-
1 effortlessly
adverb sin esfuerzo, fácilmentetr['efətləslɪ]1 fácilmente, sin esfuerzoeffortlessly ['ɛfərtləsli] adv: sin esfuerzo, fácilmenteadv.• fácilmente adv.'efərtləsli, 'efətlɪsliadverb <move/accomplish> sin esfuerzo; ( gracefully) con gracia or donaire['efǝtlɪslɪ]ADV [win, succeed] fácilmente; [move, lift] sin ningún esfuerzo* * *['efərtləsli, 'efətlɪsli]adverb <move/accomplish> sin esfuerzo; ( gracefully) con gracia or donaire -
2 sail
seil
1. noun1) (a sheet of strong cloth spread to catch the wind, by which a ship is driven forward.) vela2) (a journey in a ship: a sail in his yacht; a week's sail to the island.) paseo/viaje en barco3) (an arm of a windmill.) aspa
2. verb1) ((of a ship) to be moved by sails: The yacht sailed away.) navegar a vela2) (to steer or navigate a ship or boat: He sailed (the boat) to the island.) pilotar3) (to go in a ship or boat (with or without sails): I've never sailed through the Mediterranean.) navegar4) (to begin a voyage: The ship sails today; My aunt sailed today.) zarpar, hacerse a la mar5) (to travel on (the sea etc) in a ship: He sailed the North Sea.) navegar, cruzar en barco6) (to move steadily and easily: Clouds sailed across the sky; He sailed through his exams; She sailed into the room.) deslizarse•- sailing
- sailing-
- sailor
- in full sail
sail1 n velasail2 vb1. navegar2. salir / zarpartr[seɪl]1 (canvas) vela3 (ship) velero, barco de vela4 (of windmill) aspa2 (control ship) gobernar1 (ship, boat) navegar; (person) ir en barco, navegar2 (begin journey) zarpar, hacerse a la mar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin full sail a toda vela, con las velas desplegadasto be under sail moverse (por el viento)to set sail zarpar, hacerse a la marto sail through something figurative use encontrar algo muy fácilto sail under false colours expresar opiniones falsassail ['seɪl] vi1) : navegar (en un barco)2) : ir fácilmentewe sailed right in: entramos sin ningún problemasail vt1) : gobernar (un barco)2)to sail the seas : cruzar los maressail n1) : vela f (de un barco)2) : viaje m en veleroto go for a sail: salir a navegarn.• aspa de molino de viento s.f.• barco de vela s.m.• lona s.f.• vela (Barco) s.f.• vela de barco s.f.v.• bogar v.• gobernar un barco v.• hacerse a la vela v.• navegar v.seɪl
I
1) ( Naut)a) c u (of ship, boat) vela fto set sail — ( start journey) zarpar, hacerse* a la mar; \<\<yacht/galleon\>\> hacerse* a la vela
to go for a sail — salir* a navegar
2) c ( of windmill) aspa f‡
II
1.
a) ( control) \<\<boat/ship\>\> gobernar*, manejarb) (travel, cross)to sail the Atlantic single-handed — cruzar* el Atlántico en solitario
2.
vi1)a) ( travel) \<\<ship/boat\>\> navegar*; \<\<person/passenger\>\> ir* en barco, navegar*to sail around the world — dar* la vuelta al mundo en barco
to sail east/west — navegar* hacia el or en dirección este/oeste
b) ( depart) \<\<person/ship\>\> zarpar, salir*2) ( move effortlessly)to sail into/out of a room — entrar en/salir* de una habitación con aire majestuoso
•Phrasal Verbs:[seɪl]1. N1) (Naut) (=cloth) vela f•
the age of sail — la época de la navegación a vela•
in or under full sail — a toda vela, a vela llena•
to lower the sails — arriar las velasto set sail for Liverpool — zarpar hacia Liverpool, hacerse a la vela con rumbo a Liverpool
•
to take in the sails — amainar las velas•
under sail — a vela- take the wind out of sb's sails2) (Naut) (=trip) paseo m en barco•
it's three days' sail from here — desde aquí se tarda tres días en barco•
to go for a sail — dar una vuelta en barco3) (Naut) (=boat)(pl sail) barco m de vela, velero m4) [of windmill] aspa f2.VT [+ boat, ship] gobernar•
they sailed the ship to Cadiz — fueron con el barco a Cádiz- sail the3. VI1) (Naut) [boat, ship, person] navegar•
to sail at 12 knots — navegar a 12 nudos, ir a 12 nudos•
we sailed into harbour — entramos a puerto•
to sail round the world — dar la vuelta al mundo en barco•
to sail up the Tagus — navegar por el Tajo, subir el Tajo- sail close to the wind2) (Naut) (=leave) zarpar, salir•
the boat sails at eight o'clock — el barco zarpa or sale a las ocho•
we sail for Australia soon — pronto zarpamos or salimos hacia Australia•
she sails on Monday — zarpa or sale el lunes3) (fig)•
she sailed into the room — entró majestuosamente en la sala•
the plate sailed over my head — el plato voló por encima de mi cabeza* * *[seɪl]
I
1) ( Naut)a) c u (of ship, boat) vela fto set sail — ( start journey) zarpar, hacerse* a la mar; \<\<yacht/galleon\>\> hacerse* a la vela
to go for a sail — salir* a navegar
2) c ( of windmill) aspa f‡
II
1.
a) ( control) \<\<boat/ship\>\> gobernar*, manejarb) (travel, cross)to sail the Atlantic single-handed — cruzar* el Atlántico en solitario
2.
