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the gable of a house

  • 1 BURST

    f.
    1) bristle, bristles; draga burst ór nefi em, to draw a bristle out of one’s nose, to cheat one;
    * * *
    f.
    I. [A. S. byrst, Germ. borste; Swed. bösta], a bristle, Hb. (1865) 22; but also of a hog’s back and bristles, Edda 70; cp. Gullin-bursti, Gold-bristle, the mythical hog of the god Frey; Fas. i. 532 (of the sónargöltr, the sacred hog); Fms. v. 165: the phrase, draga bust ór nefi e-m, to draw a bristle out of one’s nose, to cheat, gull one, Ölk. 36, does not occur anywhere else that we know of; the Engl. say, ‘to lead one by the nose,’ in much the same sense.
    II. metaph. the gable of a house (hús-burst), Hkr. iii. 14 (of a shrine), Mar. 106, Konr. 57; og gogginn á bustinni brýnir (of a raven sitting on the top of a house and whetting his bill), Sig. Breiðfjörð.
    COMPDS: burstakollr, burstarhár.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > BURST

  • 2 furca

    furca, ae, f. [Sanscr. bhur-ig, shears; cf. Lat. forceps, forfex; also Gr. pharos, plough; Lat. forāre;

    Engl. bore,

    Curt. Gr. Etym. p. 299; but Corss. refers furca to root dhar-,=fero, as a prop. support; v. Ausspr. 1, 149], a two-pronged fork.
    I.
    Lit.:

    exacuunt alii vallos furcasque bicornes,

    Verg. G. 1, 264:

    valentes,

    id. ib. 2, 359:

    furcis detrudi,

    Liv. 28, 3, 7; cf. Caes. B. C. 2, 11, 2. —Prov.: naturam expellas furcā, tamen usque recurret, with might and main, Hor. Ep. 1, 10, 24 (v. furcilla).—
    II.
    Transf., of things shaped like a fork.
    A.
    A forkshaped prop, pole, or stake, for carrying burdens on the back or shoulder, Plaut. Cas. 2, 8, 2;

    for supporting the seats of a theatre,

    Liv. 1, 35, 9;

    for a vine,

    Plin. 14, 2, 4, § 32;

    for fishing-nets,

    id. 9, 8, 9, § 31;

    for the gable of a house,

    Ov. M. 8, 700; a frame on which meat was suspended in the chimney, id. ib. 8, 648.—
    B.
    An instrument of punishment in the form of a fork (V or II), which was placed on the culprit's neck, while his hands were fastened to the two ends, a yoke (cf.: crux, gabalus, patibulum; hence, furcifer): To. Satis sumpsimus jam supplici. Do. Fateor, manus vobis do. To. Post dabis sub furcis, Plaut. Pers. 5, 2, 71:

    canem et furcam ferre,

    id. Cas. 2, 6, 37:

    servus per circum, cum virgis caederetur, furcam ferens ductus est,

    Cic. Div. 1, 26, 55:

    servus sub furca caesus,

    Liv. 2, 36, 1 Drak.; Val. Max. 1, 7, 4; Lact. 2, 7, 20:

    sub furca vinctus inter verbera et cruciatus,

    Liv. 1, 26, 10:

    cervicem inserere furcae,

    Suet. Ner. 49; Eutr. 7, 5; Prud. steph. 10, 851.—Hence poet. to designate the worst condition of slavery:

    ibis sub furcam prudens,

    Hor. S. 2, 7, 66.—
    C.
    A fork-shaped gallows:

    aliquem furcā figere,

    Dig. 48, 19, 28 fin.:

    furcae subicere,

    ib. 9:

    in furcam tollere,

    ib. 38:

    in furcam suspendere,

    ib. 13, 6:

    in furcam damnare,

    ib. 49, 16, 3:

    canes vivi in furca, sambucea arbore fixi,

    Plin. 29. 4, 14, § 57.—
    D.
    A fork-shaped yoke in which young bullocks were put to be tamed, Varr. R. R. 1, 20, 2.—
    E.
    Furcae cancrorum, the claws of a crab, App. Mag. p. 297. —
    F.
    Furcae Caudinae, the narrow pass of Caudium, the Caudine Forks, usually called Furculae Caudinae (v. furcula, II. and Caudium), Val. Max. 5, 1, 5 ext.; 7, 2, 17 ext.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > furca

