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1 it\ is\ a\ common\ experience\ that
English-Hungarian dictionary > it\ is\ a\ common\ experience\ that
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2 common
common ['kɒmən]∎ it's quite common c'est courant ou tout à fait banal;∎ it's a common experience cela arrive à beaucoup de gens ou à tout le monde;∎ he's nothing but a common criminal ce n'est qu'un vulgaire criminel;∎ a common expression une expression courante;∎ common name (of plant) nom m vulgaire;∎ a common occurrence une chose fréquente ou qui arrive souvent;∎ a common sight un spectacle familier;∎ in common parlance dans le langage courant;∎ British pejorative the common horde la plèbe, la populace;∎ the common man l'homme du peuple;∎ the common people le peuple, les gens du commun;∎ common prostitute vulgaire prostituée f;∎ common salt sel m (ordinaire);∎ a common soldier un simple soldat;∎ common thief vulgaire voleur m;∎ it's only common courtesy to reply ce serait la moindre des politesses de répondre;∎ British to have the common touch savoir parler aux gens simples(b) (shared, public) commun;∎ by common consent d'un commun accord;∎ the common good le bien public;∎ common land terrain m communal ou banal;∎ common ownership copropriété f;∎ the common parts (in building) les parties communes;∎ common staircase escalier m commun;∎ common wall mur m commun ou mitoyen;∎ there is no common ground between the two groups il n'y a pas de terrain d'entente entre les deux groupes;∎ British to make common cause with sb faire cause commune avec qn;∎ Commerce common carrier transporteur m (public);∎ common interest group groupe m d'intérêt commun;∎ Aviation common rated fare tarif m commun;∎ Aviation common rated points = destinations pour lesquelles les tarifs sont identiques à partir d'un même point de départ(c) (widespread) général, universel;∎ the common belief la croyance universelle;∎ in common use d'usage courant;∎ it's common knowledge that… tout le monde sait que… + indicative, il est de notoriété publique que… + indicative;∎ the agreement is common knowledge l'accord est connu de tous;∎ it's common practice to thank your host il est d'usage de remercier son hôte;∎ British it's common talk that… on entend souvent dire que… + indicative∎ a common little man un petit homme vulgaire∎ common time or measure mesure f à quatre temps2 noun∎ British Law right of common (of land) communauté f de jouissance; (of pasture) droit m de (vaine) pâture; (of property) droit m de servitude∎ nothing out of the common rien d'extraordinaire∎ or literary the commons (common people) le peuple∎ to be on short common faire maigre chère∎ the Commons les Communes fplen commun;∎ to have sth in common with sb avoir qch en commun avec qn;∎ we have nothing in common nous n'avons rien en commun;∎ they have certain ideas in common ils partagent certaines idées►► EU Common Agricultural Policy politique f agricole commune;common cold rhume m;common crab crabe m vert;common currency Finance monnaie f commune;∎ figurative to be common currency être monnaie courante;Mathematics & figurative common denominator dénominateur m commun;Mathematics common divisor commun diviseur m;British School Common Entrance = examen de fin d'études primaires permettant d'entrer dans une "public school";American Stock Exchange common equities actions fpl ordinaires;Religion Common Era ère f chrétienne;EU common external tariff tarif m externe commun;Mathematics common factor facteur m commun;EU Common Fisheries Policy politique f commune de la pêche;Accountancy common fixed costs coûts mpl fixes communs;American Mathematics common fraction fraction f ordinaire;EU Common Foreign and Security Policy politique f étrangère et de sécurité commune;Computing common gateway interface interface f commune de passerelle;Ornithology common gull goéland m cendré;common law droit m coutumier, common law f;Mathematics common logarithm logarithme m vulgaire ou décimal;EU the Common Market le marché commun;Mathematics common multiple commun multiple m;Grammar common noun nom m commun;common ownership copropriété f;the Common Riding = festival se déroulant dans plusieurs villes des Borders, en Écosse, au cours duquel ont lieu des proclamations, des processions, des cavalcades, des manifestations sportives et des reconstitutions historiques;British School & University common room (for students) salle f commune; (for staff) salle f des professeurs;common sense bon sens m, sens m commun;∎ she has a great deal of common sense elle a beaucoup de bon sens;∎ it's only common sense ça tombe sous le sens;Ornithology common snipe bécassine f des marais;American Stock Exchange common stock actions fpl ordinaires;Ornithology common tern sterne f pierregarinⓘ COMMON LAW On désigne ainsi l'ensemble des règles de droit qui constituent la base du système juridique des pays de langue anglaise. À l'opposé des systèmes issus du droit romain, qui s'appuie sur la loi telle qu'elle est fixée dans des Codes, ces règles, non écrites, sont établies par la jurisprudence. -
