-
21 Absicht
f; -, -en intention; (Ziel) aim, object; bes JUR. intent; in der Absicht zu (+ Inf.) with the intention of (+ Ger.), with a view to (+ Ger.) in der besten Absicht with the best of intentions; in betrügerischer / guter Absicht with intent to deceive ( oder defraud) / with good intentions; in böswilliger Absicht JUR. with malicious intent, Am. with malice aforethought; ohne böse Absicht not meaning to hurt (you, him etc.); mit Absicht on purpose, deliberately; mit einer bestimmten Absicht for a purpose; mit der festen Absicht zu (+ Inf.) determined to (+ Inf.) ohne Absicht unintentionally; nicht ohne Absicht not entirely unintentionally; ohne besondere Absicht without any particular purpose (od. intent); ich habe die Absicht zu (+ Inf.) I intend to (+ Inf.), I’m planning to (+ Inf.) es war nicht meine Absicht zu (+ Inf.) I didn’t mean to (+ Inf.) das war nie meine Absicht I never wanted ( oder intended for) that (to happen); das liegt nicht in meiner Absicht that isn’t my intention; die Absicht war zu (+ Inf.) the idea was to (+ Inf.) es besteht die Absicht zu (+ Inf.) the plan is to (+ Inf.) steht oder steckt da eine bestimmte Absicht dahinter? is there a particular agenda behind it?; jemandes Absichten durchschauen / vereiteln see through / thwart s.o.’s plans; Absichten auf jemanden haben umg. have designs on s.o.* * *die Absichtpurpose; intention; intent; aim; view; goal; end* * *Ạb|sichtf -, -en(= Vorsatz) intention; (= Zweck) purpose; (JUR) intentin der besten Absicht, in bester Absicht — with the best of intentions
in der Absicht, etw zu tun — with the idea or object of doing sth, with a view to doing sth, with the intention of doing sth
die Absicht haben, etw zu tun — to intend to do sth
etw mit/ohne Absicht tun — to do/not to do sth on purpose or deliberately
das war doch keine Absicht! (inf) — it wasn't deliberate or intentional
* * *die1) (a plan formed in the mind; (an) intention: Our holidays coincided by design and not by accident.) design2) (what a person plans or intends to do: He has no intention of leaving; He went to see the boss with the intention of asking for a pay rise; If I have offended you, it was quite without intention; good intentions.) intention3) (purpose; what a person means to do: He broke into the house with intent to steal.) intend4) (an aim or intention: His main object in life was to become rich.) object* * *Ab·sicht<-, -en>f intentiondas war bestimmt nicht meine \Absicht! it was an accident!, I didn't mean to do it!es war schon immer seine \Absicht, reich zu werden it has always been his goal to be richdas lag nicht in meiner \Absicht that was definitely not what I intendedmit den besten \Absichten with the best of intentionsernste \Absichten haben to have honourable [or AM -orable] intentionsverborgene \Absichten hidden intentionsdie \Absicht haben, etw zu tun to have the intention of doing sthin selbstmörderischer \Absicht with the intention of killing herself/himself\Absicht sein to be intentionalin der \Absicht, etw zu tun with a view to [or the intention of] doing sther verfolgte sie in der \Absicht, sie zu berauben he followed her with intent to rob hereine \Absicht verfolgen to pursue a goalmit/ohne \Absicht intentionally/unintentionally* * *die; Absicht, Absichten intentiondie Absicht haben, etwas zu tun — plan or intend to do something
etwas mit Absicht tun — do something intentionally or deliberately
etwas ohne od. nicht mit Absicht tun — do something unintentionally
in der besten Absicht — with the best of intentions
* * *in der besten Absicht with the best of intentions;in betrügerischer/guter Absicht with intent to deceive ( oder defraud)/with good intentions;ohne böse Absicht not meaning to hurt (you, him etc);mit Absicht on purpose, deliberately;mit einer bestimmten Absicht for a purpose;ohne Absicht unintentionally;nicht ohne Absicht not entirely unintentionally;ohne besondere Absicht without any particular purpose ( oder intent);das liegt nicht in meiner Absicht that isn’t my intention;steckt da eine bestimmte Absicht dahinter? is there a particular agenda behind it?;jemandes Absichten durchschauen/vereiteln see through/thwart sb’s plans;Absichten auf jemanden haben umg have designs on sb* * *die; Absicht, Absichten intentiondie Absicht haben, etwas zu tun — plan or intend to do something
etwas mit Absicht tun — do something intentionally or deliberately
etwas ohne od. nicht mit Absicht tun — do something unintentionally
* * *-en f.intent n.intention n.mind n.purpose n.tendency n. -
22 gemein
I Adj.1. (boshaft) mean, nasty; bes. von Frauen: auch bitchy umg.; Bemerkung etc.: mean; (abfällig) snide; gemeiner Kerl nasty guy; gemeine Lüge rotten ( oder dirty, filthy) lie umg.; gemeiner Streich dirty trick; das ist gemein! that’s not fair, that’s mean; wie kann man nur so gemein sein? how can anyone be so mean ( oder nasty, cruel)?2. umg. (unerfreulich) awful, terrible; es regnet schon wieder, wie gemein! how depressing!, what a pain!; das Gemeine daran the awful thing about it, what really gets me about it3. umg. (schwer) Verletzung etc.: nasty; die Prüfung, das Interview etc. war gemein was really tough, was a real stinker4. (abstoßend) Witz etc.: vulgar; Aussehen, Lachen: coarse5. BOT., ZOOL., sonst altm. (gewöhnlich) common; der gemeine Mann the man in the street; gemeiner Soldat MIL. common soldier; das gemeine Volk the common people; gemeiner Bruch MATH. vulgar fraction6. etw. gemein haben mit have s.th. in common with; sie haben nichts miteinander gemein they have nothing in common; das hat mit Nächstenliebe nichts gemein that’s got very little to do with brotherly love; die Liebe zur Natur ist ihnen gemein a love of nature is something they have in common ( oder they share); sich gemein machen mit altm., fig. rub shoulders with, get chummy with umg.7. attr.; altm. der Allgemeinheit: common; (öffentlich) public; das gemeine Wohl the common good (lit. weal); für das gemeine Wohl auch for the good ( oder benefit) of all8. DRUCK. (Ggs. kursiv) lowercaseII Adv.* * *(boshaft) nasty; mean; cattish; miscreant; beastly; bitchy;(gewöhnlich) public; common;(niederträchtig) caddish; base; low; vile; rascally; infamous;(niedrig) abject; ignoble* * *ge|mein [gə'main]1. adj1) pred no compnichts mit jdm geméín haben wollen — to want nothing to do with sb
das ist beiden geméín — it is common to both of them
2) attr no comp (BIOL old = üblich, verbreitet, öffentlich) commongeméíner Bruch (Math) — vulgar fraction
geméínes Recht — common law
ein geméíner Soldat — a common soldier, a private (US)
das geméíne Volk/Wohl — the common people/good or weal (old)
der geméíne Mann — the ordinary man
das war geméín von dir! — that was mean or nasty of you
ein geméíner Streich — a dirty or rotten trick
4) (= ordinär) vulgar; Bemerkung, Witz vulgar, dirty, coarse5) (inf = unangenehm) horrible, awful2. adv1) (= niederträchtig) behandeln meanly; betrügen, hintergehen despicablyer hat sie geméín im Stich gelassen — he abandoned her in a despicable way
2) (inf = unangenehm) horribly, awfullydie Prüfung war geméín schwer — the exam was horribly or awfully difficult
das hat geméín wehgetan — it hurt terribly
* * *1) (disagreeable: What a beastly thing to do!) beastly2) common3) ignobly4) (shameful: an ignoble action.) ignoble5) (likely or intending to cause harm or annoyance: It is mean to tell lies.) mean6) vilely* * *ge·mein[gəˈmain]I. adj1. (niederträchtig) mean, nastydas war \gemein [von dir]! that was nasty [or mean] [of you]!das ist \gemein! that's so mean!3. (böse) nasty4. attr, kein komp/superl BOT, ZOOL common▪ jdm/etw \gemein sein to be common to sb/sthetw mit jdm/etw \gemein haben to have sth in common with sb/sth6.* * *1.du bist gemein!/das ist gemein [von dir]! — you're mean or nasty!/that's mean or nasty [of you]!
3) (ärgerlich) infuriating; damned annoying (coll.)4) nicht präd. (Bot., Zool., sonst veralt.): (allgemein vorkommend) common5) (veralt.): (allgemein) general2.etwas mit jemandem/etwas gemein haben — have something in common with somebody/something
1)jemanden gemein behandeln — treat somebody in a mean or nasty way
2)es hat ganz gemein weh getan — (ugs.) it hurt like hell (coll.)
