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there+we+differ

  • 41 debido a

    prep.
    due to, as a matter of, for, because of.
    * * *
    due to, owing to, because of
    * * *
    = be reason of, because of, by reason of, by virtue of, due to, for reasons of, in connection with, in light of, in the face of, in the interest(s) of, in the light of, on account of, on grounds, on the grounds that/of, owing to, thanks to, out of, because
    Ex. For fifty years impregnated papers have been used which turn dark at every point where an electrical contact touches them by reason of the chemical change thus produced in a iodine compound included in the paper.
    Ex. This makes him feel somehow defficient and all because of his difficulty in making sense out of words in print with which his troubles began.
    Ex. In order that the picture may not be too commonplace, by reason of sticking to present-day patterns, it may be well to mention one such possibility.
    Ex. For example, the set of documents about 'programmed instruction' forms a class by virtue of sharing the common characteristic of subject content.
    Ex. This is in part due to the different stages of development reached by different libraries.
    Ex. It is important to recognise, then, that a variety of different indexing approaches are inevitable, not only for reasons of history and indexer preference, but because different situations demand different approaches.
    Ex. There is an index to the schedules, but this has been criticised in connection with the size of the entry vocabulary.
    Ex. This is essentially the traditional enterprise of cataloguing theory, but it is explored in light of current standards and developments.
    Ex. In the face of present priorities and staff commitments, the Library feels that it cannot undertake a comprehensive study of the subject heading system that would pave the way for a major restructuring of the system.
    Ex. In the interest of clarity an integrated account of the appropriate added entry headings is to be found in 21.29 and 21.30.
    Ex. In the light of the information explosion, no researcher can now realistically expect to keep pace with developments in his own field, let alone those in allied fields = En vista del crecimiento vertiginoso de la información, siendo realista ahora el investigador no puede mantenerse al día en los avances de su propio campo y mucho menos de los de campos afines.
    Ex. Partly on account of the variety of bases for coverage there is significant overlap between the assortment of abstracting and indexing services.
    Ex. Apart from differing needs of users, indexing approaches may differ on policy grounds.
    Ex. AACR2 has been criticised on the grounds that it does not identify the cataloguing unit to which the rules refer.
    Ex. The simplest KWIC indexes are unattractive and tedious to scan owing to their physical format and typeface.
    Ex. It is a matter of some small pride that my account of the eighteenth edition of Dewey appeared at about the same time as the official publication of the scheme itself, thanks to the cooperation of the editor, Mr Ben Custer.
    Ex. But these and other interested people collected this type of books out of a mixture of curiosity and sentiment.
    Ex. In practice, many cataloguers favour the direct catalogue partly because it is simpler for the cataloguer to compile.
    * * *
    = be reason of, because of, by reason of, by virtue of, due to, for reasons of, in connection with, in light of, in the face of, in the interest(s) of, in the light of, on account of, on grounds, on the grounds that/of, owing to, thanks to, out of, because

    Ex: For fifty years impregnated papers have been used which turn dark at every point where an electrical contact touches them by reason of the chemical change thus produced in a iodine compound included in the paper.

    Ex: This makes him feel somehow defficient and all because of his difficulty in making sense out of words in print with which his troubles began.
    Ex: In order that the picture may not be too commonplace, by reason of sticking to present-day patterns, it may be well to mention one such possibility.
    Ex: For example, the set of documents about 'programmed instruction' forms a class by virtue of sharing the common characteristic of subject content.
    Ex: This is in part due to the different stages of development reached by different libraries.
    Ex: It is important to recognise, then, that a variety of different indexing approaches are inevitable, not only for reasons of history and indexer preference, but because different situations demand different approaches.
    Ex: There is an index to the schedules, but this has been criticised in connection with the size of the entry vocabulary.
    Ex: This is essentially the traditional enterprise of cataloguing theory, but it is explored in light of current standards and developments.
    Ex: In the face of present priorities and staff commitments, the Library feels that it cannot undertake a comprehensive study of the subject heading system that would pave the way for a major restructuring of the system.
    Ex: In the interest of clarity an integrated account of the appropriate added entry headings is to be found in 21.29 and 21.30.
    Ex: In the light of the information explosion, no researcher can now realistically expect to keep pace with developments in his own field, let alone those in allied fields = En vista del crecimiento vertiginoso de la información, siendo realista ahora el investigador no puede mantenerse al día en los avances de su propio campo y mucho menos de los de campos afines.
    Ex: Partly on account of the variety of bases for coverage there is significant overlap between the assortment of abstracting and indexing services.
    Ex: Apart from differing needs of users, indexing approaches may differ on policy grounds.
    Ex: AACR2 has been criticised on the grounds that it does not identify the cataloguing unit to which the rules refer.
    Ex: The simplest KWIC indexes are unattractive and tedious to scan owing to their physical format and typeface.
    Ex: It is a matter of some small pride that my account of the eighteenth edition of Dewey appeared at about the same time as the official publication of the scheme itself, thanks to the cooperation of the editor, Mr Ben Custer.
    Ex: But these and other interested people collected this type of books out of a mixture of curiosity and sentiment.
    Ex: In practice, many cataloguers favour the direct catalogue partly because it is simpler for the cataloguer to compile.

    Spanish-English dictionary > debido a

  • 42 justificación

    f.
    justification, excuse, vindication, substantiation.
    * * *
    1 justification
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *

    justificación automática — (Inform) automatic justification

    * * *
    1) (disculpa, razón) justification; (Der) ( prueba) proof
    2) (Impr) justification
    * * *
    = justification, substantiation, justification, peg, ratio decidendi, apologia, vindication, warrant.
    Ex. The following represent some of the factors that might need to be specified: justification, indentation and hyphenation.
    Ex. Written substantiation of this belief, from a wide variety of points of view, has become plentiful in the 1970s.
    Ex. They should also provide a full justification of the factors and elements that have been taken into consideration.
    Ex. The concepts currently being floated by UNESCO are such as will make convenient pegs to hang pleas for resources for bibliographic and library development to national governments.
    Ex. An online search of the WESTLAW and LEXIS databases, and examination of numerous cases with potential precedential value found the many dicta in judicial opinions to differ among jurisdictions, and found no ratio decidendi at all.
    Ex. The article ' apologia for alternatives' examines the situation where professional standards may have to give way to commercial interests.
    Ex. Hitchens' vigorous defense and vindication of Orwell consists of ten shortish chapters examining his hero's credentials in relation to various matters.
    Ex. And the common belief that the possession of the same surname allows you to use a family's arms has no legal or heraldic warrant.
    ----
    * encontrar justificación = build + a case for.
    * justificación bibliográfica = literary warrant.
    * justificación documental = literary warrant.
    * sin justificación = unreasonably, unjustified.
    * sin justificación alguna = wantonly.
    * * *
    1) (disculpa, razón) justification; (Der) ( prueba) proof
    2) (Impr) justification
    * * *
    = justification, substantiation, justification, peg, ratio decidendi, apologia, vindication, warrant.

    Ex: The following represent some of the factors that might need to be specified: justification, indentation and hyphenation.

    Ex: Written substantiation of this belief, from a wide variety of points of view, has become plentiful in the 1970s.
    Ex: They should also provide a full justification of the factors and elements that have been taken into consideration.
    Ex: The concepts currently being floated by UNESCO are such as will make convenient pegs to hang pleas for resources for bibliographic and library development to national governments.
    Ex: An online search of the WESTLAW and LEXIS databases, and examination of numerous cases with potential precedential value found the many dicta in judicial opinions to differ among jurisdictions, and found no ratio decidendi at all.
    Ex: The article ' apologia for alternatives' examines the situation where professional standards may have to give way to commercial interests.
    Ex: Hitchens' vigorous defense and vindication of Orwell consists of ten shortish chapters examining his hero's credentials in relation to various matters.
    Ex: And the common belief that the possession of the same surname allows you to use a family's arms has no legal or heraldic warrant.
    * encontrar justificación = build + a case for.
    * justificación bibliográfica = literary warrant.
    * justificación documental = literary warrant.
    * sin justificación = unreasonably, unjustified.
    * sin justificación alguna = wantonly.

    * * *
    A
    1 (disculpa) justification
    lo que has hecho no tiene justificación there is no justification for what you have done, what you have done cannot be justified
    2 (razón) justification
    3 ( Der) (prueba) proof
    B ( Impr) justification
    * * *

     

    justificación sustantivo femenino (disculpa, razón) justification;
    (Der) ( prueba) proof
    justificación sustantivo femenino justification: no hay justificación posible para lo que hizo, there's no possible justification for what she did
    ' justificación' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    gratuita
    - gratuito
    English:
    justification
    * * *
    1. [de comportamiento] justification;
    su actuación no tiene justificación there can be no justification for her actions
    2. Imprenta justification
    justificación automática automatic justification;
    justificación horizontal horizontal justification;
    justificación vertical vertical justification
    * * *
    f tb
    TIP justification
    * * *
    justificación nf, pl - ciones : justification

