-
61 leikata
yks.nom. leikata; yks.gen. leikkaan; yks.part. leikkasi; yks.ill. leikkaisi; mon.gen. leikatkoon; mon.part. leikannut; mon.ill. leikattiincarve (verb)clip (verb)crop (verb)cut (verb)dock (verb)dress (verb)excixe (verb)incise (verb)intersect (verb)mow (verb)operate (verb)pare (verb)prune (verb)reap (verb)shave (verb)shear (verb)slice (verb)snip (verb)trim (verb)cut out lance prunce slit (noun)* * *• wound• MAT• make a joke• lance• intersect• incise• hurt• hack• dress• operate• divide• strike out• cut• cut out• grasp• shave• cut apart• trouble• trim• split• slice• snip• shear• pare• separate• sculpt• score• reap• prune• prunce• slash• break off• cut off• cut down• bisect• carve• castrate• chop• clip• crop• cross• BIO -
62 شطب
شَطَبَ: شَقّ، شَرّحَto scarify, scratch, incise, slit, slash; cut, make incisions into; to slice, cut into slices -
63 شق
شَقّ: فَلَعَ، مَزّقَ، بَضَعَto split, cleave, fissure, crack, rift, break; to tear, rend, rip (apart), rive; to cut open, slash open, slit open, cut, incise, make incisions into; to carve up, dissect -
64 bala
wr. bal; bil2 "to rotate, turn over, cross; to pour out, libate, make a libation; reign, rotation, turn, term of office; to revolt; to hoist, draw (water); to transfer (boats over weirs etc. blocking a stream); to carry; to boil (meat in water); to change, transgress (the terms of an agreement); conversion (math.)" Akk. elû; nabalkutu; nakāru; naqû; palû; tabākuwr. bala "wastage (in processing grain)" -
65 tagliare
[taʎ'ʎare]1. vt1) (gen) to cut, (torta, salame) to cut, slice, (arrosto) to carve, (siepe) to trim, (fieno, prato) to mow, (grano) to reap, (albero) to fell, cut downtagliare qc in due/in più parti — to cut sth in two/into several pieces
tagliare la gola a qn — to cut o slit sb's throat
tagliare il capo o la testa a qn — to behead sb, cut sb's head off
taglia e incolla Inform — cut and paste
2) (articolo, scritto, scena) to cut, (acqua, telefono, gas) to cut off3) (intersecare: sogg: strada) to cut acrosstagliare la strada a qn — (in macchina) to cut in on sb, (a piedi) to cut across in front of sb
5) (carte) to cut7)tagliare la corda — to sneak offtagliare le gambe a qn fig — to make it impossible for sb to act, tie sb's hands
tagliare i panni addosso a qn — (sparlare) to tear sb to pieces
2. vi -
66 не в обиду будь сказано
( кому)no offence meant; without offence; if you don't mind my saying so; I do not mean this as a slight on smb.- Теперь уже не умеют делать таких, - сказал он. - Это древние ножи арауканцев, которыми мои прадедушки вспарывали когда-то животы белым - вашим прадедушкам, не в обиду вам будь сказано. (А. Беляев, Человек-амфибия) — 'They don't make their kind nowadays,' he said. 'These're ancient knives my forefathers used to slit open the bellies of your forefathers with - if you don't mind my saying so.'
- Этой выставкой мы целиком обязаны - да не в обиду будет сказано нашему руководству - одной из рядовых сотрудниц Союза, нашей милой Анастасии Семёновне. (К. Паустовский, Телеграмма) — 'We are wholly indebted for this exhibition - and I do not mean this as a slight on our board members - to a rank-and-file employee of the Union, our dear Anastasia Semyonovna.'
Русско-английский фразеологический словарь > не в обиду будь сказано
-
67 шлицевать
гл. slot, slit, make slits, groove; mill splines -
68 slash
[slæʃ]1. verbجُرْح طَويل في الجِلْدHe slashed his victim's face with a razor.
2) ( with at) to strike out violently at (something):يُهاجِم أو يَضْرُب بِشِدَّهHe slashed at the bush angrily with a stick.
3) to reduce greatly:يُخَفِّض الأسْعارA notice in the shop window read "Prices slashed!"