* * *A. adj1. (boshaft) mean, nasty; besonders von Frauen: auch bitchy umg; Bemerkung etc: mean; (abfällig) snide;gemeiner Kerl nasty guy;gemeiner Streich dirty trick;das ist gemein! that’s not fair, that’s mean;wie kann man nur so gemein sein? how can anyone be so mean ( oder nasty, cruel)?wie gemein! how depressing!, what a pain!;das Gemeine daran the awful thing about it, what really gets me about it3. umg (schwer) Verletzung etc: nasty;die Prüfung, das Interview etcwar gemein was really tough, was a real stinkerder gemeine Mann the man in the street;gemeiner Soldat MIL common soldier;das gemeine Volk the common people;gemeiner Bruch MATH vulgar fraction6.etwas gemein haben mit have sth in common with;sie haben nichts miteinander gemein they have nothing in common;das hat mit Nächstenliebe nichts gemein that’s got very little to do with brotherly love;die Liebe zur Natur ist ihnen gemein a love of nature is something they have in common ( oder they share)das gemeine Wohl the common good (liter weal);8. TYPO (Ggs kursiv) lowercaseB. adv1. umg:gemein kalt awfully cold;es tut gemein weh it hurts like hell2.gemein an jemandem handeln treat sb badly ( oder shabbily)* * *1.du bist gemein!/das ist gemein [von dir]! — you're mean or nasty!/that's mean or nasty [of you]!
3) (ärgerlich) infuriating; damned annoying (coll.)4) nicht präd. (Bot., Zool., sonst veralt.): (allgemein vorkommend) commonder gemeine Mann — the ordinary man; the man in the street
5) (veralt.): (allgemein) general2.etwas mit jemandem/etwas gemein haben — have something in common with somebody/something
1)jemanden gemein behandeln — treat somebody in a mean or nasty way
2)es hat ganz gemein weh getan — (ugs.) it hurt like hell (coll.)
* * *adj.beastly adj.ignoble adj.mean adj.miscreant adj.scurvy adj.vile adj. adv.blackly adv.cussedly adv.ignobly adv.meanly adv.rascally adv.scurvily adv.vilely adv. -
23 fehlen
v/i1. (nicht vorhanden sein, abhanden gekommen sein) be missing; (jemandem ermangeln) be lacking; bei dir fehlt ein Knopf you’ve lost a button, you’ve got a button missing; in der Kasse fehlt Geld money is missing from the till; ihm fehlen zwei Zähne he has two teeth missing; mir fehlt... I have no..., I haven’t got (any)...; (ich habe nicht genug, brauche) I haven’t got enough..., I need...; uns fehlt das nötige Geld we haven’t got the money (needed); es fehlen uns immer noch einige Leute we still need ( oder we are still short of) a few people; ihr fehlten noch 50 Euro she was short 50 euros, she needed another 50 euros; mir fehlen die Worte words fail me; das fehlte gerade noch! iro. that’s the last straw, that’s all I ( oder we etc.) need(ed); das hat / du hast mir gerade noch ( zu meinem Glück) gefehlt! iro. that’s / you’re all I need(ed)2. (abwesend sein) be absent (in der Schule, bei einer Sitzung etc. from); er hat gefehlt auch he wasn’t there; er hat eine Woche gefehlt he was absent for a week; du darfst bei der Hochzeit nicht fehlen you mustn’t miss the wedding, the wedding won’t be the same without you; bei dem Rezept darf ein Schuss Kognak nicht fehlen the recipe is not complete without a dash of brandy3. jemandem fehlen (vermisst werden) be missed by s.o.; du hast uns sehr gefehlt we really missed you4. unpers.: es fehlt an (+ Dat) there’s a lack of; (es gibt kein[e]) there’s ( oder there are) no, there isn’t ( oder there aren’t) enough; es an nichts fehlen lassen make sure nothing is lacking; (keine Mühe/Kosten scheuen) spare no pains / expense; es fehlt ihm an nichts he’s got everything he wants; es fehlte an jeder Zusammenarbeit there was no cooperation whatsoever; wo fehlt’s denn? what’s wrong?, what’s the trouble?; es fehlte nicht viel, und er wäre daran gestorben he very nearly died of it; an mir soll’s nicht fehlen (well,) I’ll do what I can; daran soll’s nicht fehlen that’s no problem; dazu fehlt’s noch weit oder dazu fehlt noch viel that’s still a long way off, he’s etc. still got a long way to go before he etc. can do that; bei dir fehlt’s wohl da oben oder hier umg. mit Stirntippen: you must be off your head ( oder out of your mind); Ecke5. gesundheitlich etc.: was fehlt ihr denn? what’s wrong with her?; fehlt Ihnen etwas? are you all right?; dem fehlt schon nichts beruhigend: there’s nothing wrong with him, he’s perfectly OK6. (vorbeischießen) miss; weit gefehlt! fig. (falsch geraten) try again; (nichts dergleichen) you ( oder he etc.) couldn’t be more wrong7. geh. (sündigen) sin, transgress* * *das Fehlennon-existence; shortage; lack; shortcoming; absence* * *feh|len ['feːlən]1. vi1) (= mangeln) to be lacking; (= nicht vorhanden sein) to be missing; (in der Schule etc) to be away or absent (in +dat from); (= schmerzlich vermisst werden) to be missedentschuldigt féhlen — to be absent
jdm fehlt etw — sb lacks sth, sb doesn't have sth
mir féhlen 20 Cent am Fahrgeld — I'm 20 cents short for my fare, I'm short of 20 cents for my fare
mir féhlen die Worte — words fail me
meine Bibliothek fehlt/du fehlst mir sehr — I miss my library/you a lot
der/das hat mir gerade noch gefehlt! (inf) — he/that was all I needed (iro)
das durfte nicht féhlen — that had to happen
2)dem Hund scheint etwas zu féhlen — the dog seems to have something the matter with it, there seems to be something wrong or the matter with the dog
3) (old = etwas falsch machen) to err2. vi imperses fehlt etw or an etw (dat) — there is a lack of sth; (völlig) there is no sth, sth is missing
es féhlen drei Messer — there are three knives missing
es fehlt jdm an etw (dat) — sb lacks sth
féhlen lassen — to be lacking in sth, to lack sth
es fehlt hinten und vorn(e), es fehlt an allen Ecken und Enden or Kanten — we/they etc are short of everything; (bei Kenntnissen) he/she etc has a lot to learn, he/she etc has a long way to go; (bei Klassenarbeit etc) it's a long way from perfect
wo fehlt es? — what's the trouble?, what's up? (inf)
es fehlte nicht viel und ich hätte ihn verprügelt — I almost hit him
es fehlt(e) nur noch, dass wir sonntags arbeiten sollen — working Sundays is all we need (iro)
3. vt (old HUNT)to missweit gefehlt! (fig) — you're way out! (inf); (ganz im Gegenteil) far from it!
* * *1) (to have too little or none of: He lacked the courage to join the army.) lack2) (to be absent; to be present in too little an amount: Money for the project is not lacking but enthusiasm is.) be lacking* * *Fehl·en<-s>[ˈfe:lən]nt kein pl lack\Fehlen der zugesicherten Eigenschaft JUR lack of promised quality* * *intransitives Verb1) (nicht vorhanden sein) be lackingihm fehlt der Vater/das Geld — he has no father/no money
ihr fehlt der Sinn dafür — she lacks a or has no feeling for it
2) (ausbleiben) be missing; be absent[un]entschuldigt fehlen — be absent with[out] permission
3) (verschwunden sein) be missing; be gonein der Kasse fehlt Geld — money is missing or has gone from the till
er/das wird mir fehlen — I shall miss him/that
5) (erforderlich sein) be neededes fehlte nicht viel, und ich wäre eingeschlafen — I all but fell asleep
das fehlte mir gerade noch [zu meinem Glück], das hat mir gerade noch gefehlt — (ugs.) that's all I needed
6) unpers. (mangeln)es fehlt an allen Ecken und Enden od. Kanten [bei jemandem] — somebody is short of everything
7)fehlt dir etwas? — is there something wrong?; are you all right?
8)weit gefehlt! — (geh.) far from it!
