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1 doğuş günü
natal day -
2 dan rođenja
• natal day -
3 день рождения
2) Law: birth day -
4 день рождения
1. birth day2. birthday3. natal day -
5 послеродовой день
Medicine: PND (post-natal day) -
6 день рождения
birthday имя существительное: -
7 जन्मन् _janman
जन्मन् n. [जन् भावे मनिन्]1 Birth; तां जन्मने शैलवधूं प्रपेदे Ku.1.21.-2 Origin, rise, production, creation; आकरे पद्मरागाणां जन्म काचमणेः कुतः H. Pr.44; Ku.5.6; (at the end of comp.) arising or born from; सरलस्कन्धसंघट्ठजन्मा दवाग्निः Me.53.-3 Life, existence; पूर्वेष्वपि हि जन्मसु Ms.9.1;5.38; Bg.4.5.-4 Birth- place.-5 Nativity.-6 A father, giver of birth, proge- nitor; Ś.7.18.-7 Natal star.-8 (In astr.) N. of the first mansion or Nakṣatra.-9 A creature, being.-1 People.-11 The people of a household.-12 Kind, race.-13 Nature; property, quality.-14 Custom, manner.-अधिपः 1 an epithet of Śiva.-2 the regent of a constellation under which a person is born (in astrolo- gy); होराजन्माधिपयोर्जन्मर्क्षे वाशुभो राज्ञः Bṛi. S.34.11.-अन्तरम् 1 another life.-2 the preceding life, former birth; मनो हि जन्मान्तरसंगतिज्ञम् R.7.15.-3 regeneration.-4 the other world.-अन्तरीय a. belonging to or done in another life; जन्मान्तरीयैः साम्राज्यं मया प्रापीति चिन्तयन् Rāj. T.6.85.-अन्धः a. born blind.-अष्टमी the eighth day of the dark fortnight of Srāvaṇa, the birth-day of Kṛisna.-आस्पदम् birthplace.-ईशः = 2 जन्माधिप;-कीलः an epithet of Vi&snu.-कुण्डली a diagram in a horoscope in which the positions of different planets at the time of one's birth are marked.-कृत् m. a father.-क्षेत्रम् birth-place.-तिथिः m., f.,-दिनम्, -दिवसः birth-day; सुखाय तज्जन्मदिनं बभूव Ku.1.23.-दः a father.-नक्षत्रम्, -भम् the natal star.-नामन् n. the name received on the 12th day after birth.-पः the regent of a planet under which a person is born.-पत्रम्, -पत्रिका a horoscope.-पादपः a family-tree; उत्तराः कुरवो$विक्षंस्तद्भयाज्जन्मपादपान् Rāj. T.4.175.-प्रतिष्ठा 1 a birth-place.-2 a mother; Ś.6 (between verses 9th and 1th).-भाज्, भृत् m. a creature, living being; मोदन्तां जन्मभाजः सततम् Mk.1.6. -a. one whose life is fruitful; अहो भोजपते यूयं जन्मभाजो नृणामिह Bhāg.1.82. 29.-भाषा a mother-tongue; यत्र स्त्रीणामपि किमपरं जन्मभाषा- वदेव प्रत्यावासं विलसति वचः संस्कृतं प्राकृतं च Vikr.18.6.-भूमिः f. birth-place, native country.-योगः a horoscope.-रोगिन् a. sickly from birth.-लग्नम्, -राशिः the sign of the zodiac under which a person is born.-वर्त्मन् n. the vulva.-वसुधा native country; पश्यद्भिर्जन्मवसुधाम् Rāj. T.4.147.-शोधनम् discharging the obligations derived from birth.-साफल्यम् attainment of the ends of existence; एतद्धि जन्मसाफल्यं ब्राह्मणस्य विशेषतः Ms.12.93. Pt.1.28.-स्थानम् 1 birth-place, native country, home.-2 the womb.-हेतुः cause of birth, author of one's being; पितरस्तासां केवलं जन्महेतवः R.1.24. -
8 descansar
v.1 to rest, to lie.descansó la cabeza en mi hombro he laid o rested his head on my shoulder2 to rest (reposar) (relajar).dormir descansa la vista sleep gives your eyes o eyesight a restdescansó un rato antes de seguir he rested for a while before continuingdespués de tanto trabajo necesito descansar I need a rest after all that work¿paramos a o para descansar? how about stopping for a rest?necesitas descansar de tantas preocupaciones you need a break from all these worriesdescansaremos en una hora we'll take a break in an hourllevo cuatro horas trabajando sin descansar I've been working for four hours non-stop o without a break3 to sleep.¡que descanses! sleep well!4 to lie (estar enterrado).que en paz descanse may he/she rest in peace* * *1 (gen) to rest, have a rest; (un momento) to take a break2 (dormir) to sleep■ ¡que descanses! sleep well!3 (confiar) to rely (en, on)5 (basarse) to be based (en, on)6 (estar enterrado) to lie, rest7 (un terreno) to lie fallow1 (aliviar) to rest2 MILITAR to order\descansar en paz to rest in peace¡descansen armas! order arms!* * *verb* * *1. VI1) (=reposar) to rest, have a restsiéntate aquí y descansa — sit down here and have a rest, sit down here and rest
paramos en un bar a o para descansar — we stopped at a bar for a rest o to have a rest
no descansará hasta conseguir que dimita el presidente — he will not rest until he gets the president to resign
va al campo a descansar de las preocupaciones — she goes to the country to get away from o get a break from her worries
2) (=dormir)a medianoche, se retiraron a descansar — at midnight they retired (to bed)
¡hasta mañana! ¡que descanses! — see you in the morning! sleep well!
3)descansar sobre algo — [cúpula, tejado] to be supported by sth, rest on sth; [argumento, tesis] to be based on sth
4) (=estar enterrado)aquí descansan los restos mortales de José Fernández — here lie the mortal remains of José Fernández
tu tío, que en paz descanse — your uncle, may he rest in peace
5) (Mil)¡descansen! — at ease!, stand at ease!
6) (Agr) [terreno, parcela] to rest, lie fallow2. VT1) (=apoyar) to rest2) (Mil)¡descansen armas! — order arms!
* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) (de actividad, trabajo) to rest, have a restdescansen! — (Mil) (stand) at ease!
descansar de algo — to have a rest o break from something
b) ( en la cama) to rest, have a restbuenas noches, que descanses — goodnight, sleep well
c) ( yacer) to lie2) tierra to lie fallow3) ( apoyarse)2.descansar en or sobre algo — techo/bóveda to rest on o upon something; teoría to rest o hinge on something
descansar vta)descansar la vista — to rest one's eyes, to give one's eyes a rest
b) (Mil)* * *= break off, put + Posesivo + feet up, give + Reflexivo + a break, lie on + Posesivo + oars, rest on + Posesivo + oars.Ex. During this period the compositors worked non-stop, breaking off only to eat, for the almost incredible period of fifty hours: two days and two nights without rest 'in an atmosphere that would poison a vulture'.Ex. Don't you think, Juan, that when the reference librarian or somebody from the circulation desk comes down to the staff room after a tough morning, they should be able to put their feet up and enjoy a smoke?.Ex. The article is entitled ' Give yourself a break; don't give the hacker one. Security breaches'.Ex. But that is no reason for lying on our oars and refusing to see that our service is full of absurdities and mistakes.Ex. While we can be proud of what we have achieved I believe resting on our oars is a sure recipe for failure.----* descansar en = rely on/upon, lean against.* descansar la mente = relieve + mind.* descansar sobre = lean on/upon, rest on/upon.* no descansar en + Posesivo + tumba = spin + in + Posesivo + grave.* sin descansar = without (a) rest, without a break.* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) (de actividad, trabajo) to rest, have a restdescansen! — (Mil) (stand) at ease!
descansar de algo — to have a rest o break from something
b) ( en la cama) to rest, have a restbuenas noches, que descanses — goodnight, sleep well
c) ( yacer) to lie2) tierra to lie fallow3) ( apoyarse)2.descansar en or sobre algo — techo/bóveda to rest on o upon something; teoría to rest o hinge on something
descansar vta)descansar la vista — to rest one's eyes, to give one's eyes a rest
b) (Mil)* * *= break off, put + Posesivo + feet up, give + Reflexivo + a break, lie on + Posesivo + oars, rest on + Posesivo + oars.Ex: During this period the compositors worked non-stop, breaking off only to eat, for the almost incredible period of fifty hours: two days and two nights without rest 'in an atmosphere that would poison a vulture'.
