-
101 mów|ić
impf Ⅰ vt 1. (przekazywać) to tell (coś komuś sb sth a. sth to sb); to say (coś komuś sth to sb)- mówię ci prawdę I’m telling you the truth- mówiłem mu, jak było I told him what it was like- zawsze mówi mi dzień dobry s/he always says hello to me- mówiłem ci, że wrócę później I told you (that) I’d come back later- matka mówi mu, żeby był grzeczny his mother keeps telling him to be a good boy- mówiono (nam) a. było mówione, żeby nie palić we were told not to smoke- mówili (sobie) wiersze they were reciting poems (to each other)- mówić z pamięci (wyuczony tekst) to speak from memory- mówić z głowy (improwizować) to speak a. talk without notes, to give an extempore talk, to improvise- mówić od rzeczy a. bzdury to talk nonsense a. rubbish- mówić do rzeczy to talk sense- mówić coś pod nosem a. wąsem to say sth under a. below one’s breath- halo, kto mówi? (przez telefon) hallo, who’s there?- dzień dobry, mówi Jacek hello, Jacek speaking2. (plotkować) to talk vi, to say- mówić coś na kogoś a. o kimś to say sth about sb- cała wieś o nich mówi the whole village is talking about them a. they are the talk of the village- mówią na niego, że (jest) głupi they say he’s stupid- mówią, że miał dwie żony he is said to have had two wives- tylko wróciła, a wszyscy zaczęli mówić no sooner had she come back than tongues began to wag3. (informować) [przepisy, konstytucja] to say; [znak, wygląd] to mean; (podpowiadać) [serce, rozum, intuicja] to tell- prawo Archimedesa mówi, że… Archimedes’ principle says that…- jego mina/wzrok mówił, że… his expression/eyes showed that…- o czym mówi ta książka/ulotka? what’s the book/leaflet about?- ta nazwa nic mi nie mówi the name tells me nothing a. doesn’t ring a bell with me- mówi ci to coś? does it mean anything to you?- przeczucie a. coś mi mówi, że nam się uda something tells me a. I have the feeling that we’ll succeed- jej uśmiech/spojrzenie mówi nam wszystko her smile/look tells us everything- fakty mówią (nam) co innego the facts tell (us) a different story ⇒ powiedziećⅡ vi 1. (posługiwać się mową) to talk, to speak- kiedy dziecko zaczyna mówić? when do children start to talk a. speak?- mówić gwarą to speak (in a) dialect- mówić przez nos to speak through one’s nose2. (rozmawiać) to talk- mówić (z kimś) o kimś/czymś to talk (to a. with US sb) about sb/sth- czy mogę mówić z Janem? (przez telefon) can a. may I speak to a. with US Jan please?- mówić do kogoś to talk to sb- jak śmiesz tak do mnie mówić! how dare you talk a. speak to me like that!- mówić o kimś dobrze/źle to speak well/ill of sb3. (zwracać się, nazywać) to call vt- mówią na niego Lolo/„grubas” he is called a. they call him Lolo/‘fatso’- mówił do niej po imieniu he called her by her first name- mówienie sobie po imieniu jest tu powszechne it’s common to be on first-name terms with people here ⇒ powiedzieć4. pot. (podczas śledztwa, przesłuchania) to talk- na torturach zaczął mówić as soon as they began torturing him he started to talk■ a nie mówiłem? I told you so!- co ja mówię? pot. no, I’m sorry- wczoraj, co ja mówię, przedwczoraj yesterday, no, I’m sorry, the day before yesterday- jego mina mówi sama za siebie pot. his expression speaks for itself- złość/żal mówi przez kogoś a. przez czyjeś usta książk. it’s sb’s anger/resentment speaking- czy ja coś mówię? go ahead, do as you like- dobrze a. łatwo ci mówić it’s a. that’s easy for you to say, it’s all very well for you to talk- krótko mówiąc in brief a. short- mów co chcesz/mówcie co chcecie pot. say what you like- mówza siebie! speak for yourself!- mówiąc między nami a. między nami mówiąc pot. (just) between you and me a. between ourselves a. between the two of us- mówić bez ogródek a. osłonek a. bez owijania w bawełnę to not mince (one’s) words, to lay it a. put it on the line- mówić do kogoś jak do kogoś dobrego a. mówić komuś jak komu dobremu to try to make sb understand- mówić z kimś wspólnym a. tym samym językiem to speak the same language as sb- mówię ci! I (can) tell you- nie ma co mówić pot. no two ways about it- nie ma o czym mówić (odpowiedź na podziękowanie) my pleasure, don’t mention it; (odpowiedź na przeprosiny) don’t mention it; (odmowa) it’s out of the question- nie mów! you don’t say (so)! pot.- nie mówiąc a. wspominając o… książk. not to mention…, to say nothing of…The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > mów|ić
-
102 a stroke of fortune
удача, везениеBy a wonderful stroke of luck I had glimpses of an England, a nook of it, which had changed little since Shakespeare or even since Chaucer. (R. Aldington, ‘Life for Life's Sake’, ch. 2) — Я считаю необыкновенной удачей то, что мне удалось повидать уголок старой Англии, который мало изменился со времен Шекспира и даже Чосера.
Essex... was thinking that it was a real stroke of luck to have MacGregor with him, a man whom the Russians already respected. (J. Aldridge, ‘The Diplomat’, ch. 2) — Эссекс... думал, что ему в самом деле повезло с Мак-Грегором: тот уже успел завоевать уважение русских.
And then I had two magnificent strokes of fortune. In the same week I received two briefs of a similar nature. (C. P. Snow, ‘Time of Hope’, ch. XXXIX) — А после этого мне дважды неслыханно повезло. За одну неделю ко мне поступили два похожих и очень запутанных дела.