* * *fehlen v/ibei dir fehlt ein Knopf you’ve lost a button, you’ve got a button missing;in der Kasse fehlt Geld money is missing from the till;ihm fehlen zwei Zähne he has two teeth missing;mir fehlt … I have no …, I haven’t got (any) …; (ich habe nicht genug, brauche) I haven’t got enough …, I need …;uns fehlt das nötige Geld we haven’t got the money (needed);es fehlen uns immer noch einige Leute we still need ( oder we are still short of) a few people;ihr fehlten noch 50 Euro she was short 50 euros, she needed another 50 euros;mir fehlen die Worte words fail me;das hat/du hast mir gerade noch (zu meinem Glück) gefehlt! iron that’s/you’re all I need(ed)2. (abwesend sein) be absent (in der Schule,bei einer Sitzung etc from);er hat gefehlt auch he wasn’t there;er hat eine Woche gefehlt he was absent for a week;du darfst bei der Hochzeit nicht fehlen you mustn’t miss the wedding, the wedding won’t be the same without you;bei dem Rezept darf ein Schuss Kognak nicht fehlen the recipe is not complete without a dash of brandy3.jemandem fehlen (vermisst werden) be missed by sb;du hast uns sehr gefehlt we really missed you4. unpers:es fehlt an (+dat) there’s a lack of; (es gibt kein[e]) there’s ( oder there are) no, there isn’t ( oder there aren’t) enough;es an nichts fehlen lassen make sure nothing is lacking; (keine Mühe/Kosten scheuen) spare no pains/expense;es fehlt ihm an nichts he’s got everything he wants;es fehlte an jeder Zusammenarbeit there was no cooperation whatsoever;wo fehlt’s denn? what’s wrong?, what’s the trouble?;es fehlte nicht viel, und er wäre daran gestorben he very nearly died of it;an mir soll’s nicht fehlen (well,) I’ll do what I can;daran soll’s nicht fehlen that’s no problem;dazu fehlt’s noch weit oderdazu fehlt noch viel that’s still a long way off, he’s etc still got a long way to go before he etc can do that;5. gesundheitlich etc:was fehlt ihr denn? what’s wrong with her?;fehlt Ihnen etwas? are you all right?;dem fehlt schon nichts beruhigend: there’s nothing wrong with him, he’s perfectly OK6. (vorbeischießen) miss;weit gefehlt! fig (falsch geraten) try again; (nichts dergleichen) you ( oder he etc) couldn’t be more wrong7. geh (sündigen) sin, transgress* * *intransitives Verb1) (nicht vorhanden sein) be lackingihm fehlt der Vater/das Geld — he has no father/no money
ihr fehlt der Sinn dafür — she lacks a or has no feeling for it
2) (ausbleiben) be missing; be absent[un]entschuldigt fehlen — be absent with[out] permission
3) (verschwunden sein) be missing; be gonein der Kasse fehlt Geld — money is missing or has gone from the till
er/das wird mir fehlen — I shall miss him/that
5) (erforderlich sein) be neededes fehlte nicht viel, und ich wäre eingeschlafen — I all but fell asleep
das fehlte mir gerade noch [zu meinem Glück], das hat mir gerade noch gefehlt — (ugs.) that's all I needed
6) unpers. (mangeln)es fehlt an allen Ecken und Enden od. Kanten [bei jemandem] — somebody is short of everything
7)fehlt dir etwas? — is there something wrong?; are you all right?
8)weit gefehlt! — (geh.) far from it!
* * *(von) n.lack (of) n. n.absence (of) n. -
24 Fehlen
v/i1. (nicht vorhanden sein, abhanden gekommen sein) be missing; (jemandem ermangeln) be lacking; bei dir fehlt ein Knopf you’ve lost a button, you’ve got a button missing; in der Kasse fehlt Geld money is missing from the till; ihm fehlen zwei Zähne he has two teeth missing; mir fehlt... I have no..., I haven’t got (any)...; (ich habe nicht genug, brauche) I haven’t got enough..., I need...; uns fehlt das nötige Geld we haven’t got the money (needed); es fehlen uns immer noch einige Leute we still need ( oder we are still short of) a few people; ihr fehlten noch 50 Euro she was short 50 euros, she needed another 50 euros; mir fehlen die Worte words fail me; das fehlte gerade noch! iro. that’s the last straw, that’s all I ( oder we etc.) need(ed); das hat / du hast mir gerade noch ( zu meinem Glück) gefehlt! iro. that’s / you’re all I need(ed)2. (abwesend sein) be absent (in der Schule, bei einer Sitzung etc. from); er hat gefehlt auch he wasn’t there; er hat eine Woche gefehlt he was absent for a week; du darfst bei der Hochzeit nicht fehlen you mustn’t miss the wedding, the wedding won’t be the same without you; bei dem Rezept darf ein Schuss Kognak nicht fehlen the recipe is not complete without a dash of brandy3. jemandem fehlen (vermisst werden) be missed by s.o.; du hast uns sehr gefehlt we really missed you4. unpers.: es fehlt an (+ Dat) there’s a lack of; (es gibt kein[e]) there’s ( oder there are) no, there isn’t ( oder there aren’t) enough; es an nichts fehlen lassen make sure nothing is lacking; (keine Mühe/Kosten scheuen) spare no pains / expense; es fehlt ihm an nichts he’s got everything he wants; es fehlte an jeder Zusammenarbeit there was no cooperation whatsoever; wo fehlt’s denn? what’s wrong?, what’s the trouble?; es fehlte nicht viel, und er wäre daran gestorben he very nearly died of it; an mir soll’s nicht fehlen (well,) I’ll do what I can; daran soll’s nicht fehlen that’s no problem; dazu fehlt’s noch weit oder dazu fehlt noch viel that’s still a long way off, he’s etc. still got a long way to go before he etc. can do that; bei dir fehlt’s wohl da oben oder hier umg. mit Stirntippen: you must be off your head ( oder out of your mind); Ecke5. gesundheitlich etc.: was fehlt ihr denn? what’s wrong with her?; fehlt Ihnen etwas? are you all right?; dem fehlt schon nichts beruhigend: there’s nothing wrong with him, he’s perfectly OK6. (vorbeischießen) miss; weit gefehlt! fig. (falsch geraten) try again; (nichts dergleichen) you ( oder he etc.) couldn’t be more wrong7. geh. (sündigen) sin, transgress* * *das Fehlennon-existence; shortage; lack; shortcoming; absence* * *feh|len ['feːlən]1. vi1) (= mangeln) to be lacking; (= nicht vorhanden sein) to be missing; (in der Schule etc) to be away or absent (in +dat from); (= schmerzlich vermisst werden) to be missedentschuldigt féhlen — to be absent
jdm fehlt etw — sb lacks sth, sb doesn't have sth
mir féhlen 20 Cent am Fahrgeld — I'm 20 cents short for my fare, I'm short of 20 cents for my fare
mir féhlen die Worte — words fail me
meine Bibliothek fehlt/du fehlst mir sehr — I miss my library/you a lot
der/das hat mir gerade noch gefehlt! (inf) — he/that was all I needed (iro)
das durfte nicht féhlen — that had to happen
2)dem Hund scheint etwas zu féhlen — the dog seems to have something the matter with it, there seems to be something wrong or the matter with the dog
3) (old = etwas falsch machen) to err2. vi imperses fehlt etw or an etw (dat) — there is a lack of sth; (völlig) there is no sth, sth is missing
es féhlen drei Messer — there are three knives missing
es fehlt jdm an etw (dat) — sb lacks sth
féhlen lassen — to be lacking in sth, to lack sth
es fehlt hinten und vorn(e), es fehlt an allen Ecken und Enden or Kanten — we/they etc are short of everything; (bei Kenntnissen) he/she etc has a lot to learn, he/she etc has a long way to go; (bei Klassenarbeit etc) it's a long way from perfect
wo fehlt es? — what's the trouble?, what's up? (inf)
es fehlte nicht viel und ich hätte ihn verprügelt — I almost hit him
es fehlt(e) nur noch, dass wir sonntags arbeiten sollen — working Sundays is all we need (iro)
3. vt (old HUNT)to missweit gefehlt! (fig) — you're way out! (inf); (ganz im Gegenteil) far from it!
* * *1) (to have too little or none of: He lacked the courage to join the army.) lack2) (to be absent; to be present in too little an amount: Money for the project is not lacking but enthusiasm is.) be lacking* * *Fehl·en<-s>[ˈfe:lən]nt kein pl lack\Fehlen der zugesicherten Eigenschaft JUR lack of promised quality* * *intransitives Verb1) (nicht vorhanden sein) be lackingihm fehlt der Vater/das Geld — he has no father/no money
ihr fehlt der Sinn dafür — she lacks a or has no feeling for it
2) (ausbleiben) be missing; be absent[un]entschuldigt fehlen — be absent with[out] permission
3) (verschwunden sein) be missing; be gonein der Kasse fehlt Geld — money is missing or has gone from the till
er/das wird mir fehlen — I shall miss him/that
5) (erforderlich sein) be neededes fehlte nicht viel, und ich wäre eingeschlafen — I all but fell asleep
das fehlte mir gerade noch [zu meinem Glück], das hat mir gerade noch gefehlt — (ugs.) that's all I needed
6) unpers. (mangeln)es fehlt an allen Ecken und Enden od. Kanten [bei jemandem] — somebody is short of everything
7)fehlt dir etwas? — is there something wrong?; are you all right?
