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121 sotto (a)
sotto (a) prep.1 ( in luogo o posizione inferiore o sottostante) under; beneath, underneath: sotto (a) il sole, sotto (a) le stelle, under the sun, beneath the stars; lo sgabello è sotto (a) il tavolo, the stool is under the table; sotto (a) il divano c'è un tappeto, there is a carpet under the settee; sotto (a) il cappotto indossava un abito di seta, she was wearing a silk dress under her coat; portava un libro sotto (a) il braccio, he carried a book under his arm; la campagna era sotto (a) una coltre di neve, the countryside was under a mantle of snow; erano in due sotto (a) l'ombrello, there were two of them under the umbrella; si ripararono sotto (a) un albero, they sheltered under a tree; cercare una parola sotto (a) la lettera S, to look up a word under the letter S; il ritrovo dei partecipanti era sotto (a) l'orologio della stazione, the participants were to meet under (neath) the station clock; hanno costruito un tunnel sotto (a) la Manica, a tunnel was built under the Channel; passare sotto (a) un ponte, to go under a bridge; ho ritrovato il documento sotto (a) un mucchio di pratiche, I found the document under a pile of papers; vivere sotto (a) lo stesso tetto, to live under the same roof; nuotare sott'acqua, to swim underwater; estrasse una pistola da sotto (a) la giacca, he took out a gun from under his jacket // infilarsi sotto (a) le coperte, to slip between the sheets // passeggiare sotto (a) i portici, to stroll through the arcade // conservare sott'olio, sott'aceto, to preserve in oil, to pickle2 ( più in basso, al di sotto di) below (anche fig.); ( a sud di) south of: sotto (a) il livello del mare, below sea level; sotto (a) la media, below average; la pianura si stende sotto (a) il castello, the plain stretches below the castle; il rifugio era proprio sotto (a) la vetta, the refuge hut was just below the summit; il corteo passò sotto (a) le mie finestre, the procession passed below my windows; metti la tua firma sotto (a) la mia, put your signature below mine; ha 500 dipendenti sotto (a) di sé, he has 500 workers under him; la temperatura era scesa sotto (a) lo zero, the temperature had fallen below zero; Roma è sotto (a) Firenze, Rome is south of Florence; il Sud Africa è sotto (a) l'equatore, South Africa is below the equator // (mar.) sotto (a) ponte, below deck // (fin.) sotto (a) la pari, below par (o at a discount) // al di sotto (a) di → disotto3 (per indicare subordinazione, influsso, condizione) under: sotto (a) la bandiera italiana, under the Italian flag; sotto (a) la direzione, la guida di..., under the management, the guide of...; sotto (a) il nome di..., under the name of...; sotto (a) il fuoco nemico, under enemy fire; sotto (a) il regno di Elisabetta I, sotto (a) gli Stuart, sotto (a) Augusto, under the reign of Elizabeth I, under the Stuarts, under Augustus; nel 1848 la Lombardia era sotto (a) la dominazione austriaca, in 1848 Lombardy was under Austrian rule; mettere qlcu. sotto (a) la protezione della polizia, to put s.o. under police protection; avere qlcu. sotto (a) la propria tutela, to have s.o. under one's care; agire sotto (a) l'effetto di un farmaco, to act under the influence of a drug // sotto (a) la pioggia, in the rain // essere nato sotto (a) una buona, cattiva stella, to be born under a lucky, an unlucky star // studiare sotto (a) un buon maestro, to study with a good teacher // sotto (a) minaccia di morte, on pain of death; sotto (a) processo, on trial; sotto (a) giuramento, on (o under) oath4 ( meno di) under: essere sotto (a) la quarantina, to be under forty; atleti sotto (a) i 21 anni, athletes under 21; un reddito annuo sotto (a) i 16.000 euro, an annual income of under 16,000 euros; essere sotto (a) peso, to be underweight; gli abitanti erano di poco sotto (a) il migliaio, there were just under a thousand inhabitants5 (in prossimità di, con valore temporale): qui gli alberghi sono pieni sotto (a) Pasqua, hotels here are full up at Eastertime; siamo ormai sotto (a) gli esami, it's exam time◆ agg.invar. ( inferiore) below: il piano (di) sotto (a), the floor below; leggi la riga sotto (a), read the line below◆ s.m. ( la parte inferiore) bottom; underside: il sotto (a) della pentola è di rame, the bottom of the pan is made of copper; il sotto (a) della coperta è di raso, the underside of the cover is made of satin.