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victims of war

  • 1 victims of war

    Макаров: жертвы войны

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > victims of war

  • 2 victims of war

    Politics english-russian dictionary > victims of war

  • 3 victims of war

    English-Russian combinatory dictionary > victims of war

  • 4 Diplomatic Conference for the Establishment of International Conventions for the Protection of Victims of War

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Diplomatic Conference for the Establishment of International Conventions for the Protection of Victims of War

  • 5 Conventions for the protection of victims of war

    Jur. Conventions [de Genève] relatives à la protection des victimes des conflits armés internationaux [1949]

    English-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > Conventions for the protection of victims of war

  • 6 war

    war [wɔ:(r)] (pt & pp warred, cont warring)
    1 noun
    (a) (armed conflict) guerre f;
    to be at war/to go to war with sb être en guerre/entrer en guerre avec qn;
    Japan was at war with Russia le Japon était en guerre avec la Russie;
    Israel went to war with Syria over border disagreements Israël est entré en guerre avec ou contre la Syrie pour des problèmes territoriaux;
    the Allies waged war against or on the Axis les Alliés ont fait la guerre aux puissances de l'Axe;
    he fought in the war il a fait la guerre;
    the troops went off to war les troupes sont parties pour ou sont allées à la guerre;
    familiar humorous you've been through the wars! on dirait que tu reviens de la guerre!, tu t'es bien arrangé!;
    familiar humorous that carpet (looks like it) has been through the wars! cette moquette est dans un état lamentable!;
    to have a good war (soldier) être vaillant au combat;
    the war to end all wars la der des der;
    literary to let loose the dogs of war déchaîner les fureurs de la guerre;
    war of attrition guerre f d'usure;
    war of nerves guerre f des nerfs;
    the American War of Independence la guerre d'Indépendance américaine;
    the War between the States, the War of Secession la guerre de Sécession;
    the Wars of the Roses la guerre des Deux-Roses
    (b) (conflict, struggle) guerre f, lutte f;
    to declare or to wage war on sth partir en guerre contre ou déclarer la guerre à qch;
    a war of nerves/words une guerre des nerfs/des mots;
    the war against crime/drugs la lutte contre le crime/la drogue
    (diary, hero, pension) de guerre;
    during the war years pendant la guerre;
    the war effort l'effort m de guerre
    faire la guerre;
    to war with sb faire la guerre à qn
    ►► war baby = enfant né pendant la guerre;
    war bond titre m d'emprunt de guerre (émis pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale);
    war bride mariée f de la guerre;
    war cabinet cabinet m de guerre;
    war cemetery cimetière m militaire;
    war chest caisse f spéciale (affectée à une guerre); figurative caisse f spéciale (d'un parti politique, d'hommes d'affaires etc);
    war clouds nuages mpl ou signes mpl précurseurs de guerre;
    the war clouds are gathering la guerre menace;
    war correspondent correspondant(e) m,f de guerre;
    war crime crime m de guerre;
    war criminal criminel(elle) m,f de guerre; also figurative war cry cri m de guerre;
    war dance danse f de guerre ou guerrière;
    war film film m de guerre;
    war game Military (simulated battle with maps) kriegspiel m, wargame m; (manoeuvres) manœuvres fpl militaires; (game) wargame m;
    war grave = tombeau d'un soldat tombé au champ d'honneur;
    British war loan titre m d'emprunt de guerre;
    war machine machine f de guerre;
    war memorial monument m aux morts;
    war museum musée m de la guerre;
    the War Office = ancien nom du ministère de la Défense britannique;
    war record passé m militaire;
    he has a good war record il s'est conduit honorablement pendant la guerre;
    what's his war record? qu'est-ce qu'il a fait pendant la guerre?;
    war risk (in insurance) risques mpl de guerre;
    war victims victimes fpl de guerre;
    war widow veuve f de guerre;
    a war widow's pension une pension de veuve de guerre;
    war wound blessure f de guerre;
    war zone zone f de guerre
    ✾ Book 'War and Peace' Tolstoy 'Guerre et paix'
    ✾ Book 'The War of the Worlds' Wells 'La Guerre des mondes'
    THE WARS OF THE ROSES Au XVème siècle, ces guerres opposèrent les deux familles pouvant prétendre au trône d'Angleterre: la maison d'York, dont l'emblème était une rose blanche, et la maison de Lancastre, représentée par une rose rouge. La "guerre des Deux-Roses" prit fin en 1485 avec la victoire d'un Lancastre, qui devint Henri VII et réconcilia les deux familles en épousant Élisabeth d'York.
    THE WAR OF THE WORLDS Cette pièce radiophonique, adaptée du roman de H.G. Wells et mise en scène par Orson Welles, fut diffusée le 30 octobre 1938 par une radio new-yorkaise à l'occasion de Halloween. La description très réaliste de l'arrivée sur Terre de martiens fut prise au sérieux par les auditeurs, ce qui provoqua une panique générale: désertion des villes, embouteillages monstres mais aussi crises d'hystérie, crises cardiaques et suicides.

    Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > war

  • 7 war victims

    Военный термин: жертвы войны (напр. убитые, раненые, пропавшие без вести)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > war victims

  • 8 War Victims Assistance

    American: WVA

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > War Victims Assistance

  • 9 War Victims Fund

    UN: WVF

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > War Victims Fund

  • 10 war victims

    קרבנות מלחמה, חללי מלחמה
    * * *
    המחלמ יללח,המחלמ תונברק

    English-Hebrew dictionary > war victims

  • 11 war victims

    oorlogsslachtoffers

    English-Dutch dictionary > war victims

  • 12 war victims

    жертвы войны (напр. убитые, раненые, пропавшие без вести)

    English-Russian military dictionary > war victims

  • 13 World War II

    (1939-1945)
       In the European phase of the war, neutral Portugal contributed more to the Allied victory than historians have acknowledged. Portugal experienced severe pressures to compromise her neutrality from both the Axis and Allied powers and, on several occasions, there were efforts to force Portugal to enter the war as a belligerent. Several factors lent Portugal importance as a neutral. This was especially the case during the period from the fall of France in June 1940 to the Allied invasion and reconquest of France from June to August 1944.
       In four respects, Portugal became briefly a modest strategic asset for the Allies and a war materiel supplier for both sides: the country's location in the southwesternmost corner of the largely German-occupied European continent; being a transport and communication terminus, observation post for spies, and crossroads between Europe, the Atlantic, the Americas, and Africa; Portugal's strategically located Atlantic islands, the Azores, Madeira, and Cape Verde archipelagos; and having important mines of wolfram or tungsten ore, crucial for the war industry for hardening steel.
       To maintain strict neutrality, the Estado Novo regime dominated by Antônio de Oliveira Salazar performed a delicate balancing act. Lisbon attempted to please and cater to the interests of both sets of belligerents, but only to the extent that the concessions granted would not threaten Portugal's security or its status as a neutral. On at least two occasions, Portugal's neutrality status was threatened. First, Germany briefly considered invading Portugal and Spain during 1940-41. A second occasion came in 1943 and 1944 as Great Britain, backed by the United States, pressured Portugal to grant war-related concessions that threatened Portugal's status of strict neutrality and would possibly bring Portugal into the war on the Allied side. Nazi Germany's plan ("Operation Felix") to invade the Iberian Peninsula from late 1940 into 1941 was never executed, but the Allies occupied and used several air and naval bases in Portugal's Azores Islands.
       The second major crisis for Portugal's neutrality came with increasing Allied pressures for concessions from the summer of 1943 to the summer of 1944. Led by Britain, Portugal's oldest ally, Portugal was pressured to grant access to air and naval bases in the Azores Islands. Such bases were necessary to assist the Allies in winning the Battle of the Atlantic, the naval war in which German U-boats continued to destroy Allied shipping. In October 1943, following tedious negotiations, British forces began to operate such bases and, in November 1944, American forces were allowed to enter the islands. Germany protested and made threats, but there was no German attack.
       Tensions rose again in the spring of 1944, when the Allies demanded that Lisbon cease exporting wolfram to Germany. Salazar grew agitated, considered resigning, and argued that Portugal had made a solemn promise to Germany that wolfram exports would be continued and that Portugal could not break its pledge. The Portuguese ambassador in London concluded that the shipping of wolfram to Germany was "the price of neutrality." Fearing that a still-dangerous Germany could still attack Portugal, Salazar ordered the banning of the mining, sale, and exports of wolfram not only to Germany but to the Allies as of 6 June 1944.
       Portugal did not enter the war as a belligerent, and its forces did not engage in combat, but some Portuguese experienced directly or indirectly the impact of fighting. Off Portugal or near her Atlantic islands, Portuguese naval personnel or commercial fishermen rescued at sea hundreds of victims of U-boat sinkings of Allied shipping in the Atlantic. German U-boats sank four or five Portuguese merchant vessels as well and, in 1944, a U-boat stopped, boarded, searched, and forced the evacuation of a Portuguese ocean liner, the Serpa Pinto, in mid-Atlantic. Filled with refugees, the liner was not sunk but several passengers lost their lives and the U-boat kidnapped two of the ship's passengers, Portuguese Americans of military age, and interned them in a prison camp. As for involvement in a theater of war, hundreds of inhabitants were killed and wounded in remote East Timor, a Portuguese colony near Indonesia, which was invaded, annexed, and ruled by Japanese forces between February 1942 and August 1945. In other incidents, scores of Allied military planes, out of fuel or damaged in air combat, crashed or were forced to land in neutral Portugal. Air personnel who did not survive such crashes were buried in Portuguese cemeteries or in the English Cemetery, Lisbon.
