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1 World War II
(1939-1945)In the European phase of the war, neutral Portugal contributed more to the Allied victory than historians have acknowledged. Portugal experienced severe pressures to compromise her neutrality from both the Axis and Allied powers and, on several occasions, there were efforts to force Portugal to enter the war as a belligerent. Several factors lent Portugal importance as a neutral. This was especially the case during the period from the fall of France in June 1940 to the Allied invasion and reconquest of France from June to August 1944.In four respects, Portugal became briefly a modest strategic asset for the Allies and a war materiel supplier for both sides: the country's location in the southwesternmost corner of the largely German-occupied European continent; being a transport and communication terminus, observation post for spies, and crossroads between Europe, the Atlantic, the Americas, and Africa; Portugal's strategically located Atlantic islands, the Azores, Madeira, and Cape Verde archipelagos; and having important mines of wolfram or tungsten ore, crucial for the war industry for hardening steel.To maintain strict neutrality, the Estado Novo regime dominated by Antônio de Oliveira Salazar performed a delicate balancing act. Lisbon attempted to please and cater to the interests of both sets of belligerents, but only to the extent that the concessions granted would not threaten Portugal's security or its status as a neutral. On at least two occasions, Portugal's neutrality status was threatened. First, Germany briefly considered invading Portugal and Spain during 1940-41. A second occasion came in 1943 and 1944 as Great Britain, backed by the United States, pressured Portugal to grant war-related concessions that threatened Portugal's status of strict neutrality and would possibly bring Portugal into the war on the Allied side. Nazi Germany's plan ("Operation Felix") to invade the Iberian Peninsula from late 1940 into 1941 was never executed, but the Allies occupied and used several air and naval bases in Portugal's Azores Islands.The second major crisis for Portugal's neutrality came with increasing Allied pressures for concessions from the summer of 1943 to the summer of 1944. Led by Britain, Portugal's oldest ally, Portugal was pressured to grant access to air and naval bases in the Azores Islands. Such bases were necessary to assist the Allies in winning the Battle of the Atlantic, the naval war in which German U-boats continued to destroy Allied shipping. In October 1943, following tedious negotiations, British forces began to operate such bases and, in November 1944, American forces were allowed to enter the islands. Germany protested and made threats, but there was no German attack.Tensions rose again in the spring of 1944, when the Allies demanded that Lisbon cease exporting wolfram to Germany. Salazar grew agitated, considered resigning, and argued that Portugal had made a solemn promise to Germany that wolfram exports would be continued and that Portugal could not break its pledge. The Portuguese ambassador in London concluded that the shipping of wolfram to Germany was "the price of neutrality." Fearing that a still-dangerous Germany could still attack Portugal, Salazar ordered the banning of the mining, sale, and exports of wolfram not only to Germany but to the Allies as of 6 June 1944.Portugal did not enter the war as a belligerent, and its forces did not engage in combat, but some Portuguese experienced directly or indirectly the impact of fighting. Off Portugal or near her Atlantic islands, Portuguese naval personnel or commercial fishermen rescued at sea hundreds of victims of U-boat sinkings of Allied shipping in the Atlantic. German U-boats sank four or five Portuguese merchant vessels as well and, in 1944, a U-boat stopped, boarded, searched, and forced the evacuation of a Portuguese ocean liner, the Serpa Pinto, in mid-Atlantic. Filled with refugees, the liner was not sunk but several passengers lost their lives and the U-boat kidnapped two of the ship's passengers, Portuguese Americans of military age, and interned them in a prison camp. As for involvement in a theater of war, hundreds of inhabitants were killed and wounded in remote East Timor, a Portuguese colony near Indonesia, which was invaded, annexed, and ruled by Japanese forces between February 1942 and August 1945. In other incidents, scores of Allied military planes, out of fuel or damaged in air combat, crashed or were forced to land in neutral Portugal. Air personnel who did not survive such crashes were buried in Portuguese cemeteries or in the English Cemetery, Lisbon.Portugal's peripheral involvement in largely nonbelligerent aspects of the war accelerated social, economic, and political change in Portugal's urban society. It strengthened political opposition to the dictatorship among intellectual and working classes, and it obliged the regime to bolster political repression. The general economic and financial status of Portugal, too, underwent improvements since creditor Britain, in order to purchase wolfram, foods, and other materials needed during the war, became indebted to Portugal. When Britain repaid this debt after the war, Portugal was able to restore and expand its merchant fleet. Unlike most of Europe, ravaged by the worst war in human history, Portugal did not suffer heavy losses of human life, infrastructure, and property. Unlike even her neighbor Spain, badly shaken by its terrible Civil War (1936-39), Portugal's immediate postwar condition was more favorable, especially in urban areas, although deep-seated poverty remained.Portugal experienced other effects, especially during 1939-42, as there was an influx of about a million war refugees, an infestation of foreign spies and other secret agents from 60 secret intelligence services, and the residence of scores of international journalists who came to report the war from Lisbon. There was also the growth of war-related mining (especially wolfram and tin). Portugal's media eagerly reported the war and, by and large, despite government censorship, the Portuguese print media favored the Allied cause. Portugal's standard of living underwent some improvement, although price increases were unpopular.The silent invasion of several thousand foreign spies, in addition to the hiring of many Portuguese as informants and spies, had fascinating outcomes. "Spyland" Portugal, especially when Portugal was a key point for communicating with occupied Europe (1940-44), witnessed some unusual events, and spying for foreigners at least briefly became a national industry. Until mid-1944, when Allied forces invaded France, Portugal was the only secure entry point from across the Atlantic to Europe or to the British Isles, as well as the escape hatch for refugees, spies, defectors, and others fleeing occupied Europe or Vichy-controlled Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria. Through Portugal by car, ship, train, or scheduled civil airliner one could travel to and from Spain or to Britain, or one could leave through Portugal, the westernmost continental country of Europe, to seek refuge across the Atlantic in the Americas.The wartime Portuguese scene was a colorful melange of illegal activities, including espionage, the black market, war propaganda, gambling, speculation, currency counterfeiting, diamond and wolfram smuggling, prostitution, and the drug and arms trade, and they were conducted by an unusual cast of characters. These included refugees, some of whom were spies, smugglers, diplomats, and business people, many from foreign countries seeking things they could find only in Portugal: information, affordable food, shelter, and security. German agents who contacted Allied sailors in the port of Lisbon sought to corrupt and neutralize these men and, if possible, recruit them as spies, and British intelligence countered this effort. Britain's MI-6 established a new kind of "safe house" to protect such Allied crews from German espionage and venereal disease infection, an approved and controlled house of prostitution in Lisbon's bairro alto district.Foreign observers and writers were impressed with the exotic, spy-ridden scene in Lisbon, as well as in Estoril on the Sun Coast (Costa do Sol), west of Lisbon harbor. What they observed appeared in noted autobiographical works and novels, some written during and some after the war. Among notable writers and journalists who visited or resided in wartime Portugal were Hungarian writer and former communist Arthur Koestler, on the run from the Nazi's Gestapo; American radio broadcaster-journalist Eric Sevareid; novelist and Hollywood script-writer Frederick Prokosch; American diplomat George Kennan; Rumanian cultural attache and later scholar of mythology Mircea Eliade; and British naval intelligence officer and novelist-to-be Ian Fleming. Other notable visiting British intelligence officers included novelist Graham Greene; secret Soviet agent in MI-6 and future defector to the Soviet Union Harold "Kim" Philby; and writer Malcolm Muggeridge. French letters were represented by French writer and airman, Antoine Saint-Exupery and French playwright, Jean Giroudoux. Finally, Aquilino Ribeiro, one of Portugal's premier contemporary novelists, wrote about wartime Portugal, including one sensational novel, Volframio, which portrayed the profound impact of the exploitation of the mineral wolfram on Portugal's poor, still backward society.In Estoril, Portugal, the idea for the world's most celebrated fictitious spy, James Bond, was probably first conceived by Ian Fleming. Fleming visited Portugal several times after 1939 on Naval Intelligence missions, and later he dreamed up the James Bond character and stories. Background for the early novels in the James Bond series was based in part on people and places Fleming observed in Portugal. A key location in Fleming's first James Bond novel, Casino Royale (1953) is the gambling Casino of Estoril. In addition, one aspect of the main plot, the notion that a spy could invent "secret" intelligence for personal profit, was observed as well by the British novelist and former MI-6 officer, while engaged in operations in wartime Portugal. Greene later used this information in his 1958 spy novel, Our Man in Havana, as he observed enemy agents who fabricated "secrets" for money.Thus, Portugal's World War II experiences introduced the country and her people to a host of new peoples, ideas, products, and influences that altered attitudes and quickened the pace of change in this quiet, largely tradition-bound, isolated country. The 1943-45 connections established during the Allied use of air and naval bases in Portugal's Azores Islands were a prelude to Portugal's postwar membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). -
2 a cog in the machine
маленький человек; ≈ мелкая сошкаAmong them was this same Stener - a minute cog in the silent machinery of their affairs. (Th. Dreiser, ‘The Financier’, ch. XIV) — Среди этих людей числился и Стинер - мелкое колесико в бесшумно работавшей машине их политических интриг.
