-
121 piece
1. [pi:s] n1. 1) кусок; частьa piece of paper - лист(ок) /клочок/ бумаги
to take a machine to pieces - разобрать /демонтировать/ машину
a piece of the road is now under repair - один участок дороги сейчас ремонтируется
piece by piece - а) по кускам; по частям; б) постепенно
in /of/ one piece - целым куском, целиком
2) pl обломки; осколкиthe statue was in pieces - статуя была разбита на мелкие кусочки; б) расколовшийся; полный противоречий
to pieces - на части; вдребезги
to break smth. (in)to pieces - разбить что-л. вдребезги
the tea-pot fell and was broken to pieces - чайник упал и разбился вдребезги
to burst /to fly/ to pieces - разлететься на мелкие кусочки
to come /to fall, to go/ to pieces - а) разбиться вдребезги; развалиться на части; his clothes are coming /falling/ to pieces - его одежда превращается в лохмотья; б) погибнуть, пропасть
when he heard of his son's death he went to pieces - когда он узнал, что его сын погиб, он стал сам не свой; things are going to pieces - всё идёт к чёрту; в) распадаться
following the election defeat the party went to pieces - после поражения на выборах в партии произошёл раскол; under cross-examination his story went to pieces - на перекрёстном допросе все его объяснения рухнули; г) потерять присутствие духа, «сломаться»
in the second half the team went all to pieces - во второй половине игры команда выдохлась
to pull /to tear/ to pieces - разорвать на мелкие кусочки, растерзать ( жертву)
to pull /to tear/ smb. to pieces - беспощадно критиковать кого-л.
they will tear you to pieces! - вас же растерзают!
2. участокpiece of water - водоём, бассейн, пруд
3. штука, кусок; определённое количествоa piece of wall-paper - кусок /рулон/ обоев
per /by the/ piece - поштучно
to sell goods by the piece - продавать товары поштучно /штуками/
4. отдельный предмет, штукаthe /each, every/ piece - каждая штука
he was turning a piece of china in his hands - он вертел в руках фарфоровую вещицу
she was allowed to take one piece of luggage - ей разрешили взять только одно место багажа
5. 1) картина; произведение искусстваa museum piece - музейная вещь /редкость/
2) короткое литературное произведениеto speak /to say, to recite/ a piece - а) продекламировать стихотворение; прочитать отрывок; б) выступать с речью и т. п.
3) статья, заметка, сообщение6. муз. пьеса7. монета (тж. a piece of money)crown piece - крона, монета в одну крону
they did not have a penny piece between them - у них не было ни гроша за душой
a piece of gold [of silver] - золотая [серебряная] монета
8. 1) шашка; фишка ( в играх)2) шахм. фигураheavy [minor] pieces - тяжёлые [лёгкие] фигуры
9. 1) воен. огневое средство; орудие, винтовка, пистолет и т. п.2) амер. разг. пистолет, «пушка»10. спорт. гимнастический снаряд11. деталь; обрабатываемое изделие12. вставка, заплата13. бочонок вина14. амер. лёгкий второй завтрак15. диал. кусок, ломоть хлебаshe had nothing more than a piece all day - за весь день она съела лишь кусок хлеба
16. образец, пример (поведения и т. п.)a piece of impudence /of insolence, of impertinence/ - пример /образец/ наглости
17. в выражениях:18. разг. девушка, женщина19. преим. амер. место, вещь; багажthe cases in which pieces go astray are rare - случаи, когда багаж попадает не по адресу, редки
20. амер. разг. доля, пай (в каком-л. предприятии)21. (the piece) разг. дело, вопрос♢
a piece of cake - пустячное дело; ≅ раз плюнутьa piece of work - а) (отдельно выполненная) работа, произведение; a splendid piece of work - великолепная работа; it will be a tedious piece of work - это будет очень скучная работа; б) трудное дело; this translation is such a piece of work - этот перевод - трудное дело; в) шум, скандал; he kept jawing us, and making a piece of work all the time - он всё время ругал нас и скандалил без конца; г) презр. тип, человек
I hate this man, he is such a forward piece - терпеть не могу этого человека, он такой наглец
thirty pieces of silver - библ. тридцать сребреников
piece of flesh - груб. «товар», бабёнка, девка
piece of muslin /of calico/ - «юбка», девушка, женщина
a piece of change /of jack/ - амер. хороший куш, кругленькая сумма
(all) of a piece, of one piece with - а) такой же, того же качества; they are all of a piece - все они одним миром мазаны; the harness and the horse were all of a piece - и упряжь была под стать лошади; б) целиком (и полностью); an expedition like this must be all of a piece in the leader's hand - такая экспедиция должна целиком находиться под контролем начальника; в) образующий единое целое; гармонирующий; the hangings are of a piece with the furniture - занавеси прекрасно подходят к мебели; г) в соответствии с (чем-л.)
his conduct is of a piece with his words - у него слова не расходятся с делом
all to pieces - а) измученный, в изнеможении; б) разорившийся; в) амер. совершенно, полностью, с начала до конца
to know smth. all to pieces - знать что-л. в совершенстве; ≅ знать что-л. как свои пять пальцев
I know him all to pieces - ≅ я знаю его как облупленного
to hit smb. to pieces - ошеломить кого-л.