       Portugal's peripheral involvement in largely nonbelligerent aspects of the war accelerated social, economic, and political change in Portugal's urban society. It strengthened political opposition to the dictatorship among intellectual and working classes, and it obliged the regime to bolster political repression. The general economic and financial status of Portugal, too, underwent improvements since creditor Britain, in order to purchase wolfram, foods, and other materials needed during the war, became indebted to Portugal. When Britain repaid this debt after the war, Portugal was able to restore and expand its merchant fleet. Unlike most of Europe, ravaged by the worst war in human history, Portugal did not suffer heavy losses of human life, infrastructure, and property. Unlike even her neighbor Spain, badly shaken by its terrible Civil War (1936-39), Portugal's immediate postwar condition was more favorable, especially in urban areas, although deep-seated poverty remained.
       Portugal experienced other effects, especially during 1939-42, as there was an influx of about a million war refugees, an infestation of foreign spies and other secret agents from 60 secret intelligence services, and the residence of scores of international journalists who came to report the war from Lisbon. There was also the growth of war-related mining (especially wolfram and tin). Portugal's media eagerly reported the war and, by and large, despite government censorship, the Portuguese print media favored the Allied cause. Portugal's standard of living underwent some improvement, although price increases were unpopular.
       The silent invasion of several thousand foreign spies, in addition to the hiring of many Portuguese as informants and spies, had fascinating outcomes. "Spyland" Portugal, especially when Portugal was a key point for communicating with occupied Europe (1940-44), witnessed some unusual events, and spying for foreigners at least briefly became a national industry. Until mid-1944, when Allied forces invaded France, Portugal was the only secure entry point from across the Atlantic to Europe or to the British Isles, as well as the escape hatch for refugees, spies, defectors, and others fleeing occupied Europe or Vichy-controlled Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria. Through Portugal by car, ship, train, or scheduled civil airliner one could travel to and from Spain or to Britain, or one could leave through Portugal, the westernmost continental country of Europe, to seek refuge across the Atlantic in the Americas.
       The wartime Portuguese scene was a colorful melange of illegal activities, including espionage, the black market, war propaganda, gambling, speculation, currency counterfeiting, diamond and wolfram smuggling, prostitution, and the drug and arms trade, and they were conducted by an unusual cast of characters. These included refugees, some of whom were spies, smugglers, diplomats, and business people, many from foreign countries seeking things they could find only in Portugal: information, affordable food, shelter, and security. German agents who contacted Allied sailors in the port of Lisbon sought to corrupt and neutralize these men and, if possible, recruit them as spies, and British intelligence countered this effort. Britain's MI-6 established a new kind of "safe house" to protect such Allied crews from German espionage and venereal disease infection, an approved and controlled house of prostitution in Lisbon's bairro alto district.
       Foreign observers and writers were impressed with the exotic, spy-ridden scene in Lisbon, as well as in Estoril on the Sun Coast (Costa do Sol), west of Lisbon harbor. What they observed appeared in noted autobiographical works and novels, some written during and some after the war. Among notable writers and journalists who visited or resided in wartime Portugal were Hungarian writer and former communist Arthur Koestler, on the run from the Nazi's Gestapo; American radio broadcaster-journalist Eric Sevareid; novelist and Hollywood script-writer Frederick Prokosch; American diplomat George Kennan; Rumanian cultural attache and later scholar of mythology Mircea Eliade; and British naval intelligence officer and novelist-to-be Ian Fleming. Other notable visiting British intelligence officers included novelist Graham Greene; secret Soviet agent in MI-6 and future defector to the Soviet Union Harold "Kim" Philby; and writer Malcolm Muggeridge. French letters were represented by French writer and airman, Antoine Saint-Exupery and French playwright, Jean Giroudoux. Finally, Aquilino Ribeiro, one of Portugal's premier contemporary novelists, wrote about wartime Portugal, including one sensational novel, Volframio, which portrayed the profound impact of the exploitation of the mineral wolfram on Portugal's poor, still backward society.
       In Estoril, Portugal, the idea for the world's most celebrated fictitious spy, James Bond, was probably first conceived by Ian Fleming. Fleming visited Portugal several times after 1939 on Naval Intelligence missions, and later he dreamed up the James Bond character and stories. Background for the early novels in the James Bond series was based in part on people and places Fleming observed in Portugal. A key location in Fleming's first James Bond novel, Casino Royale (1953) is the gambling Casino of Estoril. In addition, one aspect of the main plot, the notion that a spy could invent "secret" intelligence for personal profit, was observed as well by the British novelist and former MI-6 officer, while engaged in operations in wartime Portugal. Greene later used this information in his 1958 spy novel, Our Man in Havana, as he observed enemy agents who fabricated "secrets" for money.
       Thus, Portugal's World War II experiences introduced the country and her people to a host of new peoples, ideas, products, and influences that altered attitudes and quickened the pace of change in this quiet, largely tradition-bound, isolated country. The 1943-45 connections established during the Allied use of air and naval bases in Portugal's Azores Islands were a prelude to Portugal's postwar membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > World War II

