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1 midday
ظَهِيرة \ midday: the middle of the day. noon: midday; 12 o’clock in the day: I’ll meet you at noon. noonday: noon: the heat of the noonday sun. \ ظُهْر \ midday: the middle of the day. noon: midday; 12 o’clock in the day: I’ll meet you at noon. noonday: noon: the heat of the noonday sun. -
2 मध्यंदिन
mádhya-ṉ-dina( madhyá-) m. (n. L.) midday, noon RV. etc. etc.;
the midday offering (Savana orᅠ Pavamāna) Br. ṠrS. ;
Bassia Latifolia L. ;
N. of a disciple of Yājñavalkya Cat. ;
n. Midday (personified as a son of Pushpârṇa by Prabhā) BhP. ;
mfn. = mādhyaṉdina (q.v.);
- gata mfn. having reached the meridian (as the sun) MBh. ;
- samaya m. midday-time, noon Pañcat. ;
-nâ̱rka-saṉtapta mfn. burnt by the midday-sun Kāvyâd. ;
- nīya mfn. meridional, meridian, belonging to noon orᅠ midday Lāṭy.
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3 полуденное солнце
General subject: meridian sun, the midday sun, the noonday sun, the sun at noon -
4 मध्यादित्य
madhyâ̱dityam. the midday sun (- gate'hani, « when the day has reached the mid-sun» i.e. at noon) R.
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5 staan
1 [met betrekking tot personen, dieren] stand2 [op steunpunten rusten] stand3 [in een toestand, hoedanigheid zijn] stand ⇒ be4 [passen, kleden] look6 [weldra zullen] be ready/about to7 [gericht zijn] be8 [bij voortduring met iets bezig zijn] stand ⇒ be9 [geëist worden] carry10 [stilstaan] stand still12 [functie, standplaats hebben] be (employed)13 [eisen] insist ((up)on)♦voorbeelden:1 ga er maar aan staan! • (you) just go ahead and try!; 〈 dat is niet eenvoudig〉 that's no easy mattergaan staan • stand upachter/naast elkaar gaan staan • 〈 ook〉 queue/line upergens onverwacht voor komen te staan • come up against something unexpectedlyiemand terzijde staan • help/support someonekom bij me staan! • come stand beside me〈 figuurlijk〉 waar sta jij in deze zaak? • where do you stand in this?op zijn remmen staan • slam on the brakesdie gebeurtenis staat geheel op zichzelf • that is an isolated incident〈 figuurlijk〉 voor een probleem staan • be faced with/face a problemhiermee staat of valt de zaak • this will make or break the business3 hoe staat de barometer? • what does the barometer say/read?hoe staat het pond? • how high is the pound?zó staat die zaak • that's how the matter standshoe staan de zaken? • how are things?alleen staan • be alonebekend staan als • be known ashoe staat het ermee? • how's it going?, how are things?er goed bij staan • be doing weller goed voor staan • look goodhiertegenover staat echter dat … • on the other hand, however, …zij staan sterk • they are in a strong positionzijn ogen staan wazig • he has a hazy look in his eyesboven iemand staan • be above someonebuiten iets staan • not be involved in somethingin zijn twee staan • be in second (gear)in de grondverf staan • have an undercoat onin de schuld staan • be in debthoe staat het met de gezondheid? • how is your health?onder iemand staan • be under someonede verwarming staat op 18° • the heating is at 18 degreesde snelheidsmeter stond op 80 • the speedometer showed 80ergens ambivalent tegenover staan • be ambivalent about somethingergens positief tegenover staan • think something is a good thing7 staat tot 14 als 8 staat tot 16 • 7 is to 14 as 8 is to 16zij staat derde in het algemeen klassement • she is third in the overall rankingwie staat er nummer één? • who is number one?zoals de zaken nu staan • as things now standdie kleur staat er niet bij • that colour clashesdat kapsel staat u goed • that hairstyle suits youdie jas staat netjes • that jacket looks smarter staat geschreven • it is written, it says in the Bibleer staat niet bij wanneer • it doesn't say whenhet staat niet in Van Dale/in de krant • it's not in Van Dale/the paperwat staat er in de krant over Thatcher? • what does it say in the paper about Thatcher?het staat in de wet • the law says soin de tekst staat daar niets over • the text doesn't say anything about iter stond een waarschuwing op • there was a warning on itwat staat er op het programma? • what's on the programme?i.e. staat voor id est • i.e. stands for id ester staat nog 100 pond (schuld) • there is still £100 outstanding8 verlegen/raar staan (te) kijken • feel embarrassed/strangeergens van staan (te) kijken • be flabbergastedze staat al een uur te wachten • she has been waiting (for) an hourkoud staan (te) worden • be getting colder staat een hoge beloning op zijn hoofd • there's/he's got a high price on his headde vijand tot staan brengen • stop the enemysta of ik schiet! • stop or I'll shoot11 laat maar staan • just leave it (alone/there)laat staan dat … • not to mention (that) …hij kon nauwelijks spreken, laat staan zingen • he could barely speak, let alone singzijn eten laten staan • leave one's foodzijn baard laten staan • grow a beardhij liet nog wat op zijn rekening staan • he left some money in his accounter staat nog wat van gisteren • there is some left over from yesterdayhij staat op goede manieren • he insists upon good mannerser staat ons heel wat te doen • there is a whole lot (waiting) to be doneer staat hem wat te wachten • there is something in store for him -
6 вонючий
1) General subject: buckish, cheesy, fetid, foetid, foul, frowzy, funky, goatish, graveolent, malodorous, nauseous, noisome, odoriferous, putrid, rank, smelly, stinking, stinky2) Botanical term: fetid (лат. felosomus), fetid (лат. nidorosus), stinking (лат. felosomus), stinking (лат. nidorosus)3) Bookish: olid4) British English: whiffy5) Australian slang: off like a bucket of prawns in the midday sun, on the bugle, on the nose -
7 остроконечные образования на поверхности фирна и льда, наклонённые в направлении на полуденное положение солнца
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > остроконечные образования на поверхности фирна и льда, наклонённые в направлении на полуденное положение солнца
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8 гнилой
1) General subject: carrion, doty (о древесине), flyblown, punk (о дереве), punky (о древесине), purulent, putrescent, putrid, rotten, (в сложных словах с греч. корнями) sapr-, (в сложных словах с греч. корнями) sapro- (тж. sapr-), scrofulous, unsound, wet2) Geology: decayed4) Engineering: decay5) Agriculture: addle6) British English: manky7) Australian slang: off like a bucket of prawns in the midday sun8) Automobile industry: dozy (о древесине)9) Forestry: druxy, foxy (о древесине в начальной стадии гниения), frowy (о древесине), unsound (о древесине)10) Drilling: foul11) Polymers: sour12) Makarov: bad, corrupt, druxy (о древесине) -
9 полностью сгнивший
Australian slang: off like a bucket of prawns in the midday sunУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > полностью сгнивший
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10 há-degi
n. high day, about twelve o’clock (vide dagr), Nj. 208, Grett. 121, Landn. 94 (v. l. to miðdegi), Stj. 447; hádegis sól, the midday sun, Pass. 37. 13. -
11 de zon staat 's middags op deze kamer
de zon staat 's middags op deze kamerVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > de zon staat 's middags op deze kamer
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12 noon
ظَهِيرة \ midday: the middle of the day. noon: midday; 12 o’clock in the day: I’ll meet you at noon. noonday: noon: the heat of the noonday sun. \ ظُهْر \ midday: the middle of the day. noon: midday; 12 o’clock in the day: I’ll meet you at noon. noonday: noon: the heat of the noonday sun. -
13 noonday
ظَهِيرة \ midday: the middle of the day. noon: midday; 12 o’clock in the day: I’ll meet you at noon. noonday: noon: the heat of the noonday sun. \ ظُهْر \ midday: the middle of the day. noon: midday; 12 o’clock in the day: I’ll meet you at noon. noonday: noon: the heat of the noonday sun. -
14 μεσημβρία
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `midday', as direction `south' (Att. A.);Derivatives: μεσημβρινός (Att.), Dor. (Theoc.) μεσαμβρινός `of the midday, southern' (after the adj. of time in - ινός; cf. Risch Mus. Helv. 2, 17); μεσήμβριος `southern' (Ruf. ap. Orib.), f. μεσημβριάς (Nonn.); also (after Dor. ἀμέρα) τὸ μεσᾱμέριον `on the midday' (Theoc.). Denomin.: μεσημβρ-ιάζω (Pl.), - ίζω (Str.), ptc. - ιάων, - ιόων (AP, A. R.) `pass the midday, culminate', of sun and stars.Origin: GR [a formation built with Greek elements]Etymology: Abstract formation in - ία from μέσον ἆμαρ or from a (supposed) adj. PGr. *μέσ-ᾱμ(β)ρ-ος, - ιος `of the middle of the day' to the zero grade of ἆμαρ `day'; from this with PGr. shortening μεσ-ᾰμβρ-ία, - ίη (Schwyzer 279) and, with analogical η after ἦμαρ, ἡμέρα, μεσ-ημβρ-ία.Page in Frisk: 2,213Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > μεσημβρία
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15 sōl
