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81 mundo
mundo sustantivo masculino 1 ( en general) world; el mejor del mundo the best in the world; me parece lo más normal del mundo it seems perfectly normal to me; es conocido en todo el mundo he is known worldwide; el mundo árabe the Arab world; el mundo de la droga the drugs world; el mundo del espectáculo showbusiness; todo el mundo lo sabe everybody knows it; el mundo es un pañuelo it's a small world; por nada del or en el mundo: yo no me lo pierdo por nada del mundo I wouldn't miss it for the world; no lo vendería por nada en el mundo I wouldn't sell it for anything in the world o (colloq) for all the tea in China; traer a algn/venir al mundo to bring sb/come into the world; ver mundo to see the world 2 (planeta, universo) planet, world;◊ él vive en otro mundo he's on another planet o in another world
mundo sustantivo masculino
1 world
el mundo de la farándula, the show-business world
2 (seres humanos) todo el mundo, everybody
3 (experiencia) tener mucho mundo, to be a man/woman of the world Locuciones: caérsele/ venírsele el mundo encima, to be overwhelmed
nada del otro mundo, nothing special
por nada del mundo, not for all the world
ver mundo, to travel around ' mundo' also found in these entries: Spanish: comparable - consagración - de - desconectarse - islámico - más - miss - nada - ni - ombligo - oro - prioritaria - prioritario - proclamarse - recorrer - solidaria - solidario - tenerse - tercer - terráquea - terráqueo - toda - todo - tramoya - universal - valle - venir - voz - vuelta - actual - aislado - campeón - clásico - comercio - conocer - desquiciado - emotivo - entero - espectáculo - exterior - fantasía - globo - interior - natural - naturalidad - negocio - parejo - superpoblado - tercero - volver English: advanced - agreement - airport - Armageddon - around - astronomical - autonomous - awe-inspiring - best - brink - cat - circle - cloud cuckoo land - cocoon - common - concerned - cruise - densely - deny - earth - enunciate - everybody - everyone - exist - flash - flirt - globe trotting - high - home - hot - knowledge - large - male-dominated - man - manufacturer - Miss World - navigate - never-never land - over - publishing - quarrel - revolve - save - sought-after - sundry - Third World - ultimately - wander - wing - world -
82 wall
1. n стена; ограда2. n преим. ист. городская стенаwithout the walls — вне города, за городскими стенами
3. n дамба, насыпь для защиты от наводнения4. n барьер, преграда, стенаwall of partition — пропасть, стена
5. n оплот, защита6. n спец. стенка7. n геол. бокflat wall — подошва пласта, лежачий бок
8. n геол. крыло9. n геол. с. -х. обрез борозды10. n геол. сад. шпалера, шпалерник11. n геол. обыкн. воен. вал; укреплениеto jump over the wall — расстричься ; уйти из монастыря, отказаться от сана
12. a стенной, настенныйwall bed — кровать, убирающаяся в стену
wall hung W.C. pan — настенный унитаз
13. a шпалерный14. v обносить стеной; огораживать15. v разделять стеной16. v ист. обносить крепостной стеной, валом17. v диал. варить соль, заниматься солеварением18. v амер. закатыватьСинонимический ряд:1. bulwark (noun) bastion; battlement; breastwork; bulwark; bunker; dike; rampart2. stop (noun) bar; barricade; barrier; blank wall; block; blockade; fence; hindrance; hurdle; impediment; obstacle; obstruction; partition; resistance; roadblock; snag; stop; traverse3. enclose (verb) cage; close in; coop; corral; divide; enclose; envelop; fence; hedge; hem; immure; mew; mure; partition; pen; protect; shut in; shut off -
83 MacCready, Paul
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 29 September 1925 New Haven, Connecticut, USA[br]American designer of man-powered aeroplanes, one of which flew across the English Channel in 1979.[br]As a boy, Paul MacCready was an enthusiastic builder of flying model aeroplanes; he became US National Junior Champion in 1941. He learned to fly and became a pilot with the US Navy in 1943. he developed an interest in gliding in 1945 and became National Soaring Champion in 1948 and 1949. After graduating from the California Institute of Technology (Cal Tech) as a meteorologist, he set up Meteorological Research Inc. In 1953 MacCready became the first American to win the World Gliding Championship. When hang-gliders became popular in the early 1970s MacCready studied their performance and compared them with soaring birds: he came to the conclusion that man-powered flight was a possibility. In an effort to generate an interest in man-powered flight, a cash prize had been offered in Britain by Henry Kremer, a wealthy industrialist and fitness enthusiast. A man-powered aircraft had to complete a one-mile (1.6km) figure-of-eight course in order to win. However, the figure-of-eight proved to be a major obstacle and the prize money was increased over the years to £50,000. In 1976 MacCready and his friend Dr Peter Lissaman set to work on their computer and came up with their optimum design for a man-powered aircraft. The Gossamer Condor had a wing span of 96 ft (27.4 m), about the same as a Douglas DC-9 airliner, yet it weighed just 70 lb (32 kg). It was a tail-first design with a pedaldriven pusher propeller just behind the pilot. Bryan Allen, a biologist, pilot and racing cyclist, joined the team to provide the muscle-power. After over two hundred flights they were ready to make an attempt on the prize, and on 23 August 1977 they succeeded where many had failed, in 7 minutes. Kremer then offered £100,000 for the first manpowered flight across the English Channel. Many thought this would be impossible, but MacCready and his team set about the task of designing a new machine based on their Condor, which they called the Gossamer Albatross. Bryan Allen also had a major task: getting fit for a flight which might take three hours of pedalling. The weather was more of a problem than in California, and after a long delay the Gossamer Albatross took off, on 12 June 1979. After pedalling for 2 hours 49 minutes, Bryan Allen landed in France: it was seventy years since Blériot's flight, although Blériot was much quicker.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsWorld Gliding Champion 1953.Bibliography1979, "The Channel crossing and the future", Man Powered Aircraft Symposium, London: Royal Aeronautical Society.Further ReadingM.Grosser, 1981, Gossamer Odyssey, London (provides a brief biography and detailed accounts of the two aircraft).M.F.Jerram, 1980, Incredible Flying Machines, London (a short survey of pedal planes).Articles by Ron Moulton on the Gossamer Albatross appeared in Aerospace (Royal Aeronautical Society) London, August/September 1979, and the Aeromodeller, London, September 1979.JDS -
84 throw
throw [θrəυ]1. n1) броса́ние; бросо́к2) да́льность броска́; расстоя́ние, на кото́рое мо́жно метну́ть диск и т.п.3) риск, риско́ванное де́ло4) спорт. бросо́к ( в борьбе)5) геол. вертика́льное перемеще́ние, сброс6) гонча́рный круг7) тех. ход (поршня, шатуна); разма́х8) амер. покрыва́ло ( на кровати)9) амер. разг. шарф, лёгкая наки́дкаthe book is sold at $5 a throw кни́га продаётся по 5 до́лларов (за экземпля́р)
2. v (threw; thrown)1) броса́ть, кида́ть; мета́ть; набра́сывать (тж. throw on);to throw oneself броса́ться, кида́ться
;to throw oneself at smb., smth. набра́сываться на кого́-л., что-л.