8)weit gefehlt! — (geh.) far from it!
* * *1. (Mangel) lack, absence2. (Nichterscheinen) absence (* * *intransitives Verb1) (nicht vorhanden sein) be lackingihm fehlt der Vater/das Geld — he has no father/no money
ihr fehlt der Sinn dafür — she lacks a or has no feeling for it
2) (ausbleiben) be missing; be absent[un]entschuldigt fehlen — be absent with[out] permission
3) (verschwunden sein) be missing; be gonein der Kasse fehlt Geld — money is missing or has gone from the till
er/das wird mir fehlen — I shall miss him/that
5) (erforderlich sein) be neededes fehlte nicht viel, und ich wäre eingeschlafen — I all but fell asleep
das fehlte mir gerade noch [zu meinem Glück], das hat mir gerade noch gefehlt — (ugs.) that's all I needed
6) unpers. (mangeln)es fehlt an allen Ecken und Enden od. Kanten [bei jemandem] — somebody is short of everything
7)fehlt dir etwas? — is there something wrong?; are you all right?
8)weit gefehlt! — (geh.) far from it!
* * *(von) n.lack (of) n. n.absence (of) n. -
25 hergeben
(unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)I v/t1. (zurückgeben) give ( oder hand) back; (weggeben) give away; gib her! give it to me, hand it over; gib mal her! (lass mich mal sehen) let me have a look; ich gebe es nicht gerne her I don’t like to part with it3. fig.: eine Menge oder viel hergeben be pretty good umg., weitS. be well worth the effort; es gibt nichts oder wenig her it’s not much use; (lohnt sich nicht) it’s not worth it; Buch, Thema etc.: there isn’t much to it; schreien, was die Stimme hergibt shout at the top of one’s voice; sie lief, was die Beine hergaben she ran as fast as her legs would carry herII v/refl: sich für oder zu etw. hergeben get involved in s.th.; stärker: stoop to s.th.; sich dazu hergeben zu (+ Inf.) lower o.s. to (+ Inf.), stoop to (+ Ger.) dazu gebe ich mich nicht her auch I’m not going to have anything to do with that ( oder be a party to that)* * *to give* * *her|ge|ben sep1. vt(= weggeben) to give away; (= überreichen, aushändigen) to hand over; (= zurückgeben) to give backgib das her! — give me that, let me have that
wenig hérgeben (inf) — not to be much use
das Buch gibt nicht viel her — the book doesn't tell me/you (very) much
das Thema gibt viel/nichts her — there's a lot/nothing to this topic
ein Essen, das was hergibt — a fine spread
was die Beine hergaben — as fast as one's legs would carry one
was die Lunge/Stimme hergab — at the top of one's voice
seinen Namen für etw hérgeben — to lend one's name to sth
2. vreine Schauspielerin, die sich für solche Filme hergibt — an actress who allows herself to be involved in such films
* * *her|ge·benI. vt1. (weggeben)2. (überreichen, aushändigen)der Artikel gibt eine Fülle an Information her the article contains a lot of information4. (leihen)II. vr* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) hand over; (weggeben) give awaysein Geld für etwas hergeben — put one's money into something
er hat sein letztes hergegeben — he gave everything he had
2) (reichen) givegib es her! — hand it over!
3) (erbringen)was seine Beine hergaben — as fast as his legs could carry him
* * *hergeben (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)A. v/tgib her! give it to me, hand it over;gib mal her! (lass mich mal sehen) let me have a look;ich gebe es nicht gern[e] her I don’t like to part with it2.zu associate o.s. with3. fig:viel hergeben be pretty good umg, weitS. be well worth the effort;wenig her it’s not much use; (lohnt sich nicht) it’s not worth it; Buch, Thema etc: there isn’t much to it;schreien, was die Stimme hergibt shout at the top of one’s voice;sie lief, was die Beine hergaben she ran as fast as her legs would carry herB. v/r:zu etwas hergeben get involved in sth; stärker: stoop to sth;dazu gebe ich mich nicht her auch I’m not going to have anything to do with that ( oder be a party to that)* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) hand over; (weggeben) give away2) (reichen) give3) (erbringen)* * *v.to give away v. -
26 commun
commun, e1 [kɔmœ̃, yn]1. adjectivea. ( = collectif, de tous) common ; ( = fait ensemble) [décision, effort, réunion] jointb. ( = partagé) [élément] common ; [pièce, cuisine] communalc. ( = comparable) [goût, intérêt, caractère] commond. ( = ordinaire) [erreur] common ; [opinion] commonly helde. (pejorative = vulgaire) common2. masculine noun* * *
1.
commune kɔmœ̃, yn adjectif1) ( venant de plusieurs personnes) [travail, œuvre] collaborative; [désir, accord, conception] common; [candidat, politique, projet] joint (épith)2) ( appartenant à plusieurs) [pièce, équipement, souvenirs] shared; [langue, passé] common; [biens] joint (épith)3) ( semblable) [intérêts, traits] common (à to); [ambition, objectifs] sharedles événements d'hier sont sans commune mesure avec les précédents — yesterday's events are on an altogether different scale from previous ones
4) ( courant) common5) ( ordinaire) pej [goût, personne] common péj; [visage] plainc'est/il est d'un commun! — it's/he's so common!
2.
nom masculin ordinary
3.
en commun locution adverbiale [écrire, produire] jointly, togethermettre ses moyens or ressources en commun — to pool one's resources
4.
* * *kɔmœ̃, yn commun, -e1. adj1) (problème, intérêts, passion) common, (amis) mutualNous avons des intérêts communs. — We have interests in common., We have common interests.
Je l'ai appris par des amis communs. — I heard it from mutual friends.
Ils ont beaucoup de points communs. — They have a lot in common.
c'est sans commune mesure avec... — there's no possible comparison with...
2) (pièce, services) communal, sharedSee:être commun à [pièce, services] — to be shared by
3) (réunion, effort, travail) jointIls ont décidé d'un commun accord d'abandonner le projet. — They decided by mutual agreement to drop the project.
4) (= courant) (fait, plante) common, commonplaceCe genre de problème est tout à fait commun. — This kind of problem is very common., This kind of problem is very commonplace.
5) péjoratif (manières, personne) commonSee:2. nm1)2)avoir en commun [intérêts] — to have in common
Ils n'ont rien en commun. — They've got nothing in common.
mettre en commun [biens, services] — to share, [ressources] to pool
Nous mettons tous nos livres en commun. — We share all our books.
