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1 all quiet on the western front
Общая лексика: на западном фронте без переменУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > all quiet on the western front
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2 all quiet on the Western front
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3 All\ Quiet\ on\ the\ Western\ Front
English-Estonian dictionary > All\ Quiet\ on\ the\ Western\ Front
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4 front
1. noun1) Vorderseite, die; (of door) Außenseite, die; (of house) Vorderfront, die; (of queue) vorderes Ende; (of procession) Spitze, die; (of book) vorderer Deckelin or at the front [of something] — vorn [in etwas position: Dat., movement: Akk.]
in front — vorn[e]
be in front of something/somebody — vor etwas/jemandem sein
walk in front of somebody — (preceding) vor jemandem gehen; (to position) vor jemanden gehen
he was murdered in front of his wife — er wurde vor den Augen seiner Frau ermordet
2) (Mil.; also fig.) Front, dieon the Western front — an der Westfront
be attacked on all fronts — an allen Fronten/(fig.) von allen Seiten angegriffen werden
4) (Meteorol.) Front, diecold/warm front — Kalt-/Warmluftfront, die
5) (outward appearance) Aussehen, das; (bluff) Fassade, die (oft abwertend); (pretext, façade) Tarnung, die2. adjectiveit's all a front — das ist alles nur Fassade (abwertend)
vorder...; Vorder[rad, -zimmer, -zahn]front garden — Vorgarten, der
* * *1) (the part of anything (intended to be) nearest the person who sees it; usually the most important part of anything: the front of the house; the front of the picture; ( also adjective) the front page.) die Vorderseite2) (the foremost part of anything in the direction in which it moves: the front of the ship; ( also adjective) the front seat of the bus.) die Front3) (the part of a city or town that faces the sea: We walked along the (sea) front.) die (Strand-)promenade4) ((in war) the line of soliers nearest the enemy: They are sending more soldiers to the front.) die Front5) (a boundary separating two masses of air of different temperatures: A cold front is approaching from the Atlantic.) die Front6) (an outward appearance: He put on a brave front.) die Kühnheit7) (a name sometimes given to a political movement: the Popular Front for Liberation.) die Organisation•- academic.ru/29601/frontage">frontage- frontal
- at the front of
- in front of
- in front* * *[frʌnt]I. nshall I lie on my \front or my back? soll ich mich auf den Bauch oder auf den Rücken legen?please turn round and face the \front bitte drehen Sie sich um und schauen Sie nach vorn\front of a building Front f eines Gebäudes\front of a pullover Vorderteil m eines Pulloversto put sth on back to \front etw verkehrt herum anziehen▪ from the \front von vorneto lead from the \front die Spitze anführen2. (front area)▪ the \front der vordere Bereichwe want seats as near the \front as possible wir wollen möglichst weit vorne sitzenthe \front of a crowd die Spitze einer Menge▪ at the \front vorn[e]she got us seats right at the \front sie hat uns Sitze in der vordersten Reihe besorgt3. (ahead of)▪ in \front vorn[e]the lady in the row in \front die Dame in der Reihe vor uns▪ in \front of sth/sb vor etw/jdmin \front of other people/the children/witnesses vor anderen Menschen/den Kindern/Zeugen▪ out \front im Publikumto go out \front vor den Vorhang treten▪ up \front im Vorausthe restaurant is a \front for a drug-smuggling gang das Restaurant dient nur als Deckadresse für eine Drogenschmugglerbandeto put on a bold [or brave] \front kühn [o mutig] auftreten8. MIL, METEO, POL Front fthe \front for the Liberation of Palestine die palästinensische Befreiungsarmeea cold/warm \front METEO eine Kalt-/Warmfronta united \front POL eine geschlossene Fronton the domestic/work \front an der Heimatfront/Arbeitsfronton the employment \front im Beschäftigungsbereichthe lake/river \front die Uferpromenade1. (at the front) vorderste(r, s)I like sitting in the \front seats at the cinema ich sitze gerne auf den vorderen Plätzen im Kino\front leg Vorderbein nt\front teeth Schneidezähne pl\front wheel Vorderrad nt2. (concealing) Deck-\front operation Deckfirma fIII. vt1. (face onto)all the apartments \front the sea alle Wohnungen gehen zum Meer hinaus▪ to be \fronted verkleidet seinto be \fronted with timber mit Holz verkleidet sein3. (be head of)to \front a department eine Abteilung leiten▪ to \front sth etw moderierenIV. vi1. (face)the house \fronts north das Haus geht nach Norden [hinaus]our cottage \fronts onto the village green unser Häuschen liegt zur Dorfwiese hin2. (be front man)* * *[frʌnt]1. n1) (= forward side, exterior) Vorderseite f; (= forward part, including interior) Vorderteil nt; (of house etc = façade) Vorderfront f, Stirnseite f; (of shirt, dress) Vorderteil nt; (= dickey) Hemdbrust f; (THEAT = auditorium) Zuschauerraum min front of sb/sth — vor jdm/etw
at the front of (inside) — vorne in (+dat); (outside) vor (+dat)
to be in front — vorne sein; (Sport) vorn(e) or an der Spitze liegen
in front of you you can see... — vor Ihnen können Sie... sehen
in or at the front of the train/class — vorne im Zug/Klassenzimmer
2) (MIL, POL, MET) Front fthey were attacked on all fronts (Mil) — sie wurden an allen Fronten angegriffen; (fig) sie wurden von allen Seiten angegriffen
cold front (Met) — Kalt(luft)front f
we must present a common/united front — wir müssen eine gemeinsame/geschlossene Front bieten
4) (= outward appearance) Fassade f7) no pl (= effrontery) Stirn fto have the front to do sth — die Frechheit besitzen or die Stirn haben, etw zu tun
2. adv50% up front —
See:→ also upfront3. vithe houses/windows front onto the street — die Häuser liegen/die Fenster gehen auf die Straße hinaus
4. vt1)2) organization, band leiten5. adjvorderste(r, s), Vorder-; page erste(r, s)front tooth/wheel/room — Vorderzahn m/-rad nt/-zimmer nt
the front end of the train — die Spitze des Zuges
* * *front [frʌnt]A s1. allg Vorder-, Stirnseite f, Front f:at the front auf der Vorderseite, vorn ( → A 4)2. ARCH (Vorder)Front f, Fassade f3. Vorderteil n4. MILa) Front f, Kampf-, Frontlinie fb) Frontbreite f:at the front an der Front ( → A 1);go to the front an die Front gehen;on all fronts an allen Fronten (a. fig);on a broad front auf breiter Front (a. fig);form a united front against gemeinsam Front machen gegen5. Vordergrund m:drive too close to the car in front zu wenig Abstand zum Vordermann lassen;go in front (Fußball etc) in Führung gehen;he threw himself in front of a train er warf sich vor einen Zug;to the front nach vorn, voraus, voran;a) in den Vordergrund treten,b) an Popularität gewinnen;look to the front nach vorn schauen;play up front SPORT Spitze spielen6. a) (Straßen-, Wasser) Front f7. fig Front f:b) Sektor m, Bereich m:on the educational front im Erziehungsbereich, auf dem Erziehungssektor8. a) Strohmann mb) Aushängeschild n (einer Interessengruppe oder subversiven Organisation etc)9. umg Fassade f, äußerer Schein:a) auf vornehm machen, sich Allüren geben,b) Theater spielen;maintain a front den Schein wahren10. poeta) Stirn fb) Antlitz n, Gesicht n11. Frechheit f, Unverschämtheit f:have the front to do sth die Stirn haben oder sich erdreisten, etwas zu tun12. Hemdbrust f, Einsatz m13. (falsche) Stirnlocken pl14. METEO Front f15. THEATa) Zuschauerraum m:be out front umg im Publikum sitzenb) Proszenium n (Raum zwischen Vorhang und Rampe)B adj1. Front…, Vorder…:front entrance Vordereingang m;the front nine (Golf) die ersten 9 Löcher;front surface Stirnfläche f;3. LING Vorderzungen…C v/t1. gegenüberstehen, -liegen (dat):the house fronts the sea das Haus liegt (nach) dem Meer zu;the windows front the street die Fenster gehen auf die Straße (hinaus)3. mit einer Front oder Vorderseite versehen4. als Front oder Vorderseite dienen für6. MIL Front machen lassenD v/i* * *1. noun1) Vorderseite, die; (of door) Außenseite, die; (of house) Vorderfront, die; (of queue) vorderes Ende; (of procession) Spitze, die; (of book) vorderer Deckelin or at the front [of something] — vorn [in etwas position: Dat., movement: Akk.]
