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it is extremely difficult

  • 1 extremely difficult

    adj.
    imposible adj.

    English-spanish dictionary > extremely difficult

  • 2 extremely difficult

    berat-berat

    English-Indonesian dictionary > extremely difficult

  • 3 (an) extremely difficult question

    an extremely difficult (complicated) question крайне трудный (сложный) вопрос

    English-Russian combinatory dictionary > (an) extremely difficult question

  • 4 these equations are extremely difficult to treat mathematically

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > these equations are extremely difficult to treat mathematically

  • 5 it is extremely difficult to define ...

      • чрезвычайно трудно определить...

    English-Russian dictionary of phrases and cliches for a specialist researcher > it is extremely difficult to define ...

  • 6 extremely

    adverb (very: extremely kind.) extremadamente
    extremely adv extremadamente / sumamente
    tr[ɪk'striːmlɪ]
    1 extremadamente, sumamente
    extremely [ɪk'stri:mli, ɛk-] adv
    : sumamente, extremadamente, terriblemente
    adv.
    altamente adv.
    extremadamente adv.
    sumamente adv.
    ɪk'striːmli
    adverb (as intensifier) sumamente

    it's extremely interesting/difficult — es interesantísimo/dificilísimo, es sumamente interesante/difícil

    [ɪks'triːmlɪ]
    ADV sumamente, extremadamente

    it is extremely difficult — es dificilísimo, es sumamente difícil, es extremadamente difícil

    * * *
    [ɪk'striːmli]
    adverb (as intensifier) sumamente

    it's extremely interesting/difficult — es interesantísimo/dificilísimo, es sumamente interesante/difícil

    English-spanish dictionary > extremely

  • 7 extremely

    [ɪk'striːmlɪ]
    adv
    чрезвычайно, крайне, в высшей степени, очень
    - extremely difficult question
    - extremely slowly
    USAGE:
    Extremely - усилительное наречие степени. Подобные наречия-усилители, как правило, стоят перед определяемым прилагательным: the book was extremely interesting книга была чрезвычайно интересна. К таким же усилителям относятся: awfully - ужасно, крайне; definitely - определенно; positively - безусловно, несомненно, непременно; purely - совершенно; reasonably - разумно, умеренно; somewhat - до некоторой степени, несколько; terribly - ужасно; very - очень

    English-Russian combinatory dictionary > extremely

  • 8 extremely

    adverb

    Did you enjoy the party? - Yes, extremely — Hat dir die Party gefallen? - Ja, sehr sogar!

    * * *
    adverb (very: extremely kind.) äußerst
    * * *
    ex·treme·ly
    [ɪkˈstri:mli]
    adv äußerst, höchst
    I'm \extremely sorry es tut mir außerordentlich leid
    \extremely confusing/dull äußerst [o höchst] verwirrend/langweilig
    to be \extremely good-looking äußerst gutaussehend sein
    * * *
    [Ik'striːmlɪ]
    adv
    äußerst; important, high, low extrem

    was it difficult? – extremely! — war es schwierig? – sehr!

    * * *
    extremely adv äußerst, höchst, ungemein, hochgradig:
    extremely favo(u)rable äußerst günstig;
    extremely rare äußerst oder ganz selten
    * * *
    adverb

    Did you enjoy the party? - Yes, extremely — Hat dir die Party gefallen? - Ja, sehr sogar!

    * * *
    adv.
    extrem adv.
    in höchstem Maße ausdr.
    überaus adv.