But my Left views made such jobs out of the question for me. I just couldn't see myself becoming a cog in the big bureaucratic machine dominating the trade union movement. (W. Foster, ‘The Twilight of World Capitalism’, ch. XII) — Но мои левые взгляды не позволяли мне соглашаться на такую работу. Я никак не мог представить себя винтиком огромной бюрократической машины, командовавшей профсоюзным движением.
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3 it is better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and let the world know it
English-Ukrainian dictionary of proverbs > it is better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and let the world know it
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4 it is better to remain silent and be thought of as a fool than to speak and prove the same
var: it is better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and let the world know itкраще мовчати і справляти враження дурня, ніж заговорити і підтвердити те ж самеEnglish-Ukrainian dictionary of proverbs > it is better to remain silent and be thought of as a fool than to speak and prove the same
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5 Cousteau, Jacques-Yves
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 11 June 1910 Saint-André-de-Cubzac, France[br]French marine explorer who invented the aqualung.[br]He was the son of a country lawyer who became legal advisor and travelling companion to certain rich Americans. At an early age Cousteau acquired a love of travel, of the sea and of cinematography: he made his first film at the age of 13. After an interrupted education he nevertheless passed the difficult entrance examination to the Ecole Navale in Brest, but his naval career was cut short in 1936 by injuries received in a serious motor accident. For his long recuperation he was drafted to Toulon. There he met Philippe Tailliez, a fellow naval officer, and Frédéric Dumas, a champion spearfisher, with whom he formed a long association and began to develop his underwater swimming and photography. He apparently took little part in the Second World War, but under cover he applied his photographic skills to espionage, for which he was awarded the Légion d'honneur after the war.Cousteau sought greater freedom of movement underwater and, with Emile Gagnan, who worked in the laboratory of Air Liquide, he began experimenting to improve portable underwater breathing apparatus. As a result, in 1943 they invented the aqualung. Its simple design and robust construction provided a reliable and low-cost unit and revolutionized scientific and recreational diving. Gagnan shunned publicity, but Cousteau revelled in the new freedom to explore and photograph underwater and exploited the publicity potential to the full.The Undersea Research Group was set up by the French Navy in 1944 and, based in Toulon, it provided Cousteau with the Opportunity to develop underwater exploration and filming techniques and equipment. Its first aims were minesweeping and exploration, but in 1948 Cousteau pioneered an extension to marine archaeology. In 1950 he raised the funds to acquire a surplus US-built minesweeper, which he fitted out to further his quest for exploration and adventure and named Calypso. Cousteau also sought and achieved public acclaim with the publication in 1953 of The Silent World, an account of his submarine observations, illustrated by his own brilliant photography. The book was an immediate success and was translated into twenty-two languages. In 1955 Calypso sailed through the Red Sea and the western Indian Ocean, and the outcome was a film bearing the same title as the book: it won an Oscar and the Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival. This was his favoured medium for the expression of his ideas and observations, and a stream of films on the same theme kept his name before the public.Cousteau's fame earned him appointment by Prince Rainier as Director of the Oceanographie Institute in Monaco in 1957, a post he held until 1988. With its museum and research centre, it offered Cousteau a useful base for his worldwide activities.In the 1980s Cousteau turned again to technological development. Like others before him, he was concerned to reduce ships' fuel consumption by harnessing wind power. True to form, he raised grants from various sources to fund research and enlisted technical help, namely Lucien Malavard, Professor of Aerodynamics at the Sorbonne. Malavard designed a 44 ft (13.4 m) high non-rotating cylinder, which was fitted onto a catamaran hull, christened Moulin à vent. It was intended that its maiden Atlantic crossing in 1983 should herald a new age in ship propulsion, with large royalties to Cousteau. Unfortunately the vessel was damaged in a storm and limped to the USA under diesel power. A more robust vessel, the Alcyone, was fitted with two "Turbosails" in 1985 and proved successful, with a 40 per cent reduction in fuel consumption. However, oil prices fell, removing the incentive to fit the new device; the lucrative sales did not materialize and Alcyone remained the only vessel with Turbosails, sharing with Calypso Cousteau's voyages of adventure and exploration. In September 1995, Cousteau was among the critics of the decision by the French President Jacques Chirac to resume testing of nuclear explosive devices under the Mururoa atoll in the South Pacific.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsLégion d'honneur. Croix de Guerre with Palm. Officier du Mérite Maritime and numerous scientific and artistic awards listed in such directories as Who's Who.Bibliography1953, The Silent World.1972, The Ocean World of Jacques Cousteau, 21 vols.Further ReadingR.Munson, 1991, Cousteau, the Captain and His World, London: Robert Hale (published in the USA 1989).LRD -
6 third
1. n третье2. n третий участник игры3. n тройка4. n третья часть; одна третья, треть5. n разг. степень бакалавра с отличием третьей степени6. n амер. третья скоростьthird party risk — риск, которому подвергается третье лицо
7. n муз. терция8. n товар третьего сорта, низкого качестваthird party — третье лицо, третья сторона
Third Estate — третье сословие, буржуазия
9. n шестидесятая доля секунды10. n фин. третий образец переводного векселя11. a составляющий одну третью часть12. a третьесортный, низкого качестваthird rate — третьесортный; дешевый; плохой
third of exchange — третьесортный; низкого качества
13. a третий; сторонний, не являющийся непосредственным участникомthird person — третья сторона, свидетель
Third Reich — «Третий рейх», гитлеровская Германия
14. adv третьим классом, в купе или каюте третьего классаthe Third World countries — страны «третьего мира»
the third degree — третья степень, куб
15. v делить на три части16. v быть третьимThe Third Basket — " третья корзина "
17. v выступать третьим в пользу; поддерживать -
7 go
ɡəu 1. 3rd person singular present tense - goes; verb1) (to walk, travel, move etc: He is going across the field; Go straight ahead; When did he go out?) gå, dra, reise2) (to be sent, passed on etc: Complaints have to go through the proper channels.) bli sendt, skulle sendes3) (to be given, sold etc: The prize goes to John Smith; The table went for $100.) gå (til); bli solgt4) (to lead to: Where does this road go?) gå, føre5) (to visit, to attend: He goes to school every day; I decided not to go to the movie.) gå på6) (to be destroyed etc: This wall will have to go.) bli fjernet7) (to proceed, be done: The meeting went very well.) gå, forløpe, utvikle seg8) (to move away: I think it is time you were going.) dra, gå9) (to disappear: My purse has gone!) forsvinne10) (to do (some action or activity): I'm going for a walk; I'm going hiking next week-end.) skal gjøre (noe)11) (to fail etc: I think the clutch on this car has gone.) ryke, gå12) (to be working etc: I don't think that clock is going.) virke13) (to become: These apples have gone bad.) bli (fordervet, osv.)14) (to be: Many people in the world regularly go hungry.) være, gå15) (to be put: Spoons go in that drawer.) høre hjemme, ha sin plass16) (to pass: Time goes quickly when you are enjoying yourself.) gå17) (to be used: All her pocket-money goes on sweets.) bli brukt på/til18) (to be acceptable etc: Anything goes in this office.) være lov19) (to make a particular noise: Dogs go woof, not miaow.) lage en lyd, si20) (to have a particular tune etc: How does that song go?) lyde21) (to become successful etc: She always makes a party go.) gå bra, være en suksess2. noun1) (an attempt: I'm not sure how to do it, but I'll have a go.) forsøk2) (energy: She's full of go.) futt, fart, pågangsmot•- going3. adjective1) (successful: That shop is still a going concern.) vellykket2) (in existence at present: the going rate for typing manuscripts.) eksisterende, nåværende, vanlig•- go-ahead4. noun(permission: We'll start as soon as we get the go-ahead.) klarsignal, grønt lys- going-over
- goings-on
- no-go
- all go
- be going on for
- be going on
- be going strong
- from the word go
- get going
- give the go-by
- go about
- go after
- go against
- go along
- go along with
- go around
- go around with
- go at
- go back
- go back on
- go by
- go down
- go far
- go for
- go in
- go in for
- go into
- go off
- go on
- go on at
- go out
- go over
- go round
- go slow
- go steady
- go through
- go through with
- go too far
- go towards
- go up
- go up in smoke/flames
- go with
- go without
- keep going
- make a go of something
- make a go
