-
1 the Royal
['rɔɪəl]разг."Ро́йял", Короле́вская (сельскохозя́йственная) вы́ставка (устраивается ежегодно с 1839 Английским королевским сельскохозяйственным обществом [ Royal Agricultural Society of England]; с 1963 проводится в Национальном сельскохозяйственном центре [National Agricultural Centre] в Кенилуэрте, графство Уорикшир)полн. Royal International Agricultural ShowEnglish-Russian Great Britain dictionary (Великобритания. Лингвострановедческий словарь) > the Royal
-
2 royal
royal ['rɔɪəl]∎ by royal charter par acte du souverain;∎ the royal "we" le "nous" de majesté∎ they gave us a (right) royal welcome ils nous ont accueillis comme des rois;∎ to be in royal spirits être d'excellente humeur∎ that guy is a right royal pain in the neck ce type est un véritable emmerdeur;∎ her whining gives me a royal pain elle me fait vraiment chier avec ses jérémiades;∎ he's a royal idiot c'est un sombre crétin ou un crétin de première∎ royal octavo/quarto in-huit m/in-quarto m raisin2 nounfamiliar = membre de la famille royale;∎ the Royals la famille royale□►► the Royal Academy (of Arts) Académie f royale britannique des beaux-arts;the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art = Conservatoire national d'art dramatique, à Londres;the Royal Academy of Music = conservatoire national de musique, à Londres;the Royal Air Force armée f de l'air britannique;Royal Ascot = événement hippique annuel, étalé sur plusieurs jours, qui entre dans le calendrier mondain de la haute société anglaise;royal assent = signature royale qui officialise une loi;the Royal Ballet = compagnie nationale de ballet qui a son siège à Covent Garden à Londres;royal blue bleu m roi;the Royal British Legion = association britannique d'anciens militaires;royal burgh ville f établie par charte royale;the Royal Canadian Mounted Police la Gendarmerie royale du Canada;the Royal College of Music Collège m royal de musique (école de musique située à Londres);the Royal College of Physicans Collège m royal de médecine (organisation de médecins);the Royal College of Surgeons Collège m royal de chirurgie (organisation de chirurgiens);the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons Collège m royal de médecine vétérinaire (organisation de vétérinaires);the Royal Commission = commission nommée par le monarque sur recommandation du premier ministre;the Royal Court = théâtre à Londres;Royal Doulton = porcelaine fine anglaise;the Royal Enclosure = tribune de la famille royale à Royal Ascot;the Royal Engineers le génie militaire britannique;the Royal Family la famille royale;Botany royal fern osmonde f royale;Cards royal flush quinte f royale; (in poker) flush m royal;Royal Highland Show = grande foire agricole annuelle qui a lieu à Ingleston, près d'Édimbourg;Your Royal Highness Votre Altesse Royale;∎ His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales Son Altesse Royale, le prince de Galles;Their Royal Highnesses Leurs Altesses Royales;the Royal Horse Guards = la garde à cheval qui assure la garde du palais et du souverain;British Cookery royal icing = glaçage à base de sucre glace et de blancs d'œufs (utilisé pour les cakes);the Royal Institute of British Architects = institut d'architectes, à Londres;the Royal Institution l'Académie f des sciences britannique;royal jelly gelée f royale;the Royal Mail = la Poste britannique;the Royal Marines les Marines mpl (britanniques);Nautical royal mast mât m de cacatois;the Royal Mile = rue d'Édimbourg qui relie le château au palais de Holyrood;the Royal Mint = la Monnaie britannique, ≃ (l'hôtel m de) la Monnaie;the Royal Navy la marine f nationale britannique;the Royal Opera House l'opéra m de Covent Garden;Botany royal palm palmier m royal;royal prerogative prérogative f du souverain;∎ to exercise the royal prerogative faire acte de souverain;the Royal School of Music École f royale de musique;Royal Scottish Academy Académie f royale écossaise des beaux-arts;the Royal Shakespeare Company = célèbre troupe de théâtre basée à Stratford-on-Avon et à Londres;the Royal Show = le salon annuel de l'agriculture en Grande-Bretagne;the Royal Society l'Académie f des sciences britannique;Royal Society of Medicine Fondation f britannique de médecine;the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals = société britannique protectrice des animaux, ≃ SPA f;British the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children ≃ Fondation f pour l'enfance;the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds = ligue britannique pour la protection des oiseaux;royal standard = drapeau représentant les armoiries de la couronne britannique, hissé lorsque le monarque est au château;the Royal Tournament = meeting annuel destiné au public organisé par les forces armées, avec entre autres choses des démonstrations de gymnastique;the Royal Ulster Constabulary = corps de police d'Irlande du Nord;the Royal Variety Show = spectacle de variétés organisé à Londres en faveur de la Fédération des artistes de variétés;royal warrant brevet m de fournisseur du souverain;Royal Worcester = porcelaine fine anglaiseⓘ THE ROYAL SOCIETY Cette société à vocation scientifique, fondée par Charles II en 1660, contribua à renforcer la crédibilité des hommes de science, qui jouirent également d'une plus grande liberté. En firent notamment partie Isaac Newton et Robert Boyle. -
3 show
[ʃəu] 1. гл.; прош. вр. showed; прич. прош. вр. shown; showed1) показыватьHe showed me the pictures of his family. — Он показал мне фотографии своей семьи.
I've got a new toy I want to show you. — У меня есть новая игрушка, которую я хочу тебе показать.
2) показывать, выявлять, устанавливатьThe survey showed that up to 90 per cent of big UK employers use part-time and temporary workers. — Опрос показал, что до 90 процентов крупных работодателей в Соединённом Королевстве используют совместителей и временных работников.
These are important figures which show clearly what has been happening in the UK labour market. — Это важные цифры, которые ясно показывают, что происходит в последнее время на рынке рабочей силы в Великобритании и Северной Ирландии.
3) показывать, объяснять; учитьHe showed us how to lasso. — Он показал нам, как нужно ловить арканом.
4) показывать, указыватьMany people showed us marks on walls where the waters reached. — Многие показывали нам отметки на стенах, которые оставила вода.
5) показывать ( путь), провожать, сопровождатьto show smb. round / around — сопровождать кого-л. во время осмотра
He let me in and showed me the way to the sitting room. — Он впустил меня в дом и проводил в гостиную.
He showed us to our seats. — Он проводил нас на наши места.
I'll show you out. — Я вас провожу (к выходу).
Ella showed her around the town. — Эльза показала ей местные достопримечательности.
During her visit to Bangladesh in 1983 Her Majesty was shown around a children's clinic. — Во время визита в Бангладеш в 1983 Её Величество осмотрела детскую клинику.
Show the doctor up when he comes. — Проводите доктора наверх, когда он придёт.
6)а) проявлять, выказывать ( эмоции)The enemy showed no mercy. — Враги были беспощадны.
Iran is showing its displeasure. — Иран выражает недовольство.
If he was bitter, it did not show. — Возможно он обиделся, но не показывал виду.
The world is showing concern over the invasion. — Мировое сообщество выражает озабоченность по поводу вторжения.
The US showed its own goodwill by undertaking to withdraw their troops. — США продемонстрировали со своей стороны добрую волю, взяв обязательство вывести свои войска.
б) проявляться, появляться (на лице; о негативных эмоциях)He was upset but never let it show. — Он был расстроен, но не показывал виду.
Your grief is showing. — Ваше горе не скроешь.
The fear they felt showed clearly in their faces. — Страх, который они чувствовали, был написан у них на лице.
7) ( show oneself)а) проявлять себя, оказыватьсяHe showed himself a harsh ruler. — Он оказался суровым правителем.
He has shown himself willing to participate in the debate. — Он выразил желание принять участие в дебатах.
Panic can show itself in many different ways. — Паника может проявляться по разному.
Tact also shows itself in respecting what others hold dear. — Тактичность также проявляется в уважении к тому, что дорого другим.
8)а) показывать, обнаруживать, выделятьto show the signs of smth. — обнаруживать признаки чего-л.
to show profit / loss — быть прибыльным, убыточным
The bodies showed the signs of torture. — На телах были обнаружены следы пыток.
The suit was showing the signs of wear. — Костюм выглядел поношенным.
White carpet showed every mark. — На белом ковре было заметно каждое пятно.
Сorporate America is showing the signs of recovery. — Появились признаки того, что американские корпорации выходят из кризиса.
Two animals are thought to be incubating the disease but not showing symptoms. — Полагают, что у двух животных болезнь находится в инкубационном периоде, поэтому симптомы пока не заметны.
The sector was showing only 0.5 per cent growth. — Рост в этом секторе составляет всего лишь 0,5%.
The construction sector showed the biggest losses. — Строительный сектор понёс самые большие убытки.
б) выделяться, виднеться, обнаруживатьсяDon't worry, the stain will never show. — Не переживайте, пятно будет незаметно.
My dandruff is showing. — Перхоть у меня на волосах - заметна.
Then hammer them in so that only the top 6 inches (15cm) is showing. — А затем вбейте их так, чтобы виднелась только верхушка – 6 дюймов (15 см).
Mike was in the water, his red life-jacket showing clearly. — Майк был в воде, его красный спасательный жилет был хорошо заметен.
9) = show through проступать, быть заметным; просвечиватьThe bra showed through (the blouse). — Бюстгальтер просвечивал (через блузку).
The old dog was so thin that his bones showed through (his skin). — Старая собака была такой тощей, что сквозь кожу проступали кости.
She spoke near-perfect American, though occasionally her native Welsh accent showed through. — Она говорила на американском английском почти идеально, её родной валлийский акцент проскальзывал лишь иногда.
10) показывать, предъявлять ( документ)I showed my driver's license to the policeman. — Я показал полцейскому свои права.
11)а) показывать, отмечать, регистрировать ( о приборе)The luminous dial on the clock showed five minutes to seven. — Светящийся циферблат часов показывал, что сейчас без пяти семь.
My test score showed on the screen. — На экране появился результат моего теста (сколько очков я набрала).
12) показывать, изображатьThe photo shows the American and Soviet leaders standing side by side on the lawn of the White House. — На фото изображены лидеры США и СССР, стоящие рядом на лужайке перед Белым домом.
13)а) показывать, играть, давать (пьесу, фильм)William showed us the video of his wedding. — Вильям показал нам видео своей свадьбы.
Most cinemas will not show NC-17 films. — Большинство кинотеатров отказываются демонстрировать фильмы категории "Эн-Си-17" (зрители до 17 лет не допускаются).
It was the first film shown at Radio City Music Hall. — Это был первый фильм, который показали в киноконцертном зале "Рэдио-сити".
б) идти (о пьесе, фильме)There's J.B. Priestley's classic drama showing at the Garrick Theatre. — В театре «Гаррик» идёт классическая драма Джона Бойтона Пристли.
14)а) выставлять; предлагать для продажиThe Royal Academy is showing Pissarro. — В Королевской академии искусств идёт выставка работ французского художника Камиля Писсаро.
б) выставляться; предлагаться для продажиAn exhibition of paintings and charcoal drawings by Georgia O'Keeffe is showing at the Hayward Gallery. — В галерее Хейуарда идёт выставка Джорджии О'Киф: картины и графика.
15) = show up появляться, приходитьHe failed to show for the opening game of the season. — Он не появился на игре, открывшей сезон.
