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21 duro
dūro, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. and n. [durus], to make hard, to harden (mostly ante-class. and post-Aug.; not in Cic.).I.Lit.(α).Act.:(β).quae nobis durata ac spissa videntur, Haec, etc.,
Lucr. 2, 444; so in the part. perf.:coria (with condurare ferrum),
id. 6, 970; cf.cutis,
Ov. M. 4, 577:caementa calce (opp. interlita luto),
Liv. 21, 11:ova in aqua,
Plin. 29, 3, 11, § 45:pontus frigore,
Ov. P. 4, 9, 85:nives solo,
Hor. C. 3, 24, 39:aqua salibus,
i. e. strongly saturated, Col. 7, 4 fin., v. durus, I.:ungulas (mularum),
id. 6, 37, 11:ferrum ictibus,
Plin. 34, 15, 43, § 149:guttas in grana,
id. 12, 19, 42, § 94:uvam fumo,
i. e. to dry, preserve, Hor. S. 2, 4, 72.—In medic. lang.: corpus, i. e. to bind, make costive, opp. mollire, Cels. 2, 14; cf. id. 2, 33 fin. —In fullers' lang., to harden, stiffen or full cloth: Art. Non queo durare. Par. Si non didicisti fulloniam, non mirandumst, Plaut. As. 5, 2, 57 (with a punning reference to the meaning II. A. 2.).—Neutr.:II.tum durare solum et discludere Nerea ponto Coeperit, i. q. durescere,
Verg. E. 6, 35; so,vino minime durante, uva maxime,
Plin. 14, 3, 4, § 37.—Trop.A.(Acc. to durus, II. A. 2.).1.Act., to harden with use or labor, etc.; to make hardy or callous, to inure (class.):2.opere in duro membra manusque,
Lucr. 5, 1359; cf.:membra animumque,
Hor. S. 1, 4, 119:umeros ad vulnera,
Verg. G. 3, 257: hoc se labore durant homines adolescentes, * Caes. B. G. 6, 28, 3; cf.:exercitum crebris expeditionibus, patientiaque periculorum,
Vell. 2, 78, 2:cor,
Plaut. Ps. 1, 3, 6; cf.mentem,
Tac. A. 3, 15 al.:ab duratis usu armorum pulsi,
Liv. 7, 29; so in the part., id. 23, 18; 30, 28:durati bellis,
id. 42, 52:vitia durantur,
grow inveterate, Quint. 1, 1, 37.—Neutr. (so most freq.), to be hardened, inured to troubles, i. e. to be patient, to wait, persevere; to endure, hold out:(β).durare nequeo in aedibus,
Plaut. Am. 3, 2, 1; cf. id. Men. 5, 2, 31; Ter. Ad. 4, 2, 15; Liv. 5, 2, 7; 38, 7 fin.; Quint. 11, 3, 23; Verg. A. 9, 604; Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 82 al.; cf. impers., Liv. 10, 46:durate et vosmet rebus servate secundis,
Verg. A. 1, 207; cf. Suet. Calig. 45; Auct. ap. Quint. 9, 2, 91; Ov. Am. 3, 11, 27 al.:nequeo durare, quin, etc.,
Plaut. Curc. 1, 3, 22:durare nequeo quin intro eam,
id. Mil. 4, 6, 34; Suet. Claud. 26.—With acc., to bear, endure ( poet. and in post-Aug. prose):(γ).patior quemvis durare laborem,
Verg. A. 8, 577:quascumque vias,
Stat. S. 5, 2, 153;and of inanimate subjects: sine funibus Vix durare carinae Possunt imperiosius Aequor,
Hor. C. 1, 14, 7; cf.:(vitis genus) quod siccitatem durat et ventos,
Pall. Febr. 9, 1.—With inf.:b.non quis parumper durare opperier,
Plaut. Truc. 2, 3, 5.—In gen., to hold out, to continue in existence, to last, remain (very freq.): Ar. Ubi illaec (talenta) quae dedi ante? Cl. Abusa. Num si ea durarent mihi, [p. 621] etc., Plaut. As. 1, 3, 44:B.uti quam diutissime durent oleae,
Cato R. R. 58; 104; Varr. R. R. 1, 59, 3:omnem durare per aevom,
Lucr. 3, 605; cf. id. 3, 812; Verg. G. 2, 100; Suet. Calig. 6 al.:neque post mortem durare videtur (corpus),
Lucr. 3, 339; cf. ib. 561:ad posteros virtus durabit,
Quint. 3, 1, 21; cf. id. 1, 11, 18; 3, 1, 9; 5, 11, 41:maneat quaeso duretque gentibus, si non amor nostri, at certe odium sui,
Tac. G. 33:durante originis vi,
id. Agr. 11; cf. Petr. 96, 3:durante bello,
Tac. A. 14, 39; so with adhuc, Suet. Gramm. 24; cf.:munera, quibus donatus est, durant, ostendunturque adhuc Bais,