3 common
common [ˈkɒmən]1. adjectivea. ( = shared) [interest, cause, language] commun• it's common knowledge that... chacun sait que...• it's something common to all young children c'est quelque chose qu'on trouve chez tous les jeunes enfants• a belief common to both Jews and Christians une croyance partagée par les juifs et les chrétiens► in common en communb. ( = ordinary) commun• to be common currency [idea, story] être répanduc. ( = vulgar) [accent, person] vulgaire2. noun3. compounds► common market noun ( = free trade organization) organisation f de libre-échange, marché m commun (entre pays quelconques)* * *['kɒmən] 1. 2.commons plural noun1) ( the people)3.the commons — les Communes fpl
1) ( frequent) courant, fréquentto be common among — être répandu chez [children, mammals etc]
2) ( shared) commun (to à)3) ( ordinary) [man] du peuple (after n)the common herd — péj la masse
a common criminal — péj un criminel ordinaire
it looks/sounds common — ça fait commun
5) [courtesy, decency] le/la plus élémentaire6) Zoology, Botany commun••to be as common as muck ou dirt — (colloq) ( vulgar) être d'une vulgarité crasse (colloq)
they are as common as muck — (colloq) ( widespread) on en ramasse à la pelle
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4 common sense
إِدْرَاك سَليم \ common sense: good practical judgement gained from experience: Although he’s not very clever, he’s got plenty of common sense. \ حُسْنُ تَقْديرٍ للأُمُور \ common sense: good practical judgement gained from experience: Although he’s not very clever, he’s got plenty of common sense. -
5 common
'komən
1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) corriente2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) común3) (publicly owned: common property.) público4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) ordinario5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) corriente6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) común
2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) tierras comunales- commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common
common adj comúntr['kɒmən]1 (ordinary, average) corriente2 (usual, not scarce) común, corriente■ it's quite common for mothers to suffer from postnatal depression es bastante común que las madres padezcan una depresión posparto3 (shared, joint) común■ for the common good por el bien común, por el bien de todos4 pejorative (vulgar) ordinario,-a1 (land) campo comunal, terreno comunal, tierras nombre femenino plural comunales\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLas common as dirt / as common as muck muy ordinario,-acommon or garden normal y corrientein common en comúnin common with (like) al igual queto be common knowledge ser de dominio públicoto have something in common with somebody tener algo en común con alguiento make common cause with somebody hacer causa común con alguiencommon decency educación nombre femeninocommon denominator denominador nombre masculino comúncommon factor factor nombre masculino comúncommon law derecho consuetudinarioCommon Market Mercado Comúncommon noun nombre nombre masculino comúncommon room SMALLBRITISH ENGLISH/SMALL sala de reunióncommon sense sentido comúncommon time SMALLMUSIC/SMALL cuatro por cuatrothe common touch el contacto con el pueblocommon ['kɑmən] adj1) public: común, públicothe common good: el bien común2) shared: comúna common interest: un interés común3) general: común, generalit's common knowledge: todo el mundo lo sabe4) ordinary: ordinario, común y corrientethe common man: el hombre medio, el hombre de la callecommon n1) : tierra f comunal2)in common : en comúnadj.• adocenado, -a adj.• burdo, -a adj.• común adj.• consuetudinario, -a adj.• frecuente adj.• genérico, -a adj.• ramplón, -ona adj.• regular adj.• usual adj.
I 'kɑːmən, 'kɒmən1)a) (widespread, prevalent) común, corriente(to be) in common use — (ser*) de uso corriente
b) (average, normal) < soldier> rasothe common man — el hombre medio or de la calle
c) (low class, vulgar) ordinario2)a) (shared, mutual) comúncommon ground — puntos mpl en común or de coincidencia
to be common TO something — ser* común a algo
b) ( public)the common good — el bien común or de todos
II
1) u (in phrases)to have something in common (with somebody) — tener* algo en común (con alguien)
['kɒmǝn]in common with — (as prep) al igual que; see also Commons
1. ADJ1) (=usual, ordinary) [event, experience, name, species] común, corriente; [misconception, mistake] común, frecuentethis butterfly is common in Spain — esta mariposa es común or corriente en España
it is common for these animals to die young — es corriente or frecuente que estos animales mueran jóvenes
•
it is a common belief that... — es una creencia extendida or generalizada que...common belief has it that... — según la opinión generalizada...