  • 3 tetto

    "roof;
    Dach;
    teto"
    * * *
    m roof
    * * *
    tetto s.m.
    1 roof: tetto a capanna, a due falde, saddle roof; tetto apribile, (spec. di automobile) sunroof; tetto ad abbaino, mansard roof; tetto a due falde su timpano, gable roof; tetto a una falda, lean-to roof; tetto a gradinata, stepped roof; tetto a guglia, spire roof; tetto a lucernario, lantern roof; tetto a padiglione, hip roof; tetto terrazza, platform (o flat) roof; tetto d'ardesia, di tegole, di paglia, slated, tiled, thatched roof; il tetto di una casa, the roof of a house // (aut.) tetto scorrevole, sliding roof // sotto il proprio tetto, under one's roof; dormire sotto lo stesso tetto, to sleep under the same roof // il tetto del mondo, ( l'Everest) the roof of the world
    2 ( casa) home, house: non ha un tetto, he is homeless (o he hasn't got a roof over his head) // il tetto paterno, the paternal home // (dir.) abbandono del tetto coniugale, desertion
    3 (econ.) ( livello massimo) ceiling: tetto di spesa, expenditure ceiling; tetto salariale, wage ceiling; il tetto programmato dell'inflazione, the planned inflation ceiling; sfondare il tetto del disavanzo pubblico, to break (o to go) through the upper limit of the state deficit; aumentare il tetto delle pensioni, to raise the pension ceiling (o upper limit)
    4 (geol., miner.) (di faglia, filone) hangingwall.
    * * *
    ['tetto]
    sostantivo maschile
    1) (di casa, auto) roof

    tetto spioventepitched o sloping roof

    2) fig. (casa)
    3) fig. (limite) ceiling

    tetto massimo — cut-off, upper limit

    il tetto del mondoalp. the roof of the world

    tetto a due spioventigable o ridge roof

    tetto a terrazzaterrace o flat roof

    * * *
    tetto
    /'tetto/
    sostantivo m.
     1 (di casa, auto) roof; copertura del tetto roofing; tetto spiovente pitched o sloping roof
     2 fig. (casa) vivere sotto lo stesso tetto to live under one o the same roof; senza tetto homeless
     3 fig. (limite) ceiling; tetto massimo cut-off, upper limit
    tetto coniugale matrimonial home; abbandono del tetto coniugale desertion; tetto a mansarda mansard (roof); il tetto del mondo alp. the roof of the world; tetto di paglia thatched roof; tetto a punta pointed roof; tetto a due spioventi gable o ridge roof; tetto a terrazza terrace o flat roof.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > tetto

  • 4 fastigium

    fastīgĭum, ii, n. [cf. Sanscr. bhrshtīs, corner, rim; Gr. a-phlaston, aplustria, the ornamented stern of a ship; O. H. Germ. brort, the prow], the top of a gable, a gable end, pediment (syn.: cacumen, culmen, vertex, apex).
    I.
    Prop.:

    Capitolii fastigium illud et ceterarum aedium non venustas, sed necessitas ipsa fabricata est... utilitatem templi fastigii dignitas consecuta est,

    Cic. de Or. 3, 46, 180; cf.:

    fastigia aliquot templorum a culminibus abrupta,

    Liv. 40, 2, 3:

    evado ad summi fastigia culminis,

    Verg. A. 2, 458; Cic. Q. Fr. 3, 1, 4, § 14.—Hence, meton., the roof of a house, Verg. A. 8, 491; 9, 568; Val. Fl. 2, 235:

    habere pulvinar, simulacrum, fastigium, flaminem,

    id. Phil. 2, 43, 110; cf.

