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81 früher
I Komp. frühII Adj.2. (ehemalig) former; (vorherig) auch previous; der frühere Besitzer the previous owner; die frühere DDR former East GermanyIII Adv.2. (einst) in the past; früher, als... in the (old) days when...; an früher denken think back, think of earlier times; früher habe ich geraucht / nicht geraucht I used to / didn’t use to smoke; früher habe ich nie geraucht I never used to smoke; hast du früher wirklich geraucht? did you really use to smoke?; warst du früher wirklich Rennfahrer? did you really use to be a racing (Am. racecar) driver?; ich hab noch meine ganzen Bücher von früher I’ve still got all my old books (from university etc.); ich kenne ihn von früher I know him from the old days; genau wie früher just as it etc. used to be; es ist alles noch wie früher nothing has changed* * *previous (Adj.); former (Adj.); in the past (Adv.); formerly (Adv.); sooner (Adv.); before (Adv.); earlier (Adv.); earlier (Adj.); in former times (Adv.); antecedent (Adj.); previously (Adv.); prior (Adj.); anterior (Adj.)* * *frü|her ['fryːɐ] comp von früh1. adj1) earlierin frǘheren Jahren/Zeiten — in the past
in frǘheren Zeitaltern — in past ages
der Kontakt zu seinen frǘheren Freunden ist abgebrochen — he lost contact with his old friends
2. adv1) earlierfrǘher als 6 Uhr/Freitag kann ich nicht kommen — I can't come earlier than 6 o'clock/earlier or sooner than Friday
frǘher am Abend hat er gesagt... — earlier (on) in the evening he said...
alle, die sich frǘher angemeldet haben, werden zuerst berücksichtigt — the first to apply will be the first to be considered
das hättest du frǘher sagen müssen/wissen sollen — you should have said that before or sooner/known that before
frǘher oder später — sooner or later
2)(= in jüngeren Jahren, in vergangenen Zeiten)
Herr X, frǘher Direktor eines Industriebetriebs — Herr X, formerly director of an industrial concernich habe ihn frǘher mal gekannt — I used to know him
frǘher habe ich so etwas nie gemacht — I never used to do that kind of thing
frǘher stand hier eine Kirche — there used to be a church here
frǘher war alles besser/war das alles anders — things were better/different in the old days, things used to be better/different
genau wie frǘher — just as it/he etc used to be
Erzählungen von/Erinnerungen an frǘher — stories/memories of times gone by or of bygone days (liter)
das habe ich noch von frǘher — I had it before
ich kannte ihn von frǘher — I knew him before
ich kenne ihn von frǘher — I've known him some time
wir kennen uns noch von frǘher — we got to know each other some time ago
meine Freunde von frǘher — my old friends
* * *1) (dead, especially recently: the late king.) late2) (in earlier times: Formerly this large town was a small village.) formerly3) (of an earlier time: In former times people did not travel so much.) former4) (the past tense: a verb in the past.) past5) previously7) (already arranged for the same time: a prior engagement.) prior* * *frü·her[ˈfry:ɐ]I. adj1. (vergangen) earlierin \früheren Jahren [o Zeiten] in the past, in former times2. (ehemalig) former, previous\frühere Adresse previous [or last] address\früherer Freund/ \frühere Freundin ex[-boyfriend]/[-girlfriend]II. adv1. (eher) earlier\früher als 6 Uhr kann ich nicht kommen I can't come before [or earlier than] 6 o'clock\früher geht's nicht it can't be done [or I/he/she etc. can't make it] any earlier\früher oder später sooner or later2. (ehemals)ich habe ihn \früher [mal] gekannt I used to know him\früher hast du so etwas nie gemacht you never used to do that kind of thing [before]\früher war das alles anders things were different in the old daysBekannte von \früher old acquaintancesErinnerungen an \früher memories of times gone by [or of bygone days liter]genau wie \früher, als... exactly as it/he etc. used to [be/do] as...von \früher from former times [or days]ich kenne sie von \früher I've known her for some time* * *Adverb formerlyich kenne ihn [noch] von früher [her] — I know him from some time ago
* * *B. adj1. earlier; (älter) older;frühere Fassung earlier versionder frühere Besitzer the previous owner;die frühere DDR former East Germany3. (vergangen) past;in früheren Zeiten in the pastC. adv1. earlier; (eher) auch sooner;früher oder später sooner or later2. (einst) in the past;früher, als … in the (old) days when …;an früher denken think back, think of earlier times;früher habe ich geraucht/nicht geraucht I used to/didn’t use to smoke;früher habe ich nie geraucht I never used to smoke;hast du früher wirklich geraucht? did you really use to smoke?;warst du früher wirklich Rennfahrer? did you really use to be a racing (US racecar) driver?;ich kenne ihn von früher I know him from the old days;genau wie früher just as it etc used to be;es ist alles noch wie früher nothing has changed* * *Adverb formerlyich kenne ihn [noch] von früher [her] — I know him from some time ago
* * *adj.anterior adj.former adj.prior adj.quondam adj. adv.formerly adv.in the past adv. -
82 don
m.1 gift.don de mando leadership qualitiestener el don de la palabra to have the gift of speech; (cualidad humana) to be a gifted speaker (de orador)tener don de gentes to have a way with people2 Mr., Mister.3 don.* * *1 Mr\Don Fulano de Tal Mr So-and-Soun don nadie a nobody Table 1 NOTA Don is a courtesy title placed before the first names of men /Table 1————————1 (regalo) gift, present2 (talento) talent, natural gift\don de gentes natural ability to get on well with people* * *noun m.* * *ISM1) (=talento) giftdon de gentes, tener don de gentes — to know how to handle people, be good with people
don de mando — leadership qualities pl ; (Mil) generalship
don de palabra — gift of the gab *, gift of gab (EEUU) *
2) (=deseo) wish3) (=regalo) giftIISM1) [tratamiento de cortesía]Don — [en carta, sobre] Esquire
Sr. Don Fernando García — [en correspondencia] Mr F. García, Fernando García Esq.
¿habéis visto a don Fernando? — have you seen Mr García?
Juan DON/DOÑA A courtesy title, don/doña placed before the first name of an older or more senior man/woman is a way of showing them your respect when talking to them or about them. E.g. "¿Podría hablar con don César Roca?", "Buenos días doña Alicia. ¿Qué tal su viaje?" Although now becoming rarer, in Spain Don and Doña, often abbreviated to D. and Dña., are commonly used before full names on official documents and contracts. In formal correspondence, they are used in combination with Sr., Sra. and Srta., e.g. Sr. D. Bernardo Esplugas Martín, Sra. Dña. Ana Rodríguez.es don perfecto, él cree que nunca se equivoca — iró he thinks he's Mr Perfect and never makes a mistake
* * *Ia) (liter) ( dádiva) giftb) ( talento) talent, giftII1)a) (con el nombre de pila, tratamiento de cortesía) ≈MrSr Don Miguel López — (Corresp) Mr M López o (frml) Miguel López Esq
b) (fam) ( en motes) Mr2) (AmL) ( uso popular)•• Cultural note:¿qué le vendo, don? — what can I do for you, buddy (AmE) o (BrE) guv? (colloq)
don/doñaThe words don, for men, and doña, for women, are courtesy titles used before someone's name, when they are being spoken or written to. They are used for someone who is senior professionally, in age or socially. Doña is usually used only for married or widowed women, except in official documents, when it refers to any woman. Don and doña always precede a person's first name. "¿Se va ya, don Juan?" When talking about a third person you can use don and doña before their first name, which is followed by their surname: " Don Juan Montesinos". In correspondence, don and doña can be abbreviated to D. and Dn., or Dña. and Da, respectively, and can be preceded by the appropriate title señor or señora: ‘Sr. Dn. Juan Montesinos’; ‘Sra. Dña. Ana Castellón’* * *= gift, endowment, flair.Nota: A veces confundido con flare.Ex. The writer's gift is to orchestrate words in print better than the rest of us.Ex. Appreciation of literature, and the ability to say things about it which are true but not new, is a much commoner endowment.Ex. The image of the reference librarian, as portrayed by Katherine Hepburn in the film, 'Desk Set,' suggests the superb flair and intellectual acumen with which reference librarians would like to dazzle their patrons.----* cultivar un don = cultivate + gift.* don angustias = worryguts, worrywart, worrypot.* don especial = knack, knack.* dotar con un don = endow with + gift.* * *Ia) (liter) ( dádiva) giftb) ( talento) talent, giftII1)a) (con el nombre de pila, tratamiento de cortesía) ≈MrSr Don Miguel López — (Corresp) Mr M López o (frml) Miguel López Esq
b) (fam) ( en motes) Mr2) (AmL) ( uso popular)•• Cultural note:¿qué le vendo, don? — what can I do for you, buddy (AmE) o (BrE) guv? (colloq)
don/doñaThe words don, for men, and doña, for women, are courtesy titles used before someone's name, when they are being spoken or written to. They are used for someone who is senior professionally, in age or socially. Doña is usually used only for married or widowed women, except in official documents, when it refers to any woman. Don and doña always precede a person's first name. "¿Se va ya, don Juan?" When talking about a third person you can use don and doña before their first name, which is followed by their surname: " Don Juan Montesinos". In correspondence, don and doña can be abbreviated to D. and Dn., or Dña. and Da, respectively, and can be preceded by the appropriate title señor or señora: ‘Sr. Dn. Juan Montesinos’; ‘Sra. Dña. Ana Castellón’* * *= gift, endowment, flair.Nota: A veces confundido con flare.Ex: The writer's gift is to orchestrate words in print better than the rest of us.
Ex: Appreciation of literature, and the ability to say things about it which are true but not new, is a much commoner endowment.Ex: The image of the reference librarian, as portrayed by Katherine Hepburn in the film, 'Desk Set,' suggests the superb flair and intellectual acumen with which reference librarians would like to dazzle their patrons.* cultivar un don = cultivate + gift.* don angustias = worryguts, worrywart, worrypot.* don especial = knack, knack.* dotar con un don = endow with + gift.* * *don12 (talento) talent, gifttiene un don para la música she has a talent o gift for music, she is a talented o gifted musicianel don de la palabra/razón the gift of speech/reasontiene el don de meter siempre la pata ( iró); she has a real talent for o ( colloq) knack of putting her foot in it at every available opportunity ( iro)Compuestos:ability to get on well with people, good interpersonal skills ( frml)tiene don de gentes he gets on well with people, he has a way with peopleleadership qualities (pl)don2don/doña (↑ dona a1)A(usado con el nombre de pila): desde que se fue don Miguel since Mr López left¿le sirvo un café, don Miguel? would you like some coffee, Mr López?2 ( fam) (en motes) Mrése es don dificultades that's Mr `No can do' o Mr Negativea don puntualidad no le va a caer nada bien que llegues tarde Mr Punctuality isn't going to think much of you showing up late ( colloq)Compuesto:masculine and feminine nobody¡y no se va a casar con un don nadie como tú! and she's not going to marry a nobody o ( AmE colloq) a walking zero like you!B( AmL) (en el uso popular): ¿qué le vendo, don? what can I do for you, buddy ( AmE) o ( BrE) guv? ( colloq)* * *
Multiple Entries:
Don
don
don sustantivo masculino
1
don de gentes ability to get on well with people;
don de mando leadership qualities (pl)
2 ( tratamiento de cortesía) ≈ Mr;
ser un don nadie to be a nobody
don 1 sustantivo masculino
1 (capacidad) gift, talent: tiene el don de hacerme perder la paciencia, she has a knack for making me lose my patience
2 (regalo, dádiva) gift: es un don divino, it is a heavenly gift
don 2 sustantivo masculino Señor Don Carlos Jiménez, Mr Carlos Jiménez
ser un don nadie, to be a nobody
Es incorrecto traducir Don Miguel por Mr Miguel, ya que Mr sólo se puede usar con un apellido. Lo mejor es traducirlo por Mr Miguel más el apellido o Mr más el apellido. Si te refieres al destinatario de una carta, puedes escribir Miguel Romero, Esq.
' don' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abandonar
- abandonarse
- abatimiento
- abonarse
- absoluta
- absoluto
- abundar
- abusar
- acalorarse
- achantarse
- aconsejar
- adónde
- advertir
- agradar
- ajena
- ajeno
- algo
- almorzar
- amargada
- amargado
- amargarse
- antipatía
- apartarse
- aturullarse
- aunque
- aviso
- bagatela
- bajarse
- balde
- barrio
- bastarse
- berrinche
- bicha
- bilis
- blandengue
- bledo
- bobada
- bonita
- bonito
- borde
- botepronto
- broma
- buena
- bueno
- caballo
- caber
- calibre
- carne
- carné
- casar
English:
ability
- don
- empathize
- esquire
- excerpt
- flair
- genius
- gift
- money
- nobody
- nonentity
- pipsqueak
- skill
- way
- Esquire
* * *Don nmel Don the Don* * *1 m gift;don de gentes way with people;don de lenguas gift for languages2 m Mr.;don Enrique Mr. Sanchez English uses the surname while Spanish uses the first name* * *don nm1) : gift, present2) : talentdon nm1) : title of courtesy preceding a man's first name2)don nadie : nobody, insignificant person* * *don n1. Mr2. (habilidad) gift / talent -
83 ценить
оценить (вн.)ценить в сто рублей — value / estimate at a hundred roubles (d.)
