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1 Thinking
But what then am I? A thing which thinks. What is a thing which thinks? It is a thing which doubts, understands, [conceives], affirms, denies, wills, refuses, which also imagines and feels. (Descartes, 1951, p. 153)I have been trying in all this to remove the temptation to think that there "must be" a mental process of thinking, hoping, wishing, believing, etc., independent of the process of expressing a thought, a hope, a wish, etc.... If we scrutinize the usages which we make of "thinking," "meaning," "wishing," etc., going through this process rids us of the temptation to look for a peculiar act of thinking, independent of the act of expressing our thoughts, and stowed away in some particular medium. (Wittgenstein, 1958, pp. 41-43)Analyse the proofs employed by the subject. If they do not go beyond observation of empirical correspondences, they can be fully explained in terms of concrete operations, and nothing would warrant our assuming that more complex thought mechanisms are operating. If, on the other hand, the subject interprets a given correspondence as the result of any one of several possible combinations, and this leads him to verify his hypotheses by observing their consequences, we know that propositional operations are involved. (Inhelder & Piaget, 1958, p. 279)In every age, philosophical thinking exploits some dominant concepts and makes its greatest headway in solving problems conceived in terms of them. The seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophers construed knowledge, knower, and known in terms of sense data and their association. Descartes' self-examination gave classical psychology the mind and its contents as a starting point. Locke set up sensory immediacy as the new criterion of the real... Hobbes provided the genetic method of building up complex ideas from simple ones... and, in another quarter, still true to the Hobbesian method, Pavlov built intellect out of conditioned reflexes and Loeb built life out of tropisms. (S. Langer, 1962, p. 54)Experiments on deductive reasoning show that subjects are influenced sufficiently by their experience for their reasoning to differ from that described by a purely deductive system, whilst experiments on inductive reasoning lead to the view that an understanding of the strategies used by adult subjects in attaining concepts involves reference to higher-order concepts of a logical and deductive nature. (Bolton, 1972, p. 154)There are now machines in the world that think, that learn and create. Moreover, their ability to do these things is going to increase rapidly until-in the visible future-the range of problems they can handle will be coextensive with the range to which the human mind has been applied. (Newell & Simon, quoted in Weizenbaum, 1976, p. 138)But how does it happen that thinking is sometimes accompanied by action and sometimes not, sometimes by motion, and sometimes not? It looks as if almost the same thing happens as in the case of reasoning and making inferences about unchanging objects. But in that case the end is a speculative proposition... whereas here the conclusion which results from the two premises is an action.... I need covering; a cloak is a covering. I need a cloak. What I need, I have to make; I need a cloak. I have to make a cloak. And the conclusion, the "I have to make a cloak," is an action. (Nussbaum, 1978, p. 40)It is well to remember that when philosophy emerged in Greece in the sixth century, B.C., it did not burst suddenly out of the Mediterranean blue. The development of societies of reasoning creatures-what we call civilization-had been a process to be measured not in thousands but in millions of years. Human beings became civilized as they became reasonable, and for an animal to begin to reason and to learn how to improve its reasoning is a long, slow process. So thinking had been going on for ages before Greece-slowly improving itself, uncovering the pitfalls to be avoided by forethought, endeavoring to weigh alternative sets of consequences intellectually. What happened in the sixth century, B.C., is that thinking turned round on itself; people began to think about thinking, and the momentous event, the culmination of the long process to that point, was in fact the birth of philosophy. (Lipman, Sharp & Oscanyan, 1980, p. xi)The way to look at thought is not to assume that there is a parallel thread of correlated affects or internal experiences that go with it in some regular way. It's not of course that people don't have internal experiences, of course they do; but that when you ask what is the state of mind of someone, say while he or she is performing a ritual, it's hard to believe that such experiences are the same for all people involved.... The thinking, and indeed the feeling in an odd sort of way, is really going on in public. They are really saying what they're saying, doing what they're doing, meaning what they're meaning. Thought is, in great part anyway, a public activity. (Geertz, quoted in J. Miller, 1983, pp. 202-203)Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler. (Einstein, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 17)What, in effect, are the conditions for the construction of formal thought? The child must not only apply operations to objects-in other words, mentally execute possible actions on them-he must also "reflect" those operations in the absence of the objects which are replaced by pure