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121 в кои-то веки
• В КОИ-ТО < B КОИ> ВЕКИ coll[PrepP; these forms only; adv; most often used with pfv past verbs; when used with impfv or pfv fut verbs, usu. denotes a repeated action; fixed WO]=====⇒ finally, for the first time in a long period or after a long wait:- after an eternity (of waiting <of silence etc>);- [of repeated actions] once in a blue moon;- once in a great while.♦ "...Зачем ты это сделал [загнал полицмейстера в клозет]? Ты его не любишь?" - "Давайте об этом не будем", - предложил Виктор. "Так, а о чем же мы будем?.. В кои веки случилось что-то интересное, и сразу - не будем" (Стругацкие 1). "...Why did you do it [lock the police chief in the lavatory]? Don't you like him?" "Let's not talk about it," proposed Viktor. "Then what will we talk about?...At long last something interesting happens, and right away we can't talk about it" (1a)♦...Близилось открытое и общемосковское - в кои-то веки! - собрание советских писателей... (Свирский 1). The open, all-Moscow conference of Soviet writers was approaching after an eternity of silence (1a).♦ Ефим и Наташа приехали в субботу, как раз к тому дню, когда было решено накрыть стол... В кои веки собрались все вместе... (Рыбаков 1). Yefim and Natasha arrived on a Saturday, the very day we had decided to 'have a spread'...-once in a blue moon the whole family got together... (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > в кои-то веки
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122 в запасе
• В ЗАПАСЕ[PrepP; Invar; usu. subj-compl with copula (subj: any common noun)]=====⇒ kept for later use, ready to be used:- in reserve;- (have (keepetc) sth.) ready;- [in limited contexts](have (keep etc) sth.) up one's sleeve.♦...Он [защитник] всех прокурорских свидетелей сумел вовремя " подвести" и, по возможности, сбить, а главное, подмарать их нравственную репутацию... Все были убеждены, что какой-нибудь большой и окончательной пользы он всеми этими "подмарываниями" не мог достичь и, вероятно, это сам лучше всех понимает, имея какую-то свою идею в запасе, какое-то еще пока припрятанное оружие защиты, которое вдруг и обнаружит, когда придёт срок (Достоевский 2).... Не [the defense attorney] had been able to "take down" all the witnesses for the prosecution, to throw them off as much as possible, and, above all, to cast a slight taint on their moral reputations.... Everyone was convinced that he could achieve no great and ultimate advantage by all these "slight taints," and that he probably knew it better than anyone, holding ready some idea of his own, some still hidden weapon of defense that he would suddenly reveal when the time came (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > в запасе
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123 как по маслу
• КАК ПО МАСЛУ идти, получаться, течь и т. п. coll[ как + PrepP; Invar; adv]=====⇒ (of affairs, undertakings etc) (to move along, proceed) very smoothly, without any difficulties or hindrances:- swimmingly;- [in past contexts only](things) could not have gone better.♦ Пружины разбитого матраца кусали его, как блохи. Он не чувствовал этого. Он ещё неясно представлял себе, что последует вслед за получением ордеров, но был уверен, что тогда всё пойдёт как по маслу... (Ильф и Петров 1). The springs of the battered mattress nipped him like fleas, but he did not feel them. He still only had a vague idea of what would follow once the orders had been obtained, but was sure everything would go swimmingly (1a).♦ [Кречинский:] Берегись старика; остальное пойдёт как по маслу... (Сухово-Кобылин 2). [К.:] Watch out for the old man. The rest will go like clockwork (2a).♦ Этот генерал за короткий срок сделал головокружительную карьеру, потому что четыре года назад он носил ещё одну шпалу и командовал ротой. Но однажды ему крупно повезло... С тех пор дела его шли как по маслу (Войнович 2). The general had made a fabulous career for himself in a very short span of time. Four years before, he still wore only a single stripe and commanded a company. But then he had one great piece of luck....From then on, things could not have gone better for him (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > как по маслу
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124 пускать пыль в глаза
