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21 revelar un secreto
(v.) = spill + secret, spill + the beans, tell + a secret, let + the cat out of the bag, blow + the gaffEx. Journalists are worried about spilling military secrets, undermining national security, and consorting with the enemy.Ex. Native speakers of English use idioms such as 'put your foot down' and ' spill the beans' to label events that are not described literally by the words that make up the idioms.Ex. Fully 50% of the respondents to my survey say the person to whom they're most likely to tell a secret is their significant other.Ex. Manic-depressives who are aware of their mental illness usually take great pains not to let the cat out of the bag, fearing it will damage their career and poison relationships.Ex. It was not idealism but plain fear, plus a peasant's nose for security, which led to Vladimir's decision to blow the gaff.* * *(v.) = spill + secret, spill + the beans, tell + a secret, let + the cat out of the bag, blow + the gaffEx: Journalists are worried about spilling military secrets, undermining national security, and consorting with the enemy.
Ex: Native speakers of English use idioms such as 'put your foot down' and ' spill the beans' to label events that are not described literally by the words that make up the idioms.Ex: Fully 50% of the respondents to my survey say the person to whom they're most likely to tell a secret is their significant other.Ex: Manic-depressives who are aware of their mental illness usually take great pains not to let the cat out of the bag, fearing it will damage their career and poison relationships.Ex: It was not idealism but plain fear, plus a peasant's nose for security, which led to Vladimir's decision to blow the gaff. -
22 tirar de la manta
to let the cat out of the bag* * *to let the cat out of the bag, give the game away* * *(v.) = let + the cat out of the bag, blow + the gaff, spill + the beansEx. Manic-depressives who are aware of their mental illness usually take great pains not to let the cat out of the bag, fearing it will damage their career and poison relationships.Ex. It was not idealism but plain fear, plus a peasant's nose for security, which led to Vladimir's decision to blow the gaff.Ex. Native speakers of English use idioms such as 'put your foot down' and ' spill the beans' to label events that are not described literally by the words that make up the idioms.* * *(v.) = let + the cat out of the bag, blow + the gaff, spill + the beansEx: Manic-depressives who are aware of their mental illness usually take great pains not to let the cat out of the bag, fearing it will damage their career and poison relationships.
Ex: It was not idealism but plain fear, plus a peasant's nose for security, which led to Vladimir's decision to blow the gaff.Ex: Native speakers of English use idioms such as 'put your foot down' and ' spill the beans' to label events that are not described literally by the words that make up the idioms. -
23 NNS
1) Компьютерная техника: Next Naming System2) Военный термин: Newport Naval Station4) Химия: Net Nitrogen Synthesis5) Сокращение: National Natality Survey, National Newspaper Syndicate, Newport News Shipbuilding, Non Native Speaker6) Вычислительная техника: Netware Named Services (Novel, Netware)7) Сетевые технологии: NetWare Name Service, NetWare Naming Service, служба имен NetWare, служба именования в ОС NetWare8) Автоматика: near-net shape9) Должность: Non Native Speakers10) NYSE. Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock, Inc. -
24 Grammar
I think that the failure to offer a precise account of the notion "grammar" is not just a superficial defect in linguistic theory that can be remedied by adding one more definition. It seems to me that until this notion is clarified, no part of linguistic theory can achieve anything like a satisfactory development.... I have been discussing a grammar of a particular language here as analogous to a particular scientific theory, dealing with its subject matter (the set of sentences of this language) much as embryology or physics deals with its subject matter. (Chomsky, 1964, p. 213)Obviously, every speaker of a language has mastered and internalized a generative grammar that expresses his knowledge of his language. This is not to say that he is aware of the rules of grammar or even that he can become aware of them, or that his statements about his intuitive knowledge of his language are necessarily accurate. (Chomsky, 1965, p. 8)Much effort has been devoted to showing that the class of possible transformations can be substantially reduced without loss of descriptive power through the discovery of quite