◆ FRASEOLOGIA: un lupo sotto (a) la veste d'agnello, a wolf in sheep's clothing // sotto (a) questo aspetto, from that point of view; sotto (a) ogni punto di vista, from every point of view // andare sotto (a) un'automobile, to be run over by a car; mettere sotto (a) qlcu., to run s.o. over // mettere qlcu. sotto (a) i piedi, to treat s.o. like a doormat // avere qlco. sotto (a) il naso, to have sthg. under one's nose; mettere qlco. sotto (a) i denti, to have a bite to eat // tenere qlcu. sott'occhio, to keep an eye on s.o. // passare qlco. sotto (a) silenzio, to keep quiet about sthg. -
122 Reading
1) The Discovery of Truth Depends on the Thoughtful Reading of Authoritative TextsFor the Middle Ages, all discovery of truth was first reception of traditional authorities, then later-in the thirteenth century-rational reconciliation of authoritative texts. A comprehension of the world was not regarded as a creative function but as an assimilation and retracing of given facts; the symbolic expression of this being reading. The goal and the accomplishment of the thinker is to connect all these facts together in the form of the "summa." Dante's cosmic poem is such a summa too. (Curtius, 1973, p. 326)The readers of books... extend or concentrate a function common to us all. Reading letters on a page is only one of its many guises. The astronomer reading a map of stars that no longer exist; the Japanese architect reading the land on which a house is to be built so as to guard it from evil forces; the zoologist reading the spoor of animals in the forest; the card-player reading her partner's gestures before playing the winning card; the dancer reading the choreographer's notations, and the public reading the dancer's movements on the stage; the weaver reading the intricate design of a carpet being woven; the organ-player reading various simultaneous strands of music orchestrated on the page; the parent reading the baby's face for signs of joy or fright, or wonder; the Chinese fortune-teller reading the ancient marks on the shell of a tortoise; the lover blindly reading the loved one's body at night, under the sheets; the psychiatrist helping patients read their own bewildering dreams; the Hawaiian fisherman reading the ocean currents by plunging a hand into the water; the farmer reading the weather in the sky-all these share with book-readers the craft of deciphering and translating signs....We all read ourselves and the world around us in order to glimpse what and where we are. We read to understand, or to begin to understand. We cannot do but read. Reading, almost as much as breathing, is our essential function. (Manguel, 1996, pp. 6-7)There is a pitched battle between those theorists and modellers who embrace the primacy of syntax and those who embrace the primacy of semantics in language processing. At times both schools have committed various excesses. For example, some of the former have relied foolishly on context-free mathematical-combinatory models, while some of the latter have flirted with versions of the "direct-access hypothesis," the idea that skilled readers process printed language directly into meaning without phonological or even syntactic processing. The problems with the first excess are patent. Those with the second are more complex and demand more research. Unskilled readers apparently do rely more on phonological processing than do skilled ones; hence their spoken dialects may interfere with their reading-and writing-habits. But the extent to which phonological processing is absent in the skilled reader has not been established, and the contention that syntactic processing is suspended in the skilled reader is surely wrong and not supported by empirical evidence-though blood-flow patterns in the brain are curiously different during speaking, oral reading, and silent reading. (M. L. Johnson, 1988, pp. 101-102)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Reading
