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separate+from+something

  • 101 в стороне

    [PrepP; Invar]
    =====
    1. в стороне (от кого-чего) [adv or Prep (the resulting PrepP is adv)]
    at a relatively small distance away (from s.o. or sth.), somewhat set apart (from s.o. or sth.):
    - (off < away>) to one side;
    - somewhat removed (from).
         ♦ В стороне от дома был небольшой сарай. There was a small barn some distance away from the house.
         ♦ Вернулся... старик Мочёнкин, стоял в стороне хмурый, строго наблюдал (Аксёнов 3). Old Mochenkin returned....Standing to one side, he frowned and observed everything with a critical eye (3a).
         ♦ Она понимала, почему брат хочет устроить её возле печи. Тут теплее и в стороне (Абрамов 1). She understood why her brother wanted to get her settled in beside the stove. It was warmer there, and somewhat removed (1a).
    2. [adv or subj-compl with copula (subj: concr)]
    sth. is located far off, in a distant, isolated place:
    - far away from everything.
         ♦ Постоялый двор... находился в стороне, в степи, далече от всякого селения... (Пушкин 2). This wayside inn...was in a remote place, in the middle of the steppe, far from any habitation... (2a).
    3. в стороне (от кого) держаться и т.п. [the resulting PrepP is subj-compl with copula (subj: human or animal)]
    (to remain) separate, isolated from others, not (to associate) with others:
    - X remains < holds himself> aloof (from Ys).
         ♦ Я с самого начала говорил, что революция достигает чего-нибудь нужного, если совершается в сердцах, а не на стогнах. Но уж раз начали без меня - я не мог быть в стороне от тех, кто начал (Ерофеев 1). From the very first, I said that revolution achieves something essential when it occurs in the heart and not in the town square. But once they began it without me, I could not remain aloof from those who began it (1a).
    4. в стороне (от кого-чего) держаться, стоять, оставаться и т.п. Also: В СТОРОНКЕ coll [the resulting PrepP is subj-compl with copula (subj: human)]
    (to remain) uninvolved with s.o. or in sth., not to participate in sth.:
    - X остается в стороне X stays (remains) on the sidelines;
    - X keeps < stays> out of it;
    - [in limited contexts] X remains aloof.
         ♦ "Я на тебя всё взваливаю, взваливаю, а сам... в сторонке, ты одна обязана колотиться" (Распутин 2). "I keep heaping things on you and then I remain on the sidelines, leaving you to struggle with all the responsibility" (2a).
         ♦ "Я вообще считаю, что военных надо держать в стороне. Глупо с ними советоваться" (Эренбург 4). "...As a general rule, my opinion is that military men must be kept out of it. It's folly to take their advice" (4a).
         ♦ Я подозреваю, что мужу ее [княгини], мирному абхазскому князю, приходилось терпеть более грубые формы её деспотического темперамента. Так что он на всякий случай старался держаться в сторонке (Искандер 3). [context transl] I suspect that her [the princess's] husband, a peaceable Abkhazian prince, was forced to bear cruder expressions of her despotic temperament. So, just in case, he tried to keep out of range (3a).
    5. в стороне оставаться, оказываться и т.п. Also: В СТОРОНКЕ coll [subj-compl with copula (subj: abstr or human)]
    (to be) disregarded, unnoticed, not included:
    - X остался в стороне X was ignored <passed over, left out>.
         ♦ "О редкостях [в статье] расписали много, а работа коллектива библиотеки осталась в стороне" (Доморовский 1). " А great deal was said [in the article] about rare books but all the library staff's good work was ignored" (1a).
         ♦ "Когда я была на заводе, я это почувствовала... Они могут нас считать своими, любить, баловать, но вот придёт минута, и мы окажемся в сторонке" (Эренбург 4). "When I was at the factory, I had this feeling. I thought: They may consider us to be on their side, they may like us and spoil us, but there'll come a moment when we'll find ourselves left out'" (4a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > в стороне

  • 102 в сторонке

    [PrepP; Invar]
    =====
    1. в сторонке (от кого-чего) [adv or Prep (the resulting PrepP is adv)]
    at a relatively small distance away (from s.o. or sth.), somewhat set apart (from s.o. or sth.):
    - (off < away>) to one side;
    - somewhat removed (from).
         ♦ В стороне от дома был небольшой сарай. There was a small barn some distance away from the house.
         ♦ Вернулся... старик Мочёнкин, стоял в стороне хмурый, строго наблюдал (Аксёнов 3). Old Mochenkin returned....Standing to one side, he frowned and observed everything with a critical eye (3a).
         ♦ Она понимала, почему брат хочет устроить её возле печи. Тут теплее и в стороне (Абрамов 1). She understood why her brother wanted to get her settled in beside the stove. It was warmer there, and somewhat removed (1a).
    2. [adv or subj-compl with copula (subj: concr)]
    sth. is located far off, in a distant, isolated place:
    - far away from everything.
         ♦ Постоялый двор... находился в стороне, в степи, далече от всякого селения... (Пушкин 2). This wayside inn...was in a remote place, in the middle of the steppe, far from any habitation... (2a).
    3. в сторонке (от кого) держаться и т.п. [the resulting PrepP is subj-compl with copula (subj: human or animal)]
    (to remain) separate, isolated from others, not (to associate) with others:
    - X remains < holds himself> aloof (from Ys).
         ♦ Я с самого начала говорил, что революция достигает чего-нибудь нужного, если совершается в сердцах, а не на стогнах. Но уж раз начали без меня - я не мог быть в стороне от тех, кто начал (Ерофеев 1). From the very first, I said that revolution achieves something essential when it occurs in the heart and not in the town square. But once they began it without me, I could not remain aloof from those who began it (1a).
    4. в сторонке (от кого-чего) держаться, стоять, оставаться и т.п. Also: В СТОРОНКЕ coll [the resulting PrepP is subj-compl with copula (subj: human)]
    (to remain) uninvolved with s.o. or in sth., not to participate in sth.:
    - X остается в стороне X stays (remains) on the sidelines;
    - X keeps < stays> out of it;
    - [in limited contexts] X remains aloof.
         ♦ "Я на тебя всё взваливаю, взваливаю, а сам... в сторонке, ты одна обязана колотиться" (Распутин 2). "I keep heaping things on you and then I remain on the sidelines, leaving you to struggle with all the responsibility" (2a).
         ♦ "Я вообще считаю, что военных надо держать в стороне. Глупо с ними советоваться" (Эренбург 4). "...As a general rule, my opinion is that military men must be kept out of it. It's folly to take their advice" (4a).
         ♦ Я подозреваю, что мужу ее [княгини], мирному абхазскому князю, приходилось терпеть более грубые формы её деспотического темперамента. Так что он на всякий случай старался держаться в сторонке (Искандер 3). [context transl] I suspect that her [the princess's] husband, a peaceable Abkhazian prince, was forced to bear cruder expressions of her despotic temperament. So, just in case, he tried to keep out of range (3a).
    5. в сторонке оставаться, оказываться и т.п. Also: В СТОРОНКЕ coll [subj-compl with copula (subj: abstr or human)]
    (to be) disregarded, unnoticed, not included:
    - X остался в стороне X was ignored <passed over, left out>.
         ♦ "О редкостях [в статье] расписали много, а работа коллектива библиотеки осталась в стороне" (Доморовский 1). " А great deal was said [in the article] about rare books but all the library staff's good work was ignored" (1a).
         ♦ "Когда я была на заводе, я это почувствовала... Они могут нас считать своими, любить, баловать, но вот придёт минута, и мы окажемся в сторонке" (Эренбург 4). "When I was at the factory, I had this feeling. I thought: They may consider us to be on their side, they may like us and spoil us, but there'll come a moment when we'll find ourselves left out'" (4a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > в сторонке