vi1)a) ( travel) \<\<ship/boat\>\> navegar*; \<\<person/passenger\>\> ir* en barco, navegar*to sail around the world — dar* la vuelta al mundo en barco
to sail east/west — navegar* hacia el or en dirección este/oeste
b) ( depart) \<\<person/ship\>\> zarpar, salir*2) ( move effortlessly)to sail into/out of a room — entrar en/salir* de una habitación con aire majestuoso
•Phrasal Verbs: -
3 sail
1. noun1) (voyage in sailing vessel) Segelfahrt, die2) (piece of canvas) Segel, das2. intransitive verb3) (glide in air) segeln5) (move smoothly) gleiten6) (fig. coll.): (pass easily)3. transitive verb* * *[seil] 1. noun1) (a sheet of strong cloth spread to catch the wind, by which a ship is driven forward.) das Segel3) (an arm of a windmill.) der Windmühlenflügel2. verb3) (to go in a ship or boat (with or without sails): I've never sailed through the Mediterranean.) mit dem Schiff fahren6) (to move steadily and easily: Clouds sailed across the sky; He sailed through his exams; She sailed into the room.) segeln•- academic.ru/109922/sailboard">sailboard- sailing
- sailing- - sailor
- in full sail* * *[seɪl]I. nto come [or go] for a \sail eine Segelfahrt machento hoist/lower the \sails die Segel setzen/einholenunder \sail unter Segel, auf der Fahrt4.▶ to set \sail in See stechen, auslaufento set \sail for/from France nach/von Frankreich absegelnII. viwe \sailed up/down the river wir segelten flussaufwärts/-abwärtsto \sail against/before the wind gegen den/vor dem Wind segelnto \sail around the world die Welt umsegeln2. (start voyage) auslaufentheir ship \sails for Bombay next Friday ihr Schiff läuft nächsten Freitag nach Bombay aus3. (move effortlessly) gleitento \sail along dahingleitenthe clouds went \sailing by quickly die Wolken zogen rasch vorübershe was \sailing along on her bike sie rollte mit ihrem Fahrrad dahinshe \sailed into the room sie kam ins Zimmer gerauscht [o fam gesegelt]he wasn't looking where he was going, and just \sailed straight into her er passte nicht auf, wohin er ging und rauschte geradewegs mit ihr zusammento \sail on to victory dem Sieg entgegeneilen▪ to \sail into sb jdn attackierento \sail into one's opponents über seine Gegner herfallen famhe \sailed into his wife for spending so much money every month er herrschte seine Frau an, weil sie jeden Monat so viel Geld ausgab6. (do easily)▪ to \sail through sth etw mit Leichtigkeit [o spielend] schaffenhe's \sailing through school er schafft die Schule mit linksI \sailed through my first pregnancy bei meiner ersten Schwangerschaft verlief alles glatt7.III. vt1. (navigate)to \sail a ship ein Schiff steuernto \sail a yacht eine Yacht segeln2. (travel)to \sail the Pacific den Pazifik befahren [o durchsegeln]* * *[seɪl]1. n1) Segel nt; (of windmill) Flügel mto set or make sail ( for...) — los- or abfahren (nach...); (with sailing boat)
he set sail from Dover (with sailing boat) — er fuhr von Dover los er segelte von Dover ab or los
2) (= trip) Fahrt fit's 3 days' sail from here — von hier aus fährt or (in yacht) segelt man 3 Tage
to go for a sail —
have you ever had a sail in his yacht? — sind Sie schon einmal auf seiner Jacht gefahren or gesegelt?
20 sail — 20 Schiffe/Boote
there was not a sail in sight — kein einziges Schiff war zu sehen
2. vtship segeln mit; liner etc steuernhe sails his own yacht — er hat eine eigene Jacht
to sail the Atlantic — den Atlantik durchkreuzen
3. viare you flying? – no, sailing — fliegen Sie? – nein, ich fahre mit dem Schiff
I went sailing for a week —
to sail round the world — um die Welt segeln, die Erde umsegeln
to sail round a headland — eine Landzunge umfahren/umsegeln
2) (= leave) (for nach) abfahren; (yacht, in yacht) absegelnshe sailed past/out of the room — sie rauschte vorbei/aus dem Zimmer (inf)
she sailed into the room — sie kam ins Zimmer gerauscht (inf)
* * *sail [seıl]A s1. SCHIFFa) Segel nb) koll Segel(werk) pl(n):a) die Segel (bei)setzen,b) mehr Segel beisetzen,a) die Segel einholen,b) fig zurückstecken;under sail unter Segel, auf der Fahrt;under full sail mit vollen Segeln2. SCHIFFa) (Segel)Schiff n:travel by sail → B 1 ab) koll (Segel)Schiffe pl3. (Segel)Fahrt f:have (go for) a sail segeln (gehen)4. a) Segel n (eines Windmühlenflügels)b) Flügel m (einer Windmühle)5. JAGD und poet Flügel m6. ZOOLa) Segel n (Rückenflosse der Seglerfische)b) Tentakel m (eines Nautilus)B v/i1. SCHIFFb) fahren (Schiff)2. SCHIFFa) auslaufen (Schiff)b) abfahren, absegeln ( beide:from von;for, to nach):ready to sail segelfertig, klar zum Auslaufenb) sail through an examination eine Prüfung spielend schaffen4. fig fliegen (Luftschiff, Vogel)5. fig (besonders stolz) schweben, rauschen, segeln:a) rangehen, zupacken,b) sich (in eine Diskussion etc) einschaltena) jemanden od etwas attackieren, herfallen über (akk),b) rangehen an (akk), etwas tüchtig anpacken,c) sich in eine Diskussion etc einschaltenC v/t1. SCHIFF durchsegeln, befahren2. SCHIFFa) allg das Schiff steuernb) ein Segelboot segeln* * *1. noun1) (voyage in sailing vessel) Segelfahrt, dieset sail — (begin voyage) losfahren ( for nach)
2) (piece of canvas) Segel, das2. intransitive verb1) (travel on water) fahren; (in sailing boat) segeln2) (start voyage) auslaufen ( for nach); in See stechen3) (glide in air) segeln5) (move smoothly) gleiten6) (fig. coll.): (pass easily)3. transitive verb1) steuern [Boot, Schiff]; segeln mit [Segeljacht, -schiff]2) (travel across) durchfahren, befahren [Meer]* * *n.abfahren (nach) v.segeln v. v.segeln v. -
4 sail
[seɪl] nto hoist/lower the \sails die Segel setzen/einholen;under \sail unter Segel, auf der FahrtPHRASES:to set \sail in See stechen, auslaufen;1) ( by ship) fahren, reisen;( by yacht) segeln;we \sailed up/ down the river wir segelten flussaufwärts/-abwärts;to \sail against/ before the wind gegen den/vor dem Wind segeln;to \sail around the world die Welt umsegeln;2) ( start voyage) auslaufen;their ship \sails for Bombay next Friday ihr Schiff läuft nächsten Freitag nach Bombay aus3) ( move effortlessly) gleiten;to \sail along dahingleiten;the clouds went \sailing by quickly die Wolken zogen rasch vorüber;the ball went \sailing over the wall der Ball segelte über die Mauer ( fam)she was \sailing along on her bike sie rollte mit ihrem Fahrrad dahinhe wasn't looking where he was going, and just \sailed straight into her er passte nicht auf, wohin er ging und rauschte geradewegs mit ihr zusammen;to \sail on to victory dem Sieg entgegeneilen;to \sail into sb jdn attackieren;to \sail into one's opponents über seine Gegner herfallen ( fam)he \sailed into his wife for spending so much money every month er herrschte seine Frau an, weil sie jeden Monat so viel Geld ausgab6) ( do easily)to \sail through sth etw mit Leichtigkeit [o spielend] schaffen;he's \sailing through school er schafft die Schule mit links;I \sailed through my first pregnancy bei meiner ersten Schwangerschaft verlief alles glattPHRASES:1) ( navigate)to \sail a ship ein Schiff steuern;to \sail a yacht eine Yacht segeln2) ( travel)to \sail the Pacific den Pazifik befahren [o durchsegeln] -
5 roll
