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his+associate

  • 21 associate

    [əˈsəusɪeɪt]
    1. verb
    1) to connect in the mind:

    He always associated the smell of tobacco with his father.

    يَربُط
    2) ( usually with with) to join (with someone) in friendship or work:

    They don't usually associate (with each other) after office hours.

    يُرافِق،يُزامِل، يُصادِق
    2. [-et] adjective
    1) having a lower position or rank:

    an associate professor.

    أستاذ مُساعِد
    2) joined or connected:

    associate organizations.

    مُرافِق، مُتَّصِل، مُشارِك
    3. noun
    a colleague or partner; a companion.
    عُضو، مُشارِك ،زَميل

    Arabic-English dictionary > associate

  • 22 associate

    1. [ə'səusieit] verb
    1) (to connect in the mind: He always associated the smell of tobacco with his father.) associer
    2) ((usually with with) to join (with someone) in friendship or work: They don't usually associate (with each other) after office hours.) (se) fréquenter
    2. [-et] adjective
    1) (having a lower position or rank: an associate professor.) associé
    2) (joined or connected: associate organizations.) affilié
    3. noun
    (a colleague or partner; a companion.) associé/-ée
    - in association with

    English-French dictionary > associate

  • 23 associate

    1. [ə'səusieit] verb
    1) (to connect in the mind: He always associated the smell of tobacco with his father.) associar
    2) ((usually with with) to join (with someone) in friendship or work: They don't usually associate (with each other) after office hours.) relacionar-se
    2. [-et] adjective
    1) (having a lower position or rank: an associate professor.) adjunto
    2) (joined or connected: associate organizations.) associado
    3. noun
    (a colleague or partner; a companion.) colega
    - in association with

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > associate

  • 24 associate

    ضَمَّ \ amalgamate: (of businesses, groups, etc.) to join; unite; (of substances) mix. associate: to (cause to) to join as friends or in business: In the course of his work he associated with many different kinds of people. The two companies were associated. combine: to mix; cause to unite; join together: I try to combine business with pleasure. Our schools combined to form a town team. You can’t combine oil and water. \ See Also خالط (خَالَطَ)، شارك (شارَكَ)، ربط (رَبَط)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > associate

  • 25 associate

    رَبَطَ \ associate: to think of sth. in relation to sth. else: Certain national characteristics are usually associated with a country. attach: to fasten; join: I attached the rope to a tree. bind (bound): to tie; fasten sth. with sth. else: The prisoner was bound with rope. connect: to join or be joined: a road connecting two towns; two families connected by marriage. do up: to fasten (clothes); pack and tie (a packet, etc.): Do up your shoes!. fasten: to fix or be fixed firmly: Fasten those buttons. This coat does not fasten properly. join: to fix together; bring together: Please join these two bits of string. The islands were joined by a bridge. link: to join two things together: A bridge linked the island to the mainland. tie: to fasten or bind (with rope, etc.): They tied the prisoner’s hands. He tied his horse to a tree.

    Arabic-English glossary > associate

  • 26 associate

    شَارَكَ \ associate: to (cause to) join as friends or in business: In the course of his work he associated with many different kinds of people. The two companies were associated. collaborate: to work together (with sb.) for some special purpose: He is collaborating with a friend on writing a book about modern music. \ See Also خالط (خَالَطَ)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > associate

  • 27 associate

    خالَطَ \ associate: to join as friends or in business: In the course of his work he associated with many different kinds of people. mix: (of things) to be able to be mixed; (of people) have social relations: Oil and water will not mix. She did not mix with many people except in the office where she worked.

    Arabic-English glossary > associate

  • 28 связанное (с кем-л.) лицо (напр . John Smith and his associates-Джон Смит и связанные с ним лица)

    General subject: associate

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > связанное (с кем-л.) лицо (напр . John Smith and his associates-Джон Смит и связанные с ним лица)

  • 29 סנקתדרוס

    סִנְקַתִּדְרוֹס, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳m. (συγκάθεδρος) assessor, associate. Gen. R. s. 49 מלך שהיה לו ס׳ אחד (not ים …, … יס; Ar. … רון) a king who had an associate; עשיתי … ס׳ שלי I have appointed him my associate. Ib. s. 78 … רון Ex. R. s. 43, beg. סוּנְקַתִּדְרוֹ his associate regent. Tanḥ. Mishp. 5 סקנדרוס; ed. Bub. 3 סונדוקרזס (corr. acc.); a. fr.Pl. סִנְקַתִּדְרִין, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳,. Yalk. Gen. 13 מלך שהיו לו ס׳ … חוץ מדעתן a king who had associates without whose consent he did nothing; Gen. R. s. 8 סנקתדרון … חוץ מדעתו (some ed. מדעתם, corr. acc.). Yalk. Esth. 1057 סנקדרין (corr. acc.).

