-
41 по виду
• НА ВИД; С <ПО> ВИДУ[PrepP; these forms only; adv or modif]=====⇒ the way (a person or thing) seems when perceived visually:- look (like);- look to be;- [AdjP]- looking;- [NP or AdjP] to look at;- to look at s.o. < sth.>;- from the looks of s.o. < sth.>;- give the appearance of...;- seemingly;- seem...to the eye;- look to the eye like...;- appear to the eye to be...;- on the outside.♦ Только два человека, с виду похожие на мелких базарных торговцев, мирно пивши в углу кофе, не принимали никакого участия в этих сетованиях (Эренбург 2). Only two people, who looked like bazaar merchants, sitting quietly in their corner drinking coffee, took no part in any of these lamentations (2a).♦ Они [посетители] вступили в комнату почти одновременно со старцем... В келье ещё раньше их дожидались выхода старца два скитские иеромонаха... Кроме того, ожидал, стоя в уголку (и всё время потом оставался стоя), молодой паренёк, лет двадцати двух на вид, в статском сюртуке... (Достоевский 1). They [the visitors] came into the room almost at the same moment as the elder....Two hieromonks of the hermitage were already in the cell awaiting the elder....Besides them, there stood in the comer (and remained standing there all the while) a young fellow who looked to be about twenty-two and was dressed in an ordinary frock coat... (1a).♦...Слушая его щёлкающую речь и глядя на его аккуратные черты, трудно было представить себе внежизненный опыт этого здорового с виду, кругленького... человека... (Набоков 1)....When one listened to his sprightly speech and looked at his regular features, it was difficult to imagine the unearthly experiences of this healthy-looking, plump little man... (1a).♦ Вероятно, я был в те времена очень жалким на вид - болезненный, бледный, маленький (Олеша 3). Probably I was at that time rather pitiful to look at: sickly, pale, small (3a).♦ На вид Пастернаку можно было дать не более 47-48 лет( Ивинская 1). То look at him one would not have given Pasternak more than forty-seven or forty-eight (1a).♦...Ведь вы молоды, вам на вид не дашь и шестнадцати (Соколов 1)....You're young, after all, from the looks of you you're not more than sixteen (1a).♦ Пьер почти не изменился в своих внешних приемах. На вид он был точно таким же, каким он был прежде (Толстой 7). Outwardly Pierre had hardly changed at all. In appearance he was just the same as before (7a).♦ И хотя с виду Лёва был спокоен и рассудителен, я видел, что он напряжён, как струна... (Рыбаков 1). Although Lyova gave the appearance of calm and common sense, I could tell he was under terrible strain... (1a).♦ Вообще судя, странно было, что молодой человек, столь учёный, столь гордый и осторожный на вид, вдруг явился в такой безобразный дом... (Достоевский 1). Generally considered, it was strange that so learned, so proud, and seemingly so prudent a young man should suddenly appear in such a scandalous house... (1a).♦ Пузыри газа лопались и подымались - гигантские, как целые планеты! И невесомые на вид (Обухова 1). Bubbles of gas burst and flew up-enormous as planets, yet seeming weightless to the eye (1a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > по виду
-
42 с виду
• НА ВИД; С <ПО> ВИДУ[PrepP; these forms only; adv or modif]=====⇒ the way (a person or thing) seems when perceived visually:- look (like);- look to be;- [AdjP]- looking;- [NP or AdjP] to look at;- to look at s.o. < sth.>;- from the looks of s.o. < sth.>;- give the appearance of...;- seemingly;- seem...to the eye;- look to the eye like...;- appear to the eye to be...;- on the outside.♦ Только два человека, с виду похожие на мелких базарных торговцев, мирно пивши в углу кофе, не принимали никакого участия в этих сетованиях (Эренбург 2). Only two people, who looked like bazaar merchants, sitting quietly in their corner drinking coffee, took no part in any of these lamentations (2a).♦ Они [посетители] вступили в комнату почти одновременно со старцем... В келье ещё раньше их дожидались выхода старца два скитские иеромонаха... Кроме того, ожидал, стоя в уголку (и всё время потом оставался стоя), молодой паренёк, лет двадцати двух на вид, в статском сюртуке... (Достоевский 1). They [the visitors] came into the room almost at the same moment as the elder....Two hieromonks of the hermitage were already in the cell awaiting the elder....Besides them, there stood in the comer (and remained standing there all the while) a young fellow who looked to be about twenty-two and was dressed in an ordinary frock coat... (1a).♦...