•
the common man — el hombre de la calle, el hombre medio•
it is common practice in the USA — es una práctica común en EE.UU.•
pigeons are a common sight in London — es corriente or frecuente ver palomas en Londres2) (=shared) [cause, aim, language] comúnto work for a common aim — cooperar para un mismo fin or para un objetivo común
•
for the common good — para el bien común, para el bien de todos•
they discussed several issues of common interest — hablaron de varios asuntos de interés común or de interés mutuo•
it is common knowledge that... — es del dominio público que...•
the desire for freedom is common to all people — todo el mundo comparte el deseo de la libertad4) (Zool, Bot) común2. N1) (=land) campo m comunal, ejido m2) (Brit)(Pol) house 1., 3)3)in common: we have a lot in common (with other people) — tenemos mucho en común (con otra gente)
in common with many other companies, we advertise in the local press — al igual que otras muchas empresas, nos anunciamos en la prensa local
3.CPDcommon cold N — resfriado m común
common core N — (Scol) (also: common-core syllabus) asignaturas fpl comunes
common currency N —
to become/be common currency — [idea, belief] convertirse en/ser moneda corriente
common denominator N — (Math) común denominador m
Common Entrance N — (Brit) (Scol) examen de acceso a un colegio de enseñanza privada
common factor N — (Math) factor m común
common land N — propiedad f comunal
common-lawcommon law N — (Jur) (established by custom) derecho m consuetudinario; (based on precedent) jurisprudencia f
common noun N — nombre m común
common ownership N — (=joint ownership) copropiedad f ; (Pol) (=collective ownership) propiedad f colectiva
common room N — (esp Brit) (for students) sala f de estudiantes; (for teachers) sala f de profesores
common salt N — sal f común
commonsensecommon sense N — sentido m común
common stock N — (US) (St Ex) acciones fpl ordinarias
common time N — (Mus) cuatro m por cuatro
COMMON LAW Se llama common law o case law (derecho consuetudinario o jurisprudencia), al conjunto de leyes basadas en el fallo de los tribunales, a diferencia de las leyes establecidas por escrito en el Parlamento. El derecho consuetudinario inglés se desarrolló después de la conquista normanda, cuando los jueces basaban sus decisiones en la tradición o en el precedente judicial. La jurisprudencia sigue usándose como base del sistema legal anglosajón, aunque va perdiendo vigencia por el desarrollo del derecho escrito.common wall N — pared f medianera
See:see cultural note ACT OF PARLIAMENT in act,see cultural note CONSTITUTION in constitution* * *
I ['kɑːmən, 'kɒmən]1)a) (widespread, prevalent) común, corriente(to be) in common use — (ser*) de uso corriente
b) (average, normal) < soldier> rasothe common man — el hombre medio or de la calle
c) (low class, vulgar) ordinario2)a) (shared, mutual) comúncommon ground — puntos mpl en común or de coincidencia
to be common TO something — ser* común a algo
b) ( public)the common good — el bien común or de todos
II
1) u (in phrases)to have something in common (with somebody) — tener* algo en común (con alguien)
in common with — (as prep) al igual que; see also Commons
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6 common
1. adjective,1) (belonging equally to all) gemeinsam [Ziel, Interesse, Sache, Unternehmung, Vorteil, Merkmal, Sprache]2) (belonging to the public) öffentlicha common belief — [ein] allgemeiner Glaube
3) (usual) gewöhnlich; normal; (frequent) häufig [Vorgang, Erscheinung, Ereignis, Erlebnis]; allgemein verbreitet [Sitte, Wort, Redensart]common honesty/courtesy — [ganz] normale Ehrlichkeit/Höflichkeit
4) (without rank or position) einfach5) (vulgar) gemein; gewöhnlich (abwertend), ordinär (ugs. abwertend) [Ausdrucksweise, Mundart, Aussehen, Benehmen]2. noun2)have something/nothing/a lot in common [with somebody] — etwas/nichts/viel [mit jemandem] gemein[sam] haben
