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61 перенос
ч1) ( переміщення) transfer; transportation, carrying over2) грам. ( слів) division of words, hyphenation3) ( знак переносу) hyphen -
62 détacher
détacher [deta∫e]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = délier) to untie ; [+ wagon, remorque] to take offb. [+ vêtement] to undo• « détacher suivant le pointillé » "tear off along the dotted line"d. ( = envoyer) [+ personne] to send ; (à un ministère, une organisation) to assign temporarily (à to)e. ( = mettre en relief) [+ lettres] to separate ; [+ syllabes, mots] to articulate2. reflexive verbb. [ceinture, chaussure, lacet, ficelle] to come undonec. [fruit, peau, papier collé] to come off ; [page, épingle] to come oute. ( = ressortir) to stand outf. se détacher de ( = renoncer à) to turn one's back on ; ( = se désintéresser de) to grow away from* * *detaʃe
1.
1) ( ôter les liens de) to untie [personne, animal, barque, cheveux, paquet] (de from)2) ( défaire un lien) to unfasten [ceinture, collier]; to undo [chaussure, bouton]; to untie, to undo [nœud, corde]détachez-lui ses menottes — remove his/her handcuffs
3) ( défaire d'un support) [personne] to tear [something] off [timbre, coupon, chèque]; to take down [affiche]; [vent] to tear [something] off [affiche]détachez selon or suivant le pointillé — tear along the dotted line
4) ( éloigner)détacher quelqu'un de — to turn ou drive somebody away from [personne, famille]
5) ( détourner)détacher les yeux or le regard de quelque chose — to take one's eyes off something
6) ( affecter) [administration] to second GB, to transfer [enseignant, diplomate, militaire]7) ( faire ressortir) [orateur] to articulate [mot, syllabe]; [musicien] to detach [note]; [imprimeur, designer] to make [something] stand out [lettre, titre, mot]8) ( enlever les taches de) to remove the stain(s) from [vêtement]
2.
se détacher verbe pronominal1) ( se défaire de ses liens) [prisonnier, animal] to break loose (de from); [bateau] to come untied (de from)2) ( se défaire) [nœud, lien] to come undone3) ( se séparer d'un support) [coupon, feuillet] to come out (de of); [papier peint, affiche] to come away (de from), to peel (de off)4) ( se désintéresser)se détacher de — to turn one's back on [monde]; to grow away from [personne]
6) ( s'éloigner)se détacher de — [individu, invité] to detach oneself from [groupe]; [coureur, cheval] to pull away from [groupe]; [membre, pays] to break away from [organisation, union]
* * *detaʃe vt1) (= enlever) to remove2) (= délier) to untie3) (= envoyer)détacher qn auprès de qch ADMINISTRATION — to send sb on temporary assignment to sth, to second sb to sth Grande-Bretagne MILITAIREto detail sb to sth
4) (= nettoyer) [vêtement] to remove stains from* * *détacher verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( ôter les liens de) to untie [personne, animal, barque, cheveux, paquet] (de from);2 ( défaire un lien) to unfasten [agrafe, ceinture, collier]; to undo [chaussure, bouton]; to untie, to undo [nœud, corde, ficelle, lacet]; détachez-lui ses menottes remove his/her handcuffs;3 ( défaire d'un support) [personne] to tear [sth] off [timbre, coupon, chèque]; to take down [affiche, tableau, cadre]; [vent] to tear [sth] off [affiche]; to blow [sth] off [fruits, feuilles, tuiles]; [humidité] to make [sth] come away [affiche, plâtre]; détachez selon or suivant le pointillé tear along the dotted line; ‘partie à détacher’ ‘tear off here’; détacher un fruit/une feuille d'un arbre [personne] to pick a fruit/a leaf from a tree; [vent] to blow a fruit/a leaf off a tree; détacher un wagon d'un train to uncouple a carriage GB ou car US from a train;4 ( éloigner) détacher qn de to turn ou drive sb away from [personne, famille]; [défaut, mode de vie] to alienate sb from sb/sth; son travail l'a détachée de sa vie de famille her work has drawn her away from her family life;5 ( détourner) détacher les yeux or le regard/l'esprit de qch to take one's eyes/one's mind off sth; détacher son attention/ses pensées de qch to turn one's attention/one's thoughts away from sth;6 ( affecter) [administration] to second GB, to transfer [enseignant, diplomate, militaire] (à, en, auprès de to; de from); demander à être détaché en Asie to ask to be seconded to Asia; se faire détacher to be seconded;7 ( faire ressortir) [orateur] to articulate [mot, syllabe]; [musicien] to detach [note]; [imprimeur, designer] to make [sth] stand out [lettre, titre, mot]; [peintre] to make [sth] stand out [motif];8 ( écarter) détacher les bras du corps to hold one's arms away from one's body;9 ( enlever les taches de) to remove the stain(s) from [tissu, cuir, vêtement] (à with).B se détacher vpr1 ( se défaire de ses liens) [prisonnier, animal] to break loose (de from); [bateau] to come untied (de from); [colis] to come undone;2 ( se défaire) [agrafe, nœud, corde, lacet] to come undone; comment se détache cette ceinture? how does this belt unfasten?;3 ( se séparer d'un support) [coupon, feuillet] to come out (de of); [papier peint, affiche] to come away (de from), to peel (de off); les fruits se détachent facilement des branches the fruit comes off the branches easily;4 ( se désintéresser) se détacher de to lose interest in [vie, activité]; to turn one's back on [monde]; to grow away from [personne]; se détacher des biens terrestres to turn one's back on worldly goods;5 ( ressortir) [motif, titre, objet, silhouette] to stand out (dans in; sur against);6 ( s'éloigner) se détacher de [individu, invité] to detach oneself from [groupe]; [coureur, cycliste, cheval] to pull away from [groupe]; [entreprise] to pull away from [concurrent]; [personne, œuvre, style] to break away from [tradition, genre]; [membre, pays] to break away from [organisation, union];7 ( se distinguer) [élève, candidat, artiste, œuvre] to stand out (de from).[detaʃe] verbe transitif1. [libérer] to untiedétacher ses cheveux to untie one's hair, to let one's hair downdétacher une caravane to unhitch ou to unhook a caravan2. [séparer]a. [enlever le trombone] to unclip a picture from a letterb. [enlever l'agrafe] to unstaple a picture from a letterdétacher une recette d'un magazine/un timbre d'un carnet to tear a recipe out of a magazine/a stamp out of a book4. [détourner]détacher ses yeux ou son regard de quelqu'un to take one's eyes off somebody[affectivement]être détaché de to be detached from ou indifferent to6. [faire ressortir] to separate (out)détachez bien chaque mot/note make sure every word/note stands out (clearly)7. [nettoyer] to clean————————se détacher verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)[se libérer] to untie ou to free oneself————————se détacher verbe pronominal intransitif1. [sandale, lacet] to come undone[étiquette] to come off[page] to come loose2. SPORT [se séparer - du peloton] to break away3. [se profiler] to stand out————————se détacher de verbe pronominal plus préposition1. [se décrocher de] to come off2. [s'éloigner de]puis je me suis détachée de ma famille/de l'art figuratif later, I grew away from my family/from figurative art————————à détacher locution adjectivalefiche/recette à détacher tear-off card/recipe -
63 SKJÓTA
* * *(skýt; skaut, skutum; skotinn), v.1) to shoot with a weapon, with dat. (skjóta öru, spjóti, kólfi);vera skotinn spjóti í gegnum, to be shot through with a spear;skjóta af boga, to shoot with a bow;with the object shot at in acc. (skjóta dýr, mann, sel, fugl);skjóta at e-m, til e-s, to shoot at one;skjóta til hœfis, to shoot at a mark;skjóta brú af, to draw the bridge off or away;skjóta skildi fyrir sik, to put a shield before one;skjóta loku fyrir, to shoot the bolt, lock the door;skjóta frá lokum, to unlock;skjóta e-u fyrir borð, to ‘shoot’ overboard;skjóta skipum á vatn, to launch ships;skjóta báti, to launch a boat from the shore;skjóta útan báti, to shove out a boat;skjóta hesti uridir e-n, to put a horse under one, to mount him;var mér hér skotit á land, I was put ashore here;skjóta e-u niðr, to thrust it down (hann skaut svá fast niðr skildinum, at);skjóta e-m brott or undan, to let one escape;skjóta undan peningum, to abstract, embezzle money;skjóta e-u í hug e-m to suggest to one (þá skaut guð því ráði í hug þeim);skjóta upp hvítum skildi, to hoist a white shield;skjóta upp vita, skjóta eldi í vita, to light up a beacon;skjóta land-tjaldi, to pitch a tent;skjóta á fylking, to draw up in battle array;skjóta á husþingi, to call a meeting together;skjóta á eyrendi, to make a speech;skjóta fótum undir sik, to take to one’s heels, to run;barnit skaut öndu upp, the child began to breathe;skjóta e-u of öxl, to throw off one’s shoulder;vér tólf dómendr, er málum þessum er t il skotit, to whom these suits are handed over;skýt ek því til gúðs ok góðra manna, at, I call God and all good men to witness, that;4) to pay (hann skaut einn fyrir sveitunga sína alla);5) impers., e-u skýtr upp, it shoots up, emerges, comes forth;upp skýtr jörðunni þá ór sænum, then the earth rises from the sea;skaut upp jörðu dag frá degi, the earth appeared day by day (as the snow melted);þó at þér skyti því í hug, though it shot into thy mind, occurred to thee;þeim skaut skelk í bringu, they were panic-stricken;sem kólfi skyti, swift as a dart;6) refl., skjótast.* * *skýt, pret. skaut, skauzt (skauztu rhyming with laust, Fms. vi. in a verse), skaut, pl. skutu; subj. skyti; imperat. skjót, skjóttú; part. skotinn: [A. S. sceôtan, scyttan; Engl. shoot and shut; Dan. skyde; Germ. schiessen.]A. To shoot with a weapon, the weapon being in dat.; skjóta öru (örum), spjóti, fleini, skutli, kesju, kólfi …, Fms. i. 44, x. 308, 362, Eg. 380; þeir þykkjask eigi hafa skotið betra skot, Fms. vii. 211; vera skotinn spjóti í gögnum, shot through with a spear, Nj. 274: the object shot at in acc., skjóta dýr, fugla, sela, Edda 16, Nj. 95, Ld. 56, Fms. x. 356, 362, and passim: also, s. til e-s, to shoot at; s. til fugls, Orkn. 346; s. til hæfis, to shoot at a mark, Fms. ii. 268; s. kesju at e-m, Eg. 380; allir skutu at Baldri, Edda 37.II. to shoot, to push or shove quickly; skjóta loku fyrir (or frá) hurðu (dyrum), to shoot the bolt, lock the door; s. frá lokum, to unlock, Lv. 60; hann lagðisk niðr ok skaut fyrir loku, Eg. 601; skaut hann þá frá lokum, Fms. vi. 189; þeir lögðu hann í kistu ok skutu síðan fyrir borð, and shot the chest overboard, Eg. 127; skaut Egill yfir brúnni, E. shot the bridge over the ditch, 531; s. brú af, to draw the bridge off or away, Fms. xi. 370; s. skipum á vatn, to launch the ships into water, ix. 501; s. báti, to launch a boat from the shore, Nj. 133; s. útan báti, to shove out a boat, 272; brauð þat er hón hafði í ofninn skotið, Hom. 114; menn er í ofn vóru skotnir, 117; var þeim skotið í eld brennanda, Eg. 232; then in all kinds of relations, s. hesti uudir e-n, to put a horse under one, mount him, Eg. 397, 602, Fms. vii. 21; var mér hér skotið á land, I was put ashore here, Nj. 45; s. e-m upp á land, id., Fms. i. 131; s. barni heim af fóstri, to send back a bairn from the fóstr, Grág. i. 276; s. e-m brott, to let one escape, Fms. ix. 420; s. e-m undan, id., vi. 116, vii. 250; s. niðr úmaga, to leave a pauper behind, place him there, Grág. i. 296, 297; s. fé á brott (undan), to abstract, embezzle money, 334; þetta líkar Þórdísi ílla ok skýtr undan peningunum, Korm. 150; skjóttú diametro sólarinnar í tvá staði, divide it into two, Rb. 462; þá skaut Guð því ráði í hug þeim, put this rede into their mind, 655. 