2. [pi:s] vto puzzle smb. to pieces - поставить кого-л. в тупик
1. 1) соединять (в единое целое; тж. piece together); собирать из кусочков; надставлять ( одежду; тж. piece down)2) refl присоединяться; объединятьсяshe has pieced herself to the strongest side - она присоединилась к сильнейшей стороне
2. чинить, латать, штопатьshe was piecing the skirt with a patch of black silk - она латала юбку куском чёрного шёлка
3. текст. присучивать ( нить)4. разг. хватать куски, перехватить (перед обедом и т. п.) -
122 Bein
n; -(e)s, -e1. auch eines Tisches, einer Hose etc.: leg; krumme / schlanke Beine haben have crooked ( Person auch: bandy) / slim legs; die Beine übereinander schlagen cross one’s legs; mit übereinander geschlagenen Beinen cross-legged, (with) legs crossed; von einem Bein aufs andere treten umg. shift from one foot to the other; geh du, du hast jüngere Beine umg. you go, your legs are in better shape ( oder younger) than mine; ich konnte mich nicht mehr auf den Beinen halten I could hardly stand on my (own two) feet; das geht in die Beine! bei körperlicher Anstrengung: you really feel it in your legs, it goes for your legs; bei zu viel Alkohol: it goes straight to your knees; von Tanzmusik: it makes you want to get up and dance; er hat jetzt zu viel am Bein fig. he has too much on his hands now, he has too much to do at the moment; auf einem Bein kann man nicht stehen umg. you can’t stop at one (drink); jemandem ein Bein stellen auch fig. trip s.o. up; beim Fußball: das Bein stehen lassen trip up one’s opponent, trip s.o. up; ( schon) auf den Beinen sein be up and about (already); dauernd auf den Beinen sein always be on the go; ich muss mich auf die Beine machen I must ( oder have to) get moving, I must ( oder have to) be off ( oder be making tracks); jemandem Beine machen (fortjagen) send s.o. packing; (antreiben) get s.o. moving; die Beine in die Hand oder unter den Arm nehmen müssen umg. have to scoot off, have to stir one’s stumps, have to step on it; jemandem auf die Beine helfen help s.o. up, help s.o. onto his ( oder her) feet, fig. set s.o. up, give s.o. a leg up; einer Sache auf die Beine helfen fig. get s.th. going; wieder auf den Beinen sein (gesund sein) be back on one’s feet again; ( wieder) auf die Beine kommen (gesund werden, auch fig. wirtschaftlich etc.) get back on one’s feet (again); (sich aufrichten) get up (again); wir werden dich bald wieder auf die Beine bringen! we’ll have you back on your feet ( oder running around) again in no time; schwach auf den Beinen sein be a bit shaky ( oder wobbly); auf schwachen oder wack(e) ligen Beinen stehen fig. be shaky, be a shaky affair; etw. auf die Beine stellen get s.th. up and running, launch ( oder start) s.th.; auf eigenen Beinen stehen stand on one’s own two feet; mit beiden Beinen im Leben stehen have both feet firmly on the ground; sich (Dat) ( etwas oder kurz) die Beine vertreten umg. stretch one’s legs; wie lange willst du noch die Beine unter unseren Tisch strecken? umg. how much longer are you going to be living off us?; mein Schlüssel hat ( wohl) Beine bekommen oder gekriegt umg. my key seems to have walked off; die ganze Stadt war auf den Beinen the whole town had turned out; alles, was Beine hat anyone and everyone, the whole population ( oder town etc.); ausreißen I, Bauch, Grab, Klotz, Knüppel, Kopf, link etc.; siehe auch Fuß12. MED., österr., schw., südd., sonst altm. (Knochen) bone; diese Nachricht etc. ist ihm in die Beine gefahren the news etc. shook him to the core3. Dial., bes. nordd. (Fuß) foot* * *das Beinleg* * *[bain]nt -(e)s, -e1) legmit übereinandergeschlagenen Béínen — cross-legged
sich kaum auf den Béínen halten können — to be hardly able to stay or stand on one's feet
er ist noch gut auf den Béínen — he's still sprightly
schwach auf den Béínen sein — to be a bit shaky
sich auf die Béíne machen (inf) — to make tracks (inf)
meine Tasche hat Béíne bekommen (fig) — my bag has vanished into thin air, my bag seems to have grown legs and walked