- on the gogå--------kjøre--------reiseIsubst. \/ɡəʊ\/1) ( hverdagslig) hendelse, sak, historie2) omgang, runde, kule3) futt, tæl, pågangsmot, krutt, smell, sving, klem4) ( hverdagslig) forsøk5) ( hverdagslig) glass, rundeto glass rom, takk6) ( hverdagslig) suksess7) porsjon, doseat one go på første forsøk, på én gang, i strekkbe on the go ( hverdagslig) være på farten, være i gang, være i bevegelsebe (all) the go være motebevisst, følge siste motefrom go to whoa fra begynnelse til sluttfrom the word go se ➢ word, 1full of go eller have plenty of go full av farthave a go at something forsøke seg på noe, gjøre et forsøk på noemake a go of something lykkes med noe, ha fremgang med noea near go nære på, på håreta rum go tøff behandling, hard medfart ( foreldet) en overraskende begivenhet, et merkelig utfall, en snodig affærethat's a go eller here's a go litt av en røre, litt av en suppeII1) dra, reise, gå, kjøre, ferdes2) gå på, delta i, være medlem av3) gå omkring (og være), forbli4) begi seg, dra av gårde, gåjeg skal hjem \/ jeg går hjem5) ( særlig om noe negativt) bli, endre tilstand6) strekke seg, lede, føre til, gå til• is this the road that goes into town?7) ( om tid) gå, passere, forløpe8) ( om utfallet av noe) gå, lykkes• how did your application go?9) være på farten, jobbe, stå på10) gjøre• when you draw a bow you go like this...når du skal spenne buen gjør du slik...11) sette i gang, begynne• go when you hear the bell!12) harmonere, passe til, passe sammen13) ( om maskiner e.l.) funksjonere, gå, være i gang14) ( om gjenstander) høre til, høre hjemme, ha sin plass, være, stå, ligge, henge• where do you want your piano to go?15) ( hverdagslig) gå på do• please, Sir! I have to go!16) bli solgt for17) gå tom for, slippe opp for, ta slutt, gå unna, bruke opp• we'll have to stop at the next service station, the petrol's nearly gonevi må stoppe på neste bensinstasjon, det er nesten tomt for bensin18) forsvinne, gå tapt, ryke, gå i vasken19) avskaffes, oppheves, oppgis, ofres20) opphøre, ta slutt, gå over, gi seg21) avskjediges, slutte, måtte gå22) gå konkurs, gå over ende23) avta, svikte, gi etter24) dø, gå bort• the old man went peacefully at 3 a.m.25) få plass, romme, gå ned, gå inn i26) ( matematikk) gå opp i• the gun went bang!28) (om tekster, dikt, sanger e.l.) lyde, sies, gå• the story goes that...det sies at...• can you remember how that song goes?amerikanske dollar går\/er gyldige nesten overalt30) være akseptabelt, være tillatt, være lov31) ha det siste ordetnår jeg sier det, blir det slik32) gjøre, foreta, gjennomføre33) (amer., hverdagslig) strekke seg til• I'll go $500 for a suit but no morejeg kan strekke meg til 500 dollar for en dress, men ikke mer34) (amer., hverdagslig) vedde, sette, melde• I'll go $5 on the queen of hearts35) (amer., hverdagslig) holde ut36) (amer., hverdagslig) smake, ha lyst på37) (hverdagslig, ofte i indirekte tale) si• so I go, what'd you do that for?og så sier jeg bare, hvorfor gjorde du det, 'a?as something goes hva angår• she is not very old, as grandmothers goas things go som vanligcome and go se ➢ come, 2• a rumour is going about...det ryktes at...ta en omvei( sjøfart) gå baut, stagvende gå i gang med, sette i gang, gripe noe anutføre, skjøtte, passego about with gå sammen med, henge sammen med, være sammen medgo after gå etter, løpe etterforsøke å få tak i, forsøke å skaffe seg, være ute ettergo against gå imot, motstå(om følelser, prinsipper) gå på tvers av ( om avgjørelser e.l.) gå imot, være i disfavørgo ahead fortsette, gå på sette i gang, starte• go ahead!sett i gang! \/ kjør i vei!gå (fort) fremover, rykke frem, vinne frem, gjøre fremskrittgå i forveien, dra i forveienta ledelsen, gå forbi, passere(også overført)go along with være enig med, si seg enig igo all out ( hverdagslig) ta seg helt utgo all the way ( ungdomsspråk) ha samleiego all the way with være helt enig med ( sport) være på høyde medgo around with gå sammen med, henge sammen medgo at gyve løs pågo back ( om klokken) bli stilt tilbake ha kjent hverandre lengego back on svikte, gå tilbake på (hva en har sagt)go bad bli dårlig, bli bedervetgo from bad to worse gå fra asken til ildengo down (om skip, fly) gå ned, synke, krasje tape, bli slåttbli husket, bli skrevet ned( overført) bli mottatt (av publikum)bli slukt, bli svelget, gli ned(amer., hverdagslig) skje(britisk, hverdagslig) fullføre studier (særlig ved Oxford eller Cambridge) (britisk, hverdagslig) bli satt i fengselgo down on somebody (vulgært, slang, om oralsex) sokke noen, suge noen, slikke noengo down with ( britisk) begynne å bli syk (av en spesifisert sykdom)go for bestemme seg for, velge• how I wish he had gone for the other candidate!angripe, gå løs påbli solgt for, gå forgjelde, angå everyone• everyone listen - that goes for you too, young man!go for it! ikke gi deg!go forward ( om klokken) bli stilt fremgo in for delta, melde seg pålike, gå på, delta i (regelmessig)go into kjøre inn i, kollidere gå inn på, undersøke( matematikk) gå (opp) i• how many times does 3 go into 18?( hverdagslig) miste selvbeherskelsen, «gå i lufta» (spesielt britisk, om mat) bli dårlig, bli bedervet, bli sur (spesielt britisk, hverdagslig) miste lysten på, begynne å mislike( om følelse) avta gradvis, gå overgo on ( ofte med presens partisipp) fortsettehun kunne ikke fortsette å arbeide der snakke ustoppelig, mase( i gjengitt direkte tale) fortsette (å snakke) etter et kort opphold• 'I don't think so', she went on( hverdagslig) kom igjen• go on, tell him!hende, finne sted, skje, foregå( ofte med infinitiv) gå videre, fortsette(hverdagslig, ofte negativt) like, ha noe til overs for, synes omvære sammen med, ha følge med( golf) spille de første ni hullene i en omgang på atten ( i kortspill) kaste kortene, kvitte seg med kortene en har på håndengo over gjennomgå• can we go over the procedure once more, pleasegå over til, endre standpunkt, konvertere( spesielt om en handling eller opptreden) bli godt mottatt, gå hjem hos (publikum)go round eller go around ( om hjul e.l.) gå rundt, dreie rundt ( om mat) rekke rundt, være tilstrekkelig( overført) fungere, gågo through gjennomgå, lidegå igjennom, lete igjennomjeg måtte lete igjennom hele beholdningen for å finne boken du spurte ettergjennomføre, fullføre, ferdigstille, avslutte( hverdagslig) bruke (opp)( om bøker) bli utgitt (i flere opplag)(austr., hverdagslig) stikke av (fra en forpliktelse)go to! ( gammeldags) gi deg!go up ( om et byggverk) bli reist eksplodere, antenne (plutselig)(britisk, hverdagslig) begynne ved et universitet (spesielt Oxford eller Cambridge)go with si seg enig med, gi tillatelse til ha et (seksuelt) forhold tilgo without være foruten, klare seg uten, forsake• he gave his children what they wanted, even if he had to go withoutIIIadj. \/ɡəʊ\/(romteknologi, hverdagslig) (start)klar -
8 _дурість
all asses wag their ears all men are fools, but the wisest of fools are called philosophers arguing with a fool shows there are two ask a silly question and you get a silly answer as the fool thinks, so the bell clinks the ass is known by its ears asses as well as pitchers have ears blame-all and praise-all are two blockheads change of weather is a discourse of fools children and fools have merry lives children and fools must not play with edged tools children and fools tell the truth dreams give wings to fools the darkest place is under the candlestick every ass loves to hear himself bray every ass thinks himself worthy to stand with the king's horses every fool will be meddling experience is the teacher of fools folly grows without watering a fool always finds a bigger fool to admire a fool always rushes to the fore a fool and his money are soon parted a fool believes everything a fool is known by his conversation a fool is known by his laughing a fool may ask more questions in an hour than a wise man answer in seven years a fool over forty is a fool indeed a fool may give a wise man counsel a fool may sometimes speak to the purpose a fool may throw a stone into a well which a hundred wise men cannot pull out a fool who keeps his mouth closed fools the whole world the fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool the fool wonders; the wise man asks a fool's voice is known by a multitude of words fools and bairns should never see half-done work fools go in crowds fools make feasts and wise men eat them fools never know when they are well fools rush in where angels fear to tread fortune favors the fools give a man enough rope and he will hang himself a great talker may be no fool, but he is one that relies on him he is a fool who cannot be angry but a wise man who will not he that makes himself an ass must not complain if men ride him he who is born a fool is never cured honey is not for the ass's mouth if all fools wore white caps, we'd all look like geese if an ass goes traveling, he'll not come back a horse if fools went not to market, bad wares would not be sold in spite of colleges and schools, the world remains a ship of fools it is better to remain silent and be thought of as a fool than to speak and prove the same it is ill manners to silence a fool, and it is cruelty to let him go on it is a silly fish, that is caught twice with the same bait a learned blockhead is a greater blockhead than an ignorant one lend and lose is the game of fools little wit in the head makes much work for the feet one fool makes many never bray at an ass never show a fool a half-done work no fool like an old fool none is a fool always, everyone sometimes riches serve a wise man but command a fool silence is the virtue of a fool success ruins a fool there are a great many asses without long ears it is better to lose with a wise man than to win with a fool a wager is a fool's argument the way of a fool is right in his own eyes when a fool has made up his mind, the market has gone by a white wall is the fool's writing paper: he writes his name there a wise man changes his mind, a fool never will a wise man learns by the experiences of others; an ordinary man learns by his own experience; a fool learns by nobody's experiences a wise man's day is worth a fool's life the wise seek wisdom; the fool has found it words are the wise man's counters and the fool's money -
9 Royce, Sir Frederick Henry