3; s. upp hvítum skildi, to hoist a white shield, Fms. x. 347; s. upp vita, to light up the beacon, Hkr. i. 148; þá varð engum vita upp skotið, Orkn. 266; vita-karlinn skaut eldi í vitann, lighted up the beacon, Fms. viii. 188; s. land-tjaldi, to pitch a tent, Nj. 157; var skotið um hann skjaldborg, 274; s. á skjaldborg, to draw up a s., Fms. vii. 70; s. á fylking, to draw up in battle array, Ó. H. 209; s. á húsþingi, to call a meeting together, Eg. 357; s. á eyrendi, to make a speech, Fms. i. 215; skýtr or skýtsk mjök í tvau horn um e-t, see horn B.I. 2; s. fótum undir sik, to take to one’s heels, to run, Fms. viii. 358; hann skaut sér út hjá þeim, shot out, escaped, vi. 189; harm hljóp upp á altarit, ok skaut á knjám sínum, ix. 462; barnit skaut öndu upp, the bairn began to breathe, Hkr. ii. 199; s. skildi fyrir sik, to put a shield before one, Eg. 378, Nj. 156; s. skjóli yfir e-n, to protect (see skjól); Máriusúðin skaut lykkjunum, she (the ship) shivered, Fms. viii. 199; þá segisk, at hann skyti í fyrstu þessu orði, eldisk árgalinn nú, he is said to have let this word slip, to have said, vi. 251; s. e-u of öxl, to throw it off one’s shoulder, Gg. 6; s. e-u á frest, to put off, delay: skjóta augum, to look askance, Eg. (in a verse), from which the mod. gjóta augum is a corruption.III. metaph. to shift or transfer a case to another, appeal; skutu þau til ráða Ólafs, Ld. 74; s. þrætu til ór skurðar e-s, Fms. vii. 203; því skýt ek til Guðs, i. 3; s. sínu máli á Guðs vald, x. 103; s. þessu máli til Frosta-þings …, þeir skutu þangat sínu máli, i. 32; vér tólf dómendr, er málum þessum er til skotið, Nj. 188; s. máli á fylkis-þing, N. G. L. i. 21; skýt ek því til Guðs ok góðra manna, Nj. 176; menn þá er hann skaut ráðum undir, whom he took as his counsel, Fms. vii. 308.IV. [A. S. scot; Engl. shot, scot, see skot, I and II]:—to pay; rétt er at fimm búar virði gripinn, ok skal hann þá skjóta í móti slíku, er þeir virða gripinn dýrra enn hans skuld var fyrir öndverðu, Grág. i. 412; skjóta fé saman, to club money together, make a collection, Mar.; þeir skutu saman fjár-hlutum sínum hverr eptir efnum, Hom, 123 (samskot); hann skaut einn fyrir sveitunga sína alla ( he paid their scot) þá er þeir sátu í skytningum, Ld. 312 (see skytningr).V. impers., e-u skýtr upp, it shoots up, emerges, comes forth; upp skýtr jörðunni þá ór sænum, Edda 44; skaut upp jörðu dag frá degi, the earth appeared day by day (as the snow melted), Fms. ii. 228; þó at þér skyti því í hug, though it shot into thy mind, occurred to thee, Band. 37 new Ed.; þeim skaut skelk í bringu, they were panic-stricken, Ld. 78, Eg. 49, Fb. i. 418 (see skelkr); mjök skýtr mornar vakri, she is much tossed, Hallfred; sveita skaut á skjaldrim, the shield-rim was blood-shot, blood-stained, Orkn. (in a verse); sem kólfi skyti, swift as a dart, Fms. ii. 183.B. Reflex. to shoot, start, move, slip away; Skíði frá ek at skauzt á fætr, S. started to his feet, Skíða R. 52; Björn skauzk aptr síðan at baki Kára, B. shot or slipped behind Kári’s back, Nj. 262; at menn hans skytisk eigi frá honum, lest they should slip away, abscond, Fms. vii. 49; vildi ljósta Gretti, en hann skautzk undan, started away from the blow, Grett. 91 A; þeir fálmauðu af hræðslu, ok skutusk hingað ok þingat undan geislum hans, Niðr. 5; þó at fé hans skjótisk fyrir garðsenda, to slip through by the end of the fence, Grág. ii. 263; nú skýzk maðr undan tali (evades,) N. G. L. i. 97; kemr í hug, at hann mun skotisk hafa undan, ok vilja eigi fara, Ísl. ii. 334: skjótask yfir (impers.), to skip, slip over; mér hefir skotisk yfir að telja hann, þeim hafði yfir skotisk um þetta, they had made a false calculation, Ld. 100; þá skjótumk ek mjök yfir, then I am much mistaken, Skálda (Thorodd); skýzt þeim mörgum vísdómrinn sem betri ván er at, Grett. 25 new Ed.: skjótask e-m, to fail; margir skutusk honum, many forsook him, Fms. i. 22; skutusk þá margir við Þórð í trúnaðinum, many proved false to Thord, Sturl. iii. 75 C; vildi dýrið ljósta þeim hramminum seni heill var, ok skauzk á stúfinn, and stumbled, reeled on the stump of the other leg, Grett. 101 A; hann var nokkut við aldr, ok skauzk á fótum ( and tottered on his legs), ok þó hinn karlmannligsti, Háv. 45: also in the law phrase, hafa e-u fyrir skotið, to have a case forfeited, N. G. L. i. 52, 53; ef hann stefnir eigi … þá er þeim váttum fyrir skotið, then the witnesses are valueless, 54 (cp. Dan. for-skyde).2. reflex., in the mod. skjótask, to go on a short errand, pay a short visit; viltu ekki skjótast með bréfið að tarna? eg ætla að skjútast inn sem snöggvast, bíddu meðan eg skýzt inn, and the like.II. recipr., skjótask á, to exchange shots, Fms. i. 93, vii. 54.III. part., of corn, to shoot; rúgakr al-skotinn, Þiðr. 180. -
64 шина
( люка) batten мор., bar, bus вчт., bus-line, bus rod эл., bus lead электрон., line, ( цепной пилы) guide plate, conductor run, run, strip, strap, tire, trunk, busbar wire, wire* * *ши́на ж.1. ( пневматическая) брит. tyre; амер. tireарми́ровать ши́на — reinforce a tyreвосстана́вливать ши́ну — remould [retread] a tyreши́на глисси́рует на мо́крой доро́ге — the tyre hydroplanes on a wet roadе́хать на спу́щенной ши́не — drive on the rimиспо́льзовать ши́ны ме́ньшего или увели́ченного разме́ра — undertyre or overtyre a car [truck]монти́ровать ши́ну — apply a tyre (to the rim), fit a tyreнава́ривать ши́ну — recap [retread] a tyre (casing)надева́ть ши́ну — mount [fit] a tyreнадува́ть [нака́чивать] ши́ну — inflate a tyreши́на недока́чана — the tyre is underinflatedошипо́вывать ши́ну — insert studs in a tyreши́на перека́чана — the tyre is overinflatedпроизошё́л разры́в ши́ны — a tyre has burstпроколо́ть ши́ну — puncture a tyre(рва́ная) ши́на «моло́тит» — a (burst) tyre is flailingспуска́ть во́здух из ши́ны — flatten a tyreши́на спусти́ла — the tyre is flat [went flat]уси́ливать ши́ну — fortify a tyre2. эл. bus(bar)3. вчт. wire, line (Примечание. В советской литературе термин ши́на относится к одному проводу; в англо-американской — к совокупности проводов и соответствует русскому термину магистра́ль. Если в магистрали один провод, термины могут совпадать. Примеры: а́дресная магистра́ль — address bus; ко́довая ши́на а́дреса — address wire)4. полигр. ink railбеска́мерная ши́на — tubeless tyreбеско́рдная ши́на — cordless tyreбесшу́мная ши́на — silent tyreши́на большо́й грузоподъё́мности — heavy-duty [high-capacity] tyreши́на возбужде́ния — drive wire, drive lineши́на втори́чной це́пи — secondary circuit busвходна́я ши́на — input lineши́на вы́борки ( в памяти) — drive wire, select(ion) lineши́на высо́кого давле́ния — high-pressure tyreвыходна́я ши́на — output lineгла́вная ши́на — main busгрузова́я ши́на — брит. lorry tyre; амер. truck tireгрузова́я ши́на для тяжё́лых усло́вий рабо́ты — heavy-duty tyreши́на грузово́го лю́ка, запира́ющая мор. — hatch-locking barши́на грузово́го лю́ка, прижи́мная мор. — hatch-clamping barши́на двуска́тного колеса́, вну́тренняя — inner [inside] tyreши́на двуска́тного колеса́, нару́жная — outer [outside] tyreши́на для бездоро́жья — off-the road tyreши́на для движе́ния по сне́гу и гря́зи — mud-and-snow tyreзаземля́ющая ши́на — earthing busbarзапасна́я ши́на — spare tyreши́на запре́та — inhibit(ing) wire, inhibit(ing) lineи́мпульсная ши́на — pulse busка́мерная ши́на — tubed tyreкли́нчерная ши́на — clincher [beaded edge] tyreко́довая ши́на а́дреса — address wire, address busко́довая ши́на числа́ — number [data] wire, number [data] lineко́рдная ши́на — cord tyreмасси́вная ши́на — solid-rubber tyreнескользя́щая ши́на — anti-skid tyreши́на ни́зкого давле́ния — low-pressure [balloon] tyreнизкопро́фильная ши́на — oval [low cross-section, low section height] tyreобходна́я ши́на — transfer busbarо́бщая ши́на — common busответви́тельная ши́на — branch [tee-off] busотходя́щая ши́на — outgoing busши́на перви́чной це́пи — primary circuit busши́на перено́са — carry lineши́на пита́ния — power lineпневмати́ческая ши́на — pneumatic [air] tyreши́на повы́шенной проходи́мости — cross-country tyreши́на повы́шенной про́чности — reinforced tyreподу́шечная ши́на — cushion tyreпроколосто́йкая ши́на — puncture-proof tyreши́на прямоуго́льного сече́ния — rectangular busши́на радиа́льного ти́па — radial tyreрезе́рвная ши́на — reserve busрези́новая ши́на — rubber tyreсамозакле́ивающаяся ши́на ( при проколе) — self-sealing tyreсбо́рная ши́на — collecting busши́на сбро́са — reset lineши́на с грунтозаце́пами — adhesive(-type) [ground-grip, traction-type] tyreсдво́енные ши́ны — dual [twin] tyresши́на с двойны́м проте́ктором — dual-tread tyreсигна́льная ши́на — signal wire, signal lineсобира́тельная ши́на — collecting barши́на счи́тывания — sense wire, sense lineчислова́я ши́на — number (transfer) line, word lineши́на электроста́нции — station bus -
65 перевод
I м.1) (перемещение, перенаправление) transferперево́д на другу́ю рабо́ту — transfer to another position / job
перево́д часо́в вперёд [наза́д] — putting a clock forward / on [back]
перево́д стре́лки ж.-д. — shunting, switching
2) ( денежный) remittanceпочто́вый перево́д — postal (money) order
3) (в вн.; преобразование, пересчёт) conversion (to)II м.перево́д мер — conversion of measures
1) ( с одного языка на другой) translation; ( устный) interpretationмаши́нный перево́д — machine translation
перево́д с ру́сского языка́ на англи́йский — translation from Russian into English
слова́рный перево́д сло́ва — dictionary translation / equivalent of a word
чита́ть (вн.) в перево́де — read (d) in translation
язы́к перево́да (язык, на который переводят) — target language
2) ( переведённое произведение) translation, versionIII м. разг.( бессмысленное расходование) waste, squanderingто́лько перево́д де́нег — a mere waste of money
-
66 передавать
несов. - передава́ть, сов. - переда́ть; (вн.)1) (отдавать, вручать, направлять) pass (d), give (d)передава́ть в со́бственность (дт.) — transfer (d) to the possession [-'zeʃ-] (of); transfer the ownership (of to); hand (d) over (to)
земля́ была́ передана́ крестья́нам — the land was turned over to the peasants ['pez-]
передава́ть из рук в ру́ки — hand (d)
передава́ть де́ло в суд — bring the case before the court(s), take a matter to law
передава́ть законопрое́кт в коми́ссию — refer a bill to a committee
передава́ть по насле́дству — hand down (d to)
2) (дт.; приобщать кого-л к знаниям, традициям и т.п.) pass on (d to); share (d with)передава́ть из поколе́ния в поколе́ние — passed (d) on from one generation to another
передава́ть свой о́пыт кому́-л — pass on one's experience to smb, share one's experience with smb
3) (дт.; уступать свои функции кому-л) hand (d) over (to)передава́ть управле́ние (тв. дт.) — hand over the administration (of to)
4) ( воспроизводить) reproduce (d), convey (d), render (d)э́тот перево́д пло́хо передаёт осо́бенности оригина́ла — this translation doesn't do justice to the original
5) ( сообщать) tell (d); communicate (d), impart (d) офиц.; ( через посредника) convey (d), give (d)мне переда́ли, что — I have been informed / told that
передава́ть секре́тные све́дения — pass secret information
передава́ть приказа́ние — transmit an order, pass the word
передава́ть благода́рность (дт.) — convey thanks (to)
передава́ть пожела́ние — convey a wish
переда́йте ему́ мои́ наилу́чшие пожела́ния — give him my best wishes
передава́ть приве́т [покло́н уст.] (дт. от) — send / give (i) smb's (best) regards
передава́ть серде́чный [бра́тский] приве́т (дт.) — convey cordial [fraternal] greetings / feelings (to)
ему́ что́-нибудь переда́ть? (при сообщении об отсутствии кого-л) — would you like to leave a message for him?