-
103 sleep
sleep [sli:p]sommeil ⇒ 1 (a) dormir ⇒ 1 (a), 3 (a) s'endormir ⇒ 1 (a) endormir ⇒ 1 (a) faire une somme ⇒ 1 (b) coucher ⇒ 3 (b) passer la nuit ⇒ 3 (b) rêvasser ⇒ 3 (c) chassie ⇒ 1 (c)(pt & pp slept [slept])1 noun∎ to turn over in one's sleep se retourner dans son sommeil;∎ to talk in one's sleep parler en dormant ou dans son sommeil;∎ to walk in one's sleep être somnambule;∎ she walked in her sleep last night elle a fait une crise de somnambulisme ou a marché en dormant la nuit dernière;∎ to be in a deep sleep dormir profondément;∎ to have a good (night's) sleep bien dormir;∎ you need (to get) a good night's sleep il te faut une bonne nuit de sommeil;∎ I only had two hours' sleep je n'ai dormi que deux heures;∎ I need my sleep j'ai besoin de beaucoup de sommeil;∎ I couldn't get to sleep je n'arrivais pas à m'endormir;∎ to go to sleep s'endormir;∎ to go or get back to sleep se rendormir;∎ my legs have gone to sleep (numb) j'ai les jambes engourdies; (tingling) j'ai des fourmis dans les jambes;∎ to read oneself to sleep lire pour s'endormir;∎ to sing a child to sleep chanter une berceuse à un enfant;∎ you're not going to lose sleep over it! tu ne vas pas en perdre le sommeil!;∎ I won't lose any sleep over it cela ne va pas m'empêcher de dormir;∎ I was put to sleep before the operation on m'a endormi avant l'opération;∎ the horse had to be put to sleep on a dû faire piquer le cheval;∎ to have a sleep faire un somme;∎ the children usually have a sleep in the afternoon en général les enfants font la sieste l'après-midi;∎ I could do with a sleep je ferais bien un petit somme(c) (substance in eyes) chassie f;∎ to rub the sleep out of one's eyes se frotter les yeux (au réveil)∎ the sofa bed sleeps two deux personnes peuvent coucher dans le canapé-lit;∎ the house sleeps four on peut coucher à quatre dans cette maison∎ to sleep the sleep of the just dormir du sommeil du juste∎ sleep well or tight! bonne nuit!;∎ did you sleep well? avez-vous bien dormi?;∎ I'm not sleeping well at the moment je ne dors pas bien en ce moment;∎ to sleep (for) six hours dormir six heures;∎ he can't sleep for thinking about it il n'en dort pas;∎ to sleep late faire la grasse matinée;∎ to sleep soundly dormir profondément ou à poings fermés;∎ to sleep like a log dormir comme une souche ou comme un loir, dormir à poings fermés(b) (spend night) coucher, passer la nuit;∎ can I sleep at your place? est-ce que je peux coucher ou dormir chez vous?;∎ to sleep on the floor coucher ou dormir par terre;∎ the bed had not been slept in le lit n'avait pas été défait;∎ where did you sleep last night? où est-ce que tu as passé la nuit?;∎ to sleep rough coucher sur la dure(c) (daydream) rêvasser, rêver;∎ Walsh is sleeping at the back of the class as usual Walsh rêvasse au fond de la classe, comme d'habitude∎ to put a notebook to sleep mettre un portable en veilleComputing sleep mode veille ffamiliar coucher à droite et à gauche∎ he slept the night away il a dormi toute la nuit;∎ he sleeps the day away il passe toute la journée à dormir(a) (lie in → voluntarily) faire la grasse matinée; (→ involuntarily) se lever en retard, ne pas se réveiller (à l'heure)(hangover, fatigue) dormir pour faire passer ou se remettre de;∎ he's sleeping off the effects of the journey il dort pour se remettre de la fatigue du voyage;∎ familiar he's sleeping it off il cuve son vin➲ sleep oncontinuer à dormir;∎ let her sleep on a bit laisse-la dormir encore un peu;∎ she slept on until lunchtime elle a dormi jusqu'à l'heure du déjeuner∎ I'll sleep on it la nuit porte conseil;∎ sleep on it la nuit porte conseil(away from home) découcher; (in the open air) coucher à la belle étoile; (in tent) coucher sous la tente;∎ some of the nurses sleep out les infirmières ne sont pas toutes logées sur place∎ can I sleep over? est-ce que je peux rester la nuit?∎ he slept through till five o'clock il a dormi jusqu'à cinq heures∎ I slept through the last act j'ai dormi pendant tout le dernier acte;∎ she slept through her alarm elle n'a pas entendu son réveil;∎ she slept through the storm la tempête ne l'a pas réveillée;∎ they slept through my speech ils ont dormi pendant mon discourscoucher ensemblecoucher avec -
104 puncture
1. verb(to make or get a small hole in: Some glass on the road punctured my new tyre.) pinchar
2. noun(a hole in a tyre: My car has had two punctures this week.) pinchazopuncture1 n pinchazopuncture2 vb pinchar / pincharsetr['pʌŋkʧəSMALLr/SMALL]1 pinchazo1 (tyre, ball, etc) pinchar2 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL puncionar1 pincharse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLpunctured lung pulmón nombre masculino perforadopuncture n: pinchazo m, ponchadura f Mexn.• perforación s.f.• pinchadura s.f.• pinchazo s.m.• punción s.f.• puntura s.f.• punzada s.f.v.• perforar v.• pinchar v.• punzar v.'pʌŋktʃər
I
a) (in tire, ball) pinchazo m, pinchadura f (AmL), ponchadura f (Méx)my bike has a puncture — mi bicicleta tiene una rueda pinchada or (Méx) una llanta ponchada
we had a puncture on the way there — pinchamos por el camino, se nos ponchó una llanta en el camino (Méx)
b) ( Med) punción f
II
1.
transitive verb \<\<tire/ball\>\> pinchar, ponchar (Méx)punctured lung — pulmón m perforado
2.
vi \<\<tire/ball\>\> pincharse['pʌŋktʃǝ(r)]1.N (in tyre, balloon) pinchazo m, ponchadura f (Mex); (in skin) perforación f ; (Aut) pinchazo m, ponchadura f (Mex)I have a puncture — se me ha pinchado or (Mex) ponchado un neumático or (esp LAm) una llanta
2.VT [+ tyre] pinchar, ponchar (Mex); [+ skin] perforar3.VI pincharse, poncharse (Mex)4.CPDpuncture repair kit N — kit m de reparación de pinchazos
puncture wound N — herida f punzante
* * *['pʌŋktʃər]
I
a) (in tire, ball) pinchazo m, pinchadura f (AmL), ponchadura f (Méx)my bike has a puncture — mi bicicleta tiene una rueda pinchada or (Méx) una llanta ponchada
we had a puncture on the way there — pinchamos por el camino, se nos ponchó una llanta en el camino (Méx)
b) ( Med) punción f
II
1.
transitive verb \<\<tire/ball\>\> pinchar, ponchar (Méx)punctured lung — pulmón m perforado
2.
