-
41 vorbeigehen
v/i (unreg., trennb., ist -ge-)1. pass, go past (an etw. / jemandem s.th. / s.o.); im Vorbeigehen in passing; vorbeigehen an (+ Dat) fig. (nicht beachten) pass s.th. by; unabsichtlich: miss; das muss an mir vorbeigegangen sein umg. it must have passed me by; an jemandem vorbeigehen SPORT go ( oder get) past s.o.2. Schuss etc.: miss (the mark)4. umg.: beim Arzt / irgendwo vorbeigehen drop in at the doctor’s / somewhere* * *(passieren) to pass; to pass by; to go past;(verfehlen) to miss;(vergehen) to go away; to pass; to pass by* * *vor|bei|ge|henvi sep irreg aux sein1) (lit, fig) (an jdm/etw sb/sth) to go past or by, to passbei jdm vorbéígehen (inf) — to drop or call in on sb, to stop or drop by sb's house (inf)
eine Gelegenheit vorbéígehen lassen — to let an opportunity pass by or slip by
an der Wirklichkeit vorbéígehen (Bericht etc) — to miss the truth; (Mensch) to be unrealistic
im Vorbeigehen (lit, fig) — in passing
2) (= vergehen) to pass; (Laune, Zorn) to blow over, to pass3) (= danebengehen) to miss (an etw (dat) sth)* * *1) (to pass: Time goes quickly when you are enjoying yourself.) go2) (to move towards and then beyond (something, by going past, through, by, over etc): I pass the shops on my way to work; The procession passed along the corridor.) pass* * *vor·bei|ge·hen[fo:ɐ̯ˈbaige:ən]vi irreg Hilfsverb: sein1. (vorübergehen) to go past [or by]▪ [an jdm/etw] \vorbeigehen to go past [sb/sth]sie ging dicht an uns vorbei, erkannte uns aber nicht she walked right past us, but didn't recognize user ging an den Schönheiten der Natur vorbei he walked past the things of natural beauty; (überholen) to overtakeder Russe geht an dem Briten vorbei the Russian is overtaking the Briton; (danebengehen) to miss [sb/sth]du musst genau zielen, sonst geht der Schuss am Ziel vorbei you must aim accurately, otherwise your shot will miss the target▪ im V\vorbeigehen in passingim V\vorbeigehen konnte ich nichts Ungewöhnliches feststellen I didn't notice anything unusual in passing▪ [bei jdm/etw] \vorbeigehen to call [or drop] in [at sb's/sth]gehe doch bitte auf dem Rückweg bei der Apotheke vorbei please could you drop in at the chemist's on the way back3. (vergehen)▪ etw geht vorbei sth passesirgendwann geht die Enttäuschung vorbei the disappointment will pass sometime or otherkeine Gelegenheit ungenutzt \vorbeigehen lassen (fig) to not let an opportunity slip [or pass]* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) pass; go pastan jemandem/etwas vorbeigehen — pass somebody/something go past somebody/something
2)[bei jemandem/der Post] vorbeigehen — (ugs.) drop in (coll.) [at somebody's/at the post office]
3) (nicht treffen) missam Ziel vorbeigehen — miss its mark or target
4) (vergehen) pass* * *vorbeigehen v/i (irr, trennb, ist -ge-)1. pass, go past (an etwas/jemandem sth/sb);im Vorbeigehen in passing;das muss an mir vorbeigegangen sein umg it must have passed me by;2. Schuss etc: miss (the mark)4. umg:beim Arzt/irgendwo vorbeigehen drop in at the doctor’s/somewhere* * *unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb; mit sein1) pass; go pastan jemandem/etwas vorbeigehen — pass somebody/something go past somebody/something
2)[bei jemandem/der Post] vorbeigehen — (ugs.) drop in (coll.) [at somebody's/at the post office]
3) (nicht treffen) missam Ziel vorbeigehen — miss its mark or target
4) (vergehen) pass* * *(an) v.to pass (by) v. v.to pass by v. -
42 Magister
Ma·gis·ter, Ma·gis·tra <-s, -> [maʼgɪstɐ, maʼgɪstra] m, f2) ( Inhaber des Universitätsgrades) Master\Magister [pharmaciae] Master of Pharmacy¿Kultur?The Magister Artium is the most commonly awarded degree in the humanities and social sciences. Only certain combinations of major and minor subjects are permitted in a Magister course of study, generally either two majors or one major and two minors may be combined.The introduction of the Bachelor and Master degrees a few years ago started a small revolution at German universities. The programmes give students the opportunity to complete their education quickly, and move on into the working world.
См. также в других словарях:
quickly — quick|ly [ kwıkli ] adverb *** 1. ) at a fast speed: She went quickly out of the room. We have to work quickly. 2. ) after only a short time: Our suspicions were quickly proved accurate. Something has to be done about this quickly. 3. ) lasting… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
quickly */*/*/ — UK [ˈkwɪklɪ] / US adverb 1) at a fast speed She went quickly out of the room. We have to work quickly. 2) after only a short time Our suspicions were quickly proved accurate. Something has to be done about this quickly. 3) lasting only a short… … English dictionary
quickly*/*/*/ — [ˈkwɪkli] adv 1) at a fast speed We have to work quickly.[/ex] She walked quickly out of the room.[/ex] 2) after only a short time, or lasting only a short time Something has to be done about this quickly.[/ex] Let me explain very quickly what I… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
work — [wʉrk] n. [ME werk < OE weorc, akin to Ger werk < IE base * werĝ , to do, act > Gr ergon (for * wergon), action, work, organon, tool, instrument] 1. physical or mental effort exerted to do or make something; purposeful activity; labor;… … English World dictionary
work-to-rule — ˌwork to ˈrule , ˌwork to ˈcontract noun [singular] HUMAN RESOURCES an occasion when people protest about a situation at work by doing their job less quickly or effectively, but without breaking their employer s rules or the terms of their… … Financial and business terms
Work Activity Management — (WAM) is the process of creating, delegating and tracking the progress of multiple tasks to completion. It is the next step in the form of project management, which is described as “the discipline of organizing and managing resources in such a… … Wikipedia
work|man — «WURK muhn», noun, plural men. 1. a man who works with his hands or with machines: »The plumbers, carpenters, and other workmen finished the new house quickly. 2. = worker (def. 2). (Cf. ↑worker) … Useful english dictionary
work — [[t]wɜ͟ː(r)k[/t]] ♦ works, working, worked 1) VERB People who work have a job, usually one which they are paid to do. [V prep/adv] Weiner works for the US Department of Transport... [V prep/adv] I started working in a recording studio... [V… … English dictionary
work — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 effort/product of effort ADJECTIVE ▪ hard ▪ It s hard work trying to get him to do a few things for himself. ▪ It doesn t require skill it s a matter of sheer hard work. ▪ arduous, back breakin … Collocations dictionary
work — work1 W1S1 [wə:k US wə:rk] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(do a job for money)¦ 2¦(do your job)¦ 3¦(help)¦ 4¦(do an activity)¦ 5¦(try to achieve something)¦ 6¦(machine/equipment)¦ 7¦(be effective/successful)¦ 8¦(have an effect)¦ 9¦(art/style/literature)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
work — I n. labor 1) to do work (they never do any work) 2) to begin; quit, stop work (they quit work at one o clock) 3) to take on work 4) to undo smb. s work 5) backbreaking, hard; delicate; demanding; dirty, scut; easy, light; exhausting, tiring;… … Combinatory dictionary