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21 dehors
dehors [dəɔʀ]1. adverb( = à l'extérieur) outside ; ( = pas chez soi) out• en dehors de cela, il n'y a rien de neuf apart from that there's nothing new2. masculine noun( = extérieur) outside• « défense de se pencher au-dehors » "don't lean out"• au-dehors, elle paraît calme, mais c'est une nerveuse outwardly she looks relaxed, but actually she's quite highly strung3. plural masculine noundehors ( = apparences) sous des dehors aimables, il est dur under his friendly exterior, he's a hard man* * *dəɔʀ
1.
adverbe outsidepasser la nuit dehors — ( occasionnellement) to spend the night outdoors; [clochard] to sleep rough
mettre quelqu'un dehors — gén to throw somebody out; ( d'un travail) to fire somebody; ( d'un établissement scolaire) to expel [élève]
de dehors — [voir, arriver] from outside
2.
exclamation get out!
3.
nom masculin invariableses dehors bourrus cachent un cœur d'or — his/her rough exterior hides a heart of gold
4.
en dehors locution adverbiale1) ( à l'extérieur) outside2) fig ( non impliqu é)
5.
en dehors de locution prépositive1) ( à l'extérieur de) outside2) ( mis à part) apart from3) ( hors de) outsidec'est en dehors du sujet — École it's off the subject
c'est en dehors de mes attributions — that's outside my jurisdiction sout, that's not my job
* * *dəɔʀ1. advoutside, (= en plein air) outdoors, outsideJe t'attends dehors. — I'll wait for you outside.
2. nmau dehors — outside, (= en apparence) outwardly
de dehors (= depuis l'extérieur) — from outside, from the outside
en dehors de (= sauf) — apart from
En dehors de lui, tout le monde était content. — Apart from him, everybody was happy.
3. nmpl(= apparences) appearances, exterior sg* * *A adv1 ( à l'extérieur) outside; manger/dormir dehors to eat/to sleep outside ou outdoors; ne restez pas dehors, entrez don't stay outside, come in; passer la nuit dehors ( occasionnellement) to spend the night outdoors; ( habituellement) to sleep rough; mettre sa bicyclette dehors to put one's bicycle outside; allez jouer dehors! go and play outside!;2 ( hors de son domicile) out; j'ai été dehors toute la journée I was out all day; je déjeune dehors aujourd'hui I'm having lunch out today; mettre or flanquer○ qn dehors ( exclure d'un lieu) gén to throw ou to chuck○ sb out; ( d'un cours) to throw sb out; ( d'un travail) to fire, to sack○ GB; ( d'un établissement scolaire) to expel; de dehors [voir, appeler, arriver] from outside.B excl get out!C nm inv1 ( lieu) le dehors the outside; les bruits du dehors noise from outside; quelqu'un du dehors ne peut pas comprendre fig an outsider can't understand;2 ( apparence) ses dehors bourrus cachent un cœur d'or his/her rough exterior hides a heart of gold; sous des dehors modestes, il est très orgueilleux under his modest exterior, he's a very proud man.D en dehors loc adv1 ( à l'extérieur) outside;E en dehors de loc prép1 ( à l'extérieur de) outside; en dehors de la ville/du pays outside the city/the country; traverser en dehors des passages pour piétons to cross the street ou road outside the pedestrian crossings; il fait du tennis en dehors de l'école he plays tennis outside school; choisir qn en dehors du groupe/parti to choose sb from outside the group/party; l'accident est survenu en dehors de l'autoroute the accident happened off the motorway GB ou freeway US;2 ( mis à part) apart from; en dehors de quelques amis, il ne voit personne apart from a few friends, he sees no one; il a des indemnités en dehors de son salaire he has allowances in addition to his salary; en dehors de certaines dates outside certain dates;3 ( hors de) outside of; en dehors des heures d'ouvertures/heures de travail outside of opening hours/office hours; il est resté en dehors du coup or de cette histoire he stayed out of the whole business; c'est en dehors du sujet Scol it's off the subject; c'est en dehors de mes attributions that's outside my jurisdiction sout, that's not my job; c'est en dehors d'eux qu'il faut chercher la responsabilité we must look beyond them to find those who are to blame; en dehors de tout clivage idéologique