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main+entrance

  • 121 porte d'entrée

    ( de maison) front door; (d'église, hôpital, immeuble) main entrance
    * * *
    nf
    * * *

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > porte d'entrée

  • 122 pyramide

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > pyramide

  • 123 brandadyrr

    f. pl. main entrance, front door, so called because of the ‘brandar’ (ships’ beaks) fixed as ornaments over or beside it.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > brandadyrr

  • 124 ā

       ā    (before consonants), ab (before vowels, h, and some consonants, esp. l, n, r, s), abs (usu. only before t and q, esp. freq. before the pron. te), old af, praep. with abl., denoting separation or departure (opp. ad).    I. Lit., in space, from, away from, out of.    A. With motion: ab urbe proficisci, Cs.: a supero mari Flaminia (est via), leads: Nunc quidem paululum, inquit, a sole, a little out of the sun: usque a mari supero Romam proficisci, all the way from; with names of cities and small islands, or with domo, home (for the simple abl; of motion, away from, not out of, a place); hence, of raising a siege, of the march of soldiers, the setting out of a fleet, etc.: oppidum ab Aeneā fugiente a Troiā conditum: ab Alesiā, Cs.: profectus ab Orico cum classe, Cs.; with names of persons or with pronouns: cum a vobis discessero: videat forte hic te a patre aliquis exiens, i. e. from his house, T.; (praegn.): a rege munera repudiare, from, sent by, N.—    B. Without motion.    1. Of separation or distance: abesse a domo paulisper maluit: tum Brutus ab Romā aberat, S.: hic locus aequo fere spatio ab castris Ariovisti et Caesaris aberat, Cs.: a foro longe abesse: procul a castris hostes in collibus constiterunt, Cs.: cum esset bellum tam prope a Siciliā; so with numerals to express distance: ex eo loco ab milibus passuum octo, eight miles distant, Cs.: ab milibus passuum minus duobus castra posuerunt, less than two miles off, Cs.; so rarely with substantives: quod tanta machinatio ab tanto spatio instrueretur, so far away, Cs.—    2. To denote a side or direction, etc., at, on, in: ab sinistrā parte nudatis castris, on the left, Cs.: ab eā parte, quā, etc., on that side, S.: Gallia Celtica attingit ab Sequanis flumen Rhenum, on the side of the Sequani, i. e. their country, Cs.: ab decumanā portā castra munita, at the main entrance, Cs.: crepuit hinc a Glycerio ostium, of the house of G., T.: (cornua) ab labris argento circumcludunt, on the edges, Cs.; hence, a fronte, in the van; a latere, on the flank; a tergo, in the rear, behind; a dextro cornu, on the right wing; a medio spatio, half way.—    II. Fig.    A. Of time.    1. Of a point of time, after: Caesar ab decimae legionis cohortatione ad dextrum cornu profectus, immediately after, Cs.: ab eo magistratu, after this office, S.: recens a volnere Dido, fresh from her wound, V.: in Italiam perventum est quinto mense a Carthagine, i. e. after leaving, L.: ab his, i. e. after these words, hereupon, O.: ab simili <*>ade domo profugus, i. e. after and in consequence of, L.—    2. Of a period of time, from, since, after: ab hora tertiā bibebatur, from the third hour: ab Sullā et Pompeio consulibus, since the consulship of: ab incenso Capitolio illum esse vigesumum annum, since, S.: augures omnes usque ab Romulo, since the time of: iam inde ab infelici pugnā ceciderant animi, from (and in consequence of), L.; hence, ab initio, a principio, a primo, at, in, or from the beginning, at first: ab integro, anew, afresh: ab... ad, from (a time)... to: cum ab horā septimā ad vesperum pugnatum sit, Cs.; with nouns or adjectives denoting a time of life: iam inde a pueritiā, T.: a pueritiā: a pueris: iam inde ab incunabulis, L.: a parvo, from a little child, or childhood, L.: ab parvulis, Cs.—    B. In other relations.    1. To denote separation, deterring, intermitting, distinction, difference, etc., from: quo discessum animi a corpore putent esse mortem: propius abesse ab ortu: alter ab illo, next after him, V.: Aiax, heros ab Achille secundus, next in rank to, H.: impotentia animi a temperantiā dissidens: alieno a te animo fuit, estranged; so with adjj. denoting free, strange, pure, etc.: res familiaris casta a cruore civili: purum ab humano cultu solum, L.: (opoidum) vacuum ab defensoribus, Cs.: alqm pudicum servare ab omni facto, etc., II.; with substt.: impunitas ab iudicio: ab armis quies dabatur, L.; or verbs: haec a custodiis loca vacabant, Cs.