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1 plague
أَسْرَاب (مؤذية) \ plague: a very large number of creatures (esp. flies, rats, locusts, etc.) that cause great trouble: The crops were destroyed by a plague of locusts. \ أَعْدَاد كبيرة مِن \ plague: a very large number of creatures (esp. flies, rats, locusts, etc.) that cause great trouble: The crops were destroyed by a plague of locusts. \ See Also أَسْرَاب مُؤذِيَة مِن... \ الطّاعُون \ plague: a terrible disease that kills many people. -
2 Чёрный мор
History: Great Pestilence (Medieval people called the catastrophe of the 14th century either the "Great Pestilence"' or the "Great Plague".), Great Plague (Medieval people called the catastrophe of the 14th century either the "Great Pestilence"' or the "Great Plague". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Death) -
3 Черная смерть
History: Great Pestilence, Great Plague (Medieval people called the catastrophe of the 14th century either the "Great Pestilence"' or the "Great Plague". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Death) -
4 чёрная смерть
History: Great Pestilence, Great Plague (Medieval people called the catastrophe of the 14th century either the "Great Pestilence"' or the "Great Plague". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Death) -
5 mann-dauði
a, m. = manndauðr; in compds, manndauða-sumar, -ár, -vetr, Ann. 1402, 1404, 1405 (of the great plague), Bs. i. 822. -
6 Hund
m; -(e)s, -e1. dog; (Jagdhund) auch hound; ZOOL. canine; junger Hund puppy; streunender Hund stray (dog); bissig 12. (Rüde) dog, male3. umg., fig.: ( gemeiner) Hund pej. (rotten) swine Sl.; er ist ein armer Hund he’s a poor devil; blöder Hund! pej. idiot!, cretin!; so ein blöder Hund! pej. auch what a stupid bastard vulg.; du fauler Hund! you lazy sod!; krummer Hund Zigarre: culebras (cigar); (zwielichtiger Kerl) crafty devil; scharfer oder harter Hund (strenger Lehrer) strict bastard vulg.; (harter Trainer) demanding sod Sl., Am. slavedriver; sturer Hund stubborn bastard vulg.; verrückter Hund crazy sod (Am. bastard) Sl.; kein Hund not a soul7. BERGB. tub8. in Wendungen: auf den Hund bringen / kommen umg. ruin / go to pot; ( ganz) auf dem Hund sein umg. be in a real mess; gesundheitlich: auch be a wreck; mit den Nerven auf dem Hund sein umg. be a nervous wreck; vor die Hunde gehen umg. go to the dogs; da liegt der Hund begraben umg. that’s why; er ist mit allen Hunden gehetzt umg. he knows all the tricks of the trade; er ist bekannt wie ein bunter oder scheckiger Hund everybody knows him; das ist ein dicker Hund! umg. (eine Frechheit) that’s a bit thick!, Am. what nerve!; (grober Fehler) that’s a real boo-boo!; wie ein geprügelter Hund like a whipped cur; frieren wie ein junger Hund umg. be frozen to the core, be chilled to the bone; müde wie ein Hund umg. be dog-tired; wie ein Hund leben umg. live like a dog; wie Hund und Katze leben oder sein umg. fight like cat and dog; damit kann man keinen Hund hinter dem Ofen hervorlocken umg. who’s interested in that?; bei diesem Wetter würde man keinen Hund auf die Straße jagen you wouldn’t turn a dog out in weather like this; von dem nimmt kein Hund einen Bissen oder Brocken etc. Brot umg. no one will have anything to do with him; er wird von ihnen behandelt, dass es ( sogar) einen Hund jammert oder dauert umg. they treat him pitifully badly; da wird ja der Hund in der Pfanne verrückt! umg. it’s unbelievable!; ein getroffener Hund bellt umg. it’s always the guilty party who makes the loudest noise; das ist ja zum Junge-Hunde-Kriegen! umg. it’s enough to drive you to despair; Hunde, die bellen, beißen nicht barking dogs seldom bite; viele Hunde sind des Hasen Tod Sprichw. the one stands little chance against the many; man kann den Hund nicht zum Jagen tragen Sprichw. you can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink; letzt... 4, schlafen* * *der Hunddog; hound* * *Hụnd [hʊnt]m -(e)s, -e[-də]junger Hund — puppy, pup
getroffene Hunde bellen (inf) — if the cap fits, wear it
viele Hunde sind des Hasen Tod (Prov) — there is not much one person can do against many
wie Hund und Katze leben — to live like cat and dog, to lead a cat-and-dog life
ich würde bei diesem Wetter keinen Hund auf die Straße jagen — I wouldn't send a dog out in this weather
müde wie ein Hund sein (inf) — to be dog-tired
das ist ( ja) zum Junge-Hunde-Kriegen (inf) — it's enough to give you kittens
da wird der Hund in der Pfanne verrückt (inf) — it's enough to drive you crazy (inf) or round the twist (Brit inf)
da liegt der Hund begraben (inf) — (so) that's what is/was behind it all; (Haken, Problem etc) that's the problem
er ist mit allen Hunden gehetzt (inf) — he knows all the tricks, there are no flies on him (Brit inf)
er ist ein armer Hund — he's a poor soul or devil (inf)
er ist völlig auf dem Hund (inf) — he's really gone to the dogs (inf)
auf den Hund kommen (inf) — to go to the dogs (inf)
jdn auf den Hund bringen (inf) — to ruin sb; (gesundheitlich) to ruin sb's health
die Weiber haben/der Suff hat ihn auf den Hund gebracht (inf) — women have/drink has been his ruin or downfall
vor die Hunde gehen (inf) — to go to the dogs (inf)
du blöder Hund (inf) — you silly or stupid bastard (sl)
du gemeiner Hund (inf) — you rotten bastard (sl)
2) (MIN = Förderwagen) truck, tub* * *(a domestic, meat-eating animal related to the wolf and fox.) dog* * *<-[e]s, -e>[hʊnt, pl ˈhʊndə]m„[Vorsicht,] bissiger \Hund!“ “beware of the dog!”„\Hunde müssen draußen bleiben“ “no dogs allowed”zur Familie der \Hunde gehören to be a caninefliegender \Hund flying foxjunger \Hund puppy[du] falscher \Hund! (sl) [you] dirty rat!krummer \Hund (sl) rogue, villainräudiger \Hund mang[e]y dogwie ein räudiger \Hund like a mad dogein scharfer \Hund sein (fam) to be a tough customer [or cookie]3. ASTROLder Große/Kleine \Hund Canis Major/Minor, the Great/Little Dog4.er droht damit, die Sache vor Gericht zu bringen — Hunde die bellen, beißen nicht he threatens with taking the case to court — his bark is worse than his bite▶ das ist [ja] zum Junge-\Hunde-Kriegen (fam) that's maddening, that's enough to drive one around the bend [or AM to go off of the deep end]▶ mit etw dat keinen \Hund hinterm Ofen hervorlocken können (fam) to not be able to tempt a single soul with sth▶ da wird der \Hund in der Pfanne verrückt (fam) it's enough to drive a person mad [or BRIT sb round the twist]▶ schlafende \Hunde soll man nicht wecken one should let sleeping dogs lie▶ bei diesem Wetter jagt man keinen \Hund vor die Tür one wouldn't send a dog out in this weather* * *der; Hundes, Hunde1) dog; (JagdHund) hound; dogbekannt sein wie ein bunter Hund — (ugs.) be a well-known figure
bei diesem Wetter würde man keinen Hund vor die Tür schicken — I wouldn't turn a dog out in weather like this
da liegt der Hund begraben — (fig. ugs.) (Ursache) that's what's causing it; (Grund) that's the real reason
da wird der Hund in der Pfanne verrückt — (salopp) it's quite incredible
Hunde, die bellen, beißen nicht — (Spr.) barking dogs seldom bite
den letzten beißen die Hunde — (fig.) late-comers must expect to be unlucky
ein dicker Hund — (ugs.): (grober Fehler) a real bloomer (Brit. sl.) or (sl.) goof
das ist ein dicker Hund — (ugs.): (Frechheit) that's a bit thick (coll.)
wie Hund und Katze leben — (ugs.) lead a cat-and-dog life
auf den Hund kommen — (ugs.) go to the dogs (coll.)
vor die Hunde gehen — (ugs.) go to the dogs (coll.); (sterben) die; kick the bucket (fig. sl.)
so ein blöder Hund! — [what a] stupid bastard!
