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61 Was will er nur?
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62 I want a rope that will go from the top window to the ground
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > I want a rope that will go from the top window to the ground
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63 When I want your opinion, I will rattle your cage
Общая лексика: Я начальник, ты дуракУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > When I want your opinion, I will rattle your cage
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64 what do you want to eat? Will steak fit the bill?
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > what do you want to eat? Will steak fit the bill?
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65 when the fish strikes, you want to pull sharply to sink the hook, or the fish will get away
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > when the fish strikes, you want to pull sharply to sink the hook, or the fish will get away
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66 hendak
will, want, desire, wish* * *will* * *wish (to do something); intend, be going to; be about to -
67 robar
v.1 to steal (object).me han robado la moto my motorbike's been stolenrobar a alguien to rob somebodyrobar el corazón a alguien to steal somebody's heartla contabilidad me roba mucho tiempo doing the accounts takes up a lot of my timeEllos roban dinero They steal money.Ellos roban de noche They purloin at night.2 to draw.3 to rob (cobrar caro).en esa tienda te roban the prices in that shop are daylight robberyEllos roban pan They rob bread.4 to steal from, to rob, to burglarize, to burgle.María le roba a su vecina Mary steals from her neighbor.Ellos roban casas They burglarize homes.5 to rob of.* * *2 (raptar) to kidnap3 (en naipes) to draw4 figurado (cobrar muy caro) to rip off5 figurado (corazón, alma) to steal* * *verb1) to rob, steal2) abduct* * *1. VT1) [+ objeto, dinero] to steal; [+ banco] to rob¡nos han robado! — we've been robbed!
tuve que robarle horas al sueño para acabar el trabajo — I had to work into the night to finish the job
robarle el corazón a algn — liter to steal sb's heart
2) [+ atención] to steal, capture; [+ paciencia] to exhaust; [+ tranquilidad] to destroy, take away; [+ vida] to take, steal3) (=estafar) to cheat, roben ese negocio te han robado — you've been cheated o robbed in that deal
4) [+ naipes] to take, drawroba una carta de la baraja — take o draw a card from the deck
5) frm [río, corriente] to carry away6) †† (=raptar) to kidnap, abduct2. VI1) (=sisar) to stealno robarás — (Biblia) thou shalt not steal
2) (Naipes) to take a card, draw a card* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <dinero/bolso> to steal; < banco> to rob2) ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)¿$300? te robaron! — $300? you were conned! (colloq)
3) (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)2.robar vi to stealrobaron en la casa de al lado — the house next door was burglarized (AmE) o (BrE) was burgled
* * *= steal, rob, raid, thieve, steal off, pilfer, filch, break into, break in, mug, plunder, rifle, snatch, nick, hold up.Ex. In imposing penalties for book stealing libraries are particularly helpless.Ex. This article contrasts a range of principles with the widely prevailing system of polygraphic marking which requires much manual, specialised work and which robs the resulting text of good visual presentation = Este artículo contrasta una serie de principios con el sistema prevalente de marcas poligráficas que necesita mucho trabajo manual y especializado que roba al texto resultante una buena presentación visual.Ex. The article ' Raiding the World Bank' explains how the World Bank operates, shareholding, the initiation of loan proposals, and lending to education projects.Ex. But it was no less misguided than the commonplace practice of setting passages thieved from literature for comprehension exercises.Ex. I have nothing against Aussies but I do have something against parasites who steal off someone else's ideas.Ex. In his work, Al pilfers fragments from a wide array of sources and glues them into collages.Ex. Even in poems written directly out of his own experience, he is likely to use notions, phrases, and musical ideas filched from other recent poems.Ex. A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed.Ex. The hacker broke in on the university dial-in lines through the library system.Ex. In that time, she relates, she had been mugged at gunpoint, punched in the face, and harassed.Ex. Close on such paradeground excitements comes the popular sport of plundering for projects.Ex. English, on the other hand, has been accused of waylaying other languages in dark alleys and rifling their pockets for loose vocabulary.Ex. The thieves broke into the museum using a hydraulic jack and snatched both paintings in 3 minutes.Ex. It's more advisable to have a cheap and skanky bike for pootling around town, the idea being that no-one would want to nick a nasty looking bike.Ex. The film starts with two small-time thieves who spontaneously decide to hold up a restaurant.----* robar en una tienda = shoplift.* robar ganado = rustle + cattle.* robar la credibilidad = destroy + credence.* robarle tiempo al sueño = burn + the candle at both ends.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <dinero/bolso> to steal; < banco> to rob2) ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)¿$300? te robaron! — $300? you were conned! (colloq)
3) (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)2.robar vi to stealrobaron en la casa de al lado — the house next door was burglarized (AmE) o (BrE) was burgled
* * *= steal, rob, raid, thieve, steal off, pilfer, filch, break into, break in, mug, plunder, rifle, snatch, nick, hold up.Ex: In imposing penalties for book stealing libraries are particularly helpless.
