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21 soulager
soulager [sulaʒe]➭ TABLE 31. transitive verbto relieve ; [+ conscience] to ease• mets de la crème, ça soulage put some cream on, it's soothing• pleure un bon coup, ça soulage ! have a good cry, it'll make you feel better!2. reflexive verb* * *sulaʒe
1.
1) ( décharger) to relieve [personne, entreprise, étagère] (de of)2) ( apaiser) to relieve [personne]; to relieve, to ease [conscience, peine]pleure un bon coup, ça soulage — have a good cry, you'll feel better
3) (colloq) fig ( voler) to relieve ( de quelque chose of something)
2.
se soulager verbe pronominal1) (colloq) ( satisfaire un besoin naturel) euph to relieve oneself2) ( s'apaiser)* * *sulaʒe vt* * *soulager verb table: mangerA vtr1 ( décharger) to relieve [personne, entreprise, étagère] (de of); passe-moi une valise, ça te soulagera let me relieve you of one of your suitcases; il faut le soulager des tâches administratives we'll have to relieve him of administrative duties; suppression d'une taxe pour soulager les entreprises exportatrices tax relief for exporters;2 ( apaiser) to relieve [personne]; to relieve, to ease [peine, conscience]; soulager qn d'un mal de tête to relieve sb's headache; pleure un bon coup, ça soulage have a good cry, you'll feel better; la mort de l'assassin ne soulagera pas ma peine the death of the murderer will not assuage my grief; tu m'as soulagé d'un grand poids you've taken a great weight off my shoulders;3 ○ fig ( voler) to relieve (de qch of sth); il s'est fait soulager de son portefeuille somebody relieved him of his wallet.B se soulager vpr1 ○( satisfaire un besoin naturel) euph to relieve oneself;2 ( s'apaiser) elle m'a raconté tout cela pour se soulager she told me the whole story to get it off her chest.[sulaʒe] verbe transitifcela devrait vous soulager de votre mal de tête this should relieve ou help your headachepleure, ça te soulagera have a good cry, you'll feel better afterwards4. [décharger] to relievemon collègue me soulage parfois d'une partie de mon travail my colleague sometimes relieves me of part of my work————————se soulager verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)[d'une charge de travail] to lessen the strain on oneselfprends un collaborateur pour te soulager take somebody on to take some of the pressure of work off you————————se soulager verbe pronominal intransitifil m'arrive de crier pour me soulager sometimes I shout to let ou to blow off steam2. (familier & euphémisme) to relieve oneself -
22 apariencia sencilla
Ex. The simple-looking flow from editorial to production to sale is not, by any means, the whole story of publishing.* * *Ex: The simple-looking flow from editorial to production to sale is not, by any means, the whole story of publishing.
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23 cūnctus
cūnctus adj. [contr. for con-iūnctus], all in a body, all together, the whole, all, entire: ordo: senatus populusque, L.: Gallia, Cs.: plebes, S.: terra: oppida, Cs.: quin cuncti vivi caperentur, Cs.: cuncti aut magna pars Siccensium, S.: auxilia rei p. cunctis senatūs sententiis, by a unanimous vote: cunctis lecti navibus, i. e. some from every ship, V.— Plur n. as subst: cuncta agitare, everything at once, S.: Cicero cuncta edoctus, the whole story, S.: Inter cuncta, at all times, H.: cuncta tibi fatebor, V.: ab his oriuntur cuncta, the universe, O.: cuncta sub imperium accepit, i. e. the Roman world, Ta.—With gen: hominum cuncti, O.: cuncta terrarum, everything on earth, H.: cuncta camporum, Ta.* * *Icuncta, cunctum ADJaltogether (usu. pl.), in a body; every, all, entire; total/complete; whole ofIIall (pl.) (M); all with a stated/implied exception -
24 suprimir
v.1 to abolish (ley, impuesto, derecho).hay que suprimir todo lo superfluo we have to get rid of everything that's superfluous2 to delete (palabras, texto).suprime los detalles y ve al grano forget the details and get to the point3 to ax (puestos de trabajo, proyectos).4 to suppress, to ban, to delete, to eliminate.5 to edit out.* * *1 (libertad etc) to suppress; (ley, impuestos) to abolish; (dificultades) to eliminate, remove; (restricciones) to lift2 (tabaco, alcohol) to cut out3 (palabra) to delete, take out, leave out4 (omitir) to omit* * *verb* * *VT [+ rebelión, crítica] to suppress; [+ costumbre, derecho, institución] to abolish; [+ dificultad, obstáculo] to remove, eliminate; [+ restricción] to lift; [+ detalle, pasaje] to delete, cut out, omit; [+ libro] to suppress, bansuprimir la grasa de la dieta — to cut out o eliminate fat from one's diet
* * *verbo transitivoa) <impuesto/ley/costumbre> to abolish; < restricción> to lift; < servicio> to withdrawdebemos suprimir gastos superfluos — we must eliminate o cut out unnecessary expenses
b) (Impr) <párrafo/capítulo> to deletec) <noticia/detalles> to suppress* * *= abort, delete, remove, stifle, suppress, staunch [stanch, -USA], elide, abolish, expunge, cut out, quash, steamroller, stomp + Nombre + out.Ex. It is important to know what police or fire responses are triggered by alarms and how that reaction can be aborted and the alarm silenced.Ex. Expressive notation is generally easier to truncate, that is, delete final characters to create the notation for a more general subject.Ex. Folders allow a set of papers to be kept together when a set on a given topic is removed from the file.Ex. Excessive emphasis on the need to exact payment will stifle the flow of information.Ex. It is possible to suppress references and to omit steps in a hierarchy.Ex. Some notable progress is being made worldwide in staunching publishers' losses.Ex. A variant text is conventionally represented in a footnote quoting the text to be elided, the variant reading, and a code identifying its source.Ex. Who knows? If we can abolish the card catalogue and replace it with some form more acceptable to library users, they may even begin to use library catalogues!.Ex. This article examines the controversial issue about whether to expunge books about satanism from the library shelves.Ex. In order to support a core acquistions programme of essential materials for its users, a library will more readily cut out material on the fringe of its needs if such material can be obtained by a good document supply system.Ex. The author brazenly insists that Woodman's family has compromised the documentation of the photographer's life by effectively quashing most of her work.Ex. When push comes to shove, it seems that short-term economic interests steamroller scientific arguments.Ex. Like I said, no wonder racism won't die, it takes BOTH sides to stomp it out, not just one!.* * *verbo transitivoa) <impuesto/ley/costumbre> to abolish; < restricción> to lift; < servicio> to withdrawdebemos suprimir gastos superfluos — we must eliminate o cut out unnecessary expenses
b) (Impr) <párrafo/capítulo> to deletec) <noticia/detalles> to suppress* * *= abort, delete, remove, stifle, suppress, staunch [stanch, -USA], elide, abolish, expunge, cut out, quash, steamroller, stomp + Nombre + out.Ex: It is important to know what police or fire responses are triggered by alarms and how that reaction can be aborted and the alarm silenced.
