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  • 1 Sign

    subs.
    Nod: P. νεῦμα, τό, V. σῆμα, τό; see Signal.
    Signal for battle, etc.: Ar. and P. σημεῖον, τό, V. σῆμα, τό.
    Proof, token: P. and V. σημεῖον, τό, τεκμήριον, τό, σύμβολον, τό, V. τέκμαρ, τό; see Proof.
    Signs in writing: V. συνθήματα, τά; see Writing.
    Portent: P. and V. τέρας, τό, φάσμα, τό, σημεῖον, τό, V. σῆμα, τό.
    Omen from birds: P. and V. οἰωνός, ὁ, Ar. and V. ὄρνις, ὁ or ἡ, V. πτερόν, τό, Ar. and V. σύμβολος, ὁ (also Xen.).
    Omen from sounds: P. and V. φήμη, ἡ, V. κληδών, ἡ, Ar. and V. φτις, ἡ.
    Heavenly sign: V. σῆμα, τό, σημεῖον, τό.
    ——————
    v. trans.
    Sign ( a document) and witness its being sealed: P. γράφειν καὶ συσσημαίνεσθαι (Dem. 928); see also Seal.
    Sign accounts ( pass them): P. εὐθύνας ἐπισημαίνεσθαι (lit., seal).
    Make a sign, signal: P. and V. σημαίνειν,Ar. and V. νεύειν.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Sign

  • 2 sign

    1. noun
    1) (a mark used to mean something; a symbol: is the sign for addition.) σημείο,σύμβολο
    2) (a notice set up to give information (a shopkeeper's name, the direction of a town etc) to the public: road-sign.) πινακίδα,σήμα(της τροχαίας),επιγραφή,ταμπέλα
    3) (a movement (eg a nod, wave of the hand) used to mean or represent something: He made a sign to me to keep still.) σήμα,νεύμα,νόημα
    4) (a piece of evidence suggesting that something is present or about to come: There were no signs of life at the house and he was afraid they were away; Clouds are often a sign of rain.) σήμα,ένδειξη
    2. verb
    1) (to write one's name (on): Sign at the bottom, please.) υπογράφω
    2) (to write (one's name) on a letter, document etc: He signed his name on the document.) υπογράφω
    3) (to make a movement of the head, hand etc in order to show one's meaning: She signed to me to say nothing.) γνέφω,κάνω νόημα
    - signpost
    - sign in/out
    - sign up

    English-Greek dictionary > sign

  • 3 witness

    ['witnəs] 1. noun
    1) (a person who has seen or was present at an event etc and so has direct knowledge of it: Someone must have seen the accident but the police can find no witnesses.) αυτόπτης μάρτυρας
    2) (a person who gives evidence, especially in a law court.) μάρτυρας δικαστηρίου
    3) (a person who adds his signature to a document to show that he considers another signature on the document to be genuine: You cannot sign your will without witnesses.) μάρτυρας
    2. verb
    1) (to see and be present at: This lady witnessed an accident at three o'clock this afternoon.) βλέπω, είμαι παρών σε (κάτι)
    2) (to sign one's name to show that one knows that (something) is genuine: He witnessed my signature on the new agreement.) είμαι μάρτυρας, υπογράφω ως μάρτυρας
    - bear witness

