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61 достигнуть высшей точки
General subject: arrive at the climax, reach a peakУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > достигнуть высшей точки
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62 Gipfel
m; -s, -1. summit, (mountain) peak, mountain top2. fig. (Höhepunkt) peak, height; einer Kurve: peak; auf dem Gipfel (+ Gen) at the peak ( oder height) of; der Gipfel der Frechheit the height of impudence; das ist der Gipfel der Geschmacklosigkeit auch for tastelessness that’s hard to beat; das ist ja der Gipfel! umg. that really is the limit, auch that takes the biscuit (Am. cake)3. POL. umg. summit4. altm. (Wipfel) top* * *der Gipfel(Bergspitze) top of the mountain; peak; summit; height; hilltop; tip; top; pinnacle;(Höhepunkt) peak; acme; heyday* * *Gịp|fel ['gɪpfl]m -s, -1) (= Bergspitze) peak; (= höchster Punkt eines Berges) summitden Gipfel erreichen — to reach the summit
er hat den Gipfel seiner Wünsche/Träume erreicht — all his wishes/dreams have been fulfilled or have come true
das ist der Gipfel! (inf) — that's the limit, that takes the biscuit (Brit) or cake (inf)
3) (= Gipfelkonferenz) summit4) (Sw = Croissant) croissant* * *der1) (the top eg of a head, hat, hill etc: We reached the crown of the hill.) crown2) (the peak or extreme: dressed in the height of fashion; His actions were the height of folly.) height3) (the highest, greatest, busiest etc point, time etc: He was at the peak of his career.) peak4) (a high pointed rock or mountain: It was a dangerous pinnacle to climb.) pinnacle5) (a high point (of achievement, success etc): He has reached the pinnacle of his career.) pinnacle6) (the highest point: They reached the summit of the mountain at midday; At the age of thirty he was at the summit of his powers as a composer.) summit* * *Gip·fel<-s, ->[ˈgɪpfl̩]mauf dem \Gipfel der Macht/des Ruhms angelangt sein to have reached the peak of one's power/fame; (Höhepunkt) heightder \Gipfel der Vollkommenheit sein to be the epitome of perfectionder \Gipfel der Frechheit sein to be the height of cheekder \Gipfel der Geschmacklosigkeit/Perversion the depths [or the height] of bad taste/perversion3. POL summit [conference]* * *der; Gipfels, Gipfel1) peak; (höchster Punkt des Berges) summit2) (Höhepunkt) height; (von Begeisterung, Glück, Ruhm, Macht auch) peakauf dem Gipfel der Macht/des Ruhmes — at the height of one's power/fame
das ist [doch] der Gipfel! — (ugs.) that's the limit!
3) (Gipfelkonferenz) summit* * *1. summit, (mountain) peak, mountain topder Gipfel der Frechheit the height of impudence;3. POL umg summit4. obs (Wipfel) top* * *der; Gipfels, Gipfel1) peak; (höchster Punkt des Berges) summit2) (Höhepunkt) height; (von Begeisterung, Glück, Ruhm, Macht auch) peakauf dem Gipfel der Macht/des Ruhmes — at the height of one's power/fame
das ist [doch] der Gipfel! — (ugs.) that's the limit!
3) (Gipfelkonferenz) summit* * *- m.apogee n.climax n.height n.pinnacle n.summit n.top n. m.acme n. -
63 szczytować
The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > szczytować
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64 zirveye ulaşmak
v. climax, crest, reach the peak -
65 a ajunge la apogeu
to reach a / its climax( d. o criză) to come to a head. -
66 градус
м.1) ( единица измерения углов и дуг) degreeу́гол в 60 гра́дусов — angle of sixty degrees
гра́дус широты́ — degree of latitude
гра́дус укло́на (дороги, рельефа) — degree of slope; grade амер.
2) ( единица измерения температуры) degreeсего́дня 10 гра́дусов тепла́ [моро́за] — it is ten degrees above [below] zero today
сего́дня 20 гра́дусов в тени́ — it is twenty degrees in the shade today
ско́лько гра́дусов сего́дня? — what is the temperature today?
подня́ться [упа́сть] на сто́лько-то гра́дусов — rise [fall ] so many degrees
3) разг. (мера концентрации, степень крепости спиртного напитка) percentнапи́тки кре́постью свы́ше 30 гра́дусов — liquors stronger than 30 percent alcohol
4) (рд.; мера, степень) degree (of), extent (of)дости́чь вы́сшего гра́дуса — reach the highest degree / point, be at its highest; climax
••под гра́дусом разг. (в нетрезвом состоянии) — under the influence; one over the eight брит.; under the weather амер.