3. communs nmpl(= bâtiments) outbuildings4. nfSee:* * *A adj1 ( venant de plusieurs personnes) [travail, œuvre] collaborative; [désir, volonté, accord, préoccupation, conception] common; [candidat, politique, projet, revendication, stratégie] joint ( épith); d'un commun accord by mutual agreement;2 ( appartenant à plusieurs) [cour, pièce, équipement, fonds, souvenirs, expérience] shared; [ami] mutual; [ancêtre, langue, passé, dénominateur, facteur] common; [biens] joint ( épith); nous avons des amis communs we have mutual friends, we have friends in common; pour le bien commun for the common good; dans l'intérêt commun in the common interest; la cuisine est commune aux locataires the kitchen is shared by the tenants; époux communs en biens Jur couple who have become joint owners of property through marriage; après dix ans de vie commune after living together for ten years;3 ( semblable) [caractéristiques, intérêts, traits] common (à to); [ambition, objectifs] shared; une politique commune aux deux partis a policy common to both parties; n'avoir plus rien de commun avec qch/qn no longer to have anything in common with sth/sb; les événements d'hier sont sans commune mesure avec les précédents yesterday's events are on an altogether different scale from previous ones;4 ( courant) [attitude, opinion, faute, maladie, espèce] common; il est commun de faire it's common to do; ce n'est pas un prénom très commun that's a rather unusual name; elle est d'une beauté peu commune she's uncommonly beautiful;5 ( ordinaire) pej [goût, personne] common péj; [visage] plain; c'est/il est d'un commun! it's/he's so common!B nm ordinary; sortir du commun to be out of the ordinary; les gens du commun ordinary people; le commun des mortels ordinary ou common mortals (pl); le commun des auditeurs/lecteurs the ordinary listener/reader; tomber dans le commun to become commonplace ou run-of-the-mill; hors du commun exceptional.C en commun loc adv [écrire, travailler, produire] jointly, together; prendre ses repas en commun to eat together; avoir qch en commun to have sth in common (avec qn with sb); mettre ses moyens or ressources en commun to pool one's resources; nous mettons tout en commun we share everything.E commune nf1 Admin ( village) village; ( ville) town, district; dans la commune de Melay in the village of Melay;2 Hist la Commune (de Paris) the (Paris) Commune.ⓘ Commune The smallest administrative unit, headed by a maire and a conseil municipal. Each village, town and city is a commune, of which there are 36,000 nationwide.( féminin commune) [kɔmœ̃, yn] adjectifle court de tennis est commun à tous les propriétaires the tennis court is the common property of all the residents[en communauté]la vie commune [conjugale] conjugal life, the life of a couplenous avons des problèmes communs we share the same problems, we have similar problemsil n'y a pas de commune mesure entre... there's no similarity whatsoever between...c'est sans commune mesure avec... there's no comparison with...il est d'un courage peu commun he's uncommonly ou exceptionally bravecommun nom masculinun homme hors du commun an exceptional ou unusual man————————communs nom masculin plurield'un commun accord locution adverbialetous d'un commun accord ont décidé que... they decided unanimously that...————————en commun locution adverbiale -
27 münasebet
",-ti 1. relation (between people or nations). 2. connection, relation; tie-in: bu münasebetle in this connection/in this regard/ as regards this. 3. favorable occasion or opportunity. 4. reason; means: Bu münasebetle sizi tebrik etmek istiyorum. It´s for this that I want to congratulate you. 5. appropriateness, fitness. -iyle owing to, on the occasion of, because of: Ramazan münasebetiyle lokantamız kapalıdır. Our restaurant is closed because of the Ramazan fast. - almaz. It doesn´t befit the occasion./It´s not the right time for it. -te bulunmak /la/ 1. to be connected with; to have relations with, have dealings with. 2. to have sexual intercourse with, go to bed with. - düşmek for the right occasion/moment to present itself/arise. -ini getirmek to find the right moment to say something. -e girmek /la/ to establish a relationship with, have dealings with, have something to do with. - kurmak /la/ 1. to establish a relationship with, have dealings with, have something to do with. 2. to see a connection between, perceive a relationship between." -
28 parmak
"1. finger. 2. toe. 3. spoke (of a wheel). 4. bar, rail (in a railing or grill); baluster. 5. inch (2.5 centimeters). 6. finger (measure used to determine the amount of liquid in a glass). 7. the amount of material that will stick to a finger: bir parmak bal a taste of honey. 8. the length of a finger (used in making rough measurements). -ı ağzında kalmak to be greatly astonished, be open-mouthed with amazement; to marvel at something wonderful. - atmak to make trouble, stir up a stink. - basmak 1. /a/ to draw attention to (a point). 2. to put one´s thumbprint on (a document) (in lieu of a signature). -ımı basarım. colloq. You mark my words! -ını bile oynatamamak/kıpırdatamamak not to be able to move a muscle (owing to fatigue). -ını bile oynatmamak/kıpırdatmamak not to lift so much as a finger (to help). - bozmak (for children) to be on the outs with each other. -ına dolamak/sarmak /ı/ to get (something) on the brain. -la gösterilmek 1. to be a person of distinction, be famous. 2. to be small in number, be so few one can count them on the fingers of one hand (as it were). - hesabı 1. (doing arithmetic by) counting on one´s fingers. 2. metrical system based on a count of syllables. - ısırmak to be greatly astonished, be open-mouthed with amazement; to marvel at something wonderful. - ısırtmak /a/ to leave (someone) open-mouthed with astonishment; to cause (someone) to marvel. - izi fingerprint, dactylogram. - kadar small, mere slip of a (child). - kaldı almost, very nearly. - kaldırmak 1. to raise one´s hand (with only the index finger extended) (done as a means of asking permission to speak). 2. to vote in favor of a motion. - kapı 1. gate made of vertical bars. 2. hinged window grate. -ı olmak /da/ to have a finger in (something), have something to do with (something). -ında oynatmak /ı/ to twist (someone) around one´s little finger, dominate (someone) completely. -ını oynatmak to give a bribe, grease someone´s palm. - parmak finger-shaped, fingerlike. -la sayılmak to be so few one can count them on the fingers of one hand (so to speak). -ını sokmak /a/ to interfere in, meddle in (something); to stick one´s oar in. - tatlısı a sweet, finger-shaped pastry. -ının ucunda/ucuyla çevirmek /ı/ to do (something) easily and skillfully. -ının ucunu göstermemek (for a woman) to cover herself so that a man may see no part of her body whatsoever. - usulü metrical system based on a count of syllables. - üzümü a grape whose fruit is somewhat elongated. -ını yaranın üzerine basmak to put one´s finger on the real problem. -larını (birlikte) yemek to find a food very much to one´s liking, relish every mouthful of a food." -
29 Stift
m; -(e)s, -e2. (Bleistift) pencil; (Buntstift) crayon; mit Tinte schreibend: pen; (Filzstift) felt pen; (Kugelschreiber) ballpoint, Brit. auch biro ®; EDV (light) pen; hast du irgendeinen Stift? have you got something to write with?, have you got a pen (of some sort)?3. umg. (Lehrling) (young) apprentice4. umg. (Knirps) (young) nipper—n; -(e)s, -e2. (Altersheim) old people’s home* * *der Stift(Bolzen) pin;(Schreibgerät) stylus* * *Stịft I [ʃtɪft]m -(e)s, -e1) (= Metallstift) pin; (= Holzstift) peg, pin; (= Nagel) tack2) (= Bleistift) pencil; (= Buntstift) pencil, crayon; (= Filzstift) felt-tip, felt-tipped pen; (= Kugelschreiber) ballpoint (pen), Biro® (Brit); (COMPUT) pen3) (inf) (= Lehrling) apprentice (boy); (= Knirps) nipper (Brit inf whippersnapper (US inf)IInt -(e)s, -e(= Domstift) cathedral chapter; (= Theologiestift) seminary* * *(a long, thin instrument (usually of wood) containing a thin stick of graphite or some similar solid substance for writing or drawing: This pencil needs sharpening / to be sharpened; He wrote in pencil; ( also adjective) a pencil sharpener.) pencil* * *Stift1<-[e]s, -e>[ʃtɪft]m1. (Stahlstift) tack, pin2. (zum Schreiben) pen/pencilhaben Sie einen \Stift? do you have something to write with [or a pen/pencil]?3. ELEK stylusStift2<-[e]s, -e>[ʃtɪft]nt1. (Heim) home2. REL (christliches Internat) church boarding school, seminary dated; (christliches Internat für Mädchen) conventStift3<-[e]s, -e>[ʃtɪft]* * *Ider; Stift[e]s, Stifte1) (aus Metall) pin; (aus Holz) peg3) (ugs.): (Lehrling) apprenticeIIdas; Stift[e]s, Stifte1) (christl. Kirche): (Institution) foundation2) (österr.): (Kloster) monastery* * *Stift1 m; -(e)s, -e2. (Bleistift) pencil; (Buntstift) crayon; mit Tinte schreibend: pen; (Filzstift) felt pen; (Kugelschreiber) ballpoint, Br auch biro ®; IT (light) pen;hast du irgendeinen Stift? have you got something to write with?, have you got a pen (of some sort)?3. umg (Lehrling) (young) apprentice4. umg (Knirps) (young) nipperStift2 n; -(e)s, -e2. (Altersheim) old people’s home* * *Ider; Stift[e]s, Stifte1) (aus Metall) pin; (aus Holz) peg3) (ugs.): (Lehrling) apprenticeIIdas; Stift[e]s, Stifte1) (christl. Kirche): (Institution) foundation2) (österr.): (Kloster) monastery* * *-e m.dowel n.nib n.pen n.pin n.spike n.stud n.tack n. -
30 dominar
