Перевод: со всех языков на все языки

со всех языков на все языки

they+need+one+another

  • 81 NJÓTA

    * * *
    (nýt; naut, nutum; notit), v.
    1) to have the use or benefit of, to enjoy (þú skalt njóta kvikfjár þíns ok verða í brottu frá Helgafelli); skal hann njóta draums síns, he shall have his dream out; njót þú heill handa, good luck go with your hands;
    2) to derive benefit from, profit by; Egils nauztu at því, föður þíns, you had your father Egil to thank for that; lítt lætr þú mik njóta frændsemi frá þér, you let me have little profit of kinship with you; nauzt þú nú þess, at ek var eigi við búinn, it was your good fortune that I was not ready for you; njóta e-s við, to receive help at one’s hands; mun ek yðvar verða við at njóta, I shall have need of your help; njóta af e-u, to consume (naut vóru œrin, nutum af stórum);
    3) impers., ekki nýtr sólar, there is no sun; naut at því mest hans forellris, at, it was chiefly due to his forefathers that; þess naut mjök við í Þrándheimi ( it helped greatly), at menn áttu þar mikil forn korn;
    4) recipr., njótast, to enjoy each other (Þorveig seiddi til þess, at þau skyldi eigi njóta mega).
    * * *
    pres. nýt; pret. naut, nauzt, naut, pl. nutu; subj. nyti; imperat. njót: [Ulf. niûtan and ga-niutan = ἀγρεύεν, συλλαμβάνειν, but also = ὀνίνασθαι, Philem. 20; as also nuta = ἁλιεύς, ὁ ζωγρων; it may be that net, nót (= a net) are derived from the same root, and that the primitive sense of this word was to catch, hunt, whence metaph. to use, enjoy; A. S. niotan; O. H. G. niozan; Germ. nützen, geniessen; Dan. nyde.]
    B. To use, enjoy, with gen.; neyta eðr njóta vættis, Nj. 238, Grág. ii. 79; njóta yndis, Vsp. 63; ættir jóku, aldrs nutu, Rm. 37, Fs. 39; vel keypts litar hefi ek vel notið, Hm. 107; nýtr manngi nás, 70; knáka ek þess njóta, Am. 52; njóta Guðs miskunnar, Hom. 43, O. H. L. 88; skal hann n. draums síns, he shall enjoy his dream undisturbed, Nj. 94; ef hann hefði eigi notið hans ráða ok vizku, Fb. ii. 80; njóti sá er nam, Hm. 165; njóttú ef þú namt, Sdm.; niout kubls! see kuml; njóttú heill handa, blessed be thy hands! an exclamation, Nj. 60, Gísl. 87; svá njóta ek trú minnar, at …, upon my faith! upon my word! Edda i. 130.
    II. to derive benefit from or through the virtue of another person; Sigríðr. kona þin, er þess van at þit njótið hennar bæði nú ok síðarr, Fms. ii. 18; naut hann drottningar at því, v. 348; Egils nauztú at því föður þíns, Ísl. ii. 215; at hann mundi njóta föður sins en gjalda, Gísl. 73; heldr geldr Leifr Þrándar en nýtr frá mér, Fms. ii. 116 (see gjalda II. 2):—to get advantage from, nauztú nú þess (it saved thee, helped thee) at ek var eigi við búinn, Nj. 58; vér skulum þess n. at vér erum fleiri, 64; n. liðsmunar, to avail oneself of one’s greater strength:—n. e-s við, to receive help at one’s hands; fyrir löngu værir þú af lífi tekinn ef eigi nytir þú vár við, Fb. ii. 130; því at þér nutuð mín við, Ó. H. 136; mun ek yðar þurfa við at n. ef ek fæ rétt af, Nj. 6:—n. af e-u, to consume; naut vóru ærin nutum af stórum, Am. 92.
    2. impers., þess naut mjök við í Þrándheimi ( it availed much) at menn áttu þar mikil forn korn, Ó. H. 102; naut at því mest forellris, Fms. viii. 11: in the phrase, það nýtr sólar, the sun is seen; ekki nýtr þar sólar, there is little sun, Edda 40.
    III. recipr. to enjoy one another; Þorveig seiddi til þess at þau skyldi eigi njótask mega, Korm. 54; þó höfum vit bæði breytni til þess at vit mættim njótask, Nj. 13; ok þótti fýsiligt at þau nytisk, that they should marry, O. T. 32.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > NJÓTA

  • 82 بادل

    بَادَلَ \ change: to take or put one thing in place of another: Will you change places with me?. exchange: to give sth. and receive sth. else in return: We exchanged addresses. People exchange money for the goods that they need. reciprocate: to give or feel in return: She gave me a birthday gift, so I ought to reciprocate (by giving one to her). I don’t like him, and he reciprocates my dislike. swap: to give (one thing) and receive (another) in return: Schoolboys swap foreign stamps. I swapped my radio for her leather bag.

    Arabic-English dictionary > بادل

  • 83 change

    بَادَلَ \ change: to take or put one thing in place of another: Will you change places with me?. exchange: to give sth. and receive sth. else in return: We exchanged addresses. People exchange money for the goods that they need. reciprocate: to give or feel in return: She gave me a birthday gift, so I ought to reciprocate (by giving one to her). I don’t like him, and he reciprocates my dislike. swap: to give (one thing) and receive (another) in return: Schoolboys swap foreign stamps. I swapped my radio for her leather bag.

    Arabic-English glossary > change

  • 84 exchange

    بَادَلَ \ change: to take or put one thing in place of another: Will you change places with me?. exchange: to give sth. and receive sth. else in return: We exchanged addresses. People exchange money for the goods that they need. reciprocate: to give or feel in return: She gave me a birthday gift, so I ought to reciprocate (by giving one to her). I don’t like him, and he reciprocates my dislike. swap: to give (one thing) and receive (another) in return: Schoolboys swap foreign stamps. I swapped my radio for her leather bag.

    Arabic-English glossary > exchange

  • 85 reciprocate

    بَادَلَ \ change: to take or put one thing in place of another: Will you change places with me?. exchange: to give sth. and receive sth. else in return: We exchanged addresses. People exchange money for the goods that they need. reciprocate: to give or feel in return: She gave me a birthday gift, so I ought to reciprocate (by giving one to her). I don’t like him, and he reciprocates my dislike. swap: to give (one thing) and receive (another) in return: Schoolboys swap foreign stamps. I swapped my radio for her leather bag.

    Arabic-English glossary > reciprocate

  • 86 swap

    بَادَلَ \ change: to take or put one thing in place of another: Will you change places with me?. exchange: to give sth. and receive sth. else in return: We exchanged addresses. People exchange money for the goods that they need. reciprocate: to give or feel in return: She gave me a birthday gift, so I ought to reciprocate (by giving one to her). I don’t like him, and he reciprocates my dislike. swap: to give (one thing) and receive (another) in return: Schoolboys swap foreign stamps. I swapped my radio for her leather bag.

    Arabic-English glossary > swap

  • 87 διακονέω

    διακονέω (s. two next entries) impf. διηκόνουν; fut. διακονήσω; 1 aor. διηκόνησα; pf. inf. δεδιηκονηκέναι (AssMos Fgm. k, Denis p. 67); aor. pass. διηκονήθην, for augm. s. B-D-F §69, 4; W-S. §12, 6; Mlt-H. 192 (Soph., Hdt. et al.; rare in ins, pap; never in LXX, but in Philo, Joseph.) gener. to render service in a variety of ways either at someone’s behest or voluntarily and freq. with suggestion of movement.
    to function as an intermediary, act as go-between/agent, be at one’s service w. intermediary function either expressed or implied (lead tablet Sb 4947, 2 διακόνησόν μοι; in lover’s petition ‘serve as intermediary [medium] for me’ PWarr 21, 4; 8; Lucian, Cont. 1 of Hermes as messenger for Zeus; Theophr. Char. 2, 9 fetch things; Just., D. 79, 2; cp. the role of Repentance JosAs 15:7) w. dat. of pers. and acc. of thing οὐχ ἑαυτοῖς ὑμῖν δὲ διηκόνουν αὐτά they were not acting as agents in their own behalf but for yours in the things 1 Pt 1:12 (for a service consisting in the delivery of a message cp. Jos., Ant. 6, 298). For a similar contrast, and with suggestion of an intermediary’s mission: οὐκ ἦλθεν διακονηθῆναι ἀλλὰ διακονῆσαι came not to be served, but to serve Mt 20:28; Mk 10:45 (i.e. the Human One [Son of Man] came to carry out an assignment not to benefit himself but others [by giving his life in ransom]; cp. Mt 4:11; par. Mk 1:13 [service rendered by divine messengers]). Of Jesus carrying out his mission [ἀ]νῆλθε[ν δια]κονῶν AcPl BMM verso 13f.— Phlm 13 suggests that Onesimus can be used by Paul on assignment in behalf of the gospel. πορεύομαι … διακονῶν τοῖς ἁγίοις on an errand to God’s people (REB) Ro 15:25 (s. 3).—Of delivery of an object: χάρις διακονουμένη ὑφʼ ἡμῶν gift that we are transmitting (a ref. to the collection for whose delivery they have accepted responsibility) 2 Cor 8:19; cp. vs. 20. In imagery, ἐπιστολὴ Χριστοῦ διακονηθεῖσα ὑφʼ ἡμῶν a letter of Christ, delivered by us 2 Cor 3:3 (WBaird, Letters of Recommendation: JBL 80, ’61, 190).
    to perform obligations, without focus on intermediary function
    of unspecified services perform duties, render assistance, serve τινί someone (Demosth. 9, 43; UPZ 18, 23 [163 B.C.]; δαίμοσι δ. Orig., C. Cels. 2, 51, 38) Mt 8:15; Mk 1:31; Lk 4:39; GJs 6:3; διακονοῦσαι αὐτῷ being at his service Mt 27:55; cp. Mk 15:41. διακόνει μοι serve me Hs 8, 4, 1, cp. 2; J 12:26; Ac 19:22. Also εἰς ἑαυτοὺς αὐτὸ δ. serve one another w. it 1 Pt 4:10. W. acc. of thing ὅσα διηκόνησεν what services he rendered 2 Ti 1:18; cp. Hs 2:10. Abs. (POxy 275, 10 [I A.D.]) 1 Pt 4:11. Pass. (Jos., Ant. 10, 242); ἁπλῶς δ. complete a service in simplicity of heart Hm 2:6.
    of attention at meals wait on someone (τινί) at table (Menand., Fgm. 272; Pyrgion [Hellenistic times]: 467 Fgm. 1 Jac. [a communal meal in Crete]; Diod S 4, 36, 2; 5, 28, 4; Philo, Vi. Cont. 70; TestJob 12:1 al.; Jos., Ant. 11, 163; 166) Lk 12:37; 17:8. Abs. 10:40; J 12:2; GJs 6:3. In imagery ὡς ὁ διακονῶν waiter Lk 22:26f.
    to meet an immediate need, help w. dat. (Iren. 1, pr. 3 [Harv. I 7, 1]) πότε οὐ διηκονήσαμέν σοι; when did we not help you? Mt 25:44 (but s. 4, Collins). ἐκ τῶν ὑπαρχόντων helped to support them w. their means Lk 8:3 (KTorjesen, When Women Were Priests ’93, 53ff); the saints Ro 15:25 (JO’Rourke, CBQ 29, ’67, 116–18; but s. 1); Hb 6:10.
    to carry out official duties, minister, in cultic context (of holy service at the altar Jos., Ant. 3, 155; cp. PGM 36, 304 and 335 παρὰ θεοῖς δ.) of διάκονοι 1 Ti 3:10; καλῶς δ. vs. 13. ἀγνῶς καὶ σεμνῶς Hv 3, 5, 1. Opp. κακῶς Hs 9, 26, 2. Collins (s. below) p. 65 argues for placement of Mt 25:44 in this classification: those consigned to perdition plead their total dedication to the Lord’s interests.
    Ac 6:2 poses a special problem: care for, take care of w. dat. of thing τραπέζαις look after tables can be understood of serving food at tables (cp. βούλομαι … διακονῆσαι τοῖς πτωχοῖς σήμερον ἐν τῇ σῇ τραπέζῃ TestJob 12:1), but it is improbable that some widows would be deprived of food at a communal meal. The term διακονία vs. 1 more probably refers to administrative responsibility (s. διακονία 5), one of whose aspects is concern for widows without specifying the kind of assistance that is allotted. Vs. 2 may contain wordplay involving the phrase τὸν λόγον τοῦ θεοῦ, w. λόγος designating a ledger entry, in which case τράπεζα, which is also a banker’s term (s. L-S-J-M s.v. II), may here denote accounts (s. τράπεζα 1c).—WBrandt, Dienst u. Dienen im NT ’31; ESchweizer, D. Leben des Herrn in d. Gemeinde u. ihren Diensten ’46; PBoulton, Διακονέω and Its Cognates in the 4 Gospels: TU 73, ’59, 415–22. JCollins, Diakonia ’90.—DELG s.v. διάκονος. M-M. TW.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > διακονέω