in front — vorn[e]
be in front of something/somebody — vor etwas/jemandem sein
walk in front of somebody — (preceding) vor jemandem gehen; (to position) vor jemanden gehen
2) (Mil.; also fig.) Front, diebe attacked on all fronts — an allen Fronten/(fig.) von allen Seiten angegriffen werden
3) (at seaside) Strandpromenade, die4) (Meteorol.) Front, diecold/warm front — Kalt-/Warmluftfront, die
5) (outward appearance) Aussehen, das; (bluff) Fassade, die (oft abwertend); (pretext, façade) Tarnung, die2. adjectiveit's all a front — das ist alles nur Fassade (abwertend)
vorder...; Vorder[rad, -zimmer, -zahn]front garden — Vorgarten, der
* * *n.Front -en f.Vorderseite f. -
5 western
1. adjectivewestlich; West[grenze, -hälfte, -seite]2. nounWestern, der* * *adjective (of the west or the West: Western customs/clothes.) westlich* * *west·ern[ˈwestən, AM -tɚn]I. adj attr, inv1. GEOG West-, westlich\western Europe Westeuropa nt\western France Westfrankreich nt2. (of culture)▪ W\western westlichW\western culture/medicine westliche Kultur/Medizin▪ W\western westlich4. (of wind) westlich* * *['westən]1. adjwestlichon the Western front — an der Westfront
Western Europe — Westeuropa nt
the Western Sahara — die westliche Sahara
2. nWestern m* * *western [ˈwestə(r)n]A adj1. westlich, West…:the Western Empire HIST das Weströmische Reich;2. westwärts, West…:western course Westkurs ma) Wildwestgeschichte f, -roman mb) Wildwestfilm mW. abk1. Wales2. Welsh3. west W4. western westl.* * *1. adjectivewestlich; West[grenze, -hälfte, -seite]2. nounwestern Germany — Westdeutschland, das
Western, der* * *adj.abendländisch adj. n.Western m.Wildwestfilm m. -
6 front
front [frʌnt]devant ⇒ 1 (a), 6, 7 avant ⇒ 1 (a) bord de mer ⇒ 1 (b) front ⇒ 1 (c), 1 (d), 1 (g) façade ⇒ 1 (e), 1 (f), 1 (h) de devant ⇒ 2 (a) de façade ⇒ 2 (b) par devant ⇒ 3 diriger ⇒ 5 (c) à l'avant ⇒ 6 en avant ⇒ 61 noun(a) (forward part) devant m; (of vehicle) avant m; (of queue) début m; (of stage) devant m; (of building) façade f; (of shop) devanture f;∎ I'll be at the front of the train je serai en tête de ou à l'avant du train;∎ he sat up front near the driver il s'est assis à l'avant près du conducteur;∎ our seats were at the front of the theatre nous avions des places aux premiers rangs (du théâtre);∎ come to the front of the class venez devant;∎ she went to the front of the queue elle alla se mettre au début de la queue;∎ to push one's way to the front se frayer un chemin jusqu'au premier rang; figurative se pousser (en avant);∎ the actors stood at the front of the stage les comédiens étaient debout sur le devant de la scène;∎ The Times's theatre critic is out front tonight le critique dramatique du Times est dans la salle ce soir;∎ at the front of the book au début du livre;∎ she wrote her name on the front of the envelope elle écrivit son nom sur le devant de l'enveloppe;∎ he got wine down his front or the front of his shirt du vin a été renversé sur le devant de sa chemise;∎ his portrait was in the front of every schoolbook son portrait figurait sur la couverture de tous les livres de classe(b) (seashore) bord m de mer, front m de mer;∎ the hotel is on the front l'hôtel est au bord de la ou sur le front de mer;∎ a walk along or on the front une promenade au bord de la mer∎ on the Eastern/Western front sur le front Est/Ouest;∎ he fought at the front il a combattu au front;∎ figurative the Prime Minister is being attacked on all fronts on s'en prend au Premier ministre de tous côtés;∎ little had been achieved on the domestic or home front on avait accompli peu de choses sur le plan intérieur(d) (joint effort) front m;∎ to present a united front (on sth) faire front commun (devant qch)(e) (appearance) façade f;∎ his apparent optimism was only a front son optimisme apparent n'était qu'une façade;∎ to put on a bold or brave front faire preuve de courage∎ the shop is just a front for a drugs ring le magasin n'est qu'une couverture pour des trafiquants de drogue(g) Meteorology front m;∎ cold/warm front front m froid/chaud(h) Architecture façade f;∎ the north/south front la façade nord/sud∎ to have the front to do sth avoir l'effronterie ou le front de faire qch□∎ to pay up front payer d'avance□ ;∎ they want £5,000 up front ils veulent 5000 livres d'avance;∎ he was very up front about it il a été franc sur ce point□(a) (in a forward position) de devant;∎ Cars front seat/wheel siège m/roue f avant;∎ she was sitting in the front row elle était assise au premier rang;∎ Press the front page la première page;∎ his picture is on the front page sa photo est en première page;∎ to be front page news faire la une;∎ he came in through a front window il est entré par une fenêtre de devant;∎ I'll be in the front end of the train je serai en tête de ou à l'avant du train;∎ the front part of the brain la partie antérieure du cerveau;∎ his name is on the front cover son nom est en couverture;∎ a front view une vue de face; Architecture une élévation du devant(b) (bogus, fake) de façade∎ a front vowel une voyelle avant ou antérieure∎ to put sth on the front burner traiter qch en priorité□3 adverbpar devant;∎ Military eyes front! fixe!∎ the hotel fronts onto the beach l'hôtel donne sur la plage;∎ the house fronts north la maison est exposée ou orientée au nord∎ left front! à gauche front!, à gauche, gauche!∎ the newspaper fronted for a terrorist organization le journal servait de façade à une organisation terroriste(a) (stand before → of building) donner une (nouvelle) façade à;∎ lush gardens fronted the building il y avait des jardins luxuriants devant le bâtiment∎ the house was fronted with stone la maison avait une façade en pierre∎ the cashier can front you the money le caissier peut vous faire une avance ou vous avancer l'argent∎ can you front me five bucks? tu pourrais pas me filer cinq dollars?(in theatre, vehicle) à l'avant; (ahead, leading) en avant;∎ there was a very tall man in the row in front il y avait un très grand homme assis devant moi;∎ the women walked in front and the children behind les femmes marchaient devant et les enfants derrière;∎ to send sb on in front envoyer qn devant;∎ Sport to be in front être en tête ou premier;∎ Manchester United are 5 points in front Manchester United mène par 5 pointsdevant;∎ she was sitting in front of the TV elle était assise devant la télé;∎ he was right in front of me il était juste devant moi;∎ not in front of the children! pas devant les enfants!►► front desk réception f;Theatre front of house = partie d'un théâtre où peuvent circuler les spectateurs;Military the front line la première ligne;∎ figurative she is in the front line in the fight against drug abuse elle joue un rôle important dans la lutte contre la toxicomanie;American front lot cour f (devant un immeuble);front man (representative, spokesman) porte-parole m inv, représentant m; pejorative (figurehead) prête-nom m; Television (presenter) présentateur m;front matter = pages préliminaires (avant le texte) d'un livre;Banking front office front-office m;Cinema front projection projection f frontale;front room (at front of house) = pièce qui donne sur le devant de la maison; (sitting room) salon m;American front yard jardin m (devant une maison) -
7 front
[frʌnt] 1. сущ.1)а) перёд, передняя частьThe teacher asked him to come up to the front of the classroom. — Учитель попросил его выйти к доске.
to cut to the front of the line — амер. пролезть без очереди
The restaurant car is at the front of the train. — Вагон-ресторан находится в голове поезда.
He was sitting in first class, so he probably was in the bathroom near the front of the plane. — У него было место в первом классе, поэтому он наверное был в туалете, расположенном в носовой части самолёта.
Anne sat in the front in the passenger seat while Adam was in the back with Abigail. — Энн сидела впереди, а Адам c Абигейл - сзади.
2) лицо, лицевая сторонаHe said, "Kaye, what's on the front of the postcard?" — Он сказал: "Что изображено на открытке, Кей?"
3) грудь; животHe rolled over on to his front. — Он перевернулся на живот.
4)а) грудь (рубашки и т. п.); перёдI undid the buttons on the front of my shirt. — Я расстегнул пуговицы на груди рубашки.
б) манишкаSyn:dicky 1. 1) а)The front of the museum is very impressive. — Главный фасад музея впечатляет.
The front of the house faces north. — Дом обращён фасадом на север.
The intricately decorated western front of the cathedral is a masterpiece of French Flamboyant Gothic. — Западный фасад кафедрального собора, отличающийся прихотливым узором оконных проёмов, является шедевром французской пламенеющей готики.
Syn:I'll go out the front, and you go out the back. — Я выйду через парадный ход, а ты через чёрный.
7)а) обложка (книги, журнала)б) первые страницы ( книги), первая полоса ( газеты)8)а) (to show / put on a front) притворяться, делать видJoni's parents tried to make the best of the situation and put on a good front for Joni but they too were disappointed. — Родители Джони старались найти выход из сложившейся ситации и всем своим видом показывали Джони, что всё хорошо, но и они были разочарованы.
б) брит. дерзость, нахальство; смелостьNone of them had the front to pronounce that. — Ни у кого не хватило духа сказать это вслух.
Syn:9)а) воен. фронт; передовые позиции, передоваяto hold a front of ten miles — оборонять фронт, протяжённостью десять миль
The eventuality of a war with two fronts was foreseen. — Была предусмотрена вероятность войны на два фронта.
The war correspondent spent two days at the front. — Военный корреспондент провёл на фронте два дня.
б) метео фронт, граница10) брит. набережная; приморский бульвар11) фронт, сплочённость; фронт, объединение ( обычно общественно-политическое)popular / the people's front — народный фронт
12) фронт, область, сфераon the home front — "на домашнем фронте"
13)They kept a shop as a front for dealing in stolen goods. — Они держали магазин, служивший прикрытием для торговли краденым.
б) подставное лицо (лицо, возглавляющее что-либо номинально)Syn:14)а) поэт. чело, лобSyn:б) уст. лицоSyn:••- in front
- in front of 2. прил.1)а) переднийб) театр. относящийся к просцениумуSyn:2) лингв. переднеязычный3. гл.1) (front on / onto) выходить на что-л., на какую-л. сторону, быть обращённым к чему-л., по направлению к чему-л.The rooms fronted onto Athol Street. — Комнаты выходили на Этол стрит.
Syn:2)а) находиться напротив (чего-л.)The house was fronted by a garden. — Перед домом был сад.
Syn:б) встречать широкой грудью, фронтом; сопротивляться, противостоятьSyn:в) воен. формировать фронт3)а) украшать переднюю часть чего-л.б) отделывать, облицовыватьThe building was to be fronted with stone. — Здание предполагалось отделать камнем.
4) муз. стоять на сцене в первом ряду, быть фронтменом, лидером (группы и т. п.); "вести" оркестр, ансамбль5) лингв.а) произносить переднеязычные звуки; произносить звуки с тенденцией делать их более переднеязычнымиб) палатализовать, палатализовыватьSyn: -
8 Chronology
