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61 school leaving age
of ripe age — зрелого возраста; немолодой
tender age — юные годы; незрелый возраст
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62 advanced age
of ripe age — зрелого возраста; немолодой
tender age — юные годы; незрелый возраст
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63 mean age
of ripe age — зрелого возраста; немолодой
tender age — юные годы; незрелый возраст
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64 chemical age
of ripe age — зрелого возраста; немолодой
tender age — юные годы; незрелый возраст
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65 Fermi age
of ripe age — зрелого возраста; немолодой
tender age — юные годы; незрелый возраст
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66 neutron age
of ripe age — зрелого возраста; немолодой
tender age — юные годы; незрелый возраст
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67 radiometric age
of ripe age — зрелого возраста; немолодой
tender age — юные годы; незрелый возраст
English-Russian dictionary on nuclear energy > radiometric age
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68 years of age
enjoying a green old age — всё ещё бодрый, несмотря на годы
tender age — юные годы; незрелый возраст
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69 child, of, tender, years
enfant en bas âge -
70 нежность
жен.
1) tenderness, caress ;
fondness;
delicacy;
civility прилив нежности
2) мн. нежности;
разг. kind words, endearments;
compliments( ухаживания) ;
flattery ед. телячьи нежностинежн|ость - ж.
1. tenderness;
2. мн. разг. (ласковые слова, поступки) endearments;
~ый
3. (ласковый) gentle, tender-hearted;
~ые взгляды tender glances;
4. (мягкий) tender;
~ая кожа tender skin;
5. (приятный) gentle, pleasant;
~ый аромат delicate fragrance;
~ый голос gentle/caressing voice;
6. (слабый, хрупкий) frail;
~ный возраст tender age;
~ный пол the weaker sex.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > нежность
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71 impressionable
1. a впечатлительный, восприимчивый, чувствительный2. a пластичныйСинонимический ряд:impressible (adj.) at a tender age; easily influenced; impressible; naive; perceptive; receptive; responsive; sensible; sensile; sensitive; sensorial; sentient; susceptible; susceptive; sympathetic; tender -
72 Saldanha, Duke of
(1790-1876)Born João Carlos de Saldanha Oliveira Daun, and later called duke, marshal, count, and marquis of Saldanha, he pursued a military career and personified military intervention in 19th-century politics. Saldanha fought against the French in the Peninsular War, as well as in conflicts in Uruguay and Brazil, and he backed the constitutional monarchist cause of King Pedro IV. Perhaps the most famous of career officers during the century, in his younger years he was often in exile. Critics quipped that his true name was "Dom João VII" for his imperious manner. As minister and prime minister in various liberal governments after 1851, his name later became used as a generic term for an impetuously planned military coup, a "Saldanhada," meaning a military golpe almost whimsical in spirit, carried out by a wild, headstrong general.A soldier from the tender age of 14, Saldanha was a much-discussed figure during various generations of soldiers and politicians. The writer Oliveira Martins later described the man as "a liberal and Portuguese Cid," after El Cid, the Castilian crusading warrior who fought Muslims in medieval Spain. For the constitutional liberal cause of Regent Dom Pedro, Saldanha's personal valor and military prowess were essential in the civil wars, and his prestige in the military was important in the era of the Regeneration of 1851-70; however, this officer lacked political ideas and was out of his element in governance. Queen Maria II, however, in part owed her throne to the force of this military personality who had become a general at age 27. In later life, Saldanha, loaded with honors and freighted with medals, served as Portugal's ambassador in Paris and London, in which city he died at his last post. -
73 Owens, Michael Joseph