2. noun1) a long cut or slit.جُرْح طَويل2) a sweeping blow.ضَربَةٌ قَوِيَّه -
69 Anschütz, Ottomar
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1846 Lissa, Prussia (now Leszno, Poland) d. 1907[br]German photographer, chronophotographer ana inventor.[br]The son of a commercial photographer, Anschütz entered the business in 1868 and developed an interest in the process of instantaneous photography. The process was very difficult with the contemporary wet-plate process, but with the introduction of the much faster dry plates in the late 1870s he was able to make progress. Anschütz designed a focal plane shutter capable of operating at speeds up to 1/1000 of a second in 1883, and patented his design in 1888. it involved a vertically moving fabric roller-blind that worked at a fixed tension but had a slit the width of which could be adjusted to alter the exposure time. This design was adopted by C.P.Goerz, who from 1890 manufactures a number of cameras that incorporated it.Anschütz's action pictures of flying birds and animals attracted the attention of the Prussian authorities, and in 1886 the Chamber of Deputies authorized financial support for him to continue his work, which had started at the Hanover Military Institute in October 1885. Inspired by the work of Eadweard Muybridge in America, Anschütz had set up rows of cameras whose focal-plane shutters were released in sequence by electromagnets, taking twenty-four pictures in about three-quarters of a second. He made a large number of studies of the actions of people, animals and birds, and at the Krupp artillery range at Meppen, near Essen, he recorded shells in flight. His pictures were reproduced, and favourably commented upon, in scientific and photographic journals.To bring the pictures to the public, in 1887 he created the Electro-Tachyscope. The sequence negatives were printed as 90 x 120 mm transparencies and fixed around the circumference of a large steel disc. This was rotated in front of a spirally wound Geissler tube, which produced a momentary brilliant flash of light when a high voltage from an induction coil was applied to it, triggered by contacts on the steel disc. The flash duration, about 1/1000 of a second, was so short that it "froze" each picture as it passed the tube. The pictures succeeded each other at intervals of about 1/30 of a second, and the observer saw an apparently continuously lit moving picture. The Electro-Tachyscope was shown publicly in Berlin at the Kulturministerium from 19 to 21 March 1887; subsequently Siemens \& Halske manufactured 100 machines, which were shown throughout Europe and America in the early 1890s. From 1891 his pictures were available for the home in the form of the Tachyscope viewer, which used the principle of the zoetrope: sequence photographs were printed on long strips of thin card, perforated with narrow slots between the pictures. Placed around the circumference of a shallow cylinder and rotated, the pictures could be seen in life-like movement when viewed through the slots.In November 1894 Anschütz displayed a projector using two picture discs with twelve images each, which through a form of Maltese cross movement were rotated intermittently and alternately while a rotating shutter allowed each picture to blend with the next so that no flicker occurred. The first public shows, given in Berlin, were on a screen 6×8 m (20×26 ft) in size. From 22 February 1895 they were shown regularly to audiences of 300 in a building on the Leipzigstrasse; they were the first projected motion pictures seen in Germany.[br]Further ReadingJ.Deslandes, 1966, Histoire comparée du cinéma, Vol. I, Paris. B.Coe, 1992, Muybridge and the Chronophotographers, London.BC -
70 קדר I (קדד)
