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1 fairly
[ʹfeəlı] adv1. честно; справедливо, беспристрастноto win /to gain/ smth. fairly - получить что-л. честно /по справедливости/
to act fairly by all men - поступать справедливо по отношению ко всем людям
2. 1) довольно; в известной степени; сносноwe could see and hear fairly well - нам было довольно хорошо видно и слышно
his suggestion fairly took my breath away - от его предложения у меня просто дух захватило
2) эмоц.-усил. совершенно, явно; весьма3. благоприятно; надлежащим, соответствующим образомa town fairly situated - город, хорошо расположенный
4. ясно, чётко, разборчиво -
2 high
كَبِير \ big: large. considerable: great (of amount, cost, difficulty, distance, etc.). good: fairly large: It cost a good deal of money. great: large in size or amount or importance: A great city; a great deal of money; a great mistake; a great artist. high: great: high speed, important a high official. large: big (in size or amount; not usu. used of a person): He needs a large car for his large family. He’s a big boy with large feet. old: not young or middle-aged; having lived a long time: an old man with white hair. respectable: of fairly large size or fairly good quality, etc.: He sold his house for quite a respectable sum. -
3 fairly
ˈfɛəlɪ нареч.
1) а) красиво, мило The table was set fairly. ≈ Стол был чудесно сервирован. б) уст. спокойно;
вежливо( о поведении человека) Syn: quietly
2) а) должным образом б) беспристрастно, объективно, справедливо The story was told fairly and objectively. ≈ История была рассказана честно и объективно. Syn: impartially, without bias
3) довольно;
в некоторой степени a fairly easy problem ≈ довольно простая задачка Syn: rather
4) четко, ясно, отчетливо, явно I have fairly seen him. ≈ Я отчетливо его разглядела. Syn: absolutely, quite честно;
справедливо, беспристрастно - to win /to gain/ smth. * получить что-л. честно /по справедливости/ - to act * by all men поступать справедливо по отношению ко всем людям довольно;
в известной степени;
сносно - * good довольно хороший - she sings * well она неплохо поет - we could see and hear * well нам было довольно хорошо видно и слышно - his suggestion * took my breath away от его предложения у меня просто дух захватило (эмоционально-усилительно) совершенно, явно;
весьма - he is * beside himself он совершенно вне себя - the boat was * under way корабль был уже на полном ходу благоприятно;
надлежащим, соответствующим образом - a town * situated город, хорошо расположенный - he may * have high hopes он вправе питать большие надежды ясно, четко, разборчиво - to write * писать разборчиво fairly амер. безусловно;
фактически ~ беспристрастно ~ довольно;
в известной степени;
сносно;
fairly often( well) довольно часто( хорошо) ~ справедливо, беспристрастно ~ справедливо ~ честно ~ явно;
совершенно;
in fairly close relations в весьма близких отношениях ~ довольно;
в известной степени;
сносно;
fairly often (well) довольно часто( хорошо) ~ явно;
совершенно;
in fairly close relations в весьма близких отношениях present ~ представлять точные данные -
4 he may fairly have high hopes
Общая лексика: он вправе питать большие надеждыУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > he may fairly have high hopes
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5 bastante
adj.1 enough (suficiente).no tengo dinero bastante I haven't got enough money2 a lot of, sufficient, enough, plenty of.adv.1 quite, pretty (considerablemente).es bastante fácil it's pretty o quite easybastante mejor quite a lot betterme gustó bastante I enjoyed it quite a lot2 a lot, very much, a great deal.pron.enough, a good deal, a lot, a sufficient quantity.* * *► adjetivo1 enough, sufficient■ ¿tienes bastante dinero? have you got enough money?2 (abundante) quite a lot of► adverbio1 enough2 (un poco) fairly, quite3 (tiempo) some time, quite a while* * *1. adv.1) enough, sufficiently2) quite, rather2. pron. 3. adj.1) enough, sufficient3) quite a few* * *1. ADJ1) (=suficiente) enough ( para for)¿no tienes ya bastantes? — haven't you got enough?