  • 103 अर्थः _arthḥ

    अर्थः [In some of its senses from अर्थ्; in others from ऋ-थन् Uṇ.2.4; अर्थते ह्यसौ अर्थिभिः Nir.]
    1 Object, pur- pose, end and aim; wish, desire; ज्ञातार्थो ज्ञातसंबन्धः श्रोतुं श्रोता प्रवर्तते, सिद्ध˚, ˚परिपन्थी Mu.5; ˚वशात् 5.8; स्मर्तव्यो$स्मि सत्यर्थे Dk.117 if it be necessary; Y.2.46; M.4.6; oft. used in this sense as the last member of compounds and translated by 'for', 'intended for', 'for the sake of', 'on account of', 'on behalf of', and used like an adj. to qualify nouns; अर्थेन तु नित्य- समासो विशेष्यनिघ्रता च Vārt.; सन्तानार्थाय विधये R.1.34; तां देवतापित्रतिथिक्रियार्थाम् (धेनुम्) 2.16; द्विजार्था यवागूः Sk.; यज्ञार्थात्कर्मणो$न्यत्र Bg.3.9. It mostly occurs in this sense as अर्थम्, अर्थे or अर्थाय and has an adverbial force; (a) किमर्थम् for what purpose, why; यदर्थम् for whom or which; वेलोपलक्षणार्थम् Ś.4; तद्दर्शनादभूच्छम्भोर्भूयान्दारार्थ- मादरः Ku.6.13; (b) परार्थे प्राज्ञ उत्सृजेत् H.1.41; गवार्थे ब्राह्मणार्थे च Pt.1.42; मदर्थे त्यक्तजीविताः Bg.1.9; (c) सुखार्थाय Pt.4.18; प्रत्याख्याता मया तत्र नलस्यार्थाय देवताः Nala.13.19; ऋतुपर्णस्य चार्थाय 23.9.
    -2 Cause, motive, reason, ground, means; अलुप्तश्च मुनेः क्रियार्थः R. 2.55 means or cause; अतो$र्थात् Ms.2.213.
    -3 Meaning, sense, signification, import; अर्थ is of 3 kinds:-- वाच्य or expressed, लक्ष्य or indicated (secondary), and व्यङ्ग्य or suggested; तददोषौ शब्दार्थौ K. P.1; अर्थो वाच्यश्च लक्ष्यश्च व्यङ्ग्यश्चेति त्रिधा मतः S. D.2; वागर्थाविव R.1.1; अवेक्ष्य धातोर्गमनार्थमर्थवित् 3.21.
    -4 A thing, object, substance; लक्ष्मणो$र्थं ततः श्रुत्वा Rām.7.46.18; अर्थो हि कन्या परकीय एव Ś.4.22; that which can be perceived by the senses, an object of sense; इन्द्रिय˚ H.1.146; Ku.7.71; R.2.51; न निर्बद्धा उपसर्गा अर्थान्निराहुः Nir.; इन्द्रियेभ्यः परा ह्यर्था अर्थेभ्यश्च परं मनः Kaṭh. (the objects of sense are five: रूप, रस, गन्ध, स्पर्श and शब्द); शब्दः स्पर्शो रसो गन्धो रूपं चेत्यर्थजातयः Bhāg.11.22.16.
    -5 (a) An affair, business, matter, work; प्राक् प्रतिपन्नो$यमर्थो$- ङ्गराजाय Ve.3; अर्थो$यमर्थान्तरभाव्य एव Ku.3.18; अर्थो$र्था- नुबन्धी Dk.67; सङ्गीतार्थः Me.66 business of singing i. e. musical concert (apparatus of singing); सन्देशार्थाः Me. 5 matters of message, i. e. messages; (b) Interest, object; स्वार्थसाधनतत्परः Ms.4.196; द्वयमेवार्थसाधनम् R.1. 19;2.21; दुरापे$र्थे 1.72; सर्वार्थचिन्तकः Ms.7.121; माल- विकायां न मे कश्चिदर्थः M.3 I have no interest in M. (c) Subject-matter, contents (as of letters &c.); त्वामव- गतार्थं करिष्यति Mu.1 will acquaint you with the matter; उत्तरो$यं लेखार्थः ibid.; तेन हि अस्य गृहीतार्था भवामि V.2 if so I should know its contents; ननु परिगृहीतार्थो$- स्मि कृतो भवता V.5; तया भवतो$विनयमन्तरेण परिगृहीतार्था कृता देवी M.4 made acquainted with; त्वया गृहीतार्थया अत्रभवती कथं न वारिता 3; अगृहीतार्थे आवाम् Ś.6; इति पौरान् गृहीतार्थान् कृत्वा ibid.
    -6 Wealth, riches, property, money (said to be of 3 kinds: शुक्ल honestly got; शबल got by more or less doubtful means, and कृष्ण dishonestly got;) त्यागाय संभृतार्थानाम् R.1.7; धिगर्थाः कष्टसंश्रयाः Pt.1.163; अर्थानामर्जने दुःखम् ibid.; सस्यार्थास्तस्य मित्राणि1.3; तेषामर्थे नियुञ्जीत शूरान् दक्षान् कुलोद्गतान् Ms.7.62.
    -7 Attainment of riches or worldly prosperity, regarded as one of the four ends of human existence, the other three being धर्म, काम and मोक्ष; with अर्थ and काम, धर्म forms the well-known triad; cf. Ku.5.38; अप्यर्थकामौ तस्यास्तां धर्म एव मनीषिणः R.1.25.
    -8 (a) Use, advantage, profit, good; तथा हि सर्वे तस्यासन् परार्थैकफला गुणाः R.1.29 for the good of others; अर्थान- र्थावुभौ बुद्ध्वा Ms.8.24 good and evil; क्षेत्रिणामर्थः 9.52; यावानर्थ उदपाने सर्वतः सांप्लुतोदके Bg.2.46; also व्यर्थ, निरर्थक q. v. (b) Use, want, need, concern, with instr.; को$र्थः पुत्रेण जातेन Pt.1 what is the use of a son being born; कश्च तेनार्थः Dk.59; को$र्थस्तिरश्चां गुणैः Pt.2.33 what do brutes care for merits; Bh.2.48; योग्येनार्थः कस्य न स्याज्ज- नेन Ś.18.66; नैव तस्य कृतेनार्थो नाकृतेनेह कश्चन Bg.3.18; यदि प्राणैरिहार्थो वो निवर्तध्वम् Rām. को नु मे जीवितेनार्थः Nala.12. 65.
    -9 Asking, begging; request, suit, petition.
    -1 Action, plaint (in law); अर्थ विरागाः पश्यन्ति Rām.2.1. 58; असाक्षिकेषु त्वर्थेषु Ms.8.19.
    -11 The actual state, fact of the matter; as in यथार्थ, अर्थतः, ˚तत्वविद्, यदर्थेन विनामुष्य पुंस आत्मविपर्ययः Bhāg.3.7.1.
    -12 Manner, kind, sort.
    -13 Prevention, warding off; मशकार्थो धूमः; prohibition, abolition (this meaning may also be derived from 1 above).
    -14 Price (perhaps an incorrect form for अर्घ).
    -15 Fruit, result (फलम्). तस्य नानुभवेदर्थं यस्य हेतोः स रोपितः Rām.6.128.7; Mb.12.175.5.
    -16 N. of a son of धर्म.
    -17 The second place from the लग्न (in astr.).
    -18 N. of Viṣṇu.
    -19 The category called अपूर्व (in पूर्वमीमांसा); अर्थ इति अपूर्वं ब्रूमः । ŚB. on MS.7.1.2.
    -2 Force (of a statement or an expres- sion); अर्थाच्च सामर्थ्याच्च क्रमो विधीयते । ŚB. on MS.5.1.2. [अर्थात् = by implication].
    -21 The need, purpose, sense; व्यवधानादर्थो बलीयान् । ŚB. on MS.6.4.23.
    -22 Capacity, power; अर्थाद्वा कल्पनैकदेशत्वात् । Ms.1.4.3 (where Śabara paraphrases अर्थात् by सामर्थ्यात् and states the rule: आख्यातानामर्थं ब्रुवतां शक्तिः सहकारिणी ।), cf. अर्थो$भिधेयरैवस्तुप्रयोजननिवृत्तिषु । मोक्षकारणयोश्च...... Nm.
    -Comp. -अतिदेशः Extension (of gender, number &e.) to the objects (as against words), i. e. to treat a single object as though it were many, a female as though it were male. (तन्त्रवार्त्तिक 1.2.58.3;6.3.34.7).
    -अधिकारः charge of money, office of treasurer ˚रे न नियोक्तव्यौ H.2.
    -अधिकारिन् m. a treasurer, one charged with finan- cial duties, finance minister.
    -अनुपपत्तिः f. The difficulty of accounting for or explaining satisfactorily a particular meaning; incongruity of a particular meaning (तन्त्रवार्त्तिक 4.3.42.2).
    -अनुयायिन् a. Following the rules (शास्त्र); तत्त्रिकालहितं वाक्यं धर्म्यमर्थानुयायि च Rām.5.51.21.
    -अन्वेषणम् inquiry after a matter.
    -अन्तरम् 1 another or different meaning.
    -2 another cause or motive; अर्थो$यम- र्थान्तरभाव्य एव Ku.3.18.
    -3 A new matter or circum- stance, new affair.
    -4 opposite or antithetical meaning, difference of meaning. ˚न्यासः a figure of speech in which a general proposition is adduced to support a particular instance, or a particular instance, to support a general proposition; it is an inference from parti- cular to general and vice versa; उक्तिरर्थान्तरन्यासः स्यात् सामान्यविशेषयोः । (1) हनूमानब्धिमतरद् दुष्करं किं महात्मनाम् ॥ (2) गुणवद्वस्तुसंसर्गाद्याति नीचो$पि गौरवम् । पुष्पमालानुषङ्गेण सूत्रं शिरसि धार्यते Kuval.; cf. also K. P.1 and S. D.79. (Ins- tances of this figure abound in Sanskrit literature, especi- ally in the works of Kālidāsa, Māgha and Bhāravi).
    -अन्वित a.
    1 rich, wealthy.
    -2 significant.
    -अभिधान a.
    1 That whose name is connected with the purpose to be served by it; अर्थाभिधानं प्रयोजनसम्बद्धमभिधानं यस्य, यथा पुरोडाश- कपालमिति पुरोडाशार्थं कपालं पुरोडाशकपालम् । ŚB. on MS.4.1. 26.
    -2 Expression or denotation of the desired meaning (वार्त्तिक 3.1.2.5.).
    -अर्थिन् a. one who longs for or strives to get wealth or gain any object. अर्थार्थी जीवलोको$यम् । आर्तो जिज्ञासुरर्थार्थी Bg.7.16.
    -अलंकरः a figure of speech determined by and dependent on the sense, and not on sound (opp. शब्दालंकार). अलंकारशेखर of केशवमिश्र mentions (verse 29) fourteen types of अर्थालंकारs as follows:- उपमारूपकोत्प्रेक्षाः समासोक्तिरपह्नुतिः । समाहितं स्वभावश्च विरोधः सारदीपकौ ॥ सहोक्तिरन्यदेशत्वं विशेषोक्तिर्विभावना । एवं स्युरर्थालकारा- श्चतुर्दश न चापरे ॥
    -आगमः 1 acquisition of wealth, income; ˚गमाय स्यात् Pt.1. cf. also अर्थागमो नित्यमरोगिता च H.
    -2 collection of property.
    -3 conveying of sense; S. D.737.
    -आपत्तिः f. [अर्थस्य अनुक्तार्थस्य आपत्तिः सिद्धिः]
    1 an inference from circumstances, presumption, im- plication, one of the five sources of knowledge or modes of proof, according to the Mīmāṁsakas. It is 'deduc- tion of a matter from that which could not else be'; it is 'assumption of a thing, not itself perceived but necessarily implied by another which is seen, heard, or proved'; it is an inference used to account for an apparent inconsistency; as in the familiar instance पीनो देवदत्तो दिवा न भुङ्क्ते the apparent inconsistency between 'fatness' and 'not eating by day' is accounted for by the inference of his 'eating by night'. पीनत्वविशि- ष्टस्य देवदत्तस्य रात्रिभोजित्वरूपार्थस्य शब्दानुक्तस्यापि आपत्तिः. It is defined by Śabara as दृष्टः श्रुतो वार्थो$न्यथा नोपपद्यते इत्यर्थ- कल्पना । यथा जीवति देवदत्ते गृहाभावदर्शनेन बहिर्भावस्यादृष्टस्य कल्पना ॥ Ms.1.1.5. It may be seen from the words दृष्टः and श्रुतः in the above definition, that Śabara has sug- gested two varieties of अर्थापत्ति viz. दृष्टार्थापत्ति and श्रुता- र्थापत्ति. The illustration given by him, however, is of दृष्टार्थापत्ति only. The former i. e. दृष्टार्थापत्ति consists in the presumption of some अदृष्ट अर्थ to account for some दृष्ट अर्थ (or अर्थs) which otherwise becomes inexplicable. The latter, on the other hand, consists in the presump- tion of some अर्थ through अश्रुत शब्द to account for some श्रुत अर्थ (i. e. some statement). This peculiarity of श्रुतार्थापत्ति is clearly stated in the following couplet; यत्र त्वपरिपूर्णस्य वाक्यस्यान्वयसिद्धये । शब्दो$ध्याह्रियते तत्र श्रुतार्थापत्ति- रिष्यते ॥ Mānameyodaya p.129 (ed. by K. Raja, Adyar, 1933). Strictly speaking it is no separate mode of proof; it is only a case of अनुमान and can be proved by a व्यतिरेकव्याप्ति; cf. Tarka. K.17 and S. D.46.
    -2 a figure of speech (according to some rhe- toricians) in which a relevant assertion suggests an inference not actually connected with the the subject in hand, or vice versa; it corresponds to what is popularly called कैमुतिकन्याय or दण्डापूपन्याय; e. g. हारो$यं हरिणाक्षीणां लुण्ठति स्तनमण्डले । मुक्तानामप्यवस्थेयं के वयं स्मरकिङ्कराः Amaru.1; अभितप्तमयो$पि मार्दवं भजते कैव कथा शरीरिषु R.8.43.; S. D. thus defines the figure:- दण्डापूपिकन्यायार्थागमो$र्थापत्तिरिष्यते.
    -उत्पत्तिः f. acquisition of wealth; so ˚उपार्जनम्.
    -उपक्षेपकः an introductory scene (in dramas); अर्थोपक्षेपकाः पञ्च S. D.38. They are विष्कम्भ, चूलिका, अङ्कास्य, अङ्कावतार, प्रवेशक.
    -उपमा a simile dependent on sense and not on sound; see under उपमा.
    -उपार्जनम् Acquiring wealth.
    -उष्मन् m. the glow or warmth of wealth; अर्थोष्मणा विरहितः पुरुषः स एव Bh.2.4.
    -ओघः, -राशिः treasure, hoard of money.
    -कर (
    -री f.),
    -कृत a.
    1 bringing in wealth, enriching; अर्थकरी च विद्या H. Pr.3.
    -2 useful, advan- tageous.
    -कर्मन् n.
    1 a principal action (opp. गुणकर्मन्).
    -2 (as opposed to प्रतिपत्तिकर्मन्), A fruitful act (as opposed to mere disposal or प्रतिपत्ति); अर्थकर्म वा कर्तृ- संयोगात् स्रग्वत् । MS.4.2.17.
    -काम a. desirous of wealth. (-˚मौ dual), wealth and (sensual) desire or pleasure; अप्यर्थकामौ तस्यास्तां धर्म एव मनीषिणः R.1.25. ह्रत्वार्थकामास्तु गुरूनिहैव Bg.2.5.
    -कार्ष्यम् Poverty. निर्बन्धसंजातरुषार्थकार्घ्यमचिन्तयित्वा गुरुणाहमुक्तः R.5.21.
    -काशिन् a. Only apparently of utility (not really).
    -किल्बिषिन् a. dishonest in money-matters.
    -कृच्छ्रम् 1 a difficult matter.
    -2 pecuniary difficulty; व्यसनं वार्थकृच्छ्रे वा Rām.4.7.9; Mb.3.2.19; cf. also Kau. A.1.15 न मुह्येदर्थकृच्छ्रेषु Nīti.
    -कृत्यम् doing or execution of a business; अभ्युपेतार्थकृत्याः Me.4.
    -कोविद a. Expert in a matter, experienced. उवाच रामो धर्मात्मा पुनरप्यर्थकोविदः Rām.6.4.8.
    -क्रमः due order or sequ- ence of purpose.
    -क्रिया (a) An implied act, an act which is to be performed as a matter of course (as opposed to शब्दोक्तक्रिया); असति शब्दोक्ते अर्थक्रिया भवति ŚB. on MS.12.1.12. (b) A purposeful action. (see अर्थकर्मन्).
    -गत a.
    1 based on the sense (as a दोष).
    -2 devoid of sense.
    -गतिः understanding the sense.
    -गुणाः cf. भाविकत्वं सुशब्दत्वं पर्यायोक्तिः सुधर्मिता । चत्वारो$र्थगुणाः प्रोक्ताः परे त्वत्रैव संगताः ॥ अलंकारशेखर 21.
    -गृहम् A treasury. Hariv.
    -गौरवम् depth of meaning; भारवेरर्थगौरवम् Udb., Ki.2.27.
    -घ्न a. (
    घ्नी f.) extrava- gant, wasteful, prodigal; सुरापी व्याधिता धूर्ता वन्ध्यार्थघ्न्य- प्रियंवदा Y.1.73; व्याधिता वाधिवेत्तव्या हिंस्रार्थघ्नी च सर्वदा Ms.9.8.
    -चित्रम् 'variety in sense', a pun, Kāvya- prakāśa.
    -चिन्तक a.
    1 thinking of profit.
    -2 having charge of affairs; सर्वार्थचिन्तकः Ms.7.121.
    -चिन्ता, -चिन्तनम् charge or administration of (royal) affairs; मन्त्री स्यादर्थचिन्तायाम् S. D.
    -जात a.
    1 full of meaning.
    -2 wealthy (जातधन).
    (-तम्) 1 a collection of things.
    -2 large amount of wealth, considerable property; Dk.63, Ś.6; ददाति च नित्यमर्थजातम् Mk.2.7.
    -3 all matters; कवय इव महीपाश्चिन्तयन्त्यर्थजातम् Śi.11.6.
    -4 its own meaning; वहन्द्वयीं यद्यफले$र्थजाते Ki.3.48.
    -ज्ञ a. knowing the sense or purpose; अर्थज्ञ इत्सकलं भद्रमश्नुते Nir.
    -तत्त्वम् 1 the real truth, the fact of the matter; यो$र्थतत्त्वमविज्ञाय क्रोधस्यैव वशं गतः H.4.94.
    -2 the real nature or cause of anything.
    - a.
    1 yielding wealth; Dk.41.
    -2 advantageous, productive of good, useful.
    -3 liberal, munificent Ms.2.19.
    -4 favour- able, compliant. (
    -दः) N. of Kubera.
    -दर्शकः 'one who sees law-suits'; a judge.
    -दर्शनम् perception of objects; कुरुते दीप इवार्थदर्शनम् Ki.2.33; Dk.155.
    -दूषणम् 1 extravagance, waste; H.3.18; Ms.7.48.
    -2 unjust seizure of property or withholding what is due.
    -3 finding fault with the meaning.
    -4 spoiling of another's property.
    -दृश् f. Consideration of truth; क्षेमं त्रिलोकगुरुरर्थदृशं च यच्छन् Bhāg.1.86.21.
    -दृष्टिः Seeing profit; Bhāg.
    -दोषः a literary fault or blemish with regard to the sense, one of the four doṣas or blemishes of literary composition, the other three being परदोष, पदांशदोष, वाक्यदोष; for definitions &c. see K. P.7. अलंकारशेखर of केशवमिश्र who mentions eight types of doṣas as follows: अष्टार्थदोषाः विरस, -ग्राम्य, -व्याहत, -खिन्नताः । -हीना, -धिका, सदृक्साम्यं देशादीनां विरोधि च ॥ 17
    -द्वयविधानम् Injunction of two ideas or senses; विधाने चार्थद्वयविधानं दोषः ŚB. on MS.1.8.7.
    -नित्य a. = अर्थ- प्रधान Nir.
    -निबन्धन a. dependent on wealth.
    -निश्चयः determination, decision.
    -प्रतिः 1 'the lord of riches', a a king; किंचिद् विहस्यार्थपतिं बभाषे R.2.46;1.59;9.3;18.1; Pt.1.74.
    -2 an epithet of Kubera.
    -पदम् N. of the Vārt. on Pāṇini; ससूत्रवृत्त्यर्थपदं महार्थं ससंग्रहं सिद्ध्यति वै कपीन्द्रः Rām.7.36.45.
    -पर, -लुब्ध a.
    1 intent on gaining wealth, greedy of wealth, covetous.
    -2 niggardly, parsimonious; हिंस्रा दयालुरपि चार्थपरा वदान्या Bh.2.47; Pt.1.425.
    -प्रकृतिः f. the leading source or occasion of the grand object in a drama; (the number of these 'sources' is five:-- बीजं बिन्दुः पताका च प्रकरी कार्यमेव च । अर्थप्रकृतयः पञ्च ज्ञात्वा योज्या यथाविधि S. D.317.)
    -प्रयोगः 1 usury.
    -2 administration of the affairs (of a state)
    -प्राप्त a. derived or understood from the sense included as a matter of course, implied; परिसमाप्तिः शब्दार्थः । परिसमाप्त्यामर्थप्राप्तत्वादारम्भस्य । ŚB. on MS.6.2.13.
    -˚त्वम् Inplication.
    -बन्धः 1 arrange- ment of words, composition, text; stanza, verse; संचिन्त्य गीतक्षममर्थबन्धम् Ś.7.5; ललितार्थबन्धम् V.2.14 put or expressed in elegant words.
    -2. connection (of the soul) with the objects of sense.
    -बुद्धि a. selfish.
    -बोधः indication of the (real) import.
    -भाज् a. entitled to a share in the division of property.
    -भावनम् Delibera- tion over a subject (Pātañjala Yogadarśana 1.28).
    -भृत् a. receiving high wages (as a servant).
    -भेदः distinc- tion or difference of meaning; अर्थभेदेन शब्दभेदः.
    -मात्रम्, -त्रा 1 property, wealth; Pt.2.
    -2 the whole sense or object.
    -युक्त a. significant, full of यस्यार्थयुक्तं meaning; गिरिराजशब्दं कुर्वन्ति Ku.1.13.
    -लक्षण a. As determined by the purpose or need (as opposed to शब्दलक्षण); लोके कर्मार्थलक्षणम् Ms.11.1.26.
    -लाभः acquisition of wealth.
    -लोभः avarice.
    -वशः power in the form of discrimination and knowledge. अर्थवशात् सप्तरूपविनिवृत्ताम् Sāvk.65.
    -वादः 1 declaration of any purpose.
    -2 affirmation, declaratory assertion, an explanatory remark, exegesis; speech or assertion having a certain object; a sentence. (It usually recommends a विधि or precept by stating the good arising from its proper observance, and the evils arising from its omission, and also by adducing historical instances in its support; स्तुतिर्निन्दा परकृतिः पुराकल्प इत्यर्थवादः Gaut. Sūt.; said by Laugākṣi to be of 3 kinds:- गुणवादो विरोधे स्यादनु वादो$वधारिते । भूतार्थवादस्तद्धानादर्थ- वादस्त्रिधा मतः; the last kind includes many varieties.)
    -3 one of the six means of finding out the tātparya (real aim and object) of any work.
    -4 praise, eulogy; अर्थवाद एषः । दोषं तु मे कंचित्कथय U.1.
    -विकरणम् = अर्थ- विक्रिया change of meaning.
    -विकल्पः 1 deviation from truth, perversion of fact.
    -2 prevarication; also ˚वैकल्प्यम्
    -विज्ञानम् comprehending the sense, one of the six exercises of the understanding (धीगुण).
    -विद् a. sensible, wise, sagacious. भुङ्क्ते तदपि तच्चान्यो मधुहेवार्थविन्मधु Bhāg.11.18.15. विवक्षतामर्थविदस्तत्क्षणप्रतिसंहृताम् Śi.
    -विद्या knowledge of practical life; Mb.7.
    -विपत्तिः Failing of an aim; समीक्ष्यतां चार्थविपत्तिमार्गताम् Rām.2.19.4.
    -विभावक a. money-giver; विप्रेभ्यो$र्थविभावकः Mb.3.33. 84.
    -विप्रकर्षः difficulty in the comprehension of the sense.
    -विशेषणम् a reprehensive repetition of something uttered by another; S. D.49.
    -वृद्धिः f. accumulation of wealth.
    -व्ययः expenditure; ˚ज्ञ a. conversant with money-matters.
    -शब्दौ Word and sense.
    -शालिन् a. Wealthy.
    -शास्त्रम् 1 the science of wealth (political economy).
    -2 science of polity, political science, politics; अर्थशास्त्रविशारदं सुधन्वानमुपाध्यायम् Rām.2.1.14. Dk.12; इह खलु अर्थशास्त्रकारास्त्रिविधां सिद्धिमुपवर्णयन्ति Mu.3; ˚व्यवहारिन् one dealing with politics, a politician; Mu.5.
    -3 science giving precepts on general conduct, the science of practical life; Pt.1.
    -शौचम् purity or honesty in money-matters; सर्वेषां चैव शौचानामर्थशौचं परं स्मृतं Ms. 5.16.
    -श्री Great wealth.
    -संस्थानम् 1 accumulation of wealth.
    -2 treasury.
    -संग्रहः, -संचयः accumulation or acquisition of wealth, treasure, property. कोशेनाश्रयणी- यत्वमिति तस्यार्थसंग्रहः R.17.6. कुदेशमासाद्य कुतो$र्थसंचयः H.
    -संग्रहः a book on Mīmāṁsā by Laugākṣi Bhāskara.
    -सतत्त्वम् truth; किं पुनरत्रार्थसतत्त्वम् । देवा ज्ञातुमर्हन्ति MBh. or P.VIII.3.72.
    -समाजः aggregate of causes.
    -समाहारः 1 treasure.
    -2 acquisition of wealth.
    -संपद् f. accomplishment of a desired object; उपेत्य संघर्ष- मिवार्थसंपदः Ki.1.15.
    -संपादनम् Carrying out of an affair; Ms.7.168.
    -संबन्धः connection of the sense with the word or sentence.
    -संबन्धिन् a. Concerned or interested in an affair; Ms.8.64.
    -साधक a.
    1 accomplishing any object.
    -2 bringing any matter to a conclusion.
    -सारः considerable wealth; Pt.2.42.
    -सिद्ध a. understood from the very context (though not expressed in words), inferable from the connection of words.
    -सिद्धिः f. fulfilment of a desired object, success. द्वारमिवार्थसिद्धेः R.2.21.
    -हानिः Loss of wealth
    -हारिन् a. stealing money Ks.
    -हर a. inheriting wealth.
    -हीन a.
    1 deprived of wealth, poor.
    -2 unmeaning, nonsensical.
    -3 failing.

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > अर्थः _arthḥ

  • 104 Kasse

    f; -, -n
    1. (Ladenkasse) till; (Registrierkasse) cash register; die Kasse klingelt oder die Kassen klingeln umg. the cash tills are ringing; in die Kasse greifen oder einen Griff in die Kasse tun help o.s. to the takings (Am. the take), have a hand in the till
    2. (Zahlstelle) (Kassentisch) cash desk; Supermarkt: checkout (counter); einer Bank: counter (for payments); Büro: cashier’s office; THEAT. etc.: box office; SPORT ticket window; zahlen Sie bitte an der Kasse please pay at the cash desk (Am. pay the cashier); jemanden zur Kasse bitten umg. present s.o. with the bill
    3. Kartenspiel etc.: pool
    4. (Krankenkasse) health (insurance) scheme (Am. plan); bei welcher Kasse sind Sie? which health scheme (Am. plan oder company) are you with?; in keiner Kasse sein have no health insurance, be uninsured
    5. (Sparkasse) savings bank; (örtliche Bank) local (bank) branch
    6. (Einnahmen) takings Pl., receipts Pl., Am. auch take; Kasse machen cash up; sie führt die Kasse she looks after the money
    7. (Bargeld) cash; gut / knapp bei Kasse sein umg. be flush / be hard up; etw. reißt ein Loch in die / in jemandes Kasse s.th. makes a big hole in one’s finances; Kasse machen umg. (schwer verdienen) be raking it in; getrennt
    * * *
    die Kasse
    (Kassentisch) cash desk;
    (Ladenkasse) till; exchequer;
    (Theater) booking office; ticket office; box office
    * * *
    Kạs|se ['kasə]
    f -, -n
    1) (= Zahlstelle) cash desk (Brit) or point, till (Brit), cash register (US), counter (esp US); (= Zahlraum) cashier's office; (THEAT ETC) box office; (in Bank) bank counter; (in Supermarkt) checkout

    an der Kasse (in Geschäft)at the desk (esp Brit), at the (checkout) counter (esp US)

    2) (= Geldkasten) cash box; (in Läden) cash register, till (Brit); (= Geldmittel) coffers pl; (bei Spielen) kitty; (in einer Spielbank) bank

    in die Kasse greifen (inf)to dip into the till (Brit) or cashbox

    der Film hat volle Kassen gemachtthe film was a big box-office success

    die Kassen klingelnthe tills are ringing (Brit), the money is really rolling in

    3) (= Bargeld) cash

    bei Kasse sein (inf)to be flush (inf), to be in the money (inf)

    knapp bei Kasse sein (inf)to be short of cash, to be out of pocket (Brit)

    gut/schlecht bei Kasse sein (inf) — to be well-off/badly-off

    Kasse machento check one's finances; (in Geschäft) to cash up (Brit), to count up the earnings (US)

    4) (inf = Sparkasse) (savings) bank
    5)
    See:
    = Krankenkasse
    * * *
    die
    1) (a ticket office in a theatre, concert - hall etc: There's a queue at the box office for tonight's show.) box office
    2) (a place where payment is made for goods bought in a supermarket.) checkout
    3) (a stock or supply: We put our money into a general pool.) pool
    * * *
    Kas·se
    <-, -n>
    [ˈkasə]
    f
    1. (Zahlstelle) cash desk, till; (Supermarkt) check-out
    netto \Kasse net cash
    gegen \Kasse for cash
    \Kasse bei Rechnungseingang FIN cash on delivery; s.a. Loch
    2. (Kartenverkauf) ticket office
    3. (Registrierkasse) cash register, till
    jdn [für etw akk] zur \Kasse bitten to ask sb to pay [for sth]
    \Kasse machen to close out a register; (fig sl) to cash up, to earn a packet
    die \Kasse stimmt (fam) the money's ok fam
    die \Kassen klingeln (fam) the tills are ringing
    4. (fam: Sparbank) savings bank
    gut/schlecht bei \Kasse sein (fam) to be well/badly off
    knapp/nicht bei \Kasse sein to be short of cash/hard up
    5. ADMIN (Krankenkasse) health insurance fund
    gemeinsame/getrennte \Kasse machen to have joint/separate housekeeping
    * * *
    die; Kasse, Kassen
    1) (Kassette) cash box; (RegistrierKasse) till; cash register

    in die Kasse greifen od. einen Griff in die Kasse tun — (ugs.; auch fig.) help oneself from the till

    er wurde beim Griff in die Kasse ertappt(auch fig.) he was caught with his fingers in the till

    2) (Ort zum Bezahlen) cash or pay desk; (im Supermarkt) checkout; (in einer Bank) counter

    Kasse machen(Kaufmannsspr.) cash up

    jemanden zur Kasse bitten(ugs.) ask somebody to pay up

    3) (Geld) cash

    gemeinsame Kasse führen od. machen — share expenses

    gut/knapp bei Kasse sein — be well-off or flush/be short of cash or money

    etwas reißt ein Loch in die Kasse — (ugs.) something makes a hole in somebody's pocket or a dent in somebody's finances

    4) (Kassenraum) cashier's office
    5) (TheaterKasse, KinoKasse, StadionKasse) box office
    6) s. Krankenkasse
    7) (Kaufmannsspr.): (Barzahlung) [payment in] cash
    * * *
    Kasse f; -, -n
    1. (Ladenkasse) till; (Registrierkasse) cash register;
    die Kassen klingeln umg the cash tills are ringing;
    einen Griff in die Kasse tun help o.s. to the takings (US the take), have a hand in the till
    2. (Zahlstelle) (Kassentisch) cash desk; Supermarkt: checkout (counter); einer Bank: counter (for payments); Büro: cashier’s office; THEAT etc box office; SPORT ticket window;
    zahlen Sie bitte an der Kasse please pay at the cash desk (US pay the cashier);
    jemanden zur Kasse bitten umg present sb with the bill
    3. Kartenspiel etc: pool
    4. (Krankenkasse) health (insurance) scheme (US plan);
    bei welcher Kasse sind Sie? which health scheme (US plan oder company) are you with?;
    in keiner Kasse sein have no health insurance, be uninsured
    5. (Sparkasse) savings bank; (örtliche Bank) local (bank) branch
    6. (Einnahmen) takings pl, receipts pl, US auch take;
    Kasse machen cash up;
    sie führt die Kasse she looks after the money
    7. (Bargeld) cash;
    gut/knapp bei Kasse sein umg be flush/be hard up;
    etwas reißt ein Loch in die/in jemandes Kasse sth makes a big hole in one’s finances;
    Kasse machen umg (schwer verdienen) be raking it in; getrennt
    * * *
    die; Kasse, Kassen
    1) (Kassette) cash box; (RegistrierKasse) till; cash register

    in die Kasse greifen od. einen Griff in die Kasse tun — (ugs.; auch fig.) help oneself from the till

    er wurde beim Griff in die Kasse ertappt(auch fig.) he was caught with his fingers in the till

    2) (Ort zum Bezahlen) cash or pay desk; (im Supermarkt) checkout; (in einer Bank) counter

    Kasse machen(Kaufmannsspr.) cash up

    jemanden zur Kasse bitten(ugs.) ask somebody to pay up

    3) (Geld) cash

    gemeinsame Kasse führen od. machen — share expenses

    gut/knapp bei Kasse sein — be well-off or flush/be short of cash or money

    etwas reißt ein Loch in die Kasse(ugs.) something makes a hole in somebody's pocket or a dent in somebody's finances

    4) (Kassenraum) cashier's office
    5) (TheaterKasse, KinoKasse, StadionKasse) box office
    7) (Kaufmannsspr.): (Barzahlung) [payment in] cash
    * * *
    -n f.
    cash desk n.
    cash register n.
    cash-box n.
    exchequer n.
    point of sales n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Kasse

  • 105 parça

    "1. piece; fragment; bit. 2. item (in a set of several items). 3. piece (of literature, music, fine art); passage (from a piece of literature, music, or fine art). 4. a poor substitute for..., a worthless thing that goes by the name of...: bu hekim parçası this worthless individual who´s supposed to be a doctor. 5. used as a counting word: beş parça kumaş five lengths of cloth. 6. slang pretty woman, nice piece of goods. 7. slang hashish, hash. - alım med. biopsy. - almak med. to carry out a biopsy. - bohçası 1. patchwork cloth. 2. mishmash, hodgepodge. - mal goods sold by the piece. - parça 1. in bits and pieces, in smithereens. 2. in separate pieces. 3. in installments. 4. in tatters, in rags. - parça etmek /ı/ to break, smash, tear, or pull (something, someone) to pieces. - parça satmak /ı/ 1. to sell (something) piecemeal. 2. to sell (something) retail."

