Monday, August 17, 2015

Meanings of “Book” in Some Languages from Dictionaries of Lingoes-Translator 2





Concise English Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n.

1. a written work or composition that has been published (printed on pages bound together)

2. physical objects consisting of a number of pages bound together

3. a record in which commercial accounts are recorded

4. a number of sheets (ticket or stamps etc.) bound together on one edge

5. a compilation of the known facts regarding something or someone

6. a major division of a long written composition

7. a written version of a play or other dramatic composition; used in preparing for a performance

8. a collection of playing cards satisfying the rules of a card game

9. a collection of rules or prescribed standards on the basis of which decisions are made

10. the sacred writings of Islam revealed by God to the prophet Muhammad during his life at Mecca and Medina

11. the sacred writings of the Christian religions

v.

1. record a charge in a police register

2. arrange for and reserve (something for someone else) in advance

3. engage for a performance

4. register in a hotel booker Would you like to advertise here? IExif - EXIF/GPS/IPTC viewer

Concise English Synonym & Antonym Dictionary



book

syn.: Bible Book Christian Bible Good Book Holy Scripture Holy Writ Koran Quran Scripture Word Word of God account book al-Qur'an book of account hold ledger leger playscript record record book reserve rule book script volume

English-German dictionary



book

Buch {n}, Heft {n}

Vicon English-Arabic Dictionary



book 1

pref. كتبى مستقى من الكتب

n. الكتاب المقدس book 2 [bʊk]

n. كتاب, حجز بطاقة, سجل المراهناة, دفتر تجاري, مسؤولية, سجل

v. سجل, دون, حجز مقدما

Essential English Dictionary



book [bʊk]

noun

1. a written work or composition that has been published (printed on pages bound together)

2. physical objects consisting of a number of pages bound together

3. a record in which commercial accounts are recorded

4. a number of sheets (ticket or stamps etc.) bound together on one edge

5. a compilation of the known facts regarding something or someone

6. a major division of a long written composition

7. a written version of a play or other dramatic composition; used in preparing for a performance

8. a collection of playing cards satisfying the rules of a card game

9. a collection of rules or prescribed standards on the basis of which decisions are made

10. the sacred writings of Islam revealed by God to the prophet Muhammad during his life at Mecca and Medina

11. the sacred writings of the Christian religions

verb

1. record a charge in a police register

2. arrange for and reserve (something for someone else) in advance

3. engage for a performance

4. register in a hotel booker

English - Arabic Finacial & Legal Dictionary



Book

كتاب، كتيب، سجل، دفتر

English Slang Dictionary



book

1. to run, to get away

2. to leave

WordNet English Dictionary



book

n.

1. a written work or composition that has been published (printed on pages bound together)

I am reading a good book on economics

2. physical objects consisting of a number of pages bound together; volume

he used a large book as a doorstop

3. a record in which commercial accounts are recorded; ledger, leger, account book, book of account

they got a subpoena to examine our books

4. a number of sheets (ticket or stamps etc.) bound together on one edge

he bought a book of stamps

5. a compilation of the known facts regarding something or someone; record, record book

Al Smith used to say, `Let's look at the record'

his name is in all the record books

6. a major division of a long written composition

the book of Isaiah

7. a written version of a play or other dramatic composition; used in preparing for a performance; script, playscript

8. a collection of playing cards satisfying the rules of a card game

9. a collection of rules or prescribed standards on the basis of which decisions are made; rule book

they run things by the book around here

10. the sacred writings of Islam revealed by God to the prophet Muhammad during his life at Mecca and Medina; Koran, Quran, al-Qur'an, Book

11. the sacred writings of the Christian religions; Bible, Christian Bible, Book, Good Book, Holy Scripture, Holy Writ, Scripture, Word of God, Word

he went to carry the Word to the heathen

v.