* * *junger Hund puppy;2. (Rüde) dog, male3. umg, fig:er ist ein armer Hund he’s a poor devil;blöder Hund! pej idiot!, cretin!;so ein blöder Hund! pej auch what a stupid bastard vulg;du fauler Hund! you lazy sod!;harter Hund (strenger Lehrer) strict bastard vulg; (harter Trainer) demanding sod sl, US slavedriver;sturer Hund stubborn bastard vulg;kein Hund not a soul4. ZOOL:Fliegender Hund flying fox5. ASTRON:Großer/Kleiner Hund Great/Little ( oder Lesser) Dog, Canis Major/Minor6. GASTR:7. BERGB tub8. in Wendungen:auf den Hund bringen/kommen umg ruin/go to pot;mit den Nerven auf dem Hund sein umg be a nervous wreck;vor die Hunde gehen umg go to the dogs;da liegt der Hund begraben umg that’s why;er ist mit allen Hunden gehetzt umg he knows all the tricks of the trade;scheckiger Hund everybody knows him;das ist ein dicker Hund! umg (eine Frechheit) that’s a bit thick!, US what nerve!; (grober Fehler) that’s a real boo-boo!;wie ein geprügelter Hund like a whipped cur;frieren wie ein junger Hund umg be frozen to the core, be chilled to the bone;müde wie ein Hund umg be dog-tired;wie ein Hund leben umg live like a dog;sein umg fight like cat and dog;damit kann man keinen Hund hinter dem Ofen hervorlocken umg who’s interested in that?;bei diesem Wetter würde man keinen Hund auf die Straße jagen you wouldn’t turn a dog out in weather like this;Brocken etcBrot umg no one will have anything to do with him;dauert umg they treat him pitifully badly;da wird ja der Hund in der Pfanne verrückt! umg it’s unbelievable!;das ist ja zum Junge-Hunde-Kriegen! umg it’s enough to drive you to despair;Hunde, die bellen, beißen nicht barking dogs seldom bite;viele Hunde sind des Hasen Tod sprichw the one stands little chance against the many;man kann den Hund nicht zum Jagen tragen sprichw you can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink; → letzt… 4, schlafen* * *der; Hundes, Hunde1) dog; (JagdHund) hound; dogbekannt sein wie ein bunter Hund — (ugs.) be a well-known figure
bei diesem Wetter würde man keinen Hund vor die Tür schicken — I wouldn't turn a dog out in weather like this
da liegt der Hund begraben — (fig. ugs.) (Ursache) that's what's causing it; (Grund) that's the real reason
da wird der Hund in der Pfanne verrückt — (salopp) it's quite incredible
Hunde, die bellen, beißen nicht — (Spr.) barking dogs seldom bite
den letzten beißen die Hunde — (fig.) late-comers must expect to be unlucky
ein dicker Hund — (ugs.): (grober Fehler) a real bloomer (Brit. sl.) or (sl.) goof
das ist ein dicker Hund — (ugs.): (Frechheit) that's a bit thick (coll.)
wie Hund und Katze leben — (ugs.) lead a cat-and-dog life
auf den Hund kommen — (ugs.) go to the dogs (coll.)
vor die Hunde gehen — (ugs.) go to the dogs (coll.); (sterben) die; kick the bucket (fig. sl.)
so ein blöder Hund! — [what a] stupid bastard!
* * *-e m.dog n.hound n. -
7 recrudecimiento
m.worsening.* * *1 (empeoramiento) worsening2 (aumento) rise (de, in), deepening, upsurge* * ** * *= upsurge, re-intensification, flare-up, heightening.Ex. It was the great upsurge both in publication and in literacy that forced a change.Ex. The prospect of completely new machines for inscribing and transmitting the written word most surely lead to the re-intensification of this discussion.Ex. He demonstrates how the plague came to be dealt with by both the French and the Africans between its first manifestation in 1914 and its final flare-up in 1944 and 1945.Ex. The arts can serve the heightening of our sensibilities to the theological dimensions of cultural movements.* * ** * *= upsurge, re-intensification, flare-up, heightening.Ex: It was the great upsurge both in publication and in literacy that forced a change.
Ex: The prospect of completely new machines for inscribing and transmitting the written word most surely lead to the re-intensification of this discussion.Ex: He demonstrates how the plague came to be dealt with by both the French and the Africans between its first manifestation in 1914 and its final flare-up in 1944 and 1945.Ex: The arts can serve the heightening of our sensibilities to the theological dimensions of cultural movements.* * *se ha producido un recrudecimiento de los combates en la zona fighting has intensified in the area* * *
recrudecimiento sustantivo masculino worsening
' recrudecimiento' also found in these entries:
English:
up
* * *[de crisis] worsening; [de criminalidad] upsurge;el recrudecimiento de la huelga ha obligado a intervenir al gobierno the escalation of the strike has forced the government to intervene* * *m worsening, intensification -
8 סרס
סְרַסPa. סָרֵיס ch. same, 1) to emasculate. Targ. Y. Lev. 22:24.Ḥag.14b מהו לסָרוּסֵיוכ׳ is it permitted to castrate a dog? 2) to disarrange, transpose, reverse. Lev. R. s. 22 הוה מְסָרֵס קרייאוכ׳ Resh Lakish interpreted the verse (Is. 66:3) by transposition (making the subject the predicate), ‘he who kills a man (thinks of it as lightly as if he) had slaughtered an ox Y.R. Hash. II, end, 58b (read:) ר״ש בן ל׳ מסרס הדין קרייא אלופינו מְסַבְּלִים אין כתיבוכ׳ R. S. b. L. interprets this verse just in a reverse way (to R. Johanans interpretation), it is not written, ‘our teachers bear, but ‘our teachers are borne with, when the small bear with (the shortcomings of) the great, then there is no breach Trnsf. to plague, torment, weary into submission. Gen. R. s. 58 (ref. to ופגעו, Gen. 23:8) (read as:) Yalk. ib. 102 פגעוניה לי סָרְסוּנֵיה ליוכ׳ plague him for me, bore him for me, and if this has no effect, pray for him in my favor (that God may turn his heart to yield to my wishes). -
9 סְרַס
סְרַסPa. סָרֵיס ch. same, 1) to emasculate. Targ. Y. Lev. 22:24.Ḥag.14b מהו לסָרוּסֵיוכ׳ is it permitted to castrate a dog? 2) to disarrange, transpose, reverse. Lev. R. s. 22 הוה מְסָרֵס קרייאוכ׳ Resh Lakish interpreted the verse (Is. 66:3) by transposition (making the subject the predicate), ‘he who kills a man (thinks of it as lightly as if he) had slaughtered an ox Y.R. Hash. II, end, 58b (read:) ר״ש בן ל׳ מסרס הדין קרייא אלופינו מְסַבְּלִים אין כתיבוכ׳ R. S. b. L. interprets this verse just in a reverse way (to R. Johanans interpretation), it is not written, ‘our teachers bear, but ‘our teachers are borne with, when the small bear with (the shortcomings of) the great, then there is no breach Trnsf. to plague, torment, weary into submission. Gen. R. s. 58 (ref. to ופגעו, Gen. 23:8) (read as:) Yalk. ib. 102 פגעוניה לי סָרְסוּנֵיה ליוכ׳ plague him for me, bore him for me, and if this has no effect, pray for him in my favor (that God may turn his heart to yield to my wishes). -
10 Hund
1) ( Tier) dog;(Jagd\Hund) hound;zur Familie der \Hunde gehören to be a canine;fliegender \Hund flying fox;„[Vorsicht,] bissiger \Hund!“ “beware of the dog!”;„\Hunde müssen draußen bleiben“ “no dogs allowed”;ein \Hund schlägt an a dog gives a warning bark;blöder \Hund! (sl) stupid idiot, dickhead (fam!)[du] falscher \Hund! (sl) [you] dirty rat!;krummer \Hund (sl) rogue, villain;ein räudiger \Hund a mang[e]y dog;wie einen räudigen \Hund like a mad dog;WENDUNGEN:kein \Hund nimmt ein Stückchen Brot von ihm ( fam) everyone avoids him like the plague;viele \Hunde sind des Hasen Tod ( Tod) as one against many you don't stand a chance;wie \Hund und Katze leben ( fam) to be at each other's throats, to fight like cats and dogs;den Letzten beißen die \Hunde the last one [out] has to carry the can ( Brit)mit etw dat keinen \Hund hinterm Ofen hervorlocken können ( fam) to not be able to tempt a single soul with sth;da wird der \Hund in der Pfanne verrückt ( fam) it's enough to drive a person mad [or ( Brit) sb round the twist];bekannt sein wie ein bunter \Hund ( fam) to be known far and wide;das ist ja ein dicker \Hund (sl) that is absolutely outrageous;[ja] zum Junge-\Hunde-Kriegen sein ( fam) to be maddening, to be enough to drive one around the bend [or (Am) off of the deep end];schlafende \Hunde wecken ( fam) to wake sleeping dogs, to stir something up;schlafende \Hunde soll man nicht wecken one should let sleeping dogs lie;da liegt der \Hund begraben ( fam) that's the crux of the matter, that's what's behind it;jdn wie einen \Hund behandeln ( fam) to treat sb like a dog;vor die \Hunde gehen (sl) to go to the dogs;er ist mit allen \Hunden gehetzt ( fam) he knows all the tricks;auf den \Hund kommen ( fam) to go to the dogs -