I noun[bread] roll — Brötchen, das
egg/ham roll — Eier-/Schinkenbrötchen, das
3) (document) [Schrift]rolle, dieroll of honour — Gedenktafel [für die Gefallenen]
schools with falling rolls — Schulen mit sinkenden Schülerzahlen
6)II 1. nounbe on a roll — (coll.) eine Gluckssträhne haben
2) (motion) Rollen, das2. transitive verb2) (shape by rolling) rollenroll a cigarette — eine Zigarette rollen od. drehen
roll one's own — [selbst] drehen
roll snow/wool into a ball — einen Schneeball formen/Wolle zu einem Knäuel aufwickeln
[all] rolled into one — (fig.) in einem
roll oneself/itself into a ball — sich zusammenrollen
3) (flatten) walzen [Rasen, Metall usw.]; ausrollen [Teig]4)5)3. intransitive verbheads will roll — (fig.) es werden Köpfe rollen
2) (operate) [Maschine:] laufen; [Presse:] sich drehen; (on wheels) rollen4) (Naut.) [Schiff:] rollen, schlingern5) (revolve) [Augen:] sich [ver]drehen6) (flow, go forward) sich wälzen (fig.); [Wolken:] ziehen; [Tränen:] rollen7) [Donner:] rollen; [Trommel:] dröhnenPhrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/62788/roll_about">roll about- roll by- roll in- roll on- roll out- roll up* * *I 1. [rəul] noun1) (anything flat (eg a piece of paper, a carpet) rolled into the shape of a tube, wound round a tube etc: a roll of kitchen foil; a toilet-roll.) die Rolle2) (a small piece of baked bread dough, used eg for sandwiches: a cheese roll.) die Roulade3) (an act of rolling: Our dog loves a roll on the grass.) das Rollen4) (a ship's action of rocking from side to side: She said that the roll of the ship made her feel ill.) das Rollen5) (a long low sound: the roll of thunder.) das Rollen6) (a thick mass of flesh: I'd like to get rid of these rolls of fat round my waist.) der Wulst7) (a series of quick beats (on a drum).) der Trommelwirbel2. verb1) (to move by turning over like a wheel or ball: The coin/pencil rolled under the table; He rolled the ball towards the puppy; The ball rolled away.) rollen2) (to move on wheels, rollers etc: The children rolled the cart up the hill, then let it roll back down again.) rollen3) (to form (a piece of paper, a carpet) into the shape of a tube by winding: to roll the carpet back.) rollen4) ((of a person or animal in a lying position) to turn over: The doctor rolled the patient (over) on to his side; The dog rolled on to its back.) rollen5) (to shape (clay etc) into a ball or cylinder by turning it about between the hands: He rolled the clay into a ball.) rollen6) (to cover with something by rolling: When the little girl's dress caught fire, they rolled her in a blanket.) wälzen7) (to make (something) flat or flatter by rolling something heavy over it: to roll a lawn; to roll pastry (out).) ausrollen8) ((of a ship) to rock from side to side while travelling forwards: The storm made the ship roll.) schlingern9) (to make a series of low sounds: The thunder rolled; The drums rolled.) grollen,wirbeln10) (to move (one's eyes) round in a circle to express fear, surprise etc.) rollen11) (to travel in a car etc: We were rolling along merrily when a tyre burst.) fahren12) ((of waves, rivers etc) to move gently and steadily: The waves rolled in to the shore.) wälzen13) ((of time) to pass: Months rolled by.) dahinziehen•- roller- rolling
- roller-skate 3. verb(to move on roller-skates: You shouldn't roller-skate on the pavement.) rollschuhlaufen- rolling-pin- roll in
- roll up II(a list of names, eg of pupils in a school etc: There are nine hundred pupils on the roll.) das Verzeichnis* * *[rəʊl, AM roʊl]I. nfilm \roll Filmrolle fa \roll of film/paper eine Rolle Film/Papier\roll of fat Speckrolle f, Speckwulst m4. (list) [Namens]liste f; (register) Verzeichnis nt, Register nt; of lawyers Anwaltsliste f; (rolled up document) Schriftrolle f histelectoral \roll Wählerverzeichnis ntto be admitted to the \roll als Anwalt zugelassen werdencheese \roll Käsebrötchen nt, Käsesemmel fthe dog went for a \roll in the grass der Hund wälzte sich im Grasto walk with a \roll einen wiegenden Gang haben10. SPORT, AVIAT Rolle fa backward \roll eine Rolle rückwärts11. usu sing (sound) of thunder [G]rollen nt kein pl; of an organ Brausen nt kein pl; of a canary Trillern nt kein pl; MUSdrum \roll, \roll of the drum Trommelwirbel m12.II. vt1. (make move around axis)▪ to \roll sb/sth jdn/etw rollento \roll one's eyes die Augen verdrehen2. (make turn over)▪ to \roll sb/sth jdn/etw drehen\roll him onto his side dreh ihn auf die Seite3. (push on wheels)4. (shape)he \rolled the clay into a ball in his hands er formte [o rollte] den Ton in seinen Händen zu einer Kugel5. (wind)▪ to \roll sth etw aufrollenthe hedgehog \rolled itself into a ball der Igel rollte sich zu einer Kugel zusammento \roll a cigarette eine Zigarette drehento \roll wool into a ball Wolle aufwickeln6. (wrap)7. (flatten)▪ to \roll sth etw walzen8. (games)to \roll a die [or dice] würfeln9. (start)to \roll a device/machine ein Gerät/eine Maschine in Gang bringen\roll the camera! Kamera an!10. LINGto \roll one's r's das R rollen12.▶ [all] \rolled into one [alles] in einemIII. vito \roll down the hill den Berg hinunterrollenthe newspapers \rolled off the presses die Zeitungen rollten von den Druckerpressena tear ran down his check eine Träne lief ihm die Wange herunterthe sweat ran down my back der Schweiß lief ihr den Rücken hinunter3. (move on wheels) rollenthe truck \rolled to a stop just before the barricade der Lastwagen kam gerade noch vor dem Hindernis zum Stehen5. (revolve in an orbit) planet kreisen6. SPORT, AVIAT eine Rolle machen7. (operate) laufento keep sth \rolling etw in Gang haltento \roll by vorbeiziehen9. (undulate) wogen, wallena wave of cigarette smoke \rolled towards me ein Schwall von Zigarettenrauch schlug mir entgegenthe drums \rolled ein Trommelwirbel ertönte11. (curl up)to \roll into a ball sich akk zu einem Ball [o einer Kugel] zusammenrollen12. (be uttered effortlessly) leicht über die Lippen kommen13.* * *[rəʊl]1. n1) (of paper, netting, film, hair etc) Rolle f; (of fabric) Ballen m; (of banknotes) Bündel nt; (of butter) Röllchen nt; (of flesh, fat) Wulst m, Röllchen nta roll of banknotes — ein Bündel nt Banknoten
he has rolls on his belly — er hat Speckrollen am Bauch
ham/cheese roll — Schinken-/Käsebrötchen nt
See:→ sausage roll etc3) (= movement) (of sea, waves) Rollen nt; (of ship) Schlingern nt, Rollen nt; (= somersault, AVIAT) Rolle f; (of person's gait) Schaukeln nt, Wiegen ntthe ship gave a sudden roll —
to have a roll in the hay with sb (inf) — mit jdm ins Heu gehen (inf)
to call the roll — die Namensliste verlesen, die Namen aufrufen
roll of honour (Brit) — Ehrenliste f
See:2. vi1) (person, object) rollen; (from side to side ship) schlingern; (presses) laufen; (AVIAT) eine Rolle machento roll over and over — rollen und rollen, kullern und kullern (inf)
the children/stones rolled down the hill — die Kinder/Steine rollten or kugelten (inf) den Berg hinunter
tears were rolling down her cheeks — Tränen rollten or kullerten (inf) ihr über die Wangen
heads will roll! (fig) — da werden die Köpfe rollen!
