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the attempt was unsuccessful

  • 1 ohne

    I Präp. (+ Akk)
    1. without; (ausschließlich) auch not counting, excluding; ein Topf ohne Deckel a pan without a lid; wir sind momentan ohne Auto we are without a car ( oder haven’t got a car) at the moment; sie ging ohne Hut / Schuhe she wasn’t wearing a hat / any shoes; er kam ohne die Kinder he came without (hum. minus) the children; wir sind fünf ohne die Kinder we’re five not counting ( oder minus) the children; ohne mich! (you can) count me out, I’m not having anything to do with it; ohne Zweifel undoubtedly; ohne seine Schuld through no fault of his (own); ohne mein Wissen without my knowledge ( oder knowing), unbeknown to me
    2. ohne weiteres just like that; (mühelos) auch without any (great) effort; (ohne Probleme) without any problems ( oder difficulty); das machen wir ohne weiteres we’ll manage that easily; das kannst du ohne weiteres akzeptieren (bedenkenlos) you needn’t worry ( oder hesitate) about accepting that; du kannst ihr ohne weiteres glauben you need have no hesitation in believing her; das geht nicht so ohne weiteres that’s not that simple
    3. umg., allein stehend: sie ist ( gar) nicht (so) ohne there’s more to her than you might think; das ist gar nicht so ohne it’s not bad, you know; (ist schwieriger etc., als man denkt) there’s more to it than meets the eye, it’s not that simple; ich schlafe / schwimme am liebsten ohne I prefer to sleep / swim in the nude; du brauchst einen Ausweis, ohne lassen sie dich nicht rein you need a pass, they won’t let you in without (one); oben 1
    II Konj.: ohne dass, ohne zu (+ Inf.) without (+ Ger.) ohne dass ich ihn gesehen hatte without (my) having seen him; sie ging, ohne ein Wort zu sagen she left without saying a word; ohne auch nur zu lächeln without so much as a smile
    * * *
    devoid (Adj.); without (Präp.); ex (Präp.); minus (Präp.)
    * * *
    oh|ne ['oːnə]
    1. prep +acc

    óhne (die) Vororte hat die Stadt 100.000 Einwohner — excluding or not including or not counting the suburbs, the city has 100,000 inhabitants

    óhne mich! — count me out!

    er ist nicht óhne (inf)he's not bad (inf), he's got what it takes (inf)

    óhne ihn wären wir immer noch dort — without him or but for him or if it weren't for him we'd still be there

    óhne etw sein — to be without or minus (inf) sth

    óhne Auto — without a or one's car

    óhne Mehrwertsteuer — excluding VAT

    er ist óhne jede Begabung (für Musik) — he lacks or is without any (musical) talent

    óhne einen or jeden Pfennig Geld — penniless, without a penny or dime (US), without two ha'pennies to rub together

    ich rauche immer óhne (inf)I always smoke untipped cigarettes

    2)

    ich hätte das óhne Weiteres getan — I'd have done it without a second thought, I'd have done it without thinking twice about it

    so etwas kann man óhne Weiteres sagen — it's quite all right to say that

    so etwas kann man in feiner Gesellschaft nicht óhne Weiteres sagen — you can't say that sort of thing in polite society

    ich würde óhne Weiteres sagen, dass... — I would not hesitate to say that...

    er hat den Brief óhne Weiteres unterschrieben — he signed the letter straight away or just like that

    das Darlehen ist óhne Weiteres bewilligt worden — the loan was granted straight away or without any bother or problem

    ihm können Sie óhne Weiteres vertrauen — you can trust him implicitly

    das lässt sich óhne Weiteres arrangieren — that can easily be arranged

    das ist nicht ( so) óhne Weiteres möglich — it can't be done just like that

    hast du das Geld gekriegt? – ja, óhne Weiteres — did you get the money? – yes, no problem (inf)

    dem Kerl kann man nicht óhne Weiteres glauben — you can't just believe anything or whatever that guy says

    das kann man nicht óhne Weiteres voraussetzen — you can't just assume that automatically

    diesem Vorschlag kann ich nicht óhne Weiteres zustimmen — I can't just accept the suggestion without question

    du kannst doch nicht so óhne Weiteres aus der Schule weglaufen — you can't just run away from school like that

    2. conj

    óhne zu zögern — without hesitating

    óhne dass ich ihn darum gebeten hätte, kam er mich besuchen — he came to see me without my (Brit) or me inviting him

    wer redet, óhne gefragt zu sein... — anybody who talks without being asked...

    * * *
    1) ((with of) free from or lacking: That is devoid of any meaning.) devoid
    2) ((with of or from) without or no longer having (especially something or someone unpleasant etc): She is free from pain now; free of charge.) free
    3) (not wanting or allowed to have (food etc): The child is off his food.) off
    4) ((with of) lacking entirely: a statement void of meaning.) void
    5) (in the absence of; not having: They went without you; I could not live without him; We cannot survive without water.) without
    6) (not: He drove away without saying goodbye; You can't walk along this street without meeting someone you know.) without
    * * *
    oh·ne
    [ˈo:nə]
    I. präp + akk
    1. (nicht versehen mit)
    \ohne etw without sth
    \ohne Auto without a car
    \ohne Geld without any money
    sie ist \ohne Mantel gekommen she came without a coat
    wir sind noch \ohne weitere Informationen we still don't have any more information
    sei \ohne Furcht! don't be afraid!
    mein Versuch ist \ohne Erfolg geblieben my attempt was unsuccessful
    sie ist \ohne jede Begabung she lacks [or is without] any talent
    er ist ein Mensch \ohne jeglichen Humor he's a person totally lacking [or without any sense of] humour
    \ohne dich wäre ich immer noch ohne Kleiderschrank if it weren't for you I'd still be without a wardrobe
    \ohne Appetit sein to have no appetite
    \ohne einen [o jeden] Cent [Geld] penniless, without a penny [or AM dime]
    \ohne Schutz unprotected
    2. (nicht eingerechnet)
    \ohne etw excluding [or not including] [or not counting] sth
    \ohne die Vororte hat die Stadt 300.000 Einwohner the city has 300,000 inhabitants excluding [or not including] [or not counting] the suburbs
    der Preis versteht sich \ohne Mehrwertsteuer the price does not include VAT
    er raucht immer \ohne he always smokes untipped cigarettes
    sie badet am liebsten \ohne she prefers to bathe in the nude
    wenn du keinen Zucker hast, trinke ich den Kaffee auch \ohne if you haven't got any sugar, I can have my coffee without
    du brauchst eine Eintrittskarte, \ohne kommst du nicht rein you need a ticket, they won't let you in without one
    4. (nicht mit jdm)
    \ohne jdn without sb
    \ohne mich! count me out!
    \ohne Erben sterben to die heirless
    \ohne Kinder/Nachwuchs childless/without offspring
    5.
    [gar] nicht \ohne sein (fam: schwierig) to be not [quite] that easy; (interessant) to not be bad
    die Fragen waren gar nicht so \ohne the questions were not that easy
    sie ist gar nicht so \ohne she's quite something, she's got what it takes
    der Vorschlag ist nicht \ohne it's not a bad suggestion; s.a. oben, weitere(r, s)
    II. konj
    \ohne etw zu tun without doing sth
    sie nahm sich ein Stück Kuchen, \ohne vorher zu fragen she took a piece of cake without asking
    wer redet, \ohne gefragt zu sein... anybody who talks without being asked...
    \ohne dass ich ihn darum gebeten hätte, hat er mir geholfen he helped me without my [or me] asking
    \ohne zu zögern without hesitating
    * * *
    1.

    ohne mich! — [you can] count me out!

    2) (mit Auslassung des Akkusativs)

    ich rauche nur ohneI only smoke untipped or filterless cigarettes

    er/sie ist [gar] nicht [so] ohne — (ugs.) he's/she's quite something; s. auch oben 3)

    3)

    ohne weiteres(leicht, einfach) easily; (ohne Einwand) readily

    das traue ich ihm ohne weiteres zuI can quite or easily believe he's capable of that

    2.

    er nahm Platz, ohne dass er gefragt hätte — he sat down without asking

    ohne zu zögern — without hesitating; without hesitation

    * * *
    A. präp (+akk)
    1. without; (ausschließlich) auch not counting, excluding;
    ein Topf ohne Deckel a pan without a lid;
    wir sind momentan ohne Auto we are without a car ( oder haven’t got a car) at the moment;
    sie ging ohne Hut/Schuhe she wasn’t wearing a hat/any shoes;
    er kam ohne die Kinder he came without (hum minus) the children;
    wir sind fünf ohne die Kinder we’re five not counting ( oder minus) the children;
    ohne mich! (you can) count me out, I’m not having anything to do with it;
    ohne Zweifel undoubtedly;
    ohne seine Schuld through no fault of his (own);
    ohne mein Wissen without my knowledge ( oder knowing), unbeknown to me
    2.
    ohne Weiteres just like that; (mühelos) auch without any (great) effort; (ohne Probleme) without any problems ( oder difficulty);
    das machen wir ohne Weiteres we’ll manage that easily;
    das kannst du ohne Weiteres akzeptieren (bedenkenlos) you needn’t worry ( oder hesitate) about accepting that;
    du kannst ihr ohne Weiteres glauben you need have no hesitation in believing her;
    das geht nicht so ohne Weiteres that’s not that simple
    3. umg, alleinstehend:
    sie ist (gar) nicht (so) ohne there’s more to her than you might think;
    das ist gar nicht so ohne it’s not bad, you know; (ist schwieriger etc, als man denkt) there’s more to it than meets the eye, it’s not that simple;
    ich schlafe/schwimme am liebsten ohne I prefer to sleep/swim in the nude;
    du brauchst einen Ausweis, ohne lassen sie dich nicht rein you need a pass, they won’t let you in without (one); oben 1
    B. konj:
    ohne dass, ohne zu (+inf) without (+ger)
    ohne dass ich ihn gesehen hatte without (my) having seen him;
    sie ging, ohne ein Wort zu sagen she left without saying a word;
    ohne auch nur zu lächeln without so much as a smile
    * * *
    1.

    ohne mich! — [you can] count me out!

    ich rauche nur ohneI only smoke untipped or filterless cigarettes

    er/sie ist [gar] nicht [so] ohne — (ugs.) he's/she's quite something; s. auch oben 3)

    3)

    ohne weiteres(leicht, einfach) easily; (ohne Einwand) readily

    das traue ich ihm ohne weiteres zuI can quite or easily believe he's capable of that

    2.

    er nahm Platz, ohne dass er gefragt hätte — he sat down without asking

    ohne zu zögern — without hesitating; without hesitation

    * * *
    präp.
    without prep.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > ohne

  • 2 riuscire vi irreg

    [riuʃ'ʃire]
    (aus essere)
    1)

    (aver successo) riuscire (in qc/a fare qc) — to succeed (in sth/in doing sth), be successful (in sth/in doing sth)

    2) (essere capace) to be able, manage

    riuscire a fare qcto manage o be able to do sth

    non riesco a farlo — I can't do it, I am unable to do it

    3) (essere, risultare) to be, prove (to be)

    ti riuscirà più facile dopo un po' di praticait'll be easier o you'll find it easier after a bit of practice