6) (пересылать, распространять по каналам связи, вещания) transmit (d)передава́ть по ра́дио — broadcast (d)
передава́ть по телеви́дению — televise (d), show (d)
что там передаю́т по телеви́зору? — what are they showing on television?; what's on television now?
7) (дт.; распространять на кого-л своё состояние, чувство) communicate (d to), pass (d) on (to)8) (дт.; заражать - инфекцией и т.п.) transmit (i d), communicate (d to) -
67 confero
confĕro, contŭli, collātum (conl-), conferre, v. a.I.To bring, bear, or carry together, to collect, gather (freq. and class.).A.In gen.:B.ligna circa casam,
Nep. Alcib. 10, 4:arma,
Vell. 2, 114, 4:cibos ore suo (aves),
Quint. 2, 6, 7:undique collatis membris,
Hor. A. P. 3 al.:sarcinas in unum locum,
Caes. B. G. 1, 24; cf. id. ib. 2, 25:collatis militaribus signis,
id. ib. 7, 2:ut premerer sacrā Lauroque collatāque myrto,
Hor. C. 3, 4, 19:quo (sc. in proximum horreum) omne rusticum instrumentum,
Col. 1, 6, 7:illuc (sc. in castella) parentes et conjuges,
Tac. A. 4, 46 fin.:dentes in corpore (canes),
Ov. M. 3, 236:materiam omnem, antequam dicere ordiamur,
Quint. 3, 9, 8:summas (scriptorum) in commentarium et capita,
id. 10, 7, 32:plura opera in unam tabulam,
id. 8, 5, 26:quae in proximos quinque libros conlata sunt,
id. 8, prooem. 1: res Romanas Graeco peregrinoque sermone in historiam, Just. pr. 1; cf. Suet. Caes. 44; cf. I. B. 5. infra.; Quint. 4, 1, 23:rogus inimicis collatus manibus,
Petr. 115 fin. —In partic.1.To collect money, treasures, etc., for any object, to bring offerings, contribute:b.dona mihi,
Plaut. Men. 1, 2, 20:contulit aes populus,
Ov. F. 4, 351;so freq. on monuments: AERE CONLATO,
Inscr. Orell. 3648; 74; Suet. Aug. 59:EX AERE CONLATO,
Inscr. Orell. 3991:aurum argentumque in publicum,
Liv. 28, 36, 3:munera ei,
Nep. Ages. 7, 3:tributa quotannis ex censu,
Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 53, § 131:conferre eo minus tributi,
Liv. 5, 20, 5:in commune,
Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 59, § 145; id. Quint. 3, 12:quadringena talenta quotannis Delum,
Nep. Arist. 3, 1:(pecunia) ad ejus honores conlata,
Cic. Fl. 25, 59:ad honorem tuum pecunias maximas contulisse,
id. Verr. 2, 2, 65, § 157:sextantes in capita,
Liv. 2, 33, 11:pecunias,
Suet. Caes. 19; id. Aug. 57; 30; Just. 3, 6:vinum alius, alius mel,
Dig. 41, 1, 7; 47, 7, 3 pr.:sua bona in medium,
ib. 37, 6, 1 pr.:magnam partem patrimonii alicui rei,
ib. 50, 4, 5:cum et Socrati collatum sit ad victum,
Quint. 12, 7, 9.— Absol.:nos dabimus, nos conferemus, nostro sumptu, non tuo,
Plaut. Most. 5, 2, 39.—Hence,Trop., like the Gr. sumpherô (v. Lidd. and Scott in h. v. 5.), to be useful, profitable, to profit, serve, be of use to ( = prosum; cf. also conduco, II.; post-Aug., and only in the third person; most freq. in Quint.); constr. with ad, in, the dat., inf., or absol.(α).With ad:* (β).naturane plus ad eloquentiam conferat an doctrina,
Quint. 2, 19, 1; so id. 1, 8, 7; 2, 5, 1; 3, 6, 7 al.; Cels. 6, 6, 1; Col. 12, prooem. § 6; Suet. Tib. 4.—With in:(γ).rursus in alia plus prior (exercitatio) confert,
Quint. 10, 7, 26.—With dat.:(δ).Gracchorum eloquentiae multum contulisse matrem,
Quint. 1, 1, 6; so id. prooem. § 6; 2, 9, 2; 3, 7, 12 al.; Plin. 20, 6, 23, § 54; 20, 23, 98, § 261; 29, 1, 6, § 13; Suet. Vesp. 6.—With subj. inf.:(ε).incipiente incremento confert alterna folia circum obruere,
Plin. 19, 5, 26, § 83.—Absol.:2.multum veteres etiam Latini conferunt, imprimis copiam verborum,
Quint. 1, 8, 8; 2, 5, 16; 4, 2, 123 al.; cf. Sillig ad Plin. 35, 10, 36, § 67.—To bring into connection, to unite, join, connect:b.membris collatis, of an embrace,
Lucr. 4, 1101; cf.ora,
App. M. 5, p. 161, 17:fontes e quibus collatae aquae flumen emittunt,
Curt. 7, 11, 3: capita, to lay heads together (in conferring, deliberating, etc.), Cic. Verr. 2, 3, 12, § 31; Liv. 2, 45, 7: pedem, to go or come with one, Plaut. Merc. 5, 2, 41; so,gradum ( = congredi),
id. Men. 3, 3, 30; id. Ps. 2, 4, 17; Verg. A. 6, 488.—Of chemical union:dissimiles et dispares res in unam potestatem,
Vitr. 2, 6, 4.—Trop.:3.collatis viribus,
Plin. Ep. 8, 14, 17; cf.:conferre vires in unum,
Liv. 33, 19, 7:collata omnium vota in unius salutem,
Plin. Pan. 23, 5:e singulis frustis collata oratio,
Quint. 8, 5, 27; cf. id. 2, 9, 3:velut studia inter nos conferebamus,
id. 4, prooem. § 1.— So esp. of conferences, consultations, etc., to consult together, confer, consider or talk over together:si quid res feret, coram inter nos conferemus,
Cic. Att. 1, 20, 1:sollicitudines nostras inter nos,
id. Fam. 6, 21, 2:rationes,
id. Att 5, 21, 12: familiares sermones cum aliquo, to unite in familiar conversation with, id. Off. 2, 11, 39:cum hoc in viā sermonem contulit,
id. Inv. 2, 4, 14; cf.:cum aliquo aut sermones aut consilia,
id. Phil. 2, 15, 38:consilia ad adulescentes,
Ter. Heaut. 3, 1, 64; cf.:consilia dispersim antea habita,
Suet. Caes. 80:injurias,
to deliberate together concerning, Tac. Agr. 15; Cael. ap. Cic. Fam. 8, 15, 2.— Absol.:omnes sapientes decet conferre et fabulari,
Plaut. Rud. 2, 3, 8.—With a rel.clause:fusi contulerimus inter nos... quid finis,
Cic. Fin. 2, 2, 4:ibi conferentibus, quid animorum Hispanis esset,
Liv. 27, 20, 4.—To bring or join together in a hostile manner, to set together (most freq. in milit. lang.):b.(Galli) cum Fontejo ferrum ac manus contulerunt,
Cic. Font. 5, 12 (1, 2):signa cum Alexandrinis,
id. Pis. 21, 49; cf.:collatis signis depugnare,
Plaut. Cas. 2, 5, 44; Cic. Imp. Pomp. 23, 66:arma cum aliquo,
Nep. Eum. 11, 5; 3, 6; cf.:arma inter se,
Liv. 21, 1, 2:castra cum hoste,
id. 26, 12, 14; cf.:castra castris,
id. 23, 28, 9; 8, 23, 9; Cic. Div. 2, 55, 114; Caes. B. C. 3, 79:pedem cum pede,
to fight foot to foot, Liv. 28, 2, 6; cf.:pede conlato,
id. 6, 12, 10; 10, 29, 6; 26, 39, 12 al.:gradum cum aliquo,
id. 7, 33, 11:pectora luctantia nexu pectoribus,
Ov. M. 6, 242:stat conferre manum Aeneae,
Verg. A. 12, 678:prima movet Cacus collatā proelia dextrā,
Ov. F. 1, 569:collatis cursibus hastas conicere,
Val. Fl. 6, 270:seque viro vir contulit,
Verg. A. 10, 735.— Poet.:inter sese duri certamina belli,
Verg. A. 10, 147:contra conferre manu certamina pugnae,
Lucr. 4, 843:collato Marte,
Ov. M. 12, 379.— Absol.:mecum confer, ait,
fight with me, Ov. M. 10, 603.—Transf. from milit. affairs to lawsuits: pedem, to encounter, come in contact with one, to attack:4.non possum magis pedem conferre, ut aiunt, aut propius accedere?
Cic. Planc. 19, 48:pedem cum singulis,
Quint. 5, 13, 11; cf. id. 8, 6, 51; cf.:qui illi concedi putem utilius esse quod postulat quam signa conferri,
Cic. Att. 7, 5, 5.— Poet.:lites,
to contend, quarrel, Hor. S. 1, 5, 54.—To bring together for comparison, to compare; constr. with cum, inter se, ad, the dat., or acc. only.(α).With cum:(β).quem cum eo (sc. Democrito) conferre possumus non modo ingenii magnitudine sed etiam animi?