• ПУСКАТЬ/ПУСТИТЬ ПЫЛЬ В ГЛАЗА кому coll[VP; subj: human]=====⇒ to represent o.s. or ones affairs in a falsely advantageous light (by boasting, exaggerating, doing sth. flashy etc) in an attempt to fool others:- X пускает Y-y пыль в глаза≈ X is trying to impress Y (with...);- X is trying to pass himself off as rich (important etc) (in front of Y);- [in refer, to speaking only] X is spinning Y a fine yarn;- [only when the surrounding context makes it clear that what is displayed does not reflect the true state of affairs] X is showing (trying to show) off (to Y);- X is cutting (trying to cut) a swath.♦ Петрушка пустил Григорию пыль в глаза своею бывалостью в разных местах; Григорий же осадил его сразу Петербургом, в котором Петрушка не был (Гоголь 3). Petrushka tried to impress Grigory with having been in all sorts of places, but Grigory at once floored him with Petersburg, a place Petrushka had never visited (3a)♦ [author's usage] [Хлестаков:]...Они меня принимают за государственного человека. Верно, я вчера им подпустил пыли (Гоголь 4). [Kh.:]... They have taken me for someone of great importance in the government. I must have spun them a fine yarn yesterday (4c).♦...На свадьбе его сына впервые в нашем городе появился автомобиль, специально выписал его из Чернигова или из Гомеля, не знаю уж откуда, любил пустить пыль в глаза (Рыбаков 1). At his son's wedding the first automobile in town made its appearance, specially ordered from Chernigov, or Gomel, I'm not sure which - anyway, he loved to show off (1a)♦ Изредка, в большие праздники, любил Сергей Платонович пустить пыль в глаза: созывал гостей и угощал дорогими винами, свежей осетровой икрой... лучшими закусками (Шолохов 2). Occasionally, at festival time Sergei Platonovich liked to make a splash. He would give a party and treat his guests to expensive wines, fresh sturgeon caviar., and other delicacies (2a)♦ [Леонид:] Она молоденькая, хорошенькая, ей хочется повертеться, пустить пыль в глаза другим, это молодость, чепуха! Пройдет! (Розов 2). [L.:] She's young, pretty, she wants to show off, dazzle people It's just youth, nonsense. It'll pass! (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > пускать пыль в глаза
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125 пустить пыль в глаза
• ПУСКАТЬ/ПУСТИТЬ ПЫЛЬ В ГЛАЗА кому coll[VP; subj: human]=====⇒ to represent o.s. or ones affairs in a falsely advantageous light (by boasting, exaggerating, doing sth. flashy etc) in an attempt to fool others:- X пускает Y-y пыль в глаза≈ X is trying to impress Y (with...);- X is trying to pass himself off as rich (important etc) (in front of Y);- [in refer, to speaking only] X is spinning Y a fine yarn;- [only when the surrounding context makes it clear that what is displayed does not reflect the true state of affairs] X is showing (trying to show) off (to Y);- X is cutting (trying to cut) a swath.♦ Петрушка пустил Григорию пыль в глаза своею бывалостью в разных местах; Григорий же осадил его сразу Петербургом, в котором Петрушка не был (Гоголь 3). Petrushka tried to impress Grigory with having been in all sorts of places, but Grigory at once floored him with Petersburg, a place Petrushka had never visited (3a)♦ [author's usage] [Хлестаков:]...Они меня принимают за государственного человека. Верно, я вчера им подпустил пыли (Гоголь 4). [Kh.:]... They have taken me for someone of great importance in the government. I must have spun them a fine yarn yesterday (4c).♦...На свадьбе его сына впервые в нашем городе появился автомобиль, специально выписал его из Чернигова или из Гомеля, не знаю уж откуда, любил пустить пыль в глаза (Рыбаков 1). At his son's wedding the first automobile in town made its appearance, specially ordered from Chernigov, or Gomel, I'm not sure which - anyway, he loved to show off (1a)♦ Изредка, в большие праздники, любил Сергей Платонович пустить пыль в глаза: созывал гостей и угощал дорогими винами, свежей осетровой икрой... лучшими закусками (Шолохов 2). Occasionally, at festival time Sergei Platonovich liked to make a splash. He would give a party and treat his guests to expensive wines, fresh sturgeon caviar., and other delicacies (2a)♦ [Леонид:] Она молоденькая, хорошенькая, ей хочется повертеться, пустить пыль в глаза другим, это молодость, чепуха! Пройдет! (Розов 2). [L.:] She's young, pretty, she wants to show off, dazzle people It's just youth, nonsense. It'll pass! (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > пустить пыль в глаза
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126 тогда как