Ex: Expressive notation is generally easier to truncate, that is, delete final characters to create the notation for a more general subject.Ex: Folders allow a set of papers to be kept together when a set on a given topic is removed from the file.Ex: Excessive emphasis on the need to exact payment will stifle the flow of information.Ex: It is possible to suppress references and to omit steps in a hierarchy.Ex: Some notable progress is being made worldwide in staunching publishers' losses.Ex: A variant text is conventionally represented in a footnote quoting the text to be elided, the variant reading, and a code identifying its source.Ex: Who knows? If we can abolish the card catalogue and replace it with some form more acceptable to library users, they may even begin to use library catalogues!.Ex: This article examines the controversial issue about whether to expunge books about satanism from the library shelves.Ex: In order to support a core acquistions programme of essential materials for its users, a library will more readily cut out material on the fringe of its needs if such material can be obtained by a good document supply system.Ex: The author brazenly insists that Woodman's family has compromised the documentation of the photographer's life by effectively quashing most of her work.Ex: When push comes to shove, it seems that short-term economic interests steamroller scientific arguments.Ex: Like I said, no wonder racism won't die, it takes BOTH sides to stomp it out, not just one!.* * *suprimir [I1 ]vtA1 ‹impuesto› to abolish; ‹restricción› to lift; ‹servicio› to withdrawdebemos suprimir estos gastos superfluos we must eliminate o cut out these unnecessary expensesle suprimieron la medicación they stopped his medication¿por qué no le suprimes el ajo? why don't you leave out the garlic?queda suprimida la parada en El Colorado the bus ( o train etc) no longer stops at El Coloradose suprimió la salida de las 9h the 9 o'clock service was withdrawn2 ( Impr) ‹párrafo/capítulo› to deletesuprimió un párrafo entero she cut out o deleted a whole paragraph3 ‹noticia/detalles› to suppressB ( Elec) to suppress* * *
suprimir ( conjugate suprimir) verbo transitivo
‹ restricción› to lift;
‹ servicio› to withdraw;
‹gasto/ruido/alcohol› to cut out
suprimir verbo transitivo
1 to supress
(un derecho, una ley, etc) to abolish
(un servicio) to withdraw
(gastos) to eliminate, cut out
(en un texto) to delete
2 (omitir, pasar por alto) to omit: suprime los detalles técnicos, leave out the technicalities
' suprimir' also found in these entries:
English:
black out
- delete
- edit
- suppress
- zap
- ax
- do
- strike
* * *suprimir vt1. [eliminar] to get rid of;[ley, impuesto, derecho] to abolish; [sanciones, restricciones] to lift; [gastos] to cut out;hay que suprimir todo lo superfluo we have to get rid of everything that's superfluous;han suprimido las retransmisiones deportivas they have cancelled the sports broadcasts2. [palabras, texto] to delete;suprime los detalles y ve al grano forget the details and get to the point3. [puestos de trabajo, proyectos] to axe* * *v/t rebelión suppress, put down; ley, impuesto abolish; restricción lift; servicio withdraw; puesto de trabajo cut; en texto delete;suprimió algunos detalles she kept something back, she didn’t give me/us the whole story* * *suprimir vt1) : to suppress, to eliminate2) : to delete* * * -
25 pressé
presse [pʀεs]feminine nouna. ( = institution) press• presse féminine/automobile women's/car magazines• avoir bonne/mauvaise presse to be well/badly thought of• agence/conférence de presse press agency/conferenceb. ( = machine) press* * *pʀɛs
1.
1) ( journaux) press; ( journalistes) press; ( magazines) magazines (pl)avoir bonne/mauvaise presse — fig to be well/not well thought of ( auprès de among)
2) ( machine à presser) press3) ( machine à imprimer) pressmettre sous presse — to send [something] to press
‘sous presse’ — ‘in preparation’
2.