    Saja Türkçe - İngilizce Sözlük > parça

  • 106 aperio

    ăpĕrĭo, ĕrŭi, ertum, 4, v. a. ( fut. aperibo, Plaut. Truc. 4, 2, 50; Pompon. ap. Non. p. 506, 30) [ab-pario, to get from, take away from, i.e. to uncover, like the opp. operio, from obpario, to get for, to put upon, i. e. to cover; this is the old explanation, and is received by Corssen, Ausspr. I. p. 653; II. p. 410, and by Vanicek, p. 503], to uncover, make or lay bare.
    I.
    Lit.:

    patinas,

    Plaut. Ps. 3, 2, 51: apertae surae, Turp. ap. Non. p. 236, 16:

    apertis lateribus,

    Sisenn. ib. p. 236, 26:

    capite aperto esse,

    Varr. ib. p. 236, 25;

    p. 236, 28: ut corporis partes quaedam aperiantur,

    Cic. Off. 1, 35, 129:

    caput aperuit,

    id. Phil. 2, 31; Sall. H. Fragm. ap. Non. p. 236, 20:

    capita,

    Plin. 28, 6, 17, § 60:

    aperto pectore,

    Ov. M. 2, 339; and poet. transf. to the person:

    apertae pectora matres,

    id. ib. 13, 688:

    ramum,

    Verg. A. 6, 406 al. — Trop., to make visible, to show, reveal, Liv. 22, 6:

    dispulsā nebulā diem aperuit,

    id. 26, 17 (cf. just before:

    densa nebula campos circa intexit): dies faciem victoriae,

    Tac. Agr. 38:

    lux aperuit bellum ducemque belli,

    Liv. 3, 15:

    novam aciem dies aperuit,

    Tac. H. 4, 29:

    his unda dehiscens Terram aperit,

    opens to view, Verg. A. 1, 107.—From the intermediate idea of making visible,
    II.
    Metaph.
    A.
    1.. To unclose, open: aperto ex ostio Alti Acheruntis, Poët. ap. Cic. Tusc. 1, 16, 37:

    aperite aliquis ostium,

    Ter. Ad. 4, 4, 26; so id. Heaut. 2, 3, 35:

    forem aperi,

    id. Ad. 2, 1, 13:

    fores,

    id. Eun. 2, 2, 52; Ov. M. 10, 457; Suet. Aug. 82:

    januas carceris,

    Vulg. Act. 5, 19:

    fenestram,

    ib. Gen. 8, 6:

    liquidas vias,

    to open the liquid way, Lucr. 1, 373; so Verg. A. 11, 884:

    sucum venis fundere apertis,

    to pour out moisture from its open veins, Lucr. 5, 812:

    saccum,

    Vulg. Gen. 42, 27:

    os,

    ib. ib. 22, 28:

    labia, ib. Job, 11, 5: oculos,

    ib. Act. 9, 8:

    accepi fasciculum, in quo erat epistula Piliae: abstuli, aperui, legi,

    Cic. Att. 5, 11 fin.; so id. ib. 1, 13;

    6, 3: aperire librum,

    Vulg. Apoc. 5, 5; 20, 12:

    testamentum,

    Plin. 7, 52, 53, § 177 (cf.:

    testamentum resignare,

    Hor. Ep. 1, 7, 9); Suet. Caes. 83; id. Aug. 17:

    sigillum aperire,

    to break, Vulg. Apoc. 6, 3 al.:

    ferro iter aperiundum est,

    Sall. C. 58, 7:

    locum... asylum,

    to make it an asylum, Liv. 1, 8:

    subterraneos specus,

    Tac. G. 16:

    navigantibus maria,

    Plin. 2, 47, 47, § 122:

    arbor florem aperit,

    id. 12, 11, 23, § 40 et saep.: aperire parietem, to open a wall, in order to put a door or window in it, Dig. 8, 2, 40: alicui oculos aperire, to give sight to (after the Heb.), Vulg. Joan. 9, 10; 9, 14 al.; so,

    aures aperire,

    to restore hearing to, ib. Marc. 7, 35.—
    2.
    Trop.:

    nec ita claudenda est res familiaris, ut eam benignitas aperire non possit,

    Cic. Off. 2, 15, 54: amicitiae fores. id. Fam. 13, 10:

    multus apertus cursus ad laudem,

    id. Phil. 14, 6 fin.:

    tibi virtus tua reditum ad tuos aperuit,

    id. Fam. 6, 11:

    philosophiae fontes,

    id. Tusc. 1, 3, 6; id. Mil. 31, 85 et saep.: alicujus oculos aperire, to open one's eyes, make him discern (after the Heb.), Vulg. Gen. 3, 5; 3, 7; ib. Act. 26, 18; so,

    alicujus cor aperire,

    ib. ib. 16, 14: ventus [p. 136] incendio viam aperuit, Liv. 6, 2:

    occasionem ad invadendum,

    id. 4, 53; so id. 9, 27: si hanc fenestram aperueritis (i.e. if you enter upon the way of complaint), nihil aliud agi sinetis, Suet. Tib. 28 (cf. Ter. Heaut. 3, 1, 72:

    Quantam fenestram ad nequitiem patefeceris!): quia aperuisset gentibus ostium fidei,

    Vulg. Act. 14, 27; ib. Col. 4, 3.— So of the new year, to open it, i.e. begin:

    annum,

    Verg. G. 1, 217:

    contigit ergo privatis aperire annum (since the consul entered upon his office the first of January),

    Plin. Pan. 58, 4 Gierig and Schaef.—So also of a school, to establish, set up, begin, or open it:

    Dionysius tyrannus Corinthi dicitur ludum aperuisse,

    Cic. Fam. 9, 18; so Suet. Gram. 16; id. Rhet. 4.— Poet.:

    fuste aperire caput,

    i.e. to cleave, split the head, Juv. 9, 98.—
    B.
    Aperire locum (populum, gentes, etc.), to lay open a place, people, etc., i.e. to open an entrance to, render accessible (cf. patefacio);

    most freq. in the histt., esp. in Tacitus: qui aperuerint armis orbem terrarum,

    Liv. 42, 52; 42, 4:

    Syriam,

    Tac. A. 2, 70:

    omnes terras fortibus viris natura aperuit,

    id. H. 4, 64:

    novas gentes,

    id. Agr. 22:

    gentes ac reges,

    id. G. 1:

    Britanniam tamdiu clausam aperit,

    Mel. 3, 6, 4; Luc. 1, 465 Cort.:

    Eoas,

    id. 4, 352:

    pelagus,

    Val. Fl. 1, 169.—
    C.
    Transf. to mental objects, to disclose something unknown, to unveil, reveal, make known, unfold, to prove, demonstrate; or gen. to explain, recount, etc.:

    occulta quaedam et quasi involuta aperiri,

    Cic. Fin. 1, 9, 30:

    explicanda est saepe verbis mens nostra de quāque re atque involutae rei notitia definiendo aperienda est,

    id. Or. 33, 116:

    alicui scripturas aperire,

    Vulg. Luc. 24, 32:

    tua probra aperibo omnia,

    Plaut. Truc. 4, 2, 50: ne exspectetis argumentum fabulae;

    hi partem aperient,

    Ter. Ad. prol. 23:

    non quo aperiret sententiam suam, sed etc.,

    Cic. de Or. 1, 18, 84:

    eo praesente conjurationem aperit,

    Sall. C. 40, 6:

    naturam et mores,

    id. ib. 53 fin.; so id. ib. 45, 1; 47, 1; id. J. 33, 4:

    lux fugam hostium aperuit,

    Liv. 27, 2:

    aperiri error poterat,

    id. 26, 10:

    casus aperire futuros,

    to disclose the future, Ov. M. 15, 559:

    futura aperit,

    Tac. H. 2, 4.—So also, se aperire or aperiri, to reveal one's true disposition, character:

    tum coacti necessario se aperiunt,

    show themselves in their true light, Ter. And. 4, 1, 8:

    studio aperimur in ipso,

    Ov. A. A. 3, 371:

    exspectandum, dum se ipsa res aperiret,

    Nep. Paus. 3, 7; Quint. prooem. § 3.—Sometimes constr. with acc. and inf., a rel.-clause, or de:

    cum jam directae in se prorae hostes appropinquare aperuissent,

    Liv. 44, 28:

    domino navis, quis sit, aperit,

    Nep. Them. 8, 6; so id. Eum. 13, 3: de clementiā, Auct. ad Her. 2, 31.—In a gen. sense (freq. in epistt.) in Cic. Att. 5, 1, 2: de Oppio factum est, ut volui, et maxime, quod DCCC. aperuisti, you promised, i.e. that it should be paid to him (= ostendisti te daturum, Manut.); cf.

    the more definite expression: de Oppio bene curāsti, quod ei DCCC. exposuisti,

    id. ib. 5, 4, 3.—Hence, ăpertus, a, um, P. a.; pr., opened; hence, open, free.
    A.
    Lit.
    1.
    Without covering, open, uncovered (opp. tectus):

    naves apertae,

    without deck, Cic. Verr. 2, 5, 40; Liv. 31, 22 fin.; cf. id. 32, 21, 14: centum tectae naves et quinquaginta leviores apertae, et saep.; v. navis.—Also, without covering or defence, unprotected, exposed:

    locus,

    Caes. B. C. 3, 84.— Poet., of the sky, clear, cloudless:

    caelo invectus aperto,

    Verg. A. 1, 155:

    aether,

    id. ib. 1, 587:

    aperta serena prospicere,

    id. G. 1, 393.—
    2.
    Unclosed, open, not shut (opp. clausus):

    Janua cum per se transpectum praebet apertum,

    since this affords an open view through it, Lucr. 4, 272:

    oculi,

    id. 4, 339:

    oculorum lumine aperto,

    id. 4, 1139 et saep.:

    nihil tam clausum, neque tam reconditum, quod non istius cupiditati apertissimum promptissimumque esset,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 20:

    caelum patens atque apertum,

    id. Div. 1, 1 (diff. from 1.); so Ov. M. 6, 693:

    vidit caelos apertos,

    Vulg. Marc. 1, 10:

    apertus et propatulus locus,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 49:

    iter,

    Liv. 31, 2:

    apertior aditus ad moenia,

    id. 9, 28:

    campi,

    id. 38, 3:

    per apertum limitem (viae),

    Tac. H. 3, 21; Ov. M. 1, 285:

    fenestrae,

    Vulg. Dan. 6, 10:

    ostia,

    ib. ib. 13, 39:

    aequor,

    Ov. M. 4, 527; so id. ib. 8, 165; 11, 555 et saep. — Poet., of a battle: nec aperti copia Martis Ulla fuit, an action in the open field, Ov. M. 13, 208.—Very freq. ăpertum, subst., that which is open, free; an open, clear space:

    in aperto,

    Lucr. 3, 604:

    per apertum fugientes,

    Hor. C, 3, 12, 10:

    impetum ex aperto facerent,

    Liv. 35, 5:

    castra in aperto posita,

    id. 1, 33; so id. 22, 4:

    volantem in aperto,

    Plin. 10, 8, 9, § 22:

    in aperta prodeunt,

    id. 8, 32, 50, § 117:

    disjecit naves in aperta Oceani,

    Tac. A. 2, 23.—
    B.
    Trop.
    1.
    a.. Opp. to that which is concealed, covered, dark, open, clear, plain, evident, manifest, unobstructed:

    nam nihil aegrius est quam res secernere apertas ab dubiis,

    nothing is, indeed, more difficult than to separate things that are evident from those that are doubtful, Lucr. 4, 467; so id. 4, 596; 1, 915; 5, 1062:

    cum illum ex occultis insidiis in apertum latrocinium conjecimus,

    Cic. Cat. 2, 1:

    simultates partim obscurae, partim apertae,

    id. Manil. 24:

    quid enim potest esse tam apertum tamque perspicuum?

    id. N. D. 2, 2, 4:

    quid rem apertam suspectam facimus?

    Liv. 41, 24:

    non furtim, sed vi aperta,

    id. 25, 24:

    apertus animi motus,

    Quint. 10, 3, 21:

    invidia in occulto, adulatio in aperto,

    Tac. H. 4, 4 et saep.—So, in rhet., of clear, intelligible discourse:

    multo apertius ad intellegendum est, si, etc.... apertam enim narrationem tam esse oportet quam, etc.,

    Cic. de Or. 2, 80, 328; cf. id. Inv. 1, 20.—Hence,
    b.
    Esp. as subst.: in aperto esse,
    (α).
    To be clear, evident, well known, notorious, en tôi phanerôi einai:

    ad cognoscendum omnia illustria magis magisque in aperto,

    Sall. J. 5, 3.—
    (β).
    To be easily practicable, easy, facile (the figure taken from an open field or space):

    agere memoratu digna pronum magisque in aperto erat,

    there was a greater inclination and a more open way to, Tac. Agr. 1:

    hostes aggredi in aperto foret,

    id. H. 3, 56:

    vota virtusque in aperto omniaque prona victoribus,

    id. Agr. 33.—
    2.
    Of character, without dissimulation, open, frank, candid:

    animus apertus et simplex,

    Cic. Fam. 1, 9; id. Off. 3, 13, 57:

    pectus,

    id. Lael. 26, 97. —Hence, ironically: ut semper fuit apertissimus, as he has always been very open, frank (for impudent, shameless), Cic. Mur. 35.—Hence, ăpertē, adv., openly, clearly, plainly.
    I.
    In gen.:

    tam aperte irridens,

    Ter. Phorm. 5, 8, 62:

    ab illo aperte tecte quicquid est datum, libenter accepi,

    Cic. Att. 1, 14, 4; id. Or. 12, 38; id. Am. 18, 67:

    cum Fidenae aperte descissent,

    Liv. 1, 27:

    aperte quod venale habet ostendit,

    Hor. S. 1, 2, 83:

    aperte revelari,

    Vulg. 1 Reg. 2, 27:

    non jam secretis colloquiis, sed aperte fremere,

    Tac. A. 11, 28:

    aperte adulari,

    Cic. Am. 26, 99:

    aperte mentiri,

    id. Ac. 2, 6, 18:

    aperte pugnare, id. ap. Aquil. Rom. 10: aperte immundus est,

    Vulg. Lev. 13, 26.— Comp.:

    cum ipsum dolorem hic tulit paulo apertius,

    Cic. Planc. 34; id. Att. 16, 3, 5; Curt. 6, 1, 11:

    ab his proconsuli venenum inter epulas datum est apertius quam ut fallerent,

    Tac. A. 13, 1.— Sup.:

    hinc empta apertissime praetura,

    Cic. Verr. 1, 100:

    equite Romano per te apertissime interfecto,

    id. Har. Resp. 30:

    largiri,

    id. ib. 56:

    praedari,

    id. Verr. 1, 130.—
    II.
    Esp. of what is set forth in words or writing, plainly, clearly, freely, without reserve:

    nempe ergo aperte vis quae restant me loqui?

    Ter. And. 1, 2, 24; id. Phorm. 4, 3, 49:

    aperte indicat (lex) posse rationem habere non praesentis,

    Cic. ad Brut. 1, 5, 3:

    Non tu istuc mihi dictura aperte es, quicquid est?

