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41 word denoting presence of some one or some thing
உண்டுEnglish-Tamil dictionary > word denoting presence of some one or some thing
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42 presenza
"presence;Vorhandensein;presença"* * *f presencealla (o in) presenza di in the presence ofdi bella presenza fine-looking* * *presenza s.f.1 presence: nessuno si era accorto della sua presenza, nobody had noticed his presence; la sua presenza ci salvò dal pericolo, his presence saved us from danger; si segnala la presenza di banchi di nebbia, have been reported banks of fog; in presenza dello zinco, l'acido solforico sviluppa idrogeno, in the presence of zinc, sulphuric acid gives off hydrogen; non dire parolacce in sua presenza, don't use bad language in his presence; in presenza di testimoni, in the presence (o in front) of witnesses; la cerimonia si è svolta alla presenza del presidente, the ceremony took place in the presence of the president; fu condotto alla presenza del re, he was taken into the presence of the king // presenza d'animo, di spirito, presence of mind // di presenza, (non com.) ( di persona) in person (o personally) // fare atto di presenza, to put in (o to make) an appearance2 ( aspetto fisico) presence, appearance: una ragazza di bella presenza, a good-looking girl // non aver presenza, to lack physical presence3 ( a scuola, in ufficio) attendance: la presenza è obbligatoria alla mia scuola, attendance is compulsory at my school; in questa settimana ha solo due presenze, this week his record shows only two attendances; libro delle presenze, attendance book (o register)4 ( spirito, fantasma) ghost: in quella casa si segnalano presenze, there have been reports of ghosts in that house.* * *[pre'zɛntsa]sostantivo femminile1) presencein o alla presenza di qcn. in sb.'s presence, in the presence of sb.; essere ammesso alla presenza di qcn. to be admitted to sb.'s presence; fare atto di presenza to put in o make an appearance; una massiccia presenza di polizia a heavy police presence; si è riscontrata la presenza di bacilli nell'acqua — bacilli have been found in that water
2) scol.-e — attendance
prendere le -e — to take the register o attendance AE
3) (aspetto)"si richiede bella presenza" — "smart appearance essential"
•conservare la propria presenza di spirito — to have o keep (all) one's wits about
••* * *presenza/pre'zεntsa/sostantivo f.1 presence; in o alla presenza di qcn. in sb.'s presence, in the presence of sb.; essere ammesso alla presenza di qcn. to be admitted to sb.'s presence; fare atto di presenza to put in o make an appearance; una massiccia presenza di polizia a heavy police presence; si è riscontrata la presenza di bacilli nell'acqua bacilli have been found in that water2 scol. -e attendance; registro delle -e attendance register; prendere le -e to take the register o attendance AE3 (aspetto) "si richiede bella presenza" "smart appearance essential"fare sentire la propria presenza to make one's presence felt\presenza di spirito presence of mind; conservare la propria presenza di spirito to have o keep (all) one's wits about; presenza scenica stage presence. -
43 присутствие присутстви·е
presence, attendanceувеличивать / усиливать военное присутствие — to expand military presence
наращивание военного присутствия — building up of (one's) military presence
в присутствии кого-л. — in smb.'s presence
подписано в присутствии кого-л. — signed in the presence of smb.
Russian-english dctionary of diplomacy > присутствие присутстви·е
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44 imposer
imposer [ɛ̃poze]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. [+ règle, conditions] to lay down• imposer ses idées/sa présence à qn to force one's ideas/one's company on sb• il/sa conduite impose le respect he/his behaviour compels respectb. ( = taxer) [+ marchandise, revenu] to taxc. imposer les mains [guérisseur] to lay on hands2. reflexive verba. ( = être nécessaire) [action] to be essential• quand on est à Paris une visite au Louvre s'impose if you're in Paris, a visit to the Louvre is a must (inf)b. ( = montrer sa supériorité) to assert o.s.c. ( = imposer sa présence à) je ne voudrais pas m'imposer I don't want to impose* * *ɛ̃poze
1.
1) ( rendre obligatoire) [personne] to impose [sanctions, délai, personne] (à on); to lay down [règlement]; [situation] to require [mesures, changement]2) ( faire admettre) to impose [idée, volonté]; to set3) ( inspirer) to command [respect, admiration]4) ( soumettre à l'impôt) to tax
2.
en imposer verbe transitif indirect
3.
s'imposer verbe pronominal1) ( être évident) [choix, solution] to be obvious (à to); ( être requis) [prudence, mesure, changement] to be called for2) ( s'astreindre à) to impose [something] on oneself [horaires, discipline]3) ( déranger) to impose ( à quelqu'un on somebody)4) ( se faire admettre)s'imposer dans un domaine — [personne] to make a name for oneself in a field
s'imposer sur un marché — [produit, firme] to establish itself in a market
s'imposer comme le plus grand architecte contemporain — to be universally acknowledged as the greatest contemporary architect
5) ( pour dominer) [personne] to make one's presence felt; [volonté] to impose itself* * *ɛ̃poze vt1) (= taxer) to tax2) (= faire accepter) [discipline, délais, tâches] to impose3) [attitude, courage, situation] [admiration, prudence] to command4)5) RELIGION* * *imposer verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( rendre obligatoire) [personne] to impose [sanctions, délai] (à qn on sb); to lay down [règlement]; [situation] to require [mesures, changement]; imposer ses amis à ses parents to impose one's friends on one's parents; imposer que to rule that; on leur a imposé de faire they were obliged ou forced to do; imposer le port de lunettes protectrices aux ouvriers to make it obligatory for workers to wear protective goggles; cela impose qu'on réfléchisse au problème this demands that we think about the problem; il nous a imposé sa présence he forced his presence on us; elle nous a imposé le silence she made us be quiet;2 ( faire admettre) to impose [idée, volonté, point de vue]; to set [style, mode]; cela l'a imposé comme un des meilleurs chirurgiens this has established him as one of the best surgeons;3 ( inspirer) to command [respect, admiration];4 Fisc to tax [personne, produit, revenu];5 Imprim to impose.B en imposer vtr ind to be impressive; elle en impose! she's impressive!; elle en impose par son calme/intelligence her calm/intelligence is impressive; elle en impose à ses élèves she inspires respect in her pupils; ne t'en laisse pas imposer don't let yourself be overawed (par by).C s'imposer vpr1 ( être évident) [choix, solution] to be obvious (à to); ( être requis) [prudence, mesure, changement] to be called for; une visite au Louvre s'impose a visit to the Louvre is a must; s'imposer comme évident to be obvious;2 ( s'astreindre à) to impose [sth] on oneself [horaires, habitudes alimentaires, discipline]; s'imposer un sacrifice/des efforts démesurés to force oneself to make a sacrifice/a huge effort; s'imposer de travailler le soir to make it a rule to work in the evening;3 ( déranger) to impose oneself (à qn on sb); je ne voudrais pas m'imposer I wouldn't like to impose;4 ( se faire admettre) il s'est imposé comme leader he established himself as the leader; la ville s'est imposée comme capitale culturelle the city established itself as the cultural capital; s'imposer comme langue officielle to come in as the official language; s'imposer dans un domaine [personne] to make a name for oneself in a field; s'imposer sur un marché [produit, firme] to establish itself in a market; s'imposer par son intelligence to stand out because of one's intelligence; s'imposer comme le plus grand architecte contemporain to be universally acknowledged as the greatest contemporary architect;5 ( pour dominer) [personne] to make one's presence felt; [volonté] to impose itself.[ɛ̃poze] verbe transitifimposer sa volonté/son point de vue to impose one's will/one's ideas2. [provoquer]imposer l'admiration/le respect to command admiration/respectcette affaire impose la prudence/la discrétion this matter requires prudence/discretion3. [rendre célèbre]a. [personne] to make oneself knownb. [entreprise] to become establishedimposé à 33 % taxed at 33%5. (locution)————————s'imposer verbe pronominal intransitif1. [se faire accepter de force] to impose oneselfde peur de s'imposer for fear of being in the way ou of imposing2. [se faire reconnaître] to stand out3. [être inévitable] to be necessary————————s'imposer verbe pronominal transitif[se fixer]s'imposer un effort/un sacrifice to force oneself to make an effort/a sacrifice -
45 honour
1.(Brit.)noundo honour to somebody/something — jemandem/einer Sache zur Ehre gereichen (geh.); jemandem/einer Sache Ehre machen
2) (respect) Hochachtung, diedo somebody honour, do honour to somebody — jemandem Ehre erweisen; (show appreciation of) jemanden würdigen
in honour of something — um etwas gebührend zu feiern
3) (privilege) Ehre, diemay I have the honour [of the next dance]? — darf ich [um den nächsten Tanz] bitten?
he is a man of honour — er ist ein Ehrenmann od. Mann von Ehre
feel [in] honour bound to do something — sich moralisch verpflichtet fühlen, etwas zu tun
promise [up]on one's honour — sein Ehrenwort geben
she gained honours in her exam, she passed [the exam] with honours — sie hat das Examen mit Auszeichnung bestanden
6) in pl.do the honours — (coll.) (introduce guests) die Honneurs machen; (serve guests) den Gastgeber spielen
7) in titleyour Honour — (Brit. Law) hohes Gericht; Euer Ehren
8) (person or thing that brings credit)2. transitive verbbe an honour to somebody/something — jemandem/einer Sache Ehre machen
1) ehren; würdigen [Verdienste, besondere Eigenschaften]be honoured as an artist — als Künstler Anerkennung finden
honour somebody with one's presence — (iron.) jemanden mit seiner Gegenwart beehren
2) (acknowledge) beachten [Vorschriften]; respektieren [Gebräuche, Rechte]3) (fulfil) sich halten an (+ Akk.); (Commerc.) honorieren; begleichen [Rechnung, Schuld]* * *['onə] 1. noun1) (respect for truth, honesty etc: a man of honour.) die Ehre2) ((the keeping or increasing of) a person's, country's etc good reputation: We must fight for the honour of our country.) die Ehre3) (fame; glory: He won honour on the field of battle.) das Ansehen4) (respect: This ceremony is being held in honour of those who died in the war.) die Ehre5) (something which a person feels to be a reason for pride etc: It is a great honour to be asked to address this meeting.) die Ehre6) (a title, degree etc given to a person as a mark of respect for his services, work, ability etc: He has received many honours for his research into cancer.) die Ehrung7) ((with capital: with His, Your etc) a title of respect used when talking to or about judges, mayors etc: My client wishes to plead guilty, Your Honour.) Titel der Richter2. verb2) (to do, say etc something which is a reason for pride, satisfaction etc to: Will you honour us with your presence at the meeting?) beehren3) (to give (someone) a title, degree etc as a mark of respect for his ability etc: He was honoured for his work with the mentally handicapped.) ehren•- academic.ru/35477/honorary">honorary- honourable
- honours
- in honour bound
- honour bound
- on one's honour
- word of honour* * *hon·our, AM hon·or[ˈɒnəʳ, AM ˈɑ:nɚ]I. nI want to win so that \honour is satisfied ich will gewinnen, damit meine Ehre wiederhergestellt ist humthe children were on their \honour to go to bed at ten o'clock die Kinder hatten versprochen, um zehn Uhr ins Bett zu gehenone's word of \honour sein Ehrenwort ntto be/feel [in] \honour bound to do sth es als seine Pflicht ansehen, etw zu tunas a mark of \honour als Zeichen der Ehrein the place of \honour am Ehrenplatzthese women were an \honour to their country diese Frauen haben ihrem Land alle Ehre gemachtshe did me the \honour of allowing me to help her with the washing-up sie war so gnädig, mir zu gestatten, ihr beim Abwasch zu helfen iron▪ to have the \honour of doing sth die Ehre haben, etw zu tun a. iron5. (reputation) guter Rufto stake one's \honour on sth sein Ehrenwort für etw akk gebento acquit oneself with \honour sich akk durch gute Leistungen auszeichnen8. (title)Her H\honour die vorsitzende RichterinHis H\honour der vorsitzende RichterYour H\honour Euer Ehren9. (in golf) Recht, den Golfball vom ersten Abschlag zu spielento defend one's \honour ( dated) seine Ehre verteidigen11.▶ on [or upon] my \honour bei meiner EhreII. vt▪ to \honour sb/sth jdn/etw in Ehren halten2. (praise)3. (fulfil)4. (grace)to \honour sth with one's presence etw mit seiner Gegenwart beehren* * *(US) ['ɒnə(r)]1. n1) Ehre fsense of honour — Ehrgefühl nt
he decided to make it a point of honour, never to... — er schwor sich (dat), nie zu...
there is honour among thieves — es gibt so etwas wie Ganovenehre
honour where honour is due —
on my honour! (old) — bei meiner Ehre (old)
you're on your honour not to leave — Sie haben Ihr Ehrenwort gegeben, dass Sie bleiben
he's put me on my honour not to tell — ich habe ihm mein Ehrenwort gegeben, dass ich nichts sage
to do honour to sb (at funeral) — jdm die letzte Ehre erweisen; (action, thought etc) jdm zur Ehre gereichen
to do honour to sth — einer Sache (dat) Ehre machen
in honour of sb — zu Ehren von jdm, zu jds Ehren; of dead person in ehrendem Andenken an jdn
in honour of sth — zu Ehren von etw; of past thing
may I have the honour of accompanying you? (form) — ich bitte um die Ehre, Sie begleiten zu dürfen (geh)
if you would do me the honour of accepting (form) — wenn Sie mir die Ehre erweisen würden anzunehmen (geh)
to whom do I have the honour of speaking? (form, hum) — mit wem habe ich die Ehre? (geh, hum)
he is honour bound to do it — es ist Ehrensache für ihn, das zu tun
2)(= title)
Your Honour — Hohes Gerichtthe case was up before His Honour, Sir Charles — der Fall wurde unter dem Vorsitz des vorsitzenden Richters Sir Charles verhandelt
3)with full military honours —
New Year's Honour — Titelverleihung f am Neujahrstag
4)to do the honours (inf) — die Honneurs machen; (on private occasions) den Gastgeber spielen
5) (UNIV)honours (also honours degree) — akademischer Grad mit Prüfung im Spezialfach
to do or take honours in English — Englisch belegen, um den "Honours Degree" zu erwerben
to get first-class honours — das Examen mit Auszeichnung or "sehr gut" bestehen
6) (GOLF)7) (CARDS) eine der (beim Bridge) 5 bzw. (beim Whist) 4 höchsten Karten einer Farbethe honours — die Honneurs pl
2. vt1) person ehrenI should be ( deeply) honoured if you... —
it's Angelika, we ARE honoured (iro) —
would you honour me by dining with me tonight? — würden Sie mir die Ehre erweisen, heute Abend mit mir zu speisen? (geh)
2) cheque annehmen, einlösen; debt begleichen; bill of exchange respektieren; obligation nachkommen (+dat); commitment stehen zu; credit card anerkennen; pledge, promise halten, einlösen; agreement, contract sich halten an (+acc), erfüllen* * *A v/t1. ehren:I’m honored oft iron ich fühle mich geehrt;a performance honoring eine Vorstellung zu Ehren von (od gen)2. ehren, auszeichnen:honor sb with sth jemandem etwas verleihen3. beehren ( with mit):honor sb with one’s presence4. zur Ehre gereichen (dat), Ehre machen (dat)5. einer Einladung etc Folge leisten6. honorieren, anerkennen7. respektieren8. WIRTSCHa) einen Wechsel, Scheck honorieren, einlösenb) eine Schuld bezahlenc) einen Vertrag erfüllenB s1. Ehre f:(sense of) honor Ehrgefühl n;feel (in) honor bound sich moralisch verpflichtet fühlen ( to do zu tun);honor to whom honor is due Ehre, wem Ehre gebührt;be (up)on one’s honor sein Ehrenwort gegeben haben ( to do zu tun);do sb honor jemandem zur Ehre gereichen, jemandem Ehre machen;do sb the honor of doing sth jemandem die Ehre erweisen, etwas zu tun;I have the honor ich habe die Ehre (of doing, to do zu tun);may I have the honor (of the next dance)? darf ich (um den nächsten Tanz) bitten?;put sb on their honor jemanden bei seiner Ehre packen;his honor it must be said that … zu seiner Ehre muss gesagt werden, dass …; → court A 10, debt 1, etc2. Ehrung f, Ehre(n) f(pl):a) Ehrerbietung f, Ehrenbezeigung fb) Hochachtung f, Ehrfurcht fc) Auszeichnung f, (Ehren)Titel m, Ehrenamt n, -zeichen n:in honor of sb, sb’s honor zu jemandes Ehren, jemandem zu Ehren;3. Ehre f (Jungfräulichkeit):lose one’s honor die Ehre verlieren4. Ehre f, Zierde f:he is an honor to his school (parents) er ist eine Zierde seiner Schule (er macht seinen Eltern Ehre);what an honor to my poor abode! oft iron welcher Glanz in meiner Hütte!it is his honor er hat die Ehre8. do the honors als Gastgeber(in) fungierenYour Honor hohes Gericht, Herr Vorsitzender* * *1.(Brit.)noundo honour to somebody/something — jemandem/einer Sache zur Ehre gereichen (geh.); jemandem/einer Sache Ehre machen
2) (respect) Hochachtung, diedo somebody honour, do honour to somebody — jemandem Ehre erweisen; (show appreciation of) jemanden würdigen
3) (privilege) Ehre, diemay I have the honour [of the next dance]? — darf ich [um den nächsten Tanz] bitten?