presses nom féminin pluriel ( maison d'édition) press (sg)* * *pʀɛs nf1) (= média) press2) (= affluence)* * *A nf1 ( journaux) press; ( journalistes) press; ( magazines) magazines (pl); presse écrite/économique written/economic press; article de presse press article; présenter à or devant la presse to present to the press; convoquer la presse to summon the press; presse automobile/féminine/du cœur motoring GB ou car US/women's/romantic magazines; avoir bonne/mauvaise presse to be well/not well thought of (auprès among); que dit la presse? what do the papers say?; ⇒ grand;2 ( machine à presser) press; presse hydraulique/de 100 tonnes hydraulic/100-ton press; presse à la main/à vis/mécanique hand/screw/power press; presse à relier/à emboutir holding/stamping press;3 ( machine à imprimer) press; presse à cylindres or rotative cylinder press; presse à bras hand press; presse à platine platen press; mettre sous presse to send [sth] off to press; être mis sous presse to go to press; ‘sous presse’ ‘in preparation’;4 ( hâte) dans les moments de presse when things get busy.1. [personne]être pressé to be pressed for time, to be in a hurry ou rushtu n'as pas l'air pressé de la revoir you seem in no hurry ou you don't seem eager to see her again2. [précipité - démarche, geste] hurried3. [urgent - réparation, achat] urgentil n'a rien trouvé de plus pressé que d'aller tout raconter à sa femme he wasted no time in telling his wife the whole storyle plus pressé, c'est de prévenir son mari the first thing to do is to tell her husband[agrume] freshly squeezed -
26 Computers
The brain has been compared to a digital computer because the neuron, like a switch or valve, either does or does not complete a circuit. But at that point the similarity ends. The switch in the digital computer is constant in its effect, and its effect is large in proportion to the total output of the machine. The effect produced by the neuron varies with its recovery from [the] refractory phase and with its metabolic state. The number of neurons involved in any action runs into millions so that the influence of any one is negligible.... Any cell in the system can be dispensed with.... The brain is an analogical machine, not digital. Analysis of the integrative activities will probably have to be in statistical terms. (Lashley, quoted in Beach, Hebb, Morgan & Nissen, 1960, p. 539)It is essential to realize that a computer is not a mere "number cruncher," or supercalculating arithmetic machine, although this is how computers are commonly regarded by people having no familiarity with artificial intelligence. Computers do not crunch numbers; they manipulate symbols.... Digital computers originally developed with mathematical problems in mind, are in fact general purpose symbol manipulating machines....The terms "computer" and "computation" are themselves unfortunate, in view of their misleading arithmetical connotations. The definition of artificial intelligence previously cited-"the study of intelligence as computation"-does not imply that intelligence is really counting. Intelligence may be defined as the ability creatively to manipulate symbols, or process information, given the requirements of the task in hand. (Boden, 1981, pp. 15, 16-17)The task is to get computers to explain things to themselves, to ask questions about their experiences so as to cause those explanations to be forthcoming, and to be creative in coming up with explanations that have not been previously available. (Schank, 1986, p. 19)In What Computers Can't Do, written in 1969 (2nd edition, 1972), the main objection to AI was the impossibility of using rules to select only those facts about the real world that were relevant in a given situation. The "Introduction" to the paperback edition of the book, published by Harper & Row in 1979, pointed out further that no one had the slightest idea how to represent the common sense understanding possessed even by a four-year-old. (Dreyfus & Dreyfus, 1986, p. 102)A popular myth says that the invention of the computer diminishes our sense of ourselves, because it shows that rational thought is not special to human beings, but can be carried on by a mere machine. It is a short stop from there to the conclusion that intelligence is mechanical, which many people find to be an affront to all that is most precious and singular about their humanness.In fact, the computer, early in its career, was not an instrument of the philistines, but a humanizing influence. It helped to revive an idea that had fallen into disrepute: the idea that the mind is real, that it has an inner structure and a complex organization, and can be understood in scientific terms. For some three decades, until the 1940s, American psychology had lain in the grip of the ice age of behaviorism, which was antimental through and through. During these years, extreme behaviorists banished the study of thought from their agenda. Mind and consciousness, thinking, imagining, planning, solving problems, were dismissed as worthless for anything except speculation. Only the external aspects of behavior, the surface manifestations, were grist for the scientist's mill, because only they could be observed and measured....It is one of the surprising gifts of the computer in the history of ideas that it played a part in giving back to psychology what it had lost, which was nothing less than the mind itself. In particular, there was a revival of interest in how the mind represents the world internally to itself, by means of knowledge structures such as ideas, symbols, images, and inner narratives, all of which had been consigned to the realm of mysticism. (Campbell, 1989, p. 10)[Our artifacts] only have meaning because we give it to them; their intentionality, like that of smoke signals and writing, is essentially borrowed, hence derivative. To put it bluntly: computers themselves don't mean anything by their tokens (any more than books do)-they only mean what we say they do. Genuine understanding, on the other hand, is intentional "in its own right" and not derivatively from something else. (Haugeland, 1981a, pp. 32-33)he debate over the possibility of computer thought will never be won or lost; it will simply cease to be of interest, like the previous debate over man as a clockwork mechanism. (Bolter, 1984, p. 190)t takes us a long time to emotionally digest a new idea. The computer is too big a step, and too recently made, for us to quickly recover our balance and gauge its potential. It's an enormous accelerator, perhaps the greatest one since the plow, twelve thousand years ago. As an intelligence amplifier, it speeds up everything-including itself-and it continually improves because its heart is information or, more plainly, ideas. We can no more calculate its consequences than Babbage could have foreseen antibiotics, the Pill, or space stations.Further, the effects of those ideas are rapidly compounding, because a computer design is itself just a set of ideas. As we get better at manipulating ideas by building ever better computers, we get better at building even better computers-it's an ever-escalating upward spiral. The early nineteenth century, when the computer's story began, is already so far back that it may as well be the Stone Age. (Rawlins, 1997, p. 19)According to weak AI, the principle value of the computer in the study of the mind is that it gives us a very powerful tool. For example, it enables us to formulate and test hypotheses in a more rigorous and precise fashion than before. But according to strong AI the computer is not merely a tool in the study of the mind; rather the appropriately programmed computer really is a mind in the sense that computers given the right programs can be literally said to understand and have other cognitive states. And according to strong AI, because the programmed computer has cognitive states, the programs are not mere tools that enable us to test psychological explanations; rather, the programs are themselves the explanations. (Searle, 1981b, p. 353)What makes people smarter than machines? They certainly are not quicker or more precise. Yet people are far better at perceiving objects in natural scenes and noting their relations, at understanding language and retrieving contextually appropriate information from memory, at making plans and carrying out contextually appropriate actions, and at a wide range of other natural cognitive tasks. People are also far better at learning to do these things more accurately and fluently through processing experience.What is the basis for these differences? One answer, perhaps the classic one we might expect from artificial intelligence, is "software." If we only had the right computer program, the argument goes, we might be able to capture the fluidity and adaptability of human information processing. Certainly this answer is partially correct. There have been great breakthroughs in our understanding of cognition as a result of the development of expressive high-level computer languages and powerful algorithms. However, we do not think that software is the whole story.In our view, people are smarter than today's computers because the brain employs a basic computational architecture that is more suited to deal with a central aspect of the natural information processing tasks that people are so good at.... hese tasks generally require the simultaneous consideration of many pieces of information or constraints. Each constraint may be imperfectly specified and ambiguous, yet each can play a potentially decisive role in determining the outcome of processing. (McClelland, Rumelhart & Hinton, 1986, pp. 3-4)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Computers
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27 из песни слова не выкинешь
Set phrase: a word dropped from a song makes it all wrong, the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, varnished tale can't be round (one has to tell the whole story without omitting any unpleasant part of it), you can't knock words out of a song, you can't throw words out of a songУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > из песни слова не выкинешь
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28 tell
[tel] past tense, past participle told [tould] verb1) to inform or give information to (a person) about (something):يُخْبِرHe told John about it.