[br]b. 27 March 1863 Alwalton, Huntingdonshire, Englandd. 22 April 1933 West Wittering, Sussex, England.[br]English engineer and industrialist.[br]Royce was the younger son of a flour miller. His father's death forced him to earn his own living from the age of 10 selling newspapers, as a post office messenger boy, and in other jobs. At the age of 14, he became an apprentice at the Great Northern Railway's locomotive works, but was unable to complete his apprenticeship due to a shortage of money. He moved to a tool company in Leeds, then in 1882 he became a tester for the London Electric Light \& Power Company and attended classes at the City \& Guilds Technical College. In the same year, the company made him Chief Electrical Engineer for the lighting of the streets of Liverpool.In 1884, at the age of 21, he founded F.H. Royce \& Co (later called Royce Ltd, from 1894 to 1933) with a capital of £70, manufacturing arc lamps, dynamos and electric cranes. In 1903, he bought a 10 hp Deauville car which proved noisy and unreliable; he therefore designed his own car. By the end of 1903 he had produced a twocylinder engine which ran for many hundreds of hours driving dynamos; on 31 March 1904, a 10 hp Royce car was driven smoothly and silently from the works in Cooke Street, Manchester. This car so impressed Charles S. Rolls, whose London firm were agents for high-class continental cars, that he agreed to take the entire output from the Manchester works. In 1906 they jointly formed Rolls-Royce Ltd and at the end of that year Royce produced the first 40/50 hp Silver Ghost, which remained in production until 1925 when it was replaced by the Phantom and Wraith. The demand for the cars grew so great that in 1908 manufacture was transferred to a new factory in Derby.In 1911 Royce had a breakdown due to overwork and his lack of attention to taking regular meals. From that time he never returned to the works but continued in charge of design from a drawing office in his home in the south of France and later at West Wittering, Sussex, England. During the First World War he designed the Falcon, Hawk and Condor engines as well as the VI2 Eagle, all of which were liquid-cooled. Later he designed the 36.7-litre Rolls-Royce R engines for the Vickers Supermarine S.6 and S.6B seaplanes which were entered for the Schneider Trophy (which they won in 1929 and 1931, the 5.5 having won in 1927 with a Napier Lion engine) and set a world speed record of 408 mph (657 km/h) in 1931; the 1941 Griffon engine was derived from the R.Royce was an improver rather than an innovator, though he did invent a silent form of valve gear, a friction-damped slipper flywheel, the Royce carburettor and a spring drive for timing gears. He was a modest man with a remarkable memory who concentrated on perfecting the detail of every component. He married Minnie Punt, but they had no children. A bust of him at the Derby factory is captioned simply "Henry Royce, Mechanic".[br]Further ReadingR.Bird, 1995, Rolls Royce Heritage, London: Osprey.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Royce, Sir Frederick Henry
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10 old
old [əʊld]1. adjective━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• old for his years ( = mature) mûr (pour son âge)b. (of specified age) how old are you? quel âge as-tu ?• you're old enough to know better! à ton âge tu devrais avoir plus de bon sens !• Martyn? we're old friends Martyn ? c'est un ami de longue date• just like old times! c'est comme au bon vieux temps !2. noun3. plural noun4. compounds► the Old Bill (inf!) noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━La cravate est l'élément distinctif principal de l'uniforme que portent les élèves des écoles britanniques, à tel point qu'elle en est venue à symboliser le réseau de relations dont continuent de bénéficier dans leur carrière les anciens élèves des écoles les plus prestigieuses. On dira ainsi « how did he get the job ? -- it was a case of the old school tie » (il a fait joué ses relations).━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━* * *[əʊld] 1.1) ( old people)the old — (+ v pl) les personnes fpl âgées
2)2.1) ( not young) vieux/vieille, âgéan old man — un vieil homme, un vieillard
2) ( of a particular age)a week old — [bread etc] vieux d'une semaine
I'm the oldest — c'est moi l'aîné/-e
3) ( not new) [object, song, tradition, family] vieux/vieille; [excuse] classique; [joke] rebattu4) (former, previous) [address, school, job, admirer, system] ancien/-ienne (before n)5) (colloq) ( as term of affection) vieux/vieillegood old British weather! — iron ce sacré (colloq) climat anglais!
6) (colloq) ( as intensifier)a right old mess — une sacrée pagaille (colloq)
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11 Paton, Stuart
1883-1944Escoces, parece que solo una de las peliculas que dirigio le dio verdadero prestigio, su version de 20.000 leguas de viaje submarino, rodada en 1916. Despues, tanto en el mudo como en el sonoro, peliculas dignas de un estudio arqueologico. Se retira en 1938. Ese ano dirige The Alamo: Shrine of Texas Liberty, que tiene la peculiaridad de carecer de dia logos; en lugar de ellos, un narrador va explicando lo que sucede en la pantalla.The Mystery Trooper (El jinete enmascarado) (co.d: Harry S. Webb). 1931. 195 minutos (10 episodios). Blanco y Negro. Syndicate. Robert Frazer, Blanche Mehaffey.In Old Cheyenne. 1931. 60 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Sono Art/World Wide. Rex Lease, Dorothy Gulliver, Jay Hunt.Mounted Fury. 1931. 63 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Sono Art/World Wide. John Bowers, Blanche Mehaffey.The Silent Code. 1935. 60 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Stage and Screen. Kane Richmond, Blanche Mehaffey.Thunderbolt. 1935. 55 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Regal Distributing Corp. Kane Richmond, Bobby Nelson. -
12 Blumlein, Alan Dower
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace, Broadcasting, Electronics and information technology, Photography, film and optics, Recording, Telecommunications[br]b. 29 June 1903 Hampstead, London, Englandd. 7 June 1942[br]English electronics engineer, developer of telephone equipment, highly linear electromechanical recording and reproduction equipment, stereo techniques, video and radar technology.[br]He was a very bright scholar and received a BSc in electrical technology from City and Guilds College in 1923. He joined International Western Electric (later to become Standard Telephone and Cables) in 1924 after a period as an instructor/demonstrator at City and Guilds. He was instrumental in the design of telephone measuring equipment and in international committee work for standards for long-distance telephony.From 1929 Blumlein was employed by the Columbia Graphophone Company to develop an electric recording cutterhead that would be independent of Western Electric's patents for the system developed by Maxfield and Harrison. He attacked the problems in a most systematic fashion, and within a year he had developed a moving-coil cutterhead that was much more linear than the iron-cored systems known at the time. Eventually Blumlein designed a complete line of recording equipment, from microphone and through-power amplifiers. The design was used by Columbia; after the merger with the Gramophone Company in 1931 to form Electrical and Musical Industries Ltd (later known as EMI) it became the company standard, certainly for coarse-groove records, until c.1950.Blumlein became interested in stereophony (binaural sound), and developed and demonstrated a complete line of equipment, from correctly placed microphones via two-channel records and stereo pick-ups to correctly placed loudspeakers. The advent of silent surfaces of vinyl records made this approach commercial from the late 1950s. His approach was independent and quite different from that of A.C. Keller.His extreme facility for creating innovative solutions to electronic problems was used in EMI's development from 1934 to 1938 of the electronic television system, which became the BBC standard of 405 lines after the Second World War, when television broadcasting again became possible. Independent of official requirements, EMI developed a 60 MHz radar system and Blumlein was involved in the development of a centimetric radar and display system. It was during testing of this aircraft mounted equipment that he was killed in a crash.[br]BibliographyBlumlein was inventor or co-inventor of well over 120 patents, a complete list of which is to be found in Burns (1992; see below). The major sound-recording achievements are documented by British patent nos. 350,954, 350,998, 363,627 (highly linear cutterhead, 1930) and 394,325 (reads like a textbook on stereo technology, 1931).Further ReadingThe definitive biography of Blumlein has not yet been written; the material seems to have been collected, but is not yet available. However, R.W.Burns, 1992, "A.D.Blumlein, engineer extraordinary", Engineering Science and Education Journal (February): 19– 33 is a thorough account. Also B.J.Benzimra, 1967, "A.D. Blumlein: an electronics genius", Electronics \& Power (June): 218–24 provides an interesting summary.GB-N -
13 De Forest, Lee