mit beiden Béínen im Leben or auf der Erde stehen (fig) — to have both feet (firmly) on the ground
mit einem Béín im Grab stehen (fig) — to have one foot in the grave
mit einem Béín im Gefängnis stehen — to be likely to end up in jail
das steht auf schwachen Béínen (fig) — that isn't very sound
auf eigenen Béínen stehen (fig) — to be able to stand on one's own two feet
er fällt immer wieder auf die Béíne (fig) — he always falls on his feet
wieder auf die Béíne kommen (fig) — to get back on one's feet again
jdn wieder auf die Béíne bringen or stellen (fig) — to get sb back on his/her feet again
etw auf die Béíne stellen (fig) — to get sth off the ground; Geld etc to raise sth
die Béíne breit machen (sl: zum Geschlechtsverkehr) — to spread one's legs (sl)
etw ans Béín binden (fig) — to saddle oneself with sth
See:2) (= Knochen) boneder Schreck ist ihm in die Béíne gefahren —
Fleisch am Béín (old) — meat on the bone
See:→ Stein3) (= Elfenbein) ivory4) (dial = Fuß) foot* * *das1) (one of the limbs by which animals and man walk: The horse injured a front leg; She stood on one leg.) leg2) (the part of an article of clothing that covers one of these limbs closely: He has torn the leg of his trousers.) leg3) (a long, narrow support of a table etc: One of the legs of the chair was broken.) leg* * *<-[e]s, -e>[bain]nt1. (Körperteil) legjdm ein \Bein amputieren to amputate sb's legdie \Beine ausstrecken/spreizen/übereinanderschlagen to stretch [out]/part/cross one's legsdas \Bein heben Hund to lift a legjdm auf die \Beine helfen (a. fig) to help sb back on [or onto] their feet a. figschwach/unsicher auf den \Beinen sein to be weak/unsteady on one's feetauf einem \Bein stehen to stand on one legvon einem \Bein aufs andere treten to shift from one foot [or leg] to the otherein \Bein verlieren to lose a legjdn/etw wieder auf die \Beine bringen (a. fig) to get sb/sth back on their/its feet again a. figwieder auf die \Beine kommen (aufstehen) to get back on one's feet [again], to find one's legs fam; (fig: sich wirtschaftlich erholen) to be back on one's feet again fig; (gesund werden) to be up on one's feet again fig2. (Hosenbein) legJeans mit engen \Beinen drainpipes nplweite \Beine flares nplHosen mit weiten \Beinen flared trousers4. (eines Möbelstücks, Gerätes) legjdm aufs \Bein treten to step on sb's toes6.▶ sich dat die \Beine [nach etw dat] abrennen [o ablaufen] [o wund laufen] (fam) to run one's legs off [for sth] fam▶ jdn auf die \Beine bringen (fam: mobilisieren) to mobilize sb; (zusammenbringen) to bring sb together▶ jdm in die \Beine fahren to go right through sb▶ mit einem \Bein im Gefängnis stehen to be running the risk of a jail sentence▶ mit einem \Bein im Grabe stehen (krank, in Gefahr sein) to have one foot in the grave; (berufsbedingt) to defy death▶ nicht mehr so gut auf den \Beinen sein to be not as young as one used to be▶ sich akk kaum noch [o nicht mehr] auf den \Beinen halten können to be hardly able to stand on one's [own two] feet▶ jdm [tüchtig [o lange]] \Beine machen (fam) to give sb a [swift] kick in [or up] the arse [or AM ass] slverschwinde endlich, oder muss ich dir erst \Beine machen? get lost, or do you need a kick up the arse? sl▶ etw auf die \Beine stellen to get sth off the groundeine Mannschaft/ein Programm auf die \Beine stellen to put together a team/programme [or AM program]* * *das; Bein[e]s, Beine1) legjemandem Beine machen — (ugs.) make somebody get a move on (coll.)
er hat sich (Dat.) kein Bein ausgerissen — (ugs.) he didn't overexert himself
jemandem ein Bein stellen — trip somebody; (fig.) put or throw a spanner or (Amer.) a monkey wrench in somebody's works
jemandem [einen] Knüppel od. Prügel zwischen die Beine werfen — (fig.) put or throw a spanner or (Amer.) a monkey wrench in somebody's works
das hat Beine gekriegt — (fig. ugs.) it seems to have [grown legs and] walked (coll.)
die Beine in die Hand od. unter die Arme nehmen — (fig. ugs.) step on it (coll.)