    4) (uscire di nuovo) to go out again, go back out

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > riuscire vi irreg

  • 3 riuscire

    vi irreg [riuʃ'ʃire]
    (aus essere)
    1)

    (aver successo) riuscire (in qc/a fare qc) — to succeed (in sth/in doing sth), be successful (in sth/in doing sth)

    2) (essere capace) to be able, manage

    riuscire a fare qcto manage o be able to do sth

    non riesco a farlo — I can't do it, I am unable to do it

    3) (essere, risultare) to be, prove (to be)

    ti riuscirà più facile dopo un po' di praticait'll be easier o you'll find it easier after a bit of practice

    4) (uscire di nuovo) to go out again, go back out

    Nuovo dizionario Italiano-Inglese > riuscire

  • 4 fortuna

    f fortune
    avere fortuna be successful
    ( essere fortunato) be lucky
    buona fortuna! good luck!
    fare fortuna make a fortune
    per fortuna luckily
    di fortuna makeshift
    atterraggio m di fortuna emergency landing
    * * *
    fortuna s.f.
    1 fortune; luck: buona fortuna!, good luck!; che ( gran) fortuna!, what (wonderful) luck!; colpo di fortuna, stroke of luck; fortuna che non c'ero, luckily I wasn't there; ebbi la fortuna di trovarlo subito, I was lucky enough to find it at once; aver fortuna, to be in luck (o to be lucky); non ho avuto la fortuna di conoscerlo, I wasn't lucky enough to know him; portar fortuna, to bring luck; avere la fortuna dalla propria ( parte), to have fortune (o luck) on one's side; aver fortuna in qlco., to have good luck in sthg.; aver fortuna con le donne, con gli uomini, to be lucky in love; aver fortuna negli affari, to be successful in business; non aver fortuna, to have no luck (o to be out of luck o to be unlucky); tentare la fortuna, to try one's fortune (o luck); afferrare la fortuna per i capelli, to seize an (o one's) opportunity; affidarsi alla fortuna, to trust to luck (o fortune); augurare buona fortuna a qlcu., to wish s.o. good luck; leggere la fortuna a qlcu., to tell s.o.'s fortune; i capricci della fortuna, the whims of fortune // fortuna volle, as luck would have it // (mit.) Fortuna, Fortune: la ruota della Fortuna, the wheel of Fortune; la fortuna gli arrise, Fortune smiled on him; la fortuna aiuta i forti, Fortune favours the brave // per fortuna, fortunately (o luckily)
    2 ( ricchezza, patrimonio) fortune, patrimony; riches (pl.), wealth [U]: ha speso una fortuna in quadri, he has spent a fortune on pictures; ci ha rimesso una fortuna, he lost a fortune; avere una fortuna, to have a fortune; sperperare la propria fortuna, to squander one's fortune // far fortuna, to make a fortune (o fam. to make a pile o to achieve wealth) // beni di fortuna, wealth (o means o property)
    3 ( riuscita, successo) fortune, success: il suo tentativo ebbe fortuna, his attempt was successful; la fortuna di un libro, di uno scrittore, the success of a book, of a writer; cercar fortuna all'estero, to seek one's fortune abroad; essere l'artefice della propria fortuna, to be the architect of one's own success (o to be a self-made man); far fortuna, to make one's fortune
    4 ( emergenza) emergency: mezzo di fortuna, makeshift; ponte di fortuna, emergency bridge; pranzo di fortuna, potluck; letto di fortuna, shakedown; riparazioni di fortuna, makeshift (o temporary) repairs // ( assicurazioni) fortuna di mare, sea risks // (aer.): atterraggio di fortuna, forced (o emergency) landing; campo di fortuna, emergency landing-ground
    5 (mar.): albero di fortuna, jury mast; timone di fortuna, jury rudder; vela di fortuna, storm sail
    6 (letter.) ( estrazione sociale) stock
    7 (letter.) fortunale.
    * * *
    [for'tuna]
    sostantivo femminile
    1) (sorte) fortune, chance
    2) (sorte favorevole) fortune, good luck

    avere la fortuna di fare — to be fortunate (enough) to do, to have the good fortune to do

    che fortuna!colloq. you lucky thing!

    per fortuna — by good fortune, luckily

    non ho la fortuna di conoscerla (in espressioni di cortesia) I don't have the pleasure of knowing you

    3) (ricchezza) fortune

    fare fortuna — to strike it rich, to make one's pile colloq.

    costare una fortunato cost a fortune o the earth colloq.

    4) (successo) fortune
    ••

    la fortuna aiuta gli audaciprov. who dares wins, fortune favours the brave

    * * *
    fortuna
    /for'tuna/
    sostantivo f.
     1 (sorte) fortune, chance; gioco di fortuna game of chance
     2 (sorte favorevole) fortune, good luck; avere la fortuna di fare to be fortunate (enough) to do, to have the good fortune to do; che fortuna! colloq. you lucky thing! buona fortuna! all the best! good luck! per fortuna by good fortune, luckily; è una fortuna che it's a mercy (that); aveva la fortuna dalla sua (parte) luck was on his side; non avere fortuna to be out of luck; essere abbandonato dalla fortuna to run out of luck; la fortuna sta girando our luck is on turn; è stata una fortuna per lui che it was fortunate for him that; non ho la fortuna di conoscerla (in espressioni di cortesia) I don't have the pleasure of knowing you
     3 (ricchezza) fortune; fare fortuna to strike it rich, to make one's pile colloq.; costare una fortuna to cost a fortune o the earth colloq.
     4 (successo) fortune; il film non ha avuto fortuna the film was unsuccessful
     5 di fortuna (improvvisato) riparo di fortuna makeshift shelter; pista di fortuna airstrip; atterraggio di fortuna crash landing; letto di fortuna shakedown
    la fortuna aiuta gli audaci prov. who dares wins, fortune favours the brave; portare fortuna to bring good luck.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > fortuna

  • 5 Seguin, Marc

    [br]
    b. 20 April 1786 Annonay, Ardèche, France
    d. 24 February 1875 Annonay, Ardèche, France
    [br]
    French engineer, inventor of multi-tubular firetube boiler.
    [br]
    Seguin trained under Joseph Montgolfier, one of the inventors of the hot-air balloon, and became a pioneer of suspension bridges. In 1825 he was involved in an attempt to introduce steam navigation to the River Rhône using a tug fitted with a winding drum to wind itself upstream along a cable attached to a point on the bank, with a separate boat to transfer the cable from point to point. The attempt proved unsuccessful and was short-lived, but in 1825 Seguin had decided also to seek a government concession for a railway from Saint-Etienne to Lyons as a feeder of traffic to the river. He inspected the Stockton \& Darlington Railway and met George Stephenson; the concession was granted in 1826 to Seguin Frères \& Ed. Biot and two steam locomotives were built to their order by Robert Stephenson \& Co. The locomotives were shipped to France in the spring of 1828 for evaluation prior to construction of others there; each had two vertical cylinders, one each side between front and rear wheels, and a boiler with a single large-diameter furnace tube, with a watertube grate. Meanwhile, in 1827 Seguin, who was still attempting to produce a steamboat powerful enough to navigate the fast-flowing Rhône, had conceived the idea of increasing the heating surface of a boiler by causing the hot gases from combustion to pass through a series of tubes immersed in the water. He was soon considering application of this type of boiler to a locomotive. He applied for a patent for a multi-tubular boiler on 12 December 1827 and carried out numerous experiments with various means of producing a forced draught to overcome the perceived obstruction caused by the small tubes. By May 1829 the steam-navigation venture had collapsed, but Seguin had a locomotive under construction in the workshops of the Lyons-Sain t- Etienne Railway: he retained the cylinder layout of its Stephenson locomotives, but incorporated a boiler of his own design. The fire was beneath the barrel, surrounded by a water-jacket: a single large flue ran towards the front of the boiler, whence hot gases returned via many small tubes through the boiler barrel to a chimney above the firedoor. Draught was provided by axle-driven fans on the tender.
    Seguin was not aware of the contemporary construction of Rocket, with a multi-tubular boiler, by Robert Stephenson; Rocket had its first trial run on 5 September 1829, but the precise date on which Seguin's locomotive first ran appears to be unknown, although by 20 October many experiments had been carried out upon it. Seguin's concept of a multi-tubular locomotive boiler therefore considerably antedated that of Henry Booth, and his first locomotive was completed about the same date as Rocket. It was from Rocket's boiler, however, rather than from that of Seguin's locomotive, that the conventional locomotive boiler was descended.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    February 1828, French patent no. 3,744 (multi-tubular boiler).
    1839, De l'Influence des chemins de fer et de l'art de les tracer et de les construire, Paris.
    Further Reading
    F.Achard and L.Seguin, 1928, "Marc Seguin and the invention of the tubular boiler", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 7 (traces the chronology of Seguin's boilers).
    ——1928, "British railways of 1825 as seen by Marc Seguin", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 7.
    J.B.Snell, 1964, Early Railways, London: Weidenfeld \& Nicolson.
    J.-M.Combe and B.Escudié, 1991, Vapeurs sur le Rhône, Lyons: Presses Universitaires de Lyon.
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Seguin, Marc

  • 6 Media

       The purpose of the media during the Estado Novo (1926-74) was to communicate official government policy. Therefore, the government strictly censored newspapers, magazines, and books. Radio and television broadcasting was in the hands of two state-owned companies: Radiodifusão Portuguesa (RDP) and Radiotelevisão Portuguesa (RTP). The first TV broadcasts aired in March 1957, and the official state visit of Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain to Portugal was featured. The only independent broadcasting company during the Estado Novo was the Catholic Church's Radio Renascença. Writers and journalists who violated the regime's guidelines were severely sanctioned. Under Prime Minister Marcello Caetano, censorship was relaxed somewhat, and writers were allowed to publish critical and controversial works without fear of punishment. Caetano attempted to "speak to the people" through television. Daily program content consisted of little more than government-controlled (and censored) news programs and dull documentaries.
       After the Revolution of 25 April 1974, censorship was abolished. As the revolution veered leftward, some sectors of the media were seized by opponents of the views they expressed. The most famous case was the seizure of Radio Renascença by those who sought to bring it into line with the drift leftward. State ownership of the media was increased after 25 April 1974, when banks were nationalized because most banks owned at least one newspaper. As the Revolution moderated and as banking was privatized during the 1980s and 1990s, newspapers were also privatized.
       The history of two major Lisbon dailies illustrates recent cycles of Portuguese politics and pressures. O Século, a major Lisbon daily paper was founded in 1881 and was influenced by Republican, even Masonic ideas. When the first Republic began in 1910, the editorials of O Século defended the new system, but the economic and social turmoil disillusioned the paper's directors. In 1924, O Século, under publisher João Pereira da Rosa, called for political reform and opposed the Democratic Party, which monopolized elections and power in the Republic. This paper was one of the two most important daily papers, and it backed the military coup of 28 May 1926 and the emergent military dictatorship. Over the history of the Estado Novo, this paper remained somewhat to the left of the other major daily paper in Lisbon, Diário de Notícias, but in 1972 the paper suffered a severe financial crisis and was bought by a Lisbon banker. During the more chaotic times after the Revolution of 25 April 1974, O Século experienced its own time of turmoil, in which there was a split between workers and editors, firings, resignations, and financial trouble. After a series of financial problems and controversy over procommunist staff, the paper was suspended and then ceased publication in February 1977. In the 1990s, there was a brief but unsuccessful attempt to revive O Século.
       Today, the daily paper with the largest circulation is Diário de Notícias of Lisbon, which was established in 1883. It became the major daily paper of record, but after the Revolution of 25 April 1974, like O Século, the paper suffered difficulties, both political and financial. One of its editors in the "hot" summer of 1975 was José Saramago, future Nobel Prize winner in literature, and there was an internal battle in the editorial rooms between factions. The paper was, like O Século, nationalized in 1976, but in 1991, Diário de Notícias was reprivatized and today it continues to be the daily paper of record, leading daily circulation.
       Currently, about 20 daily newspapers are published in Portugal, in Lisbon, the capital, as well as in the principal cities of Oporto, Coimbra, and Évora. The major Lisbon newspapers are Diário de Notícias (daily and newspaper of record), Publico (daily), Correia da Manha (daily), Jornal de Noticias (daily), Expresso (weekly), The Portugal News (English language weekly), The Resident (English language weekly), and Get Real Weekly (English language).
       These papers range from the excellent, such as Público and the Diário de Notícias, to the sensationalistic, such as Correio da Manhã. Portugal's premier weekly newspaper is Expresso, founded by Francisco Balsemão during the last years of Marcello Caetano's governance, whose modern format, spirit, and muted criticism of the regime helped prepare public opinion for regime change in 1974. Another weekly is O Independente, founded in 1988, which specializes in political satire. In addition to these newspapers, Portugal has a large number of newspapers and magazines published for a specific readership: sports fans, gardeners, farmers, boating enthusiasts, etc. In addition to the two state-owned TV channels, Portugal has two independent channels, one of which is operated by the Catholic Church. TV programming is now diverse and sophisticated, with a great variety of programs of both domestic and foreign content. The most popular TV programs have been soap operas and serialized novels ( telenovelas) imported from Brazil. In the 1990s, Portugal attempted to produce its own telenovelas and soap operas, but these have not been as popular as the more exotic Brazilian imports.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Media