Cic. Ac. 2, 23, 73; so id. Verr. 2, 4, 52, § 115:ut non conferam vitam neque existimationem tuam cum illius,
id. ib. 2, 4, 20, § 45; id. Sull. 26, 72:cum maximis minima,
id. Opt. Gen. Or. 6, 17; Quint. 5, 13, 12; 8, 4, 2 al.:nostras leges cum illorum Lycurgo et Dracone et Solone,
Cic. de Or. 1, 44, 197; cf.:illa cum Graeciā,
id. Tusc. 1, 1, 2; v. also d. —With inter se (rare):* (γ).vitam inter se utriusque conferte,
Cic. Rosc. Com. 7, 20.—With ad:(δ).bos ad bovem collatus,
Varr. L. L. 9, § 28 Müll.—With dat.:(ε).tempora praesentia praeteritis,
Lucr. 2, 1166:parva magnis,
Cic. Or. 4, 14:alicui illud,
id. Inv. 2, 50, 151:lanam tinctam Tyriae lacernae,
Quint. 12, 10, 75:ingenia ingeniis,
Sen. Contr. 5, 33:illam puellis,
Prop. 1, 5, 7; 1, 4, 9:nil jucundo amico,
Hor. S. 1, 5, 44:(Pausanias et Lysander) ne minimā quidem ex parte Lycurgi legibus et disciplinae conferendi sunt,
Cic. Off. 1, 22, 76; cf. supra, a.—With acc. only:5.tesseram hospitalem,
Plaut. Poen. 5, 2, 88:conferte Verrem: non ut hominem cum homine comparetis, etc.,
Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 54, § 121:exemplum,
Plaut. Poen. 1, 2, 85; Ter. Ad. 1, 2, 14; Ov. M. 7, 696:nec cum quaereretur gener Tarquinio, quisquam Romanae juventutis ullā arte conferri potuit,
Liv. 1, 39, 4; Suet. Caes. 47:census,
Plin. 7, 48, 49, § 159.—Of documents:haec omnia summā curā et diligentiā recognita et conlata sunt,
Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 77, § 190.—With the idea of shortening by bringing together (cf. colligo), to compress, abridge, condense, make or be brief:6.quam potero in verba conferam paucissima,
Plaut. Men. prol. 6; cf.:in pauca, ut occupatus nunc sum, confer, quid velis,
id. Ps. 1, 3, 44:rem in pauca,
id. Poen. 5, 4, 68; and:in pauca verba,
id. As. 1, 1, 75; id: Pers. 4, 4, 109:totam Academiam... ex duobus libris contuli in quattuor,
Cic. Att. 13, 13, 1:ut in pauca conferam,
id. Caecin. 6, 17:sua verba in duos versus,
Ov. F. 1, 162:ex immensā diffusāque legum copiā optima quaeque et necessaria in paucissimos libros,
Suet. Caes. 44.— [p. 412] *To join in bringing forward, to propose unitedly (as a law; cf.II.fero, II. B. 8. b.): cur enim non confertis, ne sit conubium divitibus et pauperibus,
Liv. 4, 4, 9 Weissenb. ad loc.(Con intens.) To bear, carry, convey, direct a thing somewhere (in haste, for protection, etc.); and conferre se, to betake or turn one's self anywhere, to go (very freq. and class.).A.Prop.1.In gen.(α).With the designation of the goal: quo me miser conferam? Gracch. ap. Cic. de Or. 3, 56, 214:(β). 2.qui cum se suaque omnia in oppidum Bratuspantium contulissent,
Caes. B. G. 2, 13:se suaque eo,
id. ib. 3, 28:se suaque in naves,
Nep. Them. 2, 7 al.:iter Brundisium versus,
Cic. Att. 3, 4 med.; cf.: iter eo, Brut. ap. Cic. Fam. 11, 13, 4:suas rationes et copias in illam provinciam,
id. Imp. Pomp. 7, 17: legiones in mediam aciem, Auct. B. Alex. 39;Auct. B. Afr. 60: quos eodem audita Cannensis clades contulerat,
Liv. 23, 17, 8:parentes illuc,
Tac. A. 4, 46:se Rhodum conferre,
Cic. de Or. 3, 56, 213: se Laodiceam, Lent. ap. Cic. Fam. 12, 14, 4:se Colonas,
Nep. Paus. 3, 3:quo se fusa acies,
Liv. 9, 16, 1 al.:se ad Tissaphernem,
Nep. Alcib. 5, 2; so,se ad Pharnabazum,
id. Con. 2, 1:se in fugam,
Cic. Caecin. 8, 22: sese in pedes, Enn. ap. Non. p. 518, 20; Plaut. Bacch. 3, 1, 7 (cf.:conicere se in pedes,
Ter. Phorm. 1, 4, 13).—Of things:pituita eo se umorve confert,
Cels. 2, 12.—Esp., in Ov. M. (cf. abeo, II.): aliquem in aliquid, to change into, transform to something:B.aliquem in saxum,
Ov. M. 4, 278: versos vultus ( poet. circumlocution for se) in hanc, id. ib. 9, 348:corpus in albam volucrem,
id. ib. 12, 145.—Trop.1.In gen., to bring, turn, direct something to; and conferre se, to turn, apply, devote one's self to, etc.:2.quo mortuo me ad pontificem Scaevolam contuli,
Cic. Lael. 1, 1:(Crassus) cum initio aetatis ad amicitiam se meam contulisset,
id. Brut. 81, 281; id. Fam. 11, 29, 2:qui se ad senatūs auctoritatem, ad libertatem vestram contulerunt,
id. Phil. 4, 2, 5; id. Ac. 1, 9, 34:se ad studium scribendi,
id. Arch. 3, 4:se ad studia litterarum,
id. ib. 7, 16; cf. Suet. Gram. 24:meus pater eam seditionem in tranquillum conferet (the figure taken from the sea when in commotion),
Plaut. Am. 1, 2, 16: verba ad rem, to bring words to actions, i. e. to pass from words to deeds, Ter. Eun. 4, 6, 4; id. Hec. 3, 1, 17:suspitionem in Capitonem,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 35, 100:ut spes votaque sua non prius ad deos quam ad principum aures conferret,
Tac. A. 4, 39:lamentationes suas etiam in testamentum,
id. ib. 15, 68.—More freq., in partic.,With the access. idea of application or communication, to devote or apply something to a certain purpose, to employ, direct, confer, bestow upon, give, lend, grant, to transfer to (a favorite word with Cic.).(α).With dat.:(β).dona quid cessant mihi Conferre?
Plaut. Men. 1, 2, 20:tibi munera,
Prop. 2, 3, 25; Nep. Ages. 7, 3:victoribus praemia,
Suet. Calig. 20:puellae quinquaginta milia nummūm,
Plin. Ep. 6, 32, 2:fructum alio,
Ter. Eun. 3, 1, 60; Dig. 37, 6, 1, § 24.—With ad and acc.:(γ).hostiles exuvias ornatum ad urbis et posterum gloriam,
Tac. A. 3, 72:Mithridates omne reliquum tempus non ad oblivionem veteris belli, sed ad comparationem novi contulit,
Cic. Imp. Pomp. 4, 9:omne studium atque omne ingenium ad populi Romani gloriam laudemque celebrandam,
id. Arch. 9, 19; id. Fam. 10, 1, 3:omnem meam curam atque operam ad philosophiam,
id. ib. 4, 3, 4:omnem tuum amorem omnemque tuam prudentiam... confer ad eam curam,
id. Att. 7, 1, 2:animum ad fodiendos puteos, Auct. B. Alex. 9: ad naturae suae non vitiosae genus consilium vivendi omne,
Cic. Off. 1, 33, 120:orationem omnem ad misericordiam,
id. Lig. 1, 1.—With in:(δ).omnes curas cogitationesque in rem publicam,
Cic. Off. 2, 1, 2:diligentiam in valetudinem tuam,
id. Fam. 16, 4, 4:praedas ac manubias suas non in monumenta deorum immortalium, neque in urbis ornamenta conferre, sed, etc.,
id. Agr. 2, 23, 60:in eos, quos speramus nobis profuturos, non dubitamus officia conferre,
id. Off. 1, 15, 48; so,plurimum benignitatis in eum,
id. ib. 1, 16, 50; id. Lael. 19, 70: curam restituendi Capitolii in L. Vestinum confert, i. e. assigns to, charges with, Tac. H. 4, 53:in unius salutem collata omnium vota,
Plin. Pan. 23, 5.—With erga:3.commemoratio benevolentiae ejus, quam erga me a pueritiā contulisses,
Cic. Fam. 10, 5, 1.—With aliquid ad or in aliquem or aliquid, to refer or ascribe something to a person or thing as its possessor, author (in a good, and freq. in a bad sense), to attribute, impute, assign, ascribe to one, to lay to the charge of:4.species istas hominum in deos,
Cic. N. D. 1, 27, 77:res ad imperium deorum,
Lucr. 6, 54:permulta in Plancium, quae ab eo numquam dicta sunt, conferuntur... Stomachor vero, cum aliorum non me digna in me conferuntur,
Cic. Planc. 14, 35; id. Fam. 5, 5, 2:mortis illius invidiam in L. Flaccum,
id. Fl. 17, 41:suum timorem in rei frumentariae simulationem angustiasque itinerum,
Caes. B. G. 1, 40:sua vitia et suam culpam in senectutem,
Cic. Sen. 5, 14:hanc ego de re publicā disputationem in Africani personam et Phili contuli,
id. Att. 4, 16, 2.—So esp.:culpam in aliquem,
Plaut. Am. 2, 2, 156; Ter. Eun. 2, 3, 97; Cic. Att. 9, 2, a, 1:causam in aliquem,
id. ib. 12, 31, 1; Liv. 5, 11, 6; cf.:causam in tempus,
Cic. de Or. 3, 61, 228.—To transfer to a fixed point of time, fix, assign, refer, appoint, put off, defer, postpone (cf. differo):5.Carthaginis expugnationem in hunc annum,
Liv. 27, 7, 5: in posterum diem iter suum contulit, Brut. ap. Cic. Fam. 11, 13, 3:omnia in mensem Martium,
Cic. Att. 6, 1, 24:aliquid in ambulationis tempus,
id. Q. Fr. 3, 3, 1:eam pecuniam in rei publicae magnum aliquod tempus,
id. Off. 3, 24, 93:quod in longiorem diem conlaturus fuisset,
Caes. B. G. 1, 40 fin.:alicujus consulatum in annum aliquem,
Plin. Pan. 61.—Rarely of place:idoneum locum in agris nactus... ibi adventum expectare Pompei eoque omnem belli rationem conferre constituit,
Caes. B. C. 3, 81 fin. —To bring on, cause, occasion, induce:pestem alicui,
Col. 1, 5, 4:candorem mollitiamque,
Plin. 35, 15, 50, § 175. -
68 traduco
trādūco (TRANSDVCO, Inscr. Orell. 750; Cic. Sest. 42, 91; Sall. J. 11, 4; Liv. 10, 37, 1; and so always in Cæs.; v. Neue, Formenl. 1, 734), xi, ctum, 3 ( imv. traduce, Ter. Heaut. 4, 4, 22; id. Ad. 5, 7, 12; perf. sync. traduxti, Plaut. Cas. 3, 3, 16; inf. parag. transducier, id. Most. 1, 1, 16; Ter. Ad. 2, 1, 46), v. a. [trans-duco], to lead, bring, or conduct across; to lead, bring, or carry over any thing (syn. traicio).I.Lit.A.In gen.:B.jamne hanc traduxti huc ad nos vicinam tuam?
