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1 Simon the Tanner
Христианство: Симон-кожевник -
2 Tanner, Henry Ossawa
(1859-1937) Тэннер, Генри ОссаваНегритянский художник, ученик Т. Икинса [ Eakins, Thomas]. Окончив Пенсильванскую академию художеств [ Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts], в 1891 уехал в Париж и провел большую часть жизни в Европе. Писал главным образом картины на библейские темы, несколько раз посетил Палестину. Его первая персональная выставка состоялась в 1908 в Американской художественной галерее [American Art Galleries] в г. Нью-Йорке. Среди наиболее известных картин "Гибель Содома и Гоморры" ["Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah"] (музей "Метрополитен" [ Metropolitan Museum of Art] в г. Нью-Йорке), "Урок игры на банджо" ["The Banjo Lesson"] (около 1893, Хэмптонский университет [ Hampton University] в Вирджинии). В 1920-х стал одним из вдохновителей Гарлемского возрождения [ Harlem Renaissance]English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Tanner, Henry Ossawa
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3 the author trained with Professor Tanner
Общая лексика: автор обучался у профессора ТэннераУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > the author trained with Professor Tanner
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4 quick on the draw
быcтpo cooбpaжaющий, peaгиpующий, пpoвopный, шуcтpый [букв. быcтpo выxвaтывaющий peвoльвep; пepвoнaч. aмep.]Arty would tackle Tanner, but that wouldn't do. Tanner would be too clever for Arty and too quick on the draw (F. Hardy). He was a strong, forceful bull-like youth quick on the draw with wit when talking about jazz and women, but dense on such mathematical subjects and cartography (A. Sillitoe) -
5 bow before the storm
уступить под давлением общественного протеста; уступить натискуViolet: "I hope you will be more careful in future about the things you say." Tanner (bowing to the storm): "I have no defence..." (B. Shaw, ‘Man and Superman’, act I) — Вайолет: "Надеюсь, впредь вы будете внимательнее к своим словам..." Тэннер (уступая натиску): "Мне нечего возразить..."
The Town Council wanted to close the gardens on Sunday, but they bowed before the storm. (CDEI) — Муниципальный совет предполагал вынести решение о закрытии парков по воскресеньям, но под давлением общественного мнения это решение не было принято.
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6 come into the picture
(тж. enter the picture)пoявитьcя, вoзникнуть, фигуpиpoвaть, выcтупить нa пepвый плaнJim Morton didn't like the sound of Tanner's gang coming into the picture. He began to have misgivings (F. Hardy). I felt that there were certain complications which entered into the picture (.E. S. Gardner). The police only entered the picture after the body was found (H. MacJnnes) -
7 Pascale, Richard Tanner
(b. 1938) Gen MgtU.S. academic and consultant. Co-developer of the McKinsey 7-S framework of corporate success, and coauthor, with Anthony Athos, of The Art of Japanese Management (1981). Pascale also originated the concept of organizational agility. Pascale and Athos collaborated with Tom Peters and Bob Waterman on the 7-S model at the management consulting company McKinsey. Peters and Waterman cited U.S. examples of success in In Search of Excellence, but it was Pascale and Athos who explored the model in greater depth, tracing many of its origins to working practice in Japanese organizations. -
8 Pascale, Richard Tanner