propositions. Thus, "reflection" is thought raised to the second power. Concrete thinking is the representation of a possible action, and formal thinking is the representation of a representation of possible action.... It is not surprising, therefore, that the system of concrete operations must be completed during the last years of childhood before it can be "reflected" by formal operations. In terms of their function, formal operations do not differ from concrete operations except that they are applied to hypotheses or propositions [whose logic is] an abstract translation of the system of "inference" that governs concrete operations. (Piaget, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 237)[E]ven a human being today (hence, a fortiori, a remote ancestor of contemporary human beings) cannot easily or ordinarily maintain uninterrupted attention on a single problem for more than a few tens of seconds. Yet we work on problems that require vastly more time. The way we do that (as we can observe by watching ourselves) requires periods of mulling to be followed by periods of recapitulation, describing to ourselves what seems to have gone on during the mulling, leading to whatever intermediate results we have reached. This has an obvious function: namely, by rehearsing these interim results... we commit them to memory, for the immediate contents of the stream of consciousness are very quickly lost unless rehearsed.... Given language, we can describe to ourselves what seemed to occur during the mulling that led to a judgment, produce a rehearsable version of the reaching-a-judgment process, and commit that to long-term memory by in fact rehearsing it. (Margolis, 1987, p. 60)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Thinking
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2 power of reflexion
(thinking) n.Denkfähigkeit f. -
3 thinking power
சிந்திகும் சக்தி -
4 intellectual power
(thinking) n.Denkvermögen n. -
5 reasoning power
(thinking) n.Denkvermögen n. -
6 мыслительная способность
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7 мыслительная способность
Синонимический ряд:разум (сущ.) голова; здравый смысл; интеллект; мозги; разум; рассудок; ум; умственные способностиРусско-английский большой базовый словарь > мыслительная способность
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8 мыслительная способность
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > мыслительная способность
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9 Verstand
m; -(e)s, kein Pl.; (Denkfähigkeit) intellect, mind; (Vernunft) (common) sense; (Ratio) (powers Pl. of) reason; (Intelligenz) intelligence; (Urteilsfähigkeit) powers Pl. of judg(e)ment; (Auffassungskraft) understanding; gesunder Verstand common sense; mein Verstand sagt mir common sense tells me; klarer / kühler Verstand a clear / cool head; scharfer Verstand keen (Am. sharp) mind ( oder intellect); mit Verstand intelligently, with a bit of common sense; den Verstand verlieren go mad (Am. crazy); jemanden um den Verstand bringen drive s.o. mad ( oder insane, bes. Am. crazy); wieder zu Verstand kommen come to one’s senses; das geht über meinen Verstand that’s beyond me; hat er denn keinen Verstand? has he got no sense in him ( oder wits about him)?; er ist nicht recht bei Verstand umg. he’s not in his right mind, he’s not all there; etw. mit Verstand genießen savo(u)r s.th.* * *der Verstandbrains; sense; wits; brain; common sense; senses; wit; reason; understanding; mind; intellect; intelligence* * *Ver|stạnd [fɛɐ'ʃtant]m - (e)s[-dəs] no pl (= Fähigkeit zu denken) reason; (= Intellekt) mind, intellect; (= Vernunft) (common) sense; (= Urteilskraft) (powers pl of) judgementhast du denn den Verstand verloren?, bist du denn noch bei Verstand? — have you taken leave of your senses? (esp Brit), are you out of your mind?
das geht über meinen Verstand — it's beyond me, it beats me (inf)
etw ohne Verstand essen/trinken — to eat/drink sth without paying attention
etw mit Verstand genießen/essen/trinken — to savour (Brit) or savor (US) sth, to relish sth
See:→ klar* * *der1) (the thinking power of the mind: He was a person of great intellect.) intellect2) (the power by which one thinks etc; the intelligence or understanding: The child already has the mind of an adult.) mind3) (good judgement: You can rely on him - he has plenty of sense.) sense4) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) understand* * *Ver·stand<-[e]s>[fɛɐ̯ˈʃtant]m kein pl reason no art, no pljdm \Verstand zutrauen to think sb has [common] sensebei klarem \Verstand sein to be in full possession of one's faculties [or in one's right mind]seinen \Verstand anstrengen (fam) to think hardjdn um den \Verstand bringen to drive sb out of his/her mindüber jds \Verstand gehen to be beyond sbnicht bei \Verstand sein to not be in one's right mindda bleibt einem der \Verstand stehen the mind bogglesden \Verstand verlieren to lose [or go out of] one's mindetw mit \Verstand essen/genießen/trinken to savour [or AM -or] sthetw ohne \Verstand essen/rauchen/trinken to eat/smoke/drink sth without savouring [or AM -oring] it* * *der; Verstand[e]s (Fähigkeit zu denken) reason no art.; (Fähigkeit, Begriffe zu bilden) mind; (Vernunft) [common] sense no art.Tiere haben keinen Verstand — animals do not have the power or faculty of reason
wenn du deinen Verstand gebraucht hättest — if you had used your brain or had been thinking
hast du denn den Verstand verloren — (ugs.) have you taken leave of your senses?; are you out of your mind?