Ex: Don't you think, Juan, that when the reference librarian or somebody from the circulation desk comes down to the staff room after a tough morning, they should be able to put their feet up and enjoy a smoke?.Ex: The article is entitled ' Give yourself a break; don't give the hacker one. Security breaches'.Ex: But that is no reason for lying on our oars and refusing to see that our service is full of absurdities and mistakes.Ex: While we can be proud of what we have achieved I believe resting on our oars is a sure recipe for failure.* descansar en = rely on/upon, lean against.* descansar la mente = relieve + mind.* descansar sobre = lean on/upon, rest on/upon.* no descansar en + Posesivo + tumba = spin + in + Posesivo + grave.* sin descansar = without (a) rest, without a break.* * *descansar [A1 ]viA1 (de una actividad, un trabajo) to rest, have a rest, have o take a breakno puedo más, vamos a descansar un rato I'm exhausted! let's rest for a while o let's have a rest o let's take a break o ( colloq) breathertrabajé toda la mañana sin descansar I worked all morning without a breakse pararon a descansar they stopped for a restno descansaré hasta que haya justicia en este país I shall not rest until there is justice in this country¡descansen! ( Mil) stand at ease!, at ease!descansar DE algo to have a rest o break FROM sthnecesita descansar de los niños she needs a break from the children2 (en la cama) to rest, have a restdormí ocho horas pero no he descansado I slept eight hours but I don't feel rested o refreshedbuenas noches, que descanses goodnight, sleep well3«muerto»: tu abuelo, que en paz descanse, … your grandfather, God rest his soul, …los dos descansan juntos en su pueblo natal they lie buried together in their birthplaceaquí descansan los restos del poeta here lie the remains of the poetB «tierra» to lie fallowC (apoyarse) descansar EN or SOBRE algo «techo/bóveda» to rest ON o UPON sth; «teoría» to rest o hinge ON sth■ descansarvt1descansar la vista to rest one's eyes, to give one's eyes a restcambia de actividad para descansar la mente do something else to give your mind a break o rest2 ( Mil):¡descansen armas! order arms!* * *
descansar ( conjugate descansar) verbo intransitivo
descansar de algo to have a rest o break from sth
verbo transitivo
descansar la mente to give one's mind a break o rest
descansar verbo intransitivo
1 to rest, have a rest
(un momento) to take a break
2 euf que en paz descanse, may he/she rest in peace o God rest his/her soul
' descansar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
gravitar
- sostenerse
- apoyar
- falta
- mandar
- reposar
English:
break
- foot
- relax
- repose
- rest
- sit-down
- unwind
* * *♦ vt1. [reposar] to rest, to lie;descansó la cabeza en mi hombro he laid o rested his head on my shoulder2. [relajar] to rest;dormir descansa la vista sleep gives your eyes o eyesight a rest;al final de la jornada doy un paseo para descansar la mente at the end of the day I go for a walk to take my mind off work♦ vi1. [reposar] to rest;descansó un rato antes de seguir he rested for a while before continuing;después de tanto trabajo necesito descansar I need a rest after all that work;descansaremos en una hora we'll take a break in an hour;llevo cuatro horas trabajando sin descansar I've been working for four hours non-stop o without a break;necesitas descansar de tantas preocupaciones you need a break from all these worries;no descansar hasta conseguir algo not to rest until one has achieved sth2. [dormir] to sleep;¿has conseguido descansar con este ruido? did you manage to sleep with that noise?;¡que descanses! sleep well!3. [estar enterrado] to lie;sus restos descansan en el cementerio local she lies buried in the local cemetery;aquí descansan los caídos en la batalla here lie those fallen in the battle;que en paz descanse may he/she rest in peace4.[sujeto: teoría, hipótesis, argumento] to rest on sth, to be based on sthdescansar en o [m5] sobre algo [sujeto: viga, cúpula, tejado] to rest on sth, to be supported by sth;5. [tierra de cultivo] to lie fallow* * *I v/i rest, have a rest;¡que descanses! sleep wellII v/t1 rest ( sobre on)2:¡descansen armas! MIL order arms!* * *descansar vi: to rest, to relaxdescansar vt: to restdescansar la vista: to rest one's eyes* * *descansar vb1. (en general) to rest2. (hacer una pausa) to have a break¿por qué no descansas un rato? why don't you have a little break?¡que descanses! sleep well! -
9 suelo
m.1 floor (pavimento) (en interiores).2 soil (terreno, territorio).en suelo colombiano on Colombian soilsuelo urbanizable land suitable for development3 ground, floor, firm land.4 solum.pres.indicat.1 1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: solar.2 1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: soler.* * *1 (superficie) ground; (de interior) floor3 (territorio) soil, land4 (terreno) land5 (pavimento) surface6 figurado (de vasija etc) bottom\besar el suelo familiar to fall flat on one's face, hit the deckdar consigo en el suelo to fallechar al suelo to demolish, knock downechar por los suelos figurado to ruinponer algo por los suelos figurado to run something down, tear something to piecesvenirse al suelo to fall down 2 figurado to fall throughsuelo cultivable arable landsuelo de madera wooden floorsuelo patrio native land* * *noun m.1) floor2) ground3) soil* * *SM1) [en el exterior] (=tierra) ground; (=superficie) surfacecaer al suelo — to fall to the ground, fall over
echar al suelo — [+ edificio] to demolish; [+ esperanzas] to dash; [+ plan] to ruin
echarse al suelo — (=tirarse al suelo) to hurl o.s. to the ground; (=arrodillarse) to fall on one's knees
por los suelos —
tirarse por los suelos — * to roll in the aisles (with laughter) *
venirse al suelo — to fail, collapse, be ruined
suelo natal, suelo patrio — native land, native soil
2) [en edificio] (=superficie) floor; (=solería) flooring3) (=terreno) soil, landsuelo empresarial — space for office accommodation
4) [de pan, vasija] bottom* * *a) ( tierra) groundse echaron or tiraron al suelo — they threw themselves to the ground
arrastrarse por los suelos — (fam) to grovel
estar por los suelos or el suelo — (fam) precios to be rock bottom (colloq); moral/ánimos to be at rock bottom (colloq)
poner algo/a alguien por los suelos or el suelo — (fam) to run something/somebody down (colloq)
b) ( en casa) floorc) (en calle, carretera) road (surface)d) (Agr) lande) ( territorio) soilel suelo patrio — one's native soil o land
* * *= floor, ground, soil, flooring, floor surface.Ex. An enquirer wishes to retrieve documents on the 'finishing of concrete floors for industrial buildings'.Ex. A profile is a scale representation of the intersection of a vertical surface with the surface of the ground.Ex. This article diagnoses the information needs of those who work in the area of pollution of air, soil and earth.Ex. This article focusses on the need for suitable flooring strength and ceiling heights in library buildings.Ex. Floor surfaces should be chosen as a guide for the blind while avoiding deep carpets which snag wheel chairs = Se debería el suelo para guiar a los ciegos aunque debe evitarse las alfombras gruesas ya que dificultan el deslizamiento de las sillas de ruedas.----* abrillantador de suelos = floor polish.* abrillantador para el suelo = floor polish.* a nivel del suelo = at ground level.* a ras del suelo = at ground level.* calefacción por suelo radiante = radiant-floor heating, underfloor heating.* cera para suelos = floor wax.* ciencia del suelo = soil science.* clasificación del suelo = zoning.* con basura por el suelo = littered.* con el suelo de tierra = dirt-floored.* debajo del suelo = subfloor.* degradación del suelo = land degradation.* erosión del suelo = soil erosion.* fertilidad del suelo = soil fertility.* hasta el suelo = floor-length.* persona que tira basura al suelo = litterbug, litter lout.* poner por los suelos = slate, slag + Nombre + off, mouth off, say + nasty things about, call + Nombre + all the names under the sun, trash, cut + Nombre + up, tear + Nombre + down, rubbish.* por los suelos = in tatters.* recubrimiento de suelos = floor covering.* retrete de agujero en el suelo = squat toilet, squatty potty, squat loo.* revestimiento para suelos = flooring.* salinización del suelo = soil salinisation, soil salination.* sobre suelo firme = on firm footing.* suelo alzado = raised floor.* suelo arenoso = sandy soil.* suelo cenagoso = loamy soil.* suelo de madera = wood flooring.* suelo de parqué = parquet floor.* suelo lunar = regolith.* suelo margoso = loamy soil.* suelo mojado = wet floor.* suelo radiante = underfloor heating, radiant floor.* sujetar + Nombre + contra el suelo = pin + Nombre + to the floor.* tener los pies firmemente en el suelo = feet + be + firmly planted on the ground.* tirar a Alguien al suelo = knock + Nombre + to the ground, knock + Nombre + to the floor.* tirar a Alguien al suelo de un golpe = knock + Nombre + to the floor, knock + Nombre + to the ground.* tirar al suelo = upset.* tumbar a Alguien al suelo de un golpe = knock + Nombre + to the floor, knock + Nombre + to the ground.* vista a ras de suelo = worm's eye view.* * *a) ( tierra) groundse echaron or tiraron al suelo — they threw themselves to the ground
arrastrarse por los suelos — (fam) to grovel
estar por los suelos or el suelo — (fam) precios to be rock bottom (colloq); moral/ánimos to be at rock bottom (colloq)
poner algo/a alguien por los suelos or el suelo — (fam) to run something/somebody down (colloq)
b) ( en casa) floorc) (en calle, carretera) road (surface)d) (Agr) lande) ( territorio) soilel suelo patrio — one's native soil o land
* * *= floor, ground, soil, flooring, floor surface.Ex: An enquirer wishes to retrieve documents on the 'finishing of concrete floors for industrial buildings'.