    Jewish literature > סנקתדרוס

  • 30 סינ׳

    סִנְקַתִּדְרוֹס, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳m. (συγκάθεδρος) assessor, associate. Gen. R. s. 49 מלך שהיה לו ס׳ אחד (not ים …, … יס; Ar. … רון) a king who had an associate; עשיתי … ס׳ שלי I have appointed him my associate. Ib. s. 78 … רון Ex. R. s. 43, beg. סוּנְקַתִּדְרוֹ his associate regent. Tanḥ. Mishp. 5 סקנדרוס; ed. Bub. 3 סונדוקרזס (corr. acc.); a. fr.Pl. סִנְקַתִּדְרִין, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳,. Yalk. Gen. 13 מלך שהיו לו ס׳ … חוץ מדעתן a king who had associates without whose consent he did nothing; Gen. R. s. 8 סנקתדרון … חוץ מדעתו (some ed. מדעתם, corr. acc.). Yalk. Esth. 1057 סנקדרין (corr. acc.).

    Jewish literature > סינ׳

  • 31 סִנְקַתִּדְרוֹס

    סִנְקַתִּדְרוֹס, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳m. (συγκάθεδρος) assessor, associate. Gen. R. s. 49 מלך שהיה לו ס׳ אחד (not ים …, … יס; Ar. … רון) a king who had an associate; עשיתי … ס׳ שלי I have appointed him my associate. Ib. s. 78 … רון Ex. R. s. 43, beg. סוּנְקַתִּדְרוֹ his associate regent. Tanḥ. Mishp. 5 סקנדרוס; ed. Bub. 3 סונדוקרזס (corr. acc.); a. fr.Pl. סִנְקַתִּדְרִין, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳,. Yalk. Gen. 13 מלך שהיו לו ס׳ … חוץ מדעתן a king who had associates without whose consent he did nothing; Gen. R. s. 8 סנקתדרון … חוץ מדעתו (some ed. מדעתם, corr. acc.). Yalk. Esth. 1057 סנקדרין (corr. acc.).

    Jewish literature > סִנְקַתִּדְרוֹס

  • 32 סִינְ׳

    סִנְקַתִּדְרוֹס, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳m. (συγκάθεδρος) assessor, associate. Gen. R. s. 49 מלך שהיה לו ס׳ אחד (not ים …, … יס; Ar. … רון) a king who had an associate; עשיתי … ס׳ שלי I have appointed him my associate. Ib. s. 78 … רון Ex. R. s. 43, beg. סוּנְקַתִּדְרוֹ his associate regent. Tanḥ. Mishp. 5 סקנדרוס; ed. Bub. 3 סונדוקרזס (corr. acc.); a. fr.Pl. סִנְקַתִּדְרִין, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳,. Yalk. Gen. 13 מלך שהיו לו ס׳ … חוץ מדעתן a king who had associates without whose consent he did nothing; Gen. R. s. 8 סנקתדרון … חוץ מדעתו (some ed. מדעתם, corr. acc.). Yalk. Esth. 1057 סנקדרין (corr. acc.).

    Jewish literature > סִינְ׳

  • 33 סוּנְ׳

    סִנְקַתִּדְרוֹס, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳m. (συγκάθεδρος) assessor, associate. Gen. R. s. 49 מלך שהיה לו ס׳ אחד (not ים …, … יס; Ar. … רון) a king who had an associate; עשיתי … ס׳ שלי I have appointed him my associate. Ib. s. 78 … רון Ex. R. s. 43, beg. סוּנְקַתִּדְרוֹ his associate regent. Tanḥ. Mishp. 5 סקנדרוס; ed. Bub. 3 סונדוקרזס (corr. acc.); a. fr.Pl. סִנְקַתִּדְרִין, סִינְ׳, סוּנְ׳,. Yalk. Gen. 13 מלך שהיו לו ס׳ … חוץ מדעתן a king who had associates without whose consent he did nothing; Gen. R. s. 8 סנקתדרון … חוץ מדעתו (some ed. מדעתם, corr. acc.). Yalk. Esth. 1057 סנקדרין (corr. acc.).

