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1 typical for
Математика: характерен для -
2 Greekish (Reminding something typical for Greece)
Религия: несколько напоминающий греческийУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > Greekish (Reminding something typical for Greece)
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3 such juxtapositions are typical for ...
• такие противоречия типичны для...English-Russian dictionary of phrases and cliches for a specialist researcher > such juxtapositions are typical for ...
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4 typical motive
( for a crime) типовий мотив ( злочину) -
5 typical
'tipikəl((negative untypical) having or showing the usual characteristics (of): He is a typical Englishman; They're typical civil servants.) typisktypiskadj. \/ˈtɪpɪk(ə)l\/1) typisk, karakteristisk, utpreget, representativ, betegnende2) symbolskbe typical of ( også) symbolisere, representeretypical of typisk for, karakteristisk for, betegnende for symbolsk for -
6 typical values for ...
<tech.gen> ■ Richtwerte für... mplEnglish-german technical dictionary > typical values for ...
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7 karakteristisk for
characteristic of, typical of -
8 T-branch for not valved typical installation
Общая лексика: тройной отвод для типовой установки без клапанаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > T-branch for not valved typical installation
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9 T-branch for valved typical installation
Общая лексика: тройной отвод для типовой установки с клапаномУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > T-branch for valved typical installation
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10 T-branch for without valved typical installation
Общая лексика: тройной отвод для типовой установки без клапанаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > T-branch for without valved typical installation
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11 landestypisch
Adj. typical (for a oder for the country)* * *lan·des·ty·pisch\landestypische Küche local [or traditional] fare [or delicacies pl]Zimmer im \landestypischen Stil rooms in the typical local style* * * -
12 Qualitätswein
m quality wine (meeting certain requirements and typical for a recognized wine area); Qualitätswein mit Prädikat etwa premium quality wine (made from grapes of a particular degree of ripeness)* * *Qua|li|täts|weinmwine of certified origin and quality* * *Qualitätswein mit Prädikat etwa premium quality wine (made from grapes of a particular degree of ripeness)* * *m.vintage wine n. -
13 типичный
•Representative circuits of these detectors are shown in Fig. 1.
•Representative steels of the various types now in use...
•These formations will contain known quantities of potassium in amounts representative of average sedimentary formations.
•High-moisture smog seems typical for London.
•This feature is typical of such assemblies.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > типичный
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14 betegnende
* * *adj( karakteristisk) characteristic, typical ( for of, fx how typical of him!);( som antyder, viser) indicative, suggestive ( fx a choice which was suggestive of his sympathies);( betydningsfuld) significant ( fx gesture);[ betegnende nok] characteristically ( fx characteristically, he refused to answer). -
15 typisk
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16 Άσκληπιός