Ex: A profile is a scale representation of the intersection of a vertical surface with the surface of the ground.Ex: This article diagnoses the information needs of those who work in the area of pollution of air, soil and earth.Ex: This article focusses on the need for suitable flooring strength and ceiling heights in library buildings.Ex: Floor surfaces should be chosen as a guide for the blind while avoiding deep carpets which snag wheel chairs = Se debería el suelo para guiar a los ciegos aunque debe evitarse las alfombras gruesas ya que dificultan el deslizamiento de las sillas de ruedas.* abrillantador de suelos = floor polish.* abrillantador para el suelo = floor polish.* a nivel del suelo = at ground level.* a ras del suelo = at ground level.* calefacción por suelo radiante = radiant-floor heating, underfloor heating.* cera para suelos = floor wax.* ciencia del suelo = soil science.* clasificación del suelo = zoning.* con basura por el suelo = littered.* con el suelo de tierra = dirt-floored.* debajo del suelo = subfloor.* degradación del suelo = land degradation.* erosión del suelo = soil erosion.* fertilidad del suelo = soil fertility.* hasta el suelo = floor-length.* persona que tira basura al suelo = litterbug, litter lout.* poner por los suelos = slate, slag + Nombre + off, mouth off, say + nasty things about, call + Nombre + all the names under the sun, trash, cut + Nombre + up, tear + Nombre + down, rubbish.* por los suelos = in tatters.* recubrimiento de suelos = floor covering.* retrete de agujero en el suelo = squat toilet, squatty potty, squat loo.* revestimiento para suelos = flooring.* salinización del suelo = soil salinisation, soil salination.* sobre suelo firme = on firm footing.* suelo alzado = raised floor.* suelo arenoso = sandy soil.* suelo cenagoso = loamy soil.* suelo de madera = wood flooring.* suelo de parqué = parquet floor.* suelo lunar = regolith.* suelo margoso = loamy soil.* suelo mojado = wet floor.* suelo radiante = underfloor heating, radiant floor.* sujetar + Nombre + contra el suelo = pin + Nombre + to the floor.* tener los pies firmemente en el suelo = feet + be + firmly planted on the ground.* tirar a Alguien al suelo = knock + Nombre + to the ground, knock + Nombre + to the floor.* tirar a Alguien al suelo de un golpe = knock + Nombre + to the floor, knock + Nombre + to the ground.* tirar al suelo = upset.* tumbar a Alguien al suelo de un golpe = knock + Nombre + to the floor, knock + Nombre + to the ground.* vista a ras de suelo = worm's eye view.* * *1 (tierra) groundtropezó y se cayó al suelo she tripped and fell overse echaron or tiraron al suelo they threw themselves to the groundno te sientes en el suelo que te vas a ensuciar don't sit on the ground, you'll get dirtyarrastrarse por los suelos ( fam); to grovelbesar el suelo que algn pisa ( fam); to worship the (very) ground sb walks on«moral/ánimos» to be at rock bottom ( colloq)tiene la moral por los suelos her morale is very low, her morale is at rock bottomen la carta lo ponía por los suelos in the letter she really ran him down o ( AmE) tore into him o ( BrE) slagged him off ( colloq)2 (en una casa) floorse le cayó la taza al suelo he dropped the cup on the floor3 (en una calle, carretera) road surface, road4 ( Agr) landel suelo es muy fértil the land is very fertilesuelo de labor farming o agricultural land5 (territorio) soilen suelo americano on American soilCompuestos:floorboards (pl)● suelo patrio or natalnative soil o land* * *
Del verbo solar: ( conjugate solar)
suelo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
Del verbo soler: ( conjugate soler)
suelo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
Multiple Entries:
solar
soler
suelo
solar adjetivo ‹energía/año/placa› solar;
■ sustantivo masculino
1 ( terreno) piece of land, site
2
3 (Per) ( casa de vecindad) tenement building
soler ( conjugate soler) verbo intransitivo:
no suele retrasarse he's not usually late;
solía correr todos los días he used to go for a run every day
suelo sustantivo masculino
d) (Agr) land
◊ el suelo patrio one's native soil o land
solar 1 sustantivo masculino
1 (terreno para edificar) plot
2 Hist (mansión ancestral) noble house
solar 2 adjetivo solar
energía solar, solar energy
luz solar, sunlight
sistema solar, solar system
solar 3 vtr (el suelo) to floor, pave
soler vi defect
1 (en presente) to be in the habit of: solemos ir en coche, we usually go by car
sueles equivocarte, you are usually wrong
2 (en pasado) solía pasear por aquí, he used to walk round here
En el presente, la traducción más común de soler es el verbo principal más usually: Suele volver a las diez. He usually comes back at ten.
Para referirnos a costumbres en el pasado hay que usar to use to o would. Would expresa acciones repetidas, mientras que to use to describe también estados o situaciones: Antes íbamos/solíamos ir a la playa en tren. We used to/would go to the beach by train.
No confundas to use to (do sthg) con to be used to (doing sthg), que significa estar acostumbrado y, al contrario que to use to, puede usarse también en presente: Estoy acostumbrado a coger el metro. I'm used to taking the metro. ➣ Ver nota en accustom
suelo sustantivo masculino
1 (tierra) ground
2 Agr land
(de cultivo) soil: es un suelo muy fértil, it's very fertile land
3 (de una casa) floor
(de la calle, carretera) surface, road
4 (país, territorio) soil: el suelo de la patria, native soil
5 (edificable) building land: aún queda mucho suelo sin construir, there's still a lot of land left to be developed
♦ Locuciones: estar por los suelos, (precios) to be rock-bottom o dirt cheap
(el ánimo) to be at rock bottom o down in the dumps
' suelo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acuchillar
- bambolearse
- bayeta
- brillante
- coger
- contorsionarse
- crujir
- desigualdad
- despanzurrarse
- desplomarse
- elevarse
- entarimado
- escalón
- escurridiza
- escurridizo
- fregar
- greca
- impacto
- intuitivamente
- levantarse
- limadura
- mandar
- ojo
- regar
- relucir
- reluciente
- resbalar
- rodilla
- sembrar
- sobresalir
- solar
- tender
- tierra
- tirar
- tramo
- trampa
- ánimo
- arrastrar
- baldosa
- barrer
- botar
- brillar
- brillo
- caído
- cepillo
- cera
- duela
- echar
- emparejar
- ensuciar
English:
compact
- crack
- creak
- damp
- deal with
- dip
- down
- downcast
- feel
- floor
- floorboard
- gather up
- give
- ground
- ground level
- icy
- litter
- mess
- messy
- mop
- nuisance
- pick up
- polish
- rising
- rolling
- scuff
- shove
- sit
- slump
- soggy
- soil
- stand
- stuff
- sweep
- take up
- tile
- tip out
- wipe
- crash
- cross
- drop
- empty
- free
- lay
- off
- on
- over
- stamp
- stick
- top
* * *suelo2 nm1. [pavimento] [en interiores] floor;[en el exterior] ground; Famarrastrarse por el suelo to grovel, to humble oneself;Fambesar el suelo to fall flat on one's face;echar algo por el suelo to ruin sth;Famestar por los suelos [persona, precio] to be at rock bottom;[productos] to be dirt cheap;tienen la moral por los suelos their morale has hit rock bottom;[fracasar] to fail suelo laminado laminate flooring2. [terreno, territorio] soil;[para edificar] land;en suelo colombiano on Colombian soil;el precio del suelo urbano land prices in urban areassuelo no urbanizable land which is unsuitable for development;suelo urbanizable land suitable for development* * *men el suelo on the ground;estar por los suelos fam be at rock bottom fam ;poner a alguien por los suelos run s.o. down;besar el suelo fig fall flat on one’s face;2 AGR soil* * *suelo nm1) : groundcaerse al suelo: to fall down, to hit the ground2) : floor, flooring3) tierra: soil, land* * *suelo n1. (de habitación) floor2. (del exterior) ground3. (terreno) land -
10 место рождения
1. birth-place2. birth place3. birthplace4. natal place -
11 घातः _ghātḥ
घातः [हन्-णिच् घञ्]1 A blow, stroke, bruise, hit; ज्याघात Ś.3.13; नयनशरघात Gīt.1; so पार्ष्णिघातः शिरोघात &c.-2 Killing, hurting, destruction, slaughter, death- sentence; वियोगो मुग्धाक्ष्याः स खलु रिपुघातावधिरभूत् U.3.44; पशुघातः Gīt.1; Y.2.159;3.252. तत्र रत्नोपभोगे घातः Kau. A.2.8.-3 An arrow.-4 Power.-5 The pro- duct of a sum in multiplication.-6 Whipping; कोशाधि- ष्ठितस्य कोशावच्छेदे घातः Kau. A.2.5.-7 (in Astr.) En- trance. (In comp. translated by 'inauspicious'; ˚दिवसः)-Comp. -कृच्छ्रम् a kind of urinary disease; Śārṅg. S. 7.57.-चन्द्रः the moon when in an inauspicious man- sion determined by one's natal zodiacal sign.-तिथिः an inauspicious lunar day.-नक्षत्रम् an inauspicious constellation.-वारः an inauspicious day of the week.-स्थानम् a slaughter-house, place for execution; कदाचि- दियमालोक्यैव संनिकृष्टं घातस्थानम् Nāg.4. -
12 hora
1.hōra, ae (archaic gen. sing. horāï, Lucr. 1, 1016.—In abl. plur. HORABVS, Inscr. Orell. 4601), f. [kindred with hôra; Zend yare, year; ayara, day; orig. for Wosara, from Wear, ver], (lit., a definite space of time, fixed by natural laws; hence, as in Greek).I.An hour.A.Lit. (among the Romans, of varying length, according to the time of year, from sunrise to sunset being reckoned as twelve hours; cf.:2.aetas, aevum, tempus, dies): aestiva,
Mart. 12, 1, 4; cf.:viginti milia passuum horis quinque duntaxat aestivis conficienda sunt,
Veg. Mil. 1, 9:horam amplius jam in demoliendo signo moliebantur,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 43, § 95:īdem eadem possunt horam durare probantes?
Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 82:ternas epistolas in hora dare,
Cic. Fam. 15, 16, 1:in hora saepe ducentos versus dictabat,
Hor. S. 1, 4, 9:horas tres dicere,
Cic. Att. 4, 2, 4:primum dormiit ad horas tres,
id. ib. 10, 13, 1:quatuor horarum spatio antecedens,
Caes. B. C. 3, 79 fin.:quatuor aut plures aulaea premuntur in horas,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 189:non amplius quam septem horas dormiebat,
Suet. Aug. 78:haec (cogitatio) paucis admodum horis magnas etiam causas complectitur,
Quint. 10, 6, 1:paucissimarum horarum consulatus,
Plin. 7, 53, 54, § 181:hora quota est?
what o'clock is it? Hor. S. 2, 6, 44:nuntiare horas,
to tell the time of day, Juv. 10, 216; cf.:cum a puero quaesisset horas,
Plin. 7, 53, 54, § 182; Suet. Dom. 16:si te grata quies et primam somnus in horam Delectat,
Hor. Ep. 1, 17, 6:hora secunda postridie,
Cic. Quint. 6, 25:quartā vix demum exponimur horā,
Hor. S. 1, 5, 23:cum ad te quinta fere hora venissem,
Cic. Pis. 6, 13:ea res acta est, cum hora sexta vix Pompeius perorasset, usque ad horam octavam,
id. Q. Fr. 2, 3, 2:hora fere nona,
id. ib.:hora diei decima fere,
id. Phil. 2, 31, 77:hora fere undecima aut non multo secus,
id. Mil. 10, 29: prima salutantes atque altera continet hora;Exercet raucos tertia causidicos: In quintam varios extendit Roma labores: Sexta quies lassis, septima finis erit, etc.,
Mart. 4, 8:post horam primam noctis.... decem horis nocturnis,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 7, 19:prima noctis,
Suet. Aug. 76:tribus nocturnis,
id. Calig. 50:id quidem in horam diei quintam vel octavam spectare maluerint, i. e.,
towards that part of the heavens where the sun is at the fifth or eighth hour, Plin. 17, 11, 16, § 84; 6, 32, 37, § 202:hic tu fortasse eris diligens, ne quam ego horam de meis legitimis horis remittam,
of the hours allowed to an orator, Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 9, § 25:hora partūs,
the hour of one's birth, natal hour, Suet. Aug. 94:hora natalis,
Hor. C. 2, 17, 19:mortis,
Suet. Dom. 14:cenae,
id. Claud. 8:pugnae,
id. Aug. 16:somni,
id. Dom. 21 et saep.:ad horam venire,
at the hour, punctually, Sen. Q. N. 2, 16:clavum mutare in horas,
every hour, hourly, Hor. S. 2, 7, 10; id. C. 2, 13, 14; id. A. P. 160; Plin. Ep. 3, 17, 3.—Prov.a.In horam vivere, to care only for the passing hour, to live from hand to mouth, Cic. Phil. 5, 9, 25.—b.Omnium horarum homo (amicus, etc.), ready, active, well disposed at all times, Quint. 6, 3, 110 Spald.; Suet. Tib. 42 (for which:B.C. Publicium solitum dicere, P. Mummium cuivis tempori hominem esse,
Cic. de Or. 2, 67, 271).—Transf., in plur.: hōrae, ārum, a horologe, dial, clock:II.cum machinatione quadam moveri aliquid videmus, ut sphaeram, ut horas,
Cic. N. D. 2, 38, 97; Petr. 71; cf.:videt oscitantem judicem, mittentem ad horas,
to look at the clock, Cic. Brut. 54, 200.—Poet., in gen., time, time of year, season:III.tu quamcumque deus tibi fortunaverit horam, Grata sume manu,
Hor. Ep. 1, 11, 22:et mihi forsan, tibi quod negarit, Porriget hora,
id. C. 2, 16, 31:neu fluitem dubiae spe pendulus horae,
id. Ep. 1, 18, 110:qui recte vivendi prorogat horam,
id. ib. 1, 2, 41:extremo veniet mollior hora die,
Prop. 2, 28 (3, 24), 16:numquam te crastina fallet Hora,
Verg. G. 1, 426:sub verni temporis horam,
Hor. A. P. 302;so of spring: genitalis anni,
Plin. 9, 35, 54, § 107:flagrantis atrox hora Caniculae,
Hor. C. 3, 13, 9:(hae latebrae) Incolumem tibi me praestant Septembribus horis,
id. Ep. 1, 16, 16:arbor ipsa omnibus horis pomifera est,
at all seasons, all the year round, Plin. 12, 3, 7, § 15.—Personified: Hōrae, ārum, f., like the Gr. Hôrai, the Hours, daughters of Jupiter and Themis, goddesses that presided over the changes of the seasons and kept watch at the gates of heaven, Ov. M. 2, 26; 118; Val. Fl. 4, 92; Stat. Th. 3, 410; Ov. F. 1, 125; 5, 217; Hyg. Fab. 183.2.Hō̆ra, ae, f. [perh. an old form for hĕra, lady], the wife of Quirinus ( Romulus), who was worshipped as a goddess (called, before her death, Hersilia, Ov. M. 14, 830): Quirine pater, veneror, Horamque Quirini, Enn. ap. Non. 120, 2 (Ann. v. 121 Vahl.):Hora Quirini,
Gell. 13, 22, 2; cf.:pariter cum corpore nomen Mutat Horamque vocat,
Ov. M. 14, 851. -
13 Horae
1.hōra, ae (archaic gen. sing. horāï, Lucr. 1, 1016.—In abl. plur. HORABVS, Inscr. Orell. 4601), f. [kindred with hôra; Zend yare, year; ayara, day; orig. for Wosara, from Wear, ver], (lit., a definite space of time, fixed by natural laws; hence, as in Greek).I.An hour.A.Lit. (among the Romans, of varying length, according to the time of year, from sunrise to sunset being reckoned as twelve hours; cf.:2.aetas, aevum, tempus, dies): aestiva,
Mart. 12, 1, 4; cf.:viginti milia passuum horis quinque duntaxat aestivis conficienda sunt,
Veg. Mil. 1, 9:horam amplius jam in demoliendo signo moliebantur,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 43, § 95:īdem eadem possunt horam durare probantes?
Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 82:ternas epistolas in hora dare,
Cic. Fam. 15, 16, 1:in hora saepe ducentos versus dictabat,
Hor. S. 1, 4, 9:horas tres dicere,
Cic. Att. 4, 2, 4:primum dormiit ad horas tres,
id. ib. 10, 13, 1:quatuor horarum spatio antecedens,
Caes. B. C. 3, 79 fin.:quatuor aut plures aulaea premuntur in horas,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 189:non amplius quam septem horas dormiebat,
Suet. Aug. 78:haec (cogitatio) paucis admodum horis magnas etiam causas complectitur,
Quint. 10, 6, 1:paucissimarum horarum consulatus,
Plin. 7, 53, 54, § 181:hora quota est?
what o'clock is it? Hor. S. 2, 6, 44:nuntiare horas,
to tell the time of day, Juv. 10, 216; cf.:cum a puero quaesisset horas,
Plin. 7, 53, 54, § 182; Suet. Dom. 16:si te grata quies et primam somnus in horam Delectat,
Hor. Ep. 1, 17, 6:hora secunda postridie,
Cic. Quint. 6, 25:quartā vix demum exponimur horā,
Hor. S. 1, 5, 23:cum ad te quinta fere hora venissem,
Cic. Pis. 6, 13:ea res acta est, cum hora sexta vix Pompeius perorasset, usque ad horam octavam,
id. Q. Fr. 2, 3, 2:hora fere nona,
id. ib.:hora diei decima fere,
id. Phil. 2, 31, 77:hora fere undecima aut non multo secus,
id. Mil. 10, 29: prima salutantes atque altera continet hora;Exercet raucos tertia causidicos: In quintam varios extendit Roma labores: Sexta quies lassis, septima finis erit, etc.,
Mart. 4, 8:post horam primam noctis.... decem horis nocturnis,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 7, 19:prima noctis,
Suet. Aug. 76:tribus nocturnis,
id. Calig. 50:id quidem in horam diei quintam vel octavam spectare maluerint, i. e.,
towards that part of the heavens where the sun is at the fifth or eighth hour, Plin. 17, 11, 16, § 84; 6, 32, 37, § 202:hic tu fortasse eris diligens, ne quam ego horam de meis legitimis horis remittam,
of the hours allowed to an orator, Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 9, § 25:hora partūs,
the hour of one's birth, natal hour, Suet. Aug. 94:hora natalis,
Hor. C. 2, 17, 19:mortis,
Suet. Dom. 14:cenae,
id. Claud. 8:pugnae,
id. Aug. 16:somni,
id. Dom. 21 et saep.:ad horam venire,
at the hour, punctually, Sen. Q. N. 2, 16:clavum mutare in horas,
every hour, hourly, Hor. S. 2, 7, 10; id. C. 2, 13, 14; id. A. P. 160; Plin. Ep. 3, 17, 3.—Prov.a.In horam vivere, to care only for the passing hour, to live from hand to mouth, Cic. Phil. 5, 9, 25.—b.Omnium horarum homo (amicus, etc.), ready, active, well disposed at all times, Quint. 6, 3, 110 Spald.; Suet. Tib. 42 (for which:B.C. Publicium solitum dicere, P. Mummium cuivis tempori hominem esse,
Cic. de Or. 2, 67, 271).—Transf., in plur.: hōrae, ārum, a horologe, dial, clock:II.cum machinatione quadam moveri aliquid videmus, ut sphaeram, ut horas,
Cic. N. D. 2, 38, 97; Petr. 71; cf.:videt oscitantem judicem, mittentem ad horas,
to look at the clock, Cic. Brut. 54, 200.—Poet., in gen., time, time of year, season:III.tu quamcumque deus tibi fortunaverit horam, Grata sume manu,
Hor. Ep. 1, 11, 22:et mihi forsan, tibi quod negarit, Porriget hora,
id. C. 2, 16, 31:neu fluitem dubiae spe pendulus horae,
id. Ep. 1, 18, 110:qui recte vivendi prorogat horam,
id. ib. 1, 2, 41:extremo veniet mollior hora die,
Prop. 2, 28 (3, 24), 16:numquam te crastina fallet Hora,
Verg. G. 1, 426:sub verni temporis horam,
Hor. A. P. 302;so of spring: genitalis anni,
Plin. 9, 35, 54, § 107:flagrantis atrox hora Caniculae,
Hor. C. 3, 13, 9:(hae latebrae) Incolumem tibi me praestant Septembribus horis,
id. Ep. 1, 16, 16:arbor ipsa omnibus horis pomifera est,
at all seasons, all the year round, Plin. 12, 3, 7, § 15.—Personified: Hōrae, ārum, f., like the Gr. Hôrai, the Hours, daughters of Jupiter and Themis, goddesses that presided over the changes of the seasons and kept watch at the gates of heaven, Ov. M. 2, 26; 118; Val. Fl. 4, 92; Stat. Th. 3, 410; Ov. F. 1, 125; 5, 217; Hyg. Fab. 183.2.Hō̆ra, ae, f. [perh. an old form for hĕra, lady], the wife of Quirinus ( Romulus), who was worshipped as a goddess (called, before her death, Hersilia, Ov. M. 14, 830): Quirine pater, veneror, Horamque Quirini, Enn. ap. Non. 120, 2 (Ann. v. 121 Vahl.):Hora Quirini,
Gell. 13, 22, 2; cf.:pariter cum corpore nomen Mutat Horamque vocat,
Ov. M. 14, 851. -
14 horae
1.hōra, ae (archaic gen. sing. horāï, Lucr. 1, 1016.—In abl. plur. HORABVS, Inscr. Orell. 4601), f. [kindred with hôra; Zend yare, year; ayara, day; orig. for Wosara, from Wear, ver], (lit., a definite space of time, fixed by natural laws; hence, as in Greek).I.An hour.A.Lit. (among the Romans, of varying length, according to the time of year, from sunrise to sunset being reckoned as twelve hours; cf.:2.aetas, aevum, tempus, dies): aestiva,
Mart. 12, 1, 4; cf.:viginti milia passuum horis quinque duntaxat aestivis conficienda sunt,
Veg. Mil. 1, 9:horam amplius jam in demoliendo signo moliebantur,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 43, § 95:īdem eadem possunt horam durare probantes?
Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 82:ternas epistolas in hora dare,
Cic. Fam. 15, 16, 1:in hora saepe ducentos versus dictabat,
Hor. S. 1, 4, 9:horas tres dicere,
Cic. Att. 4, 2, 4:primum dormiit ad horas tres,
id. ib. 10, 13, 1:quatuor horarum spatio antecedens,
Caes. B. C. 3, 79 fin.:quatuor aut plures aulaea premuntur in horas,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 189:non amplius quam septem horas dormiebat,
Suet. Aug. 78:haec (cogitatio) paucis admodum horis magnas etiam causas complectitur,
Quint. 10, 6, 1:paucissimarum horarum consulatus,
Plin. 7, 53, 54, § 181:hora quota est?
what o'clock is it? Hor. S. 2, 6, 44:nuntiare horas,
to tell the time of day, Juv. 10, 216; cf.:cum a puero quaesisset horas,
Plin. 7, 53, 54, § 182; Suet. Dom. 16:si te grata quies et primam somnus in horam Delectat,
Hor. Ep. 1, 17, 6:hora secunda postridie,
Cic. Quint. 6, 25:quartā vix demum exponimur horā,
Hor. S. 1, 5, 23:cum ad te quinta fere hora venissem,
Cic. Pis. 6, 13:ea res acta est, cum hora sexta vix Pompeius perorasset, usque ad horam octavam,
id. Q. Fr. 2, 3, 2:hora fere nona,
id. ib.:hora diei decima fere,
id. Phil. 2, 31, 77:hora fere undecima aut non multo secus,
id. Mil. 10, 29: prima salutantes atque altera continet hora;Exercet raucos tertia causidicos: In quintam varios extendit Roma labores: Sexta quies lassis, septima finis erit, etc.,
Mart. 4, 8:post horam primam noctis.... decem horis nocturnis,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 7, 19:prima noctis,
Suet. Aug. 76:tribus nocturnis,
id. Calig. 50:id quidem in horam diei quintam vel octavam spectare maluerint, i. e.,
towards that part of the heavens where the sun is at the fifth or eighth hour, Plin. 17, 11, 16, § 84; 6, 32, 37, § 202:hic tu fortasse eris diligens, ne quam ego horam de meis legitimis horis remittam,
of the hours allowed to an orator, Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 9, § 25:hora partūs,
the hour of one's birth, natal hour, Suet. Aug. 94:hora natalis,
Hor. C. 2, 17, 19:mortis,
Suet. Dom. 14:cenae,
id. Claud. 8:pugnae,
id. Aug. 16:somni,
id. Dom. 21 et saep.:ad horam venire,
at the hour, punctually, Sen. Q. N. 2, 16:clavum mutare in horas,
