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21 Б-264
КАКОЙ БЫ TO НИ БЫЛО AdjP modif fixed WOanyany... (at all (whatsoever, whatever))(in limited contexts) any sort (kind) of no matter what sort (kind) (of).При настоящих, усложнённых формах государственной и общественной жизни в Европе возможно ли придумать какое бы то ни было событие, которое бы не было предписано, указано, приказано государями, министрами, парламентами, газетами? (Толстой 7). With the present complex forms of political and social life in Europe, can one think of any event that would not have been prescribed, decreed, or ordered by monarchs, ministers, parliaments, or newspapers? (7a).Только при полном отсутствии каких бы то ни было сведений об общественной жизни тайна будет сохранена (Зиновьев 1). The secret can only be preserved in the complete absence of any data at all about social life (1a)..Как бы ни хотел учёный быть объективным, одним последовательным перечислением известных фактов — он уже рисует, даже помимо воли, определённую жизненную картину и расстановку сил в нашем сознании. Но... в этой картине неизбежно отсутствует какая бы то ни было полнота... (Битов 2)....However objective a scholar may wish to be, let him merely enumerate a sequence of known facts and he is already, even against his will, drawing a well-denned picture of life and an arrangement of forces in our consciousness. But...that picture inevitably lacks any sort of completeness... (2a).Он так устал от целого месяца этой сосредоточенной тоски своей и мрачного возбуждения, что хотя одну минуту хотелось ему вздохнуть в другом мире, хоть бы в каком бы то ни было... (Достоевский 3). After а whole month of concentrated melancholy and gloomy excitement, he was so weary he wanted to take breath in some other world, no matter what kind (3b). -
22 какой бы то ни было
[AdjP; modif; fixed WO]=====⇒ any:- any... (at all <whatsoever, whatever>);- [in limited contexts] any sort (kind) of;- no matter what sort (kind) (of).♦ При настоящих, усложнённых формах государственной и общественной жизни в Европе возможно ли придумать какое бы то ни было событие, которое бы не было предписано, указано, приказано государями, министрами, парламентами, газетами? (Толстой 7). With the present complex forms of political and social life in Europe, can one think of any event that would not have been prescribed, decreed, or ordered by monarchs, ministers, parliaments, or newspapers? (7a).♦ Только при полном отсутствии каких бы то ни было сведений об общественной жизни тайна будет сохранена (Зиновьев 1). The secret can only be preserved in the complete absence of any data at all about social life (1a).♦...Как бы ни хотел ученый быть объективным, одним последовательным перечислением известных фактов - он уже рисует, даже помимо воли, определённую жизненную картину и расстановку сил в нашем сознании. Но... в этой картине неизбежно отсутствует какая бы то ни было полнота... (Битов 2)....However objective a scholar may wish to be, let him merely enumerate a sequence of known facts and he is already, even against his will, drawing a well-defined picture of life and an arrangement of forces in our consciousness. But...that picture inevitably lacks any sort of completeness... (2a).♦ Он так устал от целого месяца этой сосредоточенной тоски своей и мрачного возбуждения, что хотя одну минуту хотелось ему вздохнуть в другом мире, хоть бы в каком бы то ни было... (Достоевский 3). After a whole month of concentrated melancholy and gloomy excitement, he was so weary he wanted to take breath in some other world, no matter what kind (3b).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > какой бы то ни было
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23 упорядочивать
гл. вчт. order, arrange in an ordered fashion; arrange in sequenceупорядочивать по … — order with respect to …
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24 линейный
1. linear[lang name="Russian"]линейная зависимость, линейное соотношение — linear relation
2. linearly -
25 линейный
Русско-английский словарь по информационным технологиям > линейный
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См. также в других словарях:
ordered — adj. 1. having or evincing a systematic arrangement; especially, having elements succeeding in order according to rule; as, an ordered sequence; an ordered pair. Opposite of {disordered} or {unordered}. [Narrower terms: {abecedarian,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
ordered — adjective 1. having a systematic arrangement; especially having elements succeeding in order according to rule (Freq. 4) an ordered sequence • Ant: ↑disordered • Similar to: ↑consecutive, ↑sequent, ↑sequential, ↑ … Useful english dictionary
sequence — [sē′kwəns, sē′kwens΄] n. [MFr < LL, a following < L sequens: see SEQUENT] 1. a) the following of one thing after another in chronological, causal, or logical order; succession or continuity b) the order in which this occurs 2. a continuous… … English World dictionary
Sequence — For other uses, see Sequence (disambiguation). In mathematics, a sequence is an ordered list of objects (or events). Like a set, it contains members (also called elements or terms), and the number of terms (possibly infinite) is called the length … Wikipedia
sequence analysis — A series of questions about how social processes are ordered, either temporally or spatially, together with the techniques for answering these. Many areas of sociology are concerned with events or actions in their temporal context or with what we … Dictionary of sociology
Ordered field — In mathematics, an ordered field is a field together with a total ordering of its elements that is compatible with the field operations. Historically, the axiomatization of an ordered field was abstracted gradually from the real numbers, by… … Wikipedia
Sequence (disambiguation) — A sequence is a logically ordered list of elements related to each other through some relationship, typically mathematical.Sequence may also refer to: * Sequence (archaeology) * Sequence (poetry) (Latin sequentia ), a medieval Latin poem or its… … Wikipedia
Ordered partition of a set — In combinatorial mathematics, an ordered partition O of a set S is a sequence A1, A2, A3, ..., An of subsets of S, with union is S, which are non empty, and pairwise disjoint. This differs from a partition of a set, in that the order of the Ai… … Wikipedia
sequence — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French, from Medieval Latin sequentia, from Late Latin, sequel, literally, act of following, from Latin sequent , sequens, present participle of sequi Date: 14th century 1. a hymn in irregular meter… … New Collegiate Dictionary
Ordered list — The term ordered list can refer to: an ordered list (HTML) a mathematical sequence This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly t … Wikipedia
sequence — See ordered n tuple … Philosophy dictionary