низко ценить — set* little (store) (by)
высоко ценить — set* much (store) (by); rate highly (d.); ( о человеке) think* much / highly (of)
высоко ценить чьи-л. заслуги перед родиной — pay* high tribute to the services smb. rendered to his country
высоко ценить себя — think* much of oneself, have a high opinion of oneself
ценить слишком высоко — overrate (d.), overestimate (d.)
ценить кого-л. по заслугам — value smb. according to his merits
он ценит то, что для него делают — he appreciates what is done for him
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84 wert
Adj. worth; altm. (lieb) dear; (geschätzt) esteemed, valued; etw. wert sein be worth s.th.; (einer Sache würdig sein) be worthy of s.th.; viel wert worth a lot; nichts wert worthless; das ist schon viel wert that’s a great step forward; das ist einen Versuch wert it’s worth a try; es ist viel wert zu wissen, dass... it’s good to know that...; er hat es nicht für wert gefunden, mich zu informieren he didn’t consider it necessary to inform me; das Buch ist wert, dass man es liest is worth reading; er ist es nicht wert, dass man ihm hilft he doesn’t deserve to be helped; das ist die Sache nicht wert it isn’t worth it; einer näheren Betrachtung etc. wert sein worth a closer look etc.; sie ist seiner nicht wert she is not worthy of him; ich bin heute nicht viel wert umg. I’m not up to much today; Mühe, Rede etc.* * *der Wertworth; use; value; currency* * *[veːɐt]m -(e)s, -e1) value; (esp menschlicher) worth; (von Banknoten, Briefmarken) denomination; (= Wertsache) article of value, valuable objecteinen Wért von 5 Euro haben — to be worth 5 euros, to have a value of 5 euros
im Wért(e) von — to the value of, worth
an Wért verlieren/zunehmen, im Wért sinken/steigen — to decrease/increase in value, to depreciate/appreciate (esp Econ)
eine Sache unter/über (ihrem wirklichen) Wért verkaufen — to sell sth for less/more than its true value
sie hat innere Wérte — she has certain inner qualities
legen (fig) — to set great store by sth (esp Brit), to attach importance to sth
ich lege Wért darauf, festzustellen, dass... — I think it important to establish that...
das hat keinen Wért (inf) — there's no point
2) usu pl (von Test, Analyse) result* * *der1) (a value (of a stamp, coin etc): banknotes of all denominations.) denomination2) (a good point or quality: His speech had at least the merit of being short.) merit3) (value: These books are of little or no worth; She sold fifty dollars' worth of tickets.) worth4) ((with of) deserving: She was not worthy of the honour given to her.) worthy5) (equal in value to: Each of these stamps is worth a cent.) worth6) (good enough for: His suggestion is worth considering: The exhibition is well worth a visit.) worth7) worthiness8) (worth, importance or usefulness: His special knowledge was of great value during the war; She sets little value on wealth.) value9) (price: What is the value of that stamp?) value10) (purchasing power: Are those coins of any value?) value* * *<-[e]s, -e>[ve:ɐ̯t]m1. (zu erlösender Preis) valuedie \Werte fielen um 3 Punkte zurück prices dropped by 3 pointsHandel in unnotierten \Werten off-board [or off-floor] tradinggemeiner \Wert ordinary valueinnerer \Wert des Unternehmens the company's net worthkapitalisierter \Wert capitalized valuesächlicher \Wert commodity valueeinen bestimmtem \Wert/einen \Wert von... haben to have a certain value/a value of..., to be worth [or valued at] sthim \Wert steigen, an \Wert zunehmen to increase in valuean \Wert verlieren, im \Wert sinken to decrease in valueim \Werte von etw dat worth [or to the value of] sthüber/unter \Wert above/below its value3. (wertvolle Eigenschaft) worth4. (Wichtigkeit) value[besonderen/gesteigerten] \Wert darauf legen, etw zu tun to find it [especially/increasingly] important to do sth5. (Wertvorstellung) valuebinärer \Wert binary variable7.* * *der; Wert[e]s, Werte1) valueim Wert steigen/fallen — increase/decrease in value
an Wert gewinnen/verlieren — gain/lose in value
im Wert[e] von... — worth...
etwas unter [seinem] Wert verkaufen — sell something for less than its value
einer Sache (Dat.) großen Wert beimessen — attach great value to something
sich (Dat.) seines [eigenen] Wertes bewußt sein — be conscious of one's own importance
das hat [doch] keinen Wert! — (ugs.): (ist sinnlos) there's no point
Wert auf etwas (Akk.) legen — set great store by or on something
2) Plural objects of value3) (Briefmarke) denomination* * *etwas wert sein be worth sth; (einer Sache würdig sein) be worthy of sth;viel wert worth a lot;nichts wert worthless;das ist schon viel wert that’s a great step forward;das ist einen Versuch wert it’s worth a try;es ist viel wert zu wissen, dass … it’s good to know that …;er hat es nicht für wert gefunden, mich zu informieren he didn’t consider it necessary to inform me;ist wert, dass man es liest is worth reading;er ist es nicht wert, dass man ihm hilft he doesn’t deserve to be helped;das ist die Sache nicht wert it isn’t worth it;wert sein worth a closer look etc;sie ist seiner nicht wert she is not worthy of him;…wert im adj:anhörenswert worth listening to;bestaunenswert astonishing* * *der; Wert[e]s, Werte1) valueim Wert steigen/fallen — increase/decrease in value
an Wert gewinnen/verlieren — gain/lose in value
im Wert[e] von... — worth...
etwas unter [seinem] Wert verkaufen — sell something for less than its value
einer Sache (Dat.) großen Wert beimessen — attach great value to something
sich (Dat.) seines [eigenen] Wertes bewußt sein — be conscious of one's own importance
das hat [doch] keinen Wert! — (ugs.): (ist sinnlos) there's no point
Wert auf etwas (Akk.) legen — set great store by or on something
2) Plural objects of value3) (Briefmarke) denomination* * *-e m.account n.sign n.ups n.value n.virtue n.worth n.worthiness n. -e Angebot (Econ.) n.value proposition n. -
85 viel
1) sing, adjektivisch, inv( eine Menge von etw) a lot of, a great deal of;für so ein Hobby braucht man \viel Geld for a hobby like that you need a lot of money;\viel Erfolg! good luck!, I wish you every success!;\viel Spaß! enjoy yourself/yourselves!, have fun!2) sing, mit Artikel, Possessivpronomendas \viele Essen über die Weihnachtstage ist mir nicht bekommen all that food over Christmas hasn't done me any good;der \viele Ärger lässt mich nicht mehr schlafen I can't get to sleep with all this trouble;er wusste nicht mehr, wo er sein \vieles Geld noch anlegen sollte he didn't know where to invest all his money;ich weiß nicht, wie ich meine \viele Arbeit erledigen soll I don't know how I'm going to finish all my work;\vieles Unangenehme lässt sich nicht vermeiden many unpleasant things cannot be avoidedich habe zu \viel zu tun I have too much to do;obwohl er \viel weiß, prahlt er nicht damit although he knows a lot, he doesn't brag about it;von dem Plan halte ich, offen gestanden, nicht \viel frankly, I don't think much of the plan;das hat nicht \viel zu bedeuten that doesn't mean much4) sing, substantivisch\vieles a lot, a great deal, much;sie weiß \vieles she knows a lot [or a great deal];ich habe meiner Frau \vieles zu verdanken I have to thank my wife for a lot;\vieles, was du da sagst, trifft natürlich zu a lot [or much] of what you say is correct;in \vielem hast du Recht in many respects you're right;mit \vielem, was er vorschlägt, bin ich einverstanden I agree with many of the things he suggests;mein Mann ist um \vieles jünger als ich my husband is much younger than me;schöner ist dieser Lederkoffer natürlich, aber auch um \vieles teurer this leather suitcase is nicer, of course, but a lot more expensive\viele a lot of, a great number of, many;und \viele andere and many others;unglaublich \viele Heuschrecken fraßen die Ernte an unbelievable number of grasshoppers ate the harvested crops;\viele deiner Bücher kenne ich schon I know many of your books already;wir haben gleich \viele Dienstjahre we've been working here for the same number of years\viele a lot, many;diese Ansicht wird immer noch von \vielen vertreten this view is still held by many people;( eine große Anzahl von Dingen) a lot;es sind noch einige Fehler in dem Text, aber \viele haben wir bereits verbessert there are still some errors in the text, but we've already corrected a lotadv <mehr, am meisten>1) ( häufig) a lot;\viel ins Kino gehen to go to the cinema frequently;im Sommer halten wir uns \viel im Garten auf we spend a lot of time in the garden in summer;früher hat sie ihre Mutter immer \viel besucht she always used to visit her mother a lot;\viel diskutiert Thema, Problem much discussed;\viel gekauft Produkt popular;\viel geliebt (veraltend) much-loved;eine \viel gestellte Frage a question that comes up frequently;ein \viel gereister Mann a man who has travelled a great deal;eine \viel befahrene Straße a [very] busy street;ein \viel gefragtes Model a model that is in great demand2) ( wesentlich) a lot;woanders ist es nicht \viel anders als bei uns there's not a lot of difference between where we live and somewhere else;mit dem Flugzeug wäre die Reise \viel kürzer the journey time would be far shorter by plane;die Mütze ist für das Kind \viel zu groß the cap is far too big for the child -
86 Rolle
f; -, -n1. roll (auch Geld-, Papier-, Tabakrolle etc.); (Draht-, Taurolle) coil; (Papyrusrolle) roll, scroll; Rolle Garn reel of cotton, Am. spool of thread; Rolle Film roll of film; Rolle Pfefferminz roll of peppermints; eine Rolle Münzen a roll of coins2. (Walze) roller, cylinder; an Möbeln: castor; von Flaschenzug: pulley; ein Nachttisch auf Rollen a bedside table on castors4. fig., umg.: völlig von der Rolle sein have lost one’s grip on things; SPORT have completely lost one’s touch; ihr Tod hat ihn total von der Rolle gebracht he went completely to pieces after her death—f; -, -n; THEAT. und fig. role, part; kleine Rolle small ( oder bit) part, minor role; führende Rolle lead; seine Rolle lernen learn one’s part ( oder lines); die Rollen eines Stückes besetzen cast a play; ein Stück mit verteilten Rollen lesen have a play-reading; die Rolle ist ihr auf den Leib geschrieben the part could have been written for her ( oder suits her down to the ground); er ist in seiner Rolle völlig aufgegangen he was completely taken over by the role; fig. he became completely absorbed in his task; eine Rolle spielen fig. play a part ( oder role) (bei, in + Dat in); eine große Rolle spielen fig. play an important part ( oder role); Person, Firma: auch be a key player; in einer Firma etc.: be in an influential position; eine untergeordnete Rolle spielen fig. play a subsidiary role, be less important; sich mit der Rolle des Zuschauers begnügen be content to be a mere spectator; eine klägliche Rolle spielen oder abgeben cut a poor figure; er spielt gern eine Rolle pej. he likes to be involved ( bei in); er gefällt sich in der Rolle des... he likes playing the...; sich in der Rolle der Hausfrau etc. ( nicht) wohl fühlen (not) feel at home in the role of a housewife etc.; Spiel mit vertauschten Rollen reversal of roles; das spielt keine Rolle it doesn’t matter, it doesn’t make any difference; Geld spielt keine Rolle money is no object; aus der Rolle fallen step out of line; stärker: forget oneself* * *die Rolle(Gerolltes) roll; coil;(Spule) spool; reel;(Theater) part; person; role;(Walze) roller* * *Rọl|le ['rɔlə]f -, -n1) (= Zusammengerolltes) roll; (= Garnrolle, Zwirnrolle) reel, bobbin (spec); (= Papierrolle) reel; (= Urkunde) scrolleine Rolle Garn/Zwirn — a reel of thread
eine Rolle Bindfaden — a ball of string
eine Rolle Toilettenpapier — a toilet roll, a roll of toilet paper
eine Rolle Drops — a tube of fruit drops
eine Rolle Film — a roll of film; (im Kino) a reel of film
2) (= kleines Rad, Walze) roller; (an Möbeln, Kisten) caster, castor; (an Flaschenzug) pulley; (= Gardinenrolle) runnervon der Rolle sein (fig inf) — to have lost it (inf)
3) (SPORT, AVIAT) rolleine Rolle machen — to do a roll
eine Rolle vorwärts/rückwärts — a forward/backward roll
4) (THEAT, FILM fig) role, part; (SOCIOL) rolees war ein Spiel mit vertauschten Rollen (fig) — it was a situation where the roles were reversed
ein Stück mit verteilten Rollen lesen — to read a play with the parts cast; (in Schule) to read a play with the parts given out
der literarische Kreis liest jeden Dienstag ein Stück mit verteilten Rollen — the literary circle has a play-reading every Tuesday
in der Rolle von jdm/etw auftreten — to appear in the role of sb/sth
in der Rolle des... (fig) — he likes to think of or see himself in the role of the...