Ex: This article contrasts a range of principles with the widely prevailing system of polygraphic marking which requires much manual, specialised work and which robs the resulting text of good visual presentation = Este artículo contrasta una serie de principios con el sistema prevalente de marcas poligráficas que necesita mucho trabajo manual y especializado que roba al texto resultante una buena presentación visual.Ex: The article ' Raiding the World Bank' explains how the World Bank operates, shareholding, the initiation of loan proposals, and lending to education projects.Ex: But it was no less misguided than the commonplace practice of setting passages thieved from literature for comprehension exercises.Ex: I have nothing against Aussies but I do have something against parasites who steal off someone else's ideas.Ex: In his work, Al pilfers fragments from a wide array of sources and glues them into collages.Ex: Even in poems written directly out of his own experience, he is likely to use notions, phrases, and musical ideas filched from other recent poems.Ex: A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed.Ex: The hacker broke in on the university dial-in lines through the library system.Ex: In that time, she relates, she had been mugged at gunpoint, punched in the face, and harassed.Ex: Close on such paradeground excitements comes the popular sport of plundering for projects.Ex: English, on the other hand, has been accused of waylaying other languages in dark alleys and rifling their pockets for loose vocabulary.Ex: The thieves broke into the museum using a hydraulic jack and snatched both paintings in 3 minutes.Ex: It's more advisable to have a cheap and skanky bike for pootling around town, the idea being that no-one would want to nick a nasty looking bike.Ex: The film starts with two small-time thieves who spontaneously decide to hold up a restaurant.* robar en una tienda = shoplift.* robar ganado = rustle + cattle.* robar la credibilidad = destroy + credence.* robarle tiempo al sueño = burn + the candle at both ends.* * *robar [A1 ]vtA1 ‹dinero/joya/bolso› to steal; ‹banco› to roble robó dinero a su padre he stole some money from his fatherles robaron todos los ahorros they were robbed of all their savings, all their savings were stolenentraron pero no robaron nada they broke in but didn't steal o take anything¿quién me ha robado la regla? who's taken o stolen o ( colloq) swiped my ruler?me robó el corazón she stole my heartle robó un beso he stole a kiss from herle roba horas al sueño para poder estudiar he does o goes without sleep so that he can studyno te quiero robar más tiempo I don't want to take up any more of your time2 (raptar) ‹niño› to abduct, kidnap¿$300? ¡te robaron! $300? what a rip-off! o you were conned! ( colloq)■ robarvito stealno robarás ( Bib) thou shalt not stealrobaron en la casa de al lado the house next door was broken into o was burglarized ( AmE) o ( BrE) was burgled¡me han robado! I've been robbed!* * *
robar ( conjugate robar) verbo transitivo
1
‹ banco› to rob;
robarle algo a algn to steal sth from sb;
le robaron el bolso she had her bag stolen
2 ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)
3 (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)
verbo intransitivo
to steal;
¡me han robado! I've been robbed!
robar verbo transitivo
1 (cosas materiales) to steal: robar algo a alguien, to steal sthg from sb
(a una persona, un banco) to rob: me robaron en la calle, I was robbed in the street
(en una casa) to burgle: anoche robaron en casa de mi vecino, my neighbour's house was burgled last night
2 (el tiempo) to take up: debo robarte unos minutos para que me expliques este problema, may I take a few minutes of your time and ask you to explain this problem to me?
le roba horas al estudio para ver la televisión, he spends hours of his study time watching TV
3 (metros de un espacio) to take off
4 Naipes to draw, pick up
To steal se aplica a lo que el ladrón se lleva (dinero, joyas, etc.). To rob se refiere al lugar desde donde se lo lleva (un banco, una casa). To burgle significa entrar en una casa con la intención de robar.