;to throw stones at smb. швыря́ть в кого́-л. камня́ми; перен. осужда́ть кого́-л.
;to throw a glance бро́сить взгляд
;to throw kisses at smb. посыла́ть кому́-л. возду́шные поцелу́и
2) бы́стро, неожи́данно приводи́ть, вверга́ть в како́е-л. состоя́ние (into, out of);to throw into confusion приводи́ть в смяте́ние
;he was thrown out of work его́ вы́кинули с рабо́ты
4) положи́ть на о́бе лопа́тки ( в борьбе)5) сбра́сывать ( всадника)6) разг. смуща́ть, приводи́ть в замеша́тельство7) выбра́сывать како́е-л. коли́чество очко́в ( при игре в кости)8) навести́ ( мост)11) спорт. разг. наме́ренно прои́грывать соревнова́ние13) отели́ться, ожереби́ться и т.п.throw about разбра́сывать, раски́дывать;to throw one's money about сори́ть деньга́ми
;throw aside отбра́сывать, отстраня́ть;а) броса́ть, отбра́сывать;б) тра́тить впусту́ю ( деньги и т.п.);в) упусти́ть, не воспо́льзоваться;to throw away an advantage упусти́ть возмо́жность
;г) сбра́сывать ( карту);а) походи́ть на пре́дков; проявля́ть атависти́ческие черты́;б) (обыкн. pass.) вы́нудить кого-л. воспо́льзоваться свои́ми сбереже́ниями и т.п.; отбра́сывать наза́д;в) замедля́ть разви́тие;г) (ре́зко) отверга́ть;а) сбра́сывать; броса́ть;to throw oneself down бро́ситься, лечь на зе́млю
;to throw down one's arms сдава́ться
;to throw down one's tools забастова́ть
;б) сноси́ть, разруша́ть ( здание);в) ниспроверга́ть;г) хим. вызыва́ть оседа́ние;д) амер. отклоня́ть ( предложение и т.п.); отверга́ть;to throw down one's brief юр. отка́зываться от дальне́йшего веде́ния де́ла
;а) вставля́ть ( замечание);б) добавля́ть;в) тех. включа́ть;г) броса́ть ( в крикете);а) отверга́ть;б) сверга́ть;в) сбра́сывать; избавля́ться;to throw off an illness попра́виться, вы́лечиться
;г) изверга́ть;д) легко́ и бы́стро наброса́ть ( эпиграмму и т.п.);е) охот. спуска́ть соба́к;ж) начина́ть (что-л.);з) тех. выключа́ть;а) наки́нуть, наде́ть ( пальто и т.п.);б) подбра́сывать, подбавля́ть;to throw on coals подбра́сывать у́голь ( в топку)
;а) выбра́сывать;б) выгоня́ть; увольня́ть;в) пристра́ивать;to throw out a new wing пристро́ить но́вое крыло́ (к зда́нию)
;г) мимохо́дом выска́зывать ( предложение);д) парл. отверга́ть ( законопроект);е) сбить, запу́тать (напр., в расчётах);ж) спорт. перегоня́ть;з) испуска́ть, излуча́ть ( свет);и) воен. выставля́ть, высыла́ть;а) броса́ть; покида́ть ( друзей);б) отка́зываться (от плана, намерения и т.п.);в) тех. переключа́ть;а) на́спех составля́ть, компили́ровать;б) своди́ть вме́сте, ста́лкивать ( о людях);а) подбра́сывать;в) возводи́ть, бы́стро стро́ить (дом, баррикады);г) броса́ть, оставля́ть;д) отка́зываться от уча́стия;е) изверга́ть; разг. рвать;he threw up его́ вы́рвало
ж) выделя́ть, оттеня́ть;з) амер. упрека́ть, критикова́ть◊to throw the great cast поста́вить всё на ка́рту
;to throw a fit прийти́ в я́рость; закати́ть исте́рику
;to throw oneself at the head of smb. ве́шаться кому́-л. на ше́ю
;to throw the cap over the mill пуска́ться во все тя́жкие
;to throw the bull амер. трепа́ться; бессо́вестно врать
;to throw good money after bad, to throw the handle after the blade рискова́ть после́дним; упо́рствовать в безнадёжном де́ле
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85 extend
A vtr1 ( enlarge) agrandir [house, factory] ; prolonger [road, runway] ; élargir [knowledge, vocabulary] ; étendre [circle of friends, influence, powers] ; élargir, étendre [range, scope] ; accroître, élargir [clientele] ; approfondir [research, study] ;2 ( prolong) prolonger [visit, visa] ; proroger [loan, contract] ; prolonger [show] ; the deadline was extended by six months un délai supplémentaire de six mois a été accordé ;3 ( stretch) étendre [arm, leg, wing] ; tendre [neck] ; to extend one's hand ( in greeting) tendre la main ;4 ( offer) sout présenter [congratulations] ; accorder [credit, loan] ; apporter [help] ; faire [invitation] ; to extend a welcome to sb souhaiter la bienvenue à qn ;5 Accts reporter [balance, total].B vi1 ( stretch) [beach, carpet, damage, forest, lake, weather] s'étendre (as far as, up to jusqu'à ; beyond au-delà de ; from de) ; the railway extends from Moscow to Vladivostok la voie ferrée va de Moscou à Vladivostok ; the rail network extends over the whole of England le réseau ferroviaire couvre toute l'Angleterre ;2 ( last) to extend into September/next week se prolonger jusqu'en septembre/jusqu'à la semaine prochaine ; to extend over a month/two weeks [course, strike] s'étendre sur un mois/deux semaines ;3 ( reach) to extend beyond [enthusiasm, interest] aller au-delà de, dépasser [politeness] ; [experience, knowledge] s'étendre au-delà de, dépasser ;4 fig ( go as far as) to extend to doing aller jusqu'à faire ; my charity doesn't extend to writing cheques ma générosité ne va pas jusqu'à signer des chèques. -
86 exercise
учение, занятие; боевая подготовка; маневры; упражнение; тренировка; отработка (напр. порядка действий)logistic(al) and interoperability exercise — учение по тыловому обеспечению интероперабельности систем
— Iogistical landing exercise— logistical exercise— logistical map exercise -
87 Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático
(PSD)One of the two major political parties in democratic Portugal. It was established originally as the Popular Democratic Party / Partido Popular Democrático (PPD) in May 1974, following the Revolution of 25 April 1974 that overthrew the Estado Novo. The PPD had its roots in the "liberal wing" of the União Nacional, the single, legal party or movement allowed under the Estado Novo during the last phase of that regime, under Prime Minister Marcello Caetano. A number of future PPD leaders, such as Francisco Sá Carneiro and Francisco Balsemão, hoped to reform the Estado Novo from within, but soon became discouraged. After the 1974 Revolution, the PPD participated in two general elections (April 1975 and April 1976), which were crucial for the establishment and consolidation of democracy, and the party won sufficient votes to become the second largest political party after the Socialist Party (PS) in the number of seats held in the legislature, the Assembly of the Republic. The PPD voting results in those two elections were 26.4 percent and 24.4 percent, respectively.After the 1976 elections, the party changed its name from Partido Popular Democrático to Partido Social Democrático (PSD). As political opinion swung from the left to the center and center-right, and with the leadership of Francisco Sá Carneiro, the PSD gained greater popularity and strength, and from 1979 on, the party played an important role in government. After Sá Carneiro died in the air crash of December 1980, he was replaced as party chief and then prime minister by Francisco Balsemão, and then by Aníbal Cavaco Silva. As successors, these two leaders guided the PSD to a number of electoral victories, especially beginning in 1985. After 1987, the PSD held a majority of seats in parliament, a situation that lasted until 1995, when the Socialist Party (PS) won the election.The PSD's principal political program has featured the de-Marxi-fication of the 1976 Constitution and the economic system, a free-market economy with privatization of many state enterprises, and close ties with the European Economic Community (EEC) and subsequently the European Union (EU). After the PSD lost several general elections in 1995 and 1999, and following the withdrawal from office of former prime minister Cavaco Silva, a