* * *Verstand m; -(e)s, kein pl; (Denkfähigkeit) intellect, mind; (Vernunft) (common) sense; (Ratio) (powers pl of) reason; (Intelligenz) intelligence; (Urteilsfähigkeit) powers pl of judg(e)ment; (Auffassungskraft) understanding;gesunder Verstand common sense;mein Verstand sagt mir common sense tells me;klarer/kühler Verstand a clear/cool head;mit Verstand intelligently, with a bit of common sense;den Verstand verlieren go mad (US crazy);wieder zu Verstand kommen come to one’s senses;das geht über meinen Verstand that’s beyond me;hat er denn keinen Verstand? has he got no sense in him ( oder wits about him)?;er ist nicht recht bei Verstand umg he’s not in his right mind, he’s not all there;etwas mit Verstand genießen savo(u)r sth* * *der; Verstand[e]s (Fähigkeit zu denken) reason no art.; (Fähigkeit, Begriffe zu bilden) mind; (Vernunft) [common] sense no art.Tiere haben keinen Verstand — animals do not have the power or faculty of reason
wenn du deinen Verstand gebraucht hättest — if you had used your brain or had been thinking
hast du denn den Verstand verloren — (ugs.) have you taken leave of your senses?; are you out of your mind?
* * *-¨e m.apprehension n.brain n.brains n.mind n.reason n.sanity n.sense n.understanding n.wit n. -
10 understand
1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) forstå2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) forstå3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) forstå•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) forstand2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) forståelse3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) forståelse•- make oneself understood- make understood* * *1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) forstå2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) forstå3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) forstå•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) forstand2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) forståelse3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) forståelse•- make oneself understood- make understood -
11 brain
breɪn
1. сущ.
1) мозг The power of thinking depends upon the brain. ≈ Мыслительная сила зависит от головного мозга. disease of the brain ≈ болезнь мозга dish of brains ≈ мозги (блюдо)
2) обыкн. мн.;
разг. умственные способности, интеллект, разум, рассудок, ум to be in one's right brains ≈ быть в здравом уме out of one's brains ≈ помешанный, не в своем уме to live with one's own brains ≈ жить своим умом the great brains of the world ≈ великие умы человечества on one's brains ≈ в мыслях, на уме brain trust ≈ 'мозговой трест' brain truster ≈ сотрудник 'мозгового треста' brain drain ≈ 'утечка мозгов'
3) разг. 'голова', умница, мыслящая личность brain drainer ≈ ученый, специалист, эмигрировавший в другую страну (где ему предоставляют лучшие условия)
4) разг. электронная вычислительная машина ∙ to beat/puzzle/rack one's brains about/with smth. ≈ ломать себе голову над чем-л. to crack one's brain(s) ≈ спятить, свихнуться to have one's brains on ice разг. ≈ сохранять ледяное спокойствие smth. on the brain ≈ неотвязная мысль to have (got) smb., smth. on the brain ≈ неотступно думать о ком-л., чем-л. an idle brain is the devil's workshop посл. ≈ праздность ума мать всех пороков to make smb.'s brain reel ≈ поразить кого-л. to pick/suck smb.'s brains ≈ использовать чужие мысли to turn smb.'s brain ≈ вскружить кому-л. голову;
сбить кого-л. с толку
2. гл. размозжить голову головной мозг - disease of the * болезнь мозга - to blow out one's *s пустить себе пулю в лоб pl мозги (кушанье) обыкн. pl (разговорное) рассудок, разум;
умственные способности;
интеллект, ум - powerful * могучий ум - use your *s! шевели мозгами!, подумай! - that's beyond my * это выше моего понимания, это недоступно моему уму (a *) (разговорное) умник, умница, "голова", мыслящая личность pl (кинематографический) (профессионализм) киносценарист, автор литературного сценария (профессионализм) электронный мозг (ЭВМ) > to crack one's *(s) спятить, свихнуться > to cudgel one's *s about /with/ smth. ломать себе голову над чем-л. > to have smth. on the * только и думать о чем-л., увлекаться чем-л., помешаться на чем-л. > to make smb.'s * reel поразить /ошеломить/ кого-л. > to pick /to suck/ smb.'s *s использовать чужие мысли, присваивать чужие идеи > to turn smb.'s * вызывать головокружение у кого-л.;