  • 7 fracasar

    v.
    1 to fail (intento, persona).
    El chico fracasó The boy failed.
    2 to be unsuccessful, to fail to accomplish anything, to draw a blank.
    El chico fracasó The boy failed.
    El detective fracasó The detective failed to accomplish anything.
    El proyecto fracasó The project failed.
    Me fracasó el muchacho My boy failed.
    * * *
    1 to fail, be unsuccessful, fall through
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    1.
    VT LAm to mess up, make a mess of
    2.
    VI [gen] to fail, be unsuccessful; [plan] to fail, fall through
    * * *
    verbo intransitivo to fail
    * * *
    = flounder, fail, misfire, founder, be unsuccessful, bite + the dust, backfire, go under, give up + the ghost, meet with + failure, flop, fall + apart, come + unstuck, fall + flat, go + pear-shaped, fizzle, go out + the window, come + a cropper, fall through, go + kaput, go + haywire, be up the spout.
    Ex. I have noticed in many walks of life, people doing jobs, paid or unpaid, in which they are floundering because they do not have what I might call a job description.
    Ex. This article suggests the steps that libraries might take during periods of instability to reduce their chances of being injured by a vendor that fails.
    Ex. While project ALBIS was seen as an exercise in networking that misfired it did produce some positive results = Aunque se consideraba que el proyecto ALBIS fue un intento de cooperación en red que fracasó, no obstante produjo algunos resultados positivos.
    Ex. It is that, without direction, the library craft may founder in the perpetual whitewater.
    Ex. Alex Wilson sides with the librarians who say 'concentrate your book service first and foremost on existing users because expenditure on attracting those with a low motivation is much more costly and likely to be mostly unsuccessful'.
    Ex. The article 'Interchange bites the dust' comments on the decision by AT&T to abandon the Interchange online service technology.
    Ex. While this direct contact can backfire if the person is not knowledgeable about the product, it is also a golden opportunity to respond directly to customer questions and unique needs.
    Ex. Many of them are likely to go under in the next wave of economic recession.
    Ex. This article examines one such example, Cherrie Moraga's ' Giving Up the Ghost' where, for the first time, the issue of Chicana lesbian sexuality is addressed on the stage.
    Ex. However, many attempts to actively involve the community in reducing its risks of becoming ill have met with failure.
    Ex. This opera flopped at its premiere in 1819.
    Ex. Most of the packaging for cassettes provided by commercial vendors that are known nationwide is lousy, falls apart, looks bad, and so on.
    Ex. Bright people will always manage towork out the technology but it is the higher-level issues and processes that usually cause a project to come unstuck.
    Ex. The performance nevertheless falls flat due to the singers' failure to create true exhilaration.
    Ex. The test on the new machines went pear-shaped: nothing really worked properly and they had to install everything again.
    Ex. Sure we can, but minus the original moment of sizzle, our excellent choice might very well fizzle.
    Ex. The lack of centralisation means that good management goes out the window and everything gets sloppier.
    Ex. He had years of experience and common sense and to the best of my knowledge never came a cropper.
    Ex. The sale fell through recently, after the buyer was unable to come up with the money.
    Ex. With oil at $76 a barrel, it won't be long until it all goes kaput!.
    Ex. They left a trail of destruction in the wake of a plan gone haywire.
    Ex. Their email system has been up the spout since Saturday preventing the staff from communicating everyday matters and causing extensive housekeeping delays.
    ----
    * esfuerzo + fracasar = effort + founder.
    * fracasar de manera lamentable = fail + miserably, fail + dismally.
    * fracasar estrepitosamente = fall + flat on + Posesivo + face.
    * fracasar miserablemente = fail + dismally, fail + miserably, come + a cropper.
    * hacer fracasar = foil, derail.
    * planes + fracasar = plan + fall through.
    * prosperar o fracasar = sink or swim.
    * * *
    verbo intransitivo to fail
    * * *
    = flounder, fail, misfire, founder, be unsuccessful, bite + the dust, backfire, go under, give up + the ghost, meet with + failure, flop, fall + apart, come + unstuck, fall + flat, go + pear-shaped, fizzle, go out + the window, come + a cropper, fall through, go + kaput, go + haywire, be up the spout.

    Ex: I have noticed in many walks of life, people doing jobs, paid or unpaid, in which they are floundering because they do not have what I might call a job description.

    Ex: This article suggests the steps that libraries might take during periods of instability to reduce their chances of being injured by a vendor that fails.
    Ex: While project ALBIS was seen as an exercise in networking that misfired it did produce some positive results = Aunque se consideraba que el proyecto ALBIS fue un intento de cooperación en red que fracasó, no obstante produjo algunos resultados positivos.
    Ex: It is that, without direction, the library craft may founder in the perpetual whitewater.
    Ex: Alex Wilson sides with the librarians who say 'concentrate your book service first and foremost on existing users because expenditure on attracting those with a low motivation is much more costly and likely to be mostly unsuccessful'.
    Ex: The article 'Interchange bites the dust' comments on the decision by AT&T to abandon the Interchange online service technology.
    Ex: While this direct contact can backfire if the person is not knowledgeable about the product, it is also a golden opportunity to respond directly to customer questions and unique needs.
    Ex: Many of them are likely to go under in the next wave of economic recession.
    Ex: This article examines one such example, Cherrie Moraga's ' Giving Up the Ghost' where, for the first time, the issue of Chicana lesbian sexuality is addressed on the stage.
    Ex: However, many attempts to actively involve the community in reducing its risks of becoming ill have met with failure.
    Ex: This opera flopped at its premiere in 1819.
    Ex: Most of the packaging for cassettes provided by commercial vendors that are known nationwide is lousy, falls apart, looks bad, and so on.
    Ex: Bright people will always manage towork out the technology but it is the higher-level issues and processes that usually cause a project to come unstuck.
    Ex: The performance nevertheless falls flat due to the singers' failure to create true exhilaration.
    Ex: The test on the new machines went pear-shaped: nothing really worked properly and they had to install everything again.
    Ex: Sure we can, but minus the original moment of sizzle, our excellent choice might very well fizzle.
    Ex: The lack of centralisation means that good management goes out the window and everything gets sloppier.
    Ex: He had years of experience and common sense and to the best of my knowledge never came a cropper.
    Ex: The sale fell through recently, after the buyer was unable to come up with the money.
    Ex: With oil at $76 a barrel, it won't be long until it all goes kaput!.
    Ex: They left a trail of destruction in the wake of a plan gone haywire.
    Ex: Their email system has been up the spout since Saturday preventing the staff from communicating everyday matters and causing extensive housekeeping delays.
    * esfuerzo + fracasar = effort + founder.
    * fracasar de manera lamentable = fail + miserably, fail + dismally.
    * fracasar estrepitosamente = fall + flat on + Posesivo + face.
    * fracasar miserablemente = fail + dismally, fail + miserably, come + a cropper.
    * hacer fracasar = foil, derail.
    * planes + fracasar = plan + fall through.
    * prosperar o fracasar = sink or swim.

    * * *
    fracasar [A1 ]
    vi
    1 «negociaciones» to fail; «plan» to fail, fall through
    2 «persona» to fail
    como padre fracasó horriblemente he failed miserably as a father
    fracasó como actor he failed o was unsuccessful as an actor
    fracasar EN algo to fail IN sth
    fracasó en su intento de conquistar el Everest he was unsuccessful o he failed in his attempt to conquer Everest
    * * *

     

    fracasar ( conjugate fracasar) verbo intransitivo
    to fail
    fracasar verbo intransitivo to fail
    ' fracasar' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    venirse
    - sonar
    - tronar
    English:
    backfire
    - bomb
    - break down
    - fail
    - fall apart
    - fall through
    - flop
    - founder
    - miserably
    - unstuck
    - back
    - break
    - collapse
    - flat
    - grief
    * * *
    1. [intento] to fail;
    [producto] to be a failure;
    el modelo fracasó en Europa the model was a failure in Europe
    2. [persona] to fail;
    fracasó en su intento de obtener un acuerdo he failed in his attempt to get an agreement;
    fracasó como cantante she was a failure as a singer
    * * *
    v/i fail
    * * *
    1) fallar: to fail
    2) : to fall through
    * * *
    1. (en general) to fail
    2. (planes) to fall through [pt. fell; pp. fallen]