15,000-3,000 BCE Paleolithic cultures in western Portugal.400-200 BCE Greek and Carthaginian trade settlements on coast.202 BCE Roman armies invade ancient Lusitania.137 BCE Intensive Romanization of Lusitania begins.410 CE Germanic tribes — Suevi and Visigoths—begin conquest of Roman Lusitania and Galicia.714—16 Muslims begin conquest of Visigothic Lusitania.1034 Christian Reconquest frontier reaches Mondego River.1064 Christians conquer Coimbra.1139 Burgundian Count Afonso Henriques proclaims himself king of Portugal; birth of Portugal. Battle of Ourique: Afonso Henriques defeats Muslims.1147 With English Crusaders' help, Portuguese seize Lisbon from Muslims.1179 Papacy formally recognizes Portugal's independence (Pope Alexander III).1226 Campaign to reclaim Alentejo from Muslims begins.1249 Last Muslim city (Silves) falls to Portuguese Army.1381 Beginning of third war between Castile and Portugal.1383 Master of Aviz, João, proclaimed regent by Lisbon populace.1385 April: Master of Aviz, João I, proclaimed king of Portugal by Cortes of Coimbra. 14 August: Battle of Aljubarrota, Castilians defeated by royal forces, with assistance of English army.1394 Birth of "Prince Henry the Navigator," son of King João I.1415 Beginning of overseas expansion as Portugal captures Moroccan city of Ceuta.1419 Discovery of Madeira Islands.1425-28 Prince D. Pedro, older brother of Prince Henry, travels in Europe.1427 Discovery (or rediscovery?) of Azores Islands.1434 Prince Henry the Navigator's ships pass beyond Cape Bojador, West Africa.1437 Disaster at Tangier, Morocco, as Portuguese fail to capture city.1441 First African slaves from western Africa reach Portugal.1460 Death of Prince Henry. Portuguese reach what is now Senegal, West Africa.1470s Portuguese explore West African coast and reach what is now Ghana and Nigeria and begin colonizing islands of São Tomé and Príncipe.1479 Treaty of Alcáçovas between kings of Portugal and Spain.1482 Portuguese establish post at São Jorge da Mina, Gold Coast (now Ghana).1482-83 Portuguese navigator Diogo Cão reaches mouth of Congo River and Angola.1488 Navigator Bartolomeu Dias rounds Cape of Good Hope, South Africa, and finds route to Indian Ocean.1492-93 Columbus's first voyage to West Indies.1493 Columbus visits Azores and Portugal on return from first voyage; tells of discovery of New World. Treaty of Tordesillas signed between kings of Portugal and Spain: delimits spheres of conquest with line 370 leagues west of Cape Verde Islands (claimed by Portugal); Portugal's sphere to east of line includes, in effect, Brazil.King Manuel I and Royal Council decide to continue seeking all-water route around Africa to Asia.King Manuel I expels unconverted Jews from Portugal.1497-99 Epic voyage of Vasco da Gama from Portugal around Africa to west India, successful completion of sea route to Asia project; da Gama returns to Portugal with samples of Asian spices.1500 Bound for India, Navigator Pedro Álvares Cabral "discovers" coast of Brazil and claims it for Portugal.1506 Anti-Jewish riots in Lisbon.Battle of Diu, India; Portugal's command of Indian Ocean assured for some time with Francisco de Almeida's naval victory over Egyptian and Gujerati fleets.Afonso de Albuquerque conquers Goa, India; beginning of Portuguese hegemony in south Asia.Portuguese conquest of Malacca; commerce in Spice Islands.1519 Magellan begins circumnavigation voyage.1536 Inquisition begins in Portugal.1543 Portuguese merchants reach Japan.1557 Portuguese merchants granted Chinese territory of Macau for trading factory.1572 Luís de Camões publishes epic poem, Os Lusíadas.1578 Battle of Alcácer-Quivir; Moroccan forces defeat army of King Sebastião of Portugal; King Sebastião dies in battle. Portuguese succession crisis.1580 King Phillip II of Spain claims and conquers Portugal; Spanish rule of Portugal, 1580-1640.1607-24 Dutch conquer sections of Asia and Brazil formerly held by Portugal.1640 1 December: Portuguese revolution in Lisbon overthrows Spanish rule, restores independence. Beginning of Portugal's Braganza royal dynasty.1654 Following Dutch invasions and conquest of parts of Brazil and Angola, Dutch expelled by force.1661 Anglo-Portuguese Alliance treaty signed: England pledges to defend Portugal "as if it were England itself." Queen Catherine of Bra-ganza marries England's Charles II.1668 February: In Portuguese-Spanish peace treaty, Spain recognizes independence of Portugal, thus ending 28-year War of Restoration.1703 Methuen Treaties signed, key commercial trade agreement and defense treaty between England and Portugal.1750 Pombal becomes chief minister of King José I.1755 1 November: Massive Lisbon earthquake, tidal wave, and fire.1759 Expulsion of Jesuits from Portugal and colonies.1761 Slavery abolished in continental Portugal.1769 Abandonment of Mazagão, Morocco, last Portuguese outpost.1777 Pombal dismissed as chief minister by Queen Maria I, after death of José I.1791 Portugal and United States establish full diplomatic relations.1807 November: First Napoleonic invasion; French forces under Junot conquer Portugal. Royal family flees to colony of Brazil and remains there until 1821.1809 Second French invasion of Portugal under General Soult.1811 Third French invasion of Portugal under General Masséna.1813 Following British general Wellington's military victories, French forces evacuate Portugal.1817 Liberal, constitutional movements against absolutist monarchist rule break out in Brazil (Pernambuco) and Portugal (Lisbon, under General Gomes Freire); crushed by government. British marshal of Portugal's army, Beresford, rules Portugal.Liberal insurrection in army officer corps breaks out in Cadiz, Spain, and influences similar movement in Portugal's armed forces first in Oporto.King João VI returns from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and early draft of constitution; era of constitutional monarchy begins.1822 7 September: João VI's son Pedro proclaims independence ofBrazil from Portugal and is named emperor. 23 September: Constitution of 1822 ratified.Portugal recognizes sovereign independence of Brazil.King João VI dies; power struggle for throne ensues between his sons, brothers Pedro and Miguel; Pedro, emperor of Brazil, abdicates Portuguese throne in favor of his daughter, D. Maria II, too young to assume crown. By agreement, Miguel, uncle of D. Maria, is to accept constitution and rule in her stead.1828 Miguel takes throne and abolishes constitution. Sections of Portugal rebel against Miguelite rule.1831 Emperor Pedro abdicates throne of Brazil and returns to Portugal to expel King Miguel from Portuguese throne.1832-34 Civil war between absolutist King Miguel and constitutionalist Pedro, who abandons throne of Brazil to restore his young daughter Maria to throne of Portugal; Miguel's armed forces defeated by those of Pedro. Miguel leaves for exile and constitution (1826 Charter) is restored.1834-53 Constitutional monarchy consolidated under rule of Queen Maria II, who dies in 1853.1851-71 Regeneration period of economic development and political stability; public works projects sponsored by Minister Fontes Pereira de Melo.1871-90 Rotativism period of alternating party governments; achieves political stability and less military intervention in politics and government. Expansion of colonial territory in tropical Africa.January: Following territorial dispute in central Africa, Britain delivers "Ultimatum" to Portugal demanding withdrawal of Portugal's forces from what is now Malawi and Zimbabwe. Portugal's government, humiliated in accepting demand under threat of a diplomatic break, falls. Beginning of governmental and political instability; monarchist decline and republicanism's rise.Anglo-Portuguese treaties signed relating to delimitation of frontiers in colonial Africa.1899 Treaty of Windsor; renewal of Anglo-Portuguese defense and friendship alliance.1903 Triumphal visit of King Edward VII to Portugal.1906 Politician João Franco supported by King Carlos I in dictatorship to restore order and reform.1908 1 February: Murder in Lisbon of King Carlos I and his heir apparent, Prince Dom Luís, by Portuguese anarchists. Eighteen-year-old King Manuel II assumes throne.1910 3-5 October: Following republican-led military insurrection in armed forces, monarchy falls and first Portuguese republic is proclaimed. Beginning of unstable, economically troubled, parliamentary republic form of government.May: Violent insurrection in Lisbon overturns government of General Pimenta de Castro; nearly a thousand casualties from several days of armed combat in capital.March: Following Portugal's honoring ally Britain's request to confiscate German shipping in Portuguese harbors, Germany declares war on Portugal; Portugal enters World War I on Allied side.Portugal organizes and dispatches Portuguese Expeditionary Corps to fight on the Western Front. 9 April: Portuguese forces mauled by German offensive in Battle of Lys. Food rationing and riots in Lisbon. Portuguese military operations in Mozambique against German expedition's invasion from German East Africa. 5 December: Authoritarian, presidentialist government under Major Sidónio Pais takes power in Lisbon, following a successful military coup.1918 11 November: Armistice brings cessation of hostilities on Western Front in World War I. Portuguese expeditionary forces stationed in Angola, Mozambique, and Flanders begin return trip to Portugal. 14 December: President Sidónio Pais assassinated. Chaotic period of ephemeral civil war ensues.1919-21 Excessively unstable political period, including January1919 abortive effort of Portuguese monarchists to restore Braganza dynasty to power. Republican forces prevail, but level of public violence, economic distress, and deprivation remains high.1921 October: Political violence attains peak with murder of former prime minister and other prominent political figures in Lisbon. Sectors of armed forces and Guarda Nacional Republicana are mutinous. Year of financial and corruption scandals, including Portuguese bank note (fraud) case; military court acquits guilty military insurrectionists, and one military judge declares "the country is sick."28 May: Republic overthrown by military coup or pronunciamento and conspiracy among officer corps. Parliament's doors locked and parliament closed for nearly nine years to January 1935. End of parliamentary republic, Western Europe's most unstable political system in this century, beginning of the Portuguese dictatorship, after 1930 known as the Estado Novo. Officer corps assumes reins of government, initiates military censorship of the press, and suppresses opposition.February: Military dictatorship under General Óscar Carmona crushes failed republican armed insurrection in Oporto and Lisbon.April: Military dictatorship names Professor Antônio de Oliveira Salazar minister of finance, with dictatorial powers over budget, to stabilize finances and rebuild economy. Insurrectionism among military elements continues into 1931.1930 Dr. Salazar named minister for colonies and announces balanced budgets. Salazar consolidates support by various means, including creation of official regime "movement," the National Union. Salazar engineers Colonial Act to ensure Lisbon's control of bankrupt African colonies by means of new fiscal controls and centralization of authority. July: Military dictatorship names Salazar prime minister for first time, and cabinet composition undergoes civilianization; academic colleagues and protégés plan conservative reform and rejuvenation of society, polity, and economy. Regime comes to be called the Estado Novo (New State). New State's constitution ratified by new parliament, the National Assembly; Portugal described in document as "unitary, corporative Republic" and governance influenced by Salazar's stern personality and doctrines such as integralism, Catholicism, and fiscal conservatism.1936 Violent instability and ensuing civil war in neighboring Spain, soon internationalized by fascist and communist intervention, shake Estado Novo regime. Pseudofascist period of regime features creation of imitation Fascist institutions to defend regime from leftist threats; Portugal institutes "Portuguese Youth" and "Portuguese Legion."1939 3 September: Prime Minister Salazar declares Portugal's neutrality in World War II. October: Anglo-Portuguese agreement grants naval and air base facilities to Britain and later to United States for Battle of the Atlantic and Normandy invasion support. Third Reich protests breach of Portugal's neutrality.6 June: On day of Allies' Normandy invasion, Portugal suspends mining and export of wolfram ore to both sides in war.8 May: Popular celebrations of Allied victory and Fascist defeat in Lisbon and Oporto coincide with Victory in Europe Day. Following managed elections for Estado Novo's National Assembly in November, regime police, renamed PIDE, with increased powers, represses opposition.1947 Abortive military coup in central Portugal easily crushed by regime. Independence of India and initiation of Indian protests against Portuguese colonial rule in Goa and other enclaves.1949 Portugal becomes founding member of NATO.1951 Portugal alters constitution and renames overseas colonies "Overseas Provinces." Portugal and United States sign military base agreements for use of air and naval facilities in Azores Islands and military aid to Lisbon. President Carmona dies in office, succeeded by General Craveiro Lopes (1951-58). July: Indians occupy enclave of Portuguese India (dependency of Damão) by means of passive resistance movement. August: Indian passive resistance movement in Portuguese India repelled by Portuguese forces with loss of life. December: With U.S. backing, Portugal admitted as member of United Nations (along with Spain). Air force general Humberto Delgado, in opposition, challenges Estado Novo's hand-picked successor to Craveiro Lopes, Admiral Américo Tomás. Delgado rallies coalition of democratic, liberal, and communist opposition but loses rigged election and later flees to exile in Brazil. Portugal joins European Free Trade Association (EFTA).January and February: Estado Novo rocked by armed African insurrection in northern Angola, crushed by armed forces. Hijacking of Portuguese ocean liner by ally of Delgado, Captain Henrique Galvão. April: Salazar defeats attempted military coup and reshuffles cabinet with group of younger figures who seek to reform colonial rule and strengthen the regime's image abroad. 