v.1 to control (controlar) (pasión, nervios, caballo).era imposible dominar el vehículo it was impossible to maintain control of the vehicle2 to overcome.lo dominaba el deseo irrefrenable de besarla he was overcome by an irresistible desire to kiss her3 to master (conocer) (técnica, tema).domina varias lenguas she speaks various languages fluentlyha conseguido dominar el inglés en pocos meses he managed to acquire a good command of English within a few months4 to overlook.desde aquí se domina todo Bilbao you can see the whole of Bilbao from here5 to predominate.6 to dominate, to domineer, to bestride, to have sway over.El tirano domina al pueblo The tyrant dominates the people.Ella domina su ira She dominates her anger.7 to tower above, to dominate.El cerro domina el horizonte The hill dominates the horizon.8 to have the control, to dominate, to have ascendancy, to have the ascendancy.Ella domina She has the control.9 to calm down forcibly, to calm down.10 to take over.* * *1 (tener bajo dominio) to dominate2 (avasallar) to domineer3 (controlar) to control, restrain4 (conocer a fondo) to master5 (ver) to overlook, dominate1 (ser superior) to dominate2 (destacar) to stand out3 (predominar) to predominate1 (controlarse) to control oneself, restrain oneself* * *verb1) to dominate2) master3) prevail•* * *1. VT1) (=controlar) [+ población, territorio] to dominate; [+ países] to rule, rule over; [+ adversario] to overpower; [+ caballo] to control2) (=contener) [+ incendio, epidemia] to check, bring under control; [+ rebelión] to put down, suppress; [+ pasión] to control, master; [+ nervios, emoción] to control; [+ dolor] to overcome3) [+ técnica, tema] to master4) (=estar por encima de)la catedral domina toda la ciudad — the cathedral dominates o towers above the whole town
2. VI1) [edificio] to tower2) (=predominar) [color, rasgo] to stand out; [opinión, tendencia] to predominate3.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( controlar) <nación/territorio/persona> to dominate; <pasión/cólera> to control; <vehiculo/caballo> to controldominado por la ambición/los celos — ruled by ambition/consumed by jealousy
la policía dominó la situación en todo momento — the police had the situation under control at all times
b) < idioma> to have a good command of; <tema/asignatura> to know... very wellc) ( abarcar con la vista)d) montaña/torre to dominate2. 3.* * *= dominate, dominate + the scene, get + command of, tame, subdue, master, command, conquer, preponderate, overtake, overlook, gain + control (over/of), get + a grip on, tower above/over, pervade, hold + sway (over), be king, lord over, lord it over, keep + a tight hold on.Ex. The ideology advocated by Panizzi has since dominated not only Anglo-American but Western cataloging generally.Ex. This may have something to do with the absence of CABx, who seem to have dominated the scene in other states.Ex. The great storyteller, FC Sayers, having advised the beginner to 'steep himself in folklore until the elemental themes are part of himself,' explains how best to get command of a tale.Ex. The problem reside in the fact that they environment we seek to tame and control is an open, unstructured dynamic process, while human organizations are static and highly resistant to change.Ex. Anyway, experience had taught him that a subordinate who attempts to subdue a superordinate is almost always lost; the superordinate has too many advantages in such a contest.Ex. The library director strove to master his frustration.Ex. Very few engravers commanded the necessary artistry.Ex. The tools and technologies provided by the Internet enable scholars to communicate or disseminate information in ways which conquer the barriers of time and space.Ex. The indexing languages used in science and technology were first in the field, and still preponderate, both in areas covered and in number.Ex. E-Books, while a curiosity and a lot of fun, do not seem to be overtaking the mass market.Ex. In this sense the British Council libraries may be seen as a window, overlooking the British Isles, their virtues and characteristics.Ex. Gradually many of these conquerors came to realize that, although military might was necessary to gain control over an area, sheer force of arms was not sufficient to govern effectively.Ex. The article ' Getting a grip on change' argues that only by confronting the challenges and inevitability of change can libraries retain their relevancy in the information age.Ex. Prague represents a unique collection of historical monuments dominated by Prague Castle towering high above the city.Ex. I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Ex. This ideology appealed widely to the librarian as well as the library user and held sway for nearly a quarter of a millennium when, in 1841, a catalytic event in the history of cataloging took place.Ex. Despite the electronics invasion, books are still king, and book fairs keeps on growing every year.Ex. She argues that the way yeoman farmers lorded over their wives and dependents was similar to the way wealthy planters lorded over their slaves.Ex. They believe that the main use for government is for some people to lord it over others at their expense.Ex. A study of telly-addicts has found that in 45 per cent of homes mums keep a tight hold on the remote control.----* dominar a Alguien = have + Nombre + under + Posesivo + thumb, bring + Nombre + under + Posesivo + sway.* dominar aún más = tighten + Posesivo + grip on.* dominar el miedo = conquer + fear.* dominar la situación = tame + the beast.* dominar por completo = sweep + the board.* dominar una destreza = master + skill.* dominar una técnica = master + technique.* la mano que mece la cuna es la mano que domina el mundo = the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( controlar) <nación/territorio/persona> to dominate; <pasión/cólera> to control; <vehiculo/caballo> to controldominado por la ambición/los celos — ruled by ambition/consumed by jealousy
la policía dominó la situación en todo momento — the police had the situation under control at all times
b) < idioma> to have a good command of; <tema/asignatura> to know... very wellc) ( abarcar con la vista)d) montaña/torre to dominate2. 3.* * *= dominate, dominate + the scene, get + command of, tame, subdue, master, command, conquer, preponderate, overtake, overlook, gain + control (over/of), get + a grip on, tower above/over, pervade, hold + sway (over), be king, lord over, lord it over, keep + a tight hold on.Ex: The ideology advocated by Panizzi has since dominated not only Anglo-American but Western cataloging generally.
Ex: This may have something to do with the absence of CABx, who seem to have dominated the scene in other states.Ex: The great storyteller, FC Sayers, having advised the beginner to 'steep himself in folklore until the elemental themes are part of himself,' explains how best to get command of a tale.Ex: The problem reside in the fact that they environment we seek to tame and control is an open, unstructured dynamic process, while human organizations are static and highly resistant to change.Ex: Anyway, experience had taught him that a subordinate who attempts to subdue a superordinate is almost always lost; the superordinate has too many advantages in such a contest.Ex: The library director strove to master his frustration.Ex: Very few engravers commanded the necessary artistry.Ex: The tools and technologies provided by the Internet enable scholars to communicate or disseminate information in ways which conquer the barriers of time and space.Ex: The indexing languages used in science and technology were first in the field, and still preponderate, both in areas covered and in number.Ex: E-Books, while a curiosity and a lot of fun, do not seem to be overtaking the mass market.Ex: In this sense the British Council libraries may be seen as a window, overlooking the British Isles, their virtues and characteristics.Ex: Gradually many of these conquerors came to realize that, although military might was necessary to gain control over an area, sheer force of arms was not sufficient to govern effectively.Ex: The article ' Getting a grip on change' argues that only by confronting the challenges and inevitability of change can libraries retain their relevancy in the information age.Ex: Prague represents a unique collection of historical monuments dominated by Prague Castle towering high above the city.Ex: I strongly believe that we must cultivate a more positive attitude towards change in the field of library work, and that this attitude must pervade all levels of librarianship.Ex: This ideology appealed widely to the librarian as well as the library user and held sway for nearly a quarter of a millennium when, in 1841, a catalytic event in the history of cataloging took place.Ex: Despite the electronics invasion, books are still king, and book fairs keeps on growing every year.Ex: She argues that the way yeoman farmers lorded over their wives and dependents was similar to the way wealthy planters lorded over their slaves.Ex: They believe that the main use for government is for some people to lord it over others at their expense.Ex: A study of telly-addicts has found that in 45 per cent of homes mums keep a tight hold on the remote control.* dominar a Alguien = have + Nombre + under + Posesivo + thumb, bring + Nombre + under + Posesivo + sway.* dominar aún más = tighten + Posesivo + grip on.* dominar el miedo = conquer + fear.* dominar la situación = tame + the beast.* dominar por completo = sweep + the board.* dominar una destreza = master + skill.* dominar una técnica = master + technique.* la mano que mece la cuna es la mano que domina el mundo = the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world.* * *dominar [A1 ]vt1 (controlar) ‹nación/territorio› to dominate; ‹persona› to dominate; ‹pasión/cólera› to controltiene a los niños totalmente dominados she has the children well under her thumb o under controldominado por la ambición ruled by ambitiondominado por los celos consumed by jealousyno logró dominar su ira she couldn't contain o control her angerel equipo que dominó el encuentro the team which dominated the matchno logró dominar el vehículo/caballo he couldn't get control of the vehicle/horsela policía dominó la situación en todo momento the police had the situation under control at all times2 ‹tema/idioma›no domino el tema I'm no expert on the subjectdomina el francés she has a good command of Frenchnunca voy a poder dominar el inglés I'll never be able to master English3(abarcar con la vista): desde allí se domina toda la bahía there's a view over the whole bay from there, from there you can look out over the whole bay4 «montaña/torre» to dominate■ dominarvi«color/tendencia» to predominate; «opinión» to prevailel tema que dominó en las negociones the subject which dominated the talksel equipo visitante dominó durante el segundo tiempo the visitors dominated the second half o were on top in the second half«persona» to restrain o control oneself* * *