קָדַרI (קָדַד) (cmp. כָּדַר, גָּדַר, גָּדַר) to cut around, perforate, cut out. Sabb.116a; Y. ib. XVI, 15c bot. קוֹרֵר (Ar. קוֹדֵד), v. אַזְכָּרָה. Snh.103b מנשה ק׳וכ׳ (Ar. קדר) Manasseh cut the divine names out (of the Scriptures). Kidd.22b קוֹדֵד ויורדוכ׳ Ar. (ed. דוקד והולך) one must bore (through the slaves ear) until the door is reached. Ḥull.77a כל שהרופא קוֹדְרוֹ (Ar. a. Ms. M. correct. קוֹדְדוֹ, v. Rabb. D. S. a. l. note) such flesh as the physician cuts out; a. e.Part. pass. (קָדוּד) קָדוּר. Ab. Zar.32a (expl. עור לבוב) בל שקרוע … וק׳וכ׳ a hide which is slit open opposite the heart and cut out like an air-hole; Tosef. ib. IV (V), 7 כל שק׳ כנגד לבו Var. ed. Zuck. (text שנקוב, oth. ed. שקרוע). Ukts. II, 4 קְדוּרָה (ed. Dehr. קְדוּדָה) cut into, opp. שלמה. Pi. (קִדֵּד) קִדֵּר 1) to cut through; (in measuring distances) to estimate the level distance between two places separated by mountains. Erub.V, 4 (58a) שמעתי שמְקַדְּרִין בהרים (Y. ed. Ven. שמְקַדְּדִין; v. Rabb. D. S. a. l. note 90) I have heard a tradition that in measuring Sabbath distances elevations are considered as cut through. Ib. 58b כיצד מְקַדְּרִיןוכ׳ how is the measuring done to obtain the tunnel distance? He who stands below holds the rope against his heart, while he who stands above holds the other end of the rope against his feet. Ib. אין מקדרין אלא בחבלוכ׳ only a rope of four cubits can be used for measuring Ib. אין מקדרין לא בעגלהוכ׳ this method of measuring distances is not applied in the case of a slain body found in the field (v. עֶגְלָה), or for cities of refuge. Tosef. ib. VI (V), 11 מְקַדֵּר ועולה מק׳ ויורדוכ׳ we go up measuring the air-line and down again (on the other side), and consider the elevation as if it were cut through before us. Erub.58a מַקְדִּיר ועולהוכ׳; Tosef. l. c. 12 מקדר. Y. ib. V, 22d (repeatedly מְקַדְּדִין). Ib. מקדימין (corr. acc.). Y.Sot.V, 20b bot. מקדדין; Y.Macc.2, end, 32a מקדרין; a. fr.y. Keth.XIII, 36b top מקדר ויוצאוכ׳ he may cut his way through the vines and get out (v. פָּסַג).Pes.11b מקדרין, read: מקרדין, v. קָרַד. 2) (denom. of קָדֵר or קַדָּר) to make pots, pretend to be a potter. Ruth R. to I, l (s. 2), v. קַדָּרוּת. Hif. הִקְדִּיר to cut through; to penetrate. Erub.58a, v. supra. Nidd.56b; Tosef. ib. VI, 13 מַקְדִּיר, v. גָּלַד; (perh. fr. קָדַר II, becomes dull). Nif. נִקְדַּר to be cut out. Ḥull.77a נ׳ כמין טבעת (Ar. נִקְדַּד) if the flesh over a fracture is cut out like a ring. Ib. 57b רחל …שנ׳ קנה שלהוכ׳ a lamb … whose wind-pipe was perforated, and they inserted a tube of reed, and it recovered. -
71 קָדַר
קָדַרI (קָדַד) (cmp. כָּדַר, גָּדַר, גָּדַר) to cut around, perforate, cut out. Sabb.116a; Y. ib. XVI, 15c bot. קוֹרֵר (Ar. קוֹדֵד), v. אַזְכָּרָה. Snh.103b מנשה ק׳וכ׳ (Ar. קדר) Manasseh cut the divine names out (of the Scriptures). Kidd.22b קוֹדֵד ויורדוכ׳ Ar. (ed. דוקד והולך) one must bore (through the slaves ear) until the door is reached. Ḥull.77a כל שהרופא קוֹדְרוֹ (Ar. a. Ms. M. correct. קוֹדְדוֹ, v. Rabb. D. S. a. l. note) such flesh as the physician cuts out; a. e.Part. pass. (קָדוּד) קָדוּר. Ab. Zar.32a (expl. עור לבוב) בל שקרוע … וק׳וכ׳ a hide which is slit open opposite the heart and cut out like an air-hole; Tosef. ib. IV (V), 7 כל שק׳ כנגד לבו Var. ed. Zuck. (text שנקוב, oth. ed. שקרוע). Ukts. II, 4 קְדוּרָה (ed. Dehr. קְדוּדָה) cut into, opp. שלמה. Pi. (קִדֵּד) קִדֵּר 1) to cut through; (in measuring distances) to estimate the level distance between two places separated by mountains. Erub.V, 4 (58a) שמעתי שמְקַדְּרִין בהרים (Y. ed. Ven. שמְקַדְּדִין; v. Rabb. D. S. a. l. note 90) I have heard a tradition that in measuring Sabbath distances elevations are considered as cut through. Ib. 58b כיצד מְקַדְּרִיןוכ׳ how is the measuring done to obtain the tunnel distance? He who stands below holds the rope against his heart, while he who stands above holds the other end of the rope against his feet. Ib. אין מקדרין אלא בחבלוכ׳ only a rope of four cubits can be used for measuring Ib. אין מקדרין לא בעגלהוכ׳ this method of measuring distances is not applied in the case of a slain body found in the field (v. עֶגְלָה), or for cities of refuge. Tosef. ib. VI (V), 11 מְקַדֵּר ועולה מק׳ ויורדוכ׳ we go up measuring the air-line and down again (on the other