2) to order or command; to suggest or warn:يَطْلُب، يأمُرI told him to go away.
3) to say or express in words:يَرْوي، يَقُصto tell lies / the truth / a story.
4) to distinguish; to see (a difference); to know or decide:Can you tell the difference between them?
يُمَيِّزYou can tell if the meat is cooked by/from the colour.
5) to give away a secret:يَكْشِف السِّرYou mustn't tell or we'll get into trouble.
6) to be effective; to be seen to give (good) results:يُعْطي نَتائِجَ جَيِّدَه أو فَعّالَهGood teaching will always tell.
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29 Я-25
РАЗВЯЗЫВАТЬ/РАЗВЯЗАТЬ ЯЗЫК coll VP1. - кому ( subj: abstr or a noun denoting an alcoholic beverage) to encourage, induce a person to begin talking, speak freely, without reservationX развязал язык Y-y = X loosened Y% tongue.Выпитое ли вино, или потребность откровенности, или мысль, что этот человек не знает и не узнает никого из действующих лиц его истории, или всё вместе развязало язык Пьеру. И он... рассказал всю свою историю: и свою женитьбу, и историю любви Наташи к его лучшему другу, и её измену, и все свои несложные отношения к ней (Толстой 6). Whether it was the wine he had drunk or an impulse of frankness or the thought that this man did not, and never would, know any of those who played a part in his story, or whether it was all these things together, something loosened Pierre's tongue....He told the whole story of his life: his marriage, Natasha's love for his best friend, her betrayal of him, and all his own simple relations with her (6a).2. - кому (subj: human to force, impel a person to speak, divulge a secretX развяжет Y-y язык - X will loosen Y's tongueX will make Y talk.3. (subj: human fearing punishment, reprisal, to speak after a silence and divulge some secretX развязал язык — X started talking(in limited contexts) X came clean.«Ещё раз повторяю вам, что на подобные вопросы отвечать не стану». - «На выбор: или ты, собака, сейчас же развяжешь язык, или через десять минут будешь поставлен к стенке! Ну?!» (Шолохов 5). "I repeat, I refuse to answer such questions." "You have the choice. Either you come clean, you dog, or in ten minutes from now we'll have you up against a wall! Now then?" (5a).4. often disapprov (subj: human to become talkative ( usu. after a silence), talk a great dealX развязал язык - X began to talk (a lot)X began to wag his tongue X began to jabber (chatter) away. -
30 развязать язык
• РАЗВЯЗЫВАТЬ/РАЗВЯЗАТЬ ЯЗЫК coll[VP]=====1. развязать язык кому [subj: abstr or a noun denoting an alcoholic beverage]⇒ to encourage, induce a person to begin talking, speak freely, without reservation:- X развязал язык Y-y ≈ X loosened Y's tongue.♦ Выпитое ли вино, или потребность откровенности, или мысль, что этот человек не знает и не узнает никого из действующих лиц его истории, или всё вместе развязало язык Пьеру. И он... рассказал всю свою историю: и свою женитьбу, и историю любви Наташи к его лучшему другу, и её измену, и все свои несложные отношения к ней (Толстой 6). Whether it was the wine he had drunk or an impulse of frankness or the thought that this man did not, and never would, know any of those who played a part in his story, or whether it was all these things together, something loosened Pierre's tongue....He told the whole story of his life: his marriage, Natasha's love for his best friend, her betrayal of him, and all his own simple relations with her (6a).2. развязать язык кому [subj: human]⇒ to force, impel a person to speak, divulge a secret:- X will make Y talk.3. [subj: human]⇒ fearing punishment, reprisal, to speak after a silence and divulge some secret:- [in limited contexts] X came clean.♦ "Ещё раз повторяю вам, что на подобные вопросы отвечать не стану". - " На выбор: или ты, собака, сейчас же развяжешь язык, или через десять минут будешь поставлен к стенке! Ну?!" (Шолохов 5). "I repeat, I refuse to answer such questions." "You have the choice. Either you come clean, you dog, or in ten minutes from now we'll have you up against a wall! Now then?" (5a).4. often disapprov [subj: human]⇒ to become talkative (usu. after a silence), talk a great deal:- X began to jabber (chatter) away.Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > развязать язык
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31 развязывать язык
• РАЗВЯЗЫВАТЬ/РАЗВЯЗАТЬ ЯЗЫК coll[VP]=====1. развязывать язык кому [subj: abstr or a noun denoting an alcoholic beverage]⇒ to encourage, induce a person to begin talking, speak freely, without reservation:- X развязал язык Y-y ≈ X loosened Y's tongue.♦ Выпитое ли вино, или потребность откровенности, или мысль, что этот человек не знает и не узнает никого из действующих лиц его истории, или всё вместе развязало язык Пьеру. И он... рассказал всю свою историю: и свою женитьбу, и историю любви Наташи к его лучшему другу, и её измену, и все свои несложные отношения к ней (Толстой 6). Whether it was the wine he had drunk or an impulse of frankness or the thought that this man did not, and never would, know any of those who played a part in his story, or whether it was all these things together, something loosened Pierre's tongue....He told the whole story of his life: his marriage, Natasha's love for his best friend, her betrayal of him, and all his own simple relations with her (6a).2. развязывать язык кому [subj: human]⇒ to force, impel a person to speak, divulge a secret:- X will make Y talk.3. [subj: human]⇒ fearing punishment, reprisal, to speak after a silence and divulge some secret:- [in limited contexts] X came clean.♦ "Ещё раз повторяю вам, что на подобные вопросы отвечать не стану". - " На выбор: или ты, собака, сейчас же развяжешь язык, или через десять минут будешь поставлен к стенке! Ну?!" (Шолохов 5). "I repeat, I refuse to answer such questions." "You have the choice. Either you come clean, you dog, or in ten minutes from now we'll have you up against a wall! Now then?" (5a).4. often disapprov [subj: human]⇒ to become talkative (usu. after a silence), talk a great deal:- X began to jabber (chatter) away.Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > развязывать язык
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32 это ещё не всё
•However, the story is not complete, because the ability to ignore loads can be increased by...