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123 knüpfen
I v/t (Knoten, Netz) tie, make; (Teppich) knot; (befestigen) tie, fasten (an + Akk to); ein Bündnis / eine Freundschaft knüpfen fig. form an alliance / a friendship; seine Hoffnungen an etw. (Akk) knüpfen pin one’s hopes on s.th.; große Erwartungen an etw. (Akk) knüpfen have great expectations of s.th.; Bedingungen an etw. (Akk) knüpfen attach conditions to s.th.II v/refl: sich knüpfen an (+ Akk) Vorstellungen etc.: be connected ( oder associated, tied up) with; Bedingungen: be attached to; (folgen aus) arise from; daran knüpfen sich für mich glückliche Erinnerungen it’s associated with ( oder it has, it holds) happy memories for me* * *to knot* * *knụ̈p|fen ['knʏpfn]1. vtKnoten to tie; Band to knot, to tie (up); Teppich to knot; Netz to mesh; Freundschaft to form, to strike upjdn an den nächsten Baum/den Galgen knüpfen (inf) — to hang sb from the nearest tree/the gallows, to string sb up (inf)
knüpfen (lit) — to tie or knot sth to sth; (fig) Bedingungen to attach sth to sth; Hoffnungen to pin sth on sth
Kontakte knüpfen ( zu or mit) — to establish contact (with)
See:→ Band2. vran diese Erfindung knüpfen sich viele technische Möglichkeiten — this discovery has many technical possibilities
* * *knüp·fen[ˈknʏpfn̩]I. vt1. (verknoten)▪ etw \knüpfen to tie sthein Netz \knüpfen to mesh a neteinen Teppich \knüpfen to knot [or make] a carpet2. (gedanklich verbinden)II. vr* * *1.transitives Verb1) tie (an + Akk. to)3) (fig.)große Erwartungen an etwas (Akk.) knüpfen — have great expectations of something
2.Bedingungen an etwas (Akk.) knüpfen — attach conditions to something
reflexives Verbsich an etwas (Akk.) knüpfen — be connected with something
* * *an +akk to);ein Bündnis/eine Freundschaft knüpfen fig form an alliance/a friendship;knüpfen pin one’s hopes on sth;knüpfen have great expectations of sth;Bedingungen an etwas (akk)knüpfen attach conditions to sthB. v/r:sich knüpfen an (+akk) Vorstellungen etc: be connected ( oder associated, tied up) with; Bedingungen: be attached to; (folgen aus) arise from;daran knüpfen sich für mich glückliche Erinnerungen it’s associated with ( oder it has, it holds) happy memories for me* * *1.transitives Verb1) tie (an + Akk. to)2) (durch Knoten herstellen) knot; make < net>3) (fig.)große Erwartungen an etwas (Akk.) knüpfen — have great expectations of something
2.Bedingungen an etwas (Akk.) knüpfen — attach conditions to something
reflexives Verbsich an etwas (Akk.) knüpfen — be connected with something
* * *v.to knot v.to make v.(§ p.,p.p.: made)to tie v. -
124 кастря
1. (дърво) trim, prune, lop2. прен. carpet, rate, jaw, give (s.o.) a dressing-down* * *ка̀стря,гл., мин. св. деят. прич. ка̀стрил 1. ( дърво) trim, prune, coppice, lop;2. прен. carpet, rate, jaw, give (s.o.) a dressing-down.* * *clip; crop: You have to кастря off the branches of this tree. - Трябва да окастриш клоните на това дърво.; pare; pollard; trash{trES}* * *1. (дърво) trim, prune, lop 2. прен. carpet, rate, jaw, give (s. o.) a dressing-down -
125 wear
[weə] past tense wore [wɔː]; past participle worn [wɔːn]1. verb1) to be dressed in or carry on (a part of) the body:يَلْبِس، يَرْتَديDoes she usually wear spectacles?
2) to arrange (one's hair) in a particular way:يُرَتِّبُ شَعْرَهShe wears her hair in a pony-tail.
3) to have or show (a particular expression):يَبْدو عَلَيْه، يَظْهَرُ عَلَيْهِShe wore an angry expression.
4) to (cause to) become thinner etc because of use, rubbing etc:يَبْلى، يَتَآكَلThis sweater is wearing thin at the elbows.
يثْقُب، يَحِتُّI've worn a hole in the elbow of my jacket.
6) to stand up to use:يَصْمُد، يَحْتَمِل كَثْرَة الإسْتِعْمالThis material doesn't wear very well.