    Spanish-English dictionary > fracasar

  • 8 غير

    غَيْر \ another: a different one: We’ll go there another time. If this hat does not fit, try another. besides: as well as: I have two brothers besides John.. other: (in comparisons) different: He likes French cigarettes and won’t smoke any other kind. This side is dry; the other side is wet. I can’t do it now; I have other things to do. short of: less than; other than: Nothing short of a new government will save the country. un-: giving an opposite sense: ‘Unlikely’ means ‘not likely’. \ See Also آخر (آخَر)‏ \ غَيْرُ أَجْوَف \ solid: not hollow: without holes: a solid rubber ball. \ See Also صلب (صُلْب)‏ \ غَيْرُ أَكيد \ faint: (of thoughts and feelings) weak; uncertain: I haven’t the faintest idea where she is. uncertain: not certain doubtful; undecided; changeable: I’m uncertain what time he’s coming. Our holiday plans are still uncertain, we haven’t decided where to go. The weather is uncertain - it may rain soon. \ See Also ضعيف (ضَعِيف)، غير مؤكّد \ غَيْرُ أمْلَس \ rough: not smooth: a rough road; a rough surface. \ غَيْرُ آمن \ insecure: not safe; not supported or able to support other things: Be careful of that door - the lock is very insecure. \ غَيْرُ أُمِّيّ \ literate: able to read and write. \ غَيْرَ أنَّ \ but: yet: He came but she did not. I need food but I have no money to buy any. She is thin but strong. only: but: She wanted to buy it, only she had no money. \ غَيْرُ أهل للثّقة \ suspect: not trustworthy; possibly the cause of trouble: a rather suspect character. \ غَيْرُ بالِغ \ immature: not fully formed or developed. \ غَيْرُ بهيج \ dull: (of weather or colour) not clean or bright; cloudy: a dull day; a dull blue. \ غَيْرُ جاهز للعَمَل \ out of training: not in good condition. \ غَيْرُ جَمِيل \ plain: (of people) not good-looking: He was a nice boy, but rather plain and not very clever. \ غَيْرُ جَمِيل \ homely: (of people, faces, etc.) not goodlooking. \ See Also جذاب (جذّاب)‏ \ غَيْرُ حادّ \ dull: (of the senses) not sharp: a dull pain. \ غَيْرُ حَذِر \ unwary: (esp. as a noun with the) careless; not looking out for danger or deceit: ‘Easy’ questions in an exam are often a trap for the unwary (or for unwary people). \ غَيْرُ حقيقي \ unreal: imaginary; not related to facts. \ غَيْرُ دقيق \ rough: not carefully made; not properly finished; not exact: a rough drawing; a rough guess. \ غَيْرُ ذلك \ else: other (together with the first one); besides: Who else came? Did you look anywhere else, or only under the bed?, other (instead of the first one); instead Let’s talk about something else. Peter was ill, so someone else came. If there’s no coffee, what else can I drink?. otherwise: differently: I thought it was true, but they thought otherwise. \ غَيْرُ رَسْمِيّ \ informal: without ceremony or special dress: The prince paid an informal visit to the town. private: not official; not concerning one’s work; concerning one’s home and family: In his private life, the actor is rather quiet, although in the play he is loud and angry. \ غَيْرُ سَارّ \ bad, worse, worst: (of news, weather, etc.) unpleasant. \ غَيْرُ سالِك \ impassable: (of roads) unfit for use; blocked (by snow, mud, etc.). \ غَيْرُ سَكران \ sober: not under the control of alcohol; not drunk: A car driver ought to be sober. \ غَيْرُ سليمة \ broken, break: (of language) incorrectly spoken by a foreigner: broken English. \ غَيْرُ شَرْعِيّ \ illegal: against the law: A crime is an illegal act. illegitimate: (of a child) born to a mother who is not married. \ غَيْرُ شريف \ crooked: dishonest. \ غَيْرُ شَفّاف \ opaque: not allowing light to pass through it: opaque glass. \ غَيْرُ صافٍ \ gross: (of figures or amounts) whole, before subtracting anything; the opposite of net: Your gross pay is the amount before tax is paid. \ غَيْرُ صَالِح للاستعمال \ out of order: not working: I couldn’t ring you up yesterday because our telephone was out of order. \ غَيْرُ صالح للأَكل \ inedible: not fit to eat. \ غَيْرُ صَالِح لِلْعَمَل \ out of action: not working; out of order: This telephone is out of action. \ غَيْرُ صِحّي \ insanitary: so dirty that health is put at risk: an insanitary kitchen. \ غَيْرُ صحيح \ false: wrong; incorrect: a false idea. \ غَيْرُ صَحيح \ unsound: not in good condition, not satisfactory: unsound teeth; an unsound explanation. \ See Also سَليم \ غَيْرُ ضَارّ \ harmless: causing no harm; gentle: A lamb is a harmless creature. Is this insect poison harmless to people?. \ غَيْرُ ضروريّ \ needless: useless; unnecessary (trouble, expense etc.). \ غَيْرُ طاهر \ impure: not pure. \ غَيْرُ طَبيعِيّ \ artificial: adj. (of teeth, light, silk, etc.) not natural; made by man. False: not natural: false teeth. weird: very strange. \ غَيْرُ عَادِيّ \ abnormal: different from what is natural or usual: It is abnormal to have only 3 fingers on one hand. exceptional: unusual: That book is an exeptional one. It was an exceptionally hot summer. peculiar: unusual strange. remarkable: surprising; unusual and worth noticing: a remarkable change; a remarkably goodlooking child. unusual: not usual; strange. \ غَيْرُ عالِم بِـ \ ignorant of: not having heard about (a particular thing): I was ignorant of his plans. \ غَيْرُ عَمَليّ \ theoretical: adj. of theories; not learned from experience; supposed; not proved: I have only a theoretical knowledge of cooking from reading cookery books. \ غَيْرُ فَعّال \ inefficient: not working well; wasting time or power: Old machines are often inefficient. He is an inefficient clerk. \ غَيْرُ قابل للتصديق (غير معقول)‏ \ incredible: too strange to be believed; unbelievable: an incredible story. \ غَيْرُ قادِر \ incapable: not able to do sth.; not having the power or nature to do sth.: flowers are incapable of growing without light. She is incapable of being unkind to people. \ غَيْرُ قادِر على الحركة \ numb: having no feeling: My fingers were numb with cold. \ غَيْرُ قانونيّ \ illegal: against the law: A crime is an illegal act. wrongful: unjust; unlawful: wrongful imprisonment. \ غَيْرُ كافٍ \ insufficient: not enough (in power, ability, etc.): insufficient knowledge; insufficient food. lacking: missing: The bread was enough but the butter was lacking. scanty: (of a supply, of clothing, etc.) very small; not enough: He was too scantily dressed to keep warm. \ غَيْرُ كامِل \ incomplete: not complete; not perfect: This piece of work is incomplete - please finish it. His explanation is incomplete - it doesn’t explain all the facts. \ غَيْرُ كَثِيف \ sparse: thinly scattered: sparse hair; sparse grass. \ غَيْرُ كُفْء \ inefficient: not working well; wasting time or power: Old machines are often inefficient. He is an inefficient clerk. \ غَيْرُ لائق \ beneath sb.’s dignity: unsuitable for sb. to do: It was beneath the teacher’s dignity to sweep the classroom. improper: not proper; unsuitable; not polite: improper behaviour. \ غَيْرُ لَبِق \ awkward: (of manner or movement) showing difficulty; not skilful: He is too awkward on his feet to be a dancer. tactless: showing no understanding or skill in dealing with others: a tactless person; a tactless statement. \ غَيْرُ مُؤَدَّب \ impolite: not polite; rude. \ غَيْرُ مُؤذٍ \ innocent: harmless: innocent amusements. \ غَيْرُ مؤكَّد \ uncertain: not certain; doubtful; undecided; changeable: I’m uncertain what time he’s coming. Our holiday plans are still uncertain, we haven’t decided where to go. The weather is uncertain - it may rain soon. \ غَيْرُ مُؤلم \ painless: causing no pain. \ غَيْرُ مأْلوف \ queer: strange, unusually and not understood: a queer noise. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. \ غَيْرُ مَأْهول \ desert: (of an island) with nobody living on it. wild: (of plants, creatures, land, etc.) in a natural state, not under the control of man. \ غَيْرُ مُبَاشِر \ indirect: not straight or directly joined to; meaning something which is not directly said: an indirect road; the indirect result of an action; an indirect answer. \ غَيْرُ مُبَالٍ \ indifferent: not caring; not interested: He was quite indifferent to his children’s troubles. \ غَيْرُ مَبْتُوت بأمْرِه \ pending: (of a doubtful matter, esp. in court) not yet settled. \ غَيْرُ مُبْهَم \ definite: certain; clear: a definite promise; a definite plan of action. \ غَيْرُ متأكِّد \ in doubt: uncertain: When in doubt, ask your father. \ غَيْرُ مُتَجَانِس \ odd: mixed; different from each other: a boxful of odd tools; two odd shoes (not a pair). \ غَيْرُ مُتَحَرِّك \ stationary: not moving: a stationary vehicle. \ غَيْرُ مُتَحَفِّظ \ outspoken: (of sb. or his speech) saying just what one thinks, although it may annoy some people. \ غَيْرُ مُتَحَمِّس \ cool: unfriendly; They gave us rather a cool welcome. \ غَيْرُ متحمّس لِـ \ half-hearted: not eager; showing little effort or interest: He made a half-hearted attempt at the work. \ غَيْرُ مُتَرَابِط \ scrappy: made of scraps; incomplete; badly arranged: a scrappy meal; a scrappy report. \ غَيْرُ مُتَّصِل \ intermittent: repeatedly stopping and starting; not continuous: intermittent rain. \ غَيْرُ مُتَّصِل بِـ \ irrelevant: not concerned with, not in any way related to the subject: If you are appointing a good teacher, his height is quite irrelevant. \ غَيْرُ مُتَطَرِّف \ moderate: reasonable (in size or amount; in one’s customs or opinions, etc.); neither too big nor too small; neither too much nor too little: moderate prices; moderate political aims. \ غَيْرُ مُتقَن \ rough: not carefully made; not properly finished; not exact: a rough drawing; a rough guess. \ غَيْرُ مُتْقَن (للشيء أو العمل)‏ \ sloppy: (of a person) lacking effort or spirit; weakly lazy; (of a substance) wet and loose: a sloppy piece of work; a sloppy paste. \ غَيْرُ مُتَكَلّف \ homely: simple and friendly; making one feel at home: This little hotel has a homely feeling. \ غَيْرُ مُتَمدِّن (إنسان)‏ \ savage: old use sb. living in an undeveloped society, seen as fierce and wild and likely to attack strangers. \ غَيْرُ مُتَوَازِن \ top-heavy: so heavy at the top that it is likely to fall over: a top heavy load. \ غَيْرُ مُتَوَافر \ out of stock: not in stock. \ غَيْرُ مُتَوَقَّع \ abrupt: (of movement, change, etc.) sudden and unexpected: an abrupt change of plan. unexpected: not expected; surprising that one did not think would happen: an unexpected present; something quite unexpected. \ غَيْرُ مُجْدٍ \ vain: useless; unsuccessful: a vain attempt. ineffective: not able to produce the desired effect: This medicine is quite ineffective. \ غَيْرُ مُحْتَرِف \ amateur: one who works or plays for pleasure, not for money: an amateur actor. \ غَيْرُ مُحْتَمَل \ improbable: not likely to happen: That is an improbable idea. intolerable: (of heat, annoyance, rudeness, etc.) more than one can bear. \ غَيْرُ مُحَدَّد \ indefinite: adj. not clear; not fixed in time: indefinite ideas; at an indefinite date. \ غَيْرُ مَحْدُود \ infinite: endless; not measurable: I have infinite faith in his abilities. This is infinitely better than that. The infinite space of the sky. whole-hearted: full, unlimited, eager and willing: His plan had their whole-hearted support. \ غَيْرُ مُدْرِك \ unaware: not knowing: I was unaware of all the facts. He was unaware of the danger he was in. \ غَيْرُ مَرْئيّ \ invisible: unable to be seen: The sun remained invisible behind the heavy clouds. unseen: not seen; without being seen: The prisoner escaped unseen. \ غَيْرُ مُرَاعٍ لشُعور الآخرين \ thoughtless: careless; not troubling about the future or about other people: a thoughtless waste of money; thoughtless cruelty. \ غَيْرُ مَرْبُوط \ undone: not done finished; no longer fastened: He left half the work undone. Your shoe has came undone. \ غَيْرُ مَرْبُوط \ loose: not tied; not contained in sth.: The sweets were sold loose, not packed in tins. \ See Also مقيد (مُقيَّد)‏ \ غَيْرُ مُرْتاح \ uneasy: anxious, uncomfortable. \ غَيْرُ مُرَتَّب \ dishevelled: (of a person’s appearance, esp. hair) untidy. \ غَيْرُ مُرَكَّز \ watery: like water; containing too much water: watery milk. weak: (of liquids like tea or coffee) lacking taste or strength, because of too much water or milk. \ غَيْرُ مُريح \ inconvenient: causing difficulty; not what suits one: That is an inconvenient time to visit me. uncomfortable: not comfortable: This chair is very uncomfortable. I’m very uncomfortable in it. \ غَيْرُ مَسْؤُول \ irresponsible: doing foolish things without thinking of the probable results; not trustworthy: It was irresponsible of you to give the child a box of matches to play with. \ غَيْرُ مُسْتَحَبّ \ unpleasant: not pleasing or enjoyable; (of people) wanting to quarrel; unkind: What an unpleasant smell! The heat of summer can be very unpleasant. That man was rather unpleasant to me. \ غَيْرُ مُسْتَخْدَم \ obsolete: no longer used; out of date: an obsolete word; an obsolete custom. \ غَيْرُ مُسْتَعْمَل \ archaic: very old; (esp. of words) no longer used. \ غَيْرُ مُسْتَوٍ \ irregular: not regular; uneven: irregular visits; an irregular shape. rugged: rough and rocky: a rugged coast; rugged cliffs. \ غَيْرُ مُسْرَج \ bareback: (in riding horses, etc.) without a proper leather seat: The boys rode bareback. \ غَيْرُ مُسْكِر (للشَّراب)‏ \ soft: (of drinks) not alcoholic. \ غَيْرُ مَشْرُوع \ foul: (in sport) disobeying the rules: Foul play. The whistle was blown for a foul. \ غَيْرُ مشغول \ free: not busy; not in use: If you’re free this evening, let’s go to the cinema. Is this seat free?. \ غَيْرُ مُصابٍ بِأَذى \ intact: not touched; not damaged or broken; complete: The box was broken but the contents were intact. \ غَيْرُ مَصْقول \ rough: not carefully made; not properly finished; not exact: a rough drawing; a rough guess. coarse: (of people and their manners) rough; rude: a coarse fellow; a coarse laugh. \ غَيْرُ مُصَنَّع \ crude: in its natural state: crude oil. \ غَيْرُ مَصْنُوع \ undone: not done finished; no longer fastened: He left half the work undone. Your shoe has come undone. \ See Also منجز (مُنْجَز)‏ \ غَيْرُ مطبوخ \ raw: uncooked: raw meat. \ غَيْرُ مُطْلَق \ relative: comparative: the relative values of gold and iron. \ غَيْرُ مُعَدّ \ rambling: (of speeches, stories, etc.) not planned; wandering aimlessly: He wrote a long rambling letter about his troubles. \ غَيْرُ مُعَشَّق \ out of gear: with the engine separated from the driving wheels. \ غَيْرُ مُعَقَّد \ simple: plain; not fine or grand: We lead a simple life in the country. \ See Also منمق (مُنَمَّق)، متكلف (مُتَكَلَّف)‏ \ غَيْرُ مَعْقُول \ absurd: not at all sensible; foolish: The singer’s absurd clothes made us laugh. \ غَيْرُ مُغَطّى \ naked: not protected by a cover: naked sword; a naked light (whose flame is therefore dangerous). \ غَيْرُ مُفيد \ useless: worthless; fulfilling no purpose; without effect. \ غَيْرُ مَقْرُوء \ illegible: difficult or impossible to read (because the letters or figures cannot be clearly seen). \ غَيْرُ مُقَيَّد \ open: not limited: The next race is open to children of any age. It’s an open race. \ غَيْرُ مُقَيَّد \ wanton: carelessly uncontrolled;with no good reason; wild or playful, with bad resutls: Wanton behaviour causes wanton damage. \ غَيْرُ مُكْتَرِث \ careless: not taking care: Careless drivers cause accidents. indifferent: not caring; not interested: He was quite indifferent to his children’s troubles. \ غَيْرُ مُكْتَرَث بِه \ perfunctory: done with little interest or care: a perfunctory piece of work. \ غَيْرُ مُلائِم \ adverse: unfavourable: an adverse report; adverse winds that delay sailing. improper: not proper; unsuitable; not polite: improper behaviour. inconvenient: causing difficulty; not what suits one: That is an inconvenient time to visit me. \ غَيْرُ مُمطِر \ dry: not wet; with no rain; with no water: a dry cloth; dry weather; a dry river. \ غَيْرُ ممكِن \ impossible: not possible. \ غَيْرُ مُمَيّز \ indiscriminate: not choosing carefully: He invited people indiscriminately to his party. \ غَيْرُ مناسب \ wrong: not correct; mistaken; unsuitable: That’s the wrong answer, and the wrong way to do it. She came in the wrong clothes for riding. \ See Also ملائم (مُلائِم)‏ \ غَيْرُ مُنْطَبِق على \ irrelevant: not concerned with, not in any way related to the subject: If you are appointing a good teacher, his height is quite irrelevant. \ غَيْرُ مُنَظَّم \ random: not planned, not regular: random visits to the city. \ See Also غَيْر مُخَطَّط \ غَيْرُ مَنْظُور \ unseen: not seen; without being seen: The prisoner escaped unseen. \ غَيْرُ مُهْتَمّ به \ perfunctory: done with little interest or care: a perfunctory piece of work. \ غَيْرُ مُهَذَّب \ impolite: not polite; rude. uncouth: lacking good manners; strange in one’s appearance: It is uncouth to push your knife into your mouth when eating. Modern young men don’t condiser it uncouth to wear their hair long. \ غَيْرُ مَوْثوق \ irresponsible: doing foolish things without thinking of the probable results; not trustworthy: It was irresponsible of you to give the child a box of matches to play with. suspect: not trustworthy; possibly the cause of trouble: a rather suspect character. \ غَيْرُ مُوجِع \ painless: causing no pain. \ غَيْرُ موجُود \ lacking: missing: The bread was enough but the butter was lacking. \ غَيْرُ مَوْصُول بالمُحَرِّك \ out of gear: with the engine separated from the driving wheels. \ غَيْرُ ناضج \ immature: not fully formed or developed. \ غَيْرُ نِظاميّ \ irregular: not regular; uneven: irregular visits; an irregular shape. \ غَيْرُ نَقِيّ \ cloudy: (of liquids) not clear. impure: not pure. \ غَيْرُ واثِق \ uncertain: not certain doubtful; undecided; changeable: I’m uncertain what time he’s coming. \ غَيْرُ واثِق من نفْسه \ insecure: feeling afraid and not sure of oneself: He’s a very insecure person, and so he always thinks other people don’t like him. \ غَيْرُ واضِح \ dull: (of the senses) not sharp: a dull pain. vague: not clearly seen or expressed or understood; (of people) having no clear ideas: She made a vague statement. He’s rather vague about his duties. \ غَيْرُ واقعي \ fictitious: imagined; not a fact; not true: a fictitious character in a book. \ غَيْرُ وِدّي \ icy: (of a voice or manner) very cold; very unfriendly. cold: unfriendly: a cold welcome; a cold heart.