beyond all ideological divisions; la police a agi en dehors des limites de la loi the police went beyond the limits of the law; en dehors des repas between meals;4 ○( à l'insu de) faire qch en dehors de qn to do sth without the knowledge of sb; la décision a été prise en dehors de moi the decision was taken without my knowledge.I[dəɔr] adverbe[à l'extérieur] outside[hors de chez soi] outb. [renvoyer] to sack somebodyen dehors locution adverbiale1. [à l'extérieur] outside2. [vers l'extérieur]avoir ou marcher les pieds en dehors to walk with one's feet turned outen dehors de locution prépositionnelle1. [excepté] apart from2. [à l'écart de]reste en dehors de leur dispute don't get involved in ou stay out of their quarrelII[dəɔr] nom masculin1. [surface extérieure d'une boîte, d'un bâtiment] outside2. [plein air] outside3. [étranger]————————[dəɔr] nom masculin pluriel[apparences] appearances -
22 jeder
every; each; everyone; anyone; everybody; all; anybody; any; each one* * *1) (every person: Everyone thinks I'm right.) everybody2) (every person: Everyone thinks I'm right.) everyone* * *je·de(r, s)[ˈje:də, ˈje:dɐ, ˈje:dəs]sie saß \jeder Woche 60 Stunden am Computer she sat 60 hours each week in front of the computeres ist doch \jeders Mal das Gleiche it's the same every time\jeders Mal, wenn whenever, each [or every] time thates wäre abwegig, zu glauben, man könne das Ziel ohne \jeder Anstrengung erreichen it would be a mistake to believe that the objective could be achieved without any effort3. attr (in einem/einer beliebigen) anySie können mich zu \jederr Zeit anrufen you can call me at any time4. substantivisch everybody, everyonevon mir aus kannst du \jedern fragen, du wirst immer das Gleiche hören as far as I'm concerned you can ask anyone, you'll get the same answer▪ \jederr der [o \jeder von den] /meiner/seiner/etc. each of the/my/his/her/etc.ich kann doch nicht \jedern meiner Angestellten rund um die Uhr kontrollieren! I can't supervise each one of my employees round the clock!ein \jederr/eine \jeder each one\jederr gegen \jedern dog-eat-dog\jeder[r, s] zweite/dritte/... one in two/three...* * *1.1) (alle) everyjeder zweite Bürger — one out of or in every two citizens
der Zug fährt jeden Tag/viermal jeden Tag — the train runs every day/four times a day
ohne jeden Grund — without any reason whatever; for no reason whatever
2) (alle einzeln) each3) (jeglicher) all2.Menschen jeden od. jedes Alters — people of all ages
1) (alle) everyone; everybodyjeder od. (geh.) ein jeder darf mitkommen — everyone or everybody can come
hier kennt jeder jeden — everybody knows everybody else here; (verstärkend)
jeder, der Lust hat, ist willkommen — anyone who wants to come is welcome
jedes der Kinder — every one or each of the children
jeder von uns kann helfen — each or every one of us can help
* * *1.1) (alle) everyjeder zweite Bürger — one out of or in every two citizens
der Zug fährt jeden Tag/viermal jeden Tag — the train runs every day/four times a day
ohne jeden Grund — without any reason whatever; for no reason whatever
2) (alle einzeln) each3) (jeglicher) all2.Menschen jeden od. jedes Alters — people of all ages
1) (alle) everyone; everybodyjeder od. (geh.) ein jeder darf mitkommen — everyone or everybody can come
hier kennt jeder jeden — everybody knows everybody else here; (verstärkend)
jeder, der Lust hat, ist willkommen — anyone who wants to come is welcome
jedes der Kinder — every one or each of the children
jeder von uns kann helfen — each or every one of us can help
* * *adj.all adj.any adj.each adj.every adj. pron.anybody pron.anyone pron.each one pron.everybody pron. -
23 obtener gratis
(v.) = obtain + freeEx. Maybe the answer is some kind of localized Ceefax or Oracle information service that could be obtained free through one's television set but went beyond the mainly trivia that these services currently provide.* * *(v.) = obtain + freeEx: Maybe the answer is some kind of localized Ceefax or Oracle information service that could be obtained free through one's television set but went beyond the mainly trivia that these services currently provide.