2. noun1) use as clothes etc:يَلْبِس الثِّياب، يَرْتَديThose shoes won't stand much wear.
2) articles for use as clothes:لِباسleisure wear.
3) ( sometimes wear and tear) damage due to use:البِلى بالإسْتِعْمال العاديThe hall carpet is showing signs of wear.
4) ability to withstand use:قُدْرَةٌ على إحْتِمال الإسْتِعْمالThere's plenty of wear left in it yet.
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126 treten
to stride; to kick; to tread; to pace; to march* * *tre|ten ['treːtn] pret trat [traːt] ptp getreten [gə'treːtn]1. vi1) (= ausschlagen, mit Fuß anstoßen) to kick (gegen etw sth, nach out at)2) aux sein (mit Raumangabe) to stephier kann man nicht mehr tréten — there is no room to move here
vom Schatten ins Helle tréten — to move out of the shadow into the light
tréten — to move or step closer to sth
vor die Kamera tréten (im Fernsehen) — to appear on TV; (im Film) to appear in a film or on the screen
in den Vordergrund/Hintergrund tréten — to step forward/back; (fig) to come to the forefront/to recede into the background
an jds Stelle tréten — to take sb's place
See:→ nahe3) aux sein or haben (in Loch, Pfütze, auf Gegenstand etc) to step, to treadjdm auf den Fuß tréten — to step on sb's foot, to tread (esp Brit) or step on sb's toe
jdm auf die Füße tréten (fig) — to tread (esp Brit) or step on sb's toes
tréten — to tread on sb's toes
getreten fühlen — to feel offended, to be put out
See:→ Stelle4) aux sein or haben(= betätigen)
in die Pedale tréten — to pedal hardauf die Bremse tréten — to brake, to put one's foot on the brake
5) aux sein(= hervortreten, sichtbar werden)
Wasser trat aus allen Ritzen und Fugen — water was coming out of every nook and crannyTränen traten ihr in die Augen — tears came to her eyes, her eyes filled with tears
6) aux sein (Funktionsverb) (= beginnen) to start, to begin; (= eintreten) to entertréten — to come into or enter sb's life
ins Leben tréten — to come into being
in den Ruhestand tréten — to retire
in den Streik or Ausstand tréten — to go on strike
in den Staatsdienst/Stand der Ehe or Ehestand tréten — to enter the civil service/into the state of matrimony
mit jdm in Verbindung tréten — to get in touch with sb
in die entscheidende Phase tréten — to enter the crucial phase
See:2. vt1) (= einen Fußtritt geben, stoßen) to kick; (SPORT) Ecke, Freistoß to takejdn ans Bein tréten — to kick sb's leg, to kick sb on or in the leg
jdn mit dem Fuß tréten — to kick sb
in den Hintern tréten (fig inf) — to kick oneself
2) (= mit Fuß betätigen) Spinnrad, Nähmaschine, Webstuhl, Blasebalg to operate (using one's foot)die Bremse tréten — to brake, to put on the brakes
die Pedale tréten — to pedal
3) (= trampeln) Pfad, Weg, Bahn to treadeinen Splitter in den Fuß tréten — to get a splinter in one's foot
See:→ Wasser4) (fig) (= schlecht behandeln) to shove around (inf)5) (= begatten) to tread, to mate with* * *1) (to hit or strike out with the foot: The child kicked his brother; He kicked the ball into the next garden; He kicked at the locked door; He kicked open the gate.) kick2) (to place one's feet on: He threw his cigarette on the ground and trod on it.) tread* * *tre·ten<tritt, trat, getreten>[ˈtre:tn̩]I. vi1. Hilfsverb: sein (gehen)▪ irgendwohin \treten to step somewhere; (hineingehen a.) to go somewhere; (hereinkommen a.) to come somewherebitte \treten Sie näher! please come in!pass auf, wohin du trittst mind [or watch] your step, watch where you tread [or step] [or you're treading]auf den Flur \treten to step into the hallvon einem Fuß auf den anderen \treten to shift from one foot to the otherer trat aus der Tür he walked out of [or fam out] the doordie Sonne tritt hinter die Wolken (fig) the sun disappeared behind the clouds▪ von etw dat \treten (absteigen) to step off sth; (zurückgehen) to step [or move] [or come/go] away from sth▪ vor jdn \treten to appear