    Ter. Eun. 5, 1, 3:

    narrare,

    id. Heaut. 4, 3, 24:

    scribere,

    Cic. Fam. 5, 7, 3; Quint. 1, 5, 43.— Comp.:

    Planius atque apertius dicam,

    Cic. Rosc. Com. 14, 43:

    distinguere,

    Quint. 3, 6, 45.— Sup.:

    istius injurias quam apertissime vobis planissimeque explicare,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 64, 156:

    aliquid apertissime ostendere,

    Quint. 5, 12, 11.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > aperio

  • 107 aperte

    ăpĕrĭo, ĕrŭi, ertum, 4, v. a. ( fut. aperibo, Plaut. Truc. 4, 2, 50; Pompon. ap. Non. p. 506, 30) [ab-pario, to get from, take away from, i.e. to uncover, like the opp. operio, from obpario, to get for, to put upon, i. e. to cover; this is the old explanation, and is received by Corssen, Ausspr. I. p. 653; II. p. 410, and by Vanicek, p. 503], to uncover, make or lay bare.
    I.
    Lit.:

    patinas,

    Plaut. Ps. 3, 2, 51: apertae surae, Turp. ap. Non. p. 236, 16:

    apertis lateribus,

    Sisenn. ib. p. 236, 26:

    capite aperto esse,

    Varr. ib. p. 236, 25;

    p. 236, 28: ut corporis partes quaedam aperiantur,

    Cic. Off. 1, 35, 129:

    caput aperuit,

    id. Phil. 2, 31; Sall. H. Fragm. ap. Non. p. 236, 20:

    capita,

    Plin. 28, 6, 17, § 60:

    aperto pectore,

    Ov. M. 2, 339; and poet. transf. to the person:

    apertae pectora matres,

    id. ib. 13, 688:

    ramum,

    Verg. A. 6, 406 al. — Trop., to make visible, to show, reveal, Liv. 22, 6:

    dispulsā nebulā diem aperuit,

    id. 26, 17 (cf. just before:

    densa nebula campos circa intexit): dies faciem victoriae,

    Tac. Agr. 38:

    lux aperuit bellum ducemque belli,

    Liv. 3, 15:

    novam aciem dies aperuit,

    Tac. H. 4, 29:

    his unda dehiscens Terram aperit,

    opens to view, Verg. A. 1, 107.—From the intermediate idea of making visible,
    II.
    Metaph.
    A.
    1.. To unclose, open: aperto ex ostio Alti Acheruntis, Poët. ap. Cic. Tusc. 1, 16, 37:

    aperite aliquis ostium,

    Ter. Ad. 4, 4, 26; so id. Heaut. 2, 3, 35:

    forem aperi,

    id. Ad. 2, 1, 13:

    fores,

    id. Eun. 2, 2, 52; Ov. M. 10, 457; Suet. Aug. 82:

    januas carceris,

    Vulg. Act. 5, 19:

    fenestram,

    ib. Gen. 8, 6:

    liquidas vias,

    to open the liquid way, Lucr. 1, 373; so Verg. A. 11, 884:

    sucum venis fundere apertis,

    to pour out moisture from its open veins, Lucr. 5, 812:

    saccum,

    Vulg. Gen. 42, 27:

    os,

    ib. ib. 22, 28:

    labia, ib. Job, 11, 5: oculos,

    ib. Act. 9, 8:

    accepi fasciculum, in quo erat epistula Piliae: abstuli, aperui, legi,

    Cic. Att. 5, 11 fin.; so id. ib. 1, 13;

    6, 3: aperire librum,

    Vulg. Apoc. 5, 5; 20, 12:

    testamentum,

    Plin. 7, 52, 53, § 177 (cf.:

    testamentum resignare,

    Hor. Ep. 1, 7, 9); Suet. Caes. 83; id. Aug. 17:

    sigillum aperire,

    to break, Vulg. Apoc. 6, 3 al.:

    ferro iter aperiundum est,

    Sall. C. 58, 7:

    locum... asylum,

    to make it an asylum, Liv. 1, 8:

    subterraneos specus,

    Tac. G. 16:

    navigantibus maria,

    Plin. 2, 47, 47, § 122:

    arbor florem aperit,

    id. 12, 11, 23, § 40 et saep.: aperire parietem, to open a wall, in order to put a door or window in it, Dig. 8, 2, 40: alicui oculos aperire, to give sight to (after the Heb.), Vulg. Joan. 9, 10; 9, 14 al.; so,

    aures aperire,

    to restore hearing to, ib. Marc. 7, 35.—
    2.
    Trop.:

    nec ita claudenda est res familiaris, ut eam benignitas aperire non possit,

    Cic. Off. 2, 15, 54: amicitiae fores. id. Fam. 13, 10:

    multus apertus cursus ad laudem,

    id. Phil. 14, 6 fin.:

    tibi virtus tua reditum ad tuos aperuit,

    id. Fam. 6, 11:

    philosophiae fontes,

    id. Tusc. 1, 3, 6; id. Mil. 31, 85 et saep.: alicujus oculos aperire, to open one's eyes, make him discern (after the Heb.), Vulg. Gen. 3, 5; 3, 7; ib. Act. 26, 18; so,

    alicujus cor aperire,

    ib. ib. 16, 14: ventus [p. 136] incendio viam aperuit, Liv. 6, 2:

    occasionem ad invadendum,

    id. 4, 53; so id. 9, 27: si hanc fenestram aperueritis (i.e. if you enter upon the way of complaint), nihil aliud agi sinetis, Suet. Tib. 28 (cf. Ter. Heaut. 3, 1, 72:

    Quantam fenestram ad nequitiem patefeceris!): quia aperuisset gentibus ostium fidei,

    Vulg. Act. 14, 27; ib. Col. 4, 3.— So of the new year, to open it, i.e. begin:

    annum,

    Verg. G. 1, 217:

    contigit ergo privatis aperire annum (since the consul entered upon his office the first of January),

    Plin. Pan. 58, 4 Gierig and Schaef.—So also of a school, to establish, set up, begin, or open it:

    Dionysius tyrannus Corinthi dicitur ludum aperuisse,

    Cic. Fam. 9, 18; so Suet. Gram. 16; id. Rhet. 4.— Poet.:

    fuste aperire caput,

    i.e. to cleave, split the head, Juv. 9, 98.—
    B.
    Aperire locum (populum, gentes, etc.), to lay open a place, people, etc., i.e. to open an entrance to, render accessible (cf. patefacio);

    most freq. in the histt., esp. in Tacitus: qui aperuerint armis orbem terrarum,

    Liv. 42, 52; 42, 4:

    Syriam,

    Tac. A. 2, 70:

    omnes terras fortibus viris natura aperuit,

    id. H. 4, 64:

    novas gentes,

    id. Agr. 22:

    gentes ac reges,

    id. G. 1:

    Britanniam tamdiu clausam aperit,

    Mel. 3, 6, 4; Luc. 1, 465 Cort.:

    Eoas,

    id. 4, 352:

    pelagus,

    Val. Fl. 1, 169.—
    C.
    Transf. to mental objects, to disclose something unknown, to unveil, reveal, make known, unfold, to prove, demonstrate; or gen. to explain, recount, etc.:

    occulta quaedam et quasi involuta aperiri,

    Cic. Fin. 1, 9, 30:

    explicanda est saepe verbis mens nostra de quāque re atque involutae rei notitia definiendo aperienda est,

    id. Or. 33, 116:

    alicui scripturas aperire,

    Vulg. Luc. 24, 32:

    tua probra aperibo omnia,

    Plaut. Truc. 4, 2, 50: ne exspectetis argumentum fabulae;

    hi partem aperient,

    Ter. Ad. prol. 23:

    non quo aperiret sententiam suam, sed etc.,

    Cic. de Or. 1, 18, 84:

    eo praesente conjurationem aperit,

    Sall. C. 40, 6:

    naturam et mores,

    id. ib. 53 fin.; so id. ib. 45, 1; 47, 1; id. J. 33, 4:

    lux fugam hostium aperuit,

    Liv. 27, 2:

    aperiri error poterat,

    id. 26, 10:

    casus aperire futuros,

    to disclose the future, Ov. M. 15, 559:

    futura aperit,

    Tac. H. 2, 4.—So also, se aperire or aperiri, to reveal one's true disposition, character:

    tum coacti necessario se aperiunt,

    show themselves in their true light, Ter. And. 4, 1, 8:

    studio aperimur in ipso,

    Ov. A. A. 3, 371:

    exspectandum, dum se ipsa res aperiret,

    Nep. Paus. 3, 7; Quint. prooem. § 3.—Sometimes constr. with acc. and inf., a rel.-clause, or de:

    cum jam directae in se prorae hostes appropinquare aperuissent,

    Liv. 44, 28:

    domino navis, quis sit, aperit,

    Nep. Them. 8, 6; so id. Eum. 13, 3: de clementiā, Auct. ad Her. 2, 31.—In a gen. sense (freq. in epistt.) in Cic. Att. 5, 1, 2: de Oppio factum est, ut volui, et maxime, quod DCCC. aperuisti, you promised, i.e. that it should be paid to him (= ostendisti te daturum, Manut.); cf.

    the more definite expression: de Oppio bene curāsti, quod ei DCCC. exposuisti,

    id. ib. 5, 4, 3.—Hence, ăpertus, a, um, P. a.; pr., opened; hence, open, free.
    A.
    Lit.
    1.
    Without covering, open, uncovered (opp. tectus):

    naves apertae,

    without deck, Cic. Verr. 2, 5, 40; Liv. 31, 22 fin.; cf. id. 32, 21, 14: centum tectae naves et quinquaginta leviores apertae, et saep.; v. navis.—Also, without covering or defence, unprotected, exposed:

    locus,

    Caes. B. C. 3, 84.— Poet., of the sky, clear, cloudless:

    caelo invectus aperto,

    Verg. A. 1, 155:

    aether,

    id. ib. 1, 587:

    aperta serena prospicere,

    id. G. 1, 393.—
    2.
    Unclosed, open, not shut (opp. clausus):

    Janua cum per se transpectum praebet apertum,

    since this affords an open view through it, Lucr. 4, 272:

    oculi,

    id. 4, 339:

    oculorum lumine aperto,

    id. 4, 1139 et saep.:

    nihil tam clausum, neque tam reconditum, quod non istius cupiditati apertissimum promptissimumque esset,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 20:

    caelum patens atque apertum,

    id. Div. 1, 1 (diff. from 1.); so Ov. M. 6, 693:

    vidit caelos apertos,

    Vulg. Marc. 1, 10:

    apertus et propatulus locus,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 49:

    iter,

    Liv. 31, 2:

    apertior aditus ad moenia,

    id. 9, 28:

    campi,

    id. 38, 3:

    per apertum limitem (viae),

    Tac. H. 3, 21; Ov. M. 1, 285:

    fenestrae,

    Vulg. Dan. 6, 10:

    ostia,

    ib. ib. 13, 39:

    aequor,

    Ov. M. 4, 527; so id. ib. 8, 165; 11, 555 et saep. — Poet., of a battle: nec aperti copia Martis Ulla fuit, an action in the open field, Ov. M. 13, 208.—Very freq. ăpertum, subst., that which is open, free; an open, clear space:

    in aperto,

    Lucr. 3, 604:

    per apertum fugientes,

    Hor. C, 3, 12, 10:

    impetum ex aperto facerent,

    Liv. 35, 5:

    castra in aperto posita,

    id. 1, 33; so id. 22, 4:

    volantem in aperto,

    Plin. 10, 8, 9, § 22:

    in aperta prodeunt,

    id. 8, 32, 50, § 117:

    disjecit naves in aperta Oceani,

    Tac. A. 2, 23.—
    B.
    Trop.
    1.
    a.. Opp. to that which is concealed, covered, dark, open, clear, plain, evident, manifest, unobstructed:

    nam nihil aegrius est quam res secernere apertas ab dubiis,

    nothing is, indeed, more difficult than to separate things that are evident from those that are doubtful, Lucr. 4, 467; so id. 4, 596; 1, 915; 5, 1062:

    cum illum ex occultis insidiis in apertum latrocinium conjecimus,

    Cic. Cat. 2, 1:

    simultates partim obscurae, partim apertae,

    id. Manil. 24:

    quid enim potest esse tam apertum tamque perspicuum?

    id. N. D. 2, 2, 4:

    quid rem apertam suspectam facimus?

    Liv. 41, 24:

    non furtim, sed vi aperta,

    id. 25, 24:

    apertus animi motus,

    Quint. 10, 3, 21:

    invidia in occulto, adulatio in aperto,

    Tac. H. 4, 4 et saep.—So, in rhet., of clear, intelligible discourse:

    multo apertius ad intellegendum est, si, etc.... apertam enim narrationem tam esse oportet quam, etc.,

    Cic. de Or. 2, 80, 328; cf. id. Inv. 1, 20.—Hence,
    b.
    Esp. as subst.: in aperto esse,
    (α).
    To be clear, evident, well known, notorious, en tôi phanerôi einai:

    ad cognoscendum omnia illustria magis magisque in aperto,

    Sall. J. 5, 3.—
    (β).
    To be easily practicable, easy, facile (the figure taken from an open field or space):

    agere memoratu digna pronum magisque in aperto erat,

    there was a greater inclination and a more open way to, Tac. Agr. 1:

    hostes aggredi in aperto foret,

    id. H. 3, 56:

    vota virtusque in aperto omniaque prona victoribus,

    id. Agr. 33.—
    2.
    Of character, without dissimulation, open, frank, candid:

    animus apertus et simplex,

    Cic. Fam. 1, 9; id. Off. 3, 13, 57:

    pectus,

    id. Lael. 26, 97. —Hence, ironically: ut semper fuit apertissimus, as he has always been very open, frank (for impudent, shameless), Cic. Mur. 35.—Hence, ăpertē, adv., openly, clearly, plainly.
    I.
    In gen.:

    tam aperte irridens,

    Ter. Phorm. 5, 8, 62:

    ab illo aperte tecte quicquid est datum, libenter accepi,

    Cic. Att. 1, 14, 4; id. Or. 12, 38; id. Am. 18, 67:

    cum Fidenae aperte descissent,

    Liv. 1, 27:

    aperte quod venale habet ostendit,

    Hor. S. 1, 2, 83:

    aperte revelari,

    Vulg. 1 Reg. 2, 27:

    non jam secretis colloquiis, sed aperte fremere,

    Tac. A. 11, 28:

    aperte adulari,

    Cic. Am. 26, 99:

    aperte mentiri,

    id. Ac. 2, 6, 18:

    aperte pugnare, id. ap. Aquil. Rom. 10: aperte immundus est,

    Vulg. Lev. 13, 26.— Comp.:

    cum ipsum dolorem hic tulit paulo apertius,

    Cic. Planc. 34; id. Att. 16, 3, 5; Curt. 6, 1, 11:

    ab his proconsuli venenum inter epulas datum est apertius quam ut fallerent,

    Tac. A. 13, 1.— Sup.:

    hinc empta apertissime praetura,

    Cic. Verr. 1, 100:

    equite Romano per te apertissime interfecto,

    id. Har. Resp. 30:

    largiri,

    id. ib. 56:

    praedari,

    id. Verr. 1, 130.—
    II.
    Esp. of what is set forth in words or writing, plainly, clearly, freely, without reserve:

    nempe ergo aperte vis quae restant me loqui?

    Ter. And. 1, 2, 24; id. Phorm. 4, 3, 49:

    aperte indicat (lex) posse rationem habere non praesentis,

    Cic. ad Brut. 1, 5, 3:

    Non tu istuc mihi dictura aperte es, quicquid est?

    Ter. Eun. 5, 1, 3:

    narrare,

    id. Heaut. 4, 3, 24:

    scribere,

    Cic. Fam. 5, 7, 3; Quint. 1, 5, 43.— Comp.:

    Planius atque apertius dicam,

    Cic. Rosc. Com. 14, 43:

    distinguere,

    Quint. 3, 6, 45.— Sup.:

    istius injurias quam apertissime vobis planissimeque explicare,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 64, 156:

    aliquid apertissime ostendere,

    Quint. 5, 12, 11.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > aperte

  • 108 Consciousness

       Consciousness is what makes the mind-body problem really intractable.
    ... Without consciousness the mind-body problem would be much less interesting. With consciousness it seems hopeless. (T. Nagel, 1979, pp. 165-166)
       This approach to understanding sensory qualia is both theoretically and empirically motivated... [;] it suggests an effective means of expressing the allegedly inexpressible. The "ineffable" pink of one's current visual sensation may be richly and precisely expressed as a 95Hz/80Hz/80Hz "chord" in the relevant triune cortical system. The "unconveyable" taste sensation produced by the fabled Australian health tonic Vegamite might be poignantly conveyed as a 85/80/90/15 "chord" in one's four channeled gustatory system.... And the "indescribably" olfactory sensation produced by a newly opened rose might be quite accurately described as a 95/35/10/80/60/55 "chord" in some six-dimensional space within one's olfactory bulb. (P. M. Churchland, 1989, p. 106)
       One of philosophy's favorite facets of mentality has received scant attention from cognitive psychologists, and that is consciousness itself: fullblown, introspective, inner-world phenomenological consciousness. In fact if one looks in the obvious places... one finds not so much a lack of interest as a deliberate and adroit avoidance of the issue. I think I know why. Consciousness appears to be the last bastion of occult properties, epiphenomena, and immeasurable subjective states-in short, the one area of mind best left to the philosophers, who are welcome to it. Let them make fools of themselves trying to corral the quicksilver of "phenomenology" into a respectable theory. (Dennett, 1978b, p. 149)
       When I am thinking about anything, my consciousness consists of a number of ideas.... But every idea can be resolved into elements... and these elements are sensations. (Titchener, 1910, p. 33)
       A Darwin machine now provides a framework for thinking about thought, indeed one that may be a reasonable first approximation to the actual brain machinery underlying thought. An intracerebral Darwin Machine need not try out one sequence at a time against memory; it may be able to try out dozens, if not hundreds, simultaneously, shape up new generations in milliseconds, and thus initiate insightful actions without overt trial and error. This massively parallel selection among stochastic sequences is more analogous to the ways of darwinian biology than to the "von Neumann" serial computer. Which is why I call it a Darwin Machine instead; it shapes up thoughts in milliseconds rather than millennia, and uses innocuous remembered environments rather than noxious real-life ones. It may well create the uniquely human aspect of our consciousness. (Calvin, 1990, pp. 261-262)
       To suppose the mind to exist in two different states, in the same moment, is a manifest absurdity. To the whole series of states of the mind, then, whatever the individual, momentary successive states may be, I give the name of our consciousness.... There are not sensations, thoughts, passions, and also consciousness, any more than there is quadruped or animal, as a separate being to be added to the wolves, tygers, elephants, and other living creatures.... The fallacy of conceiving consciousness to be something different from the feeling, which is said to be its object, has arisen, in a great measure, from the use of the personal pronoun I. (T. Brown, 1970, p. 336)
       The human capacity for speech is certainly unique. But the gulf between it and the behavior of animals no longer seems unbridgeable.... What does this leave us with, then, which is characteristically human?.... t resides in the human capacity for consciousness and self-consciousness. (Rose, 1976, p. 177)
       [Human consciousness] depends wholly on our seeing the outside world in such categories. And the problems of consciousness arise from putting reconstitution beside internalization, from our also being able to see ourselves as if we were objects in the outside world. That is in the very nature of language; it is impossible to have a symbolic system without it.... The Cartesian dualism between mind and body arises directly from this, and so do all the famous paradoxes, both in mathematics and in linguistics.... (Bronowski, 1978, pp. 38-39)
       It seems to me that there are at least four different viewpoints-or extremes of viewpoint-that one may reasonably hold on the matter [of computation and conscious thinking]:
       A. All thinking is computation; in particular, feelings of conscious awareness are evoked merely by the carrying out of appropriate computations.
       B. Awareness is a feature of the brain's physical action; and whereas any physical action can be simulated computationally, computational simulation cannot by itself evoke awareness.
       C. Appropriate physical action of the brain evokes awareness, but this physical action cannot even be properly simulated computationally.
       D. Awareness cannot be explained by physical, computational, or any other scientific terms. (Penrose, 1994, p. 12)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Consciousness

  • 109 formen

    I v/t form, shape ( aus out of, from; zu into); aus weichem Stoff: mo(u)ld, shape; (Gedanken, Laute, Satz) form; (jemanden, Charakter) form, mo(u)ld (zu into)
    II v/refl form, take shape
    * * *
    das Formen
    moulding; molding
    * * *
    fọr|men ['fɔrmən]
    1. vt
    to form, to shape; Charakter auch, Eisen to mould (Brit), to mold (US); Wörter to articulate

    der Krieg hat ihn geformtthe war shaped him or his character

    2. vr (lit)
    to form or shape itself; (fig) to mature
    * * *
    1) (to work into a shape: He moulded the clay into a ball.) mould
    2) (to make the shape of (something): She moulded the figure out of/in clay.) mould
    3) (to make into a certain shape, to form or model: She shaped the dough into three separate loaves.) shape
    4) (to influence the nature of strongly: This event shaped his whole life.) shape
    * * *
    for·men
    [fɔrmən]
    I. vt
    etw [aus etw dat] \formen to mould [or AM mold] sth [from sth]
    hübsch/wohl geformt beautifully/well formed
    2. (bilden)
    etw \formen to form sth
    Sätze \formen to form sentences
    3. (prägen)
    jdn/etw \formen to mould [or AM mold] sb/sth
    II. vr
    sich akk \formen to form
    * * *
    1.
    transitives Verb form; shape; mould, form <character, personality>; mould < person>
    2.
    reflexives Verb take on a shape; (fig.) form; take shape
    * * *
    A. v/t form, shape (
    aus out of, from;
    zu into); aus weichem Stoff: mo(u)ld, shape; (Gedanken, Laute, Satz) form; (jemanden, Charakter) form, mo(u)ld (
    zu into)
    B. v/r form, take shape
    * * *
    1.
    transitives Verb form; shape; mould, form <character, personality>; mould < person>
    2.
    reflexives Verb take on a shape; (fig.) form; take shape
    * * *
    (Töpferei) v.
    to throw v.
    (§ p.,p.p.: threw, thrown) (zu) v.
    to knead (into) v.
    to mould (into) v. v.
    to forge v.
    to form v.
    to mould (out of) v.
    to shape v.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > formen

  • 110 lösen

    I v/i draw lots (Am. auch straws) (um for); mit einer Münze: toss (for)
    II Losen n; -s, kein Pl.: beim Losen gewinnen / verlieren win / lose the toss
    * * *
    to draw lots
    * * *
    lo|sen ['loːzn]
    vi
    to draw lots ( um for)

    wir lósen, wer... — we'll draw lots to decide who...