  • 88 πρός

    πρός prep. expressing direction ‘on the side of’, ‘in the direction of’: w. gen. ‘from’, dat. ‘at’, or acc. (the most freq. usage in our lit.) ‘to’ (s. the lit. s.v. ἀνά. beg.) (Hom.+).
    w. gen. (pseudepigr. only TestSol 10:4 C; apolog. exc. Ar.) marker of direction or aspect from which someth. is determined, to the advantage of, advantageous for (Thu. 3, 59, 1 οὐ πρὸς τῆς ὑμετέρας δόξης τάδε; Hdt. 1, 75; Dionys. Hal. 10, 30, 5; Diod S 18, 50, 5; Lucian, Dial. Deor. 20, 3; Mel., HE 4, 26, 8; Ath. 36, 1; B-D-F §240; Rob. 623f) οἱ πρ. ζωῆς μαζοί the life-giving breasts 1 Cl 20:10. πρ. τῆς σωτηρίας in the interest of safety Ac 27:34 (πρὸς τῆς ς. as Jos., Ant. 16, 313).
    w. dat. (pesudepigr. only TestSol 6:4 D; TestAbr [s. below]; JosAs 19:1.—Just.; Mel., HE 4, 26, 7; Ath., R. 22 p. 75, 10) marker of closeness of relation or proximity
    of place near, at, by (Hom. et al. incl. Aristarch. Samos 398, 20; LXX; TestSol 6:4 D; Jos., Ant 8, 349; 381) Mk 5:11; around Rv 1:13. πρ. τῇ θύρᾳ ἑστηκέναι stand at the door (Menand., Fgm. 420, 1; 830 K.=352, 1; 644 Kö.; JosAs 19:1) J 18:16; cp. 20:11. πρὸς τῇ πύλῃ GJs 4:4; ἐγγίζοντος αὐτοῦ πρ. τῇ καταβάσει τοῦ ὄρους when he came close to the slope of the mountain Lk 19:37 (s. κατάβασις). πρ. τῇ κεφαλῇ, τοῖς ποσίν at the head, at the feet J 20:12. τὰ πρ. ταῖς ῥίζαις the parts near the roots Hs 9, 1, 6; 9, 21, 1. In geographical designations Μαγνησία ἡ πρ. Μαιάνδρῳ Magnesia on the Maeander IMagnMai ins.—(Cp. the temporal use: πρὸς ἑσπέρᾳ ἐστίν it takes place at evening TestAbr B 2 p. 106, 7 [Stone p. 60]; cp. Just., D. 105, 3 and 5; 142, 1.)
    in addition to (Hom. et al.; Polyb., Just.; Mel., HE 4, 26, 7; Ath., R. 22 p. 75, 10; ins) πρὸς τούτοις (SIG 495, 105; 685, 70 and 100; 796 B, 30; 888, 35 al.; UPZ 26, 18; 25 [163 B.C.]; 2 Macc 4:9; 5:23; 9:17, 25; 14:4, esp. 12:2; Philo, Aet. M. 67 al.; Just., A I, 40, 5; D. 93, 4 al.) 1 Cl 17:1.
    w. acc. (pseudepigr. and apolog. throughout) marker of movement or orientation toward someone/someth.
    of place, pers., or thing toward, towards, to, after verbs
    α. of going; s. ἄγω 5, ἀναβαίνω 1aα, ἀνακάμπτω 1a, ἀπέρχομαι 1b, διαβαίνω, διαπεράω, εἴσειμι, εἰσέρχομαι 1bα, ἐκπορεύομαι 1c, also ἐπισυνάγομαι Mk 1:33, ἔρχομαι 1aβ, ἥκω 1d et al.—προσαγωγὴ πρὸς τὸν πατέρα Eph 2:18. εἴσοδος 1 Th 1:9a.
    β. of sending; s. ἀναπέμπω Lk 23:7, 15; Ac 25:21, ἀποστέλλω 1bα, πέμπω.
    γ. of motion gener.; s. βληθῆναι (βάλλω 1b), ἐπιστρέφω 1a, 4ab, κεῖμαι 2, πίπτω 1bαא and ב, προσκολλάω, προσκόπτω 1, προσπίπτω.
    δ. of leading, guiding; s. ἄγω 1a, ἀπάγω 2a and 4, also ἕλκω 2 end J 12:32, κατασύρω, etc.
    ε. of saying, speaking; s. ἀποκρίνομαι 1, also δημηγορέω Ac 12:21, εἶπον 1a, λαλέω 2aγ and 2b, λέγω 1bγ et al. Hebraistically λαλεῖν στόμα πρὸς στόμα speak face to face (Jer 39:4; ApcEsdr 6:6 p. 31, 10 Tdf.) 2J 12b; 3J 14 (cp. PGM 1, 39 τὸ στόμα πρὸς τὸ στόμα). πρὸς ἀλλήλους to one another, with each other, among themselves: s. ἀντιβάλλω, διαλαλέω, also διαλέγομαι Mk 9:34, διαλογίζομαι 8:16; Lk 20:14, εἶπον 24:32; J 16:17; 19:24, λαλέω, λέγω et al. πρὸς ἑαυτούς to themselves, to each other: s. διαλογίζομαι 1; εἶπον Mk 12:7; J 7:35; λέγω (Ps.-Callisth. 2, 15, 7 πρὸς ἑαυτὸν ἔλεγεν; Just., D. 62, 2) Mk 10:26; 16:3. διαθήκην ὁ θεὸς διέθετο πρὸς τοὺς πατέρας ὑμῶν, λέγων πρὸς Ἀβραάμ God made a covenant with your fathers, when he said to Abraham Ac 3:25 (διατίθημι 1). ὅρκον ὀμνύναι πρ. τινα (ὀμνύω, end) Lk 1:73.
    ζ. of asking, praying δέομαι Ac 8:24. εὔχομαι (s. εὔχομαι 1; cp. 2 Macc 9:13) 2 Cor 13:7. προσεύχομαι (cp. 1 Km 12:19; 2 Esdr 12: 4; 2 Macc 2:10) Hv 1, 1, 9. γνωρίζεσθαι πρὸς τὸν θεόν Phil 4:6 (γνωρίζω 1).—Also after nouns like δέησις, λόγος et al. Ro 10:1; 15:30; 2 Cor 1:18 al.
    of time near, at, or during (a certain time)
    α. denoting approach toward (X., Pla. et al.) πρὸς ἑσπέραν toward evening Lk 24:29 (so Just., D. 97, 1; s. ἑσπέρα).
    β. of temporal duration for πρὸς καιρόν for a time, for a while (καιρός 1a) Lk 8:13; 1 Cor 7:5. πρὸς καιρὸν ὥρας (καιρός 1a) 1 Th 2:17. πρὸς ὥραν for an hour, i.e. for a short time J 5:35; 2 Cor 7:8; Gal 2:5a; Phlm 15; MPol 11:2. πρὸς ὀλίγας ἡμέρας Hb 12:10. Also πρὸς ὀλίγον Js 4:14; GJs 19:2 (ὀλίγος 3). πρὸς τὸ παρόν for the present Hb 12:11 (πάρειμι 1b).
    α. with conscious purpose for, for the purpose of, on behalf of οὗτος ἦν ὁ πρὸς τὴν ἐλεημοσύνην καθήμενος this was the one who sat (and begged) for alms Ac 3:10. πρὸς τὴν ἔνδειξιν τῆς δικαιοσύνης αὐτοῦ Ro 3:26. τοῦτο πρὸς τὸ ὑμῶν αὐτῶν σύμφορον λέγω 1 Cor 7:35a; cp. 35b. ἐγράφη πρὸς νουθεσίαν ἡμῶν 10:11. Cp. Ro 15:2; 1 Cor 6:5; 2 Cor 4:6; 7:3; 11:8; Eph 4:12.—W. acc. of the inf. (Polyb. 1, 48, 5; PRyl 69, 16; BGU 226, 22; Jer 34:10; 2 Macc 4:45; TestJob 45:4; Jos., Ant. 14, 170; 15, 148 al.; Just., D. 132, 1) πρὸς τὸ θεαθῆναι τοῖς ἀνθρώποις in order to be seen by men Mt 23:5; cp. 6:1. πρὸς τὸ κατακαῦσαι αὐτά 13:30. πρὸς τὸ ἐνταφιάσαι με 26:12. πρὸς τὸ ἀποπλανᾶν εἰ δυνατὸν τοὺς ἐκλεκτούς Mk 13:22. πρὸς τὸ μὴ ἀτενίσαι υἱοὺς Ἰσραήλ 2 Cor 3:13. Cp. Eph 6:11a; 1 Th 2:9; 2 Th 3:8; Js 3:3 v.l.
    β. gener. of design, destiny (Demetr.[?]: 722 Fgm. 7 Jac. πρὸς τὴν κάρπωσιν; TestJob 42:7 τὰ πρὸς θυσίαν; Jos., Bell. 4, 573 τὸ πρ. σωτηρίαν φάρμακον) τῷ θεῷ πρὸς δόξαν for the glory of God 2 Cor 1:20 (on πρὸς δόξαν cp. SIG 456, 15; 704e, 21; 3 Macc 2:9; Just., A I, 15, 10 μηδὲν πρὸς δόξαν ποιεῖν). τῇ πυρώσει πρὸς πειρασμὸν ὑμῖν γινομένῃ 1 Pt 4:12.—After adjectives and participles for ἀγαθὸς πρὸς οἰκοδομήν Eph 4:29 (ἀγ. 1a) ἀδόκιμος Tit 1:16. ἀνεύθετος πρὸς παραχειμασίαν Ac 27:12. γεγυμνασμένος Hb 5:14. δυνατός 2 Cor 10:4. ἐξηρτισμένος 2 Ti 3:17. ἕτοιμος (q.v. b) Tit 3:1; 1 Pt 3:15. ἱκανός (q.v. 2) 2 Cor 2:16. ὠφέλιμος 1 Ti 4:8ab; 2 Ti 3:16.
    γ. of the result that follows a set of circumstances (so that) πάντα πρὸς οἰκοδομὴν γινέσθω everything is to be done in such a way that it contributes to edification 1 Cor 14:26; cp. vs. 12; Col 2:23 (but see eδ below); 1 Ti 4:7. ὁ βλέπων γυναῖκα πρὸς τὸ ἐπιθυμῆσαι αὐτήν one who looks at a woman with sinful desire Mt 5:28, but s. eε below. λευκαί εἰσιν πρὸς θερισμόν they (the fields) are white, so that the harvest may begin J 4:35. αὕτη ἡ ἀσθένεια οὐκ ἔστιν πρὸς θάνατον this disease is not of the kind that will lead to death 11:4. Cp. ἁμαρτία πρὸς θάνατον 1J 5:16f.