[wieder] auf die Beine kommen — (ugs.) get back on one's/its feet [again]
jemanden/etwas [wieder] auf die Beine bringen — (ugs.) put somebody/something back on his/her/its feet again
jemandem auf die Beine helfen — help somebody to his/her feet
ich kann mich nicht mehr/kaum noch auf den Beinen halten — I can't/can hardly stand up
auf eigenen Beinen stehen — (fig.) stand on one's own two feet; support oneself
mit beiden Beinen im Leben od. [fest] auf der Erde stehen — have both feet [firmly] on the ground
mit dem linken Bein zuerst aufgestanden sein — (ugs.) have got out of bed on the wrong side
mit einem Bein im Gefängnis/Grab[e] stehen — (fig.) stand a good chance of ending up in prison/have one foot in the grave
von einem Bein aufs andere treten — (ugs.) shift from one foot to the other
2) (HosenBein, TischBein, StuhlBein usw.) leg* * *1. auch eines Tisches, einer Hose etc: leg;krumme/schlanke Beine haben have crooked ( Person auch: bandy)/slim legs;die Beine übereinander schlagen cross one’s legs;mit übereinander geschlagenen Beinen cross-legged, (with) legs crossed;von einem Bein aufs andere treten umg shift from one foot to the other;ich konnte mich nicht mehr auf den Beinen halten I could hardly stand on my (own two) feet;das geht in die Beine! bei körperlicher Anstrengung: you really feel it in your legs, it goes for your legs; bei zu viel Alkohol: it goes straight to your knees; von Tanzmusik: it makes you want to get up and dance;er hat jetzt zu viel am Bein fig he has too much on his hands now, he has too much to do at the moment;(schon) auf den Beinen sein be up and about (already);dauernd auf den Beinen sein always be on the go;ich muss mich auf die Beine machen I must ( oder have to) get moving, I must ( oder have to) be off ( oder be making tracks);unter den Arm nehmen müssen umg have to scoot off, have to stir one’s stumps, have to step on it;jemandem auf die Beine helfen help sb up, help sb onto his ( oder her) feet, fig set sb up, give sb a leg up;einer Sache auf die Beine helfen fig get sth going;wieder auf den Beinen sein (gesund sein) be back on one’s feet again;(wieder) auf die Beine kommen (gesund werden, auch fig wirtschaftlich etc) get back on one’s feet (again); (sich aufrichten) get up (again);wir werden dich bald wieder auf die Beine bringen! we’ll have you back on your feet ( oder running around) again in no time;schwach auf den Beinen sein be a bit shaky ( oder wobbly);wack(e)ligen Beinen stehen fig be shaky, be a shaky affair;etwas auf die Beine stellen get sth up and running, launch ( oder start) sth;auf eigenen Beinen stehen stand on one’s own two feet;mit beiden Beinen im Leben stehen have both feet firmly on the ground;sich (dat) (kurz)die Beine vertreten umg stretch one’s legs;wie lange willst du noch die Beine unter unseren Tisch strecken? umg how much longer are you going to be living off us?;gekriegt umg my key seems to have walked off;die ganze Stadt war auf den Beinen the whole town had turned out;alles, was Beine hat anyone and everyone, the whole population ( oder town etc); → ausreißen A, Bauch, Grab, Klotz, Knüppel, Kopf, link etc; → auch Fuß12. MED, österr, schweiz, südd, sonst obs (Knochen) bone;diese Nachricht etcist ihm in die Beine gefahren the news etc shook him to the core3. dial, besonders nordd (Fuß) foot* * *das; Bein[e]s, Beine1) legjemandem Beine machen — (ugs.) make somebody get a move on (coll.)
er hat sich (Dat.) kein Bein ausgerissen — (ugs.) he didn't overexert himself
jemandem ein Bein stellen — trip somebody; (fig.) put or throw a spanner or (Amer.) a monkey wrench in somebody's works
jemandem [einen] Knüppel od. Prügel zwischen die Beine werfen — (fig.) put or throw a spanner or (Amer.) a monkey wrench in somebody's works
das hat Beine gekriegt — (fig. ugs.) it seems to have [grown legs and] walked (coll.)
die Beine in die Hand od. unter die Arme nehmen — (fig. ugs.) step on it (coll.)
[wieder] auf die Beine kommen — (ugs.) get back on one's/its feet [again]
jemanden/etwas [wieder] auf die Beine bringen — (ugs.) put somebody/something back on his/her/its feet again
jemandem auf die Beine helfen — help somebody to his/her feet
ich kann mich nicht mehr/kaum noch auf den Beinen halten — I can't/can hardly stand up
auf eigenen Beinen stehen — (fig.) stand on one's own two feet; support oneself
mit beiden Beinen im Leben od. [fest] auf der Erde stehen — have both feet [firmly] on the ground
mit dem linken Bein zuerst aufgestanden sein — (ugs.) have got out of bed on the wrong side
mit einem Bein im Gefängnis/Grab[e] stehen — (fig.) stand a good chance of ending up in prison/have one foot in the grave
von einem Bein aufs andere treten — (ugs.) shift from one foot to the other
2) (HosenBein, TischBein, StuhlBein usw.) leg* * *-e n.leg n. -
123 pedrada
f.1 throw of a stone.2 blow or hit with a stone (blow).a pedradas by stoning3 blow with a stone, hairbow.4 direct remark, brickbat.5 hint, allusion, overtone, innuendo.* * *1 blow with a stone\matar a alguien a pedradas to stone somebody to deathpegarle una pedrada a alguien to hit somebody with a stone* * *SF1) (=acción) throw of a stone; (=golpe) hit o blow from a stone2) (=comentario molesto) snide remark, dig *3)sentar como una pedrada —
la cosa le sentó como una pedrada — he took it very ill, the affair went down very badly with him
- venir como pedrada en ojo de boticario* * *1) ( golpe)la pedrada le dio justo en la frente — the stone caught o hit him right on the forehead
2) (Méx fam) ( indirecta) hintdeja de echarme pedradas! — stop dropping hints!