dominar ( conjugate dominar) verbo transitivo
‹pasión/cólera› to control;
‹vehículo/caballo› to control;◊ dominado por la ambición/los celos ruled by ambition/consumed by jealousy
‹tema/asignatura› to know … very wellc) ( abarcar con la vista):
verbo intransitivo [color/tendencia] to predominate;
[ opinión] to prevail;
[ equipo] to dominate
dominarse verbo pronominal [ persona] to restrain o control oneself
dominar
I verbo transitivo
1 (un pueblo, país) to dominate, rule
2 (contener, controlar) to control
3 (conocer perfectamente: un idioma) to speak very well
(: un asunto, una actividad) to master
4 (con la vista) to overlook
II verbo intransitivo
1 to dominate
2 (un color, una característica) to stand out
' dominar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
abarcar
- imperar
- imponerse
- vencer
- conocer
- dejar
- reducir
- someter
- sujetar
English:
control
- curb
- dominate
- hold down
- master
- overpower
- pervade
- restrain
- subdue
- sway
- tower
- over
- rule
* * *♦ vt1. [controlar] [país, territorio, pueblo] to dominate, to rule (over);[persona, caballo] to control; [emociones, nervios] to control, to keep under control; [situación] to be in control of; [incendio, epidemia] to bring under control; [rebelión] to put down; [partido] to dominate;la guerrilla domina toda esta zona guerrillas control this entire area;la policía logró dominar a los alborotadores the police managed to bring the troublemakers under control;tiene al marido dominado she has her husband under her thumb;era imposible dominar el vehículo it was impossible to maintain control of the vehicle;no supo dominar sus nervios she couldn't control her nervousness;el equipo local dominó el partido en todo momento the local team dominated the game from the beginning2. [sujeto: pasión, nervios, emociones] to overcome;lo dominaba el deseo irrefrenable de besarla he was overcome by an irresistible desire to kiss her3. [ser experto en] [técnica, tema] to master;[lengua] to be fluent in;domina a la perfección los temas de contabilidad he has a perfect mastery of accounting;domina varias lenguas she speaks various languages fluently;ha conseguido dominar el inglés en pocos meses he managed to acquire a good command of English in a few months;¡cómo domina el balón! what great ball control!4. [divisar] to overlook;desde aquí se domina todo Bilbao you can see the whole of Bilbao from here5. [destacar por encima de] to dominate;el castillo domina el pueblo the castle dominates the town♦ vi[predominar] to predominate;una zona donde domina el voto socialista an area with a predominantly socialist vote* * *I v/t2 idioma have a good command ofII v/i dominate* * *dominar vt1) : to dominate2) : to master, to be proficient atdominar vi: to predominate, to prevail* * *dominar vb1. (en general) to dominate2. (tener bajo poder) to rule over3. (controlar) to control5. (idioma) to be fluent in6. (otras materias) to be good at / to be an expert on -
31 ser algo común
(v.) = be a fact of life, dominate + the scene, be a common occurrence, become + a common feature, be a part of lifeEx. Federal aid to help cope with the problem of information was not new and had been a fact of life in one way or another for a long time.Ex. This may have something to do with the absence of CABx, who seem to have dominated the scene in other states.Ex. In the nineteenth-century compulsory overtime to 10 p.m. or midnight was a very common occurrence in news offices, with all-night working when there was a rush on.Ex. Droughts are becoming a common feature, parching the land at least once every two years.Ex. Scratches are a part of life when you have parquet floors.* * *(v.) = be a fact of life, dominate + the scene, be a common occurrence, become + a common feature, be a part of lifeEx: Federal aid to help cope with the problem of information was not new and had been a fact of life in one way or another for a long time.
Ex: This may have something to do with the absence of CABx, who seem to have dominated the scene in other states.Ex: In the nineteenth-century compulsory overtime to 10 p.m. or midnight was a very common occurrence in news offices, with all-night working when there was a rush on.Ex: Droughts are becoming a common feature, parching the land at least once every two years.Ex: Scratches are a part of life when you have parquet floors. -
32 doen
doen1〈 het〉♦voorbeelden:dat is geen manier van doen • that's no way to behavein goeden doen zijn • be well offuit zijn gewone doen zijn • not be one's normal selfergens mee van doen hebben • have (something) to do withvoor hun doen, … • for them, …; …, consideringdat is geen doen • that can't be done————————doen22 [ergens plaatsen] put3 [laten ondergaan] make, do4 [kosten, opbrengen] do ⇒ go for5 [schoonmaken] do ⇒ clean6 [bereizen, bezichtigen] do ⇒ visit7 [+ het] [gewenste (uit)werking hebben] work8 [+ onbepaalde wijs] [laten] make♦voorbeelden:een uitspraak doen • pronounce (on)uitspraak doen • pass judgementdoe mij maar een witte wijn • for me a white wine, I'll have a white wineik geef 't je te doen • it's quite a jobwat kom jij doen? • what do you want?iemand iets doen toekomen • send someone somethingze doet het erom • she does it on purposezij deed niets dan praten • she did nothing but talkwat doet hij (voor de kost)? • what does he do (for a living)?moet je wat doen? • do you have to go (somewhere)?er is niets tegen te doen • nothing can be done (about it), there's nothing to be donehij heeft het meer gedaan • he has done it beforezoiets doe je niet • you (just) don't do that (sort of thing)veel/weinig te doen hebben • have a lot/little to dowat is hier te doen? • what's going on here?ik weet niet waar ze het van doen • I don't know how they do itvergeet niet om … Doe ik • don't forget to … Will dodat doet me plezier • I'm glad about thatiemand verdriet/pijn doen • hurt someone, cause someone grief/painhet deed me niets • I couldn't have cared lessdie muziek doet me niets • I don't care for that musiczo'n ervaring doet je wat • such an experience moves/gets you4 wat moet dat boek doen? • how much do you want for that book?de tv doet het niet meer • the TV is out of orderdat doet het hem • that makes all the differenceiemand iets doen geloven • lead someone to believe somethinghij deed van zich spreken • he had people talking about himwe weten wat ons te doen staat • we know what (we are) to dodat moet je altijd doen • that's something you should always dodaar kan hij het mee doen • he can put that in his pipe and smoke iter het zwijgen toe doen • not say a worddat doet er niets toe • that's beside the pointer niets aan kunnen doen • not be able to help itkan ik er iets aan doen! • I can't help it!er is niets aan te doen • there's nothing to do about it, it can't be helpedmet iemand te doen hebben • feel sorry for someonehet is hem te doen om • he is out to (do something)niets aan te doen • can't be helpedte niet doen • undo, nullifyzich aan iets te goed doen • do (oneself) well on something2 [bezig zijn met] do, be3 [handel drijven] do ⇒ deal♦voorbeelden:gewichtig doen • act importantdoe maar net of ik er niet ben • just pretend I am not hereniet doen! • don't (do that)!doen alsof • pretendje doet maar • 〈 vaak ironisch〉 go ahead, suit yourselfaan sport doen • do/take part in sport(s)aan de lijn doen • be dietinghij doet lang over dat boek • he is taking a long time over that book -
33 beskæftige
1занима́ть, дава́ть рабо́туbeskǽftige sig (med ngt) — занима́ться (чем-л.)
* * *concern, employ* * *vb( have i arbejde) employ;( sysselsætte) occupy, keep occupied ( fx the children must be kept occupied);( optage) occupy ( fx it occupied his thoughts);[ beskæftige sig med] be occupied with, devote one's time to,( have at gøre med) have something to do with ( fx I won't haveanything to do with it),( behandle, tage sig af) deal with ( fx we are dealing with theproblem);[ beskæftiget med] occupied with, engaged in (el. on);[ travlt beskæftiget] very busy ( med at gøre noget doing something). -
34 acaparar el mercado
(v.) = dominate + the scene, corner + the marketEx. This may have something to do with the absence of CABx, who seem to have dominated the scene in other states.Ex. The article ' Cornering the market' argues that if bookshops want to capture a slice of the market, they need to experiment with multimedia products.* * *(v.) = dominate + the scene, corner + the marketEx: This may have something to do with the absence of CABx, who seem to have dominated the scene in other states.
Ex: The article ' Cornering the market' argues that if bookshops want to capture a slice of the market, they need to experiment with multimedia products. -
35 tener algo que ver con
(v.) = have + something to do withEx. Classes of children can sometimes prove to be stubbornly set against having anything to do with book introductions, and it is better then to engage them in other activities rather than be doggedly determined to have one's own way and to go on in the face of their antagonism.* * *(v.) = have + something to do withEx: Classes of children can sometimes prove to be stubbornly set against having anything to do with book introductions, and it is better then to engage them in other activities rather than be doggedly determined to have one's own way and to go on in the face of their antagonism.
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36 иметь отношение к
1. bear on2. have a bearing onсреднее время доступа к диску — avg. disk sec/io
3. have to do withсоздать, вызвать к жизни — to call into being
4. refer5. bear a relation toя понимаю, к чему вы клоните — I see what you are driving at
6. bear a relationship toотносящийть к — falling into; relate to (refl.)