    of relationship (hostile or friendly), against, for
    α. hostile against, with after verbs of disputing, etc.; s. ἀνταγωνίζομαι, γογγύζω, διακρίνομαι (διακρίνω 5b), διαλέγομαι 1, πικραίνομαι (πικραίνω 2), στασιάζω, ἔστην (ἵστημι B3). ἐστίν τινι ἡ πάλη πρός Eph 6:12. ἔχειν τι πρός τινα have anything (to bring up) against someone Ac 24:19. μομφὴν ἔχειν πρός τινα Col 3:13. πρᾶγμα ἔχειν πρός τινα 1 Cor 6:1 (πρᾶγμα 4). ἐγένετο γογγυσμὸς τῶν Ἑλληνιστῶν πρὸς τοὺς Ἑβραίους Ac 6:1. τὸ στόμα ἡμῶν ἀνέῳγεν πρὸς ὑμᾶς 2 Cor 6:11 (ἀνοίγω 7). ἐν ἔχθρᾳ ὄντες πρὸς αὐτούς Lk 23:12. βλασφημίαι πρὸς τὸν θεόν Rv 13:6 (cp. TestJob 25:10 εἰπὲ ἓν ῥῆμα πρὸς τὸν θεόν). ἀσύμφωνοι πρ. ἀλλήλους unable to agree among themselves Ac 28:25 (Tat. 25, 2); cp. the structure of Col 2:23.
    β. friendly to, toward, with, before ἐργάζεσθαι τὸ ἀγαθόν Gal 6:10ab (ἐργάζομαι 2a). μακροθυμεῖν 1 Th 5:14. εἰρήνην ἔχειν πρὸ τὸν θεόν Ro 5:1 (s. εἰρήνη 2b). παρρησίαν ἔχειν πρὸς τ. θεόν 1J 3:21; cp. 5:14. πίστιν ἔχειν πρὸς τ. κύριον Ἰ. Phlm 5. πεποίθησιν ἔχειν πρὸς τ. θεόν 2 Cor 3:4. ἔχειν χάριν πρὸς ὅλον τὸν λαόν Ac 2:47 (FCheetham, ET 74, ’63, 214f). πραΰτητα ἐνδείκνυσθαι Tit 3:2. ἐν σοφίᾳ περιπατεῖν Col 4:5. ἤπιον εἶναι πρὸς πάντας 2 Ti 2:24.—After substantives: πίστις 1 Th 1:8 (cp. 4 Macc 15:24; Just., D. 121, 2); παρρησία 2 Cor 7:4; κοινωνία 6:14; συμφώνησις vs. 15 (cp. Is 7:2).
    to indicate a connection by marking a point of reference, with reference/regard to
    α. with reference to (Ocellus Luc. c. 42 πρὸς ἡμᾶς=with reference to us) ἔγνωσαν ὅτι πρὸς αὐτοὺς τὴν παραβολὴν εἶπεν they recognized that he had spoken the parable with reference to them Mk 12:12; Lk 20:19; cp. 12:41 (Vita Aesopi cod. G 98 P. οἱ Σάμιοι νοήσαντες πρὸς ἑαυτοὺς εἰρῆσθαι τοὺς λόγους; Just., D. 122, 3 ταῦτα … πρὸς τὸν χριστὸν … εἴρηται). ἔλεγεν παραβολὴν πρὸς τὸ δεῖν προσεύχεσθαι he told them a parable about the need of praying 18:1 (Just., D. 90, 5 σύμβολον … πρὸς τὸν χριστόν). οὐδεὶς ἔγνω πρὸς τί εἶπεν αὐτῷ nobody understood with respect to what (= why) he said (this) to him J 13:28. πρὸς τὴν σκληροκαρδίαν ὑμῶν with reference to (i.e. because of) your perversity Mt 19:8; Mk 10:5 (Just., D. 45, 3). Cp. Ro 10:21a; Hb 1:7f. οὐκ ἀπεκρίθη αὐτῷ πρὸς οὐδὲ ἓν ῥῆμα he did not answer him a single word with reference to anything Mt 27:14 (s. ἀποκρίνομαι 1). ἀνταποκριθῆναι πρὸς ταῦτα Lk 14:6 (s. ἀνταποκρίνομαι). ἀπρόσκοπον συνείδησιν ἔχειν πρὸς τὸν θεόν have a clear conscience with respect to God Ac 24:16.
    β. as far as … is concerned, with regard to (Maximus Tyr. 31, 3b) πρὸς τὴν πληροφορίαν τῆς ἐλπίδος Hb 6:11. συνιστάνοντες ἑαυτοὺς πρὸς πᾶσαν συνείδησιν ἀνθρώπων we are recommending ourselves as far as every human conscience is concerned = to every human conscience (πρός w. acc. also stands simply for the dative; s. Mayser II/2 p. 359) 2 Cor 4:2. τὰ πρὸς τὸν θεόν that which concerns God or as adverbial acc. with reference to what concerns God (Soph., Phil. 1441; X., De Rep. Lac. 13, 11; Ps.-Isocr. 1, 13 εὐσεβεῖν τὰ πρὸς τ. θεούς; SIG 204, 51f; 306, 38; Mitt-Wilck. I/2, 109, 3 εὐσεβὴς τὰ πρὸς θεούς; Ex 4:16; 18:19; Jos., Ant. 9, 236) Ro 15:17; Hb 2:17; 5:1. τὰ πρός τι that which belongs to someth.; that which is necessary for someth. (Plut., Mor. 109b; Jos., Ant. 12, 405 τὰ πρὸς τὴν μάχην; 14, 27; a standard term in state documents) τὰ πρὸς ἀπαρτισμόν Lk 14:28 v.l. τὰ πρὸς εἰρήνην (TestJud 9) vs. 32; what makes for peace 19:42. Cp. Ac 28:10; 2 Pt 1:3.
    γ. elliptically τί πρὸς ἡμᾶς (sc. ἐστιν); what is that to us? Mt 27:4. τί πρὸς σέ; how does it concern you? J 21:22f (cp. Epict. 4, 1, 10 τί τοῦτο πρὸς σέ; Plut., Mor. 986b; Vi. Aesopi I 14 p. 265, 4 Eberh. τί πρὸς ἐμέ; ApcMos 11 οὐ πρὸς ἡμᾶς ἡ πλεονεξία σου).
    δ. in accordance with ὀρθοποδεῖν πρὸς τὴν ἀλήθειαν Gal 2:14. πρὸς τὸ κένωμα in accordance with the emptiness Hm 11:3. πρὸς τὸ θέλημα in accordance w. the will Lk 12:47; Hs 9, 5, 2. πρὸς ἃ ἔπραξεν 2 Cor 5:10. πρὸς ὅ Eph 3:4.In comparison with, to be compared to (Pind., Hdt. et al.; Ps.-Luc., Halc. 3 πρὸς τὸν πάντα αἰῶνα=[life is short] in comparison to all eternity; Sir 25:19; TestJob 18:8; 23:8; Just., D. 19, 2 οὐδὲν … πρὸς τὸ βάπτισμα τοῦτο τὸ τῆς ζωῆς ἐστι; Tat. 29, 1 ὀρθοποδεῖν πρὸς τὴν ἀλήθειαν) ἄξια πρός Ro 8:18 (RLeaney, ET 64, ’52f; 92 interprets Col 2:23 in the light of this usage). Cp. IMg 12.
    ε. expressing purpose πρὸς τό w. inf. (s. Mayser II/1 p. 331f) in order to, for the purpose of Mk 13:22; Ac 3:19 v.l. Perh. Mt 5:28 (s. cγ above).
    in adverbial expressions (cp. πρὸς ὀργήν = ὀργίλως Soph., Elect. 369; Jos., Bell. 2, 534. πρὸς βίαν = βιαίως Aeschyl., Prom. 208, 353, Eum. 5; Menand., Sam. 559 S. [214 Kö.]; Philo, Spec. Leg. 3, 3. πρὸς ἡδονήν Jos., Ant. 7, 195; 12, 398; Just., A II, 3, 2 πρὸς χάριν καὶ ἡδονὴν τῶν πολλῶν) πρὸς φθόνον prob.=φθονερῶς jealously Js 4:5 (s. φθόνος, where the lit. is given). πρὸς εὐφρασίαν w. joy AcPl Ox 6, 9f (cp. Aa 1 p. 241, 1 ὑπερευφραινομένη).
    by, at, near πρός τινα εἶναι be (in company) with someone Mt 13:56; Mk 6:3; 9:19a; 14:49; Lk 9:41; J 1:1f; 1 Th 3:4; 2 Th 2:5; 3:10; 1J 1:2. διαμένειν Ac 10:48 D; Gal 2:5b. ἐπιμένειν 1:18; 1 Cor 16:7. παραμένειν 16:6 (v.l. κατα-). μένειν Ac 18:3 D. παρεῖναι 12:20; 2 Cor 11:9; Gal 4:18, 20; cp. παρουσία πρὸς ὑμᾶς Phil 1:26. παρεπιδημεῖν 1 Cl 1:2. ἐποίησεν τρεῖς μῆνας πρὸς τὴν Ἐλισάβεδ GJs 12:3. πρὸς σὲ ποιῶ τὸ πάσχα Mt 26:18b. Cp. also 2 Cor 1:12; 7:12; 12:21; 2 Th 3:1; Phlm 13; 1J 2:1; Hm 11:9b v.l.—πρὸς ἑαυτούς among or to themselves Mk 9:10 (in case πρὸς ἑ. belongs w. τὸν λόγον ἐκράτησαν; B-D-F §239, 1). πρὸς ἑαυτὸν προσηύχετο he uttered a prayer to himself Lk 18:11. Cp. 24:12.—δεδεμένον πρὸς θύραν tied at a door Mk 11:4. τὴν πᾶσαν σάρκα ἀνθρώπων πρὸς ἡδονὴν ἐδέσμευεν (Satan) bound all humankind to self-gratification AcPlCor 2:11. πρὸς τ. θάλασσαν by the seaside Mk 4:1b. On πρὸς τὸ φῶς at the fire Mk 14:54; Lk 22:56 s. B-D-F §239, 3; Rob. 625 (perh. w. the idea of turning toward the fire; s. also 4 Km 23:3). πρὸς ἓν τῶν ὀρέων at one of the mountains 1 Cl 10:7. τὰ πρὸς τὴν θύραν the place near the door Mk 2:2. πρὸς γράμμα letter by letter Hv 2, 1, 4.—On πρός τι terms s. PWouters, The Treatment of Relational Nouns in Ancient Grammar: Orbis 38, ’95, 149–78 (lit.). M-M. EDNT. TW. Sv.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > πρός