Plaut. Cas. 3, 3, 16:ut traduxisti huc ad nos uxorem tuam!
id. ib. 3, 4, 7:traduce et matrem et familiam omnem ad nos,
Ter. Ad. 5, 7, 12:exercitum ex Galliā in Ligures,
Liv. 40, 25, 9:suas copias per angustias et fines Sequanorum,
Caes. B. G. 1, 11; 1, 19:copias praeter castra,
id. ib. 1, 48:cohortes ad se in castra,
id. B. C. 1, 21:impedimenta ad se,
id. ib. 1, 42:regem Antiochum in Europam,
Liv. 36, 3, 12:aquaeductum per domum suam,
Dig. 6, 2, 11:tua pompa Eo traducenda est,
to be carried over to him, Ter. Heaut. 4, 4, 18 Ruhnk.:victimas in triumpho,
parade, Liv. 45, 39, 12:carpentum, quo in pompā traduceretur,
was borne along, Suet. Calig. 15.—With trans (rare, and only when the place to which is also expressed):hominum multitudinem trans Rhenum in Galliam transducere,
Caes. B. G. 1, 35 Kraner ad loc.—With abl. (very rare):legiones Peninis Cottianisque Alpibus traducere,
Tac. H. 4, 68.—With double acc.:traductus exercitus silvam Ciminiam,
Liv. 9, 39, 1; cf. in the foll. B.—In partic.1.To lead or convey across, to transport over a stream or bridge:2.flumen subito accrevit, ut eā re traduci non potuerunt,
Cic. Inv. 2, 31, 97:pontem in Arari faciundum curat. atque ita exercitum transducit,
Caes. B. G. 1, 13. — Freq. with a double acc.: cum Isaram flumen exercitum traduxissem, Planc. ap. Cic. Fam. 10. 21, 2:ubi Caesar certior factus est, tres jam copiarum partes Helvetios id flumen transduxisse,
Caes. B. G. 1, 12: flumen Axonam exercitum transducere, id. ib. 2, 5:quos Caesar transduxerat Rhenum,
Hirt. B. G. 8, 13; 7, 11:copias flumen,
Liv. 21, 23, 3; 22, 45, 5:Volturnum flumen exercitum,
id. 23, 36, 9; 26, 8, 9:novum exercitum traducite Iberum,
id. 26, 41, 23.—Hence, pass.:raptim traducto exercitu Iberum,
Liv. 24, 41, 1; 9, 39, 1:legio flumen transducta,
Sall. H. 2, 57 Dietsch:ne major multitudo Germanorum Rhenum transducatur,
Caes. B. G. 1, 31; id. B. C. 3, 76. — With abl. (very rare):nisi flumine Ligeri copias traduxisset,
Hirt. B. G. 8, 27:Belgas Rhenum antiquitus esse transductos,
Caes. B. G. 2, 4. —Publicists' t. t.: traducere equum, to lead his horse along, said of a knight who passed muster at the inspection by the censor (cf. transveho):3.qui (P. Africanus) cum esset censor et in equitum censu C. Licinius Sacerdos prodisset... cum contra nemo diceret, jussit equum traducere,
Cic. Clu. 48, 134; cf. Val. Max. 4, 1, 10.—To lead along, parade in public by way of disgrace:II.delatores flagellis caesi ac traducti per amphitheatri harenam,
Suet. Tit. 8 fin.; cf. infra, II. B. 2.Trop.A.In gen., to lead, bring, or carry over, to transfer, remove:B.aut alio possis animi traducere motus,
Lucr. 4, 1068:animos judicum a severitate paulisper ad hilaritatem risumque traducere,
Cic. Brut. 93, 322:animum hominis ab omni aliā cogitatione ad tuam dignitatem tuendam,
id. Fam. 1, 2, 3:animos a contrariā defensione abducere et ad nostram conor traducere,
id. de Or. 2, 72, 293:ad amicitiam consuetudinemque,
id. Prov. Cons. 9, 22:post partum cura in vitulos traducitur omnis,
Verg. G. 3, 157:tum omnem orationem traduxi et converti in increpandam Caepionis fugam,
Cic. de Or. 2, 48, 199:hanc rationem naturae difficile est traducere ad id genus divinationis,
to apply, id. Div. 1, 57, 130:nomen eorum ad errorem fabulae,
id. Tusc. 5, 3, 8 et saep.:centuriones ex inferioribus ordinibus in superiores ordines erant transducti,
transferred, Caes. B. G. 6, 40:is ad plebem P. Clodium traducit,
Cic. Att. 1, 18, 4; cf.:P. Clodium a patribus ad plebem,
Suet. Caes. 20: academicen suntaxin, Cic. Att. 13, 16:gens in patricias transducta,
Suet. Aug. 2:augur destinatus ad pontificatum traductus est,
id. Calig. 12:medicus aegrum in meliorem consuetudinem, etc.,
Varr. L. L. 9, § 11 Müll.:ut (oratio) eos qui audient ad majorem admirationem possit traducere,
Cic. Or. 57, 192:mali punientur et traducentur in melius,
Sen. Ira, 2, 13, 4. — Poet., with dat.:me mea paupertas vitae traducat inerti,
Tib. 1, 1, 5 (where Müll. reads vita).—In partic.1.To bring over, draw over one to some side or opinion:2.hominem traducere ad optimates paro,
Cic. Att. 14, 21, 4:si istud obtinueris, traducas me ad te totum licebit,
id. Fin. 4. 1, 2:transductis ad se jam pluribus,
Suet. Caes. 14:traduxit me ad suam sententiam,
Cic. Clu. 52, 144.—To lead along, exhibit as a spectacle, i. e. to make a show of, to expose to public ridicule, to dishonor, disgrace, degrade (not ante-Aug.):3.an non sensistis... vestras conjuges, vestros liberos traductos per ora hominum?
Liv. 2, 38, 3; Just. 36. 1, 5; cf. Petr. 87:rideris multoque magis traduceris, etc.,
Mart. 6, 77, 5:libidinem,
Sen. Ep. 100, 10; id. Ben. 2, 17, 5; 4, 32, 3; Mart. 3, 74, 5; Juv. 8, 17:quae tua traducit manifesto carmina furto,
convicts of, proves guilty of, Mart. 1, 53, 3.—In a good sense, to set forth publicly, make public, exhibit, display, proclaim, spread abroad:4.poëmata,
Petr. 41:tot annorum secreta,
id. 17: se, to show one ' s self in public:lorica, in quā se traducebat Ulixem ancipitem,
Juv. 11, 31. —Of time, to lead, spend, pass (class.;5.syn.: ago, transigo): otiosam aetatem et quietam sine ullo labore et contentione traducere,
Cic. Sen. 23, 82; cf.:hoc quod datum est vitae tranquille placideque traducere,
id. Tusc. 3, 11, 25: quantumcumque superest temporis, Aug. ap. Gell. 15, 7, 3:adulescentiam eleganter,
Cic. Planc. 12, 31:hoc tempus quā ratione,
id. Fam. 4, 6, 3:quibus artibus latebrisque, vitam per novem annos, Tac H. 4, 67: leniter aevum,
Hor. Ep. 1, 18, 97: tempora Cynicā cenā, Petr. poët. 14: consul traducere noctem exsomnis. Sil. 9, 4 et saep.—Hence, transf., of the administration of an office:munus summā modestiā et summā abstinentiă,
Cic. Att. 5, 9, 1. —In later gram. lang. [p. 1885]a.To transfer a word from one subject or from one language to another (for the class. verto, converto, reddo, transfero, etc.): videtur Graecos secutus, qui ephodion a sumptu viae ad aliarum quoque rerum apparatus traducunt, Gell. 17, 2, 1:b.vocabulum Graecum in linguam Romanam,
id. 1, 18, 1.—To derive:jactare multo fusius largiusque est quam jacere, unde id verbum traductum est,
Gell. 2, 6, 5; cf. id. 17, 2, 14. -
69 сообщать
1) General subject: acquaint, admonish, advise, advise of (кому-л., о чем-л.), announce, apply, circulate, communicate, convey (известия), delate, herald, impart, inform, inform of, instruct, intimate, lend, let somebody hear, let somebody know, monish, report, say, send word, signal, teach, tell (тайну), tip, transmit, give notice, state, tip off about2) Aviation: call out (для информации других членов экипажа)3) Naval: speak5) Engineering: broadcast (о функции голосового оповещения в некоторых приборах), dispatch, impose (напр. скорость), message10) Psychology: break (что-л. неприятное), reveal11) Jargon: tip off, get the word out (о чём-либо), spill, squawk14) Business: beg to advise, beg to inform, (ся) describe16) Makarov: assign (напр. скорость), donate, flash (по телеграфу, радио и т.п.), give, impart (напр. ускорение), impart (напр., ускорение), impose (скорость и т.п.), present, send (напр. движение), transfer (свойства)17) Taboo: bubble -
70 übernehmen
to adopt; to assume; to take over; to take on* * *über|neh|men [yːbɐ'neːmən] ptp überno\#mmen [yːbɐ'nɔmən] insep irreg1. vt1) (= annehmen) to take; Aufgabe, Arbeit to take on, to undertake; Funktion to take on; Verantwortung to take on, to assume, to accept; Kosten, Hypothek to agree to pay; (JUR ) Fall to take (on); jds Verteidigung to take on; (= kaufen) to buyden Befehl or das Kommando übernéhmen — to take command or charge
die Führung übernéhmen (von Organisation etc) — to take charge (gen of); (Sport) to take over the lead
lassen Sie mal, das übernehme ich! — let me take care of that
es übernéhmen, etw zu tun — to take on the job of doing sth, to undertake to do sth
2) (stellvertretend, ablösend) to take over (von from); Ausdruck, Ansicht to adopt; Zitat, Wort to take, to borrow; (COMPUT ) Einstellungen to apply3) Geschäft, Praxis etc to take over2. vrto take on or undertake too much; (= sich überanstrengen) to overdo it; (beim Essen) to overeatübernéhmen Sie sich nur nicht! (iro) — don't strain yourself! (iro)
* * *1) (to take upon oneself or accept (authority, responsibility etc): He assumed the rôle of leader in the emergency.) assume2) (to take control (of): He has taken the business over ( noun take-over).) take over3) ((often with from) to do (something) after someone else stops doing it: He retired last year, and I took over (his job) from him.) take over4) (to accept (a duty, task, responsibility etc): He undertook the job willingly.) undertake* * *über·neh·men *[y:bɐˈne:mən]I. vtenteigneten Besitz/ein Geschäft \übernehmen to take over expropriated property/a business2. (auf sich nehmen, annehmen)▪ etw \übernehmen to accept sthlassen Sie es, das übernehme ich let me take care of itdie Kosten \übernehmen [to agree] to pay the costsdie Verpflichtungen \übernehmen to assume [or enter into] obligations form▪ es \übernehmen, etw zu tun to take on the job of doing sth, to undertake to do sthden Vorsitz \übernehmen to take [or assume] the chair3. (fortführen)das Steuer \übernehmen to take the wheeldie Verfolgung \übernehmen to take up pursuit sep4. (verwenden)▪ etw \übernehmen to take [or borrow] sthein übernommenes Zitat a citation taken [or borrowed] from another work [or source]eine Sendung in sein Abendprogramm \übernehmen to include a broadcast in one's evening programmes▪ jdn \übernehmen to take over sbjdn ins Angestelltenverhältnis \übernehmen to employ sb on a permanent basisjdn ins Beamtenverhältnis \übernehmen to enter sb in the civil serviceIII. vi to take overich bin zu müde, um weiterzufahren, kannst du mal \übernehmen? I'm too tired to drive any more, can you take the wheel?* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) take delivery of <goods, consignment>; receive < relay baton>; take over <power, practice, business, building, school class>; take on <job, position, task, role, case, leadership>; undertake to pay < costs>2) (bei sich einstellen) take on < staff>3) (sich zu Eigen machen) adopt, take over <ideas, methods, subject, etc.> ( von from); borrow <word, phrase> ( von from)2.unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb overdo things or itübernimm dich nur nicht — (iron.) don't strain yourself!