sōl sōlis, m [2 SER-], the sun: lux solis: quid potest esse sole maius?: occidens, oriens, sunset, sunrise: sole orto Gracchus copias educit, L.: ad solis occasum, towards sunset, Cs.: surgente a sole ad, etc., from early morning, H.—Prov.: adiecit, nondum omnium dierum solem occidisse, i. e. that his day of re<*>enge might yet come, L.— Plur: se duo soles vidisse dicant.—Esp.: spectant in orientem solem, to the East, Cs.: si illud signum solis ortum conspiceret, to the East: ab ortu solis flare venti, L.: alterum (litus) vergit ad occidentum solem, to the west, Cs.: spectat inter occasum solis et septemtriones, north-west, Cs.: quae (pars insulae) est propius solis occasum, Cs.— A day (poet.): septimus, Iu.: O sol Pulcher, O laudande, H.: Supremo sole, at midday, H.: longos Cantando condere soles, spend the long summer days, V.: Si numeres anno soles et nubila toto, the sunny and the cloudy days, O.— The sun, sunlight, sunshine, heat of the sun: paululum a sole, out of the sun: in sole ambulare: torrente meridiano sole, L.: ut veniens dextrum latus aspiciat sol, light of the morning sun, H.: adversi solis ab ictu, sunstroke, O.: patiens pulveris atque solis, H.—Prov.: processerat in solem et pulverem, i. e. into the struggles of life: cum id solis luce videatur clarius, plainer than sunlight.—Plur.: Quae levis adsiduis solibus usta riget, O.: Quae carent ventis et solibus, i. e. are buried, H.: ex imbri soles Prospicere... poteris, V.: Tum blandi soles, O.: aequora semper solibus orba tument, O.: solibus rupta glacies, Iu.—As nom prop., the Sun-god, Sol (an Italian deity): quod magni filia Solis eram, O.: gratīs tibi ago, summe Sol: si hoc uno quicquam Sol vidisset indignius: Solem Consule, qui late facta videt, O.—Fig., the sun, light, glory: P. Africanus sol alter: Solem Asiae Brutum appellat, H.* * * -
16 ظهر
ظُهْر \ midday: the middle of the day. noon: midday; 12 o’clock in the day: I’ll meet you at noon. noonday: noon: the heat of the noonday sun. -
17 ظهيرة
ظَهِيرة \ midday: the middle of the day. noon: midday; 12 o’clock in the day: I’ll meet you at noon. noonday: noon: the heat of the noonday sun. -
18 feroz
adj.1 fierce, ferocious (animal, bestia).2 cruel, savage (criminal, asesino).3 terrible (intenso) (dolor, angustia).tenía un hambre feroz he was ravenous o starvingla competencia es feroz the competition is fierce4 horrendous, dreadful.* * *1 fierce, ferocious\el lobo feroz the big bad wolf* * *adj.fierce, ferocious* * *ADJ1) (=salvaje) fierce, ferocioustengo un hambre feroz — I'm starving, I'm famished
2) (=cruel) cruel3) LAm (=feo) ugly* * *a) < animal> ferocious, fierce; <ataque/mirada/odio> fierce, vicious; <viento/tempestad> fierce, violenttengo un hambre feroz — (fam) I'm ravenous o starved (colloq)
b) (Col, Méx, Ven fam) ( feo) horrendous (colloq)* * *= fierce [fiercer -comp., fiercest -sup.], savage, swingeing, ferocius, ferocious, cutthroat, truculent.Ex. The greatest living theoretician of descriptive cataloging, Professor Seymour Lubetzky, graced our library with his brilliance, insight, and fierce dedication to the integrity of the catalog.Ex. The most vulnerable nations are Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, which have all experienced savage war and civil unrest in recent years.Ex. Faced with the prospect of a swingeing cut of 15% in the periodical budget, the library had to determine which titles could be cancelled with least damage to the integrity of the research collections.Ex. Fuller's novel make for a form of intellectual clarity, even if that clarity, paradoxically, is expressed in a ferocious hell-bent manner.Ex. One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.Ex. As the saying goes, 'Be as innocent as a lamb, and as wily as a fox' -- shrewdness is a valuable attribute in this cutthroat world.Ex. Senior staff members said that these fevers of truculent behavior had manifested themselves only within the past two or three years.----* crítica feroz = hatchet job.* * *a) < animal> ferocious, fierce; <ataque/mirada/odio> fierce, vicious; <viento/tempestad> fierce, violenttengo un hambre feroz — (fam) I'm ravenous o starved (colloq)
b) (Col, Méx, Ven fam) ( feo) horrendous (colloq)* * *= fierce [fiercer -comp., fiercest -sup.], savage, swingeing, ferocius, ferocious, cutthroat, truculent.Ex: The greatest living theoretician of descriptive cataloging, Professor Seymour Lubetzky, graced our library with his brilliance, insight, and fierce dedication to the integrity of the catalog.