[br]b. 1 January 1859 Mason County, Virginia, USAd. 27 December 1923 Toledo, Ohio, USA[br]American inventor of the automatic glass bottle making machine.[br]To assist the finances of a coal miner's family, Owens entered a glassworks at Wheeling, Virginia, at the tender age of 10, stoking coal into the "glory hole" or furnace where glass was resoftened at various stages of the hand-forming process. By the age of 15 he had become a glassblower.In 1888 Owens moved to the glassworks of Edward Drummond Libbey at Toledo, Ohio, where within three months he was appointed Superintendent and, not long after, a branch manager. In 1893 Owens supervised the company's famous exhibit at the World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago. He had by then begun experiments that were to lead to the first automatic bottle-blowing machine. He first used a piston pump to suck molten glass into a mould, and then transferred the gathered glass over another mould into which the bottle was blown by reversing the pump. The first patents were taken out in 1895, followed by others incorporating improvements and culminating in the patent of 8 November 1904 for an essentially perfected machine. Eventually it was capable of producing four bottles a second, thus effecting a revolution in bottle making. Owens, with Libbey and others, set up the Owens Bottle Machine Company in 1903, which Owens himself managed from 1915 to 1919, becoming Vice-President from 1915 until his death. A plant was also established in Manchester in 1905.Besides this, Owens and Libbey first assisted Irving W.Colburn with his experiments on the continuous drawing of flat sheet glass and then in 1912 bought the patents, forming the Owens-Libbey Sheet Glass Company. In all, Owens was granted forty-five US patents, mainly relating to the manufacture and processing of glass. Owens's undoubted inventive genius was hampered by a lack of scientific knowledge, which he made good by judicious consultation.[br]Further Reading1923, Michael J.Owens (privately printed) (a series of memorial articles reprinted from various sources).G.S.Duncan, 1960, Bibliography of Glass, Sheffield: Society of Glass Manufacturers (cites references to Owens's papers and patents).LRD -
74 малолетний
1. прил. juvenile, minor;
underage (несовершеннолетний) ;
(very) young, of tender age
2. муж.;
скл. как прил. little( one), juvenile, minor (о подростке) ;
infant (о ребенке)Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > малолетний
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75 तरुण
තරුණ taruNa taruṇa adjyoung; of tender age. m a young man. -
76 तलुण
තලුණ taluNa taluṇa adjyoung; of tender age. m a young man. -
77 orphan
I 1. ['ɔːfn]aggettivo orfano2.nome orfano m. (-a)II ['ɔːfn]verbo transitivo rendere orfano* * *['o:fən](a child who has lost both parents (rarely only one parent): That little girl is an orphan; ( also adjective) an orphan child.) orfano* * *orphan /ˈɔ:fn/A n.orfano, orfana: He was left an orphan, rimase orfanoB a. attr.● an orphan child, un orfanello, un'orfanella □ (farm.) orphan drug, farmaco orfano □ (ecol.) orphan site, zona contaminata abbandonata □ (fin., Borsa) orphan stock, titolo orfano □ ( editoria) orphan works, opere orfane ( senza diritti riconosciuti a un autore) □ a home for orphans, un orfanotrofio.(to) orphan /ˈɔ:fn/v. t. (di solito, al passivo)rendere orfano: He was orphaned at the tender age of five, rimase orfano alla tenera età di cinque anni.* * *I 1. ['ɔːfn]aggettivo orfano2.nome orfano m. (-a)II ['ɔːfn]verbo transitivo rendere orfano -
78 Carlota Joaquina, Queen
(1775-1830)Daughter of King Carlos IV of Spain, born in Aranjuez, Spain, and married at the tender age of 10 to João, son and heir of Queen Maria I. When Dom José, the eldest son of Queen Maria I died in 1788, Carlota Joaquina, who had become an unpopular Spaniard living in alien Portugal, was named princess-heiress. Always in conflict with her well-meaning but indecisive husband, João, Carlota became the leader of an extreme reactionary court party and was frequently in conflict with her more malleable husband. When the royal family fled to Brazil in 1808 to escape the French army of invasion, she accompanied them and remained in Brazil until she returned to Portugal with her husband in 1821.From that time on, Carlota Joaquina was never far from the center of political conflicts and controversy, as the Portuguese political system was caught in the grip of a violent struggle between the forces of constitutionalism and absolutism. After returning from Brazil, she refused to swear allegiance to the new constitution presented to her husband, King João VI, and was placed under house arrest. She was a power behind the throne of her son, Miguel, as he proclaimed himself an absolutist king, threw out the constitution, and prepared to rule the country in 1828. Before the civil war called " The War of the Brothers" (Miguel vs. Pedro, both her sons) was concluded with Pedro's military victory in 1834, Carlota Joaquina died and thus did not have to witness Miguel's defeat and permanent exile. -