    Jewish literature > סוּנְ׳

  • 34 Lister, Samuel Cunliffe, 1st Baron Masham

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 1 January 1815 Calverly Hall, Bradford, England
    d. 2 February 1906 Swinton Park, near Bradford, England
    [br]
    English inventor of successful wool-combing and waste-silk spinning machines.
    [br]
    Lister was descended from one of the old Yorkshire families, the Cunliffe Listers of Manningham, and was the fourth son of his father Ellis. After attending a school on Clapham Common, Lister would not go to university; his family hoped he would enter the Church, but instead he started work with the Liverpool merchants Sands, Turner \& Co., who frequently sent him to America. In 1837 his father built for him and his brother a worsted mill at Manningham, where Samuel invented a swivel shuttle and a machine for making fringes on shawls. It was here that he first became aware of the unhealthy occupation of combing wool by hand. Four years later, after seeing the machine that G.E. Donisthorpe was trying to work out, he turned his attention to mechanizing wool-combing. Lister took Donisthorpe into partnership after paying him £12,000 for his patent, and developed the Lister-Cartwright "square nip" comber. Until this time, combing machines were little different from Cartwright's original, but Lister was able to improve on this with continuous operation and by 1843 was combing the first fine botany wool that had ever been combed by machinery. In the following year he received an order for fifty machines to comb all qualities of wool. Further combing patents were taken out with Donisthorpe in 1849, 1850, 1851 and 1852, the last two being in Lister's name only. One of the important features of these patents was the provision of a gripping device or "nip" which held the wool fibres at one end while the rest of the tuft was being combed. Lister was soon running nine combing mills. In the 1850s Lister had become involved in disputes with others who held combing patents, such as his associate Isaac Holden and the Frenchman Josué Heilmann. Lister bought up the Heilmann machine patents and afterwards other types until he obtained a complete monopoly of combing machines before the patents expired. His invention stimulated demand for wool by cheapening the product and gave a vital boost to the Australian wool trade. By 1856 he was at the head of a wool-combing business such as had never been seen before, with mills at Manningham, Bradford, Halifax, Keighley and other places in the West Riding, as well as abroad.
    His inventive genius also extended to other fields. In 1848 he patented automatic compressed air brakes for railways, and in 1853 alone he took out twelve patents for various textile machines. He then tried to spin waste silk and made a second commercial career, turning what was called "chassum" and hitherto regarded as refuse into beautiful velvets, silks, plush and other fine materials. Waste silk consisted of cocoon remnants from the reeling process, damaged cocoons and fibres rejected from other processes. There was also wild silk obtained from uncultivated worms. This is what Lister saw in a London warehouse as a mass of knotty, dirty, impure stuff, full of bits of stick and dead mulberry leaves, which he bought for a halfpenny a pound. He spent ten years trying to solve the problems, but after a loss of £250,000 and desertion by his partner his machine caught on in 1865 and brought Lister another fortune. Having failed to comb this waste silk, Lister turned his attention to the idea of "dressing" it and separating the qualities automatically. He patented a machine in 1877 that gave a graduated combing. To weave his new silk, he imported from Spain to Bradford, together with its inventor Jose Reixach, a velvet loom that was still giving trouble. It wove two fabrics face to face, but the problem lay in separating the layers so that the pile remained regular in length. Eventually Lister was inspired by watching a scissors grinder in the street to use small emery wheels to sharpen the cutters that divided the layers of fabric. Lister took out several patents for this loom in his own name in 1868 and 1869, while in 1871 he took out one jointly with Reixach. It is said that he spent £29,000 over an eleven-year period on this loom, but this was more than recouped from the sale of reasonably priced high-quality velvets and plushes once success was achieved. Manningham mills were greatly enlarged to accommodate this new manufacture.
    In later years Lister had an annual profit from his mills of £250,000, much of which was presented to Bradford city in gifts such as Lister Park, the original home of the Listers. He was connected with the Bradford Chamber of Commerce for many years and held the position of President of the Fair Trade League for some time. In 1887 he became High Sheriff of Yorkshire, and in 1891 he was made 1st Baron Masham. He was also Deputy Lieutenant in North and West Riding.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Created 1st Baron Masham 1891.
    Bibliography
    1849, with G.E.Donisthorpe, British patent no. 12,712. 1850, with G.E. Donisthorpe, British patent no. 13,009. 1851, British patent no. 13,532.
    1852, British patent no. 14,135.
    1877, British patent no. 3,600 (combing machine). 1868, British patent no. 470.
    1868, British patent no. 2,386.
    1868, British patent no. 2,429.
    1868, British patent no. 3,669.
    1868, British patent no. 1,549.
    1871, with J.Reixach, British patent no. 1,117. 1905, Lord Masham's Inventions (autobiography).
    Further Reading
    J.Hogg (ed.), c. 1888, Fortunes Made in Business, London (biography).
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London; and C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. IV, Oxford: Clarendon Press (both cover the technical details of Lister's invention).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Lister, Samuel Cunliffe, 1st Baron Masham