18 December: Indian army rapidly defeats Portugal's defense force in Goa, Damão, and Diu and incorporates Portugal's Indian possessions into Indian Union. January: Abortive military coup in Beja, Portugal.1965 February: General Delgado and his Brazilian secretary murdered and secretly buried near Spanish frontier by political police, PIDE.1968 August and September: Prime Minister Salazar, aged 79, suffers crippling stoke. President Tomás names former cabinet officer Marcello Caetano as Salazar's successor. Caetano institutes modest reforms in Portugal and overseas.1971 Caetano government ratifies amended constitution that allows slight devolution and autonomy to overseas provinces in Africa and Asia. Right-wing loyalists oppose reforms in Portugal. 25 April: Military coup engineered by Armed Forces Movement overthrows Estado Novo and establishes provisional government emphasizing democratization, development, and decolonization. Limited resistance by loyalists. President Tomás and Premier Caetano flown to exile first in Madeira and then in Brazil. General Spínola appointed president. September: Revolution moves to left, as President Spínola, thwarted in his program, resigns.March: Military coup by conservative forces fails, and leftist response includes nationalization of major portion of economy. Polarization between forces and parties of left and right. 25 November: Military coup by moderate military elements thwarts leftist forces. Constituent Assembly prepares constitution. Revolution moves from left to center and then right.March: Constitution ratified by Assembly of the Republic. 25 April: Second general legislative election gives largest share of seats to Socialist Party (PS). Former oppositionist lawyer, Mário Soares, elected deputy and named prime minister.1977-85 Political pendulum of democratic Portugal moves from center-left to center-right, as Social Democratic Party (PSD) increases hold on assembly and take office under Prime Minister Cavaco Silva. July1985 elections give edge to PSD who advocate strong free-enterprise measures and revision of leftist-generated 1976 Constitution, amended modestly in 1982.1986 January: Portugal joins European Economic Community (EEC).1987 July: General, legislative elections for assembly give more than 50 percent to PSD led by Prime Minister Cavaco Silva. For first time, since 1974, Portugal has a working majority government.1989 June: Following revisions of 1976 Constitution, reprivatization of economy begins, under PS government.January: Presidential elections, Mário Soares reelected for second term. July: General, legislative elections for assembly result in new PSD victory and majority government.January-July: Portugal holds presidency of the Council of the European Economic Community (EEC). December: Tariff barriers fall as fully integrated Common Market established in the EEC.November: Treaty of Maastricht comes into force. The EEC officially becomes the European Union (EU). Portugal is signatory with 11 other member-nations.October: General, legislative elections for assembly result in PS victory and naming of Prime Minister Guterres. PS replace PSD as leading political party. November: Excavations for Lisbon bank uncover ancient Phoenician, Roman, and Christian ruins.January: General, presidential elections; socialist Jorge Sampaio defeats PSD's Cavaco Silva and assumes presidency from Dr. Mário Soares. July: Community of Portuguese Languages Countries (CPLP) cofounded by Portugal and Brazil.May-September: Expo '98 held in Lisbon. Opening of Vasco da Gama Bridge across Tagus River, Europe's longest (17 kilometers/ 11 miles). June: National referendum on abortion law change defeated after low voter turnout. November: National referendum on regionaliza-tion and devolution of power defeated after another low voter turnout.October: General, legislative elections: PS victory over PSD lacks clear majority in parliament. Following East Timor referendum, which votes for independence and withdrawal of Indonesia, outburst of popular outrage in streets, media, and communications of Portugal approves armed intervention and administration of United Nations (and withdrawal of Indonesia) in East Timor. Portugal and Indonesia restore diplomatic relations. December: A Special Territory since 1975, Colony of Macau transferred to sovereignty of People's Republic of China.January-June: Portugal holds presidency of the Council of the EU; end of Discoveries Historical Commemoration Cycle (1988-2000).United Nations forces continue to occupy and administer former colony of East Timor, with Portugal's approval.January: General, presidential elections; PS president Sampaio reelected for second term. City of Oporto, "European City of Culture" for the year, hosts arts festival. December: Municipal elections: PSD defeats PS; socialist prime minister Guterres resigns; President Sampaio calls March parliamentary elections.1 January: Portugal enters single European Currency system. Euro currency adopted and ceases use of former national currency, the escudo. March: Parliamentary elections; PSD defeats PS and José Durão Barroso becomes prime minister. Military modernization law passed. Portugal holds chairmanship of Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).May: Municipal law passed permitting municipalities to reorganize in new ways.June: Prime Minister Durão Barroso, invited to succeed Romano Prodi as president of EU Commission, resigns. Pedro Santana Lopes becomes prime minister. European Parliament elections held. Conscription for national service in army and navy ended. Mass grave uncovered at Academy of Sciences Museum, Lisbon, revealing remains of several thousand victims of Lisbon earthquake, 1755.February: Parliamentary elections; PS defeats PSD, socialists win first absolute majority in parliament since 1975. José Sócrates becomes prime minister.January: Presidential elections; PSD candidate Aníbal Cavaco Silva elected and assumes presidency from Jorge Sampaio. Portugal's national soccer team ranked 7th out of 205 countries by international soccer association. European Union's Bologna Process in educational reform initiated in Portugal.July-December: Portugal holds presidency of the Council of the European Union. For reasons of economy, Portugal announces closure of many consulates, especially in France and the eastern US. Government begins official inspections of private institutions of higher education, following scandals.2008 January: Prime Minister Sócrates announces location of new Lisbon area airport as Alcochete, on south bank of Tagus River, site of air force shooting range. February: Portuguese Army begins to receive new modern battle tanks (Leopard 2 A6). March: Mass protest of 85,000 public school (primary and secondary levels) teachers in Lisbon schools dispute recent educational policies of minister of education and prime minister. -
9 quiet
quiet ['kwaɪət]tranquillité ⇒ 1 calme ⇒ 1, 2 (b), 2 (c) silence ⇒ 1 tranquille ⇒ 2 (a), 2 (b) silencieux ⇒ 2 (a), 2 (c) doux ⇒ 2 (a) docile ⇒ 2 (c) dans l'intimité ⇒ 2 (d) discret ⇒ 2 (e) calmer ⇒ 31 noun∎ to ask for quiet demander le silence;∎ a minute's quiet une minute de silence;∎ to enjoy perfect peace and quiet jouir d'une parfaite tranquillité;∎ British familiar on the quiet (in secrecy) en douce, en cachette□ ; (discreetly) discrètement□, en douceur□ ; (in confidence) en confiance□∎ be or keep quiet! taisez-vous!;∎ could you try to keep them quiet? pourriez-vous essayer de les faire taire?;∎ quiet please! silence, s'il vous plaît!;∎ you're very quiet vous ne dites pas grand-chose;∎ keep quiet about what you've seen ne dites rien de ce que vous avez vu;∎ it was as quiet as the grave il régnait un silence de mort;∎ she was as quiet as a mouse elle ne faisait pas le moindre bruit;∎ the wind grew quiet le vent s'est apaisé;∎ we were having a quiet conversation nous bavardions tranquillement;∎ in a quiet voice d'une voix douce∎ to lead a quiet life mener une vie paisible ou tranquille;∎ the TV keeps the children quiet pendant qu'ils regardent la télé, les enfants se tiennent tranquilles;∎ sit quiet for ten minutes restez assis tranquillement pendant dix minutes;∎ he's a very quiet kind of chap c'est un type très tranquille;∎ quiet disposition caractère m doux ou calme;∎ to have a quiet drink boire un verre tranquillement;∎ we had a quiet Christmas nous avons passé un Noël tranquille;∎ it's very pretty countryside, in a quiet sort of way c'est un très joli paysage, dans le genre paisible;∎ she had a quiet night elle a passé une nuit tranquille ou paisible;∎ all is quiet tout va bien, rien à signaler;∎ anything for a quiet life tout pour avoir la paix∎ you're very quiet, is anything wrong? tu es drôlement silencieux, il y a quelque chose qui ne va pas?(d) (private → wedding) dans l'intimité; (→ party) avec quelques intimes, avec peu d'invités; (secret) secret(ète), dissimulé;∎ can I have a quiet word with you? est-ce que je peux vous dire un mot en particulier?;∎ keep the news quiet gardez la nouvelle pour vous;∎ she was very quiet about her background elle n'a pas dit grand-chose de ses antécédents(e) (subtle, discreet → irony) voilé, discret(ète); (→ optimism) discret(ète); (→ anger) sourd; (→ despair, resentment) secret(ète);∎ he had a quiet smile on his lips il avait un petit sourire aux lèvres(f) (muted → colour, style) sobre;∎ he's a quiet dresser il s'habille sobrement ou sans ostentationAmerican se calmerⓘ All quiet on the Western front Il s'agit du titre anglais du roman À l'Ouest rien de nouveau de l'écrivain allemand Erich Maria Remarque ainsi que du film de Lewis Milestone. Aujourd'hui on utilise cette phrase de façon allusive et sur le mode humoristique (et en la modifiant si nécessaire) à propos d'une période d'accalmie dans une situation de crise, ou bien pour dire qu'il ne se passe grand-chose comme dans l'exemple suivant: How's things up there in Helsinki? - Oh, you know, all quiet on the Northern front ("comment ça va, là-haut, à Helsinki? - rien à signaler"). -
10 quiet
ˈkwaɪət
1. прил.
1) а) тихий, бесшумный, неслышный A quiet murmur passed through the classroom. ≈ По классу пробежал тихий шепот. The street was unnaturally quiet. ≈ На улице было неестественно тихо. Syn: silent, tranquil, still
1. Ant: noisy б) молчащий;
молчаливый They were both quiet for a while. ≈ Оба они замолчали на минуту. quiet despair ≈ молчаливое отчаяние
2) спокойный а) (характеризующийся небольшой активностью или отсутствием активности) quiet sea ≈ спокойное море (без волн) quiet life ≈ спокойная жизнь Syn: calm
1., still
1. б) мягкий, покладистый( о человеке) a quiet temperament ≈ мягкий характер Syn: gentle
1., easygoing в) ничем не нарушаемый At last I had an opportunity of quiet reading. ≈ Наконец я мог спокойно почитать.
3) укромный, уединенный a quiet nook ≈ укромный уголок Syn: secluded
4) скромный, неброский, приглушенный( о цвете) quiet clothes ≈ одежда, не бросающаяся в глаза Syn: unobtrusive, muted
5) тайный quiet diplomacy ≈ тайная дипломатия Can I have a quiet word with your son? ≈ Можно поговорить с вашим сыном с глазу на глаз?
2. сущ. тишина, безмолвие;
покой, спокойствие;
затишье, мир, тишь Syn: silence, calm
3. гл.