2) (=mucho) quite a lot of, a fair amount ofhan dejado bastante comida — they've left quite a lot of o a fair amount of food
3) (=muchos) quite a lot of, quite a fewhabía bastantes invitados en la recepción — there were quite a lot of o quite a few guests at the reception
-¿tienes muchos cuadros? -bastantes — "do you have many paintings?" - "quite a few"
4) Méx (=demasiado) too much2. ADV1) (=suficiente) enoughya tienen bastante como para que vayamos también nosotros con nuestros problemas — they've got enough on their plate already without us taking our problems along
2) (=de forma considerable) [con verbos] quite a lot; [con adjetivos, adverbios] quitelo he visto bastante últimamente — I've seen a fair amount of him o quite a lot of him recently
me gusta bastante — I quite like it, I like it quite a lot
el libro está bastante bien — it's a fairly good book, it's quite a good book
estoy bastante cansado — I'm rather o quite tired
habla inglés bastante bien — she speaks quite good English, her English is quite good
* * *I1) ( suficiente) enoughbastantes vasos/bastante vino — enough glasses/wine
2) ( cantidad o número considerable) plenty of, quite a lot ofII1) ( suficiente) enough2) ( demasiado)III1) ( suficientemente) enough2) ( considerablemente) (con verbos) quite a lot; (con adjetivos, adverbios) quiteme pareció bastante aburrido/agradable — I thought he was rather boring/quite pleasant
es bastante fácil de curar — it's quite o fairly easy to cure
* * *= a good deal of, a great deal of, enough, plenty of, pretty much, substantive, plenty, a good many, numerable, fair share.Ex. There is a good deal of scope for users and novice cataloguers to find difficulty in identifying the appropriate heading for many of the works which are the responsibility of corporate bodies.Ex. As earlier sections amply demonstrate, there is a great deal of choice with regards to data bases.Ex. Also, the supplier with a number of clients has enough maintenance income to justify the establishment of a sound maintenance service.Ex. There are plenty of omission failures of this sort, and they litter most of the Hennepin County Library Cataloging Bulletins.Ex. Of course, suspicion always arises that both are weak; for where the library is a vital force, the public is usually pretty much alive to its worth.Ex. In Zimbabwe out of the seven universities with substantive librarians in the country, six of them were headed by women.Ex. One of the great glories of books is that there are plenty to suit everybody, no matter what our taste, our mood, our intellectual ability, age or living experience.Ex. A good many heavily gilt retailers' bindings (such as the small English devotional books that were sold in large numbers from the 1560s until the later seventeenth century) were indeed intended to look expensive while really being cheaply executed.Ex. During the past decade both groups have developed numerable measures to assess creative potential.Ex. Some librarians complain that they are not getting a fair share of these funds.----* ayudar bastante a = go + a long way (towards/to/in) + Gerundio.* bastante + Adjetivo = fairly + Adjetivo, pretty + Adjetivo, rather + Adjetivo, reasonably + Adjetivo.* bastante bien = good enough, rather well, fairly + Verbo.* bastante desarrollado = well-developed.* bastante extenso = longish.* bastante general = wide-ranging [wide ranging].* bastante grande = largish.* bastante largo = longish.* bastante lejos de = well away from.* bastante malo = third rate [third-rate].* bastante más = rather more.* bastante para todos = enough to go round.* bastante tiempo = ample time.* con bastante antelación = well in advance, far in advance.* con bastante frecuencia = quite frequently, fairly often.* dar bastante importancia a = place + great store on.* dejar bastante que desear = leave + a lot to be desired, leave + much to be desired.* estar bastante acostumbrado a = be all too familiar with.* estar bastante alejado = be a distance apart.* ganar bastante dinero = make + good money, earn + good money.* lo bastante elevado = high enough.* lo bastante extenso = adequately scoped.* no lo bastante lejos = not far enough.* Participio Pasado + bastante bueno = decently + Participio Pasado.* que necesita bastante dedicación de personal = staff-intensive [staff intensive].* que necesita bastante mano de obra = labour-intensive [labour intensive].* remontarse bastante en el tiempo = go back + a long way.* ya es bastante = enough is enough.* ya hace bastante tiempo = for quite a while now.* ya hemos hablado bastante de = so much for.* * *I1) ( suficiente) enoughbastantes vasos/bastante vino — enough glasses/wine
2) ( cantidad o número considerable) plenty of, quite a lot ofII1) ( suficiente) enough2) ( demasiado)III1) ( suficientemente) enough2) ( considerablemente) (con verbos) quite a lot; (con adjetivos, adverbios) quiteme pareció bastante aburrido/agradable — I thought he was rather boring/quite pleasant
es bastante fácil de curar — it's quite o fairly easy to cure
* * *= a good deal of, a great deal of, enough, plenty of, pretty much, substantive, plenty, a good many, numerable, fair share.Ex: There is a good deal of scope for users and novice cataloguers to find difficulty in identifying the appropriate heading for many of the works which are the responsibility of corporate bodies.