    Spanish-English dictionary > justificación

  • 43 SKILJA

    * * *
    (skil, skilda; skiliðr, later skildr, skilinn), v.
    1) to part, divide, separate (sú er nú kölluð Jökulsá ok skirl landsfjórðunga);
    skilr hann flokk sinn, he divides his band;
    2) to break off, break up (þessi sótt mun skilja samvistu okkra);
    síðan skildu þau talit, they broke off their talk;
    3) to part company, take leave (skildu þeir með mikilli vináttu);
    4) impers.; þar er leidir (acc.) skildi, þá skildi ok slóðina, where the roads parted, there the tracks too parted;
    mundi skilja vegu þeirra, their ways would diverge;
    með þessu skilr skipti þeirra, thus ended their dealings;
    it differs, mikit (acc.) skilr hamingju okkra, there is a wide difference between our fortunes;
    þá skilr á um e-t, they disagree about a thing;
    ef skrár skilr á, if the scrolls differ;
    5) to distinluish, discern, with the eyes (nú má ek þann eigi sjá eða biða mér fulltings, er ek má harm eigi skilja);
    with the ears, to hear (eru þeir hér svá, at þeir megi skilja mál mitt);
    6) to understand, find out (þá þóttist Þórr skilja hvat látum verity hafði of nóttina);
    7) to decide, settle (skildi konungr erendi Sighvats svá, at honum líkaði vel);
    8) to set apart, reserve for one (þó at konungr hafi mér skilit eignir minar eða landsvist í Orkneyjum);
    eiga e-t skilit, to have reserved, stipulated (þat átta ek skilit við þik, at);
    skilja sér e-t, to reserve to oneself (jarðir hafði hann hygt ok skilit sér allar landskyldir);
    skilja e-t í sætt, to lay down, stipulate, in an agreement (þat var skilit í sæt- várri, at);
    9) with preps.:
    skilja e-t á við e-n, to stipulate (þó vil ek skilja á við þik einn hlut);
    skilja e-t eptir, to leave behind;
    skilja e-t frá e-u, to separate from (hann skildi sik sjálfr frá ríki ok fór í klaustr);
    to exeinpt from (hverr maðr skyldi gjalda konungi fimm aura, sá er eigi væri frá því skiliðr);
    skilja fyrir e-u, to formulate, dictate (skilja fyrir eiðstafinum);
    skilja fyrir heiti, to formulate, pronounce a vow;
    skilja með mönnum, to part, separate (nótt skildi þá með þeim);
    impers., skilr með þeim, they part (eptir þetta skildi með þeim);
    skilja e-t í sundr, to part asunder (hinir skildu í sundr skipin ok gerðu hlið í millum skipanna);
    skilja e-t til, to stipulate (vil ek ok til skilja, at);
    skilja e-t undan, to except, to make a reservation for (at undan skildum, heraðssektum);
    skilja e-t undan e-m, to deprive one of;
    skilja e-t undir e-n, to leave it to one (Njáll kvaðst þat vilja skilja undir Höskuld);
    skilja e-n undir sætt, to include one in an agreement (hversu marga menn viltu skilja undir sættir okkar);
    skilja við e-n, to part with, put away;
    skilja við konu, bónda, to divorce one’s wife, one’s husband;
    segja skilit við konu, to declare oneself separated from;
    10) refl., skiljast.
    * * *
    pres. skil, skill, Grág.; pret. skilði, skildi; part. skiliðr, and later, skildr and skilinn; neut. skilið and skilt: [the original sense, viz. to cut, Lat. secare, appears in Goth. skilja = a butcher; A. S. scylan = to separate.]
    A. To part, separate, divide; Tanais skilr heims-þriðjunga, Al. 131; sú er nú kölluð Jökulsá ok skilr lands-fjórðunga, Landn. 251; Gautelfr skilr Noregs-konungs ríki ok Svía-konungs, Rb. 330:—to break off, break up, þessi sótt mun skilja vára samvistu, Ld. 286; mun sá einn hlutr vera at s. mun með okkr, Nj. 112; mun þat s. með okkr, Fs. 16: segja Rúti at betra mun at s. ykkr, of fighters, Nj. 32; Höskuldr skildi þær, Ld. 36; þá er barsmíð skilið, Grág. ii. 114; s. ræðu, s. talit, to break off the conversation, Ld. 36, Fms. ii. 262, Nj. 48, Bjarn. 22; s. boðinu (dat.), Gísl. 116, is prob. an error; skilja hjúskap, to divorce, K. Á. 6; váru skilið ráð þeirra Sigríðar, Fms. x. 219; skilr hann flokk sinn, then he divided his band, viii. 59; þá skildi ekki nema hel, vii. 233.
    2. with prepp.: s. frá, to separate, Fms. xi. 350, Blas. 42; frá skildr, excepted, Dipl. v. 22, K. Á. 182; frá skiliðr, Grág. i. 16; skilja mik frá trú, Blas. 42; at engu frá skildu, nothing excepted. Dipl. v. 22; eiðar frá skildir, K. Á. 182; sá maðr er nú var frá skiliðr, Grág;. i. 16, 17:—s. sundr, to put asunder, Nj. 42:—s. við, to part with, put away; s. við konu, s. við bónda, 686 B. 14, Þórð. 46 new Ed.; at ek vilja s. við félaga minn, Grág. i. 326; ok sé hann skildr við ( have forfeited) ábúð jarðar, Gþl 337:—s. eptir, to leave behind, Mag.: passim in mod. usage, eg skildi það eptir heima.
    3. to part company, leave; svá skildu vér næstum, at…, Nj. 49; eptir þat skildu þeir, 98; skildu þeir með mikilli vináttu, 138; hefir þú mér heitið, at vit skyldim aldri s., 201.
    4. impers. one parts; hence followed by acc., one parts a thing, i. e. it branches off, is separated; þar skilr Spán inn Kristna ok Spán inn heiðna, Fms. vii. 80; þar er leiðir skildi ( where the roads parted) þá skildi ok slóðna, there the tracks too parted, Eg. 579; mundi skilja vegu þeirra, their ways would diverge, 126; með þessu skilr skipti þeirra, thus ended their dealings, Ísl. ii. 274; er þat nú bezt at skili með oss, Finnb. 334; skilr þá með þeim, Nj. 112.
    β. it differs; at mikit (acc.) skili hamingju okkra, there is a wide difference between, Eg. 719; hvat skilr þær ástgjafar, 656 A. i. 12; þvíat mennina skildi, Sks. 733 B.
    γ. it falls out, comes to a difference; even with a double acc. of person and of thing, e-n skilr á um e-t; þá skildi aldri á orð (acc.) né verk, Nj. 147; ef þá skill á, Grág. ii. 70; þeir skyldu sik láta á, skilja um einhvern hlut, Ld. 60; þeir urðu missáttir, ok skildi þá (á) um eignina á Auslrátt, Fms. ix. 458; skildi þá ekki (acc.) á ek Rúnólf, they and R. disagreed in nought, Nj. 178; hver-vitna þess er menn skilr á um sætr, N. G. L. i. 42; nú skilr menn á (um) markteig, id.; ef menn skilr á (um) merki, id.; hann (acc.) hafði skilt á við gesti jarls, Fms. ix. 449; ek vil at þú látir þik á skilja við einhvern húskarl minn, Rd. 318; ef skrár skilr á, if the scrolls differ, Grág. i. 7.
    B. Metaph. usages:
    I. [Old Engl. to skill], to distinguish, discern, understand; vóru svá skilið nöfn með þeim, Ísl. ii. 332; eru þeir hér svá, at þeir megi s. mál mitt ( hear it), Eg. 735; spilltisk svá sýnin at eingi þeirra mátti s. hann, Hom. 120; s. ljós frá myrkum, Sks. 626 B; kunna drauma at skilja, to know how to ‘skill’ dreams, Fms. iv. 381: to understand, þat er at skilja ( that is to say) á vára tunga, Anecd. 16, 18; konungr skildi at þetta var með spotti gört, Fms. i. 15; vér þykkjumk hitt s., at …, Ld. 180; ef þat er rétt skilt, sem þar kveðr at, Grág. ii. 37; hón skildi þó raunar hvat hann mælti til hjálpar manninum, Fs. 76; kunnu vér alira þjóða tungur at mæla ok skilja, 656 A. ii. 10: very freq. in mod. usage, skilr þú þetta? eg skil ekki hvat þú segir, það er ó-skiljandi.
    II. as a law term, to decide; skildi konungr erendi Sighvats svá, at …, Fms. v. 180; þá er kviðir eigu at s. mál manna, Grág. i. 49; skulu heimilis-búar hans fimm skilja þat, hvárt …, 58; allt þat sem lögbók skilr eigi, Gþl. 18; enir sömu búar skolu um þat skilja, Grág. i. 43; at þeir eru þess kviðar kvaddir er þeir eigu eigi um at s., 55; skulu vetfangs-búar s. um hvárt-tveggja, ii. 37; tólflar-kviðr átti um at s., Eb., Nj. 238.
    2. to set apart, reserve; þat skil ek er ek vil, Nj. 55; þessu sem nú var skilt með þeim, Fms. xi. 100; nú hefir maðr kú skilt í skyld sína, Gþl. 503; þat var skilit í sætt vára, Nj. 257; þat var skilið í sæll þeirra Þóris föður míns ok Bjarnar, at …, Eg. 345; var þat skilit til brigða um áðr-nefnt kaup, Dipl. iii. 10; hann skildi af sér ( declined responsibility) um fyrnd á kirkju alla ábyrgð, iv. 4; þat er stórmæl ok skilit ( express) boðorð, Anecd. 46; nema þat væri skilt (expressly reserved), Fms. x. 447: eiga skilit, to have reserved, stipulated; þat átta ek skilit við þik, at …, ii. 93; sem Hrani átti skilt, iv. 31; at hann vill hafa gripina svá sem hann átti skilit, vi. 60: hence the mod. phrase, eg á það ekki skilið, ‘tis not due to reserve this for me, i. e. I do not deserve it; hann á það skilið, it is owing to him, it serves him right:—s. sér e-t, to reserve to oneself, Fas. i. 527, Fms. v. 293, ix. 323, Landn. 304; Njáll kveðsk þat vilja s. undir Höskuld, to make a reservation, reserve it for H., Nj. 149; þeir sem gáfu, skildu æfinlig forræði þeirra undir sik ok sína arfa, reserved it for themselves and their heirs, Bs. i. 689.
    3. esp. with a prep.; s. á, fyrir, til, undan, to stipulate, reserve; vil ek s. á við þik einn hlut, Hrafn. 6; skaltú s. þat á við hann, Fms, x. 334:—s. fyrir, hversu var skilt fyrir félagi þeirra, Grág. i. 330; ok skili þeir þá fyrir þegar, 118; skal einn maðr s. fyrir ( pronounce) en aðrir gjalda samkvæði á, i. 2; at svá fyrir-skildu ( so stipulated), Dipl, v. 19; handa-band þeirra var svá fyrir skilit, iv. 9; þá skilði Sverrir konungr fyrir eidstafinum ( dictated it), Fms. viii. 150; er hann hafði fyrir skilt heitinu, made (said) the vow, 55:—þann hlut vilda ek til s., at vér værim austr hér. Nj. 149; þat vil ek þá s. til, segir Hallr, at …, 156; þat vil ek ok til s. við ykkr bræðr jarla mína, at …, Ó. H. 98; megu þeir eigi aðra göra sekð hans en til var skilit fyrir váttum, Grág. i. 118:—s. undir eið, to take an oath with reservation, Grág. i. 56, Sturl. i. 66:—s. undan, to reserve, make a reservation; s. undan goðorð, utanferðir, sektir, Ld. 308, Sturl. ii. 63.
    C. Reflex. to separate, break up; skildisk þá ok riðlaðisk fylkingin, Fms. vii. 277; at þau væri skild, Grág. i. 307; vóru þau þá skilið, Nj. 268:—s. við e-n, to part from; sá er skiliðr við konuna, Grág. i. 33; segja skilið við, konu, bónda, to declare oneself separated from, Nj. 14, 50; ef kona skilsk við bónda sinn ( divorces), 656 A. 15; hvar hann skildisk við Þórólf, Ld. 44: to forsake. Fms. i. 34, Nj. 250; s. við mál e-s, Ld. 308, Nj. 177; þeir er ekki vildu við skiljask ( leave off) ok láta af heiðninni, Fms. iv. 144.
    2. recipr. to part company; at vit skilimk í orrostu, Eg 293; þótt vit skilimk, Korm. 88; þeir skiljask fóstrar, Fms. xi. 99; skildusk þeir með blíðskap. feðgar, Eg. 790.
    β. to be divorced, Grág. i. 325, 326, K. Á. 116.
    II. impers., e-m skilsk e-t, ‘it skills one’, one perceives; honum hafði þat skilisk, Eg. 715; haun kenndi honum atferli—Nú skaltú vita hvárt mér hafi skilisk, Ísl. ii. 206; konunginum skildusk vel orð jarls, Fms. xi. 13; má mér þat eigi skiljask, Sks. 61; hón lét sér þat ok vel skiljask, to make up one’s mind to it, Hkr. ii. 88; Barði lætr sér skiljask at svá er, Ísl. ii. 327; þú vill þér ekki skiljask (láta) þat er á mót er þínum vilja. 625. 68.
    III. part. skilinn, q. v.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > SKILJA