general conditions that all such rules and the representations they operate on and form must meet.... [The] transformational rules, at least for a substantial core grammar, can be reduced to the single rule, "Move alpha" (that is, "move any category anywhere"). (Mehler, Walker & Garrett, 1982, p. 21)4) The Relationship of Transformational Grammar to Semantics and to Human Performancehe implications of assuming a semantic memory for what we might call "generative psycholinguistics" are: that dichotomous judgments of semantic well-formedness versus anomaly are not essential or inherent to language performance; that the transformational component of a grammar is the part most relevant to performance models; that a generative grammar's role should be viewed as restricted to language production, whereas sentence understanding should be treated as a problem of extracting a cognitive representation of a text's message; that until some theoretical notion of cognitive representation is incorporated into linguistic conceptions, they are unlikely to provide either powerful language-processing programs or psychologically relevant theories.Although these implications conflict with the way others have viewed the relationship of transformational grammars to semantics and to human performance, they do not eliminate the importance of such grammars to psychologists, an importance stressed in, and indeed largely created by, the work of Chomsky. It is precisely because of a growing interdependence between such linguistic theory and psychological performance models that their relationship needs to be clarified. (Quillian, 1968, p. 260)here are some terminological distinctions that are crucial to explain, or else confusions can easily arise. In the formal study of grammar, a language is defined as a set of sentences, possibly infinite, where each sentence is a string of symbols or words. One can think of each sentence as having several representations linked together: one for its sound pattern, one for its meaning, one for the string of words constituting it, possibly others for other data structures such as the "surface structure" and "deep structure" that are held to mediate the mapping between sound and meaning. Because no finite system can store an infinite number of sentences, and because humans in particular are clearly not pullstring dolls that emit sentences from a finite stored list, one must explain human language abilities by imputing to them a grammar, which in the technical sense is a finite rule system, or programme, or circuit design, capable of generating and recognizing the sentences of a particular language. This "mental grammar" or "psychogrammar" is the neural system that allows us to speak and understand the possible word sequences of our native tongue. A grammar for a specific language is obviously acquired by a human during childhood, but there must be neural circuitry that actually carries out the acquisition process in the child, and this circuitry may be called the language faculty or language acquisition device. An important part of the language faculty is universal grammar, an implementation of a set of principles or constraints that govern the possible form of any human grammar. (Pinker, 1996, p. 263)A grammar of language L is essentially a theory of L. Any scientific theory is based on a finite number of observations, and it seeks to relate the observed phenomena and to predict new phenomena by constructing general laws in terms of hypothetical constructs.... Similarly a grammar of English is based on a finite corpus of utterances (observations), and it will contain certain grammatical rules (laws) stated in terms of the particular phonemes, phrases, etc., of English (hypothetical constructs). These rules express structural relations among the sentences of the corpus and the infinite number of sentences generated by the grammar beyond the corpus (predictions). (Chomsky, 1957, p. 49)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Grammar
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25 sayable
выразимый словами - he felt a great deal that was not * он чувствовал много такого, для чего не находил слов произносимый - certain sounds are * only by native speakers некоторые звуки могут произносить только местные уроженцы -
26 sayable
[ʹseıəb(ə)l] a1. выразимый словамиhe felt a great deal that was not sayable - он чувствовал много такого, для чего не находил слов
2. произносимыйcertain sounds are sayable only by native speakers - некоторые звуки могут произносить только местные уроженцы
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27 die (out)