  • 89 omen

    iz.
    1. ( fama, entzute) fame, renown; \omen handiko famed, fabled, celebrated
    2.
    a. reputation, name; \omen ederrekoa da he's got a good {reputation || name}; \omen txarra du herri honetan he's got a bad name for himself in this town | he's got a bad reputation in this town ; \omena galdu to become discredited | to lose one's good name
    b. \omenez jakin dut I heard it on the grapevine| I heard tell about it
    3. -(r)i \omen egin pay homage to part.
    1. it is said that... | they say that..., reportedly, alledgedly; Jack-ek hiria ongi ezagutzen \omen du Jack is said to know the city well | they say Jack knows the city well ; alde ederra \omen dago, dakitenek diotenez, batetik bestera it is said, by those in the know, that they differ greatly from one another; ezin \omen du jarraitu he is said not to be able to carry on
    2. ( aditza ezabaturik) munduan ez \omen halakorik there's said to be nothing like it in the world; bururik ez duenak txapel beharrik, ez \omen he who has no head is said to have no need of a beret
    3. (I) ( esaldiaren buruan) gero hau erran zion \omen Ama Birjinak Bernadetteri: eliza bat nahi dut hemen then Our Lady reportedly told Bernadette this: I would like a church here

    Euskara Ingelesa hiztegiaren > omen

  • 90 объединяться

    гл.
    Русский возвратный непереходный глагол объединяться обозначает любой вид объединения людей, не конкретизируя ни цели, ни способа объединения. Его английские эквиваленты наоборот содержат в своей семантике указания на то, кто объединяется, с какой целью, каков характер самого объединения.
    1. to combine — объединяться, соединяться, сочетаться: The opposition parties combined to drive the President out of office. — Оппозиционные партии объединились, чтобы добиться отставки президента. Members of the police and the army combined to keep the true details of the case from becoming public. — Полиция и армия действовали воедино, чтобы детали этого дела никогда не стали достоянием гласпости./Полиция и армия объединились, чтобы детали этого дела никогда не стали известными. Oil and water do not combine. — Масло и вода не смешиваются.
    2. to unite — объединяться (с другими людьми, организациями, странами для достижения поставленной цели): Не called on Western countries to unite to save the people of that country from starvation. — Он призвал западные страны объединиться, чтобы спасти народ той страны от голода./Он призвал западные страны к объединению для спасения народа той страны от голода. The forces of all panics should unite to support the extension of the social welfare program instead of fighting each other all the time. — Все партии должны объединить свои силы для расширения программы общественного благосостояния, а не вести борьбу между собой. They were able to unite against the common enemy. — Им удалось объединиться в борьбе против общего врага. Unless we unite we will never be able to defend our rights against the employers. — Мы никогда не сумеем постоять за себя в борьбе с работодателями, если мы не объединимся./Мы никогда не сумеем защитить спои права в борьбе с работодателями, пока не объединимся. In his speech the prime minister stressed the need for parties to unite. — В своей речи премьер-министр подчеркнул, что партиям необходимо обьединиться.
    3. to rally — объединяться, сплачиваться ( в защиту или поддержку кого-либо или чего-либо): Supporters have been quick to rally behind the team. — Болельщики быстро объединились в поддержку своей команды. Parents rallied to the defence of the school. — Родители объединились и nui гупили в защиту школы. Animal rights groups have rallied to the cause of this endangered species. — Разные группы борцов за права животных сплотились для защиты ною вида, находящегося на грани уничтожения. The people rallied in the face of real danger. — Народ сплотился перед липом реальной угрозы.
    4. to merge — объединяться, сливаться (как правило, об органазациях или компаниях, подчеркивается, что в результате появляется новое качество или новый объект): The two banks have announced plans to merge next year. — Оба банка объявили о своем намерении объединиться в будущем году. The Liberal Democratic Party has merged with the Social Democrats. Либеральнодемократическая партия слилась с социал-демократами./ Либеральнодемократическая и социал-демократическая партии слились в одну. II was the place where the two rivers used to merge. — Это было то место, где некогда сливались эти две реки. The hills merged into the dark sky behind them. — Горы сливались с темным небом за ними. For me life and work merge into one another. — Для меня работа и жизнь одно и то же. The new place was embarrassingly alien and she tried to merge into the background. — На этом новом месте она чувствовала себя чужой и в смущении пыталась не выделяться/слиться с окружающими.
    5. to stand together — объединяться, держаться вместе (стоять друг за друга для того, чтобы справиться с трудностями или опасностями): We must all stand together. I don't want anybody saying that they don't want to be involved. — Мы должны держаться вместе, и я не хочу слышать, чтобы кто-либо говорил, что он не хочет быть в этом замешан. Somehow they stood together and got the business going in spite of all that was going on. — Все же они держались вместе и сохранили фирму, несмотря на то, что происходило вокруг. So long as we all stand together we'll win. — Пока мы вместе, мы победим.
    6. to come together — объединяться, объединять усилия ( в работе) (особенно той, которую трудно или невозможно сделать в одиночку): The conference called on everyone to come together to resist the government's plans to reform the education system. — Конференция призвала всех объединить усилия и противостоять планам правительства реформировать существующую систему образования. Some Russian and Japanese firms came together to organize transnational electronics projects. — Несколько русских и японских фирм объединили усилия в создании транснациональных электронных проектов.
    7. to align oneself with — объединяться ( с кем-либо), поддерживать открыто ( кого-либо), поддерживать публично ( кого-либо), примкнуть (к кому-либо, какой-либо партии или стороне), вставать под знамена (партии, страны): Most of the major companies have publicly aligned themselves with the ruling party. — Большая часть ведущих компаний открыто поддержала правящую партию. Church leaders have aligned themselves with the opposition. — Религиозные лидеры примкнули к оппозиции./Религиозные лидеры публично поддержали оппозицию. Many women do not want toalign themselves with the movement. — Многие женщины не хотят поддерживать это движение./Многие женщины остались в стороне от этого движения./Многие женщины не присоединились к этому движению.
    8. to pull together — объединяться, объединять усилия, объединяться в момент опасности, объединяться невзирая на индивидуальные различия и разногласия: They all pulled together and managed to get an excellent result. — Они все сплотились и смогли добиться великолепного результата. Parents, teachers and students should all pull together to tackle the school's drug problem. — Для того чтобы справиться с проблемой наркотиков в школе, родители, учителя и ученики должны объединить свои усилия, невзирая на возможные разногласия.
    9. to stick together — объединяться, держаться вместе, держаться друг за друга, выступать едино: If we stick together we should be all right. — Все будет в порядке, если мы будем держаться вместе/Все будет хорошо, если мы объединимся. If only they'd stuck together maybe they could have sorted out their problems. — Если бы они держались вместе, может быть, они и смогли бы выбраться из своих затруднений./Если бы они выступали едино, они смогли бы уладить свои проблемы./Если бы они выступали заодно, может быть, они смогли бы решить свои проблемы.
    10. to group together — объединяться, образовывать группу (объединять несколько отдельных объектов дли того, чтобы создать что-либо сообща): College and public libraries grouped together to form an inter-library loan scheme. — Публичные библиотеки и библиотеки колледжей объединились и разработали план межбиблиотечного обмена.