leadership succession crisis occurred in the party. The party leadership shifted from Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa to Manuel Durão Barroso, and, in 2004, Pedro Santana Lopes.During 2000 and 2001, as Portugal's economic situation worsened, the PS's popularity waned. In the December 2001 municipal elections, the PSD decisively defeated the PS and, as a result, Prime Minister António Guterres resigned. Parliamentary elections in March 2002 resulted in a Social Democratic victory, although its margin of victory over the PS was small (40 percent to 38 percent). Upon becoming premier in the spring of 2002, then, PSD leader Durão Barroso, in order to hold a slim majority of seats in the Assembly of the Republic, was obliged to govern in a coalition with the Popular Party (PP), formerly known as the Christian Democratic Party (CDS). Although the PSD had ousted the PS from office, the party confronted formidable economic and social problems. When Durão Barroso resigned to become president of the EU Commission, Pedro Santana Lopes became the PSD's leader, as prime minister in July 2004. Under Santana Lopes's leadership, the PSD lost the parliamentary elections of 2005 to the PS. Since then, the PSD has sought to regain its dominant position with the Portuguese electorate. It made some progress in doing so when its former leader, Cavaco Silva, was elected president of the Republic of 2006.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático
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88 Fokker, Anthony Herman Gerard
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 6 April 1890 Kediri, Java, Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia)d. 23 December 1939 New York, USA[br]Dutch designer of German fighter aircraft during the First World War and of many successful airliners during the 1920s and 1930s.[br]Anthony Fokker was born in Java, where his Dutch father had a coffee plantation. The family returned to the Netherlands and, after schooling, young Anthony went to Germany to study aeronautics. With the aid of a friend he built his first aeroplane, the Spin, in 1910: this was a monoplane capable of short hops. By 1911 Fokker had improved the Spin and gained a pilot's licence. In 1912 he set up a company called Fokker Aeroplanbau at Johannistal, outside Berlin, and a series of monoplanes followed.When war broke out in 1914 Fokker offered his designs to both sides, and the Germans accepted them. His E I monoplane of 1915 caused a sensation with its manoeuvrability and forward-firing machine gun. Fokker and his collaborators improved on the French deflector system introduced by Raymond Saulnier by fitting an interrupter gear which synchronized the machine gun to fire between the blades of the rotating propeller. The Fokker Dr I triplane and D VII biplane were also outstanding German fighters of the First World War. Fokker's designs were often the work of an employee who received little credit: nevertheless, Fokker was a gifted pilot and a great organizer. After the war, Fokker moved back to the Netherlands and set up the Fokker Aircraft Works in Amsterdam. In 1922, however, he emigrated to the USA and established the Atlantic Aircraft Corporation in New Jersey. His first significant success there came the following year when one of his T-2 monoplanes became the first aircraft to fly non-stop across the USA, from New York to San Diego. He developed a series of civil aircraft using the well-proven method of construction he used for his fighters: fuselages made from steel tubes and thick, robust wooden wings. Of these, probably the most famous was the F VII/3m, a high-wing monoplane with three engines and capable of carrying about ten passengers. From 1925 the F VII/3m airliner was used worldwide and made many record-breaking flights, such as Lieutenant-Commander Richard Byrd's first flight over the North Pole in 1926 and Charles Kingsford-Smith's first transpacific flight in 1928. By this time Fokker had lost interest in military aircraft and had begun to see flight as a means of speeding up global communications and bringing people together. His last years were spent in realizing this dream, and this was reflected in his concentration on the design and production of passenger aircraft.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsRoyal Netherlands Aeronautical Society Gold Medal 1932.Bibliography1931, The Flying Dutchman: The Life of Anthony Fokker, London: Routledge \& Sons (an interesting, if rather biased, autobiography).Further ReadingA.R.Weyl, 1965, Fokker: The Creative Years, London; reprinted 1988 (a very detailed account of Fokker's early work).Thijs Postma, 1979, Fokker: Aircraft Builders to the World, Holland; 1980, English edn, London (a well-illustrated history of Fokker and the company).Henri Hegener, 1961, Fokker: The Man and His Aircraft, Letchworth, Herts.JDS / CMBiographical history of technology > Fokker, Anthony Herman Gerard
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89 Saulnier, Raymond
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. late eighteenth century Franced. mid-twentieth century[br]French designer of aircraft, associated with Louis Blériot and later the Morane- Saulnier company.[br]When Louis Blériot made his historic flight across the English Channel in 1909, the credit for the success of the flight naturally went to the pilot. Few people thought about the designer of the successful aeroplane, and those who did assumed it was Blériot himself. Blériot did design several of the aeroplanes bearing his name, but the cross- Channel No. XI was mainly designed by his friend Raymond Saulnier, a fact not; broadcast at the time.In 1911 the Morane-Saulnier company was founded in Paris by Léon (1885–1918) and Robert (1886–1968) Morane and Raymond Saulnier, who became Chief Designer. Flying a Morane-Saulnier, Roland Garros made a recordbreaking flight to a height of 5,611 m (18,405 ft) in 1912, and the following year he made the first non-stop flight across the Mediterranean. Morane-Saulnier built a series of "parasol" monoplanes which were very widely used during the early years of the First World War. With the wing placed above the fuselage, the pilot had an excellent downward view for observation purposes, but the propeller ruled out a forward-firing machine gun. During 1913–4, Raymond Saulnier was working on an idea for a synchronized machine gun to fire between the blades of the propeller. He could not overcome certain technical problems, so he devised a simple alternative: metal deflector plates were fitted to the propeller, so if a bullet hit the blade it did no harm. Roland Garros, flying a Type L Parasol, tested the device in action during April 1915 and was immediately successful. This opened the era of the true fighter aircraft. Unfortunately, Garros was shot down and the Germans discovered his secret weapon: they improved on the idea with a fully synchronized machine gun fitted to the Fokker E 1 monoplane. The Morane-Saulnier company continued in business until 1963, when it was taken over by the Potez Group.[br]Further ReadingJane's Fighting Aircraft of World War I, 1990, London: Jane's (reprint) (provides plans and details of 1914–18 Morane-Saulnier aeroplanes).JDS -
90 Wallis, Sir Barnes Neville