    * * *
    1) (to move (a catch, brake etc) which prevents something else from moving, operating etc: He released the handbrake and drove off.) release
    2) (to take away (a doubt, fear etc) or produce an answer to (a problem, difficulty etc).) resolve
    3) (to put an end to: He severed relations with his family.) sever
    4) (to discover the answer to (a problem etc): The mathematics teacher gave the children some problems to solve.) solve
    * * *
    lo·sen
    [ˈlo:zn̩]
    vi
    [um etw akk] \losen to draw [or cast] lots [for sth]
    \losen wer etw tut/tun soll/ist to draw [or cast] lots to see who does/must do/is sth
    * * *
    intransitives Verb draws lots (um for)

    losen, wer anfangen soll — draw lots to decide who will start

    * * *
    A. v/t
    1. (losbinden) untie; (aufbinden) auch undo
    2. (lockern) loosen; (Bremse, Griff) release (auch Spannung); (Husten) loosen (up);
    seine Blicke von etwas nicht lösen können be unable to take one’s eyes off sth;
    jemandem die Zunge lösen fig loosen sb’s tongue; gelöst
    3. (entfernen) remove; (trennen) separate (
    von from)
    4. (auflösen) dissolve
    5. (entwirren) disentangle; auch fig unravel
    6. fig (Aufgabe, Rätsel, Schwierigkeit) solve; (Frage) answer; (Konflikt) resolve, settle
    7. fig (Verbindung, auch Verlobung) break off; (Ehe) dissolve
    8. (Vertrag) cancel
    9. (Fahrkarte etc) buy
    B. v/r
    1. Knoten etc: come undone
    2. (sich lockern) come loose; Husten, fig Zunge: loosen up; Spannung: ease
    3. (sich loslösen) come off; Schuss: go off
    4. fig:
    sich lösen von (verlassen) leave; (ausbrechen aus) break away from; einer Vorstellung, Verpflichtung etc: free ( oder rid) o.s. of
    5. (sich auflösen) dissolve
    6. Problem etc: be solved; Konflikt: be settled;
    sich von alleine lösen solve ( oder resolve) itself
    * * *
    intransitives Verb draws lots (um for)

    losen, wer anfangen soll — draw lots to decide who will start

    * * *
    v.
    to draw lots expr.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > lösen

  • 111

    4
    идти́, ходи́ть; отправля́ться

    tóget går (klókken seks) — по́езд отхо́дит (в шесть часо́в)

    úret går — часы́ иду́т

    gå på besǿg — ходи́ть в го́сти

    hvordán går det dig [Dem]? — как твои́ [ва́ши] дела́?, как пожива́ете?

    det går godt — (дела́ иду́т) хорошо́!

    gå i skóle — ходи́ть в шко́лу

    gå på árbejde — ходи́ть на рабо́ту

    (en)tur — прогуля́ться, соверши́ть прогу́лку

    * * *
    elapse, extend, go, march, on, play, reach, roll, run, strike, tread, walk
    * * *
    vb (gik, gået) go;
    ( om tid) go, pass, go by;
    ( spilles, opføres) be on ( fx there is a good film on at the Palladium), run ( fx the play ran for six months; is that film still running?),
    (mere F) be played, be performed;
    ( sælges) sell, be sold;
    (gram.: bøjes) go, be inflected;
    ( rækkes fra hånd til hånd) go round, pass;
    ( gå i stykker) go, break;
    ( gå på pension) retire,
    (om maskineri etc) run ( fx the engine is running smoothly; the drawer
    ( skuffen) runs smoothly; the machine runs by electricity);
    ( om tog) run ( fx the trains did not run on Sundays),
    ( afgå) leave, go ( fx when does the train leave (el. go)? it leaves
    (el. goes) at 10);
    (teat) exeunt, exit,
    ( i nyere stykker oftest) they go (, he, she goes) (off stage);
    [ døren gik] the door opened and shut; somebody came in (, went out);
    [ møllen går] the mill is turning;
    [ radioen går hele dagen] the radio is on all day;
    [ snakken gik] the conversation was in full swing,
    (dvs sladderen) people were talking;
    [ snakken gik livligt] the conversation was animated;
    [ der er gået tre trumfer] three trumps are out (el. have gone);
    (se også dans, rygte, tur, ur etc);
    [ med adv, pron etc:]
    (dvs afskediget) be retired;
    [ det gik helt anderledes] it turned out quite differently;
    [ det er gået dårligt for mig] things have gone badly with me, I have had bad luck;
    (mht helbred) he was in a bad way;
    [ det gik dårligt med foretagendet] the enterprise did not succeed;
    [ gå fri] escape,
    ( få lov at slippe) be let off;
    [ uret går godt] the watch keeps good time;
    [ forretningen går godt] the business is thriving;
    [ hvordan går det ( med helbredet)?] how are you?
    T how is it going? how goes it?
    (se også ndf: gå med);
    [ hvordan det end går] whatever happens;
    [ den går ikke] that won't do,
    (= du kan tro nej!) no you don't! nothing doing! I'm not having any!
    [ lad gå!] all right! let it pass!
    [ jeg vil lade det gå for denne gang] I'll overlook it this time;
    (dvs sætte fri) let him go;
    (dvs lade i fred) leave him alone;
    [ det går meget let] that is very easy;
    [ sådan gik det i tre år] things went on like that for three years;
    [ sådan går det her i verden] that is the way of the world;
    [ sådan går det ( med) alle store mænd] that is what happens to all great men;
    [ gå tabt] be lost,
    (se også tabe);
    (se også III. fejl, II. galt, højt, ledig, løs, nok, rigtig, vild);
    [ faste forbindelser med præp og adv:]
    ( løsne sig) come off,
    ( om noget limet også) come unstuck;
    ( om skydevåben) go off,
    ( om skud) be fired;
    ( gå på pension) retire,
    ( forløbe) go (el. pass) off;
    [ hvad går der af ham] what is the matter with him? what has come over him?
    (se også II. led, mode, vej);
    [ gå af i stilhed] pass off quietly;
    [ det kan gå af på min gæld] you can deduct it from what I owe you;
    ( være acceptabel) do ( fx will these shoes do?);
    [ det går an] it will do;
    [ det går aldrig an] it will never do;
    [ gå bagover] fall backwards;
    [ jeg var ved at gå bagover af forbavselse] you could have knocked me down with a feather;
    [ gå bort] go away;
    () die, pass away;
    ( hente) go for, go to fetch,
    T go and get;
    ( rette sig efter) go by, go on ( fx we have nothing to go by (el.
    on)), act on ( fx his advice, his recommendation);
    [ ` efter]
    ( undersøge) go over ( fx all the details), go into ( fx the
    matter),
    ( gøre rent, reparere) go over ( fx she went over the room with a duster),
    ( grundigt, om bil, skib) overhaul;
    (friske el. male op) touch up ( fx an article);
    ( efterkontrollere) go (el. check) over, go (el. check) through;
    [ hvis det gik efter mit hoved] if I had my way;
    [ gå efter lyden] go in the direction of the sound;
    ( gælde, regnes for) pass for, be supposed to be;
    ( blive solgt for) go for;
    [ hvad går her for sig?] what is going on here?
    [ hvornår skal det gå for sig?] when is it to come off? when is it to be?
    [ det går godt for ham] he is doing well;
    [ intet ville gå for ham] nothing went right for him;
    [gå foran præp] go before,
    F precede;
    adv go (, walk) ahead (el. in front), lead the way;
    [ gå forbi] pass;
    (fig) take precedence of (el. over);
    [ ` fra]
    ( løsne sig) come loose;
    ( om noget limet) come unstuck;
    ( skulle fradrages) be deducted;
    (opgive fx eksamen) give up;
    (opgive studium etc) drop out;
    ( forlade) leave (behind);
    ( lade i stikken) desert ( fx one's wife);
    (dvs hver til sit) part, separate;
    (dvs i stykker) go to pieces, split;
    [ gå fra sit ord] go back on one's word;
    [ gå frem] advance, go forward;
    ( gøre fremskridt) make progress;
    ( bære sig ad) act,
    F proceed;
    [ gå lige frem] walk straight ahead;
    [ gå fremad] advance,
    F proceed;
    ( gøre fremskridt) make progress;
    (dvs det går ham godt) he is getting on;
    (mht helbredet) his health is improving;
    ( han bliver dygtigere) he is coming on;
    [ gå hen: gå ubemærket hen] pass off unnoticed;
    [ gå ikke hen og bliv syg] don't go and be ill;
    [ han er gået hen og har købt en bil] he's (been and) gone and bought a car;
    [ gå let hen over] pass lightly over;
    T skate over;
    (se også hoved);
    [ gå hen til ham] go (up) to him; walk over to him;
    ( for at besøge ham) go and see him; look him up;
    [` gå i]
    [ `i]
    ( lukke sig) close;
    [ gå i biografen (, teatret, skole)] go to the cinema (, the theatre, school);
    [han går i sit 50. år] he is in his fiftieth year;
    [ gå i femte klasse] be in the fifth class;
    [ hun går lige i folk] people fall for her straight away;
    [ den slags historier går lige i folk] people lap up that kind of story;
    [ gå i sig selv] think better of it,
    F repent;
    [ planen gik i sig selv igen] the scheme came to nothing;
    (se også blod, I. død, frø, kloster, krig, kød, land, moder, orden,
    II. ret, I. stykke, vand, vejr);
    [` gå igen] leave again;
    [ ` igen] be repeated,
    F recur;
    ( om genfærd) walk; haunt the house (, room etc);
    [ gå igennem] pass (through), go through;
    ( undersøge) go over, go through;
    ( lide) go through,
    F undergo;
    ( blive vedtaget) be carried, pass, go through;
    [ ansøgningen gik igennem] the application was granted;
    (se også marv);
    ( i fjendtlig hensigt) go against;
    ( hen imod) go towards;
    ( modarbejde) oppose;
    [ hvad er der gået dig imod?] what is worrying you? what has upset you?
    [ alting går mig imod] nothing seems to be going my way;
    ( træde ind) go in, enter;
    (om avis etc) cease publication;
    (se også jagt);
    [ gå ind ad døren] go in through (, enter by) the door;
    ( støtte) support ( fx a proposal),
    ( være fortaler for) be an advocate of ( fx reform), advocate,
    ( anbefale) recommend;
    [ gå ind for en sag] adopt (el. identify oneself with) a cause;
    [ gå ind for hans politik] go in for (el. adopt el. advocate) his policy;
    [ jeg går ind for at] I think that, I vote that;
    [ gå ind i] go into, enter,
    (i forening etc) join;
    [ gå ind i hæren] join the army;
    (dvs han forstod det) it went right in; he got the message;
    (dvs de elsker det) they lap up that kind of thing;
    ( bevæge sig ind i) enter ( fx enter one's office);
    ( beskæftige sig med) go into ( fx go into details);
    ( give sin tilslutning til) agree to, accept ( fx accept a proposal), fall in with ( fx an arrangement, a joke);
    [ gå nærmere ind på] go into details about;
    [ gå ind til de andre] join the others;
    (se også evig (hvile));
    ( om dør) open inwards;
    [ han går indad på fødderne] his feet turn in; he turns in his feet (in walking);
    [ gå itu] break, come (el. go) to pieces;
    ( ledsage) go with, come with,
    F accompany;
    ( bære) carry ( fx a pistol, a gas mask, a cane),
    ( være iført) wear ( fx a gas mask, glasses, a ring, a hat);
    (se også krykke);
    ( om par) go out with,
    T date ( fx he's dating her);
    ( uddele) deliver ( fx newspapers, milk; bread for a baker);
    [ ` med]
    (adv) come with somebody (, me, etc), go along;
    ( forbruges) be consumed, be spent;
    ( blive ødelagt) be destroyed, be lost;
    [ går du med?] are you coming (too)? are you coming with me (, us)?
    ( også) do a newspaper round (, milk round);
    [ hvordan går det med ham?] how is he getting on?
    [ hvordan går det med arbejdet?] how is the work getting on? how are you getting on with your work?
    [ det går dårligt (, godt) med], se ovf: det går...;
    [ gå med stok] walk with a stick,
    ( til pynt) carry a stick;
    [ gå stille med noget] keep something quiet;
    (se også dør);
    [ gå med hovedet på skrå] carry one's head on one side;
    [ sådan går det med de fleste] that is what happens to most people;
    [ hele dagen gik med at forberede festen] they (, we etc) spent the whole day preparing the party;
    [ gå med på] agree to ( fx the terms, the plan, the proposal), fall in with ( fx the proposal);
    (se også værst);
    (dvs ind på) agree to;
    [ gå ned] go down,
    F descend;
    (om sol etc) set, go down;
    ( om flyvemaskine) land, come down;
    (om skib etc = synke) go down;
    ( om pris, temperatur etc) fall,
    ( pludseligt) drop;
    ( om teatertæppe) fall, come down;
    ( bukke under) go under, go to the wall,
    ( gå fallit) go under, go bust;
    (se også I. bakke, flag, I. klap);
    [ `om]
    ( gå omkring) walk about,
    ( blive rakt rundt) go round;
    ( udføres på ny) be repeated;
    ( i skole) repeat a class (, a year);
    ( om eksamen) retake (, kun skriftlig: resit) an examination,
    ( med objekt) retake (, resit) ( fx it is not possible to retake single papers);
    [ lade kanden gå om] pass the jug;
    [ kanden gik om] the jug went round;
    [gå 3. klasse om] repeat the third class;
    [ gå omkring] walk about;
    [ der går en mur omkring byen] there is a wall round the town;
    [ gå omkring i gaderne] walk about the streets;
    ( stige, også om pris) rise, go up;
    ( om dør, vindue) open,
    ( pludseligt) fly open;
    ( om sammenføjning) come apart, give way;
    (om knude etc) come undone,
    ( om noget limet) come unstuck;
    ( om regnestykke) come out, come right;
    ( om kabale) come out;
    (om fly etc) take off;
    ( om regnestykke) get out;
    (fig) it amounts to the same thing;
    ( vi er kvit) we are quits;
    [ det gik op for mig at] I came to realize that, it dawned upon me that;
    (dvs interessere sig for) be absorbed in; give one's mind to;
    ( gå helt op i) devote oneself to;
    ( til eksamen) do an examination in a subject;
    [ selskabet er gået op i et andet] the company has become merged in another;
    [ to går op i fire] two will go into four; four is divisible by two;
    [ gå op i sin rolle] identify oneself with one's part;
    (se også I. lue, røg, I. spids);
    [gå op med 6%] rise (el. go up) by 6%;
    ( fra side til side) cross ( fx let us cross here), walk across;
    ( fortage sig) pass off, wear off;
    ( gå itu) break (in two),
    ( overskride), se ndf: gå ud over;
    (se også bred, forstand, streg);
    [ gå over i] pass into;
    [ gå over på andre hænder] pass into other hands; change hands;
    [ gå over til] go over to ( fx the enemy; a Liberal MP went over to the Conservatives),
    (neds) defect to ( fx he defected to the rebels);
    ( en mening) come round to;
    ( en religion) go over to, be converted to;
    ( udvikles til) become, pass into;
    [ gå over til katolicismen] join (el. go over to) the Roman Catholic Church;
    [ `]
    ( tage fat) go ahead, go on;
    ( angribe) go for him (, them etc);
    ( ske) happen ( fx it does not happen often);
    (om handske etc) go on;
    (dvs angå) concern; be aimed at;
    [ den går han ikke `] he won't swallow (el. S buy) that; that won't go down with him;
    [ det er hårdt at gå `] it is tough luck;
    [ ( løs) på en] go for somebody;
    (se også løs);
    (dvs veg ikke) he stood his ground (like a man);
    (dvs genere) he did not turn a hair;
    [ det skal du ikke lade dig gå på af] don't let it get you down;
    [ der går 100 p på et pund] there are a hundred pence to a pound;
    (se også I. arbejde, hånd, melodi, nerve, opdagelse, universitet, vinge);
    [ gå rundt] walk about, go round;
    (se også rundt);
    [` gå sammen] walk (, leave) together;
    ( om par) go out together,
    T date ( fx they have been dating for over a year);
    (dvs gøre det i fællesskab) do it together;
    [ gå sammen om at] join together to,
    (dvs skyde penge sammen) club together to ( fx buy him a present);
    [ gå sammen med dem om at] join forces with them to;
    [ ` til]
    ( fremskynde sin gang) walk faster,
    F quicken one's pace;
    ( ske) come about, come (to pass), happen ( fx how did it happen? how did it come about that he was told? how did he come to lose the
    money?);
    ( kræves) be required,
    ( forbruges) be spent, be consumed;
    ( om fodtøj) break in ( fx new boots, new shoes);
    T go it;
    [ det gik hedt til] feelings ran high,
    T the fur really flew;
    [ det gik livligt til] things got lively;
    [ det gik underligt til med den sag] it was a queer business;
    [ jeg er ved at gå ` til af varme] this heat is getting too much for me (el.
    is getting me down);
    (se også bord, film, hjerte, hvile, hånd, læge, II. ret, sag, scene, top,
    valg);
    [ gå tilbage] go back,
    (især mil.) retreat;
    (fig) decline; fall off ( fx membership ( medlemstallet) fell off);
    [ lade handelen gå tilbage] call off the deal;
    [ det er gået tilbage for ham] he has come down in the world;
    [ vær venlig at gå tilbage i vognen!] pass right along the bus, please!
    [ det går tilbage med ham] he is falling off; he is losing his grip;
    [ gå tilbage til] return to, go back to,
    ( skrive sig fra) date from ( fx the house dates from the 17th
    century);
    [ gå ud] go out ( fx they go out a lot);
    ( om ild, lys) go out;
    ( om planter) die;
    ( udgå) be omitted, be left out, be dropped;
    [ gå ud ad døren] go out of the door;
    [ gå ud af] go out of, leave ( fx the room, school);
    ( forudsætte) assume, understand, take for granted ( fx I took it for granted that you would agree);
    ( også) I take it that;
    [ gå ud fra en urigtig forudsætning] act on a wrong assumption;
    [ gå ud med én] go out with somebody;
    (dvs overskride) go beyond ( fx what is reasonable), pass,
    F exceed ( fx all bounds alle grænser);
    ( påvirke, ramme) affect ( fx one's health);
    ( også) his work suffers;
    [ hans ondskab gik ud over ham selv] his malice rebounded on him;
    [ dette vil gå ud over ham] he will be the one to suffer for this;
    (dvs når noget går én imod) take it out on somebody else;
    [ lade sit raseri gå ud over] vent one's rage on;
    ( tilsigte) aim at,
    ( udtrykke) be to the effect (that);
    [ det går ud på at] the idea is that;
    [ forslaget (, svaret) går ud på at] the proposal (, the answer) is to the effect that;
    [ hans stræben går ud på] his object (el. aim) is;
    [ jeg så hvad alt dette gik ud på] I perceived the drift of all this;
    [ jeg ved hvad dine ønsker går ud på] I know what your wishes are;
    [ gå uden om] walk (, go) round ( fx a hole in the road);
    (fig) get round ( fx the difficulty);
    ( prøve at undgå) sidestep ( fx a problem),
    F evade ( fx the difficulty, the question);
    [ gå langt uden om én] give somebody a wide berth;
    [ gå udenom] go round ( fx the gate was shut so we had to go round),
    (fig: om sagens kerne) beat about the bush;
    [ ` under]
    (mar) go down,
    F founder;
    ( bukke under) go under, go to the wall;
    ( blive ødelagt) be destroyed;
    [ hvis verden går under] if the world comes to an end;
    (se også navn);
    [ gå væk], se væk.