vi \<\<tire/ball\>\> pincharse -
105 win
win
1. present participle - winning; verb1) (to obtain (a victory) in a contest; to succeed in coming first in (a contest), usually by one's own efforts: He won a fine victory in the election; Who won the war/match?; He won the bet; He won (the race) in a fast time / by a clear five metres.) ganar2) (to obtain (a prize) in a competition etc, usually by luck: to win first prize; I won $5 in the crossword competition.) ganar3) (to obtain by one's own efforts: He won her respect over a number of years.) ganar(se)
2. noun(a victory or success: She's had two wins in four races.) victoria- winner- winning
- winning-post
- win over
- win the day
- win through
win1 n victoriaour team has played six matches without a win nuestro equipo ha jugado seis partidos y no ha logrado ninguna victoriawin2 vb1. ganar2. ganar / llevarse / conseguirtr[wɪn]1 victoria■ who do you think will win the election? ¿quién crees que ganará las elecciones?2 (prize, cup, etc) ganar, llevarse■ we've won the pools! ¡hemos sacado una quiniela!3 (gain, obtain, achieve - gen) conseguir, obtener, ganar; (- friendship, respect) granjearse; (- sympathy, affection) ganarse, granjearse; (- support) atraer, captar; (- heart, love) conquistar1 ganar■ who's winning? ¿quién va ganando?■ OK! you win! ¡vale! ¡tú ganas!\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto win hands down ganar fácilmenteto win the day llevarse la palmato win the toss ganar el sorteowin or lose tanto si ganamos como si perdemosyou can't win (certain to lose) no hay caso: ganarwin vt1) : ganar, conseguir2)to win over : ganarse a3)to win someone's heart : conquistar a alguienwin n: triunfo m, victoria fv.(§ p.,p.p.: won) = congraciar v.• ganar v.• lograr v.• triunfar v.n.• victoria s.f.
I
1. wɪn1) ( gain) \<\<prize/title\>\> ganar; \<\<support\>\> conseguir*, ganarse; \<\<fame/recognition\>\> ganarse; \<\<affection\>\> ganarse, granjearse; \<\<scholarship/promotion\>\> conseguir*, obtener* (frml); \<\<contract\>\> conseguir*their perseverance won them universal admiration — su perseverancia les granjeó or les valió la admiración de todos
2) ( be victorious in) \<\<war/race/bet/election\>\> ganaryou can't win them all — (colloq) no se puede pretender ganarlas todas
2.
vi ganarto win AT something — \<\<at cards/billiards/golf\>\> ganar a algo
OK, you win! — (colloq) está bien, como tú digas
you can't win! — (colloq) no hay caso!
Phrasal Verbs:- win over
II
noun victoria f, triunfo m[wɪn] (vb: pt, pp won)1.N victoria f, triunfo manother win for Castroforte — otra victoria or otro triunfo para el Castroforte
their fifth win in a row — su quinta victoria consecutiva, su quinto triunfo consecutivo
last Sunday's win against or over Pakistan — la victoria del domingo frente a or sobre Pakistán
no-winto back a horse for a win — apostar dinero por un caballo para que gane la/una carrera
2. VT1) (=be victorious in) [+ competition, bet, war, election] ganar- win the daypragmatism will probably win the day — al final triunfará or se impondrá el pragmatismo
spur 1., 1)the government finally won the day after a heated debate — finalmente el gobierno triunfó or se impuso tras un debate acalorado
2) (=be awarded) [+ cup, award, prize, title] ganar; [+ contract, order] obtener, conseguirthe party won a convincing victory at the polls — el partido consiguió or obtuvo una victoria convincente en las elecciones
3) (=obtain) [+ pay rise, promotion] conseguir, ganarse; [+ support, friendship, recognition] ganarse; [+ metal, ore] extraer ( from de)to win a reputation for honesty — granjearse or ganarse una reputación de persona honrada
to win sb sth: it won him first prize — le valió or le ganó el primer premio
to win sb to one's cause — ganar a algn para la causa de uno, atraer a algn a la causa de uno
4) (=reach) [+ shore] llegar a, alcanzar; [+ goal] conseguirhe won his way to the top of his profession — (a base de trabajar duro) consiguió llegar a la cima de su profesión
5) (Mil) (=capture) tomar3.VI (in war, sport, competition) ganarwho's winning? — ¿quién va ganando?
go in and win! — ¡a ganar!
OK, you win * — vale, ganas tú
Evans won 2-6, 6-4, 6-3 — Evans ganó 2-6, 6-4, 6-3
to win by a head/a length — ganar por una cabeza/un largo
you can't win —
whatever you say, you're always wrong, you can't win — digas lo que digas, ellos siempre tienen razón, ¡no hay manera!
- win hands down- win back- win out- win over* * *
I
1. [wɪn]1) ( gain) \<\<prize/title\>\> ganar; \<\<support\>\> conseguir*, ganarse; \<\<fame/recognition\>\> ganarse; \<\<affection\>\> ganarse, granjearse; \<\<scholarship/promotion\>\> conseguir*, obtener* (frml); \<\<contract\>\> conseguir*their perseverance won them universal admiration — su perseverancia les granjeó or les valió la admiración de todos
2) ( be victorious in) \<\<war/race/bet/election\>\> ganaryou can't win them all — (colloq) no se puede pretender ganarlas todas
2.
vi ganarto win AT something — \<\<at cards/billiards/golf\>\> ganar a algo
OK, you win! — (colloq) está bien, como tú digas
you can't win! — (colloq) no hay caso!