11 Philippa of Lancaster, queen
(1360-1415)Wife of King João I of Portugal and daughter of John of Gaunt, son of King Edward III. Born in England, she was educated at home within the bosom of the royal family and little is known of her life until she was 26 and sailed to Castile with her father. The marriage of King João I and Philippa was celebrated in Oporto in 1387, and during the next 15 years of the queen's life, at least half of the time was expended in pregnancy and childbearing. From age 27 to 42, a remarkable physical feat for that era or any other, Philippa bore the so-called "illustrious generation" of children that included Prince Henry of Aviz (Prince Henry the Navigator), Prince Pedro, and King Duarte (r. 1433-38). Her six sons alone dominated politics for generations, and although what precise role she had in their education is unclear, her influence was present in continuing the Anglo- Portuguese Alliance and in encouraging the expansion of Portugal into North Africa.Philippa maintained a long correspondence with her family in England, was very religious, and introduced a new liturgy into the Portuguese Church services. Philippa, who was a strong influence in encouraging the crusade to attack Muslim North Africa, died of the Black Plague on the eve of the epoch-making Ceuta expedition in 1415. Although she died at Odivelas, eventually her remains were transferred to the great Monastery of Batalha (1416), where the effigy on her fine tomb is the only faithful likeness of her in Portugal.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Philippa of Lancaster, queen
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12 Т-122
ДО ТОГО PrepP Invar adv or modif) to such a great degree, so intensely ( usu. used to show that the high degree of some quality, the intensity of some action etc is the motivation, reason etc for sth. in the surrounding context)soso much (in limited contexts) such a NP. «Чтоб вас куриный мор», - отозвался дядя Сандро из-под своей яблони, голосом показывая, что не делает различия между курицей и её хозяйкой, до того обе они ему надоели (Искандер 3). uMay you get the chicken plague," Uncle Sandro responded from under the apple tree, his tone indicating that he made no distinction between the hen and her mistress, he was so sick of both of them (3a).Дома он (Митя) дополнил сумму, взяв взаймы три рубля от хозяев, которые дали ему с удовольствием, несмотря на то, что отдавали последние свои деньги, до того любили его (Достоевский 1). At home he (Mitya) added to the sum, borrowing three roubles from his landlords, who gave it to him gladly, though it was their last money-so much did they love him (1a).Наталья Петровна:) Неужели вы можете предполагать... (Ракитин:) Я ничего не предполагаю. (Наталья Петровна:) Неужели ж вы до того меня презираете... (Ракитин:) Перестаньте, ради бога (Тургенев 1). (N.P:) Surely you aren't suggesting... (R.:) I'm suggesting nothing. (N.:) You can't have such a low opinion of me that... (R.:) Oh stop, for goodness' sake (Id). -
13 до того
• ДО ТОГО[PrepP; Invar; adv or modif]=====⇒ to such a great degree, so intensely (usu. used to show that the high degree of some quality, the intensity of some action etc is the motivation, reason etc for sth. in the surrounding context):- so;- so much;- [in limited contexts] such a [NP].♦ "Чтоб вас куриный мор", - отозвался дядя Сандро из-под своей яблони, голосом показывая, что не делает различия между курицей и её хозяйкой, до того обе они ему надоели (Искандер 3). "May you get the chicken plague," Uncle Sandro responded from under the apple tree, his tone indicating that he made no distinction between the hen and her mistress, he was so sick of both of them (За).♦ Дома он [Митя] дополнил сумму, взяв взаймы три рубля от хозяев, которые дали ему с удовольствием, несмотря на то, что отдавали последние свои деньги, до того любили его (Достоевский 1). At home he [Mitya] added to the sum, borrowing three roubles from his landlords, who gave it to him gladly, though it was their last money-so much did they love him (1a).♦ [Наталья Петровна:] Неужели вы можете предполагать... [Ракитин:] Я ничего не предполагаю. [Наталья Петровна:] Неужели ж вы до того меня презираете... [Ракитин:] Перестаньте, ради бога (Тургенев 1). [N.P:] Surely you aren't suggesting... [R.:] I'm suggesting nothing. [N.:] You can't have such a low opinion of me that... [R.:] Oh stop, for goodness' sake (Id).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > до того
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14 plagen
I v/t torment, plague umg.; mit Bitten und Fragen: pester, plague; Sorgen etc.: worry, bother, dog; mich plagt wieder meine Allergie my allergy is plaguing me again; die Wespen plagen uns sehr the wasps are a real pest; was plagt dich? what’s eating you?; geplagtII v/refl: sich plagen slave away ( mit at); sich mit der Hausarbeit plagen slave away at the housework; (sich abmühen) go to great lengths; er plagt sich mit seinen Zähnen / mit ständigem Kopfweh his teeth are giving him a lot of trouble / his constant headaches are getting him down; sie plagt sich mit ihren Schülern her pupils (Am. students) give her a hard time* * *to vex; to annoy; to plague;sich plagento toil* * *pla|gen ['plaːgn]1. vtto plague, to torment; (mit Bitten und Fragen auch) to pester, to harassdich plagt doch was, heraus mit der Sprache — something's worrying or bothering you, out with it
vom schlechten Gewissen geplagt werden — to be plagued or tormented by a guilty conscience
2. vr1) (= leiden) to be troubled or bothered (mit by)schon die ganze Woche plage ich mich mit meinem Heuschnupfen — I've been bothered or troubled all week by my hay fever, my hay fever's been bothering or troubling me all week
2) (= sich abrackern) to slave or slog (esp Brit) away (inf); (= sich Mühe geben) to go to or take a lot of trouble or great pains (mit over, with)* * *1) (to give pain or distress to (a person etc): She is continually afflicted by/with headaches.) afflict2) (to trouble: What ails you?) ail4) (to annoy (someone) frequently or continually: He pestered me with questions; She pestered him to help her.) pester5) (to annoy or pester continually or frequently: The child was plaguing her with questions.) plague* * *pla·gen[ˈpla:gn̩]I. vt1. (behelligen)2. (quälen)▪ jdn \plagen to bother [or trouble] sb▪ geplagt troubledII. vr1. (sich abrackern)2. (sich herumplagen)mit diesem Husten plage ich mich schon eine Woche I've been bothered by this cough for a week now* * *1.transitives Verb1) torment; plague2.reflexives Verb1) (sich abmühen) slave away2) (leiden)sich mit etwas plagen — be troubled or bothered by something