Слушая его щёлкающую речь и глядя на его аккуратные черты, трудно было представить себе внежизненный опыт этого здорового с виду, кругленького... человека... (Набоков 1)....When one listened to his sprightly speech and looked at his regular features, it was difficult to imagine the unearthly experiences of this healthy-looking, plump little man... (1a).♦ Вероятно, я был в те времена очень жалким на вид - болезненный, бледный, маленький (Олеша 3). Probably I was at that time rather pitiful to look at: sickly, pale, small (3a).♦ На вид Пастернаку можно было дать не более 47-48 лет( Ивинская 1). То look at him one would not have given Pasternak more than forty-seven or forty-eight (1a).♦...Ведь вы молоды, вам на вид не дашь и шестнадцати (Соколов 1)....You're young, after all, from the looks of you you're not more than sixteen (1a).♦ Пьер почти не изменился в своих внешних приемах. На вид он был точно таким же, каким он был прежде (Толстой 7). Outwardly Pierre had hardly changed at all. In appearance he was just the same as before (7a).♦ И хотя с виду Лёва был спокоен и рассудителен, я видел, что он напряжён, как струна... (Рыбаков 1). Although Lyova gave the appearance of calm and common sense, I could tell he was under terrible strain... (1a).♦ Вообще судя, странно было, что молодой человек, столь учёный, столь гордый и осторожный на вид, вдруг явился в такой безобразный дом... (Достоевский 1). Generally considered, it was strange that so learned, so proud, and seemingly so prudent a young man should suddenly appear in such a scandalous house... (1a).♦ Пузыри газа лопались и подымались - гигантские, как целые планеты! И невесомые на вид (Обухова 1). Bubbles of gas burst and flew up-enormous as planets, yet seeming weightless to the eye (1a). -
43 איסור II, אסור
אִיסּוּרII, אִסּוּר m. ( אסר; cmp. b. h. אֵסוּר, a. אֵיסוּר) 1) band, chain; trnsf. social circle. Succ.45b (ref. to Ps. 118:27) כל העושה א׳ לחגוכ׳ he who creates a circle for the festival with eating and drinking, i. e. social pleasures. (Oth. explan.: he who makes an addition to the number of festive days;hence the popular name of אסרו חג for the day following the festivals. 2) prohibition, interdict; also the forbidden object. Y.Ber.I, 3b bot. דברי תורה יש בהן א׳וכ׳ the Biblical law contains prohibitions and permissions.א׳ ערוה an obstacle to marriage by the existing laws of incest, e. g. a man prevented from performing a levirate marriage because his late brothers wife is his own wifes sister; א׳ מצוה a marriage (or sexual connection) permitted in the Torah but forbidden by Rabbinical enactment;so called because obedience to the Rabbis is a meritorious act ( מצוה); א׳ קדושה marriage restrictions incumbent on priests on account of their sacred office; (another opinion inverts the last two definitions). Yeb.II, 3 (20a).אין א׳ חל על א׳ one prohibition can take no legal hold where another prohibition already exists; i. e. you can punish, or impose sacrificial expiation, only for the first one; e. g. if you eat the meat of an unclean animal which, besides, has not been slaughtered according to ritual ( נבלה). Ib. 13b; a. fr.Exceptions to this principle (adopted by most authorities) are when the acceding act is: 1) א׳ כֹּולֵל a more comprehensive prohibition, i. e. having a wider range of prohibited objects; e. g. the law imposing abstinence from food on the Day of Atonement includes food in general, i. e. food otherwise allowed as well as food forbidden at all times; א׳ מֹוסִיף a more extensive prohibition, i. e. having a wider range of persons concerned; e. g. the sister of As wife is forbidden to him ( אחות אשתו) but not to his brothers. If, afterwards, his brother B. marries that sister of A.s wife, she is forbidden in marriage (after B.s death) to all the brothers as a brothers wife, and to A. both as his own living wifes sister and as his late brothers wife ( אשת אח); 3) א׳ בַּת אַתַת a coincidental prohibition, i. e. two prohibitions taking effect at the same moment, e. g. the Day of Atonement coinciding with the Sabbath day, in which case the restrictions connected with each take effect at the same time (night-fall); 4) א׳ תָמוּר a heavier prohibition, i. e. a prohibition imposing larger restrictions, e. g. the law prohibiting any profitable use of thing (א׳ הנאה), compared to the lighter prohibition, א׳ קַל, not to eat or drink a thing (v. infra). Yeb.32b sq; Shebu. 24ab; Ḥull.101a sq; Kerith. 14b.א׳ תורה a Biblical prohibitory law; א׳דרבנן a Rabbinical prohibitory enactment.א׳ לאו a prohibition expressed in the Law by a plain (לֹא) ‘thou shalt not, without defining the penalty, in which case the latter consists of thirty nine lashes (v., מַלְקוּת).א׳ כרת a prohibition to which the Bible attaches the penalty of excision (by the hand of God).א׳ מיתה a prohibition the transgression of which the Bible punishes with death (execution).א׳ אכילה the law not to eat (meat boiled with milk); א׳ הנאה not to make any use (of it, as selling); א׳ בישול not to boil (meat with milk), Ḥull.115b; a. fr.א׳ במות v. בָּמָה.Pl. אִיסּוּרִין. Ḥull.98a sq. כל א׳ שבתורה (בטלין) בששים all things Biblically forbidden are neutralized if mixed with a quantity sixty times as large; ib. במאהin a quantity one hundred times as large; a. fr. -