he is a man of honour — er ist ein Ehrenmann od. Mann von Ehre
feel [in] honour bound to do something — sich moralisch verpflichtet fühlen, etwas zu tun
promise [up]on one's honour — sein Ehrenwort geben
she gained honours in her exam, she passed [the exam] with honours — sie hat das Examen mit Auszeichnung bestanden
6) in pl.do the honours — (coll.) (introduce guests) die Honneurs machen; (serve guests) den Gastgeber spielen
7) in titleyour Honour — (Brit. Law) hohes Gericht; Euer Ehren
8) (person or thing that brings credit)2. transitive verbbe an honour to somebody/something — jemandem/einer Sache Ehre machen
1) ehren; würdigen [Verdienste, besondere Eigenschaften]honour somebody with one's presence — (iron.) jemanden mit seiner Gegenwart beehren
2) (acknowledge) beachten [Vorschriften]; respektieren [Gebräuche, Rechte]3) (fulfil) sich halten an (+ Akk.); (Commerc.) honorieren; begleichen [Rechnung, Schuld]* * *(UK) n.Ehre -n f. v.beehren v.ehren v. -
46 FYRIR
* * *prep.I. with dat.1) before, in front of (ok vóru fyrir honum borin merkin);fyrir dyrum, before the door;2) before one, in one’s presence;hón nefndist fyrir þeim Gunnhildr, she told them that her name was G.;3) for;hann lét ryðja fyrir þeim búðina, he had the booth cleared for them, for their reception;4) before one, in one’s way;fjörðr varð fyrir þeim, they came to a fjord;sitja fyrir e-m, to lie in wait for one;5) naut. term. before, off;liggja fyrir bryggjum, to lie off the piers;fyrir Humru-mynni, off the Humber;6) before, at the head of, over;vera fyrir liði, to be over the troops;vera fyrir máli, to lead the case;sitja fyrir svörum, to undertake the defence;7) of time, ago;fyrir þrem nóttum, three nights ago;fyrir stundu, a while ago;fyrir löngu, long ago;vera fyrir e-u, to forebode (of a dream);8) before, above, superior to;Hálfdan svarti var fyrir þeim brœðrum, H. was the foremost of the brothers;9) denoting disadvantige, harm, suffering;þú lætr Egil vefja öll mál fyrir þér, thou lettest E. thwart all thy affairs;tók at eyðast fyrir herm lausa-fé, her money began to fail;10) denoting obstacle, hindrance;mikit gøri þer mér fyrir þessu máli, you make this case hard for me;varð honum lítit fyrir því, it was a small matter for him;Ásgrími þótti þungt fyrir, A. thought that things looked bad;11) because of, for;hon undi sér hvergri fyrir verkjum, she had no rest for pains;fyrir hræðslu, for fear;illa fœrt fyrir ísum, scarcely, passable for ice;gáðu þeir eigi fyrir veiðum at fá heyjanna, because of fishing, they neglected to make hay;fyrir því at, because, since, as;12) against;gæt þín vel fyrir konungi ok hans mönnum, guard thee well against the king and his men;beiða griða Baldri fyrir alls konar háska, against all kinds of harm;13) fyrir sér, of oneself;mikill fyrir sér, strong, powerful;minnstr fyrir sér, smallest, weakest;14) denoting manner or quality, with;hvítr fyrir hærum, while with hoary hair;II. with acc.1) before, in front of;halda fyrir augu sér, to hold (one’s hands) before one’s eyes;2) before, into the presence of;stefna e-m fyrir dómstól, before a court;3) over;hlaupa fyrir björg, to leap over a precipice;kasta fyrir borð, to throw overboard;4) in one’s way, crossing one’s way;ríða á leið fyrir þá, to ride in their way, so as to meet them;5) round, off;sigla fyrir nes, to weather a point;6) along, all along;fyrir endilangan Noreg, all along Norway, from one end to the other;draga ör fyrir odd, to draw the arrow past the point;7) of time, fyrir dag, before day;fyrir e-s minni, before one’s memory;8) for, on behalf of;vil ek bjóða at fara fyrir þik, I will offer to go for thee, in thy stead;lögvörn fyrir mál, a lawful defence for a case;9) for, for the benefit of;þeir skáru fyrir þá melinn, they cut the lyme-grass for them (the horses);10) for, instead of, in place of, as;11) for, because of (vilja Gunnar dauðan fyrir höggit);fyrir þín orð, for thy words (intercession);fyrir sína vinsæld, by reason of his popularity;12) denoting value, price;fyrir þrjár merkr, for three marks;fyrir hvern mun, by all means, at any cost;13) in spite of, against (giptast fyrir ráð e-s);14) joined with adverbs ending in -an, governing acc. (fyrir austan, vestan, sunnan, norðan, útan innan, framan, handan, ofan, neðan);fyrir austan, sunnan fjall, east, south of the fell;fyrir neðan brú, below the bridge;fyrir handan á, beyond the river;fyrir innan garð, inside the fence;III. as adverb or ellipt.1) ahead, before, opp. to eptir;þá var eigi hins verra eptir ván, er slíkt fór fyrir, when this came first, preceded;2) first;mun ek þar eptir gera sem þér gerit fyrir, I shall do to you according as you do first;3) at hand, present, to the fore;föng þau, er fyrir vóru, stores that were at hand;þar var fyrir fjöldi boðsmanna, a host of guests was already present (before the bride and bridegroom came);4) e-m verðr e-t fyrir, one takes a certain step, acts so and so;Kolbeini varð ekki fyrir, K. was at a loss what to do;e-t mælist vel (illa) fyrir, a thing is well (ill) spoken or reported of (kvæðit mæltist vel fyrir).* * *prep., in the Editions spelt differently; in MSS. this word is usually abbreviated either (i. e. firir), or Ꝼ̆, fur͛, fvr͛ (i. e. fyrir); in some MSS. it is idiomatically spelt with i, fir͛, e. g. Arna-Magn. 382 (Bs. i. 263 sqq.); and even in the old Miracle-book Arna-Magn. 645 (Bs. i. 333 sqq.), just as ifir is written for yfir ( over); in a few MSS. it is written as a monosyllable fyr, e. g. D. I. i. 475, Mork. passim; in Kb. (Sæm.-Edda) occurs fyr telia, Vsp. I; fyr norðan, 36; fyr dyrum, Gm. 22; fyr vestan ver, Hkv. 2. 8; in other places as a dissyll. fyrir, e. g. Hm. 56, Gm. 54, Skm. 34, Ls. 15, Am. 64, Hkv. 2. 2, 19 (quoted from Bugge’s edition, see his preface, p. xvi); fyr and fyrir stand to one another in the same relation as ept to eptir, und to undir, of ( super) to yfir: this monosyllabic form is obsolete, save in the compds, where ‘for-’ is more common than ‘fyrir-;’ in some cases both forms are used, e. g. for-dæming and fyrir-dæming; in others only one, but without any fixed rule: again, the forms fyri, fyre, or fire, which are often used in Edd., are just as wrong, as if one were to say epti, undi, yfi; yet this spelling is found now and then in MSS., as, fyre, Ó. H. (facsimile); fire, Grág. Sb. ii. 288 (also facsimile): the particles í and á are sometimes added, í fur, Fms. iv. 137; í fyrir, passim; á fur, Haustl. 1. [Ulf. faur and faura; A. S. fore and for; Engl. for and fore-; Germ. für and vor; Dan. for; Swed. för; Gr. προ-; Lat. pro, prae.]WITH DAT., chiefly without the notion of movement.A. LOCAL:I. before, in front of; fyrir dyrum, before the doors, at the doors, Nj. 14, Vsp. 53, Hm. 69, Edda 130; niðr f. smiðju-dyrum, Eg. 142:—ahead, úti fyrir búðinni, Nj. 181; kómusk sauðirnir upp á fjallit f. þeim, ahead of them, 27; vóru fyrir honum borin merkin, the banner was borne before him, 274; göra orð fyrir sér, to send word before one, Fms. vii. 207, Hkr. iii. 335 (Ó. H. 201, l. c., frá sér):—also denoting direction, niðri í eldinum f. sér, beneath in the fire before them, Nj. 204; þeir sá f. sér bæ mikinn, they saw before them a great building, i. e. they came to a great house, Eg. 546; öðrum f. sér ( in front) en öðrum á bak sér, Grág. i. 5.2. before one, before one’s face, in one’s presence; úhelgaða ek Otkel f. búum, before the neighbours, Nj. 87; lýsi ek f. búum fimm, 218; lýsa e-u ( to proclaim) f. e-m, Ld. 8; hann hermdi boð öll f. Gizuri, Nj. 78; hón nefndisk f. þeim Gunnhildr, told them that her name was G., Fms. i. 8; kæra e-t f. e-m, Ó. H. 60; slíkar fortölur hafði hann f. þeim, Nj. 200; the saying, því læra börnin málið að það er f. þeim haft, bairns learn to speak because it is done before them, i. e. because they hear it; hafa gott (íllt) f. e-m, to give a good (bad) example, e. g. in the presence of children; lifa vel f. Guði, to live well before God, 623. 29; stór ábyrgðar-hluti f. Guði, Nj. 199; sem þeir sjá réttast f. Guði, Grág. i. (pref.); fyrir öllum þeim, Hom. 89; á laun f. öðrum mönnum, hidden from other men, unknown to them, Grág. i. 337, Jb. 378; nú skaltú vera vin minn mikill f. húsfreyju minni, i. e. when you talk to my wife, Nj. 265; fyrir Drottni, before the Lord, Merl. 2. 78.3. denoting reception of guests, visitors; hann lét ryðja f. þeim búðina, he had the room cleared for them, for their reception, Nj. 228; Valhöll ryðja fyr vegnu fólki, i. e. to clear Valhalla for slain folk, Em. I; ryðja vígvöll f. vegundum, Nj. 212; ljúka upp f. e-m, to open the door for one, Fms. xi. 323, Stj. 5; rýma pallinn f. þeim, Eg. 304; hann lét göra eld f. þeim, he had a fire made for them, 204; þeir görðu eld. f. sér, Fms. xi. 63; … veizlur þar sem fyrir honum var búit, banquets that were ready for him, Eg. 45.II. before one, in one’s way; þar er díki varð f. þeim, Eg. 530; á (fjörðr) varð f. þeim, a river, fjord, was before them, i. e. they came to it, 133, 161; at verða eigi f. liði yðru, 51; maðr sá varð f. Vindum, that man was overtaken by the V., Hkr. iii. 363; þeirra manna er f. honum urðu, Eg. 92.2. sitja f. e-m, to lie in wait for one, Ld. 218, Nj. 107; lá f. henni í skóginum, Edda (pref.); sitja f. rekum, to sit watching for wrecks, Eg. 136 (fyrir-sát).3. ellipt., menn urðu at gæta sín er f. urðu, Nj. 100; Egill var þar f. í runninum, E. was before (them), lay in ambush, Eg. 378; hafði sá bana er f. varð, who was before (the arrow), i. e. he was hit, Nj. 8.4. verða f. e-u, to be hit, taken, suffer from a thing; ef hann verðr f. drepi, if he be struck, Grág. ii. 19; verða f. áverka, to be wounded, suffer injury, Ld. 140; verða f. reiði konungs, to fall into disgrace with the king, Eg. 226; verða f. ósköpum, to become the victim of a spell, spell-bound, Fas. i. 130; sitja f. hvers manns ámæli, to be the object of all men’s blame, Nj. 71; vera eigi f. sönnu hafðr, to be unjustly charged with a thing, to be innocent.III. a naut. term, before, off; liggja f. bryggjum, to lie off the pier, Ld. 166; skip fljóta f. strengjum, Sks. 116; þeir lágu f. bænum, they lay off the town, Bs. i. 18; liggja úti f. Jótlands-síðu, off Jutland, Eg. 261; hann druknaði f. Jaðri, off the J., Fms. i. II; þeir kómu at honum f. Sjólandi, off Zealand, x. 394; hafa úti leiðangr f. landi, Hkr. i. 301; f. Humru-minni, off the Humber, Orkn. 338, cp. Km. 3, 8, 9, 13, 19, 21; fyrir Nesjum, off the Ness, Vellekla; fyrir Tungum, Sighvat; fyrir Spáni, off Spain, Orkn. 356.IV. before, at the head of, denoting leadership; smalamaðr f. búi föður síns, Ver. 26 (of king David); vera f. liði, to be over the troops, Eg. 292, Nj. 7; vera f. máli, to lead the case, Band. 8; vera forstjóri f. búi, to be steward over the household, Eg. 52; ráða f. landi, ríki, etc., to rule, govern, Ó H. 33, Nj. 5; hverr f. eldinum réði, who was the ringleader of the fire, Eg. 239; ráða f. e-u, to rule, manage a thing, passim: the phrase, sitja f. svörum, to respond on one’s behalf, Ölk. 36, Band. 12; hafa svör f. e-m, to be the chief spokesman, Fms. x. 101, Dipl. v. 26.V. special usages; friða f. e-m, to make peace for one, Fms. vii. 16, Bs. i. 65; bæta f. e-m, to make things good for one, Hom. 109; túlka, vera túlkr, flytja (etc.) f. e-m, to plead for one, Fms. iii. 33, Nj. 128,—also spilla f. e-m, to disparage one, Eg. 255; haga, ætla f. e-u, to manage, arrange for one, Ld. 208, Sturl. i. 14, Boll. 356; rífka ráð f. e-m, to better one’s condition, Nj. 21; ráða heiman-fylgju ok tilgjöf f. frændkonu sinni, Js. 58; standa f. manni, to stand before, shield a man, stand between him and his enemy, Eg. 357, Grág. ii. 13; vera skjöldr f. e-m, 655 xxxii. 4; hafa kostnað f. e-u, to have the expences for a thing, Ld. 14; vinna f. e-m, to support one by one’s work, Sks. 251; starfa f. fé sínu, to manage one’s money, Ld. 166; hyggja f. e-u, to take heed for a thing, Nj. 109; hyggja f. sér, Fs. 5; hafa forsjá f. e-m, to provide for one, Ld. 186; sjá f. e-u, to see after, Eg. 118, Landn, 152; sjá þú nokkut ráð f. mér, Nj. 20: ironic. to put at rest, Háv. 40: ellipt., sjá vel f., to provide well for, Nj. 102.B. TEMP. ago; fyrir þrem nóttum, three nights ago; fyrir stundu, a while ago, Nj. 80; fyrir litlu, a little while ago, Fms. i. 76, Ld. 134; fyrir skömmu, a sbort while ago; fyrir löngu, a long while ago, Nj. 260, Fms. i. 50; fyrir öndverðu, from the beginning, Grág. i. 80, ii. 323, 394, Finnb. 342; fyrir þeim, before they were born, Fms. i. 57.2. the phrase, vera f. e-u, to forebode; vera f. stórfundum, Nj. 107, 277; þat hygg ek vera munu f. siða-skipti, Fms. xi. 12; þessi draumr mun vera f. kvámu nökkurs manns, vii. 163; dreyma draum f. e-u, 8; fyrir tiðendum, ii. 65:—spá f. e-m, to ‘spae’ before, prophecy to one, Nj. 171.C. METAPH.:I. before, above; þóttu þeir þar f. öllum ungum mönnum, Dropl. 7; þykkisk hann mjök f. öðrum mönnum, Ld. 38; ver f. hirðmönnum, be first among my herdsmen, Eg. 65; Hálfdan svarti var f. þeim bræðrum, H. was the foremost of the brothers, Fms. i. 4; þorgrímr var f. sonum Önundar, Grett. 