вскружить кому-л. голову > to tax one's * поставить перед собой трудную задачу > to have one's *s on ice сохранять ледяное спокойствие > it soaked into his * ему это стало совершенно ясно, это дошло до его сознания > an idle * is the devil's workshop лень - мать всех пороков размозжить голову an idle ~ is the devil's workshop посл. = праздность ума - мать всех пороков ~ разг. электронная вычислительная машина;
to beat (или to puzzle, to rack) one's brains (about (или with) smth.) ломать себе голову (над чем-л.) brain мозг;
disease of the brain болезнь мозга;
dish of brains мозги (блюдо) ~ размозжить голову ~ рассудок, ум ~ разг. умница, "голова" ~ pl разг. умственные способности ~ разг. электронная вычислительная машина;
to beat (или to puzzle, to rack) one's brains (about (или with) smth.) ломать себе голову (над чем-л.) to crack one's ~(s) спятить, свихнуться;
to have one's brains on ice разг. сохранять ледяное спокойствие brain мозг;
disease of the brain болезнь мозга;
dish of brains мозги (блюдо) brain мозг;
disease of the brain болезнь мозга;
dish of brains мозги (блюдо) to have (got) (smb.), (smth.) on the ~ неотступно думать (о ком-л., чем-л.) ear: to have (smb.'s) пользоваться( чьим-л.) благосклонным вниманием;
to set by the ears рассорить;
by the ears в ссоре ha: ha' сокр. разг. форма от have has: has 3-е л. ед. ч. настоящего времени гл. to have hast: hast уст. 2- е л. ед. ч. настоящего времени гл. to have have: have разг.: I have got = I have, you have got = you have, he has got = he has и т. д.( в разн. знач.) ~ допускать;
терпеть;
позволять;
I won't have it я не потерплю этого ~ знать, понимать;
he has no Greek он не знает греческого языка;
I have your idea я понял вашу мысль ~ (had) иметь, обладать;
I have a very good flat у меня прекрасная квартира ~ иметь, обладать ~ испытывать( что-л.), подвергаться( чему-л.) ;
to have a pleasant time приятно провести время;
I have a headache у меня болит голова ~ как вспомогательный глагол употребляется для образования перфектной формы: I have done, I had done я сделал, I shall have done я сделаю;
to have done сделать ~ разг. мошенничество, обман ~ разг. (употр. в pres. perf. pass.) обмануть;
разочаровать;
you have been had вас обманули ~ победить, взять верх;
he had you in the first game он побил вас в первой партии ~ получать;
добиваться;
we had news мы получили известие;
there is nothing to be had ничего не добьешься ~ с последующим инфинитивом имеет модальное значение: быть должным, вынужденным ( что-л. делать) ~ с существительными, обозначающими еду, имеет значение есть, пить: to have breakfast завтракать;
to have dinner обедать;
to have tea пить чай ~ со сложным дополнением показывает, что действие выполняется не субъектом, выраженным подлежащим, а другим лицом по желанию субъекта, или что оно совершается без его желания: ~ содержать, иметь в составе;
June has 30 days в июне 30 дней;
the room has four windows в комнате четыре окна ~ утверждать, говорить;
as Shakespeare has it как сказано у Шекспира 've: 've сокр. разг. = have to crack one's ~(s) спятить, свихнуться;
to have one's brains on ice разг. сохранять ледяное спокойствие to make (smb.'s) ~ reel поразить (кого-л.) ;
to pick (или to suck) (smb.'s) brains использовать чужие мысли to have (got) (smb.), (smth.) on the ~ неотступно думать (о ком-л., чем-л.) (smth.) on the ~ неотвязная мысль to make (smb.'s) ~ reel поразить (кого-л.) ;
to pick (или to suck) (smb.'s) brains использовать чужие мысли pick: ~ обворовывать, красть;
очищать( карманы) ;
to pick and steal заниматься мелкими кражами;
to pick (smb.'s) brains присваивать чужие мысли shatter ~ = scatter-brain scatter-brain: scatter-brain вертопрах, легкомысленный человек shatter ~ = scatter-brain to turn (smb.'s) ~ вскружить (кому-л.) голову to turn (smb.'s) ~ сбить( кого-л.) с толку -