44 אִיסּוּר
אִיסּוּרII, אִסּוּר m. ( אסר; cmp. b. h. אֵסוּר, a. אֵיסוּר) 1) band, chain; trnsf. social circle. Succ.45b (ref. to Ps. 118:27) כל העושה א׳ לחגוכ׳ he who creates a circle for the festival with eating and drinking, i. e. social pleasures. (Oth. explan.: he who makes an addition to the number of festive days;hence the popular name of אסרו חג for the day following the festivals. 2) prohibition, interdict; also the forbidden object. Y.Ber.I, 3b bot. דברי תורה יש בהן א׳וכ׳ the Biblical law contains prohibitions and permissions.א׳ ערוה an obstacle to marriage by the existing laws of incest, e. g. a man prevented from performing a levirate marriage because his late brothers wife is his own wifes sister; א׳ מצוה a marriage (or sexual connection) permitted in the Torah but forbidden by Rabbinical enactment;so called because obedience to the Rabbis is a meritorious act ( מצוה); א׳ קדושה marriage restrictions incumbent on priests on account of their sacred office; (another opinion inverts the last two definitions). Yeb.II, 3 (20a).אין א׳ חל על א׳ one prohibition can take no legal hold where another prohibition already exists; i. e. you can punish, or impose sacrificial expiation, only for the first one; e. g. if you eat the meat of an unclean animal which, besides, has not been slaughtered according to ritual ( נבלה). Ib. 13b; a. fr.Exceptions to this principle (adopted by most authorities) are when the acceding act is: 1) א׳ כֹּולֵל a more comprehensive prohibition, i. e. having a wider range of prohibited objects; e. g. the law imposing abstinence from food on the Day of Atonement includes food in general, i. e. food otherwise allowed as well as food forbidden at all times; א׳ מֹוסִיף a more extensive prohibition, i. e. having a wider range of persons concerned; e. g. the sister of As wife is forbidden to him ( אחות אשתו) but not to his brothers. If, afterwards, his brother B. marries that sister of A.s wife, she is forbidden in marriage (after B.s death) to all the brothers as a brothers wife, and to A. both as his own living wifes sister and as his late brothers wife ( אשת אח); 3) א׳ בַּת אַתַת a coincidental prohibition, i. e. two prohibitions taking effect at the same moment, e. g. the Day of Atonement coinciding with the Sabbath day, in which case the restrictions connected with each take effect at the same time (night-fall); 4) א׳ תָמוּר a heavier prohibition, i. e. a prohibition imposing larger restrictions, e. g. the law prohibiting any profitable use of thing (א׳ הנאה), compared to the lighter prohibition, א׳ קַל, not to eat or drink a thing (v. infra). Yeb.32b sq; Shebu. 24ab; Ḥull.101a sq; Kerith. 14b.א׳ תורה a Biblical prohibitory law; א׳דרבנן a Rabbinical prohibitory enactment.א׳ לאו a prohibition expressed in the Law by a plain (לֹא) ‘thou shalt not, without defining the penalty, in which case the latter consists of thirty nine lashes (v., מַלְקוּת).א׳ כרת a prohibition to which the Bible attaches the penalty of excision (by the hand of God).א׳ מיתה a prohibition the transgression of which the Bible punishes with death (execution).א׳ אכילה the law not to eat (meat boiled with milk); א׳ הנאה not to make any use (of it, as selling); א׳ בישול not to boil (meat with milk), Ḥull.115b; a. fr.א׳ במות v. בָּמָה.Pl. אִיסּוּרִין. Ḥull.98a sq. כל א׳ שבתורה (בטלין) בששים all things Biblically forbidden are neutralized if mixed with a quantity sixty times as large; ib. במאהin a quantity one hundred times as large; a. fr. -
45 Consciousness