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24 trivialidades
f.pl.unimportant things, trivial things, trivia.* * *= trivia, trivial, theEx. Maybe the answer is some kind of localized Ceefax or Oracle information service that could be obtained free through one's television set but went beyond the mainly trivia that these services currently provide.Ex. Reference work has been ill-served in the past by its expositors and theoreticians: its extensive literature of several hundred papers and books is swollen by a mass of the transient and the trivial.* * *= trivia, trivial, theEx: Maybe the answer is some kind of localized Ceefax or Oracle information service that could be obtained free through one's television set but went beyond the mainly trivia that these services currently provide.
Ex: Reference work has been ill-served in the past by its expositors and theoreticians: its extensive literature of several hundred papers and books is swollen by a mass of the transient and the trivial. -
25 פרז
פָּרַזto break through, open, v. פָּרוּז. Hif. הִפְרִיז 1) to break through, go beyond. Nidd.4b ה׳ על מדותיו went beyond his measures, i. e. extended the restrictions of the law too far. Ned.32a ה׳ על מדותיו שלהקב״ה he went too far in testing the attributes (goodness) of the Lord, i. e. presumed on Gods kindness by asking for a sign (Gen. 15:8); Yalk. Gen. 74. Koh. R. to VIII, 8 מַפְרִיזִין באצבעותיהןוכ׳ pointed with their fingers towards a distance, saying, the vision which he sees (Ez. 12:27); (Lam. R. introd. (R. Ḥan. 1) ומורין, v. יָרָה) 2) to offer a higher rent than originally stipulated in consideration of a loan to be used to improve the property. B. Mets.V, 5 ומַפְרִיז על שדהווכ׳ (Var. ומַפְרִין; Ms. M. ומפרי׳; Y. ed. ומפרין) and a tenant may offer higher rent for his field in consideration of a loan for improvements, and need not regard the appearance of usury. Ib. 69b אין מפריז לא על חנותוכ׳ (Ms. M. everywhere מפרין) you dare not offer higher rent for a shop or a ship in consideration of a loan (to be invested in the business); Y. ib. V, 10c top מפרין; v. פָּרָה a. פָּרַן. -
26 פָּרַז
פָּרַזto break through, open, v. פָּרוּז. Hif. הִפְרִיז 1) to break through, go beyond. Nidd.4b ה׳ על מדותיו went beyond his measures, i. e. extended the restrictions of the law too far. Ned.32a ה׳ על מדותיו שלהקב״ה he went too far in testing the attributes (goodness) of the Lord, i. e. presumed on Gods kindness by asking for a sign (Gen. 15:8); Yalk. Gen. 74. Koh. R. to VIII, 8 מַפְרִיזִין באצבעותיהןוכ׳ pointed with their fingers towards a distance, saying, the vision which he sees (Ez. 12:27); (Lam. R. introd. (R. Ḥan. 1) ומורין, v. יָרָה) 2) to offer a higher rent than originally stipulated in consideration of a loan to be used to improve the property. B. Mets.V, 5 ומַפְרִיז על שדהווכ׳ (Var. ומַפְרִין; Ms. M. ומפרי׳; Y. ed. ומפרין) and a tenant may offer higher rent for his field in consideration of a loan for improvements, and need not regard the appearance of usury. Ib. 69b אין מפריז לא על חנותוכ׳ (Ms. M. everywhere מפרין) you dare not offer higher rent for a shop or a ship in consideration of a loan (to be invested in the business); Y. ib. V, 10c top מפרין; v. פָּרָה a. פָּרַן. -
27 пълномощие
power, authority; power of attorney; plenary powers; commissionюр. proxy; procurationизвънредни пълномощия extraordinary powersпо пълномощие by proxyдавам пълномощия на някого empower s.o.превишавам пълномощията си go beyond o.'s commission; exceed o.'s instructionsкомисия по пълномощията (при конгрес и пр.) credentials committee* * *пълномо̀щие,ср., -я power, authority; power of attorney; plenary powers; commission; юр. proxy; procuration; давам \пълномощиея на някого empower s.o.; извънредни \пълномощиея extraordinary powers; комисия по \пълномощиеята ( към конгрес и пр.) credentials committee; по \пълномощиее by proxy; превишавам \пълномощиеята си go beyond o.’s commission; exceed o.’s instructions.* * *authority: The manager went beyond his пълномощие. - Мениджърът надвиши пълномощията си.; deputation; warrant{`wOrxnt}; jurisdiction* * *1. power, authority;power of attorney;plenary powers;commission 2. давам пълномощия на някого empower s.o. 3. извънредни пълномощия extraordinary powers 4. комисия по пълномощията (при конгрес и пр.) credentials committee 5. по ПЪЛНОМОЩИЕ by proxy 6. превишавам пълномощията си go beyond o.'s commission;exceed o.'s instructions 7. юр. proxy;procuration -