persona acto verbo
ladrón robo robar
thief theft
robber robbery to rob
to steal
burglar burglary to burgle
' robar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ladrón
- ladrona
- limpiar
- pillar
- quitar
- robo
- bolsear
- chingar
- chorear
- chorrear
- clavar
- desvalijar
- escamotear
- guindar
- soplar
- volar
English:
accuse
- appropriate
- break in
- break into
- burglar
- burglarize
- burglary
- burgle
- cop
- fall in with
- gunpoint
- have up
- make off
- nick
- pinch
- poach
- rip off
- rob
- robber
- robbery
- rustle
- scavenge
- scoop
- snatch
- steal
- stick up
- stoop
- take
- theft
- thief
- thievishness
- break
- plunder
- rip
- wrong
* * *♦ vt1. [objeto] to steal;[casa] to burgle; [banco] to rob;robar a alguien to rob sb;me han robado la moto my motorbike's been stolen;nos robaron el partido we were robbed;le robó el corazón she stole his heart;Famel que roba a un ladrón, tiene cien años de perdón it's no crime to steal from a thief2. [niño, mujer] to abduct, to kidnap3. [tiempo] to take up;te robaré sólo un minuto I'll only take up a minute of your time;la contabilidad me roba mucho tiempo doing the accounts takes up a lot of my time4. [espacio] to take away;con esta reforma le robamos unos metros al garaje this alteration will take a few square metres away from the garage5. [naipe] to draw6. [cobrar caro] to rob;en esa tienda te roban the prices in that shop are daylight robbery♦ vi1. [sustraer] to steal;han robado en una tienda del centro there's been a robbery in a shop in the town centre2. [tomar un naipe] to draw* * *v/t2 naipe take, pick up* * *robar vt1) : to steal2) : to rob, to burglarize3) secuestrar: to abduct, to kidnap4) : to captivaterobar virobar en : to break into* * *robar vb3. (casa) to burgle -
68 нужный
necessary; кратк. ( потребен) тж. передаётся через личные формы пассива глагола need; кратк. (требуется, нужно получить, видеть) передаётся через личные формы пассива глагола wantэто очень нужно — that is very necessary; that is needed very much
всё, что нужно — all that is needed, all that is wanted
скажите ему, что он нужен здесь — tell him (that) he is wanted / needed here
это как раз то, что нужно! — that's just the thing!
их названия приводятся, если (это) нужно, где (это) нужно — their names are given if necessary, where necessary
ему, им и т. д. нужен, нужна, нужно, нужны (+ им.; необходим и т. п.) — he needs, they need, etc. (d.); (недостаёт, требуется, нужно получить, видеть) he wants, they want, etc. (d.):
им нужна помощь — they need help / assistance
что вам нужно? — Мне нужен карандаш, нужно несколько листов бумаги — what do you want? — I want a pencil, I want a few sheets of paper
скажите ему, что он мне нужен — tell him (that) I want him
что ему нужно? ( чего добивается) — what is he after?
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69 нужный
necessary; кратк. ф. тж. передаётся через личные формы гл. need, wantэ́то ну́жная кни́га — it is a necessary book
сон ну́жен для здоро́вья — sleep is necessary for health
э́то о́чень ну́жно — that is very necessary; that is needed very much
всё ну́жное — everything necessary, everything one needs
всё, что ну́жно — all that is needed / wanted
скажи́те ему́, что он ну́жен здесь — tell him (that) he is wanted / needed here
э́то как раз то, что ну́жно! — that's just the thing [just what is needed / necessary]!
ну́жный челове́к в ну́жном ме́сте и в ну́жное вре́мя — the right person at the right place and time
е́сли [когда́; где] (э́то) ну́жно — if [when; where] necessary
их назва́ния приво́дятся, где (э́то) ну́жно — their names are given where necessary
им нужна́ по́мощь — they need help / assistance
для э́того вам ну́жно сто рубле́й — you need one hundred roubles for it
э́та кни́га бу́дет нужна́ ей сего́дня — she will want this book today
им ну́жно молока́ — they need some milk
ему́ ну́жно ты́сячу рубле́й — he needs a thousand roubles
что ему́ ну́жно? — what does he want?; ( чего добивается) what is he after?
что вам от меня́ ну́жно? — what do you want from me?
кого́ вам ну́жно? (с кем вы хотите говорить) — who do you want to talk to?; ( кого вы хотите посетить) who do you want to see?