—    2. To denote the agent, by: qui (Mars) saepe spoliantem iam evertit et perculit ab abiecto, by the agency of: Laudari me abs te, a laudato viro: si quid ei a Caesare gravius accidisset, at Caesar's hands, Cs.: vetus umor ab igne percaluit solis, under, O.: a populo P. imperia perferre, Cs.: equo lassus ab indomito, H.: volgo occidebantur: per quos et a quibus? by whose hands and upon whose orders? factus ab arte decor, artificial, O.: destitutus ab spe, L.; (for the sake of the metre): correptus ab ignibus, O.; (poet. with abl. of means or instr.): intumuit venter ab undā, O.—Ab with abl. of agent for the dat., to avoid ambiguity, or for emphasis: quibus (civibus) est a vobis consulendum: te a me nostrae consuetudinis monendum esse puto.—    3. To denote source, origin, extraction, from, of: Turnus ab Ariciā, L.: si ego me a M. Tullio esse dicerem: oriundi ab Sabinis, L.: dulces a fontibus undae, V.—With verbs of expecting, fearing, hoping (cf. a parte), from, on the part of: a quo quidem genere, iudices, ego numquam timui: nec ab Romanis vobis ulla est spes, you can expect nothing from the Romans, L.; (ellipt.): haec a servorum bello pericula, threatened by: quem metus a praetore Romano stimulabat, fear of what the praetor might do, L.—With verbs of paying, etc., solvere, persolvere, dare (pecuniam) ab aliquo, to pay through, by a draft on, etc.: se praetor dedit, a quaestore numeravit, quaestor a mensā publicā, by an order on the quaestor: ei legat pecuniam a filio, to be paid by his son: scribe decem (milia) a Nerio, pay by a draft on Nerius, H.; cognoscere ab aliquā re, to know or learn by means of something (but ab aliquo, from some one): id se a Gallicis armis atque insignibus cognovisse, Cs.; in giving an etymology: id ab re... interregnum appellatum, L.—Rarely with verbs of beginning and repeating: coepere a fame mala, L.: a se suisque orsus, Ta.—    4. With verbs of freeing from, defending, protecting, from, against: ut a proeliis quietem habuerant, L.: provincia a calamitate est defendenda: sustinere se a lapsu, L.—    5. With verbs and adjectives, to define the respect in which, in relation to, with regard to, in respect to, on the part of: orba ab optimatibus contio: mons vastus ab naturā et humano cultu, S.: ne ab re sint omissiores, too neglectful of money or property, T.: posse a facundiā, in the matter of eloquence, T.; cf. with laborare, for the simple abl, in, for want of: laborare ab re frumentariā, Cs.—    6. In stating a motive, from, out of, on account of, in consequence of: patres ab honore appellati, L.: inops tum urbs ab longinquā obsidione, L.—    7. Indicating a part of the whole, of, out of: scuto ab novissimis uni militi detracto, Cs.: a quibus (captivis) ad Senatum missus (Regulus).—    8. Marking that to which anything belongs: qui sunt ab eā disciplinā: nostri illi a Platone et Aristotele aiunt.—    9. Of a side or party: vide ne hoc totum sit a me, makes for my view: vir ab innocentiā clementissimus, in favor of.—10. In late prose, of an office: ab epistulis, a secretary, Ta. Note. Ab is not repeated with a following pron interrog. or relat.: Arsinoën, Stratum, Naupactum... fateris ab hostibus esse captas. Quibus autem hostibus? Nempe iis, quos, etc. It is often separated from the word which it governs: a nullius umquam me tempore aut commodo: a minus bono, S.: a satis miti principio, L.—The poets join a and que, making āque; but in good prose que is annexed to the following abl. (a meque, abs teque, etc.): aque Chao, V.: aque mero, O.—In composition, ab- stands before vowels, and h, b, d, i consonant, l, n, r, s; abs- before c, q, t; b is dropped, leaving as- before p; ā- is found in āfuī, āfore ( inf fut. of absum); and au- in auferō, aufugiō.
    * * *
    I
    Ah!; (distress/regret/pity, appeal/entreaty, surprise/joy, objection/contempt)
    II
    by (agent), from (departure, cause, remote origin/time); after (reference)
    III
    ante, abb. a.