* * *mich plagt wieder meine Allergie my allergy is plaguing me again;die Wespen plagen uns sehr the wasps are a real pest;B. v/r:sich plagen slave away (mit at);sich mit der Hausarbeit plagen slave away at the housework; (sich abmühen) go to great lengths;er plagt sich mit seinen Zähnen/mit ständigem Kopfweh his teeth are giving him a lot of trouble/his constant headaches are getting him down;sie plagt sich mit ihren Schülern her pupils (US students) give her a hard time* * *1.transitives Verb1) torment; plague2.reflexives Verb1) (sich abmühen) slave away2) (leiden)sich mit etwas plagen — be troubled or bothered by something
* * *v.to afflict v.to ail v.to plague v.to worry v. -
15 afectar
v.1 to affect.las medidas afectan a los pensionistas the measures affect pensionersLa conversación afecta sus ideas The conversation affects his ideas.La tensión nerviosa afecta a María Stress affects Mary.2 to upset, to affect badly.le afectó mucho la muerte de su hermano his brother's death hit him hard3 to damage.a esta madera le afecta mucho la humedad this wood is easily damaged by damp4 to affect, to feign.afectó enfado he feigned o affected angerMaría afecta interés pero no es así Mary feigns interest but it is not so.5 to pretend to.El chico afecta saber mucho The boy pretends to know a lot.* * *1 (aparentar) to affect2 (impresionar) to move3 (dañar) to damage4 (concernir) to concern1 (impresionarse) to be affected, be moved* * *verb1) to affect2) feign* * *1. VT1) (=repercutir sobre) to affect2) (=entristecer) to sadden; (=conmover) to moveme afectaron mucho las imágenes del documental — I was very moved by the pictures in the documentary
3) frm (=fingir) to affect, feignafectar ignorancia — to affect o feign ignorance
4) (Jur) to tie up, encumber5) LAm [+ forma] to take, assume6) LAm (=destinar) to allocate2.See:* * *verbo transitivo1)a) ( tener efecto en) to affectb) ( afligir) to affect (frml)2) ( fingir) <admiración/indiferencia> to affect, feign* * *= affect, colour [color, -USA], cut into, disturb, hit, impair, mar, plague, take + Posesivo + toll (on), beset (with/by), concern, afflict, disrupt, bias, prejudice, cross over, bedevil, dog, dent, make + a dent in, ail, strike, spill over into, take + a toll on, hobble, cast + an impact.Ex. Errors such as indexers assigning unsuitable terms to concepts, or relationships being omitted, will affect precision.Ex. Lastly, the style, length and contents of an abstract should and will be coloured by the resources of the abstracting agency.Ex. The paperback has cut sharply into fiction circulation, and Ennis is right in questioning this type of library.Ex. Transcribe the data as found, however, if case endings are affected, if the grammatical construction of the data would be disturbed, or if one element is inseparably linked to another.Ex. Flooding, fire, earthquake, collapsed buildings and landslides are the most frequent kinds of disasters to hit libraries: nearly all will lead to wet books.Ex. It is difficult to neglect either entirely, without impairing the effectiveness in fulfilling the other objective.Ex. Unfortunately, much of Metcalfe's writing is marred by what appears to be a deep-rooted prejudice against the classified approach, particularly as exemplified by Ranganathan.Ex. Title indexes have always been plagued by the absence of terminology control.Ex. The pressures which modern society puts on all its members are great and those pressures take their toll.Ex. Since 1963 they have produced their own bibliographic listings with various degrees of efficiency and comprehensiveness but usually with the same depressing tardiness in recording new publications which has so beset the UNDEX listings.Ex. The first issue concerns the consistent description of subjects.Ex. There will also be those who have in fact decided what information they need but are afflicted by the paralysis of 'unverbalised thought'.Ex. Essentially, problem patrons can be considered in three groups: (1) the dangerous or apparently dangerous; (2) the patron who disrupts readers; and (3) the nuisance whose focus is the librarian.Ex. A sample would be biased if some elements in the population have no chance of selection.Ex. The very requirements for success in one area may prejudice success in another.Ex. Conversely, indirect costs are those factors that are difficult to assign to individual products because they cross over several products.Ex. The article has the title 'Piracy, crooked printers, inflation bedevil Russian publishing'.Ex. The title of the article is 'Sweeping away the problems that dog the industry?'.Ex. Perhaps by the year 2010 newspaper circulations might be seriously dented by online services.Ex. Office automation products and techniques will be able to make a sizeable dent in the growing number of office workers.Ex. The federal government has been once again defined as something broken and part of the problem ailing America.Ex. The collections of the National Library of the Czech Republic have suffered from the floods that recently struck a large part of the country.Ex. The artificiality of institutional concepts has spilled over into the structure of the publishing services on which the user depends for Community information.Ex. Agoraphobia can take a toll on sufferers' families as well as the sufferers themselves, as some agoraphobics may become housebound or cling to certain people for safety.Ex. With Florida's no-fault auto insurance law set to expire in October, there are fears that that medical services could be hobbled.Ex. An interest-rate increase is a weapon to fight inflation which will cast an impact on all industries.----* afectar a = cut across, have + impact (on), have + effect on, have + implication for, impinge on/upon, operate on, carry over to.* afectar a la eficacia de Algo = prejudice + effectiveness.* afectar al mundo = span + the globe.* afectar a todo = run through.* afectar a todo el país = sweep + the country.* afectar a una decisión = colour + decision, affect + decision.* afectar completamente = engulf.* afectar directamente = cut to + the quick.* afectar directamente a = cut to + the heart of.* afectar fuertemente = hit + hard.* afectar mucho = hit + hard.* dificultad + afectar = difficulty + dog.* no afectar = be immune against, leave + unaffected.* no ser afectado = leave + unaffected.* problema + afectar = problem + afflict, problem + plague.* problemática que afecta a = issues + surrounding.* que afecta a = surrounding.* que afecta a toda la sociedad = culture-wide.* que afecta a todas las culturas = culture-wide.* que afecta a varias edades = cross-age [cross age].* que afecta a varias generaciones = cross-generational.* ser afectado por = have + a high stake in.* sin ser afectado = untouched.* verse muy afectado por = have + a high stake in.* * *verbo transitivo1)a) ( tener efecto en) to affectb) ( afligir) to affect (frml)2) ( fingir) <admiración/indiferencia> to affect, feign* * *= affect, colour [color, -USA], cut into, disturb, hit, impair, mar, plague, take + Posesivo + toll (on), beset (with/by), concern, afflict, disrupt, bias, prejudice, cross over, bedevil, dog, dent, make + a dent in, ail, strike, spill over into, take + a toll on, hobble, cast + an impact.Ex: Errors such as indexers assigning unsuitable terms to concepts, or relationships being omitted, will affect precision.