are still in existence, id. Tib. 6 et saep.—With inf.:ut vivere durent,
Luc. 4, 519; so Sil. 10, 653; 11, 75; Petr. 41, 2.—In Tacitus sometimes of persons, for vivere, to live:narratum ab iis, qui nostram ad juventam duraverunt,
Tac. A. 3, 16; id. Or. 17; id. Agr. 44. And once in the same author (acc. to the better reading) of extension in space: durant colles (= continuantur, ultra porriguntur; French, s'y prolongent), extend continuously to the frontier, Germ. 30.—(Acc. to durus, II. B.)1.Act., to render hard, callous, insensible; to dull, to blunt (rare and perh. not ante-Aug.):2.aerea dehinc ferro (Juppiter) duravit saecula,
Hor. Epod. 16, 65:ad plagas durari,
Quint. 1, 3, 14 (cf. §12: quae in pravam induruerunt): ad omne facinus durato,
Tac. H. 4, 59.—Of the affections, Vulg. Job, 39, 16.— Pass.:linguae vitia, inemendabili in posterum pravitate durantur,
to become confirmed, incurable, Quint. 1, 1, 37.—Neutr., to be hard, stern, callous, insensible (rare and not ante-Aug.):ut non durat (pater) ultra poenam abdicationis,
Quint. 9, 2, 88:in nullius umquam suorum necem duravit,
Tac. A. 1, 6; Petr. 105 fin.; cf.:usque ad caedem ejus duratura filii odia,
Tac. A. 14, 1 fin. -
22 στυφελίζω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to strike hard, to dash, to beat, to drive away, to maltreat' (ep. lyr. Il.).Other forms: Aor. - λίξαι.Derivatives: στυφελιγμοί (v. l. - σμοί) m. pl. `maltreatment' (A. Eq. 537 [anap.]). -- Besides στυφελός `hard, raw, stony, severe' (A. in lyr., A. R., Opp., AP; also Arcad. Cyren. after sch. A. R. 2, 1005; cf. Leumann Hom. Wörter 269 f.), second. `astringent, bitter' (AP; after στύφω); κατα- στυφελίζω `raw, stony' (h. Merc., Hes.), ἀ- στυφελίζω `not hard, friendly, smooth' (Thgn., AP); enlarged στυφελώδης `hard' (Q.S.); also στύφλος (on the accent below) `raw, stony' (trag., Lyc.; κατά- στυφελίζω H.), - άριος (Hyettos IIIp; PN?). At first sight ep. στυφελίζω seems a derivation of the later attested στυφελός. Apart from the chronology of the attestations, in that way the meaning of the verb (prop. *`to be, make hard or severe'?) becomes hard to understand. For στυφελίζω one could consider ἐλελίζω as example (Schmoll Die Verba auf - ίζω [Diss. Tübingen 1955] 182), after it στυφελός for στύφλος (Leumann l. c.)? The barytonesis of στύφλος is remarkable (cf. however φαῦλος, μάχλος, κτίλος a.o.), but must be considered more probale as lectio difficilior then the less well attested oxytonesis.Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]X [probably]Etymology: Not well explained. The in spite of the deviating vowel quantity (cf. τύ̄φω: τῠφλός) obvious connection with στύφω is for στύφλος, στυφελός not hard to motivate ('drawing together, -drawn, contract' \> `solid, hard etc.'; e.g. Persson Stud. 193), but is for στυφελίζω not immediately convincing. So the last rather to τύπτω (Curtius 227 etc.)? -- Extensive on στυφελίζω Ruijgh L'élém. ach. 84 ff.Page in Frisk: 2,815Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στυφελίζω
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23 harden
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24 stoßen
to hit; to hustle; to impinge; to knock; to jab; to strike; to thrust; to push; to poke; to shove; to kick; to bump* * *sto|ßen ['ʃtoːsn] pret stieß [ʃtiːs] ptp gestoßen [gə'ʃtoːsn]1. vt1) (= einen Stoß versetzen) to push, to shove (inf); (leicht) to poke; (mit Faust) to punch; (mit Fuß) to kick; (mit Ellbogen) to nudge, to dig (Brit), to poke; (mit Kopf, Hörnern) to butt; (= stechen) Dolch to plunge, to thrust; (vulg) to fuck (vulg), to shag (Brit sl to poke (sl)an den Kopf etc stóßen — to hit one's head etc