Consciousness is what makes the mind-body problem really intractable.... Without consciousness the mind-body problem would be much less interesting. With consciousness it seems hopeless. (T. Nagel, 1979, pp. 165-166)This approach to understanding sensory qualia is both theoretically and empirically motivated... [;] it suggests an effective means of expressing the allegedly inexpressible. The "ineffable" pink of one's current visual sensation may be richly and precisely expressed as a 95Hz/80Hz/80Hz "chord" in the relevant triune cortical system. The "unconveyable" taste sensation produced by the fabled Australian health tonic Vegamite might be poignantly conveyed as a 85/80/90/15 "chord" in one's four channeled gustatory system.... And the "indescribably" olfactory sensation produced by a newly opened rose might be quite accurately described as a 95/35/10/80/60/55 "chord" in some six-dimensional space within one's olfactory bulb. (P. M. Churchland, 1989, p. 106)One of philosophy's favorite facets of mentality has received scant attention from cognitive psychologists, and that is consciousness itself: fullblown, introspective, inner-world phenomenological consciousness. In fact if one looks in the obvious places... one finds not so much a lack of interest as a deliberate and adroit avoidance of the issue. I think I know why. Consciousness appears to be the last bastion of occult properties, epiphenomena, and immeasurable subjective states-in short, the one area of mind best left to the philosophers, who are welcome to it. Let them make fools of themselves trying to corral the quicksilver of "phenomenology" into a respectable theory. (Dennett, 1978b, p. 149)When I am thinking about anything, my consciousness consists of a number of ideas.... But every idea can be resolved into elements... and these elements are sensations. (Titchener, 1910, p. 33)A Darwin machine now provides a framework for thinking about thought, indeed one that may be a reasonable first approximation to the actual brain machinery underlying thought. An intracerebral Darwin Machine need not try out one sequence at a time against memory; it may be able to try out dozens, if not hundreds, simultaneously, shape up new generations in milliseconds, and thus initiate insightful actions without overt trial and error. This massively parallel selection among stochastic sequences is more analogous to the ways of darwinian biology than to the "von Neumann" serial computer. Which is why I call it a Darwin Machine instead; it shapes up thoughts in milliseconds rather than millennia, and uses innocuous remembered environments rather than noxious real-life ones. It may well create the uniquely human aspect of our consciousness. (Calvin, 1990, pp. 261-262)To suppose the mind to exist in two different states, in the same moment, is a manifest absurdity. To the whole series of states of the mind, then, whatever the individual, momentary successive states may be, I give the name of our consciousness.... There are not sensations, thoughts, passions, and also consciousness, any more than there is quadruped or animal, as a separate being to be added to the wolves, tygers, elephants, and other living creatures.... The fallacy of conceiving consciousness to be something different from the feeling, which is said to be its object, has arisen, in a great measure, from the use of the personal pronoun I. (T. Brown, 1970, p. 336)The human capacity for speech is certainly unique. But the gulf between it and the behavior of animals no longer seems unbridgeable.... What does this leave us with, then, which is characteristically human?.... t resides in the human capacity for consciousness and self-consciousness. (Rose, 1976, p. 177)[Human consciousness] depends wholly on our seeing the outside world in such categories. And the problems of consciousness arise from putting reconstitution beside internalization, from our also being able to see ourselves as if we were objects in the outside world. That is in the very nature of language; it is impossible to have a symbolic system without it.... The Cartesian dualism between mind and body arises directly from this, and so do all the famous paradoxes, both in mathematics and in linguistics.... (Bronowski, 1978, pp. 38-39)It seems to me that there are at least four different viewpoints-or extremes of viewpoint-that one may reasonably hold on the matter [of computation and conscious thinking]:A. All thinking is computation; in particular, feelings of conscious awareness are evoked merely by the carrying out of appropriate computations.B. Awareness is a feature of the brain's physical action; and whereas any physical action can be simulated computationally, computational simulation cannot by itself evoke awareness.C. Appropriate physical action of the brain evokes awareness, but this physical action cannot even be properly simulated computationally.D. Awareness cannot be explained by physical, computational, or any other scientific terms. (Penrose, 1994, p. 12)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Consciousness
-
46 STUND