* * *über'nehmen (irr, untrennb, hat)A. v/tdas Kommando übernehmen take over command;eine (neue) Klasse übernehmen als Lehrer: take over a (new) class2. (sich kümmern um, erledigen) take care of; (Arbeit etc) take on;die Kosten übernehmen meet ( oder agree to pay) the costs;die Getränke übernehmen wir we’re buying the drinks;eine Stunde (von jemandem) übernehmen take over a class (from sb);das übernehme ich umg I’ll take care of that4. SCHIFF (Ladung, Passagiere) take on board; (Arbeitskräfte nach Firmenübernahme) keep on, continue to employ5. (Verfahrensweise, Begriffe etc) adopt; (Wörter) borrow, take; Elektronik:, IT transfer; (Daten etc) import, accept;eine Sendung von der BBC übernehmen TV show a BBC program(me);Ideen etcB. v/i take over (jetzt übernehmen Sie! now you take over!C. v/r (es übertreiben) overdo it ( oder things); mit Arbeit etc: take on too much, bite off more than one can chew umg; (sich überschätzen) overestimate one’s capabilities, overplay one’s hand; finanziell: overreach o.s.; beim Essen: overeat;sich kräftemäßig übernehmen overexert o.s.;sich bei der Arbeit/beim Sport etcübernehmen do too much work/sport etc;mit dem Hauskauf haben sie sich übernommen they overreached themselves in buying the house;übernimm dich nur nicht! iron don’t overdo it!'übernehmen v/t (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)1. umg (Tasche etc) hang over one’s shoulderdas Schiff nahm haushohe Seen über waves as high as a house were coming over the sides of the ship* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) take delivery of <goods, consignment>; receive < relay baton>; take over <power, practice, business, building, school class>; take on <job, position, task, role, case, leadership>; undertake to pay < costs>2) (bei sich einstellen) take on < staff>3) (sich zu Eigen machen) adopt, take over <ideas, methods, subject, etc.> ( von from); borrow <word, phrase> ( von from)2.unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb overdo things or itübernimm dich nur nicht — (iron.) don't strain yourself!
* * *v.to accede v.to adopt v.to take on v.to take over v.to undertake v.(§ p.,p.p.: undertook, undertaken) -
71 tradición
f.1 tradition, usage, routine, habit.2 tradition, lore.3 delivery.* * *1 tradition* * *noun f.* * *SF tradition* * ** * *= tradition.Ex. Tradition may sanction the use of the word 'man' to mean the human race.----* consagrado por la costumbre y la tradición = sanctified by custom and tradition.* con una gran tradición = long-standing.* inmerso en la tradición = steeped in tradition.* mantener la tradición = keep with + tradition.* romper con la tradición = make + break with tradition, break with + tradition.* sociedad de tradición escrita = literate society.* tener que cargar con el peso de la tradición = be burdened with + tradition.* tener tradición de = have + a history of.* tener una gran tradición = have + a long ancestry.* tradición cultural = cultural tradition.* tradiciones populares = folklore, lore.* tradición familiar = family tradition.* tradición literaria = literary tradition.* tradición oral = oral tradition.* tradición que (aún/todavía) perdura = lasting legacy.* * ** * *= tradition.Ex: Tradition may sanction the use of the word 'man' to mean the human race.
* consagrado por la costumbre y la tradición = sanctified by custom and tradition.* con una gran tradición = long-standing.* inmerso en la tradición = steeped in tradition.* mantener la tradición = keep with + tradition.* romper con la tradición = make + break with tradition, break with + tradition.* sociedad de tradición escrita = literate society.* tener que cargar con el peso de la tradición = be burdened with + tradition.* tener tradición de = have + a history of.* tener una gran tradición = have + a long ancestry.* tradición cultural = cultural tradition.* tradiciones populares = folklore, lore.* tradición familiar = family tradition.* tradición literaria = literary tradition.* tradición oral = oral tradition.* tradición que (aún/todavía) perdura = lasting legacy.* * *A (costumbre) traditiones tradición encender fogatas la noche de San Juan it is traditional to light bonfires on midsummer nightseguir la tradición to keep up the traditionsegún la tradición according to traditionB ( Der) transfer* * *
tradición sustantivo femenino ( costumbre) tradition
tradición sustantivo femenino tradition
' tradición' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
rancia
- rancio
- rescate
- resucitar
- antiguo
- asentado
- camino
- enraizado
- romper
- ruptura
- seguir
- solera
- subsistir
English:
cherish
- dying
- institution
- lapse
- lore
- observe
- old
- revival
- revive
- tradition
- east
* * *tradición nftradition;es tradición vestirse de negro para ir a un entierro it is the tradition to wear black for a funeral;se hace por tradición it's done o people do it out of traditiontradición escrita written tradition;tradición oral oral tradition* * *f tradition* * ** * *tradición n tradition -
72 ordre
ordre [ɔʀdʀ]1. masculine nouna. ( = succession régulière) orderb. ( = catégorie) orderd. ( = bonne organisation) [de personne, chambre] tidinesse. ( = commandement) order• j'ai reçu l'ordre de... I've been given orders to...f. ( = association) order2. compounds► ordre du jour [de conférence, réunion] agenda* * *ɔʀdʀnom masculin1) ( commandement) orderà vos ordres! — Armée yes, sir!; (à un ami, parent) hum at your service! hum
2) ( disposition régulière) orderen bon ordre — [être aligné, avancer] in an orderly fashion
avancer en ordre dispersé/serré — to advance in scattered/close formation
3) Informatique command4) ( fait d'être rangé) tidiness, orderliness; ( fait d'être bien organisé) orderêtre en ordre — [maison, armoire] to be tidy; [comptes] to be in order
mettre de l'ordre dans — to tidy up [pièce, placard]
mettre de l'ordre dans sa vie — to set ou put one's life in order
remise en ordre — fig rationalization
5) ( état stable et normal) ordertout est rentré dans l'ordre — gén everything is back to normal; ( après des émeutes) order has been restored
6) ( nature) naturede l'ordre de 30% — in the order of 30% GB, on the order of 30% US
dans le même ordre d'idées, je voudrais vous demander — talking of which, I would like to ask you
7) Architecture, Biologie, Zoologie order8) ( confrérie) order9) Religion order10) Finance orderlibellez le chèque à l'ordre de X — make the cheque GB ou check US payable to X
•Phrasal Verbs:* * *ɔʀdʀ1. nm1) (injonction) orderÇa ne se discute pas, c'est un ordre. — There's no discussion, it's an order.
2) (classement) order3) (= nature, type)4) (organisation) orderliness, tidinessavoir de l'ordre — to be tidy, to be orderly
mettre en ordre — to tidy, to tidy up, to put in order
mettre bon ordre à — to put to rights, to sort out
5) (légalité, discipline) orderbousculer l'ordre établi; bouleverser l'ordre établi — to overthrow the established order
6) COMMERCE order7) (= association) order2. ordres nmplRELIGION Holy Orders* * *ordre nm1 ( commandement) order; donner un ordre à qn to give sb an order; donner à qn l'ordre de faire to give sb the order to do, to order sb to do; recevoir l'ordre de faire qch to be given the order to do sth, to be ordered to do sth; je n'ai d'ordre à recevoir de personne I don't take orders from anybody; j'ai des ordres I'm acting under orders; agir sur ordre de qn to act on sb's orders; travailler sous les ordres de qn to work under sb; elle a 30 personnes sous ses ordres she has 30 people (working) under her; être aux ordres de qn Mil to serve under sb, to be under sb's command; ( employé de maison) to be in sb's service; prendre qn à ses ordres to take sb on; à vos ordres! Mil yes, sir!; hum (à un ami, parent) at your service! hum; jusqu' à nouvel ordre until further notice;2 ( disposition régulière) order; par ordre alphabétique/chronologique in alphabetical/chronological order; en ordre croissant/décroissant in ascending/descending order; par ordre de préférence in order of preference; par ordre d'entrée en scène in order of appearance; l'ordre des mots word order; l'ordre des cérémonies the order of ceremonies; procédons par ordre let's do things in order; tu dois, dans l'ordre, téléphoner à la gare, à l'aéroport, à l'hôtel you've got to phone the station, the airport and the hotel, in that order; selon un ordre strict in strict order; en bon ordre [être aligné, avancer] in an orderly fashion ; avancer en ordre dispersé/serré to advance in scattered/close formation; ordre de bataille battle order;3 Ordinat command;4 ( fait d'être rangé) tidiness, orderliness; ( fait d'être bien organisé) order; être en ordre [maison, armoire] to be tidy; [comptes] to be in order; tenir une pièce en ordre to keep a room tidy; mettre de l'ordre dans to tidy up [pièce, placard]; mettre de l'ordre dans ses comptes to get one's accounts in order; mettre de l'ordre dans ses idées to get one's ideas straight; mettre de l'ordre dans sa vie to sort out one's life○; mettre ses affaires en ordre ( avant de mourir) to put one's affairs in order;5 ( qualité) tidiness; elle n'a pas beaucoup d'ordre ( rangé) she' s not very tidy; ( méthodique) she's not very methodical; mettre bon ordre à qch to sort out sth; remettre une pièce en ordre to put everything back where it was in a room; remise en ordre fig rationalization;6 ( comme valeur) order; aimer l'ordre et le travail sérieux to like order and hard work;7 ( état stable et normal) order; maintenir l'ordre dans sa classe to keep order in the classroom; rappeler qn à l'ordre to reprimand sb; tout est rentré dans l'ordre gén everything is back to normal; ( après des émeutes) order has been restored; l'ordre public public order; maintenir/rétablir l'ordre (public) to maintain/restore law and order; troubler l'ordre public [individu] to cause a breach of the peace; [groupe d'insurgés] to disturb the peace; le respect de l'ordre établi respect for the established order; c'est dans l'ordre des choses it's in the nature of things; en ordre de marche in working order;8 ( nature) nature; un problème de cet ordre a problem of that nature; un problème de cet ordre (de grandeur) a problem on that scale; c'est un problème d'ordre économique it's a problem of an economic nature; d'ordre officiel/personnel of an official/a personal nature; de l'ordre de 30% in ou of the order of 30% GB, on the order of 30% US; ordre de prix price range; de quel ordre de grandeur? [somme] how much approximately?; pour vous donner un ordre de grandeur to give you a rough idea; de premier ordre first-rate; de second ordre second-rate; dans le même ordre d'idées, je voudrais vous demander talking of which, I would like to ask you; c'est du même ordre it's the same kind of thing; c'est d'un tout autre ordre it's a completely different kind of thing; des préoccupations d'un tout autre ordre very different worries;10 ( confrérie) order; ordre de chevalerie order of chivalry; l'ordre des médecins the medical association; l'ordre des avocats the lawyers' association; être rayé de l'ordre [avocat] to be disbarred; [médecin] to be struck off (the medical register) GB, to lose one's license US;11 Relig order; ordre monastique monastic order; entrer dans les ordres to take (holy) orders; l'ordre des cisterciens the Cistercian order; l'ordre des Templiers the Knights Templar; les ordres majeurs/mineurs major/minor orders;12 ( sous l'Ancien Régime) estate;13 Fin order; ordre d'achat/de vente order to buy/to sell; libellez le chèque à l'ordre de X make the cheque GB ou check US payable to X; c'est à quel ordre? who do I make it payable to?;ordre du jour ( de réunion) agenda; être à l'ordre du jour lit to be on the agenda; fig to be talked about; inscrire qch à l'ordre du jour to put sth on the agenda; ordre de mobilisation Mil marching orders (pl).