* * *['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) gewöhnlich2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) gemeinsam3) (publicly owned: common property.) allgemein4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) gewöhnlich, gemein5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) einfach6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) Gattungs-...2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) das Gemeindeland- academic.ru/14625/commoner">commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common* * *com·mon[ˈkɒmən, AM ˈkɑ:-]I. adj<-er, -est or more \common, most \common>1. (often encountered) üblich, gewöhnlicha \common name ein gängiger [o weit verbreiteter] Namea \common saying ein verbreiteter Spruch2. (normal) normalit is \common practice... es ist allgemein üblich...\common courtesy/decency ein Gebot nt der Höflichkeit/des Anstandsit's \common courtesy... es gehört sich einfach...\common salt Kochsalz nt3. (widespread) weit verbreitetit is \common knowledge that... es ist allgemein bekannt, dass...a \common ailment ein weit verbreitetes Übela \common disease eine weit verbreitete Krankheit\common area allgemeiner Bereichby \common assent/consent mit allgemeiner Zustimmung/Einwilligung\common bathroom Gemeinschaftsbad ntto make \common cause with sb mit jdm gemeinsame Sache machenfor the \common good für das Gemeinwohlto be on \common ground with sb jds Ansichten teilen\common interests gemeinsame Interessentenancy in \common Bruchteilsgemeinschaft fin \common gemeinsamto have sth in \common [with sb] etw [mit jdm] gemein habenwe've got a lot of interests in \common wir haben viele gemeinsame Interessen5. ZOOL, BOT sparrow, primrose gemein6.<-er, -est>a \common slut eine ordinäre Schlampe pej fam7. (ordinary) einfacha \common criminal ein gewöhnlicher Verbrecher/eine gewöhnliche Verbrecherin peja \common thief ein gemeiner Dieb/eine gemeine Diebina \common labourer ein einfacher Arbeiter/eine einfache Arbeiterinthe \common man der Normalbürger [o Durchschnittsbürger]\common people einfache Leutea \common soldier ein einfacher Soldat* * *['kɒmən]1. adj (+er)1) (= shared by many) gemeinsam; property also Gemein-, gemeinschaftlichcommon land — Allmende f
it is common knowledge that... —
it is to the common advantage that... — es ist von allgemeinem Nutzen, dass...
very little/no common ground — kaum eine/keine gemeinsame Basis
to find common ground (with sb) — eine gemeinsame Basis finden (mit jdm)
sth is common to everyone/sth — alle haben/etw hat etw gemein
2) (= frequently seen or heard etc) häufig; word also weitverbreitet, weit verbreitet, geläufig; experience also allgemein; animal, bird häufig pred, häufig anzutreffend attr; belief, custom, animal, bird (weit)verbreitet, weit verbreitet; (= customary, usual) normalit's quite a common sight — das sieht man ziemlich häufig
it's common for visitors to feel ill here —
nowadays it's quite common for the man to do the housework — es ist heutzutage ganz normal, dass der Mann die Hausarbeit macht
3) (= ordinary) gewöhnlichthe common people —
a common soldier — ein einfacher or gemeiner (dated) Soldat
he has the common touch —
it's only common decency to apologize — es ist nur recht und billig, dass man sich entschuldigt
4) (= vulgar, low-class) gewöhnlich2. n1) (= land) Anger m, Gemeindewiese f2)3)to have sth in common (with sb/sth) — etw (mit jdm/etw) gemein haben
to have a lot/nothing in common — viel/nichts miteinander gemein haben, viele/keine Gemeinsamkeiten haben
in common with many other people/towns/countries — (ebenso or genauso) wie viele andere (Leute)/Städte/Länder...
I, in common with... — ich, ebenso wie...