every hour, hourly, Hor. S. 2, 7, 10; id. C. 2, 13, 14; id. A. P. 160; Plin. Ep. 3, 17, 3.—Prov.a.In horam vivere, to care only for the passing hour, to live from hand to mouth, Cic. Phil. 5, 9, 25.—b.Omnium horarum homo (amicus, etc.), ready, active, well disposed at all times, Quint. 6, 3, 110 Spald.; Suet. Tib. 42 (for which:B.C. Publicium solitum dicere, P. Mummium cuivis tempori hominem esse,
Cic. de Or. 2, 67, 271).—Transf., in plur.: hōrae, ārum, a horologe, dial, clock:II.cum machinatione quadam moveri aliquid videmus, ut sphaeram, ut horas,
Cic. N. D. 2, 38, 97; Petr. 71; cf.:videt oscitantem judicem, mittentem ad horas,
to look at the clock, Cic. Brut. 54, 200.—Poet., in gen., time, time of year, season:III.tu quamcumque deus tibi fortunaverit horam, Grata sume manu,
Hor. Ep. 1, 11, 22:et mihi forsan, tibi quod negarit, Porriget hora,
id. C. 2, 16, 31:neu fluitem dubiae spe pendulus horae,
id. Ep. 1, 18, 110:qui recte vivendi prorogat horam,
id. ib. 1, 2, 41:extremo veniet mollior hora die,
Prop. 2, 28 (3, 24), 16:numquam te crastina fallet Hora,
Verg. G. 1, 426:sub verni temporis horam,
Hor. A. P. 302;so of spring: genitalis anni,
Plin. 9, 35, 54, § 107:flagrantis atrox hora Caniculae,
Hor. C. 3, 13, 9:(hae latebrae) Incolumem tibi me praestant Septembribus horis,
id. Ep. 1, 16, 16:arbor ipsa omnibus horis pomifera est,
at all seasons, all the year round, Plin. 12, 3, 7, § 15.—Personified: Hōrae, ārum, f., like the Gr. Hôrai, the Hours, daughters of Jupiter and Themis, goddesses that presided over the changes of the seasons and kept watch at the gates of heaven, Ov. M. 2, 26; 118; Val. Fl. 4, 92; Stat. Th. 3, 410; Ov. F. 1, 125; 5, 217; Hyg. Fab. 183.2.Hō̆ra, ae, f. [perh. an old form for hĕra, lady], the wife of Quirinus ( Romulus), who was worshipped as a goddess (called, before her death, Hersilia, Ov. M. 14, 830): Quirine pater, veneror, Horamque Quirini, Enn. ap. Non. 120, 2 (Ann. v. 121 Vahl.):Hora Quirini,
Gell. 13, 22, 2; cf.:pariter cum corpore nomen Mutat Horamque vocat,
Ov. M. 14, 851. -
15 natale
1.nātālis, e, adj. [natus, nascor], of or belonging to one's birth, birth-, natal:II.hunc emortualem facere ex natali die,
Plaut. Ps. 4, 7, 139:nunc huic lenonist hodie natalis dies,
id. ib. 3, 1, 9:natali die tuo scripsisti epistulam ad me,
Cic. Att. 9, 5, 1; cf.:quem ego diem vere natalem hujus urbis aut certe salutarem appellare possum,
Cic. Fl. 40, 102:natalis dies reditūs mei,
id. Att. 3, 20, 1:scit genius natale comes qui, temperat astrum,
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 187:tempus,
Ov. F. 6, 797:lux,
id. Ib. 219:hora,
Hor. C. 2, 17, 19: humus. Ov. P. 2, 9, 78:domus,
Val. Fl. 3, 321:sterilitas,
native, Col. 3, 7: so,natale decus,
Val. Fl. 6, 61.—Subst.: nātālis, is (abl. natali;A.rarely natale,
Luc. 7, 391; Inscr. Orell. 775; 2534; al. cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, p. 228 sq.), m. (sc. dies).Lit., a birthday:2.ad urbem (veni) tertio Non. natali meo,
Cic. Att. 7, 5, 3:natales grate numeras?
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 210:meus est natalis,
Verg. E. 3, 76:sex mihi natales ierant,
Ov. H. 15, 61:Brutorum et Cassi natalibus,
Juv. 5, 37:debemus mehercule natales tuos perinde ac nostros celebrare,
Plin. Ep. 6, 30, 1. On this day it was customary to make offerings, the men to their Genius, and the women to Juno, and to make presents to each other, Ov. Tr. 3, 13, 2; 5, 5, 1; Mart. 8, 64, 14.—Transf., any anniversary, a commemorative festival.—Of the day of the foundation of Rome:B.natali Urbis DCXXXII.,
Plin. 14, 4, 6, § 55.—(In eccl. Lat.) Of a martyr's death: dies in quo, lege functi carneā, in superna regna nascuntur Dei. Paul. Nol. Carm. 21, 171 sq. So of other anniversaries, Paul. Nol. Ep. 20, 3; Aug Serm. 15 de Sanct. init.; id. Serm. 310 in lemm. — Poet.:natalem alicui eripere,
to prevent one's being born, Luc. 7, 390.—In plur.: nātāles, ĭum, m., birth, origin, lineage, extraction, descent, family (postAug.):2.natalium periti,
the casters of nativities, Sen. Q. N. 2, 32, 7:Cornelius Fuscus claris natalibus,
of distinguished birth, Tac. H. 2, 86; cf.:natalium claritas,
id. ib. 1, 49:mulier natalibus clara,
Plin. Ep. 8, 18, 8:quid, Catilina, tuis natalibus atque Cethegi Inveniet quisquam sublimius?
Juv. 8, 231:dedecus natalium velare,
Tac. A. 11, 21: natalibus suis restitui or reddi, to be restored to one's birthright, i. e. to be [p. 1189] freed from slavery (because all men were regarded as originally free), Dig. 40, 11, 2:libertus natalibus redditus,
ib. 38, 2, 3:de restituendis natalibus,
Plin. Ep. 10, 73 (78). —Transf., of things, birth, origin:C.adamanti pallor argenti, et in auro non nisi excellentissimo natales,
i. e. is produced only in gold-mines, Plin. 37, 4, 15, § 56:arborum,
the seed, id. 17, 10, 14, § 73:natales impatientiae,
Tert. Pat. 5:a Pentateucho natales agnitionis supputabuntur,
id. adv. Marc. 1, 10.—nātāle, is, n.:2.et Musis natale in nemore Heliconis adsignant,
the place of birth, Plin. 4, 7, 12, § 25.Nātālis, is, m., a Roman surname, e. g. Antonius Natalis, Tac. A. 15, 50, 54 sq.; 71. -
16 natales
1.nātālis, e, adj. [natus, nascor], of or belonging to one's birth, birth-, natal:II.hunc emortualem facere ex natali die,
Plaut. Ps. 4, 7, 139:nunc huic lenonist hodie natalis dies,
id. ib. 3, 1, 9:natali die tuo scripsisti epistulam ad me,
Cic. Att. 9, 5, 1; cf.:quem ego diem vere natalem hujus urbis aut certe salutarem appellare possum,
Cic. Fl. 40, 102:natalis dies reditūs mei,
id. Att. 3, 20, 1:scit genius natale comes qui, temperat astrum,
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 187:tempus,
Ov. F. 6, 797:lux,
id. Ib. 219:hora,
Hor. C. 2, 17, 19: humus. Ov. P. 2, 9, 78:domus,
Val. Fl. 3, 321:sterilitas,
native, Col. 3, 7: so,natale decus,
Val. Fl. 6, 61.—Subst.: nātālis, is (abl. natali;A.rarely natale,
Luc. 7, 391; Inscr. Orell. 775; 2534; al. cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, p. 228 sq.), m. (sc. dies).Lit., a birthday:2.ad urbem (veni) tertio Non. natali meo,
Cic. Att. 7, 5, 3:natales grate numeras?
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 210:meus est natalis,
Verg. E. 3, 76:sex mihi natales ierant,
Ov. H. 15, 61:Brutorum et Cassi natalibus,
Juv. 5, 37:debemus mehercule natales tuos perinde ac nostros celebrare,
Plin. Ep. 6, 30, 1. On this day it was customary to make offerings, the men to their Genius, and the women to Juno, and to make presents to each other, Ov. Tr. 3, 13, 2; 5, 5, 1; Mart. 8, 64, 14.—Transf., any anniversary, a commemorative festival.—Of the day of the foundation of Rome:B.natali Urbis DCXXXII.,
Plin. 14, 4, 6, § 55.—(In eccl. Lat.) Of a martyr's death: dies in quo, lege functi carneā, in superna regna nascuntur Dei. Paul. Nol. Carm. 21, 171 sq. So of other anniversaries, Paul. Nol. Ep. 20, 3; Aug Serm. 15 de Sanct. init.; id. Serm. 310 in lemm. — Poet.:natalem alicui eripere,
to prevent one's being born, Luc. 7, 390.—In plur.: nātāles, ĭum, m., birth, origin, lineage, extraction, descent, family (postAug.):2.natalium periti,
the casters of nativities, Sen. Q. N. 2, 32, 7:Cornelius Fuscus claris natalibus,
of distinguished birth, Tac. H. 2, 86; cf.:natalium claritas,
id. ib. 1, 49:mulier natalibus clara,
Plin. Ep. 8, 18, 8:quid, Catilina, tuis natalibus atque Cethegi Inveniet quisquam sublimius?