1. record a charge in a police register

The policeman booked her when she tried to solicit a man

2. arrange for and reserve (something for someone else) in advance; reserve, hold

reserve me a seat on a flight

The agent booked tickets to the show for the whole family

please hold a table at Maxim's

3. engage for a performance

Her agent had booked her for several concerts in Tokyo

4. register in a hotel booker

21 Century Bidirectional Science And Technology Dictionary



book

多层固体火箭燃料 [航] 书 [图情] 图书 [图情]

Vicon English Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n. printed work which is bound together; publication; notebook; bundle, set of things (such as:stamps, matches, tickets and more) bound together

v. record, inscribe; indicate; order in advance; reserve

New Concept English Sentence



book

n.书

Give me a book please, Jane.请拿本书给我,简。

New Oriental Dictionary of English Roots & Affixes



book

n.书,书籍vt.订(票,座位,房间等),预定She has written several books on management.她已经写了好几部管理方面的书了.

Shakespeare Dictionary



Book 1

Book, subst., 1) a volume to read or write in: Sonn. 23, 9. Tp. I, 2, 166. III, 2, 97. V, 57. Gentl. I, 1, 20. Ado II, 3, 3. LLL I, 1, 74. LLL I, 1, 74 IV, 2, 25. Merch. IV, 1, 157. Shr. I, 2, 148. II, 101 etc. etc. the bloody b. of law you shall yourself read, Oth. I, 3, 67 . my b. of songs and sonnets, Wiv. I, 1, 206 (probably the Songs and Sonnets of Lord Surrey, printed in 1556). the b. of riddles, Wiv. I, 1, 209 . --s for good manners, As V, 4, 95 . a b. of prayer, R3 III, 7, 98 . we quarrel in print, by the b., As V, 4, 95 (alluding to Vincentio Saviolo's treatise on Honour and Honorable Quarrels). fights by the b. of arithmetic, Rom. III, 1, 106 . you kiss by the b. I, 5, 112 . without b. == by memory: Tw. I, 3, 28. II, 3, 161. Troil. II, 1, 19. Rom. I, 2, 62.



Emphatically, the bible: I'll be sworn on a b. Wiv. I, 4, 156 . Meas. II, 1, 162. Merch. II, 2, 168. I'll be sworn upon all the --s in England, H4A II, 4, 56 . who can give an oath? where is a b.? LLL IV, 3, 250 . God's b. H6B II, 3, 4 . here, kiss the b. (i. e. the bottle), Tp. II, 2, 135. Tp. II, 2, 135 -- Bell, b. and candle, John III, 3, 12 , i. e. the b. of offices, cf. bell.



Sometimes, == account-book: his land is put to their --s, Tim. I, 2, 206 . keep thy pen from lenders' --s, Lr. III, 4, 101 . such gain the cap of him that makes 'em fine, but keeps his b. uncrossed, Cymb. III, 3, 26 . your neck is pen, b. and counters, V, 4, 173 . cf. thou thinkest me as far in the devil's b. as thou and Falstaff, H4B II, 2, 49 . damned in the b. of heaven, R2 IV, 236 .



B. of memory == day-book, memorandum-book: I'll note you in my b. of memory, H6A II, 4, 101 . blotting your names from --s of memory, H6B I, 1, 100 , i. e. from historical record. Without the apposition, in the same sense: I have been the b. of his good acts, Cor. V, 2, 15 . enrolled in Jove's own b. III, 1, 293 . mark him and write his speeches in their --s, Caes. I, 2, 126 . shall live within the b. and volume of my brain, Hml. I, 5, 103 . who has a b. of all that monarchs do, Per. I, 1, 94 . Hence, to be in --s == to be in favour: the gentleman is not in your --s, Ado I, 1, 79 . a herald, Kate? O put me in thy --s, Shr. II, 223 .



