Перевод: со всех языков на все языки

со всех языков на все языки

worn+by+soldier

  • 21 gammel

    старый, -ая
    -t, gamle
    * * *
    * * *
    adj. old adj. [ som har bestått lenge] of long standing, old (f.eks.

    an old acquaintance, friendship

    ) adj. [ av en viss alder] old (f.eks.

    how old is he?, two years old, hundreds of years old

    ) adj. (nedsettende) [ umoderne] obsolete, antiquated, out-of-date, outmoded, (slang) funky adj. [ av en høy alder] old (f.eks.

    old buildings, an old hat, man, newspaper

    ), (om personer også) aged adj. [forhenværende, tidligere] old (f.eks.

    my old teacher, she is an old flame of mine

    ) adj. [ eksistert lenge] old-established adj. [ fra en periode for lenge siden] ancient (f.eks.

    the ancient Romans, Greeks, Egyptians, the ancient cultures of the Mediterranean

    ) adj. [ brukt] second-hand (f.eks.

    clothes, cars

    ) adj. [ avlagt] old, cast-off, discarded (f.eks.

    clothes

    ) adj. [erfaren. øvet] old, veteran (f.eks.

    an old soldier, a veteran diplomatist

    ) adj. [ forslitt] trite (f.eks.

    jokes, tricks

    ), stale adj. [ slitt] worn adj. [ foreldet] antiquated, archaic, obsolete (f.eks.

    expressions

    ), out-of-date (f.eks.

    fashions

    ) adj. [ antikk] antique (f.eks.

    chairs

    ) adj. [ rotfestet] old, inveterate, deep-rooted (f.eks.

    beliefs, hatred

    ) adj. [motsatt av fersk, frisk] stale (f.eks.

    bread, beer, milk

    )

    Norsk-engelsk ordbok > gammel

  • 22 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) hermanna-/lögreglujakki
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) kyrtill
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) mussa

    English-Icelandic dictionary > tunic

  • 23 tunic

    tunika, katonazubbony
    * * *
    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) zubbony
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunika

    English-Hungarian dictionary > tunic

  • 24 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) túnica
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) túnica
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) túnica
    * * *
    tu.nic
    [tj'u:nik] n 1 túnica: vestuário antigo. 2 Mil túnica dos militares. 3 Bot, Med túnica, membrana.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > tunic

  • 25 tunic

    n. tünik, ceket (uzun), gömlek [bot.], tohum zarfı
    * * *
    tunik
    * * *
    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) asker/polis ceketi
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tünik
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tünik, kısa ceket

    English-Turkish dictionary > tunic

  • 26 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) vojaška bluza
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunika
    * * *
    [tjú:nik]
    noun
    history tunika; British English military vojaška bluza; (daljša) ženska jopa; (ženska) vrhnja obleka; anatomy zoology botany opna, kožica

    English-Slovenian dictionary > tunic

  • 27 tunic

    • tunika
    • asetakki
    geology
    • vaippa
    medicine, veterinary
    • kalvo
    • takki
    • pitkä pusero
    * * *
    'tju:nik
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) takki
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunika

    English-Finnish dictionary > tunic

  • 28 emeritus

    I
    emerita, emeritum ADJ
    past service, worn/burnt out, unfit; veteran; that has finished work; deserving
    II
    discharged veteran, soldier who has completed his service, exempt; retired man

    Latin-English dictionary > emeritus

  • 29 tunic

    ['tjuːnɪk]
    n
    * * *
    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) kurtka mundurowa
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunika

    English-Polish dictionary > tunic

  • 30 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) mundieris
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunika
    * * *
    tunika; mundieris; apvalks

    English-Latvian dictionary > tunic

  • 31 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) munduras
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunika

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > tunic

  • 32 tunic

    n. tunika (skjorta för kvinnor; kort klädesplagg för män i Rom och det antika Grekland); membran, hinna (inom anatomi och biologi)
    * * *
    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) vapenrock, uniformskavaj
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunik

    English-Swedish dictionary > tunic

  • 33 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) blůza
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunika
    * * *
    • tunika

    English-Czech dictionary > tunic

  • 34 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) blúza
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunika
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunika, blúzka
    * * *
    • tunika
    • blúzka
    • blúza (voj.)