  • 44 intersum

    inter-sum, fŭi, esse (interfŭtūrus, Cic. Div. in Caecil. 11, 35;

    in tmesi: interque esse desiderat pugnis,

    Arn. 7, 255), v. n., to be between, lie between (class.; syn. interjaceo).
    I.
    In gen.
    A.
    Of space:

    quas (segetes) inter et castra unus omnino collis intererat,

    Caes. B. G. 6, 35:

    ut Tiberis inter eos et pons interesset,

    Cic. Cat. 3, 2:

    via interest perangusta,

    Liv. 22, 4:

    morari victoriam rati, quod interesset amnis,

    id. 21, 5:

    quod interest spatii,

    Plin. 6, 9, 10, § 28.—
    B.
    Of time:

    cujus inter primum et sextum consulatum sex et quadraginta anni interfuerunt,

    elapsed, Cic. de Sen. 17, 60:

    inter Laviniam et Albam Longam coloniam deductam triginta ferme interfuere anni,

    Liv. 1, 3; Cic. Leg. 3, 3, 8.—
    II.
    Transf.
    A.
    To be apart; with abl. of distance (syn. disto):

    clathros interesse oportet pede,

    Cato, R. R. 4.—
    B.
    To be different, to differ:

    ut inter eos, ne minimum quidem intersit,

    there is not the slightest difference, Cic. Ac. 2, 17, 52: inter hominem et beluam hoc maxime interest, quod, men differ chiefly from brutes in this, that, etc., id. Off. 1, 4, 11:

    vide, quantum interfuturum sit inter meam atque tuam accusationem,

    how great a difference there will be, id. Div. in Caecil. 11, 35:

    in his rebus nihil omnino interest,

    there is no difference whatever, id. Ac. 2; 15, 47:

    hoc pater ac dominus interest,

    there is this difference, Ter. Ad. 1, 1, 51:

    tantum id interest, veneritne eo itinere ad urbem, an ab urbe in Campaniam redierit,

    Liv. 26, 11.— With ab (like differo, rare):

    negant quidquam a falsis interesse,

    Cic. Ac. 2, 9, 27; cf.:

    quod intersit aut differat, aliud ab alio,

    id. Fin. 3, 7, 25:

    quod ab eo nihil intersit, etc.,

    id. Ac. 2, 26, 83.—With dat.:

    ut matrona Intererit Satyris paulum pudibunda protervis,

    Hor. A. P. 232:

    quid dimidium dimidiato intersit,

    Gell. 3, 14, 4.—With gen. (in analogy with the Gr. diapherein tinos): quoniam to nemesan interest (= diapherei) tou phthonein, i. e. anger differs from envy, Cic. Att. 5, 19 fin.
    C.
    To be present at, take part in, attend; constr. absol., with dat. or in and abl.
    (α).
    Absol.:

    ac si ipse interfuerit, ac praesens viderit,

    Cic. Inv. 1, 54, 104:

    interfuisse me memini,

    Suet. Dom. 12.—
    (β).
    With dat. rei:

    consiliis,

    Cic. Att. 14, 22, 2; 2, 23, 3:

    crudelitati,

    id. ib. 9, 6, 7:

    negotiis,

    id. Fam. 1, 6:

    lacrimis patris,

    Verg. A. 11, 62:

    ludis,

    Suet. Tib. 72:

    caedi,

    id. Dom. 47:

    rebus gerendis,

    Gell. 5, 18, 1:

    sermoni,

    id. 11, 7, 1:

    senatui,

    Cic. Dom. 11; Suet. Claud. 46:

    populo Quirini,

    to be among, live with, Hor. C. 1, 2, 46:

    rebus divinis,

    Caes. B. G. 6, 13, 4:

    proelio,

    id. ib. 7, 87:

    bello,

    Liv. 36, 4:

    spectaculo,

    id. 2, 38.— Also, with dat. loci:

    curiae,

    Suet. Aug. 38:

    contubernio patris,

    Aur. Vict. Caes. 27, 1.—Also, with dat. pers.:

    sacrificanti interfuit,

    attended him, Suet. Oth. 6.—
    (γ).
    With in and abl.:

    in convivio,

    Cic. Rosc. Am. 14, 39:

    in testamento faciendo,

    id. Clu. 59, 162:

    voluerunt eos in suis rebus ipsos interesse,

    id. Verr. 2, 3, 6, § 14:

    quibus in rebus,

    Auct. Her. 1, 9.— Also used of time, to live in:

    quisquis illis temporibus interfuit,

    Vell. 2, 114, 2:

    cui tempori Saturninus interfuit,

    Sulp. Sev. Dial. 3, 3; cf.:

    ea (ratiocinatio) dicitur interfuisse tum, cum aliquid vitasse aut secutus esse animus videbitur,

    to have taken place, Cic. Inv. 2, 5, 18.—
    D.
    To interest, be of interest to one (very rare as pers. verb):

    non quo mea interesset natura loci,

    Cic. Att. 3, 19, 1 (cf. interest, impers. infra). —
    III.
    Esp.: intĕrest, impers., it makes a difference, interests, concerns, imports; is of interest, importance; constr. with gen. pers. or meā, tuā, suā, and with a subj. or rel. clause, ut or ne, or with ad:

    ea vos rata habeatis, ne magis reipublicae interest, quam mea,

    Liv. 26, 31, 10:

    quanto opere reipublicae communisque salutis intersit, manus hostium distineri,

    Caes. B. G. 2, 5, 2:

    semper ille, quantum interesset P. Clodii, se perire, cogitabat,

    Cic. Mil. 21, 56:

    quid illius interest, ubi sis?

    id. Att. 10, 4, 10:

    quis enim est hodie, cujus intersit istam legem manere?

    id. Phil. 1, 9:

    hoc vehementer interest rei publicae,

    id. Q. Fr. 2, 4, 1:

    quod ego et mea et rei publicae interesse arbitror,

    id. Fam. 2, 19 fin.:

    multum interest rei familiaris tuae, te quam primum venire,

    id. Fam. 4, 10, 2:

    tuā et meā maxime interest, te valere,

    id. ib. 16, 4:

    id ignorare eos velis, quorum intersit id scire,

    id. Off. 3, 13, 57.— With ut or ne:

    illud meā magni interest, te ut videam,

    Cic. Att. 11, 22, 2:

    quod ut facias tuā interesse arbitror,

    id. Fam. 12, 18, 2:

    vestrā interest, ne imperatorem pessimi faciant,

    Tac. H. 1, 30:

    non tam suā quam reipublicae interesse ut salvus esset,

    Suet. Caes. 86; so,

    utriusque nostrum magni interest ut te videam,

    Cic. Fam. 3, 5, 4 B. and K. (dub.).— With gen. pretii:

    quod meus familiaris tanti suā interesse arbitraretur,

    Cic. Fam. 13, 10.—With rel. or interrog.-clause:

    in omnibus novis conjunctionibus interest, qualis primus aditus sit,

    Cic. Fam. 13, 10, 4: non tam interest, quo animo scribatur, quam quo accipiatur, Caecin. ap. Cic. Fam. 6, 7, 1:

    neque multum interest, quod nondum per numeros distributi sunt,

    Plin. Ep. 10, 30, 2; cf. with utrum... an: quid interfuit, homo audacissime, utrum hoc decerneres, an, etc., what mattered it? Cic. Verr. 2, 3, 61, § 141:

    nihil interest nunc, an violaverim, etc.,

    Liv. 26, 31.— With ad:

    ad honorem interesse,

    Cic. Fam. 16, 1, 1:

    ad decus et ad laudem civitatis,

    id. N. D. 1, 4, 7:

    ad laudem nostram,

    id. ib. 5, 12, 2:

    ad beate vivendum,

    id. Fin. 2, 28, 90.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > intersum