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67 بلغ السيل الزبى
بَلَغَ السّيْلُ الزّبَىto come to a head, reach a crisis or climax; to be or become too aggravated, too critical; to be or become unbearable, intolerable, unendurable, extreme -
68 κλῐ1νω
κλῐ1νωGrammatical information: v.Meaning: `incline (oneself), lean (on), sink, bend'.Other forms: - ομαι, aor. κλῖναι, κλίνασθαι (Il.), pass. κλιθῆναι (Od.), κλινθῆναι (Il.;; Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 404 w. n. 2, Schwyzer 761), also κλινῆναι (Att.; prob. for *κλι-ῆναι; Schwyzer 760), fut. κλῐνῶ (Att.), perf. midd. κέκλῐμαι (Il.), with κέκλῐκα (Plb.),Derivatives: 1. from the root with δ-suffix: δι-κλί-δ-ες f. `double leaning, two-winged' (s. v.), ἐγκλίς ἡ καγκελλωτη θύρα (EM); παρα-, ἐγ-κλιδόν `turning aside, inclining' (Od.). 2. From a prefixed present with ending after the s-stems (Schwyzer 513): κατα-, ἐπι-, ἀπο-, ἐκ-, συγ-κλινής etc. `inclined away, slant etc.' (Hp., A.) with ἐπικλίν-εια (Heliol. Med.), συγκλιν-ίαι pl. (Plu.). 3. compounds with τη-suffix: παρα-, συγ-κλί-της `who lies beside or together at the table' (X.. Plu.), ἐπι-κλίν-της `who inclines to the side' (Arist.). - 4. κλειτύ̄ς (also κλῑτύς after κλί̄νω), ύος f. `slope, hill' (Il.; on the notation Schwyzer 506 w. n. 7). 5. κλεῖτος n. (A. R. 1, 599), κλῐ́τος n. (Lyc., LXX, AP) `slope, side'. - 6. κλίσις, most. in prefixcompp., e. g. ἀνά-, κατά-, ἀπό-κλισις `leaning back etc.' (IA.). - 7. κλίμα n. (with hell. ῐ for ει; Schwyzer 523) `inclination, slope, quarter, land', also ἔγκλι-μα etc. (Arist.), with κλιματίας `inclining' (Herakleit., Amm. Marc.), κλιματικός `belonging to the sone' (Vett. Val.). 8. κλῖμαξ, - ακος f. `trep, ladder, climax etc.' (Od.) with κλιμάκιον (IA.), - ίς (Att. inscr., hell.), κλιμακίσκοι πάλαισμα ποιόν H.; κλιμακίζω `use a grip called κλῖμαξ in the fighting', metaph. `bring down' (Att.); κλιμακωτός (Plb.), - ώδης (Str.) `like a trep'; also κλιμακ-τήρ `rug of a ladder' (IA.), `critical point of a mans life' (Varro) with κλιμακτηρικός, - τηρίζω (Gell., Vett. Val.); on the formation of κλῖμαξ (ῑ analog. for ει [*κλεῖ-μα] from κλί̄νω) Rodriguez Adrados Emerita 16, 133ff.; on κλιμακτήρ Chantraine Formation 327f. - 9. κλισμός `arm-chair' (Ion.Il.) with κλισμίον, - άκιον (inscr., Call.), `inclination, slope' (Arist.). - 10. ἀνά-κλιθρον `back of a chair' (Ptol.). - 11. κλίτα στοαί, κλίταν ( καὶ τάν cod.) στοάν H., prop. `leaning'; from there κλισία, Ion. - ίη `pile-dwelling, shed, chapel; arm-chair, resting-bed, tomb' ( Il.), κλίσιον nearly `annex, stoa' (ω 208, Delos IIIa), also `annex, shed, chapel' (Lys., Paus.); often written κλεισίον (inscr.), also κλεισία f. `tavern' (ep.), perh. through adaptation to κλείω `lock' (diff. Schulze Q. 295 A. 3 and Fraenkel KZ 45, 168); from there κλεισιάδες ( θύραι) `doors of the κλ(ε)ισία, of the κλ(ε)ισίον' (Hdt., Ph., D. H., Plu.); details on κλισίη in Frisk Eranos 41, 59ff., Scheller Oxytonierung 61. - 12. ( ἐγ-, ἐκ-)κλιτικός `inflecting etc.' (gramm.); to ( ἔγ-, ἔκ-)κλισις. - From the present: 13. κλίνη `layer, bed, litter' (IA.; cf. Chantraine Formation 192) with κλινίς, - ίδιον, - ίον, - άριον (Com.), κλίνειος `belonging to a κλίνη' (D.), - ήρης `censorius' (Ph., J.); as 2. member in σύγ-κλινος `bedfellow' (Men.). - 14. κλιντήρ, - ῆρος m. `id.' (Od.) with κλιντήριον, - ίδιον, - ίσκος (Ar.), ἀνακλιν-τήρ `neighbour at table' (Ps.-Callisth.); παρακλίν-τωρ `id.' (AP); ἀνά-, ἐπί-κλιν-τρον `back (leaning) etc.' (Erot. in Poll., Ar., inschr. etc.