jdm or jdn in die Seite stóßen — to nudge sb, to dig (Brit) or poke sb in the ribs
jdn von sich stóßen — to push sb away; (fig) to cast sb aside
jdn/etw zur Seite stóßen — to push sb/sth aside; (mit Fuß) to kick sb/sth aside or to one side
er stieß den Ball mit dem Kopf ins Tor — he headed the ball into the goal (Brit), he hit the ball into the goal with his head
ein Loch ins Eis stóßen — to make or bore a hole in the ice
2) (= werfen) to push; (SPORT ) Kugel to putjdn von der Treppe/aus dem Zug stóßen —
jdn aus dem Haus stóßen (fig) jdn ins Elend stóßen (liter) — to throw or turn sb out (of the house) to plunge sb into misery
3) (= zerkleinern) Zimt, Pfeffer, Zucker to pound4) (Sw = schieben, drücken) to push2. vrto bump or bang or knock oneselfstóßen (lit) — to bump etc oneself on or against sth; (fig) to take exception to sth, to disapprove of sth
er stößt sich daran, wenn Männer Ohrringe tragen — he takes exception to men wearing earrings
3. vi1) aux sein (= treffen, prallen) to run or bump into (auch fig); (= herabstoßen Vogel) to swoop down (auf +acc on)stóßen — to bump into or hit sth
gegen etw stóßen — to run into sth
zu jdm stóßen — to meet up with sb, to join sb
auf jdn stóßen — to bump or run into sb
auf Erdöl stóßen — to strike oil
auf Grundwasser stóßen — to discover underground water
auf Widerstand stóßen — to meet with or encounter resistance
auf Ablehnung/Zustimmung stóßen — to meet with disapproval/approval
an seine Grenzen stóßen — to reach one's limits
2) (mit den Hörnern) to butt (nach at)3) (TECH) to butt (an +acc against)4) (Gewichtheben) to jerk5) (old = blasen) to blow, to soundSee:→ Horn* * *1) (to poke: He dug his brother in the ribs with his elbow.) dig2) bump3) (to strike (someone or something) with the head: He fell over when the goat butted him.) butt4) (to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction: The batsman hit the ball (over the wall).) hit5) (to push quickly and roughly: The man was hustled out of the office.) hustle6) ((often with against, on) to strike against or bump into: She knocked against the table and spilt his cup of coffee; I knocked my head on the car door.) knock7) shove8) (to push (something) violently or suddenly into: He plunged a knife into the meat.) plunge9) (to push something into; to prod: He poked a stick into the hole; He poked her in the ribs with his elbow.) poke10) (to press against something, in order to (try to) move it further away: He pushed the door open; She pushed him away; He pushed against the door with his shoulder; The queue can't move any faster, so stop pushing!; I had a good view of the race till someone pushed in front of me.) push11) stick12) (to hurt (especially a toe) by striking it against something hard: She stubbed her toe(s) against the bedpost.) stub13) (to push suddenly and violently: He thrust his spade into the ground; She thrust forward through the crowd.) thrust* * *sto·ßen<stößt, stieß, gestoßen>[ˈʃto:sn̩]I. vter hat sie die Treppe hinunterge\stoßen he shoved her down the stairsjdn aus dem Haus \stoßen (fig) to throw sb out [of the house]jdn von der Leiter/aus dem Zug \stoßen to push sb down the ladder/out of the trainjdn ins Elend \stoßen (fig) to plunge sb into miseryjdn mit der Faust/dem Fuß/dem Kopf \stoßen to punch/kick/butt sbjdn in die Seite \stoßen to poke sb in the ribssie stieß ihn mit dem Ellbogen in die Seite she poked him in the