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1 lane
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2 lane
[leɪn]1) a narrow road or street:زِقاق، طَريق ضيِّقَهa winding lane.
2) used in the names of certain roads or streets:طريق: تُسْتَعْمَل في أسماء الطُّرُقHis address is 12 Penny Lane.
3) a division of a road for one line of traffic:مَسْلَكThe new motorway has three lanes in each direction.
4) a regular course across the sea taken by ships:مَمَر مائيa regular shipping lane.
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3 lane
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4 lane
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5 Gasse
f; -, -n1. narrow street, (narrow) lane; auf der Gasse in ( oder on) the street; auf allen Gassen zu hören sein fig., pej. be the talk of the town; Hansdampf2. fig.: ( für jemanden) eine Gasse bilden make ( oder clear) a path (for s.o.); sich (Dat) eine Gasse bahnen durch force one’s way through3. österr. Straße* * *die Gassepassage; alleyway; lane; alley* * *Gạs|se ['gasə]f -, -nlane; (= Durchgang) alley(way); (S Ger, Aus = Stadtstraße) street; (RUGBY) line-outdie schmalen Gassen der Altstadt — the narrow streets and alleys of the old town
eine Gasse bilden — to clear a passage; (Rugby) to form a line-out
auf der Gasse (S Ger, Aus) — on the street
* * *die2) (used in the names of certain roads or streets: His address is 12 Penny Lane.) lane* * *Gas·se<-, -n>[ˈgasə]f1. (schmale Straße) alley [or alleyway2. (Durchgang) way througheine \Gasse bilden to clear a path [or make way]; SPORT line-out3. (die Bewohner einer Gasse) streetauf der \Gasse on the streetüber die \Gasse to take away* * *die; Gasse, Gassen1) lane; narrow street; (österr.) street[für jemanden] eine Gasse bilden — (fig.) make way or clear a path [for somebody]
2) (Fußball) opening* * *1. narrow street, (narrow) lane;auf der Gasse in ( oder on) the street;2. fig:sich (dat)eine Gasse bahnen durch force one’s way throughein Pass in die Gasse a through pass* * *die; Gasse, Gassen1) lane; narrow street; (österr.) street[für jemanden] eine Gasse bilden — (fig.) make way or clear a path [for somebody]
2) (Fußball) opening* * *-n f.alley n.lane n. -
6 GEIL
(pl. -ar), f. narrow glen, lane.* * *f. [cp. gil, a chasm]:—a narrow glen; geilar þær sem ganga fyrir framan Titlingshól, Vm. 156, Fms. viii. 409, Nj. 114, Gísl. 136; geilar þreyngar at ríða at bænum, Orkn. 450; gras-geilar, grassy ‘gills,’ Hrafn. 20; Hrossa-geilar, id.II. any narrow passage, e. g. a shaft through a hay-rick or the narrow lane between hay-ricks or houses.COMPDS: geilagarðr, geilagarðshlið. -
7 Brandgasse
f narrow lane between houses (to prevent the spreading of fire)* * * -
8 Gässchen
n (little) alleyway, narrow lane* * *Gạ̈ss|chen ['gɛsçən]nt -s, -alley(way)* * *Gäss·chenRRntGäß·chenALT<-s, ->[ˈgɛsçən]* * *Gässchen n (little) alleyway, narrow lane -
9 smátta
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10 Gasse
Deutsch-Englisch Fachwörterbuch Architektur und Bauwesen > Gasse
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11 закоулок
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12 borɔmma
nounnarrow alley--------nounnarrow lane--------nounnarrow street -
13 veit
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14 горло
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15 gjóta
(gýt; gaut, gutum; gotinn), v.1) g. hrognum, to spawn;2) g. augum, sjonum, to cast a look.* * *u, f. [Dan. gyde], a narrow lane. -
16 mið-hæfi
n. a Gr. word [prob. = imperat. μεταβηθι, = go away]; the Orkn. S., in a report of Earl Rögnvald’s journey to Palestine in 1152, says that in Imbólar (= ἔμπολις? which the travellers took to be the name of a place) in Asia Minor when two persons met in a narrow lane the one used to shout, miðhæfi! miðhæfi! (answering to the Dan. varsko!), Orkn. 374. -
17 veit
from vita.* * *f., pl. veitr, qs. vreit, a trench, = veita, D. N. iv. 198.2. a narrow lane in a town, N. G. L. ii. 243, Munk. 83. -
18 ÞVEIT
f., or þveiti, n. [the root is found in A. S. þwîtan, pret. þwât = to chop; North. E. thwaite; Chaucer to thwite; cp. also Dutch duit, whence Engl. doit, Germ. deut, Dan. döit = a bit]:—prop. a ‘cut-off piece,’ but occurs only in special usages:1. a piece of land, paddock, parcel of land, it seems orig. to have been used of an outlying cottage with its paddock; þær jarðir allar, bú ok þveiti, all the estates, manor and ‘thwaite,’ where bú and þveiti are opp. to one another, D. N. ii. 81; séttungs þ., áttungs-þ., id.; öng-þveiti, a narrow lane, strait.2. freq. in local names in Norway and Denmark, tvæt, Dan. tvæde (whence Dan. Tvæde as a pr. name); and in North. E. Orma-thwaite, Braith-thwaite, Lang-thwaite, and so on, names implying Danish colonisation: Þveit, Þveitar, f., Þveitin, n., Þveitini (qs. Þveit-vin), Þveitar-ruð, n., Þveitar-garðr, m., Þveitar-fjall, n., D. N. passim; in Icel. local names it never occurs, and is there quite an obsolete word.II. a unit of weight; þveiti mjöls, Boldt; þveitis-leiga, a rent amounting to a þ.; þveitis-ból, a farm of the value or the rent of a þ.; tveggja þveitna (thus a gen. pl. as if from þveita) toll, þveitis toll, D. N. iii. 465; hálf þveit smœrs, Boldt 114.III. [Dutch duit, etc.], a kind of small coin, a doit, a subdivision of an ounce (= a fraction, cut-off piece); in weregild the baugþak was counted thus, sex aurar ok þveiti átta ens fimta tigar, i. e. six ounces and forty-eight doits; hálf mörk ok þveiti tvau ens fjórða tegar, a half mark and thirty-two doits; þrír aurar ok þveiti tuttugu ok fjögur, three ounces and twenty-four doits; tveir aurar ok þveiti sextan, two ounces and sixteen doits, Grág. (Kb.) i. 193; ef maðr stelr minna enn þveiti þá skal heita hvinn, N. G. L. i. 253, cp. B. K. 8–11, 28, 29; þar eru þveiti tuttugu ok þrjú at höfuðbaugi, … átta þveiti, ok þriðjungr ens fimta þveitis, ok hálft fjórða þveiti ok þriðjungr ens þriðja þveitis ok hálft annat þveiti, Grág. (Kb.) i. 202. -
19 angiporto
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20 закоулок
муж.alleyway, (narrow) lane; nook
См. также в других словарях:
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