  • 45 from

    [frɔm]
    abstain from воздерживаться от to act from good motives действовать из добрых побуждений; to be shy from nature быть от природы застенчивым appear from вытекать appear from следовать to act from good motives действовать из добрых побуждений; to be shy from nature быть от природы застенчивым from now on с этих пор, отныне; beginning from Friday week начиная с будущей пятницы benefit from извлекать выгоду benefit from извлекать пользу buy from выкупать customs differ from country to country в каждой стране свои обычаи; to do things differently from other people поступать не так, как все date from исчислять с derive from возникать derive from выводить derive from вытекать derive from извлекать derive from получать derive from происходить derive from унаследовать derogate from умалять достоинство desist from воздерживаться от detract from отнимать detract from приуменьшать detract from умалять deviate from отклоняться от deviate from уклоняться от customs differ from country to country в каждой стране свои обычаи; to do things differently from other people поступать не так, как все emanate from происходить emanate from происходить to exclude from the number исключить из числа; she parted from him at the door она рассталась с ним у дверей from prep. указывает на освобождение от обязанностей, избавление от опасности и т. п. от; to hide (from smb.) спрятаться (от кого-л.) from prep. указывает на отнятие, изъятие, вычитание, разделение и т. п. у, из, с, от from prep. указывает на временные отношения с, от, из; from the (very) beginning с (самого) начала from prep. указывает на изменение состояния из, с, от; from being a dull, indifferent boy he now became a vigorous youth из вялого, апатичного мальчика он превратился в живого, энергичного юношу from prep. указывает на источник, происхождение от, из, по; I know it from papers я знаю это из газет from prep. указывает на отправную точку, исходный пункт, предел с, от; from the beginning of the book с начала книги from prep. указывает на причину действия от, из; to suffer from cold страдать от холода from prep. указывает на пространственные отношения от, из, с (передается тж. приставками) from prep. указывает на различие от, из; to tell real silk from its imitation отличить натуральный шелк от искусственного from away с расстояния, издали; from outside снаружи; извне; from over из-за from the beginning of the century с начала века; from a child с детства; from before the war с довоенного времени from dusk to dawn от зари и до зари; from six a.m. с шести часов утра; from beginning to end от начала до конца from prep. указывает на изменение состояния из, с, от; from being a dull, indifferent boy he now became a vigorous youth из вялого, апатичного мальчика он превратился в живого, энергичного юношу from dusk to dawn от зари и до зари; from six a.m. с шести часов утра; from beginning to end от начала до конца from floor to ceiling от пола до потолка; from end to end из конца в конец from floor to ceiling от пола до потолка; from end to end из конца в конец from Leningrad из Ленинграда; where is he coming from? откуда он? from ten to twenty thousand от десяти до двадцати тысяч; from my point of view с моей точки зрения from now on с этих пор, отныне; beginning from Friday week начиная с будущей пятницы now: from from on (или onwards) в дальнейшем, впредь; as from now с сего числа, с настоящего времени from away с расстояния, издали; from outside снаружи; извне; from over из-за outside: from внешний мир; объективная реальность; from outside извне; impressions from the outside впечатления внешнего мира from away с расстояния, издали; from outside снаружи; извне; from over из-за from over the sea из-за моря; from under из-под; from under the table из-под стола from dusk to dawn от зари и до зари; from six a.m. с шести часов утра; from beginning to end от начала до конца from ten to twenty thousand от десяти до двадцати тысяч; from my point of view с моей точки зрения from prep. указывает на временные отношения с, от, из; from the (very) beginning с (самого) начала from prep. указывает на отправную точку, исходный пункт, предел с, от; from the beginning of the book с начала книги from the beginning of the century с начала века; from a child с детства; from before the war с довоенного времени from over the sea из-за моря; from under из-под; from under the table из-под стола from over the sea из-за моря; from under из-под; from under the table из-под стола he died from blood-poisoning он умер от заражения крови to release from duty воен. сменить на посту, заступить в наряд; he was excused from digging он был освобожден от тяжелых земляных работ he was saved from ruin он был спасен от разорения; prevent him from going there не пускайте его туда from prep. указывает на освобождение от обязанностей, избавление от опасности и т. п. от; to hide (from smb.) спрятаться (от кого-л.) hide: hide разг. выпороть, спустить шкуру from шутл. кожа (человека); to save one's hide спасать свою шкуру from ист. надел земли для одной семьи (= 100 акрам) from (ист.) надел земли для одной семьи (= 100 акрам) from (hid; hid, hidden) прятать(ся); скрывать(ся); to hide one's feelings скрывать свои чувства from прятать(ся), скрывать(ся) from прятать from скрывать from скрытый запас from скрытый запас from содрать шкуру from содрать шкуру from укрытие; тайник from укрытие, тайник from шкура, кожа from шкура, кожа I heard it from his own lips я слышал это из его собственных уст from prep. указывает на источник, происхождение от, из, по; I know it from papers я знаю это из газет from prep. указывает на изменение состояния из, с, от; from being a dull, indifferent boy he now became a vigorous youth из вялого, апатичного мальчика он превратился в живого, энергичного юношу originate from брать начало от originate from возникать из originate from происходить из he was saved from ruin он был спасен от разорения; prevent him from going there не пускайте его туда profit from получать прибыль recede from отступать refrain from воздерживаться refrain from воздерживаться от (совершения действия) refrain from сдерживаться refrain from удерживаться to release from duty воен. сменить на посту, заступить в наряд; he was excused from digging он был освобожден от тяжелых земляных работ result from вытекать result from следовать, происходить в результате (чего-л.) seek redress from требовать возмещения to exclude from the number исключить из числа; she parted from him at the door она рассталась с ним у дверей to speak (to write down) from memory говорить (записывать) по памяти stem from возникать stem from вытекать from prep. указывает на причину действия от, из; to suffer from cold страдать от холода take the knife from the child отнимите нож у ребенка; take ten from fifteen вычтите десять из пятнадцати take the knife from the child отнимите нож у ребенка; take ten from fifteen вычтите десять из пятнадцати from prep. указывает на различие от, из; to tell real silk from its imitation отличить натуральный шелк от искусственного they withdrew the team from the match команда не была допущена к соревнованиям we are two hours journey from there мы находимся в двух часах пути оттуда; we were 50 km from the town мы были в 50 км от города we are two hours journey from there мы находимся в двух часах пути оттуда; we were 50 km from the town мы были в 50 км от города from Leningrad из Ленинграда; where is he coming from? откуда он? you will find the word in the seventh line from the bottom (of the page) вы найдете это слово в седьмой строке снизу

    English-Russian short dictionary > from

  • 46 agree

    əˈɡri: гл.
    1) соглашаться( with - с кем-л.;
    to - с чем-л.;
    on - на что-л.) John agreed to do it in order to please his mother. ≈ Джон согласился сделать это, чтобы доставить удовольствие своей матери. He agreed to my plan. ≈ Он принял мой план. He agreed with neither side. ≈ Он не соглашался ни с одной из сторон. agree fully agree completely agree entirely agree readily agree wholeheartedly agree reluctantly agree on all points Syn: accede
    1), acquiesce, assent
    2., consent
    2., concur
    2)
    2) сходиться во взглядах We are agreed on this. ≈ У нас по этому поводу существует общее мнение. be generally agreed be universally agreed agree in views agree in tastes agree in opinion Syn: coincide
    3) уславливаться, договариваться (on, upon) We've agreed on Spain for our holiday next year. ≈ Мы договорились провести отпуск в следующем году в Испании. Agreed! ≈ Решено!
    4) соответствовать, гармонировать, быть сходным The two statements don't agree. ≈ Эти два утверждения не согласуются. All the figures sufficiently agree. ≈ Все цифры в основном сходятся. His statement agrees with facts. ≈ Его заявление соответствует фактам. Syn: correspond
    1)
    5) уживаться (тж. agree together, agree with) We shall never agree. ≈ Мы никогда не поладим.
    6) разг. быть полезным/приятным;
    быть подходящим This climate doesn't agree with her. ≈ Этот климат ей не подходит. Wine doesn't agree with me. ≈ Пить мне нельзя.
    7) согласовывать, приводить в порядок (счета и т. п.)
    8) грам. согласоваться( with - с чем-л.;
    in - в чем-л.) Latin adjectives agree with nouns in gender, case and number. ≈ Латинские прилагательные согласуются с существительными по роду, падежу и числу. ∙ to agree to differотказаться от попыток убедить друг друга( о сторонах в споре или переговорах)
    соглашаться, договариваться;
    сходиться во мнениях;
    - to * with smb. соглашаться с кем-л, быть одного мнения с кем-л;
    - to * in smth. иметь на что-л одинаковые взгляды, иметь одинаковые мнения о чем-л;
    - we did not * у нас были разные точки зрения;
    мы не договорились;
    - the principles *d upon принципы, по которым достигнуто соглашение;
    - we are all *d on finding him innocent мы все пришли к единому мнению, что он невиновен уславливаться, сговариваться, договариваться;
    - to * on smth. договориться, достигнуть соглашения по какому-л вопросу;
    - we *d to go there together мы условились пойти туда вместе;
    - to be *d on договориться, согласиться;
    - *d! (разговорное) решено!, по рукам!;
    - to * that smth. should be done договориться о необходимости сделать что-л соглашаться, давать согласие;
    - he invited us and we *d он пригласил нас, и мы приняли приглашение;
    - to * to do smth. согласиться что-л сделать;
    - father has *d to her marrying John отец дал согласие на ее брак с Джоном согласовывать;
    одобрять;
    - they have *d the terms of surrender они согласовали условия капитуляции;
    - we * the stipulations мы одобряем эти условия утверждать, одобрять;
    - the inspector has *d your return of income инстпектор утвердил вашу. налоговую декларацию ладить, уживаться, жить в согласии;
    - the children can never * дети постоянно ссорятся;
    - they * well они хорошо живут, они живут в согласии соответствовать, гармонировать;
    - to * with facts соответствовать фактам;
    - the figures do not * цифры не сходятся;
    - this story *s with hers этот рассказ совпадает с ее версией;
    - the two copies * оба экземпляра идентичны;
    - this play does not * with the book пьеса очень отличается от книги, по которой она написана;
    - * within... совпадать с точностью до...;
    - theoretical predictions * within 1 per cent теоретический расчет совпадает с точностью до 1 процента обыкн с отриц (разговорное) быть полезным, подходящим;
    - she wondered whether the climate would * with her она не знала, окажется ли подходящим для нее этот климат;
    - smoking does not * with me курить мне нельзя;
    - pepper does not * with me от перца мне делается плохо (грамматика) согласоваться;
    - the predicate *s with its subject in number and person сказуемое согласуется в лице и числе с подлежащим > to * like dog(s) and cat(s) (пословица) жить как кошка с собакой;
    > to * to differ каждый остается при своем мнении
    agree быть полезным или приятным;
    быть подходящим;
    wine doesn't agree with me вино мне вредно ~ гармонировать ~ давать согласие ~ договариваться ~ одобрять ~ грам. согласоваться;
    we agree to differ мы отказались от попыток убедить друг друга ~ согласовывать, приводить в порядок (счета и т. п.) ~ согласовывать ~ соглашаться, договариваться ~ соглашаться (with - с кем-л.;
    to - с чем-л., on - на что-л.) ~ соглашаться ~ соответствовать, гармонировать, быть сходным;
    быть по душе ~ соответствовать ~ сходиться во взглядах;
    уживаться (тж. agree together, agree with) ;
    they agree well они хорошо ладят ~ сходиться во мнениях ~ уславливаться (on, upon - о чем-л.) ;
    договариваться (about) ;
    agree d! решено!, по рукам! ~ условливаться ~ утверждать
    ~ уславливаться (on, upon - о чем-л.) ;
    договариваться (about) ;
    agree d! решено!, по рукам!
    ~ on договариваться ~ on достигать соглашения
    ~ to соглашаться
    ~ to a specific venue соглашаться на конкретное место рассмотрения дела
    ~ to be fined summarily соглашаться на наложение штрафа в упрощенном порядке
    ~ сходиться во взглядах;
    уживаться (тж. agree together, agree with) ;
    they agree well они хорошо ладят
    ~ грам. согласоваться;
    we agree to differ мы отказались от попыток убедить друг друга
    agree быть полезным или приятным;
    быть подходящим;
    wine doesn't agree with me вино мне вредно