I)(pl. -ir), f.1) a certain length of time, a while;var s. til dags, it was a while before daybreak;er á leið stundina, in the course of time, after a while;þat var s. ein, it was but a short time;er stundir líða (fram), as time goes on;dvelja af stundir, to kill the time;lítil er líðandi stund, brief is the fleeting hour;2) adverbial phrases;af stundu, ere long, soon;af annarri stundu, ‘the next while’, ere long;á lítilli stundu, in a little while;fyrir stundu, a while ago;langri stundu fyrr, a long while before;um s., for a while;litla (skamma) s., for a short while;allar stundir, always;alla s., all the time;s. af s., s. frá s., little by little, by degrees;stundum (dat.), at times, sometimes3) little distance, a little way, a bit (hann stóð s. frá dyrunum);4) hour;tvær stundir dags, two hours;5) pains, exertion;leggja s. á e-t, to take pains about a thing.n. dust (gneri hann of andlit honum moldar stundinu).* * *f., dat. stundu, pl. stundir, with neg. suff. stund-gi, q. v.; [A. S. stund; Old Engl. stound; Dan. stund; Germ. stunde]:—a certain length of time, a while, hour, of a longer or shorter time according to the context, mostly of a short time; en er at þeirri stundu kom at hón mundi barn ala, Fms. i. 14; var stund til dags, it was a while before daybreak, Ld. 44; stund var í milli ( a good while) er þeir sá framstafninn ok inn eptri kom fram, Fms. ii. 304; langa stund eðr skamma, for a long while or a short, Grág. i. 155; langri stundu fyrr, long ere, Fms. ix. 450; litla stund, a little while, for a short time, MS. 623. 32, Bs. i. 42, Eg. 160; jafnlanga stund sem áðr var tínt, Grág. i. 406; er á stundina líðr, er á leið stundina, in the course of time, after a while, Fms. x. 392, 404; jarl mælti er stund leið, after a while, Fær. 93; þat var allt á einni stundu, er … ok, that was all at the same moment, Bs. i. 339; var ok stundin eigi löng, it was but a short time, Fms. iv. 361; þat var stund ein, but a short time, 623. 32; allar stundir, always, Fms, i. 219, xi. 76; nú líða stundir, the the time passes on, Fær. 23; er stundir líða, as time goes on, in course of time, Nj. 54; vera þar þeim stundum sem hann vildi, whenever he liked, Ísl. ii. 205; stundu eptir Jól, a while after Yule, Fms. ix. 33; stundu síðarr enn Skalla-Grímr hafði út komit, Eg. 137;. alla stund, the whole time, all the time, Fær. 123; á þeirri stundu, er …, during the time, that…, in the meantime. Fms. xi. 360, K. Þ. K. 33 new Ed.; á þessi stundu, Eg. 424; fyrir stundar sakir, in respect of time, Gþl. 31; but um stundar sakir, but for a while; dvelja af stundir, to kill the time, Band. 23 new Ed.; hann gáði eigi stundanna, Fms. v. 195: savings, opt verðr lítil stand at seinum, Líkn.; lítil er líðandi stund, brief is the fleeting hour, Hkr. i. 154; hvat bíðr sinnar stundar, Grett. 168 new Ed.: allit., staðr ok stund, place and time.2. adverbial phrases; af stundu, ere long, soon, Íb. 12; fundusk þeir af stundu, Sighvat; munu þeir margir hans úvinir af stundu, er …, Ld. 146, Fms. vii. 159, xi. 357; af annarri stundu, ‘the next while,’ ere long, Band. 27 new Ed.; fyrir stundu, a while ago, Ölk.; um stund, for a while, Fb. i. 170, Ísl. ii. 260; nú um stund, now for a while, Grág. i. 317: stundum (dat.), [cp. A. S. stundum], at times, sometimes, Ld. 256, Fms. i. 14; optliga allar saman en stundum ( but now and then) sér hverir, 52; stundum … stundum, sometimes … sometimes, Sks. 96; gaus upp eldrinn stundum en stundum sloknaði, alternately, Nj. 204.3. in a local sense, a certain little distance, a little way, a bit; hann stóð stund frá dyrunum, Bs. i. 660; hann hafði tjaldat upp frá stund þá; stund þá, a bit, Fms. xi. 85; jarðhús-munna er stund þá var brott frá bænum, Fær. 169; þar í brekkunni stund frá þeim, Rd. 316; stund er til stokksins önnur til steinsins, Hbl., cp. Germ. stunde.4. gen. stundar, stundar hríð, a good while, Hkr. i. 150: very, quite, with an adjective, stundar fast, Grett. 84 new Ed.; stundar-hart, Fms. iv. 153; stundar hátt, vi. 303, Eg. 408; stundar mikill, Þorf. Karl. 426; öx stundar mikil, Fbr. 12; stundar heilráðr, Eb. 54.II. an hour, adding ‘dags’ (cp. Lat. hora diei); í dægri era stundir tólf, Rb. 6; önnur, þriðja stund dags, Mar., Fms. iii. 57; eina stund dags, 623. 29; tvær stundir dags, two hours, Fms. x. 218; of þrjár stundir dags, 623. 14.III. metaph. care, pains, exertion; leggja stund á e-t, to take pains, Ísl. ii. 341; leggja hér mikla stund á, to make great exertion, Boll. 354; leggja mesta stund á, Nj. 31; leggja minni (litla, önga) stund á, Ísl. ii. 347.COMPDS: stundarél, stundarhríð, stundaklukka, stundarstefna, stundatal, stundarvegr, stundarþögn. -
47 while
[waɪl] 1. njakiś or pewien czas m; ( very short) chwila f2. conj( at the same moment as) w chwili or momencie, gdy; ( during the time that) (podczas) gdy or kiedy; ( although) chociaż, choćfor/in a while — przez/za jakiś czas