before sbvor den Spiegel \treten to step up to the mirrorvor die Tür \treten to step outside▪ zu jdm/etw \treten to step up to sb/sthzur Seite \treten to step [or move] aside2. Hilfsverb: sein (fließen)der Fluss trat über seine Ufer the river broke [or burst] [or overflowed] its banksSchweiß trat ihm auf die Stirn sweat appeared on [or beaded] his forehead▪ aus etw dat \treten to come out of sth; (durch Auslass) to exit from sth; (quellen) to ooze from sth; (tropfen) to drip from sth; (stärker) to run from sth; (strömen) to pour [or gush] from [or out of] sth; (entweichen) to leak from sthder Schweiß trat ihm aus allen Poren he was sweating profuselyWasser tritt aus den Wänden water was coming out of the walls, the walls were exuding waterjdm auf den Fuß \treten to tread [or step] on sb's foot [or toes]du bist in etwas ge\treten (euph) smells like you've stepped in somethingin einen Nagel \treten to tread [or step] on a nail; s.a. Schlips4. Hilfsverb: haben (stampfen)5. Hilfsverb: haben (schlagen)jdm in den Hintern \treten (fam) to kick sb [or give sb a kick] up the backside [or BRIT also bum] fam▪ nach jdm \treten to kick out [or aim a kick] at sb6. Hilfsverb: haben (betätigen)auf den Balg \treten to operate the bellowsauf die Bremse \treten to brake, to apply [or step on] the brakesauf die Kupplung \treten to engage [or operate] the clutchauf die Pedale \treten to pedalnach unten \treten to bully [or harass] the staff under one8. Hilfsverb: sein (anfangen)sie ist in ihr 80. Jahr ge\treten she has now turned 80in Aktion \treten to go into actionin den Ausstand \treten to go on strikein jds Dienste \treten to enter sb's servicein den Ruhestand \treten to go into retirementin Verhandlungen \treten to enter into negotiations9. Hilfsverb: sein (fig)in jds Bewusstsein \treten to occur to sbin Erscheinung \treten to appear; Person a. to appear in personin jds Leben \treten to come into sb's lifein eine Umlaufbahn \treten to enter into orbit11. Hilfsverb: haben (begatten)eine Henne \treten to tread a hen specII. vt Hilfsverb: haben1. (schlagen)jdn mit dem Fuß \treten to kick sbden Ball ins Aus/Tor \treten to kick the ball out of play/into the neteine Ecke/einen Elfmeter/einen Freistoß \treten to take a corner/penalty/free kick4. (betätigen)▪ etw \treten to step on sth, to press [or depress] sth with one's footden Balg \treten to operate the bellowsdie Bremse \treten to brake, to apply [or step on] the brakesdie Kupplung \treten to engage [or operate] the clutchdie Pedale \treten to pedal5. (bahnen)die Mönche haben eine Spur auf die Steintreppe ge\treten the monks have worn away the stone steps with their feet6. (stampfen)tretet mir keinen Dreck ins Haus! wipe your feet before coming into the house!etw in die Erde/einen Teppich \treten to tread/stamp sth into the earth/a carpetetw zu Matsch \treten to stamp sth to a mushetw platt \treten to stamp sth flatihr tretet meine Blumen platt! you're trampling all over my flowers!▪ jdn \treten to bully [or harass] sb▪ jdn \treten, damit er etw tut to give sb a kick to make him do sthIII. vrsie trat sich einen Nagel in den Fuß she stepped onto a nail [or ran a nail into her foot]* * *1.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (einen Schritt, Schritte machen) step (in + Akk. into, auf + Akk. on to)der Schweiß ist ihm auf die Stirn getreten — (fig.) the sweat came to his brow
der Fluss ist über die Ufer getreten — (fig.) the river has overflowed its banks
auf etwas (Akk.) treten — (absichtlich) tread on something; (unabsichtlich; meist mit sein) step or tread on something
jemandem auf den Fuß treten — step/tread on somebody's foot or toes
auf das Gas[pedal] treten — step on the accelerator
3) mit sein4) (ausschlagen) kick2.jemandem an od. gegen das Schienbein treten — kick somebody on the shin
unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) kick <person, ball, etc.>2) (trampeln) trample, tread < path>* * *treten; tritt, trat, getretenA. v/i (ist)1. (sich mit einem Schritt oder Schritten in eine bestimmte Richtung bewegen) step, walk, go, move;jemandem in den Weg treten step into sb’s path; (den Weg versperren) block sb’s path;zu jemandem treten besonders mit einem Anliegen: walk ( oder go) up to sb; (sich zu jemandem gesellen) join sb;ans Fenster treten go (over) to the window;über die Schwelle treten cross the threshold;treten Sie näher! step this way!;2. Sachen: (sich [scheinbar] bewegen) go, come, pass;der Mond/die Sonne trat hinter die Wolken the moon/sun disappeared behind the clouds; Sonne: auch the sun went in umg;die Tränen traten ihm in die Augen tears came to ( oder welled up in) his eyes;der Schweiß trat ihm auf die Stirn (beads of) sweat formed ( oder stood out) on his forehead ( oder face);über die Ufer treten Fluss: overflow (its banks), flood3. (unabsichtlich den Fuß auf, in etwas setzen) stand, step, tread (auf/in +akk on/in);hast)auf etwas treten tread (besonders US step) on sth;man wusste nicht, wohin man treten sollte you didn’t know where to put your feet ( oder where to step);von einem Fuß auf den andern treten hop from one leg ( oder shift from one foot) to the otherB. v/t & v/i1. (hat) (jemandem, einer Sache einen Fußtritt versetzen) kick, give sb (oder sth) a kick;nach jemandem treten (take a) kick ( oder kick out) at sb;jemandem gegen das Schienbein treten kick sb in the shin(s);Vorsicht, das Pferd tritt! look out, that horse kicks ( oder is a kicker)!;treten gegen unabsichtlich: accidentally kick (against), walk into; absichtlich: kick; fig (jemanden drängen) prod, put pressure on ( stärker: kick);mit Füßen treten) bully, trample on;nach unten treten take it out on the dog2. (hat) (durch einen Tritt, Tritte bewirken) kick;eine Ecke/einen Elfmeter treten take a corner (kick)/a penalty;eine Beule ins Auto treten dent the car with a kick ( oder by kicking it);sich (dat)den Dreck von den Schuhen treten kick ( oder stamp) the muck off one’s boots3. (hat) (durch Fußdruck betätigen, bewirken) press down (with the foot), depress; Radfahrer: pedal;die Kupplung/Pedale treten depress the clutch (pedal)/work the pedals ( Fahrrad: pedal, push on the pedals);aufs Gas treten put one’s foot down umg, step on it ( oder on the gas) umg, put the pedal to the metal umg;4. (durch Darauftreten an eine bestimmte Stelle gelangen) get, run, tread;sich (dat)einen Dorn in den Fuß treten get a thorn in ( oder run a thorn into) one’s footder Hahn tritt die Henne the cock treads the hen; → nah B, näher; → Dienst 3, Hühnerauge, Kraft 6, Schlips, Stelle 1, zutage etc* * *1.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (einen Schritt, Schritte machen) step (in + Akk. into, auf + Akk. on to)der Schweiß ist ihm auf die Stirn getreten — (fig.) the sweat came to his brow
der Fluss ist über die Ufer getreten — (fig.) the river has overflowed its banks
auf etwas (Akk.) treten — (absichtlich) tread on something; (unabsichtlich; meist mit sein) step or tread on something
jemandem auf den Fuß treten — step/tread on somebody's foot or toes
auf das Gas[pedal] treten — step on the accelerator
3) mit sein4) (ausschlagen) kick2.jemandem an od. gegen das Schienbein treten — kick somebody on the shin
unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) kick <person, ball, etc.>2) (trampeln) trample, tread < path>* * *(in) v.to step (into) v. v.(§ p.,pp.: trat, ist/hat getreten)= to kick v.to tread v.(§ p.,p.p.: trod, trodden) -
127 vorteilhaft