•This is not the whole story, however.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > это ещё не всё
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33 вот и весь сказ
General subject: that is the whole story, end of story, that's the long and the short of it -
34 это ещё не все
1) General subject: there is more to come, there's more to come2) Mathematics: this is not the whole story3) Makarov: that's not the half of the story -
35 déballer
déballer [debale]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb[+ objets] to unpack ; [+ marchandises] to display• il m'a déballé toute l'histoire/toute sa vie (inf) he told me the whole story/his life story* * *debaleverbe transitif to unpack [marchandise, caisse]; to open [paquet, cadeau]; ( étaler) to display [marchandise]* * *debale vt1) [bagages] to unpack2) [cadeaux] to unwrap3) fig péjoratif to pour out* * *déballer verb table: aimer vtr2 ( étaler) to display [marchandise];[debale] verbe transitif1. [bagages] to unpack2. [exposer - produits] to display3. (familier) [sentiments] to unload -
36 envolver
v.1 to wrap (up).envuélvamelo para regalo, por favor could you giftwrap it, please?2 to wind.3 to envelop, to cover.la niebla envolvía el valle the valley was deep in mist4 to wrap up, to wrap, to envelop, to enfold.Ella envuelve los regalos She wraps up the gifts.5 to pack, to wrap up, to envelop, to parcel.Ella envuelve el libro She packs the book.6 to involve.El caso envuelve a María The case involves Mary.7 to embody, to embosom.El libro envuelve toda la historia The book embodies the whole story.* * *1 (con papel) to wrap, wrap up2 (con ropa) to wrap, wrap up3 (hilo, cinta) to wind4 (pasteles etc) to coat, cover6 figurado (implicar) to involve (en, in), implicate (en, in)7 figurado (confundir) to confound8 MILITAR to surround, encircle1 (uso reflexivo) to wrap oneself up (en, in)2 figurado (implicarse) to become involved (en, in)* * *verb1) to wrap2) surround* * *( pp envuelto)1. VT1) (=cubrir) [con papel] to wrap (up); [con ropa] to wrap (up), cover (up)¿quiere que se lo envuelva? — shall I wrap it (up) for you?
2) (=rodear) to surround, shrouduna niebla espesa envolvía el castillo — the castle was surrounded o shrouded in thick fog
3) (=involucrar) to involve (en in)4) frm (=contener) to contain2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <paquete/regalo> to wrap (up)¿me lo puede envolver para regalo? — could you gift wrap it?
envolver algo/a alguien en algo — to wrap something/somebody (up) in something
2) ( rodear) membrana/capa to surround; humo/tristeza to envelopun velo de misterio envuelve el caso — the case is cloaked o shrouded in mystery
3) ( implicar) <crítica/opinión> to imply4) ( involucrar) to involve2.envolver a alguien en algo — to involve somebody in something, get somebody involved in something
envolverse v prona) (refl) ( en manta) to wrap oneself (up)b) (en delito, asunto) to become involved* * *= wrap, envelop, shroud, wrap up.Ex. In some cases the real question that needs to be answered may indeed turn out to be, as Winston Churchill once said of Russia, 'a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma'.Ex. Her eyes swept the room and then enveloped him in an icy glare.Ex. Often the needs of the disabled are shrouded by misconceptions such as that they are forced to lead a poor quality of life.Ex. Finally, the type faces were inspected for defects, and the sort was wrapped up in a packet for delivery.----* papel de envolver = wrapping paper.* papel de envolver regalos = gift wrapping paper.* sin envolver = unwrapped.* * *1.verbo transitivo1) <paquete/regalo> to wrap (up)¿me lo puede envolver para regalo? — could you gift wrap it?
envolver algo/a alguien en algo — to wrap something/somebody (up) in something
2) ( rodear) membrana/capa to surround; humo/tristeza to envelopun velo de misterio envuelve el caso — the case is cloaked o shrouded in mystery
3) ( implicar) <crítica/opinión> to imply4) ( involucrar) to involve2.envolver a alguien en algo — to involve somebody in something, get somebody involved in something
envolverse v prona) (refl) ( en manta) to wrap oneself (up)b) (en delito, asunto) to become involved* * *= wrap, envelop, shroud, wrap up.Ex: In some cases the real question that needs to be answered may indeed turn out to be, as Winston Churchill once said of Russia, 'a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma'.