    English-german dictionary > extremely

  • 9 fiendishly

    ['fiːndɪʃlɪ]
    1) (wickedly) [smile, plot] diabolicamente, malvagiamente
    2) (extremely) [ difficult] tremendamente
    * * *
    1) (wickedly.) diabolicamente
    2) (very: fiendishly difficult.) tremendamente
    * * *
    fiendishly
    * * *
    ['fiːndɪʃlɪ]
    1) (wickedly) [smile, plot] diabolicamente, malvagiamente
    2) (extremely) [ difficult] tremendamente

    English-Italian dictionary > fiendishly

  • 10 desperately

    adverb

    be desperately ill or sick — todkrank sein

    2) (appallingly, shockingly, extremely) schrecklich (ugs.)
    * * *
    adverb verzweifelt
    * * *
    des·per·ate·ly
    [ˈdespərətli]
    1. (in a desperate manner) verzweifelt
    2. (seriously, extremely) äußerst; (greatly) enorm fam
    I'm not \desperately keen on watching football ich bin nicht sonderlich scharf auf Fußball sl
    they \desperately wanted a child sie wollten unbedingt ein Kind haben
    to be \desperately ill todkrank sein
    * * *
    ['despərItlI]
    adv
    1) (= frantically) fight, look for, hope, try verzweifelt
    2) (= urgently) need dringend; want unbedingt

    to be desperately in need of sb/sth —

    he desperately wanted to become a film makerer wollte unbedingt Filmemacher werden

    3) (= extremely) difficult extrem; important, sad äußerst

    desperately ill —

    to be desperately worried ( about sth) — sich (dat) (über etw acc ) schreckliche Sorgen machen

    I'm not desperately keen on... — ich bin nicht besonders scharf auf (acc)...

    to try desperately hard to do sth — verzweifelt versuchen, etw zu tun

    to be desperately in love (with sb) — unsterblich (in jdn) verliebt sein

    * * *
    adverb

    be desperately ill or sick — todkrank sein

    2) (appallingly, shockingly, extremely) schrecklich (ugs.)
    * * *
    adv.
    verzweifelt adv.

    English-german dictionary > desperately

  • 11 Reichenbach, Georg Friedrich von

    [br]
    b. 24 August 1772 Durlach, Baden, Germany
    d. 21 May 1826 Munich, Germany
    [br]
    German engineer.
    [br]
    While he was attending the Military School at Mannheim, Reichenbach drew attention to himself due to the mathematical instruments that he had designed. On the recommendation of Count Rumford in Munich, the Bavarian government financed a two-year stay in Britain so that Reichenbach could become acquainted with modern mechanical engineering. He returned to Mannheim in 1793, and during the Napoleonic Wars he was involved in the manufacture of arms. In Munich, where he was in the service of the Bavarian state from 1796, he started producing precision instruments in his own time. His basic invention was the design of a dividing machine for circles, produced at the end of the eighteenth century. The astronomic and geodetic instruments he produced excelled all the others for their precision. His telescopes in particular, being perfect in use and of solid construction, soon brought him an international reputation. They were manufactured at the MathematicMechanical Institute, which he had jointly founded with Joseph Utzschneider and Joseph Liebherr in 1804 and which became a renowned training establishment. The glasses and lenses were produced by Joseph Fraunhofer who joined the company in 1807.
    In the same year he was put in charge of the technical reorganization of the salt-works at Reichenhall. After he had finished the brine-transport line from Reichenhall to Traunstein in 1810, he started on the one from Berchtesgaden to Reichenhall which was an extremely difficult task because of the mountainous area that had to be crossed. As water was the only source of energy available he decided to use water-column engines for pumping the brine in the pipes of both lines. Such devices had been in use for pumping purposes in different mining areas since the middle of the eighteenth century. Reichenbach knew about the one constructed by Joseph Karl Hell in Slovakia, which in principle had just been a simple piston-pump driven by water which did not work satisfactorily. Instead he constructed a really effective double-action water-column engine; this was a short time after Richard Trevithick had constructed a similar machine in England. For the second line he improved the system and built a single-action pump. All the parts of it were made of metal, which made them easy to produce, and the pumps proved to be extremely reliable, working for over 100 years.
    At the official opening of the line in 1817 the Bavarian king rewarded him generously. He remained in the state's service, becoming head of the department for roads and waterways in 1820, and he contributed to the development of Bavarian industry as well as the public infrastructure in many ways as a result of his mechanical skill and his innovative engineering mind.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Bauernfeind, "Georg von Reichenbach" Allgemeine deutsche Biographie 27:656–67 (a reliable nineteenth-century account).
    W.Dyck, 1912, Georg v. Reichenbach, Munich.
    K.Matschoss, 1941, Grosse Ingenieure, Munich and Berlin, 3rd edn. 121–32 (a concise description of his achievements in the development of optical instruments and engineering).
    WK