Phrasal Verbs:- win over
II
noun victoria f, triunfo m -
106 Nobel, Immanuel
[br]b. 1801 Gävle, Swedend. 3 September 1872 Stockholm, Sweden[br]Swedish inventor and industrialist, particularly noted for his work on mines and explosives.[br]The son of a barber-surgeon who deserted his family to serve in the Swedish army, Nobel showed little interest in academic pursuits as a child and was sent to sea at the age of 16, but jumped ship in Egypt and was eventually employed as an architect by the pasha. Returning to Sweden, he won a scholarship to the Stockholm School of Architecture, where he studied from 1821 to 1825 and was awarded a number of prizes. His interest then leaned towards mechanical matters and he transferred to the Stockholm School of Engineering. Designs for linen-finishing machines won him a prize there, and he also patented a means of transforming rotary into reciprocating movement. He then entered the real-estate business and was successful until a fire in 1833 destroyed his house and everything he owned. By this time he had married and had two sons, with a third, Alfred (of Nobel Prize fame; see Alfred Nobel), on the way. Moving to more modest quarters on the outskirts of Stockholm, Immanuel resumed his inventions, concentrating largely on India rubber, which he applied to surgical instruments and military equipment, including a rubber knapsack.It was talk of plans to construct a canal at Suez that first excited his interest in explosives. He saw them as a means of making mining more efficient and began to experiment in his backyard. However, this made him unpopular with his neighbours, and the city authorities ordered him to cease his investigations. By this time he was deeply in debt and in 1837 moved to Finland, leaving his family in Stockholm. He hoped to interest the Russians in land and sea mines and, after some four years, succeeded in obtaining financial backing from the Ministry of War, enabling him to set up a foundry and arms factory in St Petersburg and to bring his family over. By 1850 he was clear of debt in Sweden and had begun to acquire a high reputation as an inventor and industrialist. His invention of the horned contact mine was to be the basic pattern of the sea mine for almost the next 100 years, but he also created and manufactured a central-heating system based on hot-water pipes. His three sons, Ludwig, Robert and Alfred, had now joined him in his business, but even so the outbreak of war with Britain and France in the Crimea placed severe pressures on him. The Russians looked to him to convert their navy from sail to steam, even though he had no experience in naval propulsion, but the aftermath of the Crimean War brought financial ruin once more to Immanuel. Amongst the reforms brought in by Tsar Alexander II was a reliance on imports to equip the armed forces, so all domestic arms contracts were abruptly cancelled, including those being undertaken by Nobel. Unable to raise money from the banks, Immanuel was forced to declare himself bankrupt and leave Russia for his native Sweden. Nobel then reverted to his study of explosives, particularly of how to adapt the then highly unstable nitroglycerine, which had first been developed by Ascanio Sobrero in 1847, for blasting and mining. Nobel believed that this could be done by mixing it with gunpowder, but could not establish the right proportions. His son Alfred pursued the matter semi-independently and eventually evolved the principle of the primary charge (and through it created the blasting cap), having taken out a patent for a nitroglycerine product in his own name; the eventual result of this was called dynamite. Father and son eventually fell out over Alfred's independent line, but worse was to follow. In September 1864 Immanuel's youngest son, Oscar, then studying chemistry at Uppsala University, was killed in an explosion in Alfred's laboratory: Immanuel suffered a stroke, but this only temporarily incapacitated him, and he continued to put forward new ideas. These included making timber a more flexible material through gluing crossed veneers under pressure and bending waste timber under steam, a concept which eventually came to fruition in the form of plywood.In 1868 Immanuel and Alfred were jointly awarded the prestigious Letterstedt Prize for their work on explosives, but Alfred never for-gave his father for retaining the medal without offering it to him.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsImperial Gold Medal (Russia) 1853. Swedish Academy of Science Letterstedt Prize (jointly with son Alfred) 1868.BibliographyImmanuel Nobel produced a short handwritten account of his early life 1813–37, which is now in the possession of one of his descendants. He also had published three short books during the last decade of his life— Cheap Defence of the Country's Roads (on land mines), Cheap Defence of the Archipelagos (on sea mines), and Proposal for the Country's Defence (1871)—as well as his pamphlet (1870) on making wood a more physically flexible product.Further ReadingNo biographies of Immanuel Nobel exist, but his life is detailed in a number of books on his son Alfred.CM -
107 einbrechen
(unreg., trennb.)I v/i1. (ist eingebrochen): einbrechen (in + Akk) Dieb: break in(to); einbrechen in (+ Akk) (Wohnung etc.) auch burgle2. (hat): einbrechen (in + Dat oder bei) siehe 1; bei ihm wurde eingebrochen his house ( oder flat, Am. apartment) was burgled (Am. auch burglarized), he had burglars, he was burgled, he got broken into3. (ist) Höhle, Dach etc.: collapse, cave in5. (ist) fig. (scheitern) suffer a severe defeat ( oder setback); Plan, Vorhaben etc.: come a cropper; Aktienkurse etc.: fall, cave in; Einbruch 5II v/t (hat) (niederreißen) break down, demolish* * *(Einbrecher) to burglarize; to break in; to burgle;(Eis) to break through;(Mauer) to break down;(Militär) to invade;(Nacht) to set in; to fall* * *ein|bre|chen sep1. vtTür, Wand etc to break down2. vi1) aux sein (= einstürzen) to fall or cave in2) aux sein or haben (= Einbruch verüben) to break inbei mir ist eingebrochen worden, man hat bei mir eingebrochen — I've had a break-in, I've been burgled or (US) burglarized