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > agree

  • 47 beg

    [beg] 1.
    verbo transitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) chiedere (in elemosina) [food, money] ( from a); chiedere [favour, permission, forgiveness] ( from, of a); supplicare, pregare [ person] ( to do di fare)

    to beg sb. for sth. — chiedere qcs. a qcn. (con insistenza)

    "stop, I beg (of) you!" — "fermatevi, vi prego!"

    2.
    verbo intransitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) [ person] chiedere l'elemosina ( from a); [ dog] = stare seduto con le zampe anteriori sollevate in attesa di cibo, ecc.

    to beg for — elemosinare, mendicare [money, food]

    ••
    * * *
    [beɡ] 1. past tense, past participle - begged; verb
    1) (to ask (someone) for (money, food etc): The old man was so poor that he had to beg in the street; He begged (me) for money.) elemosinare, chiedere l'elemosina
    2) (to ask (someone) desperately or earnestly: I beg you not to do it.) pregare
    2. verb
    (to make very poor: He was beggared by the collapse of his firm.) rovinare, ridurre in miseria
    - beg to differ
    * * *
    [bɛɡ]
    1. vt
    1) (entreat) supplicare, pregare, (favour) chiedere, (subj: beggar: food, money) mendicare

    he begged me to help himmi ha supplicato or pregato di aiutarlo

    2)
    2. vi

    (entreat) to beg for — implorare, (beggar) chiedere l'elemosina or la carità

    * * *
    [beg] 1.
    verbo transitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) chiedere (in elemosina) [food, money] ( from a); chiedere [favour, permission, forgiveness] ( from, of a); supplicare, pregare [ person] ( to do di fare)

    to beg sb. for sth. — chiedere qcs. a qcn. (con insistenza)

    "stop, I beg (of) you!" — "fermatevi, vi prego!"

    2.
    verbo intransitivo (forma in -ing ecc. - gg-) [ person] chiedere l'elemosina ( from a); [ dog] = stare seduto con le zampe anteriori sollevate in attesa di cibo, ecc.

    to beg for — elemosinare, mendicare [money, food]

    ••

    English-Italian dictionary > beg

  • 48 פלג I, פליג

    פְּלַגI, פְּלֵיג ch. sam(פלגto separate, split), 1) to divide, share. Targ. Ex. 21:35 (O. ed. Vien. יְפַלְּג׳ Pa.). Targ. Prov. 29:24. Ib. 23 (h. text יתמך); a. fr.Part. pass. פְּלִיג; f. פְּלִיגָא; pl. פְּלִיגִין, פְּלִיגֵי; פְּלִיגָן a) divided ( at heart), undecided. Targ. Hos. 11:7. Targ. 1 Kings 18:37. Ib. 21; a. e.Targ. Ps. 44:19, v. infra.b) (with על) differing in opinion. Targ. Y. II Gen. 49:1.B. Mets.5a, a. fr. תנא הוא ופ׳ he is a Tannai, and (as such) he differs (from the Mishnah). Y.Kil.IX, 32a top, a. fr. מתניתא פ׳ עלוכ׳ the Boraitha differs from Rab. Ḥull.92b הא מִפְלֵיג פליגי ביה are there not differing opinions about it? Ber.23b ופליגא דר׳ חייא and R. Ḥias opinion differs (from what has just been said). Ib. 33b מכלל דפליגי this implies that scholars differ about it; ולא פ׳ and do they not differ?; a. v. fr.c) distinguished, rare, v. infra. Pa. פַּלֵּג 1) to divide; to distribute, assign a share. Targ. Ex. 21:35, v. supra. Targ. O. Gen. 15:10. Targ. Ps. 44:19 (not פְּלִיג), v. זְהַהּ. Targ. Job 39:17. Targ. Ps. 68:14. Ib. 13 Ms. (ed. מַפְלְגָא Af.). Targ. 1 Chr. 26:5; a. fr.B. Bath. 119b דפ׳ ליה רביה יקרא when his teacher did him honor. Y.Shek.II, end, 47a מה את פַּלֵּיג ליהוכ׳ why wilt thou do him (the idol) honor?; Y.Ber.II, 4b איתפליג (corr. acc.). Y.Sabb.VII, 10a bot. כד מְפַלֵּג when he divides (the flax stalks). Lev. R. s. 3, beg. ומְפַלְּגָא לבישיא, v. גּוּף ch.; Koh. R. to IV, 6; a. e.Y.Kidd.IV, 65c to פלגין, v. פְּלַג II. 2) to divert the mind. Targ. Y. Deut. 4:19. Ib. 22:1. 3) to speak differently from what one thinks, flatter. Targ. Prov. 28:23 Ms. (ed. Af.). Af. אַפְלֵג 1) to separate. Targ. Y. Gen. 49:7; a. e. 2) to divert. Targ. Y. II Gen. 45:26 וְאַ׳ ליביה (Y. I יפַּלֵּיג, ed. Vien. ופְלֵיג) he turned his mind off it (gave up hope, would not believe; h. text ויפג). Targ. Prov. 14:30 דמַפְלִיג חמתאוכ׳ who diverts the anger of his heart; a. e. Ithpa. אִתְפַּלֵּג, Ithpe. אִתְפְּלֵג, אִיפְּלִיג, אִפְּ׳ 1) to be divided, dispersed. Targ. Num. 26:53; 55. Targ. Gen. 14:15; a. fr.B. Bath. 121b א״י לשבטים נתחלקה או דילמא קרקף גברא אִיפַּלְּגָא Ms. M. was the land of Israel divided according to tribes (in equal shares for each tribe), or according to the number of heads?; ed. א״י לשבטים אִיפְּלוּג … איפלוג (sub. נחלות) were the shares of the land of Israel divided ? 2) to be different from the rest, rare, distinguished, Ib. 120a דמִפְּלִיג בחכמה (Ms. R. דפליג) of rare wisdom, דמפ׳ בזקנה extremely old. Gitt.28a כיון דאיפ׳ אפ׳ having reached a rare old age, he may as well be presumed to be more distinguished (and be still alive). Erub.63a שאני … דמִיפְּלַג (Ar. a. Ms. O. דמוּפְלָג h. form) it is different with R. …, for he was very distinguished (for age and learning); a. e. 3) (cmp. גזר) to be decreed. Targ. Y. Gen. 14:7 (v. פִּילּוּגָא). 4) to secede; to differ. Targ. O. Num. 16:1 (h. text ויקח). Targ. 2 Kings 17:21; a. fr.Y.Taan.IV, 67d top ואפי׳ עלה לא הוה צריך מִתְפַּלְּגָה even about this it was unnecessary to assume a difference of opinion. Gen. R. s. 21 אִיתְפַּלְּגוּןר׳וכ׳ R. A. and R. H. differ (in their interpretations). Ber.22b bot. בהא קמִיפַּלְּגֵי (popular pronunciation קמִיפְלְגֵי) on this principle their difference rests. Ib. 23a; a. v. fr.