[br]b. 26 September 1887 Ripley, Derbyshire, Englandd. 30 October 1979 Leatherhead, Surrey, England[br]English aeronautical designer and inventor.[br]Wallis was apprenticed first at Thames Engineering Works, and then, in 1908, at John Samuel White's shipyard at Cowes. In 1913, the Government, spurred on by the accelerating development of the German Zeppelins (see Zeppelin, Ferdinand von), ordered an airship from Vickers; Wallis was invited to join the design team. Thus began his long association with aeronautical design and with Vickers. This airship, and the R80 that followed it, were successfully completed, but the military lost interest in them.In 1924 the Government initiated a programme for the construction of two airships to settle once and for all their viability for long-dis-tance air travel. The R101 was designed by a Government-sponsored team, but the R100 was designed by Wallis working for a subsidiary of Vickers. The R100 took off on 29 July 1930 for a successful round trip to Canada, but the R101 crashed on its first flight on 4 October, killing many of its distinguished passengers. The shock of this disaster brought airship development in Britain to an abrupt end and forced Wallis to direct his attention to aircraft.In aircraft design, Wallis is known for his use of geodesic construction, which combined lightness with strength. It was applied first to the single-engined "Wellesley" and then the twin-en-gined "Wellington" bomber, which first flew in 1936. With successive modifications, it became the workhorse of RAF Bomber Command during the Second World War until the autumn of 1943, when it was replaced by four-engined machines. In other areas, it remained in service until the end of the war and, in all, no fewer than 11,461 were built.Wallis is best known for his work on bomb design, first the bouncing bomb that was used to breach the Möhne and Eder dams in the Ruhr district of Germany in 1943, an exploit immortalized in the film Dambusters. Encouraged by this success, the authorities then allowed Wallis to realize an idea he had long urged, that of heavy, penetration bombs. In the closing stages of the war, Tallboy, of 12,000 lb (5,400 kg), and the 10-ton Grand Slam were used to devastating effect.After the Second World War, Wallis returned to aeronautical design and was given his own department at Vickers to promote his ideas, principally on variable-geometry or swing-wing aircraft. Over the next thirteen years he battled towards the prototype stage of this revolutionary concept. That never came, however; changing conditions and requirements and increasing costs led to the abandonment of the project. Bit-terly disappointed, Wallis continued his researches into high-speed aircraft until his retirement from Vickers (by then the British Aircraft Corporation), in 1971.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1968. FRS 1945.Further ReadingJ.Morpurgo, 1972, Barnes Wallis: A Biography, London: Longman (a readable account, rather biased in Wallis's favour).C.J.Heap, 1987, The Papers of Sir Barnes Wallis (1887–1979) in the Science Museum Library, London: Science Museum; with a biographical introd. by L.R.Day.LRDBiographical history of technology > Wallis, Sir Barnes Neville
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91 Concepts
From a psychological perspective, concepts are mental representations of classes (e.g., one's beliefs about the class of dogs or tables), and their most salient function is to promote cognitive economy.... By partitioning the world into classes, we decrease the amount of information we must perceive, learn, remember, communicate, and reason about. Thus, if we had no concepts, we would have to refer to each individual entity by its own name; every different table, for example, would be denoted by a different word. The mental lexicon required would be so enormous that communication as we know it might be impossible. Other mental functions might collapse under the sheer number of entities we would have to keep track of.Another important function of concepts is that they enable us to go beyond the information given.... When we come across an object, say a wolf, we have direct knowledge only of its appearance. It is essential that we go beyond appearances and bring to bear other knowledge that we have, such as our belief that wolves can bite and inflict severe injury. Concepts are our means of linking perceptual and nonperceptual information. We use a perceptual description of the creature in front of us to access the concept wolf and then use our nonperceptual beliefs to direct our behavior, that is, run. Concepts, then, are recognition devices; they serve as entry points into our knowledge stores and provide us with expectations that we can use to guide our actions.A third important function of concepts is that they can be combined to form complex concepts and thoughts. Stoves and burn are two simple concepts; Stoves can burn is a full-fledged thought. Presumably our understanding of this thought, and of complex concepts in general, is based on our understanding of the constituent concepts. (Smith, 1988, pp. 19-20)The concept may be a butterfly. It may be a person he has known. It may be an animal, a city, a type of action, or a quality. Each concept calls for a name. These names are wanted for what may be a noun or a verb, an adjective or an adverb. Concepts of this type have been formed gradually over the years from childhood on. Each time a thing is seen or heard or experienced, the individual has a perception of it. A part of that perception comes from his own concomitant interpretation. Each successive perception forms and probably alters the permanent concept. And words are acquired gradually, also, and deposited somehow in the treasure-house of word memory.... Words are often acquired simultaneously with the concepts.... A little boy may first see a butterfly fluttering from flower to flower in a meadow. Later he sees them on the wing or in pictures, many times. On each occasion he adds to his conception of butterfly.It becomes a generalization from many particulars. He builds up a concept of a butterfly which he can remember and summon at will, although when he comes to manhood, perhaps, he can recollect none of the particular butterflies of past experience.The same is true of the sequence of sound that makes up a melody. He remembers it after he has forgotten each of the many times he heard or perhaps sang or played it. The same is true of colours. He acquires, quite quickly, the concept of lavender, although all the objects of which he saw the colour have faded beyond the frontier of voluntary recall. The same is true of the generalization he forms of an acquaintance. Later on he can summon his concept of the individual without recalling their many meetings. (Penfield, 1959, pp. 228-229)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Concepts
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92 just
В современном языке частица just выполняет много различных функций, и трудности ее перевода связаны нередко с проблемой правильной идентификации функции. Традиционно речь идет о трех функциях just как частицы - выделительной, ограничительной и эмфатической, однако, как показывает анализ, встречаются и другие, хотя и менее распространенные функции; кроме того, в рамках указанных трех можно обнаружить довольно интересные вариации, интересные в том числе и с точки зрения перевода.