    Danish-English dictionary >

  • 112 corto

    adj.
    1 short, small-sized.
    2 slow-witted.
    3 short, shy.
    4 short, brief, laconic, succinct.
    5 brief, short.
    6 short, non-talkative, reserved, unexpressive.
    7 short, scant, wanting.
    pres.indicat.
    1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: cortar.
    * * *
    1 (extensión) short
    2 (duración) short, brief
    3 (escaso) scant, meagre (US meager)
    4 figurado (tonto) thick, dim
    5 figurado (tímido) shy, timid
    1 short film, short
    \
    a la corta o a la larga figurado sooner or later, in the long run
    corto,-a de alcances familiar thick, dim
    corto,-a de medios of scant means
    corto,-a de miras familiar narrow-minded
    corto,-a de vista short-sighted
    ni corto,-a ni perezoso,-a familiar without thinking twice
    quedarse corto,-a (ropa) to become too short
    te quedaste corto con los bocadillos you didn't make enough sandwiches 3 (un tiro) to fall short 4 (no decir todo) to hold something back, not say enough
    ————————
    1 short film, short
    * * *
    (f. - corta)
    adj.
    2) shy, timid
    * * *
    1. ADJ
    1) [longitud, distancia] short
    pantalón 1)
    2) [periodo, visita, reunión] short, brief
    plazo 1)
    3) (=escaso) [ración] small

    corto de algo, un café con leche, pero corto de café — a coffee with plenty of milk, a milky coffee

    ando o voy corto de dinero — I'm short of money

    ando o voy muy corto de tiempo — I'm short of time, I'm pressed o pushed for time

    corto de vista — shortsighted, nearsighted (EEUU)

    quedarse corto, costará unos tres millones, y seguro que me quedo corto — it will cost three million, and I'm probably underestimating

    le dijo lo que pensaba de él, pero se quedó corto — she told him what she thought of him, but it still wasn't enough

    4) (=tímido) shy
    5) (=torpe) dim *, thick *
    - es más corto que las mangas de un chaleco
    2. SM
    1) (Cine) short, short film, short movie (EEUU)
    2) [de cerveza, vino] small glass; [de café] black coffee
    3.
    SF
    * * *
    I
    - ta adjetivo
    1)
    a) ( en longitud) <calle/río> short

    iba vestida de corto — she was wearing a short dress/skirt

    en corto< pase> (Dep) short

    b) ( en duración) <película/curso/viaje> short; <visita/conversación> short, brief
    2) (escaso, insuficiente)

    corto de algo: ando corto de dinero I'm a bit short of money; corto de vista near-sighted, shortsighted (BrE); ando muy corto de tiempo I'm really pressed for time; un café con leche corto de café a milky coffee; quedarse corto: costará más de un millón y seguro que me quedo corto it must cost at least a million, in fact it could well be more; lo llamé de todo y aun así me quedé corto I called him all the names under the sun and I could have said more; nos quedamos cortos con el pan — we didn't buy enough bread

    3) < persona>
    a) (fam) ( tímido) shy
    b) (fam) ( poco inteligente) stupid

    corto de entendederas or alcances — dim, dense (colloq)

    II
    1) (Cin)
    a) ( cortometraje) short (movie o film)
    b) cortos masculino plural (Col, Méx, Ven) ( de película) trailer
    2) (de cerveza, vino) (Esp) small glass; ( de whisky etc) (Chi) shot
    * * *
    I
    - ta adjetivo
    1)
    a) ( en longitud) <calle/río> short

    iba vestida de corto — she was wearing a short dress/skirt

    en corto< pase> (Dep) short

    b) ( en duración) <película/curso/viaje> short; <visita/conversación> short, brief
    2) (escaso, insuficiente)

    corto de algo: ando corto de dinero I'm a bit short of money; corto de vista near-sighted, shortsighted (BrE); ando muy corto de tiempo I'm really pressed for time; un café con leche corto de café a milky coffee; quedarse corto: costará más de un millón y seguro que me quedo corto it must cost at least a million, in fact it could well be more; lo llamé de todo y aun así me quedé corto I called him all the names under the sun and I could have said more; nos quedamos cortos con el pan — we didn't buy enough bread

    3) < persona>
    a) (fam) ( tímido) shy
    b) (fam) ( poco inteligente) stupid

    corto de entendederas or alcances — dim, dense (colloq)

    II
    1) (Cin)
    a) ( cortometraje) short (movie o film)
    b) cortos masculino plural (Col, Méx, Ven) ( de película) trailer
    2) (de cerveza, vino) (Esp) small glass; ( de whisky etc) (Chi) shot
    * * *
    corto1
    1 = brief [briefer -comp., briefest -sup.], short [shorter -comp., shortest -sup.], skimpy [skimpier -comp., skimpiest -sup.].

    Ex: Longer titles since each title can occupy only one line will be truncated and only brief source references are included.

    Ex: The 'in' analytic entry consist of two parts: the description of the part, and a short citation of the whole item in which the part is to be found.
    Ex: Wimbledon organisers have imposed a ban on skimpy tennis outfits ahead of this year's tournament.
    * a corto plazo = before very long, short term [short-term], in the short run, short-range, at short notice, in the short term, short-run.
    * andar corto de dinero = be strapped for + cash, be strapped for + cash.
    * andar (muy) corto de dinero = be (hard) pressed for + money.
    * andar (muy) corto de tiempo = be (hard) pressed for + time.
    * arma corta = small arm.
    * camiseta de mangas cortas = T-shirt [tee-shirt].
    * con un plazo de tiempo muy corto = at (a) very short notice.
    * con un plazo de tiempo tan corto = at such short notice.
    * corta distancia de desplazamiento = easy travelling distance.
    * cortas miras = nearsightedness [near-sightedness], myopia.
    * corto de dinero = strapped, cash strapped, financially strapped, short of money.
    * corto de miras = myopic, short-sighted [shortsighted].
    * corto de vista = nearsighted [near-sighted].
    * corto y grueso = stubby [stubbier -comp., stubbiest -sup.].
    * de corta duración = short term [short-term].
    * de mangas cortas = short-sleeved.
    * demasiado corto = all too short.
    * edición de tiradas cortas = short run publishing.
    * en un corto espacio de tiempo = in a short space of time.
    * en un corto período de tiempo = in a short period of time.
    * en un tiempo relativamente corto = in a relatively short time, in a relatively short span of time.
    * hacerse más corto = grow + shorter.
    * más bien corto = shortish.
    * novela corta = novella, novelette.
    * quedarse corto = stop + short of, fall + short, fall + short of.
    * relato corto = short story.
    * siesta corta = power nap, catnap.
    * solución a corto plazo = short-term solution.
    * tirada corta = short run.
    * tirando a corto = shortish.
    * vacación corta = short break.

    corto2
    2 = dim-witted [dimwitted].

    Ex: From that point on, the film is not only stupid, it's dim-witted, brainless and obtuse to the point of being insulting to the audience.

    * corto de luces = dim [dimmer -comp., dimmest -sup.], dim-witted [dimwitted].
    * más corto que las mangas de un chaleco = as thick as two (short) planks, as shy as shy can be, as thick as a brick, as daft as a brush, knucklehead.

    corto3

    Ex: With an eclectic mix of high-end quality short films and a devoted audience it is little wonder the event has sold out ever year for the past six years.

    * festival de cine corto = short film festival.
    * festival de cortos = short film festival.

    * * *
    corto1 -ta
    A
    1 (en longitud) ‹calle/río› short
    el camino más corto the shortest route
    el niño dio unos pasos cortitos the baby took a few short steps
    me voy a cortar el pelo bien corto I'm going to have my hair cut really short
    un jersey de manga corta a short-sleeved pullover
    el vestido (se) le ha quedado corto the dress has got(ten) too short for her, she's got(ten) too big for the dress
    fue a la fiesta vestida de corto she went to the party wearing a short dress/skirt
    en corto ( Dep) short
    recibe un pase en corto de Chano he receives a short pass from Chano
    tener a algn corto to keep sb on a tight rein
    2 (en duración) ‹película/curso› short; ‹visita/conversación› short, brief; ‹viaje› short
    los días se están haciendo más cortos the days are getting shorter
    esta semana se me ha hecho muy corta this week has gone very quickly o has flown (by) for me
    a la corta o a la larga sooner or later
    B
    (escaso, insuficiente): tiene hijos de corta edad she has very young children
    una ración muy corta a very small portion
    corto DE algo:
    un café con leche corto de café a weak white coffee, a milky coffee
    para mí, un gin-tonic cortito de ginebra I'll have a gin and tonic, but not too much gin
    ando corto de dinero I'm a bit short of money
    es muy corto de ambiciones he lacks ambition
    corto de vista near-sighted, shortsighted ( BrE)
    ando muy corto de tiempo I'm really pressed o ( BrE) pushed for time, I'm very short of time
    quedarse corto: deben haber gastado más de un millón y seguro que me quedo corto they must have spent at least a million, in fact it could well have been more
    lo llamé de todo y aun así me quedé corto I called him all the names under the sun and I still felt I hadn't said enough o and I still didn't feel I'd said enough
    nos quedamos cortos con el pan we didn't buy enough bread
    el pase se quedó corto the pass fell short
    C ‹persona›
    1 ( fam) (tímido) shy
    ni corto ni perezoso as bold as you like, as bold as brass
    ni corto ni perezoso le dijo lo que pensaba he told him outright o in no uncertain terms what he thought
    corto de entendederas or alcances dim, dense ( colloq), thick ( BrE colloq)
    A ( Cin)
    1 (cortometraje) short, short movie o film
    2 cortos mpl (Col, Ven) (de una película) trailer
    B
    1 ( Esp) (de cerveza, vino) small glass
    3 ( Esp) (de café) weak black coffee
    C ( Elec) short circuit, short ( colloq)
    * * *

     

    Del verbo cortar: ( conjugate cortar)

    corto es:

    1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo

    cortó es:

    3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo

    Multiple Entries:
    cortar    
    corto
    cortar ( conjugate cortar) verbo transitivo
    1 ( dividir) ‹cuerda/pastel to cut, chop;
    asado to carve;
    leña/madera to chop;
    baraja to cut;
    corto algo por la mitad to cut sth in half o in two;

    corto algo en rodajas/en cuadritos to slice/dice sth;
    corto algo en trozos to cut sth into pieces
    2 (quitar, separar) ‹rama/punta/pierna to cut off;
    árbol to cut down, chop down;
    flores› (CS) to pick;

    3 ( hacer más corto) ‹pelo/uñas to cut;
    césped/pasto to mow;
    seto to cut;
    rosal to cut back;
    texto to cut down
    4 ( en costura) ‹falda/vestido to cut out
    5 ( interrumpir)
    a)agua/gas/luz/teléfono to cut off;

    película/programa to interrupt
    b) calle› [policía/obreros] to close, block off;

    [ manifestantes] to block;

    6 (censurar, editar) ‹ película to cut;
    escena/diálogo to cut (out)
    7 [ frío]:
    el frío me cortó los labios my lips were chapped o cracked from the cold weather

    verbo intransitivo
    1 [cuchillo/tijeras] to cut
    2
    a) (Cin):

    ¡corten! cut!




    cortarse verbo pronominal
    1 ( interrumpirse) [proyección/película] to stop;
    [llamada/gas] to get cut off;

    se me cortó la respiración I could hardly breathe
    2

    brazo/cara to cut;

    b) ( refl) ‹uñas/pelo to cut;


    c) ( caus) ‹ peloto have … cut;


    d) [piel/labios] to crack, become chapped

    3 ( cruzarse) [líneas/calles] to cross
    4 [ leche] to curdle;
    [mayonesa/salsa] to separate
    5 (Chi, Esp) [ persona] (turbarse, aturdirse) to get embarrassed
    corto 1
    ◊ -ta adjetivo

    1
    a) ( en longitud) ‹calle/río short;


    el vestido le quedó corto the dress is too short for her now;
    iba vestida de corto she was wearing a short dress/skirt
    b) ( en duración) ‹película/curso/viaje short;

    visita/conversación short, brief;

    2 (escaso, insuficiente):

    corto de vista near-sighted, shortsighted (BrE);
    andar corto de tiempo to be pressed for time
    3 (fam) ( poco inteligente) stupid;
    corto de entendederas or alcances dim, dense (colloq)
    corto 2 sustantivo masculino (Cin)
    a) ( cortometraje) short (movie o film)

    b)

    cortos sustantivo masculino plural (Col, Méx, Ven) ( de película) trailer

    cortar
    I verbo transitivo
    1 to cut
    (un árbol) to cut down
    (el césped) to mow
    2 (amputar) to cut off
    3 (la luz, el teléfono) to cut off
    4 (impedir el paso) to block
    5 (eliminar, censurar) to cut out
    II verbo intransitivo
    1 (partir) to cut
    2 (atajar) to cut across, to take a short cut
    3 familiar (interrumpir una relación) to split up: cortó con su novia, he split up with his girlfriend
    ♦ Locuciones: familiar cortar por lo sano, to put an end to
    corto,-a
    I adjetivo
    1 (distancia, tiempo) short
    2 fam (de poca inteligencia) corto,-a (de luces), dim-witted
    3 (escaso) short: el guiso está corto de sal, the stew is short of salt
    corto,-a de vista, short-sighted
    4 (vergonzoso) shy
    II sustantivo masculino
    1 Cine short (film)
    2 Auto luz corta, dipped headlights pl
    ♦ Locuciones: familiar quedarse corto, to fall short (of the mark), underestimate: y me quedo corto cuando digo que es la mejor película del siglo, and my saying that it's the best movie of the century is an understatement
    ' corto' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    atar
    - carabina
    - comunicación
    - corta
    - cortar
    - cortarse
    - literalmente
    - pantalón
    - pequeña
    - pequeño
    - remo
    - salida
    - short
    - slip
    - tachuela
    - tres
    - vista
    - corriente
    - cursillo
    - espacio
    - gabán
    - llevar
    - pelado
    - plazo
    English:
    ankle
    - block off
    - bob
    - coat
    - cord
    - crop
    - dim
    - dull
    - have
    - hop
    - least
    - short
    - short-haired
    - short-range
    - short-term
    - short-winded
    - skimpy
    - spell
    - term
    - themselves
    - thick
    - understatement
    - clean
    - cut
    - draw
    - herself
    - himself
    - jab
    - nearsighted
    - notice
    - on
    - over
    - push
    - sever
    - side
    - slash
    - their
    - under
    * * *
    corto, -a
    adj
    1. [de poca longitud] short;
    las mangas me están cortas my sleeves are too short;
    estos pantalones se me han quedado cortos these trousers are too short for me now;
    hace varias semanas que no se viste de corto [futbolista] he hasn't been in the squad for several weeks;
    luces cortas Br dipped headlights, US low beams
    2. [de poca duración] short;
    el paseo se me ha hecho muy corto the walk seemed to go very quickly
    3. [escaso] [raciones] small, meagre;
    [disparo] short of the target;
    el lanzamiento se quedó corto the throw fell short;
    estoy corto de dinero I'm short of money;
    andamos muy cortos de tiempo we're very short of time, we haven't got very much time;
    Fig
    corto de miras short-sighted;
    corto de vista short-sighted
    4. [tonto]
    corto (de alcances) dim, simple;
    Fam Hum
    ser más corto que las mangas de un chaleco to be as thick as two short planks
    5. Comp
    ni corto ni perezoso just like that;
    quedarse corto [al calcular] to underestimate;
    nos quedamos cortos al comprar pan we didn't buy enough bread;
    decir que es bueno es quedarse corto it's an understatement to call it good;
    este programa se queda corto para nuestras necesidades this program doesn't do all the things we need
    nm
    1. [cortometraje] short (movie o Br film)
    2. [bebida]
    un corto de vino/cerveza a small wine/beer
    3. Am
    los cortos de una película [los avances] the trailer for a movie o Br film
    * * *
    adj short;
    ir de corto be wearing a short dress;
    corto de vista nearsighted;
    ni corto ni perezoso as bold as brass;
    quedarse corto fall short; ( calcular mal) underestimate;
    a la corta o a la larga sooner or later
    * * *
    corto, -ta adj
    1) : short (in length or duration)
    2) : scarce
    3) : timid, shy
    4)
    corto de vista : nearsighted
    * * *
    corto adj
    1. (en general) short
    2. (poco inteligente) dim [comp. dimmer; superl. dimmest] / thick

    Spanish-English dictionary > corto

  • 113 particular

    adj.
    1 particular (especial).
    tiene su sabor particular it has its own particular taste
    en casos particulares puede hacerse una excepción we can make an exception in special cases
    en particular in particular
    eso no tiene nada de particular that's nothing special o unusual
    lo que tiene de particular es… the unusual thing about it is…
    2 private (privado).
    dar clases particulares to teach private classes
    domicilio particular home address
    f. & m.
    1 member of the public (person).
    2 individual, citizen, civilian, private citizen.
    3 matter, point.
    m.
    matter (asunto).
    sin otro particular, se despide atentamente yours faithfully (en carta) (British), sincerely yours (United States)
    * * *
    1 (concreto) particular
    2 (privado) private
    3 (privativo) peculiar, particular, special
    4 (extraordinario) noteworthy, extraordinary
    1 (individuo) private individual
    2 (asunto) matter, subject
    \
    en particular in particular, particularly
    no tener nada de particular (no ser nada especial) to be nothing special 2 (no ser nada extraño) to be completely normal
    sin otro particular, le saluda... Yours sincerely,...
    * * *
    1. adj.
    3) special, peculiar
    2. noun m.
    * * *
    1. ADJ
    1) (=especial) special

    lo que tiene de particular es que... — what's remarkable about it is that...

    2) (=específico)

    me gustan todas, pero esta en particular — I like all of them, but this one in particular

    3) (=privado) [secretario, coche] private
    2.
    SM (=asunto) matter

    sin otro particular, se despide atentamente... — [en correspondencia] yours faithfully, sincerely yours (EEUU)

    3.
    SMF (=persona) (private) individual
    * * *
    I
    a) ( privado) <clases/profesor> private; < teléfono> home (before n)
    b) ( específico) <caso/aspecto> particular

    en particular — in particular, particularly

    c) ( especial)

    es un tipo muy particular — (fam) he's a very peculiar guy

    II
    a) (frml) ( asunto) matter, point

    sin otro particular le saludasincerely yours (AmE), yours faithfully (BrE)

    b) ( persona) (private) individual

    de particular — (RPl) out of uniform

    * * *
    I
    a) ( privado) <clases/profesor> private; < teléfono> home (before n)
    b) ( específico) <caso/aspecto> particular

    en particular — in particular, particularly

    c) ( especial)

    es un tipo muy particular — (fam) he's a very peculiar guy

    II
    a) (frml) ( asunto) matter, point

    sin otro particular le saludasincerely yours (AmE), yours faithfully (BrE)

    b) ( persona) (private) individual

    de particular — (RPl) out of uniform

    * * *
    particular1
    1 = private individual, private citizen.

    Ex: Special pricing policies introduced recently by several international publishers have resulted in libraries having to pay more than private individuals for books.

    Ex: Except for civil laws, and the individual right of the private citizen etc., the king is bound to public law, constitutional law and divine law.

    particular2
    2 = specified, particular.

    Ex: If access is limited to certain specified times, the term 'off-line' is applied.

    Ex: It is possible to identify an item uniquely within a particular institution or agency by a running accession number.
    * algo en particular = that certain something.
    * casa particular = private home.
    * de lo general a lo particular = from the general to the particular.
    * de lo particular a lo general = from the particular to the general.
    * en particular = in particular.
    * no hacer nada de particular = do + nothing in particular.
    * particular a = peculiar to.
    * particular a un área = localised [localized, -USA].
    * ser muy particular = be picky.