    Jewish literature > פלג I, פליג

  • 49 פְּלַג

    פְּלַגI, פְּלֵיג ch. sam(פלגto separate, split), 1) to divide, share. Targ. Ex. 21:35 (O. ed. Vien. יְפַלְּג׳ Pa.). Targ. Prov. 29:24. Ib. 23 (h. text יתמך); a. fr.Part. pass. פְּלִיג; f. פְּלִיגָא; pl. פְּלִיגִין, פְּלִיגֵי; פְּלִיגָן a) divided ( at heart), undecided. Targ. Hos. 11:7. Targ. 1 Kings 18:37. Ib. 21; a. e.Targ. Ps. 44:19, v. infra.b) (with על) differing in opinion. Targ. Y. II Gen. 49:1.B. Mets.5a, a. fr. תנא הוא ופ׳ he is a Tannai, and (as such) he differs (from the Mishnah). Y.Kil.IX, 32a top, a. fr. מתניתא פ׳ עלוכ׳ the Boraitha differs from Rab. Ḥull.92b הא מִפְלֵיג פליגי ביה are there not differing opinions about it? Ber.23b ופליגא דר׳ חייא and R. Ḥias opinion differs (from what has just been said). Ib. 33b מכלל דפליגי this implies that scholars differ about it; ולא פ׳ and do they not differ?; a. v. fr.c) distinguished, rare, v. infra. Pa. פַּלֵּג 1) to divide; to distribute, assign a share. Targ. Ex. 21:35, v. supra. Targ. O. Gen. 15:10. Targ. Ps. 44:19 (not פְּלִיג), v. זְהַהּ. Targ. Job 39:17. Targ. Ps. 68:14. Ib. 13 Ms. (ed. מַפְלְגָא Af.). Targ. 1 Chr. 26:5; a. fr.B. Bath. 119b דפ׳ ליה רביה יקרא when his teacher did him honor. Y.Shek.II, end, 47a מה את פַּלֵּיג ליהוכ׳ why wilt thou do him (the idol) honor?; Y.Ber.II, 4b איתפליג (corr. acc.). Y.Sabb.VII, 10a bot. כד מְפַלֵּג when he divides (the flax stalks). Lev. R. s. 3, beg. ומְפַלְּגָא לבישיא, v. גּוּף ch.; Koh. R. to IV, 6; a. e.Y.Kidd.IV, 65c to פלגין, v. פְּלַג II. 2) to divert the mind. Targ. Y. Deut. 4:19. Ib. 22:1. 3) to speak differently from what one thinks, flatter. Targ. Prov. 28:23 Ms. (ed. Af.). Af. אַפְלֵג 1) to separate. Targ. Y. Gen. 49:7; a. e. 2) to divert. Targ. Y. II Gen. 45:26 וְאַ׳ ליביה (Y. I יפַּלֵּיג, ed. Vien. ופְלֵיג) he turned his mind off it (gave up hope, would not believe; h. text ויפג). Targ. Prov. 14:30 דמַפְלִיג חמתאוכ׳ who diverts the anger of his heart; a. e. Ithpa. אִתְפַּלֵּג, Ithpe. אִתְפְּלֵג, אִיפְּלִיג, אִפְּ׳ 1) to be divided, dispersed. Targ. Num. 26:53; 55. Targ. Gen. 14:15; a. fr.B. Bath. 121b א״י לשבטים נתחלקה או דילמא קרקף גברא אִיפַּלְּגָא Ms. M. was the land of Israel divided according to tribes (in equal shares for each tribe), or according to the number of heads?; ed. א״י לשבטים אִיפְּלוּג … איפלוג (sub. נחלות) were the shares of the land of Israel divided ? 2) to be different from the rest, rare, distinguished, Ib. 120a דמִפְּלִיג בחכמה (Ms. R. דפליג) of rare wisdom, דמפ׳ בזקנה extremely old. Gitt.28a כיון דאיפ׳ אפ׳ having reached a rare old age, he may as well be presumed to be more distinguished (and be still alive). Erub.63a שאני … דמִיפְּלַג (Ar. a. Ms. O. דמוּפְלָג h. form) it is different with R. …, for he was very distinguished (for age and learning); a. e. 3) (cmp. גזר) to be decreed. Targ. Y. Gen. 14:7 (v. פִּילּוּגָא). 4) to secede; to differ. Targ. O. Num. 16:1 (h. text ויקח). Targ. 2 Kings 17:21; a. fr.Y.Taan.IV, 67d top ואפי׳ עלה לא הוה צריך מִתְפַּלְּגָה even about this it was unnecessary to assume a difference of opinion. Gen. R. s. 21 אִיתְפַּלְּגוּןר׳וכ׳ R. A. and R. H. differ (in their interpretations). Ber.22b bot. בהא קמִיפַּלְּגֵי (popular pronunciation קמִיפְלְגֵי) on this principle their difference rests. Ib. 23a; a. v. fr.

    Jewish literature > פְּלַג

  • 50 мнение

    opinion, judgment
    Доводы, приведенные Смитом [1], поддерживают это мнение/ взгляд. - Arguments given in Smith [1] support this view.
    Исследователи довольно единодушно сходятся во мнении относительно... - A good consensus exists among the researchers as to...
    Кажется, имеется некоторое различие во мнениях, действительно ли... - There seems to be some difference of opinion as to whether...
    Мнения (ученых) сходятся к тому, что... - The consensus is...; There is general agreement...
    Мнения относительно... расходятся. - Opinions differ as to...
    Мнения по вопросу о... сильно расходятся. - Opinions differ widely on how...
    Наконец, наше мнение заключается в том, что... - Finally, it is our opinion that...
    Нет единого мнения относительно... - There is no consensus on...
    Относительно... прозвучали разнообразные мнения. - Various opinions have been voiced with regard to...
    По мнению автора,... - It is the author's opinion that...; In the opinion of the author,...
    По нашему мнению,... - In our view,...
    По нашему мнению,... - It is our opinion that...
    По общему мнению, - It is generally agreed that...
    Это мнение появилось после экспериментов, в которых... - This opinion was reached after experiments in which...

    Русско-английский словарь научного общения > мнение

  • 51 lógica

    f.
    logic, method, logicality.
    * * *
    1 logic
    \
    lógica matemática mathematical logic
    * * *
    1. noun f. 2. f., (m. - lógico)
    * * *

    lógica borrosa, lógica difusa — fuzzy logic

    lógico
    * * *
    a) ( coherencia) logic
    b) (Fil) logic
    * * *
    = logic, ratio decidendi, reasonability.
    Ex. For example, class R Philosophy is first divided into such canonical divisions as Logic, Epistemology, Metaphysics, Ethics and Aesthetics.
    Ex. An online search of the WESTLAW and LEXIS databases, and examination of numerous cases with potential precedential value found the many dicta in judicial opinions to differ among jurisdictions, and found no ratio decidendi at all.
    Ex. A major objective of this project was also to demonstrate both the possibility and the reasonability of using handheld technology = Además, uno de los principales objetivos de este proyecto fue demostrar la posibilidad y la conveniencia de utilizar tecnología portátil para simplificar y normalizar el proceso de recogida de datos.
    ----
    * base de datos de lógica difusa = fuzzy database.
    * conjunto aleatorio de lógica difusa = random fuzzy set.
    * conjunto de lógica difusa = fuzzy set.
    * conjuntos de lógica difusa = fuzzy clustering.
    * especialista en la lógica = logician.
    * lógica booleana = Boolean logic.
    * lógica borrosa = fuzzy logic.
    * lógica contextual = contextual logic.
    * lógica de búsqueda = search logic.
    * lógica de búsqueda por ponderación = weighted-term search logic.
    * lógica de términos ponderados = weighted term logic.
    * lógica difusa = fuzzy logic.
    * lógica imprecisa = fuzzy logic.
    * lógica matemática = mathematical logic.
    * lógica modal = modal logic.
    * lógica simbólica = symbolic logic.
    * modelo de lógica difusa = fuzzy model.
    * operador de lógica booleana = Boolean logic operator.
    * procesador de lógica difusa = fuzzy query processor.
    * recuperación de información de lógica difusa = fuzzy data retrieval.
    * señal lógica = logical signal.
    * sin lógica ni explicación = without rhyme or reason.
    * sistema de lógica difusa = fuzzy system.
    * suma lógica = logical sum.
    * técnica de recuperación por medio de la lógica difusa = fuzzy IR technique.
    * variable aleatoria de lógica difusa = fuzzy random variable.
    * * *
    a) ( coherencia) logic
    b) (Fil) logic
    * * *
    = logic, ratio decidendi, reasonability.

    Ex: For example, class R Philosophy is first divided into such canonical divisions as Logic, Epistemology, Metaphysics, Ethics and Aesthetics.

    Ex: An online search of the WESTLAW and LEXIS databases, and examination of numerous cases with potential precedential value found the many dicta in judicial opinions to differ among jurisdictions, and found no ratio decidendi at all.
    Ex: A major objective of this project was also to demonstrate both the possibility and the reasonability of using handheld technology = Además, uno de los principales objetivos de este proyecto fue demostrar la posibilidad y la conveniencia de utilizar tecnología portátil para simplificar y normalizar el proceso de recogida de datos.
    * base de datos de lógica difusa = fuzzy database.
    * conjunto aleatorio de lógica difusa = random fuzzy set.
    * conjunto de lógica difusa = fuzzy set.
    * conjuntos de lógica difusa = fuzzy clustering.
    * especialista en la lógica = logician.
    * lógica booleana = Boolean logic.
    * lógica borrosa = fuzzy logic.
    * lógica contextual = contextual logic.
    * lógica de búsqueda = search logic.
    * lógica de búsqueda por ponderación = weighted-term search logic.
    * lógica de términos ponderados = weighted term logic.
    * lógica difusa = fuzzy logic.
    * lógica imprecisa = fuzzy logic.
    * lógica matemática = mathematical logic.
    * lógica modal = modal logic.
    * lógica simbólica = symbolic logic.
    * modelo de lógica difusa = fuzzy model.
    * operador de lógica booleana = Boolean logic operator.
    * procesador de lógica difusa = fuzzy query processor.
    * recuperación de información de lógica difusa = fuzzy data retrieval.
    * señal lógica = logical signal.
    * sin lógica ni explicación = without rhyme or reason.
    * sistema de lógica difusa = fuzzy system.
    * suma lógica = logical sum.
    * técnica de recuperación por medio de la lógica difusa = fuzzy IR technique.
    * variable aleatoria de lógica difusa = fuzzy random variable.