    Biographical history of technology > Reichenbach, Georg Friedrich von

  • 12 appallingly

    adverb horriblemente
    tr[ə'pɔːlɪŋlɪ]
    1 (horrific) horriblemente, horrorosamente
    ə'pɔːlɪŋli
    adverb <bad/ignorant> terriblemente
    [ǝ'pɔːlɪŋlɪ]
    ADV
    1) (=badly) [sing, play] pésimamente; [treat] espantosamente mal, terriblemente mal; [suffer] horriblemente, terriblemente
    2) (=extremely) [difficult, selfish, ignorant] terriblemente
    * * *
    [ə'pɔːlɪŋli]
    adverb <bad/ignorant> terriblemente

    English-spanish dictionary > appallingly

  • 13 terrifically

    [tə'rɪfɪklɪ]
    adverb ( extremely) [difficult, gifted, kind, large] extrêmement; [expensive, hot, noisy] épouvantablement

    English-French dictionary > terrifically

  • 14 market timing

    market timing STOCK Market Timing n (synonymous: timing the market; investment strategy: market timers believe that it is possible to predict future changes of market directions; most experts agree that market timing is extremely difficult if not downright impossible; Anlagestrategie, die auf das frühzeitige Erkennen und Ausnutzen künftiger Richtungsänderungen des Marktes setzt; Gegensatz: Kaufen-und-Halten-Strategie = buying and holding)

    Englisch-Deutsch Fachwörterbuch der Wirtschaft > market timing

  • 15 if not

    1) а то и...
    A will become extremely difficult, if not impossible А становится чрезвычайно сложным, а то и [ вовсе] невозможным
    2) в противном случае

    English-Russian dictionary of scientific and technical difficulties vocabulary > if not

  • 16 turn over a new leaf

    начать новую жизнь, исправиться, измениться к лучшему, порвать с прошлым

    If I'll only promise to marry him Charley says, he'll turn over a new leaf, stop drinking, save money and take me away from this blasted pub. (K. S. Prichard, ‘The Roaring Nineties’, ch. 31) — Чарли говорит, что если я пообещаю выйти за него, то он начнет новую жизнь, бросит пить, будет откладывать деньги и возьмет меня из этого мерзкого трактира.

    It is extremely difficult, practically impossible, for ex-convicts to turn over a new leaf and go straight. (E. Flynn, ‘The Alderson Story’, ch. XV) — Человеку, вышедшему из тюрьмы, крайне трудно, вернее, невозможно, начать новую страницу жизни и добиться успеха.

    Various faculty members have complained of your superior attitude - making fun of our courses right out in class!.. Now unless you immediately turn over a new leaf, young man, I shall have to suspend you for the rest of the year... (S. Lewis, ‘Arrowsmith’, ch. IX) — Многие преподаватели жалуются на ваш заносчивый тон - вы прямо в аудитории высмеиваете наши курсы!.. Так вот, если вы, молодой человек, не одумаетесь незамедлительно, мне придется запретить вам посещать лекции до конца года...

    Large English-Russian phrasebook > turn over a new leaf

  • 17 terrifically

    1 ( extremely) [difficult, gifted, kind, large] extrêmement ; [expensive, hot, noisy] épouvantablement ;
    2 [sing, write] formidablement bien .