Ex: As earlier sections amply demonstrate, there is a great deal of choice with regards to data bases.Ex: Also, the supplier with a number of clients has enough maintenance income to justify the establishment of a sound maintenance service.Ex: There are plenty of omission failures of this sort, and they litter most of the Hennepin County Library Cataloging Bulletins.Ex: Of course, suspicion always arises that both are weak; for where the library is a vital force, the public is usually pretty much alive to its worth.Ex: In Zimbabwe out of the seven universities with substantive librarians in the country, six of them were headed by women.Ex: One of the great glories of books is that there are plenty to suit everybody, no matter what our taste, our mood, our intellectual ability, age or living experience.Ex: A good many heavily gilt retailers' bindings (such as the small English devotional books that were sold in large numbers from the 1560s until the later seventeenth century) were indeed intended to look expensive while really being cheaply executed.Ex: During the past decade both groups have developed numerable measures to assess creative potential.Ex: Some librarians complain that they are not getting a fair share of these funds.* ayudar bastante a = go + a long way (towards/to/in) + Gerundio.* bastante + Adjetivo = fairly + Adjetivo, pretty + Adjetivo, rather + Adjetivo, reasonably + Adjetivo.* bastante bien = good enough, rather well, fairly + Verbo.* bastante desarrollado = well-developed.* bastante extenso = longish.* bastante general = wide-ranging [wide ranging].* bastante grande = largish.* bastante largo = longish.* bastante lejos de = well away from.* bastante malo = third rate [third-rate].* bastante más = rather more.* bastante para todos = enough to go round.* bastante tiempo = ample time.* con bastante antelación = well in advance, far in advance.* con bastante frecuencia = quite frequently, fairly often.* dar bastante importancia a = place + great store on.* dejar bastante que desear = leave + a lot to be desired, leave + much to be desired.* estar bastante acostumbrado a = be all too familiar with.* estar bastante alejado = be a distance apart.* ganar bastante dinero = make + good money, earn + good money.* lo bastante elevado = high enough.* lo bastante extenso = adequately scoped.* no lo bastante lejos = not far enough.* Participio Pasado + bastante bueno = decently + Participio Pasado.* que necesita bastante dedicación de personal = staff-intensive [staff intensive].* que necesita bastante mano de obra = labour-intensive [labour intensive].* remontarse bastante en el tiempo = go back + a long way.* ya es bastante = enough is enough.* ya hace bastante tiempo = for quite a while now.* ya hemos hablado bastante de = so much for.