    Arabic-English dictionary > غير

  • 9 mislukken

    fail, be unsuccessful go wrong, 〈plan/poging ook〉 fall through, break down onderhandelingen, huwelijk
    voorbeelden:
    1   een mislukte advocaat/genie a failed lawyer/genius
         het feest mislukte the party was a failure/ informeelflopped/bombed
         een mislukte onderneming an unsuccessful business/operation
         een mislukte oogst a crop failure
         het plan mislukte totaal the plan was a total disaster/failure
         mijn taarten mislukken altijd my pies always go wrong
         al mijn vakantiefoto's zijn mislukt none of my holiday snaps came out
         een project doen mislukken wreck a project
         een poging zien mislukken be defeated in an attempt
         tot mislukken gedoemd zijn have the cards/odds stacked against one/something, be doomed to fail(ure)
         zij is mislukt als actrice she was a failure/ informeel flop as an actress

    Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > mislukken

  • 10 Haynes, Elwood

    [br]
    b. 14 October 1857 Portland, Indiana, USA
    d. 13 April 1925 Kokomo, Indiana, USA
    [br]
    American inventor ofStellite cobalt-based alloys, early motor-car manufacturer and pioneer in stainless steels.
    [br]
    From his early years, Haynes was a practising Presbyterian and an active prohibitionist. He graduated in 1881 at Worcester, Massachusetts, and a spell of teaching in his home town was interrupted in 1884–5 while he attended the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. In 1886 he became permanently diverted by the discovery of natural gas in Portland. He was soon appointed Superintendent of the local gas undertaking, and then in 1890 he was hired by the Indiana Natural Gas \& Oil Company. While continuing his gas-company employment until 1901, Haynes conducted numerous metallurgical experiments. He also designed an automobile: this led to the establishment of the Haynes- Apperson Company at Kokomo as one of the earliest motor-car makers in North America. From 1905 the firm traded as the Haynes Automobile Company, and before its bankruptcy in 1924 it produced more than 50,000 cars. After 1905, Haynes found the first "Stellite" alloys of cobalt and chromium, and in 1910 he was publicizing the patented material. He then discovered the valuable hardening effect of tungsten, and in 1912 began applying the "improved" Stellite to cutting tools. Three years later, the Haynes Stellite Company was incorporated, with Haynes as President, to work the patents. It was largely from this source that Haynes became a millionaire in 1920. In April 1912, Haynes's attempt to patent the use of chromium with iron to render the product rustless was unsuccessful. However, he re-applied for a US patent on 12 March 1915 and, although this was initially rejected, he persevered and finally obtained recognition of his modified claim. The American Stainless Steel Company licensed the patents of Brearley and Haynes jointly in the USA until the 1930s.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    John Scott Medal 1919 (awarded for useful inventions).
    Bibliography
    Haynes was the author of more than twenty published papers and articles, among them: 1907, "Materials for automobiles", Proceedings of the American Society of Mechanical
    Engineers 29:1,597–606; 1910, "Alloys of nickel and cobalt with chromium", Journal of Industrial Engineering
    and Chemistry 2:397–401; 1912–13, "Alloys of cobalt with chromium and other metals", Transactions of the American Institute of 'Mining Engineers 44:249–55;
    1919–20, "Stellite and stainless steel", Proceedings of the Engineering Society of West
    Pennsylvania 35:467–74.
    1 April 1919, US patent no. 1,299,404 (stainless steel).
    The four US patents worked by the Haynes Stellite Company were: 17 December 1907, patent no. 873,745.
    1 April 1913, patent no. 1,057,423.
    1 April 1913, patent no. 1,057, 828.
    17 August 1915, patent no. 1,150, 113.
    Further Reading
    R.D.Gray, 1979, Alloys and Automobiles. The Life of Elwood Haynes, Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society (a closely documented biography).
    JKA

    Biographical history of technology > Haynes, Elwood

  • 11 effort

    [ˈefət] noun
    1) hard work; energy:

    The effort of climbing the hill made the old man very tired.