87; var Haraldr mest f. þeim at virðingu, Fms. i. 47.II. denoting help, assistance; haun skal rétta vættið f. þeim, Grág. i. 45 (vide above A. IV and V).2. the following seem to be Latinisms, láta lífit f. heilagri Kristni, to give up one’s life for holy Christianity, = Lat. pro, Fms. vii. 172; ganga undir píslir fyrir Guðs nafni, Blas. 38; gjalda önd mína f. önd þinni, Johann. 17; gefa gjöf f. sál sinni ( pro animâ suâ), H. E. i. 466; fyrir mér ok minni sál, Dipl. iv. 8; færa Guði fórnir f. e-m, 656 A; heita f. e-m, biðja f. e-m, to make a vow, pray for one (orare pro), Fms. iii. 48, Bs. i. 70; biðja f. mönnum, to intercede for, 19, Fms. xi. 287: even with a double construction, biðja f. stað sinn (acc., which is vernacular) ok heilagri kirkju (dat., which is a Latinism), x. 127.III. denoting disadvantage, harm, suffering; þú lætr Egil vefja öll mál fyrir þér, thou lettest Egil thwart all thy affairs, Eg. 249; únýtir hann þá málit fyrir sér, then he ruins his own case, Grág. i. 36, Dropl. 14, 16; Manverjar rufu safnaðinn f. Þorkatli, the Manxmen broke up the assembly, i. e. forsook Thorkel, Fms. ix. 422; kom upp grátr f. henni, she burst into tears, 477; taka fé f. öðrum, to take another’s money, N. G. L. i. 20; knörr þann er konungr lét taka fyrir Þórólfi, Landn. 56; ef hross verðr tekit f. honum, if a horse of his be taken, Grág. i. 436; hann tók upp fé fyrir öllum, he seized property for them all, Ó. H. 60; e-t ferr ílla f. e-m, a thing turns out ill for one; svá fór f. Ólófu, so it came to pass for O., Vígl. 18; loka dyrr f. e-m, to lock the door in one’s face, Edda 21: þeir hafa eigi þessa menn f. yðr drepit, heldr f. yðrar sakir þessi víg vegit, i. e. they have not harmed you, but rather done you a service in slaying those men, Fbr. 33; tók at eyðask f. henni lausa-fé, her money began to fail, Nj. 29; rak á f. þeim storma ok stríðviðri, they were overtaken by gales and bad weather, Vígl. 27; Víglundr rak út knöttinn f. Jökli, V. drove the ball for J., i. e. so that he had to run after it, 24; sá er skar tygil f. Þóri, he who cut Thor’s line, Bragi; sverð brast f. mér, my sword broke, Korm. 98 (in a verse); brjóta e-t f. e-m, to break a thing for one, Bs. i. 15 (in a verse); Valgarðr braut krossa fyrir Merði ok öll heilög tákn, Nj. 167; árin brotnaði f. honum, his oar broke; allar kýrnar drápust fyrir honum, all his cows died.2. denoting difficulty, hindrance; sitja f. sæmd e-s, to sit between oneself and one’s honour, i. e. to hinder one’s doing well, Sturl. 87; mikit göri þér mér f. þessu máli, you make this case sore for me, Eb. 124; þér er mikit f. máli, thy case stands ill, Fms. v. 325; ekki er Guði f. því, it is easy for God to do, 656 B. 9; varð honum lítið f. því, it was a small matter for him, he did it easily, Grett. III; mér er minna f. því, it is easier for me, Am. 60; þykkja mikit f. e-u, to be much grieved for a thing, do it unwillingly, Nj. 77; Icel. also say, þykja fyrir (ellipt.), to feel hurt, be displeased:—ellipt., er þeim lítið fyrir at villa járnburð þenna, it is a small matter for them to spoil this ordeal, Ó. H. 140; sem sér muni lítið f. at veiða Gunnar, Nj. 113; fast mun f. vera, it will be fast-fixed before (one), hard to move, Ld. 154; Ásgrími þótti þungt f., A. thought that things looked sad (heavy), Nj. 185; hann var lengi f., he was long about it, Fms. x. 205; hann var lengi f. ok kvað eigi nei við, he was cross and said not downright no, Þorf. Karl. 388.IV. in a causal sense, for, because of, Lat. per, pro; sofa ek né mákat fugls jarmi fyrir, I cannot sleep for the shrill cry of birds, Edda 16 (in a verse); hon undi sér hvergi f. verkjum, she had no rest for pains, Bjarn. 69; fyrir gráti, tárum, = Lat. prae lacrymis; fyrir harmi, for sorrow; f. hlátri, for laughter, as in Engl.; þeir æddust f. einni konu, they went mad for the sake of one woman, Sól. 11; ílla fært f. ísum, scarce passable for ice, Fms. xi. 360; hætt var at sitja útar f. Miðgarðs-ormi, Edda 35; hann var lítt gengr f. sárinu, he could hardly walk for the wound, Fbr. 178; fyrir hræðslu, for fear, Hbl. 26; heptisk vegrinn f. þeim meinvættum sem …, Fs. 4; gáðu þeir eigi f. veiðum at fá heyjanna, because of fishing they took no care to make hay, Landn. 30; fyrir riki konungs, for the king’s power, Eg. 67, 117; fyrir ofríki manna, Grág. i. 68; fyrir hví, for why? Eluc. 4; fyrir hví þeir væri þar, Eg. 375; fyrir því, at …, for that, because, Edda 35, Fms. i. 22, vii. 330, Ld. 104; en fyrir því nú at, now since, Skálda 171; nú fyrir því at, id., 169: the phrase, fyrir sökum, for the sake of, because of, passim; vide sök.V. by, by the force of; öxlin gékk ór liði fyrir högginu, the shoulder was disjointed by the force of the stroke, Háv. 52.2. denoting contest; falla f. e-m, to fall before one, i. e. fighting against one, Fms. i. 7, iv. 9, x. 196; verða halloki f. e-m, to be overcome in fighting one, Ld. 146; látask f. e-m, to perish by one, Eb. 34; hafa bana f. e-m, to be slain by one, Nj. 43; þeir kváðu fá fúnað hafa f. honum, 263; mæddisk hann f. þeim, he lost his breath in fighting them, Eg. 192; láta ríki f. e-m, to lose the kingdom before another, i. e. so that the latter gains it, 264; láta lausar eignir mínar f. þér, 505; láta hlut sinn f. e-m, Fs. 47; standask f. e-m, to stand one’s ground before one, Edda (pref.); hugðisk hann falla mundu f. sjóninni einni saman, that he would sink before his glance, 28, Hým. 12; halda hlut f. e-m, Ld. 54; halda frið ok frelsi f. várum óvinum, Fms. viii. 219; fara mun ek sem ek hefi áðr ætlað f. þínum draum ( thy dream notwithstanding), Ld. 216; þér farit hvárt er þér vilit f. mér, you go wherever you like for me, so far as I am concerted, Fær. 37; halda vöku f. sér, to keep oneself awake, Fms. i. 216.β. with verbs, flýja, hlaupa, renna, stökkva f. e-m, to fly, leap, run before one, i. e. to be pursued, Bs. i. 774, Grág. ii. 359; at hann rynni f. þrælum hans, Ld. 64; fyrir þessum úfriði stökk Þangbrandr til Noregs, 180; skyldi hann ganga ór á f. Hofsmönnum, Landn. 178; ganga f. e-u, to give way before, yield to a thing, Fms. i. 305, x. 292; vægja f. e-m, to yield to one, give way, Eg. 21, 187, Nj. 57, Ld. 234.VI. against; verja land f. e-m, Eg. 32; verja landit f. Dönum ok öðrum víkingum, Fms. i. 23; til landvarnar f. víkingum, Eg. 260; landvarnar-maðr f. Norðmönnum, Fms. vi. 295; gæta brúarinnar f. bergrisum, Edda 17; gæt þín vel f. konungi ok hans mönnum, guard thee well against the king and his men, Eg. 113; góð aðstoð f. tröllum ok dvergum, Bárð. 163; beiða Baldri griða f. allskonar háska, Edda 36; auðskæðr f. höggum, Eg. 770.VII. in the sense of being driven before; fyrir straumi, veðri, vindi, before the stream, wind, weather (forstreymis, forvindis), Grág. ii. 384, Fms. vii. 262; halda f. veðri, to stand before the wind, Róm. 211.2. rýrt mun verða f. honum smá-mennit, he will have an easy game with the small people, Nj. 94: ellipt., hafði sá bana er f. varð, 8; sprakk f., 16, 91.VIII. fyrir sér, of oneself, esp. of physical power; mikill f. sér, strong, powerful; lítill f. sér, weak, feeble, Nj. 20, Ísl. ii. 368, Eg. 192; þér munuð kalla mik lítinn mann f. mér, Edda 33; minnstr f. sér, smallest, weakest, Eg. 123; gildr maðr f. sér, Ísl. ii. 322, Fms. ii. 145; herðimaðr mikiil f. sér, a hardy man, Nj. 270; hvat ert þú f. þér, what kind of fellow art thou? Clem. 33; vera einn f. sér, to be a strange fellow, Grett. 79 new Ed.; Icel. also say, göra mikið (lítið) f. sér, to make oneself big ( little).β. sjóða e-t f. sér, to hesitate, saunter, Nj. 154; mæla f. munni, to talk between one’s teeth, to mutter, Orkn. 248, Nj. 249.IX. denoting manner or quality; hvítr f. hærum, white with hoary hairs, Fms. vi. 95, Fas. ii. 540; gráir fyrir járnum, grey with steel, of a host in armour, Mag. 5; hjölt hvít f. silfri, a hilt white with silver = richly silvered, Eb. 226.X. as adverb or ellipt.,1. ahead, in front, = á undan, Lat. prae, opp. to eptir; þá var eigi hins verra eptir ván, er slíkt fór fyrir, as this came first, preceded, Nj. 34; at einhverr mundi fara heim fyrir, that some one would go home first (to spy), Eg. 580; Egill fór f., E. went in before, id.; at vér ríðim þegar f. í nótt, 283.β. first; hann stefndi f. málinu, en hann mælti eptir, one pronounced the words first, but the other repeated after him, Nj. 35; mun ek þar eptir göra sem þér gerit f., I shall do to you according as you do first, 90:—temp., sjau nóttum f., seven nights before, Grág. ii. 217.2. to the fore, at hand, present; þar var fyrir fjöldi boðsmanna, a host of guests was already to the fore, i. e. before the bride and bridegroom came, Nj. 11; úvíst er at vita hvar úvinir sitja á fleti fyrir, Hm. 1; skal þá lögmaðr þar f. vera, he shall be there present, Js. 3; heima í túni fyrir, Fær. 50; þar vóru fyrir Hildiríðar-synir, Eg. 98; var honum allt kunnigt fyrir, he knew all about the localities, 583; þeim ómögum, sem f. eru, who are there already, i. e. in his charge, Grág. i. 286: of things, föng þau er f. vóru, stores that were to the fore, at hand, Eg. 134.3. fore, opp. to ‘back,’ of clothes; slæður settar f. allt gullknöppum, Eg. 516; bak ok fyrir, back and front, = bak ok brjóst, Mar.XI. in the phrase, e-m verðr e-t fyrir, a thing is before one, i. e. one takes that and that step, acts so and so in an emergency; nú verðr öðrum þeirra þat f., at hann kveðr, now if the other part alleges, that …, Grág. i. 362; Kolbeini varð ekki f., K. had no resource, i. e. lost his head, Sturl. iii. 285:—the phrase, e-t mælisk vel (ílla) fyrir, a thing is well ( ill) reported of; víg Gunnars spurðisk ok mæltisk ílla fyrir um allar sveitir, Nj. 117, Sturl. ii. 151; mun þat vel f. mælask, people will like it well, Nj. 29, Þórð. 55 new Ed.; ílla mun þat f. mælask at ganga á sættir við frændr sína, Ld. 238; ok er lokit var, mæltisk kvæðit vel f., the people praised the poem, Fms. vii. 113.XII. in special senses, either as prep. or adv. (vide A. V. above); segja leið f. skipi, to pilot a ship, Eg. 359; segja f. skipi, to say a prayer for a new ship or for any ship going to sea, Bs. i. 774, Fms. x. 480; mæla f. e-u, to dictate, Grág. ii. 266; mæla f. minni, to bring out a toast, vide minni; mæla f. sætt, i. 90; skipa, koma e-u f., to arrange, put right; ætla f. e-u, to make allowance for; trúa e-m f. e-u, to entrust one with; það fer mikið f. e-u (impers.), it is of great compass, bulky; hafa f. e-u, to have trouble with a thing; leita f. sér, to enquire; biðjask f., to say one’s prayers, vide biðja; mæla fyrir, segja f., etc., to order, Nj. 103, Js. 3: of a spell or solemn speaking, hann mælti svá f., at …, Landn. 34; spyrjask f., to enquire, Hkr. ii. 333; búask f., to prepare, make arrangement, Landn. 35, Sks. 551; skipask f., to draw up, Nj. 197; leggjask f., to lie down in despair, Bs. i. 194; spá fyrir, to ‘spae’ before, foretell; þeir menn er spá f. úorðna hluti, Fms. i. 96; segja f., to foretell, 76, Bb. 332; Njáll hefir ok sagt f. um æfi hans, Nj. 102; vita e-t f., to ‘wit’ beforehand, know the future, 98; sjá e-t f., to foresee, 162; ef þat er ætlat f., fore-ordained, id.WITH ACC., mostly with the notion of movement.A. LOCAL:I. before, in front of; fyrir dyrrin, Nj. 198; láta síga brýnn f. brár, Hkv. Hjörv. 19; halda f. augu sér, to hold (one’s hands) before one’s eyes, Nj. 132; leggja sverði fyrir brjóst e-m, to thrust a sword into his breast, 162, Fs. 39.2. before one, before a court; stefna e-m f. dómstól, Fms. xi. 444; ganga, koma f. e-n, to go, come before one, Fms. i. 15, Eg. 426, Nj. 6, 129, passim; fyrir augu e-s, before one’s eyes, Stj. 611.3. before, so as to shield; hann kom skildinum f. sik, he put the shield before him, Nj. 97, 115; halda skildi f. e-n, a duelling term, since the seconder had to hold one’s shield, Ísl. ii. 257.4. joined to adverbs such as fram, aptr, út, inn, ofan, niðr, austr, vestr, suðr, norðr, all denoting direction; fram f., forward; aptr f., backward, etc.; hann reiddi öxina fram f. sik, a stroke forward with the axe, Fms. vii. 91; hann hljóp eigi skemra aptr en fram fyrir sik, Nj. 29; þótti honum hann skjóta brandinum austr til fjallanna f. sik, 195; komask út f. dyrr, to go outside the door, Eg. 206:—draga ofan f. brekku, to drag over the hill, Ld. 220; hrinda f. mel ofan, to thrust one over the gravel bank, Eg. 748; hlaupa f. björg, to leap over a precipice, Eb. 62, Landn. 36; elta e-n f. björg, Grág. ii. 34; hlaupa (kasta) f. borð, to leap ( throw) overboard, Fms. i. 178, Hkr. iii. 391, Ld. 226; síga ( to be hauled) niðr f. borgar-vegg, 656 C. 13, Fms. ix. 3; hlaupa niðr f. stafn, Eg. 142; niðr f. skaflinn, Dropl. 