    of the same: omnes unum in principem congesti honores: circa templa imagines... suggestus in curia, fastigium in domo, mensis in caelo,

    Flor. 4, 2 fin.:

    Romae signa eorum sunt in Palatina aede Apollinis in fastigio,

    Plin. 36, 5, 4, § 13; cf. id. 35, 12, 43, § 152; Vitr. 3, 2.— Transf.:

    operi tamquam fastigium imponere,

    Cic. Off. 3, 7, 33.—
    B.
    Transf.
    1.
    The extreme part, extremity of a thing, whether above or below.
    a.
    Top, height, summit:

    colles... pari altitudinis fastigio oppidum cingebant,

    Caes. B. G. 7, 69, 4:

    opus nondum aquae fastigium aequabat,

    Curt. 4, 2, 19:

    summi operis,

    id. 4, 2, 8:

    jamque agger aequaverat summae fastigia terrae,

    id. 8, 10, 31:

    aquatilium ova rotunda, reliqua fere fastigio acuminata,

    Plin. 10, 52, 74, § 145:

    gracilitas (arundinis) nodis distincta leni fastigio tenuatur in cacumina,

    id. 16, 36, 64, § 158; cf.:

    cornua in leve fastigium exacuta,

    id. 11, 37, 45, § 124; 16, 33, 60, § 141; Vulg. 2 Reg. 18, 24.—In plur., Lucr. 4, 827:

    muri,

    Val. Fl. 2, 553:

    fontis fastigium,

    i. e. the height on which the fountain sprang up, Hirt. B. G. 8, 41, 5.—
    b.
    The lower part, depth: forsitan et scrobibus quae sint fastigia, quaeres, [p. 728] what should be the depth of the trenches, Verg. G. 2, 288.—
    2.
    (From the sloping form of the gable.) A slope, declivity, descent:

    ab oppido declivis locus tenui fastigio vergebat,

    Caes. B. C. 1, 45, 5:

    jugum paulo leniore fastigio,

    id. ib. 2, 24, 3:

    iniquum loci ad declivitatem fastigium,

    id. B. G. 7, 85, 4:

    rupes leniore submissa fastigio,

    Curt. 6, 6, 11:

    capreoli molli fastigio,

    Caes. B. C. 2, 10, 3; 2, 24, 3:

    musculi,

    id. ib. 2, 11, 1:

    scrobes paulatim angustiore ad infimum fastigio,

    i. e. gradually narrowing from top to bottom, id. B. G. 7, 73, 5; cf.:

    si (fossa) fastigium habet, ut (aqua) exeat e fundo,

    Varr. R. R. 1, 14, 2.—
    3.
    In the later grammarians, an accent placed over a word, Mart. Cap. 3, § 264; § 268 al.; Diom. p. 428 P.
    II.
    Trop.
    A.
    The highest part, summit, the highest degree, most exalted rank or dignity (perh. only since the Aug. per.):

    quicquid numinum hanc Romani imperii molem in amplissimum terrarum orbis fastigium extulit,

    Vell. 2, 131, 1; cf.:

    sic fit, ut dei summum inter homines fastigium servent,

    Plin. Pan. 52, 2:

    et quoad usque ad memoriam nostram tribuniciis consularibusque certatum viribus est, dictaturae semper altius fastigium fuit,

    Liv. 6, 38 fin.; cf.:

    in consulare fastigium vehi,

    Vell. 2, 69, 1:

    ad regium fastigium evehere aliquem,

    Val. Max. 1, 6, 1:

    alii cives ejusdem fastigii,

    Liv. 3, 35, 9:

    stare in fastigio eloquentiae,

    Quint. 12, 1, 20:

    rhetoricen in tam sublime fastigium sine arte venisse,

    id. 2, 17, 3:

    et poësis ab Homero et Vergilio tantum fastigium accepit, et eloquentia a Demosthene,

    id. 12, 11, 26; cf.:

    magice in tantum fastigii adolevit, ut, etc.,

    grew into such esteem, Plin. 30, 1, 1, § 2.—
    2.
    In gen., dignity, rank, condition:

    (M. Laetorio) curatio altior fastigio suo data est,

    Liv. 2, 27, 6; cf.:

    ampliora etiam humano fastigio decerni sibi passus est,

    Suet. Caes. 76:

    tamquam mortale fastigium egressus,

    Tac. A. 15, 74:

    animus super humanum fastigium elatus,

    Curt. 9, 10 med.:

    quales ex humili magna ad fastigia rerum extollit Fortuna,

    Juv. 3, 39.—
    B.
    A leading or chief point, head in a discourse; a principal sort or kind (rare):

    summa sequar fastigia rerum,

    Verg. A. 1, 342:

    e quibus tribus fastigiis (agrorum) simplicibus,

    sorts, kinds, Varr. R. R. 1, 6, 2:

    propter haec tria fastigia formae discrimina quaedam fiunt sationum,

    id. ib. 1, 5:

    haec atque hujuscemodi tria fastigia agri, etc.,

    id. ib. 1, 6, 6; cf.

    also: quo fastigio sit fundus,

    id. ib. 1, 20 fin. (and v. Lachm. ad Lucr. p. 223):

    laudem relego fastigia summa,

    Prisc. Laud. Anast. 148.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > fastigium

  • 5 BÆR

    * * *
    bœr, or býr, gen. baejar or býjar; gen. biar also occurs, esp. in Norse MSS. of the 14th century, Fb., but is rare and unclassical; pl. -ir, gen. -ja, dat. -jum. In Icel. people say bær; in Norway in Swed. and Dan. (always with y) by; the root word being búa, bú: this word is very freq. in local names of towns and villages throughout the whole of Scandinavia; and wherever the Scandinavian tribes settled the name by or went along with them. In the map of Northern England the use of this word marks out the limits and extent of the Norse immigration, e. g. the name Kirkby or Kirby; about twenty or thirty such are found in English maps of the Northern and Midland Counties, denoting churches built by the Norse or Danish settlers, as Whitby, Grimsby, etc., cp. Kirkjubær in Icel. In Denmark and Sweden local names ending in -by are almost numberless.
    I. a town, village, this is the Norse, Swed., and Dan. notion; þeir brenna býi at köldum kolum, Fms. xi. 122; til bæjarins (of Niðarós), vii. 30; of Bergen, viii. 360, 438; Tunsberg, ix. 361; of the town residence of the earl of Orkney, Nj. 267: allit., borgir ok bæi, castles and towns, Ann. 1349, etc. etc.; baejar-biskup, a town-bishop, Fms. vii. 32; bæjar-prestr, a town-priest, D. N.; bæjar-lögmaðr, a town-justice, id.; bæjar-lýðr, bæjar-lið, bæjar-menn, town’s-people, Fms. viii. 38, 160, 210, Eg. 240, Bs. i. 78; baejar-brenna, the burning of a town, Fms. x. 30; bæjar-bygð, a town-district, viii. 247; bæjar-gjald, a town-rate, N. G. L. i. 328; bæjar-sýsla, a town-office, Fms. vi. 109; bæjar-starf, id., Hkr. iii. 441; bæjar-seta, dwelling in town, Ld. 73, Ísl. ii. 392.
    II. a farm, landed estate, this is the Icel. notion, as that country has no towns; bær in Icel. answers to the Germ. ‘hof,’ Norweg. ‘ból,’ Dan. ‘gaard,’ denoting a farm, or farmyard and buildings, or both together; hence the phrase, reisa, göra, setja bæ, efna til bæjar, to build the farmstead, Eb. 10, 26, 254, Ld. 96, 98, Fs. 26, Landn. 126, 127, Eg. 131, Gísl. 8, 28, Bs. i. 26, Þorst. hv. 35; byggja bæ, Bs. i. 60; the phrase, bær heitir…, a farm is called so and so, Ísl. ii. 322, 323, 325, Ann. 1300, Hrafn. 22, Dropl. 5; the allit. phrase, búa á bæ…, Þorst. hv. 37; the passages are numberless, and ‘bær’ has almost become synonymous with ‘house and home;’ and as it specially means ‘the farm-buildings,’ Icel. also say innan-bæjar, in-doors; utan-bæjar, out-of-doors; í bæ, within doors; milii baejar ok stöðuls, K. Þ. K. 78; milli bæja; bæ frá bæ, from house to house; á bæ og af bæ, at home and abroad: things belonging to a bær, bæjar-dyr, the doors of the houses, the chief entrance; bæjar-hurð ( janua); bæjar-veggr, the wall of the houses; bæjar-bust, the gable of the houses; bæjar-lækr, the home-spring, well; bæjar-hlað, the premises; bæjar-stétt, the pavement in the front of the houses; bæjar-leið, a furlong, a short distance as between two ‘bæir;’ bæjar-sund, passage between the houses; bæjar-hús, the home-stead, opp. to fjár-hús, etc., where cattle is kept, or barns and the like; fram-bær, the front part of the houses; torf-bær, timbr-bær, a ‘bær’ built of turf or timber: phrases denoting the ‘bær’ as hearth and home, hér sú Guð í bæ, God be in this house, a form of greeting, cp. Luke x. 5; bæjar-bragr, the customs or life in a house; nema börn hvað á bæ er títt (a proverb).