  • 14 Geneva Conventions for the protection of war victims

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Geneva Conventions for the protection of war victims

  • 15 protection of war victims

    Военный термин: защита жертв войны

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > protection of war victims

  • 16 Office for War Victims


    Ured za žrtve rata

    English-Croatian dictionary > Office for War Victims

  • 17 protection of war victims

    English-russian dctionary of diplomacy > protection of war victims

  • 18 savaş kurbanları

    victims of war

    İngilizce Sözlük Türkçe > savaş kurbanları

  • 19 жертвы войны

    war dead, victims of war

    Русско-английский политический словарь > жертвы войны

  • 20 жертва

    сущ.
    Русское существительное жертва многозначно и относится к разным областям жизни, однако оно не указывает на обстоятельства и причины, вызвавшие жертву или приведшие к ней. Английские эквиваленты подчеркивают результатом чего или по причине каких обстоятельств возникают жертвы.
    1. sacrifice — жертва ( добровольный отказ от чего-либо в пользу кого-либо): noble (heroic, useless) sacrifice — благородная (героическая, бесполезная) жертва; a sacrifice willingly offered — добровольная жертва; to make sacrifices for the sake of one's children — приносить жертвы ради своих детей/жертвовать чем-либо ради своих детей/идти на лишения ради своих детей; to accept smb's sacrifice — принимать чью-либо жертву; to give one's life as a sacrifice for one's country — пожертвовать своей жизнью за родину; to fall a sacrifice to smth — пасть жертвой чего-либо; to offer up a sacrifice — приносить жертву; to win a battle at a great sacrifice of life — выиграть сражение ценой больших потерь Most of the speeches on the Victory Day will focus on the sacrifice of the World War generation. — Большинство речей в День Победы будут посвящены жертвам Второй мировой войны. Making a sacrifice is always a part of bringing up children. — Воспитание детей всегда связано с жертвами. Goats were offered as a sacrifice to the Gods. — Коз приносили в жертву богам.
    2. casualty — (обыкн. pl) жертва, пострадавший (пострадавшие и убитые в ходе военных действий или во время катастроф или аварий): There were a lot of casualties. — Было много пострадавших./Было много жертв. We suffered heavy casualties. — Мы понесли тяжелые потери. They published a casualty list. — Они опубликовали список пострадавших./Был опубликован список жертв. There were no reports of casualties from the attack. — Сообщений о пострадавших в этом бою не поступало. A small group of rebels inflicted heavy casualties on the government forces. — Небольшая группа повстанцев нанесла тяжелые потери правительственным войскам./Правительственные войска понесли серьезные потери при столкновении с небольшой группой повстанцев.
    3. victim — жертва (пострадавший от каких-либо насильственных действий, преступлений и стихийных бедствий): victims of war — жертвы войны; victims of an accident — жертвы несчастного случая; victims of pestilence — жертвы эпидемии; victims of circumstances — жертвы обстоятельств; the victim of malice (of hatred) — жертва недоброжелательства (ненависти); to fall victim to smth — стать жертвой чего-либо/пасть жертвой чего-либо They were victims of domestic violence. — Они были жертвами бытового насилия. We were collecting money for the flood victims. — Мы собирали деньги для жертв наводнения./Мы собирали деньги для пострадавших от наводнения. Five hundred penguins were among the victims of an oil spell. — От разлива нефти пострадали пятьсот пингвинов./Среди жертв от разлива нефти оказались пятьсот пингвинов. She fell victim to a rare disease. — Она оказалась жертвой редкой болезни. Many people fall victims of race discrimination. — Многие оказались жертвами расовой дискриминации. She believes she is the victim of media conspiracy to discredit her. — Она считает себя жертвой заговора средств массовой информации, для того чтобы дискредитировать ее.

    Русско-английский объяснительный словарь > жертва

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