25; fyrir brekku, Orkn. 450, Glúm. 395 (in a verse).II. in one’s way, crossing one’s way; þeir stefndu f. þá, Fms. ix. 475; ríða á leið f. þá, to ride in their way, so as to meet them, Boll. 348; hlaupa ofan f. þá, Nj. 153; vóru allt komin f. hann bréf, letters were come before him, in his way, Fms. vii. 207; þeir felldu brota f. hann, viz. they felled trees before him, so as to stop him, viii. 60, ix. 357; leggja bann f. skip, to lay an embargo on a ship, Ld. 166.III. round, off a point; fyrir nesit, Nj. 44; út f. Holm, out past the Holm, Fms. vii. 356: esp. as a naut. term, off a point on the shore, sigla f. England, Norðyrnbraland, Þrasnes, Spán, to sail by the coast of, stand off England, Northumberland, … Spain, Orkn. 338, 340, 342, 354; fyrir Yrjar, Fms. vii. (in a verse); fyrir Siggju, Aumar, Lista, Edda 91 (in a verse); er hann kom f. Elfina, when be came off the Gotha, Eg. 80; leggja land f. skut, to lay the land clear of the stern, i. e. to pass it, Edda l. c.; göra frið f. land sitt, to pacify the land from one end to another, Ld. 28; fyrir uppsprettu árinnar, to come to ( round) the sources of the river, Fms. iii. 183; fyrir garðs-enda, Grág. ii. 263; girða f. nes, to make a wall across the ness, block it up, cp. Lat. praesepire, praemunire, etc., Grág. ii. 263; so also binda f. op, poka, Lat. praeligare, praestringere; hlaða f. gat, holu, to stop a hole, opening; greri f. stúfinn, the stump (of the arm or leg) was healed, closed, Nj. 275; skjóta slagbrandi f. dyrr, to shoot a bolt before the door, to bar it, Dropl. 29; láta loku (lás) f. hurð, to lock a door, Gísl. 28; setja innsigli f. bréf, to set a seal to a letter, Dipl. i. 3: ellipt., setr hón þar lás fyrir, Ld. 42, Bs. i. 512.2. along, all along; f. endilanga Danmörk, f. endilangan Noreg, all along Denmark, Norway, from one end to the other, Fms. iv. 319, xi. 91, Grett. 97:—öx álnar f. munn, an axe with an ell-long edge, Ld. 276; draga ör f. ödd, to draw the arrow past the point, an archer’s term, Fms. ii. 321.IV. with verbs, fyrir ván komit, one is come past hope, all hope is gone, Sturl. i. 44, Hrafn. 13, Fms. ii. 131; taka f. munn e-m, to stop one’s mouth; taka f. háls, kverkar, e-m, to seize one by the throat, etc.; taka mál f. munn e-m, ‘verba alicujus praeripere,’ to take the word out of one’s mouth, xi. 12; taka f. hendr e-m, to seize one’s hands, stop one in doing a thing, Eb. 124; mod., taka fram f. hendrnar á e-m.B. TEMP.: fyrir dag, before day, Eg. 80; f. miðjan dag, Ld. 14; f. sól, before sunrise, 268; f. sólar-lag, before sunset; f. miðjan aptan, Nj. 192; f. náttmál, 197; f. óttu, Sighvat; f. þinglausnir, Ölk. 37; f. Jól, Nj. 269; f. fardaga, Grág. ii. 341; viku f. sumar, 244; f. mitt sumar, Nj. 138; litlu f. vetr, Eg. 159; f. vetrnætr, Grág. ii. 217; f. e-s minni, before one’s memory, Íb. 16.C. METAPH.:I. above, before; hann hafdi mest fyrir aðra konunga hraustleikinn, Fms. x. 372.II. for, on behalf of; vil ek bjóða at fara f. þik, I will go for thee, in thy stead, Nj. 77; ganga í skuld f. e-n, Grág. i. 283; Egill drakk … ok svá f. Ölvi, Eg. 210; kaupa e-t f. e-n, Nj. 157; gjalda gjöld f. e-n, Grág. i. 173; verja, sækja, sakir f. e-n, Eg. 504; hvárr f. sik, each for oneself, Dipl. v. 26; sættisk á öll mál f. Björn, Nj. 266; tók sættir f. Björn, Eg. 168; svara f. e-t, Fms. xi. 444; hafa til varnir f. sik, láta lýrit, lög-vörn koma f.; færa vörn f. sik, etc.; verja, sækja sakir f. sik, and many similar law phrases, Grág. passim; biðja konu f. e-n, to woo a lady for another, Fms. x. 44; fyrir mik, on my behalf, for my part, Gs. 16; lögvörn f. mál, a lawful defence for a case, Nj. 111; hafa til varnar f. sök, to defend a case, Grág. i. 61; halda skiladómi f. e-t, Dipl. iv. 8; festa lög f. e-t, vide festa.III. in a distributive sense; penning f. mann, a penny per man, K. Þ. K. 88; fyrir nef hvert, per nose = per head, Lv. 89, Fms. i. 153, Ó. H. 141; hve f. marga menn, for how many men, Grág. i. 296; fyrir hverja stiku, for each yard, 497.IV. for, for the benefit of; brjóta brauð f. hungraða, Hom. 75; þeir skáru f. þá melinn, they cut the straw for them (the horses), Nj. 265; leggja kostnað f. e-n, to defray one’s costs, Grág. i. 341.V. for, instead of; hann setti sik f. Guð, Edda (pref.); hafa e-n f. Guð (Lat. pro Deo), Stj. 73, Barl. 131; geta, fá, kveðja mann f. sik, to get a man as one’s delegate or substitute, Grág. i. 48 passim; þeir höfðu vargstakka f. brynjur, Fs. 17; manna-höfuð vóru f. kljána, Nj. 275; gagl f. gás ok grís f. gamalt svín, Ó. H. 86; rif stór f. hlunna, Háv. 48; buðkr er f. húslker er hafðr, Vm. 171; auga f. auga, tönn f. tönn, Exod. xxi. 24; skell f. skillinga, Þkv. 32.VI. because of, for; vilja Gunnar dauðan fyrir höggit, Nj. 92, Fms. v. 162; eigi f. sakleysi, not without ground, i. 302; fyrir hvat (why, for what) stefndi Gunnarr þeim til úhelgi? Nj. 101; ok urðu f. þat sekir, Landn. 323; hafa ámæli f. e-t, Nj. 65, passim.2. in a good sense, for one’s sake, for one; fyrir þín orð, for thy words, intercession, Ísl. ii. 217; vil ek göra f. þín orð, Ld. 158, Nj. 88; fyrir sína vinsæld, by his popularity, Fms. i. 259: the phrase, fyrir e-s sök, for one’s sake, vide sök: in swearing, a Latinism, fyrir trú mína, by my faith! (so in Old Engl. ‘fore God), Karl. 241; fyrir þitt líf, Stj. 514; ek særi þik f. alla krapta Krists ok manndóm þinn, Nj. 176. VII. for, at, denoting value, price; fyrir þrjár merkr, for three marks, Eg. 714; er sik leysti út f. þrjú hundruð marka, Fms. ix. 421; ganga f. hundrað, to pass or go for a hundred, D. I. i. 316:—also of the thing bought, þú skalt reiða f. hana þrjár merkr, thou shall pay for her three marks, Ld. 30; fyrir þik skulu koma mannhefndir, Nj. 57; bætr f. víg, Ísl. ii. 274; bætr f. mann, Eg. 259, passim; fyrir áverka Þorgeirs kom legorðs-sökin, Nj. 101:—so in the phrase, fyrir hvern mun, by all means, at any cost; fyrir öngan mun, by no means, Fms. i. 9, 157, Gþl. 531:—hafði hverr þeirra mann f. sik, eða tvá …, each slew a man or more for himself, i. e. they sold their lives dearly, Ó. H. 217.2. ellipt., í staðinn f., instead of, Grág. i. 61; hér vil ek bjóða f. góð boð, Nj. 77; taka umbun f., Fms. vii. 161; svara slíku f. sem …, Boll. 350; þér skulut öngu f. týna nema lífinu, you shall lose nothing less than your head, Nj. 7.VIII. by means of, by, through; fyrir þat sama orð, Stj.; fyrir sína náttúru, Fms. v. 162; fyrir messu-serkinn, iii. 168; fyrir þinn krapt ok frelsis-hönd, Pass. 19. 12; svikin f. orminn, by the serpent, Al. 63,—this use of fyrir seems to be a Latinism, but is very freq. in eccl. writings, esp. after the Reformation, N. T., Pass., Vídal.; fyrir munn Davíðs, through the mouth of David, etc.:—in good old historical writings such instances are few; þeir hlutuðu f. kast ( by dice), Sturl. ii. 159.IX. in spite of, against; fyrir vilja sinn, N. G. L. i. 151; fyrir vitorð eðr vilja e-s, against one’s will or knowledge, Grág. ii. 348; kvángask (giptask) f. ráð e-s, i. 177, 178, Þiðr. 190; nú fara menn f. bann ( in spite of an embargo) landa á milli, Gþl. 517; hann gaf henni líf f. framkvæmd farar, i. e. although she had not fulfilled her journey ( her vow), Fms. v. 223; fyrir várt lof, vi. 220; fyrir allt þat, in spite of all that, Grett. 80 new Ed.; fyrir ráð fram, heedlessly; fyrir lög fram, vide fram.X. denoting capacity, in the same sense as ‘at,’ C. II, p. 27, col. 1; scarcely found in old writers (who use ‘at’), but freq. in mod. usage, thus, eigi e-n f. vin, to have one for a friend, in old writers ‘at vin;’ hafa e-n f. fífl, fól, to make sport of one.2. in old writers some phrases come near to this, e. g. vita f. vist, to know for certain, Dipl. i. 3; vita f. full sannindi, id., ii. 16; hafa f. satt, to take for sooth, believe, Nj. 135; koma f. eitt, to come ( turn) all to one, Lv. 11, Nj. 91, Fms. i. 208; koma f. ekki, to come to naught, be of no avail, Ísl. ii. 215; fyrir hitt mun ganga, it will turn the other way, Nj. 93; fyrir hann er einskis örvænt orðs né verks, from him everything may be expected, Ísl. ii. 326; hafa e-s víti f. varnað, to have another’s faults for warning, Sól. 19.XI. joined with adverbs ending in -an, fyrir austan, vestan, sunnan, norðan, útan, innan, framan, handan, ofan, neðan, either with a following acc. denoting. direction, thus, fyrir austan, sunnan … fjall, east, south of the fell, i. e. on the eastern, southern side; fyrir neðan brú, below the bridge; fyrir útan fjall = Lat. ultra; fyrir innan fjall = Lat. infra; fyrir handan á, beyond the river; fyrir innan garð, inside the yard; fyrir ofan garð, above, beyond the yard, etc.; vide these adverbs:—used adverb., fyrir sunnan, in the south; fyrir vestan, in the west; fyrir norðan, in the north; fyrir austan, in the east,—current phrases in Icel. to mark the quarters of the country, cp. the ditty in Esp. Árb. year 1530; but not freq. in old writers, who simply say, norðr, suðr …, cp. Kristni S. ch. 1: absol. and adverb., fyrir ofan, uppermost; fyrir handan, on the other side:—fyrir útan e-t, except, save, Anal. 98, Vkv. 8; fyrir fram, vide fram.☞ For- and fyrir- as prefixes, vide pp. 163–167 and below:I. fore-, for-, meaning before, above, in the widest sense, local, temp., and metaph. furthering or the like, for-dyri, for-nes, for-ellri, for-beini, etc.β. before, down, for-brekkis, -bergis, -streymis, -vindis, -viðris, etc.2. in an intens. sense = before others, very, but not freq.; for-dyld, -góðr, -hagr, -hraustr, -kostuligr, -kuðr, -lítill, -ljótr, -prís, -ríkr, -snjallr.II. (cp. fyrir, acc., C. IX), in a neg. or priv. sense; a few words occur even in the earliest poems, laws, and writers, e. g. for-að, -átta, -dæða, -nám, -næmi, -sending, -sköp, -verk, -veðja, -viða, -vitni, -ynja, -yrtir; those words at least seem to be original and vernacular: at a later time more words of the same kind crept in:1. as early as writers of the 13th and 14th centuries, e. g. for-boð, -bænir, -djarfa, -dæma (fyrir-dæma), -taka (fyrir-taka), -þóttr; fyrir-bjóða, -fara, -göra, -koma, -kunna, -líta, -muna, -mæla, -vega, -verða.2. introduced in some words at the time of the Reformation through Luther’s Bible and German hymns, and still later in many more through Danish, e. g. for-brjóta, -drífa, -láta, -líkast, -merkja, -nema, -sorga, -sóma, -standa, -svara, -þénusta, and several others; many of these, however, are not truly naturalised, being chiefly used in eccl. writings:—it is curious that if the pronoun be placed after the verb (which is the vernacular use in Icel.) the sense is in many cases reversed; thus, fyrir-koma, to destroy, but koma e-u fyrir can only mean to arrange; so also fyrir-mæla, to curse, and mæla fyrir, to speak for; for-bænir, but biðja fyrir e-m, etc.; in the latter case the sense is good and positive, in the former bad and negative; this seems to prove clearly that these compds are due to foreign influence. -
47 melden
I v/t1. (berichten) report; wie soeben gemeldet wird as has just been reported; vorangestellt: according to reports just received,...2. (ankündigen, bekannt geben) announce; würden Sie mich bei ihm melden? would you tell him I’m here?; wen darf ich melden? who shall I say is here?3. amtlich etc.: notify the authorities of; (Geburt etc.) register; (Unfall, Vergehen etc.) report ( der Polizei etc. to the police etc.); jemanden als vermisst melden report s.o. (as) missing; jemandem etw. melden notify s.o. of s.th.; nichts zu melden haben umg., fig. have no say (in the matter); du hast hier nichts zu melden! umg., fig. this is none of your businessII v/refl2. polizeilich: register with the police4. freiwillig: volunteer (zu etw. for s.th.); sich zum Militär melden join the armed forces (bes. Am. enlist) as a volunteer5. Leiden etc.: make its presence felt; mein Weisheitszahn meldet sich wieder my wisdom tooth is sending messages again6. in der Schule: put one’s hand up7. zum Lehrgang etc.: enrol(l), sign up (zu for); zum Examen, Wettbewerb: enter (zu for)8. sich auf ein Inserat melden answer an advertisement9. er wird sich schon melden (von sich hören lassen) he’ll be in touch; (sich bemerkbar machen) he’ll make noises; er hat sich ewig oder lange nicht gemeldet I haven’t heard from him (oder umg. had a peep out of him) for ages; wenn du mich brauchst, melde dich just let me know (oder umg. just give me a shout) if you need me; anmelden, krankIII v/i1. Hund: give tongue2. SPORT (sich anmelden) enter; sie hat für den Hürdenlauf / für Wimbledon gemeldet she has entered for the hurdles / for Wimbledon* * *to notify; to advertise; to report; to announce; to give notice; to let know;sich meldento report* * *mẹl|den ['mɛldn]1. vt1) (= anzeigen) Unfall, Verlust, ansteckende Erkrankungen to report; (= berichten) to report; (= registrieren lassen) to register; (= denunzieren) to reportmelden — to notify the authorities of a birth/changes
wie soeben gemeldet wird (Rad, TV) — according to reports just coming in
das wird gemeldet! (Sch) — I'll tell on you (Sch inf)
er hat hier nichts zu melden (inf) —
(als) arbeitslos gemeldet sein — to be registered unemployed
2) (= ankündigen) to announceich ging zur Sekretärin und ließ mich beim Direktor melden — I went to the secretary and asked her to tell the director that I was there
wen darf ich melden? — who(m) shall I say (is here)?, who(m) shall I announce?