* * *1) ( golpe)la pedrada le dio justo en la frente — the stone caught o hit him right on the forehead
2) (Méx fam) ( indirecta) hintdeja de echarme pedradas! — stop dropping hints!
* * *A(golpe): me dio/pegó una pedrada en la cabeza she hit me on the head with a stonela pedrada le dio justo en la frente the stone caught o hit him right on the foreheadlo mataron a pedradas he was stoned to deathlo rompió de una pedrada he smashed it with a stone/rockcaer or sentar como una pedrada ( fam); to go down very badlyle cayó como una pedrada al director it went down very badly with the directorvenirle a algn como pedrada en ojo de boticario ( fam); to be just what sb needs/needed, to be just what the doctor ordered ( colloq), to be just the ticket ( colloq)¡deja de echarme pedradas! stop dropping hints!* * *
pedrada sustantivo femenino
1 ( golpe):
2 (Méx fam) ( indirecta) hint
pedrada f (golpe) blow from a stone
(lanzamiento) throw of a stone
* * *pedrada nfrecibieron a la policía a pedradas the police were met by a hail of stones;el árbitro recibió una pedrada en la cabeza the referee was hit on the head by a stone;matar a pedradas a alguien to stone sb to death;pegar una pedrada a alguien to hit sb with a stone;Famvenir como pedrada en ojo de boticario to be just what one neededtirar pedradas a alguien to make snide remarks about sb* * *f blow with a stone;me dio una pedrada en la cabeza he hit me over the head with a stone* * *pedrada nf1) : blow (with a rock or stone)la ventana se quebró de una pedrada: the window was broken by a rock* * *pedrada n -
124 par
par [paʀ]━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━b. (moyen, manière) par le train by traind. (lieu, direction) ( = en passant par) by ; ( = en traversant) through ; (suivi d'un nom propre) via ; ( = en longeant) along• par où sont-ils entrés ? how did they get in?• par où est-il venu ? which way did he come?f. ( = pendant) par une belle nuit d'été on a beautiful summer night• sortir par moins 10° to go out when it's minus 10°* * *paʀ
1.
1) ( indiquant un trajet)entre par le garage/par la porte du garage — come in through the garage/by the garage door
il est passé par tous les échelons — fig he worked his way up through the ranks
pour aller à Rome, je passe par Milan — to get to Rome, I go via ou through Milan
le peintre a terminé or fini par la cuisine — the painter did the kitchen last
2) ( indiquant un lieu)ils sortent même par moins 40° — they go outdoors even when it's minus 40°
par deux/trois fois — on two/three occasions
par jour/semaine/an — a day/week/year
par personne or habitant — per person ou head
deux par deux — [travailler] in twos; [marcher] two by two
5) ( introduit un complément d'agent) by6) ( indiquant le moyen) by7) ( indiquant la manière) in8) ( indiquant la cause)l'accident est arrivé par sa faute — it was his/her fault that the accident happened
par ennui/jalousie — out of boredom/jealousy
9) ( indiquant un intermédiaire) through
2.
de par locution prépositive fml1) ( partout dans) throughout, all overvoyager de par le monde — to travel all over ou throughout the world
2) ( à cause de)* * *paʀ prépL'interface a été conçue par des graphistes. — The interface was designed by graphic designers.
2) (manière) withSon nom commence par un H. — His name begins with H.
3) (motif) out of4) (lieu, stade intermédiaire) throughIl faut passer par Lyon pour aller à Marseille. — You have to go through Lyons to get to Marseilles.
Il vaut mieux passer par la côte. — It's better to go by the coast.
Nous sommes passés par Lyon pour aller à Grenoble. — We went via Lyons to Grenoble.
Il faut passer par la douane avant de prendre l'avion. — You have to go through customs before boarding the plane.