    تَعَب
    2) a trying hard; a struggle:

    Please make every effort to be punctual.

    جُهْد
    3) the result of an attempt:

    Your drawing was a good effort.

    نَتيجَة المُحاوَلَه

    Arabic-English dictionary > effort

  • 12 usiłowa|nie

    sv usiłować n attempt, effort
    - moje usiłowania, by te sprawy uregulować, spełzły na niczym my attempts to regulate the matters were unsuccessful
    - oskarżono go o usiłowanie zabójstwa/gwałtu he was charged with attempted murder/rape

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > usiłowa|nie

  • 13 fallido

    adj.
    1 failed, unsuccessful, faulty.
    2 insolvent.
    m.
    bankrupt.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: fallir.
    * * *
    1 unsuccessful, frustrated
    \
    * * *
    ADJ
    1) [esfuerzo] unsuccessful; [esperanza] disappointed; [deuda] bad, irrecoverable; (Mec, Mil) dud

    un tiro fallido — a missed shot, a shot wide of the mark o target

    2) Caribe (Com) (=quebrado) bankrupt
    * * *
    - da adjetivo
    a) <intento/esfuerzo> failed (before n)
    b) (Com, Fin) < comerciante> bankrupt
    * * *
    = abortive, failed, unsuccessful, bungled.
    Ex. The Consumers' Association had been founded in 1957 following a similar abortive service set up by the British Standards Institution two years previously.
    Ex. The project studies the interaction between users and automated information retrieval systems with the aim of reducing the number of failed searches.
    Ex. Hundreds of unsuccessful children's books are written by practising mothers and only a few are lucky enough to have their work published.
    Ex. He was also blamed for the bungled imposition of a state of emergency in Nyasaland in March 1959.
    ----
    * intento de atraco fallido = failed robbery attempt.
    * intento de robo fallido = failed robbery attempt.
    * intento fallido = failed attempt, bungled attempt.
    * resultar fallido = nothing + come of.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo
    a) <intento/esfuerzo> failed (before n)
    b) (Com, Fin) < comerciante> bankrupt
    * * *
    = abortive, failed, unsuccessful, bungled.

    Ex: The Consumers' Association had been founded in 1957 following a similar abortive service set up by the British Standards Institution two years previously.

    Ex: The project studies the interaction between users and automated information retrieval systems with the aim of reducing the number of failed searches.
    Ex: Hundreds of unsuccessful children's books are written by practising mothers and only a few are lucky enough to have their work published.
    Ex: He was also blamed for the bungled imposition of a state of emergency in Nyasaland in March 1959.
    * intento de atraco fallido = failed robbery attempt.
    * intento de robo fallido = failed robbery attempt.
    * intento fallido = failed attempt, bungled attempt.
    * resultar fallido = nothing + come of.

    * * *
    fallido1 -da
    1 ‹intento/esfuerzo› failed ( before n)
    un tiro fallido a shot that missed, a shot that went over/wide of the target
    2 ( Com, Fin) ‹comerciante› bankrupt
    bad debt
    * * *

    fallido,-a adjetivo unsuccessful, vain
    un intento fallido, a vain attempt
    ' fallido' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    fallida
    English:
    miss
    - bankrupt
    - bungle
    - false
    - unsuccessful
    * * *
    fallido, -a adj
    [esfuerzo, intento] unsuccessful, failed; [esperanza] vain; [disparo] missed
    * * *
    adj
    1 esfuerzo failed, unsuccessful
    2
    :
    * * *
    fallido, -da adj
    : failed, unsuccessful
    * * *
    fallido adj failed

    Spanish-English dictionary > fallido

  • 14 frustrado

    adj.
    1 frustrated, thwarted, attempted, unsuccessful.
    2 frustrated, manqué, unfulfilled, disappointed.
    3 frustrate.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: frustrar.
    * * *
    1 (persona) frustrated
    2 (hechos) frustrated, unsuccessful
    * * *
    (f. - frustrada)
    adj.
    1) frustrated, would-be
    2) failed, unsuccessful
    * * *
    ADJ [persona] frustrated; [intento, plan, atentado] failed
    * * *
    - da adjetivo
    a) < persona> frustrated; <actor/bailarina> frustrated (before n)
    b) <atentado/intento> failed (before n)
    * * *
    = frustrated, in frustration, abortive, bungled, out of frustration.
    Ex. First, Sholom Aleichem I recently spent something like twenty minutes talking over the telephone with a suitably irate and properly frustrated borrower.
    Ex. When a library user comes to the reference desk in frustration and desperation -- perhaps in a rage or in tears, it is often an unforgettable (and sometimes unpleasant) opportunity to test one's problem-solving abilities and diplomatic talents.
    Ex. The Consumers' Association had been founded in 1957 following a similar abortive service set up by the British Standards Institution two years previously.
    Ex. He was also blamed for the bungled imposition of a state of emergency in Nyasaland in March 1959.
    Ex. If either spouse on rare occasions out of frustration or anger slams a door or speaks angry words is it fair to label he or she as an abuser?.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo
    a) < persona> frustrated; <actor/bailarina> frustrated (before n)
    b) <atentado/intento> failed (before n)
    * * *
    = frustrated, in frustration, abortive, bungled, out of frustration.

    Ex: First, Sholom Aleichem I recently spent something like twenty minutes talking over the telephone with a suitably irate and properly frustrated borrower.

    Ex: When a library user comes to the reference desk in frustration and desperation -- perhaps in a rage or in tears, it is often an unforgettable (and sometimes unpleasant) opportunity to test one's problem-solving abilities and diplomatic talents.
    Ex: The Consumers' Association had been founded in 1957 following a similar abortive service set up by the British Standards Institution two years previously.
    Ex: He was also blamed for the bungled imposition of a state of emergency in Nyasaland in March 1959.
    Ex: If either spouse on rare occasions out of frustration or anger slams a door or speaks angry words is it fair to label he or she as an abuser?.

    * * *
    1 ‹persona› frustrated
    sentirse frustrado to feel frustrated
    2 ‹atentado/intento› failed ( before n); ‹actor/bailarina› frustrated ( before n)
    * * *

    Del verbo frustrar: ( conjugate frustrar)

    frustrado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    frustrado    
    frustrar
    frustrado
    ◊ -da adjetivo

    a) persona frustrated;

    actor/bailarina frustrated ( before n)
    b)atentado/intento failed ( before n)

    frustrar ( conjugate frustrar) verbo transitivo persona to frustrate;
    planes to thwart;
    esperanzas to dash;

    frustrarse verbo pronominal [ planes] to be thwarted, fail;

    [ esperanzas] to come to nothing
    frustrado,-a adjetivo
    1 (persona) frustrated
    2 (tentativa, proyecto) unsuccessful
    frustrar verbo transitivo to frustrate
    (una esperanza) to disappoint
    ' frustrado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    frustrada
    English:
    abortive
    - foil
    - frustrated
    - sex-starved
    - unfulfilled
    * * *
    frustrado, -a adj
    1. [persona] frustrated;
    se quedó muy frustrado cuando se enteró del suspenso he was very frustrated when he found out he'd failed
    2. [plan] failed;
    un intento frustrado de mandar una nave tripulada a Marte an unsuccessful attempt to send a manned spacecraft to Mars
    * * *
    frustrado, -da adj
    1) : frustrated
    2) : failed, unsuccessful

    Spanish-English dictionary > frustrado

  • 15 fracasado

    adj.
    1 ruined, dashed, lame-duck, unsuccessful.
    2 washed-up, all through.
    f. & m.
    loser, dud, failure, lame duck.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: fracasar.
    * * *
    1 (fallido) unsuccessful
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 (persona) failure
    * * *
    1. (f. - fracasada)
    noun
    2. (f. - fracasada)
    adj.
    1) unsuccessful, failed
    * * *
    fracasado, -a
    1.
    ADJ failed, unsuccessful
    2.
    SM / F failure
    * * *
    I
    - da adjetivo failed, unsuccessful
    II
    - da masculino, femenino failure
    * * *
    = failed, bungled.
    Ex. The project studies the interaction between users and automated information retrieval systems with the aim of reducing the number of failed searches.
    Ex. He was also blamed for the bungled imposition of a state of emergency in Nyasaland in March 1959.
    ----
    * estudiante fracasado = dropout, high-school dropout, school dropout.
    * * *
    I
    - da adjetivo failed, unsuccessful
    II
    - da masculino, femenino failure
    * * *
    = failed, bungled.

    Ex: The project studies the interaction between users and automated information retrieval systems with the aim of reducing the number of failed searches.

    Ex: He was also blamed for the bungled imposition of a state of emergency in Nyasaland in March 1959.
    * estudiante fracasado = dropout, high-school dropout, school dropout.

    * * *
    fracasado1 -da
    failed, unsuccessful
    fracasado2 -da
    masculine, feminine
    failure
    * * *

    Del verbo fracasar: ( conjugate fracasar)

    fracasado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    fracasado    
    fracasar
    fracasado
    ◊ -da adjetivo

    failed, unsuccessful
    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
    failure
    fracasar ( conjugate fracasar) verbo intransitivo
    to fail
    fracasado,-a
    I adjetivo unsuccessful
    II sustantivo masculino y femenino failure
    fracasar verbo intransitivo to fail

    ' fracasado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    fracasada
    - ahí
    English:
    abortive
    - break down
    - failure
    - unsuccessful
    * * *
    fracasado, -a
    adj
    failed
    nm,f
    failure
    * * *
    I adj unsuccessful
    II m, fracasada f loser
    * * *
    fracasado, -da adj
    : unsuccessful, failed
    fracasado, -da n
    : failure
    * * *
    fracasado1 adj failed / unsuccessful
    fracasado2 n failure