  • 35 Rankine, William John Macquorn

    [br]
    b. 5 July 1820 Edinburgh, Scotland
    d. 1872
    [br]
    [br]
    Rankine was educated at Ayr Academy and Glasgow High School, although he appears to have learned much of his basic mathematics and physics through private study. He attended Edinburgh University and then assisted his father, who was acting as Superintendent of the Edinburgh and Dalkeith Railway. This introduction to engineering practice was followed in 1838 by his appointment as a pupil to Sir John MacNeill, and for the next four years he served under MacNeill on his Irish railway projects. While still in his early twenties, Rankine presented pioneering papers on metal fatigue and other subjects to the Institution of Civil Engineers, for which he won a prize, but he appears to have resigned from the Civils in 1857 after an argument because the Institution would not transfer his Associate Membership into full Membership. From 1844 to 1848 Rankine worked on various projects for the Caledonian Railway Company, but his interests were becoming increasingly theoretical and a series of distinguished papers for learned societies established his reputation as a leading scholar in the new science of thermodynamics. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1853. At the same time, he remained intimately involved with practical questions of applied science, in shipbuilding, marine engineering and electric telegraphy, becoming associated with the influential coterie of fellow Scots such as the Thomson brothers, Napier, Elder, and Lewis Gordon. Gordon was then the head of a large and successful engineering practice, but he was also Regius Professor of Engineering at the University of Glasgow, and when he retired from the Chair to pursue his business interests, Rankine, who had become his Assistant, was appointed in his place.
    From 1855 until his premature death in 1872, Rankine built up an impressive engineering department, providing a firm theoretical basis with a series of text books that he wrote himself and most of which remained in print for many decades. Despite his quarrel with the Institution of Civil Engineers, Rankine took a keen interest in the institutional development of the engineering profession, becoming the first President of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland, which he helped to establish in 1857. Rankine campaigned vigorously for the recognition of engineering studies as a full university degree at Glasgow, and he achieved this in 1872, the year of his death. Rankine was one of the handful of mid-nineteenth century engineers who virtually created engineering as an academic discipline.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1853. First President, Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland, 1857.
    Bibliography
    1858, Manual of Applied Mechanics.
    1859, Manual of the Steam Engine and Other Prime Movers.
    1862, Manual of Civil Engineering.
    1869, Manual of Machinery and Millwork.
    Further Reading
    J.Small, 1957, "The institution's first president", Proceedings of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland: 687–97.
    H.B.Sutherland, 1972, Rankine. His Life and Times.
    AB

    Biographical history of technology > Rankine, William John Macquorn

  • 36 Dassault (Bloch), Marcel

    SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace
    [br]
    b. 22 January 1892 Paris, France
    d. 18 April 1986 Paris, France
    [br]
    French aircraft designer and manufacturer, best known for his jet fighters the Mystère and Mirage.
    [br]
    During the First World War, Marcel Bloch (he later changed his name to Dassault) worked on French military aircraft and developed a very successful propeller. With his associate, Henri Potez, he set up a company to produce their Eclair wooden propeller in a furniture workshop in Paris. In 1917 they produced a two-seater aircraft which was ordered but then cancelled when the war ended. Potez continued to built aircraft under his own name, but Bloch turned to property speculation, at which he was very successful. In 1930 Bloch returned to the aviation business with an unsuccessful bomber followed by several moderately effective airliners, including the Bloch 220 of 1935, which was similar to the DC-3. He was involved in the design of a four-engined airliner, the SNCASE Languedoc, which flew in September 1939. During the Second World War, Bloch and his brothers became important figures in the French Resistance Movement. Marcel Bloch was eventually captured but survived; however, one of his brothers was executed, and after the war Bloch changed his name to Dassault, which had been his brother's code name in the Resistance. During the 1950s, Avions Marcel Dassault rapidly grew to become Europe's foremost producer of jet fighters. The Ouragon was followed by the Mystère, Etendard and then the outstanding Mirage series. The basic delta-winged Mirage III, with a speed of Mach 2, was soon serving in twenty countries around the world. From this evolved a variable geometry version, a vertical-take-off aircraft, an enlarged light bomber capable of carrying a nuclear bomb, and a swept-wing version for the 1970s. Dassault also produced a successful series of jet airliners starting with the Fan Jet Falcon of 1963. When the Dassault and Breguet companies merged in 1971, Marcel Dassault was still a force to be reckoned with.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Guggenheim Medal. Deputy, Assemblée nationale 1951–5 and 1958–86.
    Bibliography
    1971, Le Talisman, Paris: Editions J'ai lu (autobiography).
    Further Reading
    1976, "The Mirage Maker", Sunday Times Magazine (1 June).
    Jane's All the World's Aircraft, London: Jane's (details of Bloch and Dassault aircraft can be found in various years' editions).
    JDS