Общая лексика: передохнуть (I'm adding this for non-native speakers of Russian, just in case. This is from дохнуть ( the stress is on ДОХ), as opposed to передохНУТЬ (meaning to take a break). Example: Чтоб вы все передохли! - I) -
28 unsure of oneself, lacking confidence or assurance, unassured, unassertive
Общая лексика: неуверенный в себе ('Diffident' is a perfect word, but it appears to be often unknown to native speakers.)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > unsure of oneself, lacking confidence or assurance, unassured, unassertive
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29 выучить английский язык до уровня носителей языка
Linguistics: acquire English to the level of native speakersУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > выучить английский язык до уровня носителей языка
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30 некоторые звуки могут произносить только местные уроженцы
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > некоторые звуки могут произносить только местные уроженцы
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31 неуверенный в себе
1) General subject: diffident, unsure of oneself, lacking confidence or assurance, unassured, unassertive ('Diffident' is a perfect word, but it appears to be often unknown to native speakers.)2) Aviation medicine: underconfident (о человеке)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > неуверенный в себе
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32 передохнуть
1) General subject: breathe, spell, take breath, take breath Or rest, fetch breath, gather breath, take breath, take five, take a breath (Take a breath, Mike.), Take two (также take five), sit down for a moment, make a truce, die (out) (I'm adding this for non-native speakers of Russian, just in case. This is from дохнуть ( the stress is on ДОХ), as opposed to передохНУТЬ (meaning to take a break). Example: Чтоб вы все передохли! - I)2) Colloquial: take a break3) British English: take a breather4) Jargon: breeze off, cool it5) American English: take a rest6) Makarov: rest oneself, draw a breath, draw breath -
33 albur
m.1 bleak (fish).2 chance.3 pun (juego de palabras). (Mexican Spanish, Dominican Spanish)4 hazard, fortune, luck, chance.5 double meaning, play on words, double entendre.* * *1 chance* * *SM1) Esp (=pez) bleak2) (=riesgo) chance, risk3) Méx (=juego de palabras) pun4) Caribe (=mentira) lie* * *2) (Méx) ( doble sentido) double meaning; ( juego de palabras) play on words, pun* * *2) (Méx) ( doble sentido) double meaning; ( juego de palabras) play on words, pun* * *A ( liter)(azar, riesgo): dejar algo al albur to leave sth to chancecorren el albur de perderlo they run the risk of losing itB (pez) bleak, dace* * *albur nm1. [pez] bleak2. [azar] chance;dejar algo al albur to leave sth to chance3. Méx, RDom [juego de palabras] pun;[doble sentido] double meaningALBURESAlbures are a distinctive form of punning which originated in the speech of the (male) lower-classes of Mexico City, but are now in much wider use. They are used in rapid-fire repartee, chiefly of a sexual nature, which can be stretched into extensive exchanges as each participant tries to top the last speaker's remark. They typically involve use of numerous synonyms for the sexual organs, and one frequent theme of albures is the attempt to insinuate that one's adversary is the passive partner in a homosexual act. Many of the puns have passed into everyday speech, and can cause unintended hilarity. For example, the apparently innocent word “setecientas” (seven hundred) can be understood to mean “you sit on it”. Non-native speakers, no matter how fluent their Spanish, are unlikely to make much sense of an exchange of albures, let alone be able to participate. Indeed, they can be largely incomprehensible even to many Mexicans.* * *m1 fate, chance2 ZO dace* * *albur nm1) : chance, risk -
34 lettre
lettre [lεtʀ]1. feminine nouna. ( = caractère) letterb. ( = missive) letter• Anne Lemoine, féministe avant la lettre Anne Lemoine, a feminist before the term existed2. plural feminine nouna. ( = littérature) les (belles) lettres literatureb. (à l'université, au collège) arts subjects ; ( = français) French• lettres modernes ( = discipline) French3. compounds* * *lɛtʀ
1.
1) ( signe graphique) letterlettre majuscule or capitale — capital letter
en toutes lettres — lit in full
c'est écrit en toutes lettres dans le rapport — fig it's down in black and white in the report
les Romains furent des urbanistes avant la lettre — the Romans were city planners before the concept was invented
2) ( écrit adressé) letter3) ( contenu d'un texte) letterà la lettre, au pied de la lettre — [appliquer, suivre] to the letter
2.