перс.упр. Паскаль, Ричард Тэннер ( в 1981 г. совместно с Э. Атосом опубликовал книгу "The Art of Japanese Management", в которой была предложена модель "7 S" для объяснения различий американского и японского стилей управления; занимался исследованием управления компанией в быстро изменяющейся и неустойчивой среде)See:Англо-русский экономический словарь > Pascale, Richard Tanner
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9 θρανευομένας
θρᾱνευομένᾱς, θρανεύομαιto be stretched on the tanner's board: pres part mp fem acc plθρᾱνευομένᾱς, θρανεύομαιto be stretched on the tanner's board: pres part mp fem gen sg (doric aeolic) -
10 θρανεύσεται
θρᾱνεύσεται, θρανεύομαιto be stretched on the tanner's board: aor subj mp 3rd sg (epic)θρᾱνεύσεται, θρανεύομαιto be stretched on the tanner's board: fut ind mp 3rd sg -
11 קמץ
קָמַץ(b. h.) 1) to compress, close the hand, grasp. Pes.VII, 2 יִקְמוֹץ את מקומו he must grab (take a handful of the flour from) its place (where the juice has dripped on it).Esp. to take a fistful (קוֹמֶץ) of the meal-offering (by bending three fingers over to the wrist and striking the flour off with the thumb on top and with the little finger below). Sifra Vayikra, Ndab., ch. X, Par. 9 יכול יקמוץוכ׳ you may think he may grab with the tips of his fingers, Ib. יכול מצוה שיִקְמְצֶנָּה … קְמָצָהּוכ׳ you may think the proper thing is for the priest to take off the fistful, but if a layman did it, it is legal. Men.II, 1 הקוֹמֵץ אתוכ׳ if the priest takes a grab of the meal-offering with the intention of eating ; a. fr.Part. pass. קָמוּץ closed. Cant. R. to VIII, 14 צבי … ועינו אחת קְמוּצָה the deer when sleeping has one eye open and one closed. 2) to leap. Yalk. Ps. 685 קומץ כאיל, v. קָפַץ. Hif. הִקְמִיץ to perform the קְמִיצָה. Lev. R. s. 3 ה׳ ואכלוכ׳ he took the handful for the altar, and ate the rest. Nif. נִקְמָץ to be grabbed from. Men.III, 3 שתי … שלא נִקְמְצוּוכ׳ two meal-offerings which were mixed up before the altars share had been taken off. Ib. 18b בנִקְמָצוֹת concerning such offerings as are subject to קְמִיצָה; a. fr. Pi. קִימֵּץ. 1) to scrape off (with bent fingers). Ḥull.50a מְקַמְּצִין you must take off a little from the surface.Trnsf. to take off a share. B. Bath. 106b שני אחין שחלקו … מקמצין if two brothers divide an estate, and then a third brother comes from abroad …, they have to give him each a share from their portion, opp. בטלה מחלוקת the division is null and void (and a new division by lot has to be made); ib. 107a; a. e. 2) to scrape together, collect. Pesik. R. s. 20 מְקַמֵּץ (not מקמיץ), v. סַרְטָן. Keth.VII, 10 אלו … והמקמץ the following are those whom the court forces to release their wives, … and the scraper; expl. ib. 77a המקבץ צואת כלבים he that collects excrements of dogs; (another interpret.) המק׳ זה בורסי ‘the scraper (of excrements) means the tanner; Tosef. ib. VII, 11 המקמץ את הצואה (not הצועה) who collects excrements; Y. ib. VII, end, 31d. Hag.4a; 7b. 3) to be parsimonious. Ḥull.46a וסימניך עשירין מקמצין and as a mnemonical sign (to remember which of the two it was that threw the liver away, and which used it) it may serve thee: ‘the rich are parsimonious (R. Simon who was rich used it); Men.86a. -
12 קָמַץ