Il faut passer par ici pour y arriver. — You have to go this way to get there., (= dans le coin) round here
Il y a beaucoup de touristes par ici. — There are lots of tourists round here.
par-ci, par-là — here and there
par la fenêtre [jeter, regarder] — out of the window
Elle regardait par la fenêtre. — She was looking out of the window.
par jour — a day, per day
3 par jour — 3 a day, 3 per day
Prenez trois cachets par jour. — Take three tablets a day., Take three tablets per day.
Le voyage coûte deux cents euros par personne. — The trip costs two hundred euros per person.
deux par deux [arriver, être reçu] — two at a time, [marcher, se ranger] in twos
Les élèves sont entrés deux par deux. — The pupils went in two by two.
* * *A prép1 ( indiquant un trajet) entre par le garage/par la porte du garage lit come in through the garage/by the garage door; il a pris par les champs he cut across the fields; il est entré dans la compagnie par la petite porte fig he got into the company through the back door; il est passé par tous les échelons fig he worked his way up through the ranks; pour aller à Rome, je passe par Milan to get to Rome, I go via ou by Milan; prends or passe par le chemin au lieu de passer par la route take the path instead of going by the road; elle est arrivée par la droite she came from the right; errer par les rues to wander through the streets; voyager par le monde to travel all over ou throughout the world; le peintre a terminé or fini par la cuisine the painter did the kitchen last;3 ( indiquant une circonstance) par le passé in the past; par une belle journée d'été on a beautiful summer's day; par ce froid/cette chaleur in this cold weather/this heat; ils sortent même par moins 40°C they go outdoors even when it's minus 40°C; par deux/trois fois on two/three occasions;4 ( indiquant une répartition) par jour/semaine/an a day/week/year; les conférences auront lieu un lundi par mois the lectures will take place once a month on a Monday; par personne or habitant per person ou head; par tête Écon per capita; travailler par petits groupes to work in small groups; deux par deux [travailler] in twos; [marcher] two by two; les touristes sont arrivés par centaines/bus entiers tourists arrived by the hundred/the coachload;5 ( introduit un complément d'agent) by; baignée par une douce lumière bathed in soft light; être pris par son travail to be taken up with one's work;6 ( indiquant le moyen) by; régler/payer par carte de crédit to pay by credit card;8 ( indiquant la cause) l'accident est arrivé par sa faute it was his/her fault that the accident happened; par ennui/jalousie out of boredom/jealousy;9 ( indiquant un intermédiaire) through; tu peux me faire passer le livre par ta sœur you can get the book to me via your sister.1 ( partout dans) throughout, all over; avoir des amis de par le monde to have friends throughout ou all over the world;I[par] nom masculin[au golf] parII[par] préposition1. [indiquant la direction, le parcours] by[en traversant un lieu] throughil est arrivé par la gauche/par la droite/par le nord he arrived from the left/the right/the northfaut-il passer par Paris? do we have to go through ou via Paris?[indiquant la position]2. [pendant]par grand froid/grosse chaleur in extreme cold/intense heatpar moments at times, from time to time3. [indiquant le moyen, la manière] byenvoyer quelque chose par avion/télex to send something by airmail/telexpar air/terre/mer by air/land/seavoyager par avion to travel by plane, to flyrépondre par oui ou par non/par la négative to answer yes or no/in the negativeobtenir quelque chose par la force/la douceur to obtain something by force/through kindnessje suis avec toi par la pensée I'm thinking of you, my thoughts are with you4. [indiquant la cause, l'origine]faire quelque chose par habitude/caprice/plaisir/paresse to do something out of habit/on a whim/for the pleasure of it/out of laziness5. [introduisant le complément d'agent] byle logiciel est protégé par un code the software is protected by ou with a codeje l'ai appris par elle I heard it from her, I learned of it through herils veulent le faire par eux-mêmes they want to do it by ou for themselveselles se sont rencontrées par son intermédiaire they met through him/her6. [emploi distributif]une heure par jour one hour a ou per dayils arrivaient par petits groupes/centaines they arrived in small groups/in their hundreds7. [avec les verbes 'commencer' et 'finir']ça finira par arriver/par ressembler à quelque chose it will end up happening/looking like something————————de par locution prépositionnelle1. [par l'ordre de]2. (littéraire) [dans l'espace] throughoutde par le monde all over ou throughout the world3. [du fait de] by virtue ofpar-ci par-là locution adverbiale1. [dans l'espace] here and there3. [marquant la répétition]avec lui, c'est mon yacht par-ci, mon avion personnel par-là it's my yacht this, my plane that, all the time with him -
125 Danskr