lettres nom féminin plurielétudiant en lettres — ( français) student reading French GB, student majoring in French US; ( plus général) arts GB ou humanities US student
docteur ès lettres — ≈ Doctor of Philosophy
2) ( culture littéraire) letters•Phrasal Verbs:••passer comme une lettre à la poste — (colloq) [réforme] to go through smoothly; [excuse] to be accepted without any questions
* * *lɛtʀ1. nf1) [alphabet] letteren lettres majuscules; en lettres capitales — in capital letters, in capitals
2) (= courrier) letteravant la lettre — before the term existed, before the term was coined
..., écologiste avant la lettre —..., an ecologist before the term existed,..., an ecologist before the term was coined
2. lettres nfpl1) (culture)2) (= littérature) literature sg3) ÉDUCATION arts subjects* * *A nf1 ( signe graphique) letter; les lettres de l'alphabet the letters of the alphabet; lettre minuscule small letter; lettre majuscule or capitale capital letter; lettre d'imprimerie block letter; en lettres majuscules in capital letters; un mot de trois lettres a three-letter word; en toutes lettres lit in full; écrire la date/somme en toutes lettres write the date/sum out in full; c'est écrit en toutes lettres dans le rapport fig it's down in black and white in the report; c'est écrit en grosses lettres it's written in big letters; les Romains furent des urbanistes avant la lettre the Romans were city planners before they were invented; ⇒ cinq;2 ( écrit adressé) letter; une lettre de félicitations/remerciements/condoléances a letter of congratulations /thanks/condolence; lettre d'accompagnement covering letter; lettre de réclamation letter of complaint; lettre de rupture letter ending a relationship; une lettre de recommandation/candidature/démission a letter of recommendation/application/resignation; lettre anonyme/de menaces anonymous/threatening letter; une petite lettre a note;3 ( contenu d'un texte) letter; l'esprit et la lettre d'un texte the spirit and the letter of a text; à la lettre, au pied de la lettre [appliquer, suivre] to the letter; il prend à la lettre tout ce qu'on lui dit he takes everything you say literally.B lettres nfpl1 Univ, Scol ( français) French; ( plus général) arts GB, humanities US; étudiant en lettres ( français) student reading French GB, student majoring in French US; ( plus général) arts GB ou humanities US student; faculté de lettres arts faculty GB, school of the humanities; être en lettres, faire des études de lettres to do an arts degree, to study humanities US; professeur de lettres teacher of French (for native speakers); docteur ès lettres ≈ Doctor of Philosophy;2 ( culture littéraire) letters; homme/femme de lettres man/woman of letters; les gens de lettres writers; avoir des lettres to be well read; le monde des lettres the literary world.lettre de cachet lettre de cachet; lettre de cadrage Pol scoping document (outlining issues for inclusion in the next budget); lettre capitulaire Édition decorated initial; lettre de change bill of exchange; lettre de château thank you letter, bread and butter letter; lettre circulaire circular; lettre de crédit letter of credit; lettre d'intention letter of intention; lettre ornée illuminated letter; lettre ouverte open letter (à to); lettre recommandée registered letter; lettre de voiture Comm waybill, consignment note; lettres classiques French and Latin; lettres de créance credentials; lettres modernes French language and literature; lettres de noblesse letters patent of nobility; avoir ses lettres de noblesse fig to have an illustrious history; gagner ses lettres de noblesse fig to win one's spurs; lettres patentes letters patent; lettres supérieures preparatory class for entrance exam for the École Normale Supérieure.passer comme une lettre à la poste○ [décision, réforme] to go through smoothly ou without a hitch; [excuse] to be accepted without any questions; un événement à graver en lettres d'or an event to remember; écrit en lettres de feu written in letters of fire; devenir lettre morte to become a dead letter; rester lettre morte to go unheeded.[lɛtr] nom fémininA.[CARACTÈRE]1. [d'un alphabet] letterlettre minuscule small ou lowercase letteren lettres de feu/d'or/de sang: leur révolte est écrite en lettres de feu dans ma mémoire their revolt is branded on my memoryleur abnégation est gravée en lettres d'or dans nos cœurs their self-sacrifice is engraved indelibly in our heartscette page d'histoire est imprimée en lettres de sang dans notre mémoire this page of history has left a bloody impression in our memoryB.