Ex: Her eyes swept the room and then enveloped him in an icy glare.Ex: Often the needs of the disabled are shrouded by misconceptions such as that they are forced to lead a poor quality of life.Ex: Finally, the type faces were inspected for defects, and the sort was wrapped up in a packet for delivery.* papel de envolver = wrapping paper.* papel de envolver regalos = gift wrapping paper.* sin envolver = unwrapped.* * *vtA ‹paquete/regalo› to wrap, wrap up¿se lo envuelvo? shall I wrap it (up) for you?¿me lo puede envolver para regalo? could you gift wrap it?envolver algo/a algn EN algo to wrap sth/sb (up) IN sthenvolvió al niño en una manta she wrapped the child (up) in a blanketB (rodear) «membrana/capa» to surround; «humo/tristeza» to envelopla niebla envolvía la ciudad fog enveloped the city, the city was shrouded in fogun velo de misterio envuelve el caso the case is cloaked o shrouded in mysteryun halo de santidad la envolvía she seemed to be shrouded in o surrounded by an aura of saintlinessC (contener) ‹crítica/opinión› to contain, implyD (involucrar) to involve envolver a algn EN algo to involve sb IN sth, get sb involved IN sth1 ( refl) (en una manta) to wrap oneself (up)se envolvió en la manta y se durmió she wrapped herself (up) in the blanket o she wrapped the blanket around herself and fell asleep2 (en un delito, asunto) to become involved* * *
envolver ( conjugate envolver) verbo transitivo
1 ‹paquete/regalo› to wrap (up);◊ ¿me lo puede envolver para regalo? could you gift wrap it?;
envolver algo/a algn en algo to wrap sth/sb (up) in sth
2 ( rodear) [membrana/capa] to surround;
[humo/tristeza] to envelop
3 ( involucrar) to involve
envolverse verbo pronominal
envolver verbo transitivo
1 (con papel) to wrap: envúelvalo para regalo, por favor, gift-wrap it, please
2 (rodear, cubrir) to envelop: la niebla envolvía la ciudad, the town was enveloped in fog
3 (enredar, implicar) to involve
' envolver' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
cinta
- liar
- aparte
- implicar
- papel
English:
envelop
- gift-wrap
- muffle up
- parcel up
- shroud
- wrap
- wrap up
- wrapping paper
- bind
- cling
- do
- engulf
- gift
- wrapping
* * *♦ vt1. [embalar] to wrap (up);envuélvamelo para regalo, por favor could you giftwrap it, please?;¿quiere que se lo envuelva? would you like it wrapped?;2. [cubrir, rodear] to envelop, to cover;la niebla envolvía el valle the valley was deep in mist;la membrana que envuelve al feto the membrane which envelops o covers the foetus;una sensación de melancolía la envolvía a feeling of melancholy enveloped him3. [enrollar] to wind;envolver hilo en un carrete to wind thread onto a spool5. [conllevar] to imply;lo que dijo no envuelve crítica alguna what he said doesn't imply any criticism whatsoever* * *<part envuelto> v/t1 wrap (up)2 ( rodear) surround, envelop3 ( involucrar) involve;envolver a alguien en algo involve s.o. in sth* * *envolver {89} vt1) : to wrap2) : to envelop, to surround3) : to entangle, to involve* * * -
37 marcher
marcher [maʀ∫e]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verba. to walk ; [soldats] to march• on marche sur la tête ! (inf) it's crazy!• venez, on va marcher un peu come on, let's go for a walk• c'est marche ou crève ! (inf!) it's sink or swim!• « défense de marcher sur les pelouses » "keep off the grass"b. ( = progresser) marcher vers le succès to be on the road to successc. ( = être dupe) (inf) on lui raconte n'importe quoi et il marche you can tell him anything and he'll swallow it (inf)• est-ce que le métro marche aujourd'hui ? is the underground running today?• les études, ça marche ? (inf) how's college going?* * *maʀʃeverbe intransitif1) ( utiliser ses pieds) [personne, animal, robot] to walk2) ( poser le pied) to tread ( dans in; sur on)se laisser marcher sur les pieds — fig to let oneself be walked over
3) ( avancer) to gomarcher sur les mains — [gymnaste] to walk on one's hands
4) ( fonctionner) [mécanisme, réforme, procédé] to workma radio marche bien/marche mal — my radio works well/doesn't work properly
5) (colloq) ( aller)marcher (bien)/marcher mal — [travail, relations, examen] to go well/not to go well; [affaires, film, élève] to do well/not to do well
6) (colloq) ( être d'accord) to go for itc'est trop risqué, je ne marche pas — it's too risky, count me out
ça marche! — ( marché conclu) it's a deal!; ( la commande est prise) coming up!
7) (colloq) ( croire naïvement) to fall for ittu verras, elle marchera à tous les coups — you'll see, she falls for it every time
8) (colloq) ( obéir)••il ne marche pas, il court! — (colloq) he's as gullible as they come
marcher sur la tête de quelqu'un — (colloq) to walk all over somebody
* * *maʀʃe vi1) [personne] to walkElle marche cinq kilomètres par jour. — She walks 5 kilometres every day.
Elle marchait devant. — She was walking in front.
marcher sur [gazon, l'asphalte] — to walk on, [clou] to step on, [crotte de chien] to step in
marcher dans [herbe] — to walk on, [flaque] to step in
2) MILITAIRE, [armée] to marchmarcher sur [ville, pays] — to march on
3) (= aller) [affaires, santé] to go, (= bien aller) to go wellAlors les études, ça marche? — How are you getting on at school?
marcher comme sur des roulettes — to go smoothly, to go without any hitches
4) (= fonctionner) [appareil] to work, [transports] to runLe métro marche normalement aujourd'hui. — The underground is running normally today.
5) (= se mouvoir) [véhicule, train] to goLe convoi marchait à vive allure. — The convoy was going fast., The convoy was moving fast
6) (= être d'accord) to go along, to agreeIl a refusé de marcher dans la combine. — He wouldn't play the game.