SUBJECT AREA: Broadcasting, Electronics and information technology, Photography, film and optics, Recording, Telecommunications[br]b. 26 August 1873 Council Bluffs, Iowa, USAd. 30 June 1961 Hollywood, California, USA[br]American electrical engineer and inventor principally known for his invention of the Audion, or triode, vacuum tube; also a pioneer of sound in the cinema.[br]De Forest was born into the family of a Congregational minister that moved to Alabama in 1879 when the father became President of a college for African-Americans; this was a position that led to the family's social ostracism by the white community. By the time he was 13 years old, De Forest was already a keen mechanical inventor, and in 1893, rejecting his father's plan for him to become a clergyman, he entered the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University. Following his first degree, he went on to study the propagation of electromagnetic waves, gaining a PhD in physics in 1899 for his thesis on the "Reflection of Hertzian Waves from the Ends of Parallel Wires", probably the first US thesis in the field of radio.He then joined the Western Electric Company in Chicago where he helped develop the infant technology of wireless, working his way up from a modest post in the production area to a position in the experimental laboratory. There, working alone after normal working hours, he developed a detector of electromagnetic waves based on an electrolytic device similar to that already invented by Fleming in England. Recognizing his talents, a number of financial backers enabled him to set up his own business in 1902 under the name of De Forest Wireless Telegraphy Company; he was soon demonstrating wireless telegraphy to interested parties and entering into competition with the American Marconi Company.Despite the failure of this company because of fraud by his partners, he continued his experiments; in 1907, by adding a third electrode, a wire mesh, between the anode and cathode of the thermionic diode invented by Fleming in 1904, he was able to produce the amplifying device now known as the triode valve and achieve a sensitivity of radio-signal reception much greater than possible with the passive carborundum and electrolytic detectors hitherto available. Patented under the name Audion, this new vacuum device was soon successfully used for experimental broadcasts of music and speech in New York and Paris. The invention of the Audion has been described as the beginning of the electronic era. Although much development work was required before its full potential was realized, the Audion opened the way to progress in all areas of sound transmission, recording and reproduction. The patent was challenged by Fleming and it was not until 1943 that De Forest's claim was finally recognized.Overcoming the near failure of his new company, the De Forest Radio Telephone Company, as well as unsuccessful charges of fraudulent promotion of the Audion, he continued to exploit the potential of his invention. By 1912 he had used transformer-coupling of several Audion stages to achieve high gain at radio frequencies, making long-distance communication a practical proposition, and had applied positive feedback from the Audion output anode to its input grid to realize a stable transmitter oscillator and modulator. These successes led to prolonged patent litigation with Edwin Armstrong and others, and he eventually sold the manufacturing rights, in retrospect often for a pittance.During the early 1920s De Forest began a fruitful association with T.W.Case, who for around ten years had been working to perfect a moving-picture sound system. De Forest claimed to have had an interest in sound films as early as 1900, and Case now began to supply him with photoelectric cells and primitive sound cameras. He eventually devised a variable-density sound-on-film system utilizing a glow-discharge modulator, the Photion. By 1926 De Forest's Phonofilm had been successfully demonstrated in over fifty theatres and this system became the basis of Movietone. Though his ideas were on the right lines, the technology was insufficiently developed and it was left to others to produce a system acceptable to the film industry. However, De Forest had played a key role in transforming the nature of the film industry; within a space of five years the production of silent films had all but ceased.In the following decade De Forest applied the Audion to the development of medical diathermy. Finally, after spending most of his working life as an independent inventor and entrepreneur, he worked for a time during the Second World War at the Bell Telephone Laboratories on military applications of electronics.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsInstitute of Electronic and Radio Engineers Medal of Honour 1922. President, Institute of Electronic and Radio Engineers 1930. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Edison Medal 1946.Bibliography1904, "Electrolytic detectors", Electrician 54:94 (describes the electrolytic detector). 1907, US patent no. 841,387 (the Audion).1950, Father of Radio, Chicago: WIlcox \& Follett (autobiography).De Forest gave his own account of the development of his sound-on-film system in a series of articles: 1923. "The Phonofilm", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 16 (May): 61–75; 1924. "Phonofilm progress", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 20:17–19; 1927, "Recent developments in the Phonofilm", Transactions of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 27:64–76; 1941, "Pioneering in talking pictures", Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 36 (January): 41–9.Further ReadingG.Carneal, 1930, A Conqueror of Space (biography).I.Levine, 1964, Electronics Pioneer, Lee De Forest (biography).E.I.Sponable, 1947, "Historical development of sound films", Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers 48 (April): 275–303 (an authoritative account of De Forest's sound-film work, by Case's assistant).W.R.McLaurin, 1949, Invention and Innovation in the Radio Industry.C.F.Booth, 1955, "Fleming and De Forest. An appreciation", in Thermionic Valves 1904– 1954, IEE.V.J.Phillips, 1980, Early Radio Detectors, London: Peter Peregrinus.KF / JW -
14 new
new [nju:]1. adjectivea. ( = different, not seen before) nouveau ( nouvelle f) ; (masculine before vowel or silent "h") nouvel ; ( = not old) neuf ( neuve f)• I've got a new car ( = different) j'ai une nouvelle voiture ; ( = brand-new) j'ai une voiture neuve• are you new here? vous venez d'arriver ici ? ; (in school, firm) vous êtes nouveau ici ?• that's nothing new! ça n'est pas nouveau !2. compounds• in New York State dans l'État de New York adjective new-yorkais ► New Yorker noun New-Yorkais (e) m(f)* * *[njuː], US [nuː]adjective (recent, different, not known, seen, owned etc before) nouveau/-elle; ( brand new) neuf/neuveI bought a new computer — ( to replace old one) j'ai acheté un nouvel ordinateur; ( a brand new model) j'ai acheté un ordinateur neuf
as good as new — lit, fig comme neuf
‘as new’ — ( in advertisement) ‘état neuf’
someone/something new — quelqu'un/quelque chose d'autre
could I have a new plate? this one is dirty — est-ce que je pourrais avoir une autre assiette? celle-ci est sale
to be new to — ne pas être habitué à [job, way of life]
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15 TSW
1) Спорт: Tri State Wrestling2) Военный термин: The Scottish Warrior, tactical strike weapon3) Техника: test software, transmitting side wire4) Религия: The Simple World5) Страхование: Tropical load line mark6) Сокращение: Tactical Supply Wing (UK Royal Air Force), Tswana, temperature switch, test switch7) Университет: The Students Will8) Вычислительная техника: TeleSoftWare (T-Online)9) Транспорт: Thomas Steering Wheel, Too Soft Wheels10) Фирменный знак: The Silent Workhorse11) СМИ: Television South- West12) Нефть и газ: tracking switch -
16 rough stuff
1) грубое обращение; насилиеI'll see, that you get a square shake, no framing, and no rough stuff. (E. S. Gardner, ‘The Case of the Silent Partner’, ch. 11) — Я позабочусь о том, чтобы ваше дело было рассмотрено справедливо, чтобы не было ни ложных обвинений, ни грубого обращения.
2) грубое нарушение правил (напр., в спорте)Basil Zaharoff believed in the "rough stuff"; he had learned it in his youth and never seen reason to change. (U. Sinclair, ‘World's End’, ch. 2) — Базиль Захаров не стеснялся в выборе средств, он привык к этому с молодости и не видел оснований менять свои привычки.
Fight fairly, no rough stuff is allowed. — Борьба должна вестись честно. Правил не нарушайте.
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17 all
ɔ:l I прил.
1) весь, вся, все, целый all her life ≈ вся ее жизнь He lived here all his life. ≈ Он прожил здесь всю свою жизнь. all the time ≈ все время all (the) day ≈ весь/целый день all the year round ≈ круглый год all the world ≈ весь мир
2) всякий, всевозможный;
любой beyond all doubt ≈ вне всякого сомнения in all directions ≈ во всех направлениях all manner of ≈ всякого рода in all aspects ≈ во всех отношениях at all events ≈ в любом случае, при всех обстоятельствах at all hours ≈ в любое время
3) весь, наибольший;
максимально возможный with all respect ≈ с полным( со всем) уважением with all speed ≈ с предельной скоростью in all haste ≈ со всей поспешностью I wish you all happiness. ≈ Я желаю вам самого большого счастья.
4) (эмоц.-усил.) весь He was all ears. ≈ Он весь обратился в слух. I am all attention. ≈ Я весь внимание.
5) амер. (за) кончившийся, истекший The pie is all. ≈ Весь пирог съеден. II нареч.
1) всецело, полностью, целиком The pin was all gold. ≈ Булавка была целиком из золота. Things are all wrong. ≈ Все идет не так. I am all for staying here. ≈ Я целиком за то, чтобы остаться здесь. She is her mother all over. ≈ Она вылитая мать. all set ≈ готовый к действию, в полной готовности
2) совершенно, совсем all to pieces ≈ в полном упадке сил (физических и моральных) He arrived all too late. ≈ Он пришел совсем поздно. all at once ≈ вдруг, внезапно all for nothing ≈ зря, напрасно not at all
3) только, ничего кроме, исключительно He spent his income all on pleasure. ≈ Он тратил деньги только на развлечения. III мест.
1) все All agree. ≈ Все согласны. We all love him. ≈ Мы все его любим. all men ≈ все (люди) all things ≈ все, все вещи all countries ≈ все страны at all times ≈ во все времена, всегда a film suitable for all ages ≈ фильм, который могут смотреть все (взрослые и дети)
2) все All is lost. ≈ Все пропало. I know it all. ≈ Я все это знаю. All in good time. ≈ Все в свое время. ∙ all of most of all best of all one and all nothing at all and all all in all take for all in all for all IV сущ.
