Аннотация: БИБЛЕИЗМЫ (с примерами) и их русские соответствия The apple of smb"s eye - зеница ока George was the apple of his father"s eye (W.S. Maugham) Источник: http://youreng.narod.ru/god.html
БИБЛЕИЗМЫ
The apple of smb's eye - зеницаока George was the apple of his father's eye (W.S. Maugham)
Ask for bread and be given a stone - (по)проситьхлеба, аполучитькамень Nurse. Yes, I loved him. My love grew as I saw yours fade... He asked for bread and you gave him a stone (W.S. Maugham)
As the sparks fly upward - неотвратимо, неизбежно; народунаписано Some people are born to trouble, Charlie - born to trouble as the sparks fly upward (F. Norris)
At the eleventh hour - впоследнююминуту, всамыйпоследниймомент And early in October came the great drive of the Germans towards Antwerp... Mr. Van der Pant had escaped at the eleventh hour (H.G. Wells)
At the parting of the ways - нараспутье Edwin Drood stands at the parting of the ways between the early Victorian and the modern attitude to murder in literature (V.S. Pritchett). All right, sister, you're at the parting of the ways. Either identify this guy or get hooked as an accessory (E.S. Gardner)
Babes and sucklings - новички, совершеннонеопытныелюди, сущиемладенцы (ср: молоконагубахнеобсохло) Certainly we write not for babes and sucklongs but for the world at large (Morning Star)
Be a law into/unto oneself - житьпособственнымзаконам, нисчемнесчитаться, кромесобственногомнения, идтинаперекортрадициям, обычаям, общепринятымнормам (ср: самсебезакон) The Chevenix-Gores are all arrogant as the devil - a law into themselves (A. Christie) Gramps has always been a law unto himself. Heaven knows what he'll do (E.S. Gardner)
Be all things to all men - старатьсяугодитьвсемикаждому Hampton was too theatrical, and all things to all men. He was not quite a gentleman (W. Du Bois). In his campaign Jones has tried to appeal to every conceivable group of voters; he'll soon discover that no candidate can be all things to all men
Bear/carry one's/the cross - нестисвойкрест; безропотнопереноситьвсепревратностисудьбы However, I must bear my cross as best I may: least said is soonest mended (G.B. Shaw)
Beat swords into ploughshares - перековатьмечинаорала, перейтикмирномутруду `Beat Swords Into Ploughshares' is the motto of the day reflecting the ... people's will to peace (New World Review)
Be in deep water(s) - находитьсявтяжелом, затруднительномилиопасномположении With a cunning worthy of her cause, she waited till he was in deep water over British politics (J.Galsworthy)
A broken reed - человек, накоторогонельзяположиться, ненадежныйчеловек; нечтоневнушающеедоверия He feared lest Pongo, when it came to the pinch, might prove a broken reed (P.G. Wodehouse)
By/with the skin of one's teeth - едва, еле-еле, чудом She came tearing up in a taxicab and barely caught the bus by the skin of her teeth at Bakersfield (E.S. Gardner)/ They felt like men who with the skin of their teeth have escaped a sudden and violent death (W.S. Maugham)
By the sweat of one's brow - в поте лица (своего) The peoples of all countries are not rich and the aristocratic - they are the common people, those who earn their bread by the sweat of their brows (G. Green)
Cast the first stone at smb. - броситьпервыйкаменьвкого-либо They condemned her unanimously, and each and every crowded forward to cast the first stone, lest it might be thought that there was even one among them not without sin (R. Aldington)
Change one's spots - изменитьсядонеузнаваемости, изменитьсвоюприроду I'm a coward. You cnnot expect me to change my spots to soon (Gr. Greene). `And you reckon he's using the same tactics now.' `Leopards,' said Hodge. `Leopards? Don't change their bleeding spots' (Th. Sharpe)
Chapter and verse - точнаяссылка Any books there were came from... the public library except for `The Old Curiosity Shop', and `David Copperfield', which the read, as people used to read the Bible, over and over again till he could have quoted chapter and verse (Gr. Greene). You must give me chapter and verse for your charge that he has been stealing. What exactly has he taken and when did it happen?