Ex: The most vulnerable nations are Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, which have all experienced savage war and civil unrest in recent years.Ex: Faced with the prospect of a swingeing cut of 15% in the periodical budget, the library had to determine which titles could be cancelled with least damage to the integrity of the research collections.Ex: Fuller's novel make for a form of intellectual clarity, even if that clarity, paradoxically, is expressed in a ferocious hell-bent manner.Ex: One by one, he wiped the floor with opponents who had spoken in the debate -- with a ferocious blend of rant, rhetoric and rumbustious counterattack.Ex: As the saying goes, 'Be as innocent as a lamb, and as wily as a fox' -- shrewdness is a valuable attribute in this cutthroat world.Ex: Senior staff members said that these fevers of truculent behavior had manifested themselves only within the past two or three years.* crítica feroz = hatchet job.* * *1 ‹animal› ferocious, fierce; ‹ataque/mirada› fierce, vicious; ‹viento/tempestad› fierce, violent; ‹fanatismo› fiercebajo el feroz sol del mediodía beneath the fierce midday sunse desató una feroz tempestad a fierce o violent storm was unleashed ( liter)un verde feroz a ghastly o horrendous green ( colloq)* * *
Multiple Entries:
algo feroz
feroz
feroz adjetivo
‹ataque/mirada/odio› fierce, vicious;
‹viento/tempestad› fierce, violent
feroz adjetivo fierce, ferocious: tengo un hambre feroz, I'm ravenous
una crítica feroz, savage criticism
' feroz' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
bestia
- un
English:
cutthroat
- destroy
- ferocious
- fierce
- glare
- rat race
- ravenous
- savage
- cut
- furious
- hard
- vicious
* * *feroz adj1. [animal, bestia] fierce, ferocious2. [criminal, asesino] cruel, savage3. [intenso] [tempestad] fierce, violent;[dolor, angustia] terrible;tenía un hambre feroz I was ravenous o starving;la competencia es feroz the competition is fierce;lanzó un ataque feroz contra la propuesta del gobierno he launched a fierce attack against the government's proposalagarraron una feroz borrachera they got terribly o incredibly drunk* * *adj fierce; ( cruel) cruel* * *♦ ferozmente adv* * *feroz adj fierce / ferocious -
19 implacable
adj.implacable, relentless.* * *► adjetivo1 implacable, relentless* * *adj.* * *ADJ implacable, relentless* * *a) <odio/furia> implacable; <avance/lucha> relentless; < sol> relentlessb) <juez/crítico> implacablec) <enemigo/contrincante> ruthless* * *= unrelenting, relentless, ruthless, remorseless, unforgiving, bitter, implacable, inexorable, nagging, unsparing, cutthroat.Nota: Adjetivo.Ex. Unrelenting tuition increases are pricing private institutions out of the reach of many middle-class parents.Ex. They need to be relentless in their fight for adequate funding so that the library service and the profession are not jeopardised.Ex. The ruling also coincided with a flood of mergers and acquisitions that transformed gentlemen publishers into ruthless entrepreneurs.Ex. The population explosion and the remorseless growth of knowledge are discussed.Ex. Unlike other Swedish illustrators, he used the time consuming and unforgiving technique of wood engraving for his illustrations.Ex. The author notes the work of Melvyl Dewey in espousing library education and the bitter opposition from some library leaders.Ex. The implacable reduction in the dissemination of public documents constitutes a rebarbative policy that threatens the quality of reference services in libraries.Ex. The inexorable tide of automation seems to be threatening the existence of old-fashioned, handwritten copymarking.Ex. With inflated prices, the nagging question was whether consumers were being bilked by the market.Ex. The book is so ferociously unsparing in detailing the systematic torment as well as wanton cruelty that the reconstruction of the past is often unbearable.Ex. As the saying goes, 'Be as innocent as a lamb, and as wily as a fox' -- shrewdness is a valuable attribute in this cutthroat world.----* actuar de un modo implacable = play + hardball.* ser implacable = play + hardball.* * *a) <odio/furia> implacable; <avance/lucha> relentless; < sol> relentlessb) <juez/crítico> implacablec) <enemigo/contrincante> ruthless* * *= unrelenting, relentless, ruthless, remorseless, unforgiving, bitter, implacable, inexorable, nagging, unsparing, cutthroat.Nota: Adjetivo.Ex: Unrelenting tuition increases are pricing private institutions out of the reach of many middle-class parents.