2. vr1) (= antreten) to report (zu for)sich zu or für etw melden (esp Mil) — to sign up for sth, to volunteer for sth; (für Arbeitsplatz) to apply for sth; (für Lehrgang) to enrol (Brit) or enroll (US) for sth, to sign on for sth
sich auf eine Anzeige melden — to answer an advertisement
sich polizeilich or bei der Polizei melden — to register with the police
sich arbeitslos melden — to register as unemployed, to sign on
See:2) (fig = sich ankündigen) to announce one's presence; (Alter, Hunger) to make itself or its presence felt; (Winter, Dunkelheit) to draw or set in; (SPORT, zur Prüfung) to enter (one's name) (zu for); (durch Handaufheben) to put one's hand up, to hold up one's hand; (RAD, TV) to come on the airSee:→ Wort3) (ESP TELEC = antworten) to answerbitte melden! (Telec) — come in, please
4) (= von sich hören lassen) to get in touch (bei with)seitdem hat er sich nicht mehr gemeldet — he hasn't been heard of since
wenn du was brauchst, melde dich — if you need anything give (me) a shout (inf)
* * *1) (to make a complaint about; to give information about the misbehaviour etc of: The boy was reported to the headmaster for being rude to a teacher.) report2) (to tell someone in authority about: He reported the theft to the police.) report* * *mel·den[ˈmɛldn̩]I. vt1. (anzeigen)▪ [jdm] etw \melden to report sth [to sb]▪ jdn [bei jdm] \melden to report sb [to sb]der Behörde eine Adressänderung \melden to notify the authorities of a change of addresseine Geburt/einen Todesfall \melden to register a birth/a deathetw im Personalbüro \melden to report sth to the personnel officejdn bei der Polizei \melden (anzeigen) to report sb to the police; (anmelden) to register sb with the policeetw bei der Polizei \melden to report sth to the policeetw schriftlich \melden to notify sth in writingeinen Unfall/den Verlust \melden to report an accident/the losseinen Zug \melden to signal a train2. (öffentlich berichten)für morgen ist Schnellfall gemeldet snow is forecast for tomorrowdas Wahlergebnis wurde soeben gemeldet the results of the election have just been announcedwie [soeben/gerade] gemeldet wird according to reports [just [coming] in]3. (anmelden)▪ jdn [bei jdm] \melden to announce sb [to sb]wen darf ich \melden? whoshall I say [is here]?, what name shall I say?\melden Sie mich bitte bei Ihrem Chef! please tell your boss [that] I'm here!4. SPORT to enterjdn/eine Mannschaft für einen Wettbewerb \melden to enter sb/a team for a competition5.II. vr1. (anmelden)sich akk polizeilich \melden (nach Umzug) to register with the police; (wegen eines Delikts) to report to the police2. (sich zur Verfügung stellen)wer meldet sich freiwillig? any volunteers?es meldet sich keiner [unter dieser Nummer] there's no answer [or reply] [on this number]sie meldet sich nie unter ihrem wahren Namen she never answers with her real name4. (sich wenden an)wenn ich Sie brauchen sollte, melde ich mich [bei Ihnen] if I need you, I'll let you knowich melde mich wieder I'll be in touchHerr Müller bitte bei der Information \melden will Mr Müller please come to the information desk5. (mitteilen)6. (um Zulassung bitten)7. (sich bemerkbar machen)▪ sich akk \melden to ask to speak [or address the meeting]; Hund to bark; Kleinkind to make itself heard; SCH to put one's hand up; (fig) Schmerzen, Alter, etc. to make itself felt, to set inDurst/Hunger meldet sich bei jdm sb begins to feel thirsty/hungrybei jdm meldet sich das Gewissen sb's conscience begins to trouble sbbei jdm meldet sich Reue sb begins to feel remorse* * *1.transitives Verb1) report; (registrieren lassen) register <birth, death, etc.> (Dat. with)wie soeben gemeldet wird — (Fernseh., Rundf.) according to reports just coming in
nichts/nicht viel zu melden haben — (ugs.) have no/little say
2) (ankündigen) announce3) (Schülerspr.)2.reflexives Verb1) reportsich freiwillig melden — volunteer (zu for)
sich auf eine Anzeige melden — reply to or answer an advertisement
2) (am Telefon) answeres meldet sich niemand — there is no answer or reply
3) (ums Wort bitten) put one's hand up4) (von sich hören lassen) get in touch ( bei with)wenn du etwas brauchst, melde dich — if you need anything let me/us know
Otto 2, bitte melden! — Otto 2, come in please!
* * *A. v/t1. (berichten) report;wie soeben gemeldet wird as has just been reported; vorangestellt: according to reports just received, …2. (ankündigen, bekannt geben) announce;würden Sie mich bei ihm melden? would you tell him I’m here?;wen darf ich melden? who shall I say is here?jemanden als vermisst melden report sb (as) missing;jemandem etwas melden notify sb of sth;nichts zu melden haben umg, fig have no say (in the matter);du hast hier nichts zu melden! umg, fig this is none of your businessB. v/r1. dienstlich: report (bei to;zur Arbeit/zum Dienst for work/duty)2. polizeilich: register with the police3. TEL answer (the [tele]phone);es meldet sich keiner there’s no answer4. freiwillig: volunteer (zu etwas for sth);sich zum Militär melden join the armed forces (besonders US enlist) as a volunteer5. Leiden etc: make its presence felt;mein Weisheitszahn meldet sich wieder my wisdom tooth is sending messages again6. in der Schule: put one’s hand up7. zum Lehrgang etc: enrol(l), sign up (zu for); zum Examen, Wettbewerb: enter (zu for)8.sich auf ein Inserat melden answer an advertisement9.er wird sich schon melden (von sich hören lassen) he’ll be in touch; (sich bemerkbar machen) he’ll make noises;lange nicht gemeldet I haven’t heard from him (oder umg had a peep out of him) for ages;wenn du mich brauchst, melde dich just let me know (oder umg just give me a shout) if you need me; → anmelden, krankC. v/i1. Hund: give tonguesie hat für den Hürdenlauf/für Wimbledon gemeldet she has entered for the hurdles/for Wimbledon* * *1.transitives Verb1) report; (registrieren lassen) register <birth, death, etc.> (Dat. with)wie soeben gemeldet wird — (Fernseh., Rundf.) according to reports just coming in
nichts/nicht viel zu melden haben — (ugs.) have no/little say
2) (ankündigen) announce3) (Schülerspr.)2.reflexives Verb1) reportsich freiwillig melden — volunteer (zu for)
sich auf eine Anzeige melden — reply to or answer an advertisement
2) (am Telefon) answeres meldet sich niemand — there is no answer or reply
3) (ums Wort bitten) put one's hand up4) (von sich hören lassen) get in touch ( bei with)wenn du etwas brauchst, melde dich — if you need anything let me/us know
Otto 2, bitte melden! — Otto 2, come in please!
* * *v.to announce v.to message v.to notify v. -
48 manifester
manifester [manifεste]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb2. intransitive verb( = protester) to demonstrate3. reflexive verba. [émotion] to express itself ; [phénomène] to be apparent• cette maladie se manifeste par l'apparition de boutons the appearance of a rash is the first symptom of this diseaseb. [personne] to appear ; (par écrit, par téléphone) to get in touch ; [bénévole, candidat, témoin] to come forwardc. [élève] to participate* * *manifɛste
1.
verbe transitif ( faire connaître) to show, to demonstrate [soutien]; to show [curiosité, sentiment, qualité]; ( exprimer) to express [désir, crainte]
2.
verbe intransitif to demonstrate
3.
se manifester verbe pronominal1) ( devenir apparent) [symptôme] to manifest itself; [phénomène] to appear; [maladie, inquiétude] to show itself2) ( faire signe)il ne s'est pas encore manifesté — ( en personne) there is still no sign of him; (par lettre, téléphone) we still haven't heard from him
3) ( répondre à un appel) [témoin] to come forward* * *manifɛste1. vt[volonté, intentions] to show, to indicate, [joie, peur] to express, to show2. viPOLITIQUE to demonstrate* * *manifester verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( faire connaître) to show, to demonstrate [soutien, opposition, solidarité, volonté]; to signal, to demonstrate [inquiétude, humeur]; to show [curiosité, sentiment, qualité]; manifester son désir de faire to signal one's desire to do; manifester sa présence to make one's presence known (par by; en faisant by doing);2 ( indiquer) [résultats électoraux, décision] to reveal.B vi to demonstrate (contre against; en faveur de for); appeler à manifester le 5 juin to call a demonstration for 5 June.C se manifester vpr1 ( devenir apparent) [symptôme] to manifest itself; [phénomène] to appear; [peur, maladie, inquiétude] to show itself; une tendance au changement se manifeste a tendency for change can be seen; des signes encourageants commencent à se manifester encouraging signs are becoming apparent ou manifest;2 ( faire signe) il ne s'est pas encore manifesté ( en personne) there is still no sign of him; (par lettre, téléphone) we still haven't heard from him; l'auteur des lettres anonymes s'est encore manifesté the anonymous letter writer has been heard from again;3 (répondre à un appel, une offre) [candidat, témoin] to come forward.[manifɛste] verbe transitif1. [exprimer] to expressmanifester son mécontentement à quelqu'un to indicate ou to express one's dissatisfaction to somebodymanifester un désir to express ou to indicate a wisha-t-elle manifesté le désir d'être enterrée près de son mari? was it her wish that she should be buried near her husband?sans manifester la moindre irritation/admiration without the slightest show of anger/admiration————————[manifɛste] verbe intransitif————————se manifester verbe pronominal intransitif1. [personne] to come forwardque le gagnant se manifeste, s'il vous plaît! would the (lucky) winner step ou come forward please!bon élève, mais devrait se manifester plus/moins souvent en classe good student, but should contribute more/be quieter in class2. [sentiment] to show[phénomène] to appearsa joie de vivre se manifeste dans toutes ses toiles her joie de vivre is expressed ou expresses itself in every one of her paintings -
49 oculus
ŏcŭlus (sync. oclus, Prud. steph. 10, 592 dub.), i, m. [kindr. with Sanscr. akshi and aksha, from the root ītsh, videre; Gr. ossomai, osse; Goth. augō; Germ. Auge; Engl. eye], an eye.I.Lit.:B.quae (natura) primum oculos membranis tenuissimis vestivit et saepsit... sed lubricos oculos fecit et mobiles,
Cic. N. D. 2, 57, 142; cf. Cels. 7, 7, 13; Plin. 11, 37, 52, § 139 sq.; Cic. de Or. 3, 59, 221:venusti,
id. Tusc. 5, 16, 46:eminentes,
prominent, id. Vatin. 2, 4:oculi tanquam speculatores,
id. N. D. 2, 57, 140:acuti,
id. Planc. 27, 69:maligni,
Verg. A. 5, 654:minaces,
Luc. 2, 26: oculos conicere in aliquem, to cast or fix one's eyes upon, Cic. Clu. 19, 54:oculos conjecit in hostem,
Verg. A. 12, 483: adicere alicui rei, to cast one's eyes upon, glance at:ad eorum ne quem oculos adiciat suos,
Plaut. As. 4, 1, 24; to covet, Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 15, § 37:adicere ad rem aliquam,
id. Agr. 2, 10, 25:de aliquo nusquam deicere,
to never turn one's eyes away from, to regard with fixed attention, id. Verr. 2, 4, 15, § 33:deicere ab aliquā re,
to turn away, id. Phil. 1, 1, 1:in terram figere,
to fix one's eyes upon the ground, Tac. H. 4, 72:deicere in terram,
to cast down to, Quint. 1, 11, 9:demittere,
Ov. M. 15, 612:erigere,
id. ib. 4, 146: attollere. Verg. A. 4, 688; Ov. M. 2, 448:circumferre,
id. ib. 6, 169:premere,
Verg. A. 9, 487: deponere, to fix, Hor C. 1, 36, 18:distorquere,
id. S. 1, 9, 65:spargere,
to direct hither and thither, Pers. 5, 33:oculis cernere,
to see with one's own eyes, Nep. Timol. 2, 2:oculos auferre spectanti,
to blind the eyes of an observer, to cheat him before his eyes, Liv. 6, 15 fin.: ponere sibi aliquid ante oculos. i. e. to imagine to one's self any thing, Cic. Agr. 2, 20, 53:proponere oculis suis aliquid,
id. Sest. 7, 17:esse ante oculos,
to be before one's eyes, id. Lael. 11, 38: res posita in oculis, and ante oculos, that lies before one's eyes, is apparent, evident:de rebus ante oculos positis,
id. Ac. 1, 2, 5:omnia sunt enim posita ante oculos,
id. de Or. 1, 43, 192:inque meis oculis candida Delos erat,
before my eyes, Ov. H. 21, 82: vivere in oculis, habitare in oculis, to live in the sight of, in the presence of, in intercourse with:in maximā celebritate atque in oculis civium quondam viximus,
Cic. Off. 3, 1, 3:habitavi in oculis,
id. Planc. 27, 66; cf.:in foro palam Syracusis in ore atque in oculis provinciae,
id. Verr. 2, 2, 33, § 81; Liv. 22, 12; 35, 10; Tac. H. 4, 77:habere in oculis,
to keep in sight, to watch, observe, Plaut. Ps. 3, 2, 66:in oculis omnium submergi,
Curt. 9, 4, 11:se ante oculos suos trucidari sinerent,
Liv. 2, 6, 2; 4, 14, 5; Auct. Her. 4, 36, 48: ab oculis alicujus abire (ire), to leave one's presence:Abin' hinc ab oculis?