16) юр. представлять18) зарегистрировать ( лошадь) для участия в соревнованиях19) брит.; разг. быть на последних сроках беременности•- show off- show up••to show (smb.) a clean pair of heels — дать стрекоча, дать тягу, улепётывать
to show smb. who's boss — показать, кто главный
to show promise — подавать надежды, свидетельствовать о таланте
to show smb. the ropes — ввести кого-л. в курс дела
- show one's hand- show a leg
- show smb. the door
- show one's face 2. сущ.1)а) спектакль; шоу, представление; показ; выставкаhorse show — выставка лошадей, конноспортивный праздник
motor / auto show — автосалон, автомобильный салон; автомобильная выставка
ice show — эстрадное представление на льду; балет на льду, ревю
variety show — варьете, эстрадное представление, эстрадный концерт
minstrel show амер. — шоу менестрелей (жанр развлекательных представлений, распространённый в середине 19 века)
dog-and-pony show амер.; уст. — цирк-шапито
to do / produce / put on / stage a show — ставить спектакль
to see / watch a show — смотреть спектакль
Let's go to a show. — Пойдёмте в театр.
I enjoyed the show immensely. — Мне очень понравился спектакль.
The show starts at 7.30 p.m. — Представление начинается в половине восьмого вечера.
б) телевизионная или радио программаchat show брит. / talk show амер. — тлв. ток-шоу
game show — телеигра, телевизионная игра
в) киносеанс2)а) показ, показывание, демонстрацияShe was frightened by any show of affection. — Любые знаки внимания отпугивали её.
Syn:б) видимость, притворствоonly a show of kindness / regret — только видимость доброго отношения, сожаления
I made a show of believing her. — Я сделал вид, что верю ей.
He was making a show of working while actually doing very little. — Он изображал, что работает, хотя в действительности почти ничего не делал.
3) зрелище4) брит.; разг. посмешищеNow, don't make a show of yourself. — Пожалуйста, не делай из себя посмешище.
5)а) след, признак наличияThere is a show of reason in it. — В этом есть какой-то смысл.
Syn:б) физиол. предродовые воды7) разг. дело, предприятие; организованная активностьto give away the show — выдать, разболтать секрет, проговориться; разболтать о недостатках (какого-л. предприятия)
to run / boss the show — заправлять (чем-л.); хозяйничать
8) спорт.; жарг. третье место на финише ( обычно в конных соревнованиях)9) амер.; разг. удобный случай или возможность проявить себя, показать свои силы; шансLet's give him a show in spite of his background. — Давайте дадим ему (ещё один) шанс, несмотря на его происхождение.
We must give the boy a good / fair show. — Надо дать парню возможность проявить себя.
Syn:chance 1.10) воен.; жарг. операция, бой; заваруха••to put up a good / poor show разг. — хорошо, плохо себя проявить
Let's get this show on the road. разг. — Пора приниматься за работу.
dog-and-pony show амер.; разг. — показуха
- show of hands- for show -
4 Fowler, John
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering[br]b. 11 July 1826 Melksham, Wiltshire, Englandd. 4 December 1864 Ackworth, Yorkshire, England[br]English engineer and inventor who developed a steam-powered system of mole land drainage, and a two-engined system of land cultivation, founding the Steam Plough Works in Leeds.[br]The son of a Quaker merchant, John Fowler entered the business of a county corn merchant on leaving school, but he found this dull and left as soon as he came of age, joining the Middlesbrough company of Gilkes, Wilson \& Hopkins, railway locomotive manufacturers. In 1849, at the age of 23, Fowler visited Ireland and was so distressed by the state of Irish agriculture that he determined to develop a system to deal with the drainage of land. He designed an implement which he patented in 1850 after a period of experimentation. It was able to lay wooden pipes to a depth of two feet, and was awarded the Silver Medal at the 1850 Royal Agriculture Show. By 1854, using a steam engine made by Clayton \& Shuttleworth, he had applied steam power to his invention and gained another award that year at the Royal Show. The following year he turned his attention to steam ploughing. He first developed a single-engined system that used a double windlass with which to haul a plough backwards and forwards across fields. In 1856 he patented his balance plough, and the following year he read a paper to the Institution of Mechanical Engineers at their Birmingham premises, describing the system. In 1858 he won the Royal Agricultural Society award with a plough built for him by Ransomes. Fowler founded the Steam Plough Works in Leeds and in 1862 production began in partnership with William Watson Hewitson. Within two years they were producing the first of a series of engines which were to make the name Fowler known worldwide. John Fowler saw little of his success because he died in 1864 at his Yorkshire home as a result of tetanus contracted after a riding accident.[br]Further ReadingM.Lane, 1980, The Story of the Steam Plough Works, Northgate Publishing (provides biographical details of John Fowler, but is mostly concerned with the company that he founded).AP -
5 Anglo-Portuguese Alliance
The world's oldest diplomatic connection and alliance, an enduring arrangement between two very different nations and peoples, with important practical consequences in the domestic and foreign affairs of both Great Britain (England before 1707) and Portugal. The history of this remarkable alliance, which has had commercial and trade, political, foreign policy, cultural, and imperial aspects, can be outlined in part with a list of the main alliance treaties after the first treaty of commerce and friendship signed between the monarchs of England and Portugal in 1373. This was followed in 1386 by the Treaty of Windsor; then in 1654, 1661, 1703, the Methuen Treaty; and in 1810 and 1899 another treaty also signed at Windsor.Common interests in the defense of the nation and its overseas empire (in the case of Portugal, after 1415; in the case of England, after 1650) were partly based on characteristics and common enemies both countries shared. Even in the late Middle Ages, England and Portugal faced common enemies: large continental countries that threatened the interests and sovereignty of both, especially France and Spain. In this sense, the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance has always been a defensive alliance in which each ally would assist the other when necessary against its enemies. In the case of Portugal, that enemy invariably was Spain (or component states thereof, such as Castile and Leon) and sometimes France (i.e., when Napoleon's armies invaded and conquered Portugal as of late 1807). In the case of England, that foe was often France and sometimes Spain as well.Beginning in the late 14th century, England and Portugal forged this unusual relationship, formalized with several treaties that came into direct use during a series of dynastic, imperial, naval, and commercial conflicts between 1373 and 1961, the historic period when the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance had its most practical political significance. The relative world power and importance of each ally has varied over the centuries. During the period 1373-1580, the allies were similar in respective ranking in European affairs, and during the period 1480-1550, if anything, Portugal was a greater world power with a more important navy than England. During 1580-1810, Portugal fell to the status of a third-rank European power and, during 1810-1914, England was perhaps the premier world power. During 1914-61, England's world position slipped while Portugal made a slow recovery but remained a third- or fourth-rank power.The commercial elements of the alliance have always involved an exchange of goods between two seafaring, maritime peoples with different religions and political systems but complementary economies. The 1703 Methuen Treaty establ ished a trade link that endured for centuries and bore greater advantages for England than for Portugal, although Portugal derived benefits: English woolens for Portuguese wines, especially port, other agricultural produce, and fish. Since the signing of the Methuen Treaty, there has been a vigorous debate both in politics and in historical scholarship as to how much each nation benefited economically from the arrangement in which Portugal eventually became dependent upon England and the extent to which Portugal became a kind of economic colony of Britain during the period from 1703 to 1910.There is a vast literature on the Alliance, much of it in Portuguese and by Portuguese writers, which is one expression of the development of modern Portuguese nationalism. During the most active phase of the alliance, from 1650 to 1945, there is no doubt but that the core of the mutual interests of the allies amounted to the proposition that Portugal's independence as a nation in Iberia and the integrity of its overseas empire, the third largest among the colonial powers as of 1914, were defended by England, who in turn benefited from the use by the Royal Navy of Portugal's home and colonial ports in times of war and peace. A curious impact on Portuguese and popular usage had also come about and endured through the impact of dealings with the English allies. The idiom in Portuguese, "é para inglês ver," means literally "it is for the Englishman to see," but figuratively it really means, "it is merely for show."The practical defense side of the alliance was effectively dead by the end of World War II, but perhaps the most definitive indication of the end of the political significance of an alliance that still continues in other spheres occurred in December 1961, when the army of the Indian Union invaded Portugal's colonial enclaves in western India, Goa, Damão, and Diu. While both nations were now North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies, their interests clashed when it came to imperial and Commonwealth conflicts and policies. Portugal asked Britain for military assistance in the use of British bases against the army of Britain's largest former colony, India. But Portugal was, in effect, refused assistance by her oldest ally. If the alliance continues into the 21st century, its essence is historical, nostalgic, commercial, and cultural.See also Catherine of Braganza.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Anglo-Portuguese Alliance
-
6 pon
Del verbo poner: ( conjugate poner) \ \
pon es: \ \2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: pon poner
pon see◊ poner
poner ( conjugate poner) verbo transitivo 1 ponle el collar al perro put the dog's collar on; pon una bomba to plant a bomb 2 ( agregar) to put 3 ‹inyección/supositorio› to give 4◊ poner la mesa to lay o set the table5 (instalar, montar) 6 [ ave] ‹ huevo› to lay 7 (Esp) (servir, dar):◊ póngame un café, por favor I'll have a coffee, please;¿cuántos le pongo? how many would you like? 1 ‹ dinero› ( contribuir) to put in; 2 ‹ atención› to pay; ‹cuidado/interés› to take; 3 ‹examen/problema› to set; 4 ( dar) ‹nombre/apodo› to give; ‹ ejemplo› to give; 5 ( enviar) ‹ telegrama› to send 6 ( escribir) ‹dedicatoria/líneas› to write 7 (Esp) (exhibir, dar) ‹ película› to show;◊ ¿ponen algo interesante en la tele? is there anything interesting on TV?;¿qué ponen en el Royal? what's on o what's showing at the Royal? 1 ‹programa/canal› to put on; ‹cinta/disco/música› to put on;◊ puso el motor en marcha she switched on o started the enginepuso el reloj en hora she put the clock right 2 (Esp) ( al teléfono): pon a algn con algo/algn to put sb through to sth/sb (en estado, situación) (+ compl): pon a algn en un aprieto to put sb in an awkward position vi [ ave] to lay ponerse verbo pronominal 1 ( refl) ( colocarse): ponse de pie to stand (up); ponse de rodillas to kneel (down), get down on one's knees 2 [ sol] to set 3 ( refl) ‹calzado/maquillaje/alhaja› to put on; 1 (en estado, situación) (+ compl): se puso triste she became sad; cuando lo vio se puso muy contenta she was so happy when she saw it; se puso como loco he went mad; ponse cómodo to make oneself comfortable 2 ( empezar) ponse a + inf to start -ing, to start + inf; (Esp):
poner verbo transitivo
1 (en un lugar, una situación) to put: me puso en un aprieto, he put me in a tight corner (seguido de adjetivo) to make: me pone contento, he makes me happy
2 (hacer funcionar) to turn o switch on
3 (un fax, telegrama) to send
poner una conferencia, to make a long-distance call
4 (una multa, un castigo) to impose
5 (abrir un negocio) to set up
6 (vestir) to put on
7 (exponer) tienes que poner la planta al sol/a la sombra, you have to put the plant in the sun/shade
8 (aportar) yo puse mil pesetas, I contributed a thousand pesetas
9 (conjeturar, imaginar) to suppose: pongamos que..., supposing (that)...