Особенно наглядно разнообразные возможности just видны на примере эмфатической (усилительной) функции, на которой нам хотелось бы остановиться подробнее. Рассмотрим следующие примеры:
• "I see your point, but people here just can't afford that sort of luxury..." (DL: 65)
"Я понимаю, что вы хотите сказать, но люди здесь просто не могут позволить себе подобную роскошь."
• "I'm sorry Siegfried, I just have nothing to say." (DL: 95)
"Простите, Зигфрид, мне просто нечего сказать."
• "It's just too early." (DT: 265)
" Просто сейчас ещё слишком рано."
Как видно из примеров, just усиливает (интенсифицирует) значение следующего за ней смыслового блока, который нередко представляет собой структуру с отрицанием, как эксплицитным (первые два примера), так и имплицитным (последний пример). Предложенная нами в качестве эквивалента русская частица просто может быть использована в этом качестве в большинстве случаев, хотя иногда возможны и другие средства:
• "Не told you he was taking you out. Didn't he?... And just happened to leave his wallet at home." (DT: 66)
"Он сказал тебе, что приглашает тебя в ресторан. Так?... И совершенно (чисто / просто) случайно забыл бумажник дома."
Особый интерес для нас представляют случаи, когда при переводе just в эмфатической функции требуется перестройка всей структуры предложения. Рассмотрим следующий пример:
• "Wasn't that just typical?..." (DL: 131)
" Как же все это было знакомо!"
В английском тексте мы имеем дело с эмфатическим вопросительно-отрицательным предложением, которому, как было показано в нашей работе, посвященной переводу русских частиц, довольно часто соответствуют русские предложения с же. Дополнительная интенсификация смысла осуществляется посредством восклицательного предложения с интенсификатором как. С точки зрения норм русского языка, употребление просто в данной структуре представляется вряд ли возможным.
Кроме общих случаев усиления смысла с помощью just, довольно часто можно наблюдать интенсификацию конкретных логических значений, что представляет интерес с точки зрения перевода в силу различия в эквивалентах. Во-первых, можно выделить интенсификацию (подчеркивание) незначительности расстояния или временного промежутка:
• "We were sitting towards the rear of the aircraft, just behind the wing." (DL: 68)
"Мы сидели ближе к хвосту самолета, сразу за крылом."
• "This was the woman who just a few hours before had said she would do anything for them." (DL: 76)
"И это была та же самая женщина, которая всего несколькими часами раньше обещала сделать для них все, что угодно."
• "It's by a British friend of mine.... He gave it to me just yesterday." (DL: 119)
"Ее автор - один мой приятель из Британии. Он мне ее подарил не далее как (только) вчера."
Как видно, русский эквивалент сильно зависит от сочетаемости.
Когда just выступает в функции интенсификации достаточности, ее эквивалентами часто выступают структуры с прилагательным один или уже упоминавшаяся ранее частица просто:
• I felt nauseated just to breathe them. (DT: 531)
Меня тошнило от одного их запаха.
• It made you smile just to look at him. (DL: 115)
его вид вызывал улыбку.
• "Don't worry, just do exactly as I do." (DL: 180)
"Не волнуйтесь, просто в точности повторяйте за мной."
В сочетании с like частица just выступает в функции интенсификации сравнения:
• "Lovely girl. I've always said so. Looks just like a statue of Diana in my father's club." (DT: 61)
"Прелестная девушка. Я всегда это говорил. Выглядит точь-в-точь как статуя Дианы в клубе моего отца."
Наконец, стоит упомянуть, что в сочетании с модальными глаголами may, might, could анализируемая частица подчеркивает маловероятность:
• I said I was rather tied up at the school over most weekends; though the half-term holiday was the week-end after the next and I might just be in Athens then - but I couldn't be sure. (F: 162)
Я написал, что довольно сильно занят в школе почти все выходные, хотя через выходные у школьников будут короткие каникулы, и у меня, возможно, получится приехать в Афины, но я не могу ничего обещать.
На наш взгляд, коммуникативный смысл английской частицы позволяют передать лексические средства русского языка, в частности добавление слова получится обычно подчеркивает большую зависимость от обстоятельств, что ещё дополнительно усиливается местоимением ничего при глаголе обещать.
Особенно следует оговорить те случаи, когда частица just употребляется для усиления вопросительных и относительных местоимений и при этом нередко имплицитно выражает различные эмоции. Рассмотрим следующий пример:
• I didn't answer. I was wondering just how we had reached this stage. (JB: 53)
Я не ответил. Я размышлял, как же мы достигли такой степени близости.
Из контекста видно, что герой не может объяснить для себя произошедшее, оно вызывает у него большое удивление, что и подчеркивается введением частицы just. На наш взгляд, подобную эмоцию в русском языке хорошо передает частица же, что очевидно и в другом примере:
• " Just what is all this nonsense?" (KA: 74)
"Как же все это понимать?"