[ÉCRIT]1. [correspondance] letterpas de lettres pour moi? no mail ou no letters for me?lettre d'amour/de menace love/threatening letterb. [avec valeur déclarée] registered letterlettre de remerciements letter of thanks, thank-you lettera. (familier) [boisson, aliment] to go down a treatb. [demande, mesure] to go off without a hitch, to go off smoothly2. BANQUE3. DROIT4. HISTOIRE5. POLITIQUE6. PRESSE7. LITTÉRATURE [titre]C.[SENS STRICT] letterrespecter la lettre de la loi to respect ou observe the letter of the lawrester lettre morte to go unheeded, to be disregarded————————lettres nom féminin pluriel1. ÉDUCATIONles lettres arts subjects, the arts, the humanitieslettres classiques classics, Latin and Greeklettres supérieures preparatory class (leading to the École Normale Supérieure and lasting two years)2. LITTÉRATUREun homme/une femme de lettres a man/a woman of letters————————à la lettre locution adverbiale,au pied de la lettre locution adverbiale————————avant la lettre locution adverbialeen toutes lettres locution adverbiale1. [entièrement] in fullc'est écrit en toutes lettres dans le contrat it's written in black and white ou it's spelt out plainly in the contract -
35 lettré
lettre [lεtʀ]1. feminine nouna. ( = caractère) letterb. ( = missive) letter• Anne Lemoine, féministe avant la lettre Anne Lemoine, a feminist before the term existed2. plural feminine nouna. ( = littérature) les (belles) lettres literatureb. (à l'université, au collège) arts subjects ; ( = français) French• lettres modernes ( = discipline) French3. compounds* * *lɛtʀ
1.
1) ( signe graphique) letterlettre majuscule or capitale — capital letter
en toutes lettres — lit in full
c'est écrit en toutes lettres dans le rapport — fig it's down in black and white in the report
les Romains furent des urbanistes avant la lettre — the Romans were city planners before the concept was invented
2) ( écrit adressé) letter3) ( contenu d'un texte) letterà la lettre, au pied de la lettre — [appliquer, suivre] to the letter
2.
lettres nom féminin plurielétudiant en lettres — ( français) student reading French GB, student majoring in French US; ( plus général) arts GB ou humanities US student
docteur ès lettres — ≈ Doctor of Philosophy
2) ( culture littéraire) letters•Phrasal Verbs:••passer comme une lettre à la poste — (colloq) [réforme] to go through smoothly; [excuse] to be accepted without any questions
* * *lɛtʀ1. nf1) [alphabet] letteren lettres majuscules; en lettres capitales — in capital letters, in capitals
2) (= courrier) letteravant la lettre — before the term existed, before the term was coined
..., écologiste avant la lettre —..., an ecologist before the term existed,..., an ecologist before the term was coined
2. lettres nfpl1) (culture)2) (= littérature) literature sg3) ÉDUCATION arts subjects* * *A nf1 ( signe graphique) letter; les lettres de l'alphabet the letters of the alphabet; lettre minuscule small letter; lettre majuscule or capitale capital letter; lettre d'imprimerie block letter; en lettres majuscules in capital letters; un mot de trois lettres a three-letter word; en toutes lettres lit in full; écrire la date/somme en toutes lettres write the date/sum out in full; c'est écrit en toutes lettres dans le rapport fig it's down in black and white in the report; c'est écrit en grosses lettres it's written in big letters; les Romains furent des urbanistes avant la lettre the Romans were city planners before they were invented; ⇒ cinq;2 ( écrit adressé) letter; une lettre de félicitations/remerciements/condoléances a letter of congratulations /thanks/condolence; lettre d'accompagnement covering letter; lettre de réclamation letter of complaint; lettre de rupture letter ending a relationship; une lettre de recommandation/candidature/démission a letter of recommendation/application/resignation; lettre anonyme/de menaces anonymous/threatening letter; une petite lettre a note;3 ( contenu d'un texte) letter; l'esprit et la lettre d'un texte the spirit and the letter of a text; à la lettre, au pied de la lettre [appliquer, suivre] to the letter; il prend à la lettre tout ce qu'on lui dit he takes everything you say literally.B lettres nfpl1 Univ, Scol ( français) French; ( plus général) arts GB, humanities US; étudiant en lettres ( français) student reading French GB, student majoring in French US; ( plus général) arts