater economy from his engines, but steam pressures at that time were not high enough to produce really efficient compound engines. Between 1790 and 1794 ten engines with his two-cylinder arrangement were erected in Cornwall, and this threatened Boulton \& Watt's near monopoly. At first the steam was condensed by a surface condenser in the bottom of the second, larger cylinder, but this did not prove very successful and later a water jet was used. Although Boulton \& Watt proceeded against the owners of these engines for infringement of their patent, they did not take Jonathan Hornblower to court. He tried a method of packing the piston rod by a steam gland in 1781 and his work as an engineer must have been quite successful, for he left a considerable fortune on his death.[br]Bibliography1781, British patent no. 1,298 (compound steam engine).Further ReadingR.Jenkins, 1979–80, "Jonathan Hornblower and the compound engine", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 11.J.Tann, 1979–80, "Mr Hornblower and his crew, steam engine pirates in the late 18th century", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 51.J.Farey, 1827, A Treatise on the Steam Engine, Historical, Practical and Descriptive, reprinted 1971, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles (an almost contemporary account of the compound engine).D.S.L.Cardwell, 1971, From Watt to Clausius. The Rise of Thermo dynamics in the Early Industrial Age, London: Heinemann.H.W.Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press.R.L.Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press.RLH -
57 Hurter, Ferdinand
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 15 March 1844 Schaffhausen, Switzerlandd. 5 March 1898[br]Swiss chemist who, with Vero Charles Driffield, established the basis of modern sensitometry in England.[br]Ferdinand Hurter worked for three years as a dyer's apprentice before entering the Polytechnic in Zurich; he transferred to Heidelberg, where he graduated in 1866. A year later he secured an appointment as a chemist for the British alkali manufacturing company, Gaskell, Deacon \& Co. of Widnes, Cheshire. In 1871 he was joined at the company by the young engineer Vero Charles Driffield, who was to become his co-worker. Driffield had worked for a professional photographer before beginning his engineering apprenticeship and it was in 1876, when Hurter sought to draw on this experience, that the partnership began. At this time the speed of the new gelatine halide dry plates was expressed in terms of the speed of a wet-collodion plate, an almost worthless concept as the speed of a collodion plate was itself variable. Hurter and Driffield sought to place the study of photographic emulsions on a more scientific basis. They constructed an actinometer to measure the intensity of sunlight and in 1890 published the first of a series of papers on the sensitivity of photographic plates. They suggested methods of exposing a plate to lights of known intensities and measuring the densities obtained on development. They were able to plot curves based on density and exposure which became known as the H \& D curve. Hurter and Driffield's work allowed them to express the characteristics of an emulsion with a nomenclature which was soon adopted by British plate manufacturers. From the 1890s onwards most British-made plates were identified with H \& D ratings. Hurter and Driffield's partnership was ended by the former's death in 1898.[br]Further ReadingW.B.Ferguson (ed.), 1920, The Photographic Researches of Ferdinand Hurter \& Vero C. Driffield, London: Royal Photographic Society reprinted in facsimile, with a new introd. by W.Clark, 1974, New York (a memorial volume; the most complete account of Hurter and Driffield's work, includes a reprint of all their published papers).JW -
58 Н-8
ВОЗЛАГАТЬ НАДЕЖДЫ на кого-что VP subj: human to expect sth. good, favorable (from some person or thing)X возлагает надежды на Y-a = X places (his) hope in (on) YX sets (pins, puts) his hopes on Y (in limited contexts) Х's hope is that...H.И. Грудинина вновь рассказала о том, как Бродский занимался в ее семинаре молодых поэтов и какие надежды она возлагает на него... (Эткинд 1). N. I. Grudinina recounted once again how Brodsky had worked in her seminar for young poets and what hopes she had placed in him... (1a).«С ним (Мандельштамом) поступили очень милостиво: у нас и не за такое расстреливают»... Он (Винавер) тогда же предупредил меня, чтобы мы не возлагали лишних надежд на высочайшую милость: «Её могут отобрать, как только уляжется шум»... (Мандельштам 1). "Не (Mandelstam) got off very lightly: people are shot for much less than that." At the same time he (Vinaver) warned me not to place too much hope in mercy from on high: "It might be withdrawn as soon as the fuss has died down," he said (1a).Они хотят показать Гитлеру, что в СССР есть политические силы... возлагающие на войну все свои надежды, чтобы свалить нынешнее руководство... (Рыбаков 2)....They wanted Hitler to know that there were political forces in the U.S.S.R. that...were putting (all) their hopes on war to overthrow the present leadership... (2a)....Мы возлагали все надежды на то, что арест (Мандельштама) вызван местью за пощёчину... Алексею Толстому (Мандельштам 1)....Our main hope was that M(andelstam)'s arrest was indeed an act of vengeance for the slap in the face given to Alexei Tolstoi (1a). -
59 С-690
НА СЧАСТЬЕ coll PrepP Invar1. (дать, подарить что кому и т. п.) \С-690adv(to give sth. to s.o.) so that it will bring him good fortunefor (good) luckas a good-luck charm.Нина подарила мне на счастье своё кольцо. Nina gave me her ring as a good-luck charm.2. \С-690 (чьё) (sent adv (parenth)) by favorable chancefortunately (for s.o.)luckily (for s.o.)....Хотя все уже знали о приезде начальства, но решительно не могли в себе преодолеть мучительной инерции бездействия... Симочки, на её счастье, на работе не было — она отгуливала переработанный день... (Солженицын 3)....Though everyone now knew about the arrival of the committee, they were still unable to overcome the tormenting inertia of inaction.... Simochka, fortunately for her, was not on duty she had the day off in return for the extra day she had worked... (3a).В Карду (Настёна и уполномоченный) приехали засветло, магазин, на счастье, был открыт (Распутин 2). They (Nastyona and the representative) got to Karda before dark and the store, luckily, was open (2a). -
60 возлагать надежды
[VP; subj: human]=====⇒ to expect sth. good, favorable (from some person or thing):- X sets ( pins, puts) his hopes on Y;- [in limited contexts] X's hope is that...♦ Н. И. Грудинина вновь рассказала о том, как Бродский занимался в ее семинаре молодых поэтов и какие надежды она возлагает на него... (Эткинд 1). N. I. Grudinina recounted once again how Brodsky had worked in her seminar for young poets and what hopes she had placed in him... (1a).♦ "С ним [Мандельштамом] поступили очень милостиво: у нас и не за такое расстреливают"... Он [Винавер] тогда же предупредил меня, чтобы мы не возлагали лишних надежд на высочайшую милость: "Её могут отобрать, как только уляжется шум"... (Мандельштам 1). " Не [Mandelstam] got off very lightly: people are shot for much less than that." At the same time he [Vinaver] warned me not to place too much hope in mercy from on high: "It might be withdrawn as soon as the fuss has died down," he said (1a).♦...Они хотят показать Гитлеру, что в СССР есть политические силы... возлагающие на войну все свои надежды, чтобы свалить нынешнее руководство... (Рыбаков 2)....They wanted Hitler to know that there were political forces in the U.S.S.R. that...were putting [all] their hopes on war to overthrow the present leadership... (2a).♦...Мы возлагали все надежды на то, что арест [Мандельштама] вызван местью за пощёчину... Алексею Толстому (Мандельштам 1)....Our main hope was that M[andelstam]'s arrest was indeed an act of vengeance for the slap in the face given to Alexei Tolstoi (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > возлагать надежды
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