Возможны, однако, и другие способы перевода just в этой функции:
• I knew just what happened to people who were sacked from the local government. (JB: 200)
Я прекрасно знал, что происходило с людьми, уволенными из органов местного управления.
Перейдем теперь к рассмотрению частицы just в функции идентификации. Ее перевод на русский язык обычно не вызывает здесь больших затруднений, поскольку в русском языке существует довольно много частиц, употребляющихся в этой функции; в качестве эквивалента just обычно могут быть использованы частицы как раз и именно, что видно из следующих примеров:
• "Oh thank you, James, it's just what I want." (KA: 89)
"Ой, спасибо, Джеймс, это именно / как раз то, что мне нужно."
• And I am fairly sure he would have done just that if only I had made it in to see him. (DT: 77)
И я почти уверен, что именно это он бы и сделал, если бы мне только удалось с ним увидеться.
• I nearly hung up... but just then the operator came back on. (DT: 160)
Я почти уже повесил трубку... но как раз в этот момент я снова услышал голос оператора.
Особым случаем идентификации можно признать выражение одновременности, хотя и в этом случае английская частица обычно переводится с помощью русской как раз:
• He ran lightly up the stairs. Ronny was just emerging from Gerald Wade's room. ( AC1: 24)
Он быстро взбежал по ступенькам. Ронни как раз выходил из комнаты Джеральда Уэйда.
Как уже отмечалось, ещё одной распространенной функцией частицы just является ограничительная функция, и здесь в качестве ее эквивалентов в русском языке обычно выступают такие слова как лишь, всего лишь, только, просто:
• I convinced myself that it was just superstition. (DL: 76)
Я убедил себя, что это всего лишь / просто суеверие.
• It's just a rumour, actually. (DL: 120)
На самом деле это всего лишь слух.
• "No, Howard, you said it was the way out, I just agreed." (DL: 117)
"Нет, Хауард, это вы сказали, что это выход из положения, я лишь / просто согласился."
• And it wasn't just a question of having kept my mouth shut. (DT: 550)
И дело было не только в том, что я держал язык за зубами.
Особо стоит остановиться на том случае, когда just в ограничительной функции приближается по значению к русскому едва. Рассмотрим следующий пример:
• Absolute peace. High and very far to the north I could just hear an aeroplane. (F: 113)
Полная тишина. Где-то высоко и очень далеко на севере был едва слышен шум самолета.
Пример интересен прежде всего с точки зрения определения функции английской частицы. Этому помогает в основном первое предложение, поскольку, раз герой говорит о том, что стояла полная тишина, то он не мог слышать ничего или почти ничего, а значит частица ограничивает семантику глагола hear. В противном случае получалось бы логическое противоречие.
Важность правильного определения функции just становиться особенно очевидной при обращении к следующему, хотя и не очень частотному, прагматическому значению этой частицы. Проанализируем следующий пример:
• "It's terrible," said Charles. "Really, I can just see him. Standing out in a yard wearing some kind of stupid apron." (DT: 112)
Сложность определения функции здесь заключается в том, что just употребляется в той же синтаксической позиции, что и в предыдущем примере, в сочетании с модальным глаголом can (could) и глаголом восприятия. Поэтому помочь нам может только общий контекст, экспрессивный характер которого (выражение it's terrible, частица really), а также непосредственно предшествующее предложение, с большой степенью вероятности исключают ограничительную функцию и, более того, подводит нас к мысли о том, что частица употребляется скорее в экспрессивной функции и по прагматическому значению приближается к наречию easily, в результате перевод данного примера может выглядеть в частности так:
• "Это ужасно," сказал Чарльз. "Черт возьми, могу себе это представить (Ей богу, я так живо это себе представляю.) Как он стоит во дворе, напялив какой-нибудь дурацкий передник."
Последняя функция just, о которой нам хотелось бы сказать, - это выражение вежливости. По сути мы имеем дело с разновидностью эмфатической функции, поскольку just здесь всегда употребляется в высказываниях, представляющих собой вежливую просьбу, и частица нередко лишь усиливает степень вежливости:
• "I don't seem to have my information handy right now, maybe you could just prompt me." (DT: 159)
С точки зрения естественности следует отметить, что для русского языка не очень характерно употребление частиц перед глаголом в вежливой просьбе, поэтому, на наш взгляд, вполне уместен перевод просто самой вежливой просьбы:
• "Боюсь, у меня нет сейчас под рукой нужной информации; не могли бы вы мне подсказать?"
С другой стороны, в русском языке возможно усиление вежливости другими способами, в частности:
•... если вас не затруднит, подскажите, пожалуйста.