sich in die Rolle eines anderen versetzen (fig) — to put oneself in sb else's place
eine Rolle spielen — to play a part in sth; (Mensch auch) to play a role in sth
als Lehrer hat er eine klägliche Rolle gespielt — as a teacher he was not up to much or he left much to be desired
es spielt keine Rolle, (ob)... — it doesn't matter (whether)..., it doesn't make any difference (whether)..., whether... doesn't come into it
aus der Rolle fallen (fig) — to do/say the wrong thing
5) (dial = Wäschemangel) roller iron* * *die1) (a person in a play, novel etc: Rosencrantz is a minor character in Shakespeare's `Hamlet'.) character2) (a character in a play etc: She played the part of the queen.) part3) (the words, actions etc of a character in a play etc: He learned his part quickly.) part4) (a person's share, responsibility etc in doing something: He played a great part in the government's decision.) part5) (a wheel over which a rope etc can pass in order to lift heavy objects.) pulley6) (a part played by an actor or actress in a play etc: He is playing the rôle of King Lear.) rôle7) (the actions or functions of a person in some activity: He played the rôle of peacemaker in the dispute.) rôle8) (a part played by an actor or actress in a play etc: He is playing the rôle of King Lear.) role9) (the actions or functions of a person in some activity: He played the rôle of peacemaker in the dispute.) role10) (anything flat (eg a piece of paper, a carpet) rolled into the shape of a tube, wound round a tube etc: a roll of kitchen foil; a toilet-roll.) roll11) (a small solid wheel or cylinder on which something can be rolled along.) roller12) (a round wheel-shaped or cylindrical object of wood, metal etc on which thread, film, fishing-lines etc can be wound: a reel of sewing-cotton; He changed the reel in the projector.) reel* * *Rol·le<-, -n>[ˈrɔlə]fTapete wird in \Rollen verkauft wallpaper is sold in rollseine \Rolle Draht a reel [or spool] of wireeine \Rolle Film a roll [or BRIT reel] [or spool] of filmeine \Rolle Garn a reel of cotton BRIT, a spool of threadeine \Rolle Toilettenpapier a roll of toilet paper, a toilet roll BRITeine \Rolle Eurostücke a roll of one euro pieceseine \Rolle Kekse a [round] packet of biscuitseine \Rolle Pfefferminzbonbons a roll of mintseine \Rolle Smarties® a tube of Smarties®wir können das Klavier nur auf \Rollen verschieben we'll need to move the piano on rollers4. (Turnübung) rolleine \Rolle vorwärts/rückwärts a forward/backward rolleine \Rolle machen to do a roll8. FILM, THEAT role, parter war sehr gut in der \Rolle des Königs he was very good in the part of the kingsie gefiel sich in der \Rolle der Heldin she liked playing the role of the heroinein der \Rolle von jdm auftreten to appear in the role of sbmit verteilten \Rollen with each role castsie lasen das Stück mit verteilten \Rollen they read the play with the parts cast9. (Beteiligung, Part) role, partin der Situation waren die \Rollen vertauscht it was a situation where the roles were reversedich sehe meine \Rolle bei diesem Projekt als Organisatorin I see my role in this project as an organizerin jds \Rolle schlüpfen (fam) to slip into sb's role [or the role of sb]10. SOZIOL roleein Ehe mit streng verteilten \Rollen a marriage with strict allocation of rolessie weigerte sich, die traditionelle \Rolle der Frau zu übernehmen she refused to take the traditional woman's role11.▶ seine \Rolle ausgespielt haben to be finished▶ aus der \Rolle fallen to behave badlydas spielt doch keine \Rolle! it's of no importance!, it doesn't matter!das spielt jetzt keine \Rolle that does not concern us nowdas Alter spielt natürlich eine wichtige \Rolle of course, age plays an important part [or role]Geld spielt bei ihr keine \Rolle with her money is no object▶ es spielt keine \Rolle, ob/wie... it doesn't matter whether/how...* * *die; Rolle, Rollen1) (Spule) reel; spool2) (zylindrischer [Hohl]körper; Zusammengerolltes) roll; (SchriftRolle) scrolleine Rolle Bindfaden/Zweieurostücke/Kekse — a reel of string/roll of two-euro pieces/[round] packet of biscuits
3) (Walze) roller; (TeigRolle) rolling pin[bei jemandem/einer Sache] eine entscheidende Rolle spielen — be of crucial importance [to somebody/for something]
es spielt keine Rolle — it is of no importance; (es macht nichts aus) it doesn't matter
* * *Rolle1 f; -, -n1. roll (auch Geld-, Papier-, Tabakrolle etc); (Draht-, Taurolle) coil; (Papyrusrolle) roll, scroll;Rolle Garn reel of cotton, US spool of thread;Rolle Film roll of film;Rolle Pfefferminz roll of peppermints;eine Rolle Münzen a roll of coinsein Nachttisch auf Rollen a bedside table on castors3. Turnen: roll;Rolle vorwärts/rückwärts forward/backward roll4. fig, umg:ihr Tod hat ihn total von der Rolle gebracht he went completely to pieces after her deathRolle2 f; -, -n; THEAT etc fig role, part;kleine Rolle small ( oder bit) part, minor role;führende Rolle lead;seine Rolle lernen learn one’s part ( oder lines);die Rollen eines Stückes besetzen cast a play;ein Stück mit verteilten Rollen lesen have a play-reading;die Rolle ist ihr auf den Leib geschrieben the part could have been written for her ( oder suits her down to the ground);er ist in seiner Rolle völlig aufgegangen he was completely taken over by the role; fig he became completely absorbed in his task;bei, in +dat in);eine große Rolle spielen fig play an important part ( oder role); Person, Firma: auch be a key player; in einer Firma etc: be in an influential position;eine untergeordnete Rolle spielen fig play a subsidiary role, be less important;sich mit der Rolle des Zuschauers begnügen be content to be a mere spectator;abgeben cut a poor figure;er spielt gern eine Rolle pej he likes to be involved (bei in);er gefällt sich in der Rolle des … he likes playing the …;Spiel mit vertauschten Rollen reversal of roles;das spielt keine Rolle it doesn’t matter, it doesn’t make any difference;Geld spielt keine Rolle money is no object;aus der Rolle fallen step out of line; stärker: forget oneself* * *die; Rolle, Rollen1) (Spule) reel; spool2) (zylindrischer [Hohl]körper; Zusammengerolltes) roll; (SchriftRolle) scrolleine Rolle Bindfaden/Zweieurostücke/Kekse — a reel of string/roll of two-euro pieces/[round] packet of biscuits
3) (Walze) roller; (TeigRolle) rolling pin5) (Turnen, Kunstflug) roll6) (Theater, Film usw., fig.) role; part; (Soziol.) role[bei jemandem/einer Sache] eine entscheidende Rolle spielen — be of crucial importance [to somebody/for something]
es spielt keine Rolle — it is of no importance; (es macht nichts aus) it doesn't matter
* * *-n (Theater, Film) f.role n. -n f.character n.part n.role n.roll n.roller n. -
87 nic
Ⅰ pron. nothing; (w pytaniu) anything- nic się nie zmieniło nothing has changed- nic a. niczego nam nie brakuje we have everything we need- nic a. niczego nie zapomniałeś? have you forgotten anything?- nie dostał nic a. niczego do zjedzenia he wasn’t given anything to eat- niczym się nie przejmował he didn’t worry about a thing- nie znalazła nic, co mogłoby ją zainteresować she didn’t find anything that might be of interest to her- nic nowego/szczególnego nothing new/special- nic ważnego się nie stało nothing important happened- nic podobnego nothing of the kind a. sort- nic dziwnego, że… it’s no wonder that…, no wonder…- nie ma nic łatwiejszego nothing could be simpler a. easier- błagałem go, a on nic I begged him, but he didn’t say a word- szukaliśmy cały dzień, i nic we were searching all day, all for nothing- nic ci/mu do mnie a. do moich spraw it’s got nothing to do with you/him- nic mi po takim starym rowerze an old bike like that is no use to me pot.- nic tu po tobie you have no business being here- nic innego nothing else- to nic innego jak gra na zwłokę it’s just playing for time, it’s nothing other than playing for time- nic takiego nothing important/serious- to nic takiego, zwykłe przeziębienie it’s nothing serious, just an ordinary cold- nic takiego się nie stało nothing really happened- to nic never mind, it doesn’t matter- to nic, nie martw się it’s nothing, don’t worry- nic, nic, to tylko lekkie zadrapanie it’s nothing (at all), just a scratch- mieć kogoś/coś za nic to not care about sb/sth- zrobić coś z niczego to make something out of nothing- on w niczym nie potrafi jej dorównać she outshines a. surpasses książk. him in any way- Anna w niczym nie przypomina swojej siostry Anna is quite a. totally unlike her sister- z niczym [przyjść, odejść] empty-handed- odprawiono go z niczym he was sent back empty-handedⅡ part. (wcale) not a bit, not at all- nic nie lepszy/gorszy not a bit better/worse- „boisz się?” – „nic a nic” a. „nic, ale to nic” ‘are you afraid?’ – ‘not a bit’ a. ‘not at all’- całą noc nic nie spał he didn’t sleep at all the whole night- czemu ty nic nie tańczysz? why aren’t you dancing at all?- łzy nic tu nie pomogą it’s no use cryingⅢ n pejor. (o osobie) nobody; (o rzeczy) nothing- być niczym to be a nobody- takie nic, a śmie mnie pouczać a nonentity like him telling me what to do!- twoje dochody to kompletne nic what you earn is absolutely nothingⅣ inter. nothing!- „co?” – „nic, nieważne” ‘what?’ – ‘nothing, it doesn’t matter a. it’s not important’■ być do niczego pot. [osoba] (o samopoczuciu) to be under the weather pot.; (o umiejętnościach) to be hopeless a. lousy GB pot., to be useless pot.; [film, książka] to be hopeless GB pot.; [pomysł, projekt] to be half-baked pot.- jak nic się spóźni he’s bound a. sure to be late- cała robota na nic all that work for nothing a. down the drain pot.- „smaczne, prawda?” – „nic dodać, nic ująć” ‘tasty, isn’t it?’ – ‘you’re right there’- mieszkanie duże, jasne, nic dodać, nic ująć a large, bright flat – just right a. perfect- wokół nic, tylko lasy there’s nothing but forest all around- ona nic, tylko narzeka she does nothing but complain- nic, tylko płakać it’s enough to make you weep- nic z tego, telefon zepsuty nothing doing, the phone’s out of order- „chcę iść do kina” – „nic z tego, musisz odrobić lekcje” ‘I want to go to the cinema’ – ‘nothing doing, you’ve got (your) homework to do’- niczego sobie pot. not bad (at all)- niczego sobie facet not a bad-looking guy pot.- niczego sobie piwo not bad beer; pretty good beer pot.- za nic not for anything* * *grubymi nićmi szyty — (przen) thinly disguised
* * *pron.1. (= żadna rzecz) nothing; ( z innym wyrazem przeczącym) anything; nic dobrego ( o człowieku) no good, good for nothing; nic dziwnego no wonder; nic podobnego! nothing of the sort l. kind!, no way!; nic takiego nothing really; niczego sobie pot. (= całkiem niezły) not bad (at all); nic z tego (nie będzie) it's no use, nothing doing; to nic nie pomoże it's not going to help; nic ci do tego! it's none of your business!, mind your own business!; nic tu po nas we won't help here, we won't be of any use here; to nic, że przegraliśmy never mind that we lost; być do niczego be useless, be no good, be good for nothing; nic nie szkodzi never mind, it's nothing; być niczym be worthless; nic mi nie jest I'm alright, I'm O.K.; nic mu nie będzie he'll be fine l. alright l. O.K.; nic a nic not a thing; mieć kogoś/coś za nic not think much of sb/sth; nie mieć nic do powiedzenia have nothing to say; nie mieć nic do stracenia have nothing to lose; nie mieć nic przeciw komuś/czemuś have nothing against sb/sth; zrobić coś z niczego make sth out of nothing.2. (= wcale, w najmniejszym stopniu) nothing at all, not at all; jak nic (= na pewno) for sure; (= bez trudu) without any effort, like nothing; wszystko na nic (all) for nothing; za nic (w świecie) not for anything (in the world); to nie ma nic do rzeczy that is immaterial l. irrelevant; na nic się (nie) zdać be useless; jakby l. jak gdyby (nigdy) nic as if nothing happened; nie miałem nic w ustach od tygodnia I haven't eaten for a week.n.indecl. nothing; wielkie nic big (fat) zero; zupa nic kulin. milk soup with egg yolk, sugar and vanilla.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > nic