    English-Slovak dictionary > tunic

  • 35 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) tunică
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) tunică
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) tunică

    English-Romanian dictionary > tunic

  • 36 patte

    n. f.
    1. 'Pin', 'gamb', leg. Aller à pattes: To 'hoof it', to have to walk. Aux pattes! (Let's) scram! Ne pas être solide sur ses pattes: To be unsteady on one's pins. Tirer la patte: To limp.
    2. En avoir plein les pattes: To be 'all-in', to feel worn-out.
    3. Ça ne casse pas quatre pattes à un canard! (joc. & iron.): It's no great shakes! — I don't rate it very highly!
    4. Lever la patte (of man):
      a To have a 'slash', to urinate (literally to cock a leg).
      b To get a 'leg-over', to 'screw', to have coition.
    5. Marcher sur trois pattes (of conventional motor car): To fire on only three cylinders. (An offspring of the above literal meaning, the figurative describes a venture or undertaking that is not running smoothly.)
    6. Traîner la patte: To 'come the old soldier' (literally to exaggerate a limp in order to get compassion).
      a To 'put a spoke in someone's wheel', to hamper someone's progress.
      b To 'stab someone in the back', to speak ill of someone.
    8. Etre fait aux pattes (also: se faire faire aux pattes): To get 'nabbed', to be 'collared', to get arrested.
    9. 'Mitt', 'paw', hand. Arriver les pattes vides: To come empty-handed. Bas les pattes! (Woman's retort): Stop pawing! — Keep your hands to yourself!
    10. Faire patte de velours (fig.): To 'draw in one's claws', to be extra gentle with someone.
    11. Faire ( des) pattes d'araignée à quelqu'un: To 'goose', to caress lightly with nails and fingertips.
    12. Faire des pattes de mouche: To write in a spidery script.
    13. Graisser la patte à quelqu'un: To 'grease someone's palm', to bribe someone.
    14. Faire quelque chose aux pattes: To 'lift', to 'pinch' something.
    15. Avoir le coup de patte: To 'have the knack', to be skilful at something.
    16. Pattes de lapin (Hairstyle): Short sideboards.
    17. Feet (without colloquial overtones). Retomber sur ses pattes:
      a To 'fall on one's feet', to come off better than one might have expected.
      b To 'get offscot-free', to escape ill-fate or retribution, sometimes through good fortune, but more often than not through connivance.
    18. Se fourrer dans les pattes de quelqu'un: To disturb someone (literally to get in someone's way).
    19. Mettre une affaire sur pattes: To start up a business, to get an enterprise under way.
      20 Avoir des pattes d'oie: To have 'crow's feet', 'laugh-lines', to have wrinkles around the eyes.

    Dictionary of Modern Colloquial French > patte

  • 37 tunic

    ['tju:nik]
    1) (a soldier's or policeman's jacket.) χιτώνιο
    2) (a loose garment worn especially in ancient Greece and Rome.) χιτώνας
    3) (a similar type of modern garment.) τουνίκ, ριχτή μπλούζα

    English-Greek dictionary > tunic

  • 38 caliga

    călĭga, ae, f. [cf. calceus, from calx], a shoe of leather, esp. that worn by the Roman soldiers (cf. Dio, 48, 12; Smith, Antiq., and Becker, Gall. III. p. 134, 2d ed.), a half-boot, a soldier ' s boot.
    I.
    Lit., *Cic. Att. 2, 3, 1; Just. 38, 10, 3; * Suet. Calig. 52; * Juv. 16, 24; Edict. Diocl. p. 241.—
    II.
    Meton., military service, Plin. 7, 43, 44, § 135; Sen. Brev. Vit. 17, 6; id. Ben. 5, 16, 2; Inscr. Grut. 445, 9.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > caliga

  • 39 emereo

    ē-mĕrĕo, ŭi, ĭtum, 2, v. a., and (perh. not ante-Aug.) ē-mĕrĕor, ĭtus, 2, v. dep. a.
    I. A.
    In gen. (rare;

    not in Cic.): quid ego emerui mali?