    * * *
    1 (privado) ‹clases/profesor› private; ‹teléfono› home ( before n)
    2 (específico) ‹característica/aspecto› particular
    en el caso particular de García in García's particular case
    la especie presenta ciertos rasgos que le son particulares the species has certain characteristics which are peculiar o unique to it
    en particular in particular, particularly
    3
    (especial, diferente): tiene un estilo muy particular she has a very individual o personal style, she has a style all of her own
    es un tipo muy particular ( fam); he's a very peculiar o ( colloq) weird guy
    no tiene nada de particular que quiera ir there's nothing unusual o strange in her wanting to go
    la casa no tiene nada de particular there's nothing special about the house
    1 ( frml) (asunto) matter, point
    conocemos su opinión sobre este particular we know your opinion on this matter o point
    sin otro particular saluda a usted atentamente sincerely yours ( AmE), yours faithfully ( BrE)
    2 (persona) (private) individual
    viajar como particular to travel on private o personal business
    de particular ( AmL); out of uniform
    * * *

     

    particular adjetivo
    a) ( privado) ‹clases/profesor private;

    teléfono home ( before n)
    b) ( específico) ‹caso/aspecto particular;


    c) ( especial) ‹estilo/gusto individual, personal;


    no tiene nada de particular que vaya there's nothing unusual o strange in her going;
    la casa no tiene nada de particular there's nothing special about the house
    ■ sustantivo masculino
    a) (frml) ( asunto) matter, point;



    viajar como particular to travel on private o personal business

    particular
    I adjetivo
    1 (peculiar, característico) special
    2 (concreto, singular) particular
    3 (privado) private, personal
    4 (raro, extraordinario) peculiar
    II sustantivo masculino
    1 (persona) private individual
    2 (asunto, tema) subject, matter
    ♦ Locuciones: de particular, special, extraordinary: ¿qué tiene de particular que vengan a visitarme?, what's so special about them coming to visit me?
    en particular, in special
    ' particular' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    ceñirse
    - chofer
    - chófer
    - concreta
    - concreto
    - determinada
    - determinado
    - frasear
    - permitirse
    - profesor
    - profesora
    - alojar
    - baño
    - bueno
    - cada
    - clase
    - cuál
    - domicilio
    - escritorio
    - especial
    - gentilicio
    - parte
    - peculiar
    - puntilloso
    - salón
    - vestíbulo
    English:
    coach
    - especially
    - in
    - individual
    - lazy
    - locker
    - particular
    - potter
    - private
    - separate
    - special
    - tutor
    - able
    - can
    - certain
    - detail
    - disability
    - distinct
    - distinctive
    - file
    - home
    - hour
    - knowledge
    - language
    - lodger
    - management
    - notably
    - peculiar
    - perk
    - personal
    - play
    - power
    - school
    - single
    - some
    - specific
    - syllabus
    - trade
    - trouble
    - -wise
    * * *
    adj
    1. [especial] particular;
    tiene su sabor particular it has its own particular taste;
    en casos particulares puede hacerse una excepción we can make an exception in special cases;
    es una persona muy particular she's a very unusual person;
    eso no tiene nada de particular that's nothing special o unusual;
    lo que tiene de particular es… the unusual thing about it is…;
    en particular in particular
    2. [privado] private;
    se vieron en su domicilio particular they met at his private residence;
    dar clases particulares to teach privately;
    domicilio particular home address;
    la casa tiene jardín particular the house has its own Br garden o US yard
    nmf
    [persona] member of the public; Am
    de particular [de paisano] [policía] in plain clothes;
    [soldado] in civilian clothes;
    iba vestido de particular [policía] he was in o wearing plain clothes;
    [soldado] he was in o wearing civilian clothes
    nm
    [asunto] matter;
    ¿cuál es tu opinión sobre el particular? what's your opinion on this (matter)?;
    te llamaba sin otro particular que preguntarte por la operación de tu madre I was just calling to ask about your mother's operation;
    sin otro particular, se despide atentamente [en carta] Br yours faithfully, US sincerely yours
    * * *
    I adj
    1 clase, propiedad private; asunto personal
    2 ( específico) particular;
    caso particular particular case;
    en particular in particular
    3 ( especial) peculiar
    II m
    1 ( persona) individual
    2
    :
    particulares pl particulars
    3
    :
    sin otro particular se despide atentamente sincerely yours, Br yours faithfully
    4
    :
    sobre el particular on the subject
    * * *
    1) : particular, specific
    2) : private, personal
    3) : special, unique
    1) : matter, detail
    2) : individual
    * * *
    1. (privado) private
    2. (concreto) particular / specific
    3. (característico) particular / characteristic
    4. (peculiar) individual / personal
    5. (original) unusual

    Spanish-English dictionary > particular

  • 114 sisih

    exclude, excluded, excluded, excluding
    * * *
    give away, get out of the way; be separate, aloof from; set something aside, put something to the side

    Indonesia-Inggris kamus > sisih

  • 115 part

    [paːt]
    1. noun
    1) something which, together with other things, makes a whole; a piece:

    We spent part of the time at home and part at the seaside.

    جُزْء
    2) an equal division:

    He divided the cake into three parts.

    جُزْء مُتساوٍ

    She played the part of the queen.

    شَخْصِيَّه
    4) the words, actions etc of a character in a play etc:

    He learned his part quickly.

    دَوْر
    5) in music, the notes to be played or sung by a particular instrument or voice:

    the violin part.

    دَوْر موسيقي
    6) a person's share, responsibility etc in doing something:

    He played a great part in the government's decision.

    دَور
    2. verb
    to separate; to divide:

    They parted (from each other) at the gate.

    يَفْصِل، يَنْفَصِل

    Arabic-English dictionary > part

  • 116 strain

    I [streɪn]
    1. verb
    1) to exert oneself or a part of the body to the greatest possible extent:

    They strained at the door, trying to pull it open

    He strained to reach the rope.

    يَلْوي، يُوَتِّرُ، يَضْغَطُ
    2) to injure (a muscle etc) through too much use, exertion etc:

    You'll strain your eyes by reading in such a poor light.

    يَرُضُّ العَضَلَه
    3) to force or stretch (too far):

    The constant interruptions were straining his patience.

    يُوَتِّرُ
    4) to put (eg a mixture) through a sieve etc in order to separate solid matter from liquid:

    She strained the coffee.

    يُصَفِّي
    2. noun
    1) force exerted; Can nylon ropes take more strain than the old kind of rope?
    شَد، إلتِواء
    2) (something, eg too much work etc, that causes) a state of anxiety and fatigue:

    to suffer from strain.

    إجْهاد، إرْهاق
    3) (an) injury especially to a muscle caused by too much exertion:

    muscular strain.

    رَضُّ العَضَلَه
    4) too great a demand:

    These constant delays are a strain on our patience.

    عِبء ْ كَبير، طَلَب زائِد II [streɪn] noun
    1) a kind or breed (of animals, plants etc):

    a new strain of cattle.

    سُلالَه، نَوْع
    2) a tendency in a person's character:

    I'm sure there's a strain of madness in her.

    نَزْعَه
    3) ( often in plural) (the sound of) a tune:

    I heard the strains of a hymn coming from the church.

    أنْغام

    Arabic-English dictionary > strain

  • 117 Veranlagung

    f
    1. charakterliche: disposition; (Neigung) inclination; (Talent) gift, talent; seine künstlerische / homosexuelle Veranlagung his artistic bent / homosexual tendencies Pl.; es ist Veranlagung it’s in his ( oder her) nature, he ( oder she) was made that way
    3. MED.: eine Veranlagung haben zu be prone to, suffer from; eine Veranlagung zur Fettsucht etc. haben be prone to obesity etc., have a tendency toward(s) obesity etc.
    4. steuerliche: assessment; i-e gemeinsame Veranlagung zur Einkommensteuer their joint assessment for income tax
    * * *
    die Veranlagung
    (Begabung) talent; gift;
    (Charakter) disposition;
    (Neigung) tendency; bent; inclination; idiosyncrasy;
    (Steuer) assessment
    * * *
    Ver|ạn|la|gung
    f -, -en
    1) (körperlich ESP MED) predisposition; (charakterlich) nature, disposition; (= Hang) tendency; (= allgemeine Fähigkeiten) natural abilities pl; (= künstlerisches, praktisches etc Talent) bent
    2) (von Steuern) assessment
    * * *
    die
    1) (personality: He has a pleasant disposition.) disposition
    2) (the set, or combination, of characteristics or ingredients that together form something, eg a personality; composition: Violence is just not part of his make-up.) make-up
    * * *
    Ver·an·la·gung
    <-, -en>
    f
    1. (angeborene Anlage) disposition
    eine bestimmte \Veranlagung haben to have a certain bent
    eine homosexuelle \Veranlagung haben to have homosexual tendencies
    eine künstlerische/artistische \Veranlagung haben to have an artistic/a musical bent
    eine praktische \Veranlagung haben to be practically minded
    eine \Veranlagung [zu etw dat] haben to have a tendency towards sth
    2. FIN (von Steuern) assessment
    gemeinsame/getrennte \Veranlagung joint/separate assessment
    steuerliche \Veranlagung tax assessment, assessment for tax purposes
    * * *
    die; Veranlagung, Veranlagungen
    1) [pre]disposition

    seine homosexuelle / künstlerische / praktische / romantische Veranlagung — his homosexual tendencies pl./artistic bent/practical nature/romantic disposition

    2) (Steuerw.) assessment
    * * *
    1. charakterliche: disposition; (Neigung) inclination; (Talent) gift, talent;
    seine künstlerische/homosexuelle Veranlagung his artistic bent/homosexual tendencies pl;
    es ist Veranlagung it’s in his ( oder her) nature, he ( oder she) was made that way
    3. MED:
    eine Veranlagung haben zu be prone to, suffer from;
    haben be prone to obesity etc, have a tendency toward(s) obesity etc
    4. steuerliche: assessment;
    i-e gemeinsame Veranlagung zur Einkommensteuer their joint assessment for income tax
    * * *
    die; Veranlagung, Veranlagungen
    1) [pre]disposition

    seine homosexuelle / künstlerische / praktische / romantische Veranlagung — his homosexual tendencies pl./artistic bent/practical nature/romantic disposition

    2) (Steuerw.) assessment
    * * *
    f.
    assessment n.
    habitude n.
    idiosyncrasy n.
    natural tendency (of) n.
    temper n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Veranlagung

  • 118 hacerse

    pron.v.
    1 to recede, to separate.
    2 to become, to enter into some new state or condition (llegar a ser).
    3 to accustom oneself (acostumbrarse).
    Hacerse de miel, to treat one gently, not to be very severe. Hacerse con alg or de algo, to acquire, to attain; to purchase anything which is wanting
    Hacerse memorable to become memorable, famous, notorious, etc. Hacerse añicos, to take great pains in doing anything
    Hacerse chiquito to pretend to be modest; to conceal one's knowledge
    Todavía no se ha hecho, it still has not been done. Hacer cortesía (mutuamente), to exchange courtesies
    Hacerse grande to grow tall, to get tall
    * * *
    1 (volverse) to become, get
    2 (crecer) to grow
    3 (acostumbrarse) to get used (a, to), become accustomed (a, to)
    4 (resultar) to become, go on, seem
    la película se hizo muy larga the film went on too long, I found the film too long
    5 (simular) to pretend
    6 (mandar hacer) to have made, have done
    * * *
    2) get
    3) pretend, play
    * * *
    VERBO PRONOMINAL
    1) (=realizar, crear)

    hacerse algo[uno mismo] to make o.s. sth; [otra persona] to have sth made

    ¿os hicisteis muchas fotos? — did you take a lot of photos?

    hacerse cacato soil one's pants

    hacerse pipí — to wet o.s.

    idea 1), nudo II, 1)
    2) (=cocinarse)
    3) + infin
    a) (=conseguir)
    b) (=mandar)
    4) (=reflexivo)
    5) [recíproco]
    6) (=llegar a ser)
    a) + sustantivo to become
    b) + adj
    7) (=parecer)

    se me hizo largo/pesado el viaje — the journey felt long/boring

    se me hace que... — esp LAm it seems to me that..., I get the impression that...

    se me hace que nos están engañandoit seems to me that o I get the impression that we're being deceived

    8) * (=fingirse)

    hacerse el sordoto pretend not to hear

    9) (=moverse)

    hacerse atrásto move back

    hacerse a un lado[de pie] to move to one side; [sentado] to move over

    hazte para allá, que me siente — move up that way a bit so I can sit down

    10) [seguido de preposición]
    hacerse a (=acostumbrarse) to get used to

    ¿te has hecho ya a levantarte temprano? — have you got used to getting up early yet?

    hacerse con [+ información] to get hold of; [+ ciudad, fortaleza] to take
    * * *
    (v.) = grow up to be, grow up into
    Ex. Quite obviously, however, everything rests in the end on the extent to which people grow up to be avid, thoughtful readers.
    Ex. Smart and speedy start-ups blindside mature companies with their inventiveness then grow up into mature companies and are outsmarted in their turn.
    * * *
    (v.) = grow up to be, grow up into

    Ex: Quite obviously, however, everything rests in the end on the extent to which people grow up to be avid, thoughtful readers.

    Ex: Smart and speedy start-ups blindside mature companies with their inventiveness then grow up into mature companies and are outsmarted in their turn.

    * * *

     

    ■hacerse verbo reflexivo
    1 (convertirse) to become, grow
    hacerse mayor, to grow old
    se hizo monja, she became a nun
    2 (simular) to pretend: me vio, pero se hizo el despistado, he saw me, but pretended he hadn't
    hacerse el sordo, to turn a deaf ear 3 hacerse con, (conseguir) to get hold of
    4 (acostumbrarse) to get used [a, to]: enseguida me hice a dormir sola, I soon got used to sleeping alone
    me tengo que hacer a la idea, I've got to get used to the idea
    ' hacerse' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    adueñarse
    - agenciarse
    - arrumaco
    - asegurarse
    - boca
    - cargar
    - cargo
    - comprometerse
    - curar
    - dueña
    - dueño
    - eco
    - idea
    - ilusión
    - ladearse
    - lío
    - loca
    - loco
    - lograr
    - mar
    - oro
    - ovillo
    - permanente
    - remolón
    - remolona
    - rogar
    - sorda
    - sordo
    - sueca
    - sueco
    - suplantar
    - taco
    - tonta
    - tonto
    - agujero
    - América
    - amigo
    - análisis
    - ánimo
    - añicos
    - bola
    - caca
    - camote
    - cirugía
    - cocer
    - competencia
    - comprender
    - confiar
    - control
    - correr
    English:
    appear
    - become
    - befriend
    - break
    - break up
    - charge
    - come
    - cook
    - corner
    - daydream
    - deepen
    - delude
    - drag on
    - endear
    - evidence
    - fall
    - fiendish
    - get on
    - get through
    - get-rich-quick
    - grow
    - grow up
    - hard
    - impersonate
    - join
    - kid
    - masquerade
    - materialize
    - move along
    - muddle
    - part
    - part with
    - piece
    - play
    - pose
    - possum
    - power
    - pretend
    - pull over
    - put out
    - run
    - sail
    - sea
    - seize
    - shatter
    - shoeshine
    - sidestep
    - smash
    - stage
    - stake
    * * *
    vpr
    1. [convertirse en] to become;
    hacerse musulmán to become a Muslim;
    se hizo hombre he became a man;
    hacerse viejo to grow old;
    hacerse del Universitario to sign for o join Universitario
    2. [guisarse, cocerse] to cook;
    el pavo se está haciendo the turkey's in the oven
    3. Literario [formarse]
    se hizo la noche night fell;
    y se hizo la luz [cita bíblica] and there was light
    4. [resultar] + adj to get;
    se hace muy pesado it gets very tedious;
    se me ha hecho muy corto el viaje the journey seemed very short;
    la clase se me ha hecho eterna the class seemed to go on forever
    5. [causarse] + nombre
    se hizo un corte en la mano she cut her hand
    6. [fabricarse] + nombre to make oneself;
    me hice un vestido [yo mismo] I made myself a dress;
    [la modista] I had a dress made;
    se han hecho una casa al lado del mar they've built (themselves) a house by the sea
    7. [arreglarse] + nombre
    hacerse las uñas to do one's nails
    8. [crearse en la mente] + nombre
    hacerse ilusiones to get one's hopes up;
    con lo que me has dicho ya me hago una idea de cómo es la escuela from what you've told me I've got a pretty good idea of what the school is like;
    no me hago una idea de cómo debió ser I can't imagine what it must have been like
    9. [mostrarse] + "el" + adj
    se hace el gracioso/el simpático he acts the comedian/the nice guy;
    hacerse el distraído to pretend to be miles away;
    ¿eres tonto o te lo haces? are you stupid or are you just pretending to be?
    10.
    hacerse a [acostumbrarse a] [m5] no consiguió hacerse a la comida británica she couldn't get used to British food;
    no me hago a su forma de trabajar I can't get used to the way they work;
    hacerse a una idea to get used to an idea;
    hazte a la idea de que no vamos a poder ir de vacaciones you'd better start getting used to the idea that we won't be able to go on holiday
    11. [moverse]
    hacerse a un lado [persona] to move aside;
    [vehículo] to pull over
    12.
    hacerse con [conseguir] [m5] se hizo con la medalla de oro she won the gold medal;
    se hizo con el control de la empresa he took control of the company
    13. [referido a necesidades fisiológicas]
    el bebé se ha hecho encima [orina] the baby has wet himself;
    [excremento] the baby has dirtied his Br nappy o US diaper; Fam
    el bebé se ha hecho pipí the baby's wet himself
    14. Esp muy Fam
    hacérselo con alguien [tener relaciones sexuales] to do it with sb, Br to have it off with sb
    15. Am Fam
    hacerse de [obtener] to get hold of;
    tengo que hacerme de unas llaves para poder entrar I need to get hold of some keys to get in;
    se hizo de un diploma y salió a buscarse la vida she got herself a qualification and set out to make her fortune;
    nos hicimos de algo de comida y pasamos el día en el campo we got some food together and spent the day in the country
    16. Am Fam
    ¿qué se habrá hecho mi vestido? [¿dónde estará?] what's happened to my dress?;
    ¿y tu prima? ¿qué se hizo? [corto plazo] where has your cousin got to?;
    [largo plazo] whatever happened to that cousin of yours?
    17. Am Fam [salir bien]
    precisaba una beca y por suerte se le hizo she needed a scholarship and luckily she got one;
    después de años, se me hizo, gané la grande after waiting for years, at last it happened for me, I got the big one
    18. Méx, RP Fam [creer]
    ¿llegará Pedro? – se me hace que no do you think Pedro will come? – I don't think so
    * * *
    v/r
    1 traje make; casa build o.s.
    2 ( cocinarse) cook
    3 ( convertirse, volverse) get, become;
    hacerse viejo get old;
    hacerse de noche get dark;
    se hace tarde it’s getting late;
    ¿qué se hizo de aquello? what happened with that?
    4
    :
    hacerse el sordo/el tonto pretend to be deaf/stupid
    5
    :
    hacerse a algo get used to sth
    6
    :
    hacerse con algo get hold of sth
    * * *
    vr
    1) : to become
    2) : to pretend, to act, to play
    hacerse el tonto: to play dumb
    3) : to seem
    el examen se me hizo difícil: the exam seemed difficult to me
    4) : to get, to grow
    se hace tarde: it's growing late
    * * *
    1. (volverse + sustantivo) to become [pt. became; pp. become]
    2. (volverse + adjetivo) to get
    3. (fingir) to pretend to be
    4. (parecer) to seem
    5. (conseguir) to get
    ¿dónde te has hecho con esa camiseta? where did you get that T shirt?
    6. (ganar) to win [pt. & pp. won]
    7. (acostumbrarse) to get used to
    8. (apartarse) to move

    Spanish-English dictionary > hacerse

  • 119 carpo

    carpo, psi, ptum, 3 [cf.: rapio, harpazô, karpos; Engl. grab, grip, grasp].
    I.
    Lit., of plants, flowers, fruits, etc., to pick, pluck, pluck off, cull, crop, gather (class.; in prose and poetry, esp. in the latter very freq.; syn. decerpere).
    A.
    In gen.:

    (flos) tenui carptus ungui,

    Cat. 62, 43; Hor. C. 3, 27, 44; Ov. M. 9, 342:

    ab arbore flores,

    id. ib. 9, 380; cf.

    infra, II.: rosam, poma,

    Verg. G. 4, 134:

    violas et papavera,

    id. E. 2, 47:

    violas, lilia,

    Ov. M. 5, 392:

    frondes uncis manibus,

    id. G. 2, 366:

    plenis pomaria ramis,

    Ov. H. 4, 29:

    vindemiam de palmite,

    Verg. G. 2, 90:

    fructus,

    id. ib. 2, 501:

    frumenta manu,

    id. ib. 3, 176.—
    B.
    Esp.
    1.
    Of animals, to take something as nourishment (cf. Burm. ad Phaedr. 1, 28, 4); first, of nourishment from plants, to crop, pluck off, browse, graze on, etc. (syn. depascere); also of flesh, to eat, devour (rare):

    alia (animalia) sugunt, alia carpunt, alia vorant, alia mandunt,

    Cic. N. D. 2, 47, 122:

    carpunt gramen equi,

    Verg. A. 9, 353; id. G. 2, 201; Ov. M. 1, 299:

    herbam,

    Verg. G. 3, 296; 3, 465; Ov. M. 13, 927:

    pabula,

    id. ib. 4, 217; id. F. 4, 750:

    alimenta,

    id. M. 15, 478:

    apes carpunt ex oleā arbore ceram, e fico mel, etc.,

    gather, Varr. R. R. 3, 16, 24 sq.; cf.:

    apis carpens thyma,

    Hor. C. 4, 2, 29.— Poet.:

    Invidia (personif. envy) summa cacumina carpit,

    Ov. M. 2, 792:

    nec carpsere jecur volucres,

    id. ib. 10, 43; cf. Phaedr. 1, 28, 4.—Sometimes transf., of men:

    prandium,

    Ter. Ad. 4, 2, 52:

    carpe cibos digitis,

    Ov. A. A. 3, 755: pisces, pulles, Mart. 3, 13, 1.—Also, to carve; hence the pun in Petr. 36 fin.
    2.
    Poet., of other things, to tear off, tear away:

    summas carpens media inter cornua saetas,

    Verg. A. 6, 245.—Of wool, to pluck; hence, poet., to spin:

    vellera,

    Verg. G. 4, 335:

    pensa,

    id. ib. 1, 390; Prop. 3 (4), 6, 16; Hor. C. 3, 27, 64:

    lana carpta,

    carded, Cels. 6, 6, 1 (hence, facete: stolidum pecus, to pluck, i. e. to fleece rich lovers, Prop. 2 (3), 16, 8; Ov. A. A. 1, 420):

    ex collo furtim coronas,

    to pull off, Hor. S. 2, 3, 256:

    crinem genasque,

    to tear, rend, lacerate, Val. Fl. 8, 7;

    so acc. to Servius's inaccurate account, in a fragment of the Twelve Tables: mulier faciem ne carpito,

    Serv. ad Verg. A. 12, 606 (instead of the real words: MVLIERES. GENAS. NE. RADVNTO.; cf.