79 Isabel, Santa
(Saint Elizabeth of Portugal)(1269-1336)Known to the Portuguese as "Holy Queen" Isabel, she was born in Spain, the daughter of Pedro III of Aragon. At the tender age of 12, she was married to Portugal's King Dinis, who was a better monarch than he was a husband. Isabel became widely known and famous for her peacemaking among her warring family and between Portugal and Castile, her piety and devotion, and her good works in supporting and building convents, chapels, hospitals, refuges for the homeless and wayward, orphanages, and shelters for abused women. Widowed in 1325, she moved near the Santa Clara Convent in Coimbra and continued her pious deeds. She died on 4 July 1336, the day now celebrated as her feast day, and was buried in Coimbra. She was beatified in 1516, and canonized in 1625 by Pope Urban VIII. -
80 Sebastião I, king
(1554-1578)The king of Portugal whose disappearance and death in battle in Morocco in 1578 led to a succession crisis and to Spain's annexation of Portugal in 1580. He is the person after whom the cult and mythology of Sebastianism is named. Sebastião succeeded to the throne of Portugal at the tender age of three, upon the death of his father King João III in 1557. With his great-uncle Cardinal Henrique, he was the only other surviving legitimate male member of the Aviz dynasty. The Spanish menace loomed on Portugal's eastern horizons, as Phillip II of Spain gathered more reasons to make good his own strong claims to the Portuguese throne. A headstrong youth, Sebastião dreamed of glory in battle against the Muslims and was certainly influenced by the example of the feats of Phillip II's half-brother Don Juan of Austria and the naval victory against the Turks at Lepanto in 1571.Sebastião's great project was a victory in Africa, and he ordered a major effort to raise a fleet and army to attack Morocco. His forces landed at Tangier and Arzila and marched to meet the Muslim armies. In early August 1578, at the battle of Alcácer- Quivir, Portugal's army was destroyed by Muslim forces, and the king himself was lost. Although he was undoubtedly killed, his body was never found. The result of this foolhardy enterprise changed the course of Portugal's history and gave rise to the cult and myth that Sebastião survived and would return one foggy morning to make Portugal great once again.
См. также в других словарях:
tender age — tender (young) age : a very young age She left home at the tender young age of 14. He was playing the piano at a tender age. • • • Main Entry: ↑tender … Useful english dictionary
tender age — index nonage Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
tender age of — See the tender age of … English idioms
tender age — Synonyms and related words: bloom, budtime, early years, florescence, flowering time, jeunesse, juvenescence, juvenility, my burning youth, my green age, prime of life, salad days, seedtime of life, springtime of life, tenderness, young blood,… … Moby Thesaurus
tender age — infancy … English contemporary dictionary
(a) tender age — a tender age phrase a time in your life when you are still young and lack experience Tennis players start at a more tender age these days. at the tender age of something: He was first elected at the tender age of 23. Thesaurus: general words… … Useful english dictionary
at a tender age — at a ˌtender ˈage | at the tender age of… idiom used in connection with sb who is still young and does not have much experience • He left home at the tender age of 15. • She shouldn t be having to deal with problems like this at such a tender age … Useful english dictionary
at the tender age of … — at a ˌtender ˈage | at the tender age of… idiom used in connection with sb who is still young and does not have much experience • He left home at the tender age of 15. • She shouldn t be having to deal with problems like this at such a tender age … Useful english dictionary
a tender age — a time in your life when you are still young and lack experience Tennis players start at a more tender age these days. at the tender age of something: He was first elected at the tender age of 23 … English dictionary
the tender age of — the young age of, still wet behind the ears He was the tender age of three when his mother died … English idioms
tender young age — tender (young) age : a very young age She left home at the tender young age of 14. He was playing the piano at a tender age. • • • Main Entry: ↑tender … Useful english dictionary