12 understand
1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) comprender, entender2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) comprender, entender3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) comprender, entender; tener entendido•- understanding
2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) inteligencia, entendimiento2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) comprensión3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) entendimiento•- make oneself understood- make understood
understand vb entender / comprenderare you sure that you understand it all? ¿estás seguro de que lo entiendes todo?tr[ʌndə'stænd]1 entender, comprender2 (believe) tener entendido3 (to get on with somebody) entenderse4 (take for granted) sobreentender\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto give to understand dar a entender1) comprehend: comprender, entenderI don't understand it: no lo entiendothat's understood: eso se comprendeto make oneself understood: hacerse entender2) believe: entenderto give someone to understand: dar a alguien a entender3) infer: tener entendidoI understand that she's leaving: tengo entendido que se vaunderstand vi: comprender, entenderv.• entender v.• sobreentender v.• sobrentender v.'ʌndər'stænd, ˌʌndə'stænd
1.
(past & past p - stood) transitive verb1)a) ( grasp meaning of) entender*I can't understand why he did it — no logro entender or comprender por qué lo hizo
I don't want it to happen again; have I made myself understood? — no quiero que vuelva a suceder ¿está claro?
b) ( interpret) entender*, interpretaras I understand it,... — según tengo entendido,..., por lo que entiendo,..., según creo,...
what do you understand by the term `deprivation'? — ¿qué entiendes tú por `privaciones'?
c) (sympathize, empathize with) comprender, entender*2) (believe, infer)the president is understood to favor the second option — se cree que el presidente prefiere la segunda opción
am I to understand that you won't help? — ¿entonces quiere decir que no me van a ayudar?
I was given to understand I'd get my money back — me dieron a entender que me devolverían el dinero; see also understood II
2.
vi entender*, comprender[ˌʌndǝ'stænd] (pt, pp understood)1. VTI can't understand it! — ¡no lo entiendo!
that's what I can't understand — eso es lo que no logro entender or comprender
I don't want to hear another word about it, (is that) understood? — no quiero que se hable más del tema, ¿entendido or comprendido?
the process is still not fully understood — el proceso todavía no se comprende or entiende del todo
doctors are still trying to understand the disease — los médicos siguen intentando comprender la enfermedad
it must be understood that... — debe entenderse que...
you must understand that we're very busy — debes entender or comprender que estamos muy ocupados
2) (=follow, interpret) entenderdid I understand you correctly? — ¿te entendí bien?
•
to make o.s. understood — hacerse entenderdo I make myself understood? — ¿queda claro?
3) (=empathize with) [+ person, point of view, attitude] comprender, entenderhis wife doesn't understand him — su mujer no le comprende or entiende
she understands children — comprende or entiende a los niños
we understand one another — nos comprendemos or entendemos
I (fully) understand your position — comprendo or entiendo (totalmente) su posición
4) (=know) [+ language] entender5) (=believe) tener entendido•
as I understand it, he's trying to set up a meeting — según tengo entendido or según creo está intentando convocar una reuniónit's understood that he had a heart attack — se piensa or cree que sufrió un infarto
am I to understand that...? — ¿debo entender que...?
we confirm our reservation and we understand (that) the rental will be 500 euros — confirmamos nuestra reserva y entendemos que el alquiler será de 500 euros
•
to give sb to understand that — dar a algn a entender quewe were given to understand that... — se nos dio a entender que...
