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1 occupation
1) (a person's job or work.) επάγγελμα,απασχόληση2) (the act of occupying (a house, town etc).) κατάληψη3) (the period of time during which a town, house etc is occupied: During the occupation, there was a shortage of food.) κατοχή -
2 Occupation
subs.Business: P. ἐργασία, ἡ, πραγματεία, ἡ, ἐπιτήδευμα, τό, μελέτημα, τό, Ar. and P. διατριβή, ἡ, P. and V. σπουδή, ἡ.Want of leisure: P. ἀσχολία, ἡ.Seizure: P. κατάληψις, ἡ.A being inhabited: P. οἴκησις, ἡ, ἐνοίκησις, ἡ, κατοίκησις, ἡ.The army of occupation: use garrison.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Occupation
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3 occupation
1) επάγγελμα2) κατάληψη3) κατοχή -
4 profession
[-ʃən]1) (an occupation or job that needs special knowledge, eg medicine, law, teaching, engineering etc.) επάγγελμα,κοινωνικό λειτούργημα2) (the people who have such an occupation: the legal profession.) λειτουργός,επαγγελματίας3) (an open statement or declaration.) διακήρυξη,ομολογία -
5 Study
v. trans.Learn: P. and V. μανθάνειν.Devote oneself to: P. and V. σπουδάζειν περί (acc. or gen.), P. σχολάζειν (dat.). Ar. and P. διατρίβειν (ἐν, dat., περί, acc. or ἐπί, dat.), Ar. and P. ἐπιμέλεσθαι (gen.).With infin. following use try.Study how to do a thing: P. φιλοσοφεῖν ὅπως (fut. indic.).Study scientifically: P. φιλοσοφεῖν (acc.).——————subs.Ar. and P. μάθημα, τό.Act of learning: P. and V. μάθησις, ἡ.Practice: Ar. and P. μελετή, ἡ, P. ἄσκησις, ἡ, ἐπιτήδευσις, ἡ, ἐπιτήδευμα, τό.The study of virtue: P. ἀρετῆς ἐπιμέλεια, ἡ.Examination: P. and V. σκέψις, ἡ, P. ἐξέτασις, ἡ.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Study
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6 at
[æt]( showing)1) (position: They are not at home; She lives at 33 Forest Road) στον, στη, στο2) (direction: He looked at her; She shouted at the boys.) προς3) (time: He arrived at ten o'clock; The children came at the sound of the bell.) (για ώρα) στις4) (state or occupation: The countries are at war; She is at work.) σε κατάσταση5) (pace or speed: He drove at 120 kilometres per hour.) (για ταχύτητα) με6) (cost: bread at $1.20 a loaf.) προς, αντί•- at all -
7 badge
[bæ‹](a mark, emblem or ornament showing rank, occupation, or membership of a society, team etc: a school badge on a blazer.) κονκάρδα, έμβλημα -
8 business
['biznis]1) (occupation; buying and selling: Selling china is my business; The shop does more business at Christmas than at any other time.) εργασία, ασχολία, δουλειές2) (a shop, a firm: He owns his own business.) επιχείρηση3) (concern: Make it your business to help him; Let's get down to business (= Let's start the work etc that must be done).) υπόθεση, δουλειά•- businessman
- on business -
9 colleague
['koli:ɡ](a person with whom one is associated in a profession or occupation: He gets on well with his colleagues.) συνάδελφος -
10 degrading
adjective (tending to make lower in rank etc or to disgrace: a degrading occupation.) υποτιμητικός,εξαχρειωτικός -
11 mountaineer
noun (a person who climbs mountains, especially with skill, or as his occupation.) ορειβάτης -
12 occupy
1) (to be in or fill (time, space etc): A table occupied the centre of the room.) καταλαμβάνω/απασχολώ2) (to live in: The family occupied a small flat.) διαμένω σε3) (to capture: The soldiers occupied the town.) καταλαμβάνω,κατακτώ•- occupant- occupation
- occupational
- occupier -
13 pastime
(an occupation which one enjoys and takes part in during one's spare time; a hobby: Playing chess is his favourite pastime.) απασχόληση,χόμπι -
14 pursuit
[pə'sju:t]1) (the act of pursuing: The thief ran down the street with a policeman in (hot) pursuit.) καταδίωξη2) (an occupation or hobby: holiday pursuits.) ασχολία,ενασχόληση -
15 sit-in
noun (an occupation of a building etc by protesters: The students staged a sit-in.) κατάληψη,καθιστική διαμαρτύρια -
16 title
1) (the name of a book, play, painting, piece of music etc: The title of the painting is `A Winter Evening'.) τίτλος2) (a word put before a person's name to show rank, honour, occupation etc: Sir John; Lord Henry; Captain Smith; Professor Brown; Dr (Doctor) Peter Jones.) τίτλος (κοινωνικής θέσης, τιμής κλπ)•- titled- title deed