we'll make it worth your while — postaramy się, żeby Pan/Pani na tym nie stracił/a
Phrasal Verbs:* * *1. conjunction( also whilst)1) (during the time that: I saw him while I was out walking.) podczas (gdy)2) (although: While I sympathize, I can't really do very much to help.) aczkolwiek2. noun(a space of time: It took me quite a while; It's a long while since we saw her.) chwila, pewien czas- worth one's while -
48 حدث
حَدَثَ \ be: to happen: When will the match be?. come about: to happen: How did this loss come about?. go on: to happen: What’s going on in that room?. happen: to take place: The accident happened at exactly 4 o’clock, be done What has happened to your old car? Did you sell it?. occur: to happen: Where did the accident occur?. take place: to happen: Tell me what took place at the meeting. \ حَدَثَ ثانِيَةً \ recur: to happen again: a recurring mistake. \ حَدَثَ في وَقْت وَاحِد \ simultaneous: happening at the same moment: simultaneous explosions. -
49 вступать в работу
Later the automatic approach control system was switched on.At the same moment the controlled reentry system is put into operation.Русско-английский словарь по космонавтике > вступать в работу
-
50 stund
(en -er)( stykke tid) while ( fx for a short while);[ jeg har ikke stunder til det] I have no time for it;[ nu om stunder] nowadays;[ i samme stund] at the same moment;[ til min sidste stund] to my dying day. -
51 система управляемого спуска
At the same moment the controlled reentry system is put into operation.Русско-английский словарь по космонавтике > система управляемого спуска
-
52 ὁμαρτέω
Aὐμάρτη Theoc.28.3
: [tense] impf. ; [dialect] Ion.- ευν A.R.1.579
, Theoc.2.73 ; [dialect] Ep. [ per.] 3 dual ὁμαρτήτην, v. ὁμαρτήδην : [tense] fut. , E.Ph. 1616 : [tense] aor.ὡμάρτησα Coluth.25
; opt. ὁμαρτήσειεν, etc., Od.13.87, al.: [tense] aor. 2 ; act together, at the same moment,τὸν δ' Αἴας καὶ Τεῦκρος ὁμαρτήσανθ' ὁ μὲν ἰῷ βεβλήκει, Αἴας δὲ.. νύξεν Il.12.400
;ἐξ οἴκου βῆσαν ὁμαρτήσαντες ἅμ' ἄμφω Od.21.188
.2 accompany,ἐν νηΐ θοῇ ἢ πεζὸς ὁμαρτέων Il.24.438
; οὐδέ κεν ἴρηξ κίρκος ὁμαρτήσειεν could not keep pace, keep up with the ship, Od.13.87.3 c. dat., walk beside, accompany, τινι Hes.Op. 196, 676, Th. 201 ;ὁ. σύν τινι S.OC 1647
; ; also, pursue, chase, A.Eu. 338(lyr.): abs., Id.Pr. 678.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ὁμαρτέω
-
53 सज्जु
සජ්ජු sajjuind instantly; speedily; at the same moment. -
54 sam-stundis
(sam-stundar, D. N.), adv. at the same moment, Fms. v. 168. -
55 samstundis
-
56 ineens
at once, at the same moment, suddenly -
57 متزامن
مُتَزَامِن \ simultaneous: happening at the same moment: simultaneous explosions. -
58 متواقت
مُتَوَاقِت \ simultaneous: happening at the same moment: simultaneous explosions. -
59 يحدث في وقت واحد
يَحْدُث في وَقْت وَاحِد \ simultaneous: happening at the same moment: simultaneous explosions. -
60 stesso
samelo stesso, la stessa the same oneè lo stesso it's all the sameoggi stesso this very dayio stesso myselfse stesso himselfl'ho visto coi miei stessi occhi I saw it with my very own eyes* * *stesso agg.1 ( identico) same: abbiamo preso lo stesso treno, we caught the same train; hanno lo stesso insegnante, they have the same teacher; abitate nella stessa casa?, do you live in the same building?; faccio sempre la stessa strada per andare in ufficio, I always go the same way to the office; abbiamo avuto la stessa idea, we had the same idea; sono nati nello stesso giorno, they were born (on) the same day; mi comporterei nello stesso modo, I'd behave just the same (o I'd do the same thing); dice sempre le stesse cose, he always says the same (old) things; fa sempre gli stessi errori, he always makes the same mistakes; sono anch'io del tuo stesso parere, I think the same as you do; non ho più lo stesso numero di telefono, I haven't got the same telephone number any more; non frequentiamo le stesse persone, we don't move in the same circles; non abbiamo gli stessi gusti, we haven't got the same tastes (o our tastes are different); siamo allo stesso punto di prima, we're back to where we were before (o we're at the same point we were at before o we're back where we started from); siamo stati nello stesso albergo dell'anno scorso, we went to the same hotel as last year; è lo stesso negozio dove andavo io, it's the same shop I went to; mi ha dato la stessa risposta che ha dato a te, he gave me the same answer he gave you; alla TV hanno dato lo stesso film della settimana scorsa, they showed the same film on TV as they did last week; tu farai la stessa