Clean hands - "чистыеруки", незапятнаннаярепутация, честность Lady Wanley. Are you ready still for any adventure that comes your way? Jack Straw. So long as I can do it with clean hands (W. S. Maugham)
Come to pass - произойти, иметь место What Captain Bulter... had anticipated, actually came to pass (W. S. Maugham). The epidemics of influenza which came to pass before I was thirteen brought death to members of many families I knew (W. Saroyan)
One's countenance/face fell - он (она, ит.д.) поник(ла) головой, унего (нее) физиономиявытянулась His face feel, and in bitter disappointment he sank heavily into a chair (W. S. Maugham)
The crumbs which fell from the rich man's table - крохисбарскогостола `Rhett, you are nice.' `Thanks for the crumbs from tour table' (M. Mitchell)
Cry/proclaim/shout from (proclaim upon) the house(-)tops - провозглашатьвовсеуслышание; кричатьнавсехперекрестках I tell you I'm proud of them, so proud that I could shout it from the house-tops (N. Coward)
Daily bread - хлеб насущный, кусок хлеба, средства к существованию How to earn daily bread by my pen was then the problem (G. B. Shaw)
David and Jonathan - ДэвидиИонафан, неразлучныедрузья The affection of Damon and Pythias or that of David and Jonathan is not a circumstance to the love of the white Republican for the negro while the ballots are going on
Dig a pit for oneself/smb. (dig one's own grave/the grave of smb.) - самомусебе/другомумогилурыть, самогосебяугробить (угробить, погубитького-либо) I strongly object to the type of paper where examinees, instead of being given a straightforward chance to show what they do know, have a pit dug for them in every question. `And I don't like Glaushof,' said the Colonel... `Let him dig his own grave' (Th. Sharpe)
A doubting Thomas - Фоманеверный (разг: неверующий), человек, котороготруднозаставитьповеритьчему-либо, скептик He was neither very happy nor very unhappy - a doubting Thomas without faith or hope in humanity, and without any particular affection for anybody (Th. Dreiser)
Drain/drink the cup (of bitterness, humiliation, etc) to the dregs - испитьчашу (горечи, униженияит.п.) додна He must drain this cup too: must face, accept this last ultimate useless and reasonless risk (W. Faulkner). Checco walked through with set face, very pale. We asked him to turn back, but he refused, slackening his pace to prolong the walk, as it gave him a certain painful pleasure to drain the cup of bitterness to the dregs (W. S. Maugham). She despised herself when she remembered the utter self-abasement of the past. `He made me drink the cup of humiliation to the very dregs' (W. S. Maugham)
Draw a bow at a venture - сказатьчто-либонаугад, наудачу He said: `What is the fishing like round here?' And added drawing a bow at a venture, `It should be good' (A. Powell)
A drop in the bucket/ocean - каплявморе The House is aware that experiments in this direction have already been made, with conspicuous success, but such experiments are but drop in the bucket (J. Glasworthy). `He'll get a country grant,' Mor mumbled... `You know as well as I do... that a country grant is a drop in the ocean' (J. Murdoch)
Dust and ashes - прахитлен, тленисуета (выражаетгорькоеразочарование, мысльоничтожности, бренности, недолговечностичего-либо) Hate him she did not quite; but he was dust and a ashes to her, and even for her name's sake she scarcely wished to marry him (Th. Hardy). But be sure of this, Count Styptich will be remembered long after you and I are dust and ashes (A. Christie). You said to me once that life without me was dust and ashes to you (A. Christie).