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > BÆR

  • 6 dach

    m (G dachu) 1. (budynku, pojazdu) roof
    - dach blaszany a. z blachy a tin roof
    - dach słomiany a. ze słomy a thatched roof
    - pokój pod dachem an attic room
    - samochód z otwieranym dachem a convertible (car)
    - wejść na dach to get a. go onto the roof
    - spaść z dachu to fall off a roof
    - dach przecieka the roof’s leaking
    - dzieci bawiły się pod dachem the children were playing indoors
    - w ciągu paru miesięcy budynek stanął pod dachem in the course of a couple of months, the building was roofed over
    2. sgt przen. (sklepienie) roof, canopy
    - siedzieliśmy pod dachem z gałęzi drzew we were sitting under a canopy of trees
    - dach świata the roof of the world
    3. przen. (dom) roof
    - mieć dach nad głową to have a roof over one’s head
    - nie mieć dachu nad głową to have no roof over one’s head, to be homeless
    - stracić dach nad głową to be without a roof over one’s head, to lose one’s home
    - mieszkać pod jednym a. wspólnym dachem to live under one a. the same roof
    - przybyć pod czyjś dach to arrive at sb’s place
    - pierwsze tygodnie za granicą spędził pod dachem przyjaciela he spent his first weeks abroad at a friend’s place
    - □ dach czterospadowy Budow. hip(ped) roof
    - dach dwuspadowy Budow. gable roof
    - dach mansardowy Archit. mansard (roof) GB, gambrel (roof) US
    - dach naczółkowy Budow. hipped-gable roof, jerkin head roof
    - dach jednospadowy Budow. pent roof
    - dach siodłowy Budow. saddle roof, saddleback (roof)
    * * *
    -u; -y; m
    * * *
    mi
    bud., mot. roof; dach dwuspadowy gable l. saddle roof; dach świata przen. (= Tybet, Himalaje l. Mount Everest) roof of the world; (mieć) dach nad głową (have) a roof over one's head; nie mieć dachu nad głową have no roof over one's head, be homeless; (dom) z czerwonym/zielonym dachem red/green-roofed (house); aż po dach all the way up (to the roof); mieszkać pod jednym dachem live under one roof; wróble na dachu o tym ćwierkają przen. it's an open secret; a little bird told me; I heard it through the grapevine.