a. Danish;dönsk tunga, the Danish (or old Scandinavian) language.* * *adj., Danir, pl. Danes; Dan-mörk, f. Denmark, i. e. the mark, march, or border of the Danes; Dana-veldi, n. the Danish empire; Dana-virki, n. the Danish wall, and many compds, vide Fms. xi. This adj. requires special notice, because of the phrase Dönsk tunga ( the Danish tongue), the earliest recorded name of the common Scandinavian tongue. It must be borne in mind that the ‘Danish’ of the old Saga times applies not to the nation, but to the empire. According to the researches of the late historian P.A. Munch, the ancient Danish empire, at least at times, extended over almost all the countries bordering on the Skagerac (Vík); hence a Dane became in Engl. synonymous with a Scandinavian; the language spoken by the Scandinavians was called Danish; and ‘Dönsk tunga’ is even used to denote Scandinavian extraction in the widest extent, vide Sighvat in Fms. iv. 73, Eg. ch. 51, Grág. ii. 71, 72. During the 11th and 12th centuries the name was much in use, but as the Danish hegemony in Scandinavia grew weaker, the name became obsolete, and Icel. writers of the 13th and 14th centuries began to use the name ‘Norræna,’ Norse tongue, from Norway their own mother country, and the nearest akin to Icel. in customs and idiom. ‘Swedish’ never occurs, because Icel. had little intercourse with that country, although the Scandinavian tongue was spoken there perhaps in a more antique form than in the sister countries. In the 15th century, when almost all connection with Scandinavia was broken off for nearly a century, the Norræna in its turn became an obsolete word, and was replaced by the present word ‘Icelandic,’ which kept its ground, because the language in the mean time underwent great changes on the Scandinavian continent. The Reformation, the translation of the Old and New Testaments into Icelandic (Oddr Gotskalksson, called the Wise, translated and published the N. T. in 1540, and bishop Gudbrand the whole Bible in 1584), a fresh growth of religious literature, hymns, sermons, and poetry (Hallgrímr Pétrsson, Jón Vídalín), the regeneration of the old literature in the 17th and 18th centuries (Brynjólfr Sveinsson, Arni Magnússon, Þormóðr Torfason),—all this put an end to the phrases Dönsk tunga and Norræna; and the last phrase is only used to denote obsolete grammatical forms or phrases, as opposed to the forms and phrases of the living language. The translators of the Bible often say ‘vort Íslenzkt mál,’ our Icelandic tongue, or ‘vort móður mál,’ our mother tongue; móður-málið mitt, Pass. 35. 9. The phrase ‘Dönsk tunga’ has given rise to a great many polemical antiquarian essays: the last and the best, by which this question may be regarded as settled, is that by Jon Sigurdsson in the preface to Lex. Poët.; cp. also that of Pál Vídalín in Skýr. s. v., also published in Latin at the end of the old Ed. of Gunnl. Saga, 1775. -
126 piece
1. n кусок; часть2. n обломки; осколкиthe statue was in pieces — статуя была разбита на мелкие кусочки; б) расколовшийся; полный противоречий
to pieces — на части; вдребезги
to pull to pieces — разорвать на мелкие кусочки, растерзать
3. n участок4. n штука, кусок; определённое количествоa piece of scoundrelism — подлая штука; гнусная проделка
5. n отдельный предмет, штука6. n картина; произведение искусстваhunting piece — картина, изображающая сцену охоты
7. n короткое литературное произведение8. n статья, заметка, сообщение9. n муз. пьеса10. n монетаcrown piece — крона, монета в одну крону
11. n шашка; фишка12. n шахм. фигураto move a piece — передвинуть фигуру, сделать ход
13. n амер. разг. пистолет, «пушка»14. n деталь; обрабатываемое изделие15. n вставка, заплатаa piece of the action — доля в афере; плата за соучастие
16. n бочонок вина17. n амер. лёгкий второй завтракfor breakfast he would nibble at a piece of dry toast — вместо завтрака он только погрызёт сухарик и всё
18. n диал. кусок, ломоть хлеба19. n образец, пример20. n в выражениях21. n разг. девушка, женщина22. n преим. амер. место, вещь; багажthe cases in which pieces go astray are rare — случаи, когда багаж попадает не по адресу, доля, пай
23. n разг. дело, вопросI hate this man, he is such a forward piece — терпеть не могу этого человека, он такой наглец
piece of flesh — «товар», бабёнка, девка
piece of muslin — «юбка», девушка, женщина
a piece of change — хороший куш, кругленькая сумма
a knavish piece of work — нечестные дела, жульничество
24. v соединять; собирать из кусочков; надставлятьa piece of ice — льдинка, кусочек льда
25. v присоединяться; объединяться26. v чинить, латать, штопать27. v текст. присучивать28. v разг. хватать куски, перехватитьСинонимический ряд:1. bit (noun) bit; bite; crumb; morsel2. composition (noun) article; composition; creation; essay; masterpiece; novella; ode; paper; play; poem; selection; short story3. part (noun) bit; cut; division; fragment; member; moiety; parcel; part; portion; quantity; scrap; section; segment; shred; slice; subdivision4. share (noun) role; share5. story (noun) item; paragraph; squib; story6. work (noun) opus; production; work7. darn (verb) darn; mend; patch; repair; sewАнтонимический ряд:all; entire; everything; nothing; whole -