    Big English-French dictionary > terrifically

  • 18 Girard, Philippe de

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 1775 France
    d. 1845
    [br]
    French developer of a successful flax-heckling machine for the preparation of fibres for power-spinning.
    [br]
    Early drawing and spinning processes failed to give linen yarn the requisite fineness and homogeneity. In 1810 Napoleon offered a prize of a million francs for a successful flax-spinning machine as part of his policy of stimulating the French textile industries. Spurred on by this offer, Girard suggested three improvements. He was too late to win the prize, but his ideas were patented in England in 1814, although not under his own name. He proposed that the fibres should be soaked in a very hot alkaline solution both before drawing and immediately before they went to the spindles. The actual drawing was to be done by passing the dried material through combs or gills that moved alternately; gill drawing was taken up in England in 1816. His method of wet spinning was never a commercial success, but his processes were adopted in part and developed in Britain and spread to Austria, Poland and France, for his ideas were essentially good and produced a superior product. The successful power-spinning of linen thread from flax depended primarily upon the initial processes of heckling and drawing. The heckling of the bundles or stricks of flax, so as to separate the long fibres of "line" from the shorter ones of "tow", was extremely difficult to mechanize, for each strick had to be combed on both sides in turn and then in the reverse direction. It was to this problem that Girard next turned his attention, inventing a successful machine in 1832 that subsequently was improved in England. The strick was placed between two vertical sheets of combs that moved opposite to each other, depositing the tow upon a revolving cylinder covered with a brush at the bottom of the machine, while the holder from which the strick was suspended moved up and down so as to help the teeth to penetrate deeper into the flax. The tow was removed from the cylinder at the bottom of the machine and taken away to be spun like cotton. The long line fibres were removed from the top of the machine and required further processing if the yarn was to be uniform.
    When N.L.Sadi Carnot's book Réflexions sur la puissance motrice du feu, was published in 1824, Girard made a favourable report on it.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    M.Daumas (ed.), 1968, Histoire générale des techniques, Vol. III: L'Expansion du
    Machinisme, Paris.
    C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of'Technology, Vol. IV, Oxford: Clarendon Press. T.K.Derry and T.I.Williams, 1960, A Short History of Technology from the Earliest
    Times to AD 1900, Oxford.
    W.A.McCutcheon, 1966–7, "Water power in the North of Ireland", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 39 (discusses the spinning of flax and mentions Girard).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Girard, Philippe de

  • 19 Brain

       Among the higher mammals the great development of neocortex occurs.
       In each group of mammals there is a steady increase in the area of the association cortex from the most primitive to the evolutionarily most recent type; there is an increase in the number of neurons and their connections. The degree of consciousness of an organism is some function of neuronal cell number and connectivity, perhaps of neurons of a particular type in association cortex regions. This function is of a threshold type such that there is a significant quantitative break with the emergence of humans. Although the importance of language and the argument that it is genetically specified and unique to humans must be reconsidered in the light of the recent evidence as to the possibility of teaching chimpanzees, if not to speak, then to manipulate symbolic words and phrases, there are a number of unique human features which combine to make the transition not merely quantitative, but also qualitative. In particular these include the social, productive nature of human existence, and the range and extent of the human capacity to communicate. These features have made human history not so much one of biological but of social evolution, of continuous cultural transformation. (Rose, 1976, pp. 180-181)
       [S]ome particular property of higher primate and cetacean brains did not evolve until recently. But what was that property? I can suggest at least four possibilities...: (1) Never before was there a brain so massive; (2) Never before was there a brain with so large a ratio of brain to body mass; (3) Never before was there a brain with certain functional units (large frontal and temporal lobes, for example); (4) Never before was there a brain with so many neural connections or synapses.... Explanations 1, 2 and 4 argue that a quantitative change produced a qualitative change. It does not seem to me that a crisp choice among these four alternatives can be made at the present time, and I suspect that the truth will actually embrace most or all of these possibilities. (Sagan, 1978, pp. 107-109)
       The crucial change in the human brain in this million years or so has not been so much the increase in size by a factor of three, but the concentration of that increase in three or four main areas. The visual area has increased considerably, and, compared with the chimpanzee, the actual density of human brain cells is at least 50 percent greater. A second increase has taken place in the area of manipulation of the hand, which is natural since we are much more hand-driven animals than monkeys and apes. Another main increase has taken place in the temporal lobe, in which visual memory, integration, and speech all lie fairly close together. And the fourth great increase has taken place in the frontal lobes. Their function is extremely difficult to understand... ; but it is clear that they're largely responsible for the ability to initiate a task, to be attentive while it is being done, and to persevere with it. (Bronowski, 1978, pp. 23-24)
       The human brain works however it works. Wishing for it to work in some way as a shortcut to justifying some ethical principle undermines both the science and the ethics (for what happens to the principle if the scientific facts turn out to go the other way?). (Pinker, 1994, p. 427)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Brain