    Spanish-English dictionary > fracasado

  • 16 prób|a

    f 1. (usiłowanie) attempt
    - podjąć próbę zrobienia czegoś to make an attempt to do sth a. at doing sth
    - podjęto wiele prób ratowania pasażerów zatopionego statku repeated attempts were made to save the shipwrecked passengers
    - próba pobicia rekordu świata powiodła się a. udała się his/her attempt to beat the world record was successful
    - przy pierwszej próbie zrzucił poprzeczkę he knocked the crossbar off on his first attempt
    - po trzech/kilku próbach after three/a few attempts a. tries
    - próba samobójcza a suicide attempt, an attempted suicide
    - próba gwałtu/morderstwa an attempted rape/murder
    - próba przejęcia władzy/tronu a bid for power/the throne
    - próba zamachu (na życie) an assassination attempt
    - bezskuteczne próby futile a. vain attempts
    - nieudana próba an unsuccessful a. a failed attempt
    - nieudana próba zamachu stanu an attempted coup d’état
    - nie powiodły się wszelkie próby pojednania all attempts at reconciliation failed
    2. (badanie) test, trial
    - podziemne próby jądrowe underground nuclear tests
    - próba obciążenia/wytrzymałości a load/an endurance test
    - próba nowej maszyny/systemu the trial runs of a new machine/system
    - próba na zgniatania/zmęczenie a crushing/fatigue test
    - próba sił a test of strength
    - poddać nowy system próbom to test a new system
    - przeprowadzać próby to carry out a. conduct trial runs (z czymś on sth)
    - przechodzić próby to undergo tests a. trials
    3. (sprawdzian) trial, test
    - poddać kogoś próbie to put sb to the test
    - zrobić coś na próbę a. tytułem próby to try sth as an experiment
    - weź to na próbę take it on a trial basis
    - przyjęli ją do pracy na próbę they took her on for a trial period
    4. przen. (trudności) trial, test
    - ciężka próba an ordeal
    - przejść przez ciężkie próby to go through an ordeal
    - w godzinie próby ujawnił wielki hart ducha he showed great valour at the critical a. crucial moment
    - ich przyjaźń/moja cierpliwość wystawiona była na ciężką próbę their friendship was put to the test/my patience was sorely tried
    - próba charakteru a test of character
    - próba nerwów/uczuć a test of (sb’s) nerves/love
    5. (wynik wysiłków) attempt, effort
    - jej pierwsze malarskie próby nie zapowiadały wielkiego talentu her first attempts at painting were not very promising
    - ta książka była jego pierwszą próbą pisarską this book was his first literary effort
    6. (niewielka ilość) samle
    - pobrać próbę krwi to take a blood sample a. specimen
    - próba losowa Stat. a random sample
    - badania przeprowadzono na 1000-osobowej próbie losowej Polaków a random sample of 1000 Poles were a. was interviewed
    7. (metalu szlachetnego) purity U (of precious metals); (znak stempla probierczego) hallmark
    - złoto pierwszej próby ≈ 24-carat gold
    - na pierścionku nie było próby there was no hallmark on the ring
    8. Teatr, Muz. rehearsal, practice U
    - próba chóru/orkiestry a choir/an orchestra rehearsal
    - próba czytana a read-through
    - próba generalna a dress rehearsal także przen.
    - próba nowej sztuki a rehearsal of a. for a new play
    - trwają próby nowej sztuki a new play is in rehearsal
    9. Sport trial, trial run
    - próba górska a mountain trial
    - próba przedolimpijska a pre-Olympic trial
    - □ próba ciążowa Med., Wet. pregnancy test
    - próba dźwięku Audio sound check
    - próba głosu Muz., Teatr audition
    - próba lakmusowa Chem. litmus test
    - próba mikrofonowa Radio (studio) rehearsal
    - próba plasterkowa Med. patch test
    - próba skórna Med. skin test
    - próba tuberkulinowa Med. tuberculin test
    - próba wysiłkowa Med. stress test
    dobrej a. wysokiej próby [malarstwo, przekład] of a high order
    - dokonania/artyzm najwyższej próby achievements/artistry of the highest order
    - metoda prób i błędów trial and error (method)
    - metodą prób i błędów by a. through trial and error
    - próba ogniowa a. ognia trial by fire także przen.
    - wytrzymać próbę czasu to stand the test of time

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > prób|a

  • 17 scheitern

    v/i fail (an + Dat because of), come to grief; Pläne: auch come to nothing, be thwarted (an + Dat by); Verhandlungen: fail, break down; SPORT auch be defeated (an + Dat by); Ehe: break down, fail; ein gescheiterter Versuch an unsuccessful ( oder a failed) attempt; er ist ( im Leben) gescheitert he’s one of life’s failures; daran ist er gescheitert that was his undoing; die Regierung ist mit ihren Plänen gescheitert the government got nowhere with its plans, the government’s plans failed; das Projekt scheiterte daran, dass... the project’s failure was due to the fact that..., the project fell apart because...; scheitern lassen (Vertrag) sink
    * * *
    das Scheitern
    breakdown; failure; defeat
    * * *
    Schei|tern ['ʃaitɐn]
    nt -s,
    no pl
    1) (von Menschen, Unternehmen) failure; (von Plan, Vorhaben auch) falling through; (von Verhandlungen, Ehe) breakdown; (von Regierung) foundering; (von Mannschaft) defeat

    das war zum Schéítern verurteilt or verdammt — that was doomed to failure

    etw zum Schéítern bringen — to make sth fail/fall through/break down

    2) (von Schiff) wrecking
    * * *
    1) (to be abandoned: All my plans went by the board when I lost my job.) go by the board
    2) (to fail: The talks have broken down.) break down
    3) (to break down, fail: The talks between the two countries have collapsed.) collapse
    * * *
    Schei·tern
    <-s>
    [ˈʃaitɐn]
    nt kein pl failure
    das \Scheitern der Verhandlungen the breakdown of the talks [or negotiations]
    etw zum \Scheitern bringen to thwart [or frustrate] [or form foil] sth
    zum \Scheitern verurteilt sein to be doomed [to failure]
    * * *
    intransitives Verb; mit sein fail; <talks, marriage> break down; <plan, project> fail, fall through
    * * *
    scheitern v/i fail (
    an +dat because of), come to grief; Pläne: auch come to nothing, be thwarted (
    an +dat by); Verhandlungen: fail, break down; SPORT auch be defeated (
    an +dat by); Ehe: break down, fail;
    ein gescheiterter Versuch an unsuccessful ( oder a failed) attempt;
    er ist (im Leben) gescheitert he’s one of life’s failures;
    daran ist er gescheitert that was his undoing;
    die Regierung ist mit ihren Plänen gescheitert the government got nowhere with its plans, the government’s plans failed;
    das Projekt scheiterte daran, dass … the project’s failure was due to the fact that …, the project fell apart because …;
    * * *
    intransitives Verb; mit sein fail; <talks, marriage> break down; <plan, project> fail, fall through
    * * *
    n.
    stranding n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > scheitern

  • 18 rater

    rater [ʀate]
    ➭ TABLE 1
    1. intransitive verb
    [projet, affaire] to fail
    je t'avais dit qu'il le casserait, ça n'a pas raté (inf) I told you he'd break it and sure enough he did!
    ça ne rate jamais ! it never fails!
    2. transitive verb
       a. ( = manquer) [+ balle, cible, occasion, train, rendez-vous, spectacle, personne] to miss
    raté ! missed!
    si tu croyais m'impressionner, c'est raté if you were trying to impress me, it hasn't worked!
    il n'en rate pas une ! (ironic) he's always doing stupid things
    je ne te raterai pas ! ( = je me vengerai) I'll show you!
       b. ( = ne pas réussir) [+ travail, affaire] to mess up ; [+ mayonnaise, sauce, plat] to make a mess of ; [+ examen] to fail
    * * *
    ʀate
    1.
    1) ( ne pas réussir) to fail, to flunk (colloq) US [examen]

    j'ai raté ma vie/ma photo — my life/my photo is a failure

    elle a raté son coup — (colloq) she has failed

    2) ( ne pas être présent pour) to miss [train, début de film, rendez-vous]
    3) (ne pas atteindre, ne pas voir) to miss [cible, objectif, marche, personne]

    2.
    verbe intransitif [plan, opération] to fail, to flop (colloq)

    ça va tout faire rater — (colloq) it'll spoil everything


    3.
    se rater verbe pronominal
    1) ( soi-même) to bungle one's suicide attempt
    * * *
    ʀate
    1. vi
    1) (= échouer) [affaire, projet] to go wrong, to fail
    2) (= ne pas partir) [coup de feu] to fail to go off
    2. vt
    1) [cible, train, occasion] to miss

    Chantal a raté son train. — Chantal missed her train.

    rater sa cible [bombe, projectile] — to miss its target, [tireur] to miss

    2) [démonstration, plat] to make a mess of

    Elle a raté sa pizza. — She made a mess of her pizza.

    3) [examen] to fail

    J'ai raté mon examen de maths. — I failed my maths exam.

    * * *
    rater verb table: aimer
    A vtr
    1 ( ne pas réussir) to fail, to flunk US [examen]; j'ai raté ma vie/ma carrière my life/my career is a failure; j'ai raté mon gâteau/ma photo my cake/my photo is a failure; je rate toujours les gâteaux my cakes are never a success; rater un saut en hauteur to fail a high-jump; elle a raté son coup she has failed;
    2 ( ne pas être présent pour) to miss [train, début de film, rendez-vous]; rater son train de cinq minutes to miss the train by five minutes;
    3 (ne pas atteindre, ne pas voir) to miss [cible, objectif, marche, personne]; il n'en rate pas une he can be relied upon to put his foot in it;
    4 ( ne pas sanctionner) la prochaine fois je ne le raterai pas next time I won't let him get away with it; elle ne l'a pas raté fig she put him in his place.
    B vi
    1 [plan, opération] to fail, flop; il dit toujours des bêtises, ça ne rate jamais he can be relied upon to say something stupid; ça va tout faire rater it'll spoil everything;
    2 [arme] to misfire.
    C se rater vpr
    1 ( soi-même) to bungle one's suicide attempt;
    2 ( ne pas se voir) nous nous sommes ratés we missed each other.
    [rate] verbe intransitif
    1. (familier) [échouer] to fail
    je t'avais dit qu'elle serait en retard, et ça n'a pas raté! I told you she'd be late, and sure enough she was!
    tais-toi, tu vas tout faire rater! shut up or you'll ruin everything!
    ————————
    [rate] verbe transitif
    1. [but] to miss
    s'il recommence, je te jure que je ne le raterai pas! (familier) if he does it again, I swear I'll get him!
    2. [avion, rendez-vous, visiteur, occasion] to miss
    je n'ai pas vu le concert — tu n'as rien raté/tu as raté quelque chose! I didn't see the concert — you didn't miss anything/you really missed something!
    3. [ne pas réussir]
    ————————
    se rater verbe pronominal
    il s'est coupé les cheveux lui-même, il s'est complètement raté! he cut his hair himself and made a complete mess of it!
    elle est tombée de vélo, elle ne s'est pas ratée! she didn't half hurt herself when she fell off her bike!