1) умиротворять, унимать, усмирять, успокаивать See if you can quiet the dog down. ≈ Попробуй успокоить собаку. Syn: calm, soothe
2) угомониться, униматься, успокаиваться At last the wind quietened down, and the storm was over. ≈ Наконец ветер стих и шторм кончился. Syn: abate, calm тишина, безмолвие - in the * of the night в тишине ночи (техническое) бесшумность покой, спокойствие - the * of the mind душевный покой - a few hours of * несколько часов покоя - to read in * спокойно почитать спокойствие, мир - to live in peace and * жить в мире и спокойствии - the country enjoyed many years of * after the war после войны страна долгие годы жила мирной жизнью > on the *, on the QT /qt/ тайком, втихаря, втихомолку;
под большим секретом > I'm telling you that on the * я тебе скажу, но только между нами тихий;
бесшумный, неслышный - * wind тихий ветер - * footsteps неслышные /бесшумные/ шаги - * neighbours спокойные соседи - * street тихая улица - the wind grew * ветер утих - to be * молчать, хранить молчание - be *! помолчите!, перестаньте разговаривать! - keep *! не шумите!, замолчите! - we must keep * about it мы не должны об этом говорить - everything is * after 10 o'clock все умолкает после 10 часов спокойный, тихий;
неподвижный - * air неподвижный воздух - * river тихая /спокойная, неподвижная/ река - to seem * казаться спокойным - the patient was at last * now больной, наконец, успокоился /затих/ - the restless boy was * now беспокойный мальчик наконец угомонился мирный, спокойный;
ничем не нарушаемый - * sleep спокойный /безмятежный/ сон - * times спокойные /тихие/ времена - * evening тихий /мирный/ вечер - * mind спокойный /ровный/ характер - * conscience чистая совесть - * horse смирная лошадь - a * cup of tea чашка чаю, выпитая на досуге - to have a * meal поесть неторопливо /не спеша/ - I want to be * after my journey я хочу отдохнуть после поездки - let me be * оставьте меня в покое - all * on the western front на западном фронте без перемен однообразный, скучный - he finds life in the country too * жизнь в деревне кажется ему слишком однообразной неяркий, неброский, приятный для глаза - * colours неяркие /спокойные/ цвета - a * style of dress скромная /неброская/ одежда скромный;
сдержанный - * wedding скромная свадьба - * dinner интимный ужин - * existence скромное существование - a * gathering of friends скромная встреча друзей - a very * man очень сдержанный человек - in his * way he is very proud of his son он очень гордится сыном, но старается не показывать этого мягкий (о человеке) - of a * disposition /nature/ тихого нрава - nice * people приятные, добрые люди - * manners приятные манеры - * movements мягкие /сдержанные/ движения укромный, уединенный - * corner /nook/ укромный уголок тайный, скрытый - * suspicion тайное подозрение - * resentment глухая неприязнь - we had a * laugh over it мы между собой над этим посмеялись - to keep smth. * утаивать /умалчивать/ что-л. (экономика) вялый( о рынке) ;
низкий( об уровне деловой активности) в грам. знач. междометия тише!, не шуметь! > as * as a mouse тихий как мышь > (as) * as the grave молчаливый;
тише воды, ниже травы > after the storm the town was as * as the grave после урагана город казался вымершим успокаивать, унимать;
останавливать, усмирять - to * a clamour /tumult/ унять шум - to * a crying baby унять /успокоить/ плачущего ребенка - to * the pulse (медицина) отрегулировать пульс успокаиваться, униматься, угомониться (обыкн. * down) - the wind *ed down ветер утих ~ тайный, скрытый;
укромный;
to keep (smth.) quiet утаивать, умалчивать;
in a quiet corner в укромном уголке ~ спокойный;
тихий, бесшумный;
неслышный;
keep quiet не шумите;
quiet! тише!, не шуметь!;
the sea is quiet море спокойно ~ тайный, скрытый;
укромный;
to keep (smth.) quiet утаивать, умалчивать;
in a quiet corner в укромном уголке ~ тишина, безмолвие;
покой, спокойствие;
мир;
on the quiet (сокр. жарг. on the q. t.) тайком, втихомолку;
под большим секретом quiet мирный, спокойный, ничем не нарушаемый;
a quiet cup of tea чашка чаю, выпитая на досуге, в тишине ~ неяркий, не бросающийся в глаза;
quiet colours спокойные цвета ~ низкий (об уровне деловой активности) ~ спокойный, мягкий (о человеке) ~ спокойный, скромный;
a quiet dinnerparty интимный обед;
a quiet wedding скромная свадьба ~ спокойный;
тихий, бесшумный;
неслышный;
keep quiet не шумите;
quiet! тише!, не шуметь!;
the sea is quiet море спокойно ~ спокойный;
тихий, бесшумный;
неслышный;
keep quiet не шумите;
quiet! тише!, не шуметь!;
the sea is quiet море спокойно ~ спокойный ~ тайный, скрытый;
укромный;
to keep (smth.) quiet утаивать, умалчивать;
in a quiet corner в укромном уголке ~ тайный ~ тихий ~ тишина, безмолвие;
покой, спокойствие;
мир;
on the quiet (сокр. жарг. on the q. t.) тайком, втихомолку;
под большим секретом ~ успокаивать(ся) ;
to quiet down утихать, успокаиваться ~ неяркий, не бросающийся в глаза;
quiet colours спокойные цвета quiet мирный, спокойный, ничем не нарушаемый;
a quiet cup of tea чашка чаю, выпитая на досуге, в тишине ~ спокойный, скромный;
a quiet dinnerparty интимный обед;
a quiet wedding скромная свадьба ~ успокаивать(ся) ;
to quiet down утихать, успокаиваться ~ спокойный, скромный;
a quiet dinnerparty интимный обед;
a quiet wedding скромная свадьба ~ спокойный;
тихий, бесшумный;
неслышный;
keep quiet не шумите;
quiet! тише!, не шуметь!;
the sea is quiet море спокойно -
11 quiet
1. adjective1) (not making very much, or any, noise; without very much, or any, noise: Tell the children to be quiet; It's very quiet out in the country; a quiet person.) tranquilo; silencioso; callado2) (free from worry, excitement etc: I live a very quiet life.) tranquilo, relajado, calmado3) (without much movement or activity; not busy: We'll have a quiet afternoon watching television.) tranquilo4) ((of colours) not bright.) discreto
2. noun(a state, atmosphere, period of time etc which is quiet: In the quiet of the night; All I want is peace and quiet.) tranquilidad, calma
3. verb((especially American: often with down) to quieten.) calmar(se)- quieten- quietly
- quietness
- keep quiet about
- on the quiet
quiet1 adj1. tranquilo2. silencioso3. calladobe quiet! ¡cállate!quiet2 n tranquilidad / silenciotr['kwaɪət]1 (silent) callado,-a, silencioso,-a2 (peaceful, calm) tranquilo,-a, sosegado,-a3 SMALLFINANCE/SMALL apagado,-a, poco activo,-a4 (unobtrusive) callado,-a, reservado,-a5 (tranquil, without fuss) tranquilo,-a1 (silence) silencio2 (calm) tranquilidad nombre femenino, calma, sosiego1 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL calmar, silenciar1 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL calmarse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLon the quiet a la chita callando, a hurtadillas, en secreto, sigilosamentequiet v ['kwaɪət] vt1) silence: hacer callar, acallar2) calm: calmar, tranquilizarquiet vito quiet down : calmarse, tranquilizarsequiet adv: silenciosamentea quiet-running engine: un motor silenciosoquiet adj1) calm: tranquilo, calmoso2) mild: sosegado, suavea quiet disposition: un temperamento sosegado3) silent: silencioso4) unobtrusive: discreto5) secluded: aisladoa quiet nook: un rincón aislado♦ quietly advquiet n1) calm: calma f, tranquilidad f2) silence: silencio madj.• apagado, -a adj.• callado, -a adj.• calmoso, -a adj.• deslucido, -a adj.• encalmado, -a adj.• modoso, -a adj.• pacato, -a adj.• quedo, -a adj.• quieto, -a adj.• reposado, -a adj.• silencioso, -a adj.• sordo, -a adj.• sosegado, -a adj.• suave adj.• tranquilo, -a adj.n.• descanso s.m.• poso s.m.• quietud s.f.• reposo s.m.• silencio s.m.• sosiego s.m.• tranquilidad s.f.v.• acallar v.• allanar v.• aquietar v.• callar v.• calmar v.• silenciar v.• sosegar v.'kwaɪət
I
1)be quiet! — ( to one person) cállate!; ( to more than one person) cállense! or (Esp tb) callaros or callaos!, silencio!
he gave them money to keep them quiet — les pagó para que no hablasen or para que se callaran
he has a very quiet voice — habla muy bajo, tiene una voz muy suave
keep it quiet! — no hagan or (Esp tb) hagáis ruido!
c) ( not boisterous) < manner> tranquilo, sosegado2)a) ( peaceful) tranquiloI finally bought it for him: anything for a quiet life — al final se lo compré: con tal de que me dejara en paz...!
c) ( private) en privado
II
mass nouna) ( silence) silencio mon the quiet — a escondidas, con disimulo
b) (peace, tranquillity) tranquilidad f, calma f, sosiego m
III
1.
(AmE) transitive verba) ( silence) \<\<uproar/protests\>\> acallar; \<\<class\>\> hacer* callarb) ( calm) \<\<horse/person\>\> tranquilizar*; \<\<fear/suspicion\>\> disipar
2.
vi ( become calmer) \<\<person/animal\>\> tranquilizarse*; \<\<wind/storm\>\> amainar, calmarsePhrasal Verbs:['kwaɪǝt]1. ADJ(compar quieter) (superl quietest)1) (=not loud) [engine] silencioso; [music] tranquilo, suave; [tone] bajo, quedo liter; [laughter] suave2) (=silent)a) [person] callado•
to be quiet — estar calladobe quiet! — ¡cállate!, ¡silencio!
•
to go quiet — quedarse calladoto keep sb quiet: they paid him £1,000 to keep him quiet — le pagaron 1000 libras para que se callara
b)to keep sth quiet: keep it quiet — no se lo digas a nadie
the government has tried to keep the matter quiet — el gobierno ha intentado mantener el asunto en secreto
c) [place] silenciosoisn't it quiet! — ¡qué silencio!
3) (=peaceful, not busy) [life, night, village, area] tranquilothe shops will be quieter today — las tiendas estarán más tranquilas hoy, hoy habrá menos jaleo en las tiendas
4) (=calm, placid) [person] callado; [temperament] tranquilo, sosegado; [dog, horse] manso5) (=discreet) [manner, decor, style] discreto; [clothes, dress] discreto, no llamativo; [colour] suave, apagado; [despair] callado; [optimism] comedido; [ceremony] íntimowith quiet humour he said... — con un humor discreto dijo...
we had a quiet lunch/supper — comimos/cenamos en la intimidad
it was a quiet funeral/wedding — el funeral/la boda se celebró en la intimidad
•
to have a quiet dig at sb — burlarse discretamente de algn•
we had a quiet laugh over it — nos reímos en privado•
I'll have a quiet word with him — hablaré discretamente con él2. N1) (=silence) silencio m•
on the quiet — a escondidas2) (=peacefulness) tranquilidad fpeacethere was a period of quiet after the fighting — hubo un periodo de tranquilidad tras los enfrentamientos
3.VT(US) = quieten 1.4.VI(US) = quieten 2.* * *['kwaɪət]
I
1)be quiet! — ( to one person) cállate!; ( to more than one person) cállense! or (Esp tb) callaros or callaos!, silencio!
he gave them money to keep them quiet — les pagó para que no hablasen or para que se callaran
he has a very quiet voice — habla muy bajo, tiene una voz muy suave
keep it quiet! — no hagan or (Esp tb) hagáis ruido!
c) ( not boisterous) < manner> tranquilo, sosegado2)a) ( peaceful) tranquiloI finally bought it for him: anything for a quiet life — al final se lo compré: con tal de que me dejara en paz...!
c) ( private) en privado
II
mass nouna) ( silence) silencio mon the quiet — a escondidas, con disimulo
b) (peace, tranquillity) tranquilidad f, calma f, sosiego m
III
1.
(AmE) transitive verba) ( silence) \<\<uproar/protests\>\> acallar; \<\<class\>\> hacer* callarb) ( calm) \<\<horse/person\>\> tranquilizar*; \<\<fear/suspicion\>\> disipar
2.