* * *A (suficiente) enough¿tenemos bastantes vasos/bastante vino? do we have enough glasses/wine?B (una cantidad o un número considerable) plenty ofcompra bastantes aceitunas buy plenty of olivesnecesita bastante sal it needs plenty of o quite a lot of saltnos dio bastantes ejemplos he gave us plenty of o quite a lot of o quite a few examplesA (en cantidad o número suficiente) enoughvámonos, ya he visto bastante let's go, I've seen enoughya tenemos bastantes we already have enoughB(en cantidad o número considerable): la traducción deja bastante que desear the translation leaves rather a lot to be desiredA (suficientemente) enoughno te has esforzado bastante you haven't tried hard enoughel río no es lo bastante profundo the river isn't deep enoughes lo bastante fácil como para que lo pueda hacer sola it's easy enough for her to do on her ownme ayudó bastante he gave me quite a lot of help, he helped me quite a lotme pareció bastante aburrido/agradable I thought he was rather boring/quite pleasantllegó bastante cansado he was pretty o quite tired when he arrivedlo que tiene es bastante fácil de curar what she has is quite o fairly easy to curehabla español bastante bien she speaks Spanish quite o pretty welllos resultados fueron bastante decepcionantes the results were rather disappointing* * *
bastante adjetivo
◊ bastantes vasos/bastante vino enough glasses/wine
◊ había bastante gente/bastantes coches there were plenty of people/cars
■ pronombre
1 ( suficiente) enough;
2 ( demasiado):
■ adverbio
1 ( suficientemente) enough;
2 ( considerablemente) ( con verbos) quite a lot;
(con adjetivos, adverbios) quite;
me pareció bastante agradable/aburrido I thought he was quite pleasant/rather boring
bastante
I adjetivo
1 (suficiente) enough: ¿tenéis bastantes mantas?, do you have enough blankets?
bastante dinero/azúcar, enough money/sugar
2 (en abundancia) quite a lot of: tiene bastante valor, he's quite brave
bastantes personas, quite a lot of people
II adverbio
1 (suficiente) enough: nunca tiene bastante, it's never enough for her
es lo bastante inteligente como para..., he's clever enough to...
2 (muy, mucho) fairly, quite: conduces bastante bien, you drive rather well
es una película bastante buena, it's quite a good film
viaja bastante, she travels quite often ➣ Ver nota en quite
1) Cuando quieres decir suficiente, debes usar la palabra enough, que se coloca detrás de un adjetivo o adverbio, pero delante de un sustantivo: Tengo bastante dinero. I have enough money. No es bastante grande. It's not big enough.
Recuerda que nunca puedes usar enough cuando bastante significa muy: Este libro es bastante (muy) interesante. This book is very interesting. Hace bastante calor. It's very hot.
2) Cuando quieres decir abundante, puedes emplear la palabra quite, pero también:
fairly: bastante pero no suficiente
pretty: más o mejor de lo esperado (informal)
rather: más o mejor de lo esperado (formal)
En una escala de nada a muy, el orden sería: not-fairly-quite-rather/pretty-very.
Quite se coloca delante de a/an + sustantivo
pretty y fairly entre a/an y el sustantivo, y rather en ambas posiciones: It's quite/ rather a nice day today o it's a pretty/fairly/rather nice day today. Hoy es un día bastante agradable.
En la comparación sólo puedes emplear rather: It's rather warmer today. Hoy hace bastante más calor.
Con un verbo sólo podemos usar quite o rather: I rather/ quite liked it. Me gustó bastante.