ribs with her elbowjdn/etw zur Seite \stoßen to push sb/sth aside; (mit dem Fuß) to kick sb/sth aside [or to one side]; s.a. Kopfein Loch ins Eis \stoßen to make [or bore] a hole in the icejdm einen Dolch/ein Messer in die Rippen \stoßen to plunge [or thrust] a dagger/knife into sb's ribsden Ball mit dem Kopf ins Tor \stoßen to head the ball into the goalman muss sie immer drauf \stoßen she always has to have things pointed out to her6. (zerstoßen)Pfeffer/Zimt/Zucker \stoßen to pound pepper/cinnamon/sugar▪ jdm etw \stoßen to hammer sth home to sbein Fahrrad \stoßen to push a bicycle▪ jdn \stoßen to give sb a pushkönnen Sie mich bitte mal \stoßen? can you please give me a push?10. (vulg)eine Frau \stoßen to poke a woman vulgII. vrsie stolperte und stieß sich das Knie am Tisch she tripped and banged her knee on the tableer stößt sich daran, wenn Frauen Zigarren rauchen he takes exception to women smoking cigarsIII. vi1. Hilfsverb: sein (aufschlagen)2. Hilfsverb: haben (zustoßen)er hat mit einem Messer nach mir ge\stoßen he trust at me with a knifeer stieß immer wieder mit dem Stock nach mir he tried again and again to hit me with the stickder Stier stieß [mit den Hörnern] nach dem Torero the bull charged the matador [with lowered horns]jdm in die Seite \stoßen to poke sb in the ribs3. Hilfsverb: sein (grenzen)mein Grundstück stößt im Süden an einen Bach my plot is bordered to the south by a stream, a stream borders my plot to the south4. Hilfsverb: sein (direkt hinführen)5. Hilfsverb: sein (zufällig begegnen)▪ auf jdn \stoßen to bump [or run] into sb6. Hilfsverb: sein (sich jdm anschließen)▪ zu jdm \stoßen to join sb7. Hilfsverb: sein (entdecken)▪ auf etw \stoßen to find [or come across [or upon]] sthauf Erdöl \stoßen to strike oilauf Grundwasser \stoßen to discover underground water8. Hilfsverb: sein (konfrontiert werden)auf Ablehnung/Zustimmung \stoßen to meet with disapproval/approvalauf Widerstand \stoßen to meet with [or encounter] resistancebitte \stoßen! please push!ins Horn/in die Trompete \stoßen to blow [or sound] the horn/trumpet11. Hilfsverb: sein (angreifen)* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) auch itr. (mit der Faust) punch; (mit dem Fuß) kick; (mit dem Kopf, den Hörnern) butt; (mit dem Ellbogen) digjemanden od. jemandem in die Seite stoßen — dig somebody in the ribs; (leicht) nudge somebody in the ribs
3) (stoßend hervorbringen) knock, bang < hole>4) (schleudern) pushdie Kugel stoßen — (beim Kugelstoßen) put the shot; (beim Billard) strike the ball
5) (zerstoßen) pound <sugar, cinnamon, pepper>2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (auftreffen) bump ( gegen into)2) mit sein (begegnen)auf jemanden stoßen — bump or run into somebody
3) mit sein (entdecken)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — come upon or across something
auf Ablehnung stoßen — (fig.) meet with disapproval
4) mit seinzu jemandem stoßen — (jemanden treffen) meet up with somebody; (sich jemandem anschließen) join somebody
5) mit sein (zuführen)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <path, road> lead [in]to something
6) (grenzen)3.an etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <room, property, etc.> be [right] next to something
unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb bump or knock oneselfich habe mich am Kopf gestoßen — I bumped or banged my head
sich (Dat.) den Kopf blutig stoßen — bang one's head and cut it
sich an etwas (Dat.) stoßen — (fig.) object to or take exception to something
