Lesen 2, S. 78,79 + AB Flashcards
concern n
interest n
seltener:
interests pl · concerns pl · importance n · relevance n · issue n · significance n
Belang Substantiv, maskulin
___ Belang
der, e
unsettling adj
seltener:
disconcerting adj · disruptive adj · disquieting adj
unsettle v (unsettled, unsettled)
verstörend Adjektiv / Partizip Präsens
„verstörend” könnte Partizip I sein von
verstören Verb
Der schlechte Traum verstörte den kleinen Jungen.
The bad dream unsettled the little boy.
un‧set‧tling / ʌnsetlɪŋ / adjective
making you feel nervous or worried :
an unsettling experience
affronted p-II
vor den Kopf gestoßen Partizip Perfekt
Siehe auch:
vor den Kopf stoßend p-I—affronting p-I
vor den Kopf stoßen v —affront v · snub sb. v
af‧front 1 / əfrʌnt / verb [ transitive usually passive ] formal
to offend or insult someone, especially by not showing respect :
He stepped back, affronted by the question.
affront v (affronted, affronted)
seltener:
snub sb. v
affronted p-II
affronting p-I
vor den Kopf stoßen Verb
vor den Kopf gestoßen Partizip Perfekt
vor den Kopf stoßend Partizip Präsens
snub 1 / snʌb / verb ( past tense and past participle snubbed , present participle snubbing ) [ transitive ]
to treat someone rudely, especially by ignoring them when you meet :
the boys who had snubbed her in high school
fellow student n
Kommilitone Substantiv, maskulin
___ Kommilitone
der, n
figure sth. out v
find out v
seltener:
glean sth. v [fig.] · solve v · get sth. out v · suss out sth.BE v [ugs.] · suss sth. out v
figured out p-II · gleaned p-II · sussed p-II · sussed out p-II · got out p-II
herausbekommen (etw.Akk ~) Verb
Ich versuchte, die Bedeutung des Sprichwortes herauszubekommen.
I tried to figure out the meaning of the proverb.
herausbekommen Partizip Perfekt
Beispiele:
Ich kann den Kniff nicht herausbekommen.—I can’t get the knack of it.
___ Programm
das
matter v
darauf ankommen Verb
Beispiele:
Lass es nicht darauf ankommen! [Redew.]—Don’t push your luck! [Redew.]
Er ließ es darauf ankommen.—He took his chance.
Er lässt es darauf ankommen.—He’ll take the chance.
es darauf ankommen lassen v—take the chance v · chance it
věc
Wenn es darauf ankommt… → Když přijde na věc…
boundary condition n (meistens verwendet)
seltener:
constraint n · marginal condition n · limiting condition n · edge condition n
Randbedingung Substantiv, feminin
Beispiele:
weitere Randbedingung f—further constraint n
bound‧a‧ry / baʊnd ə ri / noun ( plural boundaries )
1 [ countable ] the real or imaginary line that marks the edge of a state, country etc, or the edge of an area of land that belongs to someone
boundary between
The Mississippi River forms a natural boundary between Iowa and Illinois.
National boundaries are becoming increasingly meaningless in the global economy.
We would need their agreement to build outside the city boundary .
The stream curves round to mark the boundary of his property.
Anything that crosses the boundary of a black hole cannot get back.
We walked through the churchyard towards the boundary wall .
The property’s boundary line is 25 feet from the back of the house.
boundary disputes between neighbouring countries
2 [ countable usually plural ] the limit of what is acceptable or thought to be possible
boundary of
the boundaries of human knowledge
within/beyond the boundaries of something
within the boundaries of the law
push back the boundaries (of something) (= to make a new discovery, work of art etc that is very different from what people have known before, and that changes the way they think )
art that pushes back the boundaries
3 [ countable ] the point at which one feeling, idea, quality etc stops and another starts
boundary of/between
the boundaries between work and play
the blurring of the boundaries between high and popular culture
4 [ countable ] the outer limit of the playing area in cricket , or a shot that sends the ball across this limit for extra points
___ Randbedingung
die
appropriate adj
accordingly adv
correspondingly adv
thus adv
seltener:
according to this adv · to that effect adv
dementsprechend Adjektiv
dementsprechend Adverb
Als die Produktionskosten stiegen, wurden die Preise dementsprechend angepasst.
When production costs increased, the prices were adjusted accordingly.
Ich habe meine Position sehr deutlich gemacht und dementsprechend gehandelt.
I made my position very clear and acted accordingly.
Als die Produktionskosten sich erhöhten, stieg dementsprechend auch der Preis.
When production costs increased, the price went up correspondingly.
Die Firma verkaufte mehr Produkte und erzielte dementsprechend mehr Gewinn.
The company sold more products, thus making higher profits.
Beispiele:
dementsprechend handeln v—act accordingly v
dementsprechend reagieren v—act accordingly v
dementsprechend ausgelegt—construed accordingly
dementsprechend benachrichtigen v—advise accordingly v
Verweisrwörter
Um Sätze zu kohärenten, logisch aufgebauten und stilistisch guten Texten zu verbinden, gibt es Verweiswörter.
Hier werden auch mehr Fragen in den Vorlesungen gestellt.
Verweiswörter
DAS kannte ich so nicht.
In Deutschland kommt es darauf an, dass man einen Überblick über ein Thema bekommt.
Verweiswörter
DEM stimme ich zu.
Meistens gehe ich mit Fragen zu den Mitarbeitern des Fachbereichs.
Verweiswörter
DA habe ich immer Ansprechpartner gefunden.
In Belgrad studieren wir fast nie im Semester.
Verweiswörter
STATTDESSEN (DAFÜR) lernen wir in den Ferien umso mehr.
Ich finde das Studium ziemlich anstrengend.
Verweiswörter
DADURCH bleibt leider wenig Energie für anderes.
Leider bleibt keine Zeit, Fachzeitschriften zu lesen.
Verweiswörter
DEMENTSPRECHEND (INFOLGEDESSEN, DEMZUFOLGE) ist man fachlich nicht auf den neusten Stand.
cram v (crammed, crammed)
seltener:
read up v · bone up v · swotBE v [ugs.]
pauken Verb [ugs.]
Der Schüler paukt für die Prüfung.
The pupil is cramming for the exam.
Beispiele:
Mathe pauken v—bone up on maths v · swot up on one’s maths v
jdn. mit Pauken und Trompeten empfangen v [fig.]—roll out the red carpet for sb. v [fig.]
cram / kræm / verb ( past tense and past participle crammed , present participle cramming )
1 [ transitive always + adverb/preposition ] to force something into a small space
cram something into/onto etc something
Jill crammed her clothes into the bag.
A lot of information has been crammed into this book.
2 [ intransitive always + adverb/preposition ] if a lot of people cram into a place or vehicle, they go into it so it is then full
cram in/into
We all crammed in and Pete started the car.
36,000 spectators crammed into the stadium to see the game.
3 [ transitive ] especially American English if a lot of people cram a place, they fill it :
Thousands of people crammed the mall Sunday.
4 [ intransitive ] to prepare yourself for an examination by learning a lot of information quickly SYN swot British English :
She’s been cramming hard all week.
cram for
I have to cram for my chemistry test tomorrow.
cram something ↔ in ( also cram something into something ) phrasal verb
to do a lot of activities in a short period of time SYN pack in :
We crammed in as much sightseeing as possible during our stay in New York.