Ex: They need to be relentless in their fight for adequate funding so that the library service and the profession are not jeopardised.Ex: The ruling also coincided with a flood of mergers and acquisitions that transformed gentlemen publishers into ruthless entrepreneurs.Ex: The population explosion and the remorseless growth of knowledge are discussed.Ex: Unlike other Swedish illustrators, he used the time consuming and unforgiving technique of wood engraving for his illustrations.Ex: The author notes the work of Melvyl Dewey in espousing library education and the bitter opposition from some library leaders.Ex: The implacable reduction in the dissemination of public documents constitutes a rebarbative policy that threatens the quality of reference services in libraries.Ex: The inexorable tide of automation seems to be threatening the existence of old-fashioned, handwritten copymarking.Ex: With inflated prices, the nagging question was whether consumers were being bilked by the market.Ex: The book is so ferociously unsparing in detailing the systematic torment as well as wanton cruelty that the reconstruction of the past is often unbearable.Ex: As the saying goes, 'Be as innocent as a lamb, and as wily as a fox' -- shrewdness is a valuable attribute in this cutthroat world.* actuar de un modo implacable = play + hardball.* ser implacable = play + hardball.* * *1 ‹odio/furia› implacable; ‹avance/lucha› relentlessel implacable sol del mediodía the relentless midday sunel paso implacable del tiempo the inexorable passage of time2 ‹juez/crítico› implacablees implacable cuando se trata de corregir errores de ortografía she is unforgiving o uncompromising when it comes to correcting spelling mistakes3 ‹enemigo/contrincante› ruthless* * *
implacable adjetivo
‹avance/lucha› relentless;
‹ sol› relentless
implacable adjetivo relentless, implacable
' implacable' also found in these entries:
English:
bitter
- fierce
- persecution
- pitiless
- relentless
- remorseless
- unrelenting
- hard
- implacable
- ruthless
- unyielding
* * *implacable adj1. [odio, ira] implacable;[sol] relentless; [clima] harsh;el implacable avance del desierto the relentless o inexorable advance of the desert2. [persona] inflexible, firm;es implacable con sus alumnos she's very hard on her pupils3. [incontestable] unassailable;un argumento de una lógica implacable an argument of unassailable logic* * *adj implacable* * *implacable adj: implacable, relentless♦ implacablemente adv -
20 אליסטון
אִלְיַסְטוֹן, אִלְיַיסְטוֹן, הִלְיַיסְטוֹןm. (ἡλιαστός, acc., fr. ἡλιάζω, v. Gr. Dict.) a luscious wine (vinum dulce) for which the grapes were to be dried in the sun for three days, after which they were gathered and trodden on the fourth during the full fervor of the midday heat (Sm. Ant. s. v. Vinum; Columella XII, 27). Men.VIII, 6 אליוסטון Mish. (Ar. ed. Koh. אלייס׳, Talm. ed. 86b הליסטיון, היל׳). B. Bath.97b אלייסטון Ar. (Var. a. ed. היליסטון; Ms. והלאסטון, והיליסטיון; v. Rabb. D. S. a. l.). Tosef.Men.IX, 9 (from which B. Bath. l. c. is quoted) אליסטון.
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