  • 20 ecosystem degradation

    1. деградация экосистем

     

    деградация экосистем

    [ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]

    EN

    ecosystem degradation
    Degradation or destruction of large natural environments. When one ecosystem is under attack as a result of natural or man-made disaster it is extremely difficult to calculate the ripple effects throughout nature. When two or more ecosystems are being degraded the probabilities of synergistic destructiveness multiply. Ecosystems in many regions are threatened, despite their biological richness and their promise of material benefits. (Source: WPR)
    [http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > ecosystem degradation

См. также в других словарях:

  • extremely — ex|treme|ly [ ık strimli ] adverb *** very: used for emphasizing an adjective or adverb: He knows the area extremely well. It is extremely important to record everything that happens. These negotiations will be extremely difficult for the company …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • extremely */*/*/ — UK [ɪkˈstriːmlɪ] / US [ɪkˈstrɪmlɪ] adverb very: used for emphasizing an adjective or adverb He knows the area extremely well. It is extremely important to record everything that happens. These negotiations will be extremely difficult for the… …   English dictionary

  • extremely — ex|treme|ly W2S1 [ıkˈstri:mli] adv [+ adjective/adverb] to a very great degree ▪ Earthquakes are extremely difficult to predict. ▪ I m extremely sorry to have troubled you …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • difficult — adj. VERBS ▪ be, look, prove, remain, seem, sound ▪ become, get ▪ It is getting more and more difficult to find …   Collocations dictionary

  • extremely — adv. Extremely is used with these adjectives: ↑able, ↑abstract, ↑abusive, ↑accurate, ↑active, ↑adaptable, ↑addictive, ↑adept, ↑advanced, ↑advantageous, ↑afraid, ↑ …   Collocations dictionary

  • hell on wheels — extremely difficult. He s going to be hell on wheels to deal with …   New idioms dictionary

  • like pulling teeth — extremely difficult. Getting our kids dressed and off to school in winter is like pulling teeth …   New idioms dictionary

  • France — /frans, frahns/; Fr. /frddahonns/, n. 1. Anatole /ann nann tawl /, (Jacques Anatole Thibault), 1844 1924, French novelist and essayist: Nobel prize 1921. 2. a republic in W Europe. 58,470,421; 212,736 sq. mi. (550,985 sq. km). Cap.: Paris. 3.… …   Universalium

  • Germany — /jerr meuh nee/, n. a republic in central Europe: after World War II divided into four zones, British, French, U.S., and Soviet, and in 1949 into East Germany and West Germany; East and West Germany were reunited in 1990. 84,068,216; 137,852 sq.… …   Universalium

  • pottery — /pot euh ree/, n., pl. potteries. 1. ceramic ware, esp. earthenware and stoneware. 2. the art or business of a potter; ceramics. 3. a place where earthen pots or vessels are made. [1475 85; POTTER1 + Y3] * * * I One of the oldest and most… …   Universalium

  • Russia — /rush euh/, n. 1. Also called Russian Empire. Russian, Rossiya. a former empire in E Europe and N and W Asia: overthrown by the Russian Revolution 1917. Cap.: St. Petersburg (1703 1917). 2. See Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. 3. See Russian… …   Universalium

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