10 (estar escrito) lo pone aquí, it's written here
no pone nada de eso, it doesn't say anything about that
11 TV Cine to put on, show
12 Tel ponme con él, put me through to him
13 (un nombre) le pondremos Tadeo, we are going to call him Tadeo
ya le puso título a la novela, he has already given the novel a title Locuciones: poner a alguien a caldo, to pull sb to pieces
poner a cien, to make sb nervous: me pone a cien cuando habla de ese modo, when he talks that way I get nervous
poner en duda, to call into question: los inversores pusieron su competencia en duda, the investors questioned his competence
poner a alguien en evidencia, to show sb up
poner en evidencia, to show up: la situación pone en evidencia la falta de justicia del sistema, the situation exposes the system's unfairness
poner a alguien en su sitio, to put sb in his place ' pon' also found in these entries: Spanish: aparte - encima - énfasis - inicial - mesa - quitar - alto - atención - cosa - cubierto - fuerte - hora - interés - música - pegado - poner - señal - sitio English: bung - card - detachable - drip-dry - syllable - wash-and-wear - with - drip - removable - thickly -
7 pondré
Del verbo poner: ( conjugate poner) \ \
pondré es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) futuro indicativoMultiple Entries: pondré poner
pondré,◊ pondría, etc see poner
poner ( conjugate poner) verbo transitivo 1 ponle el collar al perro put the dog's collar on; pondré una bomba to plant a bomb 2 ( agregar) to put 3 ‹inyección/supositorio› to give 4◊ poner la mesa to lay o set the table5 (instalar, montar) 6 [ ave] ‹ huevo› to lay 7 (Esp) (servir, dar):◊ póngame un café, por favor I'll have a coffee, please;¿cuántos le pongo? how many would you like? 1 ‹ dinero› ( contribuir) to put in; 2 ‹ atención› to pay; ‹cuidado/interés› to take; 3 ‹examen/problema› to set; 4 ( dar) ‹nombre/apodo› to give; ‹ ejemplo› to give; 5 ( enviar) ‹ telegrama› to send 6 ( escribir) ‹dedicatoria/líneas› to write 7 (Esp) (exhibir, dar) ‹ película› to show;◊ ¿ponen algo interesante en la tele? is there anything interesting on TV?;¿qué ponen en el Royal? what's on o what's showing at the Royal? 1 ‹programa/canal› to put on; ‹cinta/disco/música› to put on;◊ puso el motor en marcha she switched on o started the enginepuso el reloj en hora she put the clock right 2 (Esp) ( al teléfono): pondré a algn con algo/algn to put sb through to sth/sb (en estado, situación) (+ compl): pondré a algn en un aprieto to put sb in an awkward position vi [ ave] to lay ponerse verbo pronominal 1 ( refl) ( colocarse): pondrése de pie to stand (up); pondrése de rodillas to kneel (down), get down on one's knees 2 [ sol] to set 3 ( refl) ‹calzado/maquillaje/alhaja› to put on; 1 (en estado, situación) (+ compl): se puso triste she became sad; cuando lo vio se puso muy contenta she was so happy when she saw it; se puso como loco he went mad; pondrése cómodo to make oneself comfortable 2 ( empezar) pondrése a + inf to start -ing, to start + inf; (Esp):
poner verbo transitivo
1 (en un lugar, una situación) to put: me puso en un aprieto, he put me in a tight corner (seguido de adjetivo) to make: me pone contento, he makes me happy
2 (hacer funcionar) to turn o switch on
3 (un fax, telegrama) to send
poner una conferencia, to make a long-distance call
4 (una multa, un castigo) to impose
5 (abrir un negocio) to set up
6 (vestir) to put on
7 (exponer) tienes que poner la planta al sol/a la sombra, you have to put the plant in the sun/shade
8 (aportar) yo puse mil pesetas, I contributed a thousand pesetas
9 (conjeturar, imaginar) to suppose: pongamos que..., supposing (that)...
10 (estar escrito) lo pone aquí, it's written here
no pone nada de eso, it doesn't say anything about that
11 TV Cine to put on, show
12 Tel ponme con él, put me through to him
13 (un nombre) le pondremos Tadeo, we are going to call him Tadeo
ya le puso título a la novela, he has already given the novel a title Locuciones: poner a alguien a caldo, to pull sb to pieces
poner a cien, to make sb nervous: me pone a cien cuando habla de ese modo, when he talks that way I get nervous
poner en duda, to call into question: los inversores pusieron su competencia en duda, the investors questioned his competence
poner a alguien en evidencia, to show sb up
poner en evidencia, to show up: la situación pone en evidencia la falta de justicia del sistema, the situation exposes the system's unfairness
poner a alguien en su sitio, to put sb in his place ' pondré' also found in these entries: Spanish: empeño English: into - shall -
8 poner
poner ( conjugate poner) verbo transitivo 1 ponle el collar al perro put the dog's collar on; poner una bomba to plant a bomb 2 ( agregar) to put 3 ‹inyección/supositorio› to give 4◊ poner la mesa to lay o set the table5 (instalar, montar) 6 [ ave] ‹ huevo› to lay 7 (Esp) (servir, dar):◊ póngame un café, por favor I'll have a coffee, please;¿cuántos le pongo? how many would you like? 1 ‹ dinero› ( contribuir) to put in; 2 ‹ atención› to pay; ‹cuidado/interés› to take; 3 ‹examen/problema› to set; 4 ( dar) ‹nombre/apodo› to give; ‹ ejemplo› to give; 5 ( enviar) ‹ telegrama› to send 6 ( escribir) ‹dedicatoria/líneas› to write 7 (Esp) (exhibir, dar) ‹ película› to show;◊ ¿ponen algo interesante en la tele? is there anything interesting on TV?;¿qué ponen en el Royal? what's on o what's showing at the Royal? 1 ‹programa/canal› to put on; ‹cinta/disco/música› to put on;◊ puso el motor en marcha she switched on o started the enginepuso el reloj en hora she put the clock right 2 (Esp) ( al teléfono): poner a algn con algo/algn to put sb through to sth/sb (en estado, situación) (+ compl): poner a algn en un aprieto to put sb in an awkward position vi [ ave] to lay ponerse verbo pronominal 1 ( refl) ( colocarse): ponerse de pie to stand (up); ponerse de rodillas to kneel (down), get down on one's knees 2 [ sol] to set 3 ( refl) ‹calzado/maquillaje/alhaja› to put on; 1 (en estado, situación) (+ compl): se puso triste she became sad; cuando lo vio se puso muy contenta she was so happy when she saw it; se puso como loco he went mad; ponerse cómodo to make oneself comfortable 2 ( empezar) ponerse a + inf to start -ing, to start + inf; (Esp):
poner verbo transitivo
1 (en un lugar, una situación) to put: me puso en un aprieto, he put me in a tight corner (seguido de adjetivo) to make: me pone contento, he makes me happy
2 (hacer funcionar) to turn o switch on
3 (un fax, telegrama) to send
poner una conferencia, to make a long-distance call
4 (una multa, un castigo) to impose
5 (abrir un negocio) to set up
6 (vestir) to put on
7 (exponer) tienes que poner la planta al sol/a la sombra, you have to put the plant in the sun/shade
8 (aportar) yo puse mil pesetas, I contributed a thousand pesetas
9 (conjeturar, imaginar) to suppose: pongamos que..., supposing (that)...
10 (estar escrito) lo pone aquí, it's written here
no pone nada de eso, it doesn't say anything about that
11 TV Cine to put on, show
12 Tel ponme con él, put me through to him
13 (un nombre) le pondremos Tadeo, we are going to call him Tadeo
ya le puso título a la novela, he has already given the novel a title Locuciones: poner a alguien a caldo, to pull sb to pieces
poner a cien, to make sb nervous: me pone a cien cuando habla de ese modo, when he talks that way I get nervous
poner en duda, to call into question: los inversores pusieron su competencia en duda, the investors questioned his competence
poner a alguien en evidencia, to show sb up
poner en evidencia, to show up: la situación pone en evidencia la falta de justicia del sistema, the situation exposes the system's unfairness
poner a alguien en su sitio, to put sb in his place ' poner' also found in these entries: Spanish: activar - alinear - alta - alto - altura - antecedente - antena - arreglar - arrinconar - aunar - bandeja - brete - cabeza - calzar - caldo - calle - cara - cargar - carta - caso - cien - codificar - comprometer - confiar - coto - crecer - cuenco - cuestión - dejar - denuncia - depositar - descomponer - descubierta - descubierto - desesperar - diente - dirigir - discutir - distribuir - enchufar - enderezar - enervar - enfermar - enfrentar - enmascarar - entregar - entregarse - escenificar - escobilla - esmerarse English: acquaint - action - apply - arm - arrange - aside - best - blur - bond - box - bracket - bundle - bung - cap - cast - cheek - claim - code - collect - compromise - connect - cork - crack - cross - crown - curb - date - dip - discomfit - dishwasher - egg - end - endanger - excite - face - fault - feature - fetter - fill in - fit - fluster - follow up - forewarn - free - gather - get - glaze - go - gown - grin -
9 ponga
Del verbo poner: ( conjugate poner) \ \
ponga es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativoMultiple Entries: poner ponga
poner ( conjugate poner) verbo transitivo 1 ponle el collar al perro put the dog's collar on; ponga una bomba to plant a bomb 2 ( agregar) to put 3 ‹inyección/supositorio› to give 4◊ poner la mesa to lay o set the table5 (instalar, montar) 6 [ ave] ‹ huevo› to lay 7 (Esp) (servir, dar):◊ póngame un café, por favor I'll have a coffee, please;¿cuántos le pongo? how many would you like? 1 ‹ dinero› ( contribuir) to put in; 2 ‹ atención› to pay; ‹cuidado/interés› to take; 3 ‹examen/problema› to set; 4 ( dar) ‹nombre/apodo› to give; ‹ ejemplo› to give; 5 ( enviar) ‹ telegrama› to send 6 ( escribir) ‹dedicatoria/líneas› to write 7 (Esp) (exhibir, dar) ‹ película› to show;◊ ¿ponen algo interesante en la tele? is there anything interesting on TV?;¿qué ponen en el Royal? what's on o what's showing at the Royal? 1 ‹programa/canal› to put on; ‹cinta/disco/música› to put on;◊ puso el motor en marcha she switched on o started the enginepuso el reloj en hora she put the clock right 2 (Esp) ( al teléfono): ponga a algn con algo/algn to put sb through to sth/sb (en estado, situación) (+ compl): ponga a algn en un aprieto to put sb in an awkward position vi [ ave] to lay ponerse verbo pronominal 1 ( refl) ( colocarse): pongase de pie to stand (up); pongase de rodillas to kneel (down), get down on one's knees 2 [ sol] to set 3 ( refl) ‹calzado/maquillaje/alhaja› to put on; 1 (en estado, situación) (+ compl): se puso triste she became sad; cuando lo vio se puso muy contenta she was so happy when she saw it; se puso como loco he went mad; pongase cómodo to make oneself comfortable 2 ( empezar) pongase a + inf to start -ing, to start + inf; (Esp):
ponga,◊ pongas, etc see poner
poner verbo transitivo
1 (en un lugar, una situación) to put: me puso en un aprieto, he put me in a tight corner (seguido de adjetivo) to make: me pone contento, he makes me happy
2 (hacer funcionar) to turn o switch on
3 (un fax, telegrama) to send
poner una conferencia, to make a long-distance call
4 (una multa, un castigo) to impose
5 (abrir un negocio) to set up
6 (vestir) to put on
7 (exponer) tienes que poner la planta al sol/a la sombra, you have to put the plant in the sun/shade
8 (aportar) yo puse mil pesetas, I contributed a thousand pesetas
9 (conjeturar, imaginar) to suppose: pongamos que..., supposing (that)...