* * *1. gemeinsam, gemeinschaftlich:common to all allen gemeinsam;that was common ground in yesterday’s debate darüber waren sich in der gestrigen Debatte alle einig;be common ground between the parties JUR von keiner der Parteien bestritten werden;they have sufficient common ground sie haben genügend Gemeinsamkeiten;2. a) allgemeinb) öffentlich:by common consent mit allgemeiner Zustimmung;3. Gemeinde…, Stadt…4. notorisch, berüchtigt (Verbrecher etc)5. a) allgemein (bekannt), alltäglich, gewöhnlich, normal, vertrautb) häufig:be common häufig vorkommen;it is a common belief es wird allgemein geglaubt;it is common knowledge (usage) es ist allgemein bekannt (üblich);a very common name ein sehr häufiger Name;common sight alltäglicher oder vertrauter Anblick;6. üblich, allgemein gebräuchlich:common salt gewöhnliches Salz, Kochsalz n8. allgemein zugänglich, öffentlich9. gewöhnlich, minderwertig, zweitklassig10. abgedroschen (Phrase etc)11. gewöhnlich, ordinär (Br besonders Person)12. gewöhnlich, ohne Rang:the common man der einfache Mann von der Straße;the common people das einfache Volk;B s3. Gemeinsamkeit f:(act) in common gemeinsam (vorgehen);in common with (genau) wie;with so much in common bei so vielen Gemeinsamkeiten;have sth in common with etwas gemein haben mit;we have nothing in common wir haben nichts miteinander gemein;they have many interests in common sie haben viele gemeinsame Interessen;hold sth in common etwas gemeinsam besitzenout of the common außergewöhnlich, -ordentlichcom. abk1. comedy2. comma3. commander4. commerce5. commercial6. commission7. commissioner8. committee9. common* * *1. adjective,1) (belonging equally to all) gemeinsam [Ziel, Interesse, Sache, Unternehmung, Vorteil, Merkmal, Sprache]2) (belonging to the public) öffentlicha common belief — [ein] allgemeiner Glaube
3) (usual) gewöhnlich; normal; (frequent) häufig [Vorgang, Erscheinung, Ereignis, Erlebnis]; allgemein verbreitet [Sitte, Wort, Redensart]common honesty/courtesy — [ganz] normale Ehrlichkeit/Höflichkeit
4) (without rank or position) einfach5) (vulgar) gemein; gewöhnlich (abwertend), ordinär (ugs. abwertend) [Ausdrucksweise, Mundart, Aussehen, Benehmen]2. noun2)have something/nothing/a lot in common [with somebody] — etwas/nichts/viel [mit jemandem] gemein[sam] haben
* * *adj.allgemein adj.allgemein bekannt adj.geläufig adj.gemeinsam adj.zusammen adj. n.verbreitet adj. -
7 common
['kɔmən] 1. adj( shared) wspólny; ( ordinary) object, name, species pospolity; experience, phenomenon powszechny; ( vulgar) prostacki2. nbłonia pl (wiejskie)it's common knowledge that … — powszechnie wiadomo, że …
for the common good — dla wspólnego dobra, dla dobra ogółu
* * *['komən] 1. adjective1) (seen or happening often; quite normal or usual: a common occurrence; These birds are not so common nowadays.) pospolity2) (belonging equally to, or shared by, more than one: This knowledge is common to all of us; We share a common language.) wspólny, powszechny3) (publicly owned: common property.) wspólny4) (coarse or impolite: She uses some very common expressions.) ordynarny5) (of ordinary, not high, social rank: the common people.) prosty6) (of a noun, not beginning with a capital letter (except at the beginning of a sentence): The house is empty.) pospolity2. noun((a piece of) public land for everyone to use, with few or no buildings: the village common.) błonia- commoner- common knowledge
- common law
- common-law
- commonplace
- common-room
- common sense
- the Common Market
- the House of Commons
- the Commons
- in common -
8 common
['kɒmən] UK / US1. adj(experience) allgemein, alltäglich, (shared) gemeinsam, (widespread, frequent) häufig, pej gewöhnlich, ordinär2. n BRIT(land) Gemeindewiese f -
9 common
['kɒmən] UK / US1. adj(experience) allgemein, alltäglich, (shared) gemeinsam, (widespread, frequent) häufig, pej gewöhnlich, ordinär2. n BRIT(land) Gemeindewiese f -
10 Common Intellectual Experience
Education: CIEУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Common Intellectual Experience
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11 Common Reading Experience
Education: CREУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Common Reading Experience