I Adj. advantageous ( für to); (positiv) positive; WIRTS. (Gewinn bringend) profitable ( für to); (günstig) favo(u)rable; Kleid, Farbe: becoming; vorteilhaft aussehen oder wirken look good; ihr vorteilhaftes Äußeres her good looksII Adv. advantageously etc.; siehe I; WIRTS. (mit Gewinn) verkaufen etc.: at a profit; sich kleiden etc.: to one’s (best) advantage; sich vorteilhaft auswirken (vorteilhaft sein) have a positive effect ( auf +Akk on); längerfristig: (prove to) be of advantage ( auf + Akk, für for); sich auf oder für jemanden vorteilhaft auswirken auch be to s.o.’s advantage; sich vorteilhaft kleiden auch make the most of one’s figure; sich vorteilhaft entwickeln develop positively; Person: make a lot of progress; unvorteilhaft* * *positive; advantageous; profitable; favourable; favorable* * *vor|teil|haft1. adjadvantageous; Kleid, Frisur flattering; Geschäft lucrative, profitableein vórteilhafter Kauf — a good buy, a bargain
2. advvórteilhaft aussehen — to look one's best
der helle Teppich wirkt vórteilhaft — the light carpet looks good
sie war nicht sehr vórteilhaft geschminkt — her make-up wasn't very flattering
du solltest dich vórteilhafter kleiden —
etw vórteilhaft verkaufen (finanziell) — to sell sth for a profit
etw vórteilhaft kaufen — to get sth at a good price
* * *1) (having or giving an advantage: Because of his experience he was in an advantageous position for promotion) advantageous* * *vor·teil·haftI. adjein \vorteilhafter Kauf a good buy, a bargain▪ [für jdn] \vorteilhaft sein to be favourable [for sb]ich würde von dem Geschäft abraten, es ist für Sie wenig \vorteilhaft I would advise [you] against entering into this deal, it won't be very profitable [for you]der Kauf eines Gebrauchtwagens kann durchaus \vorteilhaft sein a used car can often prove to be a really good buyII. advetw \vorteilhaft erwerben [o kaufen] to buy sth at an attractive [or a bargain] [or a reasonable] pricein dem schlabberigen Pullover siehst du nicht sehr \vorteilhaft aus that baggy [old] sweater doesn't do you any favoursdu solltest dich etwas \vorteilhafter kleiden you should wear clothes which are a bit more flattering* * *1.Adjektiv advantageous2.adverbial advantageouslysich vorteilhaft auswirken — have a favourable or beneficial effect
* * *A. adj advantageous (wirken look good;ihr vorteilhaftes Äußeres her good looksB. adv advantageously etc; → A; WIRTSCH (mit Gewinn) verkaufen etc: at a profit; sich kleiden etc: to one’s (best) advantage;sich vorteilhaft auswirken (vorteilhaft sein) have a positive effect (auf +akk,für for);für jemanden vorteilhaft auswirken auch be to sb’s advantage;sich vorteilhaft kleiden auch make the most of one’s figure;* * *1.Adjektiv advantageous2.adverbial advantageouslysich vorteilhaft auswirken — have a favourable or beneficial effect
* * *adj.advantageous adj.profitable adj. adv.advantageously adv. -
128 bombardeo
m.1 bombardment.bombardeo aéreo air raid2 bombard.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: bombardear.* * *1 (con artillería) bombardment, shelling; (desde el aire) bombing* * *noun m.1) bombing, shelling2) bombardment* * *SM1) (Mil) [desde el aire] bombing; [con artillería] bombardment, shellingapuntarse 2)bombardeo aéreo — [contable] air raid, air attack; [incontable] air bombardment (contra, sobre on)
2) [de preguntas] bombardment* * *1)a) ( desde aviones) bombing; ( con artillería) bombardment, shellingsufrimos un intenso bombardeo publicitario — we were bombarded with o subjected to a barrage of advertising
2) (Meteo) seeding* * *= bomb attack, bombardment, bombing, shelling, blitz, bomb raid, bombing campaign.Ex. The ARPAnet was an experimental network designed to support military research -- in particular, research about how to build networks that could withstand partial outages (like bomb attacks) and still function.Ex. The National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina was destroyed during a bombardment in 1992.Ex. Despite damage from bombing, triple digit inflation, and staff shortages, many libraries functioned throughout the conflict.Ex. The library was plundered for its electronic equipment, and later suffered severe fire damage from the shelling.Ex. This decision touched off a battle of wills between the library and the government as well as a blitz of media publicity.Ex. Recently the US and Britain have been intensifying their bomb raids against Iraqi territory, in particular, in the so-called no-fly zones.Ex. An example of 'weasel word' usage might be the description of a bombing campaign -- a peace activist might describe it as 'genocide' whereas a military spokesperson might use the term 'collateral damage'.