10 (estar escrito) lo pone aquí, it's written here
no pone nada de eso, it doesn't say anything about that
11 TV Cine to put on, show
12 Tel ponme con él, put me through to him
13 (un nombre) le pondremos Tadeo, we are going to call him Tadeo
ya le puso título a la novela, he has already given the novel a title Locuciones: poner a alguien a caldo, to pull sb to pieces
poner a cien, to make sb nervous: me pone a cien cuando habla de ese modo, when he talks that way I get nervous
poner en duda, to call into question: los inversores pusieron su competencia en duda, the investors questioned his competence
poner a alguien en evidencia, to show sb up
poner en evidencia, to show up: la situación pone en evidencia la falta de justicia del sistema, the situation exposes the system's unfairness
poner a alguien en su sitio, to put sb in his place ' ponga' also found in these entries: English: name - probably - overnight -
10 puesto
Del verbo poner: ( conjugate poner) \ \
puesto es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: poner puesto
poner ( conjugate poner) verbo transitivo 1 ponle el collar al perro put the dog's collar on; puesto una bomba to plant a bomb 2 ( agregar) to put 3 ‹inyección/supositorio› to give 4◊ poner la mesa to lay o set the table5 (instalar, montar) 6 [ ave] ‹ huevo› to lay 7 (Esp) (servir, dar):◊ póngame un café, por favor I'll have a coffee, please;¿cuántos le pongo? how many would you like? 1 ‹ dinero› ( contribuir) to put in; 2 ‹ atención› to pay; ‹cuidado/interés› to take; 3 ‹examen/problema› to set; 4 ( dar) ‹nombre/apodo› to give; ‹ ejemplo› to give; 5 ( enviar) ‹ telegrama› to send 6 ( escribir) ‹dedicatoria/líneas› to write 7 (Esp) (exhibir, dar) ‹ película› to show;◊ ¿ponen algo interesante en la tele? is there anything interesting on TV?;¿qué ponen en el Royal? what's on o what's showing at the Royal? 1 ‹programa/canal› to put on; ‹cinta/disco/música› to put on;◊ puso el motor en marcha she switched on o started the enginepuso el reloj en hora she put the clock right 2 (Esp) ( al teléfono): puesto a algn con algo/algn to put sb through to sth/sb (en estado, situación) (+ compl): puesto a algn en un aprieto to put sb in an awkward position vi [ ave] to lay ponerse verbo pronominal 1 ( refl) ( colocarse): puestose de pie to stand (up); puestose de rodillas to kneel (down), get down on one's knees 2 [ sol] to set 3 ( refl) ‹calzado/maquillaje/alhaja› to put on; 1 (en estado, situación) (+ compl): se puso triste she became sad; cuando lo vio se puso muy contenta she was so happy when she saw it; se puso como loco he went mad; puestose cómodo to make oneself comfortable 2 ( empezar) puestose a + inf to start -ing, to start + inf; (Esp):
puesto 1
◊ -ta adjetivo: ¿qué haces con el abrigo puesto? what are you doing with your coat on?;tenía las botas puestas she was wearing her boots; la mesa estaba puesta the table was laid; ver tb poner
puesto 2 sustantivo masculino 1◊ sacó el primer puesto de la clase she came top o (AmE) came out top of the class2 ( empleo) position, job; (Inf) workstation 3 ( quiosco) kiosk; ( tienda) stand, stall◊ puesto de socorro first-aid post/station4
poner verbo transitivo
1 (en un lugar, una situación) to put: me puso en un aprieto, he put me in a tight corner (seguido de adjetivo) to make: me pone contento, he makes me happy
2 (hacer funcionar) to turn o switch on
3 (un fax, telegrama) to send
poner una conferencia, to make a long-distance call
4 (una multa, un castigo) to impose
5 (abrir un negocio) to set up
6 (vestir) to put on
7 (exponer) tienes que poner la planta al sol/a la sombra, you have to put the plant in the sun/shade
8 (aportar) yo puse mil pesetas, I contributed a thousand pesetas
9 (conjeturar, imaginar) to suppose: pongamos que..., supposing (that)...
10 (estar escrito) lo pone aquí, it's written here
no pone nada de eso, it doesn't say anything about that
11 TV Cine to put on, show
12 Tel ponme con él, put me through to him
13 (un nombre) le pondremos Tadeo, we are going to call him Tadeo
ya le puso título a la novela, he has already given the novel a title Locuciones: poner a alguien a caldo, to pull sb to pieces
poner a cien, to make sb nervous: me pone a cien cuando habla de ese modo, when he talks that way I get nervous
poner en duda, to call into question: los inversores pusieron su competencia en duda, the investors questioned his competence
poner a alguien en evidencia, to show sb up
poner en evidencia, to show up: la situación pone en evidencia la falta de justicia del sistema, the situation exposes the system's unfairness
poner a alguien en su sitio, to put sb in his place
puesto,-a
I adjetivo
1 (la mesa) set, laid: la mesa está puesta, the table is laid
2 (prenda de vestir) to have on
con el abrigo puesto, with one's coat on familiar ir muy puesto, to be all dressed up
3 fam (saber mucho) está muy puesto en filosofía, he's very well up in philosophy
4 fam (borracho) drunk
II sustantivo masculino
1 (lugar) place
2 (empleo) position, post: es un puesto fijo, it's a permanent job
3 (tienda) stall, stand
4 Mil post
puesto de mando, command post
III conj puesto que, since, as ' puesto' also found in these entries: Spanish: absurda - absurdo - antigüedad - apoltronarse - ascender - brete - callejera - callejero - cargo - cesar - conquistar - desempeñar - designar - destino - dieta - disputa - empeño - enchufe - excavar - huevo - instalar - le - libertad - maldita - maldito - ocupar - optar - precio - pues - puesta - rehabilitación - relevar - reponer - saco - tenderete - traer - vestir - acomodar - alto - apetecible - aplicar - aspirante - barraca - candidato - cargar - ceder - clasificación - como - concursar - confianza English: applicant - apply - appointment - bearer - bookstall - boost - capacity - chair - checkpoint - command post - concession - designate - downgrade - earth - economic - fill - fit - free - fresh - give up - government - hold - inside - job - job description - leave on - lookout - market stall - name - nominate - observation post - occupy - on - opening - outpost - place - position - post - put in - qualification - qualified - qualify - quit - relieve - removal - remove - resign - responsible - retiring - shove out -
11 puse
Del verbo poner: ( conjugate poner) \ \
puse es: \ \1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: poner puse
poner ( conjugate poner) verbo transitivo 1 ponle el collar al perro put the dog's collar on; puse una bomba to plant a bomb 2 ( agregar) to put 3 ‹inyección/supositorio› to give 4◊ poner la mesa to lay o set the table5 (instalar, montar) 6 [ ave] ‹ huevo› to lay 7 (Esp) (servir, dar):◊ póngame un café, por favor I'll have a coffee, please;¿cuántos le pongo? how many would you like? 1 ‹ dinero› ( contribuir) to put in; 2 ‹ atención› to pay; ‹cuidado/interés› to take; 3 ‹examen/problema› to set; 4 ( dar) ‹nombre/apodo› to give; ‹ ejemplo› to give; 5 ( enviar) ‹ telegrama› to send 6 ( escribir) ‹dedicatoria/líneas› to write 7 (Esp) (exhibir, dar) ‹ película› to show;◊ ¿ponen algo interesante en la tele? is there anything interesting on TV?;¿qué ponen en el Royal? what's on o what's showing at the Royal? 1 ‹programa/canal› to put on; ‹cinta/disco/música› to put on;◊ puso el motor en marcha she switched on o started the enginepuso el reloj en hora she put the clock right 2 (Esp) ( al teléfono): puse a algn con algo/algn to put sb through to sth/sb (en estado, situación) (+ compl): puse a algn en un aprieto to put sb in an awkward position vi [ ave] to lay ponerse verbo pronominal 1 ( refl) ( colocarse): pusese de pie to stand (up); pusese de rodillas to kneel (down), get down on one's knees 2 [ sol] to set 3 ( refl) ‹calzado/maquillaje/alhaja› to put on; 1 (en estado, situación) (+ compl): se puso triste she became sad; cuando lo vio se puso muy contenta she was so happy when she saw it; se puso como loco he went mad; pusese cómodo to make oneself comfortable 2 ( empezar) pusese a + inf to start -ing, to start + inf; (Esp):
puse,◊ pusiera, etc see poner
poner verbo transitivo
1 (en un lugar, una situación) to put: me puso en un aprieto, he put me in a tight corner (seguido de adjetivo) to make: me pone contento, he makes me happy
2 (hacer funcionar) to turn o switch on
3 (un fax, telegrama) to send
poner una conferencia, to make a long-distance call
4 (una multa, un castigo) to impose
5 (abrir un negocio) to set up
6 (vestir) to put on
7 (exponer) tienes que poner la planta al sol/a la sombra, you have to put the plant in the sun/shade
8 (aportar) yo puse mil pesetas, I contributed a thousand pesetas
9 (conjeturar, imaginar) to suppose: pongamos que..., supposing (that)...
10 (estar escrito) lo pone aquí, it's written here
no pone nada de eso, it doesn't say anything about that
11 TV Cine to put on, show
12 Tel ponme con él, put me through to him
13 (un nombre) le pondremos Tadeo, we are going to call him Tadeo
ya le puso título a la novela, he has already given the novel a title Locuciones: poner a alguien a caldo, to pull sb to pieces
poner a cien, to make sb nervous: me pone a cien cuando habla de ese modo, when he talks that way I get nervous
poner en duda, to call into question: los inversores pusieron su competencia en duda, the investors questioned his competence
poner a alguien en evidencia, to show sb up
poner en evidencia, to show up: la situación pone en evidencia la falta de justicia del sistema, the situation exposes the system's unfairness
poner a alguien en su sitio, to put sb in his place ' puse' also found in these entries: Spanish: alma - cara - gratinar - idéntica - idéntico - mecha - poner - roja - rojo - aguantar - evitar - fe - les - recordar English: approach - dress - join - my - pain - seem -
12 pusiste
Del verbo poner: ( conjugate poner) \ \
pusiste es: \ \2ª persona singular (tú) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: poner pusiste
poner ( conjugate poner) verbo transitivo 1 ponle el collar al perro put the dog's collar on; pusiste una bomba to plant a bomb 2 ( agregar) to put 3 ‹inyección/supositorio› to give 4◊ poner la mesa to lay o set the table5 (instalar, montar) 6 [ ave] ‹ huevo› to lay 7 (Esp) (servir, dar):◊ póngame un café, por favor I'll have a coffee, please;¿cuántos le pongo? how many would you like? 1 ‹ dinero› ( contribuir) to put in; 2 ‹ atención› to pay; ‹cuidado/interés› to take; 3 ‹examen/problema› to set; 4 ( dar) ‹nombre/apodo› to give; ‹ ejemplo› to give; 5 ( enviar) ‹ telegrama› to send 6 ( escribir) ‹dedicatoria/líneas› to write 7 (Esp) (exhibir, dar) ‹ película› to show;◊ ¿ponen algo interesante en la tele? is there anything interesting on TV?;¿qué ponen en el Royal? what's on o what's showing at the Royal? 1 ‹programa/canal› to put on; ‹cinta/disco/música› to put on;◊ puso el motor en marcha she switched on o started the enginepuso el reloj en hora she put the clock right 2 (Esp) ( al teléfono): pusiste a algn con algo/algn to put sb through to sth/sb (en estado, situación) (+ compl): pusiste a algn en un aprieto to put sb in an awkward position vi [ ave] to lay ponerse verbo pronominal 1 ( refl) ( colocarse): pusistese de pie to stand (up); pusistese de rodillas to kneel (down), get down on one's knees 2 [ sol] to set 3 ( refl) ‹calzado/maquillaje/alhaja› to put on; 1 (en estado, situación) (+ compl): se puso triste she became sad; cuando lo vio se puso muy contenta she was so happy when she saw it; se puso como loco he went mad; pusistese cómodo to make oneself comfortable 2 ( empezar) pusistese a + inf to start -ing, to start + inf; (Esp):
pusiste,
poner verbo transitivo
1 (en un lugar, una situación) to put: me puso en un aprieto, he put me in a tight corner (seguido de adjetivo) to make: me pone contento, he makes me happy
2 (hacer funcionar) to turn o switch on
3 (un fax, telegrama) to send
poner una conferencia, to make a long-distance call
4 (una multa, un castigo) to impose
5 (abrir un negocio) to set up
6 (vestir) to put on
7 (exponer) tienes que poner la planta al sol/a la sombra, you have to put the plant in the sun/shade
8 (aportar) yo puse mil pesetas, I contributed a thousand pesetas
9 (conjeturar, imaginar) to suppose: pongamos que..., supposing (that)...