Ex: Lastly, the style, length and contents of an abstract should and will be coloured by the resources of the abstracting agency.Ex: The paperback has cut sharply into fiction circulation, and Ennis is right in questioning this type of library.Ex: Transcribe the data as found, however, if case endings are affected, if the grammatical construction of the data would be disturbed, or if one element is inseparably linked to another.Ex: Flooding, fire, earthquake, collapsed buildings and landslides are the most frequent kinds of disasters to hit libraries: nearly all will lead to wet books.Ex: It is difficult to neglect either entirely, without impairing the effectiveness in fulfilling the other objective.Ex: Unfortunately, much of Metcalfe's writing is marred by what appears to be a deep-rooted prejudice against the classified approach, particularly as exemplified by Ranganathan.Ex: Title indexes have always been plagued by the absence of terminology control.Ex: The pressures which modern society puts on all its members are great and those pressures take their toll.Ex: Since 1963 they have produced their own bibliographic listings with various degrees of efficiency and comprehensiveness but usually with the same depressing tardiness in recording new publications which has so beset the UNDEX listings.Ex: The first issue concerns the consistent description of subjects.Ex: There will also be those who have in fact decided what information they need but are afflicted by the paralysis of 'unverbalised thought'.Ex: Essentially, problem patrons can be considered in three groups: (1) the dangerous or apparently dangerous; (2) the patron who disrupts readers; and (3) the nuisance whose focus is the librarian.Ex: A sample would be biased if some elements in the population have no chance of selection.Ex: The very requirements for success in one area may prejudice success in another.Ex: Conversely, indirect costs are those factors that are difficult to assign to individual products because they cross over several products.Ex: The article has the title 'Piracy, crooked printers, inflation bedevil Russian publishing'.Ex: The title of the article is 'Sweeping away the problems that dog the industry?'.Ex: Perhaps by the year 2010 newspaper circulations might be seriously dented by online services.Ex: Office automation products and techniques will be able to make a sizeable dent in the growing number of office workers.Ex: The federal government has been once again defined as something broken and part of the problem ailing America.Ex: The collections of the National Library of the Czech Republic have suffered from the floods that recently struck a large part of the country.Ex: The artificiality of institutional concepts has spilled over into the structure of the publishing services on which the user depends for Community information.Ex: Agoraphobia can take a toll on sufferers' families as well as the sufferers themselves, as some agoraphobics may become housebound or cling to certain people for safety.Ex: With Florida's no-fault auto insurance law set to expire in October, there are fears that that medical services could be hobbled.Ex: An interest-rate increase is a weapon to fight inflation which will cast an impact on all industries.* afectar a = cut across, have + impact (on), have + effect on, have + implication for, impinge on/upon, operate on, carry over to.* afectar a la eficacia de Algo = prejudice + effectiveness.* afectar al mundo = span + the globe.* afectar a todo = run through.* afectar a todo el país = sweep + the country.* afectar a una decisión = colour + decision, affect + decision.* afectar completamente = engulf.* afectar directamente = cut to + the quick.* afectar directamente a = cut to + the heart of.* afectar fuertemente = hit + hard.* afectar mucho = hit + hard.* dificultad + afectar = difficulty + dog.* no afectar = be immune against, leave + unaffected.* no ser afectado = leave + unaffected.* problema + afectar = problem + afflict, problem + plague.* problemática que afecta a = issues + surrounding.* que afecta a = surrounding.* que afecta a toda la sociedad = culture-wide.* que afecta a todas las culturas = culture-wide.* que afecta a varias edades = cross-age [cross age].* que afecta a varias generaciones = cross-generational.* ser afectado por = have + a high stake in.* sin ser afectado = untouched.* verse muy afectado por = have + a high stake in.* * *afectar [A1 ]vtA1 (tener efecto en) to affectla nueva ley no afecta al pequeño empresario the new law doesn't affect the small businessmanestá afectado de una grave enfermedad pulmonar ( frml); he is suffering from a serious lung diseasela enfermedad le afectó el cerebro the illness affected her brainlas zonas afectadas por las inundaciones the areas hit o affected by the floodslo que dijiste lo afectó mucho what you said upset him terribly3 ( Der) ‹bienes› to encumberB (fingir) ‹admiración/indiferencia› to affect, feign afectar + INF to pretend to + INF* * *
afectar ( conjugate afectar) verbo transitivo
1
2 ( fingir) ‹admiración/indiferencia› to affect, feign
afectar verbo transitivo
1 (incumbir) to affect: la medida nos afecta a todos, the measure affects us all
2 (impresionar, entristecer) to affect, sadden: le afectó mucho la muerte de su padre, she was deeply affected by her father's death
' afectar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
inmune
- tocar
- afligir
- impresionar
- repercutir
- sacudir
English:
affect
- damage
- get
- hit
- tell
- upset
- dent
- difference
- disrupt
- impair
- interfere
- touch
- whole
* * *afectar vt1. [incumbir] to affect;las medidas afectan a los pensionistas the measures affect pensioners2. [afligir] to upset, to affect badly;todo lo afecta he's very sensitive;lo afectó mucho la muerte de su hermano his brother's death hit him hard3. [producir perjuicios en] to damage;la sequía que afectó a la región the drought which hit the region;a esta madera le afecta mucho la humedad this wood is easily damaged by damp4. [simular] to affect, to feign;afectó enfado he feigned o affected anger5. RP [destinar, asignar] to assign* * *v/t2 ( conmover) upset, affect3 ( fingir) feign* * *afectar vt1) : to affect2) : to upset3) : to feign, to pretend* * *afectar vb1. to affect -
16 мъча
torment, torture(c примамливи представи) tantalize(преуморявам) overwork, overdrive(безпокоя, тормозя) vex, annoy, worry, bother, pester, molest, pick (on s.o.), tease, ( систематично) harass, harry, plagueмъчи ме съвестта be tormented with remorse, be tortured by remorse, s.th. lies on o.'s conscience, s.th. weighs heavy on o.'s conscience, be conscious-strickenмъчи ме ревматизъм be a martyr to rheumatismкакво те мъчи? what's your trouble? what's worrying you?мъчи ме жажда be tormented by thirstмъчи ме глад be tormented by hunger, have pangs of hungerмъча се 1. torment o.s. (over s.th.); be in torment(страдам) suffer; have a hard/bad/terrible time(изпитвам болка) suffer/feel/undergo great pain(агонизирам) agonize, suffer agony, writhe in anguish(тревожа се) worry (about)мъча се като грешен дявол have a hell of a timeубивам животно да не се мъчи put an animal out of its painубивам човек да не се мъчи (при сражение и пр.) give s.o. the coup de grace2. (опитвам се, правя усилия) try, endeavour, struggle, make efforts, do o.'s best (to do s.th.), take pains (over s.th.)мъча се напразно try in vainмъча се да прочета мислите на някого search s.o.'s faceмъча се да си спомня try to remember; rack o.'s brainsмъча се да заспя try to sleep, woo o.'s pillow* * *мъ̀ча,гл., мин. св. деят. прич. мъ̀чил torment, torture; ( изтезавам) torture, excruciate, (put on the) rack (и прен.); (с примамливи представи) tantalize; ( преуморявам) overwork, overdrive; ( безпокоя, тормозя) vex, annoy, worry, bother, pester, molest, pick (on s.o.), gnaw (at); ( систематично) harass, harry, plague; какво те мъчи? what’s your trouble? what’s worrying you? разг. what’s biting/eating you? мъчи ме жажда be tormented by thirst; мъчи ме съвестта be tortured by remorse, s.th. lies on o.’s conscience, s.th. weighs on o.’s conscience, be conscious-stricken;\мъча се 1. torment o.s. (over s.th.); be in torment; ( страдам) suffer; have a hard/bad/terrible time; be a martyr (to), be tormented/tortured (with); ( изпитвам болка) suffer/feel/undergo great pain; ( агонизирам) agonize, suffer agony, writhe in anguish; \мъча се като грешен дявол have a hell of a time; убивам животно да не се мъчи put an animal out of its pain; убивам човек да не се мъчи ( при сражение и пр.) give s.o. the coup de grace;2. ( опитвам се, правя усилия) try, endeavour, struggle, make efforts, do o.’s best (to do s.th.), take pains (over s.th.); \мъча се да прочета мислите на някого search s.o.’s face; \мъча се да проявя търпение fight to be patient; \мъча се да си спомня rack o.’s brains.