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88 сметна
вж. смятам* * *смѐтна,смя̀там гл.1. reckon, count; ( изчислявам) work/figure out, calculate, compute; без да се смята not counting; exclusive of; \сметна на пръсти count on o.’s fingers; \сметна на ум work out in o.’s mind, make mental calculations;2. ( считам) consider (за -), think; regard (за as); книж. deem; за какъв ме смятате? what do you take me for? не го \сметна за нещо много I don’t think much of him; смятат го за луд they take him for a madman; той се смята за гений he thinks/fancies himself a genius; тя го смята за един от най-добрите си приятели she reckons him among her best friends;3. ( възнамерявам) intend, plan, mean (да to c inf.); think (of c ger.), figure (on c ger.), be going (to c inf.);4. ( струва ми се) think, figure, guess.* * *вж. смятам -
89 ценить
несов. - цени́ть, сов. - оцени́ть; (вн.)2) ( определять цену) value (d); ( приблизительно) estimate (d)цени́ть в сто рубле́й — value / estimate (d) at a hundred roubles
3) (судить о ценности, значимости кого-чего-л) rate (d), value (d)высоко́ цени́ть — rate (d) highly; appreciate (d); ( человека) think much / highly (of)
высоко́ цени́ть чьи-л заслу́ги — rate / value smb's services highly
высоко́ цени́ть себя́ — think much of oneself, have a high opinion of oneself
цени́ть сли́шком высоко́ — overrate (d), overestimate (d)
цени́ть кого́-л по заслу́гам — value smb according to smb's merits
4) тк. несов. ( понимать значимость кого-чего-л) value (d), appreciate (d); (испытывать благодарность за что-л тж.) be grateful (for)его́ не це́нят — he is not appreciated
я ценю́ то, что вы для меня́ сде́лали — I appreciate [am grateful for] what you have done for me
он не це́нит мои́х сове́тов — he doesn't value my advice
ты до́лжен цени́ть мою́ по́мощь — you should be grateful for my help
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90 weglopen
1 [naar elders gaan] walk away/off3 [wegvloeien] run off/out4 [sport] break/pull away (from)5 [+ met] [veel ophebben met] be taken with/by ⇒ think much/the world of♦voorbeelden:1 hard weglopen • run away/offdat loopt niet weg • that can waitweglopen voor een hond • run away from a dogde weggelopen poes is terug • the lost cat has returned〈 figuurlijk〉 weggelopen lijken (uit een boek/film/periode) • look like someone who/something that has walked right out (of a book/film/period)hij was niet eens verrast dat zijn vrouw bij hem was weggelopen • he wasn't even surprised that his wife had walked out on himweggelopen: cyperse kat 〈enz.〉 • lost: tabby cater is wijn/olie uit het vat weggelopen • wine/oil has leaked out of the barrel -
91 passen
I v/i1. (die richtige Größe etc. haben) fit ( jemandem s.o.; auf etw. s.th.); es passt genau it fits perfectly, it’s a perfect fit; der hat gepasst Tennisball etc.: it just made it2. passen zu jemandem: suit; einer Sache: go with; (farblich übereinstimmen mit) match; der Hut passt gut zu dir the hat suits you; die Krawatte passt nicht zur Jacke the tie doesn’t go with the jacket; das passt zu ihm fig. that’s just like him, that’s him all over; das passt überhaupt nicht zu ihm fig. that’s not like him at all3. (harmonieren, für jemanden oder etw. geeignet sein) fit; sie passen gut zueinander they suit each other; er passt nicht in diese Kreise he doesn’t fit ( oder he’s out of place) in these circles; die Bemerkung passt hier nicht that remark is out of place here; das hat gepasst (gesessen) that hit home4. (genehm sein) suit (+ Dat s.o. oder s.th.), be suitable ( oder convenient) (for s.o. oder s.th.); passt es Ihnen am Montag? does Monday suit you?, is Monday convenient for you?; morgen passt es ihm nicht tomorrow doesn’t suit him ( oder is inconvenient for him); das passt mir gut that suits me fine; nur wenn es ihnen (umg.: in den Kram) passt only when they feel like it; das passt mir überhaupt nicht in den Kram umg. it doesn’t suit me at all, that’s the last thing I want; er / sein Gesicht passt mir nicht I don’t like him / the look on his etc. face; mein neues Zimmer passt mir ( überhaupt) nicht I don’t like (I’m not at all happy with) my new room; das könnte dir so passen! iro. you’d like that, wouldn’t you?5. Kartenspiel: pass; ich passe! pass; da muss ich passen umg., fig. you’ve got me there; da musste er passen umg., fig. he couldn’t answer that one, that had him stumpedII v/t1. TECH. fit (in into)* * *to suit; to fit* * *pạs|sen I [pasn]1. vidieser Schlüssel passt nicht ( ins Schloss) — this key doesn't or won't fit (the lock)
der Deckel passt nicht — the lid doesn't or won't fit (on)
2)zu jdm passen (Mensch) — to be suited to sb, to suit sb
sie passt gut zu ihm — she's well suited to him, she's just right for him
das passt zu ihm, so etwas zu sagen — that's just like him to say that
es passt nicht zu dir, Bier zu trinken — it doesn't look right for you to drink beer, you don't look right drinking beer
es passt nicht zu ihr, dass sie so freundlich ist — it's not like her to be so friendly
diese Einstellung passt gut zu ihm — that attitude is typical of him, that attitude is just like him
so ein formeller Ausdruck passt nicht in diesen Satz — such a formal expression is out of place or is all wrong in this sentence
Streiks passen nicht in die konjunkturelle Landschaft — strike action is inappropriate in the current economic situation
das Rot passt da nicht — the red is all wrong there
er passt nicht in diese Welt/in dieses Team — he doesn't fit or he is out of place in this world/in this team
See:= zueinanderpassen3) (= genehm sein) to suit, to be suitable or convenienter passt mir ( einfach) nicht — I (just) don't like him
Sonntag passt uns nicht/gut — Sunday is no good for us/suits us fine
das passt mir gar nicht, dass du schon gehst — I don't want you to go now
wenns dem Chef passt... — if it suits the boss..., if the boss gets the idea into his head...
du kannst doch nicht einfach kommen, wann es dir passt — you can't just come when it suits you or when you like
das könnte dir so passen! (inf) — you'd like or love that, wouldn't you?
ihre Raucherei passt mir schon lange nicht — this smoking of hers has been annoying me for a long time
2. vr (inf)to be proper3. vtto fix IIvi (CARDS fig)to pass(ich) passe! — (I) pass!
IIIbei dieser Frage muss ich passen — I'll have to pass on this question
vti (FTBL)to pass* * *1) (to be the right size or shape (for someone or something): The coat fits (you) very well.) fit2) ((with with) to be in agreement with; to match.) correspond3) ((of eg an arrangement, fashion etc) to suit (a person) completely: The dress suits her down to the ground.) suit down to the ground4) (to satisfy the needs of, or be convenient for: The arrangements did not suit us; The climate suits me very well.) suit* * *pas·sen1[ˈpasn̩]vi▪ [jdm] \passen to fit [sb]2. (richtige Größe haben) to fitdieser Schlüssel passt ins Schloss this key fits the lock▪ [irgendwohin] \passen to go well [somewhere]so ein riesiger Tisch passt nicht in diese Ecke a huge table like that doesn't look right in this cornerder Schrank passt besser in die Küche the cupboard would look better in the kitchenes passt in unsere politische Landschaft, dass Politiker käuflich sind it's typical of our political landscape that politicians can be boughtsie passt einfach nicht in unser Team she simply doesn't fit in with this teameine solche Beschreibung passt hier nicht such a description is out of place here▪ zu jdm \passen to suit sbgut zueinander \passen to go well together, to be well matched [or suited to each other]das passt zu dir! that's typical of you!4. (gelegen sein)▪ jdm \passen to suit sb, to be convenient for sbdas passt mir gut that suits me finedas würde mir besser \passen that would be better [or more convenient] for meder Termin passt mir zeitlich leider gar nicht that date isn't at all convenient for mepasst es Ihnen, wenn wir uns morgen treffen? would it be ok to meet up tomorrow?5. (angenehm sein)▪ jdm passt etw nicht sb doesn't like sthes passt ihm nicht, dass wir ab und zu mal lachen he doesn't like us laughing now and then▪ jdm passt etw nicht an jdm sb does not like sth about sbdiese vorlaute Art passt mir nicht an dir I don't like your loud-mouthed wayspasst dir an mir was nicht? is there something bugging you about me?▪ jdm passt jd nicht sb doesn't like [or think much of] sbder Mann passt mir gar nicht I don't like that man at aller passt mir nicht als neuer Chef I don't fancy him as my new bossdie neue Lehrerin passte ihren Kollegen nicht the new teacher wasn't liked by her colleaguespas·sen2[ˈpasn̩]vi1. (überfragt sein)2. KARTEN to pass* * *1.intransitives Verb1) (die richtige Größe/Form haben) fitetwas passt [jemandem] gut/nicht — something fits [somebody] well/does not fit [somebody]
2) (geeignet sein) be suitable, be appropriate (auf + Akk., zu for); (harmonieren) <colour etc.> matchzu etwas/jemandem passen — go well with something/be well suited to somebody
zueinander passen — < things> go well together; < two people> be suited to each other
dieses Benehmen passt zu ihm/passt nicht zu ihm — (ugs.) that's just like him (coll.) /that's not like him
diese Beschreibung passt [genau] auf sie — this description fits her [exactly]
jemandem passen — < time> be convenient for somebody, suit somebody
das könnte dir so passen! — (ugs.) you'd just love that, wouldn't you?
4) (Kartenspiel) pass2.bei dieser Frage muss ich passen — (fig.) I'll have to pass on that question
* * *A. v/i1. (die richtige Größe etc haben) fit (jemandem sb;auf etwas sth);es passt genau it fits perfectly, it’s a perfect fit;2.der Hut passt gut zu dir the hat suits you;die Krawatte passt nicht zur Jacke the tie doesn’t go with the jacket;das passt überhaupt nicht zu ihm fig that’s not like him at all3. (harmonieren, für jemanden oder etwas geeignet sein) fit;sie passen gut zueinander they suit each other;die Bemerkung passt hier nicht that remark is out of place here;das hat gepasst (gesessen) that hit homepasst es Ihnen am Montag? does Monday suit you?, is Monday convenient for you?;morgen passt es ihm nicht tomorrow doesn’t suit him ( oder is inconvenient for him);das passt mir gut that suits me fine;nur wenn es ihnen (umg:passt only when they feel like it;das passt mir überhaupt nicht in den Kram umg it doesn’t suit me at all, that’s the last thing I want;mein neues Zimmer passt mir (überhaupt) nicht I don’t like (I’m not at all happy with) my new room;das könnte dir so passen! iron you’d like that, wouldn’t you?5. Kartenspiel: pass;ich passe! pass;da muss ich passen umg, fig you’ve got me there;da musste er passen umg, fig he couldn’t answer that one, that had him stumped6. SPORT pass;Scholl passte zu Klose Scholl passed to KloseB. v/t1. TECH fit (in into)2. SPORT pass;den Ball/Puck zu … passen pass the ball/puck to …* * *1.intransitives Verb1) (die richtige Größe/Form haben) fitetwas passt [jemandem] gut/nicht — something fits [somebody] well/does not fit [somebody]
2) (geeignet sein) be suitable, be appropriate (auf + Akk., zu for); (harmonieren) <colour etc.> matchzu etwas/jemandem passen — go well with something/be well suited to somebody
zueinander passen — < things> go well together; < two people> be suited to each other
dieses Benehmen passt zu ihm/passt nicht zu ihm — (ugs.) that's just like him (coll.) /that's not like him
diese Beschreibung passt [genau] auf sie — this description fits her [exactly]
jemandem passen — < time> be convenient for somebody, suit somebody
das könnte dir so passen! — (ugs.) you'd just love that, wouldn't you?