' bastante' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abundante
- animosidad
- apolillada
- apolillado
- chillón
- chillona
- decente
- dentro
- descreída
- descreído
- desear
- destreza
- eufórica
- eufórico
- excitable
- informal
- lucir
- miedosa
- miedoso
- ordinaria
- ordinario
- parecerse
- pedestre
- pequeña
- pequeño
- potable
- rancia
- rancio
- reparación
- suficiente
- tonta
- tonto
- adelantado
- alto
- creer
- defender
- guisar
- hombre
- para
English:
accurately
- aspect
- by
- carefree
- close
- considerably
- deal
- decent
- draw on
- enough
- explode
- fairly
- have
- lengthy
- livable
- morale
- near
- OK
- okay
- pretty
- quite
- rather
- reasonable
- reasonably
- some
- sufficient
- sufficiently
- tolerably
- warm
- way
- bit
- considerable
- decently
- desire
- fair
- good
- nice
- nip
- ropey
- rough
- shape
- stock
- well
- while
* * *♦ adj1. [suficiente] enough;no tengo dinero bastante I haven't got enough money;no es lo bastante ancha para que entre el piano it's not wide enough to get the piano throughtienen bastante dinero they're quite o pretty well off;bastantes libros quite a lot of books, a fair number of books;tenemos bastante tiempo we have quite a lot of time♦ adv1. [suficientemente]es lo bastante lista para… she's smart enough to…;ya has hablado bastante, ahora cállate you've done enough talking, be quiet now2. [considerablemente] [con adjetivos, adverbios] quite;[con verbos] quite a lot;es bastante fácil it's pretty o quite easy;es una práctica bastante común it's quite a common practice, it's a pretty common practice;bastante mejor quite a lot better;me gustó bastante I enjoyed it quite a lot;he cenado bastante I had a pretty big dinner;desde que le operaron ha mejorado bastante he's quite a lot better o he's improved quite a lot since he had the operation3. [con frecuencia] quite a lot;voy bastante por ahí I go there quite a lot;¿viajas mucho? – bastante do you do much travelling? – yes, quite a lot o a fair bit♦ pronéramos bastantes there were quite a few o a lot of us;hay bastantes que piensan así there are quite a few people who share the same opinion;queda bastante there's quite a lot left* * *I adj1 enough2 número ocantidad considerable plenty of;quedan bastantes plazas there are plenty of seats leftbebe bastante she drinks quite a lot* * *bastante adv1) : enough, sufficientlyhe trabajado bastante: I have worked enough2) : fairly, rather, quitellegaron bastante temprano: they arrived quite earlybastante adj: enough, sufficientbastante pron: enoughhemos visto bastante: we have seen enough* * *bastante1 adj1. (suficiente) enough¿habrá bastante comida para todos? will there be enough food for everyone?¿tenemos bastantes sillas? have we got enough chairs?2. (no poco) quite a lot ofbastante2 adv1. (no poco) quite2. (suficiente) enoughbastante3 pron1. (suficente) enoughno eches más agua a la planta, ya tiene bastante don't water the plant any more, that's enough2. (mucho) quite a lot -
6 довольно
•The burning rate is fairly (or rather) high.
* * *Довольно (низкий)-- In general, the uncertainty level in the basic parameters is quite low. Довольно -- fairly, rather, quite; not in..., not un...; in some, for some, at someAlso, vanadium has a fairly high solid solubility for oxygen, above about 1 atomic percent at 200°C.The most obvious effect of leakage at fixed T4 is the rather large increase in compressor flow rate.Entrance lengths in turbulent flow are usually quite short.—довольно похожий наРусско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > довольно
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7 cortacircuitos
m. s.&pl.circuit breaker.* * *1 circuit breaker* * *SM INV circuit breaker, trip switch* * *masculino (pl cortacircuitos) circuit breaker* * *Ex. The terms were very largely single concept terms, but did include a fairly high proportion of composite headings such as ' circuit breakers'.* * *masculino (pl cortacircuitos) circuit breaker* * *Ex: The terms were very largely single concept terms, but did include a fairly high proportion of composite headings such as ' circuit breakers'.
* * *(pl cortacircuitos)circuit breaker, trip switch* * *
cortacircuitos m inv Elec circuit breaker
* * *cortacircuitos nm invElec [en circuito] circuit breaker; [fusible] fuse wire, fusible* * *m inv circuit breaker -
8 достаточно
иметь достаточно большую величину - to have a fairly high value A достаточно быстро уменьшается - A decreases fairly rapidlyэти результаты достаточно недавние (70-80 гг.) - the results are fairly recent (1970s-1980s)
Русско-английский словарь по прикладной механике > достаточно
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9 Gibson, R.O.