* * *excruciate; harrow; macerate; martyrise; prick (за болка); rack; torment: I'm мъчаed by thirst. - Мъчи ме жажда.; torture; victimize* * *1. (c примамливи представи) tantalize 2. (агонизирам) agonize, suffer agony, writhe in anguish 3. (безпокоя, тормозя) vex, annoy, worry, bother, pester, molest, pick (on s.o.), tease, (систематично) harass, harry, plague 4. (изпитвам болка) suffer/feel/undergo great pain 5. (изтезавам) torture, excruciate, (put on the) rack (u прен.) 6. (опитвам се, правя усилия) try, endeavour, struggle, make efforts, do o.'s best (to do s.th.), take pains (over s.th.) 7. (от болест) suffer (от from);be a martyr (to), be martyred (with), be tormented/tortured (with) 8. (преуморявам) overwork, overdrive 9. (страдам) suffer;have a hard/bad/terrible time 10. (тревожа се) worry (about) 11. torment, torture 12. МЪЧА ce torment o.s. (over s. th.);be in torment 13. МЪЧА ce да си спомня try to remember;rack o.'s brains 14. МЪЧА се да заспя try to sleep, woo o.'s pillow 15. МЪЧА се да прочета мислите на някого search s. o.'s face 16. МЪЧА се като грешен дявол have a hell of a time 17. МЪЧА се напразно try in vain 18. какво те мъчи? what's your trouble?what's worrying you? 19. мъчи ме глад be tormented by hunger, have pangs of hunger 20. мъчи ме жажда be tormented by thirst 21. мъчи ме ревматизъм be a martyr to rheumatism 22. мъчи ме съвестта be tormented with remorse, be tortured by remorse, s.th. lies on o.'s conscience, s. th. weighs heavy on o.'s conscience, be conscious-stricken 23. убивам животно да не се мъчи put an animal out of its pain 24. убивам човек да не се мъчи (при сражение и пр.) give s. o. the coup de grace -
17 Blut
n; -(e)s, kein Pl.1. blood; jemandem Blut abnehmen take a blood sample from s.o.; ein Blut bildendes Medikament h(a)ematinic ( oder blood enriching) medicine; Blut brechen vomit blood; Blut spenden give ( oder donate) blood; Blut spucken spit blood; Blut verlieren lose blood; ein Blut saugendes Insekt a blood-sucking insect; sich mit Blut bespritzen get o.s. bloody; das Hemd etc. war voll Blut covered in blood; in seinem Blut liegen be covered in blood; stärker: be lying in a pool of blood; Blut im Urin haben be passing blood (with one’s urine); ich kann kein Blut sehen I can’t stand the sight of blood; das Blut schoss ihr ins Gesicht (vor Scham / Zorn) she blushed with shame / her face was red with anger; alles Blut wich aus ihrem Gesicht her face went deathly pale; das Blut pocht in den Schläfen one’s head is throbbing; das Blut stieg ihm zu Kopf the blood rushed to his head; der Sekt etc. geht ins Blut goes (straight) to your head; die Musik etc. geht ins Blut fig. gets into your bloodstream; etw. im Blut haben have s.th. in one’s bloodstream (fig. blood); ihm stockte oder erstarrte oder gefror das Blut in den Adern his blood froze; ihr Blut kochte / geriet in Wallung her blood boiled / began to seethe; Blut und Wasser schwitzen fig. sweat blood; be terrified; an ihren Händen klebt Blut she’s got blood on her hands; an diesem Geld klebt Blut this money is tainted (with blood); ein Sieg etc. ist mit Blut erkauft fig. paid with blood; mit Blut befleckt oder besudelt fig. stained with blood; es ist viel Blut vergossen worden / geflossen there was a great deal of bloodshed / much blood (has) flowed; Blut sehen wollen want to see blood; nach Blut dürsten oder lechzen geh. thirst for blood; mit Blut geschrieben geh. written in blood; etw. mit seinem Blut besiegeln poet. (für etw. sterben) lay down one’s life for s.th.; in Blut waten fig. wade in blood; jemanden bis aufs Blut ärgern oder reizen etc. get s.o.’s blood up; jemanden bis aufs Blut aussaugen fig. bleed s.o. white; jemanden bis aufs Blut hassen loathe ( oder hate) s.o. like poison ( oder like the plague); jemanden bis aufs Blut peinigen torture s.o. to the utmost; er hat Blut geleckt fig. he’s tasted blood, he has a taste for blood2. fig.: heißes oder feuriges Blut haben be hot-blooded; dickes Blut haben be lethargic ( oder apathetic); blaues / französisches / italienisches etc. Blut in den Adern haben have blue / French / Italian blood in one’s veins; von edlem / königlichem Blut(e) sein geh. be of noble / royal blood; von reinem Blut(e) geh. pure(-blooded); kaltes oder ruhiges Blut bewahren keep calm; ruhig Blut! take it easy!, don’t get excited!, keep your hair (Am. shirt) on! Sl.; es liegt oder steckt oder sitzt ihm im Blut it’s in his blood; das wird böses Blut geben oder machen oder schaffen that’ll stir up bad feeling; Blut und Boden HIST., Nationalsozialismus: blood and soil (idea that racial origin and territorial rights further political stability and power)3. fig. (Personen) junges Blut young blood; ( einem Vorhaben) frisches oder neues Blut ( zuführen) (infuse) fresh oder new blood (into a project)* * *das Blutblood* * *[bluːt]nt -(e)s, no pl (lit, fig)blooder lag in seinem Blút — he lay in a pool of blood
es ist viel Blút vergossen worden or geflossen — there was a lot of bloodshed
nach Blút lechzen or dürsten — to thirst for blood
er kann kein Blút sehen — he can't stand the sight of blood
etw mit seinem Blút besiegeln — to lay down one's life for sth
böses Blút machen or schaffen or geben — to cause bad blood or ill feeling
jdm steigt das Blút in den Kopf — the blood rushes to sb's head
ihnen gefror or stockte or gerann das Blút in den Adern — their blood froze
ihm kocht das Blút in den Adern — his blood is boiling
vor Scham/Zorn schoss ihr das Blút ins Gesicht — she blushed with shame/went red with anger
alles Blút wich aus ihrem Gesicht — she went deathly pale
heißes or feuriges Blút haben — to be hot-blooded
etw im Blút haben — to have sth in one's blood
das liegt mir im Blút — it's in my blood
kaltes Blút bewahren — to remain unmoved
kalten Blútes — cold-bloodedly
jdn bis aufs Blút hassen — to loathe (and detest) sb
jdn/sich bis aufs Blút bekämpfen — to fight sb/fight bitterly
jdn bis aufs Blút reizen (inf) — to make sb's blood boil
ein junges Blút (liter) — a young blood (dated) or (Mädchen) thing
frisches Blút (fig) — new blood
Blút und Eisen — blood and iron
Blút und Boden (NS) — blood and soil, idea that political stability and power depend on unification of race and territory
Blút und Wasser schwitzen (inf) — to sweat blood
die Stimme des Blútes — the call of the blood
es geht (einem) ins Blút — it gets into your blood
* * *(the red fluid pumped through the body by the heart: Blood poured from the wound in his side.) blood* * *<-[e]s>[blu:t]jdm \Blut abnehmen to take a blood sample from sbin \Blut schwimmen to be swimming in bloodes wurde viel \Blut vergossen there was a lot of bloodshed, much blood was shed literes fließt \Blut blood is being spilled3.▶ bis aufs \Blut in the extremeer hasste ihn bis aufs \Blut he absolutely loathed himdiese Ketzerei wurde von der Kirche bis aufs \Blut bekämpft the church fought this heresy tooth and nailsie peinigte ihn bis aufs \Blut she tormented him mercilessly▶ blaues \Blut haben to have blue blood▶ frisches \Blut new [or fresh] blooddie Firma braucht frisches \Blut the company needs new [or fresh] blood▶ jdm gefriert [o stockt] [o gerinnt] [o erstarrt] das \Blut in den Adern sb's blood freezes [in their veins] [or ran cold]▶ [einem] ins \Blut gehen to get into one's blood [or one going]▶ \Blut geleckt haben to have developed a liking [or got a taste] for sth▶ etw im \Blut haben to have sth in one's blood▶ kaltes \Blut bewahren to remain calm▶ jdm im \Blut liegen to be in sb's blooddas Singen liegt ihm im \Blut singing is in his blood▶ jdm steigt [o schießt] das \Blut in den Kopf the blood rushes to sb's headweil sie sich so schämte, schoss ihr das Blut in den Kopf/ins Gesicht her cheeks flushed with shame* * *das; Blut[e]s bloodgleich ins Blut gehen — pass straight into the bloodstream
es wurde viel Blut vergossen — there was a great deal of bloodshed
den Zuschauern gefror od. stockte od. gerann das Blut in den Adern — (fig.) the spectators' blood ran cold
an jemandes Händen klebt Blut — (fig. geh.) there is blood on somebody's hands (fig.)
blaues Blut in den Adern haben — (fig.) have blue blood in one's veins (fig.)
böses Blut machen od. schaffen — (fig.) cause or create bad blood
Blut und Wasser schwitzen — (fig. ugs.) sweat blood (fig. coll.)