can you keep the ball or things rolling while I'm away? (inf) — können Sie den Laden in Schwung halten, solange ich weg bin? (inf)
the words just rolled off his tongue —
his eyes rolled (during a fit) — er rollte mit den Augen
to roll with the punches (fig) — sich nicht aus dem Gleis werfen or bringen lassen
3) (camera) laufen4) (CINE)3. vtbarrel, hoop, ball, car rollen; umbrella aufrollen; cigarette drehen; pastry, dough ausrollen; metal, lawn, road walzento roll one's r's —
to roll one's own (cigarettes) — sich (dat) seine eigenen drehen
See:→ also rolled* * *roll [rəʊl]A s1. HIST Schriftrolle f, Pergament n2. a) Urkunde fc) JUR Br Anwaltsliste f:call the roll die Anwesenheitsliste verlesen, MIL einen Anwesenheitsappell abhalten;strike off the roll(s) einen Solicitor von der Anwaltsliste streichen; einem Arzt etc die Zulassung entziehen;4. (Haar-, Kragen-, Papier- etc) Rolle f:roll of butter Butterröllchen n;roll of tobacco Rolle Kautabak5. Brötchen n, Semmel f7. ARCHa) Wulst m, Rundleiste f8. Bodenwelle f9. TECH Rolle f, Walze f (besonders in Lagern)10. Fließen n, Fluss m (auch fig)11. a) Brausen nb) Rollen n, Grollen nd) Dröhnen ne) ORN Triller(n) m(n)12. Wurf m (beim Würfeln)13. SCHIFF Rollen n, Schlingern n14. wiegender Gang, Seemannsgang m15. SPORT Rolle f (auch beim Kunstflug)16. US sla) zusammengerolltes GeldscheinbündelB v/i1. rollen:start rolling ins Rollen kommen;2. rollen, fahren (Fahrzeug oder Fahrer)rolling waters Wassermassenthe seasons roll away die Jahreszeiten gehen dahin5. sich wälzen (auch fig):8. wiegend gehen:rolling gait → A 149. rollen, sich verdrehen (Augen)10. a) grollen, rollen (Donner)b) dröhnen (Stimme etc)c) brausen (Wasser, Orgel)d) wirbeln (Trommel)e) trillern (Vogel)12. METALL sich walzen lassen14. würfelnC v/t1. ein Fass etca) rollenb) (herum)wälzen, (-)drehen:roll one’s eyes die Augen rollen oder verdrehen;roll one’s eyes at sb umg jemandem (schöne) Augen machen;roll a problem round in one’s mind fig ein Problem wälzen2. (dahin)rollen, fahren4. (zusammen-, auf-, ein)rollen, (-)wickeln:roll o.s. into one’s blanket sich in die Decke (ein)wickeln5. (durch Rollen) formen, einen Schneeball etc machen:roll a cigarette sich eine Zigarette drehen;roll paste for pies Kuchenteig ausrollen6. einen Rasen, eine Straße etc walzen:roll metal Metall walzen oder strecken;rolled into one umg alles in einem, in einer Person7. TYPOa) Papier kalandern, glättenb) Druckfarbe (mit einer Walze) auftragen8. rollen(d sprechen):roll one’s r’s das R rollen9. die Trommel wirbeln11. den Körper etc (beim Gehen) wiegen12. US sl einen Betrunkenen ausnehmen, berauben13. eine Drei etc würfeln* * *I noun1) Rolle, die; (of cloth, tobacco, etc.) Ballen, der; (of fat on body) Wulst, der2) (of bread etc.)[bread] roll — Brötchen, das
egg/ham roll — Eier-/Schinkenbrötchen, das
3) (document) [Schrift]rolle, die4) (register, catalogue) Liste, die; Verzeichnis, dasroll of honour — Gedenktafel [für die Gefallenen]
6)II 1. nounbe on a roll — (coll.) eine Gluckssträhne haben
2) (motion) Rollen, das2. transitive verb1) (move, send) rollen; (between surfaces) drehen2) (shape by rolling) rollenroll a cigarette — eine Zigarette rollen od. drehen
roll one's own — [selbst] drehen
roll snow/wool into a ball — einen Schneeball formen/Wolle zu einem Knäuel aufwickeln
[all] rolled into one — (fig.) in einem
roll oneself/itself into a ball — sich zusammenrollen
3) (flatten) walzen [Rasen, Metall usw.]; ausrollen [Teig]4)5)3. intransitive verb1) (move by turning over) rollenheads will roll — (fig.) es werden Köpfe rollen
2) (operate) [Maschine:] laufen; [Presse:] sich drehen; (on wheels) rollen3) (wallow, sway, walk) sich wälzen4) (Naut.) [Schiff:] rollen, schlingern5) (revolve) [Augen:] sich [ver]drehen6) (flow, go forward) sich wälzen (fig.); [Wolken:] ziehen; [Tränen:] rollen7) [Donner:] rollen; [Trommel:] dröhnenPhrasal Verbs:- roll by- roll in- roll on- roll out- roll up* * *n.Rolle -n f. v.drehen v.rollen v.wickeln v.wälzen v. -
6 انساب
اِنْسَابَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. A feather floated past my face. flow: (of other things) to move steadily like a river: Electricity flows along a wire. glide: to move gently, smoothly and silently along (on water, wheels, through the air, etc.). run: (of rivers) to flow: The Thames runs through London. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. -
7 جرى
جَرَى \ flow: (of liquid) to run: Rivers flow to the sea, (of other things) to move steadily like a river Electricity flows along a wire. go: (also go off) to take a certain course: All went (off) well at our meeting. happen: to take place: The accident happened at exactly 4 o’clock, to be done What has happened to your old car? Did you sell it?. run (ran, run): (of people and animals) to move fast, with quick steps: She ran to catch the train, (of rivers) flow The Thames runs through London. stream: to flow freely: Her eyes streamed with tears. take place: to happen: Tell me what took place at the meeting. \ See Also سال (سَالَ)، تدفق (تَدَفَّقَ) \ جَرَى بِخِفَّةٍ ورَشاقةٍ \ sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. \ جَرَى بقُوَّة مُحْدِثًا صوتًا عاليًا \ pound: to move heavily and noisily: The horses pounded up the track. -
8 float
اِنْسَابَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. A feather floated past my face. flow: (of other things) to move steadily like a river: Electricity flows along a wire. glide: to move gently, smoothly and silently along (on water, wheels, through the air, etc.). run: (of rivers) to flow: The Thames runs through London. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. -
9 flow
اِنْسَابَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. A feather floated past my face. flow: (of other things) to move steadily like a river: Electricity flows along a wire. glide: to move gently, smoothly and silently along (on water, wheels, through the air, etc.). run: (of rivers) to flow: The Thames runs through London. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. -
10 glide
اِنْسَابَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. A feather floated past my face. flow: (of other things) to move steadily like a river: Electricity flows along a wire. glide: to move gently, smoothly and silently along (on water, wheels, through the air, etc.). run: (of rivers) to flow: The Thames runs through London. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. -
