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1 hall
[ho:l]1) (a room or passage at the entrance to a house: We left our coats in the hall.) predsoba2) ((a building with) a large public room, used for concerts, meetings etc: a community hall.) dvorana3) (a building with offices where the administration of a town etc is carried out: a town hall; (American) the city hall.) magistrat4) ((American) a passageway through a building; a corridor.) hodnik5) (a building of a university, college etc, especially one in which students etc live.) študentski dom•- hallmark- hallway* * *I [hɔ:l]noundvorana; vestibul, veža, predsoba, preddverje; sodna dvorana; predavalnica; magistratBritish English dvorec, dédina; tržnica; cehovska hiša; študentovski dom, stanovanjska zgradba za študente ali predavatelje; skupna obednica univerzitetnih študentov, skupen obed v tej obednici; American vsako univerzitetno poslopje, inštitut; British English booking hall — kolodvorska dvorana za prodajo vozovnicAmerican the Hall of Fame — hram slaveto earn o.s. a place in the Hall of Fame — postati nesmrtenLiberty Hall — prostor, kjer vsak lahko počne, kar hočeII [hɔ:l]transitive verbvtisniti žig zlatarskega ceha -
2 servant
['sə:vənt]1) (a person who is hired to work for another, especially in helping to run a house.) služabnik2) (a person employed by the government, or in the administration of a country etc: a public servant; civil servants.) uslužbenec* * *[sɜ:vənt]noun(glavni) služabnik, sluga, služitelj, posel; hišna pomočnica, služabnica; državni (javni) uslužbenec; plural služinčad, poslicivil servant — uslužbenec državnih, nevojaških, civilnih ustanovdomestic servants — hišni posli, služinčadindoor servant — služabnik, ki opravlja posle v hišimaid-servant — služkinja, deklaman-servant — služabnik, slugaout-door servant — služabnik, ki opravlja posle zunaj hiše (vrtnar, konjski hlapec ipd.)Post-Office servant British English poštni uslužbenecYour obedient servant — Vaš vdani (vljudnosti izraz na koncu pisma pred podpisom; se rabi danes le v uradnih dopisih)
См. также в других словарях:
servants' hall — noun A servants dining room and sitting room • • • Main Entry: ↑servant … Useful english dictionary
Servants' hall — The Servants Hall is a common room for domestic workers in a great house. The term usually refers to the servants dining room.If there is no separate sitting room, the Servants Hall doubles as the place servants may spend their leisure hours and… … Wikipedia
Servants' quarters — [ mansion and were intended to be viewed as part of the overall facade] Servants quarters are those parts of a building, traditionally in a private house, which contain the domestic offices and staff accommodation. From the late 17th century… … Wikipedia
Hall — For the etymology of the term hall, see Hall (concept). For other uses, see Hall (disambiguation). The Marwar Hall at Umaid Bhawan Palace, Jodhpur, India … Wikipedia
Hall boy — The hall boy was the lowest ranked male servant on the staff of a great house. It was often a young boy. His name derived from the main venue of his job, the Servants Hall Verify source|date=April 2008. He may also have slept in one of the halls… … Wikipedia
Hall — (h[add]l), n. [OE. halle, hal, AS. heal, heall; akin to D. hal, OS. & OHG. halla, G. halle, Icel. h[ o]ll, and prob. from a root meaning, to hide, conceal, cover. See {Hell}, {Helmet}.] 1. A building or room of considerable size and stateliness,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Hall of the Divine Child — Military Academy was a kindergarten through eighth grade boarding school in Monroe, Michigan, the only military boarding school for boys in the state of Michigan. It was built in 1918, and closed in 1980, with the building being turned into the… … Wikipedia
Hall of Servants — In Robert Jordan s The Wheel of Time fantasy fiction series, the Hall of the Servants was the center of Aes Sedai power in the Age of Legends, analogous to the White Tower in the Third Age. It s unclear if the name referred to the organization of … Wikipedia
HALL, Edward Smith (1786-1860) — political reformer son of Smith Hall, bank manager, and his wife, Jane Drewry, was born in London on 28 March 1786. He was well educated and as a young man was interested in social and religious work, which probably brought him under the notice… … Dictionary of Australian Biography
Hall — Principal room in a medieval house, used for meeting and dining. Often, servants would sleep in the hall. It often extended up to the roof. Before chimneys were introduced, there would be an open fire, often in the middle of the floor. The smoke… … Medieval glossary
Great hall — For other uses, see Great hall (disambiguation). The Great Hall in Barley Hall, York restored to replicate its appearance in around 1483 A great hall is the main room of a royal palace, nobleman s castle or a large manor house in the Middle Ages … Wikipedia