קָמַץ(b. h.) 1) to compress, close the hand, grasp. Pes.VII, 2 יִקְמוֹץ את מקומו he must grab (take a handful of the flour from) its place (where the juice has dripped on it).Esp. to take a fistful (קוֹמֶץ) of the meal-offering (by bending three fingers over to the wrist and striking the flour off with the thumb on top and with the little finger below). Sifra Vayikra, Ndab., ch. X, Par. 9 יכול יקמוץוכ׳ you may think he may grab with the tips of his fingers, Ib. יכול מצוה שיִקְמְצֶנָּה … קְמָצָהּוכ׳ you may think the proper thing is for the priest to take off the fistful, but if a layman did it, it is legal. Men.II, 1 הקוֹמֵץ אתוכ׳ if the priest takes a grab of the meal-offering with the intention of eating ; a. fr.Part. pass. קָמוּץ closed. Cant. R. to VIII, 14 צבי … ועינו אחת קְמוּצָה the deer when sleeping has one eye open and one closed. 2) to leap. Yalk. Ps. 685 קומץ כאיל, v. קָפַץ. Hif. הִקְמִיץ to perform the קְמִיצָה. Lev. R. s. 3 ה׳ ואכלוכ׳ he took the handful for the altar, and ate the rest. Nif. נִקְמָץ to be grabbed from. Men.III, 3 שתי … שלא נִקְמְצוּוכ׳ two meal-offerings which were mixed up before the altars share had been taken off. Ib. 18b בנִקְמָצוֹת concerning such offerings as are subject to קְמִיצָה; a. fr. Pi. קִימֵּץ. 1) to scrape off (with bent fingers). Ḥull.50a מְקַמְּצִין you must take off a little from the surface.Trnsf. to take off a share. B. Bath. 106b שני אחין שחלקו … מקמצין if two brothers divide an estate, and then a third brother comes from abroad …, they have to give him each a share from their portion, opp. בטלה מחלוקת the division is null and void (and a new division by lot has to be made); ib. 107a; a. e. 2) to scrape together, collect. Pesik. R. s. 20 מְקַמֵּץ (not מקמיץ), v. סַרְטָן. Keth.VII, 10 אלו … והמקמץ the following are those whom the court forces to release their wives, … and the scraper; expl. ib. 77a המקבץ צואת כלבים he that collects excrements of dogs; (another interpret.) המק׳ זה בורסי ‘the scraper (of excrements) means the tanner; Tosef. ib. VII, 11 המקמץ את הצואה (not הצועה) who collects excrements; Y. ib. VII, end, 31d. Hag.4a; 7b. 3) to be parsimonious. Ḥull.46a וסימניך עשירין מקמצין and as a mnemonical sign (to remember which of the two it was that threw the liver away, and which used it) it may serve thee: ‘the rich are parsimonious (R. Simon who was rich used it); Men.86a. -
13 θρᾶνος
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `bench, supporting beams' (Att. a. hell. inschr., Ar.).Dialectal forms: Myc. ta-ra-nu.Derivatives: Diminutive θρανίον `id.' (Ar.) with θρανίδιον (Ar.); θρανίτης `rower of the upper of the three rows' (Th., Ar.; s. Morrison Class. Quart. 41, 128ff.), f. θρανῖτις ( κώπη; Attica), with θρανιτικός (Callix.); θρανίας m. (Marcell. Sid.), θρᾶνις or - ίς (Xenokr.) = ξιφίας, `swordfish', after the form of the upper jaw, cf. Thompson Fishes s. v. Denominative verb θρανεύω `to stretch to the tanner's board' (Ar. Eq. 369; θρανεύεται συντρίβεται H.) with ἀθράνευτον ἄστρωτον H. (= E. Fr. 569); to συν-θρανόω, θρανύσσω s. v. - Beside it θρῆνυς, - υος m. `footstool' (Hom.; cf. Hermann Gött. Nachr. 1943, 8; Chantraine Formation 118; improbable Benveniste Origines 56), with secondary κ-enlargement (Chantraine 383, Schwyzer 496 n. 6) θρῆνυξ, - υκος (Euph.), θρᾶνυξ (Corinn.).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: If νο- or. νυ- is a suffix, we can connect the aor. inf. θρή-σασθαι (only Philet. 14 [IV-IIIa]: θρήσασθαι πλατάνῳ γ\<ρ\> αίῃ ὕπο), usually rendered with `sit down'. But the original meaning must rather have been `support oneself (on)' v.t., if the word is cognate with θρόνος; θρᾶνος, θρῆνυς then "the support, the bearer". This analysis however is quite doubtful. The word is no doubt a Pre-Greek word.Page in Frisk: 1,678-679Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θρᾶνος
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14 בורסקי