7. concern inсогласовывать, приводить к согласию — to bring into accord
8. concern the9. have a relation to10. have a relationship toстать лагом к … — turn broadside on to the sea
ехать к морю, поехать на море — to go to the sea
11. have something to do withиметь отношение к; оказывать; влияние на — have a bearing on
12. refers to13. relate to14. concernРусско-английский большой базовый словарь > иметь отношение к
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37 fælles
о́бщий, совме́стный* * *collective, collectively, common, communal, concerted, joint, mixed, mutual, united* * *adj(som to el. flere har) common ( for to, fx that mistake was common to all of them; their common enemy; common interests), joint ( fx bank account, project, responsibility),( som man deles om) shared ( fx toilet),(mere F) communal ( fx kitchen, television);( forenet) joint ( fx action, efforts), united ( fx efforts; form a united front);[ være fælles om noget] share something;[ med sb:][ ved fælles anstrengelser] by our (, their etc) joint (el. united) efforts;[ til fælles bedste] for our (, their, etc) common good;[ ved fælles hjælp] between them (, us, you), by their (, our, your) joint efforts;( også) have interests in common;[ i fælles interesse] in our (, their etc) common interest;[ gøre fælles sag med] make common cause with;( for begge køn) co-education;[ vor fælles ven] our mutual (el. common) friend. -
38 y
I.Y1, y1 [igʀεk]masculine nounII.Y2( ABBR OF yen) Y* * *
I
Y igʀɛk nom masculin invariable ( lettre) y, Y
II i1) ( à ça)2) (là) there3) ( avec le verbe avoir)des pommes? il n'y en a plus/pas — apples? there are none left/none
du vin? il n'y en a plus/pas — wine? there's none left/none
••
••
Lorsque y met en relief un groupe exprimé, on ne le traduit pas: tu y vas souvent, à Londres? (colloq) = do you often go to London?; je n'y comprends rien, moi, aux échecs (colloq) = I don't understand anything about chessLorsque y ne remplace aucun groupe identifiable, on ne le traduit pas: c'est plus difficile qu'il n'y paraît = it's harder than it seems; je n'y vois rien = I can't see a thing
••
Lorsque y met en relief un groupe exprimé, on ne le traduit pas: tu y vas souvent, à Londres? (colloq) = do you often go to London?; je n'y comprends rien, moi, aux échecs (colloq) = I don't understand anything about chessLorsque y ne remplace aucun groupe identifiable, on ne le traduit pas: c'est plus difficile qu'il n'y paraît = it's harder than it seems; je n'y vois rien = I can't see a thing* * *iɡʀɛk nm inv(= y) Y, yY comme Yvonne — Y for Yellow Grande-Bretagne Y for Yoke USA
* * *I.y pronLorsque y met en relief un groupe exprimé, on ne le traduit pas: tu y vas souvent, à Londres○? = do you often go to London?; je n'y comprends rien, moi, aux échecs○ = I don't understand anything about chess.Lorsque y ne remplace aucun groupe identifiable, on ne le traduit pas: c'est plus difficile qu'il n'y paraît = it's harder than it seems; je n'y vois rien = I can't see a thing.1 ( à ça) rien n'y fait it's no use; elle n'y peut rien there's nothing she can do about it; j'y viens I'm coming to that point; tu n'y arriveras jamais you'll never manage; tu y crois? do you believe it?; je vais m'y mettre demain I'll start tomorrow; je n'y comprends rien I don't understand a thing; il n'y connaît rien he knows nothing about it; j'y pense parfois I sometimes think about it; tu sais y jouer? can you play?; tu t'y attendais? were you expecting it?; elle n'a rien à y perdre she's got nothing to lose; tu y as gagné you got the best deal;2 (là) there; j'y serai en août I'll be there in August; elle y mange parfois she sometimes goes there to eat; n'y va pas don't go; j'y suis allé hier I went yesterday;3 ◑(à lui, à elle) dis-y tell him/her; parles-y talk to him/her; coupes-y les cheveux cut his/her hair;5 ◑(il) c'est-y pas dommage qu'y pleuve? what a pity it's raining!; c'est-y pas gentil! how nice!;6 ( avec le verbe avoir) des pommes? il n'y en a plus/pas apples? there are none left/none; du vin? il n'y en a plus/pas wine? there's none left/none; quand y en a plus, y en a encore○ there's always more where that came from; il n'y a qu'à téléphoner, y a qu'à téléphoner○ just phone; ‘il n'y a qu'à le repeindre!’-‘y a qu'à○, c'est facile à dire!’ ‘all you have to do is repaint it!’-‘just repaint it! easier said than done!’y mettre du sien to work at it.II.Ipronom1. [représente le lieu] therevas-y, entre! go on in!je n'y suis pour personne whoever it is, I'm not in2. [représente une chose] itpensez-y, à mon offre do think about my offern'y comptez pas don't count ou bank on it3. [représente une personne]les fantômes, j'y crois I believe in ghosts4. (locution)a. [j'ai compris] (I've) got it!b. [je t'ai compris] I'm with you!je n'y suis pour rien, moi! it's (got) nothing to do with me!, it's not my fault!laisse-le choisir, il s'y connaît let him choose, he knows all about itsi tu veux un matériel de qualité, il faut y mettre le prix if you want quality material, you have to pay for itavec les petits, il faut savoir s'y prendre with little children you have to know how to handle themIInom masculin,Y nom masculin [igrɛk]y, Yvoir aussi link=g g -
39 indlade
4впуска́тьíndlade sig ; índlade sig i sámtale med én... — вступи́ть в разгово́р с кем-л.
* * *I. vb (indlade, indladet)(mar) ship, load, take in.II. vb (indlod, indladt) let in, admit;[ indlade sig i samtale med] enter into conversation with;[ indlade sig med] take up with, have something to do with, have dealings with;[ hun ville ikke indlade sig med ham] she rejected his advances;[ indlade sig på] embark on; enter into; engage in;( udsætte sig for) let oneself in for ( fx he does not know what he is letting himself in for);[ indlade sig på at] undertake to. -
40 herumpfuschen
v/i (trennb., hat -ge-) umg. mess around; herumpfuschen an (+ Dat) fiddle around with; unerlaubt: tamper with* * *to mess around; to mess about* * *he|rụm|pfu|schenvi sep (inf)to mess about (inf) ( an +dat with)* * *((with with) to meddle, or to have something to do with: She's always messing with the television set.) mess* * *her·um|pfu·schenvi (fam)* * *herumpfuschen v/i (trennb, hat -ge-) umg mess around;* * *(an) v.to fiddle around (with) v.
См. также в других словарях:
have something in common with something — have something in common (with something) phrase to have the same features as something else This area obviously has a lot in common with other inner city areas. Thesaurus: to be similar to, or the same as, something or someonesynonym Main entry … Useful english dictionary
have something in common with something — have (something) in common (with (someone/something)) to share interests or characteristics. What these very old objects have in common is that they were all stolen and smuggled out of the country. What does the new model have in common with… … New idioms dictionary
have something in common with someone — have (something) in common (with (someone/something)) to share interests or characteristics. What these very old objects have in common is that they were all stolen and smuggled out of the country. What does the new model have in common with… … New idioms dictionary
have something in common with — have (something) in common (with (someone/something)) to share interests or characteristics. What these very old objects have in common is that they were all stolen and smuggled out of the country. What does the new model have in common with… … New idioms dictionary
have something in common with someone — have something in common (with someone) phrase to have the same interests or opinions as someone else We’ve got such a lot in common. I don’t think they’ve got much in common with their neighbours. Thesaurus: to be similar to, or the same as,… … Useful english dictionary
have something to do with something — be/have something to do with something phrase used for saying that something is related to something else, especially when you do not know or do not give the exact details I can’t always open my emails – it has something to do with the type of… … Useful english dictionary
have something in common with somebody — have sth in common (with sb) idiom (of people) to have the same interests, ideas, etc. as sb else • Tim and I have nothing in common./I have nothing in common with Tim. Main entry: ↑commonidiom … Useful english dictionary
have (something) in common — (with (someone/something)) to share interests or characteristics. What these very old objects have in common is that they were all stolen and smuggled out of the country. What does the new model have in common with earlier versions? Usage notes:… … New idioms dictionary
something to do with — connected in some way. How a ball travels after it is hit has something to do with the laws of physics. I wonder if cell phones have something to do with people bumping into things when they walk. Opposite of: nothing to do with … New idioms dictionary
have something on — {v. phr.}, {informal} To have information or proof that someone did something wrong. * /Mr. Jones didn t want to run for office because he knew the opponents had something on him./ * /Mr. Smith keeps paying blackmail to a man who has something on … Dictionary of American idioms
have something on — {v. phr.}, {informal} To have information or proof that someone did something wrong. * /Mr. Jones didn t want to run for office because he knew the opponents had something on him./ * /Mr. Smith keeps paying blackmail to a man who has something on … Dictionary of American idioms