•
it was understood that he would pay for it — se dio por sentado que él lo pagaría•
he let it be understood that... — dio a entender que...2. VI1) (=comprehend) entender; (more emphatic) comprenderdo you understand? — ¿entiendes or comprendes?
now I understand! — ¡ahora entiendo!, ¡ahora comprendo!
there's to be no noise, (do you) understand? — que no haya ruido, ¿entiendes or comprendes?
2) (=believe)she was, I understand, a Catholic — según tengo entendido era católica
3) (=accept sb's position) entender; (esp in more complex situation) comprenderhe'll understand — lo entenderá or comprenderá
don't worry, I quite understand — no te preocupes, lo entiendo or comprendo perfectamente
* * *['ʌndər'stænd, ˌʌndə'stænd]
1.
(past & past p - stood) transitive verb1)a) ( grasp meaning of) entender*I can't understand why he did it — no logro entender or comprender por qué lo hizo
I don't want it to happen again; have I made myself understood? — no quiero que vuelva a suceder ¿está claro?
b) ( interpret) entender*, interpretaras I understand it,... — según tengo entendido,..., por lo que entiendo,..., según creo,...
what do you understand by the term `deprivation'? — ¿qué entiendes tú por `privaciones'?
c) (sympathize, empathize with) comprender, entender*2) (believe, infer)the president is understood to favor the second option — se cree que el presidente prefiere la segunda opción
am I to understand that you won't help? — ¿entonces quiere decir que no me van a ayudar?
I was given to understand I'd get my money back — me dieron a entender que me devolverían el dinero; see also understood II
2.
vi entender*, comprender -
13 understand
1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) forstå, skjønne, oppfatte2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) forstå, kjenne, skjønne3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) forstå, gå ut fra, oppfatte, innse•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) forståelse, forstand, dømmekraft2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) forståelse, innsikt3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) forståelse•- make oneself understood- make understoodbegripe--------forstå--------oppfatte--------skjønneverb ( understood - understood) \/ˌʌndəˈstænd\/1) forstå, skjønne, begripe• do you understand Shakespeare's English?2) fatte, bli klar over, være klar over, forstå rekkevidden av (en situasjon e.l.)• do you understand your duties?3) forstå seg på, være flink med4) ha forståelse for, ha sympati med5) få greie på, ha brakt i erfaring, forstå• he is, I understand, not alone6) fatte, få for seg, konkludere med7) oppfatte, tolke• am I to understand that you refuse?8) regne med, gå ut fra, ta for gittgive someone to understand that la noen forstå atit is understood that ( også) det er underforstått atunderstand about forstå seg påunderstand by forstå med, legge i• what do you understand by that word?understand each other\/one another ha forståelse for hverandres synspunkter, være enige om noeunderstand from forstå av, fatte av, lese ut av -
14 understand
1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) skilja2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) skilja3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) gera sér grein fyrir, skiljast•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) skilningur2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) skilningur3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) samkomulag•- make oneself understood- make understood -
15 understand
értesül, hozzáért, hozzágondol* * *1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) (meg)ért2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) megért; alaposan ismer3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) értesül•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) értelmi képesség2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) megértés3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) megállapodás•- make oneself understood- make understood -
16 understand
1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) compreender2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) compreender3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) perceber•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) intelecto2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) compreensão3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) acordo•- make oneself understood- make understood* * *un.der.stand[∧ndəst'ænd] vt+vi (ps, pp understood) 1 compreender, entender, perceber. he understands boys / ele tem habilidade para lidar com rapazes. I cannot understand him / eu não o posso compreender. we could not make ourselves understood / não conseguimos nos fazer entender. 2 saber. 3 reconhecer. 4 ouvir, tomar conhecimento, ficar inteirado, ser informado. I was given to understand / deram-me a entender. he gave me to understand that he would be here soon / ele me deu a entender que estaria aqui logo. 5 supor, pensar, julgar, inferir, acreditar, crer. I understood him to say... / compreendi que ele disse. I understand that we need help / creio que precisamos de ajuda. 6 subentender, ser subentendido. am I to understand that you wish to go? / você quer dizer que deseja ir embora? an understood thing coisa lógica, natural. as I understand it assim como eu o entendo. that is understood isto é evidente, subentendido, natural. to understand by compreender por. to understand each other ( one another) entender-se. to understand from tomar conhecimento por intermédio de (carta etc.).————————understand.• adj 1 compreendido, entendido. 2 de acordo. 3 implícito. -