Plaut. Trin. 4, 2, 147; id. Truc. 2, 5, 24; Sen. Ep. 36, 10; cf.:ab oculis recedere,
Plin. Ep. 2, 1, 11:ab oculis concedere,
Cic. Cat. 1, 7, 17:(angues) conspecti repente ex oculis abierunt,
out of sight, Liv. 25, 16, 2:prodigii species ex oculis elapsa,
id. 26, 19, 7:(avem) ablatam ex oculis,
Tac. H. 2, 50:facesserent propere ex urbe ab ore atque oculis populi Romani,
Liv. 6, 17, 8:sub oculis alicujus,
before a person's eyes, in his presence, Caes. B. C. 1, 71; Vell. 2, 79, 4:sub oculis domini esse,
Col. 9, 5, 2:quos honores sub oculis tuis gessit,
Plin. Ep. 10, 11, 2:sub avi oculis necari,
Just. 1, 4, 5; Flor. 4, 7, 8:hostes sub oculis erant,
Liv. 22, 14, 3; 26, 38, 9:sub oculis Caesaris,
Tac. A. 2, 35: hunc oculis suis nostrarum numquam quisquam vidit, with his own eyes, i. e. actually, in person, Ter. Eun. 4, 4, 10:numquam ante hunc diem meis oculis eam videram,
id. Hec. 5, 4, 23: ad oculum, for display, to be seen:non ad oculum servientes,
Vulg. Eph. 1, 18; id. Col. 3, 22.—As a term of endearment, the apple of my eye, my darling:ubi isti sunt quibus vos oculi estis, quibus vitae estis, quibus deliciae?
Plaut. Ps. 1, 2, 46:bene vale, ocule mi!
id. Curc. 1, 3, 47 —Hence, in a double sense:par oculorum in amicitiā M. Antonii triumviri,
Suet. Rhet. 5.—The ancients swore by their eyes:si voltis per oculos jurare, nihilo magis facietis,
Plaut. Men. 5, 9, 1.—Transf.1.The power of seeing, sight, vision: ut eum quoque oculum, quo bene videret, amitteret, lost, i. e. became blind, Cic. Div. 1, 24, 48:2.oculos perdere,
id. Har. Resp. 18, 37:restituere alicui,
Suet. Vesp. 7; cf.:oculis usurpare rem,
i. e. see, Lucr. 1, 301.—A luminary, said of the sun and stars ( poet. and in post-Aug. prose): mundi oculus. i. e. the sun, Ov. M. 4, 228:3.stellarum oculi,
Plin. 2, 5, 4, § 10.—A spot resembling an eye, as on a panther's hide, a peacock's tail, etc., Plin. 8, 17, 23, § 62:4.pavonum caudae,
id. 13, 15, 30, § 96. —So arch. t. t.:oculus volutae,
Vitr. 3, 5. —Of plants.a.An eye, bud, bourgeon: oculos imponere, i. e. to bud, inoculate, Verg. G. 2, 73:b.gemmans,
Col. 4, 24, 16.—A bulb or knob on many roots, on the reed, etc.:c.harundinis,
Cato, R. R. 6, 3; Varr. R. R. 1, 24, 3:seritur harundo bulbo radicis, quem alii oculum vocant,
Plin. 17, 20, 33, § 144.—A plant, called also aizoum majus, Plin. 25, 13, 102, § 160. —II.Trop.A.A principal ornament: hi duo illos oculos orae maritimae effoderunt ( Corinth and Carthage), Cic. N. D. 3, 38, 91:B.ex duobus Graeciae oculis,
i. e. Athens and Sparta, Just. 5, 8, 4.—The eye of the soul, the mind's eye:eloquentiam quam nullis nisi mentis oculis videre possumus,
Cic. Or. 29, 101:acrioribus mentis oculis intueri,
Col. 3, 8, 1:oculos pascere re aliquā,
to feast one's eyes on any thing, Cic. Verr. 2, 5, 26, § 65; cf.:concupiscentia oculorum,
Vulg. 1 Joh. 2, 16: fructum oculis (dat.) capere ex aliquā re, Nep. Eum. 11, 2: oculi dolent, the eyes ache, i. e. one is afflicted by something seen, Ter. Ph. 5, 8, 64; Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 14, 1; cf.:pietas, pater, oculis dolorem prohibet,
i. e. forbids me to take offence, Plaut. As. 5, 1, 4: in oculis, in the eye, i. e. in view, hoped or expected:frumenti spes, quae in oculis fuerat, utrosque frustrata pariter,
Liv. 26, 39, 23:acies et arma in oculis erant,
Curt. 3, 6, 3:Philotae supplicium in oculis erat,
id. 8, 6, 21:esse in oculis,
to be beloved, esteemed, Cic. Att. 6, 2, 5:esse in oculis multitudinis,
id. Tusc. 2, 26, 63: ferre, gestare in oculis, to love, esteem, value:oderat tum, cum, etc....jam fert in oculis,
id. Phil. 6, 4, 11:rex te ergo in oculis,
Ter. Eun. 3, 1, 11: aequis oculis videre, i. e. contentedly, with satisfaction (like aequo animo), Curt. 8, 2, 9: ante oculos, in mind, in view:mors ante oculos debet esse,
Sen. Ep. 12, 6; Plin. Ep. 3, 16, 6; also plain, obvious:simul est illud ante oculos,
Cic. de Or. 2, 85, 349:sit ante oculos Nero,
i. e. set him before you, consider him, Tac. H. 1, 16: ante oculos habere, to keep in mind (post-class.):habe ante oculos hanc esse terram,
Plin. Ep. 8, 24, 4:mortalitatem,
id. ib. 2, 10, 4; Just. 5, 6, 1; for which (late Lat.) prae oculis: prae oculis habere terrorem futuri judicii, Greg. M. Ep. 2, 48;3, 27 al.: nec jam fas ullum prae oculis habent,
Amm. 30, 4, 18: ob oculos versari, to be before the mind, etc.:mors (ei) ob oculos versatur,
Cic. Rab. Post. 14, 39; Liv. 28, 19, 14; cf.:usu versatur ante oculos vobis Glaucia,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 35, 98; id. Fin. 2, 22, 75; 5, 1, 3; id. Dom. 55, 141; Liv. 34, 36, 6: ponere aliquid ante oculos, to call up in mind, imagine, etc.:eā (translatione) utimur rei ante oculos ponendae causā,
Auct. Her. 4, 34, 45:ora eorum ponite vobis ante oculos,
Cic. Phil. 13, 2, 4:calamitatem Cottae sibi ante oculos ponunt,
Caes. B. G. 6, 37:exsilium Cn. Marci sibi proponunt ante oculos,
Liv. 2, 54, 6:conjurationem ante oculos ponere,
id. 24, 24, 8:studia eorum vobis ante oculos proponere,
Auct. Her. 4, 36, 48;rarely: constituere sibi aliquid ante oculos,
Cic. Cael. 32, 79; Aug. Serm. 233, 3: ante oculos ponere (proponere), with ellips. of dat. of person, Cic. Marc. 2, 5; id. Deiot. 7, 20; id. Phil. 2, 45, 115; 11, 3, 7; id. N. D. 1, 41, 114:nec a re publicā deiciebam oculos,
id. Phil. 1, 1, 1. -
50 honor
= academic.ru/35474/honorable">honorable* * *hon·orhon·our, AM hon·or[ˈɒnəʳ, AM ˈɑ:nɚ]I. nI want to win so that \honor is satisfied ich will gewinnen, damit meine Ehre wiederhergestellt ist humthe children were on their \honor to go to bed at ten o'clock die Kinder hatten versprochen, um zehn Uhr ins Bett zu gehenone's word of \honor sein Ehrenwort ntto be/feel [in] \honor bound to do sth es als seine Pflicht ansehen, etw zu tunas a mark of \honor als Zeichen der Ehrein the place of \honor am Ehrenplatzthese women were an \honor to their country diese Frauen haben ihrem Land alle Ehre gemachtshe did me the \honor of allowing me to help her with the washing-up sie war so gnädig, mir zu gestatten, ihr beim Abwasch zu helfen iron▪ to have the \honor of doing sth die Ehre haben, etw zu tun a. iron5. (reputation) guter Rufto stake one's \honor on sth sein Ehrenwort für etw akk gebento acquit oneself with \honor sich akk durch gute Leistungen auszeichnen8. (title)Her H\honor die vorsitzende RichterinHis H\honor der vorsitzende RichterYour H\honor Euer Ehren9. (in golf) Recht, den Golfball vom ersten Abschlag zu spielento defend one's \honor ( dated) seine Ehre verteidigen11.▶ on [or upon] my \honor bei meiner EhreII. vt▪ to \honor sb/sth jdn/etw in Ehren halten2. (praise)3. (fulfil)4. (grace)to \honor sth with one's presence etw mit seiner Gegenwart beehren* * *(US) ['ɒnə(r)]1. n1) Ehre fsense of honour — Ehrgefühl nt
he made it a point of honour — er betrachtete es als Ehrensache
he decided to make it a point of honour, never to... — er schwor sich (dat), nie zu...
there is honour among thieves — es gibt so etwas wie Ganovenehre
honour where honour is due —
on my honour! (old) — bei meiner Ehre (old)
you're on your honour not to leave — Sie haben Ihr Ehrenwort gegeben, dass Sie bleiben
he's put me on my honour not to tell — ich habe ihm mein Ehrenwort gegeben, dass ich nichts sage
to do honour to sb (at funeral) — jdm die letzte Ehre erweisen; (action, thought etc) jdm zur Ehre gereichen
to do honour to sth — einer Sache (dat) Ehre machen
in honour of sb — zu Ehren von jdm, zu jds Ehren; of dead person in ehrendem Andenken an jdn
in honour of sth — zu Ehren von etw; of past thing
may I have the honour of accompanying you? (form) — ich bitte um die Ehre, Sie begleiten zu dürfen (geh)
may I have the honour (of the next dance)? (form) — darf ich (um den nächsten Tanz) bitten?
if you would do me the honour of accepting (form) — wenn Sie mir die Ehre erweisen würden anzunehmen (geh)
to whom do I have the honour of speaking? (form, hum) — mit wem habe ich die Ehre? (geh, hum)
he is honour bound to do it — es ist Ehrensache für ihn, das zu tun
2)(= title)
Your Honour — Hohes Gerichtthe case was up before His Honour, Sir Charles — der Fall wurde unter dem Vorsitz des vorsitzenden Richters Sir Charles verhandelt
3)with full military honours —
New Year's Honour — Titelverleihung f am Neujahrstag
4)to do the honours (inf) — die Honneurs machen; (on private occasions) den Gastgeber spielen
5) (UNIV)honours (also honours degree) — akademischer Grad mit Prüfung im Spezialfach
to do or take honours in English — Englisch belegen, um den "Honours Degree" zu erwerben
to get first-class honours — das Examen mit Auszeichnung or "sehr gut" bestehen
6) (GOLF)it's his honour — er hat die Ehre
7) (CARDS) eine der (beim Bridge) 5 bzw. (beim Whist) 4 höchsten Karten einer Farbethe honours — die Honneurs pl
2. vt1) person ehrenI should be ( deeply) honoured if you... —
it's Angelika, we ARE honoured (iro) —
would you honour me by dining with me tonight? — würden Sie mir die Ehre erweisen, heute Abend mit mir zu speisen? (geh)
2) cheque annehmen, einlösen; debt begleichen; bill of exchange respektieren; obligation nachkommen (+dat); commitment stehen zu; credit card anerkennen; pledge, promise halten, einlösen; agreement, contract sich halten an (+acc), erfüllen* * *A v/t1. ehren:I’m honored oft iron ich fühle mich geehrt;a performance honoring eine Vorstellung zu Ehren von (od gen)2. ehren, auszeichnen:honor sb with sth jemandem etwas verleihen3. beehren ( with mit):honor sb with one’s presence4. zur Ehre gereichen (dat), Ehre machen (dat)5. einer Einladung etc Folge leisten6. honorieren, anerkennen7. respektieren8. WIRTSCHa) einen Wechsel, Scheck honorieren, einlösenb) eine Schuld bezahlenc) einen Vertrag erfüllenB s1. Ehre f:(sense of) honor Ehrgefühl n;(there is) honor among thieves (es gibt so etwas wie) Ganovenehre;feel (in) honor bound sich moralisch verpflichtet fühlen ( to do zu tun);honor to whom honor is due Ehre, wem Ehre gebührt;be (up)on one’s honor sein Ehrenwort gegeben haben ( to do zu tun);do sb honor jemandem zur Ehre gereichen, jemandem Ehre machen;do sb the honor of doing sth jemandem die Ehre erweisen, etwas zu tun;I have the honor ich habe die Ehre (of doing, to do zu tun);may I have the honor (of the next dance)? darf ich (um den nächsten Tanz) bitten?;put sb on their honor jemanden bei seiner Ehre packen;his honor it must be said that … zu seiner Ehre muss gesagt werden, dass …; → court A 10, debt 1, etc2. Ehrung f, Ehre(n) f(pl):a) Ehrerbietung f, Ehrenbezeigung fb) Hochachtung f, Ehrfurcht fc) Auszeichnung f, (Ehren)Titel m, Ehrenamt n, -zeichen n:in honor of sb, sb’s honor zu jemandes Ehren, jemandem zu Ehren;3. Ehre f (Jungfräulichkeit):lose one’s honor die Ehre verlieren4. Ehre f, Zierde f:he is an honor to his school (parents) er ist eine Zierde seiner Schule (er macht seinen Eltern Ehre);what an honor to my poor abode! oft iron welcher Glanz in meiner Hütte!it is his honor er hat die Ehre8. do the honors als Gastgeber(in) fungierenYour Honor hohes Gericht, Herr Vorsitzender* * ** * *(US) n.Ehre -n f. v.beehren v. -
51 onorare
be a credit toonorare qualcuno di qualcosa hono(u)r s.o. with something* * *onorare v.tr.1 ( rendere onore a) to honour, to pay* honour to (s.o.); to celebrate: onora tuo padre e tua madre, ( Bibbia) honour thy father and thy mother; onorare la memoria di un amico, to honour the memory of a friend; onorare i morti, to honour the dead2 ( dare onore a) to be an honour to (s.o., sthg.), to do* credit to (s.o., sthg.): questa azione ti onora, this action does you credit; il suo eroismo onora la patria, his heroism is an honour to his country; un atleta che onora lo sport italiano, an athlete who brings honour (o does credit) to Italian sport4 (comm.) to honour: onorare una cambiale, to honour a bill; onorare una tratta, to meet (o honour) a draft; onorare la propria firma, to honour one's signature; onorare i propri impegni, to fulfil one's obligations.◘ onorarsi v.rifl. ( pregiarsi) to be proud (of sthg.), to be honoured (by sthg.): mi onoro della sua amicizia, I am proud of his friendship; ci onoriamo della vostra presenza, we are honoured by your presence.* * *[ono'rare]1. vt(gen) to honour Brit, honor Am, (far onore a) to be a credit to, do credit toonorare qn con o di qc — to hono(u)r sb with sth
2. vr (onorarsi)onorarsi di qc/di fare qc — to feel hono(u)red by sth/to do sth
* * *[ono'rare] 1.verbo transitivoonorare qcn. della propria presenza — to grace sb. with one's presence (anche iron.)