11 run
اِنْسَابَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. A feather floated past my face. flow: (of other things) to move steadily like a river: Electricity flows along a wire. glide: to move gently, smoothly and silently along (on water, wheels, through the air, etc.). run: (of rivers) to flow: The Thames runs through London. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. -
12 sail
اِنْسَابَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. A feather floated past my face. flow: (of other things) to move steadily like a river: Electricity flows along a wire. glide: to move gently, smoothly and silently along (on water, wheels, through the air, etc.). run: (of rivers) to flow: The Thames runs through London. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. -
13 sail
جَرَى بِخِفَّةٍ ورَشاقةٍ \ sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. \ رِحْلَة في مَركَبٍ شِراعيّ \ sail: a journey that is made for pleasure, in a sailing boat: Let’s go for a sail round the island. \ سَافَرَ على مَركبٍ شِراعي \ sail: (of a sailing boat; of any ship with sails or engine; of people in it) to move over water; start a journey: We sailed to America. The steamship sailed at midday. \ شِرَاع \ sail: a sheet of cloth that is spread to catch the wind and move a boat forward. \ قَادَ \ sail: to travel in and control (a sailing boat or ship): My son sails his own boat. He learnt to sail when he was eight. \ See Also وجه (وَجَّهَ)، سَيَّر مركبًا شراعيًّا \ قِلْع (السفينة) \ sail. \ See Also شراع (شِراع) \ مَخَر عُباب \ sail: to sail across (a sea): He sailed the Atlantic Ocean alone. \ مَخَرَ \ sail: (of a sailing boat; of any ship with sails or engine; of people in it) move over water; start a journey: We sailed to America. The steamship sailed at midday. \ See Also أبحر (أَبْحَرَ) -
14 roll
[rəʊl, Am roʊl] nfilm \roll [or \roll of film] Filmrolle f;a \roll of paper eine Rolle Papier;\roll of fat Speckrolle f, Speckwulst m;\roll of hair Haarrolle fthe dog went for a \roll in the grass der Hund wälzte sich im Gras\roll of the landscape hügelige Landschafta \roll of thunder ein Donnergrollen ntdrum \roll, \roll of the drum Trommelwirbel mbuttered \roll Butterbrötchen ntPHRASES:1) ( make move around axis)to \roll sb/ sth jdn/etw rollen;to \roll one's eyes die Augen verdrehen2) ( make turn over)to \roll sb/ sth jdn/etw drehen;\roll him onto his side dreh ihn auf die Seite3) ( shape)to \roll sth etw rollen;he \rolled the clay into a ball in his hands er formte den Ton in seinen Händen zu einer Kugelto \roll one's car sich akk überschlagen5) ( games)to \roll a two/ six eine Zwei/Sechs würfeln6) ( push)to \roll sth etw rollen;( when heavier) etw schieben7) ( start)to \roll a device/ machine ein Gerät/eine Maschine in Gang bringen;\roll the camera! Kamera an!8) ( form into cylinder)to \roll sth etw aufrollen;the hedgehog \rolled itself into a ball der Igel rollte sich zu einer Kugel zusammen;to \roll a cigarette sich dat eine Zigarette drehen9) ( flatten)to \roll sth grass etw walzento \roll one's r's das R rollenPHRASES:all \rolled into one ( one) alles in einem;1) ( move around an axis) rollenthe dog \rolled over onto its back der Hund rollte sich auf den Rücken4) ( oscillate) schlingern5) ( stagger) taumeln;6) ( move on wheels) rollen;the truck \rolled to a stop just before the barricade der Lastwagen kam gerade noch vor dem Hindernis zum Stehen7) ( elapse)9) ( undulate) wogen, wallen;a wave of cigarette smoke \rolled towards me ein Schwall von Zigarettenrauch schlug mir entgegen12) ( reverberate) widerhallen;the drums \rolled ein Trommelwirbel ertöntePHRASES:to \roll over in one's grave sich akk im Grabe umdrehen; -
15 سبح
سَبَحَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. swim (swam, swum): to move through the water: Fishes swim. Children learn to swim. -
16 float
سَبَحَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. swim (swam, swum): to move through the water: Fishes swim. Children learn to swim. -
17 sail
سَبَحَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. swim (swam, swum): to move through the water: Fishes swim. Children learn to swim. -
18 swim (swam, swum)
سَبَحَ \ float: to move without effort, on water or through the air: The empty boat floated down the stream. sail: to move smoothly and effortlessly: The moon sailed across the sky. His horse sailed past the others and won the race. swim (swam, swum): to move through the water: Fishes swim. Children learn to swim. -
19 venir
venir [v(ə)niʀ]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━➭ TABLE 22━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. <a. to come• je viens ! I'm coming!• comment est-il venu ? -- en voiture how did he get here? -- by car► faire venir [+ médecin, plombier] to call• il fait venir son vin de Provence he has his wine sent from Provence► venir (jusqu')à ( = atteindre) (vers le haut) to come up to ; (vers le bas) to come down to ; (en longueur, en superficie) to reach• d'où vient que... ? how is it that...?• d'où vient cette hâte soudaine ? why the hurry all of a sudden?• ça vient de ce que... it comes from the fact that...b. ( = arriver, survenir) to come• il ne sait pas encore nager, mais ça va venir he can't swim yet, but it'll come• ça vient ? come on!• alors ce dossier, ça vient ? so when's that file going to be ready?• et ma bière ? -- ça vient ! where's my beer? -- it's coming!c. (dans le temps, dans une série) to come• le moment viendra où... the time will come when...► à venire. (locutions)• où voulez-vous en venir ? what are you getting at?• j'en viens à me demander si... I'm beginning to wonder if...• comment les choses en sont-elles venues là ? how did things come to this?► y venir• et le budget ? -- j'y viens and the budget? -- I'm coming to that2. <• viens voir ! come and see!• après cela ne viens pas te plaindre ! and don't come complaining afterwards!► venir de + infinitif to have just• elle venait de m'appeler she had just called me► venir à + infinitif3. <• il ne lui viendrait pas à l'idée que j'ai besoin d'aide it wouldn't occur to him that I might need help• il vient un moment où... the time comes when...* * *vəniʀ
1.