    Русско-английский объяснительный словарь > объединяться

  • 91 Mind

       It becomes, therefore, no inconsiderable part of science... to know the different operations of the mind, to separate them from each other, to class them under their proper heads, and to correct all that seeming disorder in which they lie involved when made the object of reflection and inquiry.... It cannot be doubted that the mind is endowed with several powers and faculties, that these powers are distinct from one another, and that what is really distinct to the immediate perception may be distinguished by reflection and, consequently, that there is a truth and falsehood which lie not beyond the compass of human understanding. (Hume, 1955, p. 22)
       Let us then suppose the mind to be, as we say, white Paper, void of all Characters, without any Ideas: How comes it to be furnished? Whence comes it by that vast store, which the busy and boundless Fancy of Man has painted on it, with an almost endless variety? Whence has it all the materials of Reason and Knowledge? To this I answer, in one word, from Experience. (Locke, quoted in Herrnstein & Boring, 1965, p. 584)
       The kind of logic in mythical thought is as rigorous as that of modern science, and... the difference lies, not in the quality of the intellectual process, but in the nature of things to which it is applied.... Man has always been thinking equally well; the improvement lies, not in an alleged progress of man's mind, but in the discovery of new areas to which it may apply its unchanged and unchanging powers. (Leґvi-Strauss, 1963, p. 230)
       MIND. A mysterious form of matter secreted by the brain. Its chief activity consists in the endeavor to ascertain its own nature, the futility of the attempt being due to the fact that it has nothing but itself to know itself with. (Bierce, quoted in Minsky, 1986, p. 55)
       [Philosophy] understands the foundations of knowledge and it finds these foundations in a study of man-as-knower, of the "mental processes" or the "activity of representation" which make knowledge possible. To know is to represent accurately what is outside the mind, so to understand the possibility and nature of knowledge is to understand the way in which the mind is able to construct such representation.... We owe the notion of a "theory of knowledge" based on an understanding of "mental processes" to the seventeenth century, and especially to Locke. We owe the notion of "the mind" as a separate entity in which "processes" occur to the same period, and especially to Descartes. We owe the notion of philosophy as a tribunal of pure reason, upholding or denying the claims of the rest of culture, to the eighteenth century and especially to Kant, but this Kantian notion presupposed general assent to Lockean notions of mental processes and Cartesian notions of mental substance. (Rorty, 1979, pp. 3-4)
       Under pressure from the computer, the question of mind in relation to machine is becoming a central cultural preoccupation. It is becoming for us what sex was to Victorians-threat, obsession, taboo, and fascination. (Turkle, 1984, p. 313)
       7) Understanding the Mind Remains as Resistant to Neurological as to Cognitive Analyses
       Recent years have been exciting for researchers in the brain and cognitive sciences. Both fields have flourished, each spurred on by methodological and conceptual developments, and although understanding the mechanisms of mind is an objective shared by many workers in these areas, their theories and approaches to the problem are vastly different....
       Early experimental psychologists, such as Wundt and James, were as interested in and knowledgeable about the anatomy and physiology of the nervous system as about the young science of the mind. However, the experimental study of mental processes was short-lived, being eclipsed by the rise of behaviorism early in this century. It was not until the late 1950s that the signs of a new mentalism first appeared in scattered writings of linguists, philosophers, computer enthusiasts, and psychologists.
       In this new incarnation, the science of mind had a specific mission: to challenge and replace behaviorism. In the meantime, brain science had in many ways become allied with a behaviorist approach.... While behaviorism sought to reduce the mind to statements about bodily action, brain science seeks to explain the mind in terms of physiochemical events occurring in the nervous system. These approaches contrast with contemporary cognitive science, which tries to understand the mind as it is, without any reduction, a view sometimes described as functionalism.
       The cognitive revolution is now in place. Cognition is the subject of contemporary psychology. This was achieved with little or no talk of neurons, action potentials, and neurotransmitters. Similarly, neuroscience has risen to an esteemed position among the biological sciences without much talk of cognitive processes. Do the fields need each other?... [Y]es because the problem of understanding the mind, unlike the wouldbe problem solvers, respects no disciplinary boundaries. It remains as resistant to neurological as to cognitive analyses. (LeDoux & Hirst, 1986, pp. 1-2)
       Since the Second World War scientists from different disciplines have turned to the study of the human mind. Computer scientists have tried to emulate its capacity for visual perception. Linguists have struggled with the puzzle of how children acquire language. Ethologists have sought the innate roots of social behaviour. Neurophysiologists have begun to relate the function of nerve cells to complex perceptual and motor processes. Neurologists and neuropsychologists have used the pattern of competence and incompetence of their brain-damaged patients to elucidate the normal workings of the brain. Anthropologists have examined the conceptual structure of cultural practices to advance hypotheses about the basic principles of the mind. These days one meets engineers who work on speech perception, biologists who investigate the mental representation of spatial relations, and physicists who want to understand consciousness. And, of course, psychologists continue to study perception, memory, thought and action.
    ... [W]orkers in many disciplines have converged on a number of central problems and explanatory ideas. They have realized that no single approach is likely to unravel the workings of the mind: it will not give up its secrets to psychology alone; nor is any other isolated discipline-artificial intelligence, linguistics, anthropology, neurophysiology, philosophy-going to have any greater success. (Johnson-Laird, 1988, p. 7)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Mind

  • 92 Ч-18

    ЧАС ОТ ЧАСУ HE ЛЕГЧЕ coll (sent with бытье ( usu. pres) fixed WO
    the situation becomes worse with each new piece of information or each new development (used, usu. in a dialogue, to express annoyance when news is received of new trouble or new difficulties)
    it gets (is getting) worse all the time
    it gets (is getting) worse by the minute (every minute) it gets (is getting) worse and worse things are going from bad to worse it's one thing on top of another.
    Нюрок и тут взбеленилась: «...Неужели ты не видишь, что он давно умеет делать, чтобы за него все делали?.. Он всегда кого-нибудь эксплуатирует - мать, отца, каких-то там приятелей, а прежде всего приятельниц!» Час от часу было не легче. Ирина Викторовна спросила: «Значит, ты меня окунаешь, милая? В действительность?» (Залыгин 1). Niurok lost her temper completely: "...Can't you see he knows how to arrange things so that other people do everything for him?...He's forever exploiting somebody-his mother, his father, his friends, but most of all his girlfriends." It was getting worse all the time. Irina Viktorovna asked, "Giving me a crash course in reality, are you, my dear?" (1a).
    (Маша:) Тебя исключают из университета... (Колесов:) Да он (ректор) что, озверел, что ли? (Маша:) Полегче. Эта девочка, между прочим, дочь (ректора) Владимира Алексеевича. (Колесов:) Вы - дочь? (Таня:) Что поделаешь. (Колесов:) Час от часу не легче (Вампилов 3). (М.:) You're being expelled from the university.... (K.:) What happened, did he (the Provost) go wild, is that it? (M.:) Take it easy. This girl, by the way, is (the Provost) Vladimir Alekseyevich's daughter. (K.:) You're-his daughter? (T.:) What can I do... (K.:) It's getting worse every minute (3b).
    Да как обвенчаться! - проговорил Пьер на слова Марьи Дмитриевны. - Он не мог обвенчаться: он женат». - «Час от часу не легче, -проговорила Марья Дмитриевна. - Хорош мальчик! То-то мерзавец! А она ждет, второй день ждет» (Толстой 5). "But how could there be a marriage?" exclaimed Pierre at Marya Dmitrievna's last words. "He couldn't marry her-he's already married!" "It gets worse and worse!" cried Marya Dmitrievna. "A fine fellow! He's certainly a scoundrel! And there she sits waiting—she's been expecting him for two days" (5a).
    «Зачем же им этот ядовитый сок, - встревожился мой старик, - кого они собираются травить?» - «Нет, - успокоил его старый арап, - травить они никого не собираются - ни людей, ни скотину. Этот сок им нужен для аэропланов. Аэропланы без этого сока взлететь не могут, могут только ехать по земле, как машины» - «Час от часу не легче», — сказал мой старик (Искандер 3). "What do they want with this poisonous juice?" my old man asked anxiously. "Whom are they planning to poison?" "No," the old black soothed him, "they're not planning to poison anyone, neither men nor beasts. They need the juice for airplanes. Airplanes can't fly without it, they can only run along the ground like trucks." "Things are going from bad to worse," my old man said (3a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > Ч-18

  • 93 час от часу не легче

    [sent with быть (usu. pres); fixed WO]
    =====
    the situation becomes worse with each new piece of information or each new development (used, usu. in a dialogue, to express annoyance when news is received of new trouble or new difficulties):
    - ift one thing on top of another.
         ♦ Нюрок и тут взбеленилась: "...Неужели ты не видишь, что он давно умеет делать, чтобы за него всё делали?.. Он всегда кого-нибудь эксплуатирует - мать, отца, каких-то там приятелей, а прежде всего приятельниц!" Час от часу было не легче. Ирина Викторовна спросила: "Значит, ты меня окунаешь, милая? В действительность?" (Залыгин 1). Niurok lost her temper completely: "...Can't you see he knows how to arrange things so that other people do everything for him?...He's forever exploiting somebody-his mother, his father, his friends, but most of all his girlfriends." It was getting worse all the time. Irina Viktorovna asked, "Giving me a crash course in reality, are you, my dear?" (1a).
         ♦ [Маша:] Тебя исключают из университета... [Колесов:] Да он [ректор] что, озверел, что ли? [Маша:] Полегче. Эта девочка, между прочим, дочь [ректора] Владимира Алексеевича. [Колесов:] Вы - дочь? [Таня:] Что поделаешь. [Колесов:] Час от часу не легче (Вампилов 3). [М.:] You're being expelled from the university.... [K.:] What happened, did he [the Provost] go wild, is that it? [M.:] Tkke it easy. This girl, by the way, is [the Provost] Vladimir Alekseyevich's daughter. [K.:] You're-his daughter? [T.:] What can I do... [K.:] It's getting worse every minute (3b).
         ♦ "Да как обвенчаться! - проговорил Пьер на слова Марьи Дмитриевны. - Он не мог обвенчаться: он женат". - "Час от часу не легче, -проговорила Марья Дмитриевна. - Хорош мальчик! То-то мерзавец! А она ждёт, второй день ждёт" (Толстой 5). "But how could there be a marriage?" exclaimed Pierre at Marya Dmitrievna's last words. "He couldn't marry her-he's already married!" "It gets worse and worse!" cried Marya Dmitrievna. "A fine fellow! He's certainly a scoundrel! And there she sits waiting - she's been expecting him for two days" (5a).
         ♦ "Зачем же им этот ядовитый сок, - встревожился мой старик, - кого они собираются травить?" - "Нет, - успокоил его старый арап, - травить они никого не собираются - ни людей, ни скотину. Этот сок им нужен для аэропланов. Аэропланы без этого сока взлететь не могут, могут только ехать по земле, как машины" - "Час от часу не легче", - сказал мой старик (Искандер 3). "What do they want with this poisonous juice?" my old man asked anxiously. "Whom are they planning to poison?" "No," the old black soothed him, "they're not planning to poison anyone, neither men nor beasts. They need the juice for airplanes. Airplanes can't fly without it, they can only run along the ground like trucks." "Things are going from bad to worse," my old man said (3a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > час от часу не легче

  • 94 Flüstern

    vt/i (speak in a) whisper; du brauchst nicht zu flüstern there’s no need to whisper; wir verständigten uns flüsternd we communicated in whispers; jemandem etw. ins Ohr flüstern whisper s.th. into s.o.’s ear; dem werd ich was flüstern umg. fig. I’ll give him something to think about; das kann ich dir flüstern! umg. fig. you can take that from me
    * * *
    to whisper
    * * *
    flụ̈s|tern ['flʏstɐn]
    vti
    to whisper; (= etwas lauter tuscheln) to mutter

    wer hat da geflüstert?who was that whispering?

    das kann ich dir flüstern (inf)take it from me (inf); (Zustimmung heischend auch) I can tell you (inf)

    * * *
    1) (to speak or say very softly: You'll have to whisper or he'll hear you; `Don't tell him,' she whispered.) whisper
    2) (a very quiet sound, especially something said: They spoke in whispers.) whisper
    * * *
    flüs·tern
    [ˈflʏstɐn]
    I. vi to whisper
    miteinander \flüstern to whisper to one another
    sich akk \flüsternd unterhalten to talk in whispers [to one another]; (fig poet)
    II. vt
    1. (sehr leise sprechen)
    etw \flüstern to whisper sth
    man flüstert [o es wird geflüstert], dass... it is whispered that..., rumour [or AM -or] [or word] has it that...
    3.
    das kann ich dir \flüstern! (fam: darauf kannst du dich verlassen) that's a promise!; (na und ob!) you bet!
    jdm [et]was flüstern (fam) to give sb a good talking-to
    dem werde ich was \flüstern! I'll give him a piece of my mind!
    * * *
    1.
    intransitives Verb whisper
    2.
    transitives Verb whisper

    jemandem [et]was flüstern — (ugs.) give somebody something to think about

    das kann ich dir flüstern(ugs.) I can promise you that

    * * *
    Flüstern n; -s, kein pl whisper(ing);
    ein Flüstern a whisper, (some) whispering
    * * *
    1.
    intransitives Verb whisper
    2.
    transitives Verb whisper

    jemandem [et]was flüstern — (ugs.) give somebody something to think about

    das kann ich dir flüstern(ugs.) I can promise you that

    * * *
    v.
    to speak under breath expr.
    to whisper v.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Flüstern

