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to tread the threshold

См. также в других словарях:

  • threshold — O.E. þrescold, þærscwold, þerxold doorsill, point of entering, first element related to O.E. þrescan (see THRESH (Cf. thresh)), with its original sense of tread, trample. Second element of unknown origin and much transformed in all the Germanic… …   Etymology dictionary

  • The Panic Broadcast — Álbum de Soilwork Publicación 25 de Junio del 2010 Grabación Enero Abril 2010 Género(s) Death metal melódico Metal alternativo …   Wikipedia Español

  • threshold — /thresh ohld, thresh hohld/, n. 1. the sill of a doorway. 2. the entrance to a house or building. 3. any place or point of entering or beginning: the threshold of a new career. 4. Also called limen. Psychol., Physiol. the point at which a… …   Universalium

  • threshold — thresh•old [[t]ˈθrɛʃ oʊld, ˈθrɛʃ hoʊld[/t]] n. 1) bui the sill of a doorway 2) bui the entrance to a house or building 3) any point of entering or beginning: the threshold of a new career[/ex] 4) phl psl Also called limen the point at which a… …   From formal English to slang

  • threshold — n. 1 a strip of wood or stone forming the bottom of a doorway and crossed in entering a house or room etc. 2 a point of entry or beginning (on the threshold of a new century). 3 Physiol. & Psychol. a limit below which a stimulus causes no… …   Useful english dictionary

  • threshold — ► NOUN 1) a strip of wood or stone forming the bottom of a doorway and crossed on entering a house or room. 2) a level or point at which something would start or cease to happen or come into effect. ORIGIN Old English, related to THRESH(Cf.… …   English terms dictionary

  • threshold — [OE] The first element of threshold is identical with English thresh [OE]. This seems to go back ultimately to a prehistoric source that denoted ‘making noise’ (the apparently related Old Church Slavonic tresku meant ‘crash’, and Lithuanian has… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • threshold — [OE] The first element of threshold is identical with English thresh [OE]. This seems to go back ultimately to a prehistoric source that denoted ‘making noise’ (the apparently related Old Church Slavonic tresku meant ‘crash’, and Lithuanian has… …   Word origins

  • threshold — /ˈθrɛʃhoʊld / (say threshhohld) noun 1. the sill of a doorway. 2. the entrance to a house or building. 3. any place or point of entering or beginning. 4. Aeronautics the beginning of the landing area on a runway or landing strip. 5. Psychology,… …  

  • threshold — [ θrɛʃəʊld, θrɛʃˌhəʊld] noun 1》 a strip of wood or stone forming the bottom of a doorway and crossed in entering a house or room. 2》 a level or point at which something starts or ceases to happen or come into effect.     ↘the level at which one… …   English new terms dictionary

  • BIBLE — THE CANON, TEXT, AND EDITIONS canon general titles the canon the significance of the canon the process of canonization contents and titles of the books the tripartite canon …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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