    English-Greek dictionary > witness

  • 4 Witness

    subs.
    One who gives evidence: P. and V. μάρτυς, ὁ or ἡ.
    Eye witness: P. αὐτόπτης, ὁ, ὀπτήρ, ὁ, P. and V. ἐπόπτης, ὁ, V. κατόπτης, ὁ; see Spectator.
    One taken to witness: use adj., V. συνίστωρ (also Thuc. 2, 74, but rare P.).
    Without witness, unattested, adj.: P. ἀμάρτυρος, V. μαρτρητας.
    ( Do a thing) without witnesses: P. (πράσσειν) ἀμαρτύρως (Dem. 869).
    Evidence: Ar. and P. μαρτυρία, ἡ, V. μαρτρια, τά, μαρτύρημα, τό; see Evidence.
    Call to witness, v.: P. and V. μαρτρεσθαι (acc.), Ar. and P. ἐπιμαρτρεσθαι (acc.).
    Protest: P. διαμαρτύρεσθαι.
    He consenting thereto and calling the gods to witness: V. ὅδʼ αἰνέσας ταῦθʼ ὁρκίους τε δοὺς θεούς (Eur., Phoen. 481).
    Bear witness: see under witness, v.
    False witness: P. ψευδομαρτυρία, ἡ.
    One who gives false witness: P. ψευδόμαρτυς, ὁ.
    ——————
    v. trans.
    Behold: P. and V. ἀθρεῖν, θεᾶσθαι, θεωρεῖν; see Behold.
    Witness a document: see under Sign.
    Give evidence, bear witness: P. and V. μαρτυρεῖν, ἐκμαρτυρεῖν.
    Bear witness to: P. and V. μαρτυρεῖν (τινί τι), ἐκμαρτυρεῖν (τι), P. ἐπιμαρτυρεῖν (τινί τι).
    My husband needs none to bear witness to his renown: V. οὑμὸς δʼ ἀμαρτύρητος εὐκλεὴς πόσις (Eur., H. F. 290).
    Bear witness in favour of a person: P. and V. συμμαρτυρεῖν (dat. of person, acc. of thing or absol.).
    Bear witness against a person P. καταμαρτυρεῖν (gen. or absol.).
    Bear witness besides: P. προσμαρτυρεῖν.
    Bear false witness against: P. καταψευδομαρτυρεῖσθαι (gen. or absol.).
    Bear false witness: P. ψευδομαρτυρεῖν.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Witness

См. также в других словарях:

  • sign on the dotted line — 1. To give one s consent, thereby binding oneself, to a proposed scheme, contract, etc 2. To do this docilely or without proper investigation • • • Main Entry: ↑sign * * * sign on the dotted line phrase to sign a contract or other legal agreement …   Useful english dictionary

  • sign — [n1] indication, evidence assurance, augury, auspice, badge, beacon, bell, caution, clue, divination, flag, flash, foreboding, foreknowledge, foreshadowing, foretoken, forewarning, gesture, giveaway, handwriting on wall*, harbinger, herald, high… …   New thesaurus

  • sign for something — ˈsign for sth derived to sign a document to show that you have received sth • Someone must sign for the package when we deliver it. Main entry: ↑signderived …   Useful english dictionary

  • sign — sign1 W2S3 [saın] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(gives information)¦ 2¦(shows something is true)¦ 3¦(movement or sound)¦ 4¦(symbol)¦ 5¦(star sign)¦ 6¦(language)¦ 7 there is no sign of somebody/something 8 sign of life 9 sign of the times …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • sign — 1 /saIn/ noun 1 STH THAT PROVES STH (C) an event, fact etc that shows that something is happening or that something is true; indication: sign of: The tests can detect early signs of disease. | sign that: Exports have risen by 20%, a sign that the …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • sign — ▪ I. sign sign 1 [saɪn] verb 1. [intransitive, transitive] BANKING to write your signature on a letter, document, or cheque: • The customer must sign the traveller s …   Financial and business terms

  • sign — [[t]sa͟ɪn[/t]] ♦ signs, signing, signed 1) N COUNT A sign is a mark or shape that always has a particular meaning, for example in mathematics or music. Equations are generally written with a two bar equals sign. Syn: symbol 2) N COUNT A sign is a …   English dictionary

  • document — ▪ I. document doc‧u‧ment 1 [ˈdɒkjmənt ǁ ˈdɑːk ] noun [countable] a record of important information on paper or computer disk: • His main expense is photocopying thousands of legal documents. • electronic document management systems deˈfence… …   Financial and business terms

  • sign on — UK US sign on Phrasal Verb with sign({{}}/saɪn/ verb ► UK INFORMAL to sign a form at a government office to say that you do not have a job and that you want to receive benefits: »After Jack was made redundant, he signed on for eight months. ►… …   Financial and business terms

  • sign over — verb to sign a document transferring property or rights to somebody else …   Wiktionary

  • sign — vt 1: to affix a signature to: ratify or attest by hand or seal sign a bill into law; specif: to write or mark something (as a signature) on (a document) as an acknowledgment of one s intention to be bound by it 2: to assign or convey formally… …   Law dictionary

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