4) (Kartenspiel) pass2.bei dieser Frage muss ich passen — (fig.) I'll have to pass on that question
* * *(zu) v.to suit v. v.to be suitable expr.to fit v. -
92 rolle
f; -, -n1. roll (auch Geld-, Papier-, Tabakrolle etc.); (Draht-, Taurolle) coil; (Papyrusrolle) roll, scroll; Rolle Garn reel of cotton, Am. spool of thread; Rolle Film roll of film; Rolle Pfefferminz roll of peppermints; eine Rolle Münzen a roll of coins2. (Walze) roller, cylinder; an Möbeln: castor; von Flaschenzug: pulley; ein Nachttisch auf Rollen a bedside table on castors4. fig., umg.: völlig von der Rolle sein have lost one’s grip on things; SPORT have completely lost one’s touch; ihr Tod hat ihn total von der Rolle gebracht he went completely to pieces after her death—f; -, -n; THEAT. und fig. role, part; kleine Rolle small ( oder bit) part, minor role; führende Rolle lead; seine Rolle lernen learn one’s part ( oder lines); die Rollen eines Stückes besetzen cast a play; ein Stück mit verteilten Rollen lesen have a play-reading; die Rolle ist ihr auf den Leib geschrieben the part could have been written for her ( oder suits her down to the ground); er ist in seiner Rolle völlig aufgegangen he was completely taken over by the role; fig. he became completely absorbed in his task; eine Rolle spielen fig. play a part ( oder role) (bei, in + Dat in); eine große Rolle spielen fig. play an important part ( oder role); Person, Firma: auch be a key player; in einer Firma etc.: be in an influential position; eine untergeordnete Rolle spielen fig. play a subsidiary role, be less important; sich mit der Rolle des Zuschauers begnügen be content to be a mere spectator; eine klägliche Rolle spielen oder abgeben cut a poor figure; er spielt gern eine Rolle pej. he likes to be involved ( bei in); er gefällt sich in der Rolle des... he likes playing the...; sich in der Rolle der Hausfrau etc. ( nicht) wohl fühlen (not) feel at home in the role of a housewife etc.; Spiel mit vertauschten Rollen reversal of roles; das spielt keine Rolle it doesn’t matter, it doesn’t make any difference; Geld spielt keine Rolle money is no object; aus der Rolle fallen step out of line; stärker: forget oneself* * *die Rolle(Gerolltes) roll; coil;(Spule) spool; reel;(Theater) part; person; role;(Walze) roller* * *Rọl|le ['rɔlə]f -, -n1) (= Zusammengerolltes) roll; (= Garnrolle, Zwirnrolle) reel, bobbin (spec); (= Papierrolle) reel; (= Urkunde) scrolleine Rolle Garn/Zwirn — a reel of thread
eine Rolle Bindfaden — a ball of string
eine Rolle Toilettenpapier — a toilet roll, a roll of toilet paper
eine Rolle Drops — a tube of fruit drops
eine Rolle Film — a roll of film; (im Kino) a reel of film
2) (= kleines Rad, Walze) roller; (an Möbeln, Kisten) caster, castor; (an Flaschenzug) pulley; (= Gardinenrolle) runnervon der Rolle sein (fig inf) — to have lost it (inf)
3) (SPORT, AVIAT) rolleine Rolle machen — to do a roll
eine Rolle vorwärts/rückwärts — a forward/backward roll
4) (THEAT, FILM fig) role, part; (SOCIOL) rolees war ein Spiel mit vertauschten Rollen (fig) — it was a situation where the roles were reversed
ein Stück mit verteilten Rollen lesen — to read a play with the parts cast; (in Schule) to read a play with the parts given out
der literarische Kreis liest jeden Dienstag ein Stück mit verteilten Rollen — the literary circle has a play-reading every Tuesday
in der Rolle von jdm/etw auftreten — to appear in the role of sb/sth
in der Rolle des... (fig) — he likes to think of or see himself in the role of the...
sich in die Rolle eines anderen versetzen (fig) — to put oneself in sb else's place
eine Rolle spielen — to play a part in sth; (Mensch auch) to play a role in sth
als Lehrer hat er eine klägliche Rolle gespielt — as a teacher he was not up to much or he left much to be desired
es spielt keine Rolle, (ob)... — it doesn't matter (whether)..., it doesn't make any difference (whether)..., whether... doesn't come into it
aus der Rolle fallen (fig) — to do/say the wrong thing
5) (dial = Wäschemangel) roller iron* * *die1) (a person in a play, novel etc: Rosencrantz is a minor character in Shakespeare's `Hamlet'.) character2) (a character in a play etc: She played the part of the queen.) part3) (the words, actions etc of a character in a play etc: He learned his part quickly.) part4) (a person's share, responsibility etc in doing something: He played a great part in the government's decision.) part5) (a wheel over which a rope etc can pass in order to lift heavy objects.) pulley6) (a part played by an actor or actress in a play etc: He is playing the rôle of King Lear.) rôle7) (the actions or functions of a person in some activity: He played the rôle of peacemaker in the dispute.) rôle8) (a part played by an actor or actress in a play etc: He is playing the rôle of King Lear.) role9) (the actions or functions of a person in some activity: He played the rôle of peacemaker in the dispute.) role10) (anything flat (eg a piece of paper, a carpet) rolled into the shape of a tube, wound round a tube etc: a roll of kitchen foil; a toilet-roll.) roll11) (a small solid wheel or cylinder on which something can be rolled along.) roller12) (a round wheel-shaped or cylindrical object of wood, metal etc on which thread, film, fishing-lines etc can be wound: a reel of sewing-cotton; He changed the reel in the projector.) reel* * *Rol·le<-, -n>[ˈrɔlə]fTapete wird in \Rollen verkauft wallpaper is sold in rollseine \Rolle Draht a reel [or spool] of wireeine \Rolle Film a roll [or BRIT reel] [or spool] of filmeine \Rolle Garn a reel of cotton BRIT, a spool of threadeine \Rolle Toilettenpapier a roll of toilet paper, a toilet roll BRITeine \Rolle Eurostücke a roll of one euro pieceseine \Rolle Kekse a [round] packet of biscuitseine \Rolle Pfefferminzbonbons a roll of mintseine \Rolle Smarties® a tube of Smarties®wir können das Klavier nur auf \Rollen verschieben we'll need to move the piano on rollers4. (Turnübung) rolleine \Rolle vorwärts/rückwärts a forward/backward rolleine \Rolle machen to do a roll8. FILM, THEAT role, parter war sehr gut in der \Rolle des Königs he was very good in the part of the kingsie gefiel sich in der \Rolle der Heldin she liked playing the role of the heroinein der \Rolle von jdm auftreten to appear in the role of sbmit verteilten \Rollen with each role castsie lasen das Stück mit verteilten \Rollen they read the play with the parts cast9. (Beteiligung, Part) role, partin der Situation waren die \Rollen vertauscht it was a situation where the roles were reversedich sehe meine \Rolle bei diesem Projekt als Organisatorin I see my role in this project as an organizerin jds \Rolle schlüpfen (fam) to slip into sb's role [or the role of sb]10. SOZIOL roleein Ehe mit streng verteilten \Rollen a marriage with strict allocation of rolessie weigerte sich, die traditionelle \Rolle der Frau zu übernehmen she refused to take the traditional woman's role11.▶ seine \Rolle ausgespielt haben to be finished▶ aus der \Rolle fallen to behave badlydas spielt doch keine \Rolle! it's of no importance!, it doesn't matter!das spielt jetzt keine \Rolle that does not concern us nowdas Alter spielt natürlich eine wichtige \Rolle of course, age plays an important part [or role]Geld spielt bei ihr keine \Rolle with her money is no object▶ es spielt keine \Rolle, ob/wie... it doesn't matter whether/how...* * *die; Rolle, Rollen1) (Spule) reel; spool2) (zylindrischer [Hohl]körper; Zusammengerolltes) roll; (SchriftRolle) scrolleine Rolle Bindfaden/Zweieurostücke/Kekse — a reel of string/roll of two-euro pieces/[round] packet of biscuits
3) (Walze) roller; (TeigRolle) rolling pin[bei jemandem/einer Sache] eine entscheidende Rolle spielen — be of crucial importance [to somebody/for something]
es spielt keine Rolle — it is of no importance; (es macht nichts aus) it doesn't matter
* * *…rolle f im subst1. THEAT etc:Bühnenrolle stage part;Fernsehrolle television part;Serienrolle part in a series2. fig:Beschützerrolle role of protector;Mutterrolle role of mother;Vaterrolle role of father* * *die; Rolle, Rollen1) (Spule) reel; spool2) (zylindrischer [Hohl]körper; Zusammengerolltes) roll; (SchriftRolle) scrolleine Rolle Bindfaden/Zweieurostücke/Kekse — a reel of string/roll of two-euro pieces/[round] packet of biscuits
3) (Walze) roller; (TeigRolle) rolling pin5) (Turnen, Kunstflug) roll6) (Theater, Film usw., fig.) role; part; (Soziol.) role[bei jemandem/einer Sache] eine entscheidende Rolle spielen — be of crucial importance [to somebody/for something]
es spielt keine Rolle — it is of no importance; (es macht nichts aus) it doesn't matter
* * *-n (Theater, Film) f.role n. -n f.character n.part n.role n.roll n.roller n. -
93 Language
Philosophy is written in that great book, the universe, which is always open, right before our eyes. But one cannot understand this book without first learning to understand the language and to know the characters in which it is written. It is written in the language of mathematics, and the characters are triangles, circles, and other figures. Without these, one cannot understand a single word of it, and just wanders in a dark labyrinth. (Galileo, 1990, p. 232)It never happens that it [a nonhuman animal] arranges its speech in various ways in order to reply appropriately to everything that may be said in its presence, as even the lowest type of man can do. (Descartes, 1970a, p. 116)It is a very remarkable fact that there are none so depraved and stupid, without even excepting idiots, that they cannot arrange different words together, forming of them a statement by which they make known their thoughts; while, on the other hand, there is no other animal, however perfect and fortunately circumstanced it may be, which can do the same. (Descartes, 1967, p. 116)Human beings do not live in the object world alone, nor alone in the world of social activity as ordinarily understood, but are very much at the mercy of the particular language which has become the medium of expression for their society. It is quite an illusion to imagine that one adjusts to reality essentially without the use of language and that language is merely an incidental means of solving specific problems of communication or reflection. The fact of the matter is that the "real world" is to a large extent unconsciously built on the language habits of the group.... We see and hear and otherwise experience very largely as we do because the language habits of our community predispose certain choices of interpretation. (Sapir, 1921, p. 75)It powerfully conditions all our thinking about social problems and processes.... No two languages are ever sufficiently similar to be considered as representing the same social reality. The worlds in which different societies live are distinct worlds, not merely the same worlds with different labels attached. (Sapir, 1985, p. 162)[A list of language games, not meant to be exhaustive:]Giving orders, and obeying them- Describing the appearance of an object, or giving its measurements- Constructing an object from a description (a drawing)Reporting an eventSpeculating about an eventForming and testing a hypothesisPresenting the results of an experiment in tables and diagramsMaking up a story; and reading itPlay actingSinging catchesGuessing riddlesMaking a joke; and telling itSolving a problem in practical arithmeticTranslating from one language into anotherLANGUAGE Asking, thanking, cursing, greeting, and praying-. (Wittgenstein, 1953, Pt. I, No. 23, pp. 11 e-12 e)We dissect nature along lines laid down by our native languages.... The world is presented in a kaleidoscopic flux of impressions which has to be organized by our minds-and this means largely by the linguistic systems in our minds.... No individual is free to describe nature with absolute impartiality but is constrained to certain modes of interpretation even while he thinks himself most free. (Whorf, 1956, pp. 153, 213-214)We dissect nature along the lines laid down by our native languages.The categories and types that we isolate from the world of phenomena we do not find there because they stare every observer in the face; on the contrary, the world is presented in a kaleidoscopic flux of impressions which has to be organized by our minds-and this means largely by the linguistic systems in our minds.... We are thus introduced to a new principle