2) (adempiere) to honour BE, to honor AE, to fulfil BE, to fulfill AE [promessa, firma, impegni, parola data]; (pagare) to honour BE, to honor AE, to meet* [debito, assegno]; (rispettare) to honour BE, to honor AE [ scadenza]3) (rendere fiero) [ persona] to be* a credit to [paese, genitori]4) (dare lustro a) [ qualità] to do* [sb.] credit2.* * *onorare/ono'rare/ [1]1 to honour BE, to honor AE (di, con with); onora il padre e la madre honour thy father and mother; onorare qcn. della propria presenza to grace sb. with one's presence (anche iron.)2 (adempiere) to honour BE, to honor AE, to fulfil BE, to fulfill AE [promessa, firma, impegni, parola data]; (pagare) to honour BE, to honor AE, to meet* [debito, assegno]; (rispettare) to honour BE, to honor AE [ scadenza]3 (rendere fiero) [ persona] to be* a credit to [paese, genitori]4 (dare lustro a) [ qualità] to do* [sb.] credit; il suo coraggio la onora your bravery does you creditII onorarsi verbo pronominaleto be* proud (di qcs. of sth.; di fare of doing). -
52 imporre
imposeprezzo fix* * *imporre v.tr.1 to impose (anche fig.): imporre le mani su qlcu., to lay one's hands on s.o.; imporre un compito, un obbligo, to impose a task, an obligation; imporre la propria compagnia, volontà a qlcu., to impose one's company, will on s.o.; imporre un lavoro a qlcu., to impose a task on s.o.; imporre restrizioni a qlco., to restrict sthg. // imporsi di fare qlco., to force oneself to do sthg: mi sono imposto di non vederlo più, I've made up my mind not to see him again2 (stabilire) to fix, to establish: imporre un prezzo a qlco., to fix a price on sthg. (o to price sthg.); imporre un prezzo troppo alto a qlco., to overprice sthg.3 (imposte) to impose, to levy, to lay*: imporre un tributo, to levy (o to lay) a tax; imporre tributi in misura inadeguata, to undertax; imporre un tributo a qlcu., to assess (o to tax) s.o.; imporre un'imposta su un prodotto, to excise; imporre una nuova tassa sulle sigarette, to impose a new tax on cigarettes4 (ordinare) to impose; to force, to make*: mi impose di venire, he forced me to come; imporre silenzio, to impose (o enforce) silence5 (dare) to give*, to assign: al neonato fu imposto il nome di Giovanni, the newborn child was given the name of John6 (esigere) to call for: la sua sofferenza ci impone comprensione e rispetto, his suffering calls for our sympathy and respect.◘ imporsi v.rifl. o intr.pron.1 (far sentire la propria superiorità) to stand* out (from, among), to surpass, to outclass, to dominate: si imponeva su tutti per le sue capacità innate, he outclassed everyone by his innate abilities2 (farsi valere, farsi ubbidire) to assert oneself, to make* oneself respected: non sa imporre ai figli, alla classe, he is incapable of asserting himself with (o making himself respected by) his children, the class; devi imparare a importi, you have to learn to assert yourself // imporre all'attenzione di tutti, to claim everyone's attention3 (con la presenza) to force oneself, to impose oneself: non puoi importi se non ti vogliono, you can't force (o impose) yourself on them, if they don't want you4 (avere successo) to become* popular; to be successful: un prodotto che si è imposto sul mercato, a product which has become very popular on the market // ( sport) la squadra si è imposta sugli avversari per 4 a 0, the team beat their opponents by 4 to nil5 (rendersi necessario) to become* necessary, to be called for: s'impose un cambiamento, a change was called for.* * *1. [im'porre]vb irreg vtimporre a qn di fare qc — to oblige o force sb to do sth, make sb do sth
imporre la propria autorità — to assert one's authority, make one's authority felt
imporsi qc — to impose sth on o.s.
imporsi di fare qc — to make o.s. do sth, force o.s. to do sth
2. vr (imporsi)1) (farsi valere) to assert o.s., make o.s. respectedsi è imposto sugli altri per la sua competenza — he commanded the others' respect because of his ability
2) (aver successo: musicista, attore, sportivo) to come to the fore, become popular3.imporsi vip
1) (diventare necessario) to become necessary2) (avere successo: moda) to become established, become popular* * *[im'porre] 1.verbo transitivo1) to impose, to dictate, to enjoin [sanzioni, termine, regolamento, condizioni] (a qcn., qcs. on sb., sth.)2) (comandare) to force, to obligeimporre il silenzio — to impose o order silence
gli hanno imposto di fare — he was obliged o forced to do
3)imporre a qcn. la propria presenza — to force oneself o one's presence on sb
4) [ situazione] to require, to call for [provvedimenti, cambiamento]5) (fare accettare) to impose [idea, volontà, moda, amici] (a on)6) (ispirare) to command [rispetto, ammirazione]7) relig.imporre le mani su qcn. — to lay hands on sb
8) (dare)2.verbo pronominale imporsi1) [scelta, soluzione] to be* obvious (a to); (essere necessario)si impone un cambiamento — there must be a change, a change is needed
2) (emergere, affermarsi) to stand* out- rsi su un mercato — [prodotto, azienda] to dominate the market
3)-rsi all'attenzione di qcn. — to attract o claim sb.'s attention
4) (farsi valere) [ persona] to assert oneself; (farsi rispettare) to command respect5) (vincere)* * *imporre/im'porre/ [73]1 to impose, to dictate, to enjoin [sanzioni, termine, regolamento, condizioni] (a qcn., qcs. on sb., sth.)2 (comandare) to force, to oblige; imporre il silenzio to impose o order silence; gli hanno imposto di fare he was obliged o forced to do3 imporre a qcn. la propria presenza to force oneself o one's presence on sb.4 [ situazione] to require, to call for [provvedimenti, cambiamento]5 (fare accettare) to impose [idea, volontà, moda, amici] (a on)6 (ispirare) to command [rispetto, ammirazione]7 relig. imporre le mani su qcn. to lay hands on sb.8 (dare) al bambino fu imposto il nome di Simone the newborn child was given the name of SimoneII imporsi verbo pronominale1 [scelta, soluzione] to be* obvious (a to); (essere necessario) si impone un cambiamento there must be a change, a change is needed2 (emergere, affermarsi) to stand* out; - rsi per la propria intelligenza to stand out because of one's intelligence; si è imposto come leader he established himself as a leader; - rsi su un mercato [prodotto, azienda] to dominate the market3 -rsi all'attenzione di qcn. to attract o claim sb.'s attention5 (vincere) l'Italia si è imposta sulla Svezia per 2 a 1 Italy beat Sweden 2 to 1. -
53 grace
1. noun2) (attractive feature) Charme, derairs and graces — vornehmes Getue (ugs. abwertend); affektiertes Benehmen
3) (accomplishment)social graces — Umgangsformen Pl.
4) (decency) Anstand, derhave the grace to do something — so anständig sein und etwas tun; (civility)
with [a] good/bad grace — bereitwillig/widerwillig
he accepted my criticism with good/bad grace — er trug meine Kritik mit Fassung/nahm meine Kritik mit Verärgerung hin
he fell from grace — er fiel in Ungnade
7) (prayers) Tischgebet, das8) in address2. transitive verb1) (adorn) zieren (geh.); schmücken2) (honour) auszeichnen; ehren* * *[ɡreis] 1. noun1) (beauty of form or movement: The dancer's movements had very little grace.) die Anmut2) (a sense of what is right: At least he had the grace to leave after his dreadful behaviour.) der Anstand3) (a short prayer of thanks for a meal.) das Tischgebet4) (a delay allowed as a favour: You should have paid me today but I'll give you a day's grace.) der Aufschub5) (the title of a duke, duchess or archbishop: Your/His Grace.) Eure Hoheit6) (mercy: by the grace of God.) die Gnade•- academic.ru/31937/graceful">graceful- gracefully
- gracefulness
- gracious 2. interjection(an exclamation of surprise.) du liebe Güte!- graciously- graciousness
- with a good/bad grace
- with good/bad grace* * *[greɪs]I. nto do sth with [a] good/bad \grace etw anstandslos/widerwillig tunto have the [good] \grace to do sth den Anstand besitzen, etw zu tunsocial \graces gesellschaftliche Umgangsformento be in a state of \grace REL im Zustand der Gnade Gottes seindivine \grace göttliche Gnadeby the \grace of God durch die Gnade Gottes\grace and favour BRIT (house, apartment) kostenlose Unterbringung, die die Königliche Familie z.B. pensionierten Beamten gewährtto be in sb's good \graces bei jdm gut angeschrieben seinto get into sb's good \graces jds Gunst erlangento fall from [sb's] \grace [bei jdm] in Ungnade fallento say \grace ein Tischgebet sprechenwe're supposed to pay the bill this month, but we've been given a month's \grace wir müssten die Rechnung diesen Monat bezahlen, aber sie geben uns noch einen Monat Aufschub8. (Highness)Your/His/Her G\grace Euer/Seine/Ihre Gnaden veraltet▪ the G\graces die Grazien10. FIN\grace period [or period of \grace] Nachfrist f, Zahlungsfrist f1. (honour)to \grace sb/sth [with one's presence] jdn/etw [mit seiner Anwesenheit] beehren geh o hum2. (adorn)* * *[greɪs]1. n1) no pl (= gracefulness, graciousness) Anmut f; (of movement) Anmut f, Grazie f; (of monarch etc) Würde fwith grace —
to do sth with (a) good/bad grace — etw anstandslos/widerwillig or unwillig tun
he bore his defeat with good grace — er nahm seine Niederlage mit Fassung or anstandslos hin
he took it with bad grace — er war sehr ungehalten darüber
he had/didn't even have the (good) grace to apologize — er war so anständig/brachte es nicht einmal fertig, sich zu entschuldigen
2) (= pleasing quality) (angenehme) Eigenschaft3)(= favour)
to be in sb's good graces — bei jdm gut angeschrieben seina day's grace — ein Tag m Aufschub
5) (= prayer) Tischgebet nt6) (= mercy) Gnade fby the grace of God —
by the grace of God Queen... — Königin... von Gottes Gnaden
there but for the grace of God go I —
in this year of grace 1998 in a state of grace (Eccl) — im Jahre des Heils 1998 im Zustand der Gnade
8) (MYTH)the Graces — die Grazien pl
grace note — Verzierung f
2. vt1) (= adorn) zieren (geh)to grace the occasion with one's presence — sich (dat) die Ehre geben
* * *grace [ɡreıs]A s1. Anmut f, Grazie f, Reiz m, Charme m:the three Graces MYTH die drei Grazien2. Anstand m, Schicklichkeit f, Takt m:have the grace to do sth den Anstand haben oder so anständig sein, etwas zu tun3. Bereitwilligkeit f:with (a) good grace gern, bereitwillig;4. gute Eigenschaft, schöner Zug:social graces pl feine Lebensart;do grace to → B 35. MUS Verzierung f, Manier f, Ornament n6. Gunst f, Wohlwollen n, Gnade f:be in sb’s good graces in jemandes Gunst stehen, bei jemandem gut angeschrieben sein;be in sb’s bad graces bei jemandem in Ungnade sein, bei jemandem schlecht angeschrieben sein; → fall from8. RELa) Stand m der Gnadeb) Tugend f:grace of charity (Tugend der) Nächstenliebe fa) Eure Hoheit (Herzogin),b) Eure Exzellenz (Erzbischof)10. WIRTSCH, JUR Aufschub m, (Zahlungs-, Nach)Frist f:days of grace Respekttage;give sb a week’s grace jemandem eine Nachfrist von einer Woche gewähren11. Tischgebet n:say grace das Tischgebet sprechenB v/t1. zieren, schmücken2. ehren, auszeichnen:grace a party with one’s presence eine Gesellschaft mit seiner Anwesenheit beehren3. jemandem Ehre machen* * *1. noun2) (attractive feature) Charme, derairs and graces — vornehmes Getue (ugs. abwertend); affektiertes Benehmen
social graces — Umgangsformen Pl.