in neue Absatzmärkte etc éínbrechen — to make inroads into new markets etc
3) aux sein (Nacht, Dämmerung, Dunkelheit) to fall; (Winter) to set inbei éínbrechender Nacht — at nightfall
4) aux sein inf = Verluste machen) to come a cropper (Brit inf to fall apart (US)* * *(to enter (a house etc) by force or unexpectedly ( noun break-in: The Smiths have had two break-ins recently).) break in(to)* * *ein|bre·chenI. vibeim Juwelier ist eingebrochen worden the jeweller's has been broken into, there has been a break-in at the jeweller'sbei mir ist eingebrochen worden, man hat bei mir eingebrochen I've had a break-in, my house [or flat] has been broken into3. Hilfsverb: sein (eindringen)4. Hilfsverb: sein (nach unten durchbrechen)5. Hilfsverb: sein (einstürzen) to fall [or cave] inII. vt Hilfsverb: haben* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit haben od. sein break in2) mit sein (einstürzen) <roof, ceiling> fall in, cave in3) mit sein (durchbrechen) fall through4) mit sein (eindringen)* * *einbrechen (irr, trennb)A. v/ieinbrechen in (+akk) (Wohnung etc) auch burgle2. (hat):in +dat oderbei) → 1;bei ihm wurde eingebrochen his house ( oder flat, US apartment) was burgled (US auch burglarized), he had burglars, he was burgled, he got broken into5. (ist) fig (scheitern)suffer a severe defeat ( oder setback); Plan, Vorhaben etc: come a cropper; Aktienkurse etc: fall, cave in; → Einbruch 5in ein Land etceinbrechen invade a country etc7. (ist) geh Kälte, Winter etc: set in;Nacht at nightfallB. v/t (hat) (niederreißen) break down, demolish* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit haben od. sein break in2) mit sein (einstürzen) <roof, ceiling> fall in, cave in3) mit sein (durchbrechen) fall through4) mit sein (eindringen)5) mit sein (geh.): (beginnen) <night, darkness> fall; < winter> set in* * *v.to break in v.to burglarise (UK) v.to burglarize (US) v.to burgle v. -
108 कृष्ण
kṛishṇá
wicked, evil Vop. VII, 82 ;
m. (with orᅠ without paksha) the dark half of the lunar month from full to new moon Mn. Yājñ. Bhag. Suṡr. ;
the fourth orᅠ Kali-yuga L. ;
( kṛíshṇas) m. black (the colour) orᅠ dark-blue (which is often confounded with black by the Hindūs) L. ;
the antelope RV. X, 94, 5 VS. TS. ṠBr. BhP. ;
a kind of animal feeding on carrion AV. XI, 2, 2 ( kṛishṇá);
the Indian cuckoo orᅠ Kokila (cf. R. II, 52, 2) L. ;
a crow L. ;
Carissa Carandas L. ;
N. of one of the poets of the RV. (descended from Aṇgiras) RV. VIII, 85, 3 and 4 ṠāṇkhBr. XXX, 9 ;
(a son of Devakī andᅠ pupil of Ghora Āṇgirasa) ChUp. III, 17, 6 ;
N. of a celebrated Avatār of the god Vishṇu,
orᅠ sometimes identified with Vishṇu himself MBh. V, 2563; XIV, 1589 ff. Hariv. 2359 etc.. ;
as distinct from his ten Avatārs orᅠ incarnations (in the earlier legends he appears as a great hero andᅠ teacher MBh. Bhag. ;
in the more recent he is deified, andᅠ is often represented as a young andᅠ amorous shepherd with flowing hair andᅠ a flute in his hand;
the following are a few particulars of his birth andᅠ history as related in Hariv. 3304 ff. andᅠ in the Purāṇas etc.:
Vasu-deva, who was a descendant of Yadu andᅠ Yayāti, had two wives, Rohiṇī andᅠ Devakī;
the latter had eight sons of whom the eighth was Kṛishṇa;
Kaṇsa, king of Mathurā andᅠ cousin of Devakī, was informed by a prediction that one of these sons would kill him;
he therefore kept Vasu-deva andᅠ his wife in confinement, andᅠ slew their first six children;
the seventh was Balarāma who was saved by being abstracted from the womb of Devakī andᅠ transferred to that of Rohiṇī;
the eighth was Kṛishṇa who was born with black skin andᅠ a peculiar mark on his breast;
his father Vasu-deva managed to escape from Mathurā with the child, andᅠ favoured by the gods found a herdsman named Nanda whose wife Yaṡo-dā had just been delivered of a son which Vasu-deva conveyed to Devakī after substituting his own in its place
Nanda with his wife Yaṡo-dā took the infant Kṛishṇa andᅠ settled first in Gokula orᅠ Vraja, andᅠ afterwards in Vṛindāvana, where Kṛishṇa andᅠ Bala-rāma grew up together, roaming in the woods andᅠ joining in the sports of the herdsmen's sons;
Kṛishṇa as a youth contested the sovereignty of Indra, andᅠ was victorious over that god, who descended from heaven to praise Kṛishṇa, andᅠ made him lord over the cattle Hariv. 3787 ff.; 7456 ff. VP. ;
Kṛishṇa is described as sporting constantly with the Gopīs orᅠ shepherdesses Hariv. 4078 ff.; 8301 ff. VP. Gīt. ;
of whom a thousand became his wives, though only eight are specified, Rādhā being the favourite Hariv. 6694 ff.; 9177 ff. VP. ;
Kṛishṇa built andᅠ fortified a city called Dvārakā in Gujarāt, andᅠ thither transported the inhabitants of Mathurā after killing Kaṇsa;
Kṛishṇa had various wives besides the Gopīs, andᅠ by Rukmiṇī had a son Pradyumna who is usually identified with Kāma-deva;
with Jains, Kṛishṇa is one of the nine black Vasu-devas;
with Buddhists he is the chief of the black demons, who are the enemies of Buddha andᅠ the white demons);
N. of an attendant in Skanda's retinue MBh. IX, 2559 ;
of an Asura Hariv. 12936 Sāy. on RV. I, 101, 1 ;
of a king of the Nāgas MBh. II, 360 Divyâ̱v. II ;
of Arjuna (the most renowned of the Pāṇḍu princes, so named apparently from his colour as a child)
MBh. IV, 1389 ;
of Vyāsa MBh. Hariv. 11089 ;
of Hārita seeᅠ - hārita;
of a son of Ṡuka by Pīvarī (teacher of the Yoga) Hariv. 980 ff. ;
of a pupil of Bharad-vāja Kathās. VII, 15 ;
of Havir-dhāna Hariv. 83 VP. BhP. IV, 24, 8 ;
of a son of Arjuna Hariv. 1892 ;
of an adopted son of A.-samañjas, 2039;
of a chief of the Andhras VP. ;
of the author of a Comm. on the MBh. ;
of a poet;
of the author of a Comm. on the Dayā-bhāga ;
of the son of Keṡavârka andᅠ grandson of Jayâditya;