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12 Sexaholics Anonymous (a fellowship of men and women who share their experience, strength, and hope with each other that they may solve their common problem and help others to stop lusting and become sexually sober)
Общая лексика: (сообщество) Анонимные СексоголикиУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > Sexaholics Anonymous (a fellowship of men and women who share their experience, strength, and hope with each other that they may solve their common problem and help others to stop lusting and become sexually sober)
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13 опыт
attempt, trial, experiment, experience, run, practice• В-третьих, опыт автора говорит, что... - Thirdly, it is the author's experience that... <• Выполнив опыт успешно, мы... - Having carried out the test successfully, we...• Данная формула хорошо согласуется с опытом. - This formula is in good agreement with the experiment.• Его карьера к данному моменту уже включает опыт в... - His career to date has included experience in...• Из нашего опыта мы знаем, что... - It is a matter of experience that...• Из опыта работы в индустрии ясно, что... - It is clear from experience within the industry that...• Из повседневного опыта мы знаем, что... - We learn from common experience that...• Из собственного опыта могу сообщить, что... - From personal experience, I can say that...• Каждодневный опыт предлагает... - Everyday experience suggests that...• Мы собираемся опираться на опыт читателя относительно... - We are going to rely on the reader's experience with...• Накапливая опыт, студенты узнают, как... - With practice the student will learn to...• Накопив достаточный опыт, пользователь должен быть способен... - With sufficient experience, the user should be able to...• Накопленный опыт начал нам указывать, что... - Our accumulated experience began to indicate that...• Наш опыт приводит нас к заключению, что... - Experience leads us to conclude that...;• Необходим опыт для... - It takes experience to...• Опыт автора говорит, что... - The author's experience suggests that...• Опыт говорит нам, что... - Our experience tells us that...• Опыт истории показывает, что... - Historical experience shows that...• Опыт показывает, что... - Experiment shows that...• Опыт учит нас, что... - Experience teaches us that...• Опыты, проведенные на животных,... - The experiments performed on animals are...• Профессор Смит был умелым исследователем с многолетним опытом в... - Prof. Smith was a skilled researcher who had many years of experience with...• Смит [1] имел многолетний опыт работы с... - Smith [1] had many years of experience dealing with... -
14 irritante
adj.irritating.m.irritant.* * *► adjetivo1 irritating, aggravating, annoying* * *1.ADJ irritating2.SM irritant* * *Ia) <situación/actitud> irritating, annoyingb) (Med) irritantIImasculino irritant* * *= irritating, irksome, vexing, jarring, grating, exasperating, smarting.Ex. We want the understanding that we are not some irritating adjunct to bookstores but an alternate way.Ex. The old common press was a brilliant and deservedly successful invention, but by the end of the eighteenth century its limitations were beginning to seem irksome.Ex. Knowing precisely who is responsible for specific library services and who will make decisions relieves the uncertainty that can be particularly vexing to a neophyte (and paralyzing to library services).Ex. The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.Ex. Sanborn was infamous for his grating personality, editorial liberties and inaccurate accounts of people and events.Ex. While information appliances will proliferate, they will not lessen the perception of an exasperating electronic environment.Ex. At 11:30 I was feeling that all was well with the world, and then at 11:35 I'm all tightened to a smarting tension by having been treated like scum.* * *Ia) <situación/actitud> irritating, annoyingb) (Med) irritantIImasculino irritant* * *= irritating, irksome, vexing, jarring, grating, exasperating, smarting.Ex: We want the understanding that we are not some irritating adjunct to bookstores but an alternate way.