    Biographical history of technology > Dassault (Bloch), Marcel

  • 37 Marey, Etienne-Jules

    [br]
    b. 5 March 1830 Beaune, France
    d. 15 May 1904 Paris, France
    [br]
    French physiologist and pioneer of chronophotography.
    [br]
    At the age of 19 Marey went to Paris to study medicine, becoming particularly interested in the problems of the circulation of the blood. In an early communication to the Académie des Sciences he described a much improved device for recording the pulse, the sphygmograph, in which the beats were recorded on a smoked plate. Most of his subsequent work was concerned with methods of recording movement: to study the movement of the horse, he used pneumatic sensors on each hoof to record traces on a smoked drum; this device became known as the Marey recording tambour. His attempts to study the wing movements of a bird in flight in the same way met with limited success since the recording system interfered with free movement. Reading in 1878 of Muybridge's work in America using sequence photography to study animal movement, Marey considered the use of photography himself. In 1882 he developed an idea first used by the astronomer Janssen: a camera in which a series of exposures could be made on a circular photographic plate. Marey's "photographic gun" was rifle shaped and could expose twelve pictures in approximately one second on a circular plate. With this device he was able to study wing movements of birds in free flight. The camera was limited in that it could record only a small number of images, and in the summer of 1882 he developed a new camera, when the French government gave him a grant to set up a physiological research station on land provided by the Parisian authorities near the Porte d'Auteuil. The new design used a fixed plate, on which a series of images were recorded through a rotating shutter. Looking rather like the results provided by a modern stroboscope flash device, the images were partially superimposed if the subject was slow moving, or separated if it was fast. His human subjects were dressed all in white and moved against a black background. An alternative was to dress the subject in black, with highly reflective strips and points along limbs and at joints, to produce a graphic record of the relationships of the parts of the body during action. A one-second-sweep timing clock was included in the scene to enable the precise interval between exposures to be assessed. The fixed-plate cameras were used with considerable success, but the number of individual records on each plate was still limited. With the appearance of Eastman's Kodak roll-film camera in France in September 1888, Marey designed a new camera to use the long rolls of paper film. He described the new apparatus to the Académie des Sciences on 8 October 1888, and three weeks later showed a band of images taken with it at the rate of 20 per second. This camera and its subsequent improvements were the first true cinematographic cameras. The arrival of Eastman's celluloid film late in 1889 made Marey's camera even more practical, and for over a decade the Physiological Research Station made hundreds of sequence studies of animals and humans in motion, at rates of up to 100 pictures per second. Marey pioneered the scientific study of movement using film cameras, introducing techniques of time-lapse, frame-by-frame and slow-motion analysis, macro-and micro-cinematography, superimposed timing clocks, studies of airflow using smoke streams, and other methods still in use in the 1990s. Appointed Professor of Natural History at the Collège de France in 1870, he headed the Institut Marey founded in 1898 to continue these studies. After Marey's death in 1904, the research continued under the direction of his associate Lucien Bull, who developed many new techniques, notably ultra-high-speed cinematography.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Foreign member of the Royal Society 1898. President, Académie des Sciences 1895.
    Bibliography
    1860–1904, Comptes rendus de l'Académie des Sciences de Paris.
    1873, La Machine animale, Paris 1874, Animal Mechanism, London.
    1893, Die Chronophotographie, Berlin. 1894, Le Mouvement, Paris.
    1895, Movement, London.
    1899, La Chronophotographie, Paris.
    Further Reading
    ——1992, Muybridge and the Chronophotographers, London. Jacques Deslandes, 1966, Histoire comparée du cinéma, Vol. I, Paris.
    BC / MG