на э́то ну́жно 2 ча́са — it will take two hours
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70 downshifting
Gen Mgtthe concept of giving up all or part of your work commitment and income in exchange for improved quality of life. The term was coined by Charles Handy. Downshifting has increased in popularity because of rising stress in the workplace caused partly by the downsizing trend of the late 20th century, and may be contrasted with the concept of the organization man. Downshifting is integral to the idea of portfolio working, in which individuals opt out of a formal employee relationship to sell their services at a pace and at a price to suit themselves.Most people consider downshifting because of family demands, or because they have been asked to do something by their organization that goes strongly against their values, pushing them to question why they are working so hard for that organization. Others downshift as they approach retirement, in order to smooth the transition. People who downshift need to be very sure that that is what they really want and know why they want it, as it can be hard to reverse the decision.Someone wanting to take the risk of downshifting should make a thorough assessment of his or her short-term and long-term financial situation by way of preparation. They will need to have a good bed of savings to rely on in the first year. It may be necessary to consider moving to a smaller, cheaper place. Deciding what to keep of the old life and what to let go is another important part of the preparation. Some downshifters will want to completely leave their old work life behind them, starting a new job in a slower-paced organization, or setting up on their own. Others will want to stay with their organization but perhaps move to a less demanding job. Once these things have been considered and decided upon, it is time for the downshifter to make an action plan with a schedule which includes regular reassessment periods. -
71 Дай волю на ноготок - он возьмет на весь локоток
If you grant some men a small favo(u)r, little freedom of action, they will want to get more. See Дадут дураку честь, так не знает, где и сесть (Д), Дай курице гряду - изроет весь огород (Д), Дай черту волос, а он и за всю голову (Д), Подай палец, а за руку сам возьму (П), Пусти свинью в мякину - она и в зерно заберется (П)Var.: Дай с ноготок, попросят с локотокCf: Give him a finger and he will take a hand (Am.). Give him an inch and he'll take a mile (an ell, a yard) (Am., Br.). Give him a ring, and he'll want your whole arm (Br.). Give knaves an inch and they will take a yard (Br.). Give the devil an inch and he will take an ell (Am.)Русско-английский словарь пословиц и поговорок > Дай волю на ноготок - он возьмет на весь локоток
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72 admirar
v.1 to admire (personaje, obra de arte).lo admiro por su honradez I admire his honestyser de admirar to be admirableAdmiro este paisaje I admire this scenery.2 to amaze (to surprise).me admira su descaro I can't believe his cheekAdmiro a María I amaze Mary=I cause admiration in Mary.3 to be admired by, to cause admiration in.Me admira María I am admired by Mary= I cause admiration in Mary4 to be admired at, to be amazed at.Me admira este paisaje I am admired at this scenery.* * *1 (estimar) to admire2 (sorprender) to amaze, surprise, astonish1 (asombrarse) to be astonished (de, at), be amazed (de, at)* * *verb* * *1. VT1) (=estimar) to admireadmirar algo/a algn — to admire sth/sb
2) (=contemplar) [+ cuadro, panorama] to admire3) frm (=asombrar) to amaze, astonishsu descaro admiró a todos — everyone was amazed o astonished at o by his nerve
me admira tu ingenuidad — your ingenuity amazes o astonishes me
2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( respetar) <persona/cualidad> to admireb) ( contemplar) to admirec) ( sorprender) to amaze2.admirarse v pronadmirarse de algo — to be amazed at o about something
* * *= admire, marvel at, hold + Nombre + up for praise, impress, look up to, ooh and aah.Ex. I've heard people say they did not admire Thomas Hardy's novels because they were gloomy.Ex. You will marvel at the views of Skye from the castle ramparts.Ex. Politicians give us many reasons to worry, and I don't usually hold them up for public praise.Ex. When children are aware that records are kept there are always some who will want to impress or please.Ex. No mattter how high I get, I'll still be looking up to you.Ex. I cannot understand the mentality of people who stand around a stage door to ooh and aah at some actor or actress.----* admirar, estimar, apreciar = look up to.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( respetar) <persona/cualidad> to admireb) ( contemplar) to admirec) ( sorprender) to amaze2.admirarse v pronadmirarse de algo — to be amazed at o about something
* * *= admire, marvel at, hold + Nombre + up for praise, impress, look up to, ooh and aah.Ex: I've heard people say they did not admire Thomas Hardy's novels because they were gloomy.