7) (croire naïvement) to be taken inIl essaie de te faire marcher. — He's pulling your leg., (pour tromper) to lead sb up the garden path
* * *marcher verb table: aimer vi1 ( utiliser ses pieds) [personne, animal, robot] to walk; il marche vite he walks fast; marcher à travers champs to walk across fields; allons marcher un peu let's go for a little walk; marcher avec des talons/chaussures plates to wear high heels/flat shoes;2 ( poser le pied) to tread (dans in; sur on); j'ai marché sur mes lunettes I trod on my spectacles; marcher sur les pieds de qn to tread on sb's toes; tu m'as marché sur le pied you stood on my foot; se laisser marcher sur les pieds fig to let oneself be walked over; à la soirée on se marchait sur les pieds fig the party was packed; ne marche pas dans les flaques don't walk in the puddles; marcher dans une flaque d'eau to step in a puddle; l'homme marchera sur Mars man will walk on Mars;3 ( avancer) to go; notre train marche vite our train goes fast; malgré les embouteillages, nous avons bien marché despite the traffic jams, we've made good time; marcher vers la gloire fig to be on the road to fame; marcher sur les mains [gymnaste] to walk on one's hands; marcher en tête de cortège to march at the head of the procession; marcher sur Paris/le palais présidentiel to march on Paris/the presidential palace;4 ( fonctionner) [mécanisme, dispositif] to work; [système, réforme, procédé] to work; ma radio marche bien/marche mal my radio works well/doesn't work properly; insecticide qui ne marche pas pour les fourmis insecticide that doesn't work on ants; faire marcher qch to get sth to work; ma montre ne marche plus my watch has stopped working; la poste marche de mieux en mieux the postal service is getting better and better; marcher au gaz/à l'électricité to run on gas/on electricity; Ivan marche à la vodka hum Ivan lives on vodka; les trains/bus ne marchent pas le dimanche the trains/buses don't run on Sundays;5 ○( aller) marcher (bien)/marcher mal [travail, relations, examen] to go well/not to go well; [affaires, film, livre, élève] to do well/not to do well; [acteur] to go down well/not to go down well; comment a marché ton examen? how did your exam go?; comment marchent les affaires? how is business?;6 ○( être d'accord) to go for it; je marche I'll go for it; c'est trop risqué, je ne marche pas it's too risky, count me out; elle marche pour cent euros par jour she' s agreed to one hundred euros a day; pour cent euros, ça marche for one hundred euros, you're on; ça marche! ( marché conclu) it's a deal!; ( la commande est prise) coming up!;7 ○( croire naïvement) to fall for it; tu verras, elle marchera à tous les coups you'll see, she falls for it every time; faire marcher qn to pull sb's leg; je te faisais marcher I was just pulling your leg; elle fait marcher sa mère comme elle veut she's got her mother wrapped round her little finger;8 ○( obéir) faire marcher son monde or personnel to be good at giving orders.il ne marche pas, il court○! he's as gullible as they come; marcher sur la tête de qn○ to walk all over sb.[marʃe] verbe intransitif1. [se déplacer à pied] to walkj'ai marché longtemps/un peu I took a long/short walkdescendre une avenue en marchant lentement/rapidement to stroll/to hurry down an avenuemarcher à grands pas ou à grandes enjambées to stride (along)a. (sens propre) to walk towards, to be headed for, to be on one's way toa. (sens propre) to walk straight ou in a straight linemarcher sur une ville/sur l'ennemi to march on a city/against the enemy3. [poser le pied]marcher sur to step ou to tread onmarcher dans [flaque, saleté] to step ou to tread inne marche pas sur les fleurs! keep off the flowers!, don't walk on the flowers!marcher sur les pieds de quelqu'un to tread ou to stand ou to step on somebody's feetmarcher à l'électricité to work ou to run on electricityfaire marcher [machine] to work, to operate5. [donner de bons résultats - manœuvre, ruse] to come off, to work ; [ - projet, essai] to be working (out), to work ; [ - activité, travail] to be going wellses études marchent bien/mal she's doing well/not doing very well at collegeles affaires marchent mal/très bien business is slack/is going wellça fait marcher les affaires it's good for business ou for tradene t'inquiète pas, ça va marcher don't worry, it'll be OKet le travail, ça marche? how's work (going)?si ça marche, je monterai une exposition if it works out, I'll organize an exhibitionleur couple/commerce n'a pas marché their relationship/business didn't work outça a l'air de bien marcher entre eux they seem to be getting on fine together, things seem to be going well between them[en voiture]6. [au restaurant]7. (familier) [s'engager] to go along with thingsje ne marche pas! nothing doing!, count me out!marcher dans une affaire to get mixed up ou involved in a scheme8. (familier) [croire] to fall for itje lui ai dit que ma tante était malade et il n'a pas marché, il a couru (humoristique) I told him that my aunt was ill and he bought the whole story ou and he swallowed it hook, line and sinkera. [le taquiner] to pull somebody's leg, to have somebody on (UK)b. [le berner] to take somebody for a ride, to lead somebody up the garden path -
38 godzin|a