28 invadir
v.1 to invade.los turistas invadieron el museo the tourists flooded the museumEllos invadieron el pueblo They invaded the town.Ella invade su privacidad She invades his privacy.Ellos invadieron de repente They invaded suddenly.2 to overcome, to overwhelm.lo invadió la tristeza he was overcome by sadness3 to fill, to overflow.4 to be invaded by.Me invadieron muchas dudas I was invaded by many doubts...5 to permeate.El agua invade la bodega The water permeates the storage room.* * *1 to invade* * *verb* * *VT1) (=atacar) [+ célula, país] to invade; [+ espacio aéreo, aguas jurisdiccionales] to violate, enterlos turistas invaden nuestras costas — tourists descend upon o invade our coasts
las malas hierbas/los insectos invadieron el trigal — the wheatfield was overrun with weeds/insects
2) (=ocupar)a) [multitud] [gen] to pour into/onto; [protestando] to storm into/ontolos fans invadieron el estadio/el escenario — the fans poured into the stadium/onto the stage
los manifestantes invadieron la ciudad/las calles — the protesters stormed into the city/onto the streets
b) [vehículo] to go into/ontoel camión invadió el carril contrario/la pista de despegue — the lorry went into the wrong lane/onto the runway
3)invadir a algn — [sentimiento] to overcome sb
la invadió una gran tristeza — she was filled with great sadness, a great sadness overcame her
el miedo había invadido su cuerpo — she was overcome by fear, she was filled with fear, fear overcame her
4) (Com) [producto] to encroach onlos vinos franceses invaden los mercados europeos — French wines are encroaching on European markets
5) (Jur) to encroach uponel abogado intentó invadir las funciones del juez — the solicitor attempted to encroach upon the judge's prerogatives
el delegado invadió atribuciones que no le correspondían — the delegate went beyond the powers vested in him
* * *verbo transitivoa) ejército/fuerzas to invadeb) <espacio aéreo/aguas> to enter, encroach uponinvadió nuestras aguas jurisdiccionales — it encroached upon o entered our territorial waters
c) tristeza/alegría to overcome, overwhelmlo invadió un gran pesar — he was overcome o overwhelmed with sorrow
* * *= encroach on/upon, muscle in, horn in, invade, overrun [over-run], come over, wash over, storm, take over.Ex. We have not been alone, of course, in our concentration on inessentials; and ours is not the only profession that is being encroached upon by alternative professionals.Ex. They are, however, very much in a minority in the high technology field and any feeling that the products of such courses are ' muscling in' on library and information work is hard to substantiate.Ex. There might be some difficulty with agencies who see us as ' horning in' on their territory.Ex. Information technology invades every facet of industrial, business and personal life.Ex. Doomsayers persist in the belief that the book world has been overrun by philistinism.Ex. 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.Ex. The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex. On October 6, 1976, an angry mob stormed the university to attack students who seemed to threaten the nation.Ex. We need to replace those aspects of traditional public library service which have been taken over by other media or rendered redundant by social change.----* invadir el terreno (de Alguien) = encroach on/upon + Posesivo + domain.* invadir la intimidad de Alguien = intrude on + Posesivo + privacy.* * *verbo transitivoa) ejército/fuerzas to invadeb) <espacio aéreo/aguas> to enter, encroach uponinvadió nuestras aguas jurisdiccionales — it encroached upon o entered our territorial waters
c) tristeza/alegría to overcome, overwhelmlo invadió un gran pesar — he was overcome o overwhelmed with sorrow
* * *= encroach on/upon, muscle in, horn in, invade, overrun [over-run], come over, wash over, storm, take over.Ex: We have not been alone, of course, in our concentration on inessentials; and ours is not the only profession that is being encroached upon by alternative professionals.