17 understand
v. anlamak, iyi anlamak, kavramak, bilmek, çakmak, anlayışlı olmak, hissetmek* * *anla* * *1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) anlamak2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) anlamak3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) anlamak•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) kavrama, anlama, anlayış2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) anlayış, hâlden anlama3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) anlaşma•- make oneself understood- make understood -
18 understand
1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) razumeti2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) poznati3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) uvideti•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) razum2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) razumevanje3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) sporazum•- make oneself understood- make understood* * *[ʌndəstaend]1.transitive verbrazumeti, umeti, pojmiti; razumeti se, spoznati se ( how to infinitive kako...); uvideti, spoznati, izkusiti; smatrati, misliti, predpostaviti, podrazumeti;2.intransitive verbrazumeti, imeti razum; biti informiran; obsolete zvedeti, slišatito understand about s.th. — biti informiran o čemto understand one another — razumeti se med seboj ( each other — eden drugega), zlágati se, harmoniratihe understands horses — razume se, spozna se na konjeI understand he died last week — zvedel sem (slišal sem, slišim), da je umrl pretekli tedenI understand that you spread these rumours — slišim (slišal sem, pravijo), da vi širite te govoriceam I to understand that this sum is meant to cover all expenses? — naj razumem (naj to pomeni), da naj ta vsota krije vse stroške?do I ( —ali am I to) understand that you refuse? — hočete s tem reči, da odklanjate?it is an understood thing that... — samo po sebi se razume, da...to give s.o. to understand — dati komu razumetito make s.o. understand — dati komu razumeti; razložiti komuto make o.s. understood in French — sporazume(va)ti se v francoščini, znati toliko francosko, da se sporazumemo (s kom)it must be clearly understood that if you go, you go alone — moramo si biti čisto na jasnem, da, če greste, greste samiwhat did you understand him to say? — kako ste razumeli njegove besede? -
19 understand
• oivaltaa• osata• ottaa• saada jokin käsitys• nähdä• tajuta• älytä• ymmärtää• käsittää• luulla tietävänsä* * *1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) ymmärtää2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) ymmärtää3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) ymmärtää•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) ymmärrys2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) ymmärtämys3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) sopimus•- make oneself understood- make understood -
20 understand
[ˌʌndə'stænd] 1.verbo transitivo (pass., p.pass. - stood)1) (intellectually) capire, comprendere [question, language, con cept]to understand that, how — capire che, come
2) (emotionally) capire, comprendere [person, feelings]to understand sb. doing — capire che qcn. faccia
3) (interpret) capire, comprendere [person, statement]I understood him to say o as saying that... — ho capito che avesse detto che
4) (believe)to understand that — credere o capire che
6) ling. (imply)2.to be understood — [ subject] essere sottinteso
verbo intransitivo (pass., p.pass. - stood)1) (comprehend) capire ( about di)2) (sympathize) capire, comprendere* * *1. past tense, past participle - understood; verb1) (to see or know the meaning of (something): I can't understand his absence; Speak slowly to foreigners so that they'll understand you.) capire, comprendere2) (to know (eg a person) thoroughly: She understands children/dogs.) capire3) (to learn or realize (something), eg from information received: At first I didn't understand how ill she was; I understood that you were planning to leave today.) capire•- understanding 2. noun1) (the power of thinking clearly: a man of great understanding.) intelligenza2) (the ability to sympathize with another person's feelings: His kindness and understanding were a great comfort to her.) comprensione3) (a (state of) informal agreement: The two men have come to / reached an understanding after their disagreement.) accordo•- make oneself understood- make understood* * *[ˌʌndə'stænd] 1.verbo transitivo (pass., p.pass. - stood)1) (intellectually) capire, comprendere [question, language, con cept]to understand that, how — capire che, come
2) (emotionally) capire, comprendere [person, feelings]to understand sb. doing — capire che qcn. faccia
3) (interpret) capire, comprendere [person, statement]I understood him to say o as saying that... — ho capito che avesse detto che
4) (believe)to understand that — credere o capire che
6) ling. (imply)2.to be understood — [ subject] essere sottinteso
verbo intransitivo (pass., p.pass. - stood)1) (comprehend) capire ( about di)2) (sympathize) capire, comprendere
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