Ex: The old common press was a brilliant and deservedly successful invention, but by the end of the eighteenth century its limitations were beginning to seem irksome.Ex: Knowing precisely who is responsible for specific library services and who will make decisions relieves the uncertainty that can be particularly vexing to a neophyte (and paralyzing to library services).Ex: The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.Ex: Sanborn was infamous for his grating personality, editorial liberties and inaccurate accounts of people and events.Ex: While information appliances will proliferate, they will not lessen the perception of an exasperating electronic environment.Ex: At 11:30 I was feeling that all was well with the world, and then at 11:35 I'm all tightened to a smarting tension by having been treated like scum.* * *1 ‹situación/actitud› irritating, annoying2 ( Med) irritantirritant* * *
irritante adjetivo ‹situación/actitud› irritating, annoying
' irritante' also found in these entries:
English:
aggravating
- bratty
- constant
- grating
- irritating
- irritant
* * *irritante adjirritating, annoying* * *adj tb MED irritating* * *irritante adj: irritating* * *irritante adj irritating -
15 discordante
adj.discordant (sonidos).* * *► adjetivo1 (en desacuerdo) discordant, conflicting2 (diferente) divergent, differing3 (estilo, color) clashing4 MÚSICA dissonant, discordant\dar la nota discordante / ser la nota discordante figurado to clash, hold a conflicting opinion■ a todos les pareció bien menos a él que siempre tenía que dar la nota discordante it seemed fine to everyone except him, who always had to be different* * *ADJ1) (Mús) discordant2) [opiniones] clashingsu traje fue la nota discordante en la reunión — his suit stuck out like a sore thumb in the meeting
* * *adjetivo (Mús) discordant; <opiniones/versiones> conflicting (before n)* * *= jarring, dissonant, raucous, unharmonious.Ex. The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.Ex. Public policies have created a framework for service that may be dissonant with the ideals of the transformational value of reading.Ex. This is an important point which has been poorly neglected in this lively and, at times, raucous debate.Ex. The lighting is good but made unharmonious by the use of colour tints.* * *adjetivo (Mús) discordant; <opiniones/versiones> conflicting (before n)* * *= jarring, dissonant, raucous, unharmonious.Ex: The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.
Ex: Public policies have created a framework for service that may be dissonant with the ideals of the transformational value of reading.Ex: This is an important point which has been poorly neglected in this lively and, at times, raucous debate.Ex: The lighting is good but made unharmonious by the use of colour tints.* * *1 ( Mús) discordant2 ‹opiniones/versiones› conflicting ( before n)* * *
discordante adjetivo (Mús) discordant;
‹opiniones/versiones› conflicting
discordante adjetivo discordant
nota discordante, opposing remark: Enrique, como siempre, puso la nota discordante, as always, Enrique voiced his disagreement
' discordante' also found in these entries:
English:
discordant
- harsh
- jangle
- jarring
* * *discordante adj1. [sonidos] discordant;[colores] clashing2. [opiniones, declaraciones, versiones] conflicting;él era la única voz discordante en la reunión he was the only one at the meeting to strike a discordant note* * *adj discordant* * *discordante adj1) : discordant2) : conflicting -
16 disonante
adj.dissonant, discordant.f.dissonant.* * *► adjetivo1 MÚSICA dissonant, discordant2 figurado discordant* * *ADJ1) (Mús) dissonant2) (=discordante) discordant* * ** * *= jarring, dissonant, unharmonious, out of tune.Ex. The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.Ex. Public policies have created a framework for service that may be dissonant with the ideals of the transformational value of reading.Ex. The lighting is good but made unharmonious by the use of colour tints.Ex. Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.----* de un modo disonante = jarringly.* * ** * *= jarring, dissonant, unharmonious, out of tune.Ex: The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.
Ex: Public policies have created a framework for service that may be dissonant with the ideals of the transformational value of reading.Ex: The lighting is good but made unharmonious by the use of colour tints.Ex: Soon they started receiving complaints that he left the pianos more out of tune than he found them.* de un modo disonante = jarringly.* * *1 ( Mús) dissonant2 ‹voz› discordant3 ‹colores› clashing* * *
disonante adjetivo (Mús) dissonant;
‹ voz› discordant;
‹ colores› clashing
disonante adjetivo harsh, dissonant: nunca dice una palabra disonante, he never says a harsh word
' disonante' also found in these entries:
English:
tuneless
- discord
* * *disonante adj1. [sonidos, ritmos, voces] dissonant, discordant2. [colores, estilos] clashing;ese sofá queda de lo más disonante that sofa simply screams it doesn't belong there -
17 ordinariez
f.commonness, coarseness.decir/hacer una ordinariez to say/do something rude¡qué ordinariez! how vulgar!* * *► nombre femenino (pl ordinarieces)1 (defecto) vulgarity2 (expresión) vulgar remark■ ¡qué ordinariez! how vulgar!\decir ordinarieces to be vulgar* * *SF1) (=cualidad) coarseness, vulgarity, commonness2)* * *a) ( falta de refinamiento) vulgarity; ( grosería) rudeness, bad manners (pl); ( en la manera de hablar) vulgarity, coarsenessb) ( comentario - poco refinado) vulgar comment; (- grosero) rude comment* * *= coarseness.Ex. The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.----* ordinarieces = foul language.* * *a) ( falta de refinamiento) vulgarity; ( grosería) rudeness, bad manners (pl); ( en la manera de hablar) vulgarity, coarsenessb) ( comentario - poco refinado) vulgar comment; (- grosero) rude comment* * *= coarseness.Ex: The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.