Figuratively: this precious b. of love, this unbound lover, to beautify him, only lacks a cover, Rom. I, 3, 87 . was ever b. containing such vile matter so fairly bound? III, 2, 83 . was this fair paper, this most goodly b., made to write whore upon? Oth. IV, 2, 71 . in this b. of beauty (sc. Bianca) John II, 485. cf. princes are the glass, the school, the b., where subjects' eyes do learn, do read, do look, Lucr. 615 . poor women's faces are their own faults' --s, Lucr. 615 LLL IV, 3, 103. Mids. II, 2, 122. H4B II, 3, 31. R3 III, 5, 27. Troil. IV, 5, 239. Mcb. I, 5, 63. Per. I, 1, 15. -- And now I will unclasp a secret b. and read you, H4A I, 3, 188 . that one might read the b. of fate, H4B III, 1, 45 . unclasped to thee the b. even of my secret soul, Tw. I, 4, 14 . Hence the following phrases: is from the b. of honour razed quite, Sonn. 25, 11 . and my name put in the b. of virtue, Wint. IV, 3, 131 . my name be blotted from the b. of life, R2 I, 3, 202 . that you should seal this lawless bloody b. of forged rebellion with a seal divine, H4B IV, 1, 91 . one writ with me in sour misfortune's b. Rom. V, 3, 82 .



Serving to denote copious language: and tire the hearer with a b. of words, Ado I, 1, 309 . a whole b. full of these carpet-mongers, V, 2, 32 .



2) any writing or paper: by that time will our b. be drawn (sc. the articles of agreement) H4A III, 1, 224. H4A III, 1, 224 a b.? O rare one! Cymb. V, 4, 133 , sc. a paper containing the oracle of Jupiter.



3) study, learning: I'll to my b. Tp. III, 1, 94 . keep a good student from his b. Wiv. III, 1, 38 . my son profits nothing in the world at his b. IV, 1, 15 . which with experimental seal doth warrant the tenour of my b. Ado IV, 1, 169 . makes his b. thine eyes, LLL IV, 2, 113 . in that vow we have forsworn our --s, IV, 3, 319 . finds tongues in trees, --s in the running brooks, As II, 1, 16 . and fitter is my study and my --s than wanton dalliance with a paramour, H6A V, 1, 22 . my b. preferred me to the king, H6B IV, 7, 77 . what, at your b. so hard? H6C V, 6, 1 . a beggar's b. outworths a noble's blood, H8 I, 1, 122 . Book 2

Book, vb., to register in a book: b. both my wilfulness and errors down, Sonn. 117, 9 . let it be --ed with the rest of this day's deeds, H4B IV, 3, 50 . that we may wander o'er this bloody field to b. our dead, and then to bury them, H5 IV, 7, 76 (M. Edd. look).

© The Shakespeare dictionary developed by zhu hong liang

Word Orgins Dictionary



book

[OE] Book is widespread throughout the Germanic languages. German has buch, for example, Dutch bock, and Swedish bok. There point to a prehistoric Germanic *bōks, which was probably related to *bōkā ‘beech’, the connection being that the early Germanic peoples used beechwood tablets for writing runic inscriptions on. The original meaning of the word in Old English (bōc) was simply ‘written document or record’, but by the 9th century it had been applied to a collection of written sheets fastened together.

Link: BEECH

English Vocabulary for Postgraduate Examination 2009



book

[bʊk]

n. 书,书籍

vt. 订(票,座位,房间等),预定

Computer File Type Dictionary



BOOK

FrameMaker Book (Adobe)

Vicon English-Hebrew Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n. ספר; פנקס; צרור

v. לרשום; לציין; להזמין מראש

Vicon English-French Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n. livre, travail imprimé et relié ensemble; livret; botin, carnet; annuaire, registre; paquet, colis

v. enregistrer, inscrire, indiquer; retenir, louer, réserver; arrêter qqn (USA); engager (artiste);

Vicon English-German Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n. Buch; Kontobuch; Rechnungsbuch

v. aufschreiben; verbuchen; vorbestellen

Vicon English-Italian Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n. libro; notes, quaderno per appunti; registro, libro commerciale; (Mus) libretto

v. registrare, annotare, elencare; segnare; prenotare, fissare, riservare

Vicon English-Spanish Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n. libro, tomo

v. registrar, anotar en libros, inscribir; hacer una reservación para, comprometer de antemano, reservar; abrir un expediente a, anotar como sospechoso, expedientar

Vicon English-Chinese(S) Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n. 书, 书籍, 书本; 报章杂志; 著作; 本子

v. 预订; 预约

Vicon English-Chinese(T) Dictionary



book [bʊk]

n. 書, 書籍, 書本; 報章雜誌; 著作; 本子

v. 預訂; 預約

No comments:

Post a Comment