* * *stoßen; stößt, stieß, hat oder ist gestoßenA. v/t (hat)1. push; mit einer Waffe: thrust; mit der Faust: punch; mit dem Fuß: kick; (puffen) nudge, jostle; mit einem Stock etc: poke; (rammen) ram; (treiben) drive; SPORT (Kugel) put; im Mörser: pound;jemanden in die Rippen stoßen nudge sb, give sb a dig in the ribs;jemanden vor einen Zug stoßen push sb in front of a train;jemanden mit dem Kopf stoßen butt sb with one’s head;jemandem das Messer in die Brust stoßen plunge a knife into sb’s chest;den Ball ins Tor stoßen drive the ball into the net;von sich stoßen push away; fig disown2. unabsichtlich:3. fig:jemanden aus dem Haus/Verein stoßen turn sb out of the house/expel sb from the club;4. vulg (Frau) fuck, bangB. v/r (hat) (sich wehtun) knock o.s., hurt o.s.;sich stoßen an (+dat) knock ( oder run, bump) against; fig take offence (US -se) at, take exception to;an der Unordnung darfst du dich nicht stoßen just ignore the mess, you mustn’t mind the messC. v/i1. (hat) Bock etc: butt;2. (ist)stoßen an (+akk) odergegen bump into, knock (o.s.) against;ich bin bei dem Marathon an meine (eigenen) Grenzen gestoßen I was touching my limits (of endurance) in the marathon;stoßen auf (+akk) fig, auf Erdöl: strike; Straße etc: lead onto, hit umg; (zufällig begegnen) (happen to) meet, come across, run ( oder bump) into; (entdecken) come across, stumble on; auf Ablehnung, Widerstand etc: meet with;zu jemandem, einer Partei etcstoßen join (up with);* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) auch itr. (mit der Faust) punch; (mit dem Fuß) kick; (mit dem Kopf, den Hörnern) butt; (mit dem Ellbogen) digjemanden od. jemandem in die Seite stoßen — dig somebody in the ribs; (leicht) nudge somebody in the ribs
3) (stoßend hervorbringen) knock, bang < hole>4) (schleudern) pushdie Kugel stoßen — (beim Kugelstoßen) put the shot; (beim Billard) strike the ball
5) (zerstoßen) pound <sugar, cinnamon, pepper>2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) mit sein (auftreffen) bump ( gegen into)2) mit sein (begegnen)auf jemanden stoßen — bump or run into somebody
3) mit sein (entdecken)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — come upon or across something
auf Ablehnung stoßen — (fig.) meet with disapproval
4) mit seinzu jemandem stoßen — (jemanden treffen) meet up with somebody; (sich jemandem anschließen) join somebody
5) mit sein (zuführen)auf etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <path, road> lead [in]to something
6) (grenzen)3.an etwas (Akk.) stoßen — <room, property, etc.> be [right] next to something
unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb bump or knock oneselfich habe mich am Kopf gestoßen — I bumped or banged my head
sich (Dat.) den Kopf blutig stoßen — bang one's head and cut it
sich an etwas (Dat.) stoßen — (fig.) object to or take exception to something
* * *(an, gegen) v.to impinge (on, upon) v. (nach) v.to thrust at v. adj.stricken adj. v.(§ p.,pp.: stieß, gestossen)= to bump v.to butt v.to hustle v.to knock (at) v.to poke v.to punt v.to push v.to ram v.to shove v.to strike v.(§ p.,p.p.: struck)or p.p.: stricken•)to thrust v.(§ p.,p.p.: thrust) -
25 hacer difícil
v.to make difficult, to make hard.* * *(v.) = make + it + difficult, make + difficultEx. This will make it yet more difficult for the information worker and the end user to keep up to date with the full range of data bases.* * *(v.) = make + it + difficult, make + difficultEx: This will make it yet more difficult for the information worker and the end user to keep up to date with the full range of data bases.