Eat one's words - взятьназадсвоислова, взятьсвоисловаобратно `I beg your pardon! I never meant to hurt you. It isn't easy for me to eat my words,' Mr. Treffry said wistfully (J. Glasworthy)
Enough and to spare - болеечемдостаточно, большечемнужно; заглазадовольно We have had patience enough and spare (W. Scott). She's probably had offers enough, she thought bitterly, offers enough and spare (D. Lessing)
Fall by the wayside - потерпетьнеудачу, выйтиизстроя; спорт: недойтидофинала We have started the course with twenty-five students, but than does not mean that they will all complete it; we always expect a certain number to fall by the wayside. Royal road (имя лошади) fell entirely by the wayside, the winner was number twelve (D. Francis)
Fall from grace - отойтиотистиннойверы, погубитьсвоюдушу I had expected a severe reprimand for "falling from grace".../ the mildness of his voice made my eyes smart (A.J. Cronin)
The fatted calf - обильноеугощение, яства Patrick. ...I got back just before lunch. Alfred. Trust you for that. And I bet you walloped into the fatted calf. Patrick (with hauteur). I managed to swallow a morsel of cold chicken (W.S. Maugham)
A fly in the ointment - ложкадегтявбочкемеда The only fly in the ointment of my peaceful days was Mrs. Cavendish's extraordinary/// preference for the society of Dr. Bauerstein (A. Christie)
Forbidden fruit - запретныйплод His father successfully prevented Galileo from even knowing that there was such a subject as mathematics until at the age of nineteen he happened, as an eavesdropper to overhear a lecture on geometry. He seized with avidity upon the subject, which had for him all the charm of forbidden fruit (B. Russel). `Mrs. Biggs hardly comes within the categories of forbidden fruit,' tittered the Bursar (Th. Sharpe)
Gall and wormwood - нечтоненавистное, постылое; ножострый Madame Arcati. I cannot bring myself to admit defeat so easily - it is gall and wormwood to me (N. Coward)
Give up the ghost - испуститьдух, умереть Oh, Nola girl, if you only knew what mystery we've been undergoing, you be considerate and fetch us a drink before we give up the ghost (C. MacInnes)
Go from strength to strength - крепнутьскаждымднем, непрерывноулучшаться His enthusiasm for running had by no means abated; in fact it seemed to have gone from strength to strength (Th. Wilder)
The golden rule - "золотоеправило", мудроеправило, помогающеевсегдаивсем They consider their own intelligence as far above a simple maxim like the Golden Rule (Th. Dreiser). Tell him not to be impatient. That's the golden rule in politics (C. Hare)
Guiding light/star - путеводнаязвезда `Dad was the founder of the company, the leading philosopher and guiding light for us always,' Walton says (Newsweek). Duchesse. ... He said I was his guiding star and his guardian angel (W. S. Maugham)
The handwriting/writing on the wall - зловещеепредзнаменование With every day the danger was growing, the handwriting on the wall becoming clearer, and finally, as a few wise men had foreseen, dogs of war once again were loosed upon the world (A. J. Cronin) In this house of his there was writing on every wall. His business-like temperament protested against a mysterious warning that she was not made for him (J. Galsworthy)
Harden one's heart - ожесточиться, статьбесчувственным, бессердечным; его (ееит.д.) сердце ожесточилось When Mrs Smeeth was quietly polite to him, it meant she had really hardened her heart (J. B. Priestley) I hardened my heart and drove away all her offers to remain friends (S. Howatch)
Have clean hands - иметьчистуюсовесть, бытьчестнымчеловеком; небытьзамешаннымвчем-л. I told them that my hands were clean, but they still demanded to search my house
Hide one's light under a bushel - зарывать (свой) талантвземлю, скрыватьсвойум, своиталанты Personality, of course, you must have, though without real eccentricity; but it must not be personality which hid its light under a bushel (J. Galsworthy)
The holy of holies - святаясвятых In the gold room, "the holy of holies", which visitors were rarely permitted to enter, the girls saw the amalgam roasted and pure gold run off into moulds (K.S. Prichard)
A house divided against itself - раздор между своими, междоусобица What ignorance of the French temper it showed when the Germans thought that in France they were fighting a house divided against itself (W. S. Maugham)
In high places - ввысшихсферах Lincoln nodded. `And I am criticized for putting too many Democrats in high places. I should have doubled the blame' (G. Vidal). The General had influence in high places (Th. Sharpe)