    Dirks. Fragm. XII. Tab. p. 668): artus in parva frusta,

    Sen. Thyest. 1061.—
    II.
    Trop.
    A.
    (Acc. to I. A.) To pluck, snatch, etc.:

    ut omni ex genere orationem aucuper, et omnes undique flosculos carpam atque delibem,

    Cic. Sest. 56, 119; id. de Or. 1, 42, 191:

    atque in legendo carpsi exinde quaedam,

    Gell. 9, 4, 5: oscula, to pluck, as it were, from the lips, to snatch, Prop. 1, 20, 27; Ov. H. 11, 117 Loers. N. cr.; id. M. 4, 358; Phaedr. 3, 8, 12 al.:

    basia,

    Mart. 5, 46, 1:

    gaudia,

    Ov. A. A. 3, 661:

    dulcia,

    Pers. 5, 151:

    regni commoda carpe mei,

    Ov. F. 3, 622:

    fugitivaque gaudia carpe,

    and snatch pleasures as they fly, Mart. 7, 47, 11:

    delicias,

    Prop. 2 (3), 34, 74.—
    B.
    Esp.
    1.
    (Acc. to I. B. 1.) In a good sense, to enjoy, use, make use of (mostly poet.;

    syn.: fruor, capio): breve ver et primos carpere flores,

    Ov. M. 10, 85 (cf.:

    flore aetatis frui,

    Liv. 21, 3, 4):

    illa mihi sedes, illic mea carpitur aetas,

    spent, lived, passed, Cat. 68, 35:

    diem,

    Hor. C. 1, 11, 8:

    honores virtutis,

    Val. Fl. 1, 177:

    auras vitales,

    Verg. A. 1, 388; cf. Sil. 3, 712:

    sub dio somnos,

    Verg. G. 3, 435:

    quietem,

    id. A. 7, 414:

    soporem,

    id. ib. 4, 522:

    noctes securas,

    Val. Fl. 5, 48; a poet. circumlocution for vivere, degere, etc.—
    b.
    In a bad sense.
    (α).
    To gnaw at or tear character or reputation, to carp at, slander, calumniate, revile:

    more hominum invident, in conviviis rodunt, in circulis vellicant: non illo inimico, sed hoc maledico dente carpunt,

    Cic. Balb. 26, 57:

    nam is carpebatur a Bibulo, Curione, Favonio,

    id. ad Q. Fr. 2, 3, 2:

    Paulum obtrectatio carpsit,

    Liv. 45, 35, 5:

    imperatorem,

    id. 44, 38, 2:

    quae non desierunt carpere maligni,

    Quint. 11, 1, 24:

    maligno sermone,

    Suet. Aug. 27:

    obliquis orationibus,

    id. Dom. 2:

    nonnihil vocibus,

    Caes. B. G. 3, 17:

    aliquem sermonibus,

    Liv. 7, 12, 12:

    sinistris sermonibus,

    Plin. Ep. 1, 9, 5:

    Ciceronem in his,

    Quint. 9, 4, 64:

    te ficto quaestu,

    Cat. 62, 36 and 37:

    et detorquere recte facta,

    Plin. Ep. 1, 8, 6:

    famam vitamque,

    id. Pan. 53, 4; Suet. Calig. 34.—
    (β).
    To rob of strength, to weaken, enfeeble, wear away, consume; or poet., with the idea extended (cf. absumo), to consume completely, to destroy:

    vires,

    Verg. G. 3, 215; Liv. 9, 27, 6:

    quid si carpere singula (jura) et extorquere... patiemini,

    id. 34, 3, 2;

    esp. of in ward care, anxiety, longing, etc.: at regina, gravi jamdudum saucia curā, Volnus alit venis et caeco carpitur igni,

    Verg. A. 4, 2; Ov. M. 3, 490; 10, 370:

    solane perpetua maerens carpere juventā?

    Verg. A. 4, 32:

    curā carpitur ista mei,

    Ov. A. A. 3, 680:

    aegra assiduo mens carpitur aestu,

    Val. Fl. 3, 305; Lucr. 9, 744; Sil. 15, 1:

    invidia carpit et carpitur unā,

    Ov. M. 2, 781; cf. Prop. 3 (4), 5, 3:

    non ego Tot tuos patiar labores carpere lividas Obliviones,

    to wear away, Hor. C. 4, 9, 33; cf.: otia corpus alunt, animus quoque pascitur illis;

    Inmodicus contra carpit utrumque labor,

    Ov. P. 1, 4, 21 sq.:

    aras etiam templaque demolitur et obscurat oblivio, neglegit carpitque posteritas,

    Plin. Pan. 55, 9:

    totum potest excedere quod potest carpi,

    Sen. N. Q. 2, 13, 2.—So,
    (γ).
    In milit. lang., to inflict injury upon an enemy (esp. by single, repeated attacks), to weaken, harass:

    agmen adversariorum,

    Caes. B. C. 1, 63:

    hostes carpere multifariam vires Romanas,

    Liv. 3, 5, 1; 22, 32, 2; 27, 46, 6; cf. id. 3, 61, 13 infra; Weissenb. ad Liv. 22, 16, 2; Tac. A. 12, 32; Luc. 4, 156:

    novissimum agmen,

    Caes. B. C. 1, 78 fin.:

    novissimos,

    Liv. 8, 38, 6:

    extrema agminis,

    id. 6, 32, 11. —
    2.
    To separate a whole into single parts, to cut to pieces, divide (syn.: dividere, distribuere): neque semper utendum est perpetuitate, sed saepe carpenda membris minutioribus [p. 295] oratio est, Cic. de Or. 3, 49, 190:

    in multas parvasque partes carpere exercitum,

    Liv. 26, 38, 2:

    summam unius belli in multa proelia parvaque,

    id. 3, 61, 13:

    Erymanthus... ab accolis rigantibus carpitur,

    is drawn off into canals, Curt. 8, 9, 410. —With a reference to the meaning
    (α).
    supra:

    si erunt plures qui ob innocentem condemnandum pecuniam acceperint, tu non animadvertes in omnis, sed carpes ut velis, et paucos ex multis ad ignominiam sortiere?

    distinguish, single out, Cic. Clu. 46, 129; cf.:

    in multorum peccato carpi paucos ad ignominiam,

    id. ib. —
    3.
    Viam, iter, etc., or with definite local substantives, terram, mare, litora, etc., to go, tread upon, pass over, navigate, sail along or through, to take or pursue one ' s way (syn. ire):

    viam,

    Verg. A. 6, 629; Hor. S. 2, 6, 93; Ov. M. 8, 208; 11, 139:

    iter,

    Hor. S. 1, 5, 95; Ov. H. 18, 34; id. M. 2, 549; 10, 709:

    supremum iter = mori,

    Hor. C. 2, 17, 12:

    gyrum,

    to go in a circle, Verg. G. 3, 191:

    fugam,

    to fly, Sil. 10, 62; cf.:

    prata fugā,

    Verg. G. 3, 142:

    pede viam,

    Ov. A. A. 2, 230:

    pede iter,

    id. F. 3, 604:

    pedibus terras, pontum remis,

    Prop. 1, 6, 33:

    pede campos,

    Ov. Tr. 1, 10, 23:

    mare,

    id. M. 11, 752:

    litora,

    id. ib. 12, 196;

    15, 507: aëra alis,

    id. ib. 4, 616; cf. Verg. G. 4, 311:

    aethera,

    Ov. M. 8, 219:

    carpitur acclivis per muta silentia trames,

    id. ib. 10, 53.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > carpo

  • 120 demum

    dēmum (also demus, like prorsus, quorsus, rursus, deorsus, Liv. Andr. ap. Paul. ex Fest. p. 70, 8 Müll.; Plaut. Trin. 3, 3, 51 Ritschl and Brix), adv. [a sup. form from de, downmost; cf.: sub, summus], used to give prominence to an idea in opposition to or restriction of another, at length, at last, not till then; just, precisely; only, etc.
    I.
    In Latin of every period and description of writing (for syn. cf.: tandem, denique, postremum, primo).
    A.
    Enclitically with pronouns, like adeo (but less freq.), just, precisely, especially, exactly, indeed; also translated by an emphasis of the pronoun:

    id demum lepidumst,

    Plaut. Pers. 2, 3, 14; cf.:

    sic sentio, id demum aut potius id solum esse miserum, quod turpe sit,

    Cic. Att. 8, 8 init.:

    idem velle atque idem nolle, ea demum firma amicitia est,

    Sall. C. 20, 4; cf. id. ib. 12 fin.:

    relinquere aculeum in audientium animis is demum potest, qui, etc.,

    Plin. Ep. 1, 20, 18:

    tamquam ad eam linguam demum natus esset,

    Quint. 6 prooem. §

    11: me fortuna hac demum voluit consistere terra,

    Verg. A. 1, 629; cf. id. ib. 2, 743 al.:

    ille demum antiquis est adulescens moribus,

    Plaut. Capt. 1, 2, 20:

    per quaedam parva sane, si ipsa demum aestimes, ducunt,

    Quint. 1, 10, 5:

    vos demum, ut video, legem antiquastis sine tabella. Sed ego, etc.,

    Cic. Leg. 3, 17, 38 (but Bait. vos quidem):

    quae demum causae secundam valetudinem praestent, Cels. praef.: jam vero exsilium, si rerum naturam, non ignominiam nominis quaerimus, quantum demum a perpetua peregrinatione differt?

    Cic. Tusc. 5, 37, 107:

    sciscitando eo demum pervenit, ut haud procul esset, quin Remum agnosceret,

    Liv. 1, 5 fin.
    (β).
    Strengthened by a preceding verum enim vero, or a following profecto:

    verum enim vero id demum juvat, si quem, etc.,

    Ter. Ad. 2, 3, 2; Sall. C. 2, 9; cf. Liv. 4, 4:

    is demum profecto vitam aequa lance pensitabit, etc.,

    Plin. 7, 7, 5.—
    (γ).
    Separated from the pronoun:

    hoc est demum quod percrucior,

    Plaut. Bac. 5, 1, 13:

    illa seges demum,

    Verg. G. 1, 47.—
    B.
    Enclitically with the adverbs nunc, tum, or tunc, post, modo, jam, ibi, sic, etc.; just, precisely, not till; also freq. expressed by more strongly accenting those particles.—
    a.
    Nunc demum, Gr. nun dê, now, now at length, at last (cf.: nunc adeo, under 2. adeo, no. B. 2. c.):

    nunc demum ego cum illa fabulabor libere,

    Plaut. Poen. 5, 3, 40;

    so with scio,

    id. Epid. 3, 4, 22; id. Mil. 2, 6, 62;

    with intellego,

    Ter. Heaut. 2, 3, 12; cf.:

    nunc demum rescribo iis litteris, quas, etc.,

    Cic. Att. 16, 3; and:

    undevicesimo aetatis anno dicere in foro coepi et nunc demum, quid praestare debeat orator, adhuc tamen per caliginem video,

    yet it is only now that I am at length beginning to see, Plin. Ep. 5, 8, 8 et saep.—
    (β).
    In Plautus with following conjunctions, cum, quoniam, etc.:

    nunc demum a me insipienter factum esse arbitror, Cum rem cognosco,

    Plaut. Mil. 2, 6, 80; cf. id. Rud. 4, 4, 78.—
    (γ).
    Separated by pol, edepol, or other words:

    nunc pol demum ego sum liber,

    Plaut. Cas. 4, 4, 14:

    nunc edepol demum in memoriam regredior, cum cogito, etc.,

    id. Capt. 5, 4; 25; id. Cas. 4, 4, 14; id. Aul. 1, 2, 1:

    heu, nunc misero mihi demum Exsilium infelix!

    Verg. A. 10, 849.—
    b.
    Tum demum, then at length, then indeed (so most freq., esp. in the historians;

    in Caes. only in this connection): tum demum Liscus oratione Caesaris adductus, etc.,

    Caes. B. G. 1, 17; 1, 50, 2; 1, 51, 2; Liv. 2, 20; 3, 12; Plin. Ep. 6, 20, 6; Verg. A. 6, 330; 573; id. G. 3, 205; Ov. F. 4, 615 et saep.:

    utraque re satis experta tum demum consules,

    Liv. 2, 29.—
    (β).
    With foll. conjunct. ubi, si, cum, etc. (and in Plautus also separate; cf. above, no. 1. b. and c.):

    ubi expolivero, Magis hoc tum demum dices,

    Plaut. Poen. 1, 1, 61; Sall. J. 46; Cels. 7, 27 fin.:

    si id facies, tum demum scibis, etc.,

    Plaut. Mil. 4, 8, 56; id. Men. 2, 2, 71; Cic. Rep. 1, 24; cf. with quodsi, Att. ap. Cic. Att. 9, 10, 4:

    ac tum demum, cum medium tenuere, etc.,

    Plin. Ep. 8, 20, 7:

    tum tu igitur demum id adulescenti aurum dabis, Ubi, etc.,

    Plaut. Trin. 3, 3, 52.—Once in this connection demum alone:

    servata res est demum, si illam videro,

    Plaut. Merc. 5, 2, 68.—
    c.
    Tunc demum (cf. Drak. Liv. 41, 3, 5):

    tunc demum intelleges, etc.,

    Sen. Ep. 121; Suet. Calig. 9; Vulg. Gen. 41, 9; and with cum, Col. praef. fin.;

    with ubi,

    Cels. 3, 6, and 10.—
    d.
    Post demum, afterwards, not till after:

    post eum demum huc cras adducam,

    Plaut. As. 5, 2, 65:

    post igitur demum, etc.,

    id. Amph. 3, 1, 16.—With post as praep.: unas enim post idus Martias, Asin. Pollio ap. Cic. Fam. 10, 31, 4:

    post biduum demum,

    Suet. Aug. 10 fin.
    e.
    Modo demum, only now, now for the first time:

    modone id demum sensti,

    Ter. And. 5, 3, 11.—
    f.
    Jam demum, now at last, now (cf. dê... êdê, Eurip. Suppl. 980;

    Troad. 235),

    Ov. Tr. 2, 8.—
    g.
    Ibi demum, just there:

    illic ibi demum'st locus, ubi, etc.,

    Plaut. Capt. 5, 4, 3; Quint. 10, 3, 13:

    ibi demum morte quievit,

    Verg. A. 9, 445; cf. id. ib. 1, 629; Stat. Th. 2, 474; id. Silv. 2, 3, 14; cf.

    also ibi demum, of time,

    Ter. Hec. 1, 2, 53.—
    h.
    Sic demum:

    sic demum socios consumpta nocte reviso,

    Verg. A. 2, 795; 6, 154.—
    k.
    Ita demum, Vulg. 2 Mac. 6, 15.—
    2.
    With the abl. temp. or absol.:

    ego novus maritus anno demum quinto et sexagesimo fiam?

    Ter. Ad. 5, 8, 15:

    decimo demum pugnavimus anno,

    Ov. M. 13, 209:

    quarta vix demum exponimur hora,

    Hor. S. 1, 5, 23:

    hieme demum,

    Plin. Ep. 7, 2, 2:

    pontificatum maximum, quem numquam vivo Lepido auferre sustinuerat, mortuo demum suscepit,

    Suet. Aug. 31; cf.:

    appellato demum collegio obtinuit,

    id. Caes. 23:

    his demum exactis,

    Verg. A. 6, 637:

    noctu demum rex recessit,

    Curt. 7, 11, 20.—And once with the nominative of the part. perf.:

    damnatus demum, vi coactus reddidit Mille et ducentos Philippos,

    i. e. not until condemned, Plaut. Bac. 2, 4, 38.—
    C.
    To add emphasis to the idea contained in a proposition, in fact, in very truth, certainly, indeed (rare):

    ea sunt enim demum non ferenda in mendacio, quae, etc.,

    Cic. Rep. 2, 15:

    immemor est demum, nec frugum munere dignus, qui, etc.,

    Ov. M. 15, 122; Quint. 10, 6, 5;

    so to strengthen a comparative (cf.: adeo, etiam): latius demum ire,

    further yet, Plaut. Most. 3, 2, 156:

    num expositio haec longior demum esse debeat,

    Quint. 4, 2, 79.—
    II.
    In postAug. Latin.
    A.
    Only, solely, exclusively ( = duntaxat, tantum, solum, tantummodo, modo): ne vulgarem viam ingressus, alienis demum vestigiis insisterem, Quint. prooem. § 3; id. 2, 15, 1:

    adeo suis demum oculis credidit,

    id. 11, 3, 68: quaedam (verba) tertiae demum personae figura dicuntur, ut licet, piget, id. 1, 4, 29: [p. 545] qui (Cicero) non assecutus esset docendo judicem tantum et utiliter demum ac Latine perspicueque dicendo, ut, etc., id. 8, 3, 3 et saep.:

    nihil magis pro contione testatus est, quam id demum se habiturum, quod, etc.,

    but just that, Suet. Oth. 6 et saep.:

    ut non is demum sit veneficus, qui vitam abstulit data potione, sed etiam qui mentem,

    Quint. 9, 2, 105; cf.

    with the following verum etiam,

    id. 7 prooem. § 1.—
    b.
    Ita demum, only so; then or in that case only; not till then ( = tum demum);

    esp. freq. in conditional propositions: si plus humoris excernitur quam assumitur, ita demum secundae valetudinis spes est,

    Cels. 3, 21; Plin. Ep. 3, 3, 2; Suet. Claud. 25 al.—
    B.
    To point out something as taking place only after previous delay, at length, at last = tandem:

    quod oppidum Hispaniae frustra diu oppugnatum illitis demum galbano facibus succenderit,

    Suet. Galb. 3; cf. corresp. with tandem, id. Calig. 6.—
    * 2.
    For denique no. II. 2, finally, in fine:

    ex quibus alium Ciceroni, alium Caesari, singulis demum singulos opponeremus,

    Tac. Or. 26 fin. Cf. Hand Turs. II. p. 250-260; Zumpt ad Curt. 6, 39, 25; Mützell ad Curt. 3, 7, 8; 3, 22, 26.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > demum

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