Ex: You will marvel at the views of Skye from the castle ramparts.Ex: Politicians give us many reasons to worry, and I don't usually hold them up for public praise.Ex: When children are aware that records are kept there are always some who will want to impress or please.Ex: No mattter how high I get, I'll still be looking up to you.Ex: I cannot understand the mentality of people who stand around a stage door to ooh and aah at some actor or actress.* admirar, estimar, apreciar = look up to.* * *admirar [A1 ]vt1 (respetar) ‹persona/cualidad› to admire2 (contemplar) to admire3(sorprender): me admira la ignorancia de esta gente I'm amazed at the ignorance of these people o (at) how ignorant these people are, it amazes me how ignorant these people are, the ignorance of these people amazes meadmirarse DE algo to be amazed AT o ABOUT sthse admiró de que hubiéramos podido hacerlo sin su ayuda she was amazed that we'd managed to do it without her help* * *
admirar ( conjugate admirar) verbo transitivo
admirarse verbo pronominal admirarse de algo to be amazed at o about sth
admirar verbo transitivo
1 (tener en gran estima) to admire
2 (asombrar, causar sorpresa) to amaze, astonish
' admirar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
contemplar
English:
admire
- look up to
- look
* * *♦ vt1. [personaje, obra de arte] to admire;admiro su sinceridad I admire her frankness;lo admiro por su honradez I admire his honesty;ser de admirar to be admirable2. [sorprender] to amaze;me admira su descaro I can't believe his cheek3. [contemplar] to admire* * *v/t admire* * *admirar vt1) : to admire2) : to amaze, to astonish* * *admirar vb1. (apreciar) to admire2. (asombrar) to amaze -
73 dolorido
adj.achy, aching, hurt, in pain.* * *► adjetivo1 sore, aching2 figurado sorrowful, sad, hurt* * *adj.1) aching, painful, sore2) hurt* * *ADJ1) (Med) sore2) [persona] distressed, upset3) [tono] pained* * *- da adjetivoa) ( físicamente)b) ( afligido) hurt* * *= sore.Ex. The article 'A site for sore eyes' explains elements in a Web site that will ensure that users will want to use it: aesthetics, navigation, graphics tools, etc..----* zona dolorida = sore point, sore spot.* * *- da adjetivoa) ( físicamente)b) ( afligido) hurt* * *= sore.Ex: The article 'A site for sore eyes' explains elements in a Web site that will ensure that users will want to use it: aesthetics, navigation, graphics tools, etc..
* zona dolorida = sore point, sore spot.* * *dolorido -da(físicamente): estoy toda dolorida I'm aching all overel enfermo está muy dolorido the patient is in a lot of paintengo el brazo muy dolorido I've got a very sore arm2 (afligido) hurtestaba muy dolorido por lo que le hiciste he was very hurt by what you did to him* * *
dolorido◊ -da adjetivoa) ( físicamente):
tengo el brazo muy dolorido I've got a very sore arm
dolorido,-a adjetivo
1 (un brazo, músculo) sore, aching
2 (entristecido, afligido) hurt, sore
' dolorido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
dolorida
- adolorido
- molido
- resentido
English:
aching
- sore
- ache
- in
- stiff
* * *dolorido, -a adj1. [físicamente] sore;la caída lo dejó muy dolorido the fall left him in great pain;tengo todo el cuerpo dolorido I'm aching all over;tener la pierna/espalda dolorida to have a sore leg/back2. [moralmente] grieving, sorrowing;estar dolorido to be grieving o sorrowing* * *adj sore, aching; fighurt* * *dolorido, -da adj1) : sore, aching2) : hurt, upset* * *dolorido adj sore -
74 irritado
adj.1 irritated, angry, furious, annoyed.2 irritated, itchy, inflamed, sore.3 feverish.past part.past participle of spanish verb: irritar.* * *ADJ1) (=enfadado) irritated2) [piel] irritated* * *= sore, irritated, exasperated, testy [testier -comp., testiest -sup.].Ex. The article 'A site for sore eyes' explains elements in a Web site that will ensure that users will want to use it: aesthetics, navigation, graphics tools, etc..Ex. Stanley C Holliday hammers home the same message by more whimsical means hinting darkly that a sticky end at the hands of irritated colleagues awaits all librarians who fail to make adequate and accurate notes.Ex. He was drumming on his desk with exasperated fingers, his mouth quirked at the corners, as if saying: 'Wriggle out of that!'.Ex. We're assailed by doubts, mortified by our own shortcomings, surrounded by freaks, testy over silly details.----* ojos irritados = bloodshot eyes.* * *= sore, irritated, exasperated, testy [testier -comp., testiest -sup.].Ex: The article 'A site for sore eyes' explains elements in a Web site that will ensure that users will want to use it: aesthetics, navigation, graphics tools, etc..