of the father of Tāna-bhaṭṭa andᅠ uncle of Raṇga-nātha;
of the father of Dāmôdara andᅠ uncle of Malhaṇa;
of the father of Prabhūjika andᅠ uncle of Vidyā-dhara;
of the father of Madana;
of the grammarian Rāma-candra;
of the son of Vāruṇêndra andᅠ father of Lakshmaṇa;
of the father of Hīra-bhaṭṭa (author of the Comm. called Carakabhāshya, andᅠ of the work Sāhitya-sudhā-samudra);
N. of a hell VP. ;
(au) m. du. Kṛishṇa andᅠ Arjuna MBh. I, 8287; III, 8279 ;
(ās) m. pl. N. of the Ṡūdras in Ṡālmala-dvīpa VP. ;
(ā) f. a kind of leech Suṡr. ;
a kind of venomous insect ib. ;
N. of several plants (Piper longum L. ;
the Indigo plant L. ;
a grape L. ;
a Punar-navā with dark blossoms L. ;
Gmelina arborea L. ;
Nigella indica L. ;
Sinapis ramosa L. ;
Vernonia anthelminthica L. ;
= kākolī L. ;
a sort of Sārivā L.) Suṡr. ;
a kind of perfume (= parpaṭī) Bhpr. ;
N. of Draupadī MBh. ;
of Durgā MBh. IV, 184 ;
of one of the seven tongues of fire L. Sch. ;
of one of the mothers in Skanda's retinue MBh. IX, 2640 ;
of a Yoginī Hcat. ;
(with orᅠ without gaṅgā) N. of the river Kistna MBh. XIII, 4888 PadmaP. NārP. ;
(ī́) f. night RV. VII, 71, 1 ;
(ám) n. blackness, darkness, I, 123, 1 and 9 ;
the black part of the eye ṠBr. X, XII, XIII, XIV Suṡr. ;
the black spots in the moon TBr. I, 2, 1, 2 ;
a kind of demon orᅠ spirit of darkness RV. IV, 16, 13 ;
black pepper L. ;
black Agallochum L. ;
iron L. ;
lead L. ;
antimony L. ;
blue vitriol L. ;
<cf. kā́rshṇa, etc.;
cf. alsoᅠ Russ. černyi, « black» >
kṛishṇa
- कृष्णकटुका
- कृष्णकन्द
- कृष्णकरविर
- कृष्णकर्कटक
- कृष्णकर्ण
- कृष्णकर्बुरवर्ण
- कृष्णकर्मन्
- कृष्णकलि
- कृष्णकवच
- कृष्णकाक
- कृष्णकापोती
- कृष्णकाष्ठ
- कृष्णकिंकरप्रक्रिया
- कृष्णकीर्तन
- कृष्णकुतूहल
- कृष्णकेलि
- कृष्णकेश
- कृष्णकोहल
- कृष्णक्रीडित
- कृष्णखण्ड
- कृष्णगङ्गा
- कृष्णगति
- कृष्णगन्धा
- कृष्णगर्भ
- कृष्णगल
- कृष्णगिरि
- कृष्णगुप्त
- कृष्णगुल्म
- कृष्णगोधा
- कृष्णग्रीव
- कृष्णचञ्चुक
- कृष्णचतुर्दशी
- कृष्णचन्द्र
- कृष्णचर
- कृष्णचूडा
- कृष्णचूडिका
- कृष्णचूर्ण
- कृष्णचैतन्य
- कृष्णच्छवि
- कृष्णज
- कृष्णजंहस्
- कृष्णजटा
- कृष्णजनक
- कृष्णजन्मखण्ड
- कृष्णजन्माष्टमी
- कृष्णजी
- कृष्णजीर
- कृष्णजीरक
- कृष्णजीवनी
- कृष्णज्योतिर्विद्
- कृष्णतण्डुला
- कृष्णतर्कालंकार
- कृष्णता
- कृष्णताम्र
- कृष्णतार
- कृष्णताल
- कृष्णतिल
- कृष्णतिल्य
- कृष्णतीर्थ
- कृष्णतुण्ड
- कृष्णतूष
- कृष्णत्रिवृता
- कृष्णत्व
- कृष्णदत्त
- कृष्णदन्त
- कृष्णदर्शन
- कृष्णदश
- कृष्णदास
- कृष्णदीक्षित
- कृष्णदेव
- कृष्णदेह
- कृष्णदैवज्ञ
- कृष्णद्र
- कृष्णद्वादशी
- कृष्णद्वैपायन
- कृष्णधत्तूर
- कृष्णधत्तूरक
- कृष्णधान्य
- कृष्णधूर्जटिदीक्षित
- कृष्णनगर
- कृष्णनन्दन
- कृष्णनयन
- कृष्णनेत्र
- कृष्णपक्ष
- कृष्णपक्षिक
- कृष्णपक्षीय
- कृष्णपण्डित
- कृष्णपदी
- कृष्णपर्णी
- कृष्णपवि
- कृष्णपांसु
- कृष्णपाक
- कृष्णपाण्डुर
- कृष्णपिङ्गल
- कृष्णपिङ्गा
- कृष्णपिण्डीतक
- कृष्णपिण्डीर
- कृष्णपिपीली
- कृष्णपिल्ल
- कृष्णपुच्छ
- कृष्णपुच्छक
- कृष्णपुरुषोत्तमसिद्धान्तोपनिषद्
- कृष्णपुष्प
- कृष्णप्रुत्
- कृष्णप्रेमामृत
- कृष्णफल
- कृष्णबन्धु
- कृष्णबर्बरक
- कृष्णबलक्ष
- कृष्णबीज
- कृष्णभक्त
- कृष्णभक्ति
- कृष्णभक्ष
- कृष्णभगिनी
- कृष्णभट्ट
- कृष्णभट्टीय
- कृष्णभस्मन्
- कृष्णभुजंग
- कृष्णभू
- कृष्णभूम
- कृष्णभूमिक
- कृष्णभूमिजा
- कृष्णभेदा
- कृष्णभोगिन्
- कृष्णमण्डल
- कृष्णमत्स्य
- कृष्णमल्लिका
- कृष्णमसूर
- कृष्णमार्ग
- कृष्णमार्गण
- कृष्णमालुक
- कृष्णमित्र
- कृष्णमिश्र
- कृष्णमुख
- कृष्णमुद्ग
- कृष्णमूली
- कृष्णमृग
- कृष्णमृत्तिक
- कृष्णमृद्
- कृष्णमौनिन्
- कृष्णयजुर्वेद
- कृष्णयजुर्वेदीय
- कृष्णयाम
- कृष्णयामल
- कृष्णयुधिष्ठिरधर्मगोष्ठी
- कृष्णयोनि
- कृष्णरक्त
- कृष्णराज
- कृष्णराम
- कृष्णरामाय
- कृष्णरुहा
- कृष्णरूप्य
- कृष्णललाम
- कृष्णलवण
- कृष्णलीलातरंगिणी
- कृष्णलोह
- कृष्णलोहित
- कृष्णवक्त्र
- कृष्णवर्ण
- कृष्णवर्तनि
- कृष्णवर्त्मन्
- कृष्णवल्लिका
- कृष्णवल्ली
- कृष्णवस्त्र
- कृष्णवानर
- कृष्णवाल
- कृष्णवास
- कृष्णवासस्
- कृष्णविनोद
- कृष्णविन्ना
- कृष्णविषाण
- कृष्णवृन्ता
- कृष्णवृन्तिका
- कृष्णवेणा
- कृष्णवेण्णा
- कृष्णवेण्या
- कृष्णवेण्वा
- कृष्णवेत्र
- कृष्णव्यथिस्
- कृष्णव्याल
- कृष्णव्रीहि
- कृष्णशकुनि
- कृष्णशक्ति
- कृष्णशंकरशर्मन्
- कृष्णशफ
- कृष्णशबल
- कृष्णशर्मन्
- कृष्णशल्किन्
- कृष्णशालि
- कृष्णशिंशपा
- कृष्णशिग्रु
- कृष्णशिम्बिका
- कृष्णशिम्बी
- कृष्णशिला
- कृष्णशृङ्ग
- कृष्णशृत
- कृष्णषष्टिक
- कृष्णषष्टिका
- कृष्णसख
- कृष्णसमुद्भवा
- कृष्णसरस्
- कृष्णसर्प
- कृष्णसर्षप
- कृष्णसार
- कृष्णसारङ्ग
- कृष्णसारथि
- कृष्णसारिवा
- कृष्णसार्वभौम
- कृष्णसिंह
- कृष्णसीत
- कृष्णसुन्दर
- कृष्णसू
- कृष्णसूत्र
- कृष्णसूनु
- कृष्णसेवाह्निक
- कृष्णसैरेयक
- कृष्णस्कन्ध
- कृष्णस्वसृ
- कृष्णहारित
- कृष्णाक्ष
- कृष्णागत
- कृष्णागरुकाष्ठ
- कृषागुरु
- कृष्णाग्रज
- कृष्णाङ्ग
- कृष्णाङ्घ्रि
- कृष्णाचल
- कृष्णाजिन
- कृष्णाजिनिन्
- कृष्णाञ्जनगिरि
- कृष्णाञ्जनी
- कृष्णाञ्जि
- कृष्णात्रेय
- कृष्णाध्वन्
- कृष्णानदी
- कृष्णानन्द
- कृष्णान्तर
- कृष्णाभा
- कृष्णाभ्र
- कृष्णाभ्रक
- कृष्णामिष
- कृष्णामृततरंगिका
- कृष्णामृततमहार्णव
- कृष्णायस्
- कृष्णायस
- कृष्णार्चनविधि
- कृष्णार्चिस्
- कृष्णार्जक
- कृष्णालंकार
- कृष्णालु
- कृष्णाल्पक
- कृष्णावतार
- कृष्णावदात
- कृष्णावास
- कृष्णाश्रय
- कृष्णाश्रित
- कृष्णाष्टमिरत
- कृष्णाष्टमी
- कृष्णाहि
- कृष्णाह्वय
- कृष्णेक्षु
- कृष्णैत
- कृष्णोदर
- कृष्णोदुम्बरिका
- कृष्णोपनिषद्
- कृष्णोरग
- कृष्णोस्याखरेष्ठक
- कृष्णौजस्
-
109 apiece
adverbjethey cost a penny apiece — die kosten einen Penny das Stück
* * *[ə'pi:s](to, for, by etc each one of a group: They got two chocolates apiece.) pro Person* * *[əˈpi:s]adv after n, inv das Stückfor £500 \apiece für 500 Pfund das Stück; (per person) jedergive them five \apiece gib ihnen je fünf* * *[ə'piːs]advpro Stück; (= per person) pro PersonI gave them two apiece — ich gab ihnen je zwei
* * *apiece [əˈpiːs] adv1. für jedes oder pro Stück, je:2. für jeden, pro Kopf, pro Person:he gave us £5 apiece er gab jedem von uns 5 Pfund* * *adverbje* * *n.je Stück f. -
110 Sieg