  • 95 same

    [seɪm] adj
    attr, inv
    the \same der/die/das Gleiche;
    ( identical) der-/die-/dasselbe;
    I've got the \same taste in clothes as my sister ich habe bei Kleidung den gleichen Geschmack wie meine Schwester;
    she brought up her children in the \same way as her mother did sie erzog ihre Kinder genauso, wie ihre Mutter es getan hatte;
    she's the \same age as me sie ist genauso alt wie ich;
    it all amounts to the \same thing es läuft alles auf dasselbe hinaus;
    \same difference ( fam) ein und dasselbe;
    to go the \same way [as sb] den gleichen Weg [wie jd] gehen
    the \same der/die/das Gleiche;
    we sleep in the \same room wir schlafen im gleichen Zimmer;
    our teacher always wears the \same pullover unser Lehrer trägt stets denselben Pullover;
    he's still the \same old grouch er ist noch immer der gleiche alte Miesepeter ( fam)
    I'm not in the \same league ( fig) da kann ich nicht mithalten;
    in the \same breath im gleichen [o selben] Atemzug;
    at the \same time gleichzeitig, zur gleichen Zeit;
    ( nevertheless) trotzdem;
    by the \same token ( fig) ebenso;
    I don't think that prices will go up but, by the \same token, I don't see them going down much lower either ich glaube nicht, dass die Preise steigen werden, aber ebenso wenig glaube ich, dass sie stark sinken werden
    3) ( monotonous) eintönig;
    at every meeting you see the \same old faces bei jedem Treffen sieht man die gleichen alten Gesichter;
    it's the \same old story - the rich get richer and the poor get poorer es ist die alte Geschichte - die Reichen werden immer reicher und die Armen immer ärmer
    PHRASES:
    to be in the \same boat ( fig) im gleichen [o in einem] Boot sitzen ( fam)
    lightning never strikes in the \same place twice (never strikes in the \same place twice) der Blitz schlägt nicht zweimal an derselben Stelle ein pron the \same der-/die-/dasselbe;
    after all those years you look exactly the \same du hast dich in all diesen Jahren überhaupt nicht verändert;
    people say I look just the \same as my sister die Leute sagen, ich sähe genauso aus wie meine Schwester;
    they realized that things would never be the same again es wurde ihnen klar, dass nichts mehr so sein würde wie früher;
    all the \same;
    men are all the \same die Männer sind alle gleich;
    it's all the \same to me das macht für mich keinen Unterschied;
    to be one and the \same ein und der-/die-/dasselbe sein;
    I was amazed to discover they are one and the \same person ich war überrascht festzustellen, dass sie ein und dieselbe Person sind;
    not the \same nicht der-/die-/das Gleiche;
    our old house wasn't the \same without David unser altes Haus war ohne David nicht mehr das, was es [einmal] war
    PHRASES:
    all the \same trotzdem;
    all the \same we had a good time wir hatten dennoch eine schöne Zeit;
    thanks all the \same trotzdem vielen Dank;
    \same here ( fam) ich auch;
    I thought that film was awful! - \same here! ich fand den Film schrecklich! - ganz meine Meinung;
    \same to you danke, gleichfalls adv
    the \same gleich;
    these two machines are operated the \same diese beiden Maschinen werden auf dieselbe Art bedient;
    I feel just the \same as you do mir geht es genauso wie dir;
    I need some time to myself, \same as anybody else ( fam) ich brauche Zeit für mich selbst, genau wie jeder andere auch

    English-German students dictionary > same

  • 96 online community

    E-com
    a means of allowing Web users to engage with one another and with an organization through use of interactive tools such as e-mail, discussion boards, and chat systems.
         They are a means by which a Web site owner can take the pulse of consumers to find out what they are thinking, and to generate unique content. As stand-alone businesses, online communities have been found to be weak: they work best when they are supporting the need for an organization to collect on-going feedback.

    The ultimate business dictionary > online community

  • 97 Mind-body Problem

       From this I knew that I was a substance the whole essence or nature of which is to think, and that for its existence there is no need of any place, nor does it depend on any material thing; so that this "me," that is to say, the soul by which I am what I am, is entirely distinct from body, and is even more easy to know than is the latter; and even if body were not, the soul would not cease to be what it is. (Descartes, 1970a, p. 101)
        still remains to be explained how that union and apparent intermingling [of mind and body]... can be found in you, if you are incorporeal, unextended and indivisible.... How, at least, can you be united with the brain, or some minute part in it, which (as has been said) must yet have some magnitude or extension, however small it be? If you are wholly without parts how can you mix or appear to mix with its minute subdivisions? For there is no mixture unless each of the things to be mixed has parts that can mix with one another. (Gassendi, 1970, p. 201)
       here are... certain things which we experience in ourselves and which should be attributed neither to the mind nor body alone, but to the close and intimate union that exists between the body and the mind.... Such are the appetites of hunger, thirst, etc., and also the emotions or passions of the mind which do not subsist in mind or thought alone... and finally all the sensations. (Descartes, 1970b, p. 238)
       With any other sort of mind, absolute Intelligence, Mind unattached to a particular body, or Mind not subject to the course of time, the psychologist as such has nothing to do. (James, 1890, p. 183)
       [The] intention is to furnish a psychology that shall be a natural science: that is to represent psychical processes as quantitatively determinate states of specifiable material particles, thus making these processes perspicuous and free from contradiction. (Freud, 1966, p. 295)
       The thesis is that the mental is nomologically irreducible: there may be true general statements relating the mental and the physical, statements that have the logical form of a law; but they are not lawlike (in a strong sense to be described). If by absurdly remote chance we were to stumble on a non-stochastic true psychophysical generalization, we would have no reason to believe it more than roughly true. (Davidson, 1970, p. 90)
       We can divide those who uphold the doctrine that men are machines, or a similar doctrine, into two categories: those who deny the existence of mental events, or personal experiences, or of consciousness;... and those who admit the existence of mental events, but assert that they are "epiphenomena"-that everything can be explained without them, since the material world is causally closed. (Popper & Eccles, 1977, p. 5)
       Mind affects brain and brain affects mind. That is the message, and by accepting it you commit yourself to a special view of the world. It is a view that shows the limits of the genetic imperative on what we turn out to be, both intellectually and emotionally. It decrees that, while the secrets of our genes express themselves with force throughout our lives, the effect of that information on our bodies can be influenced by our psychological history and beliefs about the world. And, just as important, the other side of the same coin argues that what we construct in our minds as objective reality may simply be our interpretations of certain bodily states dictated by our genes and expressed through our physical brains and body. Put differently, various attributes of mind that seem to have a purely psychological origin are frequently a product of the brain's interpreter rationalizing genetically driven body states. Make no mistake about it: this two-sided view of mind-brain interactions, if adopted, has implications for the management of one's personal life. (Gazzaniga, 1988, p. 229)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Mind-body Problem

  • 98 quelqu'un

    quelqu'un [kεlkœ̃]
    indefinite pronoun
       a. somebody, someone ; (avec interrog) anybody, anyone
    quelqu'un d'autre somebody or someone else
    c'est quelqu'un de sûr/d'important he's a reliable/an important person
    Claire, c'est quelqu'un de bien Claire is a nice person
    quelqu'un pourrait-il répondre ? could somebody answer?
    il y a quelqu'un ? is there anybody there?
    * * *
    kɛlkœ̃
    pronom indéfini
    1) ( dans les phrases affirmatives) someone, somebody

    quelqu'un d'autre — somebody else, someone else

    c'est quelqu'un de compétent/de très doué — he/she is competent/very gifted

    un jour, il deviendra quelqu'un — (colloq) one day, he'll be somebody

    cette fille-là, c'est quelqu'un! — (colloq) that girl isn't just anybody

    le téléphone sonne, est-ce que quelqu'un pourrait répondre? — the telephone is ringing, could somebody answer?


    ••
    Dans les phrases affirmatives quelqu'un se traduit par someone ou somebody: quelqu'un m'a dit qu'elle était malade = someone told me she was ill; j'ai rencontré quelqu'un qui te connaissait = I met someone who knew you
    Dans les phrases interrogatives et conditionnelles l'anglais fait une distinction entre une vraie question dont la réponse peut être oui ou non ou une vraie supposition: est-ce que quelqu'un parle grec? = does anybody speak Greek?; est-ce que quelqu'un a vu mes clés? = has anybody seen my keys?; est-ce que quelqu'un connaît la réponse? = does anyone know the answer?; si quelqu'un téléphone, dites que je serai absent jusqu'à demain = if anyone calls, say that I'll be away until tomorrow; si quelqu'un touche à mon ordinateur, il sera puni = if anyone touches my computer, they'll be punished; et une supposition, un soupçon formulé sous forme de question: est-ce que quelqu'un a touché à mon ordinateur? = has somebody been playing with my computer?; est-ce que quelqu'un t'a donné la réponse? = did someone give you the answer?; ou bien une requête ou une offre polie: est-ce que quelqu'un pourrait fermer la fenêtre? = could somebody close the window?; est-ce que quelqu'un veut encore du gâteau? = would somebody like another piece of cake?; si quelqu'un voulait bien ouvrir la porte au chien = if someone would please let the dog in
    Dans les deux derniers cas, la réponse attendue est oui
    * * *
    kɛlkœ̃ pron
    someone, somebody, (interrogatif) anyone, anybody

    Quelqu'un t'a appelé. — Somebody phoned you., Someone phoned you.

    Il y a quelqu'un à la porte. — There's somebody at the door., There's someone at the door.

    Est-ce que quelqu'un a vu mon parapluie? — Has anybody seen my umbrella?, Has anyone seen my umbrella?

    Il y a quelqu'un? — Is there anybody there?, Is there anyone there?

    quelqu'un d'autre — someone else, somebody else, (interrogatif) anybody else, anyone else

    * * *
    quelqu'un ⇒ Note d'usage pron indéf
    1 ( dans les phrases affirmatives) someone, somebody; quelqu'un d'autre somebody else, someone else; c'est quelqu'un de très doué/de compétent he/she is very gifted/competent; un jour, il deviendra quelqu'un one day, he'll be somebody; cette fille-là, c'est quelqu'un! that girl isn't just anybody;
    2 ( dans les phrases interrogatives et conditionnelles) il y a quelqu'un? is there anybody here?; le téléphone sonne, est-ce que quelqu'un pourrait répondre? the telephone is ringing, could somebody answer?; si quelqu'un téléphone pendant mon absence if anybody phones while I'm out.
    ( féminin quelqu'une) [kɛlkœ̃, yn] pronom indéfini
    quelqu'un pronom indéfini masculin
    1. [dans une affirmation] someone, somebody
    quelqu'un te demande au téléphone there's someone ou somebody on the phone for you
    ce garçon, c'est quelqu'un! (péjoratif) that boy's a little horror!
    il se prend pour ou se croit quelqu'un (péjoratif) he thinks he's really something, he thinks he's it
    2. [dans une question, une négation, une hypothèse] anybody, anyone

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > quelqu'un

  • 99 call

    [kɔːl] 1. гл.
    1) кричать; окликать

    to call down — позвать вниз, пригласить сойти вниз

    From the bottom of the stairs Jane called up "Have you seen my blue bag?" — С самого низа лестницы Джейн крикнула наверх: "Ты не видел моей синей сумки?"