[nur/immer] ruhig Blut! — (ugs.) keep your hair on! (Brit. coll.); keep your cool! (coll.)
jemanden bis aufs Blut quälen od. peinigen — (fig.) torment somebody mercilessly
jemandem im Blut liegen — (fig.) be in somebody's blood (fig.)
* * *1. blood;jemandem Blut abnehmen take a blood sample from sb;ein Blut bildendes Medikament h(a)ematinic ( oder blood enriching) medicine;Blut brechen vomit blood;Blut spenden give ( oder donate) blood;Blut spucken spit blood;Blut verlieren lose blood;ein Blut saugendes Insekt a blood-sucking insect;sich mit Blut bespritzen get o.s. bloody;das Hemd etc warvoll Blut covered in blood;in seinem Blut liegen be covered in blood; stärker: be lying in a pool of blood;Blut im Urin haben be passing blood (with one’s urine);ich kann kein Blut sehen I can’t stand the sight of blood;das Blut schoss ihr ins Gesicht (vor Scham/Zorn) she blushed with shame/her face was red with anger;alles Blut wich aus ihrem Gesicht her face went deathly pale;das Blut pocht in den Schläfen one’s head is throbbing;das Blut stieg ihm zu Kopf the blood rushed to his head;der Sekt etcgeht ins Blut goes (straight) to your head;die Musik etcgeht ins Blut fig gets into your bloodstream;etwas im Blut haben have sth in one’s bloodstream (fig blood);gefror das Blut in den Adern his blood froze;ihr Blut kochte/geriet in Wallung her blood boiled/began to seethe;Blut und Wasser schwitzen fig sweat blood; be terrified;an ihren Händen klebt Blut she’s got blood on her hands;an diesem Geld klebt Blut this money is tainted (with blood);ein Sieg etc istmit Blut erkauft fig paid with blood;besudelt fig stained with blood;es ist viel Blut vergossen worden/geflossen there was a great deal of bloodshed/much blood (has) flowed;Blut sehen wollen want to see blood;lechzen geh thirst for blood;mit Blut geschrieben geh written in blood;etwas mit seinem Blut besiegeln poet (für etwas sterben) lay down one’s life for sth;in Blut waten fig wade in blood;jemanden bis aufs Blut aussaugen fig bleed sb white;jemanden bis aufs Blut peinigen torture sb to the utmost;er hat Blut geleckt fig he’s tasted blood, he has a taste for blood2. fig:feuriges Blut haben be hot-blooded;dickes Blut haben be lethargic ( oder apathetic);blaues/französisches/italienisches etcBlut in den Adern haben have blue/French/Italian blood in one’s veins;von edlem/königlichem Blut(e) sein geh be of noble/royal blood;von reinem Blut(e) geh pure(-blooded);ruhiges Blut bewahren keep calm;ruhig Blut! take it easy!, don’t get excited!, keep your hair (US shirt) on! sl;sitzt ihm im Blut it’s in his blood;Blut und Boden HIST, Nationalsozialismus: blood and soil (idea that racial origin and territorial rights further political stability and power)3. fig (Personen)junges Blut young blood;4. REL:* * *das; Blut[e]s bloodden Zuschauern gefror od. stockte od. gerann das Blut in den Adern — (fig.) the spectators' blood ran cold
an jemandes Händen klebt Blut — (fig. geh.) there is blood on somebody's hands (fig.)
blaues Blut in den Adern haben — (fig.) have blue blood in one's veins (fig.)
böses Blut machen od. schaffen — (fig.) cause or create bad blood
Blut und Wasser schwitzen — (fig. ugs.) sweat blood (fig. coll.)
[nur/immer] ruhig Blut! — (ugs.) keep your hair on! (Brit. coll.); keep your cool! (coll.)
jemanden bis aufs Blut quälen od. peinigen — (fig.) torment somebody mercilessly
jemandem im Blut liegen — (fig.) be in somebody's blood (fig.)
* * *nur sing. n.blood n. -
18 عدد
عَدَد \ figure: the sign for a number (1, 2, 3, etc.); any number: a low figure. number: a quantity: a large number of people. \ الأَعْدَاد الزَّوْجيَّة \ even numbers: those numbers that can be divided by two: 2, 4, 6, 8 etc.. \ أَعْدَادٌ كبيرة \ hundreds: a very large number: He has hundreds of friends. thousands: a great many: thousands of people. \ أَعْدَاد كبيرة مِن \ plague: a very large number of creatures (esp. flies, rats, locusts, etc.) that cause great trouble: The crops were destroyed by a plague of locusts. \ See Also أَسْرَاب مُؤذِيَة مِن... \ عَدَد \ intake: a quatity that is taken in: This year’s intake of students was 70 girls and 50 boys. \ See Also كَمِّيّة مُدْخَلَة \ عَدَد أقلّ \ less: a smaller amount of; not so much; not so many (but fewer is better than less in regard to plural nouns): You should eat less sugar and fewer sweets. less: a smaller amount: It lasted for less than five minutes. He wants $5 and he won’t accept less. \ عَدَد صَحيح \ a whole number: a number such as 2 (not a fraction like 2/3 or a decimal like 1.7). \ عَدَد غفير \ multitude: a great number; a crowd. \ عَدَد قَديم (من صَحيفَة أو مَجَلَّة) \ back number: (of a newspaper, etc) a copy which is not the latest on sale. \ See Also نُسْخَة قَديمَة \ عَدَد قَليل \ few: (with a) some, but not a large number: I waited for a few days. I need a few more books. handful: a few: Only a handful of people came to watch the match. \ العَدَد الكامِل \ strength: the full quantity of a group of persons who form an effective force: The nurses are not up to strength. (There are not enough nurses) They are 30 below strength. (The hospital usu. employs 30 more than it has now). \ عَدَد كبير \ many: a large number (of): He has (very) many friends. Many (of them) are at school with him. Many hands make light work (a job is done faster if we help each other). many a: used with a singular noun, equal in sense to a plural noun: I’ve been there many a time (many times). score: modern use (mostly pl.) a large number: I’ve been there scores of times. \ عَدَد كبير \ heaps of: a lot of: He has heaps of relations. \ See Also كَمية كبيرة مِن \ عَدَد كبير جدًّا \ a good many, a great many: very many: a good many people. \ عَدَد كَبير مِن \ dozen: a lot: I have dozens of relations. \ عَدَد مِن صَحِيفة \ issue: an official supply; (of newspapers) a particular supply: an issue of new coins; yesterday’s issue of the local paper. \ عَدَد هائِل \ a cloud: a mass of everything in the air (flying insects, smoke, dust, etc.). -
19 invadir
v.1 to invade.los turistas invadieron el museo the tourists flooded the museumEllos invadieron el pueblo They invaded the town.Ella invade su privacidad She invades his privacy.Ellos invadieron de repente They invaded suddenly.2 to overcome, to overwhelm.lo invadió la tristeza he was overcome by sadness3 to fill, to overflow.4 to be invaded by.Me invadieron muchas dudas I was invaded by many doubts...5 to permeate.El agua invade la bodega The water permeates the storage room.* * *1 to invade* * *verb* * *VT1) (=atacar) [+ célula, país] to invade; [+ espacio aéreo, aguas jurisdiccionales] to violate, enterlos turistas invaden nuestras costas — tourists descend upon o invade our coasts
las malas hierbas/los insectos invadieron el trigal — the wheatfield was overrun with weeds/insects
2) (=ocupar)a) [multitud] [gen] to pour into/onto; [protestando] to storm into/ontolos fans invadieron el estadio/el escenario — the fans poured into the stadium/onto the stage
los manifestantes invadieron la ciudad/las calles — the protesters stormed into the city/onto the streets
b) [vehículo] to go into/ontoel camión invadió el carril contrario/la pista de despegue — the lorry went into the wrong lane/onto the runway
3)invadir a algn — [sentimiento] to overcome sb
la invadió una gran tristeza — she was filled with great sadness, a great sadness overcame her
el miedo había invadido su cuerpo — she was overcome by fear, she was filled with fear, fear overcame her
4) (Com) [producto] to encroach onlos vinos franceses invaden los mercados europeos — French wines are encroaching on European markets
5) (Jur) to encroach uponel abogado intentó invadir las funciones del juez — the solicitor attempted to encroach upon the judge's prerogatives
el delegado invadió atribuciones que no le correspondían — the delegate went beyond the powers vested in him
* * *verbo transitivoa) ejército/fuerzas to invadeb) <espacio aéreo/aguas> to enter, encroach uponinvadió nuestras aguas jurisdiccionales — it encroached upon o entered our territorial waters
c) tristeza/alegría to overcome, overwhelmlo invadió un gran pesar — he was overcome o overwhelmed with sorrow
* * *= encroach on/upon, muscle in, horn in, invade, overrun [over-run], come over, wash over, storm, take over.Ex. We have not been alone, of course, in our concentration on inessentials; and ours is not the only profession that is being encroached upon by alternative professionals.Ex. They are, however, very much in a minority in the high technology field and any feeling that the products of such courses are ' muscling in' on library and information work is hard to substantiate.Ex. There might be some difficulty with agencies who see us as ' horning in' on their territory.Ex. Information technology invades every facet of industrial, business and personal life.Ex. Doomsayers persist in the belief that the book world has been overrun by philistinism.Ex. 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.Ex. The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex. On October 6, 1976, an angry mob stormed the university to attack students who seemed to threaten the nation.Ex. We need to replace those aspects of traditional public library service which have been taken over by other media or rendered redundant by social change.----* invadir el terreno (de Alguien) = encroach on/upon + Posesivo + domain.* invadir la intimidad de Alguien = intrude on + Posesivo + privacy.* * *verbo transitivoa) ejército/fuerzas to invadeb) <espacio aéreo/aguas> to enter, encroach uponinvadió nuestras aguas jurisdiccionales — it encroached upon o entered our territorial waters
c) tristeza/alegría to overcome, overwhelmlo invadió un gran pesar — he was overcome o overwhelmed with sorrow
* * *= encroach on/upon, muscle in, horn in, invade, overrun [over-run], come over, wash over, storm, take over.Ex: We have not been alone, of course, in our concentration on inessentials; and ours is not the only profession that is being encroached upon by alternative professionals.