127 Л-93
БРОСАТЬ/БРОСИТЬ В ЛИЦО (B ГЛАЗА) кому что VP subj: human to address (sharp words, accusations, rebukes etc) directly to the person for whom they are intended, often displaying open defianceX бросит Z в лицо Y-y = X will throw (fling) Z in Y's face."...Ты, кажется, и не обратил внимания, как ты обидел Катерину Ивановну тем, что рассказал Грушеньке о том дне, а та сейчас ей бросила в глаза, что вы сами „к кавалерам красу тайком продавать ходили!"» (Достоевский 1). "...Mitya, you don't seem to have noticed how you offended Katerina Ivanovna by telling Grushenka about that day. And she immediately threw it in her face, that she 'went secretly to her gentlemen to sell her beauty'!" (1a).Байрон... сломился, но сломился, как грозный Титан, бросая людям в глаза свое презрение, не золотя пилюли (Герцен 2). Byron..was broken, but broken like a menacing Titan, flinging his scorn in men's faces and not troubling to gild the pill (2a). -
128 бросать в глаза
[VP; subj: human]=====⇒ to address (sharp words, accusations, rebukes etc) directly to the person for whom they are intended, often displaying open defiance:♦ "...Ты, кажется, и не обратил внимания, как ты обидел Катерину Ивановну тем, что рассказал Грушеньке о том дне, а та сейчас ей бросила в глаза, что вы сами "к кавалерам красу тайком продавать ходили!"" (Достоевский 1). "...Mitya, you don't seem to have noticed how you offended Katerina Ivanovna by telling Grushenka about that day. And she immediately threw it in her face, that she 'went secretly to her gentlemen to sell her beauty'!" (1a).♦ Байрон... сломился, но сломился, как грозный Титан, бросая людям в глаза свое презрение, не золотя пилюли (Герцен 2). Byron..was broken, but broken like a menacing Titan, flinging his scorn in men's faces and not troubling to gild the pill (2a).Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > бросать в глаза
См. также в других словарях:
Sword-that-was-Broken — / Sword that was Broken The broken blade of Elendil. Narsil, the sword of Elendil that broke beneath him when he fell in the War of the Last Alliance. Its shards were returned to Arnor, where they were kept as an heirloom for three… … J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-earth glossary
Broken — Bro ken (br[=o] k n), a. [From {Break}, v. t.] 1. Separated into parts or pieces by violence; divided into fragments; as, a broken chain or rope; a broken dish. [1913 Webster] 2. Disconnected; not continuous; also, rough; uneven; as, a broken… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Broken ground — Broken Bro ken (br[=o] k n), a. [From {Break}, v. t.] 1. Separated into parts or pieces by violence; divided into fragments; as, a broken chain or rope; a broken dish. [1913 Webster] 2. Disconnected; not continuous; also, rough; uneven; as, a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Broken line — Broken Bro ken (br[=o] k n), a. [From {Break}, v. t.] 1. Separated into parts or pieces by violence; divided into fragments; as, a broken chain or rope; a broken dish. [1913 Webster] 2. Disconnected; not continuous; also, rough; uneven; as, a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Broken meat — Broken Bro ken (br[=o] k n), a. [From {Break}, v. t.] 1. Separated into parts or pieces by violence; divided into fragments; as, a broken chain or rope; a broken dish. [1913 Webster] 2. Disconnected; not continuous; also, rough; uneven; as, a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Broken number — Broken Bro ken (br[=o] k n), a. [From {Break}, v. t.] 1. Separated into parts or pieces by violence; divided into fragments; as, a broken chain or rope; a broken dish. [1913 Webster] 2. Disconnected; not continuous; also, rough; uneven; as, a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Broken weather — Broken Bro ken (br[=o] k n), a. [From {Break}, v. t.] 1. Separated into parts or pieces by violence; divided into fragments; as, a broken chain or rope; a broken dish. [1913 Webster] 2. Disconnected; not continuous; also, rough; uneven; as, a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
broken-hearted — adj extremely sad, especially because someone you love has died or left you →↑heartbroken ▪ He was broken hearted when she left … Dictionary of contemporary English
broken — brokenly, adv. brokenness, n. /broh keuhn/, v. 1. pp. of break. adj. 2. reduced to fragments; fragmented. 3. ruptured; torn; fractured. 4. not functioning properly; out of working order. 5. Meteorol. (of sky cove … Universalium
broken-hearted — bro|ken hearted [ ,broukən hartəd ] adjective extremely sad: He was broken hearted when his dog died … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
broken-hearted — UK [ˌbrəʊkən ˈhɑː(r)tɪd] / US [ˌbroʊkən ˈhɑrtəd] adjective extremely sad He was broken hearted when his dog died … English dictionary