    Biographical history of technology > Marey, Etienne-Jules

  • 38 incorrect

    incorrect, e [ɛ̃kɔʀεkt]
    adjective
       a. [terme] incorrect ; [interprétation] faulty
       b. ( = impoli) [propos] rude
    * * *
    incorrecte ɛ̃kɔʀɛkt adjectif
    1) ( comportant des fautes) [terme, langue, interprétation] incorrect; [montage] faulty, incorrect; [prévisions] inaccurate
    2) ( inconvenant) [conduite] improper; [terme] unsuitable; [personne] impolite

    être incorrect avec quelqu'unto be rude ou impolite to somebody

    3) ( déloyal) [personne, procédé] unfair
    * * *
    ɛ̃kɔʀɛkt adj incorrect, -e
    1) (réponse, résultat) incorrect
    2) (geste) improper
    3) (personne) rude

    Il a été incorrect avec la voisine. — He was rude to the woman next door.

    * * *
    1 ( comportant des fautes) [terme, langue, style] incorrect; [montage, réglage] faulty, incorrect; [prévisions] inaccurate; [interprétation, raisonnement] incorrect;
    2 ( inconvenant) [conduite] improper; [terme] unsuitable; [personne] impolite; être incorrect avec qn to be rude ou impolite to sb;
    3 ( déloyal) [personne, procédé] unfair; il a été très incorrect avec son associé he treated his associate very shabbily ou unfairly.
    ( féminin incorrecte) [ɛ̃kɔrɛkt] adjectif
    1. [erroné] incorrect, wrong
    2. [indécent] improper, impolite, indecent
    3. [impoli] rude, discourteous, impolite
    4. [irrégulier] underhand, irregular, unscrupulous

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > incorrect

  • 39 विटः _viṭḥ

    विटः [विट्-क]
    1 A paramour; त्वद्वत्सलः क्व स तपस्विज- नस्य हन्ता कन्याविटः पतिरसौ परिरक्षतु त्वाम् Māl.8.8; Śi.4.48.
    -2 A voluptuary, sensualist; प्रतिक्षणं नव्यवदच्युतस्य यत् स्त्रिया विटानामिव साधुवार्ता Bhāg.1.13.2.
    -3 (In dramas) The companion of a prince or dissolute young man, or of a courtezan (who is described as being skilled in the arts of singing, music, and poetry and as a para- site on familiar terms with his associate to whom he nearly serves the purpose of the Vidūṣaka; see inter alia Mk. acts 1, 5 and 8); for definition, see S. D.78; अन्येभ्यश्च वसन्ति ये$स्य भवने लब्धप्रसादा विटाः Mu.3.14.
    -4 A rogue, cheat.
    -5 A catamite.
    -6 A rat.
    -7 The Khadira tree.
    -8 The orange tree.
    -9 A branch together with its shoot.
    -1 A mineral salt.
    -Comp. -कान्ता turmeric.
    -पेटकः, -कम् a multitude of rogues.
    -माक्षिकम् a kind of mineral.
    -लवणम् a medicinal salt.

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > विटः _viṭḥ

  • 40 विट


    viṭa
    m. (derivation doubtful) a voluptuary, sensualist, bon-vivant, boon-companion, rogue, knave Kāv. Rājat. Kathās. etc.

    (in the drama, esp. in the Mṛicchakaṭika, he is the companion of a dissolute prince andᅠ resembles in some respects the Vidūshaka, being generally represented as a parasite on familiar terms with his associate, but at the same time accomplished in the arts of poetry, music, andᅠ singing;
    ifc. a term of reproach gaṇa khasūcy-ādi Gaṇar. L. alsoᅠ « the keeper of a prostitute;
    a catamite;
    a mouse;
    Acacia Catechu;
    the orange tree;
    a kind of salt;
    = prāñcalloha <?>;
    = viṭapa N. of a mountain»);
    n. a house Gal
    - विटकान्ता
    - विटप
    - विटपुत्र
    - विटपेटक
    - विटप्रिय
    - विटभूत
    - विटमाक्षिक
    - विटलवण
    - विटवल्लभा
    - विटवृत्त

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > विट

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