Ex: They are, however, very much in a minority in the high technology field and any feeling that the products of such courses are ' muscling in' on library and information work is hard to substantiate.Ex: There might be some difficulty with agencies who see us as ' horning in' on their territory.Ex: Information technology invades every facet of industrial, business and personal life.Ex: Doomsayers persist in the belief that the book world has been overrun by philistinism.Ex: 'I better go in,' Leforte muttered, a wearied, disillusioned expression coming over her pallid features.Ex: The information rich are similarly paralyzed because of their inability to create order from all the information washing over them.Ex: On October 6, 1976, an angry mob stormed the university to attack students who seemed to threaten the nation.Ex: We need to replace those aspects of traditional public library service which have been taken over by other media or rendered redundant by social change.* invadir el terreno (de Alguien) = encroach on/upon + Posesivo + domain.* invadir la intimidad de Alguien = intrude on + Posesivo + privacy.* * *invadir [I1 ]vt1 «ejército/fuerzas» to invadelos manifestantes invadieron la plaza the demonstrators poured into the squarelos turistas que invaden el pueblo cada verano the tourists who invade the town each summeruna plaga de langostas invadió la plantación the plantation was overrun by a plague of locustsel virus invade todo el organismo the virus invades the whole organismla televisión invade nuestros hogares television is invading our homes2 ‹espacio aéreo/aguas› to enter, encroach uponhabía invadido nuestras aguas jurisdiccionales it had encroached upon o entered our territorial watersel autobús invadió la calzada contraria the bus went onto the wrong side of the roadel gobierno invadió las atribuciones del poder judicial the government encroached upon the powers of the judiciary3 «tristeza/alegría» to overcome, overwhelmse sintió invadido de una sensación de angustia he felt overcome by o filled with a feeling of anxiety* * *
invadir ( conjugate invadir) verbo transitivo
invadir verbo transitivo to invade
figurado los trabajadores invadieron la calle, workers poured out onto the street
' invadir' also found in these entries:
English:
encroach
- invade
- overrun
- over
* * *invadir vt1. [sujeto: ejército] to invade;el caza invadió el espacio aéreo ruso the fighter plane encroached on Russian airspace;una plaga de langostas invadió los campos a plague of locusts invaded the fields2. [sujeto: turistas]los turistas invadieron el museo the tourists poured o flooded into the museum;la población invadió las calles people poured onto the streets3. [sujeto: sentimiento] to overcome, to overwhelm;lo invadió la tristeza he was overcome o overwhelmed by sadness;nos invade la alegría we are overcome o overwhelmed with joy;me invadió una sensación repentina de cansancio a sudden feeling of tiredness overcame me4. [sujeto: vehículo]el vehículo invadió el carril contrario the vehicle went onto the wrong side of the road;la moto invadió la acera y atropelló a dos peatones the motorbike mounted the Br pavement o US sidewalk and hit two pedestrians5. [sobrepasar límite de]acusaron al ministro de invadir las competencias de otro departamento the minister was accused of encroaching upon another department's area of responsibility;los fotógrafos invadieron la intimidad de la actriz the photographers invaded the actress' privacy* * *v/t1 invade;invadir el carril contrario go onto the wrong side of the road* * *invadir vt: to invade* * *invadir vb to invade -
29 aş
adj. ace, very good, crack, excellent--------n. ace, expert; ermine, stoat* * *1. go beyond 2. gone beyond 3. overshoot 4. went beyond -
30 overgå
best, exceed, outdo, outshine, pass, surpass* * *vb( være bedre end) surpass ( fx all the others; oneself), outdo;( forventninger) surpass,(mere F) exceed ( fx all expectations), go beyond ( fx it wentbeyond my wildest dreams);( ske for) happen to,(om uheld etc) overtake,F befall;( blive flyttet) be transferred ( til to, fx he was transferred to another department);( til ny ejer) pass ( til to);[ Guds fred som overgår al forstand] the peace of God that passeth all understanding;[ den skam (, skæbne) der overgik ham] the disgrace (, fate) that he suffered (, F: that befell him);[ huset er overgået på fremmede hænder] the house has passed into the hands of strangers. -
31 lampaui
skip over, went beyond, skipped over, going beyond -
32 Misericórdia