В любом случае, нам кажется, что окончательное решение о необходимости и возможности перевода just в этой функции очень сильно зависит от непосредственного контекста, как вербального, так и невербального. Нам хотелось бы только подчеркнуть, что в данном случае ее перевод не является самоцелью и что, когда речь идет о такой прагматической функции как усиление степени вежливости, в первую очередь следует ориентироваться на нормы языка перевода и традиции принимающей культуры. -
93 drop
[drop] 1. noun1) (a small round or pear-shaped blob of liquid, usually falling: a drop of rain.) kaplja2) (a small quantity (of liquid): If you want more wine, there's a drop left.) kaplja3) (an act of falling: a drop in temperature.) padec4) (a vertical descent: From the top of the mountain there was a sheer drop of a thousand feet.) spust2. verb1) (to let fall, usually accidentally: She dropped a box of pins all over the floor.) spustiti2) (to fall: The coin dropped through the grating; The cat dropped on to its paws.) pasti3) (to give up (a friend, a habit etc): I think she's dropped the idea of going to London.) opustiti4) (to set down from a car etc: The bus dropped me at the end of the road.) odložiti (koga)5) (to say or write in an informal and casual manner: I'll drop her a note.) napisati (nekaj besed)•- droplet- droppings
- drop-out
- drop a brick / drop a clanger
- drop back
- drop by
- drop in
- drop off
- drop out* * *I [drɔp]1.intransitive verb( from) kapljati, kaniti; ( with) cediti se, teči; pasti, spustiti se; padati (cene); (from, out of) ven pasti, izpasti; prenehati; pasti v nezavest, zrušiti se; figuratively umreti;2.transitive verbpokapati; prelivati; izpustiti; opustiti, prekiniti; spustiti se; splaviti, povreči; oglasiti se pri kom; namignitito drop from sight — izginiti, zgubiti sedrop it! — nehaj že!figuratively to drop a brick — narediti nerodno napako, ustreliti kozla, bleknitito drop short — ne zadostovati; ne doseči ciljafiguratively to drop the curtain — narediti konecII [drɔp]nounkaplja, kapljica; gledališki zastor; padec; poklopna vrata; obesek, uhan; bonbon; odpadlo sadje ali zrnje; špranja (za novec v avtomatu)at the drop of a hat — nemudoma, takojto get the drop on s.o. — izrabiti neprilike kogato have a drop too much — nekoliko preveč ga imeti, biti v rožicahAmerican slang to have a drop on s.o. — imeti koga v rokahslang to have a drop in one's eye — kazati, da je kdo preveč pil -
94 side
1. n стенка, стена2. n поверхность, сторона, одна из поверхностей3. n борт4. n склон5. n берег6. n поле, край7. n геол. сторона, крыло8. n горн. грудь; стенка9. a боковойside clearance — боковой зазор; торцевой зазор
10. a побочный, неглавныйside issue — побочный, второстепенный, несущественный вопрос
11. a заказанный на гарнир12. v вставать на сторону; объединяться, группироваться, блокироваться13. v амер. приводить в порядок, убирать14. v редк. отложить, отодвинуть в сторону15. n разг. чванство, зазнайствоСинонимический ряд:1. secondary (adj.) auxiliary; by the side; extraneous; indirect; lateral; oblique; off center; off-centre; secondary; sideways; subordinate2. edge (noun) annex; border; boundary; edge; fringe; limit; margin; perimeter; rim; verge3. hand (noun) angle; aspect; facet; flank; hand; phase; respect4. team (noun) body; camp; caucus; faction; foe; group; opinion; part; party; position; stand; team; wing5. viewpoint (noun) direction; outlook; slant; standpoint; viewpoint6. sheathe (verb) clad; coat; face; sheathe; skin -
95 Champion, William
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1710 Bristol, Englandd. 1789 England[br]English metallurgist, the first to produce metallic zinc in England on an industrial scale.[br]William, the youngest of the three sons of Nehemiah Champion, stemmed from a West Country Quaker family long associated with the metal trades. His grandfather, also called Nehemiah, had been one of Abraham Darby's close Quaker friends when the brassworks at Baptist Mills was being established in 1702 and 1703. Nehemiah II took over the management of these works soon after Darby went to Coalbrookdale, and in 1719, as one of a group of Bristol copper smelters, he negotiated an agreement with Lord Falmouth to develop copper mines in the Redruth area in Cornwall. In 1723 he was granted a patent for a cementation brass-making process using finely granulated copper rather than the broken fragments of massive copper hitherto employed.In 1730 he returned to Bristol after a tour of European metallurgical centres, and he began to develop an industrial process for the manufacture of pure zinc ingots in England. Metallic zinc or spelter was then imported at great expense from the Far East, largely for the manufacture of copper alloys of golden colour used for cheap jewellery. The process William developed, after six years of experimentation, reduced zinc oxide with charcoal at temperatures well above the boiling point of zinc. The zinc vapour obtained was condensed rapidly to prevent reoxidation and finally collected under water. This process, patented in 1738, was operated in secret until 1766 when Watson described it in his Chemical Essays. After encountering much opposition from the Bristol merchants and zinc importers, William decided to establish his own integrated brassworks at Warmley, five meals east of Bristol. The Warmley plant began to produce in 1748 and expanded rapidly. By 1767, when Warmley employed about 2,000 men, women and children, more capital was needed, requiring a Royal Charter of Incorporation. A consortium of Champion's competitors opposed this and secured its refusal. After this defeat William lost the confidence of his fellow directors, who dismissed him. He was declared bankrupt in 1769 and his works were sold to the British Brass Company, which never operated Warmley at full capacity, although it produced zinc on that site until 1784.[br]Bibliography1723, British patent no. 454 (cementation brass-making process).1738, British patent no. 564 (zinc ingot production process).1767, British patent no. 867 (brass manufacture wing zinc blende).Further ReadingJ.Day, 1973, Bristol Brass: The History of the Industry, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.A.Raistrick, 1970, Dynasty of Ironfounders: The Darbys and Coalbrookdale, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.J.R.Harris, 1964, The Copper King, Liverpool University Press.ASD -
96 bash
1. transitive verb[heftig] schlagen2. nounbash one's head against something — sich (Dat.) den Kopf [heftig] an etwas (Dat.) anschlagen
have a bash at something — etwas mal versuchen
* * *[bæʃ] 1. verb 2. noun1) (a heavy blow: a bash with his foot.) heftiger Schlag2) (a dent: a bash on the car's nearside door.) die Beule•- bash on/ahead with- bash on/ahead
- academic.ru/116563/have_a_bash_at">have a bash at* * *[bæʃ]I. n<pl -es>1. (blow) [heftiger] SchlagII. vi▪ to \bash into sb/sth mit jdm/etw zusammenstoßenIII. vt1. (hit hard)▪ to \bash sb jdn verhauen [o verprügeln]▪ to \bash sb jdn [verbal] niedermachenyou can \bash them all you want, but... du kannst über sie sagen, was du willst, aber...* * *[bʃ] (inf)1. n1) Schlag mhe gave himself a bash on the shin — er hat sich (dat) das Schienbein angeschlagen