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26 στερεοποιεί
στερεοποιέωmake hard: pres ind mp 2nd sg (attic epic doric ionic)στερεοποιέωmake hard: pres ind act 3rd sg (attic epic doric ionic) -
27 στερεοποιεῖ
στερεοποιέωmake hard: pres ind mp 2nd sg (attic epic doric ionic)στερεοποιέωmake hard: pres ind act 3rd sg (attic epic doric ionic) -
28 굳히다
v. callous, become hard, make hard or rough; clabber, make sour (of milk); bind, tie, set -
29 hit
[hɪt] present participle ˈhitting: past tense, past participle hit1. verb1) to (cause or allow to) come into hard contact with:He hit his head on/against a low branch
يَضرُبThat boxer can certainly hit hard!
2) to make hard contact with (something), and force or cause it to move in some direction:يَصْدُم، يَصْطَدِمThe batsman hit the ball (over the wall).
3) to cause to suffer:يُسبب المُعاناه، يَضْرُب، يصيب بHer husband's death hit her hard.
4) to find; to succeed in reaching:يجد، ينجَح في الوُصول إلىShe used to be a famous soprano but she cannot hit the high notes now.
2. noun1) the act of hitting:ضَرْب، إصابَهThat was a good hit.
نُقْطَه، هَدَفHe scored five hits.
3) something which is popular or successful:The play/record is a hit
ضَربة ناجِحَه، عمل ناجِح( also adjective) a hit song.
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30 apelmazar
v.1 to matt (jersey, pelo).2 to make compact, to puddle, to compress.* * *1 to compress, squeeze together2 (gente) to crowd, throng* * *1.VT to compress2.See:* * *apelmazar [A4 ]vt‹arroz/pasta› to make... stick; ‹colchones/lana› to make... hard1 «arroz/pasta» to stick together, go stodgy ( BrE)el bizcocho se apelmazó the cake didn't rise2 «colchón/cojín» to go lumpy; «lana» to get o become matted* * *♦ vt1. [jersey, pelo] to matt2. [arroz] to make stodgy3. [bizcocho] to make stodgy -
31 darse prisa
• be quick• buck up• get a move on• hurry up• make hard• make haste slowly• make it home• make it to• shake a leg• step on the gas -
32 gogortu
du/ad.1. ( oro.)a. to harden, make hardb. to toughen2. ( lokatza) to harden, set, cake3. ( indartu) to strengthen, harden4. ( p.) to toughen, harden, strengthen da/ad.1. ( oro.)a. to harden, get hard; hezurrak \gogortu zaizkio her bones have hardenedb. to toughen up, {become || get} toughc. ( malgutasuna galdu) to stiffen, stiffen up2. ( indartu) to strengthen, harden3. ( ogia) to become stale, turn hard4.a. ( p.) to become tough, grow toughb. (irud.) bere setan \gogortua set in his ways5. ( gogor egin) [ zaio ] to resist, oppose -
33 acımasızlaşmak
v. harden, make hard or tough, become hard or tough -
34 acımasızlaşmamak
v. (neg. form of acımasızlaşmak) harden, make hard or tough, become hard or tough -
35 congelo
con-gĕlo, āvi, ātum, 1, v. a. and n.I.Act., to cause to freeze up, to congeal.A.Lit.:B.sal,
Vitr. 8, 3:oleum,
Col. 1, 6, 18; 12, 50, 12:pruinas,
Plin. 18, 28, 68, § 277:radices,
Col. 3, 12, 1:mare congelatum,
the sea being frozen, Varr. R. R. 1, 2, 4:congelati gutta nasi,
Mart. 11, 98, 7.—Transf., to thicken, make hard:II.lac,
to curdle, Col. 7, 8, 6:in lapidem rictus serpentis,
Ov. M. 11, 60:ubi se adeps congelaverit,
Scrib. Comp. 271.—Humorously:quid prodest, si te congelat uxor anus?