10 (estar escrito) lo pone aquí, it's written here
no pone nada de eso, it doesn't say anything about that
11 TV Cine to put on, show
12 Tel ponme con él, put me through to him
13 (un nombre) le pondremos Tadeo, we are going to call him Tadeo
ya le puso título a la novela, he has already given the novel a title Locuciones: poner a alguien a caldo, to pull sb to pieces
poner a cien, to make sb nervous: me pone a cien cuando habla de ese modo, when he talks that way I get nervous
poner en duda, to call into question: los inversores pusieron su competencia en duda, the investors questioned his competence
poner a alguien en evidencia, to show sb up
poner en evidencia, to show up: la situación pone en evidencia la falta de justicia del sistema, the situation exposes the system's unfairness
poner a alguien en su sitio, to put sb in his place ' pusiste' also found in these entries: Spanish: allá -
13 puso
Del verbo poner: ( conjugate poner) \ \
puso es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativoMultiple Entries: poner puso
poner ( conjugate poner) verbo transitivo 1 ponle el collar al perro put the dog's collar on; puso una bomba to plant a bomb 2 ( agregar) to put 3 ‹inyección/supositorio› to give 4◊ poner la mesa to lay o set the table5 (instalar, montar) 6 [ ave] ‹ huevo› to lay 7 (Esp) (servir, dar):◊ póngame un café, por favor I'll have a coffee, please;¿cuántos le pongo? how many would you like? 1 ‹ dinero› ( contribuir) to put in; 2 ‹ atención› to pay; ‹cuidado/interés› to take; 3 ‹examen/problema› to set; 4 ( dar) ‹nombre/apodo› to give; ‹ ejemplo› to give; 5 ( enviar) ‹ telegrama› to send 6 ( escribir) ‹dedicatoria/líneas› to write 7 (Esp) (exhibir, dar) ‹ película› to show;◊ ¿ponen algo interesante en la tele? is there anything interesting on TV?;¿qué ponen en el Royal? what's on o what's showing at the Royal? 1 ‹programa/canal› to put on; ‹cinta/disco/música› to put on;◊ puso el motor en marcha she switched on o started the enginepuso el reloj en hora she put the clock right 2 (Esp) ( al teléfono): puso a algn con algo/algn to put sb through to sth/sb (en estado, situación) (+ compl): puso a algn en un aprieto to put sb in an awkward position vi [ ave] to lay ponerse verbo pronominal 1 ( refl) ( colocarse): pusose de pie to stand (up); pusose de rodillas to kneel (down), get down on one's knees 2 [ sol] to set 3 ( refl) ‹calzado/maquillaje/alhaja› to put on; 1 (en estado, situación) (+ compl): se puso triste she became sad; cuando lo vio se puso muy contenta she was so happy when she saw it; se puso como loco he went mad; pusose cómodo to make oneself comfortable 2 ( empezar) pusose a + inf to start -ing, to start + inf; (Esp):
puso see◊ poner
poner verbo transitivo
1 (en un lugar, una situación) to put: me puso en un aprieto, he put me in a tight corner (seguido de adjetivo) to make: me pone contento, he makes me happy
2 (hacer funcionar) to turn o switch on
3 (un fax, telegrama) to send
poner una conferencia, to make a long-distance call
4 (una multa, un castigo) to impose
5 (abrir un negocio) to set up
6 (vestir) to put on
7 (exponer) tienes que poner la planta al sol/a la sombra, you have to put the plant in the sun/shade
8 (aportar) yo puse mil pesetas, I contributed a thousand pesetas
9 (conjeturar, imaginar) to suppose: pongamos que..., supposing (that)...
10 (estar escrito) lo pone aquí, it's written here
no pone nada de eso, it doesn't say anything about that
11 TV Cine to put on, show
12 Tel ponme con él, put me through to him
13 (un nombre) le pondremos Tadeo, we are going to call him Tadeo
ya le puso título a la novela, he has already given the novel a title Locuciones: poner a alguien a caldo, to pull sb to pieces
poner a cien, to make sb nervous: me pone a cien cuando habla de ese modo, when he talks that way I get nervous
poner en duda, to call into question: los inversores pusieron su competencia en duda, the investors questioned his competence
poner a alguien en evidencia, to show sb up
poner en evidencia, to show up: la situación pone en evidencia la falta de justicia del sistema, the situation exposes the system's unfairness
poner a alguien en su sitio, to put sb in his place ' puso' also found in these entries: Spanish: alerta - aprieto - basilisco - brío - broche - chula - chulo - coger - delante - determinada - determinado - discordante - domingo - duda - énfasis - enferma - enfermo - enormidad - escapulario - fiera - fila - fomento - fonendo - fonendoscopio - furia - gallito - garantía - garganta - gesto - guerrera - inminencia - intramuscular - juego - mala - malo - manera - manifiesta - manifiesto - nerviosa - nervioso - niqui - objeción - pero - poner - ponerse - prueba - recaudo - rica - rico - roja English: applaud - ashen - blur - boot out - cancel - cast - change - coat - don - doze off - dress - end - fall - fluster - green - ill - lead - livid - neat - objection - outrage - over - part - potshot - prick up - reverie - stand - stick up - suddenly - sweat - tan - tremble - turn - ugly - violent - whip on - against - amused - apply - get - go - jitters - laughing - move - put - set - so - white - work -
14 play
plei
1. verb1) (to amuse oneself: The child is playing in the garden; He is playing with his toys; The little girl wants to play with her friends.) jugar2) (to take part in (games etc): He plays football; He is playing in goal; Here's a pack of cards - who wants to play (with me)?; I'm playing golf with him this evening.) jugar (a)3) (to act in a play etc; to act (a character): She's playing Lady Macbeth; The company is playing in London this week.) representar, actuar4) ((of a play etc) to be performed: `Oklahoma' is playing at the local theatre.) ser representado5) (to (be able to) perform on (a musical instrument): She plays the piano; Who was playing the piano this morning?; He plays (the oboe) in an orchestra.) tocar6) ((usually with on) to carry out or do (a trick): He played a trick on me.) gastar una broma (a alguien)7) ((usually with at) to compete against (someone) in a game etc: I'll play you at tennis.) jugar contra8) ((of light) to pass with a flickering movement: The firelight played across the ceiling.) rielar, bailar9) (to direct (over or towards something): The firemen played their hoses over the burning house.) dirigir10) (to put down or produce (a playing-card) as part of a card game: He played the seven of hearts.) jugar
2. noun1) (recreation; amusement: A person must have time for both work and play.) diversión2) (an acted story; a drama: Shakespeare wrote many great plays.) obra3) (the playing of a game: At the start of today's play, England was leading India by fifteen runs.) partido4) (freedom of movement (eg in part of a machine).) juego•- player- playable
- playful
- playfully
- playfulness
- playboy
- playground
- playing-card
- playing-field
- playmate
- playpen
- playschool
- plaything
- playtime
- playwright
- at play
- bring/come into play
- child's play
- in play
- out of play
- play at
- play back
- play down
- play fair
- play for time
- play havoc with
- play into someone's hands
- play off
- play off against
- play on
- play a
- no part in
- play safe
- play the game
- play up
play1 n1. obra de teatrothere's a Shakespeare play on at the local theatre representan una obra de Shakespeare en el teatro de la ciudad2. juegoplay2 vb1. jugar2. tocartr[pleɪ]1 (recreation) juego3 SMALLTHEATRE/SMALL obra (de teatro), pieza (teatral)4 (free and easy movement, slack) juego5 (action, effect, interaction) juego1 (game, sport) jugar a■ some played cards while the others played football algunos jugamos a cartas mientras otros jugaron a fútbol■ do you play the Stock Exchange? ¿juegas a la Bolsa?2 SMALLSPORT/SMALL (compete against) jugar contra; (in position) jugar de; (ball) pasar; (card) jugar; (piece) mover■ have you played David at tennis? ¿has jugado al tenis con David?3 SMALLMUSIC/SMALL tocar1 (joke, trick) gastar, hacer2 (record, song, tape) poner3 (direct - light, water) dirigir1 (amuse oneself) jugar (at, a), ( with, con)2 SMALLSPORT/SMALL (at game) jugar4 (pretend) pretender, jugar a■ what are you playing at? ¿qué pretendes?, ¿a qué estás jugando?5 SMALLMUSIC/SMALL tocar6 (move) recorrer\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLa play on words un juego de palabrasto be in play estar dentro de juegoto be out of play estar fuera de juegoto be played out estar agotado,-a, estar rendido,-ato bring something into play poner algo en juegoto come into play entrar en juegoto give full play to something dar rienda suelta a algoto make a play for something/somebody intentar conseguir algo/conquistar a alguiento play by ear (music) tocar de oídoto play dead hacerse el/la muerto,-ato play for time tratar de ganar tiempoto play hard to get hacerse de rogar, hacerse el/la interesanteto play into somebody's hands hacerle el juego a alguiento play it by ear (improvise) decidir sobre la marcha, improvisarto play it cool hacer como si nadato play one's cards right jugar bien sus cartasto play safe / play it safe ir a lo seguro, no arriesgarseto play the fool hacer el indio, hacer el tontoto play the game jugar limpioto play truant hacer novillos, hacer campanato play with an idea dar vueltas a una ideato play with fire jugar con fuegofair play / foul play juego limpio / juego sucioplay ['pleɪ] vi1) : jugarto play with a doll: jugar con una muñecato play with an idea: darle vueltas a una idea2) fiddle, toy: jugar, jugueteardon't play with your food: no juegues con la comida3) : tocarto play in a band: tocar en un grupo4) : actuar (en una obra de teatro)play vt1) : jugar (un deporte, etc.), jugar a (un juego), jugar contra (un contrincante)2) : tocar (música o un instrumento)3) perform: interpretar, hacer el papel de (un carácter), representar (una obra de teatro)she plays the lead: hace el papel principalplay n1) game, recreation: juego mchildren at play: niños jugandoa play on words: un juego de palabras2) action: juego mthe ball is in play: la pelota está en juegoto bring into play: poner en juego3) drama: obra f de teatro, pieza f (de teatro)4) movement: juego m (de la luz, una brisa, etc.)5) slack: juego mthere's not enough play in the wheel: la rueda no da lo suficienten.• drama s.m.• holgura s.f.• huelgo s.m.• juego s.m.• jugada s.f.• obra dramática s.f.• pieza s.f.• recreo s.m. (A role)v.v.v.• tañer v.v.• divertirse v.• jugar v.• juguetear v.• representar v.• reproducir (Electrónica) v.• sonar v.pleɪ
I
1)a) u ( recreation) juego mb) u ( Sport) juego mplay was interrupted — se interrumpió el juego or el partido
to bring something/come into play — poner* algo/entrar en juego
to make a play for somebody/something — (also BrE)
he made a play for her — trató de ganársela or de conquistársela
the company made a play for ownership of ABC Industries — la compañía intentó hacerse con ABC Industries
2) u ( interplay) juego m4) c ( Theat) obra f (de teatro), pieza f (teatral), comedia fradio play — obra f radiofónica
5) c ( pun)
II
1.