Historic, Catholic charitable institution, formally, Holy Houses of Mercy, which ministered welfare, medical, and other types of assistance to the poor and to prisoners beginning in the Middle Ages in Portugal. Although its origins lay in Christian charitable brotherhoods in medieval Portugal, the Hospitals of Mercy (Misericórdia) began in the late 15th century under royal patronage of Queen Leonor (1458-1525), wife of King João II, who founded the first Misericórdia in Lisbon. From the capital, this institution spread into other towns and regions of Portugal. She also founded the Misericórdia at Caldas da Rainha, a town north of Lisbon, where reputedly it became the world's first thermal (waters) treatment hospital, with more than 100 beds for patients. The Holy Houses of Mercy were responsible also for assisting orphans, invalids, and foundlings, as well as for feeding prisoners in jails and burying the executed. The administration of clerical brotherhood staff of these institutions increasingly was composed of persons of high social and professional standing in their communities.After 1500, the Misericórdias spread beyond continental Portugal to the Atlantic islands of Portugal, as well as to the overseas empire in Brazil, Cape Verdes, Angola, Mozambique, Portuguese India, Macau, and Japan. In Brazil alone, for example, there were more than 300 such places. Their activities went beyond hospital and other charity work and extended into education, learning, the founding of convents and presses, and patronage of the arts. More secular than religious today, the Houses of Mercy still function in Portugal by means of dispensing private welfare and mutual aid. -
33 expectation
1) (the state of expecting: In expectation of a wage increase, he bought a washing-machine.) forventning2) (what is expected: He failed his exam, contrary to expectation(s); Did the concert come up to your expectations?) forventningforventningsubst. \/ˌekspekˈteɪʃ(ə)n\/1) forventning, forhåpning• does married life answer your expectation(s)?2) ( matematikk) sannsynlighet (for noe), forventet verdi3) ( medisin) avventende behandling, ekspektasjoncome up to somebody's expectations svare til noens forventningercontrary to expectation(s) mot forventningexpectations forventninger( gammeldags) utsikter til arvin expectation of i håp om, i forventning ommathematical expectation forventet verdi, middelverdiof (great) expectation (meget) lovende -
34 Catholic church
The Catholic Church and the Catholic religion together represent the oldest and most enduring of all Portuguese institutions. Because its origins as an institution go back at least to the middle of the third century, if not earlier, the Christian and later the Catholic Church is much older than any other Portuguese institution or major cultural influence, including the monarchy (lasting 770 years) or Islam (540 years). Indeed, it is older than Portugal (869 years) itself. The Church, despite its changing doctrine and form, dates to the period when Roman Lusitania was Christianized.In its earlier period, the Church played an important role in the creation of an independent Portuguese monarchy, as well as in the colonization and settlement of various regions of the shifting Christian-Muslim frontier as it moved south. Until the rise of absolutist monarchy and central government, the Church dominated all public and private life and provided the only education available, along with the only hospitals and charity institutions. During the Middle Ages and the early stage of the overseas empire, the Church accumulated a great deal of wealth. One historian suggests that, by 1700, one-third of the land in Portugal was owned by the Church. Besides land, Catholic institutions possessed a large number of chapels, churches and cathedrals, capital, and other property.Extensive periods of Portuguese history witnessed either conflict or cooperation between the Church as the monarchy increasingly sought to gain direct control of the realm. The monarchy challenged the great power and wealth of the Church, especially after the acquisition of the first overseas empire (1415-1580). When King João III requested the pope to allow Portugal to establish the Inquisition (Holy Office) in the country and the request was finally granted in 1531, royal power, more than religion was the chief concern. The Inquisition acted as a judicial arm of the Catholic Church in order to root out heresies, primarily Judaism and Islam, and later Protestantism. But the Inquisition became an instrument used by the crown to strengthen its power and jurisdiction.The Church's power and prestige in governance came under direct attack for the first time under the Marquis of Pombal (1750-77) when, as the king's prime minister, he placed regalism above the Church's interests. In 1759, the Jesuits were expelled from Portugal, although they were allowed to return after Pombal left office. Pombal also harnessed the Inquisition and put in place other anticlerical measures. With the rise of liberalism and the efforts to secularize Portugal after 1820, considerable Church-state conflict occurred. The new liberal state weakened the power and position of the Church in various ways: in 1834, all religious orders were suppressed and their property confiscated both in Portugal and in the empire and, in the 1830s and 1840s, agrarian reform