    * * *
    1 (coherencia) logic
    lo que hizo carece de toda lógica there was no logic to what she did, what she did was completely illogical
    2 ( Fil) logic
    Compuestos:
    mathematical logic
    formal o symbolic logic
    * * *

    lógica sustantivo femenino
    logic
    lógico,-a adjetivo logical: es lógico que te enfades, it's natural for you to get angry
    lógica sustantivo femenino logic: está fuera de toda lógica, it's completely illogical
    ' lógica' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    sentida
    - sentido
    - aplastante
    - encontrar
    English:
    add up
    - logic
    - rationale
    - hold
    * * *
    1. [ciencia] logic
    Informát lógica booleana Boolean logic; Informát lógica borrosa fuzzy logic; Informát lógica difusa fuzzy logic;
    lógica matemática mathematical logic
    2. [coherencia] logic;
    por lógica obviously;
    tener lógica to make sense;
    eso no tiene lógica that doesn't make any sense
    * * *
    f logic
    * * *
    : logic
    * * *
    lógica n logic

    Spanish-English dictionary > lógica

  • 52 inter-sum

        inter-sum fuī, futūrus, esse,    to be between, lie between: quas (segetes) inter et castra unus collis intererat, Cs.: ut Tiberis inter eos et pons interesset: via interest perangusta, L.—To intervene, elapse: inter primum et sextum consulatum sex anni interfuerunt: inter Laviniam et Albam Longam coloniam deductam interfuere, etc., L.—To be different, differ: ut inter eos ne minimum quidem intersit, there is not the slightest difference: inter hominem et beluam hoc maxime interest, quod, etc., differ chiefly in this: in his rebus nihil omnino interest, there is no difference whatever: Hoc pater ac dominus interest, there is this difference, T.: tantum id interest, veneritne an, etc., L.: negant (ea) quidquam a falsis interesse: quod ab eo nihil intersit, etc.: stulto intellegens Quid interest? T.: ut matrona Intererit Satyris paulum, H.—To be present, take part, attend, assist, intervene: audierunt alii, qui interfuerant: Nec deus intersit, nisi, etc., H.: epulis: lacrimis patris, V.: populo Quirini, live with, H.: proelio, Cs.: in convivio: in testamento faciendo.—3d pers. impers., it makes a difference, it interests, it concerns, it is of interest: quasi paulum intersiet, T.: Paulum interesse censes, ex animo facias, an, etc., T.: neque interesse... -ne... -ne, makes no difference, Cs.: novis coniunctionibus interest, qualis primus aditus sit: Divesne natus Nil interest an pauper, H.: quid interfuit utrum hoc decerneres, an, etc., what mattered it? nihil interest nunc, an violaverim, etc., L.: quantum interesset Clodii, se perire: quid eius intererat?: meā video quid intersit: quod ego et meā et rei p. interesse arbitror: illud meā magni interest, te ut videam: utriusque nostrum magni interest ut te videam: ad honorem interesse: ad beate vivendum; cf. with defin. subj.: non quo meā interest natura loci, is of interest to me.

    Latin-English dictionary > inter-sum

  • 53 Intelligence

       There is no mystery about it: the child who is familiar with books, ideas, conversation-the ways and means of the intellectual life-before he begins school, indeed, before he begins consciously to think, has a marked advantage. He is at home in the House of intellect just as the stableboy is at home among horses, or the child of actors on the stage. (Barzun, 1959, p. 142)
       It is... no exaggeration to say that sensory-motor intelligence is limited to desiring success or practical adaptation, whereas the function of verbal or conceptual thought is to know and state truth. (Piaget, 1954, p. 359)
       ntelligence has two parts, which we shall call the epistemological and the heuristic. The epistemological part is the representation of the world in such a form that the solution of problems follows from the facts expressed in the representation. The heuristic part is the mechanism that on the basis of the information solves the problem and decides what to do. (McCarthy & Hayes, 1969, p. 466)
       Many scientists implicitly assume that, among all animals, the behavior and intelligence of nonhuman primates are most like our own. Nonhuman primates have relatively larger brains and proportionally more neocortex than other species... and it now seems likely that humans, chimpanzees, and gorillas shared a common ancestor as recently as 5 to 7 million years ago.... This assumption about the unique status of primate intelligence is, however, just that: an assumption. The relations between intelligence and measures of brain size is poorly understood, and evolutionary affinity does not always ensure behavioral similarity. Moreover, the view that nonhuman primates are the animals most like ourselves coexists uneasily in our minds with the equally pervasive view that primates differ fundamentally from us because they lack language; lacking language, they also lack many of the capacities necessary for reasoning and abstract thought. (Cheney & Seyfarth, 1990, p. 4)
       Few constructs are asked to serve as many functions in psychology as is the construct of human intelligence.... Consider four of the main functions addressed in theory and research on intelligence, and how they differ from one another.
       1. Biological. This type of account looks at biological processes. To qualify as a useful biological construct, intelligence should be a biochemical or biophysical process or at least somehow a resultant of biochemical or biophysical processes.
       2. Cognitive approaches. This type of account looks at molar cognitive representations and processes. To qualify as a useful mental construct, intelligence should be specifiable as a set of mental representations and processes that are identifiable through experimental, mathematical, or computational means.
       3. Contextual approaches. To qualify as a useful contextual construct, intelligence should be a source of individual differences in accomplishments in "real-world" performances. It is not enough just to account for performance in the laboratory. On [sic] the contextual view, what a person does in the lab may not even remotely resemble what the person would do outside it. Moreover, different cultures may have different conceptions of intelligence, which affect what would count as intelligent in one cultural context versus another.
       4. Systems approaches. Systems approaches attempt to understand intelligence through the interaction of cognition with context. They attempt to establish a link between the two levels of analysis, and to analyze what forms this link takes. (Sternberg, 1994, pp. 263-264)
       High but not the highest intelligence, combined with the greatest degrees of persistence, will achieve greater eminence than the highest degree of intelligence with somewhat less persistence. (Cox, 1926, p. 187)
       There are no definitive criteria of intelligence, just as there are none for chairness; it is a fuzzy-edged concept to which many features are relevant. Two people may both be quite intelligent and yet have very few traits in common-they resemble the prototype along different dimensions.... [Intelligence] is a resemblance between two individuals, one real and the other prototypical. (Neisser, 1979, p. 185)
       Given the complementary strengths and weaknesses of the differential and information-processing approaches, it should be possible, at least in theory, to synthesise an approach that would capitalise upon the strength of each approach, and thereby share the weakness of neither. (Sternberg, 1977, p. 65)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Intelligence

  • 54 Thinking

       But what then am I? A thing which thinks. What is a thing which thinks? It is a thing which doubts, understands, [conceives], affirms, denies, wills, refuses, which also imagines and feels. (Descartes, 1951, p. 153)
       I have been trying in all this to remove the temptation to think that there "must be" a mental process of thinking, hoping, wishing, believing, etc., independent of the process of expressing a thought, a hope, a wish, etc.... If we scrutinize the usages which we make of "thinking," "meaning," "wishing," etc., going through this process rids us of the temptation to look for a peculiar act of thinking, independent of the act of expressing our thoughts, and stowed away in some particular medium. (Wittgenstein, 1958, pp. 41-43)
       Analyse the proofs employed by the subject. If they do not go beyond observation of empirical correspondences, they can be fully explained in terms of concrete operations, and nothing would warrant our assuming that more complex thought mechanisms are operating. If, on the other hand, the subject interprets a given correspondence as the result of any one of several possible combinations, and this leads him to verify his hypotheses by observing their consequences, we know that propositional operations are involved. (Inhelder & Piaget, 1958, p. 279)
       In every age, philosophical thinking exploits some dominant concepts and makes its greatest headway in solving problems conceived in terms of them. The seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophers construed knowledge, knower, and known in terms of sense data and their association. Descartes' self-examination gave classical psychology the mind and its contents as a starting point. Locke set up sensory immediacy as the new criterion of the real... Hobbes provided the genetic method of building up complex ideas from simple ones... and, in another quarter, still true to the Hobbesian method, Pavlov built intellect out of conditioned reflexes and Loeb built life out of tropisms. (S. Langer, 1962, p. 54)
       Experiments on deductive reasoning show that subjects are influenced sufficiently by their experience for their reasoning to differ from that described by a purely deductive system, whilst experiments on inductive reasoning lead to the view that an understanding of the strategies used by adult subjects in attaining concepts involves reference to higher-order concepts of a logical and deductive nature. (Bolton, 1972, p. 154)
       There are now machines in the world that think, that learn and create. Moreover, their ability to do these things is going to increase rapidly until-in the visible future-the range of problems they can handle will be coextensive with the range to which the human mind has been applied. (Newell & Simon, quoted in Weizenbaum, 1976, p. 138)
       But how does it happen that thinking is sometimes accompanied by action and sometimes not, sometimes by motion, and sometimes not? It looks as if almost the same thing happens as in the case of reasoning and making inferences about unchanging objects. But in that case the end is a speculative proposition... whereas here the conclusion which results from the two premises is an action.... I need covering; a cloak is a covering. I need a cloak. What I need, I have to make; I need a cloak. I have to make a cloak. And the conclusion, the "I have to make a cloak," is an action. (Nussbaum, 1978, p. 40)
       It is well to remember that when philosophy emerged in Greece in the sixth century, B.C., it did not burst suddenly out of the Mediterranean blue. The development of societies of reasoning creatures-what we call civilization-had been a process to be measured not in thousands but in millions of years. Human beings became civilized as they became reasonable, and for an animal to begin to reason and to learn how to improve its reasoning is a long, slow process. So thinking had been going on for ages before Greece-slowly improving itself, uncovering the pitfalls to be avoided by forethought, endeavoring to weigh alternative sets of consequences intellectually. What happened in the sixth century, B.C., is that thinking turned round on itself; people began to think about thinking, and the momentous event, the culmination of the long process to that point, was in fact the birth of philosophy. (Lipman, Sharp & Oscanyan, 1980, p. xi)
       The way to look at thought is not to assume that there is a parallel thread of correlated affects or internal experiences that go with it in some regular way. It's not of course that people don't have internal experiences, of course they do; but that when you ask what is the state of mind of someone, say while he or she is performing a ritual, it's hard to believe that such experiences are the same for all people involved.... The thinking, and indeed the feeling in an odd sort of way, is really going on in public. They are really saying what they're saying, doing what they're doing, meaning what they're meaning. Thought is, in great part anyway, a public activity. (Geertz, quoted in J. Miller, 1983, pp. 202-203)
       Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler. (Einstein, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 17)
       What, in effect, are the conditions for the construction of formal thought? The child must not only apply operations to objects-in other words, mentally execute possible actions on them-he must also "reflect" those operations in the absence of the objects which are replaced by pure propositions. Thus, "reflection" is thought raised to the second power. Concrete thinking is the representation of a possible action, and formal thinking is the representation of a representation of possible action.... It is not surprising, therefore, that the system of concrete operations must be completed during the last years of childhood before it can be "reflected" by formal operations. In terms of their function, formal operations do not differ from concrete operations except that they are applied to hypotheses or propositions [whose logic is] an abstract translation of the system of "inference" that governs concrete operations. (Piaget, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 237)
       [E]ven a human being today (hence, a fortiori, a remote ancestor of contemporary human beings) cannot easily or ordinarily maintain uninterrupted attention on a single problem for more than a few tens of seconds. Yet we work on problems that require vastly more time. The way we do that (as we can observe by watching ourselves) requires periods of mulling to be followed by periods of recapitulation, describing to ourselves what seems to have gone on during the mulling, leading to whatever intermediate results we have reached. This has an obvious function: namely, by rehearsing these interim results... we commit them to memory, for the immediate contents of the stream of consciousness are very quickly lost unless rehearsed.... Given language, we can describe to ourselves what seemed to occur during the mulling that led to a judgment, produce a rehearsable version of the reaching-a-judgment process, and commit that to long-term memory by in fact rehearsing it. (Margolis, 1987, p. 60)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Thinking