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [600] *ḱlei- `lean'Etymology: The yot-presens κλί̄νω \< *κλῐ́ν-ι̯ω, which is a Greek innovation, goes back on an older nasal-presens, seen in several languages but in diff. forms: Lat. clīnāre, Germ., e. g. OS hlinōn, OHG hlinēn \> lehnen, Balt., e. g. Latv. slìe-n-u, slìet, EastLith. šli-n-ù, šliñti `lean', Av. sri-nu-, ptc. sri-ta- `lean', prob. also Arm. li-ni-m, aor. ipv. le-r, `become, be'; the basis was athem. *ḱli-n-ā-mi. Beside this there was in Indo-Iranian and Baltic a thematic root-present, e. g. Skt. śrayati = Lith. (old a. dial.) šlejù `lean'. The originally only presentic nasal has in Latin and Germanic conquered the whole inflexion, but in Greek did not reach the perfect ( κέ-κλι-ται: Skt. śi-śri-y-é), partly also the passive aorist. - The Greek nominal derivations are mostly innovations; note, except ( ἄ)-κλιτος = Skt. śri-tá-, Av. sri-ta- `leaning', κλίσις, formally = Lith. šli-tì-s `shove-shed'; κλίτον = Germ. e. g. OHG lit `cover', NHG Augen- lid; beside it with full grade (as in κλει-τύς) e. g. OWNo. hlīð f. `slope'. As in κλίνη the nasal came in OHG hlina `reclinatorium'. - Several nominal formations in Bq s. v., Pok. 600ff., W.-Hofmann s. clīnō.Page in Frisk: 1,874-875Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κλῐ1νω
См. также в других словарях:
climax — n. 1) to come to, reach a climax 2) to bring smt. to a climax; to work up to a climax 3) to mark a climax 4) a dramatic, thrilling climax 5) a sexual climax 6) a climax to (the climax to our efforts) * * * [ klaɪməks] reach a climax thrilling… … Combinatory dictionary
climax — 01. Winning the silver medal at the World Championships was the [climax] of his athletic career. 02. At the [climax] of the music festival, all the top performers came out on stage together to play the last number. 03. A visit to Mecca was the… … Grammatical examples in English
climax — I UK [ˈklaɪmæks] / US [ˈklaɪˌmæks] noun [countable] Word forms climax : singular climax plural climaxes * 1) the most exciting or important moment in a story, event, or situation, usually near the end climax of/to: the climax to this season s… … English dictionary
climax — 1. noun /ˈklaɪmæks/ a) The point of greatest intensity or force in an ascending series; a culmination The snowshoe rabbits build up through the years until they reach a climax when the seem to be everywhere; then with dramatic suddenness their… … Wiktionary
climax — /kluy maks/, n. 1. the highest or most intense point in the development or resolution of something; culmination: His career reached its climax when he was elected president. 2. (in a dramatic or literary work) a decisive moment that is of maximum … Universalium
climax — cli|max1 [ klaı,mæks ] noun count * 1. ) the most exciting or important moment in a story, event, or situation, usually near the end: climax of/to: the climax to this season s divisional playoffs come to/reach a climax: The festival reached a… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
climax — /ˈklaɪmæks / (say kluymaks) noun 1. the highest point of anything; the culmination. 2. that point in the drama in which it is clear that the central motive will or will not be successful. 3. Rhetoric a. a figure consisting in a series of related… …
climax — cli·max || klaɪmæks n. peak, pinnacle v. reach the highest point, reach the climax; culminate; reach orgasm … English contemporary dictionary
climax — 1 noun (countable usually singular) 1 the most exciting or important part of a story or experience that normally comes near the end (+ of): the climax of an exciting expedition | reach a climax: The opera reaches its climax in the third act. 2 an … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
climax — cli•max [[t]ˈklaɪ mæks[/t]] n. 1) the highest or most intense point in the development or resolution of something; culmination 2) lit. (in a dramatic or literary work) a decisive moment that is of maximum intensity or is a major turning point in… … From formal English to slang
climax — [n] peak, culmination acme, apex, apogee, ascendancy, capsheaf, capstone, climacteric, crest, crowning point, extremity, head, height, highlight, high spot, intensification, limit, maximum, meridian, ne plus ultra, orgasm, payoff*, pinnacle,… … New thesaurus