[ɔrdr] nom masculinA.[INSTRUCTION]1. [directive, injonction] ordera. [parent] to give an orderb. [officiel, policier, officier] to issue ou to give an orderdonner à quelqu'un l'ordre de faire quelque chose to order somebody to do something, to give somebody the order to do something2. BANQUE & BOURSEà l'ordre de payable to, to the order ofchèque à mon ordre cheque made out ou payable to meordre d'achat/de vente order to buy/to sellordre de paiement/virement order to pay/to transferB.[HIÉRARCHIE, AGENCEMENT]par ordre d'arrivée/de grandeur/d'importance in order of arrival/size/importancepar ordre chronologique/croissant/décroissant in chronological/ascending/descending order[sens du rangement]manquer ou ne pas avoir d'ordre to be untidy3. [organisation méthodique - de documents] ordermettre en ordre, mettre de l'ordre dans [documents, comptabilité] to set in order, to tidy up (separable)il a laissé ses papiers/comptes en ordre avant de partir he left his papers/accounts in order before leaving4. [discipline sociale]faire régner l'ordre to keep ou maintain ordera. [dans une assemblée] to be called to orderb. [dans une classe] to get told offl'ordre public public order, law and orderrentrer dans l'ordre: puis tout est rentré dans l'ordre then order was restored, then everything went back to normalC.[CLASSIFICATION, DOMAINE]du même ordre [proposition, responsabilités] similar, of the same naturede l'ordre de in the region ou order ofune augmentation de 5 %? — oui, de cet ordre a 5% rise? — yes, roughly ou in that regionc'est dans l'ordre des choses it's in the order ou nature of thingsordre attique/dorique/ionique Attic/Doric/Ionic orderde dernier ordre locution adjectivalede premier ordre locution adjectivalede second ordre locution adjectivale[question] of secondary importance[artiste, personnalité] second-rateordre du jour nom masculin1. [d'un comité] agendamettre quelque chose à l'ordre du jour to put ou to place something on the agendaPut the cases down here, please. Posez les valises là, s'il vous plaîtTake the bags out to the car, will you? Portez les bagages à la voiture, voulez-vous ?Quiet, please. Un peu de silence, s'il vous plaîtTurn left at the traffic lights. Tournez à gauche au feuDon't walk on the grass - it's wet. Ne marche pas sur l'herbe, elle est mouilléePut that down! Pose ça !Get out (of my house)! Sortez (d'ici) !Just leave it alone, will you! Laisse-ça tranquille, tu m'entends ! -
73 матрица
two-dimensional array, array, mother blank, die block, female core, die, ( клепальной машины) dolly, master form, matrix, master полигр., mat, female mold, mold, nib, plane, ( фонограммы) stamper, swage, table* * *ма́трица ж.2. мат. matrixма́трица m на n — an m -by-n matrixобраща́ть ма́трицу — invert a matrixтранспони́ровать ма́трицу — transpose a matrixумножа́ть ма́трицу сле́ва — multiply a matrix on the left, premultiply a matrix, multiply a matrix by writing the multiplier before the matrixумножа́ть ма́трицу спра́ва — multiply a matrix on the right postmultiply a matrix, multiply a matrix by writing the multiplier after the matrix3. вчт. plane, matrix4. полигр. mat, mould; matrix, die5. ( алмазной коронки) геол. matrixма́трица без повторе́ния — non-recurrent matrixбрикетиро́вочная ма́трица с.-х. — briquetting dieбу́лева ма́трица — Boolean matrixволочи́льная ма́трица — drawing dieма́трица вы́борки на (ферри́товых) серде́чниках — selection core matrixма́трица вы́пуска — output matrixвычисли́тельная ма́трица — computing matrixги́псовая ма́трица — plaster mouldграни́чная ма́трица — boundary matrixдешифра́торная ма́трица — decoder matrixдио́дная ма́трица — diode matrixдиспе́рсная ма́трица — dispersion matrixедини́чная ма́трица — identity [unit] matrixжелезобето́нная ма́трица — reinforced concrete jigма́трица запомина́ющего устро́йства — memory plane, memory matrixма́трица запомина́ющего устро́йства на серде́чниках — core plane, plane matrixма́трица имми́тансов элк. — immittance matrixма́трица като́дной осно́вы ( для электролиза меди) — blank of a starting sheetквадра́тная ма́трица — square [mmm] matrixкле́точная ма́трица — array, tableauкоди́рующая ма́трица — encoder matrixко́мплексная ма́трица — complex matrixко́мплексно-сопряжё́нная ма́трица — adjoint matrixкорреляцио́нная ма́трица — correlation matrixкососимметри́чная ма́трица — skew-symmetric matrixма́трица коэффицие́нтов — matrix of coefficientsлиноти́пная ма́трица — linotype matrixлоги́ческая кре́мниевая ма́трица — silicon-diode logic matrixма́трица магни́тного запомина́ющего устро́йства — magnetic memory matrix [plane]моноти́пная ма́трица — monotype matrixма́трица на ферри́товых серде́чниках — magnetic core matrix [plane]неосо́бенная ма́трица — non-singular matrixнесо́бственная ма́трица — improper matrixобрати́мая ма́трица — invertible matrixобра́тная ма́трица — inverse [reciprocal] matrixортогона́льная ма́трица — orthogonal matrixосо́бенная ма́трица — singular matrixма́трица оши́бок — error matrixма́трица па́мяти — memory matrixма́трица па́мяти, изгото́вленная ме́тодом проши́вки — woven wire memory matrix, woven wire memory planeпереключа́тельная ма́трица — switching matrixма́трица перехо́да — transition (probability) matrix, matrix of transition probabilitiesплатё́жная ма́трица ( в теории игр) — pay-off matrixподвесна́я ма́трица полигр. — pi matrixподо́бные ма́трицы — similar matricesма́трица по́лной проводи́мости элк. — admittance matrixма́трица по́лных сопротивле́ний элк. — impedance matrixположи́тельно определё́нная ма́трица мат. — positive definite matrixма́трица п [m2]-го поря́дка — matrix of order nма́трица преобразова́ния — transformation matrixприсоединё́нная ма́трица — adjugate matrixма́трица приспособле́ния — adaptation matrixпрове́рочная ма́трица — partly-check matrixпроизво́дная ма́трица — derivative matrixпроизводя́щая ма́трица — generator matrixпускова́я ма́трица косм. — launching matrixпуста́я ма́трица полигр. — flat type matrixма́трица разме́рности mmn — m by n matrix, mxn matrix, an array of size mxnма́трица рассе́яния — scattering matrixрасши́ренная ма́трица — augmented matrixсамосопряжё́нная ма́трица — self-conjugated matrixсигна́льная ма́трица тлв. — signal matrixсимметри́чная ма́трица — symmetric(al) matrixсингуля́рная ма́трица — singular matrixма́трица систе́мы, переда́точная — system transfer matrixсопряжё́нная ма́трица — adjoint of a matrixсоставна́я ма́трица1. маш. sectional [split] die2. мат. composite matrixстальна́я ма́трица полигр. — steel matrixма́трица с m столбца́ми — m -column matrixма́трица с n строка́ми — n -rowed matrixстохасти́ческая ма́трица — stochastic matrixструкту́рная ма́трица — structural matrixтранспони́рованная ма́трица — transpose of a matrix, transposed matrixунимода́льная ма́трица — unimodal matrixунимодуля́рная ма́трица — unimodular matrixунита́рная ма́трица — unitary matrixферри́товая ма́трица — magnetic core matrix [plane]ферри́товая ма́трица с лине́йной вы́боркой — linear [word] selection core matrix, word-organized core matrix [plane]ферри́товая ма́трица с пло́ской вы́боркой — plane-selection [bit-organized] core matrix [plane]характеристи́ческая ма́трица — characteristic matrixцветна́я ма́трица тлв. — colour matrixцеллуло́идная ма́трица — celluloid mouldма́трица це́пи эл. — circuit matrixшифра́торная ма́трица — encoder matrixэквивале́нтные ма́трицы — equivalent matricesэрми́това ма́трица — Hermitian matrixэрми́тово-сопряжё́нная ма́трица — Hermitian conjugate matrixэтало́нная ма́трица — master die -
74 prevoditi
vt impf translate (sa from, na into), render into (another language); (biti tumač) interpret; (prekategorizirati) transfer itd. (-prevesti) | doslovno -ti translate word for word (ili literally, verbatim); krivo -ti mistranslate; -i se kao is translated a* * *• translate• interpret• render -
75 преведа
преведа̀,превѐждам гл. translate, render (на into); ( устно) interpret; \преведа дума по дума translate/interpret word for word; \преведа на английски език translate/render/interpret/put into English.——————превѐждам гл.1. lead/take over/across;2. ( прехвърлям) transmit, transfer (и за човек); ( пари и пр.) send, remit; ( през трудности, препятствия и пр.) pilot. -
76 перенос
м.1) (перенесение, перемещение) carrying over, transferперено́с огня́ воен. — shift of fire
2) грам., полигр., информ. ( разделение слова) word division, hyphenation [haɪfə-]пра́вила перено́са слов — word hyphenation rules
3) (дефис, тж. знак перено́са) hyphen ['haɪfən]расстано́вка перено́сов — hyphenation
необяза́тельный перено́с информ. — discretionary / optional hyphen
-
77 перевод
I муж.1) transfer(ence), move, switch, shiftперевод часов вперед — putting a clock forward/on
2) remittance, order (денег)денежный перевод — money order; postal order
3) conversionII муж.translation; version; interpretationIII муж.; разг.waste, squandering, spending, using up -
78 переводить
vt; св - перевести́1) куда-л, через что-л to lead/to take across/to; на другое рабочее место to transfer; передвигать to shift, to move2) на другой язык to translateпереводи́ть с ру́сского языка́ на англи́йский — to translate from Russian into English; устно to interpret
переводи́ть досло́вно — to translate word for word
переводи́ть то́чно — to translate adequately
3) деньги по почте to remit, to send by postal order; телеграфом to wire (money)4)переводи́ть часы́ вперёд/наза́д — to put the clock on/back
5) разг тратить попусту to waste• -
79 pilus
1. I.Lit.:II.capra pilos ministrat ad usum nauticum,
Varr. R. R. 2, 11:munitae sunt palpebrae vallo pilorum,
Cic. N. D. 2, 57, 143:caudae pilos equinae vellere,
Hor. Ep. 2, 1, 45:duris aspera crura pilis,
Ov. A. A. 3, 194:contra pilum equum fricare, Pelag. Vet. 26: in capite homini plurimus pilus,
Plin. 11, 37, 47, § 130.—Prov.:non minus molestum est calvis quam comatis pilos velli,
Sen. Tranq. An. 8, 2, 3:propius quidem est a sole mons quam campus aut valles, sed sic, quomodo est pilus pilo crassior,
Sen. Q. N. 4, 11, 4.—Transf.A. B.As a designation of insignificance, a hair, a trifle; usually joined with a negative, not a hair, not a bit, not a whit (class.):2.ego ne pilo quidem minus me amabo,
Cic. Q. Fr. 2, 16, 5:interea e Cappadociā ne pilum quidem,