[br]fl. 1920s–30s[br]English chemist who, with E.O.Fawcett, discovered polythene.[br]Dr Gibson's work towards the discovery of polythene had its origin in a visit in 1925 to Dr A. Michels of Amsterdam University; the latter had made major advances in techniques for studying chemical reactions at very high pressures. After working with Michels for a time, in 1926 Gibson joined Brunner Mond, one of the companies that went on to form the chemical giant Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI). The company supported research into fundamental chemical research that had no immediate commercial application, including the field being cultivated by Michels and Gibson. In 1933 Gibson was joined by another ICI chemist, E.O.Fawcett, who had worked with W.H. Carothers in the USA on polymer chemistry. They were asked to study the effects of high pressure on various reaction systems, including a mixture of benzaldehyde and ethylene. Gibson's notebook for 27 March that year records that after a loss of pressure during which the benzaldehyde was blown out of the reaction tube, a waxy solid was observed in the tube. This is generally recognized as the first recorded observation of polythene. By the following June they had shown that the white, waxy solid was a fairly high molecular weight polymer of ethylene formed at a temperature of 443°K and a pressure of 2,000 bar. However, only small amounts of the material were produced and its significance was not immediately recognized. It was not until two years later that W.P.Perrin and others, also ICI chemists, restarted work on the polymer. They showed that it could be moulded, drawn into threads and cast into tough films. It was a good electrical insulator and almost inert chemically. A British patent for producing polythene was taken out in 1936, and after further development work a production plant began operating in September 1939, just as the Second World War was breaking out. Polythene had arrived in time to make a major contribution to the war effort, for it had the insulating properties required for newly developing work on radar. When peacetime uses became possible, polythene production surged ahead and became the major industry it is today, with a myriad uses in industry and in everyday life.[br]Bibliography1964, The Discovery of Polythene, Royal Institute of Chemistry Lecture Series 1, London.LRD -
10 escote
m.neckline.un escote pronunciado a plunging necklinepres.subj.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) Present Subjunctive of Spanish verb: escotar.* * *1 COSTURA low neckline————————1 (parte) share\pagar a escote to share the cost of 2 (pareja) to go Dutch on* * *SM1) [de vestido] neck, necklineescote en pico, escote en V — V-neck
2) [de mujer] cleavage* * *a) (Indum) neck, neckline; ( profundo) low-cut neck o necklinecon un gran escote en la espalda — cut very low at the back o with a very low back
b) ( parte del cuerpo)un collar adornaba su escote — a necklace adorned her neck/bosom
pagar a escote — (Esp fam) to go Dutch
* * *a) (Indum) neck, neckline; ( profundo) low-cut neck o necklinecon un gran escote en la espalda — cut very low at the back o with a very low back
b) ( parte del cuerpo)un collar adornaba su escote — a necklace adorned her neck/bosom
pagar a escote — (Esp fam) to go Dutch
* * *¿qué tipo de escote quieres? what sort of neck(line) do you want?un vestido con un gran escote en la espalda a dress cut very low at the back o with a very low backllevaba un escote indecente she was wearing an indecently low-cut dress ( o gown etc)un vestido sin escote a high-necked dress2(parte del cuerpo): el vestido revelaba un escote bronceado the dress revealed her tanned neck/bosomun collar de perlas adornaba su escote pearls adorned her neck/bosomCompuestos:round neck; (en suéters) crew neck● escote barco or botebateau o scoop necksquare neck● escote en pico or en VV neck* * *
Del verbo escotar: ( conjugate escotar)
escoté es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
escote es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
escotar
escote
escote sustantivo masculino (Indum) neck, neckline;
( profundo) low-cut neck o neckline;
( en suéters) crew neck;
pagar a escote (Esp fam) to go Dutch
escote sustantivo masculino neckline
♦ Locuciones: pagar a escote, (dos personas) to go Dutch (treat)
(varias personas) to chip in
' escote' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
atrevido
- cuello
- desbocado
- insinuante
- sugestivo
English:
cleavage
- Dutch
- neckline
- neck
- V-neck