Ex: Stanley C Holliday hammers home the same message by more whimsical means hinting darkly that a sticky end at the hands of irritated colleagues awaits all librarians who fail to make adequate and accurate notes.Ex: He was drumming on his desk with exasperated fingers, his mouth quirked at the corners, as if saying: 'Wriggle out of that!'.Ex: We're assailed by doubts, mortified by our own shortcomings, surrounded by freaks, testy over silly details.* ojos irritados = bloodshot eyes.* * *irritado, -a adj1. [persona] irritated, annoyed2. [garganta] sore;tengo la piel irritada I've got a rash -
75 perfeccionista
adj.perfectionist.f. & m.perfectionist.* * *► adjetivo1 perfectionist1 perfectionist* * *SMF perfectionist* * *masculino y femenino perfectionist* * *= perfectionist, fastidious.Ex. Those who are ' perfectionists' in such things will want to drive you crazy worrying about 'what if two people go out together' or 'it won't be accurate because some users go out for a smoke and then come right back in' or 'what about kids who run in and out' and so forth.Ex. Some of them will be sufficiently bizarre to suit the most fastidious connoisseur of the present artifacts of civilization.* * *masculino y femenino perfectionist* * *= perfectionist, fastidious.Ex: Those who are ' perfectionists' in such things will want to drive you crazy worrying about 'what if two people go out together' or 'it won't be accurate because some users go out for a smoke and then come right back in' or 'what about kids who run in and out' and so forth.
Ex: Some of them will be sufficiently bizarre to suit the most fastidious connoisseur of the present artifacts of civilization.* * *perfectionist* * *
perfeccionista sustantivo masculino y femenino
perfectionist
perfeccionista adjetivo & mf perfectionist
' perfeccionista' also found in these entries:
English:
perfectionist
* * *♦ adjperfectionist♦ nmfperfectionist* * *I adj perfectionistII m/f perfectionist* * *perfeccionista nmf: perfectionist -
76 Подай палец, а за руку сам возьму
See Дай волю на ноготок - он возьмет на весь локоток (Д)Cf: Give a dog a finger and he will want a whole hand (Am.). Give him a finger and he will take a hand (Am.). Give him an inch and he'll take a mile (an ell, a yard) (Am.). Give him a ring, and he'll want your whole arm (Br.). Give knaves an inch and they will take a yard (Br.)Русско-английский словарь пословиц и поговорок > Подай палец, а за руку сам возьму
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77 asaltar
v.1 to attack.2 to rob.Ricardo asaltó a Pedro Richard held up Peter.3 to seize.iba a ir pero al final le asaltaron las dudas he was going to go, but he was seized by doubts at the last minutele asaltó el pánico he was overcome by panic4 to be assaulted by.Te asaltó el bandido You were assaulted by the bandit.5 to assault, to assail, to invade, to attack.Ricardo asalta bancos Richard assaults banks.* * *1 to assault, attack (para robar) to raid, rob2 (abordar) to approach, come up to■ me asaltó la duda de si había dicho la verdad doubts sprang to my mind as to whether he had told the truth or not* * *verb1) to assault2) mug, rob3) storm* * *VT1) [+ persona] to attack, assault; (Mil) to storm; [+ banco, tienda etc] to break into, raid; [en disturbios etc] to loot, sackanoche fue asaltada la joyería — the jeweller's was raided last night, last night there was a break-in at the jeweller's
2) [dudas] to assail; [idea] to cross one's mindle asaltó una idea — he was struck by an idea, an idea crossed his mind
3) [desastre, muerte] to fall upon, surprise, overtake* * *verbo transitivob) ( tomar por asalto) <ciudad/embajada> to stormc) ( atacar) to attack, assaultd) ( acosar) to accost, assail (frml)e) idea to strikeme asaltó una duda — I was struck o seized by a sudden doubt
* * *= raid, storm, break into, break in, mug, assail, hold up.Ex. The article ' Raiding the World Bank' explains how the World Bank operates, shareholding, the initiation of loan proposals, and lending to education projects.Ex. On October 6, 1976, an angry mob stormed the university to attack students who seemed to threaten the nation.Ex. A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed.Ex. The hacker broke in on the university dial-in lines through the library system.Ex. In that time, she relates, she had been mugged at gunpoint, punched in the face, and harassed.Ex. It's ridiculous to assail people who are making a code for abandoning all the principles which have been going strong for 100 years.Ex. The film starts with two small-time thieves who spontaneously decide to hold up a restaurant.----* asaltar una diligencia = rob + a stagecoach.* dudas + asaltar = doubts + assail.* * *verbo transitivob) ( tomar por asalto) <ciudad/embajada> to stormc) ( atacar) to attack, assaultd) ( acosar) to accost, assail (frml)e) idea to strikeme asaltó una duda — I was struck o seized by a sudden doubt
* * *= raid, storm, break into, break in, mug, assail, hold up.Ex: The article ' Raiding the World Bank' explains how the World Bank operates, shareholding, the initiation of loan proposals, and lending to education projects.