cosa che hanno fatto gli altri, you'll do the same as the others // nello stesso tempo, al tempo stesso, at the same time: è una casa piccola, ma al tempo stesso funzionale, it's a small house but functional at the same time // Anche rafforzato da 'medesimo, identico': è la stessa ( medesima) cosa, (fam.) la stessissima cosa, it's exactly the same thing; ha ripetuto gli stessi identici errori dell'altra volta, he made exactly the same mistakes as last time2 (dopo un pron. pers. sogg. o un s., con valore rafforzativo o enfatico): io stesso, I myself, I... myself; tu stesso, you yourself, you... yourself; egli, lui stesso, he himself, he... himself; ella, lei stessa, she herself, she... herself; esso stesso, it itself, it.... itself; noi stessi, stesse, we ourselves, we... ourselves; voi stessi, stesse, you yourselves, you... yourselves; essi, loro stessi, esse, loro stesse, they themselves, they... themselves: ci andai io stesso, I went there myself; io stesso ho assistito alla scena, I witnessed the scene myself; guarda tu stesso, have a look yourself; lei stessa me lo disse, she told me herself (o she herself told me); noi stessi dovremmo prendere esempio da lui, we ought to follow his example ourselves; il sindaco stesso ha presenziato alla cerimonia, the mayor himself presided over the ceremony; è la bontà stessa, she is kindness itself3 (con i pron. rifl.) -self (pl. selves) (suffisso che serve a formare in inglese i pron. rifl.): me stesso, myself; te stesso, yourself, (poet. thyself); se stesso, himself; itself; (impers.) oneself; se stessa, herself; noi stessi, ourselves; (pl. di maestà) ourself; voi stessi, yourselves; loro stessi, themselves; conosci te stesso, (prov.) know thyself; si fida solo di se stesso, he trusts no one but himself; non si deve pensare solo a se stessi, one should not think only of oneself; sii fedele a te stesso, be true to yourself; devi solo prendertela con te stesso, you have only yourself to blame // di per se stesso, in itself4 ( con valore di proprio, esattamente; perfino) very: in quel momento stesso, at that very moment; oggi stesso, this very day; quella sera stessa, that very evening // la madre stessa lo ha riconosciuto colpevole, his own mother (o even his mother) thought he was guilty5 ( uguale per quantità o qualità) same, like: due piante della stessa specie, two plants from the same species; due abiti dello stesso colore, two dresses of the same colour; vendere allo stesso prezzo, to sell at the same price; lei non ha gli stessi problemi che hai tu, she hasn't got the same problems as you have; ha lo stesso carattere del padre, he's exactly the same as his father (o prov. like father like son); abbiamo la stessa età, we're the same age; hanno ricevuto lo stesso compenso, they received the same payment◆ pron.dimostr.1 ( la stessa persona) same: sono sempre gli stessi che si lamentano, it's always the same people who complain; dopo la malattia non è più lo stesso, he hasn't been the same since his illness; ''é lo stesso ragazzo che era scappato di casa?'' ''Sì, lo stesso'', ''Is it the same boy who ran away from home?'' ''Yes, the very same'' (o ''Yes, that's right'')2 ( la stessa cosa) the same: a me è capitato lo stesso, the same thing happened to me; anche lui dirà lo stesso, he'll say the same as well; loro stanno zitti. E tu fai lo stesso, they're keeping quiet (about it). You do the same; ...e lo stesso dicasi per qualsiasi altra lingua,...and the same is true of (o goes for) any other language // è lo stesso, fa lo stesso, it's all the same; ''Vuoi parlare con me o con lui?'' ''é lo stesso'', ''Do you want to speak to me or to him?'' ''It's (all) the same'' (o ''It doesn't make any difference''); possiamo vederci oggi o domani, per me fa lo stesso, we can meet today or tomorrow, it's all the same to me // siamo alle stesse, ( alle solite) it's the same as usual // (comm.) preventivo per installazione del citofono e messa a punto dello stesso, estimate for installing and setting up the intercom◆ avv. (fam.) ( nello stesso modo) the same; ( in ogni modo) all the same; anyway: ''Come sta il malato?'' ''Più o meno lo stesso di ieri'', ''How's the patient?'' ''Much the same as yesterday''; verrò lo stesso, anche se piove, I'll come anyway, even if it rains.* * *['stesso] stesso (-a)1. agg1) (medesimo, identico) same2) (esatto, preciso) very3)(rafforzativo: dopo sostantivo)
il medico stesso lo sconsiglia — even the doctor o the doctor himself advises against it4)(rafforzativo: dopo
pron pers sogg) l'ho visto io stesso — I saw him myselfvoi stessi sapete bene che... — you (yourselves) know very well that...