m; -es, -e victory; SPORT etc.: auch win; fig. des Guten etc.: triumph; leichter Sieg easy victory ( oder win); knapper / schwer erkämpfter Sieg narrow / hard-won victory; den Sieg davontragen be victorious, carry ( oder win) the day lit.; am Ende den Sieg davontragen win through ( oder out) in the end; knapp den Sieg verfehlen be narrowly beaten; auf Sieg spielen SPORT play to win ( oder for a win); der Vernunft etc. zum Sieg verhelfen help common sense etc. to gain the upper hand* * *der Siegvictoriousness; triumph; win; victory* * *[ziːk]m -(e)s, -e[-gə] victory ( über +acc over); (in Wettkampf auch) win ( über +acc over)um den Síég kämpfen — to fight for victory
den Síég davontragen or erringen — to be victorious; (in Wettkampf auch) to be the winner
zum Síég verhelfen — to help sth to triumph
von Síég zu Síég schreiten (geh) — to heap victory upon victory
* * *der1) ((a) defeat of an enemy or rival: Our team has had two defeats and eight victories; At last they experienced the joy of victory.) victory2) (a great victory or success: The battle ended in a triumph for the Romans.) triumph3) (a victory or success: She's had two wins in four races.) win* * *<-[e]s, -e>[zi:k, pl ˈzi:gə]mjdn um den \Sieg bringen, jdn den \Sieg kosten to cost sb his/her victory [or win]um den \Sieg kämpfen to fight for victory* * *der; Sieg[e]s, Siege victory, (bes. Sport) win (über + Akk. over)den Sieg davontragen od. erringen — (geh.) be victorious; (Sport) be the winner/winners
ein Sieg der Vernunft — (fig.) a victory for common sense
* * *leichter Sieg easy victory ( oder win);knapper/schwer erkämpfter Sieg narrow/hard-won victory;am Ende den Sieg davontragen win through ( oder out) in the end;knapp den Sieg verfehlen be narrowly beaten;der Vernunft etczum Sieg verhelfen help common sense etc to gain the upper hand* * *der; Sieg[e]s, Siege victory, (bes. Sport) win (über + Akk. over)den Sieg davontragen od. erringen — (geh.) be victorious; (Sport) be the winner/winners
ein Sieg der Vernunft — (fig.) a victory for common sense
* * *-e m.victory n. -
111 break in(to)
1) (to enter (a house etc) by force or unexpectedly (noun break-in: The Smiths have had two break-ins recently).) bryde ind2) (to interrupt (someone's conversation etc).) bryde ind* * *1) (to enter (a house etc) by force or unexpectedly (noun break-in: The Smiths have had two break-ins recently).) bryde ind2) (to interrupt (someone's conversation etc).) bryde ind -
112 break in(to)
1) (to enter (a house etc) by force or unexpectedly (noun break-in: The Smiths have had two break-ins recently).) bryde ind2) (to interrupt (someone's conversation etc).) bryde ind* * *1) (to enter (a house etc) by force or unexpectedly (noun break-in: The Smiths have had two break-ins recently).) bryde ind2) (to interrupt (someone's conversation etc).) bryde ind -
113 conviction
[-ʃən]1) (the passing of a sentence on a guilty person: She has had two convictions for drunken driving.) dom2) ((a) strong belief: It's my conviction that he's right.) fast tro; overbevisning* * *[-ʃən]1) (the passing of a sentence on a guilty person: She has had two convictions for drunken driving.) dom2) ((a) strong belief: It's my conviction that he's right.) fast tro; overbevisning -
114 ewe
[ju:](a female sheep: The ewe had two lambs.) får* * *[ju:](a female sheep: The ewe had two lambs.) får -
115 infancy
-
116 puncture
1. verb(to make or get a small hole in: Some glass on the road punctured my new tyre.) punktere2. noun(a hole in a tyre: My car has had two punctures this week.) punktering* * *1. verb(to make or get a small hole in: Some glass on the road punctured my new tyre.) punktere2. noun(a hole in a tyre: My car has had two punctures this week.) punktering -
117 serving
-
118 victory
plural - victories; noun ((a) defeat of an enemy or rival: Our team has had two defeats and eight victories; At last they experienced the joy of victory.) sejr* * *plural - victories; noun ((a) defeat of an enemy or rival: Our team has had two defeats and eight victories; At last they experienced the joy of victory.) sejr -
119 win
[win] 1. present participle - winning; verb1) (to obtain (a victory) in a contest; to succeed in coming first in (a contest), usually by one's own efforts: He won a fine victory in the election; Who won the war/match?; He won the bet; He won (the race) in a fast time / by a clear five metres.) vinde2) (to obtain (a prize) in a competition etc, usually by luck: to win first prize; I won $5 in the crossword competition.) vinde3) (to obtain by one's own efforts: He won her respect over a number of years.) vinde2. noun(a victory or success: She's had two wins in four races.) sejr- winner- winning
- winning-post
- win over
- win the day
- win through* * *[win] 1. present participle - winning; verb1) (to obtain (a victory) in a contest; to succeed in coming first in (a contest), usually by one's own efforts: He won a fine victory in the election; Who won the war/match?; He won the bet; He won (the race) in a fast time / by a clear five metres.) vinde2) (to obtain (a prize) in a competition etc, usually by luck: to win first prize; I won $5 in the crossword competition.) vinde3) (to obtain by one's own efforts: He won her respect over a number of years.) vinde2. noun(a victory or success: She's had two wins in four races.) sejr- winner- winning
- winning-post
- win over
- win the day
- win through -
120 de hecho