Ⅰ f 1. Miary hour- pół godziny half an hour- półtorej godziny an hour and a half- za godzinę/dwie godziny in an hour/two hours- godzinę/dwie godziny temu an hour/two hours ago- był tu godzinę temu a. przed godziną he was here an hour ago- wyjść na godzinę/pół godziny to go out for an hour/for half an hour- spóźnić się o dwie godziny to be two hours late- przyszedł (na) godzinę przed rozpoczęciem zebrania he came an hour before the meeting started- przyjechał (w) godzinę po wypadku he came an hour after the accident- gdybyś przyszedł godzinę wcześniej/później if you had come an hour earlier/later- wyszedł i po godzinie wrócił he went out and came back an hour later- mamy jeszcze pół godziny do odjazdu pociągu we still have half an hour before the train leaves- macie półtorej godziny na napisanie pracy you have an hour and a half to write the paper- zrobię to w godzinę a. w ciągu godziny I can do it within an hour- dzwonisz po raz trzeci w ciągu godziny that’s the third time you’ve rung in an hour- jeśli w ciągu godziny przestanie padać, to… if it stops raining within the next hour, then…- film trwał trzy godziny the film was three hours long- minęła kolejna godzina another hour passed- jechaliśmy (przez) dwie godziny we were driving for two hours- autobus kursuje co godzinę/pół godziny the buses run every hour/half hour- jechać 100 kilometrów na godzinę to drive at 100 kilometres an hour- zarabiać 20 dolarów za godzinę to earn 20 dollars an hour- (całymi) godzinami siedzi przed telewizorem he spends hours in front of the TV- czekałem chyba z godzinę I must have waited around an hour- to mi zajęło dobre a. bite trzy godziny it took me a good three hours2. (moment dnia) która (jest) godzina? what time is it?, what’s the time?- jest godzina ósma it’s eight o’clock- o której godzinie wróciłeś/skończyłeś? at what time did you come back/finish?- wybijać godziny to strike the hours- zegar bije tylko o pełnej godzinie the clock strikes only on the hour- przyszedł o wyznaczonej/umówionej godzinie he arrived at the appointed/agreed time- do godziny osiemnastej brakowało kilku minut it was (still) a few minutes before 6 p.m.- sytuacja zmieniała się z godziny na godzinę the situation changed from hour to hour a. from one hour to the next- opowiedział wszystko godzina po godzinie he told the whole story as it had happened hour by hour3. (pora) hour- w godzinach porannych/wieczornych in the morning/evening- pracowali do późnych godzin nocnych they worked until all hours- byłem w mieście w godzinie największego tłoku I was in the city during the heaviest traffic- będą tu lada godzina they’ll be here any time now- nadeszła a. wybiła godzina próby/zemsty książk. the hour of trial/vengeance has come- wybiła jej ostatnia godzina książk. her time a. last hour has come- zawiódł w godzinie próby książk. he failed in his hour of trial4. (odległość) hour- to dwie godziny marszu stąd it’s two hours’ walk from here- następny przystanek jest (o) godzinę drogi stąd the next stop is an hour (away) from here- do stacji jest pół godziny samochodem/piechotą the station is half an hour’s drive/walk away5. Szkol. (lekcja) hour- godzina lekcyjna forty-five minutes- sześć godzin angielskiego tygodniowo six hours of English a week- siatka godzin a timetable6. Górn. (znak mierniczy) kind of directional marker Ⅱ godziny plt hours- godziny urzędowania opening a. business hours- godziny przyjęć (lekarza) surgery hours- w godzinach pracy during working hours- pracować po godzinach to work after hours a. overtime- □ godzina policyjna curfew- godzina zegarowa sixty minutes- godziny dziekańskie/rektorskie Uniw. cancellation of classes by the dean/vice-chancellor- godziny nadliczbowe overtime- godzina a. godziny szczytu rush hour- w godzinach szczytu in a. during the rush hour■ godzina zero zero hour- szara godzina twilight, dusk- powiedzieć coś w dobrą/złą godzinę to say something at the right/wrong time- nie znać a. nie być pewnym dnia ani godziny not to be sure of anything- zostawić coś na czarną godzinę to keep sth for a rainy dayThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > godzin|a
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39 pić
m (G picu) pot. bull pot., eyewash pot.- cała ta historia to zwykły pic! the whole story’s just a load of bull a. eyewash!- tylko bez picu! don’t give me that bull!- nie wstawiaj picu! cut the crap! posp.- zrobić coś dla picu to do sth just for show a. just for the hell of it pot.■ pic na wodę (fotomontaż)! it’s just a load of crap! posp.* * *1. perf; wy-; -ję, -jesz; vt 2.pić (wypić) (za) czyjeś zdrowie — perf to drink (to) sb's health
* * *I.pić1ipf.2. ( alkohol) drink; pić na umór drink like a fish; pić bez umiaru drink hard; pić nałogowo be addicted to alcohol; pić jak szewc l. jak stary l. jak ryba l. jak świnia drink like there's no tomorrow, drink like a sailor, drink like prohibition is coming back, drink like it's going out of style, booze it up, hit the bottle; pić strzemiennego have one for the road; pić za czyjeś zdrowie drink to sb's health; pić toast za kogoś toast sb; pić z kimś bruderszaft drink to close friedship with sb ( after which the parties agree to be on first name terms); pić z kimś brudzia pot. zob. pić z kimś bruderszaft; pić do lustra drink with the flies; przestać pić ( o alkoholiku) dry out; zacząć pić (= wpaść w nałóg) take to drink; nie pić ( o alkoholiku) be on the wagon; znów zacząć pić ( o alkoholiku) fall off the wagon; do kogo pijesz? who are you referring to?, what are you trying to say?, who are you bad-mouthing this time?II.pić2ipf.pije pinch; buty mnie piją my shoes pinch.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > pić
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40 connesso
connesso agg. connected, linked; relevant: i documenti connessi, the relevant documents; i due fatti sono strettamente connessi, the two facts are closely connected // (mat.) spazio connesso, connected space◆ s.m.pl.: annessi e connessi, appendages // fra annessi e connessi guadagna moltissimo, what with one thing and another (o taking everything into consideration) he earns a great deal of money; mi raccontò l'accaduto con tutti gli annessi e i connessi, he told me the whole story and all the relevant details.* * *[kon'nɛsso] connesso (-a)1. ppSee:2. agg* * *[kon'nɛsso, kon'nesso] 1.participio passato connettere2.aggettivo (in relazione) [idea, evento] connected, linked, related (a to)3.sostantivo maschile plurale connessigli annessi e -i — the etceteras, the ins and outs
con tutti gli annessi e -i — colloq. scherz. with all the trimmings
* * *connesso/kon'nεsso, kon'nesso/II aggettivo(in relazione) [idea, evento] connected, linked, related (a to)III connessi m.pl.gli annessi e -i the etceteras, the ins and outs; con tutti gli annessi e -i colloq. scherz. with all the trimmings.
См. также в других словарях:
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