programs confiscated and sold large portions of Church lands. By the 1850s, Church-state relations had improved, various religious orders were allowed to return, and the Church's influence was largely restored. By the late 19th century, Church and state were closely allied again. Church roles in all levels of education were pervasive, and there was a popular Catholic revival under way.With the rise of republicanism and the early years of the First Republic, especially from 1910 to 1917, Church-state relations reached a new low. A major tenet of republicanism was anticlericalism and the belief that the Church was as much to blame as the monarchy for the backwardness of Portuguese society. The provisional republican government's 1911 Law of Separation decreed the secularization of public life on a scale unknown in Portugal. Among the new measures that Catholics and the Church opposed were legalization of divorce, appropriation of all Church property by the state, abolition of religious oaths for various posts, suppression of the theology school at Coimbra University, abolition of saints' days as public holidays, abolition of nunneries and expulsion of the Jesuits, closing of seminaries, secularization of all public education, and banning of religious courses in schools.After considerable civil strife over the religious question under the republic, President Sidónio Pais restored normal relations with the Holy See and made concessions to the Portuguese Church. Encouraged by the apparitions at Fátima between May and October 1917, which caused a great sensation among the rural people, a strong Catholic reaction to anticlericalism ensued. Backed by various new Catholic organizations such as the "Catholic Youth" and the Academic Center of Christian Democracy (CADC), the Catholic revival influenced government and politics under the Estado Novo. Prime Minister Antônio de Oliveira Salazar was not only a devout Catholic and member of the CADC, but his formative years included nine years in the Viseu Catholic Seminary preparing to be a priest. Under the Estado Novo, Church-state relations greatly improved, and Catholic interests were protected. On the other hand, Salazar's no-risk statism never went so far as to restore to the Church all that had been lost in the 1911 Law of Separation. Most Church property was never returned from state ownership and, while the Church played an important role in public education to 1974, it never recovered the influence in education it had enjoyed before 1911.Today, the majority of Portuguese proclaim themselves Catholic, and the enduring nature of the Church as an institution seems apparent everywhere in the country. But there is no longer a monolithic Catholic faith; there is growing diversity of religious choice in the population, which includes an increasing number of Protestant Portuguese as well as a small but growing number of Muslims from the former Portuguese empire. The Muslim community of greater Lisbon erected a Mosque which, ironically, is located near the Spanish Embassy. In the 1990s, Portugal's Catholic Church as an institution appeared to be experiencing a revival of influence. While Church attendance remained low, several Church institutions retained an importance in society that went beyond the walls of the thousands of churches: a popular, flourishing Catholic University; Radio Re-nascenca, the country's most listened to radio station; and a new private television channel owned by the Church. At an international conference in Lisbon in September 2000, the Cardinal Patriarch of Portugal, Dom José Policarpo, formally apologized to the Jewish community of Portugal for the actions of the Inquisition. At the deliberately selected location, the place where that religious institution once held its hearings and trials, Dom Policarpo read a declaration of Catholic guilt and repentance and symbolically embraced three rabbis, apologizing for acts of violence, pressures to convert, suspicions, and denunciation. -
35 Nobel, Alfred Bernhard
[br]b. 21 October 1833 Stockholm, Swedend. 10 December 1896 San Remo, Italy[br]Swedish industrialist, inventor of dynamite, founder of the Nobel Prizes.[br]Alfred's father, Immanuel Nobel, builder, industrialist and inventor, encouraged his sons to follow his example of inventiveness. Alfred's education was interrupted when the family moved to St Petersburg, but was continued privately and was followed by a period of travel. He thus acquired a good knowledge of chemistry and became an excellent linguist.During the Crimean War, Nobel worked for his father's firm in supplying war materials. The cancellation of agreements with the Russian Government at the end of the war bankrupted the firm, but Alfred and his brother Immanuel continued their interest in explosives, working on improved methods of making nitroglycerine. In 1863 Nobel patented his first major invention, a detonator that introduced the principle