Juv. 8, 231:dedecus natalium velare,
Tac. A. 11, 21: natalibus suis restitui or reddi, to be restored to one's birthright, i. e. to be [p. 1189] freed from slavery (because all men were regarded as originally free), Dig. 40, 11, 2:libertus natalibus redditus,
ib. 38, 2, 3:de restituendis natalibus,
Plin. Ep. 10, 73 (78). —Transf., of things, birth, origin:C.adamanti pallor argenti, et in auro non nisi excellentissimo natales,
i. e. is produced only in gold-mines, Plin. 37, 4, 15, § 56:arborum,
the seed, id. 17, 10, 14, § 73:natales impatientiae,
Tert. Pat. 5:a Pentateucho natales agnitionis supputabuntur,
id. adv. Marc. 1, 10.—nātāle, is, n.:2.et Musis natale in nemore Heliconis adsignant,
the place of birth, Plin. 4, 7, 12, § 25.Nātālis, is, m., a Roman surname, e. g. Antonius Natalis, Tac. A. 15, 50, 54 sq.; 71. -
17 Natalis
1.nātālis, e, adj. [natus, nascor], of or belonging to one's birth, birth-, natal:II.hunc emortualem facere ex natali die,
Plaut. Ps. 4, 7, 139:nunc huic lenonist hodie natalis dies,
id. ib. 3, 1, 9:natali die tuo scripsisti epistulam ad me,
Cic. Att. 9, 5, 1; cf.:quem ego diem vere natalem hujus urbis aut certe salutarem appellare possum,
Cic. Fl. 40, 102:natalis dies reditūs mei,
id. Att. 3, 20, 1:scit genius natale comes qui, temperat astrum,
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 187:tempus,
Ov. F. 6, 797:lux,
id. Ib. 219:hora,
Hor. C. 2, 17, 19: humus. Ov. P. 2, 9, 78:domus,
Val. Fl. 3, 321:sterilitas,
native, Col. 3, 7: so,natale decus,
Val. Fl. 6, 61.—Subst.: nātālis, is (abl. natali;A.rarely natale,
Luc. 7, 391; Inscr. Orell. 775; 2534; al. cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, p. 228 sq.), m. (sc. dies).Lit., a birthday:2.ad urbem (veni) tertio Non. natali meo,
Cic. Att. 7, 5, 3:natales grate numeras?
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 210:meus est natalis,
Verg. E. 3, 76:sex mihi natales ierant,
Ov. H. 15, 61:Brutorum et Cassi natalibus,
Juv. 5, 37:debemus mehercule natales tuos perinde ac nostros celebrare,
Plin. Ep. 6, 30, 1. On this day it was customary to make offerings, the men to their Genius, and the women to Juno, and to make presents to each other, Ov. Tr. 3, 13, 2; 5, 5, 1; Mart. 8, 64, 14.—Transf., any anniversary, a commemorative festival.—Of the day of the foundation of Rome:B.natali Urbis DCXXXII.,
Plin. 14, 4, 6, § 55.—(In eccl. Lat.) Of a martyr's death: dies in quo, lege functi carneā, in superna regna nascuntur Dei. Paul. Nol. Carm. 21, 171 sq. So of other anniversaries, Paul. Nol. Ep. 20, 3; Aug Serm. 15 de Sanct. init.; id. Serm. 310 in lemm. — Poet.:natalem alicui eripere,
to prevent one's being born, Luc. 7, 390.—In plur.: nātāles, ĭum, m., birth, origin, lineage, extraction, descent, family (postAug.):2.natalium periti,
the casters of nativities, Sen. Q. N. 2, 32, 7:Cornelius Fuscus claris natalibus,
of distinguished birth, Tac. H. 2, 86; cf.:natalium claritas,
id. ib. 1, 49:mulier natalibus clara,
Plin. Ep. 8, 18, 8:quid, Catilina, tuis natalibus atque Cethegi Inveniet quisquam sublimius?
Juv. 8, 231:dedecus natalium velare,
Tac. A. 11, 21: natalibus suis restitui or reddi, to be restored to one's birthright, i. e. to be [p. 1189] freed from slavery (because all men were regarded as originally free), Dig. 40, 11, 2:libertus natalibus redditus,
ib. 38, 2, 3:de restituendis natalibus,
Plin. Ep. 10, 73 (78). —Transf., of things, birth, origin:C.adamanti pallor argenti, et in auro non nisi excellentissimo natales,
i. e. is produced only in gold-mines, Plin. 37, 4, 15, § 56:arborum,
the seed, id. 17, 10, 14, § 73:natales impatientiae,
Tert. Pat. 5:a Pentateucho natales agnitionis supputabuntur,
id. adv. Marc. 1, 10.—nātāle, is, n.:2.et Musis natale in nemore Heliconis adsignant,
the place of birth, Plin. 4, 7, 12, § 25.Nātālis, is, m., a Roman surname, e. g. Antonius Natalis, Tac. A. 15, 50, 54 sq.; 71. -
18 natalis
1.nātālis, e, adj. [natus, nascor], of or belonging to one's birth, birth-, natal:II.hunc emortualem facere ex natali die,
Plaut. Ps. 4, 7, 139:nunc huic lenonist hodie natalis dies,
id. ib. 3, 1, 9:natali die tuo scripsisti epistulam ad me,
Cic. Att. 9, 5, 1; cf.:quem ego diem vere natalem hujus urbis aut certe salutarem appellare possum,
Cic. Fl. 40, 102:natalis dies reditūs mei,
id. Att. 3, 20, 1:scit genius natale comes qui, temperat astrum,
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 187:tempus,
Ov. F. 6, 797:lux,
id. Ib. 219:hora,
Hor. C. 2, 17, 19: humus. Ov. P. 2, 9, 78:domus,
Val. Fl. 3, 321:sterilitas,
native, Col. 3, 7: so,natale decus,
Val. Fl. 6, 61.—Subst.: nātālis, is (abl. natali;A.rarely natale,
Luc. 7, 391; Inscr. Orell. 775; 2534; al. cf. Neue, Formenl. 1, p. 228 sq.), m. (sc. dies).Lit., a birthday:2.ad urbem (veni) tertio Non. natali meo,
Cic. Att. 7, 5, 3:natales grate numeras?
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 210:meus est natalis,
Verg. E. 3, 76:sex mihi natales ierant,
Ov. H. 15, 61:Brutorum et Cassi natalibus,
Juv. 5, 37:debemus mehercule natales tuos perinde ac nostros celebrare,
Plin. Ep. 6, 30, 1. On this day it was customary to make offerings, the men to their Genius, and the women to Juno, and to make presents to each other, Ov. Tr. 3, 13, 2; 5, 5, 1; Mart. 8, 64, 14.—Transf., any anniversary, a commemorative festival.—Of the day of the foundation of Rome:B.natali Urbis DCXXXII.,
Plin. 14, 4, 6, § 55.—(In eccl. Lat.) Of a martyr's death: dies in quo, lege functi carneā, in superna regna nascuntur Dei. Paul. Nol. Carm. 21, 171 sq. So of other anniversaries, Paul. Nol. Ep. 20, 3; Aug Serm. 15 de Sanct. init.; id. Serm. 310 in lemm. — Poet.:natalem alicui eripere,
to prevent one's being born, Luc. 7, 390.—In plur.: nātāles, ĭum, m., birth, origin, lineage, extraction, descent, family (postAug.):2.natalium periti,
the casters of nativities, Sen. Q. N. 2, 32, 7:Cornelius Fuscus claris natalibus,
of distinguished birth, Tac. H. 2, 86; cf.:natalium claritas,
id. ib. 1, 49:mulier natalibus clara,
Plin. Ep. 8, 18, 8:quid, Catilina, tuis natalibus atque Cethegi Inveniet quisquam sublimius?
Juv. 8, 231:dedecus natalium velare,
Tac. A. 11, 21: natalibus suis restitui or reddi, to be restored to one's birthright, i. e. to be [p. 1189] freed from slavery (because all men were regarded as originally free), Dig. 40, 11, 2:libertus natalibus redditus,
ib. 38, 2, 3:de restituendis natalibus,
Plin. Ep. 10, 73 (78). —Transf., of things, birth, origin:C.adamanti pallor argenti, et in auro non nisi excellentissimo natales,
i. e. is produced only in gold-mines, Plin. 37, 4, 15, § 56:arborum,
the seed, id. 17, 10, 14, § 73:natales impatientiae,
Tert. Pat. 5:a Pentateucho natales agnitionis supputabuntur,
id. adv. Marc. 1, 10.—nātāle, is, n.:2.et Musis natale in nemore Heliconis adsignant,
the place of birth, Plin. 4, 7, 12, § 25.Nātālis, is, m., a Roman surname, e. g. Antonius Natalis, Tac. A. 15, 50, 54 sq.; 71. -
19 retourner
retourner [ʀ(ə)tuʀne]➭ TABLE 1━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. transitive verba. ( = mettre dans l'autre sens) [+ caisse, seau] to turn upside down ; [+ matelas, carte, omelette] to turn overb. [+ terre] to turn overc. ( = mettre l'intérieur à l'extérieur) [+ parapluie, sac, vêtement] to turn inside out ; [+ col] to turnd. ( = orienter dans le sens opposé) [+ mot, phrase] to turn rounde. ( = renvoyer) [+ lettre, marchandise] to returnf. ( = bouleverser) [+ maison, pièce] to turn upside down ; [+ personne] to shake• il a tout retourné dans la maison pour retrouver ce livre he turned the whole house upside down to find that bookg. ( = tourner plusieurs fois) retourner une idée dans sa tête to turn an idea over in one's mind2. intransitive verba. ( = aller à nouveau) to return, to go back• retourner en Italie/à la mer to return or go back to Italy/to the seaside• retourner en arrière or sur ses pas to turn back• il retourne demain à son travail/à l'école he's going back to work/to school tomorrow4. reflexive verba. [personne couchée, automobiliste, véhicule] to turn over ; [bateau] to capsize• il doit se retourner dans sa tombe ! he must be turning in his grave!b. ( = tourner la tête) to turn round• tout le monde se retournait sur lui or sur son passage everyone turned round as he went byc. [situation] to be turned round• se retourner contre qn [personne] to turn against sb ; [acte, situation] to backfire on sb ; ( = poursuivre en justice) to take court action against sb━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━* * *ʀ(ə)tuʀne
1.