The inner man - внутреннее "я", ум, душа Nor was this appearance only; the odd shape reflected something in the inner man. Mr. Gibbon, it was noticed, was always slightly overdressed (L. Strachey)
In season and out of season - всегда, постоянно, всевремя; несчитаясьнисчем, кстатиинекстати Misfortunes plague this family in season and out of season. When the preachers shouted "Hallelujah" he shouted "Hallelujah" also; shouted again and again in season and out of season, shouted until he was hoarse, and the perspiration poured down his crimsoning face (H. Caine)
In the flesh - воплоти, сам, собственнойперсоной `Your father's here?' `He's here, all right. In the flesh' (J. O'Hara) In spite of my... dislike of the movies, I was overwhwlmwd to be able to actually see this great star in the flesh (G. Vidal)
In the twinkling of an eye - вмгновениеока Stella. I wish someone would explain haw it is that a dab of powder can in the twinkling of an eye reduce a woman's nose from an unwidely lump to dear little thing that no one can deny is her best feature (W.S. Maugham)
A Job's comforter - горе-утешитель `Come, come,' she said gently. `We can't be mutual Job's comforters... Cheer up, old boy!' (P.H. Johnson)
A judg(e)ment of Solomon - соломоноворешение, мудроерешение A French judge at the conciliation hearing divided custody of the child - then only a year old - between the two parents giving three months' custody to each alternately. This judgement of Solomon was greeted by most French lawyers with incredulity (The Sunday Times)
Kick against the pricks - упрямиться; лезтьнарожон Robert. Well, now look here, Caroline. It's no good kicking against the pricks. We've got to marry. Caroline (energetically). I'm hanged if we do (W.S. Maugham). `You're a philosopher, Mr Black.' `No, no. I just know enough not to start kicking against the pricks' (A. Christie)
A labour of love - бескорыстныйтруд Stanley. ...I'm not going to make a nickel on this play, Frank. With me it's a labor of love (J. O'Hara)
A land flowing with milk and honey - страна изобилия; молочные и кисельные берега It is a land flowing with milk and honey, a land of the heart's desire (R. Hichens)
A leading/shining light - светило, знаменитость, корифей The executive branch of government especially is run mainly by the leading lights of high finance, its chief manipulators and managers, all men of wealth and some having great fortunes (V. Perlo)/ What Eugene and what White thought of this prospective situation was that the other would naturally be the minor figure, and that he under Colfax would be the shining light (Th. Dreiser)
A lost sheep - заблудшая овца, человек, сбившийся в пути истинного It was plain that she had erred and strayed like a lost sheep, and had been duly if severally punished (R. Aldington)
Make light of smb/smth. - относитьсяккому-л/чему-л. несерьезно, легкомысленно, неприниматького-л/что-л. всерьез; пренебрегатькем-л/чем-л, недооцениватького-л/что-л.; считатьчто-л. несущественным, неважным, непридаватьзначениячему-л; смотретьсквозьпальцыначто-л. He made light of the danger. He gave Willis to understand that it had not been very great (W.S. Maugham). She was a trifle taken aback at this remark. He had never used that tone with her before. She thought the best thing was to make light of it (W.S. Maugham).
Manna from heaven - маннанебесная The spare can of petrol the farmer produced when he found Paul stranded on the moor with his motorbike, was like manna from heaven to him
The massacre/slaughter of the innocents - избиениемладенцев A band [стадо] had been crossing just at the moment of the engine's passage. The pathos of it was beyond expression. It was a slaughter, a massacre of innocents (F. Norris)
A mote in smb's eye - "сучоквчужомглазу", чужойнедостаток But I refuse to condemn others for the mote in their eye when there is a beam in my own (Th. Dreiser)
New wine in old bottles - "молодоевиновветхихмехах", новоесодержаниевстаройформе The spirit had animated the prose of Chateaubriand and the poetry of Lamartine; but it was the spirit only: the form of both those writers retained most of the important characteristics of the old tradition. It was new wine in old bottles (L. Strachey)
(As) old as Methuselah - старкакМафусаил, преклонныхлет He must be as old as Methuselah - he was a grey-bearded old man when I was a boy