GB ou humanities US student; faculté de lettres arts faculty GB, school of the humanities; être en lettres, faire des études de lettres to do an arts degree, to study humanities US; professeur de lettres teacher of French (for native speakers); docteur ès lettres ≈ Doctor of Philosophy;2 ( culture littéraire) letters; homme/femme de lettres man/woman of letters; les gens de lettres writers; avoir des lettres to be well read; le monde des lettres the literary world.lettre de cachet lettre de cachet; lettre de cadrage Pol scoping document (outlining issues for inclusion in the next budget); lettre capitulaire Édition decorated initial; lettre de change bill of exchange; lettre de château thank you letter, bread and butter letter; lettre circulaire circular; lettre de crédit letter of credit; lettre d'intention letter of intention; lettre ornée illuminated letter; lettre ouverte open letter (à to); lettre recommandée registered letter; lettre de voiture Comm waybill, consignment note; lettres classiques French and Latin; lettres de créance credentials; lettres modernes French language and literature; lettres de noblesse letters patent of nobility; avoir ses lettres de noblesse fig to have an illustrious history; gagner ses lettres de noblesse fig to win one's spurs; lettres patentes letters patent; lettres supérieures preparatory class for entrance exam for the École Normale Supérieure.passer comme une lettre à la poste○ [décision, réforme] to go through smoothly ou without a hitch; [excuse] to be accepted without any questions; un événement à graver en lettres d'or an event to remember; écrit en lettres de feu written in letters of fire; devenir lettre morte to become a dead letter; rester lettre morte to go unheeded.2. (Belgique) [sachant lire et écrire]————————, lettrée [lɛtre] nom masculin, nom fémininc'est un fin lettré he's extremely well-read ou scholarly -
36 tutoiement
tutoiement [tytwamɑ̃]masculine nounuse of (the familiar) "tu" (instead of "vous")━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━TUTOIEMENT/VOUVOIEMENTThere are no hard-and-fast rules about when to use « tu » or « vous » to address people. Small children can be addressed as « tu », and will often reply using the « tu » form as well. In informal contexts among young people of the same age, « tu » is often used even at first meeting. Among the older generation, « vous » is standard until people know each other well. As a general rule for non-native speakers, « vous » should always be used to address adults until the other person uses « tu », or asks permission to do so.* * *tytwamɑ̃nom masculin use of the form ‘tu’* * *tytwamɑ̃ nmuse of familiar "tu" form* * *tutoiement nm use of the form ‘tu’.[tytwamɑ̃] nom masculinuse of the familiar "tu" -
37 account for
v. rekenschap geven, verantwoordelijk zijn {voor daden}account for2 verklaren ⇒ uitleggen, veroorzaken♦voorbeelden:3 the U.S.A. account for 35% of the world consumption of meat • de USA nemen 35% van de wereldconsumptie van vlees voor hun rekening4 native speakers of English account for 300 millions of the world population • Engelstaligen maken 300 miljoen van de wereldbevolking uit5 the rest of the passengers still have to be accounted for • de overige passagiers worden nog steeds vermist -
38 ♦ (to) determine
♦ (to) determine /dɪˈtɜ:mɪn/A v. t.1 determinare; stabilire: an enquiry to determine who was responsible, un'inchiesta per determinare chi era responsabile; We need to determine exactly what happened, dobbiamo determinare con esattezza cosa sia successo; His fate has not been determined yet, la sua sorte non è stata ancora stabilita; It is for the government to determine economic policy, spetta al governo stabilire la politica economica; The jury will determine whether he is innocent or guilty, la giuria stabilirà se è innocente o colpevole2 determinare, causare: (econ.) Demand determines prices, la domanda determina i prezzi; The availability of food determines the size of the population, la disponibilità di cibo determina la grandezza della popolazione; There are many factors that determine how a team performs, ci sono molti fattori che determinano la qualità delle prestazioni di una squadra3 determinare, calcolare: One way to look at the most common languages is to determine the number of native speakers, un modo di considerare le lingue più comuni è determinare il numero dei parlanti di lingua madreB v. i.(form.) decidersi; risolversi: He has determined to stay here, si è deciso a rimanere qui; We determined on leaving at once, ci siamo risolti a partire subito. -