Ex: On October 6, 1976, an angry mob stormed the university to attack students who seemed to threaten the nation.Ex: A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed.Ex: The hacker broke in on the university dial-in lines through the library system.Ex: In that time, she relates, she had been mugged at gunpoint, punched in the face, and harassed.Ex: It's ridiculous to assail people who are making a code for abandoning all the principles which have been going strong for 100 years.Ex: The film starts with two small-time thieves who spontaneously decide to hold up a restaurant.* asaltar una diligencia = rob + a stagecoach.* dudas + asaltar = doubts + assail.* * *asaltar [A1 ]vt1 (robar) ‹banco/tienda› to rob, hold up; ‹persona› to rob, mug2 ‹fortaleza/ciudad/embajada› to storm, attacklo asaltaron a preguntas they bombarded him with questions, they fired a barrage of questions at him4 «idea» to strikeen el último momento me asaltó una duda/un temor at the last moment I was struck o seized by a sudden doubt/fearle asaltaban dudas acerca de su futuro he was plagued with o by doubts about his future* * *
asaltar ( conjugate asaltar) verbo transitivo
‹ persona› to rob, mug
◊ me asaltó una duda I was struck o seized by a sudden doubt
asaltar verbo transitivo to assault, attack
(atracar un banco, una tienda) to rob
fig (un pensamiento) to assail
' asaltar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acometer
- atracar
English:
assault
- attack
- hold up
- mug
- raid
- rush
- engulf
- hold
- jump
- ram
- rob
* * *asaltar vt1. [atacar] to attack;[castillo, ciudad] to storm;la policía asaltó el avión the police stormed the plane2. [robar] to rob;lo asaltaron con una navaja he was robbed o mugged at knifepoint3. [sujeto: dudas, pánico] to seize;iba a ir pero al final le asaltaron las dudas he was going to go, but he was seized by doubts at the last minute;me asalta una duda, ¿me llegará el dinero? I have one doubt, will I have enough money?;le asaltó el pánico he was overcome by o seized with panic4. [importunar]los periodistas asaltaron al actor a preguntas the journalists bombarded the actor with questions;los pabellones se vieron asaltados por visitantes the wards were overrun with visitors* * *v/t2 fig:le asaltó una duda he was suddenly struck by doubt* * *asaltar vt1) : to assault2) : to mug, to rob3)asaltar al poder : to seize power* * *asaltar vb -
78 ἑκών
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `voluntary, deliberately'Other forms: (Cret., Locr. Ϝεκών), ἑκοῦσα (Cyren. IVa ἑκασσα, Cret. Ϝεκαθ\<θ\>α in γεκαθά ἑκοῦσα H.; ἀέκων, Att. ἄ̄κων, ἀέκουσα, ἄ̄κουσα (Dor. ἀέκασσα in \<ἀέ\> κασσα ἄκουσα H.), ἀέκον, ἆκον `unvoluntary, against one's will' (Il.). Cf. Leumann Hom. Wörter 252.), ἑκόν;Derivatives: ἑκούσιος "to somebody who wants", i. e. `from free will, voluntary' (Ion. Att.) with ἑκουσιότης (late), ἑκουσιάζομαι `sacrifice voluntarily' with ἑκουσιασμός `vol. sacrifice' (LXX); ἀεκούσιος, ἀκούσιος `unvol., unfree, forced' (Ion. Att.; on ἑκών, ἄκων beside ἑκούσιος, ἀκούσιος Schwyzer-Debrunner 180.); - ἑκοντ-ί, - ήν, - ηδόν `vol.' (postclass.; Schwyzer 623), ἑκοντής m. `volunteer' (Epikt.), as ἐθελοντής, cf. Schwyzer-Debrunner 175 Zus. 1; - Denomin. ptc. ἀεκαζόμενος (Od., h. Cer.), (Wackernagel IF 45, 314 n. 2 = Kl. Schr. 2, 1254 n. 2).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1135] *u̯eḱ- `to will, want'Etymology: Old participle (cf. Wackernagel Syntax 1, 283 and 286), identical with Skt. uś-ánt-, f. uś-at-ī́ (: ἑκασσα \< *Ϝεκ-ατ-ι̯ᾰ) except the stemvowel (on spir. asper Schwyzer 227); the Greek full grade from in the lost indicative *Ϝέκ-μι = Hitt. u̯ek-mi, Skt. váś-mi `I want, desire'. - Vgl. ἑκάεργος, ἕνεκα and ἕκητι. The origin of ἕκα- (*u̯eḱnt-?) is not certain.Page in Frisk: 1,479Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ἑκών