2)I'll have a bash (at it) — ich probiers mal (inf)
have a bash — probier mal! (inf)
2. vtperson (ver)hauen (inf), verprügeln; ball knallen (inf), dreschen (inf); car, wing eindellen (inf)to bash one's head/shin (against or on sth) — sich (dat) den Kopf/das Schienbein (an etw (dat )) anschlagen
I bashed my shin against the table — ich bin mit dem Schienbein gegen den Tisch geknallt (inf)
* * *bash [bæʃ] umgA v/t1. heftig schlagen, jemanden verprügeln:he bashed his finger with a hammer er drosch sich mit dem Hammer auf den Finger;she bashed him on the head with her umbrella sie schlug ihm den Schirm über den Kopf;bash one’s head against sich den Kopf anschlagen an (dat), mit dem Kopf knallen gegen umg;a) ein Fenster etc einschlagen,b) einen Kotflügel etc ein-, verbeulen;bash sb’s head in jemandem den Schädel einschlagen;a) jemanden zusammenschlagen, krankenhausreif schlagen,b) ein Auto etc zu Schrott fahren2. fig besonders Br einprügeln auf (akk)C s1. besonders Br Pfund n (heftiger Schlag):give sb a bash (on the nose) jemandem ein Ding (auf die Nase) verpassen umgmy car has had a bash mein Auto hat etwas oder eine Beule abgekriegt3. ausgelassene Party4. Br Versuch m:have a bash einen Versuch wagen;have a bash at sth etwas probieren oder versuchen5. notdürftige Unterkunft aus Kartons etc* * *1. transitive verb[heftig] schlagen2. nounbash one's head against something — sich (Dat.) den Kopf [heftig] an etwas (Dat.) anschlagen
* * *n.Schlag -¨e m. v.hauen v.schlagen v.(§ p.,pp.: schlug, geschlagen) -
97 clip
I 1. [klip] past tense, past participle - clipped; verb1) (to cut (foliage, an animal's hair etc) with scissors or shears: The shepherd clipped the sheep; The hedge was clipped.) cortar2) (to strike sharply: She clipped him over the ear.) bater2. noun1) (an act of clipping.) corte2) (a sharp blow: a clip on the ear.) bofetada3) (a short piece of film: a video clip.)•- clipper- clipping II 1. [klip] past tense, past participle - clipped; verb(to fasten with a clip: Clip these papers together.) agrafar2. noun(something for holding things together or in position: a paper-clip; a hair-clip; bicycle-clips (= round pieces of metal etc for holding the bottom of trouser legs close to the leg).) gancho* * *clip1[klip] n 1 tosquia, corte. 2 tosão, velo. 3 qualquer coisa cortada. 4 movimento rápido. 5 coll golpe. 6 Amer coll ocasião única. • vt+vi 1 tosquiar, cortar (com tesoura). 2 aparar, cercear. 3 cortar cabelo ou lã. 4 omitir sílabas ou sons na pronúncia. he clips his g’s / ele não pronuncia os gês. 5 reduzir, cortar, encurtar. 6 coll mover-se rapidamente. 7 coll golpear rapidamente. 8 recortar (notícias de jornal). 9 Tech desbarbar. 10 sl enganar, tapear. at a good clip a passos rápidos. to clip the wing of cortar as asas de (também fig). clipped word abreviatura. film clip filme clipe: pequena parte ou pequeno trecho de um filme completo, constituindo uma separata. video clip videoclipe: número musical com representação teatral gravado em videoteipe.————————clip2[klip] n 1 clipe, grampo. 2 pente para balas. • vt+vi segurar (com clipe), grampear, apertar. -
98 left
1. n1) ліва сторона, лівий бік2) військ. лівий фланг3) (the L.) (вжив. як pl) збірн., пол. ліві4) спорт. удар лівою рукою; ліва рука (у боксі)5) ліва рукавичка; лівий черевик тощоover the left — саме (якраз) навпаки
2. adjлівийleft wing — а) ліве крило; б) військ. лівий фланг
3. advліворуч, наліво; зліваleft turn! (амер. left face!) — військ. ліворуч!
left about face! — військ. через ліве плече кругом!
4. past і p.p. від leave* * *I [left] n1) ліва сторона2) вiйcьк. лівий фланг3) ( the Left) ліві4) удар лівою рукою, ліва рука ( бокс)5) ліва рукавичка, лівий черевикII [left] a1) лівийleft back — cпopт. лівий захисник
2) ( часто Left) лівийIII [left] adv IV [left] past, p. p. від leave II -
99 left
I [left] 1. прил.1) левый2) полит. левыйleft wing — левое крыло (в партии, парламенте)
••two left feet — неловкий, неуклюжий человек; руки не оттуда растут
2. нареч.over the left (shoulder) — через левое плечо; всё не как у людей
налево, слева3. сущ.left turn!, амер. left face! воен. — налево!
1) левая сторона; воен. левый флангat the left — слева; влево, налево
2) (the Left, the left) употр. с гл. во мн.; полит. левые, левая партияthe extreme / far left — крайние левые
3) левый предмет (из пары; левый ботинок, левая перчатка)II [left] прош. вр., прич. прош. вр. от leave II -
100 position
1. n положение, местонахождение, расположение; местоcharted position — место, нанесённое на карту
2. n обычное, правильное место, положениеin position — на своём месте; в правильном месте
3. n воен. позиция, расположение; рубежfallback position — позиция, подготовленная для отступления
unmaintainable position — позиция, которую нельзя удержать
4. n положение, поза5. n должность, местоvacant position — незанятая должность; вакансия
6. n тк. общественное положение7. n положение, состояние8. n возможность; способность9. n позиция, точка зрения; отношение10. n филос. полагание11. n муз. позиция, положение левой руки на грифе12. n муз. положение, расположение13. n муз. фон. положение, позиция14. n амер. бирж. разг. позиция, срочный контракт; сделка на срокbull position — позиция спекулянтов, играющих на повышение
bear position — позиция спекулянтов, играющих на понижение
15. n амер. бирж. разг. остаток, сальдоdollar position — сальдо по расчётам в долларах, остаток на долларовых счетах
16. n амер. бирж. разг. запас; наличие материаловположение, позиция; поза; стойка
position of attention — положение «смирно»
down position — положение «на полу»
standing position — положение «стоя»
17. n амер. бирж. разг. спорт. место, занятое в соревновании18. v редк. ставить, помещать19. v редк. определять местонахождение; локализировать20. v редк. спорт. занимать место; выбирать позицию21. v редк. выпускать или рекламировать товар, предназначенный для определённой категории покупателейСинонимический ряд:1. arrangement (noun) arrangement; array; disposition; placement2. assertion (noun) assertion; contention; dictum; doctrine; predication; principle; proposition; thesis3. circumstances (noun) circumstances; predicament4. location (noun) bearing; capacity; employment; locale; locality; location; locus; orientation; point; site; situation; where5. place (noun) appointment; berth; billet; connection; job; office; place; post; slot; spot6. pose (noun) attitude; color; colour; condition; deportment; mien; outlook; pose; posture; stance; stand7. status (noun) cachet; character; consequence; dignity; footing; prestige; prominence; quality; rank; standing; state; station; stature; status8. view (noun) attitude; belief; conviction; idea; notion; opinion; persuasion; sentiment; view9. place (verb) arrange; discover; fix; install; locate; place; put; set; settle; site; situate
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