[subord conj; contrastive, contrastive-temporal, or contrastive-concessive]=====⇒ while at the same time:- while;- whereas;- [in limited contexts] although;- even though;- by contrast.♦ Она сидела неподвижно, опустив голову на грудь; перед нею на столике была раскрыта книга, но глаза её, неподвижные и полные неизъяснимой грусти, казалось, в сотый раз пробегали одну и ту же страницу, тогда как мысли её были далеко... (Лермонтов 1). She sat motionless, her head sunk on her breast, on a table before her lay an open book, but her fixed gaze, full of inexplicable sadness, seemed to be skimming one and the same page for the hundredth time while her thoughts were far away... (1b).♦...Подсудимый, войдя в залу... шагал вперёд как солдат и держал глаза впереди себя, упираясь, тогда как вернее было ему смотреть налево, где в публике сидят дамы, ибо он был большой любитель прекрасного пола... (Достоевский 2)....The defendant, on entering the courtroom...marched along like a soldier, and kept his eyes fixed straight in front of him, whereas it would have been more correct for him to look to the left where, among the public, the ladies were sitting, since he was a great admirer of the fair sex... (2a).♦ Было непонятно, во-первых, как он [ котёл] здесь очутился, а во-вторых, как он уцелел, будучи медным, тогда как чугунный не выдержал и лопнул (Искандер 3). They could not understand, in the first place, how it [the kettle] had gotten here, and in the second place, how it had survived, being copper, when the iron one had not withstood the fire and had split (3a).♦ "Я очень рад буду, - сказал князь. - Скажите, - прибавил он, как будто только что вспомнив что-то и особенно-небрежно, тогда как то, о чём он спрашивал, было главною целью его посещения, - правда, что l'imperatrice-mere желает назначения барона Функе первым секретарём в Вену?" (Толстой 4). "Ah! I shall be delighted," said the Prince. "Tell me," he added, with elaborate casualness, as if the question he was about to ask had just occurred to him, when in fact it was the chief purpose of his visit, "is it true that the Dowager Empress wants Baron Funke to be appointed first secretary in Vienna?" (4a).♦ В простой крестьянской жизни всякий дар человека, если смысл этого дара ясен и нагляден, признаётся окружающими спокойно и безоговорочно. Тогда как в интеллигентной среде... оценки людей гораздо более запутанны и авторитеты гораздо чаще ложны (Искандер 5). In the simple peasant way of life, any gift of a man's, if the significance of the gift be clear and demonstrable, is calmly and unreservedly acknowledged by those around him. In a cultured milieu, by contrast...assessments of men are much more muddled and the experts much more often in error (5a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > тогда как
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127 использовать
. воспользоваться; максимально использовать; можно использовать; наиболее эффективно использовать; пользоваться; применять; широко использовать•Advantage is taken of this fact in some turbojet engines.
•Unique processes and equipment have been successfully applied in the mining and refining of potash salts.
•The great majority of amplifiers are electronic and depend (or rely) upon transistors and chips for their operation.
•These projects can draw on the data from five tests.
•The new relay employs three sets of contacts.
•To harness atomic energy for peaceful uses,...
•This reaction may be harnessed to perform work.
•The power unit makes use of a standard electric starter.
•These vehicles rely on ambient air as a source of oxygen.
•This nonreciprocity has as yet not been turned to useful account in antennas.
•At present, these laboratories are being utilized to test timbers.
•Such high precision makes it possible to employ (or use, or utilize) laser radiation as a primary standard of length and time.
•With electricity farmers could run useful devices of all kinds.
•This offers the possibility of putting hydrides to work in heat pumps.
•These techniques take advantage of the laser's high spectral intensity.
•Lasers are exploited to heat plasmas with short pulses of light.
•Double-break or multibreak devices can exploit this effect even at higher voltages.
•The author's suggestions were picked up by the Japanese who ran some preliminary tests on eleven pure elements.
•The steam from a dry field can be put to use() other than power production.
•The newest accelerators exploit the same fundamental principles as the first ones.
•Simplifying assumptions have been invoked to separate the two processes for individual study.
•If this natural gas can be tapped, there would be a tremendous source of fuel.
II•When all the even (or odd) integers are used up, there will still be half the series...