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79 doubt
A n doute m ; there is no doubt (that) il ne fait aucun doute que ; there is little doubt (that) il est presque certain que ; there is no doubt about sth il n'y a aucun doute sur qch ; there is no doubt about her guilt ou that she is guilty il n'y a aucun doute sur sa culpabilité ; (there's) no doubt about it il n'y a aucun doute là-dessus ; there is some doubt about its authenticity son authenticité est mise en doute ; there's (some) doubt about ou as to whether he will be able to come on ne sait pas s'il pourra venir ; there is no doubt in my mind that I'm right je suis convaincu que j'ai raison or d'avoir raison ; to have no doubt (that) ne pas douter que (+ subj) ; I have no doubt about her guilt ou that she is guilty je n'ai aucun doute sur sa culpabilité, je ne doute pas qu'elle soit coupable ; to have one's doubts about sth avoir des doutes sur qch, douter de qch ; I have my doubts! j'ai des doutes!, j'en doute! ; to have one's doubts (about) whether douter que (+ subj) ; I have my doubts about whether he's telling the truth je doute qu'il dise la vérité ; to have one's doubts about doing hésiter à faire ; no doubt sans doute ; no doubt the police will want to speak to you, the police will no doubt want to speak to you la police voudra sans doute vous parler ; to leave sb in no doubt about sth ne laisser à qn aucun doute quant à qch ; to be in doubt [outcome, project, future] être incertain ; [honesty, innocence, guilt] gen être douteux ; ( on particular occasion) être mis en doute ; [person] être dans le doute ; this report has put the whole project in doubt ce rapport a mis tout le projet en question ; the election result is not in any doubt le résultat de l'élection ne fait pas l'ombre d'un doute ; if/when in doubt dans le doute ; to be open to doubt [evidence, testimony] être sujet à caution ; to cast ou throw doubt on sth [person] mettre qch en doute ; [evidence, book] jeter le doute sur qch ; beyond (all) doubt, without (a) doubt sans aucun doute ; to prove sth beyond (all) doubt prouver qch de façon indubitable ; without the slightest doubt sans l'ombre d'un doute ; there is room for doubt le doute n'est pas exclu ; there is no room for doubt il n'y a aucun doute à avoir. ⇒ benefit.B vtr douter de [fact, evidence, value, ability, honesty, person] ; I doubt it (very much)! j'en doute (beaucoup)! ; to doubt (if ou that ou whether) douter que (+ subj) ; I don't doubt that you're telling the truth je ne doute pas que vous disiez la vérité ; I didn't doubt that she would succeed je ne doutais pas qu'elle réussirait.C vi douter. -
80 anticipate
[æn'tisəpeit]1) (to expect (something): I'm not anticipating any trouble.) forvente; se frem til2) (to see what is going to be wanted, required etc in the future and do what is necessary: A businessman must try to anticipate what his customers will want.) forudse•* * *[æn'tisəpeit]1) (to expect (something): I'm not anticipating any trouble.) forvente; se frem til2) (to see what is going to be wanted, required etc in the future and do what is necessary: A businessman must try to anticipate what his customers will want.) forudse•
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