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1 opium addict
opiómano,-a -
2 opium addict
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3 opium addict
pecandu -
4 opium addict
noppiomane m/f -
5 opium addict
s.opiómano. -
6 opium
opium ['əʊpjəm]opium m►► opium addict opiomane mf;opium addiction opiomanie f;opium den fumerie f d'opium;opium dream rêve m d'opium;opium poppy pavot m (somnifère) -
7 opium
'əupiəm(a drug made from the dried juice of a type of poppy.) opio- opiatetr['əʊpɪəm]1 opio\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLopium addict opiómano,-aopium poppy SMALLBOTANY/SMALL adormideraopium ['o:piəm] n: opio mn.• opio s.m.'əʊpiəmmass noun opio m; (before n)['ǝʊpɪǝm]opium addict — opiómano, -na m,f
1.N opio m2.CPDopium addict N — opiómano(-a) m / f
opium addiction N — opiomanía f
opium poppy N — adormidera f
* * *['əʊpiəm]mass noun opio m; (before n)opium addict — opiómano, -na m,f
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8 addict
['ædɪkt]coffee addict — colloq. scherz. (person) caffettiera
telly addict — colloq. teledipendente
* * *['ædikt](a person who has become dependent on something, especially drugs: a drug addict; a television addict.) dipendente- addicted- addiction* * *addict /ˈædɪkt/n.1 persona che ha una dipendenza fisica; -dipendente (suff.); -mane (suff.): morphine addict, morfinomane; opium addict, oppiomane3 (fam. scherz.) appassionato (di qc.); patito; fanatico; -dipendente (suff.): video game addict, patito dei videogiochi; TV addict, videodipendente; teledipendente; I'm a coffee addict, non posso fare a meno del caffèFALSI AMICI: addict non significa addetto. (to) addict /əˈdɪkt/v. t.indurre, spingere ( a un vizio).* * *['ædɪkt]coffee addict — colloq. scherz. (person) caffettiera
telly addict — colloq. teledipendente
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9 opium
['əʊpɪəm]nome oppio m.* * *['əupiəm](a drug made from the dried juice of a type of poppy.) oppio- opiate* * *opium /ˈəʊpɪəm/n.(farm.) oppio● opium addict, oppiomane □ opium den, fumeria d'oppio □ opium eater, masticatore (o mangiatore) d'oppio; oppiofago □ opium habit, oppiomania □ opium joint, fumeria d'oppio □ (bot.) opium poppy ( Papaver somniferum), papavero da oppio □ (stor.) the Opium War, la guerra dell'oppio.* * *['əʊpɪəm]nome oppio m. -
10 opium
'əupiəm(a drug made from the dried juice of a type of poppy.) opium- opiatesubst. \/ˈəʊpjəm\/opium -
11 addict
/'ædikt/ * danh từ - người nghiện =an opium addict+ người nghiện thuốc phiện * ngoại động từ - nghiện =to be much addicted to drink+ nghiện rượu nặng - ham mê, say mê, miệt mài (làm việc, học tập, nghiên cứu) =to addict one's mind to archaeology+ ham mê khảo cổ -
12 campfire boy
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13 Byron, Ada Augusta, Countess of Lovelace
SUBJECT AREA: Electronics and information technology[br]b. 12 December 1815 Piccadilly Terrace, London, Englandd. 23 November 1852 East Horsley, Surrey, England[br]English mathematician, active in the early development of the calculating machine.[br]Educated by a number of governesses in a number of houses from Yorkshire to Ealing, she was the daughter of a hypochondriac mother and her absent, separated, husband, the poet George Gordon, Lord Byron. As a child a mysterious and undiagnosed illness deprived her "of the use of her limbs" and she was "obliged to use crutches". The complaint was probably psychosomatic as it cleared up when she was 17 and was about to attend her first court ball. On 8 July 1835 she was married to William King, 1st Earl of Lovelace. She later bore two sons and a daughter. She was an avid student of science and in particular mathematics, in the course of which Charles Babbage encouraged her. In 1840 Babbage was invited to Turin to present a paper on his analytical engine. In the audience was a young Italian military engineer, L.F.Menabrea, who was later to become a general in Garibaldi's army. The paper was written in French and published in 1842 in the Bibliothèque Universelle de Genève. This text was translated into English and published with extensive annotations by the Countess of Lovelace, appearing in Taylor's Scientific Memoirs. The Countess thoroughly understood and appreciated Babbage's machine and the clarity of her description was so great that it is undoubtedly the best contemporary account of the engine: even Babbage recognized the Countess's description as superior to his own. Ada often visited Babbage in his workshop and listened to his explanations of the structure and use of his engines. She shared with her husband a love of horse-racing and, with Babbage, tried to develop a system for backing horses. Babbage and the Earl apparently stopped their efforts in time, but the Countess lost so heavily that she had to pawn all her family jewels. Her losses at the 1851 Derby alone amounted to £3,200, while borrow-ing a further £1,800 from her husband. This situation involved her in being blackmailed. She became an opium addict due to persistent pain from gastritis, intermittent anorexia and paroxys-mal tachycardia. Charles Babbage was always a great comfort to her, not only for their shared mathematical interests but also as a friend helping in all manner of small services such as taking her dead parrot to the taxidermist. She died after a protracted illness, thought to be cancer, at East Horsley Towers.