verbe auxiliaire1) ( marque l'occurrence)2) ( marque le mouvement)3) ( marque le développement)
2.
verbe intransitif1) ( dans l'espace) to comeje viens or suis venu pour m'excuser — I've come to apologize
allez, viens! — come on!
d'où viens-tu? — ( reproche) where have you been?
je viens de sa part — he/she sent me to see you
faire venir quelqu'un — ( demander) to send for somebody, to get somebody (colloq); ( en le convainquant) to get somebody to come; ( attirer) to attract somebody [client]
faire venir quelque chose — ( commander) to order something; ( par la poste) to send for something
gens venus d'ailleurs — ( de l'étranger) foreigners; ( de l'extérieur) outsiders
les mots ne venaient pas — he/she etc couldn't find the words
l'inspiration ne venait pas — inspiration failed him/her etc
l'idée lui vint que — the idea occurred to him/her that
ça ne m'est jamais venu à l'idée or l'esprit — it never crossed my mind ou occurred to me
il lui est venu une idée bizarre — he/she had a weird idea
2) ( dans le temps)ça vient, ça vient! — (colloq) it's coming!, it's on its way!
le moment venu — ( au futur) when the time comes; ( au passé) when the time came
je préfère laisser or voir venir (les choses) — I'd rather wait and see how things turn out
3) ( marquant l'origine)ça me vient naturellement or tout seul — that's just the way I am
4) ( dans une hiérarchie)venir après/avant — to come after/before
5)s'il faut en venir là — if it gets to that point, if it comes to that
en venir aux mains or aux coups — to come to blows
••
venir de + infinitifvenir verbe auxiliaire servant à former le passé immédiat: venir de faire = to have just done; elle vient (tout juste) de partir = she's (only) just left; il venait de se marier = he'd just got married; je viens de te le dire = I've just told you. Attention aux exceptions du genre vient de paraître = ( pour un livre) ‘new!’; = ( pour un disque) ‘new release’venir + infinitifLa traduction de la construction dépend du temps: j'ai demandé au plombier de venir vérifier la chaudière = I asked the plumber to come and check the boiler; le plombier viendra vérifier la chaudière = the plumber will come and check the boiler; le plombier vient vérifier la chaudière aujourd'hui = the plumber is coming to check the boiler today; te rappelles-tu quel jour le plombier est venu vérifier la chaudière? = can you remember which day the plumber came to check the boiler?; il était venu vérifier la chaudière et il en a profité pour réparer le robinet de l'évier = he had come to check the boiler and took the opportunity to mend the tap on the sink; viens voir = come and seeCependant, pour les activités sportives, on aura: elle a décidé de venir nager/faire du cheval = she has decided to come swimming/riding. On pourra aussi avoir: viens déjeuner = come for lunch, lunch étant un nom, ou encore: venez nous voir un de ces jours = come over ou round GB sometimeExemples supplémentaires et exceptions sont présentés ci-dessous aussi bien pour venir verbe auxiliaire I, que pour venir verbe intransitif II* * *v(ə)niʀ1. vi1) (provenance) to comeIl viendra demain. — He'll come tomorrow.
Il est venu nous voir. — He came to see us.
2)faire venir [docteur, plombier] — to call, to call out
On a fait venir le médecin. — We called the doctor., We called the doctor out.
Je viens d'y aller. — I've just been there.
Je viens de le voir. — I've just seen him.
Je viens de lui téléphoner. — I've just phoned him.
où veux-tu en venir? — what are you getting at?, what are you driving at?
à venir; les années à venir — the years to come
je te vois venir — I know what you're after, I can see where you're going
d'où vient que...? — how is it that...?
2. vb imperss'il vient à...; s'il vient à pleuvoir — if it should rain, if it happens to rain
s'il venait à neiger — if it should snow, if it happens to snow
2)il me vient...; Il me vient une idée. — An idea has just occurred to me.
Il m'est venu des soupçons. — I was beginning to be suspicious.