4) (decency) Anstand, derhave the grace to do something — so anständig sein und etwas tun; (civility)
with [a] good/bad grace — bereitwillig/widerwillig
he accepted my criticism with good/bad grace — er trug meine Kritik mit Fassung/nahm meine Kritik mit Verärgerung hin
7) (prayers) Tischgebet, das8) in address2. transitive verb1) (adorn) zieren (geh.); schmücken2) (honour) auszeichnen; ehren* * *n.Anmut nur sing. f.Gnade -n f.Gunst nur sing. f.Liebreiz -e m. -
54 existence
existence [εgzistɑ̃s]feminine noun* * *ɛgzistɑ̃s1) ( réalité) existence2) (colloq) ( vie) life3) ( mode de vie) lifestyle* * *ɛɡzistɑ̃s nf* * *existence nf1 ( réalité) existence; nier l'existence de Dieu/d'un document to deny the existence of God/of a document; je doute de leur existence I doubt they exist; l'essence et l'existence Philos essence and being;2 ( vie) life; las de l'existence tired of life; le parti a dix ans d'existence the party is ten years old, the party has been in existence for ten years; assurer l'existence de qn to provide for sb; ne te complique pas l'existence○ don't make life difficult for yourself;3 ( mode de vie) lifestyle; une existence de fou a frantic lifestyle; changer d'existence to change one's lifestyle.[ɛgzistɑ̃s] nom féminin[mode de vie] lifestyle4. [présence - d'une personne] presencemanifester ou signaler son existence to make one's presence known -
55 cōram
cōram adv. and praep. [com-+ōs]. I. Adv., in the presence, before the eyes, in the face, openly, face to face: coram in os te laudare, T.: coram me praesente dicere: se ipse coram offert, i. e. before the soldiers, L.: veni, H.: adgnoscere voltūs, V.—Present, in person, personally: illum huc adducam, T.: adesse, V.: fidem dare cum ipso coram duce, L.: audire, H.— II. Praep. with abl, in the face of, before, in the presence of: genero dicere: coram amicis verba habere, S.: populo, H.: latrone, Iu.: te coram, H.: Germanico coram, Ta.* * *Iin person, face-to-face; in one's presence, before one's eyes; publicly/openlyIIin the presence of, before; (may precede or follow object); personally (L+S) -
56 coram
cōram, adv. and prep. [prob. kindred with ōs, ōris].I.Object., in the presence of, before the eyes of, in the face of, before (freq. and class.).A.Adv.:b.vereor coram in os te laudare amplius,
Ter. Ad. 2, 4, 5:omnia quae tute dudum coram me incusaveras,
id. Phorm. 5, 8, 21:coram potius me praesente dixissent,
Cic. Agr. 3, 1, 1:Manlius quoque ad restituendam aciem se ipse coram offert,
i. e. before the soldiers, Liv. 2, 47, 4:ut veni coram, singultim pauca locutus,
Hor. S. 1, 6, 56 et saep.:lenissimum genus admonitionis fuit traditio coram pugillarium,
in their presence, in their own hands, Suet. Aug. 39.—With gen. (very rare):2.coram noxae prehensus,
in the very act, App. M. 9, p. 226 fin. —So in coram with gen. in App. = coram:omnium,
App. M. 7, p. 197, 21 Oud.; so id. ib. 9, p. 221, 17; 9, p. 223, 32; 10, p. 241, 5.—Esp., with verbs of command, in one's presence, i. e. on the spot, forthwith (post-Aug.;B.mostly in Suet.): clipeos et imagines ejus coram detrahi jubet,
Suet. Dom. 23:Pinarium... coram confodi imperavit,
id. Aug. 27:essedum... redimi concidique coram imperavit,
id. Claud. 16 (al. explain coram in all these passages as = coram omnibus, i. e. publicly, openly; cf. palam).—Hence, coram deprehensus = ep autophôrôi, in the very act, App. M. 3, p. 131, 2.—Prep with abl.(α).Before the noun:(β).coram genero meo quae dicere ausus es?
Cic. Pis. 6, 12:coram frequentissimo legationum conventu,
Nep. Epam. 6, 4; Quint. 6, 3, 47; Tac. A. 4, 75:coram judicibus,
Suet. Aug. 56:coram ipso,
id. Tib. 43; so id. ib. 62:coram populo,
Hor. A. P. 185:coram latrone,
Juv. 10, 22 al. —After the noun (freq. in Tac.):II.ipso Germanico coram,
Tac. A. 3, 14; so id. ib. 3, 24; 4, 8; 13, 32; Suet. Ner. 33; id. Oth. 1:te coram,
Hor. S. 1, 4, 95.—Subject. adv., present in one's own person or presence, personally (very freq. and class.):quia ted ipsus coram praesens praesentem videt,
Plaut. Ps. 4, 7, 43:istos rastros... faoito coram ut tradas in manum,
id. Merc. 2, 2, 7:sine me expurgem atque illum huc coram adducam,
Ter. And. 5, 3, 29:velut si coram adesset,
Caes. B. G. 1, 32; so,adesse,
Verg. A. 1, 595:eadem fere, quae ex nuntiis litteris cognoverat, coram perspicit,
Caes. B. G. 5, 11; so,opp. letters,
Cic. Att. 1, 20, 1; 7, 3, 12; 12, 1, 2 al.; cf. with abl.:coram me tecum eadem haec agere saepe conantem deterruit pudor, quae nunc expromam absens audacius,
by word of mouth, id. Fam. 5, 12. 1:coram cernere letum nati,
Verg. A. 2, 538:quod coram etiam ex ipso audiebamus,
Cic. Ac. 1, 4, 13:fidem nec dare nec accipere nisi cum ipso coram duce,
Liv. 28, 17, 8; 28, 18, 7; 36, 11, 1; 43, 5, 6: rexque paterque Audisti coram, nec verbo parcius absens, Hor. Ep. 1, 7, 38; Verg. A. 3, 173; Ov. M. 9, 560 et saep. -
57 присутствие
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > присутствие
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58 unsicher
I Adj.1. (gefährdet) insecure; (gefährlich) unsafe; unsichere Gegend / Straße / Straßenverhältnisse dangerous area / road / road conditions; die Arbeitsplätze werden immer unsicherer jobs are getting more and more insecure; die Gegend unsicher machen terrorize the neighbo(u)rhood; umg., fig. paint the town red; wollen wir am Wochenende ein wenig die Innenstadt unsicher machen? umg. shall we go and whoop it up a bit downtown this weekend?2. (ungewiss, auch unzuverlässig) uncertain; (ohne Gewissheit) unsure, uncertain; ( sich) unsicher sein, ob / wann / wie etc. not be sure (as to) whether / when / how etc.; ein unsicheres Gefühl haben have an uncertain feeling3. (unstet) unsteady (auch Hand, Beine); Person: (ohne Selbstsicherheit) insecure, unsure of o.s., stärker: lacking in self-confidence; unsicher auf den Beinen shaky, wobbly; unsicherer Autofahrer / Skiläufer / Torhüter etc. driver / skier / goalkeeper who lacks assurance ( oder is unsure of himself), unreliable driver / skier / goalkeeper; unsicher im Rechnen etc. shaky on arithmetic etc.; jemanden unsicher machen make s.o. unsure of himself ( oder herself), stärker: rattle s.o.II Adv. Auto fahren etc.: unreliably; nach i-m Sturz geht sie noch sehr unsicher she’s still very shaky ( oder unsteady) on her feet after her fall; der Torwart hat unsicher gehalten the goalkeeper fumbled his saves; sich unsicher fühlen feel insecure* * *precarious; instable; uncertain; unsafe; uneasy; unstable; insecure; unsure; unsteady* * *ụn|si|cher1. adj1) (= gefährlich) dangerous, unsafe2) (= nicht selbstbewusst, verunsichert) insecure, unsure (of oneself)jdn unsicher machen — to make sb feel unsure of himself/herself
3) (= ungewiss, zweifelhaft) unsure, uncertain; (= unstabil) uncertain, unstable, unsettled2. adv1) (= schwankend) unsteadily2) (= nicht selbstsicher) uncertainly* * *1) insecurely2) (unsure of oneself or lacking confidence: Whenever he was in a crowd of people he felt anxious and insecure.) insecure3) (not safe or firmly fixed: This chair-leg is insecure; an insecure lock.) insecure4) precariously5) (insecure; risky or dangerous.) precarious6) ((sometimes with at) not very good, accurate etc: He's a bit shaky at arithmetic; My arithmetic has always been very shaky; I'd be grateful if you would correct my rather shaky spelling.) shaky7) (not definitely known or settled: My plans are still uncertain; The uncertain weather delayed our departure.) uncertain8) (in an uneasy or embarrassed way: He glanced uneasily at her.) uneasily* * *un·si·cher[ˈʊnzɪçɐ]I. adj1. (gefährlich) unsafe, dangerousein \unsicherer Reaktor an unsafe reactoreine \unsichere Gegend a dangerous areadie Kneipen \unsicher machen (fam o hum) to live it up in the pubs [or bars]die Stadt \unsicher machen (fam o hum) to paint the town redein \unsicherer Arbeitsplatz an insecure job3. (nicht selbstsicher) unsure, uncertainein \unsicherer Blick an uncertain [or hesitant] lookjdn \unsicher machen to make sb uncertain, to put sb off4. (unerfahren, ungeübt)noch \unsicher sein to still be uncertainein \unsicherer Gang an unsteady gaitauf \unsicheren Beinen on unsteady legs6. (ungewiss) uncertaineine \unsichere Zukunft an uncertain futureein \unsicherer Ausgang an uncertain outcome7. (nicht verlässlich) unreliableeine \unsichere Methode an unreliable methoddas ist mir zu \unsicher that's too dodgy for my liking famII. adv1. (schwankend) unsteadily\unsicher fahren to drive with little confidence* * *1.einen Ort unsicher machen — (scherzh.) honour a place with one's presence (joc.); (sich vergnügen) have a good time in a place; (sein Unwesen treiben) get up to one's tricks in a place
3) (zögernd) uncertain, hesitant < step>; (zitternd) unsteady, shaky < hand>; (nicht selbstsicher) insecure; diffident; unsure of oneself pred.jemanden unsicher machen — put somebody off his/her stroke
4) (keine Gewissheit habend) unsure; uncertain5) (ungewiss) uncertain2.1) <walk, stand, etc.> unsteadily; < drive> without [much] confidence2) (nicht selbstsicher) <smile, look> diffidently* * *A. adjunsichere Gegend/Straße/Straßenverhältnisse dangerous area/road/road conditions;die Arbeitsplätze werden immer unsicherer jobs are getting more and more insecure;die Gegend unsicher machen terrorize the neighbo(u)rhood; umg, fig paint the town red;wollen wir am Wochenende ein wenig die Innenstadt unsicher machen? umg shall we go and whoop it up a bit downtown this weekend?(sich) unsicher sein, ob/wann/wie etc not be sure (as to) whether/when/how etc;ein unsicheres Gefühl haben have an uncertain feeling3. (unstet) unsteady (auch Hand, Beine); Person: (ohne Selbstsicherheit) insecure, unsure of o.s., stärker: lacking in self-confidence;unsicher auf den Beinen shaky, wobbly;unsicherer Autofahrer/Skiläufer/Torhüter etc driver/skier/goalkeeper who lacks assurance ( oder is unsure of himself), unreliable driver/skier/goalkeeper;B. adv Auto fahren etc: unreliably;nach i-m Sturz geht sie noch sehr unsicher she’s still very shaky ( oder unsteady) on her feet after her fall;der Torwart hat unsicher gehalten the goalkeeper fumbled his saves;sich unsicher fühlen feel insecure* * *1.einen Ort unsicher machen — (scherzh.) honour a place with one's presence (joc.); (sich vergnügen) have a good time in a place; (sein Unwesen treiben) get up to one's tricks in a place
3) (zögernd) uncertain, hesitant < step>; (zitternd) unsteady, shaky < hand>; (nicht selbstsicher) insecure; diffident; unsure of oneself pred.jemanden unsicher machen — put somebody off his/her stroke
4) (keine Gewissheit habend) unsure; uncertain5) (ungewiss) uncertain2.1) <walk, stand, etc.> unsteadily; < drive> without [much] confidence2) (nicht selbstsicher) <smile, look> diffidently* * *adj.insecure adj.precarious adj.uncertain adj.unsafe adj.unstable adj.unsure adj. adv.insecurely adv.precariously adv.unsafely adv.unstably adv.unsurely adv. -
59 Präsenz
f; -, kein Pl. presence* * *Prä|sẹnz [prE'zɛnts]f -, no pl (geh)presencedie ständig abnehmende Präsenz im Abgeordnetenhaus — the constantly decreasing numbers in parliament
* * *Prä·senz<->[prɛˈzɛnts]f kein pl (geh) presence▶ \Präsenz zeigen to make one's presence felt* * ** * *-en f.presence n. -
60 przytomnoś|ć
f sgt 1. (świadomość) consciousness- utrata przytomności loss of consciousness- stracić/odzyskać przytomność to lose/regain consciousness- leżeć bez przytomności to lie unconscious2. (bystrość) presence of mind- zachować przytomność umysłu to keep one’s presence of mind- miał na tyle przytomności umysłu, żeby… he had the presence of mind to…3. przest. (obecność) presence- w czyjejś przytomności in sb’s presence- w przytomności królowej in the presence of the queenThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > przytomnoś|ć
См. также в других словарях:
make one's presence felt — Ⅰ. ► make one s presence felt have a strong influence on a situation. Main Entry: ↑presence Ⅱ. ► make oneself (or one s presence) felt have a noticeable effect. Main Entry: ↑feel … English terms dictionary
announce one's presence — index report (present oneself) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
make oneself (or one's presence) felt — have a noticeable effect. → feel … English new terms dictionary
presence — ► NOUN 1) the state or fact of being present. 2) the impressive manner or appearance of a person. 3) a person or thing that is present but not seen. 4) a group of soldiers or police stationed in a particular place: the USA would maintain a… … English terms dictionary
make one's presence felt — have a strong influence on a situation. → presence … English new terms dictionary
presence — n. 1) to make one s presence felt, known ( to make others notice one s presence ) 2) in smb. s presence * * * [ prez(ə)ns] known ( to make others notice one s presence ) in smb. s presence to make one s presence felt … Combinatory dictionary
presence — noun 1》 the state or fact of being present. ↘a person or thing that is present but not seen. 2》 the impressive manner or appearance of a person. Phrases make one s presence felt have a strong influence on a situation. presence of mind the… … English new terms dictionary
Presence (telepresence) — Presence = Presence is a theoretical concept describing the effect that people experience when they interact with a computer mediated or computer generated environment (Sheridan, 1994). Lombard and Ditton (1997) described presence as “an illusion … Wikipedia
Presence — Pres ence, n. [F. pr[ e]sence, L. praesentia. See {Present}.] 1. The state of being present, or of being within sight or call, or at hand; opposed to absence. [1913 Webster] 2. The place in which one is present; the part of space within one s ken … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Presence chamber — Presence Pres ence, n. [F. pr[ e]sence, L. praesentia. See {Present}.] 1. The state of being present, or of being within sight or call, or at hand; opposed to absence. [1913 Webster] 2. The place in which one is present; the part of space within… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Presence of mind — Presence Pres ence, n. [F. pr[ e]sence, L. praesentia. See {Present}.] 1. The state of being present, or of being within sight or call, or at hand; opposed to absence. [1913 Webster] 2. The place in which one is present; the part of space within… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English