Grammatical information: PN m.Meaning: hero, later god of medicine (Il.)Dialectal forms: Dor. -ᾱπιός; Αἰσκλαπιός (Epid. a. Troiz.), Άσχλαπιός (Boeot.), Αἰσχλαπιός Άσκαλαπιός (Thess.), Άσκαλπιός (Gort.), Αἰσχλαβιός (bronze figure from Bologna with Corinthian letters; s. Kretschmer Glotta 30, 116), ᾽Αγλαπιός Lac., Αἰγλαπιός.Derivatives: ἀσκληπιάς f. name of a plant (Dsc; s. Strömberg Pflanzennamen 99).Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Unexplained. H. Grégoire (with R. Goossens and M. Mathieu) in Asklèpios, Apollon Smintheus et Rudra 1949 (Mém. Acad. Roy. de Belgique. Cl. d. lettres. 2. sér. 45), explains the name as `the mole-hero', connecting σκάλοψ, ἀσπάλαξ `mole' and refers to the resemblance of the Tholos in Epidauros and the building of a mole. (Thus Puhvel, Comp. Mythol.1987, 135.) But the variants of Asklepios and those of the word for `mole' do not agree. - The name is typical for Pre-Greek words; apart from minor variations (β for π, αλ(α) for λα) we find α\/αι (a well known variation; Fur. 335 - 339) followed by - γλαπ- or - σκλαπ-\/- σχλαπ\/β-, i.e. a voiced velar (without - σ-) or a voiceless velar (or an aspirated one: we know that there was no distinction between the three in the substr. language) with a - σ-. I think that the - σ- renders an original affricate, which (prob. as δ) was lost before the - γ- (in Greek the group - σγ- is rare, and certainly before another consonant); this affricate will have been palatal (i.e. cy), of which the palatal character was (sometimes) expressed with a (preceding, or following) ι, for which see on ἐξαίφνης, ἐξαπίνης and πινυτός \/ πνυτός. S. Beekes Pre-Greek. - Szemerényi's etymology ( JHS 94, 1974, 155) from Hitt. assula(a)- `well-being' and piya- `give' cannot be correct, as it does not explain the velar.Page in Frisk: 1,164-165Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > Άσκληπιός
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17 βουτάνη
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: (A) μέρος τι τῆς μακρᾶς νεώς; (2) η μάστιξ, η (3) τάνυσις τῆς βοείας. (4) μέρος δε τῆς νεώς, πρὸς ο τὸ πηδάλιον δεσμεύεται. (5) δηλοῖ δε καὶ μάχην. (6) ἀηδίαν. Cf. (B) βουστάνη βοοστασία, ἡ τῶν βοῶν στάσις. (2) η μάστιξ, (3) καὶ πληγή.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: A1 - A4 (the last later added) is unknown. A2 = B2 with τ\/στ, which is typical for Pre-Gr. (Fur. 304f).- A3 seems a cheap etymology\/interpretation from antiquity. For A5 Fur. compares βύτανα κόνδυλοι H. For A6 Fur. suggests a lost gloss βούταλις (Aisop. 85) ἀηδών. - B1 = A3?; also an ancient etymology. B3 is unknown.Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βουτάνη
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18 πρόβατα
Grammatical information: n. pl.Meaning: `cattle, herd, flock' (Il.), `small cattle', sg. - ον mostly `sheep' (Att., Gort. etc.); also name of an unknown fish (Opp., Ael.; because of the similarity of the head, cf. Strömberg Fischn. 102).Compounds: Compp., e.g. προβατο-γνώμων m. `knower of herds' (A.), πολυ-πρόβατος `rich of cattle, sheep' (Hdt., X.).Derivatives: 1. Dimin. προβάτ-ιον n. (Att.). 2. Adj. προβάτ-ειος (Arist.), - ικός (LXX, N.T.) `belonging to sheep (small cattle)', - ώδης `sheep-like' (sp.). 3. - ών (- εών Hdn.), - ῶνος m. `sheepfold' (hell. inscr. a. pap.). 4. - ήματα πρόβατα H. (after κτήματα, βοσκή-ματα etc.; Chantraine Form. 178). 5. - εύς m. `shepherd' (title of a com. of Antiph.). 6. - εύω `to keep, tend cattle, sheep' (D. H., App.) with - ευτικός, - εύσιμος, - ευτής, - εία. 7. Plant-names: - ειον, - ειος, - αία (Ps.-Dsc.) "sheep-herb" (cf. Strömberg Pfl. 137). -- To πρόβειος, rhythmical shortening for προβάτειος (An. Ox. a.o.) Palmer Class Quart. 33,31ff.Etymology: In the same sense as πρόβατα we find once in collective meaning the verbal abstract πρόβασις (β 75 κειμήλιά τε πρό-βασίν τε), which designates here the moving cattle as opposed to the life-less ("lying") property. The origin from προβαίνειν (thus already EM) is confirmed by it. Thus OIcel. ganganda fé "going cattle" = `living stock' beside liggjanda fé ' κειμήλια', Hitt. ii̯ant- `sheep' prop. "the going", ptc. of ii̯a- `go', Toch. A śemäl `small cattle', prop. vbaladj. of käm-, śäm- `come' (= βαίνειν). Typical for Greek is however the prefix προ-; so πρόβατα prop. "those going forward", a