vi ( become calmer) \<\<person/animal\>\> tranquilizarse*; \<\<wind/storm\>\> amainar, calmarsePhrasal Verbs: -
12 ♦ fall
♦ fall /fɔ:l/n.1 caduta; ruzzolone: a fall from a ladder [from a horse], una caduta da una scala a pioli [da cavallo]; a bad (o nasty) fall, una brutta caduta; to have (o to take) a fall, cadere per terra; fare una caduta: DIALOGO → - Skiiing- Did you have any major falls?, hai fatto qualche brutta caduta?; to break a fall, attutire una caduta2 caduta; crollo; capitolazione: a rock fall, una caduta di massi; the fall of the Roman Empire, la caduta (o il crollo) dell'impero romano; the fall of the government, la caduta del governo; the fall of Saigon, la caduta di Saigon4 (meteor.) caduta; precipitazione (atmosferica): a fall of snow, una nevicata; a heavy fall of hailstones, un forte rovescio di grandine7 (al pl., spec. nei toponimi = waterfall) cascata, cascate: the Niagara Falls, le cascate del Niagara8 declivio; pendio; discesa9 diminuzione; calo; ribasso; abbassamento; (econ., fin.) flessione; ( della moneta, delle quotazioni, ecc.) svilimento; a fall in temperature, un abbassamento di temperatura; a fall in exports, una flessione delle esportazioni; a fall in unemployment, un calo della disoccupazione; a sharp fall, una netta caduta11 (mus., poet.) cadenza15 (mecc.) catena di comando; cavo di manovra16 (naut.) tirante19 ( slang USA) arresto; condanna: to do (o to take) a fall, essere arrestato; andare in galera; andare dentro● (comput.) fall back, fall back ( capacità del modem di ridurre automaticamente la velocità di trasmissione) □ (comput.) fall forward, fall forward ( capacità del modem di aumentare la velocità di trasmissione) □ fall from grace, caduta nel peccato; ( anche) caduta in disgrazia, perdita di prestigio □ (fam. USA) fall guy, capro espiatorio; vittima; ( anche) facile vittima, gonzo, pollo, piccione (fam.) □ fall line, ( sci) linea di massima pendenza; (geol.) linea di caduta (o di stacco) □ the Fall of Man, ► fall, def. 3 □ ( anche fig.) the fall of the curtain, il calare del sipario □ (edil.) fall pipe, pluviale; doccia □ ( slang USA) to take the fall, prendersi la colpa (o la punizione, al posto di un altro) □ (fam. USA) to take a fall out of sb., avere la meglio (o spuntarla) su q.♦ (to) fall /fɔ:l/1 cadere; cascare; precipitare; crollare: I slipped and fell, sono scivolato e sono caduto (a terra); to fall on one's knees, cadere in ginocchio; to fall to the floor, cadere per terra (o sul pavimento); to fall overboard, cadere in mare; to fall off a wall [down the stairs, into a well, out of the window], cadere da un muro [giù dalle scale, in un pozzo, dalla finestra]; to fall to one's death, precipitare ( da un luogo elevato) e restare ucciso; morire per una caduta dall'alto; He fell on the bed, è caduto (o è crollato) sul letto; We fell into each other's arms, ci siamo buttati l'uno nelle braccia dell'altro; to fall into a deep sleep, cadere in un sonno profondo2 cadere; scendere: The rain was falling, cadeva la pioggia; Night fell suddenly, la notte cadde di colpo; Silence fell on the assembly, sull'assemblea cadde il silenzio; My eyes fell on the date, il mio sguardo cadde sulla data; Her hair fell down her back, i capelli le scendevano sulla schiena3 cadere; crollare; capitolare: The government has fallen, è caduto il governo; The city fell to the enemy, la città cadde nelle mani del nemico5 ( anche fin.) calare, scendere, diminuire, abbassarsi; ( della moneta) deprezzarsi, svalutarsi: Prices will fall, i prezzi caleranno; Temperatures fell below zero, le temperature scesero sotto lo zero; The water table has fallen considerably, la falda acquifera si è abbassata notevolmente; His voice fell to a whisper, la sua voce si è abbassata fino a un sussurro; The yen has fallen against the euro, lo yen è sceso rispetto all'euro; The wind fell, il vento è calato7 ( di parola) cadere; uscire; sfuggire: to fall from sb. 's lips, uscire di bocca; He let fall that…, si è lasciato sfuggire che…8 cadere in tentazione; peccare10 ( del viso, ecc.) mostrare disappunto; mostrare sgomento: His face fell when I told him, quando glielo dissi ci rimase13 ( seguito da agg.) cadere ( in una data condizione o situazione); diventare: to fall asleep, addormentarsi; to fall ill, ammalarsi; to fall open, aprirsi, spalancarsi ( cadendo)● (fam.) to fall about one's ears, crollare; andare a rotoli □ (fam.) to fall between the cracks, andare perso; finire ignorato □ to fall between two stools, mancare entrambi i bersagli; perdere sui due fronti □ to fall by the wayside, rinunciare; abbandonare □ to fall due, scadere □ to fall flat, non avere successo, andare a vuoto; fare fiasco; fare cilecca (fam.); ( di battuta, ecc.) non essere capito, non far ridere □ to fall flat on one's face, cadere bocconi; (fig.) fare fiasco, fare una figura barbina □ to fall foul (o afoul) of, scontrarsi con; urtarsi con; entrare in conflitto con; trovarsi contro (q.); mettersi nei guai con; pestare i piedi a; infrangere (una regola, una legge); (naut.) entrare in collisione con ( un'altra nave) □ (relig.) to fall from grace, perdere lo stato di grazia; cadere nel peccato; ( anche) perdere prestigio, cadere in disgrazia □ to fall in love (with), innamorarsi (di) □ (aeron.) to fall in spin, cadere in vite; avvitarsi □ to fall in two, spaccarsi in due □ ( di cavallo e sim.) to fall lame, azzopparsi □ to nearly fall off one's chair, rimanere di stucco □ (fam.) to fall off the back of a lorry ► lorry □ to fall on deaf ears, restare inascoltato; cadere nel vuoto □ to fall on one's feet, cadere in piedi ( anche fig.) □ to fall on hard times, avere un rovescio di fortuna □ to fall on one's sword, gettarsi sulla spada ( per uccidersi) □ to fall on stony ground, ( di parole, consiglio, ecc.) venire ignorato; cadere nel vuoto □ to fall prey to, cadere in preda a; cadere in □ to fall short (of), (di tiro, ecc.), essere troppo corto (e non raggiungere); (fig.) essere insufficiente (a), non bastare (per), non raggiungere (il numero, ecc., desiderato); essere inferiore a ( speranze, aspettative, ecc.) □ (fig. fam.) to fall through the floor, restare di stucco □ to fall to pieces, ► fall apart □ ( di voce) to fall to a whisper, diventare un sussurro □ to fall victim to, cadere vittima di. -
13 quiet
1. adjective,be quiet! — (coll.) sei still od. ruhig!
keep something quiet, keep quiet about something — (fig.) etwas geheimhalten
3) (gentle) sanft; (peaceful) ruhig [Kind, Person]2. noun 3. transitive verbhave a quiet word with somebody — mit jemandem unter vier Augen reden
see academic.ru/59748/quieten">quieten* * *1. adjective1) (not making very much, or any, noise; without very much, or any, noise: Tell the children to be quiet; It's very quiet out in the country; a quiet person.) ruhig2) (free from worry, excitement etc: I live a very quiet life.) ruhig3) (without much movement or activity; not busy: We'll have a quiet afternoon watching television.) ruhig2. noun(a state, atmosphere, period of time etc which is quiet: In the quiet of the night; All I want is peace and quiet.) die Ruhe3. verb((especially American: often with down) to quieten.) beruhigen- quieten- quietly
- quietness
- keep quiet about
- on the quiet* * *qui·et[kwaɪət]I. adj<-er, -est>to speak in a \quiet voice leise sprechen2. (silent) ruhigplease be \quiet Ruhe bitte!to keep \quiet ruhig seinthey were told to keep \quiet ihnen wurde gesagt, dass sie still sein sollengive the baby a bottle to keep her \quiet gib mal dem Baby die Flasche, damit es nicht schreitthe new teacher can't keep the children \quiet der neue Lehrer hat die Kinder nicht im Griffa \quiet corner/place eine ruhige Ecke/ein ruhiger Platzin \quiet contemplation in stiller Betrachtungyou've been very \quiet all evening — is anything the matter? du warst den ganzen Abend sehr ruhig — ist irgendwas?if she knows something, she's keeping very \quiet about it wenn sie etwas davon weiß, so sagt sie nichts darüberto keep sb \quiet jdn zum Schweigen bringen4. (secret) heimlichto feel a \quiet satisfaction eine stille Genugtuung empfindento have a \quiet word with sb mit jdm ein Wörtchen im Vertrauen reden famcan I have a \quiet word with you? könnte ich Sie [mal] unter vier Augen sprechen?to keep sth \quiet etw für sich akk behaltenthey wanted a \quiet wedding sie wollten eine Hochzeit in kleinem Rahmen6. (not exciting) geruhsamit's a \quiet peaceful little village es ist ein beschaulicher und friedlicher kleiner Ort; (not busy) street, town ruhig7.▶ anything for a \quiet life! wenn ich doch nur eine Sekunde mal meine Ruhe hätte!let's have some \quiet! Ruhe bitte!peace and \quiet Ruhe und FriedenI just want peace and \quiet for five minutes ich will nur fünf Minuten lang meine Ruhe habenI go camping for some peace and \quiet ich gehe zelten, weil ich ein wenig Ruhe und Stille finden möchte3.▶ on the \quiet heimlichto get married on the \quiet in aller Stille heiratenIII. vt esp AM▪ to \quiet sb/sth jdn/etw besänftigento \quiet children Kinder zur Ruhe bringen* * *['kwaɪət]1. adj (+er)1) (= silent) still; neighbours, person ruhig, still; engine ruhig; footsteps, music, car, voice leiseat night when the office is quiet — nachts, wenn im Büro alles still ist
she was as quiet as a mouse — sie war mucksmäuschenstill (inf)
(be) quiet! — Ruhe!
can't you keep your dog quiet? — können Sie nicht zusehen, dass ihr Hund still ist?
that book should keep him quiet for a while — das Buch sollte ihn eine Weile beschäftigt halten, mit dem Buch sollte er eine Weile zu tun haben
to keep quiet about sth — über etw (acc) nichts sagen
you've kept very quiet about it — du hast ja nicht viel darüber verlauten lassen
to go quiet — still werden; (music etc) leise werden
could you make the class quiet for a minute? —
to have a quiet mind —
he had a quiet sleep the patient had a quiet night — er hat ruhig geschlafen der Patient verbrachte eine ruhige or ungestörte Nacht
yesterday everything was quiet on the Syrian border — gestern herrschte Ruhe or war alles ruhig an der syrischen Grenze
I was just sitting there having a quiet drink — ich saß da und habe in aller Ruhe mein Bier etc getrunken
4) (= unpretentious, simple) dress, tie, colour dezent; style einfach, schlicht; elegance schlicht; wedding, dinner, funeral im kleinen RahmenI caught him having a quiet drink — ich habe ihn dabei erwischt, wie er heimlich getrunken hat
6) (= unobtrusive, confidential) dinner ruhig, im kleinen Kreis; negotiation besonnen, vertraulich; diplomacy besonnen2. nRuhe fon the quiet —
See:→ peace3. vtSee:= quieten4. vi(US: become quiet) nachlassen, erlahmen, erlöschen* * *quiet [ˈkwaıət]A adj (adv quietly)1. ruhig, still (beide auch fig Person etc)quiet run TECH ruhiger Gang;be quiet! sei still oder ruhig!;quiet, please ich bitte um Ruhe!; Ruhe, bitte!;a) sich ruhig verhalten, still sein,b) den Mund halten3. ruhig, friedlich, behaglich, beschaulich (Leben etc):a quiet evening ein ruhiger oder geruhsamer Abend;4. bewegungslos, still (Gewässer)5. fig versteckt, geheim, heimlich, leise:a quiet resentment ein heimlicher Groll;keep sth quiet etwas geheim halten oder für sich behalten6. ruhig, unauffällig:quiet colo(u)rs ruhige oder gedämpfte Farben7. WIRTSCH ruhig, still, flau (Saison etc)B s1. Ruhe f2. Ruhe f, Stille f:on the quiet umg klammheimlich; heimlich, still und leiseC v/t1. beruhigen, zur Ruhe bringen2. beruhigen, besänftigen3. zum Schweigen bringen* * *1. adjective,1) (silent) still; (not loud) leise [Schritte, Musik, Stimme, Motor, Fahrzeug]be quiet! — (coll.) sei still od. ruhig!