    He is in the next room, call him. — Он в соседней комнате, позови его.

    He called to her. — Он окликнул её.

    Jane call out when she saw her friend across the street. — Джейн окликнула свою подругу, когда увидела её на другой стороне улицы.

    Syn:
    2) издавать характерные звуки (о птицах, животных); жужжать ( о насекомых)
    3) = call up звонить, говорить по телефону

    to call about smth. — звонить насчёт чего-л., по поводу чего-л.

    to call back — перезванивать, звонить по телефону в ответ на звонок

    I tried to call you about our meeting, but you weren't in. — Я пытался позвонить вам по поводу нашей встречи, но вас не было.

    He called me from New York. — Он позвонил мне из Нью-Йорка.

    We called them to say that... — Мы сообщили им по телефону, что...

    Please call me up tomorrow morning. — Позвони мне, пожалуйста, завтра утром.

    Would you ask her to call me back? — Будь так добр, попроси её мне перезвонить.

    4)
    а) вызывать, созывать ( сигналом)

    The bell called to dinner. — Позвонили к обеду.

    б) = call in приглашать ( домой), звать ( к себе); вызывать ( на дом)

    He screamed for his wife to call an ambulance. — Он закричал, чтобы жена вызвала скорую помощь.

    в) = call out вызывать (откуда-л.)

    The doctor has been called out every night this week. — На этой неделе доктор был на вызовах каждую ночь.

    5) юр. вызывать ( в суд)
    6) = call up будить

    Please call me (up) at 7 o'clock tomorrow. — Будь так добр, разбуди меня завтра в семь утра.

    7) собирать, созывать

    A meeting has been called for Monday. — Собрание было назначено на понедельник.

    Call all the members together and we'll take a vote. — Собери всех членов комитета и мы проголосуем.

    - call an election
    - call a parliament
    Syn:
    8) ( call for) требовать

    The situation called for drastic measures. — Положение требовало принятия решительных мер.

    Henry called for the waiter in a loud voice. — Генри громко потребовал официанта.

    The opposition are calling for a general election. — Оппозиция требует всеобщих выборов.

    9) ( call for) обычно страд. нуждаться в (чём-л.)

    Your remark was not called for. — Ваше замечание было неуместно.

    10) = call in / by / round заходить; навещать, наносить визит

    to call (up)on smb. — навестить кого-л.

    to call about smth. — зайти насчёт чего-л., по какому-л. делу

    Will you call for my dress at the cleaner's? — Зайди за моим платьем в чистку, пожалуйста.

    I called at the office as I was passing, but you were out. — Проходя мимо офиса, я зашёл, но тебя не было на месте.

    There's a man at the door who says he's calling about your insurance. — Тут человек говорит, что он пришёл по поводу твоей страховки.

    Permit me to call on you next Tuesday afternoon. — Разрешите мне зайти в следующий вторник после обеда.

    When you're next in town, do call by. — Когда будешь в городе в следующий раз, заходи обязательно.

    The salesman will call back at any house he missed. — Продавец посетит каждый дом, который пропустил.

    11) называть; давать имя

    to call smb. by the title — титуловать кого-л., называть кого-л. по титулу, сану

    He is called Tom. — Его зовут Том.

    The speech was interrupted by members of the Conservative Party, who called him a traitor. — Речь была прервана членами партии консерваторов, которые назвали его предателем.

    He was called after his father. — Его назвали в честь отца.

    If you call him just by his family name he won't answer you. — Если ты назовёшь его по фамилии, он тебе не ответит.

    - call smb. names
    12) считать, полагать

    I call this a good house. — Я нахожу, что это хороший дом.

    I call that a shame. — По-моему, это стыдно.

    They call it ten miles. — Считается, что здесь десять миль.

    He calls him his son. — Он считает его своим сыном.

    The results of the conference are called satisfactory. — Считается, что конференция дала положительные результаты.

    Syn:
    13) вызывать ( в памяти), вспоминать

    to call to mind / memory — припомнить, вспомнить

    14) ( call into) приводить в ( какое-л. состояние)

    to call into existence / being — вызывать к жизни, создавать, осуществлять

    15) (call (up)on / to) призывать к (чему-л.); обращаться по поводу (чего-л.)

    to call smb.'s attention to smth. — обращать чьё-л. внимание на что-л.

    to call smb. to account — призвать к ответу; потребовать объяснения

    to call smb. to arms — призвать к оружию, призвать под знамёна

    to call to attentionвоен. скомандовать "смирно"

    to call to order — призвать к порядку; амер. открыть собрание

    to call smb. for smth. — обратиться к кому-л. за чем-л.

    Lord Berkley called on all his friends to help him. — Лорд Беркли обратился ко всем своим друзьям за помощью.

    16) ( call (up)on) приглашать высказаться, предоставлять слово

    The chairman called on the next speaker. — Председатель передал слово следующему докладчику.

    17) = call out выкрикивать (что-л. чётким, громким голосом); вызывать (по именам, фамилиям); объявлять; оглашать

    to call the scoreспорт. объявлять счёт

    Here the captain called a halt. — В этом месте капитан объявил привал.

    18) карт. объявлять (карту, масть)
    20) театр. вызывать ( актёра) на сцену; объявлять (о начале какой-л. части представления)

    He was called for the last act. — Ему объявили, чтобы он был готов к последнему действию.

    22) призвать в "лучший" мир

    All the doctors can't save him. He's called. — Ни один врач не сможет спасти его. Он обречён.

    The steamer calls at several ports along the way. — По пути пароход заходит в несколько портов.

    The ship calls at several ports to pick up passengers before crossing the ocean. — Прежде чем отправиться в плавание через океан, этот корабль обойдёт несколько портов и заберёт пассажиров.

    24) останавливаться, делать краткую остановку ( о транспортном средстве)

    The steamer calls at several ports along the way. — По пути пароход делает остановку в нескольких портах.

    This train will call at all stations to Broxbourne. — Этот поезд проследует до Броксбурна со всеми остановками.

    - call back
    - call down
    - call forth
    - call over
    - call up
    ••

    to call the play / tune — распоряжаться; задавать тон

    to call smb. over the coals — ругать кого-л., делать кому-л. выговор; давать нагоняй

    to have nothing to call one's own — ничего не иметь, быть без средств

    to call it square — удовлетворяться, примиряться

    2. сущ.
    1) крик; зов

    Suddenly he heard loud calls for help. — Вдруг он услышал громкие крики о помощи.

    Syn:
    shout 1., cry 1.
    2) крик, голос (животного, птицы)
    3) манок, дудка ( для ловли птиц)
    4) сигнал; (барабанный) сбор; свисток; звонок
    5) телефонный вызов, телефонный звонок; телефонный разговор

    long-distance / trunk call — междугородный телефонный вызов

    to give smb. a call — позвонить кому-л.

    to make / place a call to smb. — сделать кому-л. телефонный звонок

    to answer / return / take a call — ответить на телефонный звонок

    One call was for me. — Один раз звонили мне.

    The operator put my call right through. — Телефонистка сразу же соединила меня.

    collect callамер. телефонный разговор, оплачиваемый абонентом, которому звонят

    transferred-charge callбрит. телефонный разговор, оплачиваемый абонентом, которому звонят

    dial-direct callамер. прямой телефонный звонок

    direct-dialled callбрит. прямой телефонный звонок

    operator-assisted callамер. звонок через телефониста

    6) визит, посещение ( обычно краткий)

    professional callвызов специалиста (врача, адвоката)

    He decided to pay a call on Tom. — Он решил нанести визит Тому.

    8) требование; просьба

    There have been calls for a new kind of security arrangement. — Раздавались требования обновить меры безопасности.

    He has many calls on his money. — К нему постоянно обращаются за деньгами.

    Syn:
    9) необходимость, нужда

    You have no call to blush. — Вам нечего краснеть.

    There is no call for such behavior. — Такое поведение ничем не оправдано.

    Syn:
    need 1.
    10) = roll call перекличка; время переклички
    11) влечение, тяга; зов

    You must be feeling exhilarated by the call of the new. — Вероятно, вы чувствуете радость от тяги к новому.

    12) зов, знамение приближающейся смерти

    to get one's call, to get the call — умереть; быть на грани смерти

    14) театр. сбор актёров на репетицию

    The call is for 11 o'clock. — Репетиция назначена на 11 часов.

    15) юр. вызов ( в суд)
    17) фин. требование уплаты долга, очередного взноса
    20) карт. объявление ( козырной масти)
    ••