of relativity, which holds that all observers are not led by the same physical evidence to the same picture of the universe, unless their linguistic backgrounds are similar or can in some way be calibrated. (Whorf, 1956, pp. 213-214)9) The Forms of a Person's Thoughts Are Controlled by Unperceived Patterns of His Own LanguageThe forms of a person's thoughts are controlled by inexorable laws of pattern of which he is unconscious. These patterns are the unperceived intricate systematizations of his own language-shown readily enough by a candid comparison and contrast with other languages, especially those of a different linguistic family. (Whorf, 1956, p. 252)It has come to be commonly held that many utterances which look like statements are either not intended at all, or only intended in part, to record or impart straightforward information about the facts.... Many traditional philosophical perplexities have arisen through a mistake-the mistake of taking as straightforward statements of fact utterances which are either (in interesting non-grammatical ways) nonsensical or else intended as something quite different. (Austin, 1962, pp. 2-3)In general, one might define a complex of semantic components connected by logical constants as a concept. The dictionary of a language is then a system of concepts in which a phonological form and certain syntactic and morphological characteristics are assigned to each concept. This system of concepts is structured by several types of relations. It is supplemented, furthermore, by redundancy or implicational rules..., representing general properties of the whole system of concepts.... At least a relevant part of these general rules is not bound to particular languages, but represents presumably universal structures of natural languages. They are not learned, but are rather a part of the human ability to acquire an arbitrary natural language. (Bierwisch, 1970, pp. 171-172)In studying the evolution of mind, we cannot guess to what extent there are physically possible alternatives to, say, transformational generative grammar, for an organism meeting certain other physical conditions characteristic of humans. Conceivably, there are none-or very few-in which case talk about evolution of the language capacity is beside the point. (Chomsky, 1972, p. 98)[It is] truth value rather than syntactic well-formedness that chiefly governs explicit verbal reinforcement by parents-which renders mildly paradoxical the fact that the usual product of such a training schedule is an adult whose speech is highly grammatical but not notably truthful. (R. O. Brown, 1973, p. 330)he conceptual base is responsible for formally representing the concepts underlying an utterance.... A given word in a language may or may not have one or more concepts underlying it.... On the sentential level, the utterances of a given language are encoded within a syntactic structure of that language. The basic construction of the sentential level is the sentence.The next highest level... is the conceptual level. We call the basic construction of this level the conceptualization. A conceptualization consists of concepts and certain relations among those concepts. We can consider that both levels exist at the same point in time and that for any unit on one level, some corresponding realizate exists on the other level. This realizate may be null or extremely complex.... Conceptualizations may relate to other conceptualizations by nesting or other specified relationships. (Schank, 1973, pp. 191-192)The mathematics of multi-dimensional interactive spaces and lattices, the projection of "computer behavior" on to possible models of cerebral functions, the theoretical and mechanical investigation of artificial intelligence, are producing a stream of sophisticated, often suggestive ideas.But it is, I believe, fair to say that nothing put forward until now in either theoretic design or mechanical mimicry comes even remotely in reach of the most rudimentary linguistic realities. (Steiner, 1975, p. 284)The step from the simple tool to the master tool, a tool to make tools (what we would now call a machine tool), seems to me indeed to parallel the final step to human language, which I call reconstitution. It expresses in a practical and social context the same understanding of hierarchy, and shows the same analysis by function as a basis for synthesis. (Bronowski, 1977, pp. 127-128)t is the language donn eґ in which we conduct our lives.... We have no other. And the danger is that formal linguistic models, in their loosely argued analogy with the axiomatic structure of the mathematical sciences, may block perception.... It is quite conceivable that, in language, continuous induction from simple, elemental units to more complex, realistic forms is not justified. The extent and formal "undecidability" of context-and every linguistic particle above the level of the phoneme is context-bound-may make it impossible, except in the most abstract, meta-linguistic sense, to pass from "pro-verbs," "kernals," or "deep deep structures" to actual speech. (Steiner, 1975, pp. 111-113)A higher-level formal language is an abstract machine. (Weizenbaum, 1976, p. 113)Jakobson sees metaphor and metonymy as the characteristic modes of binarily opposed polarities which between them underpin the two-fold process of selection and combination by which linguistic signs are formed.... Thus messages are constructed, as Saussure said, by a combination of a "horizontal" movement, which combines words together, and a "vertical" movement, which selects the particular words from the available inventory or "inner storehouse" of the language. The combinative (or syntagmatic) process manifests itself in contiguity (one word being placed next to another) and its mode is metonymic. The selective (or associative) process manifests itself in similarity (one word or concept being "like" another) and its mode is metaphoric. The "opposition" of metaphor and metonymy therefore may be said to represent in effect the essence of the total opposition between the synchronic mode of language (its immediate, coexistent, "vertical" relationships) and its diachronic mode (its sequential, successive, lineal progressive relationships). (Hawkes, 1977, pp. 77-78)It is striking that the layered structure that man has given to language constantly reappears in his analyses of nature. (Bronowski, 1977, p. 121)First, [an ideal intertheoretic reduction] provides us with a set of rules"correspondence rules" or "bridge laws," as the standard vernacular has it-which effect a mapping of the terms of the old theory (T o) onto a subset of the expressions of the new or reducing theory (T n). These rules guide the application of those selected expressions of T n in the following way: we are free to make singular applications of their correspondencerule doppelgangers in T o....Second, and equally important, a successful reduction ideally has the outcome that, under the term mapping effected by the correspondence rules, the central principles of T o (those of semantic and systematic importance) are mapped onto general sentences of T n that are theorems of Tn. (P. Churchland, 1979, p. 81)If non-linguistic factors must be included in grammar: beliefs, attitudes, etc. [this would] amount to a rejection of the initial idealization of language as an object of study. A priori such a move cannot be ruled out, but it must be empirically motivated. If it proves to be correct, I would conclude that language is a chaos that is not worth studying.... Note that the question is not whether beliefs or attitudes, and so on, play a role in linguistic behavior and linguistic judgments... [but rather] whether distinct cognitive structures can be identified, which interact in the real use of language and linguistic judgments, the grammatical system being one of these. (Chomsky, 1979, pp. 140, 152-153)23) Language Is Inevitably Influenced by Specific Contexts of Human InteractionLanguage cannot be studied in isolation from the investigation of "rationality." It cannot afford to neglect our everyday assumptions concerning the total behavior of a reasonable person.... An integrational linguistics must recognize that human beings inhabit a communicational space which is not neatly compartmentalized into language and nonlanguage.... It renounces in advance the possibility of setting up systems of forms and meanings which will "account for" a central core of linguistic behavior irrespective of the situation and communicational purposes involved. (Harris, 1981, p. 165)By innate [linguistic knowledge], Chomsky simply means "genetically programmed." He does not literally think that children are born with language in their heads ready to be spoken. He merely claims that a "blueprint is there, which is brought into use when the child reaches a certain point in her general development. With the help of this blueprint, she analyzes the language she hears around her more readily than she would if she were totally unprepared for the strange gabbling sounds which emerge from human mouths. (Aitchison, 1987, p. 31)Looking at ourselves from the computer viewpoint, we cannot avoid seeing that natural language is our most important "programming language." This means that a vast portion of our knowledge and activity is, for us, best communicated and understood in our natural language.... One could say that natural language was our first great original artifact and, since, as we increasingly realize, languages are machines, so natural language, with our brains to run it, was our primal invention of the universal computer. One could say this except for the sneaking suspicion that language isn't something we invented but something we became, not something we constructed but something in which we created, and recreated, ourselves. (Leiber, 1991, p. 8)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Language
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94 LIGGJA
* * *(ligg; lá, lágum; leginn), v.1) to lie (ör liggr þar úti á vegginum);liggja sjúkr, to lie sick (hann liggr sjúkr heima);þeir lágu í sárum, they lay ill of their wounds;2) to lie buried (hér liggr skáld);3) to lie at anchor (hann lagði til hafnar ok lá þþþþþþar um hríð);liggja veðrfastr, to lie weather-bound;4) to lie, be situated, of a place (þorp ok borgir, er lágu við ríki hans);5) to lie, go, lead, of a road (liggr gata til bœjarins);6) to be covered with ice, ice-bound (vetrar-ríki var á mikit ok lágu firðir allir);7) to lie with, have sexual intercourse with, = liggja hjá konu;8) with preps. and advs.:liggja á e-m, to lie heavy on, weigh upon, oppress (liggja á mér hugir stórra manna);liggja á hálsi e-m, to hang on one’s neck, blame one;liggja á e-m, to be fated to one (þat lá á konungi, at hann skyldi eigi lifa um tíu vetr);liggja á e-u, to attend, be connected with (á þessum ráðum liggja stórmeinbugir);to be urgent, of importance, pressing (A. kvað honum eigi á liggja þat at vita);liggr honum ekki á, it does not matter to him;liggja á úknyttum, to pursue wicked courses;liggja eptir, to be left undone (skal ekki eptir liggja þat, sem vér megum þeim veita);liggja fyrir e-m, to lie in wait for;liggja fyrir, to be in store for, or open to, one;þœtti mér þat ráð fyrir liggja, at þú sendir menn, that the best thing would be to send men;liggja hjá e-rri, to lie with (lá ek hjá dóttur þinni);liggja í e-u, to stick or sink in (lágu hestarnir á kafi í snjónum);liggja í, to stick fast in mire or bog (liggr í hestrinn undir þeim);liggja í hernaði, víkingu, to be engaged in warfare;liggja niðri, to lie untold (nú skal þat eigi niðri liggja, er honum er þó mest vegsemd í);liggja saman, to be adjacent (lágu saman skógar þeirra Lopts);liggja til e-s, to belong to (naut ok sauðir, lá þat til Atleyjar);bœtr liggja til alls, there is atonement for every case;to be due or proper (þótti þat til liggja at taka af honum tignina);liggja til byrjar, to lie by for a fair wind;liggja til hafs, to lie ready for sea (lá biskup til hafs sex vikur);liggja um e-n, to lie in wait for;liggja um e-t, to be bent upon (hann liggr um þat nótt ok dag at veita yðr líflát);liggja undir e-n or e-m, to be subject to, belong to (þessi lönd liggja undir Danakonung);hlutr e-s liggr undir, one is worsted;liggja úti, to lie out, not in a house (sumir lágu úti á fjöllum með bú sín);liggja við, to lie at stake (líf mitt liggr við);þá muntu bezt gefast, er mest liggr við, when the need is greatest;e-m liggr við e-u, one is on the verge of;mörgum lá við bana, many lay at death’s door;lá við sjálft, at, ti was just on the point of.