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1 STAND ASIDE
heca! (be gone!). Also with pronominal affixes: sg hecat, pl hecal "you stand aside!" –WJ:364 -
2 ASIDE
– stand aside! heca! – also with pronominal affixes: sg hecat, pl hecal "you stay aside!" (be gone!) LEAVING ASIDE hequa (not counting, excluding, except) –WJ:364, 365 -
3 GO
lelya- or lenna- (pa.t. lendë in both cases; the printed Etymologies gives "linna" instad of lenna-, but according to VT45:27 this is a misreading) (proceed, travel); \#men- (attested in the aorist: menë "goes"), vanya- (pa.t. vannë) (depart, disappear – it may be that Tolkien abandoned the verb vanya-, if it is regarded as the conceptual predecessor of auta-, see GO AWAY below), GO ROUND pel- (revolve, return; the Silmarillion Appendix also mentions “encircle” as a meaning of the root PEL, cf. also “Qenya” pele- “surround, fence in, pen in”; pa.t. pellë given, QL:73). GO OVER, see CROSS. GO ATHWART tara- (cross); GO AWAY auta- (leave, pass); pa.t. oantë, perf. oantië (in the physical sense "went away [to another place]", vánë ("the most frequently used past [tense]" – less "physical" than oantë, rather meaning to be lost or to disappear), also anwë (this pa.t. was "only found in archaic language"), perf. avánië (pl. avánier is attested); perf. vánië with no augment may occur in verse. GO FORTH TOWARDS (with the thing approached as direct object) tenta-, pa.t. tentanë (the verb can also mean “direct toward” or “be directed toward”, in the intransitive tense apparently with the pa.t. tenantë). CAUSE TO GO (in a desired direction) menta- (send), GONE vanwa (departed, vanished, dead, lost, past and over, no longer to be had) BE GONE! heca! – also with pronominal affixes: sg hecat, pl hecal "you be gone!" (stand aside!) LET GO lerya- (release, set free), sen- (let loose, free) –WJ:363, LED/VT45:27, VT47:11, 30, PEL, LT2:347, WAN, Nam, WJ:364, VT41:5, VT49:23, WJ:366, VT41:5, VT43:18 -
4 BE GONE
heca! – also with pronominal affixes: sg hecat, pl hecal "you be gone!" (stand aside!) –WJ:364 -
5 THROUGH
terë, ter; also used of time (with the sense of “through[out]”) in VT49:41: ter coivierya *“throughout his/her life”. "THROUGH-ABIDE" (i.e., stand [fast]) \#termar- (only fut. termaruva is attested) –TER, UT:305, 317, VT44:35
См. также в других словарях:
stand fair with — To be in the good graces of • • • Main Entry: ↑fair … Useful english dictionary
stand in with — phrasal : to be in a specially favored position with; especially : to be in secret and usually profitable alliance with * * * stand in with To support, act together with • • • Main Entry: ↑stand … Useful english dictionary
stand there with one’s bare face hanging out — in. to stand someplace looking helpless and stupid. □ Say something. Don’t just stand there with your bare face hanging out. □ She just stood there with her bare face hanging out while they took away everything she owned … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
stand up with — {v.}, {informal} To be best man or maid of honor at a wedding. * /A groom often chooses his brother to stand up with him./ … Dictionary of American idioms
stand up with — {v.}, {informal} To be best man or maid of honor at a wedding. * /A groom often chooses his brother to stand up with him./ … Dictionary of American idioms
stand\ up\ with — v informal To be best man or maid of honor at a wedding. A groom often chooses his brother to stand up with him … Словарь американских идиом
stand in with — {v. phr.}, {informal} To be liked by or friendly with. Usually used with well . * /John stands in well with the teacher./ … Dictionary of American idioms
stand in with — {v. phr.}, {informal} To be liked by or friendly with. Usually used with well . * /John stands in well with the teacher./ … Dictionary of American idioms
stand\ in\ with — v. phr. informal To be liked by or friendly with. Usually used with well . John stands in well with the teacher … Словарь американских идиом
stand in with — phrasal to be in a specially favored position with … New Collegiate Dictionary
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