1) (часто All) вселенная, мир Syn: the Universe
2) все, что есть у кого-л. (имущество, способности, силы и т. п.;
обыкн. с притяжательным местоимением) He gave his all for the cause. ≈ Он для дела отдал все. Whatever it was, it was their all. ≈ Что бы это ни было, это все, что у них было. ∙ that's all there is to it ≈ вот и все;
не о чем больше говорить once for all ≈ навсегда all one to ≈ (совершенно) безразлично it is all over with him ≈ он человек конченый he is not quite all there ≈ он не в своем уме;
у него не все дома all and sundry ≈ каждый и всякий;
все вместе и каждый в отдельностиall: (часто А.) все сущее;
мир, вселенная - this above * это превыше всего самое дорогое или ценное для кого-л - * to give one's * отдать самое дорогое на свете - * to stake one's * in this struggle поставить на карту все в этой борьбе весь, целый, вся, все - * his life вся его жизнь - he lives here * his life он прожил здесь всю свою жизнь - * the time все время - * (the) day весь день - he sat up * night он не ложился (спать) всю ночь;
он вообще не ложился - * the year round круглый год - * England вся Англия - * the company вся компания все - * men все (люди) - * things все, все вещи - * countries все страны - at * times во все времена, всегда - a film suitable for * ages фильм, который могут смотреть взрослые и дети - * man are not equally dependable не на всех людей можно в равной степени полагаться всякий, всевозможный;
любой - in * directions во всех направлениях - * manner of... всякого рода... - * manner of men всякие люди - in * respects во всех отношениях - at * events во всяком случае, при всех обстоятельствах - at * hours в любое время весь, наибольший, предельный;
максимально возможный - with * respect с полным уважением - with * speed с предельной скоростью - in * haste со всей поспешностью - he spoke in * earnestness он говорил со всей серьезностью - I wish you * happiness я желаю вам самого большого счастья какой-нибудь, какой бы то ни было - beyond * doubt вне всякого сомнения - he denied * responsibility он сказал. что он ни за что не отвечает (эмоционально-усилительно) весь - he was * ears он весь обратился в слух - he was * eyes он смотрел во все глаза - I am * attention я весь внимание - she is * gratitude она сама благодарность - he was * smiles он весь расплылся в улыбке - a face * pimples не лицо, а одни прыщи (американизм) (диалектизм) закончившийся, истекший;
был да сплыл - the pie is * весь пирог съеден;
пирог кончился - the butter is * масло кончилось, масла больше нет > * things require skill but an appetite (пословица) аппетит дается от рождения > of * people кто-кто, но не вы (выражение удивления чьим-л поступком, кем-л) > of * people he should be the last to complain не ему бы жаловаться!;
у него меньше всех оснований для жалоб > why ask me to help, of * people? с какой стати вы обращаетесь за помощью именно ко мне? > of * idiots! свет таких дураков не видел! всецело, целиком, полностью - * set готовый к действию, в полной готовности - the pin is * gold булавка вя из золота - * covered with mud весь забрызганный грязью - that's * wrong это совсем не так, это неверно - things are * wrong все идет не так, все пошло прахом - I am * for staying here я целиком за то, чтобы остаться здесь - my wife is * for calling in a doctor моя жена обязательно хочет позвать врача совсем. совершенно - he was * alone он был совершенно один - he did it * alone он сделал это без посторонней помощи - he arrived * too late он пришел совсем поздно только, ничего кроме, исключительно - he spent his income * on pleasure он тратил (свои) деньги только на развлечения - * words and no thoughts сплошные слова и никаких (своих) мыслей (спортивное) (жаргон) поровну, ровно( о счете) - the score was two * счет был по два - love * по нулю,0:0 в сочетаниях: - * along( разговорное) все время, всегда - I knew it * along я всегда это знал;
мне это было давно известно - * round, * around кругом, со всех сторон;
- * through все целиком, до конца - to read a book * through прочитать книгу от корки до корки;
- riding * through the night ехал всю ночь напролет - * at once вдруг, сразу, внезапно;
одновременно - has he made up his mind * at once? он что же, вдруг так сразу и решил? - * of a sudden вдруг, неожиданно - * the better тем лучше - * the more тем более;
тем больше оснований (сделать, сказать что-л) - * the same безразлично, все равно;
все-таки, тем не менее - it's * the same to me whether he comes or not мне все равно, придет он или нет - if it is * the same to you если вы не возражаете;
если это вам безразлично - * the same I wish you hadn't done it и все же мне жаль, что вы это сделали - * one все равно, безразлично - it's * one to me мне это безразлично > * there зоркий, бдительный, всегда начеку > not * there придурковатый, глуповатый;
чокнутый, "с приветом" > he is not quite * there у него не все дома > * over покончено, закончено, завершено > their troubles are * over все их неприятности позади > it is * over with him с ним все кончено;
с ним покончено;
для него все кончено, он погиб > the game is * over игра окончена > * up (полиграфия) (полностью) набранный;
безнадежный, пропащий > it's * up with him - they've caught him теперь ему крышка - они схватили его > * of a dither в состоянии растерянности и недоумения все - * agree все согласны - * are present все присутствуют - we * love him мы все его любим - they * came late все они опоздали все - * is lost все пропало;
- is that * you want to say? это все, что вы хотите сказать? - I know it * я все это знаю - * in good time все в свое время - in the middle of it * в середине всего этого( разговора, события) в сочетаниях: - * of все;
все - of them must come они все должны прийти - * of it все (целиком) - * of this is beside the point все это к делу не относится - it cost him * of 1000 dollars это ему стоило по меньшей мере 1000 долларов - most of * больше всего - I love him most of * я люблю его больше всего - best of * лучше всего;
больше всего (the) best of * would be to... лучше всего было бы... - I love him best of * я люблю его больше всех - when I was busiest of * когда я был больше всего занят - one and *, each and * все до одного - * and sundry, one and * все без исключения, все подряд, все до одного > not at * ничуть;
пожалуйста, не стоит благодарности (в ответ на "спасибо") > not at * good нисколько не хорош > nothing at * совсем ничего;
ерунда > and * и все остальное;
и так далее, и все такое прочее, и тому подобное > he bought the house and * он купил дом и все, что в нем было > I wash and scrub and dust and * я стираю, мою полы, вытираю пыль и так далее > in * всего > there were only ten men in * их было всего десять( человек) > * in * в итоге, всего;
в общем;
самое дорогое;
самое важное;
полностью, целиком > * in *, the article undergoes 20 inspections в итоге каждое изделие проверяется 20 раз > take it * in *, this has been a hard week в общем и целом неделя была трудная > * in *, he is right в общем он прав > * in *, it might be worse в общем, дело могло обернуться хуже > her work was * in * to her работа была для нее всем > they are * in * to each other они души друг в друге не чают > and trust me not at all or * in * и либо вовсе мне не верь, либо доверяй полностью > take smb., smth for * in * в полном смысле > he is a man, take him for * in * он настоящий мужчина > * to pieces в полном упадке сил (физических и моральных) > for * хотя > for * he is so silent nothing escapes him хоть он и молчит, ничего не ускользает от его внимания > * for nothing зря, напрасно > for * I care мне это безразлично > he may be dead for * I care мне совершенно все равно, жив он или нет > for * he may say... что бы он ни говорил... > at * вообще;
хоть сколько-нибудь > if he comes at * если он вообще придет > if he coughs at * she runs to him стоит ему только кашлянуть, она бежит к нему > if you hesitate at * если вы хоть сколько-нибудь колеблетесь > without at * presuming to criticize you... отнюдь не желая критиковать вас... > not to know what * и так далее, и прочее > she must have a new hat, new shoes, and I don't know what * ей нужна новая шляпа, новые туфли и всякое такое > if at * если и есть, то очень мало;
если это случится > he will write to you tomorrow if at * он вам напишет завтра, если вообще будет писать > he will be here in time if at * если он придет, то (придет) вовремя > * to the good все к лучшему > * told с учетом всего;
в общем и целом > there were six people * told в конечном счете их оказалось шестеро > * very well but... это все прекрасно, но... (выражает сомнение) > she says he's reliable which is * very well, but it doesn't convince me она говорит, что он человек надежный, но меня это не очень убеждает > it's * wery well for you to say so, but... вам легко так говорить, но...all: ~ one to (совершенно) безразлично ~ pron. indef. (как прил.) весь, вся, все, все;
all day весь день;
all the time все время ~ как сущ. все имущество;
they lost their all in the fire при пожаре погибло все их имущество ~ как сущ. все, все;
all agree все согласны ~ как нареч. всецело, вполне;
совершенно;
the pin was all gold булавка была целиком из золота ~ pron. indef. (как прил.) всякий, всевозможный;
in all respects во всех отношениях;
beyond all doubt вне всякого сомнения ~ как сущ. целое~ как сущ. все, все;
all agree все согласны~ alone без всякой помощи, самостоятельно ~ alone в полном одиночестве~ round = allround;
all along все время~ and sundry все вместе и каждый в отдельности ~ and sundry каждый и всякий~ around кругом, со всех сторон ~ round = all around~ at once вдруг, внезапно once: all at ~ неожиданно~ but почти, едва не but: ~ только, лишь;
I saw him but a moment я видел его лишь мельком;
she is but nine years old ей только девять лет;
but just только что;
all but почти;
едва не~ pron. indef. (как прил.) весь, вся, все, все;
all day весь день;
all the time все время day: day день;
сутки;
on that day в тот день;
all (the) day весь деньall: ~ one to (совершенно) безразлично~ over повсюду, кругом;
all over the world по всему свету~ round = allround;
all along все время ~ round = all around round: all (или right) ~ кругом;
all the year round круглый год;
a long way round кружным путем~ the more so тем более more: neither ~ nor less than ни больше, ни меньше как;
не что иное, как;
all the more so тем более~ pron. indef. (как прил.) весь, вся, все, все;
all day весь день;
all the time все время~ told все без исключения tell: ~ уст. считать;
подсчитывать;
пересчитывать;
to tell one's beads читать молитвы, перебирая четки;
all told в общей сложности, в общем;
включая всех или все~ round = allround;
all along все времяat ~ вообще, совсем;
this plant will only grow in summer if at all это растение, если и вырастет, то только летом~ pron. indef. (как прил.) всякий, всевозможный;
in all respects во всех отношениях;
beyond all doubt вне всякого сомненияhe is not quite ~ there он не в своем уме;
у него не все домаin ~ полностью, всего;
a dozen in all всего дюжина~ pron. indef. (как прил.) всякий, всевозможный;
in all respects во всех отношениях;
beyond all doubt вне всякого сомнения respect: in all ~s во всех отношениях;
in respect that учитывая, принимая во вниманиеit is ~ over with him он человек конченый~ как нареч. всецело, вполне;
совершенно;
the pin was all gold булавка была целиком из золотаshe is her mother ~ over она вылитая матьthat's ~ there is to it вот и все;
не о чем больше говорить that: ~'s it! вот именно!, правильно!;
that's all there is to it ну, вот и все;
this and that разные~ как сущ. все имущество;
they lost their all in the fire при пожаре погибло все их имуществоat ~ вообще, совсем;
this plant will only grow in summer if at all это растение, если и вырастет, то только летом -
18 dead
1. adjective1) tot[as] dead as a doornail/as mutton — mausetot (ugs.)