Mart. 14, 147, 2.—Neutr., to freeze, freeze up.* A.Lit.: Ister congelat, Ov. Tr. 3, 10, 30.—2.Transf., to grow hard:* B.lingua,
Ov. M. 6, 307; 15, 415. —Trop.: gaudebam sane et congelasse nostrum amicum laetabar otio, had frozen together, i. e. had become wholly inactive, * Cic. Fam. 2, 13, 3; cf. conglacio, I. B. -
36 induro
I.Act.A.Lit.:B.nivem Indurat Boreas,
Ov. Tr. 3, 9, 14:sues indurantes attritu arborum costas,
Plin. 8, 52, 78, § 212.—Trop., to harden, steel:II.indurandus est animus,
Sen. Ep. 51:adversus omnia, quae accidere possunt,
id. ib. 4:frontem,
to render shameless, id. Ben. 7, 28.—Neutr., to become hard, harden:A.quae (creta) si induraverit,
Veg. 3, 82, 2.— Hence, indūrā-tus, a, um, P. a., hardened.Lit.:B.robora indurata flammis,
Stat. Th. 4, 64.—Trop.:induratus praeter spem resistendo hostium timor,
Liv. 30, 18, 3:Germanis quid induratius ad omnem patientiam?
Sen. Ira, 1, 11. [p. 939] -
37 klippe kou
to give a hard time, to make hard work -
38 alborozar
• elate• exhilarate• fill with holes• fill with mortar• make grooves in the wood• make hard -
39 alegrar
• elate• exhilarate• inspiring• inspiritingly• lighten up• make grooves in the wood• make hard -
40 apresurarse
• be hasty• be quick• buck up• hurry up• make hard• make haste slowly• rush on• shake a leg
См. также в других словарях:
make hard work of something — make hard work of (something/doing something) to do something in a way which makes it more difficult than it should be. He s really making hard work of that ironing … New idioms dictionary
make hard work of doing something — make hard work of (something/doing something) to do something in a way which makes it more difficult than it should be. He s really making hard work of that ironing … New idioms dictionary
make hard work of — (something/doing something) to do something in a way which makes it more difficult than it should be. He s really making hard work of that ironing … New idioms dictionary
make hard work of something — make hard ˈwork of sth idiom to use more time or energy on a task than is necessary Main entry: ↑hardidiom … Useful english dictionary
Hard — (h[aum]rd), v. t. To harden; to make hard. [Obs.] Chaucer. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hard — hard1 W1S1 [ha:d US ha:rd] adj comparative harder superlative hardest ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(firm to touch)¦ 2¦(difficult)¦ 3¦(work/effort)¦ 4¦(full of problems)¦ 5 be hard on somebody 6 be hard on something 7 do something the hard way … Dictionary of contemporary English
hard — 1 adjective FIRM TO TOUCH 1 firm and stiff, and difficult to press down, break, or cut: Diamond is the hardest substance known to man. | The plums are much too hard to be eaten now. | The chairs in the waiting room felt hard and uncomfortable.… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Hard Money Loan — A loan of last resort or a short term bridge loan. Hard money loans are backed by the value of the property, not by the credit worthiness of the borrower. Since the property itself is used as the only protection against default by the borrower,… … Investment dictionary
Hard Truck — is a series of trucking simulators, published in the United States by ValuSoft. The series currently has 3 released installments, with a fourth to be released soon. Hard Truck were simple, usually had 2 or 3 routes to reach the destination, and… … Wikipedia
Hard disk drive — Hard drive redirects here. For other uses, see Hard drive (disambiguation). Hard disk drive Mechanical interior of a modern hard disk drive Date invented 24 December 1954 [1] … Wikipedia
Make You Feel My Love — Song by Bob Dylan from the album Time out of Mind Released September 30, 1997 Genre Blues rock Language English … Wikipedia