2)a) \<\<cards/hopscotch\>\> jugar* ato play a jokeick on somebody — hacerle* or gastarle una broma/una jugarreta a alguien
b) \<\<football/chess\>\> jugar* (AmL exc RPl), jugar* a (Esp, RPl)3)a) ( compete against) \<\<opponent\>\> jugar* contrato play somebody AT something: I used to play her at chess — jugaba ajedrez or (Esp, RPl) al ajedrez con ella
b) \<\<ball\>\> pasar; \<\<card\>\> tirar, jugar*; \<\<piece\>\> mover*c) ( in particular position) jugar* ded) ( use in game) \<\<reserve\>\> alinear, sacar* a jugar4) ( gamble on) jugar* ato play the market — ( Fin) jugar* a la bolsa
5) ( Theat)a) \<\<villain/Hamlet\>\> representar el papel de, hacer* de, actuar* deto play the innocent — hacerse* el inocente
b) \<\<scene\>\> representarto play it cool — hacer* como si nada
to play (it) safe — ir* a la segura, no arriesgarse*
to play (it) straight — ser* sincero or honesto
c) \<\<theater/town\>\> actuar* en6) ( Mus) \<\<instrument/note\>\> tocar*; \<\<piece\>\> tocar*, interpretar (frml)7) ( Audio) \<\<tape/record\>\> poner*8) ( move) (+ adv compl)
2.
1) vi2) ( amuse oneself) \<\<children\>\> jugar*to play AT something — jugar* a algo
what are you playing at? — ¿a qué estás jugando?, ¿qué es lo que te propones?
to play WITH something/somebody — jugar* con algo/alguien
3) (Games, Sport) jugar*to play fair — jugar* limpio
to play fair with somebody — ser* justo con alguien
4)a) ( Theat) \<\<cast\>\> actuar*, trabajar; \<\<show\>\> ser* representadob) ( pretend)to play dead — hacerse* el muerto
to play hard to get — hacerse* el (or la etc) interesante
5) ( Mus) \<\<musician\>\> tocar*6) ( move)•Phrasal Verbs:- play off- play on- play out- play up[pleɪ]1. N1) (=recreation) juego m•
to be at play — estar jugando•
to do/say sth in play — hacer/decir algo en broma2) (Sport) juego m; (=move, manoeuvre) jugada f, movida fto be in play — [ball] estar en juego
fair I, 1., 1), foul 5.to be out of play — [ball] estar fuera de juego
3) (Theat) obra f (de teatro), pieza fplays teatro msingthe plays of Lope — las obras dramáticas de Lope, el teatro de Lope
radio/television play — obra f para radio/televisión
radioto be in a play — [actor] actuar en una obra
4) (Tech etc) juego mthere's too much play in the clutch — el embrague tiene demasiada holgura or va demasiado suelto
5) (fig) (=interaction)•
to come into play — entrar en juego•
to make a play for sth/sb — intentar conseguir algo/conquistar a algnto make (a) great play of sth — insistir en algo, hacer hincapié en algo
2. VT1) [+ football, tennis, chess, bridge, cards, board game etc] jugar a; [+ game, match] jugar, disputardo you play football? — ¿juegas al fútbol?
what position does he play? — ¿de qué juega?
to play centre-forward/centre-half etc — jugar de delantero centro/medio centro etc
•
to play a game of tennis — jugar un partido de tenisthe children were playing a game in the garden — los niños estaban jugando (a un juego) en el jardín
don't play games with me! — (fig) ¡no me vengas con jueguecitos!, ¡no trates de engañarme!
- play the field- play the game2) [+ team, opponent] jugar contralast time we played Sunderland... — la última vez que jugamos contra Sunderland...
•
to play sb at chess — jugar contra algn al ajedrez3) [+ card] jugar; [+ ball] golpear; [+ chess piece etc] mover; [+ fish] dejar que se canse, agotar•
he played the ball into the net — (Tennis) estrelló or golpeó la pelota contra la red•
to play the market — (St Ex) jugar a la bolsa- play one's cards right or well- play ball4) (=perform) [+ role, part] hacer, interpretar; [+ work] representar; (=perform in) [+ town] actuar enwhat part did you play? — ¿qué papel tuviste?
when we played "Hamlet" — cuando representamos "Hamlet"
to play the peacemaker/the devoted husband — (fig) hacer el papel de pacificador/de marido amantísimo
we could have played it differently — (fig) podríamos haber actuado de otra forma
- play it cool- play it safebook 1., 1), fool, trick 1., 1)5) (Mus etc) [+ instrument, note] tocar; [+ tune, concerto] tocar, interpretar more frm; [+ tape, CD] poner, tocarto play the piano/violin — tocar el piano/el violín
they played the 5th Symphony — tocaron or more frm interpretaron la Quinta Sinfonía
they were playing Beethoven — tocaban or more frm interpretaban algo de Beethoven
6) (=direct) [+ light, hose] dirigirto play a searchlight on an aircraft — dirigir un reflector hacia un avión, hacer de un avión el blanco de un reflector
3. VI1) (=amuse o.s.) [child] jugar; [puppy, kitten etc] jugar, juguetearto play with an idea — dar vueltas a una idea, barajar una idea
to play with fire — (fig) jugar con fuego
how much time/money do we have to play with? — ¿con cuánto tiempo/dinero contamos?, ¿de cuánto tiempo/dinero disponemos?
to play with o.s. * — euph tocarse, masturbarse
2) (Sport) (at game, gamble) jugarplay! — ¡listo!
who plays first? — ¿quién juega primero?
are you playing today? — ¿tu juegas hoy?
•
England are playing against Scotland in the final — Inglaterra jugará contra or se enfrentará a Escocia en la final•
to play at chess — jugar al ajedrezwhat are you playing at? * — pero ¿qué haces?, ¿qué te pasa?
•
to play by the rules — (fig) acatar las normas•
he plays for Liverpool — juega en el Liverpoolto play for high stakes — (lit) apostar muy alto; (fig) poner mucho en juego
•
to play in defence/goal — (Sport) jugar de defensa/de portero•
he played into the trees — (Golf) mandó la bola a la zona de árboles- play for time- play into sb's hands- play to one's strengths3) (Mus) [person] tocar; [instrument, record etc] sonardo you play? — ¿sabes tocar?
•
will you play for us? — ¿nos tocas algo?•
to play on the piano — tocar el piano•
to play to sb — tocar para algn4) (Theat, Cine) (=act) actuarthe film now playing at the Odeon — la película que se exhibe or proyecta en el Odeon
- play hard to get- play deadgallery5) (=move about, form patterns) correr6) [fountain] correr, funcionar4.CPDplay clothes NPL — ropa f para jugar
play reading N — lectura f (de una obra dramática)
- play in- play off- play on- play out- play up* * *[pleɪ]
I
1)a) u ( recreation) juego mb) u ( Sport) juego mplay was interrupted — se interrumpió el juego or el partido
to bring something/come into play — poner* algo/entrar en juego
to make a play for somebody/something — (also BrE)
he made a play for her — trató de ganársela or de conquistársela
the company made a play for ownership of ABC Industries — la compañía intentó hacerse con ABC Industries
2) u ( interplay) juego m4) c ( Theat) obra f (de teatro), pieza f (teatral), comedia fradio play — obra f radiofónica
5) c ( pun)
II
1.
2)a) \<\<cards/hopscotch\>\> jugar* ato play a joke/trick on somebody — hacerle* or gastarle una broma/una jugarreta a alguien
b) \<\<football/chess\>\> jugar* (AmL exc RPl), jugar* a (Esp, RPl)3)a) ( compete against) \<\<opponent\>\> jugar* contrato play somebody AT something: I used to play her at chess — jugaba ajedrez or (Esp, RPl) al ajedrez con ella
b) \<\<ball\>\> pasar; \<\<card\>\> tirar, jugar*; \<\<piece\>\> mover*c) ( in particular position) jugar* ded) ( use in game) \<\<reserve\>\> alinear, sacar* a jugar4) ( gamble on) jugar* ato play the market — ( Fin) jugar* a la bolsa
5) ( Theat)a) \<\<villain/Hamlet\>\> representar el papel de, hacer* de, actuar* deto play the innocent — hacerse* el inocente
b) \<\<scene\>\> representarto play it cool — hacer* como si nada
to play (it) safe — ir* a la segura, no arriesgarse*
to play (it) straight — ser* sincero or honesto
c) \<\<theater/town\>\> actuar* en6) ( Mus) \<\<instrument/note\>\> tocar*; \<\<piece\>\> tocar*, interpretar (frml)7) ( Audio) \<\<tape/record\>\> poner*8) ( move) (+ adv compl)
2.
1) vi2) ( amuse oneself) \<\<children\>\> jugar*to play AT something — jugar* a algo
what are you playing at? — ¿a qué estás jugando?, ¿qué es lo que te propones?