I wouldn't be seen dead in a place like that — (coll.) keine zehn Pferde würden mich an solch einen Ort bringen (ugs.)
2) tot [Materie]; erloschen [Vulkan, Gefühl, Interesse]; verbraucht, leer [Batterie]; tot [Telefon, Leitung, Saison, Kapital, Ball, Sprache]the phone has gone dead — die Leitung ist tot
3) (expr. completeness) plötzlich [Halt]; völlig [Stillstand]; genau [Mitte]dead silence or quiet — Totenstille, die
dead calm — Flaute, die
dead faint — [totenähnliche] Ohnmacht
4) (benumbed) taub5) (exhausted) erschöpft; kaputt (ugs.)2. adverb1) (completely) völligdead easy or simple/slow — kinderleicht/ganz langsam
‘dead slow’ — "besonders langsam fahren"
dead drunk — stockbetrunken (ugs.)
2) (exactly)dead on target — genau im Ziel
3. noundead on two [o'clock] — Punkt zwei [Uhr]
1)in the dead of winter/night — mitten im Winter/in der Nacht
2) pl. the dead: die Toten Pl.* * *[ded] 1. adjective2) (not working and not giving any sign of being about to work: The phone/engine is dead.) tot2. adverb(completely: dead drunk.) völlig- academic.ru/18635/deaden">deaden- deadly 3. adverb- dead end- dead-end
- dead heat
- dead language
- deadline
- deadlock* * *[ded]I. adjshe's been \dead for three years sie ist [schon] drei Jahre totto be \dead on arrival beim Eintreffen ins Krankenhaus bereits tot sein\dead body Leiche fto drop \dead tot umfallento shoot sb \dead jdn erschießento be shot \dead erschossen werden2. inv (obsolete, not active) custom ausgestorben; feelings erloschen; (gone out) fire erloschen, aus fam; railway line stillgelegtacid rain has become a \dead issue über sauren Regen spricht heute keiner mehrmy cigarette is \dead meine Zigarette ist ausgegangen; (no longer in use)are these tins \dead? brauchst du diese Dosen noch?\dead language tote Sprache\dead volcano erloschener Vulkanmy legs have gone \dead meine Beine sind eingeschlafen\dead performance glanzlose Vorführung\dead capital totes Kapitalto be \dead on one's feet zum Umfallen müde seinand then the phone went \dead und dann war die Leitung totthe phone has gone \dead die Leitung ist totthe line went \dead die Leitung brach zusammenthat remark was a \dead giveaway diese Bemerkung sagte alleswow, \dead centre! hui, genau in die Mitte!to be in a \dead faint in eine tiefe Ohnmacht gefallen sein\dead silence Totenstille fwe sat in \dead silence keiner von uns sagte auch nur ein Wortto come to a \dead stop zum völligen Stillstand kommen▪ to be \dead tief und fest schlafento be \dead to the world fest eingeschlafen [o fam total weg] sein\dead ball toter Ball (Ball, der ohne Bewertung ins Aus geht)14.▶ to be \dead and buried tot und begraben sein▶ to be a \dead ringer for sb ein Doppelgänger von jdm sein, für jdn durchgehen können▶ I wouldn't be seen \dead in that dress so ein Kleid würde ich nie im Leben anziehen▶ I wouldn't be seen \dead in that pub in diese Kneipe [o ÖSTERR dieses Beisl] [o SCHWEIZ diese Beiz] würden mich keine zehn Pferde bringenII. advI'm \dead beat ich bin todmüdeyour analysis is \dead on target deine Analyse trifft genau ins Schwarzeyou're \dead right du hast vollkommen [o absolut] Recht!“\dead slow” „Schritt fahren“\dead certain todsicher fam\dead drunk stockbetrunkento have been \dead lucky Schwein gehabt haben slto be \dead set against sth absolut gegen etw akk seinto be \dead set on sth etw felsenfest vorhaben\dead silent totenstill\dead still regungslos\dead tired todmüdethe town hall is \dead ahead die Stadthalle liegt direkt da vorneto be \dead in the centre genau in der Mitte sein\dead on five o'clock Punkt fünf\dead on target genau im Ziel\dead on time auf die Minute genau3.▶ to stop \dead in one's tracks auf der Stelle stehen bleiben▶ to stop sth \dead in its tracks etw völlig zum Stillstand bringenhis political career was stopped \dead in its tracks seine politische Karriere fand ein jähes Ende▶ \dead straight:are you coming to the party? — \dead straight I am gehst du auf die Party? — darauf kannst du wetten! fam▶ to tell sb sth \dead straight jdm unverblümt die Wahrheit sagenIII. n1. (people)you're making enough noise to wake the \dead! bei dem Lärm kann man ja Tote aufwecken!let the \dead bury the \dead lasst die Toten die Toten begrabento come back from the \dead (come back to life) aus dem Jenseits zurückkommen, von den Toten zurückkehrento show [some] respect for the \dead den Toten Respekt zollen [o erweisen2.to rise from the \dead (recover from an illness) [von den Toten] auferstehen, wieder auferstehen iron; SPORT sich akk fangen3. (right in the middle)in the \dead of night mitten in der Nachtin the \dead of winter im tiefsten Winter* * *[ded]1. adj1) tot; plant abgestorben, tothe has been dead for two years — er ist seit zwei Jahren tot
to shoot sb dead — jdn erschießen or totschießen (inf)
you're dead meat ( if you come back here) (inf) — du bist ein toter Mann(, wenn du noch mal hierhin zurückkommst) (inf)
are these glasses/bottles dead? — können diese Gläser/Flaschen weg?