side), and consider the elevation as if it were cut through before us. Erub.58a מַקְדִּיר ועולהוכ׳; Tosef. l. c. 12 מקדר. Y. ib. V, 22d (repeatedly מְקַדְּדִין). Ib. מקדימין (corr. acc.). Y.Sot.V, 20b bot. מקדדין; Y.Macc.2, end, 32a מקדרין; a. fr.y. Keth.XIII, 36b top מקדר ויוצאוכ׳ he may cut his way through the vines and get out (v. פָּסַג).Pes.11b מקדרין, read: מקרדין, v. קָרַד. 2) (denom. of קָדֵר or קַדָּר) to make pots, pretend to be a potter. Ruth R. to I, l (s. 2), v. קַדָּרוּת. Hif. הִקְדִּיר to cut through; to penetrate. Erub.58a, v. supra. Nidd.56b; Tosef. ib. VI, 13 מַקְדִּיר, v. גָּלַד; (perh. fr. קָדַר II, becomes dull). Nif. נִקְדַּר to be cut out. Ḥull.77a נ׳ כמין טבעת (Ar. נִקְדַּד) if the flesh over a fracture is cut out like a ring. Ib. 57b רחל …שנ׳ קנה שלהוכ׳ a lamb … whose wind-pipe was perforated, and they inserted a tube of reed, and it recovered.
См. также в других словарях:
slit — ► NOUN ▪ a long, narrow cut or opening. ► VERB (slitting; past and past part. slit) 1) make a slit in. 2) (past and past part. slitted) form (one s eyes) into slits. ORIGIN Old English … English terms dictionary
slit — slit1 [ slıt ] noun count 1. ) a long narrow space in something: I could see them through the slit in the curtains. a skirt with a slit up the side a ) only before noun used about clothes and other things that have a long narrow space between… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
slit — I UK [slɪt] / US noun [countable] Word forms slit : singular slit plural slits 1) a long narrow space in something I could see them through the slit in the curtains. a skirt with a slit up the side 2) a long thin cut Make a slit in the top of the … English dictionary
slit — [[t]slɪ̱t[/t]] slits, slitting (The form slit is used in the present tense and is the past tense and past participle.) 1) VERB If you slit something, you make a long narrow cut in it. [V n] They say somebody slit her throat... [V n with open] He… … English dictionary
slit — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from slitten Date: 12th century a long narrow cut or opening • slit adjective • slitless adjective II. transitive verb (slit; slitting) Etymolo … New Collegiate Dictionary
slit — n. & v. n. 1 a long straight narrow incision. 2 a long narrow opening comparable to a cut. v.tr. (slitting; past and past part. slit) 1 make a slit in; cut or tear lengthwise. 2 cut into strips. Phrases and idioms: slit eyed having long narrow… … Useful english dictionary
slit — noun a long, narrow cut or opening. verb (slits, slitting, slit) 1》 make a slit in. ↘cut into strips. 2》 (past and past participle slitted) form (one s eyes) into slits. Derivatives slitter noun Origin … English new terms dictionary
slit´like´ — slit «sliht», verb, slit, slit|ting, noun, adjective. –v.t. 1. a) to cut or tear in a straight line: »to slit cloth into strips. b) to make a long, straight cut or tear in: »to slit a skirt to make a pocket … Useful english dictionary
Slit — Slit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Slit} or {Slitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Slitting}.] [OE. slitten, fr. sliten, AS. st[=i]tan to tear; akin to D. slijten to wear out, G. schleissen to slit, split, OHG. sl[=i]zan to split, tear, wear out, Icel. st[=i]ta to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Slit — Slit, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Slit} or {Slitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Slitting}.] [OE. slitten, fr. sliten, AS. st[=i]tan to tear; akin to D. slijten to wear out, G. schleissen to slit, split, OHG. sl[=i]zan to split, tear, wear out, Icel. st[=i]ta to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
slit — slit1 [slıt] v past tense and past participle slit present participle slitting [T] to make a straight narrow cut in cloth, paper, skin etc ▪ Guy slit open the envelope. slit sb s throat (=kill someone by cutting their throat) slit your wrists… … Dictionary of contemporary English