* * *Использовать -- to use, to utilize, to apply, to employ, to exploit; to make use of; to draw on (с оттенком заимствования); to rely on (полагаться на)Under these circumstances, we can employ the data from this experiment to establish limits for heat fluxes.These diffusers exploit the centrifugal forces acting on a swirling throughflow to enhance mixing and combustion.Each engine will be provided with a control unit which makes use of modern electronic techniques (... в котором используется...).Two independent methods were applied to eliminate any possible error in fringe order determination.The work of L. [...] was drawn on for the design of turbine blades.However, the theoretical magnitude is far from correct and we must rely on experimental values for the coefficient C.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > использовать
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128 добиться успеха
1) General subject: achieve success, arrive (an actor who has arrived - актёр, который добился успеха, прославился), blossom forth, blossom out, come off with flying colours, come through with flying colours (в чем-л.), get anywhere, get off, get there, get to the top of the tree, make a hand, make the running, passed flying colors, put over, (особенно очень быстро, неожиданно) shoot to stardom, (неожиданно) get a break, (преодолеть трудности и) make the grade, come off with flying colors, go great guns, have cake baked, make good, make mark, score a knockout, strike oil, make the grade (в жизни), hit pay dirt, strike pay dirt, find success, ride high, hit a home run (в чем-либо), win out, pull something off / pull it off, succeed, succeed in, (добиваться) bring off2) Colloquial: bring home the bacon, make a go of it, make the grade, bring off3) Military: make progress, obtain gains, obtain headway, obtain success4) Australian slang: pull off5) Psychology: develop (develop some skills in - добиться некоторого успеха в)6) Jargon: go into orbit, make good (особенно в бизнесе), make jack, make it7) Advertising: score a success8) Makarov: climb to success, come off well, come to the top, cut the mustard, come off with flying colours (в чем-л.)9) Phraseological unit: make the big time10) Idiomatic expression: reach for the stars
См. также в других словарях:
The Great Time Machine Hoax — Infobox Book | name = The Great Time Machine Hoax title orig = translator = image caption = first edition of The Great Time Machine Hoax author = Keith Laumer illustrator = cover artist = country = United States language = English series = genre … Wikipedia
To have a great mind — Mind Mind (m[imac]nd), n. [AS. mynd, gemynd; akin to OHG. minna memory, love, G. minne love, Dan. minde mind, memory, remembrance, consent, vote, Sw. minne memory, Icel. minni, Goth. gamunds, L. mens, mentis, mind, Gr. me nos, Skr. manas mind,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
have a ball — If you have a ball, you have a great time, a lot of fun … The small dictionary of idiomes
have a blast — have a great time, have a lot of fun … English contemporary dictionary
great — [[t]greɪt[/t]] adj. great•er, great•est, 1) unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions; big 2) large in number; numerous: great herds of buffalo[/ex] 3) unusual or considerable in degree, power, intensity, etc.: great pain[/ex] 4)… … From formal English to slang
have — [ weak əv, həv, strong hæv ] (3rd person singular has [ weak əz, həz, strong hæz ] ; past tense and past participle had [ weak əd, həd, strong hæd ] ) verb *** Have can be used in the following ways: as an auxiliary verb in perfect tenses of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Great — (gr[=a]t), a. [Compar. {Greater}; superl. {Greatest}.] [OE. gret, great, AS. gre[ a]t; akin to OS. & LG. gr[=o]t, D. groot, OHG. gr[=o]z, G. gross. Cf. {Groat} the coin.] 1. Large in space; of much size; big; immense; enormous; expanded; opposed… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Great bear — Great Great (gr[=a]t), a. [Compar. {Greater}; superl. {Greatest}.] [OE. gret, great, AS. gre[ a]t; akin to OS. & LG. gr[=o]t, D. groot, OHG. gr[=o]z, G. gross. Cf. {Groat} the coin.] 1. Large in space; of much size; big; immense; enormous;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Great cattle — Great Great (gr[=a]t), a. [Compar. {Greater}; superl. {Greatest}.] [OE. gret, great, AS. gre[ a]t; akin to OS. & LG. gr[=o]t, D. groot, OHG. gr[=o]z, G. gross. Cf. {Groat} the coin.] 1. Large in space; of much size; big; immense; enormous;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Great charter — Great Great (gr[=a]t), a. [Compar. {Greater}; superl. {Greatest}.] [OE. gret, great, AS. gre[ a]t; akin to OS. & LG. gr[=o]t, D. groot, OHG. gr[=o]z, G. gross. Cf. {Groat} the coin.] 1. Large in space; of much size; big; immense; enormous;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Great circle of a sphere — Great Great (gr[=a]t), a. [Compar. {Greater}; superl. {Greatest}.] [OE. gret, great, AS. gre[ a]t; akin to OS. & LG. gr[=o]t, D. groot, OHG. gr[=o]z, G. gross. Cf. {Groat} the coin.] 1. Large in space; of much size; big; immense; enormous;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English