of detonation by shock, by using a small charge of nitroglycerine in a metal cap with detonating or fulminating mercury. Two years later Nobel set up the world's first nitroglycerine factory in an isolated area outside Stockholm. This led to several other plants and improved methods for making and handling the explosive. Yet Nobel remained aware of the dangers of liquid nitroglycerine, and after many experiments he was able in 1867 to take out a patent for dynamite, a safe, solid and pliable form of nitroglycerine, mixed with kieselguhr. At last, nitroglycerine, discovered by Sobrero in 1847, had been transformed into a useful explosive; Nobel began to promote a worldwide industry for its manufacture. Dynamite still had disadvantages, and Nobel continued his researches until, in 1875, he achieved blasting gelatin, a colloidal solution of nitrocellulose (gun cotton) in nitroglycerine. In many ways it proved to be the ideal explosive, more powerful than nitroglycerine alone, less sensitive to shock and resistant to moisture. It was variously called Nobel's Extra Dynamite, blasting gelatin and gelignite. It immediately went into production.Next, Nobel sought a smokeless powder for military purposes, and in 1887 he obtained a nearly smokeless blasting powder using nitroglycerine and nitrocellulose with 10 per cent camphor. Finally, a progressive, smokeless blasting powder was developed in 1896 at his San Remo laboratory.Nobel's interests went beyond explosives into other areas, such as electrochemistry, optics and biology; his patents amounted to 355 in various countries. However, it was the manufacture of explosives that made him a multimillionaire. At his death he left over £2 million, which he willed to funding awards "to those who during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind".[br]Bibliography1875, On Modern Blasting Agents, Glasgow (his only book).Further ReadingH.Schuck et al., 1962, Nobel, the Man and His Prizes, Amsterdam.E.Bergengren, 1962, Alfred Nobel, the Man and His Work, London and New York (includes a supplement on the prizes and the Nobel institution).LRD -
36 fond
adjective1) (tender) zärtlich; (affectionate) liebevoll [Blick]; lieb [Erinnerung]be fond of somebody — jemanden mögen od. gern haben
I'm not very fond of sweets — ich mache mir nicht viel aus Süßigkeiten
2) (foolishly credulous or hopeful) kühn [Hoffnung, Traum]; gutgläubig [Person]; allzu zuversichtlich [Glaube]* * *[fond]•- academic.ru/28621/fondly">fondly- fondness
- fond of* * *[fɒnd, AM fɑ:nd]adj attr1. (affectionate) smile liebevoll▪ to be \fond of sb/sth jdn/etw gerne mögen▪ to be \fond of doing sth etw gerne machen2. (tender) zärtlich, liebevoll\fond memories teure Erinnerungen3. (naive) töricht, übertrieben\fond hope kühne Hoffnung* * *[fɒnd]adj (+er)1)to be fond of sb — jdn gernhaben or mögen
she is very fond of animals — sie hat Tiere sehr gern, sie ist sehr tierlieb(end)
I'm not enormously fond of Shaw's plays —
the two were very fond of each other — die beiden hatten or mochten einander sehr gern
I am fonder of Michael than James, but I am fondest of Adrian — ich habe Michael lieber als James, aber Adrian habe ich am liebsten
to become or grow fond of sb/sth — jdn/etw lieb gewinnen
he became very fond of the garden — der Garten ist ihm sehr lieb geworden or sehr ans Herz gewachsen
he is very fond of telling us about the war — er erzählt uns mit Vorliebe vom Krieg
she gave him a fond smile to bid sb a fond farewell — sie lächelte ihn liebevoll an sich liebevoll von jdm verabschieden
to have fond memories of sth — schöne Erinnerungen an etw (acc) haben, sich gern an etw (acc) erinnern
See:→ absence3) (= fervent) hope, dream, wish sehnlichhis fondest wish — sein sehnlichster Wunsch, sein Herzenswunsch
in the fond hope/belief that... — in der vergeblichen Hoffnung, dass...
he has fond hopes of winning — er bildet sich (dat) tatsächlich ein, gewinnen zu können
* * *be fond of doing sth etwas gern tun;be fond of children kinderlieb sein;be fond of smoking gern rauchen;be fond of sports sportbegeistert sein2. zärtlich, liebevoll, innig3. allzu nachsichtig (Mutter etc)4. übertrieben zuversichtlich, (allzu) kühn (Hoffnung etc):it went beyond my fondest dreams es übertraf meine kühnsten Träume* * *adjective1) (tender) zärtlich; (affectionate) liebevoll [Blick]; lieb [Erinnerung]be fond of somebody — jemanden mögen od. gern haben
2) (foolishly credulous or hopeful) kühn [Hoffnung, Traum]; gutgläubig [Person]; allzu zuversichtlich [Glaube]* * *adj.zärtlich adj. -
37 अतिक्कन्त
අතික්කන්ත atikkanta(pp. of atikkamati) went beyond; passed over; overcame; surpassed. -
38 अतिक्कमि
අතික්කමි atikkami(aor of atikkamati) went beyond; passed over; overcame; surpassed. -
39 अतिसरि
අතිසරි atisari(aor of atisarati) went beyond the limits; transgressed. -
40 वीतिक्कमि
වීතික්කමි viitikkami vītikkami(aor of vītikkamati) transgressed; went beyond.
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