to play WITH something/somebody — jugar* con algo/alguien
3) (Games, Sport) jugar*to play fair — jugar* limpio
to play fair with somebody — ser* justo con alguien
4)a) ( Theat) \<\<cast\>\> actuar*, trabajar; \<\<show\>\> ser* representadob) ( pretend)to play dead — hacerse* el muerto
to play hard to get — hacerse* el (or la etc) interesante
5) ( Mus) \<\<musician\>\> tocar*6) ( move)•Phrasal Verbs:- play off- play on- play out- play up -
15 Acres, Birt
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 23 July 1854 Virginia, USAd. 1918[br]American photographer, inventor and pioneer cinematographer.[br]Born of English parents and educated in Paris, Acres travelled to England in the 1880s. He worked for the photographic manufacturing firm Elliott \& Co. in Barnet, near London, and became the Manager. He became well known through his frequent lectures, demonstrations and articles in the photographic press. The appearance of the Edison kinetoscope in 1893 seems to have aroused his interest in the recording and reproduction of movement.At the beginning of 1895 he took his idea for a camera to Robert Paul, an instrument maker, and they collaborated on the building of a working camera, which Acres used to record the Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race on 30 March 1895. He filmed the Derby at Epsom on 29 May and the opening of the Kiel Canal in June, as well as ten other subjects for the kinetoscope, which were sold by Paul. Acres's association with Paul ended in July 1895. Acres had patented the camera design, the Kinetic Lantern, on 27 May 1895 and then went on to design a projector with which he gave the first successful presentation of projected motion pictures to take place in Britain, at the Royal Photographic Society's meeting on 14 January 1896. At the end of the month Acres formed his own business, the Northern Photographic Company, to supply film stock, process and print exposed film, and to make finished film productions.His first shows to the public, using the renamed Kineopticon projector, started in Piccadilly Circus on 21 March 1896. He later toured the country with his show. He was honoured with a Royal Command Performance at Marlborough House on 21 July 1896 before members of the royal family. Although he made a number of films for his own use, they and his equipment were used only for his own demonstrations. His last contribution to cinematography was the design and patenting in 1898 of the first low-cost system for amateur use, the Birtac, which was first shown on 25 January 1899 and marketed in May of that year. It used half-width film, 17.5 mm wide, and the apparatus served as camera, printer and projector.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFellow of the Royal Photographic Society 1895.Bibliography27 May 1895 (the Kinetic Lantern).9 June 1898 (the Birtac).Further ReadingJ.Barnes, 1976, The Beginnings of the Cinema in England, London. B.Coe, 1980, The History of Movie Photography, London.BC -
16 Hunter, John
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 14 (registered 13) February 1728 East Kilbride, Lanarkshire, Scotlandd. 16 October 1793 London, England[br]Scottish surgeon and anatomist, pioneer of experimental methods in medicine and surgery.[br]The younger brother of William Hunter (1718–83), who was of great distinction but perhaps of slightly less achievement in similar fields, he owed much of his early experience to his brother; William, after a period at Glasgow University, moved to St George's Hospital, London. In his later teens, John assisted a brother-in-law with cabinet-making. This appears to have contributed to the lifelong mechanical skill which he displayed as a dissector and surgeon. This skill was particularly obvious when, after following William to London in 1748, he held post at a number of London teaching hospitals before moving to St George's in 1756. A short sojourn at Oxford in 1755 appears to have been unfruitful.Despite his deepening involvement in the study of comparative anatomy, facilitated by the purchase of animals from the Tower menagerie and travelling show people, he accepted an appointment as a staff surgeon in the Army in 1760, participating in the expedition to Belle Isle and also serving in Portugal. He returned home with over 300 specimens in 1763 and, until his appointment as Surgeon to St George's in 1768, was heavily involved in the examination of this and other material, as well as in studies of foetal testicular descent, placental circulation, the nature of pus and lymphatic circulation. In 1772 he commenced lecturing on the theory and practice of surgery, and in 1776 he was appointed Surgeon-Extraordinary to George III.He is rightly regarded as the founder of scientific surgery, but his knowledge was derived almost entirely from his own experiments and observations. His contemporaries did not always accept or understand the concepts which led to such aphorisms as, "to perform an operation is to mutilate a patient we cannot cure", and his written comment to his pupil Jenner: "Why think. Why not trie the experiment". His desire to establish the aetiology of gonorrhoea led to him infecting himself, as a result of which he also contracted syphilis. His ensuing account of the characteristics of the disease remains a classic of medicine, although it is likely that the sequelae of the condition brought about his death at a relatively early age. From 1773 he suffered recurrent anginal attacks of such a character that his life "was in the hands of any rascal who chose to annoy and tease him". Indeed, it was following a contradiction at a board meeting at St George's that he died.By 1788, with the death of Percival Pott, he had become unquestionably the leading surgeon in Britain, if not Europe. Elected to the Royal Society in 1767, the extraordinary variety of his collections, investigations and publications, as well as works such as the "Treatise on the natural history of the human teeth" (1771–8), gives testimony to his original approach involving the fundamental and inescapable relation of structure and function in both normal and disease states. The massive growth of his collections led to his acquiring two houses in Golden Square to contain them. It was his desire that after his death his collection be purchased and preserved for the nation. It contained 13,600 specimens and had cost him £70,000. After considerable delay, Par-liament voted inadequate sums for this purpose and the collection was entrusted to the recently rechartered Royal College of Surgeons of England, in whose premises this remarkable monument to the omnivorous and eclectic activities of this outstanding figure in the evolution of medicine and surgery may still be seen. Sadly, some of the collection was lost to bombing during the Second World War. His surviving papers were also extensive, but it is probable that many were destroyed in the early nineteenth century.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1767. Copley Medal 1787.Bibliography1835–7, Works, ed. J.F.Palmer, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London.MG -
17 Huygens, Christiaan
SUBJECT AREA: Horology[br]b. 14 April 1629 The Hague, the Netherlandsd. 8 June 1695 The Hague, the Netherlands[br]Dutch scientist who was responsible for two of the greatest advances in horology: the successful application of both the pendulum to the clock and the balance spring to the watch.[br]Huygens was born into a cultured and privileged class. His father, Constantijn, was a poet and statesman who had wide interests. Constantijn exerted a strong influence on his son, who was educated at home until he reached the age of 16. Christiaan studied law and mathematics at Ley den University from 1645 to 1647, and continued his studies at the Collegium Arausiacum in Breda until 1649. He then lived at The Hague, where he had the means to devote his time entirely to study. In 1666 he became a Member of the Académie des Sciences in Paris and settled there until his return to The Hague in 1681. He also had a close relationship with the Royal Society and visited London on three occasions, meeting Newton on his last visit in 1689. Huygens had a wide range of interests and made significant contributions in mathematics, astronomy, optics and mechanics. He also made technical advances in optical instruments and horology.Despite the efforts of Burgi there had been no significant improvement in the performance of ordinary clocks and watches from their inception to Huygens's time, as they were controlled by foliots or balances which had no natural period of oscillation. The pendulum appeared to offer a means of improvement as it had a natural period of oscillation that was almost independent of amplitude. Galileo Galilei had already pioneered the use of a freely suspended pendulum for timing events, but it was by no means obvious how it could be kept swinging and used to control a clock. Towards the end of his life Galileo described such a. mechanism to his son Vincenzio, who constructed a model after his father's death, although it was not completed when he himself died in 1642. This model appears to have been copied in Italy, but it had little influence on horology, partly because of the circumstances in which it was produced and possibly also because it differed radically from clocks of that period. The crucial event occurred on Christmas Day 1656 when Huygens, quite independently, succeeded in adapting an existing spring-driven table clock so that it was not only controlled by a pendulum but also kept it swinging. In the following year he was granted a privilege or patent for this clock, and several were made by the clockmaker Salomon Coster of The Hague. The use of the pendulum produced a dramatic improvement in timekeeping, reducing the daily error from minutes to seconds, but Huygens was aware that the pendulum was not truly isochronous. This error was magnified by the use of the existing verge escapement, which made the pendulum swing through a large arc. He overcame this defect very elegantly by fitting cheeks at the pendulum suspension point, progressively reducing the effective length of the pendulum as the amplitude increased. Initially the cheeks were shaped empirically, but he was later able to show that they should have a cycloidal shape. The cheeks were not adopted universally because they introduced other defects, and the problem was eventually solved more prosaically by way of new escapements which reduced the swing of the pendulum. Huygens's clocks had another innovatory feature: maintaining power, which kept the clock going while it was being wound.Pendulums could not be used for portable timepieces, which continued to use balances despite their deficiencies. Robert Hooke was probably the first to apply a spring to the balance, but his efforts were not successful. From his work on the pendulum Huygens was well aware of the conditions necessary for isochronism in a vibrating system, and in January 1675, with a flash of inspiration, he realized that this could be achieved by controlling the oscillations of the balance with a spiral spring, an arrangement that is still used in mechanical watches. The first model was made for Huygens in Paris by the clockmaker Isaac Thuret, who attempted to appropriate the invention and patent it himself. Huygens had for many years been trying unsuccessfully to adapt the pendulum clock for use at sea (in order to determine longitude), and he hoped that a balance-spring timekeeper might be better suited for this purpose. However, he was disillusioned as its timekeeping proved to be much more susceptible to changes in temperature than that of the pendulum clock.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1663. Member of the Académie Royale des Sciences 1666.BibliographyFor his complete works, see Oeuvres complètes de Christian Huygens, 1888–1950, 22 vols, The Hague.1658, Horologium, The Hague; repub., 1970, trans. E.L.Edwardes, AntiquarianHorology 7:35–55 (describes the pendulum clock).1673, Horologium Oscillatorium, Paris; repub., 1986, The Pendulum Clock or Demonstrations Concerning the Motion ofPendula as Applied to Clocks, trans.R.J.Blackwell, Ames.The balance spring watch was first described in Journal des Sçavans 25 February 1675, and translated in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (1675) 4:272–3.Further ReadingH.J.M.Bos, 1972, Dictionary of Scientific Biography, ed. C.C.Gillispie, Vol. 6, New York, pp. 597–613 (for a fuller account of his life and scientific work, but note the incorrect date of his death).R.Plomp, 1979, Spring-Driven Dutch Pendulum Clocks, 1657–1710, Schiedam (describes Huygens's application of the pendulum to the clock).S.A.Bedini, 1991, The Pulse of Time, Florence (describes Galileo's contribution of the pendulum to the clock).J.H.Leopold, 1982, "L"Invention par Christiaan Huygens du ressort spiral réglant pour les montres', Huygens et la France, Paris, pp. 154–7 (describes the application of the balance spring to the watch).A.R.Hall, 1978, "Horology and criticism", Studia Copernica 16:261–81 (discusses Hooke's contribution).DV -
18 Leonardo da Vinci