----* bombardeo aéreo = bombing raid.* bombardeo de ideas = brainstorming [brain-storming], brainstorm.* bombardeo del correo electrónico = mail bombing.* un bombardeo de = a barrage of.* * *1)a) ( desde aviones) bombing; ( con artillería) bombardment, shellingsufrimos un intenso bombardeo publicitario — we were bombarded with o subjected to a barrage of advertising
2) (Meteo) seeding* * *= bomb attack, bombardment, bombing, shelling, blitz, bomb raid, bombing campaign.Ex: The ARPAnet was an experimental network designed to support military research -- in particular, research about how to build networks that could withstand partial outages (like bomb attacks) and still function.
Ex: The National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina was destroyed during a bombardment in 1992.Ex: Despite damage from bombing, triple digit inflation, and staff shortages, many libraries functioned throughout the conflict.Ex: The library was plundered for its electronic equipment, and later suffered severe fire damage from the shelling.Ex: This decision touched off a battle of wills between the library and the government as well as a blitz of media publicity.Ex: Recently the US and Britain have been intensifying their bomb raids against Iraqi territory, in particular, in the so-called no-fly zones.Ex: An example of 'weasel word' usage might be the description of a bombing campaign -- a peace activist might describe it as 'genocide' whereas a military spokesperson might use the term 'collateral damage'.* bombardeo aéreo = bombing raid.* bombardeo de ideas = brainstorming [brain-storming], brainstorm.* bombardeo del correo electrónico = mail bombing.* un bombardeo de = a barrage of.* * *A1 (desde aviones) bombing; (con artillería) bombardment, shellingsufrimos un intenso bombardeo publicitario we were bombarded with o subjected to a barrage of advertisingapuntarse al bombardeo ( Esp fam hum): ¿alguien viene conmigo? — yo me apunto al bombardeo does anyone want to come with me? — count me in o I'll come2 ( Fís) bombardmentCompuesto:bombardeo por or de saturacióncarpet bombing, saturation bombingB ( Meteo) seeding* * *
Del verbo bombardear: ( conjugate bombardear)
bombardeo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
bombardeó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
bombardear
bombardeo
bombardear ( conjugate bombardear) verbo transitivo ( desde avión) to bomb;
( con artillería) to bombard, shell;
bombardeo sustantivo masculino ( desde aviones) bombing;
( con artillería) bombardment, shelling
bombardear verbo transitivo to bomb, shell
bombardeo sustantivo masculino bombing, bombardment
' bombardeo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
apuntarse
- refugiar
- refugio
English:
aerial
- blitz
- bombardment
- bombing
- saturation bombing
- raid
* * *bombardeo nm1. [con bombas] bombing;[con artillería] bombardment bombardeo aéreo [ataque] air raid; [serie de ataques] aerial bombardment2. [de átomo] bombardmentbombardeo atómico bombardment in a particle accelerator3. [con preguntas, peticiones] bombardment;la película es un constante bombardeo de imágenes the film bombards you with an uninterrupted stream of images* * ** * *bombardeo nm1) : bombing, shelling2) : bombardment
См. также в других словарях:
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