keep something quiet, keep quiet about something — (fig.) etwas geheimhalten
2) (peaceful, not busy) ruhig3) (gentle) sanft; (peaceful) ruhig [Kind, Person]4) (not overt, disguised) versteckt; heimlich [Groll]5) (not formal) zwanglos; klein [Feier]6) (not showy) dezent [Farben, Muster]; schlicht [Eleganz, Stil]2. nounRuhe, die; (silence, stillness) Stille, die3. transitive verb* * *adj.leis adj.ruhig adj.still adj. -
14 Gomes da Costa, Manuel de Oliveira
(1863-1929)Marshal of the Portuguese Army, commander of Portugal's forces in Flanders in World War I, and leader of the military coup that overthrew the First Republic in May 1926. Trained at the Military College, Gomes da Costa rose from the rank of private to general during the period 1883-1917. His career began with important colonial service in Portuguese India and Mozambique in suppressing insurgencies in the 1890s. He served with Mousinho de Albuquerque in the Gaza campaigns (1896-97), in Mozambique, and later in Angola and São Tomé. His most notable service was in Portugal's intervention in World War I as he helped organize the first brigade and commanded the first division of Portugal's Expeditionary Corps (CEP), which entered combat on the western front in May 1917. For his role in the battle of Lys, in April 1918, when German forces badly mauled the Portuguese sector, Gomes da Costa was decorated by Portugal with the Tower and Sword medal. During the latter part of the First Republic, he was dispatched to the colonies on missions to divert him from domestic politics, since he had joined the Reformist Party (PR).As the most senior and best-known career army officer, Gomes da Costa was invited by former CEP comrades to join in military conspiracies to overthrow the democrat-dominated First Republic. On 28 May 1926, in Braga, he launched the military coup with the pronouncement "To Arms, Portugal!" The general's famous name and forceful personality gave the military movement the necessary prestige and won public opinion's confidence for the political moment. Gomes da Costa, however, was not suited for political maneuvering and administrative efficiency and, on 9 July 1926, he was dismissed as minister of war by other generals, including future president Óscar Carmona, and then exiled to the Azores. For political effect and as a consolation prize to the leader whose individual daring had helped create the abertura (opening) that allowed the coup to succeed, the military dictatorship honored Gomes da Costa, even in exile, with promotion to marshal of the army. In ill health on his return from the isolated Azores in late 1927, he died less than two years later in Lisbon. There is a statue of Gomes da Costa in a square in Braga, designed by Barata Feyo, which honors the general of the Twenty- eighth of May coup d'etat.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Gomes da Costa, Manuel de Oliveira
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15 all
all [ɔ:l](a) (the whole of) tout;∎ all expenses will be reimbursed tous les frais seront remboursés;∎ all night toute la nuit;∎ all day and all night toute la journée et toute la nuit;∎ all six of us want to go nous voulons y aller tous/toutes les six;∎ to be all things to all men être tout à tous(b) (every one of) tous (toutes);∎ all kinds of people toutes sortes de gens;∎ for children of all ages pour les enfants de tous les âges;∎ Sport the British all-comers 100 m record le record britannique de l'épreuve du 100 m ouverte à tous∎ (with) all my love (at end of letter) bien affectueusement;∎ with all speed à toute vitesse;∎ in all fairness (to sb) pour être juste (avec qn)(a) (the whole of) tout(e) m,f;∎ all the butter tout le beurre;∎ all the beer toute la bière;∎ all my life toute ma vie;∎ all five women les cinq femmes;∎ is that all the luggage you're taking? c'est tout ce que vous emportez comme bagages?;∎ for all his wealth en dépit de ou malgré sa fortune;∎ familiar and all that et tout cela, et tout le reste;∎ you're not as ill as all that vous n'êtes pas aussi ou si malade que ça;∎ it's not all that pleasant ce n'est pas tellement agréable;∎ of all the stupid things to say/do! de toutes les idioties possibles!;∎ you, of all people, should know what I mean toi au moins tu devrais savoir ce que je veux dire;∎ in all honesty/sincerity pour être honnête/sincère;∎ what's all that noise? qu'est-ce que c'est que tout ce bruit?;∎ all that's nonsense tout ça, c'est des bêtises;∎ for all that they say he's a genius, I think… ils ont beau dire que c'est un génie, moi, je pense…∎ all the better! tant mieux!;∎ you will feel all the better for a rest un peu de repos vous fera le plus grand bien;∎ all the sooner d'autant plus vite3 pronoun(a) (everything) tout;∎ I gave all I had j'ai donné tout ce que j'avais;∎ take it all prenez tout;∎ all I want is to rest tout ce que je veux c'est du repos;∎ that's all I have to say c'est tout ce que j'ai à dire;∎ all will be well tout ira bien;∎ will that be all? ce sera tout?;∎ I did all I could j'ai fait tout ce que j'ai pu;∎ it was all I could do not to laugh j'ai eu du mal à m'empêcher de rire;∎ it's all his fault c'est sa faute à lui;∎ for all I know autant que je sache;∎ for all I care pour (tout) ce que cela me fait;∎ you men are all the same! vous les hommes, vous êtes tous pareils ou tous les mêmes!;∎ all or nothing tout ou rien;∎ all in good time chaque chose en son temps;∎ when all is said and done en fin de compte, au bout du compte;∎ best/worst of all,… le mieux/pire, c'est que…;∎ most of all surtout, en particulier;∎ proverb all's well that ends well tout est bien qui finit bien(b) (everyone) tous (toutes);∎ all are agreed that… tous sont d'accord que…;∎ all of us nous tous;∎ we all love him nous l'aimons tous;∎ we all came nous sommes tous venus;∎ good evening, all! bonsoir à tous!, bonsoir, tout le monde!;∎ don't all speak at once! ne parlez pas tous en même temps!;∎ they all made the same mistake ils ont tous fait la même erreur;∎ the children were all hoping to go les enfants espéraient tous y aller;∎ all who knew her loved her tous ceux qui la connaissaient l'aimaient;∎ all together tous à la fois, tous ensemble∎ the score is 5 all le score est de 5 partout;∎ 30 all (in tennis) 30 partout, 30 à∎ all of tout;∎ all of the butter/the cakes tout le beurre, tous les gâteaux;∎ all of London Londres tout entier;∎ all of it was sold (le) tout a été vendu;∎ how much wine did they drink? - all of it combien de vin ont-ils bu? - tout ce qu'il y avait;∎ I want all of it je le veux en entier;∎ all of you can come vous pouvez tous venir;∎ listen, all of you écoutez-moi tous;∎ she knows all of their names elle connaît tous leurs noms;∎ he must be all of sixty il doit avoir au moins soixante ans;∎ the book cost me all of £10 le livre ne m'a coûté que 10 livres;∎ humorous it's all of five minutes' walk away! c'est au moins à cinq minutes à pied!4 adverb(as intensifier) tout;∎ she was all alone elle était toute seule;∎ she was all excited elle était tout excitée;∎ she was all dressed or she was dressed all in black elle était habillée tout en noir;∎ all along the road tout le long de la route;∎ all around the edge tout le long du bord;∎ I forgot all about the meeting j'ai complètement oublié qu'il y avait une réunion;∎ the soup went all down my dress la soupe s'est répandue partout sur ma robe;∎ the jacket's split all up the sleeve la veste a craqué tout le long de la manche;∎ familiar don't get your hands all dirty ne va pas te salir les mains!;∎ familiar the motor's all rusty inside le moteur est tout rouillé à l'intérieur;∎ all at one go (tout) d'un seul coup;∎ I'm all for it moi, je suis tout à fait pour;∎ she's all for giving children their freedom elle est tout à fait convaincue qu'il faut donner aux enfants leur liberté;∎ my wife was all for calling in a doctor ma femme voulait à toute force ou à tout prix appeler un médecin;∎ he's not all bad il n'est pas entièrement mauvais;∎ that's all to the good! tout va pour le mieux!;∎ all the better/worse (for me) tant mieux/pis (pour moi);∎ you will be all the better for it vous vous en trouverez (d'autant) mieux;∎ all the harder encore plus dur;∎ the time came all too soon l'heure n'arriva que trop tôt;∎ familiar it's all up with him il est fichu5 nountout;∎ I would give my all to be there je donnerais tout ce que j'ai pour y être;∎ the team gave their all l'équipe a donné son maximum;∎ to stake one's all on sth tout miser sur qchdu tout;∎ do you know him at all? est-ce que vous le connaissez (un peu)?;∎ I didn't speak at all je n'ai pas parlé du tout;∎ I'm not at all astonished je n'en suis aucunement étonné;∎ he's not at all patient il n'est pas du tout patient;∎ nothing at all rien du tout;∎ if he comes at all s'il vient;∎ it seemed to worry him very little, if at all ça n'a pas eu l'air de l'inquiéter le moins du monde;∎ he comes rarely if at all il vient très rarement, voire jamais;∎ if you had any feelings at all si vous aviez le moindre sentiment;∎ if we had any money at all si nous avions le moindre argent ou ne serait-ce qu'un peu d'argent;∎ if you do any travelling at all, you'll know what I mean si vous voyagez un tant soit peu, vous comprendrez ce que je veux dire;∎ if it is at all cold s'il fait un (tant soit) peu froid;∎ if it is at all possible si c'était possible;∎ why do it at all? pourquoi se donner la peine de le faire?depuis le début;∎ that's what I've been saying all along c'est ce que je dis depuis le début(a) (suddenly) tout d'un coup(b) (all at the same time) à la fois, en même tempspresque;∎ all but finished presque ou pratiquement fini;∎ I all but missed it j'ai bien failli le rater, c'est tout juste si je ne l'ai pas raté10 all in∎ I'm all in je suis mort2 adverb(everything included) tout compris;∎ the rent is £250 a month all in le loyer est de 250 livres par mois tout compristout compte fait∎ to go all out y aller à fond;∎ to go all out to do sth se donner à fond pour faire qch13 all over(finished) fini;∎ that's all over and done with now tout ça c'est bien terminé maintenant;∎ it's all over between them tout est fini entre euxpartout;∎ there were toys scattered all over the floor il y avait des jouets éparpillés partout sur le sol;∎ you've got ink all over you! tu t'es mis de l'encre partout!;∎ all over the world dans le monde entier;∎ we have agencies all over Europe nous avons des agences dans toute l'Europe ou partout en Europe;∎ it'll be all over town tomorrow morning! demain matin, toute la ville sera au courant!;∎ familiar all over the place (everywhere) partout□, dans tous les coins; (very erratic, inaccurate) pas au point□ ;∎ familiar their filing system's all over the place leur système de classement n'est pas du tout au point;∎ familiar the team was all over the place l'équipe a joué n'importe comment□ ;∎ familiar he was all over her il ne l'a pas laissée tranquille un instant;∎ familiar he was all over us when he heard we were from the BBC il ne nous a plus laissés tranquilles quand il a appris que nous étions de la BBC□ ;∎ familiar humorous he was all over her like a rash or a cheap suit il l'a draguée de façon flagrante3 adverb(everywhere) partout;∎ painted green all over peint tout en vert;∎ covered all over in blossoms tout en fleur ou en fleurs;∎ it was like being a child all over again c'était comme retomber en enfance;∎ familiar that's him all over! ça c'est lui tout craché!∎ taken all round tout bien considéré∎ we're all square now nous ne sommes plus en compte maintenant∎ it isn't all that difficult or as difficult as all that ce n'est pas si difficile que ça17 all the more∎ all the more reason for doing it again raison de plus pour recommencer2 adverbencore plus;∎ it makes her all the more interesting ça la rend encore plus intéressante;∎ it's all the more unfair since or as he promised not to put up the rent c'est d'autant plus injuste qu'il a promis de ne pas augmenter le loyer18 all the same1 adverb(nevertheless) tout de même, quand même;∎ he paid up all the same il a payé quand même∎ it's all the same to me ça m'est complètement égal, peu m'importe;∎ if it's all the same to you si cela ne vous gêne pastout compris;∎ there were six of us all told nous étions six en tout∎ all too soon bien trop vite;∎ the holidays went all too quickly les vacances ne sont passées que trop vite;∎ it's all too easy to forget that c'est tellement facile de l'oublier des budgets►► the All Blacks les All Blacks mpl (l'équipe nationale de rugby de la Nouvelle-Zélande);1 noun(signal m de) fin f d'alerte;∎ to sound the all clear sonner la fin de l'alerte;∎ figurative he received or was given the all clear on the project on lui a donné le feu vert pour le projet;∎ the tests came back negative and he's been given the all clear les résultats des tests sont revenus et tout est normalfin d'alerte!; All Fools' Day le premier avril;All Hallows Toussaint f;All Hallows' Eve la veille de la Toussaint;All Saints' Day (le jour de) la Toussaint;All Souls' Day le jour ou la fête des Morts -