[br]b. 15 April 1452 Vinci, near Florence, Italy,d. 2 May 1519 St Cloux, near Amboise, France.[br]Italian scientist, engineer, inventor and artist.[br]Leonardo was the illegitimate son of a Florentine lawyer. His first sixteen years were spent with the lawyer's family in the rural surroundings of Vinci, which aroused in him a lifelong love of nature and an insatiable curiosity in it. He received little formal education but extended his knowledge through private reading. That gave him only a smattering of Latin, a deficiency that was to be a hindrance throughout his active life. At sixteen he was apprenticed in the studio of Andrea del Verrochio in Florence, where he received a training not only in art but in a wide variety of crafts and technical arts.In 1482 Leonardo went to Milan, where he sought and obtained employment with Ludovico Sforza, later Duke of Milan, partly to sculpt a massive equestrian statue of Ludovico but the work never progressed beyond the full-scale model stage. He did, however, complete the painting which became known as the Virgin of the Rocks and in 1497 his greatest artistic achievement, The Last Supper, commissioned jointly by Ludovico and the friars of Santa Maria della Grazie and painted on the wall of the monastery's refectory. Leonardo was responsible for the court pageants and also devised a system of irrigation to supply water to the plains of Lombardy. In 1499 the French army entered Milan and deposed Leonardo's employer. Leonardo departed and, after a brief visit to Mantua, returned to Florence, where for a time he was employed as architect and engineer to Cesare Borgia, Duke of Romagna. Around 1504 he completed another celebrated work, the Mona Lisa.In 1506 Leonardo began his second sojourn in Milan, this time in the service of King Louis XII of France, who appointed him "painter and engineer". In 1513 Leonardo left for Rome in the company of his pupil Francesco Melzi, but his time there was unproductive and he found himself out of touch with the younger artists active there, Michelangelo above all. In 1516 he accepted with relief an invitation from King François I of France to reside at the small château of St Cloux in the royal domain of Amboise. With the pension granted by François, Leonardo lived out his remaining years in tranquility at St Cloux.Leonardo's career can hardly be regarded as a success or worthy of such a towering genius. For centuries he was known only for the handful of artistic works that he managed to complete and have survived more or less intact. His main activity remained hidden until the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, during which the contents of his notebooks were gradually revealed. It became evident that Leonardo was one of the greatest scientific investigators and inventors in the history of civilization. Throughout his working life he extended a searching curiosity over an extraordinarily wide range of subjects. The notes show careful investigation of questions of mechanical and civil engineering, such as power transmission by means of pulleys and also a form of chain belting. The notebooks record many devices, such as machines for grinding and polishing lenses, a lathe operated by treadle-crank, a rolling mill with conical rollers and a spinning machine with pinion and yard divider. Leonardo made an exhaustive study of the flight of birds, with a view to designing a flying machine, which obsessed him for many years.Leonardo recorded his observations and conclusions, together with many ingenious inventions, on thousands of pages of manuscript notes, sketches and drawings. There are occasional indications that he had in mind the publication of portions of the notes in a coherent form, but he never diverted his energy into putting them in order; instead, he went on making notes. As a result, Leonardo's impact on the development of science and technology was virtually nil. Even if his notebooks had been copied and circulated, there were daunting impediments to their understanding. Leonardo was left-handed and wrote in mirror-writing: that is, in reverse from right to left. He also used his own abbreviations and no punctuation.At his death Leonardo bequeathed his entire output of notes to his friend and companion Francesco Melzi, who kept them safe until his own death in 1570. Melzi left the collection in turn to his son Orazio, whose lack of interest in the arts and sciences resulted in a sad period of dispersal which endangered their survival, but in 1636 the bulk of them, in thirteen volumes, were assembled and donated to the Ambrosian Library in Milan. These include a large volume of notes and drawings compiled from the various portions of the notebooks and is now known as the Codex Atlanticus. There they stayed, forgotten and ignored, until 1796, when Napoleon's marauding army overran Italy and art and literary works, including the thirteen volumes of Leonardo's notebooks, were pillaged and taken to Paris. After the war in 1815, the French government agreed to return them but only the Codex Atlanticus found its way back to Milan; the rest remained in Paris. The appendix to one notebook, dealing with the flight of birds, was later regarded as of sufficient importance to stand on its own. Four small collections reached Britain at various times during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; of these, the volume in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle is notable for its magnificent series of anatomical drawings. Other collections include the Codex Leicester and Codex Arundel in the British Museum in London, and the Madrid Codices in Spain.Towards the end of the nineteenth century, Leonardo's true stature as scientist, engineer and inventor began to emerge, particularly with the publication of transcriptions and translations of his notebooks. The volumes in Paris appeared in 1881–97 and the Codex Atlanticus was published in Milan between 1894 and 1904.[br]Principal Honours and Distinctions"Premier peintre, architecte et mécanicien du Roi" to King François I of France, 1516.Further ReadingE.MacCurdy, 1939, The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci, 2 vols, London; 2nd edn, 1956, London (the most extensive selection of the notes, with an English translation).G.Vasari (trans. G.Bull), 1965, Lives of the Artists, London: Penguin, pp. 255–271.C.Gibbs-Smith, 1978, The Inventions of Leonardo da Vinci, Oxford: Phaidon. L.H.Heydenreich, Dibner and L. Reti, 1981, Leonardo the Inventor, London: Hutchinson.I.B.Hart, 1961, The World of Leonardo da Vinci, London: Macdonald.LRD / IMcN -
19 Whittle, Sir Frank
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 1 June 1907 Coventry, England[br]English engineer who developed the first British jet engine.[br]Frank Whittle enlisted in the Royal Air Force (RAF) as an apprentice, and after qualifying as a pilot he developed an interest in the technical aspects of aircraft propulsion. He was convinced that the gas-turbine engine could be adapted for use in aircraft, but he could not convince the Air Ministry, who turned down the proposal. Nevertheless, Whittle applied for a patent for his turbojet engine the following year, 1930. While still in the RAF, he was allowed time to study for a degree at Cambridge University and carry out postgraduate research (1934–7). By 1936 the official attitude had changed, and a company called Power Jets Ltd was set up to develop Whittle's jet engine. On 12 April 1937 the experimental engine was bench-tested. After further development, an official order was placed in March 1938. Whittle's engine had a centrifugal compressor, ten combustion chambers and a turbine to drive the compressor; all the power output came from the jet of hot gases.In 1939 an experimental aircraft was ordered from the Gloster Aircraft Company, the E 28/39, to house the Whittle W1 engine, and this made its first flight on 15 May 1941. A development of the W1 by Rolls-Royce, the Welland, was used to power the twin-engined Gloster Meteor fighter, which saw service with the RAF in 1944. Whittle retired from the RAF in 1948 and became a consultant. From 1977 he lived in the United States. Comparisons between the work of Whittle and Hans von Ohain show that each of the two engineers developed his engine without knowledge of the other's work. Whittle was the first to take out a patent, Ohain achieved the first flight; the Whittle engine and its derivatives, however, played a much greater role in the history of the jet engine.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1948. Commander of the Order of the Bath 1947. Order of Merit 1986. FRS 1947. Honorary Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society.Bibliography1953, Jet, London (an account not only of his technical problems, but also of the difficulties with civil servants, politicians and commercial organizations).Further ReadingJ.Golley, 1987, Whittle: The True Story, Shrewsbury (this author based his work on Jet, but carried out research, aided by Whittle, to give a fuller account with the benefit of hindsight).JDS -
20 seal
I
1. si:l noun1) (a piece of wax or other material bearing a design, attached to a document to show that it is genuine and legal.) sello2) (a piece of wax etc used to seal a parcel etc.) lacre3) ((something that makes) a complete closure or covering: Paint and varnish act as protective seals for woodwork.) cierre hermético
2. verb1) (to mark with a seal: The document was signed and sealed.) sellar2) ((negative unseal) to close completely: He licked and sealed the envelope; All the air is removed from a can of food before it is sealed.) cerrar herméticamente3) (to settle or decide: This mistake sealed his fate.) sellar, concluir•- seal of approval
- seal off
- set one's seal to
II si:l noun(any of several types of sea animal, some furry, living partly on land.) foca- sealskinseal n focatr[siːl]1 SMALLZOOLOGY/SMALL foca1 cazar focas————————tr[siːl]1 (official stamp) sello2 (on letter) sello; (on bottle etc) precinto; (airtight) cierre nombre masculino hermético; (on window, door) burlete nombre masculino1 (with offical stamp) sellar; (with wax) lacrar, sellar con lacre2 (close) cerrar; (bottle etc) precintar; (make airtight) cerrar herméticamente; (window, door) sellar, poner burletes a3 (coat with sealant) sellar, impermeabilizar4 (settle, make formal) sellar, concluir\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto give one's seal of approval to something aprobar algo, dar su aprobación a algo, dar el visto bueno a algoto seal somebody's fate decidir el destino de alguiento set the seal on something (complete) culminar algo, ratificar algoseal ['si:l] vt1) close: sellar, cerrarto seal a letter: cerrar una cartato seal an agreement: sellar un acuerdo2)to seal up : tapar, rellenar (una grieta, etc.)seal n1) : foca f (animal)2) : sello mseal of approval: sello de aprobación3) closure: cierre m, precinto mn.• estampilla s.f.• firma s.f.• foca s.f.• selladura s.f.• sello s.m.• timbre s.m.v.• cerrar v.• estampar v.• lacrar v.• precintar v.• sellar v.
I siːl1) c (implement, impression) sello mto set the seal on something — ratificar* algo
2) ca) ( security device) precinto mb) ( airtight closure) cierre m hermético; ( on glass jar) aro m de goma3) ( Zool)a) c ( animal) foca fb) u ( skin) (piel f de) foca f
II
1)a sealed envelope — un sobre cerrado or sellado
my lips are sealed — (set phrase) soy una tumba, prometo no decir nada
b) \<\<jar/container\>\> cerrar* herméticamente; \<\<tomb/door\>\> precintar; \<\<wood\>\> sellar2) ( affix seal to) \<\<documenteaty\>\> sellarsigned, sealed and delivered — firmado y sellado
3) (decide, determine) \<\<victory/outcome\>\> decidir•Phrasal Verbs:- seal in- seal off- seal up
I [siːl]1.N (Zool) foca f2.VI3.CPDseal cull, seal culling N — matanza f (selectiva) de focas
II [siːl]1. N1) (=official stamp) sello mthe papal/presidential seal — el sello papal/presidencial
•
they have given their seal of approval to the proposed reforms — han dado el visto bueno a or han aprobado las reformas que se planeanit has the Royal Academy's seal of approval — cuenta con la aprobación or el visto bueno de la Real Academia
•
this set the seal on their friendship/on her humiliation — esto selló su amistad/remató su humillación•
under my hand and seal — frm firmado y sellado por mí2) [of envelope, parcel, exterior of bottle, jar] precinto m ; (inside lid of jar) aro m de goma; (on fridge door) cierre m de goma; (on door, window) burlete m3) (Rel)2. VT1) (=close) [+ envelope] cerrar; [+ package, coffin] precintar; [+ border] cerrarlip 1., 1), sign 2., 1)2) (=stop up, make airtight) [+ container] tapar or cerrar herméticamente; [+ surface] sellar3) (=enclose)•
to seal sth in sth, seal the letter in a blank envelope — mete la carta en un sobre en blanco y ciérralo4) (fig) (=confirm) [+ bargain, deal] sellar; [+ victory] decidir; [+ sb's fate] decidir, determinarthat goal sealed the match — ese gol decidió or determinó el resultado del partido
5) (Culin) [+ meat] sofreír a fuego vivo (para que no pierda el jugo)- seal in- seal off- seal up* * *
I [siːl]1) c (implement, impression) sello mto set the seal on something — ratificar* algo
2) ca) ( security device) precinto mb) ( airtight closure) cierre m hermético; ( on glass jar) aro m de goma3) ( Zool)a) c ( animal) foca fb) u ( skin) (piel f de) foca f
II
1)a sealed envelope — un sobre cerrado or sellado
my lips are sealed — (set phrase) soy una tumba, prometo no decir nada
b) \<\<jar/container\>\> cerrar* herméticamente; \<\<tomb/door\>\> precintar; \<\<wood\>\> sellar2) ( affix seal to) \<\<document/treaty\>\> sellarsigned, sealed and delivered — firmado y sellado
3) (decide, determine) \<\<victory/outcome\>\> decidir•Phrasal Verbs:- seal in- seal off- seal up
См. также в других словарях:
(the) Royal Show — the Royal Show [the Royal Show] ; » ↑Royal International Agricultural Show … Useful english dictionary
Royal Show — The Royal Show is an annual agricultural show/fair held by the Royal Agricultural Society of England every year since 1840. It is held in Stoneleigh Park (previously known as the National Agricultural Centre or NAC) near Stoneleigh in… … Wikipedia
(the) Royal International Agricultural Show — the Royal International Agricultural Show [the Royal International Agricultural Show] (also the Royal Show) an exhibition of farming methods, machinery, animals, etc. held every year at Stoneleigh Park, ↑Warwickshire, England. See also: ↑R … Useful english dictionary
The Daily Show — Also known as The Daily Show with Jon Stewart Genre … Wikipedia
The Erasure Show — Live par Erasure Sortie du 25 février au 28 mars 2005 Enregistrement du 25 février au 28 mars 2005 Durée environ 1h40mn Genre … Wikipédia en Français
The Kylie Show — Título The Kylie Show Género Comedia Música Creado por William Baker Presentado por Kylie Minogue Reparto Kylie Minogue Dannii Minogue Jason Donovan … Wikipedia Español
The Holmes Show — was a Canadian sketch comedy television series which starred Jessica Holmes, Roman Danylo and Kurt Smeaton. It ran on CTV for one season. Jessica Holmes has since joined the cast of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation sketch comedy show, Royal… … Wikipedia
Perth Royal Show — The Perth Royal Show is an annual show held in Perth, Western Australia at the Claremont Showgrounds. It features informational exhibits, agricultural competitions and display animals, a fairground and rides, and showbags. It has been held for… … Wikipedia
The Goon Show — Infobox Radio Show show name = The Goon Show imagesize = caption = format = Comedy record location = Camden Theatre London creator = Spike Milligan producer = Peter Eton (101) Dennis Main Wilson (38) Pat Dixon (29) Charles Chilton (25) John… … Wikipedia
The Big Show — Paul Wight Pour les articles homonymes, voir Wight. Paul Donald Wight, Jr … Wikipédia en Français
The Kylie Show — infobox television show name = The Kylie Show caption = format = Music Variety Show runtime = 44 mins (approx.) starring = Kylie Minogue Dannii Minogue Jason Donovan Simon Cowell Joan Collins Blair McDonough Jonathon Dutton Crazy Horse Girls Luke … Wikipedia