    in calendar expression a. d. = ante diem -- before the day

    Latin-English dictionary > ā

  • 125 decumānus or decimānus

        decumānus or decimānus adj.    [decimus], of the tenth part, of tithes: ager, that pays tithes: frumentum, a tithe of the produce. — Collecting tithes, farming tithes: mulier, a tithe-farmer's wife.—As subst m., a tithe-farmer, tax-collector.— Poet.: acipenser, fit for a tax-collector, i. e. of the largest size, Lucil. ap. C.— Of the tenth cohort, in the phrase, porta decumana, the main entrance of a Roman camp, where the tenth cohort of the legion was stationed, Cs., L.— Plur m. as subst, soldiers of the tenth legion, Ta.

    Latin-English dictionary > decumānus or decimānus

  • 126 entrata principale

    entrata principale
    main entrance
    \
    →  entrata

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > entrata principale

  • 127 portone sm

    [por'tone]

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > portone sm

  • 128 jostle

    1. intransitive verb

    jostle [against each other] — aneinander stoßen

    2. transitive verb
    * * *
    ['‹osl]
    (to push roughly: We were jostled by the crowd; I felt people jostling against me in the dark.) rempeln
    * * *
    jos·tle
    [ˈʤɒsl̩, AM ˈʤɑ:sl̩]
    I. vt
    to \jostle sb jdn anrempeln [o fam schubsen] [o SCHWEIZ fam schupfen]; FBALL jdn rempeln; ( fig)
    to \jostle sb off sth jdn von etw dat verdrängen
    II. vi
    1. (push) [sich akk] drängen [o fam drängeln]
    crowds of people \jostled at the main entrance to the concert hall Scharen von Menschen drängelten sich am Haupteingang zur Konzerthalle
    2. (compete)
    to \jostle for sth business, influence um etw akk wetteifern [o konkurrieren] [o rangeln] pej fam
    * * *
    ['dZɒsl]
    1. vi
    drängeln

    he jostled against meer rempelte mich an

    the people jostling round the stallsdie Leute, die sich vor den Buden drängelten

    See:
    academic.ru/56923/position">position
    2. vt
    anrempeln, schubsen

    they jostled him out of the roomsie drängten or schubsten ihn aus dem Zimmer

    3. n
    Gedränge nt, Rempelei f
    * * *
    jostle [ˈdʒɒsl; US ˈdʒɑsəl]
    A v/t
    1. anrempeln
    2. dränge(l)n:
    jostle one’s way through sich (hindurch)drängen durch
    B v/i
    1. jostle against rempeln gegen, anrempeln
    2. (sich) dränge(l)n
    3. US sl Taschendiebstähle begehen
    C s
    1. Rempelei f
    2. Gedränge n
    * * *
    1. intransitive verb

    jostle [against each other] — aneinander stoßen

    2. transitive verb
    * * *
    n.
    Gedränge n. v.
    anrempeln v.

    English-german dictionary > jostle

См. также в других словарях:

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  • entrance — en|trance1 W3S3 [ˈentrəns] n [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: entrer; ENTER] 1.) a door, gate etc that you go through to enter a place ≠ ↑exit entrance to/of ▪ the main entrance to the school front/back/side entrance …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • entrance — I UK [ˈentrəns] / US noun Word forms entrance : singular entrance plural entrances *** [countable] the place where you can enter a room, building, or area I ll meet you at the main entrance at six o clock. entrance to/of: The statue of the Little …   English dictionary

  • entrance — en|trance1 [ entrəns ] noun *** count the place where you can enter a room, building, or area: I ll meet you at the main entrance at six o clock. entrance to/of: The statue of the Little Mermaid stands at the entrance to the harbor. a. usually… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • entrance — noun 1 (C) a door, gate etc that you go through to enter a place (+ to/of): the main entrance to the school opposite exit 1 2 (countable usually singular) the act of entering a place or room: Their conversation was interrupted by the entrance of… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • entrance*/*/*/ — [ˈentrəns] noun 1) [C] the place where you can enter a room, building, or area Ant: exit I ll meet you at the main entrance at six o clock.[/ex] The statue stands at the entrance to the harbour.[/ex] 2) [U] The right or ability to enter a place,… …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

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