in fact* * *= actually, as a matter of fact, as it happened, de facto, in actual fact, in effect, in fact, indeed, in point of fact, in actuality, as it happens, as it is, effectively, for all intents and purposes, to all intents and purposes, for that matterEx. Dr. Richmond actually has had two careers.Ex. As a matter of fact, the record of the change is retained in at least the OCLC files and is, I am told, available to libraries.Ex. As it happened, the snowfall was moderate and all the rest of us worked all day and got home without difficulty.Ex. Will LC, after becoming the de facto national library as a result of the technological innovation of the standard, printed catalog card, be forced to abdicate its role?.Ex. Despite carefully framed acquistions policy statements regarding fiction in actual fact libraries allocate only a small percentage of their meagre book funds to fiction.Ex. In effect, we'd be suggesting to them we don't have the book.Ex. However, one important feature to note about such systems is that many of them do not in fact organise knowledge or retrieve information.Ex. Indeed the selection of an indexing approach is crucially dependent upon the way in which the index is to be used.Ex. In point of fact, I am well aware that catalogers, as a group, resist with every cell in their bodies any attempt to erode or degrade or compromise the catalog.Ex. In actuality every librarian has a different concept of ephemeral materials.Ex. As it happens, the way the Library of Congress automated the ISBD was different from the way we did it in Britain.Ex. As it is, Berlin's position - not only in Germany, but in the whole Europe and subsequently the world - is changing daily.Ex. A financial survey views the net effect of California's Proposition 13 as effectively lowering financial support of libraries by 25%.Ex. In the 20th century, the debate about weeding followed, for all intents and purposes, the contours of the controversy surrounding the Quincy Plan.Ex. To all intents and purposes he is unaware of its existence.Ex. A machine-readable national data base, or for that matter any catalog, should be capable of existing in time.* * *= actually, as a matter of fact, as it happened, de facto, in actual fact, in effect, in fact, indeed, in point of fact, in actuality, as it happens, as it is, effectively, for all intents and purposes, to all intents and purposes, for that matterEx: Dr. Richmond actually has had two careers.
Ex: As a matter of fact, the record of the change is retained in at least the OCLC files and is, I am told, available to libraries.Ex: As it happened, the snowfall was moderate and all the rest of us worked all day and got home without difficulty.Ex: Will LC, after becoming the de facto national library as a result of the technological innovation of the standard, printed catalog card, be forced to abdicate its role?.Ex: Despite carefully framed acquistions policy statements regarding fiction in actual fact libraries allocate only a small percentage of their meagre book funds to fiction.Ex: In effect, we'd be suggesting to them we don't have the book.Ex: However, one important feature to note about such systems is that many of them do not in fact organise knowledge or retrieve information.Ex: Indeed the selection of an indexing approach is crucially dependent upon the way in which the index is to be used.Ex: In point of fact, I am well aware that catalogers, as a group, resist with every cell in their bodies any attempt to erode or degrade or compromise the catalog.Ex: In actuality every librarian has a different concept of ephemeral materials.Ex: As it happens, the way the Library of Congress automated the ISBD was different from the way we did it in Britain.Ex: As it is, Berlin's position - not only in Germany, but in the whole Europe and subsequently the world - is changing daily.Ex: A financial survey views the net effect of California's Proposition 13 as effectively lowering financial support of libraries by 25%.Ex: In the 20th century, the debate about weeding followed, for all intents and purposes, the contours of the controversy surrounding the Quincy Plan.Ex: To all intents and purposes he is unaware of its existence.Ex: A machine-readable national data base, or for that matter any catalog, should be capable of existing in time.
См. также в других словарях:
Two-phase electric power — Two phase electrical power was an early 20th century polyphase alternating current electric power distribution system. Two circuits were used, with voltage phases differing by 90 degrees. Usually circuits used four wires, two for each phase. Less … Wikipedia
had a couple — had two or more drinks of alcohol, tipsy She was laughing a lot like she d had a couple … English idioms
Two-Face — This article is about the DC comics villain. For the Nigerian musician, see 2face Idibia. For the Brazilian soap opera, see Duas Caras. For craniofacial duplication, see Diprosopus. Superherobox| caption=Two Face, as depicted on the cover of… … Wikipedia
Two-way radio — receiver which only receives content. Two way radios are available in mobile, stationary base and hand held portable configurations. Hand held radios are often called walkie talkies or handie talkies. A push to talk or Press To Transmit button is … Wikipedia
Two-Bad — Infobox He Man/She Ra Character Title=Two Bad Two Bad at the controls Name=Two Bad Alliance=#B22222 Secret= Status=Alive Affiliation=Skeletor Snake Mountain Family= Powers= Weapons= Actor=Lou Scheimer 1980 s Brian Drummond (Tuvar) and Mark Gibbon … Wikipedia
Two-in, two-out — In firefighting, the policy of two in, two out mandates that firefighters never go into a dangerous situation in a fire or rescue incident alone. There should always be (at least) two firefighters together when they enter a location and one of… … Wikipedia
Two by Twos — Prominent early preachers (left to right): William Gill, William Irvine, and George Walker Classification Protestant Polity Episcopal Geographical areas … Wikipedia
Two and a Half Men — Genre Sitcom Created by Chuck Lorre Lee Aronsohn … Wikipedia
Two-wheel tractor — in Italy (2008) Two wheel tractor or walking tractor are generic terms understood in the USA and in parts of Europe to represent a single axle tractor, which is a tractor with one axle, self powered and self propelled, which can pull and power… … Wikipedia
Two Rivers, Wisconsin — Two Rivers is a city in Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 12,639 at the 2000 census. The city is located mostly within the Town of Two Rivers. A small portion extends west into the adjacent Town of Manitowoc. It is… … Wikipedia
Two-Gun Kid — (Matt Hawk / Matt Liebowicz) Art by Scott Kolins. Publication information Publisher Marvel Comics … Wikipedia