* * *pres. ligg, pl. liggja; pret. lá, 2nd pers. látt, mod. lást; subj. lægi; imperat. ligg and liggðú; part. leginn: [Ulf. ligan = κεισθαι; A. S. licgan; Chauc. to ligge; North. E. and Scot. to lig; Engl. to lie; Germ. liegen; Dan. ligge]:—to lie; ör liggr þar úti á vegginum, Nj. 115, Fas. i. 284; þeir vógu at honum liggjanda ok úvörum, 332; hann liggr á hauginum, Fb. i. 215; lá hann inni meðan þeir börðusk, Nj. 85; legsk hann niðr í runna nokkura ok liggr þar um stund, 132; Rafn lá í bekk, Sturl. i. 140; sveinar tveir er lengi höfðu úti legit á fjöllum, to lie out in the cold, Fms. ii. 98; sumir lágu úti á fjöllum með bú sín, lay out on the fells with their cattle, Sturl. iii. 75: of robbers, cp. úti-legu-maðr, an ‘outlying-man,’ outlaw; l. úti á fjöllum, Ld. 250: of freebooters, víkingar tveir, ok lágu úti bæði vetr ok sumar, Grett. 83; l. í hernaði, víkingu, to be out on a raid, Fs. 120, Eg. 1, Fms. xi. 44:—to lie, rest, þú skalt liggja í lopti hjá mér í nótt, Nj. 6; lágu þau þar tvau ein í loptinu, 7; þú skalt ríða um nætr en liggja ( but lie abed) um daga, 34; Gunnarr lá mjök langa hríð, 94; þeir lágu úti um nóttina, lay out by night, Fms. ix. 364: the phrase, liggja á gólfi, to lie on the floor, to lie in labour, Fb. ii. 263: of carnal intercourse, to lie with, hefir Guðrún dóttir mín legit hjá þér, Nj. 94; lá ek hjá dóttur þinni, 130: liggja með e-m, id., Grág. i. 128; hón hefir legit sekt í garð konungs, N. G. L. i. 358: with acc., liggja konu, stuprare, Gþl. 203, N. G. L. i. 20; at þú hafir legit dóttur Ísólfs, Lv. 78: of animals (rare), en veðrarnir ok bukkarnir lágu þær, Stj. 178:—to lie sick, hann liggr sjúkr heima at búð …, lá hann sjúkr um allt þingit, Nj. 80; Þórólfr ok Bárðr lágu í sárum, lay sick of their wounds, Eg. 34; Helga tók þá ok þyngd ok lá þó eigi, H. lay sick, but not bedridden, Ísl. ii. 274; ef griðmaðr liggr af verkum sínum, lies sick from his work, Grág. i. 154; ef hann liggr í helsótt, 201:—to lie, be buried, Björn liggr í Farmanns-haugi, Fms. i. 12; hér liggr skald, Fb. i. 215 (in a verse):—to lie at anchor, Bs. i. 713; þar lagði hann til hafnar ok lá þar um hríð, Fms. i. 145; lágu langskip konungs með endilöngum bryggjum, ix. 478; þeir lágu þar nokkura hríð undir nesi einu, Nj. 43; hann lá í Gautelfi austr, 122; þar lá fyrir í höfninni knörr einn mikill, Eg. 79; en er hann kom fyrir Elfina þá lágu þeir þar ok biðu nætr, 80; Haraldr konungr lá liði sínu út fyrir Hreinsléttu, Fms. i. 12; liggja til byrjar, to lie by for a fair wind, 135; liggja til hafs, id., Bs. i. 66, Bjarn. 4, Gísl. 7, Landn. 223: l. veðr-fastr, to lie weather-bound:—lágu hvelpar í hundunum, they were big with whelps, Fms. xi. 10: l. í kafi, to sink deep; þá liggr í hestrinn undir þeim, sank in a quagmire, Fs. 65; Gregorius lá í ísinum, Fms. vii. 273; also, lágu hestarnir á (í) kafi, Eg. 546.II. to be covered with ice, ice-bound (cp. leggja); vötnin lágu öll, Fbr. 13; til Vigra-fjarðar, ok lá hann allr, Eb. 84 new Ed.; lágu allir firðir, 306.III. to lie idle, of capital; enda er heimting til fjárins, hversu lengi sem liggr, Grág. i. 209; enda liggr féit hér alldregi, 220; erfðir liggi sem áðr er skilt um, Gþl. 254; liggja úslegit, to lie unmown, Grág. ii. 284; láta sum orð liggja (to let them lie, leave out) þau er máli eigu at skipta, þat er ljúgvitni, i. 43; l. niðri, to lie down, lie dormant, lie untold, or the like, Fagrsk, 126, Nj. 88, Ó. H. 233, Grett. 192 new Ed.; opt má satt kyrt liggja, truth may often be left alone, a saying: liggja eptir, to be left behind, untold, Fms. viii. 4: spec. usages, liggja lauss fyrir, to lie loose, lie at one’s hand; fylg þú nú virðing þinni er þér liggr laus fyrir, Boll. 360; þótti eigi svá laust fyrir liggja sem þeir hugsuðu, Fms. viii. 357: liggja undir e-m (or e-n), of power, lands, to belong to; jörðu þeirri er legit hefir undir oss langfeðrum, Gþl. 296; þat er mikit ríki, ok liggr undir biskup í Skáni, Fms. xi. 231.IV. to take, hold, of a measure; vatns-ker þau er í lágu matskjólur tvennar, Hom. (St.): the phrase, liggja í miklu, litlu rúmi, to take a great, a little space, metaph. to think much, little of a thing, Ld. 210, Al. 152; liggja í léttu rúmi, to care little for: e-m liggja vel (ílla) orð til e-s, to speak well ( ill) of a thing or person, Konr.; honum lágu vel orð til hans, he spoke favourably of him.V. to lie, be situated, of a place, road, of direction; slá er lá um þvert skipit, Nj. 125; liggja saman garðar, Gísl. 10; liggr sá steinn þar enn, Eg. 142, Gm. 4, 12; þær (the Scilly Islands) liggja vestr í hafit fra Englandi, Fms. i. 145; at garði þeim sem liggr ofan eptir mýrinni, Dipl. v. 25; er sagt er at liggi sex dægra sigling í norðr frá Bretlandi, Landn. (begin.); en Finnmörk liggr fyrir ofan öll þessi lönd, Eg. 58; Ey liggr í Hitará, Bjarn. 22; eyin liggr við þjóðleið fyrir útan, Ó. H. 116; veiði-stöð sú liggr á Breiða-firði er Bjarneyjar heita, Ld. 38; þar liggr til hafs útver, lies on the sea-side, Ó. H. 149; veginn þann er um skóginn lá, Eg. 578; sem leið liggr, Eb. 306; liggr gata til bæjarins, Gísl. 28; en til góðs vinar liggja gagnvegir, Hm. 33; leiðin liggr fram með hálsinum, Eg. 582; tjaldstaði þá er þeim þóttu beztir, ok hæst lágu, Fms. vi. 135; þangat sem leiðin liggr lægra, Sturl. ii. 247: of the body, lá hátt tanngarðrinn, he had prominent teeth, Nj. 39: of the eyes, rauðlituð augu ok lágu fagrt ok fast, Fms. viii. 447; augu þau er liggja í ljósu líki, Kormak: ofarliga mun liggja ú-jafnaðr í þér, Grett. 135 new Ed.B. Metaph. usages, esp. with prepp.; liggja á, to lie heavy on, to weigh upon, and metaph. to oppress; liggja á mér hugir stórra manna, Fb. i. 258, Sks. 276; l. á hálsi e-m, to hang on one’s neck, blame, Fms. xi. 336: of a fine, þar liggr ekki fégjald á, ’tis not finable, K. Þ. K. 164: to be bewitched, lie under a spell, þat lá á konungi, at hann skyldi eigi lifa um tíu vetr, Fms. x. 220 (cp. leggja á e-n and á-lög): to pursue, liggja á úknyttum, to pursue wicked things, 172; liggja á úráði, Karl. 121: to be urgent, of importance, pressing, kvað honum eigi á liggja þat at vita, Grett. 37 new Ed.; eigi þykki mér á því liggja, segir Járnskjöldr, Fb. i. 259; mun þar stórt á liggja, ’tis a grave matter, Nj. 62; nú liggr honum ekki á ( it does not matter for him), þótt hann komi aldri til Íslands, Band. 10: mod., það liggr ekki á, it does not press, is not urgent; mér liggr á, it lies on me, is pressing for me: impers. to feel, be in spirits so and so, liggr vel á e-m, to be in good spirits; liggr ílla á e-m, to be in low spirits, the metaphor being taken from the pressure on the mind: leaving out the prep., lá honum þat ílla, it weighed heavily on hitn, Bs. i. 775:—liggja að, in the phrase, það lá að, that was just what was to be expected! an expression of dislike:—liggja fyrir e-m, to lie before one, of things to be done or to happen, of what is fated, doomed (see for-lög); þætti mér þat ráð fyrir liggja, faðir, at þú sendir menn, the best thing to be done would be to send men, Eg. 167; at þat mundi fyrir liggja at búask til orrostu, 283; en Bera kvað Egil vera víkings-efni, kvað þat mundu fyrir liggja, þegar hann hefði aldr til, 190: liggja fyrir e-m, to lie in one’s way, in ambush (cp. fyrirsát), Edda 148 (pref.), Eg. 240:—liggja um e-t, to lie in wait for, Fms. x. 287; l. um líf e-s, to seek one’s life, Stj. 550, Sks. 722:—liggja til, to be due to, deserved; þótti þat til liggja at taka af honum tignina, Eg. 271: to belong to, naut ok sauðir, lá þat til Atleyjar, 719: to fit to, til sumra meina liggr bruni (as a remedy), 655 xi. 28; bætr liggja til alls, there is atonement for every case, Fas. iii. 522; e-m liggr vel (ílla) orð til e-s, to speak well (or evil) of a person, Sturl. iii. 143:—liggja undir, to lie underneath, be worsted, of wrestling, Bárð. 166; fyrir hverjum liggr hlutr þinn undir, Eb. 156:—liggja við, to lie at slake; deildi … ok hafði einn þat er við lá, Ísl. ii. 215; en þeir köru at hætta til, er féfang lá við svá mikit, Eg. 57; skal þar liggja við mundrinn allr, Nj. 15; liggr þér nökkut við?—Líf mitt liggr við, segir hann, 116; þá muntú bezt gefask, er mest liggr við, when the need is greatest, 179; svá er ok at mikit liggr yðr þá við, 227; en mér liggr hér nú allt við, it is all important to me, 265; þótt ek vita at líf mitt liggi við, 115; lá við sjálft, at …, it was on the point of …, Al. 79: mod., það lá við, að …C. Reflex. to lay oneself down, lie down; þá er þat étr ok er fullt liggsk þat ok söfr (of cattle), Best. 58, cp. Gm.2. e-m liggsk e-t, to leave behind, forget; svínið lásk mér eptir, Skíða R. 185; legisk hefir mér nokkut í minni venju, ek gáða eigi at taka blezun af biskupi, Bs. i. 781: hence the mod. phrase, mér láðist ( I forgot) and mér hefir láðst, which is a corruption from mér lásk eptir; for lá mér eptir, read lásk mér eptir, I forgot, neglected (?), Skv. 1. 20; láskat þat dægr háski, it did not miss, did not fail, Arnór; láskat, be failed not, Bjarn. (in a verse). -
95 niedrig
I Adj.3. von Stand: low(ly), humble4. fig. (gemein) low, mean, base; niedrige Instinkte base(r) instincts; aus niedrigen Beweggründen handeln act on base motivesII Adv.1. schweben, fliegen: low; er versuchte, den Drachen niedrig zu halten he tried to keep the kite low2. niedrig kalkulierte Preise low prices; die Inflation niedrig halten keep inflation low; wir setzten die monatlichen Raten niedrig an we fixed the monthly instal(l)ments at a low rate* * *small; mean; little; menial; low* * *nied|rig ['niːdrɪç]1. adj1) (= tief) low2) (= gering) low; Stand, Herkunft, Geburt low(ly), humbleníédrigste Preise — lowest or rock-bottom prices
2. adv2)(= gering)
etw níédriger berechnen — to charge less for sthetw zu níédrig veranschlagen — to underestimate sth
etw níédrig einstufen — to give sth a low classification
jdn gehaltsmäßig níédriger einstufen — to pay sb a lower salary
ich schätze seine Chancen sehr níédrig ein — I don't think much of his chances, I think his chances are very slim or small
níédrig denken — to think base thoughts
von jdm níédrig denken, jdn níédrig einschätzen — to have a low or poor opinion of sb
* * *1) (not at or reaching up to a great distance from the ground, sea-level etc: low hills; a low ceiling; This chair is too low for the child.) low2) (small: a low price.) low3) (near the bottom in grade, rank, class etc: low temperatures; the lower classes.) low4) (of low rank; humble.) lowly5) (in or to a low position, manner or state: The ball flew low over the net.) low6) (unimportant; having a low position in society etc: a man of humble origins.) humble7) meanly* * *nied·rig[ˈni:drɪç]I. adj1. (nicht hoch) loweine \niedrige Decke/Stirn/ \niedrige Absätze a low ceiling/forehead/low heels\niedriges Gras short [or low] grass2. (gering) lowein \niedriger Betrag/ \niedriges Trinkgeld a small amount/tip3. (gemein) low, base4. JUR base\niedriger Beweggrund base motive5. (dem untersten Rang zugehörig) lowly, humbleII. adv1. (in geringer Höhe) low2. (gering) low* * *1.1) low; short < grass>2.* * *A. adj1. an Höhe: low;niedriger Wasserstand low waterniedriger Gang AUTO low gear3. von Stand: low(ly), humble4. fig (gemein) low, mean, base;niedrige Instinkte base(r) instincts;aus niedrigen Beweggründen handeln act on base motivesB. adv1. schweben, fliegen: low;er versuchte, den Drachen niedrig zu halten he tried to keep the kite low2.niedrig kalkulierte Preise low prices;die Inflation niedrig halten keep inflation low;wir setzten die monatlichen Raten niedrig an we fixed the monthly instal(l)ments at a low rate* * *1.1) low; short < grass>2) (von geringem Rang) lowly <origins, birth>; low <rank, status, intellectual level>2.adverbial <hang, fly> low* * *adj.humble adj.low adj.lowly adj.menial adj. adv.blackly adv.menially adv. -
96 komme
4приходи́ть; приезжа́ть; прибыва́тьkómme gående — прийти́ пешко́м
kómme kǿrende — прие́хать
kómme for sent — опозда́ть
hvordán kómmer jeg til...? — как мне пройти́ к...?
kómme af (med ngn, ngt) — отде́лываться, избавля́ться от кого́-л., чего́-л.
kómme igén — возвраща́ться
kómme ind ; kom ind! — войди́те!