    The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > dach

  • 7 крыша

    Русско-английский словарь по общей лексике > крыша

  • 8 संधिः _sandhiḥ

    संधिः 1 Union, junction, combination, connection; संधये सरला सूची वक्रा छेदाय कर्तरी Subhāṣ.; Me.6.
    -2 A compact, an agreement.
    -3 Alliance, league, friend- ship, peace, treaty of peace (one of the six expedients to be used in foreign politics); कति प्रकाराः संधीनां भवन्ति H.4; (the several kinds are described in H.4.16- 125); शत्रुणा न हि संदध्यात् सुश्लिष्टेनापि संधिना H.1.85.
    -4 A joint, articulation (of the body); तुरगानुधावनकाण्डितसंधेः Ś.2.
    -5 A fold (of a garment).
    -6 A breach, hole, chasm.
    -7 Especially a mine, chasm or opening made by thieves in a wall or underneath a building; संधिं छित्त्वा तु ये चौर्यं रात्रौ कुर्वन्ति तस्कराः Ms.9.276; वृक्षवाटिका- परिसरे संधिं कृत्वा प्रविष्टो$स्मि मध्यमकम् Mk.3.
    -8 Separation, division.
    -9 Euphony, euphonic junction or coalition (in gram.)
    -1 An interval, a pause.
    -11 A critical juncture.
    -12 An opportune moment.
    -13 A period at the expiration of each Yuga or age; त्रेताद्वापरयोः संधौ Mb.1.2.3.
    -14 A division or joint (in a drama); (they are five; see S. D.33-332); तौ संधिषु व्यञ्जितवृत्तिभेदम् Ku.7.91.
    -15 The vulva.
    -16 Distillation.
    -17 Land etc. donated for the worship of temple deities etc. (cf. Dr. Raghavan's note on वृत्तिसंन्धिप्रतिपादकः Cholachampū p.1 "संधिः देवपूजार्थमतिसृष्टं तादृशं भूम्यादिकं संधिपदस्य द्रविडदेवालयशिलाशासनेषु तादृशे$र्थे व्यवहारदर्शनात् ।").
    -18 Contrivance, management; तस्य सावरणदृष्टसंधयः काम्यवस्तुषु नवेषु संगिनः R.19.16.
    -19 Twilight.
    -2 A seam.
    -21 The connecting link of a perpendicular (in mensuration).
    -22 The common side of double triangle.
    -Comp. -अक्षरम् a diphthong.
    -काष्ठम् the wood below the top of a gable.
    -गृहः a bee-hive.
    -चोरः a housebreaker, a thief who breaks into a house.
    -छेदः making holes or breaches (in a wall &c.); as in संधिच्छेदशिक्षकः M.4.
    -छेदनम् burglary.
    -जम् spirituous liquor.
    -जीवकः one who lives by dishonest means (particularly as a go-between),
    -दूषणम् violation of a treaty; अरिषु हि विजयार्थिनः क्षितीशा विदधति सोपधि संधिदूषणानि Ki.1.45.
    -नालः, -लम् Unguis Odoratus (नख, क्षुर).
    -पालत्वम् maintenance of treaties.
    -प्रबन्धनम् the ligament of a joint.
    -बन्ध 1 the tissues of joints; Ś.2.
    -2 the cement or lime.
    -बन्धनम् a ligament tendon, nerve.
    -भङ्गः, -मुक्तिः f. dislocation of a joint.
    -मोक्षः the breaking of peace; Kau. A.7.
    -रन्ध्रका a hole in a wall.
    -विग्रह m. du. peace and war. ˚अधिकारः the office of the minister for foreign affairs.
    -विग्रहकः a minister presiding over the above.
    -विचक्षणः*** one skilled in negotiating treaties.
    -विद् m. a negotiator of treaties.
    -विपर्ययौ peace and war; दूते संधिविपर्ययौ Ms.7.65.
    -वेला 1 the time of twilight.
    -2 any connecting period
    -शूलम् a kind of painful indigestion (आमवात).
    -संभवः a diphthong.
    -हारकः a house-breaker.

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > संधिः _sandhiḥ

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