* * *♦ nm1. [de prendas] neckline;un vestido con mucho/poco escote a dress with a very low-cut/a fairly high neckline;un escote generoso a plunging o revealing necklineescote cuadrado square neck;escote de pico V-neck;escote redondo round neck;escote en V V-neck2. [de persona] cleavage♦ a escote loc advEsppagar a escote to go Dutch;lo compramos a escote we went halves on it* * *m1 neckline; de mujer cleavage2:escote en pico V-neck3:pagar a escote share the expenses, go Dutch fam* * *escote nm1) : low neckline2)pagar a escote : to go dutch* * *escote n low neck -
11 altiuscule
at fairly high level, rather high -
12 hill
[hɪl]n( small) pagórek m, wzniesienie nt; ( fairly high) wzgórze ntup/down the hill — pod górę/z góry
* * *[hil]1) (noun a piece of high land, smaller than a mountain: We went for a walk in the hills yesterday.) górka, wzgórze2) (a slope on a road: This car has difficulty going up steep hills.) zbocze, wzniesienie•- hillock- hilly
- hillside -
13 так как
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > так как
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14 Pentagonese
Военно-бюрократический жаргон, для которого характерно употребление редких в языке слов, высокопарных и расплывчатых по значению выражений. У. Сафайр [ Safire, William] приводит следующий пародийный пример этого канцелярита: фраза из Геттисбергского послания [ Gettysburg Address] президента Авраама Линкольна "Сегодня мы ведем великую гражданскую войну..." ["Now we are engaged in a great civil war..."] на языке пентагоновского канцелярита звучала бы примерно так: "We have entered upon a period of civil uncertainty involving fairly high mobilization..." = "Мы вступили в период неопределенности гражданского состояния общества, связанного с высокой степенью мобилизационной готовности..." К вычурной лексике Пентагоновского канцелярита относятся такие слова, как exacerbate, dichotomy, cost effective, proliferation, counter-productive, low silhouette, quantum jump, meaningfully, fallback position и др.English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Pentagonese
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15 مدير
مُدِير \ boss: one’s employer; the person in charge.. commissioner: the holder of an official commission: a commissioner of police. director: sb. who controls sth. (a company, the making of a film, etc.): The firm’s directors meet only once a week. superintendent: an official who superintends; a police officer of fairly high rank. \ مُدِير \ headmaster: a man in charge of a school. \ See Also ناظِر مدرسة \ مُدِير إدارة (شَرِكة، مَحَلّ تجاري، إلخ) \ manager: sb. who controls a business, an office, a hotel, a shop, etc.. managing director: the one in charge of a firm’s daily business. \ مُدِير إداريّ \ executive: an important businessman who carries out his company’s plans. \ See Also تنفيذي (تنفيذيّ) \ مُدِير جَوْقَة موسيقيّة \ conductor: one who controls a musical group. \ مُدِير كلِّية \ rector: a priest in charge of a church; the head of some schools and universities. \ See Also جامعة (جامِعَة) -
16 ملاحظ
مُلاحِظ \ superintendent: an official who superintends; a police officer of fairly high rank. -
17 boss
مُدِير \ boss: one’s employer; the person in charge.. commissioner: the holder of an official commission: a commissioner of police. director: sb. who controls sth. (a company, the making of a film, etc.): The firm’s directors meet only once a week. superintendent: an official who superintends; a police officer of fairly high rank. -
18 commissioner
مُدِير \ boss: one’s employer; the person in charge.. commissioner: the holder of an official commission: a commissioner of police. director: sb. who controls sth. (a company, the making of a film, etc.): The firm’s directors meet only once a week. superintendent: an official who superintends; a police officer of fairly high rank. -
19 director
مُدِير \ boss: one’s employer; the person in charge.. commissioner: the holder of an official commission: a commissioner of police. director: sb. who controls sth. (a company, the making of a film, etc.): The firm’s directors meet only once a week. superintendent: an official who superintends; a police officer of fairly high rank. -
20 superintendent
مُدِير \ boss: one’s employer; the person in charge.. commissioner: the holder of an official commission: a commissioner of police. director: sb. who controls sth. (a company, the making of a film, etc.): The firm’s directors meet only once a week. superintendent: an official who superintends; a police officer of fairly high rank.
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