* * *venir ⇒ Note d'usage verb table: venirA v aux1 ( marque l'occurrence) venir aggraver la situation to make the situation worse; venir contribuer au chômage to push unemployment up;2 ( marque le mouvement) le ballon est venu rouler sous mes pieds/atterrir○ dans notre jardin the ball rolled up to my feet/landed in our garden;3 ( marque le développement) et si je venais à tomber malade? what if I should fall ill GB ou get sick US?; s'il venait à pleuvoir if it should rain; même s'il venait à changer d'avis even if he were to change his mind; s'il venait à l'apprendre if he ever got to hear about it; s'il venait à la quitter if he ever left her; quand il venait à sortir when he happened to go out; la maladie vint à s'aggraver the illness became more serious; il en vint à la détester he came to hate her.B vi1 ( dans l'espace) to come; viens quand tu veux come whenever you like; je viens or suis venu pour m'excuser I've come to apologize; il est venu (droit) sur moi he came straight up to me; tu peux toujours venir chez moi/dans mon bureau/à Londres/au Canada/en Irlande you can always come to my house/to my office/to London/to Canada/to Ireland; il vient beaucoup de gens le samedi lots of people come on Saturdays; la route vient jusqu'ici the road comes this far; l'eau leur venait aux genoux the water came up to their knees; venir de loin/de Hongkong to come from far away/from Hong Kong; allez, viens! come on!; d'où viens-tu? ( reproche) where have you been?; j'en viens I've just been there; il est venu quelqu'un pour toi ( encore là) someone's here to see you; ( reparti) someone came to see you; je viens de sa part he/she sent me to see you; faire venir qn ( demander) to send for sb, to get sb○; ( obtenir) to get sb to come; ( attirer) to attract sb; faire venir le plombier to send for the plumber, to get the plumber in; tu ne pourras jamais la faire venir you'll never get her to come; faire venir les clients to attract customers, to bring in the customers; faire venir le médecin to call the doctor; c'est le champagne qui le fait venir he comes for the champagne; pourquoi nous avoir fait venir si tôt? why did they get us to come here so early?; faire venir qch ( commander) to order sth; ( par la poste) to send for sth; faire venir son thé du Yunnan/ses chaussures d'Italie to get one's tea from Yunnan province/one's shoes from Italy; je suis venu ce soir vous parler du racisme I've come here tonight to talk to you about racism; plantes venues d'ailleurs plants from far-off places; produits venus d'ailleurs imported products; gens venus d'ailleurs ( étrangers) foreigners; ( des extérieurs) outsiders; le nom ne me vient pas à l'esprit the name escapes me; les mots ne venaient pas he/she etc couldn't find the words; l'inspiration ne venait pas inspiration failed him/her etc; ça m'est venu tout d'un coup ( une idée) it suddenly came to me; l'idée lui vint que the idea occurred to him/her that; ça ne m'est jamais venu à l'idée or l'esprit it never crossed my mind ou occurred to me; il ne m'est jamais venu à l'idée or l'esprit de te mentir/qu'il pourrait mentir it never occurred to me to lie to you/that he would lie; il lui est venu une idée bizarre he/she had a weird idea; un sourire lui vint aux lèvres, il lui vint un sourire aux lèvres he/she gave a smile;2 ( dans le temps) il faut prendre les choses comme elles viennent you must take things as they come; ça vient, ça vient○! it's coming!, it's on its way!; l'année qui vient the coming year; dans les années à venir in the years to come; dans les jours à venir in the next few days; le moment venu ( au futur) when the time comes; ( au passé) when the time came; quand le printemps viendra when spring comes; (il) viendra un jour où il le regrettera the day will come when ou there'll come a day when he'll regret it; la nuit va bientôt venir it'll soon be dark; le moment du départ est venu it's time to leave; dans l'heure qui vient within the hour; les difficultés à venir future problems; attends, ça va venir wait, it's coming; je préfère laisser or voir venir (les choses) I'd rather wait and see how things turn out; alors, ça vient○?, ça vient oui ou non○? ( une réponse) am I ever going to get an answer○?; ( une personne) are you ever coming?; comment êtes-vous venu à l'enseignement? how did you come to take up teaching?; venir en troisième position to come third; venir loin derrière to trail a long way behind; venir ensuite to follow, to come next; il est venu un moment où j'étais trop fatigué I got to the point when I was too tired;3 ( marquant l'origine) venir d'une famille protestante to come from a Protestant family; venir du grec to come from the Greek; de quelle école vient-il? what school did he go to?; cette bague me vient de ma tante my aunt left me this ring; le succès du roman vient de son style the novel's success is due to its style; ça vient du fait que la situation a changé it stems from the fact that the situation has changed; ça vient de ce qu'ils ne se parlent pas it's all because they don't talk to each other; d'où vient qu'il ne comprend jamais? how is it that he never understands?, how come he never understands?; d'où vient que vous êtes triste? why are you sad?; de là vient qu'il est toujours angoissé hence his continual anxiety, that's why he's always anxious; ça me vient naturellement or tout seul that's just the way I am;4 ( dans une hiérarchie) venir après/avant to come after/before; la famille vient avant le reste the family comes before everything else;5 en venir à to come to; j'en viens au problème qui vous préoccupe I now come to your problem; en venir à abandonner ses études to get to the point of dropping out; s'il faut en venir là if it gets to that point, if it comes to that; il en était venu à la faire suivre/vouloir se suicider he even had her followed/considered suicide; comment a-t-elle pu en venir à de telles extrémités? how could she have resorted to such desperate measures?; ils y viendront d'eux-mêmes ( à une idée) they'll come round of their own accord; venons-en à l'ordre du jour let's get down to the agenda; où veut-il en venir (au juste)? what's he driving at?; en venir aux mains to come to blows; ils en sont venus aux coups they came to blows.[vənir] verbe auxiliaire1. [se rendre quelque part pour] to come and ou totu l'as bien cherché, alors ne viens pas te plaindre! you asked for it, so now don't come moaning to me about it!qu'est-ce que tu viens nous raconter ou chanter là? (familier) what on earth are you on about (UK) ou talking about?2. [avoir fini de]je viens de l'avoir au téléphone I was on the phone to her just a few minutes ou a short while ago3. (soutenu)venir à [exprime un hasard] to happen tosi les vivres venaient à manquer should food supplies run out, if food supplies were to run out————————[vənir] verbe intransitifA.[AVEC IDÉE DE MOUVEMENT]1. [se déplacer, se rendre] to comeil est reparti ou il s'en est allé comme il était venub. [il est mort] he died without having made his markalors, tu viens? are you coming?on va au restaurant, tu viens avec nous? we're off to the restaurant, are you coming with us ou along?venir sur [prédateur, véhicule] to move in on, to bear down uponvenir vers quelqu'un [s'approcher] to come up to ou towards somebodya. [s'adresser à quelqu'un] to come to somebodyb. [atteindre quelqu'un] to reach somebody2. [emmener, appeler]a. [médecin, police, réparateur] to send for, to callb. [parasites, touristes] to attractB.