notion, which seems to require an other way of moving as opposite, but has a correspondence in Av. fra-čar- and Skt. pra-car- `move forward' (opposed to `remain motionless'); s. Benveniste BSL 45, 91 ff. with extensive treatment and criticism of diverging views (Lommel KZ 46, 46ff.; s. also Kretschmer Glotta 8, 269 f.). -- The plural πρόβατα is usu., esp. because of the dat. pl. πρόβασι (Hdn.) for the usual προβατοις (Hes.), considered as orig. consonant-stem πρόβατ-α, to which secondarily πρόβατον (Bq s.v., Schwyzer 499 with Risch 178, Benveniste l.c., Egli Heteroklisie 41 ff.); against this with good arguments Georgacas Glotta 36, 178 ff., who rightly points to other infinite active το-participles, e.g. στατός `standing' (s. ἵστημι). -- In the secondary sense of `sheep' πρόβατον has replaced the older ὄις.Page in Frisk: 2,597-598Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πρόβατα
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19 πύνδαξ
πύνδαξ, - ακοςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `bottom of a vessel' (Pherecr., Arist. a.o.), metaph. = `hilt of a sword' (S. Fr. 311).Other forms: ἀπυνδάκωτος ἀπύθμενος H.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Formation like κάμαξ, πίναξ, στύραξ etc. etc.; further reminding of Lat. fundus with the same meaning and so close to πυθμήν (s.v.). Inlaut. - νδ- for - νθ- cannot be explained as - μβ- in ὄμβρος (Schwyzer 333; see s.v.); on π- for φ- "sind mehrere Auswege versucht": reshaping after πυθμήν (Curtius a. o.); Germ.-Maced. LW [loanword] (Kretschmer Glotta 22, 115ff.; cf. on πύργος); Maced. LW [loanword] (Pisani Rev. int. ét. balk. 3,18ff.); all unconvincing. Further on πύνδαξ a. cogn. Mayer Glotta 32, 73f. (here with Porzig WuS 15, 129, Kretschmer a.o. also the Pl N Πύδνα, but this is no doubt Pre-Greek). -- The suffix - ακ- is typical for Pre-Greek; of course, the suffix may have been taken from the Pre-Greekwords, but this seems very rare. Furnée does not discuss it. Was the IE form adopted in Pre-Greek? In that case the - νδ- and the π- would be no problem.Page in Frisk: 2,624-625Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πύνδαξ
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20 Εὔρῑπος
ΕὔρῑποςGrammatical information: m.Meaning: `straits, narrows' (X., Arist.); esp. the straits between Euboea and Boeotia (h. Ap. 222, Hdt.); later also`canal' in gen. (D. H.); `ventilator, fan' (Gal. 10, 649).Dialectal forms: Myc. Place name EwiripoDerivatives: εὑριπώδης `like straits or the Euripos' etc. (Arist.); εὑριπίδης name of a wind, blowing from the Euripos (E. Maaß KZ 41, 204 acc. to H. s. ++ ἄντος); also PN; εὑριπική ( σχοῖνος Dsc., Plin.); Εὑρίπιος Ποσειδῶν H.Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]Etymology: Prop. `with strong current', from εὖ and ῥιπή (Fick BB 22, 11). So originally the name of the straits between Euboea and Boeotia, which is well known for its stong water- and wind-currents; from there referred to other narrows, and finally used as appellative; cf. the parallel development of δέλτα. Not with Pedersen Studi baltici 4, 152 and Hofmann Et. Wb. d. Gr. to Lith. siaũras `narrow(s)' and the IE word for `water', *ā̆p-, i.e. * seuri-h₂p-o-, with * seuro- `mall'; s. Fraenkel Gnomon 22, 237. Older interpretations in Bq. Forssmann, MSS 49 (1988) 5-12 assumed * h₁uru-h₂p-o- `with broad water(s)'. In both cases the meaning does not fit (note that * h₂ep- is rather a river, or the vowel is wrong. This makes the possibility greater that the word is Pre-Greek (the long -i- in this position is typical for Pre-Greek forms, cf. Beekes. Pre-Greek s.v. -ῑβ-, -ῑγ-, ῑδ-, -ῑθ-, -ῑν-). Thus Sommer IF 55, 185 n. 1 (like Εὑρώπη, Εὑρώτας). - In the meaning of `ventilator, fan' in Gal. εὔριπος is prob. a homonym (to ῥιπή as `blow').Page in Frisk: 1,590-591Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > Εὔρῑπος
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