39 ♦ (to) determine
♦ (to) determine /dɪˈtɜ:mɪn/A v. t.1 determinare; stabilire: an enquiry to determine who was responsible, un'inchiesta per determinare chi era responsabile; We need to determine exactly what happened, dobbiamo determinare con esattezza cosa sia successo; His fate has not been determined yet, la sua sorte non è stata ancora stabilita; It is for the government to determine economic policy, spetta al governo stabilire la politica economica; The jury will determine whether he is innocent or guilty, la giuria stabilirà se è innocente o colpevole2 determinare, causare: (econ.) Demand determines prices, la domanda determina i prezzi; The availability of food determines the size of the population, la disponibilità di cibo determina la grandezza della popolazione; There are many factors that determine how a team performs, ci sono molti fattori che determinano la qualità delle prestazioni di una squadra3 determinare, calcolare: One way to look at the most common languages is to determine the number of native speakers, un modo di considerare le lingue più comuni è determinare il numero dei parlanti di lingua madreB v. i.(form.) decidersi; risolversi: He has determined to stay here, si è deciso a rimanere qui; We determined on leaving at once, ci siamo risolti a partire subito. -
40 speaker *** speak·er n
['spiːkə(r)]he's a good/poor speaker — è un buon/pessimo oratore
2)are you a Welsh speaker? — parla gallese?3) (also: loudspeaker) altoparlante m
См. также в других словарях:
List of languages by number of native speakers — For various estimates of the total speakers of the top dozen languages, see List of languages by total number of speakers. Current distribution of human language families For larger map, scroll towards end of article. The following tables list… … Wikipedia
List of Indian languages by number of native speakers — India is home to several hundred languages. Most languages spoken in India belong either to the Indo European (ca. 74%), the Dravidian (ca. 24%), the Austroasiatic (Munda) (ca. 1.2%), or the Tibeto Burman (ca. 0.6%) families, with some languages… … Wikipedia
List of Esperanto native speakers — Note: This list is only for such native speakers of Esperanto who merit a Wikipedia article (or already have one). For the subject of native Esperanto speaking ability, please see the article on native Esperanto speakers. B *Daniel Bovet *Ulrich… … Wikipedia
native speaker — native speakers N COUNT A native speaker of a language is someone who speaks that language as their first language rather than having learned it as a foreign language. Our programme ensures daily opportunities to practice your study language with … English dictionary
native speaker — n someone who has learned a particular language as their first language, rather than as a foreign language →non native speaker ▪ For the spoken language, students are taught by native speakers. native speaker of ▪ a native speaker of English … Dictionary of contemporary English
Native Esperanto speakers — Esperanto … Wikipedia
native speaker — noun a speaker of a particular language who has spoken that language since earliest childhood native speakers of French • Hypernyms: ↑speaker, ↑talker, ↑utterer, ↑verbalizer, ↑verbaliser * * * noun, pl ⋯ ers [count] : a person who learned to… … Useful english dictionary
Native Hawaiians — This article is about the indigenous peoples of Hawaii. For other indigenous peoples see Indigenous peoples (disambiguation) Kanaka Maoli redirects here. For other uses of Kanaka, see Kanaka (disambiguation). Native Hawaiians (Kānaka Maoli) … Wikipedia
native speaker */ — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms native speaker : singular native speaker plural native speakers someone who has learnt a particular language from the time that they began to speak … English dictionary
native American — native American, adj. a person born in the United States. [1835 45, Amer.] * * * ▪ indigenous peoples of Canada and United States Introduction also called American Indian, Amerindian, Amerind, Indian, Aboriginal American, or First Nation… … Universalium
Native Americans in the United States — This article is about the indigenous people of the United States. For other indigenous people see Indigenous peoples by geographic regions Native Americans … Wikipedia