[SANS IDÉE DE MOUVEMENT] [distance]venir à ou jusqu'àb. [vers le bas] to come down to, to reach (down to)c. [en largeur, en longueur] to come out to, to stretch to, to reachC.[SURGIR, SE MANIFESTER]1. [arriver - moment, saison] to comevoici venir la nuit it's nearly night ou nighttimepuis il vient un âge/moment où... then comes an age/a time when...ça va venir: je ne suis jamais tombé amoureux — non, mais ça va venir! I've never fallen in love — (no, but) you will one day!alors, elle vient cette bière? am I getting that beer or not?, how long do I have to wait for my beer?alors, ça vient? hurry up!ça vient, ça vient! alright, it's coming!2. [apparaître - inspiration, idée, boutons] to comeprendre la vie comme elle vient ou les choses comme elles viennent ou les événements comme ils viennent to take things in one's stride ou as they come, to take life as it comesvenir à quelqu'un: l'envie m'est soudain venue d'aller me baigner I suddenly felt like going swimming ou fancied a swimles mots ne me venaient pas I was at a loss for words, I couldn't find the wordsvenir à l'esprit de quelqu'un ou à l'idée de quelqu'un to come to ou to dawn on somebody3. [dans une chronologie, un ordre, une hiérarchie] to comele mois/l'année/la décennie qui vient the coming month/year/decadedans ce jeu, l'as vient après le valet in this game, the ace is worth less than the jackvenir à maturité to reach maturity, to ripen5. IMPRIMERIE & PHOTOGRAPHIEvenir bien/mal: les verts viennent bien sur la photo the green shades come out beautifully in the photograph————————[vənir] verbe impersonnel1. [se déplacer]2. [idée, réflexion]il m'est venu à l'idée de faire I suddenly thought of doing, it dawned on me to do3. [exprime un hasard]————————venir à verbe plus préposition1. [choisir] to come to2. [atteindre]a. [thème, problème] to come ou to turn tob. [conclusion] to come to, to reachc. [décision] to come toen venir au fait ou à l'essentiel to come ou to go straight to the pointje sais certaines choses... — où veux-tu en venir? I know a thing or two... — what do you mean by that ou are you getting at ou are you driving at?en venir aux mains ou coups to come to blowsa. [finir par] to come tob. [en dernière extrémité] to resort ou to be reduced toj'en viens à me demander si... I'm beginning to wonder whether...si j'en suis venu à voler, c'est que... I resorted to stealing because...y venir [s'y résoudre] to come round to it————————venir de verbe plus préposition1. [être originaire de - suj: personne] to come from, to be from, to be a native of ; [ - suj: plante, fruit, animal] to come ou to be ou to originate fromune mode qui vient d'Espagne a fashion which comes from ou originated in Spainle mot vient du latin the word comes ou derives from Latin2. [provenir de - suj: marchandise] to originate from ; [ - suj: bruit, vent] to come from3. [être issu de] to come fromvenant d'elle, c'est presque un compliment coming from her it's almost a compliment4. [être dû à - suj: problème] to come ou to stem from, to lie in ou withil y a une grosse erreur dans la comptabilité — ça ne vient pas de moi there's a big discrepancy in the books — it's got nothing to do with mec'est de là que vient le mal/problème this is the root of the evil/problemde là vient son indifférence hence her indifference, that's why she's indifferentde là vient que: les travaux sont finis, de là vient que tout est calme the building work is over, hence the peace and quietd'où vient que: je dois terminer pour demain, d'où vient que je n'ai pas de temps à vous consacrer my deadline is tomorrow, that's why I can't give you any of my timed'où vient que...? how is it that...?————————s'en venir verbe pronominal intransitif————————à venir locution adjectivaledans les jours/semaines/mois à venir in the days/weeks/months to comeles années à venir the coming years ou years to comeles générations à venir future ou coming generations -
20 motet
мотет, мотетный;1) multiple-texted motet — политекстовый мотетa) The voices move so smoothly and effortlessly, and the harmonic impulse remains so clear throughout, that technical complexities of the motet may pass the listener by. — Голоса движутся столь плавно и легко, а гармоническое развертывание повсюду столь естественно, что слушатель не замечает сложностей мотетной техники.
См. также в других словарях:
Vocal pedagogy — Vocal pedagogy, or voice pedagogy, is the study of the teaching of singing. Vocal pedagogists are people who study the teaching of singing. To some extent all voice teachers are vocal pedagogists because vocal pedagogy informs them about not only … Wikipedia
Vocal register — A vocal register in the human voice is a particular series of tones, produced in the same vibratory pattern of the vocal folds, and possessing the same quality. Registers originate in laryngeal function. They occur because the vocal folds are… … Wikipedia
float like a butterfly — verb To move effortlessly and in an agile fashion … Wiktionary
flexible — adjective 1) flexible tubing Syn: pliable, supple, bendable, pliant, plastic; elastic, stretchy, whippy, springy, resilient, bouncy; informal bendy Ant: rigid 2) a flexib … Thesaurus of popular words
BRODERICK, MATTHEW — (1962– ), U.S. actor. The son of an actor and a playwright, Broderick was raised in New York City s Greenwich Village and began appearing in theater workshops at the age of 17. Broderick s first success came quickly, with critical acclaim for his … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Character fighting techniques (Ranma ½) — This article cover fighting techniques used by characters in Ranma ½ that are not practitioners of Musabetsu Kakutō Ryū.Independent regular characters =Ryoga= Ryoga is an exceptionally proficient martial artist, roughly comparable to Ranma, whom… … Wikipedia
List of Dragon Ball Z Kai episodes — Japanese promotional poster of Dragon Ball Kai Dragon Ball Z Kai (known in Japan as Dragon Ball Kai) is a revised version of the ani … Wikipedia
Anything Goes Martial Arts — See also Independent Character Fighting Techniques.Musabetsu Kakutō Ryū (無差別格闘流 School of Indiscriminate Grappling ) more commonly known in English as Anything Goes Martial Arts, is a fictional school of martial arts from the anime and manga… … Wikipedia
Cheng Hsin — is a pursuit of increasing consciousness using internal martial arts, body being practice, ontology and Zen like contemplation. Cheng Hsin was founded by Peter Ralston in 1975 [Cheng Hsin, The Art of Effortless Power, Tai Chi Chuan, No. 10,… … Wikipedia
List of Samurai Deeper Kyo chapters — Samurai Deeper Kyo manga summaries by volume. Volume 1 Mibu Kyoshiro is seen looking at a poster that lists out the bounty for Demon Eyes Kyo. He notices that the reward is 1 million ryo and says that the money should be used to take care of the… … Wikipedia
List of Samurai Champloo characters — This is a list of known characters in the anime and manga series Samurai Champloo .CastMain charactersMugenName: Mugen Age: 20 Profession: Vagabond, and former pirate Weapon(s): Double edged tsurugi (often confused with a katana) with two prong… … Wikipedia