verbe transitif (+ v avoir)1) ( changer de côté) to turn [something] over [seau, steak]; to turn [matelas]2) ( mettre à l'envers) to turn [something] inside out [vêtement, sac]3) ( tourner à plusieurs reprises) to turn over [terre]; to toss [salade, foin]retourner une idée dans sa tête — fig to turn an idea over in one's mind
4) ( changer d'orientation) to return [compliment, critique]5) ( bouleverser) [personne] to turn [something] upside down [maison]; [nouvelle, spectacle] to shake [personne]je suis encore tout retourné — (colloq) I'm still quite shaken
6) ( renvoyer) to send [something] back, to return [colis, lettre]
2.
verbe intransitif (+ v être) to go back (à to), to return (à to)
3.
se retourner verbe pronominal1) ( tourner la tête) to turn aroundpartir sans se retourner — lit, fig to leave without a backward glance
elle est tellement grande que tout le monde se retourne sur son passage — she's so tall that everybody turns to look as she goes past
2) to turn over3) ( s'organiser) to get organized4) ( prendre un tour inverse)se retourner contre quelqu'un — [personne, animal] to turn against somebody; [situation, agissements] to backfire on somebody
5) ( se tordre)6) ( repartir)
4.
verbe impersonnel••retourner quelqu'un comme une crêpe (colloq) or un gant — (colloq) to make somebody change their mind completely
* * *ʀ(ə)tuʀne1. vt1) (= changer de côté) [matelas, crêpe] to turn overElle a retourné la crêpe. — She turned the pancake over.
2) (= renverser) to turn upside downIl a retourné la poubelle. — He turned the bin upside down.
3) [sac, vêtement] to turn inside outretourner sa veste fig — to change sides, to go over to the other side
4) [terre, sol, foin] to turn over5) [arme] to turn roundretourner une arme contre soi — to turn a weapon against o.s.
6) [argument] to turn round7) (= émouvoir) [personne] to shake8) (= renvoyer)2. vi(= aller, revenir)retourner à [endroit] — to go back to, to return to, [état, activité] to return to, to go back to
3. vb impers(= s'agir)* * *retourner verb table: aimerA vtr (+ v avoir)1 ( changer de côté) to turn [sth] over [seau, caisse, steak, poisson]; to turn [matelas]; retourner une carte à jouer ( figure visible) to turn up a playing card; ( figure pas visible) to put a playing card face down; retourner un tableau contre le mur to turn a painting to the wall;2 ( mettre à l'envers) to turn [sth] inside out [vêtement, sac]; Cout to turn [vêtement, coussin, col]; un coup de vent a retourné son parapluie a gust of wind turned his umbrella inside out; il a retourné ses poches à la recherche de quelques sous he turned his pockets inside out looking for some change;3 ( tourner à plusieurs reprises) to turn over [terre]; to toss [salade, foin]; retourner une idée or pensée dans sa tête to turn an idea ou a thought over in one's mind;4 ( changer d'orientation) to return [compliment, critique]; retourner la situation to reverse the situation; elle a retourné le pistolet contre elle-même she then turned the gun on herself; si tu retournes l'argument contre lui if you turn his own argument against him;5 ( bouleverser) [personne] to turn [sth] upside down [maison, pièce]; [nouvelle, spectacle] to shake [personne]; elle a retourné toute la maison pour retrouver la facture she turned the house upside down trying to find the bill; je suis encore tout retourné○ I'm still quite shaken;6 ( renvoyer) to send [sth] back, to return [colis, lettre, marchandise].B vi (+ v être)1 ( aller à nouveau) to go back, to return (à to); retourner dans son village natal to return to the village where one was born; retourner chez le dentiste/médecin pour une nouvelle visite to go back to the dentist's/doctor's for another visit; retourner à l'école/au bureau to go back to school/to the office; je n'y suis jamais retourné depuis I've never been back ou never returned since;2 ( à un état antérieur) to go back (à to), to return (à to); animal qui est retourné à l'état sauvage animal that has gone back ou returned to its wild state; retourner à ses premières amours liter to return to one's first love; il est retourné à son laboratoire et à ses expériences he went back to his laboratory and to his experiments; les biens retournent à leur légitime possesseur the property reverts to its rightful owner.C se retourner vpr1 ( tourner la tête) to turn around, to turn round GB; je l'ai appelée et elle s'est retournée I called her and she turned around; partir sans se retourner lit, fig to leave without once looking back; elle est tellement grande que tout le monde se retourne sur son passage she's so tall that everybody turns to look as she goes past;2 ( changer de position) [personne couchée] to turn over; [véhicule, automobiliste] to turn over, to overturn; se retourner sur le dos/ventre to turn over onto one's back/stomach; il n'a pas arrêté de se retourner (dans son lit) pendant toute la nuit he kept tossing and turning all night long; la voiture s'est retournée dans un fossé the car overturned into a ditch;3 ( s'organiser) to get organized; ça lui laissera le temps de se retourner it'll give her time to sort things out ou to get organized;4 ( prendre un tour inverse) se retourner contre qn [personne, animal] to turn against sb; [situation, agissements] to backfire on sb; se retourner contre ses alliés to turn on one's allies; ses arguments se sont retournés contre lui his arguments backfired on him;5 ( se tordre) elle s'est retourné le doigt/un ongle she bent back her finger/a nail;D v impers j'aimerais savoir de quoi il retourne I'd like to know what's going on.retourner qn comme une crêpe○ or un gant○ to make sb change their mind completely.[rəturne] verbe transitif (auxiliaire avoir)1. [orienter dans le sens contraire] to turn round ou around (separable)retourner une arme contre ou sur quelqu'un to turn a weapon on somebodyje lui ai retourné son ou le compliment I returned the compliment2. [renvoyer - colis, lettre] to send back (separable)3. [mettre à l'envers - literie] to turn round ou around ; [ - carte à jouer] to turn up (separable) ; [ - champ, paille] to turn over (separable) ; [ - verre] to turn upside down ; [ - grillade] to turn over (separable) ; [ - gant, poche] to turn inside out4. [mélanger - salade] to toss5. [fouiller - maison, pièce] to turn upside down6. [examiner - pensée]7. (familier) [émouvoir]————————[rəturne] verbe intransitif (auxiliaire être)si tu étais à ma place, tu retournerais le voir? if you were me, would you (ever) go and see him again?je retournai la voir une dernière fois I paid her one ou my last visitretourner à sa place [sur son siège] to go back to one's seat————————[rəturne] verbe impersonnelpeut-on savoir de quoi il retourne? what is it all about?, what exactly is going on?————————retourner à verbe plus préposition————————se retourner verbe pronominal intransitif1. [tourner la tête] to turn round2. [se mettre sur l'autre face] to turn overse retourner sur le dos/ventre to turn over on one's back/stomach3. [se renverser - auto, tracteur] to overturn, to turn over4. [réagir] to sort things outa. [de décider] they won't give me time to make a decisionb. [de me reprendre] they won't give me time to sort things outle lendemain, la situation s'était retournée the following day, the situation had changed beyond recognition6. [déplacement]s'en retourner [partir]a. to depart, to leaveb. [rentrer] to make one's way back————————se retourner verbe pronominal transitifse retourner un ongle/doigt to twist a nail/finger————————se retourner contre verbe pronominal plus préposition1. [agir contre] -
20 genethliace
gĕnethlĭăcus, a, um, adj., = genethliakos, of or belonging to one's natal hour or nativity, genethliacal.I.adj.:II.ratio,
the art of calculating nativities, Arn. 2, 116; cf. in the foll.—Subst.A.gene-thliacus, i, m., a calculator of nativities, Gell. 14, 1, 1.—B.genethliace, ēs, f., the art of calculating nativities, genethliacs, Mart. Cap. 3, § 228; 9, § 894.—C.Gene-thliacon, i, n., a birth-day poem, the title of a poem by Statius, Stat. S. 2, 7.
- 1
- 2
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