Ex: They are, however, very much in a minority in the high technology field and any feeling that the products of such courses are ' muscling in' on library and information work is hard to substantiate.Ex: There might be some difficulty with agencies who see us as ' horning in' on their territory.Ex: Information technology invades every facet of industrial, business and personal life.Ex: Doomsayers persist in the belief that the book world has been overrun by philistinism.Ex: 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.Ex: The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex: On October 6, 1976, an angry mob stormed the university to attack students who seemed to threaten the nation.Ex: We need to replace those aspects of traditional public library service which have been taken over by other media or rendered redundant by social change.* invadir el terreno (de Alguien) = encroach on/upon + Posesivo + domain.* invadir la intimidad de Alguien = intrude on + Posesivo + privacy.* * *invadir [I1 ]vt1 «ejército/fuerzas» to invadelos manifestantes invadieron la plaza the demonstrators poured into the squarelos turistas que invaden el pueblo cada verano the tourists who invade the town each summeruna plaga de langostas invadió la plantación the plantation was overrun by a plague of locustsel virus invade todo el organismo the virus invades the whole organismla televisión invade nuestros hogares television is invading our homes2 ‹espacio aéreo/aguas› to enter, encroach uponhabía invadido nuestras aguas jurisdiccionales it had encroached upon o entered our territorial watersel autobús invadió la calzada contraria the bus went onto the wrong side of the roadel gobierno invadió las atribuciones del poder judicial the government encroached upon the powers of the judiciary3 «tristeza/alegría» to overcome, overwhelmse sintió invadido de una sensación de angustia he felt overcome by o filled with a feeling of anxiety* * *
invadir ( conjugate invadir) verbo transitivo
invadir verbo transitivo to invade
figurado los trabajadores invadieron la calle, workers poured out onto the street
' invadir' also found in these entries:
English:
encroach
- invade
- overrun
- over
* * *invadir vt1. [sujeto: ejército] to invade;el caza invadió el espacio aéreo ruso the fighter plane encroached on Russian airspace;una plaga de langostas invadió los campos a plague of locusts invaded the fields2. [sujeto: turistas]los turistas invadieron el museo the tourists poured o flooded into the museum;la población invadió las calles people poured onto the streets3. [sujeto: sentimiento] to overcome, to overwhelm;lo invadió la tristeza he was overcome o overwhelmed by sadness;nos invade la alegría we are overcome o overwhelmed with joy;me invadió una sensación repentina de cansancio a sudden feeling of tiredness overcame me4. [sujeto: vehículo]el vehículo invadió el carril contrario the vehicle went onto the wrong side of the road;la moto invadió la acera y atropelló a dos peatones the motorbike mounted the Br pavement o US sidewalk and hit two pedestrians5. [sobrepasar límite de]acusaron al ministro de invadir las competencias de otro departamento the minister was accused of encroaching upon another department's area of responsibility;los fotógrafos invadieron la intimidad de la actriz the photographers invaded the actress' privacy* * *v/t1 invade;invadir el carril contrario go onto the wrong side of the road* * *invadir vt: to invade* * *invadir vb to invade -
20 Lesseps, Ferdinand de
SUBJECT AREA: Canals[br]b. 19 November 1805 Versailles, Franced. 7 December 1894 La Chesnaye, near Paris, France[br]French diplomat and canal entrepreneur.[br]Ferdinand de Lesseps was born into a family in the diplomatic service and it was intended that his should be his career also. He was educated at the Lycée Napoléon in Paris. In 1825, aged 20, he was appointed an attaché to the French consulate in Lisbon. In 1828 he went to the Consulate-General in Tunis and in 1831 was posted from there to Egypt, becoming French Consul in Cairo two years later. For his work there during the plague in 1836 he was awarded the Croix de Chevalier in the Légion d'honneur. During this time he became very friendly with Said Mohammed and the friendship was maintained over the years, although there were no expectations then that Said would occupy any great position of authority.De Lesseps then served in other countries. In 1841 he had thought about a canal from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, and he brooded over the idea until 1854. In October of that year, having retired from the diplomatic service, he returned to Egypt privately. His friend Said became Viceroy and he readily agreed to the proposal to cut the canal. At first there was great international opposition to the idea, and in 1855 de Lesseps travelled to England to try to raise capital. Work finally started in 1859, but there were further delays following the death of Said Pasha in 1863. The work was completed in 1869 and the canal was formally opened by the Empress Eugenic on 20 November 1869. De Lesseps was fêted in France and awarded the Grand Croix de la Légion d'honneur.He subsequently promoted the project of the Corinth Canal, but his great ambition in his later years was to construct a canal across the Isthmus of Panama. This idea had been conceived by Spanish adventurers in 1514, but everyone felt the problems and cost would be too great. De Lesseps, riding high in popularity and with his charismatic character, convinced the public of the scheme's feasibility and was able to raise vast sums for the enterprise. He proposed a sea-level canal, which required the excavation of a 350 ft (107 m) cut through terrain; this eventually proved impossible, but work nevertheless started in 1881.In 1882 de Lesseps became first President d'-Honneur of the Syndicat des Entrepreneurs de Travaux Publics de France and was elected to the Chair of the French Academy in 1884. By 1891 the Panama Canal was in a disastrous financial crisis: a new company was formed, and because of the vast sums expended a financial investigation was made. The report led to de Lesseps, his son and several high-ranking government ministers and officials being charged with bribery and corruption, but de Lesseps was a very sick man and never appeared at the trial. He was never convicted, although others were, and he died soon after, at the age of 89, at his home.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCroix de Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur 1836; Grand Croix 1869.Further ReadingJohn S.Pudney, 1968, Suez. De Lesseps' Canal, London: Dent.John Marlowe, 1964, The Making of the Suez Canal, London: Cresset.JHB
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