[br]Further ReadingD.Langley Moore, 1977, Ada, Countess of Lovelace: Byron's Legitimate Daughter, John Murray.P.Morrison and E.Morrison, 1961, Charles Babbage and His Calculating Engine, Dover Publications.Biographical history of technology > Byron, Ada Augusta, Countess of Lovelace
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14 heroin
'herəuin(a drug obtained from opium.) heroínaheroin n heroínatr['herəʊɪn]1 (drug) heroína\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLheroin addict heroinómano,-aheroin ['hɛroən] n: heroína fn.• caballo (Drogas) s.m.• chiva (Drogas) s.f.• heroína s.f.'herəʊɪnmass noun heroína f; (before n)['herǝʊɪn]heroin addict — heroinómano, -na m,f
1.N heroína f (droga)2.CPDheroin addict N — heroinómano(-a) m / f
heroin addiction N — adicción f a la heroína, dependencia f de la heroína, heroinomanía f
heroin user N — heroinómano(-a) m / f
* * *['herəʊɪn]mass noun heroína f; (before n)heroin addict — heroinómano, -na m,f
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15 fiend
noun2) (evil spirit) böser Geist4) (devotee) Fan, derfresh-air fiend — Frischluftfanatiker, der/-fanatikerin, die
* * *[fi:nd]1) (a devil: the fiends of hell.) der Teufel2) (a wicked or cruel person: She's an absolute fiend when she's angry.) der Unhold3) (a person who is very enthusiastic about something: a fresh air fiend; a fiend for work.) der/die Fanatiker(in)•- academic.ru/27138/fiendish">fiendish- fiendishly* * *[fi:nd]n2. (Satan)▪ the \fiend der Teufel [o Satan* * *[fiːnd]n"sex fiend strikes again" — "Sexbestie schlägt wieder zu"
* * *fiend [fiːnd] s1. a) Satan m, Teufel m (beide auch fig)b) Dämon m, fig auch Unhold m2. umg besonders in Zusammensetzungena) Süchtige(r) m/f(m):b) Narr m, Närrin f, Fanatiker(in):at in dat)* * *noun2) (evil spirit) böser Geist3) (coll.): (mischievous or tiresome person) Plagegeist, der4) (devotee) Fan, derfresh-air fiend — Frischluftfanatiker, der/-fanatikerin, die
* * *n.Feind -e m.Teufel - m. -
16 heroin
Heroin, das* * *['herəuin](a drug obtained from opium.) das Heroin* * *hero·in[ˈherəʊɪn, AM -roʊ-]\heroin fix Heroinspritze f\heroin overdose Überdosis f [an] Heroin* * *['herəʊɪn]nHeroin nt* * *be on heroin heroinsüchtig sein* * *noun, no pl.Heroin, das -
17 heroin
'herəuin(a drug obtained from opium.) heroinheroinsubst. \/ˈherə(ʊ)ɪn\/heroinheroin addict heroinist, heroinmisbrukerheroin addiction heroinmisbruk -
18 heroin
['herəʊɪn]* * *['herəuin](a drug obtained from opium.) eroina* * *heroin /ˈhɛrəʊɪn/n. [u](chim.) eroina● heroin addict, eroinomane □ heroin addiction, eroinomania.* * *['herəʊɪn]
См. также в других словарях:
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addict — verb (t) /əˈdɪkt / (say uh dikt) 1. to cause to become physiologically or psychologically dependent on. –noun /ˈædɪkt / (say adikt) 2. someone who is addicted to a practice or habit: *intent on proving his father an opium addict and his wife a… …
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drug addict — noun a narcotics addict • Syn: ↑junkie, ↑junky • Hypernyms: ↑addict • Hyponyms: ↑cocaine addict, ↑crack addict, ↑binger, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
Confessions of an English Opium-Eater — (1821) is an autobiographical account written by Thomas De Quincey, about his laudanum (opium and alcohol) addiction and its effect on his life. The Confessions was the first major work De Quincey published and the one which won him fame almost… … Wikipedia
Coleridge and opium — Samuel Taylor Coleridge Born October 21, 1772(1772 10 21) Ottery St. Mary, Devonshire, England Died July 25, 1834( … Wikipedia
O — opium Addict use, and not of oxygen: To me O means opium, not physics. (Fiennes, 1996) … How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms
Fitz Hugh Ludlow — Fitz Hugh Ludlow, sometimes seen as “Fitzhugh Ludlow,” (September 11, 1836 ndash; September 12, 1870) was an American author, journalist, and explorer; best known for his autobiographical book The Hasheesh Eater (1857).The explorations of altered … Wikipedia
De Quincey, Thomas — born Aug. 15, 1785, Manchester, Lancashire, Eng. died Dec. 8, 1859, Edinburgh, Scot. English essayist and critic. While a student at Oxford he first took opium to relieve the pain of facial neuralgia. He became a lifelong addict, an experience… … Universalium