id. Att. 5, 20, 6:ne ullum pilum viri boni habere dicatur,
has not a hair of a good man about him, id. Rosc. Com. 7, 20:non facit pili cohortem,
does not value it a straw, Cat. 10, 13; cf.:nec pili facit uni,
cares not a pin about it, id. 17, 16.—In plur., a garment or fabric made of hair:vestitus pilis cameli,
Vulg. Marc. 1, 6.pīlus, i, m. [pilum], regularly joined with primus: primus pilus (in the gen. written also as one word, primipili), the division of the triarii in the Roman army:II.P. Sextius Baculus, primi pili centurio,
Caes. B. G. 3, 5; id. B. C. 1, 13: T. Balventius, qui superiore anno primum pilum duxerat, had been leader, captain of the triarii, id. B. G. 5, 35; Liv. 42, 34, 11: aliquem ad primum pilum transducere, to transfer, advance to the triarii, Caes. B. C. 3, 53, 5: primos pilos ademit, took the command of the triarii, of the primipili, Suet. Calig. 44:vetus consuetudo tenuit, ut ex primo principe legionis promeretur centurio primi pili, qui non solum aquilae praeerat, verum etiam quatuor centurias in primā acie gubernabat,
Veg. Mil. 2, 8.—Without primus:referes pili praemia,
Mart. 6, 58, 10; 1, 32, 3.—Transf.: primipilus (in inscrr. also written PRIMOPIL, and abbrev. P. P.), the chief centurion of the triarii (the transf. arose from the circumstance that the chief centurion of this division was originally designated by the term primi pili, with the omission of the easily supplied centurio, as is shown by the following citation from Liv. 7, 41, 5;soon, however, from primi pili, a new word, primipilus or primopilus, was formed): primus centurio erat, quem nunc primi pili appellant,
Liv. 7, 41, 5; 8, 8, 16:primipilo P. Sext. Baculo vulneribus confecto,
Caes. B. G. 2, 25:aquilarum altera vix convelli a primipilo potuit,
Val. Max. 1, 6, 11; Inscr. (of the time of Trajan) Orell. 799: SEX. AVLIENO SEX. F. PRIMOPIL. II., Inscr. (of the time of Tiberius or Caligula) Orell. 3426 M. P.; cf. Becker, Antiq. 3, 3, p. 264. -
80 prima
prīmus, a, um, adj. sup. [obsol. prep. pri (prei); whence also prior, priscus; cf.: privus, privo, etc., and v. pro], the first, first (properly only when three or more are referred to. The first, as opp. to the second, is prior;I.but primus is rarely used for prior,
Cic. Sest. 19, 44 al.).In gen.:II.qui primus vulnus dicitur obligavisse,
Cic. N. D. 3, 22, 57:primus sentio mala nostra: primus rescisco omnia: Primus porro obnuntio,
Ter. Ad. 4, 2, 7:verum primum: verum igitur et extremum,
Cic. Off. 3, 6, 27:primae litterae,
id. Att. 9, 6, 5:primus inter homines nobilissimos,
id. Sest. 3, 6:primi ex omnibus philosophis,
id. Fin. 4, 7, 17:primus Graeciae in Thraciam introiit,
Nep. Alcib. 7, 4:primus de mille fuisses,
Ov. H. 17, 105:in primis,
among the first, in the foremost ranks, Nep. Paus. 5, 3:in primis stetit,
id. Epam. 10, 3:in primis pugnantes,
Sall. C. 60, 6: leonem primus, aut in primis ferire, id. J. 6, 1: utque pedum primis infans vestigia plantis institerat (= ut primum, etc., poet.), Verg. A. 11, 573:primus post eos quos poëtae tradiderunt movisse aliqua circa rhetoricen Empedocles dicitur (= secundus or proximus ab iis),
Quint. 3, 1, 8.—In partic.A.In time or place, first, fore, foremost, the first part; sometimes to be translated, the end, extremity, etc.:B.in primā provinciā,
at the entrance of the province, Cic. Fam. 3, 6, 2:digitus,
the tip of the finger, Cat. 2, 3:dentes,
the front teeth, Plin. 19, 2, 11, § 35:ranis prima lingua cohaeret,
the end of the tongue, id. 11, 37, 65, § 172:primā statim nocte,
at the beginning of the night, Col. 10, 190:sol,
i. e. the rising sun, Verg. A. 6, 255:luna,
i. e. the new moon, Plin. 2, 13, 10, § 56.—With quisque, the first possible, the very first:primo quoque tempore,
at the very first opportunity, Cic. Fam. 13, 57, 1:primo quoque die,
id. Phil. 8, 11, 33:me tibi primum quidque concedente,
id. Ac. 2, 16, 49:fluit voluptas et prima quaeque avolat,
id. Fin. 2, 32, 106.— Subst.: prīma, ōrum, n., the first part, the beginning:quod bellum, si prima satis prospera fuissent,
Liv. 8, 3.—Of the first principles or elements of things, Lucr. 4, 186:prima consiliorum (for prima consilia),
Tac. H. 2, 11: a primo, from the beginning, at first:multum improbiores sunt quam a primo credidi,
Plaut. Most. 3, 2, 139; Ter. Phorm. 4, 2, 14; 4, 3, 37:in illā pro Ctesiphonte oratione submissius a primo: deinde pressius,
Cic. Or. 8, 26:suam vim retinere a primo ad extremum,
id. Fin. 4, 13, 32:hoc a primo cogitavit,
id. Att. 8, 11, 2; id. Phil. 2, 30, 75 Halm ad loc.:id a primo rectissime dicitur,
id. Fin. 3, 9, 32 Madv. ad loc.: in primo, in front, before, in the beginning, first:equites in primo late ire jubet,
in the van, Sall. J. 68, 4:qui numerus in primo viget, jacet in extremo,
Cic. Or. 64, 215. —First in rank or station, chief, principal, most excellent, eminent, distinguished, noble (cf.:A. 1.princeps, primores): evocat ad se Massiliensium quindecim primos,
Caes. B. C. 1, 35:sui municipii facile primus,
Cic. Rosc. Am. 6, 15:homo,
id. Verr. 2, 4, 17, § 37:primis urbis placuisse,
Hor. Ep. 1, 20, 23:juvenum primi,
Verg. A. 9, 785:est genus hominum, qui esse primos se omnium rerum volunt Nec sunt,
Ter. Eun. 2, 2, 17:quia sum apud te primus,
I am the first in your favor, id. ib. 1, 2, 10:primus humani generis,
Sil. 17, 255:urbem Italiae primam,
Petr. 116:praedium,
Cato, R. R. 1:suavia prima habere,
to give the first place to, think the most of, Ter. Heaut. 5, 2, 9:otium atque divitiae, quae prima mortales putant,
Sall. C. 36, 4:cura,
a chief part, Plin. 5, 25, 21, § 88.—Also, most conspicuous, chief, in a bad sense:peccatores, quorum primus ego sum,
Vulg. 1 Tim. 1, 15:primas partes, or primas agere,
to play the first part, to occupy the first rank, Ter. Phorm. prol. 27:primas in causis agebat Hortensius,
Cic. Brut. 90, 308; 47: primas dare, to give the first place, ascribe the greatest importance to a thing:actioni primas dedisse Demosthenes dicitur, cum rogaretur, quid in dicendo esset primum: huic secundas, huic tertias,
Cic. de Or. 3, 56, 213: primas deferre, to transfer the first or principal part:amoris erga me tibi primas defero,
i. e. I assign to you the first rank among those who love me, id. Att. 1, 17, 5: primas concedere, to yield the first place:si Allienus tibi primas in dicendo partes concesserit,
id. Div. in Caecil. 15, 49:primas tenere,
to play the first part, be the best, id. Brut. 95, 327: cum primis, and in primis (also written in one word, impri-mis), with or among the first, chiefly, especially, principally, particularly:homo domi suae cum primis locuples,
Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 28, § 69:in primis lautus eques,
Nep. Att. 13, 1:oppidum in primis Siciliae clarum,
Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 35, § 86:homo in primis improbissimus,
id. ib. 2, 3, 27, §68: vir magnus in primis,
id. N. D. 1, 43, 120:in primis hoc a se animadversum esse dicebat,
id. de Or. 3, 5, 17:in primis nobis sermo de te fuit,
id. Att. 5, 1, 3:in primis... dein,
first, in the first place, Sall. J. 26, 3. —Hence, adv., primo and primum; also, ante- and post-class. and very rare, prime and primiter (the form primo is usually limited to that which is strictly first in time; primum in enumerations of contemporary facts, things, or arguments, where the order is at the speaker's choice; cf. Krebs, Antibarb. p. 920 sq.).In gen.:2.aedes primo ruere rebamur,
Plaut. Am. 5, 1, 42:neque credebam primo mihimet Sosiae,
id. ib. 2, 1, 50; Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 9, § 26:primo non accredidit,
Nep. Dat. 3, 4:Themistocles solus primo profectus est,
id. Them. 6, 5:contemptus est primo a tyrannis,
id. Thras. 2, 2; id. Ham. 2, 2.—With dein, deinde, inde, post, postea, mox, denique, nunc:3.primo Stoicorum more agamus, deinde nostro instituto vagabimur,
Cic. Tusc. 3, 6, 13:primo pecuniae, dein imperii cupido crevit,
Sall. C. 10, 3:primo... deinde... tum... tum,
Cic. Fin. 1, 16, 50:primo... deinde,
Liv. 1, 27; Curt. 3, 12, 6; 4, 16, 21; 9, 10, 11:primo abstinentiā utendum: deinde danda, etc.,
Cels. 5, 26, 34:primo... inde,... hinc,
Liv. 30, 11, 6:haec primo paulatim crescere: post, etc.,
Sall. C. 10, 6:dissuadente primo Vercingetorige, post concedente,
Caes. B. G. 7, 15:primo... postea... postremo, etc.,
Liv. 26, 39:primo... mox,
id. 1, 50:primo... mox deinde,
Just. 1, 3:primo negitare, denique saepius fatigatus, etc.,
Sall. J. 111, 2:neque illi credebam primo, nunc vero palam est,
Ter. Hec. 4, 4, 91.—(Mostly post-Aug. for primum.) With iterum, rursus, secundo:B. 1.primo... iterum,
Liv. 2, 51:primo... rursus,
Suet. Aug. 17:primo... secundo,
Phaedr. 4, 10, 16.—In enumerations, with a foll. deinde, tum:2.Caesar primum suo, deinde omnium e conspectu remotis equis,
Caes. B. G. 1, 25:primum... deinde... deinde,
Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 58, § 143:primum... deinde... tum... postremo,
id. N. D. 2, 1, 3:primum... deinde... praeterea... postremo,
id. Div. 2, 56, 116:primum... tum... deinde... post... tum... deinde....,
id. Fin. 5, 23, 65; id. Font. 14, 31; cf.:primum... secundo loco... deinde... tum,
id. Leg. 1, 13, 35; id. Inv. 2, 27, 79; Curt. 3, 6, 16; 8, 10, 9; Liv. 1, 28; Nep. Them. 2, 3; id. Epam. 1, 3:primum... subinde,
Hor. Ep. 1, 8, 15:primum... mox,
id. ib. 2, 2, 93.—Without other adverbs.(α).In gen.:(β).quaerenda pecunia primum est,
Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 53:te Quicumque primum Produxit,
id. C. 2, 13, 2; id. S. 2, 3, 41.—Strengthened with omnium, first of all, Plaut. Truc. 4, 3, 13:3. (α).primum omnium ego ipse vigilo,
Cic. Cat. 2, 9, 19.—Ut primum, ubi primum, simul ac primum, cum primum, as soon as ever, as soon as:(β).ut primum potestas data est augendae dignitatis tuae, etc.,
Cic. Fam. 10, 13, 1:ubi primum potuit, istum reliquit,
id. Verr. 2, 2, 20, § 48:simul ac primum niti possunt, etc.,
id. N. D. 2, 48, 124:tum affuerat, cum primum dati sunt judices,
id. Verr. 2, 2, 23, § 57.—Nunc primum, now first, now for the first time (cf.: nunc demum, now at last):(γ).post illa nunc primum audio, Quid illo sit factum,
Ter. And. 5, 4, 33.—With dum (also by Plaut. joined in one word, pri-mumdum), in the first place, first (anteclass.):(δ).primum dum, si falso insimulas, etc. Iterum si id verum est, etc.,
Plaut. Mil. 2, 3, 26:omnium primumdum haed aedes jam face occlusae sicut,
id. Most. 2, 1, 53; 1, 2, 39; id. Capt. 1, 2, 57:primum dum omnium male dictitatur tibi vulgo in sermonibus,
id. Trin. 1, 2, 61.—With adv. or other expression of time, for the first time:* C.hodie primum ire in ganeum,
Plaut. As. 5, 2, 37:quo die primum convocati su mus,
Cic. Phil. 5, 11, 30.—prīmē, es pecially: fabula prime proba, Naev. ap. Charis. p. 188 P.; cf. Prisc. p. 603 P.—D.prīmĭter, at first, first of all (ante- and post-class.): eripis primiter dapes, Pompon. ap. Non. 154, 26; Inscr. (of the beginning of the third century of Christ) Lab. Epigr. Lat. Scop. in Egitto.
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