- title page
- title rôle -
17 trade
[treid] 1. noun1) (the buying and selling of goods: Japan does a lot of trade with Britain.) εμπόριο2) ((a) business, occupation, or job: He's in the jewellery trade.) επάγγελμα, τέχνη2. verb1) ((often with in or with) to buy and sell: They made a lot of money by trading; They trade in fruit and vegetables.) εμπορεύομαι2) (to exchange: I traded my watch for a bicycle.) ανταλλάσσω•- trader- trademark
- tradename
- tradesman
- trades union
- trade union
- trades unionist
- trade unionist
- trade wind
- trade in -
18 versatile
1) ((of people etc) able to turn easily and successfully from one task, activity or occupation to another: a versatile entertainer; He will easily get another job - he is so versatile.)2) ((of a material etc) capable of being used for many purposes: a versatile tool.)• -
19 veteran
['vetərən]noun, adjective1) (a person who is (old and) experienced as a soldier etc or in some other occupation: a veteran footballer/entertainer.)2) ((American) a person who has been in the army etc: war veterans.) -
20 walk of life
(a way of earning one's living; an occupation or profession: People from all walks of life went to the minister's funeral.) επάγγελμα / κοινωνική τάξη
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См. также в других словарях:
occupation — [ ɔkypasjɔ̃ ] n. f. • XIIe; lat. occupatio 1 ♦ Ce à quoi on consacre son activité, son temps. ⇒ affaire, besogne, ouvrage, passe temps. « Les jeux des enfants sont de graves occupations » (Barbusse). Elle a de multiples occupations. Vaquer à ses… … Encyclopédie Universelle
occupation — oc‧cu‧pa‧tion [ˌɒkjˈpeɪʆn ǁ ˌɑːk ] noun [countable] PROPERTY a job or profession, used especially on official forms or for writing about the jobs people do: • Please state your name, age, and occupation. • The least stressful occupations in our … Financial and business terms
occupation — Occupation. s. f. v. Employ, affaire à laquelle on est occupé. Importante occupation. serieuse, penible occupation. frivole, legere occupation. j ay assez d occupation. voilà une belle occupation pour un homme sage. quelles sont maintenant vos… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
Occupation — may refer to: Job (role), a regular activity performed for payment, that occupies one s time Employment, a person under service of another by hire Career, a course through life Profession, a vocation founded upon specialized training Vocation, an … Wikipedia
Occupation — Oc cu*pa tion, n. [L. occupatio: cf. F. occupation.] 1. The act or process of occupying or taking possession; actual possession and control; the state of being occupied; a holding or keeping; tenure; use; as, the occupation of lands by a tenant.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
occupation — I (possession) noun ascendancy, authority, charge, command, control, direction, domination, dominion, influence, inhabitation, jurisdiction, mastery, occupancy, occupatio, ownership, power, predominance, predominancy, proprietary rights,… … Law dictionary
occupation — [n1] profession, business activity, affair, calling, chosen work, craft, daily grind*, day gig*, do, dodge*, employment, game*, grindstone*, hang*, job, lick*, line, line of work, métier, moonlight*, nine to five*, play*, post, pursuit, racket*,… … New thesaurus
Occupation — Occupation, lat. deutsch, Besetzung, Einnahme; Besitzergreifung an herrenlosen Sachen, die noch nie im Eigenthum gewesen oder wo dasselbe aufgegeben worden ist. Nicht so an verlornen Sachen, deren widerrechtliche Aneignung den Funddiebstahl… … Herders Conversations-Lexikon
Occupation — Occupation, the the period from 1940 44 during World War II, when France was occupied by the German army … Dictionary of contemporary English
occupation — (n.) early 14c., fact of holding or possessing; mid 14c., a being employed in something, also a particular action, from O.Fr. occupacion (12c.), from L. occupationem (nom. occupatio) a taking possession, business, employment, noun of action from… … Etymology dictionary
occupation — employment, *work, calling, pursuit, business … New Dictionary of Synonyms