* ordinarieces = foul language.* * *1 (falta de refinamiento) vulgarity; (grosería) rudeness, bad manners (pl); (en la manera de hablar) vulgarity, coarseness2 (dicho poco refinado) vulgar comment; (dicho grosero) rude commentfue una ordinariez decirnos cuánto le había costado telling us how much it had cost him was very vulgar o was a very vulgar thing to do¡qué ordinariez! what a rude/vulgar thing to say!* * *
ordinariez sustantivo femenino
( grosería) rudeness, bad manners (pl);
( en la manera de hablar) vulgarity, coarseness
(— grosero) rude comment
' ordinariez' also found in these entries:
English:
vulgarity
* * *ordinariez nfvulgarity, coarseness;decir/hacer una ordinariez to say/do something rude;¡no digas ordinarieces! don't be so coarse o vulgar!;¡qué ordinariez! how vulgar!* * *f vulgarity* * *ordinariez nf: coarseness, vulgarity -
18 que raya
(adj.) = jarringEx. The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.* * *(adj.) = jarringEx: The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.
-
19 tosquedad
f.1 crudeness.2 roughness.3 coarseness, offhandedness, crassness.* * *1 roughness, crudeness* * *SF coarseness, roughness, crudeness* * *b) ( de persona) roughness; ( de modales) coarseness; ( del lenguaje) lack of refinement* * *= coarseness, ruggedness.Ex. The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.Ex. In the 10-year gap between the publication of her first book and her second, she stretched her imagination to match the diversity and ruggedness of America.* * *b) ( de persona) roughness; ( de modales) coarseness; ( del lenguaje) lack of refinement* * *= coarseness, ruggedness.Ex: The protagonist experiences a jarring descent from the heights of literary distinction at court to the coarseness of common experience.
Ex: In the 10-year gap between the publication of her first book and her second, she stretched her imagination to match the diversity and ruggedness of America.* * *1 (de un objeto) crudeness; (de una tela) coarseness, roughness2 (de una persona) roughness; (de las facciones) roughness, harshness; (de los modales) roughness; (del lenguaje) crudeness, lack of refinement* * *
tosquedad sustantivo femenino
1 (de un objeto) roughness, crudeness
2 (de los modales, de la piel) coarseness, roughness
* * *tosquedad nf1. [de objeto] crudeness2. [de persona, modales] roughness* * *f roughness, coarseness* * *tosquedad nf: crudeness, coarseness, roughness -
20 знать
(см. также помнить) know• Во многих случаях необходимо знать скорость (= частоту), при которой... - In many cases it is required to know the rate at which...• Далее, из элементарных соображений мы знаем, что... - Furthermore, we know from elementary considerations that...• Из нашего опыта мы знаем, что... - It is a matter of experience that...• Из повседневного опыта мы знаем, что... - We learn from common experience that...• Из содержания предыдущих глав мы уже знаем, что... - We already know from earlier chapters that...• Многие не знают, что... - It is not widely known that...• Мы все еще ничего не знаем о... - We are still in the dark about...• Мы до сих пор не знаем, действительно ли... - We do not yet know whether...• Мы знаем, что подобное никогда не происходит (= не случается). - We know that this does not happen.• Мы теперь знаем совершенно точно, что... - We now know beyond doubt that...• Мы уже знаем, что... - We already know that...• Нам надо знать (метод и т. п.)... - We should be familiar with...• Однако в действительности мы знаем, что... - In fact, however, we know that...• Однако во многих случаях (= часто) мы не знаем... - But in many cases, we do not know...• Однако из экспериментов мы знаем, что бывают случаи, когда... - Experimentally, however, we know that there are cases when...• Однако необходимо знать, что понимается под... - It is necessary, however, to know what is meant by...• Следовательно, трудно быть уверенным, действительно ли... —It is therefore difficult to know whether...• Студенты всегда должны знать (= помнить), что... - The students must always be aware of...• Чтобы решить нашу задачу, нам необходимо знать величину... - То solve our problem we need the value of...
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