to be dead and buried, to be dead in the water — tot und begraben sein
See:11) (TYP)2. adv1) (= exactly) genauto be dead on time — auf die Minute pünktlich kommen; (clock) auf die Minute genau gehen
dead drunk — total betrunken, stockvoll (inf)
he was dead lucky — er hat Schwein gehabt (inf), er hat irrsinnig Glück gehabt
"dead slow" — "Schritt fahren"
3)to stop dead — abrupt stehen bleiben or (talking) innehalten
3. n1)2)in the or at dead of night —
* * *dead [ded]1. tot, gestorben:dead and gone tot und begraben (a. fig);be dead to the world umg hinüber sein:a) eingeschlafen seinb) das Bewusstsein verloren habenc) sinnlos betrunken sein;play dead sich tot stellen;a) gehirnamputiert sein pej,b) keinerlei geistige Interessen haben;dead man’s handle BAHN Sicherheitsfahrschaltungstaster m, SIFA-Taster m;wait for a dead man’s shoesa) auf eine Erbschaft warten,b) warten, bis jemand stirbt, damit man in seine Position nachrücken kann;he is dead of pneumonia er ist an Lungenentzündung gestorben;he is a dead man fig er ist ein Kind des Todes, er ist ein toter Mann;2. tot, leblos:dead matter tote Materie ( → A 23)3. totenähnlich, tief (Schlaf):be in a dead faint in tiefer Ohnmacht liegen4. umg restlos fertig, todmüde, zu Tode erschöpft5. unzugänglich, unempfänglich ( beide:to für):be dead to pity keinerlei Mitleid haben6. taub ( to advice gegen Ratschläge)7. gefühllos, abgestorben, erstarrt (Finger etc):go dead (jemandem) einschlafen ( → A 11)to gegen)9. tot, ausgestorben:dead language tote Sprache10. überlebt, veraltet (Sitten etc)11. erloschen (Feuer, Vulkan, Leidenschaft etc):go dead ausgehen (Zigarette etc)( → A 7)12. tot, geistlos13. unfruchtbar, tot, leer, öde (Gegend etc)15. JURa) ungültig (Abmachung etc)b) bürgerlich tot16. langweilig, öd(e) (Party etc)17. tot, nichtssagend, farb-, ausdruckslosdead market flauer Markt19. WIRTSCH tot (auch allg Wissen etc), gewinn-, umsatzlos:dead assets pl unproduktive (Kapital)Anlage;dead capital (stock) totes Kapital (Inventar)20. TECHa) außer Betrieb, tot:dead track totes Gleisb) defekt (Ventil etc):dead engine ausgefallener oder abgestorbener Motorc) leer (Batterie)22. ELEK strom-, spannungslos, tot23. TYPO abgelegt:dead matter Ablegesatz m ( → A 2)dead floor Blend-, Blindboden m;dead window totes Fenster25. Sack… (ohne Ausgang):dead street Sackgasse f26. dumpf, klanglos, tot (Ton)27. matt (Augen, Farben etc):dead gilding matte Vergoldung28. schal, abgestanden (Getränk)29. verwelkt, dürr, abgestorben (Blumen etc)30. (akustisch) tot:31. völlig, absolut, restlos, total:dead certainty absolute Gewissheit;dead silence Totenstille f;dead stop völliger Stillstand;come to a dead stop schlagartig stehen bleiben oder aufhören; → calm A 2, cert, earnest1 B, loss 1, ringer2 432. todsicher umg, unfehlbar (Schütze etc)a dead push ein verzweifelter, aber vergeblicher StoßB s1. stillste Zeit:in the dead of night mitten in der Nacht;the dead of winter der tiefste Winterrise from the dead von den Toten auferstehen;the dead and the living die Lebenden und die TotenC adv1. umg restlos, absolut, völlig, gänzlich, total:the facts are dead against him alles spricht gegen ihn;be dead asleep im tiefsten Schlaf liegen;dead beat umg wie erschlagen, fix und fertig;dead black tiefschwarz;dead drunk sinnlos betrunken;be dead right hundertprozentig recht haben;“dead slow” AUTO „Schritt fahren!“;dead straight schnurgerade;dead tired todmüde2. plötzlich, abrupt:stop dead (in one’s tracks) abrupt stehen bleiben oder aufhören3. genau, direkt:dead against genau gegenüber von (od dat);be dead set on ganz scharf sein auf (akk) umg* * *1. adjective1) tot[as] dead as a doornail/as mutton — mausetot (ugs.)
I wouldn't be seen dead in a place like that — (coll.) keine zehn Pferde würden mich an solch einen Ort bringen (ugs.)
2) tot [Materie]; erloschen [Vulkan, Gefühl, Interesse]; verbraucht, leer [Batterie]; tot [Telefon, Leitung, Saison, Kapital, Ball, Sprache]3) (expr. completeness) plötzlich [Halt]; völlig [Stillstand]; genau [Mitte]dead silence or quiet — Totenstille, die
dead calm — Flaute, die
dead faint — [totenähnliche] Ohnmacht
4) (benumbed) taub5) (exhausted) erschöpft; kaputt (ugs.)2. adverb1) (completely) völligdead easy or simple/slow — kinderleicht/ganz langsam
‘dead slow’ — "besonders langsam fahren"
dead drunk — stockbetrunken (ugs.)
2) (exactly)3. noundead on two [o'clock] — Punkt zwei [Uhr]
1)in the dead of winter/night — mitten im Winter/in der Nacht
2) pl. the dead: die Toten Pl.* * *adj.abgestorben adj.außer Betrieb ausdr.stromlos adj.tot adj.öd adj. -
19 wonder
ˈwʌndə
1. сущ.
1) удивление, изумление it is no wonder that ≈ неудивительно, что
2) чудо;
нечто удивительное It's a wonder that we didn't get lost. ≈ Мы просто чудом не потерялись It's no small wonder that they had so much trouble. ≈ Неудивительно, что у них столько неприятностей. the seven wonders of the world ≈ семь чудес света the eighth wonder of the world ≈ восьмое чудо света for a wonder in wonder natural wonder one-day wonder nine-day wonder work wonders perform wonder
2. гл.
1) удивляться (at) to wonder really, to wonder very much ≈ сильно удивляться I really wonder if they'll come. ≈ Мне действительно интересно, придут ли они. I wonder why they left. ≈ Интересно, почему они ушли.
2) интересоваться;
желать знать I wonder who it was. ≈ Интересно знать, кто это мог быть. wonder about wonder at ∙ I wonder! I shouldn't wonder if чудо;
нечто удивительное, неожиданное - to work *s творить чудеса - the *s of modern science чудеса современной науки - seven *s of the world семь чудес света - it is a * of delicate workmanship изумительно тонкая работа - it is no *, it is little/ small/ * (that)... неудивительно, что...;
нет ничего удивительного в том, что...;
не приходится удивляться тому, что... - the * is that he found the way удивительно лишь то, что он нашел дорогу - for a * как ни странно, каким-то чудом - you are punctual for a * как ни странно, вы не опоздали - what *? чему тут удивляться?, что тут удивительного? - what * if... будет неудивительно, если... - what a *! изумительно!, поразительно! изумление, удивление (часто смешанное с восхищением, интересом) - to look in open-mouthed * смотреть разинув рот( от изумления, восторга, любопытства) - they were filled with * at the sight of the new aircraft они были поражены видом нового самолета изумление, трепет, благоговение (перед чем-л. таинственным, неизвестным) - they looked at each other in silent * они смотрели друг на друга в немом изумлении сомнение, неуверенность > a nine days' * злоба дня, кратковременная сенсация вызывающий изумление или восхищение - * child чудо-ребенок (необычайно талантливый или не по годам развитой) необычайно эффективный - * drug чудодейственное лекарство интересоваться, желать знать;
задавать (себе) вопрос;
сомневаться - I * who he is интересно, кто он такой - I * whether you can tell me... не можете ли вы сказать мне... изумляться, поражаться;
восхищаться - he *ed at the delicacy of form он был восхищен изяществом формы - I *ed at her saying that я был поражен ее словами > I *! не знаю, интересно (выражает сомнение или сдержанное недоверие) ~ чудо;
нечто удивительное;
for a wonder как это ни странно, каким-то чудом;
to work wonders творить чудеса I shouldn't ~ if неудивительно будет, если wonder интересоваться;
желать знать;
I wonder who it was интересно знать, кто это мог быть;
I wonder! сомневаюсь!, не знаю, не знаю - может быть wonder интересоваться;
желать знать;
I wonder who it was интересно знать, кто это мог быть;
I wonder! сомневаюсь!, не знаю, не знаю - может быть ~ удивление, изумление;
(it is) no wonder (that) неудивительно (, что) ;
what a wonder! поразительно! what ~? что удивительного? ~ чудо;
нечто удивительное;
for a wonder как это ни странно, каким-то чудом;
to work wonders творить чудеса -
20 Reading
1) The Discovery of Truth Depends on the Thoughtful Reading of Authoritative TextsFor the Middle Ages, all discovery of truth was first reception of traditional authorities, then later-in the thirteenth century-rational reconciliation of authoritative texts. A comprehension of the world was not regarded as a creative function but as an assimilation and retracing of given facts; the symbolic expression of this being reading. The goal and the accomplishment of the thinker is to connect all these facts together in the form of the "summa." Dante's cosmic poem is such a summa too. (Curtius, 1973, p. 326)The readers of books... extend or concentrate a function common to us all. Reading letters on a page is only one of its many guises. The astronomer reading a map of stars that no longer exist; the Japanese architect reading the land on which a house is to be built so as to guard it from evil forces; the zoologist reading the spoor of animals in the forest; the card-player reading her partner's gestures before playing the winning card; the dancer reading the choreographer's notations, and the public reading the dancer's movements on the stage; the weaver reading the intricate design of a carpet being woven; the organ-player reading various simultaneous strands of music orchestrated on the page; the parent reading the baby's face for signs of joy or fright, or wonder; the Chinese fortune-teller reading the ancient marks on the shell of a tortoise; the lover blindly reading the loved one's body at night, under the sheets; the psychiatrist helping patients read their own bewildering dreams; the Hawaiian fisherman reading the ocean currents by plunging a hand into the water; the farmer reading the weather in the sky-all these share with book-readers the craft of deciphering and translating signs....We all read ourselves and the world around us in order to glimpse what and where we are. We read to understand, or to begin to understand. We cannot do but read. Reading, almost as much as breathing, is our essential function. (Manguel, 1996, pp. 6-7)There is a pitched battle between those theorists and modellers who embrace the primacy of syntax and those who embrace the primacy of semantics in language processing. At times both schools have committed various excesses. For example, some of the former have relied foolishly on context-free mathematical-combinatory models, while some of the latter have flirted with versions of the "direct-access hypothesis," the idea that skilled readers process printed language directly into meaning without phonological or even syntactic processing. The problems with the first excess are patent. Those with the second are more complex and demand more research. Unskilled readers apparently do rely more on phonological processing than do skilled ones; hence their spoken dialects may interfere with their reading-and writing-habits. But the extent to which phonological processing is absent in the skilled reader has not been established, and the contention that syntactic processing is suspended in the skilled reader is surely wrong and not supported by empirical evidence-though blood-flow patterns in the brain are curiously different during speaking, oral reading, and silent reading. (M. L. Johnson, 1988, pp. 101-102)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Reading
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