lei stessa è venuta a dirmelo — she came and told me herself, she herself came and told me
5)(rafforzativo: dopo
pron rifl) me stesso — myself6) (proprio) own2. pron dimostrchi canta? — lo stesso di prima — who's singing? — the same singer as before
3.lo stesso avv — (comunque) all the same, even so
* * *['stesso]aggettivo indefinito1) (medesimo) sameporta lo stesso abito di ieri, di sua sorella — she's wearing the same dress as yesterday, as her sister
2) (esatto, preciso) veryoggi stesso — this very day, today
gli esperti -i riconoscono che... — even the experts recognize that
lui o egli stesso he himself; lei o ella -a she herself; esso stesso, essa -a it itself; noi -i, -e we ourselves; voi -i, -e you yourselves; loro -i, -e, essi -i, esse -e they themselves; (oggetto) me stesso myself; te stesso yourself; se stesso (di persona) himself; (di cosa, animale) itself; (impersonale) oneself; se -a (di persona) herself; (di cosa, animale) itself; noi -i, -e ourselves; voi -i, -e yourselves; se -i, -e — themselves; (imperso nale) oneself
5) lo stesso, f. la stessa, m.pl. gli stessi, f.pl. le stesse pronome indefinito6) (persona, cosa) the same (one)fa o è lo stesso it's just the same; per me è lo stesso it's all the same o it makes no difference to me; lo stesso vale per lui the same goes for him; si è rifiutato di venire e lei (ha fatto) lo stesso — he refused to come and so did she
8) (ugualmente)••grazie lo stesso — thanks anyway o all the same
Note:v. la nota della voce questo* * *stesso/'stesso/v. la nota della voce questo.1 (medesimo) same; essere della -a grandezza to be the same size; è (sempre) la -a cosa it's (always) the same; porta lo stesso abito di ieri, di sua sorella she's wearing the same dress as yesterday, as her sister; ero nella sua -a classe I was in the same class as him; si pronunciano allo stesso modo they're pronounced the same2 (esatto, preciso) very; quella sera -a that very night; nel momento stesso in cui at the very moment when3 (con valore rafforzativo) oggi stesso this very day, today; nel tuo stesso interesse in your own interest; il presidente stesso ha assistito alla cerimonia the president himself attended the ceremony; gli esperti -i riconoscono che... even the experts recognize that...4 (accompagnato da pronome personale) (soggetto) io stesso I myself; tu stesso you yourself; lui o egli stesso he himself; lei o ella -a she herself; esso stesso, essa -a it itself; noi -i, -e we ourselves; voi -i, -e you yourselves; loro -i, -e, essi -i, esse -e they themselves; (oggetto) me stesso myself; te stesso yourself; se stesso (di persona) himself; (di cosa, animale) itself; (impersonale) oneself; se -a (di persona) herself; (di cosa, animale) itself; noi -i, -e ourselves; voi -i, -e yourselves; se -i, -e themselves; (imperso nale) oneselfpron.indef.1 (persona, cosa) the same (one); lo stesso che o di the same as2 (la stessa cosa) fa o è lo stesso it's just the same; per me è lo stesso it's all the same o it makes no difference to me; lo stesso vale per lui the same goes for him; si è rifiutato di venire e lei (ha fatto) lo stesso he refused to come and so did she3 (ugualmente) grazie lo stesso thanks anyway o all the same; ti amo lo stesso I love you just the same; ci andrò lo stesso I'll go all the same.
См. также в других словарях:
The Big Moment — was an American television game show hosted by Whose Line alumnus Brad Sherwood. It ran on ABC in 1999. The show was based on a Japanese show of the same concept, Happy Family Planning .The show s premise centered on one member of a family… … Wikipedia
The Great Moment (1944 film) — Infobox Film name = The Great Moment (1944) image size = 215px caption = theatrical poster director = Preston Sturges producer = Buddy G. DeSylva Preston Sturges (uncredited) writer = René Fülöp Miller (book) Preston Sturges Ernst Laemmle… … Wikipedia
The Musical Moment — This article is about musical composition written by Nicolae Kirculescu. For classical song cycles, see Moments Musicaux. The Musical Moment, signed by the Romanian composer Nicolae Kirculescu, is a classical musical work for piano and orchestra … Wikipedia
The Reckless Moment — Infobox Film | name =The Reckless Moment caption = director = Max Ophüls producer = Walter Wanger writer = starring =James Mason Joan Bennett Geraldine Brooks Shepperd Strudwick cinematography = Burnett Guffey music = Hans J. Salter editing =… … Wikipedia
at the same time — {adv. phr.} 1. In the same moment; together. * /The two runners reached the finish line at the same time./ Syn.: AT ONCE, AT ONE TIME. 2. In spite of that fact; even though; however; but; nevertheless. * /John did pass the test; at the same time … Dictionary of American idioms
at the same time — {adv. phr.} 1. In the same moment; together. * /The two runners reached the finish line at the same time./ Syn.: AT ONCE, AT ONE TIME. 2. In spite of that fact; even though; however; but; nevertheless. * /John did pass the test; at the same time … Dictionary of American idioms
at the same time — adverb 1. at the same instant (Freq. 23) they spoke simultaneously • Syn: ↑simultaneously • Derived from adjective: ↑simultaneous (for: ↑simultaneously) … Useful english dictionary
at the same time — 1) they arrived at the same time Syn: simultaneously, at the same instant, at the same moment, together, all together, as a group, at once, at one and the same time; in unison, in concert, in chorus, in synchrony, as one, in tandem 2) Curt seems… … Thesaurus of popular words
at\ the\ same\ time — adv. phr. 1. In the same moment; together. The two runners reached the finish line at the same time. Syn.: at once, at one time 2. In spite of that fact; even though; however; but; nevertheless. John did pass the test; at the same time, he didn t … Словарь американских идиом
Do otherwise in the same circumstances — The ability to choose and do otherwise in exactly the same circumstances is one of two criteria considered essential for libertarian free will and for moral responsibility. The other is the existence of alternative possibilities for action.[1]… … Wikipedia
The X-Files: I Want to Believe — Theatrical release poster Directed by Chris Carter Produced by … Wikipedia