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1 patron
['peitrən]1) (a person who supports (often with money) an artist, musician, writer, form of art etc: He's a patron of the arts.) pokrovitelj2) (a (regular) customer of a shop etc: The manager said that he knew all his patrons.) redni odjemalec•- patronize
- patronise
- patronizing
- patronising
- patronizingly
- patronisingly
- patron saint* * *[péitrən]nounpatron, pokrovitelj, zavetnik, podpornik, varuh; economy redni odjemalec, redni obiskovalec (tudi theatre); ecclesiastic cerkveni patron, svetnik -
2 patron saint
(a saint who protects a particular person, group of people, country etc: St Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland.) patron -
3 cuss
I [kʌs]nounAmerican colloquially psovka; bitje, patron, stvorII [kʌs]transitive verbAmerican slang preklinjati -
4 merchant
['mə: ənt](a trader, especially wholesale, in goods of a particular kind: timber/tea/wine merchants.) trgovec- navy
- service
- merchant ship* * *[mɜ:čənt]nountrgovec, veletrgovec; trgovec na debelo; American Scottish trgovec na drobno; slang dečko, možakthe merchants — trgovci, trgovski krogieconomy merchant banker — menični posrednikeconomy history merchant adventurer — trgovski prekomorski spekulantslang speed-merchant — brezobziren vozač, divjaktechnical merchant bar — šibika železa -
5 number
1. noun1) ((sometimes abbreviated to no - plural nos - when written in front of a figure) a word or figure showing eg how many of something there are, or the position of something in a series etc: Seven was often considered a magic number; Answer nos 1-10 of exercise 2.) število; številka2) (a (large) quantity or group (of people or things): He has a number of records; There were a large number of people in the room.) število3) (one issue of a magazine: the autumn number.) številka4) (a popular song or piece of music: He sang his most popular number.) popevka2. verb1) (to put a number on: He numbered the pages in the top corner.) oštevilčiti2) (to include: He numbered her among his closest friends.) prištevati med3) (to come to in total: The group numbered ten.) znašati•- number-plate
- his days are numbered
- without number* * *I [nʌmbə]nounštevilo, številka; zvezek, številka (revije, časopisa)grammar število ( in the singular ŋ); točka programa; music slang popevka, ritem; poetically plural stihi; slang tip, patron; figuratively back number — pozabljen (zastarel) človek (stvar)number one — ego, jaz; nautical prvi častnik; adjective prvotengolden number — število, po katerem se izračuna datum Velike nočieconomy to raise to the full number — kompletirati, popolnitiissued in numbers — izdano v nadaljevankah, izdano v zvezkihin number — številčno, po številunumbers of times — često; vedno znovacolloquially to have (got) s.o.'s number — koga dobro poznati, koga do dna spregledatiII [nʌmbə]transitive verbnumerirati, oštevilčiti; šteti, računati, znašatito number among ( —ali in, with) — prištevati (med, k, npr. prijatelje) -
6 patronage
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7 strange
[strein‹]1) (not known, seen etc before; unfamiliar or foreign: What would you do if you found a strange man in your house?; Whenever you're in a strange country, you should take the opportunity of learning the language.) tuj2) (unusual, odd or queer: She had a strange look on her face; a strange noise.) čuden•- strangeness
- stranger
- strange to say/tell/relate
- strangely enough* * *[stréindž]1.adjective ( strangely adverb)čuden, nenavaden, redek, presenetljiv, nepričakovan; tuj, nepoznan, neznan, nov (to s.o. komu); neseznanjen (to s.th. s čim), nevešč, nevajen (to s.th. česa); rezerviran, hladen, zadržan, boječ; obsolete inozemskia strange face — tuj, neznan obraza strange remark — čudna, nenavadna opazkastrange to say — presenetljivo, čudno, za čudato be strange to s.th. — ne poznati česa, ne biti vajen česato feel strange — čudno, slabo se počutiti (zlasti imeti vrtoglavico, omotico ipd.)strange that you should not have heard it — čudno, da tega niste slišalithis writing is strange to me — ta pisava mi je nepoznana;2.adverbčudno, nenavadno, svojevrstno
См. также в других словарях:
patron — patron, onne 1. (pa tron, tro n ) s. m. et f. 1° Terme d antiquité. Chez les Romains, le maître à l égard de l affranchi, le protecteur à l égard du client. • Sous les noms séduisants de patrons et de pères Ils [les patriciens de Rome]… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
patron — PATRON, [patr]one. s. Protecteur. En parlant des Saints, il se dit du Saint dont on porte le nom, & de celuy sous l invocation duquel une Eglise est dédiée, ou qu on reclame comme Protecteur d un Païs, d une ville. Saint Jean est son Patron, est… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
Patron — Patron and Patronage † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Patron and Patronage I. By the right of patronage (ius patronatus) is understood a determinate sum of rights and obligations entailed upon a definite person, the patron, especially in… … Catholic encyclopedia
Patrón — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda El término patrón puede referirse a: un patrón de medida es un objeto o substancia que se emplea como muestra para medir alguna magnitud o para replicarla. el patrón oro y el patrón plata, el respaldo monetario de… … Wikipedia Español
patrón — patrón, na sustantivo masculino,f. 1. Área: religión Santo o advocación de la Virgen o de Jesucristo a los que se dedica una iglesia o se elige como protector de un lugar o de un grupo de personas: La Virgen del Pilar es la patrona de la… … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
Patron — Pa tron, n. [F., fr. L. patronus, fr. pater a father. See {Paternal}, and cf. {Patroon}, {Padrone}, {Pattern}.] 1. One who protects, supports, or countenances; a defender. Patron of my life and liberty. Shak. The patron of true holiness. Spenser … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Patron — Sm Schutzherr , besonders Schutzpatron Schutzheiliger erw. fremd. Erkennbar fremd (12. Jh.), mhd. patrōn(e) Schutzherr Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus l. patrōnus Schutzherr , auch Verteidiger vor Gericht , zu l. pater Vater . Das Patronat ist im 18. Jh … Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache
patrón — na 1. Los sustantivos patrón y patrono, cuyo femenino es patrona, proceden del mismo étimo latino y comparten la mayoría de las acepciones referidas a persona, a saber, ‘protector de una colectividad’: «Se rendirá homenaje a san Judas Tadeo,… … Diccionario panhispánico de dudas
patron — I {{/stl 13}}{{stl 8}}rz. mos I, Mc. patronnie; lm M. owie || i {{/stl 8}}{{stl 20}} {{/stl 20}}{{stl 12}}1. {{/stl 12}}{{stl 7}} osoba lub instytucja pełniąca funkcję opiekuna; protektor : {{/stl 7}}{{stl 10}}Być patronem czyjegoś… … Langenscheidt Polski wyjaśnień
patrón — patrón, na (Del lat. patrōnus). 1. m. y f. Defensor, protector. 2. Que tiene cargo de patronato. 3. Santo titular de una iglesia. 4. Protector escogido por un pueblo o congregación, ya sea un santo, ya la Virgen o Jesucristo en alguna de sus… … Diccionario de la lengua española
patron — pa‧tron [ˈpeɪtrən] noun [countable] 1. formal someone who regularly uses a particular shop, restaurant, hotel etc; = CUSTOMER: • Regular patrons comprise 65 percent of the restaurant s customers. 2. someone who supports the activities of a public … Financial and business terms