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > rater

  • 19 Πέτρος

    Πέτρος, ου, ὁ (ὁ πέτρος=‘stone’ Hom.+; Jos., Bell. 3, 240, Ant. 7, 142.—Π. as a name can scarcely be pre-Christian, as AMerx, D. vier kanon. Ev. II/1, 1902, 160ff, referring to Jos., Ant. 18, 156 [Niese did not accept the v.l. Πέτρος for Πρῶτος], would have it. But s. ADell [πέτρα 1b] esp. 14–17. Fr. the beginning it was prob. thought of as the Gk. equivalent of the Aram. כֵּיפָא= Κηφᾶς: J 1:42; cp. Mt 16:18 and JWackernagel, Syntax II2 1928, 14f, perh. formed on the analogy of the Gk. male proper name Πέτρων: UPZ 149, 8 [III B.C.]; 135 [78 B.C.]; Plut., Mor. 422d.—A gentile named Πέτρος in Damasc., Vi. Isid. 170. S. also the Praeses Arabiae of 278/79 A.D. Aurelius P.: Publ. Princeton Univ. Arch. Expedition to Syria III A, 1913, 4 no. 546) Peter, surname of the head of the circle of Twelve Disciples, whose name was orig. Simon. His father was a certain John (s. Ἰωάννης 4) or Jonah (s. Ἰωνᾶς 2). Acc. to J 1:44 he himself was from Bethsaida, but, at any rate, when he met Jesus he lived in Capernaum (Mk 1:21, 29). Fr. that city he and his brother Andrew made their living as fishers (Mk 1:16). He was married (Mk 1:30; cp. 1 Cor 9:5), but left his home and occupation, when Jesus called, to follow him (Mk 1:18; 10:28). He belonged to the three or four most intimate of the Master’s companions (Mk 5:37; 9:2; 13:3; 14:33). He stands at the head of the lists of the apostles (Mt 10:2; Mk 3:16; Lk 6:14; Ac 1:13). Not all the problems connected w. the conferring of the name Cephas-Peter upon Simon (s. Σίμων 1) have yet been solved (the giving of a new name and the reason for it: Plato [s. ὀνομάζω 1] and Theophrastus [Vi. Platonis 2 ln. 21 in Biog. p. 388 W.= Prolegom. 1 in CHermann, Pla. VI 196 Θεόφραστος, Τύρταμος καλούμενος πάλαι, διὰ τὸ θεῖον τῆς φράσεως Θ. μετεκλήθη]; CRoth, Simon-Peter HTR 54, ’61, 91–97). He was at least not always a model of rock-like (πέτρος is a symbol of imperturbability Soph., Oed. Rex 334; Eur., Med. 28 al.) firmness (note Gethsemane, the denial, the unsuccessful attempt at walking on water; his conduct at Antioch Gal 2:11ff which, though, is fr. time to time referred to another Cephas; s. KLake, HTR 14, 1921, 95ff; AVöllmecke, Jahrbuch d. Missionshauses St. Gabriel 2, 1925, 69–104; 3, 1926, 31–75; DRiddle, JBL 59, ’40, 169–80; NHuffman, ibid. 64, ’45, 205f; PGaechter, ZKT 72, ’50, 177–212; but s. HBetz, Gal [Hermeneia] p. 105f w. n. 442). Despite all this he was the leader of Jesus’ disciples, was spokesman for the Twelve (e.g. Mt 18:21; 19:27; Mk 8:27ff; Lk 12:41; 18:28) and for the three who were closest to Jesus (Mk 9:5); he was recognized as leader even by those on the outside (Mt 17:24). He is especially prominent in the pronouncement made Mt 16:18. Only in the Fourth Gospel does Peter have a place less prominent than another, in this case the ‘disciple whom Jesus loved’ (s. Hdb. exc. on J 13:23). In connection w. the miraculous events after Jesus’ death (on this ELohmeyer, Galiläa u. Jerusalem ’36; WMichaelis, D. Erscheinungen d. Auferstanden-en ’44; MWerner, D. ntl. Berichte üb. d. Erscheinungen d. Auferstandenen: Schweiz. Theol. Umschau ’44) Pt. played a unique role: 1 Cor 15:5; Lk 24:34; Mk 16:7. He was one of the pillars of the early church (Gal 2:9 [Κηφᾶς]). Three years after Paul was converted, on his first journey to Jerusalem as a Christian, he established a significant contact w. Peter: Gal 1:18. At least until the time described in Gal 2:1–10 (cp. Ac 15:7) he was prob. the head of the early Christian community/church. He was also active as a missionary to Israel Gal 2:8; cp. 1 Cor 9:5 (Κηφᾶς).—MGoguel, L’apôtre Pierre a-t-il joué un role personnel dans les crises de Grèce et de Galatie?: RHPR 14, ’34, 461–500.—In 1 Pt 1:1 and 2 Pt 1:1 he appears as author of an epistle. On Paul’s journey to Rome: Ἀρτέμων ὁ κυβερνήτης τοῦ πλοίου ἦν λελουμένος ὑπὸ Πέτρου Artemon, the ship’s captain, was baptized by Peter AcPl Ha 7, 20. It is probable that he died at Rome under Nero, about 64 A.D..—In the NT he is somet. called Σίμων (q.v. 1; in Ac 15:14 and 2 Pt 1:1 more exactly Συμεών=שִׁמְעוֹן); except for Gal 2:7f Paul always calls him Κηφᾶς (q.v.). Both names Σίμων Π. Mt 16:16; Lk 5:8; J 1:40; 6:8, 68; 13:6, 9, 24, 36; 18:10, 15, 25; 20:2, 6; 21:2f, 7b, 11, 15. Σίμων ὁ λεγόμενος Π. Mt 4:18; 10:2. Σίμων ὁ ἐπικαλούμενος Π. Ac 10:18; 11:13. Σίμων ὸ̔ς ἐπικαλεῖται Π. 10:5, 32.—Outside the NT it is found in our lit. GEb 34, 59; GPt 14:60 (Σίμων Πέτρος); ApcPt Rainer; GMary 463 (2 times); AcPt Ox 849 (4 times); 1 Cl 5:4 (Paul follows in 5:5); 2 Cl 5:3f (a piece fr. an apocr. gosp.); IRo 4:3 (Πέτρος καὶ Παῦλος); ISm 3:2=GHb 356, 39; Papias (2:4, w. other disciples; 15, w. Mark as his ἑρμηνευτής).—Zahn, Einl. II §38–44; KErbes, Petrus nicht in Rom, sondern in Jerusalem gestorben: ZKG 22, 1901, 1ff; 161ff (against him AKneller, ZKT 26, 1902, 33ff; 225ff; 351ff); PSchmiedel, War der Ap. Petrus in Rom?: PM 13, 1909, 59–81; HLietzmann, Petrus u. Pls in Rom2 1927; GEsser, Der hl. Ap. Petrus 1902; CGuignebert, La primauté de St. Pierre et la venue de Pierre à Rome 1909; FFoakes-Jackson, Peter, Prince of Apostles 1927; HDannenbauer, D. röm. Pt-Legende: Hist. Ztschr. 146, ’32, 239–62; 159, ’38, 81–88; KHeussi, War Pt. in Rom? ’36, War Pt. wirklich röm. Märtyrer? ’37, Neues z. Pt.-frage ’39, TLZ 77, ’52, 67–72; HLietzmann, Pt. röm. Märt.: SBBerlAk ’36, XXIX; DRobinson, JBL 64, ’45, 255–67; HSchmutz, Pt. war dennoch in Rom: Benedikt. Monatsschr. 22, ’46, 128–41.—On Mt 16:17–19 s., in addition to the lit. on κλείς 1 and πέτρα 1b: JSchnitzer, Hat Jesus das Papsttum gestiftet? 1910, Das Papsttum eine Stiftung Jesu? 1910; FTillmann, Jesus u. das Papsttum 1910; AKneller, ZKT 44, 1920, 147–69; OLinton, D. Problem der Urkirche ’32, 157–83; KPieper, Jes. u. d. Kirche ’32; AEhrhard, Urkirche u. Frühkatholizismus I 1, ’36.—JMunck, Pt. u. Pls in der Offenb. Joh. ’50 (Rv 11:3–13).—OCullmann, Petrus2, ’60 (Eng. tr. Peter, FFilson2, ’62), L’apôtre Pierre: NT Essays (TManson memorial vol.), ’59, 94–105; OKarrer, Peter and the Church: an examination of the Cullmann thesis, ’63; RO’Callaghan, Vatican Excavations and the Tomb of Peter: BA 16, ’53, 70–87; AvGerkan, D. Forschung nach dem Grab Petri, ZNW 44, ’52/53, 196–205, Zu den Problemen des Petrusgrabes: JAC ’58, 79–93; GSnyder, BA 32, ’69, 2–24; JGwynGriffiths, Hibbert Journal 55, ’56/57, 140–49; TBarnes, JTS 21, ’70, 175–79; GSchulze-Kadelbach, D. Stellung des P. in der Urchristenheit: TLZ 81, ’56, 1–18 (lit.); PGaechter, Petrus u. seine Zeit, ’58; EKirschbaum, The Tombs of St. Peter and St. Paul (transl. JMurray) ’59; EHaenchen, Petrus-Probleme, NTS 7, ’60/61, 187–97; SAgourides, Πέτρος καὶ Ἰωάννης ἐν τῷ τετάρτῳ Εὐαγγελίῳ, Thessalonike, ’66; DGewalt, Petrus, diss. Hdlbg, ’66; RBrown, KDonfried, JReumann edd., Peter in the NT, ’73; CCaragounis, Peter and the Rock (BZNW 58) ’89.—Pauly-W. XIX ’38, 1335–61; Kl. Pauly IV 674–76; BHHW III 1430f. LGPN I. M-M. EDNT. TW. Sv.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > Πέτρος

  • 20 Bright, Sir Charles Tilston

    SUBJECT AREA: Telecommunications
    [br]
    b. 8 June 1832 Wanstead, Essex, England
    d. 3 May 1888 Abbey Wood, London, England
    [br]
    English telegraph engineer responsible for laying the first transatlantic cable.
    [br]
    At the age of 15 years Bright left the London Merchant Taylors' School to join the two-year-old Electric Telegraph Company. By 1851 he was in charge of the Birmingham telegraph station. After a short time as Assistant Engineer with the newly formed British Telegraph Company, he joined his brother (who was Manager) as Engineer-in-Chief of the English and Irish Magnetic Telegraph Company in Liverpool, for which he laid thousands of miles of underground cable and developed a number of innovations in telegraphy including a resistance box for locating cable faults and a two-tone bell system for signalling. In 1853 he was responsible for the first successful underwater cable between Scotland and Ireland. Three years later, with the American financier Cyrus Field and John Brett, he founded and was Engineer-in-chief of the Atlantic Telegraph Company, which aimed at laying a cable between Ireland and Newfoundland. After several unsuccessful attempts this was finally completed on 5 August 1858, Bright was knighted a month later, but the cable then failed! In 1860 Bright resigned from the Magnetic Telegraph Company to set up an independent consultancy with another engineer, Joseph Latimer Clark, with whom he invented an improved bituminous cable insulation. Two years later he supervised construction of a telegraph cable to India, and in 1865 a further attempt to lay an Atlantic cable using Brunel's new ship, the Great Eastern. This cable broke during laying, but in 1866 a new cable was at last successfully laid and the 1865 cable recovered and repaired. The year 1878 saw extension of the Atlantic cable system to the West Indies and the invention with his brother of a system of neighbourhood fire alarms and even an automatic fire alarm.
    In 1861 Bright presented a paper to the British Association for the Advancement of Science on the need for electrical standards, leading to the creation of an organization that still exists in the 1990s. From 1865 until 1868 he was Liberal MP for Greenwich, and he later assisted with preparations for the 1881 Paris Exhibition.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1858. Légion d'honneur. First President, Société Internationale des Electriciens. President, Society of Telegraph Engineers \& Electricians (later the Institution of Electrical Engineers) 1887.
    Bibliography
    1852, British patent (resistance box).
    1855, British patent no. 2,103 (two-tone bell system). 1878, British patent no. 3,801 (area fire alarms).
    1878, British patent no. 596 (automatic fire alarm).
    "The physical \& electrical effects of pressure \& temperature on submarine cable cores", Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers XVII (describes some of his investigations of cable characteristics).
    Further Reading
    C.Bright, 1898, Submarine Cables, Their History, Construction \& Working.
    —1910, The Life Story of Sir Charles Tilston Bright, London: Constable \& Co.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Bright, Sir Charles Tilston

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