    Plaut. Aul. 4, 10, 5:

    honores,

    Prop. 4 (5), 11, 61:

    mihi altior sollicitudo, quale judicium hominum, emererer, accessit,

    Quint. 4, prooem. § 1; cf.:

    emerendi favoris gratia canunt,

    id. 4, 1, 2: pecuniam ex eo quaestu uberem, Gell, 6, 7, 5.— Poet., with inf. clause as object:

    Ennius emeruit Contiguus poni, Scipio magne, tibi,

    Ov. A. A. 3, 410; cf. id. F. 4, 58.— Pass., in the part. perf.:

    emerito caput insere caelo,

    Sil. 7, 19; so id. 11, 464; Sid. Carm. 2, 209.—
    B.
    In Tib. and Ov. emerere aliquem, like demereri aliquem, to gain the favor of any one, to deserve well of, to lay under obligation:

    viros,

    Tib. 1, 9, 60; Ov. Tr. 4, 8, 52; id. Am. 2, 8, 24; id. Her. 6, 138.—Far more frequent,
    II.
    To serve out, complete one's term of service.
    A.
    Prop., in milit. lang.:

    spes emerendi stipendia,

    Liv. 25, 6; in part. perf.:

    emerita stipendia,

    Sall. J. 84, 2 Kritz.; Cic. de Sen. 14, 49; Liv. 3, 57; 21, 43 al.:

    militia,

    Suet. Calig. 44:

    arma,

    Plin. Pan. 15, 3:

    anni,

    Ov. Tr. 4, 8, 21; cf. id. F. 3, 43.—As a v. dep.:

    stipendia emeritus,

    Val. Max. 6, 1, 10.—Hence, subst. ēmĕrĭ-tus, i, m., a soldier who has served out his time, a veteran, an exempt, Tac. A. 1, 28; Suet. Aug. 24; Luc. 1, 344 al.—
    B.
    Transf. beyond the milit. sphere:

    annuum tempus (sc. magistratus) emeritum habere,

    Cic. Att. 6, 5, 3; cf.:

    annuae operae emerentur,

    id. ib. 6, 2, 6:

    spatium juventae (homo) transit, et emeritis medii quoque temporis annis, etc.,

    Ov. M. 15, 226.—In part. perf.: emeritus, a, um (since the Aug. per. in the mid. signif.), that has become unfit for service, worn out:

    equi,

    Ov. F. 4, 688; cf.:

    apes fessae et jam emeritae,

    Plin. 11, 11, 11, § 27; so,

    palmes,

    id. 17, 23, 35, § 206:

    aratrum,

    Ov. F. 1, 665:

    latus (with invalidum),

    id. Am. 3, 11, 14:

    acus,

    Juv. 6, 498:

    rogus,

    i. e. burned out, extinguished, Prop. 4 (5), 11, 72.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > emereo

  • 40 emereor

    ē-mĕrĕo, ŭi, ĭtum, 2, v. a., and (perh. not ante-Aug.) ē-mĕrĕor, ĭtus, 2, v. dep. a.
    I. A.
    In gen. (rare;

    not in Cic.): quid ego emerui mali?

    Plaut. Aul. 4, 10, 5:

    honores,

    Prop. 4 (5), 11, 61:

    mihi altior sollicitudo, quale judicium hominum, emererer, accessit,

    Quint. 4, prooem. § 1; cf.:

    emerendi favoris gratia canunt,

    id. 4, 1, 2: pecuniam ex eo quaestu uberem, Gell, 6, 7, 5.— Poet., with inf. clause as object:

    Ennius emeruit Contiguus poni, Scipio magne, tibi,

    Ov. A. A. 3, 410; cf. id. F. 4, 58.— Pass., in the part. perf.:

    emerito caput insere caelo,

    Sil. 7, 19; so id. 11, 464; Sid. Carm. 2, 209.—
    B.
    In Tib. and Ov. emerere aliquem, like demereri aliquem, to gain the favor of any one, to deserve well of, to lay under obligation:

    viros,

    Tib. 1, 9, 60; Ov. Tr. 4, 8, 52; id. Am. 2, 8, 24; id. Her. 6, 138.—Far more frequent,
    II.
    To serve out, complete one's term of service.
    A.
    Prop., in milit. lang.:

    spes emerendi stipendia,

    Liv. 25, 6; in part. perf.:

    emerita stipendia,

    Sall. J. 84, 2 Kritz.; Cic. de Sen. 14, 49; Liv. 3, 57; 21, 43 al.:

    militia,

    Suet. Calig. 44:

    arma,

    Plin. Pan. 15, 3:

    anni,

    Ov. Tr. 4, 8, 21; cf. id. F. 3, 43.—As a v. dep.:

    stipendia emeritus,

    Val. Max. 6, 1, 10.—Hence, subst. ēmĕrĭ-tus, i, m., a soldier who has served out his time, a veteran, an exempt, Tac. A. 1, 28; Suet. Aug. 24; Luc. 1, 344 al.—
    B.
    Transf. beyond the milit. sphere:

    annuum tempus (sc. magistratus) emeritum habere,

    Cic. Att. 6, 5, 3; cf.:

    annuae operae emerentur,

    id. ib. 6, 2, 6:

    spatium juventae (homo) transit, et emeritis medii quoque temporis annis, etc.,

    Ov. M. 15, 226.—In part. perf.: emeritus, a, um (since the Aug. per. in the mid. signif.), that has become unfit for service, worn out:

    equi,

    Ov. F. 4, 688; cf.:

    apes fessae et jam emeritae,

    Plin. 11, 11, 11, § 27; so,

    palmes,

    id. 17, 23, 35, § 206:

    aratrum,

    Ov. F. 1, 665:

    latus (with invalidum),

    id. Am. 3, 11, 14:

    acus,

    Juv. 6, 498:

    rogus,

    i. e. burned out, extinguished, Prop. 4 (5), 11, 72.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > emereor

См. также в других словарях:

  • Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Guard Identification Badge — Infobox Military Award name= Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Guard Identification Badge caption= awarded by= United States Army type= military badge eligibility= Members of the Honor Guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier for= campaign= status=… …   Wikipedia

  • Mounted Soldier System — The Mounted Soldier System is standard wear for ground vehicle crew members. The Mounted Soldier System (MSS) or Ground Warrior is a combat vehicle crewman ensemble integrating advanced gear as an effective force multiplier in combat theater.[1] …   Wikipedia

  • Maryland National Guard Outstanding Soldier/Airman/First Sergeant of the Year Ribbon — Awarded to those individuals nominated for the Maryland Army National Guard Outstanding Soldier of the Year at the state level or the Maryland Air National Guard Outstanding Airman at the wing level and interviewed by the selection board. It is… …   Wikipedia

  • James Graham (soldier) — Infobox Military Person name=James Graham caption= born=1791 died=28 April 1845 placeofbirth=County Monaghan, Ireland placeofdeath=Royal Hospital, Kilmainham nickname= allegiance=United Kingdom branch=British Army serviceyears=1813–1830… …   Wikipedia

  • David Humphreys (soldier) — Col. David Humphreys, painted by Gilbert Stuart. Yale University Art Gallery David Humphreys (July 10, 1752 – February 21, 1818) was a American Revolutionary War colonel and aide de camp to George Washington, American minister to Portugal and… …   Wikipedia

  • Matthew Locke (soldier) — Matthew Raymond Locke MG Sergeant Matthew Locke MG Born 16 March 1974(1974 03 16) Bellingen, New South Wales …   Wikipedia

  • Distinctive unit insignia (U.S. Army) — A Distinctive Unit Insignia (DUI) is a metal heraldic device worn by soldiers in the United States Army. The DUI design is derived from the coat of arms authorized for a unit. DUIs may also be called distinctive insignia (DI), a crest or a unit… …   Wikipedia

  • Maroon beret — Soldier from 21 (Gibraltar 1779–83) Air Assault Battery RA(serving with 16th Air Assault Brigade) The maroon beret is a military beret and has been an international symbol of elite airborne forces since it was chosen for British airborne forces… …   Wikipedia

  • Military uniform — This article is about standardised military dress. For military protective clothing, see Armour. French, Belgian, Portuguese, Indonesian and Indian military personnel in uniform during a parade in Rome, Italy Military uniforms comprises… …   Wikipedia

  • Dog tag — This article is about identification tags worn by military personnel. For the identifying tag worn by pets, see pet tag. For 2008 film, see Dog Tags (film). For other uses of Dog tag , see Dog tag (disambiguation). A pair of blank dog tags on a… …   Wikipedia

  • British Army uniform — currently exists in several grades, which are worn depending on the requirements of a unit or individual, ranging from ceremonial uniforms to combat dress. Full dress Home Service helmet, with the cap badge of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical… …   Wikipedia

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»