    at call — наготове, к услугам

    Англо-русский современный словарь > call

  • 100 παρακαλέω

    παρακαλέω impf. παρεκάλουν; fut. παρακαλέσω LXX; 1 aor. παρεκάλεσα. Pass.: 1 fut. παρακληθήσομαι; 1 aor. παρεκλήθην; pf. παρακέκλημαι (Aeschyl., Hdt.+).
    to ask to come and be present where the speaker is, call to one’s side
    τινά w. inf. foll., to indicate the purpose of the call; so perh. παρεκάλεσα ὑμᾶς ἰδεῖν I have summoned you to see you Ac 28:20 (but s. 3 below).
    invite τινά someone w. inf. foll. (this can be supplied fr. context) παρεκάλει αὐτὸν εἰσελθεῖν εἰς τὸν οἶκον Lk 8:41. παρεκάλει αὐτόν (i.e. εἰσελθεῖν) 15:28 (but s. 5 below). παρεκάλεσεν τὸν Φίλιππον καθίσαι Ac 8:31 (cp. Jos., Ant. 12, 172). The content of the invitation follows in direct discourse 9:38; introduced by λέγουσα 16:15. Cp. ἀνὴρ Μακεδών τις ἦν παρακαλῶν αὐτὸν καὶ λέγων … βοήθησον ἡμῖν vs. 9. Pass., w. inf. foll. παρακληθέντες δειπνῆσαι when you are invited to dine Mt 20:28 D.—Some of the passages in 5 may fit here.
    summon to one’s aid, call upon for help (Hdt. et al.) so esp. of God, upon whom one calls in time of need (Thu. 1, 118, 3; Pla., Leg. 2, 666b; 11 p. 917b; X., Hell. 2, 4, 17; Epict. 3, 21, 12; Jos., Ant. 6, 25; SIG 1170, 30f in an account of a healing: περὶ τούτου παρεκάλεσα τὸν θεόν. POxy 1070, 8f [III A.D.] τὸν μέγαν θεὸν Σάραπιν παρακαλῶ περὶ τῆς ζωῆς ὑμῶν; cp. the restoration in the pap letter of Zoilus, servant of Sarapis, in Dssm., LO 121, 11 [LAE 153, 4; the letter, ln. 8: ἐμοῦ δ̣ὲ̣ π[α]ρ̣[ακαλέσαντος τὸν θεὸν Σάραπιν]) τινά: τὸν πατέρα μου Mt 26:53. ὑπὲρ τούτου τὸν κύριον παρεκάλεσα, ἵνα 2 Cor 12:8. θεὸς … παρακαλούμενος ἀκούει God heeds, when called upon AcPt Ox 849, 27.
    to urge strongly, appeal to, urge, exhort, encourage (X. et al.; LXX) w. acc. of pers. Ac 16:40; 2 Cor 10:1; 1 Th 2:12 (but s. 5 below); 5:11; Hb 3:13; ITr 12:2; IRo 7:2. The acc. is found in the immediate context Ac 20:1; 1 Ti 5:1 (but s. 5 below). Pass. 1 Cor 14:31. τινὰ λόγῳ πολλῷ someone with many words Ac 20:2; also τινὰ διὰ λόγου πολλοῦ 15:32. τινὰ διʼ ὀλίγων γραμμάτων IPol 7:3. W. acc. of pers. and direct discourse 1 Cor 4:16; 1 Th 5:14; Hb 13:22; 1 Pt 5:1; direct discourse introduced by λέγων (B-D-F §420) Ac 2:40. W. acc. of pers. and inf. foll. (SIG 695, 43 [129 B.C.]) 11:23; 27:33f; Ro 12:1 (EKäsemann, Gottesdienst im Alltag, ’60 [Beih. ZNW], 165–71); 15:30; 16:17; 2 Cor 2:8; 6:1; Eph 4:1; Phil 4:2; Tit 2:6; 1 Pt 2:11 (cp. Phlegon: 257 Fgm. 36 II, 4 Jac. p. 1172, 19; ELohse, ZNW 45, ’54, 68–89); Jd 3 (the acc. is found in the immediate context, as Philo, Poster Cai. 138); ITr 6:1; IPhld 8:2; IPol 1:2a; Pol 9:1 al. W. inf. (acc. in the context), continued by καὶ ὅτι (s. B-D-F §397, 6; Rob. 1047) Ac 14:22. W. acc. of pers. and ἵνα foll. (PRyl 229, 17 [38 A.D.]; EpArist 318; Jos., Ant. 14, 168.—B-D-F §392, 1c; Rob. 1046) 1 Cor 1:10; 16:15f; 2 Cor 8:6; 1 Th 4:1 (π. w. ἐρωτάω as BGU 1141, 10; POxy 294, 29) 2 Th 3:12; Hm 12, 3, 2; AcPl Ha 7, 32. The ἵνα-clause expresses not the content of the appeal, as in the pass. referred to above, but its aim: πάντας παρακαλεῖν, ἵνα σῴζωνται IPol 1:2b.—Without acc. of pers.: w. direct discourse foll. ὡς τοῦ θεοῦ παρακαλοῦντος διʼ ἡμῶν• δεόμεθα since God as it were makes his appeal through us: ‘We beg’ 2 Cor 5:20. Paul serves as God’s agent (like a ‘legate of Caesar’ Dssm. LO 320 [LAE 374]) and functions as mediator (like Alexander the Great, Plut., Mor. 329c διαλλακτής; cp. also the mediatorial role of a judge IPriene 53, esp. 10f; s. also CBreytenbach, Versöhnung ’89, 64–66). W. inf. foll. 1 Ti 2:1. Abs. Ro 12:8 (mng. 4 is also poss.); 2 Ti 4:2; Tit 1:9; Hb 10:25; 1 Pt 5:12 (w. ἐπιμαρτυρεῖν); B 19:10.—W. acc. of thing impress upon someone, urge, exhort πολλὰ ἕτερα Lk 3:18. ταῦτα δίδασκε καὶ παρακάλει 1 Ti 6:2. ταῦτα λάλει καὶ παρακάλει καὶ ἔλεγχε Tit 2:15. In the case of several of the passages dealt with in this section, it is poss. that they could as well be classed under
    to make a strong request for someth., request, implore, entreat (H. Gk.: Polyb., Diod S, Epict., Plut., ins, pap, LXX, EpArist, Philo; Jos., Ant. 6, 143; 11, 338) w. acc. of pers. Mt 8:5; 18:32; Mk 1:40; 2 Cor 12:18. πολλά implore urgently (4 Macc 10:1) Mk 5:23. τινὰ περί τινος someone concerning someone or for someone Phlm 10 (for the constr. w. περί cp. POxy 1070, 8). Acc. w. direct discourse foll. (s. BGU 846, 10 παρακαλῶ σαι [= σε], μήτηρ• διαλλάγηθί μοι; PGiss 12, 4; ParJer 1:4 al.), introduced w. λέγων: Mt 8:31; 18:29; Mk 5:12; Lk 7:4 (v.l. ἠρώτων). W. acc. of pers. and inf. foll. (PTebt 12, 21 [II B.C.]; 1 Macc 9:35; Jos., Ant. 6, 25) Mk 5:17; cp. Ac 19:31. Pass. Ac 28:14. W. acc. of pers. (easily supplied fr. the context, if not expressed) and ὅπως foll. (Plut., Demetr. 907 [38, 11]; SIG 563, 4; 577, 44f [200/199 B.C.]; UPZ 109, 9 [98 B.C.]; PFlor 303, 3; 4 Macc 4:11; Jos., Ant. 13, 76) Mt 8:34 (v.l. ἵνα); Ac 25:2; IEph 3:2. W. acc. of pers. and ἵνα foll. (Epict. 2, 7, 11; PRyl 229, 17; EpArist 318.—B-D-F §392, 1c; Rob. 1046) Mt 14:36; Mk 5:18; 6:56; 7:32; 8:22; Lk 8:31f; 2 Cor 9:5. πολλά τινα, ἵνα beg someone earnestly to (cp. TestNapht 9:1) Mk 5:10; 1 Cor 16:12. W. acc. of pers. and μή w. subj. foll. IRo 4:1. W. acc. and inf. foll. Ac 24:4; pass. 13:42 (Just., D. 58, 1). Foll. by subst. inf. w. acc. (B-D-F §400, 7; 409, 5; Rob. 1068; 1085) 21:12. παρεκάλεσα ὑμᾶς ἰδεῖν I have requested to be permitted to see you 28:20 (but s. 1a above). Abs., but in such a way that the acc. is easily restored fr. the context Phlm 9 (ParJer 9:4; Just., D. 46, 2; 74, 2 [always παρακαλῶ ‘please’]; cp. New Docs 8 p. 24 ln. 7 [I B.C.]).
    to instill someone with courage or cheer, comfort, encourage, cheer up (Plut., Otho 1074 [16, 2]; Gen 37:35; Ps 118:50; Job 4:3) w. acc. of pers. (Sir 48:24; Jos., Bell. 1, 667; TestReub 4:4) 2 Cor 1:4b; 7:6a; 1 Cl 59:4; B 14:9 (Is 61:2); Hm 8:10. παρακαλεῖν τινα ἔν τινι comfort someone with someth. 2 Cor 7:6b. π. τινα ἐπί τινι comfort someone w. regard to someth. 1:4a. π. τινα ὑπέρ τινος encourage someone in someth. 1 Th 3:2. παρακαλεῖτε ἀλλήλους ἐν τοῖς λόγοις τούτοις comfort one another w. these words 4:18.—Pass. be comforted, receive comfort through words, or a favorable change in the situation Mt 5:4; Lk 16:25; Ac 20:12; 2 Cor 1:6; 7:13; 13:11; let oneself be comforted Mt 2:18 (Jer 38:15 v.l.). παρεκλήθημεν ἐφʼ ὑμῖν we have been comforted concerning you 1 Th 3:7. ἐν τῇ παρακλήσει ᾗ παρεκλήθη ἐφʼ ὑμῖν 2 Cor 7:7. διά τῆς παρακλήσεως, ἧς (on attraction, for ᾗ, s. B-D-F §294, 2; Rob. 716) παρακαλούμεθα αὐτοί by the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted 1:4c.—W. acc. of thing τὰς καρδίας Eph 6:22; Col 4:8; 2 Th 2:17; pass. Col 2:2.—Abs. 2 Cor 2:7; Ro 12:8 (but s. 2 above). παρακαλεῖν ἐν τῇ διδασκαλίᾳ encourage (others) with the teaching Tit 1:9.—ἐλθόντες παραεκάλεσαν αὐτούς (the officials) came and reassured them Ac 16:39 (s. 5 below).
    In several places παρ. appears to mean simply treat someone in an inviting or congenial manner, someth. like our ‘be open to the other, have an open door’: invite in, conciliate, be friendly to or speak to in a friendly manner (cp. 2 Macc 13:23; Ar. 15, 5 [χριστιανοὶ] τοὺς ἀδικοῦντας αὐτοὺς παρακαλοῦσιν) Lk 15:28 (but s. 1b: the father tries repeatedly [impf.] to get the son to join the party); Ac 16:39 (the officials are conciliatory, but ‘apologize to’ may be overinterpretation; s. 4); 1 Cor 4:13 (somewhat like our ‘keep the door open’); 1 Th 2:12; 1 Ti 5:1. These last three pass. may also fit in 1b.—CBjerkelund, Parakalō ’67.—M-M. EDNT. TW.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > παρακαλέω

См. также в других словарях:

  • Need for Speed: The Run — Developer(s) EA Black Box Firebrand Games (3DS)[1] …   Wikipedia

  • They Came from Outer Space — was a 1990 to 1991 syndicated television situation comedy, starred Dean Cameron as Bo, and Stuart Fratkin as Abe, two teenage fraternal twin aliens from the planet Crouton. They thwart their parents plans to send them to Oxford University, in Gr …   Wikipedia

  • one — [ wʌn ] function word *** One can be used in the following ways: as a number: We have only one child. How much does one pound of apples cost? as a determiner: He grew roses on one side of his garden, and vegetables on the other. We ll meet again… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • One Vision — Single by Queen from the album A Kind of Magic B side …   Wikipedia

  • One Card (game) — One Card is a card game played with an ordinary Poker deck (see Mau Mau for a similar game). In One Card, the Jokers are used. One Card is commonly played in South Korea. The game s general principles put it into the Crazy Eights family of card… …   Wikipedia

  • One Big Happy Family — Genre Reality television Starring The Coles family Country of origin United States Language(s) English No. of seasons 2 …   Wikipedia

  • One Tree Hill (season 6) — One Tree Hill: Season 6 One Tree Hill Season 6 DVD Cover Country of origin …   Wikipedia

  • One-Design — is a racing method where all vehicles or boats have identical or very similar designs or models. It is also known as Spec series. It is heavily used in sailboat racing. All competitors in a race are then judged based on a single start time. One… …   Wikipedia

  • One Tree Hill (season 3) — One Tree Hill: Season 3 One Tree Hill Season 3 DVD Cover Country of origin …   Wikipedia

  • One-place study — One place studies are a branch of family history with a focus on the entire population of a single village or community, not just a single, geographically dispersed family line. Contents 1 Introduction 2 Development 3 Family reconstitution …   Wikipedia

  • One Good Knight —   Author(s) …   Wikipedia

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»