  • 55 у каждого свой вкус

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > у каждого свой вкус

  • 56 einig

    Adj.
    1. einig sein mit be in agreement with; ( sich) einig werden come to an agreement ( über + Akk about); mit jemandem einig gehen agree with s.o. (in + Dat about, on); sich nicht einig sein disagree, differ ( über + Akk on); die Fachwelt ist sich einig darüber, dass... the experts are agreed that...; man ist sich noch nicht einig darüber, was / wie etc. there’s still some disagreement as to what / how etc.; er ist sich selbst nicht einig, was er tun soll he can’t make up his mind what to do
    2. Volk etc.: united
    * * *
    (einer Meinung) in agreement; agreed;
    (vereinigt) united
    * * *
    ei|nig ['ainɪç]
    adj
    1) (= geeint) united
    2) (= einer Meinung) agreed, in agreement (
    über +acc on, about, in +dat on)

    ich weiß mich in dieser Sache mit ihm éínig (geh)I know I am in agreement with him on this

    éínig werden — to agree on sth

    darüber or darin sind wir uns éínig, dass... — we are agreed that...

    wir werden schon miteinander éínig werden — we will manage to come to an agreement

    ich bin mir selbst noch nicht ganz éínig, was... — I am still somewhat undecided as to what...

    * * *
    * * *
    ei·nig
    [ˈainɪç]
    1. (geeint) united
    2. pred (einer Meinung)
    sich dat [über etw akk] \einig sein/werden to be in/reach agreement [on sth]
    sich dat [darüber [o darin]] \einig sein, dass... to be in agreement [or agreed] that...
    * * *

    sich (Dat.) einig seinbe agreed or in agreement

    sich (Dat.) einig werden — reach agreement

    mit jemandem über etwas (Akk.) einig sein — be in agreement or agree with somebody about or on something

    * * *
    einig adj
    1.
    einig sein mit be in agreement with;
    (sich) einig werden come to an agreement (
    über +akk about);
    sich nicht einig sein disagree, differ (
    über +akk on);
    die Fachwelt ist sich einig darüber, dass … the experts are agreed that …;
    man ist sich noch nicht einig darüber, was/wie etc there’s still some disagreement as to what/how etc;
    er ist sich selbst nicht einig, was er tun soll he can’t make up his mind what to do
    2. Volk etc: united
    * * *

    sich (Dat.) einig sein — be agreed or in agreement

    sich (Dat.) einig werden — reach agreement

    mit jemandem über etwas (Akk.) einig sein — be in agreement or agree with somebody about or on something

    * * *
    adj.
    a few adj.
    agreed adj.
    some adj.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > einig

  • 57 dar rienda suelta a

    figurado to give free rein to
    * * *
    * * *
    (v.) = give + free rein to, allow + vent for, give + vent to, vent
    Ex. Analysts should give free rein to their imaginations and not discount even the wildest possibility.
    Ex. In a painfully detailed letter to the editor, Lespran allowed vent for her fury.
    Ex. Although social scientists differ about the effects of pornography, there are no parallel arguments that bomb manuals on the Internet give safe vent to potential bombers.
    Ex. I don't fault the fan for venting about 40 years of losing by the Eagles.
    * * *
    (v.) = give + free rein to, allow + vent for, give + vent to, vent

    Ex: Analysts should give free rein to their imaginations and not discount even the wildest possibility.

    Ex: In a painfully detailed letter to the editor, Lespran allowed vent for her fury.
    Ex: Although social scientists differ about the effects of pornography, there are no parallel arguments that bomb manuals on the Internet give safe vent to potential bombers.
    Ex: I don't fault the fan for venting about 40 years of losing by the Eagles.

    Spanish-English dictionary > dar rienda suelta a

  • 58 de ningún modo

    in no way
    * * *
    = by no means, in no way, on no account, in no sense, by any means, not at all, under no/any circumstances, in any shape or form, for the life of me, not on any account, by no stretch of the imagination
    Ex. However, UDC is by no means always applied to this degree of detail in libraries.
    Ex. Although these categories of concepts are recognizable in UDC, they are in now way made explicit within the scheme.
    Ex. On no account should the schedules of a classification scheme be modified in order to gain some dubious advantage of this kind.
    Ex. In no sense are policies engraved in stone and unchangeable.
    Ex. This is not a complete list by any means.
    Ex. There's a big difference between returning a book late and not at all.
    Ex. Some items cannot be copied under any circumstances.
    Ex. Many librarians were literally incredulous that weeding could be considered, in any shape or form, as a timesaver; others begged to differ.
    Ex. I cannot for the life of me understand what you see in the Serb's cause that gets your panties in a bundle.
    Ex. They were given strict instructions that they were not on any account to make eye contact or speak to the star.
    Ex. However, by no stretch of the imagination are anti-depressant drugs pleasant to take for most patients.
    * * *
    = by no means, in no way, on no account, in no sense, by any means, not at all, under no/any circumstances, in any shape or form, for the life of me, not on any account, by no stretch of the imagination

    Ex: However, UDC is by no means always applied to this degree of detail in libraries.

    Ex: Although these categories of concepts are recognizable in UDC, they are in now way made explicit within the scheme.
    Ex: On no account should the schedules of a classification scheme be modified in order to gain some dubious advantage of this kind.
    Ex: In no sense are policies engraved in stone and unchangeable.
    Ex: This is not a complete list by any means.
    Ex: There's a big difference between returning a book late and not at all.
    Ex: Some items cannot be copied under any circumstances.
    Ex: Many librarians were literally incredulous that weeding could be considered, in any shape or form, as a timesaver; others begged to differ.
    Ex: I cannot for the life of me understand what you see in the Serb's cause that gets your panties in a bundle.
    Ex: They were given strict instructions that they were not on any account to make eye contact or speak to the star.
    Ex: However, by no stretch of the imagination are anti-depressant drugs pleasant to take for most patients.

    Spanish-English dictionary > de ningún modo

  • 59 en absoluto

    not at all, by no means
    * * *
    * * *
    = at all, in the slightest, whatsoever, not at all, in any shape or form
    Ex. Despite this overlap, the other side of the picture is that some materials are covered inadequately or even not at all.
    Ex. Without wishing in the slightest to discourage you, I would suggest that an academic orientation of this kind is questionable.
    Ex. I have had not experience whatsoever with academic collections.
    Ex. There's a big difference between returning a book late and not at all.
    Ex. Many librarians were literally incredulous that weeding could be considered, in any shape or form, as a timesaver; others begged to differ.
    * * *
    = at all, in the slightest, whatsoever, not at all, in any shape or form

    Ex: Despite this overlap, the other side of the picture is that some materials are covered inadequately or even not at all.

    Ex: Without wishing in the slightest to discourage you, I would suggest that an academic orientation of this kind is questionable.
    Ex: I have had not experience whatsoever with academic collections.
    Ex: There's a big difference between returning a book late and not at all.
    Ex: Many librarians were literally incredulous that weeding could be considered, in any shape or form, as a timesaver; others begged to differ.

    Spanish-English dictionary > en absoluto

  • 60 minucias

    f.pl.
    minutia, trivia, minutiae.
    * * *
    = minutiae, bits and pieces, odds and ends, bits and bobs, petty details.
    Ex. Flaws are emphasized and frequent comparisons made with similar tools, but these are often buried in a mass of minutiae.
    Ex. At the same time, indigenous knowledge has become more fragmented and specialised as scientists and humanitarians pick at the bits and pieces that fit with their interests and disciplines.
    Ex. Ephemeral jobs are likely to have been printed on such odds and ends of paper -- remnants and the like -- as were available in the warehouse.
    Ex. There she found a plastic sleeve with all sorts of invoices in it and other bits and bobs.
    Ex. We all share the same wants and needs, only the petty details differ.
    * * *
    = minutiae, bits and pieces, odds and ends, bits and bobs, petty details.

    Ex: Flaws are emphasized and frequent comparisons made with similar tools, but these are often buried in a mass of minutiae.

    Ex: At the same time, indigenous knowledge has become more fragmented and specialised as scientists and humanitarians pick at the bits and pieces that fit with their interests and disciplines.
    Ex: Ephemeral jobs are likely to have been printed on such odds and ends of paper -- remnants and the like -- as were available in the warehouse.
    Ex: There she found a plastic sleeve with all sorts of invoices in it and other bits and bobs.
    Ex: We all share the same wants and needs, only the petty details differ.

    Spanish-English dictionary > minucias

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