The olive branch - оливковаяветвь, символмира; попыткапримирения, мирноепредложение Lester had long suspected that Robert would like to make up. This was the olive branch (Th. Dreiser). `Good morning, Cousin Clarissa,' I said guardedly. `I thank you for the olive branch and accept it with pleasure' (S. Howatch)
Open the door(s) to smth. - открытьпуть, дорогучему-л.; датьвозможностьдлячего-л. I have demonstrated that I can't desctibe Deer Isle. There is something about it that opens no door to words (J. Steinbeck) In this way the Geneva Conference opened the doors to a new perspective for peace (R. P. Dutt)
A/the parting of the ways - выбор (обыкн. at the parting of the ways - передвыбором; нараспутье) Edwin Drood stands at the parting of the ways between the early Victorian and the modern attitude to murder in literature (K. S. Pritchard) All right, sister, you are at the parting of the ways. Either identify this guy or get hooked as an accessory (E.S. Gardner)
Possess one's soul in patience - запастисьтерпением Laura. What is it, mother? Amanda. Possess your soul in patience - you will see! (T. Williams)
The powers that be - сильныемирасего, властипредержащие, властьимущие Clyde Mercer was a careerist of a very special kind, a man of altogether priceless value to the powers that be in Canada (D. Carter)
Put one's hand to the plough - начатьработу, принятьсязадело, приступитькчему-л., взятьсязачто-л., приложитьрукукчему-л. What was he to do? One thing, and one thing only - go forward. He had put his hand to the plough, and he wasn't the one to look back. He would start a new play that very night (S. O'Casey)
Put/set one's/own house in order - "навестипорядоквсобственнодоме", устроитьсвоидела, привестисвоиделавпорядок; исправитьсвоиошибки Putting the 44-year old Mr. Milken in prison for ten years will change little unless corporate America and its financiers choose to put their own house in order... When the good times and the big deals return, crooks just as bad as Mr. Milken will resurface (The Economist). Once Ireland's free of England it'll be easier to the house in order (I. Murdoch)
Reap where one has not sown - пожинатьплодычужоготруда We admire aesthetically the marvelous masonry and architecture of the Great Pyramid... fruits of the hard labour unjustly imposed on the many to produce the fine flowers of civilization for the exclusive enjoyment of a few who reap what they have not sown (A. J. Toynbee)
Rise from the dead - восстатьизмертвых A decade after it looked certain to fall, the American steel industry has risen from the dead (The Economist)
Root and branch - основательно, радикально, кореннымобразомсовершенно, совсем He had wasted his life, he had wrecked himself, with his accursed weakness and now he was done with it - he would tear it out of him root and branch! (U.Sinclair) This is a bad law and the government should remove it root and branch
Rule with a rod of iron - деспотическиправить, управлятьжелезнойрукой; держатьвежовыхрукавицах Hi did not know what sickness was, never had an ache or pain, ate his food with gusto, and riled his brothers with a rod of iron (Th. Dreiser). Teddy. Talk about henpecking - Doris riles her old count with a rod of iron (T. Rattigan)
Safe and sound - целиневредим, жив-здоров You must keep busy and try not to fret. If we believe Steve and Bill will come back to us safe and sound it must help (K.S. Prichard) The ship was nearly wrecked in a blow, but anchored in a bay, safe and sound (K.S. Pritchard)
The salt of the earth - сольземли We no longer accept these country gentlemen, these opulent ladies who drive about in barouches, as the salt of the earth, and their behaviour too often strikes us as vulgar and trivial (W.S. Maugham) So has closed the life of a working-class woman and mother typical of millions, their names never heard of, save in their own homes, but they are in truth the salt of the earth (H. Pollitt)
The scales fell from one's eyes - пеленаспаласчьих-л. глаз Margaret realized that, though an odious attraction bound her to the man, she loathed and feared hom. The scales fell from her eyes (W.S. Maugham)
Search one's heart/soul - заглянутьксебевдушу, проверитьсвоичувства; анализироватьсвоипоступки The teacher searched his heart trying to decide if he had been unfair in failing the boy
Separate the sheep from the goats - отделятьовецоткозлищ, отделитьвредноеотполезного, плохоеотхорошего `I wish I had a brain like yours,' said Lord Ickenham. `What an amazing thing. I suppose you could walk down a line of people, giving each of them a quick glance, and separate the sheep from the goats' (P.G. Wodehouse)