16 Davis, Robert Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 6 June 1870 London, Englandd. 29 March 1965 Epsom, Surrey, England[br]English inventor of breathing, diving and escape apparatus.[br]Davis was the son of a detective with the City of London police. At the age of 11 he entered the employment of Siebe, Gorman \& Co., manufacturers of diving and other safety equipment since 1819, at their Lambeth works. By good fortune, his neat handwriting attracted the notice of Mr Gorman and he was transferred to work in the office. He studied hard after working hours and rose steadily in the firm. In his twenties he was promoted to Assistant Manager, then General Manager, Managing Director and finally Governing Director. He retired in 1960, having been made Life President the previous year, and continued to attend the office regularly until May 1964.Davis's entire career was devoted to research and development in the firm's special field. In 1906 he perfected the first practicable oxygen-breathing apparatus for use in mine rescue; it was widely adopted and with modifications was still in use in the 1990s. With Professor Leonard Hill he designed a deep-sea diving-bell incorporating a decompression chamber. He also invented an oxygen-breathing apparatus and heated apparel for airmen flying at high altitudes.Immediately after the first German gas attacks on the Western Front in April 1915, Davis devised a respirator, known as the stocking skene or veil mask. He quickly organized the mass manufacture of this device, roping in members of his family and placing the work in the homes of Lambeth: within 48 hours the first consignment was being sent off to France.He was a member of the Admiralty Deep Sea Diving Committee, which in 1933 completed tables for the safe ascent of divers with oxygen from a depth of 300 ft (91 m). They were compiled by Davis in conjunction with Professors J.B.S.Haldane and Leonard Hill and Captain G.C.Damant, the Royal Navy's leading diving expert. With revisions these tables have been used by the Navy ever since. Davis's best-known invention was first used in 1929: the Davis Submarine Escape Apparatus. It became standard equipment on submarines until it was replaced by the Built-in Breathing System, which the firm began manufacturing in 1951.The firm's works were bombed during the Second World War and were re-established at Chessington, Surrey. The extensive research facilities there were placed at the disposal of the Royal Navy and the Admiralty Experimental Diving Unit. Davis worked with Haldane and Hill on problems of the underwater physiology of working divers. A number of inventions issued from Chessington, such as the human torpedo, midget submarine and human minesweeper. In the early 1950s the firm helped to pioneer the use of underwater television to investigate the sinking of the submarine Affray and the crashed Comet jet airliners.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1932.BibliographyDavis was the author of several manuals on diving including Deep Sea Diving and Submarine Operations and Breathing in Irrespirable Atmospheres. He also wrote Resuscitation: A Brief Personal History of Siebe, Gorman \& Co. 1819–1957.Further ReadingObituary, 1965, The Times, 31 March, p. 16.LRD -
17 Parker, George Safford
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 1 November 1863 Shullsberg, Wisconsin, USAd. 19 July 1937 USA[br]American perfector of the fountain pen and founder of the Parker Pen Company.[br]Parker was born of English immigrant stock and grew up on his parents' farm in Iowa. He matriculated at Upper Iowa University and then joined the Valentine School of Telegraphy at Jamesville, Wisconsin: within a year he was on the staff. He supplemented his meagre school-master's pay by selling fountain pens to his students. He found that the pens needed constant attention, and his students were continually bringing them back to him for repair. The more he sold, the more he repaired. The work furnished him, first, with a detailed knowledge of the design and construction of the fountain pen and then with the thought that he could make a better pen himself. He gave up his teaching career and in 1888 began experimenting. He established his own company and in the following year he registered his first patent. The Parker Pen Company was formally incorporated on 8 March 1892.In the following years he patented many improvements, including the Lucky Curve pen and ink-feed system, patented in 1894. That was the real breakthrough for Parker and the pen was an immediate success. It solved the problem that had bedevilled the fountain pen before and since, by incorporating an ink-feed system that ensured a free and uniform flow of ink to where it was wanted, the nib, and not to other undesirable places.Parker established a reputation for manufacturing high-quality pens that looked good and worked well and reliably. The pens were in demand worldwide and the company grew.During the First World War, Parker introduced the Trench Pen for use on the Western Front. A tablet of pigment was inserted in a blind cap at the end of the pen. When this tablet was placed in the barrel and the barrel was filled with water, the pen was ready for use.Later developments included the Duofold pen, designed and launched in 1920. It had an enlarged ink capacity, a red barrel and a twentyfive-year guarantee on the nib. It became immensely popular with the public and was the flagship product throughout the 1920s and early 1930s, until the Vacumatic was launched in 1933.Parker handed over control of the company to this two sons, Kenneth and Russell, during the 1920s, remaining President until his retirement in 1933.[br]Further ReadingObituary, 1937, Jamesville Gazette 19 July (an appreciation by the architect Frank Lloyd Wright was published simultaneously). No biography has appeared, but Parker gave details of his career in an article in SystemsReview, October 1926.LRD -
18 quiet
1. [ʹkwaıət] n1. 1) тишина, безмолвие2) тех. бесшумность2. 1) покой, спокойствие2) спокойствие, мирthe country enjoyed many years of quiet after the war - после войны страна долгие годы жила мирной жизнью
♢
on the quiet, on the OT /qt/ - а) тайком, втихаря, втихомолку; б) под большим секретом2. [ʹkwaıət] aI'm telling you that on the quiet - я тебе скажу, но только между нами
1. тихий; бесшумный, неслышныйquiet footsteps - неслышные /бесшумные/ шаги
quiet neighbours [surroundings] - спокойные соседи [-ое окружение]
quiet street [room] - тихая улица [комната]
to be quiet - молчать, хранить молчание
be quiet! - помолчите!, перестаньте разговаривать!
keep quiet! - не шумите!, замолчите!
2. спокойный, тихий; неподвижныйquiet river - тихая /спокойная, неподвижная/ река
the patient was at last quiet now - больной, наконец, успокоился /затих/
3. мирный, спокойный; ничем не нарушаемыйquiet sleep - спокойный /безмятежный/ сон
quiet times [hours] - спокойные /тихие/ времена [часы]
quiet evening [life] - тихий /мирный/ вечер [-ая жизнь]
quiet mind - спокойный /ровный/ характер
a quiet cup of tea - чашка чаю, выпитая на досуге
to have a quiet meal - поесть неторопливо /не спеша/
4. однообразный, скучныйhe finds life in the country too quiet - жизнь в деревне кажется ему слишком однообразной
5. 1) неяркий, неброский, приятный для глазаquiet colours - неяркие /спокойные/ цвета
a quiet style of dress - скромная /неброская/ одежда
2) скромный; сдержанныйin his quiet way he is very proud of his son - он очень гордится сыном, но старается не показывать этого
3) мягкий ( о человеке)of a quiet disposition /nature/ - тихого нрава
quiet manners [ways] - приятные манеры [-ое обхождение]
quiet movements - мягкие /сдержанные/ движения
6. укромный, уединённыйquiet corner /nook/ - укромный уголок
7. тайный, скрытыйto keep smth. quiet - утаивать /умалчивать/ что-л.
9. в грам. знач. междометия тише!, не шуметь!♢
as quiet as a mouse - тихий как мышь(as) quiet as the grave - молчаливый; ≅ тише воды, ниже травы
3. [ʹkwaıət] vafter the storm the town was as quiet as the grave - после урагана город казался вымершим
1) успокаивать, унимать; останавливать, усмирятьto quiet a clamour /tumult/ - унять шум
to quiet a crying baby - унять /успокоить/ плачущего ребёнка
to quiet the pulse - мед. отрегулировать пульс
2) успокаиваться, униматься, угомониться (обыкн. quiet down) -
19 Norton de Matos, José
(1867-1955)One of Portugal's most important and influential colonial administrators of the 20th-century African empire, a central figure in the management of Portugal's dispatch of an army to Flanders in World War I, and oppositionist candidate in the 1949 presidential elections. Trained as an army engineer, he attended Coimbra University and became a stalwart republican. During much of the 1890s, he served in Portuguese India, where he came under the influence of the style and policies of the British Raj. During the First Republic, he held a number of important posts in the empire and in Portugal: governor-general of Angola (1912-15), colonial minister (1915), and minister of war (1915-17), during which service he was instrumental in organizing the mobilization and dispatch of Portugal's Expeditionary Force (CEP) to the western front in 1917. Later, he served as high commissioner and governor-general of Angola (1921-24) and was named Portugal's minister to Great Britain (1924-26).Dismissed from his London post by the military dictatorship in 1926, Norton de Matos never held an official post again and, as he opposed both the military dictatorship and the Estado Novo, he found it difficult to practice his engineering profession while in retirement from the army. However, he remained important in post-1926 colonial policies and concepts, and attempted to put them into practice after 1945. In 1949, General Norton de Matos was the oppositionist candidate in the presidential elections and opposed the regime incumbent, Marshal Antônio Óscar Carmona. Using the law, police harassment, and other means, the Estado Novo persecuted Norton de Matos's followers and disrupted his campaign. Just before the rigged election was to be held, the aged general withdrew his candidacy, rightfully claiming fraud and intimidation. A tough if liberal reformist in colonial affairs, the senior colonial authority wrote his final book A Nação Una in 1953, calling for the regime to implement his basic reform ideas and to improve treatment of Africans in labor and race relations. Norton de Matos's prescient warnings about African policies were largely ignored, while Lisbon followed his key strategic and development concepts. -
20 Goldwyn, Samuel
(1882-1974) Голдвин, СэмюэлКинопродюсер. Родился в Польше, в бедной семье. В 13-летнем возрасте приехал в США, за несколько лет прошел путь от рабочего перчаточной фабрики до владельца фирмы, производящей перчатки. В 1913 вместе с двоюродным братом Дж. Ласки [ Lasky, Jesse Louis] и режиссером С. Де Миллем [ De Mille, Cecil Blount] создал кинофирму, которая выпустила первый в США полнометражный художественный фильм "Муж индианки" ["The Squaw Man"]. В 1917 создал корпорацию "Голдвин пикчерс" [Goldwyn Pictures Corp.], которая в 1925 слилась с корпорацией "Метро пикчерс" [Metro Pictures Corp.]. В результате появилась всемирно известная кинофирма "Метро-Голдвин-Майер" [ Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]. В 1926-41 выступал как независимый продюсер. Проявлял требовательность к художественному уровню фильмов, открыл путь на экран нескольким известным впоследствии кинозвездам. Среди фильмов Голдвина: "На Западном фронте без перемен" ["All Quiet on the Western Front"] (1930), "Эрроусмит" ["Arrowsmith"] (1931), "Лисички" ["The Little Foxes"] (1941), "Северная звезда" ["The North Star"] (1943), "Лучшие годы нашей жизни" ["The Best Years of Our Lives"] (1946) - премия "Оскар" продюсеру, "Мальчики и девочки" ["Guys and Dolls"] (1955), "Порги и Бесс" ["Porgy and Bess"] (1959) и ряд других. Голдвин, по отзыву современников, был колоритной фигурой и оставил после себя ряд забавных высказываний, ставших "крылатыми" [ Goldwynism]English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Goldwyn, Samuel
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