בּוּרְסְקִיf. (βυρσική sub. τέχνη 1) the tanning process, tannery, (fr. (= בעל ב׳) the tanner; v. בּוּרְסִי). Sabb.I, 2 ולא לב׳ nor must one enter the tannery (to look after the process, shortly before Sabbath). Ib. 9b התחלת כ׳ the beginning of the tanners work. Ib. ב׳ גדולה a tannery on a large scale; v. בּוּרְסִי. B. Bath.21b ולא ב׳ nor to put up a tanners workshop; a. fr. 2) Bursiké, a suburb of Tiberias. Cant. R. to I, 4. -
15 בּוּרְסְקִי
בּוּרְסְקִיf. (βυρσική sub. τέχνη 1) the tanning process, tannery, (fr. (= בעל ב׳) the tanner; v. בּוּרְסִי). Sabb.I, 2 ולא לב׳ nor must one enter the tannery (to look after the process, shortly before Sabbath). Ib. 9b התחלת כ׳ the beginning of the tanners work. Ib. ב׳ גדולה a tannery on a large scale; v. בּוּרְסִי. B. Bath.21b ולא ב׳ nor to put up a tanners workshop; a. fr. 2) Bursiké, a suburb of Tiberias. Cant. R. to I, 4. -
16 θρᾱνύσσω
θρᾱνύσσωGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `crush',Other forms: only aor. ptc. θρανύξαντες (Lyk. 664); συν-θρᾱνόω `id.', only perf. pass. συντεθράνωται (E. Ba. 633; = συμπέπτωκε H.);Derivatives: cf. also θρανεύεται συντρίβεται H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Relation to the noun *θραυσ-ανό-ς, from θραύω (Sütterlin Denom. 107, Solmsen Unt. 88), arouses, though theoretically possible, for this expressive word little confidence, cf. Sommer Lautstud. 64f. More probable seems ( pace Sommer l. c.), connection with θρανεύω `stretch on the tanner's bench', which H. glosses as συντρίβεται. So a change of meaning `tann (torture)' \> `crush' together with the formal transformation (after ἀμύσσω, νύσσω a. o.?, Sommer a. a. O., Debrunner IF 21, 243). See θρᾶνος.Page in Frisk: 1,679Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θρᾱνύσσω
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17 κοσκυλμάτια
Grammatical information: n. pl.Meaning: `cuttings of leather', metaph. of the flattering words of the tanner Cleon to Demos (Ar. Eq. 49).Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]X [probably]Etymology: Popular reduplicated formation [σ]κο-σκυλ-μάτ-ια (cf. Schwyzer 423) of σκύλλω `dishevel, maltreat'. The relation with Lat. quisquiliae pl. `waste, dirt' is not clear; for cognate Hofmann against Walde, who assumes a loan from Greek; s. Bq and W.-Hofmann s. v.Page in Frisk: 1,928-929Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κοσκυλμάτια
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18 צלא) צלא
(צְלָא) צַלָּא m. ( צלי to stretch, v. צְלֵי II; cmp. מִשְׁכָא) hide, leather. Targ. Y. Lev. 11:32. Ib. 13:48; a. fr.Ned.56b ערסא דצ׳ a bedstead covered with skins. B. Bath.5a (prov.) ארבעה לצ׳ ארבעה לצְלָלָא four (Zuz) for dressing a large skin, four for dressing a small skin, i. e. do not claim anything for guarding your neighbors field enclosed within your fields, since you have no more expense by doing so; (oth. opin.: four for the skin and four for the צַלָּלָא the tanner, v. comment.. צלין, Y.Sabb.VII, 10a bot., v. צַלְיָין. -
19 κασσύω
A stitch, sew together like a shoemaker, Pl.Euthd. 294b;πέδιλα Nic.Fr.85.6
:—[voice] Med. (nisi leg. καττύομεν), Pherecr.178.II metaph., stitch up a plot, οἶδ' ἐγὼ τὸ πρᾶγμα τοῦθ' ὅθεν πάλαι καττύεται (says Cleon the tanner), I know the shop that this piece of leather comes from, Ar.Eq. 314;καττύειν διαβολάς Alciphr.3.58
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20 κοσκυλμάτια
A cuttings of leather: Com., of the scraps of flattery offered by the tanner Cleon to his patron Δῆμος, Ar.Eq.49, cf. Sch.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > κοσκυλμάτια
См. также в других словарях:
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