kómme sámmen — обща́ться
kómme ved — каса́ться, име́ть отноше́ние
det kómmer ud på ét — всё равно́, безразли́чно
* * *advent, arrive, come, get, put* * *I. (et)( nærmen sig) approach ( fx the approach of night (, winter));( ankomst) coming ( fx the coming of winter), arrival.II. vb (kom, kommet)( især: hen til den talende, til det sted man tænker på) come ( fx come here! come to my house; are you coming to the dance?);( nå frem; blive hensat i) get ( fx get to London, get home, he got here at last; get into a better temper),( ankomme) arrive ( fx the guests will arrive soon; arrive in London(, at a place)),( komme på besøg) call;( hælde) pour;( smøre) spread ( fx glue (, paint) on something);[ forskellige forbindelser:][ nu kommer jeg!] coming![ komme nærmere] approach, come (, get) closer;(se også nærme sig);[ kom så da!] come on![ med sig:][ komme sig] improve,T pick up,( blive rask) recover, get well;[ komme sig af] recover from ( fx an illness, a shock, a surprise), get over ( fx an illness, a disappointment, a shock, a surprise);(dvs bliver kvikkere) you are coming on!(se også kommende);[ med præp og adv:][ komme `af](mar: komme af grunden) come off, get off;[` komme af]( skyldes) come from, be due to,( nedstamme fra) come of,( om ord: afledes af) be derived from;[ hvoraf kommer dette?] why is this?[ komme af med] get rid of;[ kom an!] come on![ komme an på] depend on ( fx it depends on the weather);(dvs afhænger af omstændighederne) that depends;[ det er karakteren det kommer an på] it's the character that matters (el.counts);[ det kommer an på dig] it depends on you, it is up to you;[ komme bag på én] take somebody by surprise;[ komme bort] get off, get away,(om brev etc også) go astray;[ komme bort fra] get away from;( utilsigtet) stray from ( fx the subject);(dvs benægte) there is no denying it;[ komme efter](dvs følge på) follow, succeed, come after,( komme for at hente) come for, call for;(dvs opdage) find out, get on to,( lære) pick up;[ jeg skal komme efter ham!] I'll be after him!( om sag) come on;[ komme foran] get in front,(ved konkurrence etc) get ahead, take the lead;[ komme forbi] pass (by);( slippe forbi) get past;[` komme fra] come from ( fx Germany, the working class);(dvs et arbejde) he made a good job of it,( ulykke) he escaped unhurt,( vovestykke) he got away with it;[ det var det jeg kom fra] as I was saying; as I was going to say;(se også levende);[ komme frem] come out, appear,( komme videre) get on;( bane sig vej) make one's way,( i verden) get on, rise;( til bestemmelsessted) get through, get there;( røbes) be revealed, become known;[ jeg kunne hverken komme frem eller tilbage] I was stuck;[ komme frem af] emerge from;[ komme frem med] put forward,T come up with ( fx a plan, a suggestion),( afsløre, F) disclose;[ komme fri](af lænker etc) get free;( hvis man sidder fast) get loose;( i fodbold) get clear;[ komme fri af] get loose from,F disengage (el. extricate) oneself from;[ komme hen til] come up to;[ komme hos Smith] be often at the Smiths,F be a frequent guest at Smith's;[ komme i avisen] get into the papers;[ komme i himlen] go to heaven;[ komme i mål], se ndf: komme ind;[ komme i tre oplag (, udgaver)] run into three printings (, editions);[ komme igen] come back, return,( betale sig) pay in time;[ jeg kommer igen en anden gang] I'll call again (another time);[ komme igennem] get through; pass;[ komme igennem med et forslag] get (el. carry el. put) a proposal through;[ komme ind] enter; come (, get) in ( fx come in! we couldn't get in);( om tog) come in, arrive;(fig: i diskussion) come in;( i sport) get in, finish ( fx he finished third);[ komme ind i] enter;( sætte sig ind i) acquaint oneself with;( i samtale) get on to a subject;( berøre) touch on a subject;[ komme nærmere ind på sagen] go into detail;(dvs blive taget med) be included,( slutte sig til andre) join;[` komme med](dvs bringe) bring ( fx the milkman brings milk every day);( fremkomme med) come up with ( fx the right answer, a solution);( ytre) make ( fx a remark; make rude remarks about, make no protest), say ( fx a few words),F utter ( fx protests);[ komme med en forklaring] give an explanation;[ han kom ikke med nogen forklaring] he offered no explanation;[ komme om ved](også fig) get around;[( søge at) komme nemt om ved det] cut a corner; cut corners;[ komme op] get up;( om planter) come up;( om teaterstykke) be put on;[ komme op at skændes] quarrel;[ komme op at slås] come to blows;[ komme op i et fag] be examined in a subject;(se også år);[ komme op på et stort tal] reach a big figure;(se også side);[ komme ovenpå], se ovenpå;[ komme over]( passere) get over ( fx the road, a wall),(fig: overvinde) get over ( fx a difficulty),F overcome, surmount ( fx a difficulty);( komme sig af) get over, recover from ( fx an illness, a shock; he'll soon get over it);( om stemning: gribe) come over ( fx a feeling of hopelessness came over us; what has come over him?);(se også ånd);[ komme overens], se overens;[ komme `på]( blive trykt i blad) be put in;( erindre) think of, remember;[` komme på][ komme på holdet] be included in (el. selected for el. put on) the team;[ jeg kan ikke komme på navnet] I can't think of the name, the name escapes me;[ hvordan kommer du dog på det?] what made you think of that? how did you get that idea?[ komme sammen] meet, come together;( omgås) see each other,F associate with each other;( om par) go out;( omgås) see,F associate with,( om par) go out with,T date ( fx he is going out with (, dating) Vera);( også) he has got a girl friend;[ komme til] come to, arrive at ( fx a place),(se også tur);( erhverve) come by ( fx how did you come by that money?),F obtain;[ der kom andre ` til] they were joined by others,( overraskende) others turned up;[ lad mig komme ` til!] let me (have a go)![ komme til middag (, te etc)] come to dinner (, tea etc);[ komme til penge] come by some money,( ved arv) come into money;( tilfældigt) happen to do something, chance to do something,( uheldigvis) do something by accident;( efterhånden) come (el. get) to do something ( fx I had come (el.got) to hate him);( i fremtiden) will do something ( fx the prices will be higher),( nødvendigvis) will have to do something ( fx you will have to change it);[ han kom til at sige at] he chanced to say that, by mistake he said that,( røbede) he blurted out that;[ han kom aldrig til at se hende mere] he never saw her again;F he was never to see her again;[ når alt kommer til alt] after all;[ når han kan komme til det] when he has a chance;[ det kom til forsoning (, til slag)] there was a reconciliation (, a battle);[ komme noget til] get hurt, be injured;( fatte sig) recover,( efter bevidstløshed) come round, come to oneself;[ komme tilbage] get (, come) back, return;[ komme ud] come out, get out,(se også II. udkomme);( i lotteri) his number came up;[ han kommer meget ud] he goes out a great deal;[ der kom intet ud af planen] the plan came to nothing; nothing came of the plan;[ der kom ikke ret meget ud af det] it did not come to much;(se også sted);[ hvad skal der komme ud af dette?] how is this going to end?[ komme ud af det med] get on with;(se også ud);[ komme ud for] meet with ( fx an accident, criticism, opposition);[nummeret er kommet ud med £500] the number has won £500;( klare) manage;[ komme ud på ét] come to the same thing; be all one;(dvs benægte) there is no denying it (el. getting round it);[ man kan ikke komme uden om at] one cannot ignore that, there is no getting away from the fact that, there is no denying that;[ komme hinanden ved] care about each other;( betyde noget for) matter to each other;[ hvad kommer det dig ved?] what business (el. concern) is that of yours?[ det kommer ikke dig ved] it is no business (el. concern) of yours, it is none of your business;[ det kommer ikke sagen ved], se sag. -
97 так
1. нареч.1) so; thus, like this, (in) this way; in such a way; ( указание на точное соответствие оригиналу) sic лат.так же, как и — as well as, along with, as also
так же..., как и — as... as
вот так! — that's the way!, that's right!
вся неделя так прошла — the whole week passed thus, the whole week passed like that
он говорил так, как будто — he spoke as though
он так говорил, что — he spoke in such a way that
я так и сказал ему, что — I told him in so many words that
он отвечал так — he answered thus, he answers as follows, this is the answer he gave
здесь что-то не так — there is smth. wrong here
так, как это было — how it was, the it was
будьте так добры (повел.) — please (повел.)
будьте так добры (делать что-л.) — would you be so kind (to do smth.)
так ли это? — is that (really) the case?, is that so?
так и есть — so it is; such, indeed, is the case
я так и не узнал — I never found out, I never learnt
если это так — if so, if this is the case
так же (как) — just as; the same way as
так чтобы не — (делать что-л.) so as not
так чтобы — (делать что-л.) so as, so that, in such a way as to
это не так — such/this is not the case
ты не пойдешь, так я пойду — if you don't go, then I shall
не тут, так там — if (it is) not here, then (it is) there
•2. союзОни должны быть одного размера, а на самом деле это не так —They should be of the same size, which they are not.
1) then (иногда не переводится)ты не спросишь его, так я спрошу — if you won't ask him, then I will
ехать, так ехать — if we are going, let's go
не сегодня, так завтра — if not today, then tomorrow
2) so3. частицаnothing in particular, nothing specialчто тебе не понравилось там? - так, общее положение — what did you not like there? - Nothing in particular, just the set-up in general
- и так- так и••и т.д. — etc.
и так далее — etceteras, and so on/forth
и так и сяк, и так и этак — this way and that, this way, that way and every way
как бы не так! — not likely!; nothing of the kind
как так? — how is that?, how do you mean?
так бы...! (взять бы да и..) — wouldn't I just...!
так или иначе — in any event, in any case; one way or another; in either event ( в том и другом случае)
так-то так, но — that's true, but
- а так- если так
- так и быть
- так и знайте
- так и знай
- так и так
- так называемый
- так например
- так себе -
98 lijken
1 [gelijkenis vertonen] be/look (a)like ⇒ resemble2 [schijnen] seem, appear ⇒ look3 [passen, aanstaan] suit, fit♦voorbeelden:1 je lijkt je vader wel • you act/sound/are just like your fatherhet lijkt wel wijn • it's almost like winedat lijkt er niet naar • it's way offhet begint erop te lijken • it's getting thereportretten lijken vaak slecht • portraits often show a poor resemblancehij lijkt sprekend op zijn vader • he's the spitting image of his fatherzij lijkt op haar moeder • she looks like her motherze lijken helemaal niet op elkaar • they're not a bit alikedat lijkt nergens op/naar • it's absolutely hopelesshet lijkt me vreemd • it seems odd to mehij lijkt me een aardige kerel te zijn • he seems (to me) to be a nice guyhij lijkt me niet geschikt voor deze baan • I don't think he's the (right) man for this jobhij lijkt wel gek • he must be crazyhet lijkt maar zo • it only seems that way't lijkt erop, dat 't gaat regenen • it looks like raindat lijkt me wel wat • I like the sound/look of thatdat zou me wel (wat) lijken • I'd like thathet lijkt me niets • I don't think much of it1 [op de wind brassen] brace (square) to the wind -
99 Versprechen
(unreg.)I v/t1. promise; ich verspreche es I promise; du hast es mir versprochen you promised (to do it); (Gegenstand) you promised me it ( oder to give it to me); er hat mir versprochen, dass er kommen würde he promised to come ( oder that he would come); jemandem etw. in die Hand versprechen promise s.o. s.th.; Ehe, hoch II2. sich (Dat) etw. versprechen (erwarten) expect s.th., hope for s.th.; sich (Dat) viel versprechen von have great hopes of; ich verspreche mir wenig / nichts davon I don’t expect much / anything to come of it, I don’t think much / anything will come of it; er verspricht, ein guter Schauspieler zu werden he promises to be a good actorII v/refl make a mistake, get it wrong; ich habe mich / er hat sich etc. versprochen auch it was a slip of the tongue; sich dauernd versprechen keep getting one’s words muddled* * *das Versprechenpromise* * *Ver|sprẹ|chen [fEɐ'ʃprɛçn]nt -s, -promise* * *das1) (loyalty to one's promise: to keep/break faith with someone.) faith2) (a promise: He gave me his pledge.) pledge3) (to promise: He pledged his support.) pledge4) (to say, or give one's word (that one will, or will not, do something etc): I promise (that) I won't be late; I promise not to be late; I won't be late, I promise (you)!) promise5) (to say or give one's assurance that one will give: He promised me a new dress.) promise6) (something promised: He made a promise; I'll go with you - that's a promise!) promise7) (a promise: He made an undertaking that he would pay the money back.) undertaking* * *Ver·spre·chen<-s, ->nt promisejdm das \Versprechen geben, etw zu tun to promise to do sth, to promise sb [that] one will do sthjdm das \Versprechen abnehmen, etw zu tun to make sb promise to do sthein \Versprechen brechen to go back on [or break] a promise* * *das; Versprechens, Versprechen: promise* * *jemandem ein Versprechen abnehmen make sb promise sth;ein Versprechen halten/brechen keep/break a promise;ein leeres Versprechen an empty promise* * *das; Versprechens, Versprechen: promise* * *n.promise n. -
100 грош
м.1. half copeck coin; (перен.) penny, farthing2. ( польская мелкая разменная монета) grosz♢
быть без гроша — be penniless, be without a penny, not have a penny to one's nameне иметь ни на грош чего-л. разг. — not have a grain / spark of smth.
этому грош цена, это гроша медного, ломаного не стоит разг. — it is not worth a brass farthing, или twopence
ни в грош не ставить (вн.) разг. — not care / give* a pin / damn (for), not give* a brass farthing (for), not think* much (of)
См. также в других словарях:
not think much of — phrase to not like someone or something very much I don’t think much of Hajime’s new girlfriend. Thesaurus: to hate or dislike someone or somethingsynonym Main entry: think * * * not think much of see ↑think … Useful english dictionary
not think much of — to not like someone or something very much I don t think much of Hajime s new girlfriend … English dictionary
To think much of — Think Think, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Thought}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Thinking}.] [OE. thinken, properly, to seem, from AS. [thorn]yncean (cf. {Methinks}), but confounded with OE. thenken to think, fr. AS. [thorn]encean (imp. [thorn][=o]hte); akin to D.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
To think much — Think Think, v. t. 1. To conceive; to imagine. [1913 Webster] Charity . . . thinketh no evil. 1 Cor. xiii. 4,5. [1913 Webster] 2. To plan or design; to plot; to compass. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] So little womanhood And natural goodness, as to think… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
think much — phrasal obsolete : to consider serious or burdensome thought not much to clothe his enemies John Milton … Useful english dictionary
Think — Think, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Thought}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Thinking}.] [OE. thinken, properly, to seem, from AS. [thorn]yncean (cf. {Methinks}), but confounded with OE. thenken to think, fr. AS. [thorn]encean (imp. [thorn][=o]hte); akin to D. denken … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
think the world not much of somebody — think the world, highly, a lot, not much, poorly, little, etc. of sb/sth idiom to have a very good, poor, etc. opinion of sb/sth • He thinks the world of his daughter. • I don t think much of her idea. Main entry: ↑thinkidiom … Useful english dictionary
think the highly not much of somebody — think the world, highly, a lot, not much, poorly, little, etc. of sb/sth idiom to have a very good, poor, etc. opinion of sb/sth • He thinks the world of his daughter. • I don t think much of her idea. Main entry: ↑thinkidiom … Useful english dictionary
think the a not much of somebody — think the world, highly, a lot, not much, poorly, little, etc. of sb/sth idiom to have a very good, poor, etc. opinion of sb/sth • He thinks the world of his daughter. • I don t think much of her idea. Main entry: ↑thinkidiom … Useful english dictionary
think the world not much of something — think the world, highly, a lot, not much, poorly, little, etc. of sb/sth idiom to have a very good, poor, etc. opinion of sb/sth • He thinks the world of his daughter. • I don t think much of her idea. Main entry: ↑thinkidiom … Useful english dictionary
think the highly not much of something — think the world, highly, a lot, not much, poorly, little, etc. of sb/sth idiom to have a very good, poor, etc. opinion of sb/sth • He thinks the world of his daughter. • I don t think much of her idea. Main entry: ↑thinkidiom … Useful english dictionary