slovo | definícia |
Goman (gcide) | Goman \Go"man\, n. [Prob. fr. good man; but cf. also AS. gumman
a man, OHG. gomman man, husband.]
A husband; a master of a family. [Obs.] Gomarist |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
dragoman (encz) | dragoman, n: |
egomania (encz) | egomania,egocentrismus Zdeněk Brož |
egomaniac (encz) | egomaniac,extrémní egocentrik Zdeněk Brožegomaniac,chorobný egoista Zdeněk Brož |
logomania (encz) | logomania, n: |
Dragoman (gcide) | Dragoman \Drag"o*man\, n.; pl. Dragomans. [From F. dragoman,
or Sp. dragoman, or It. dragomanno; all fr. LGr. ?, Ar.
tarjum[=a]n, from the same source as E. targum. Cf.
Drogman, Truchman.]
An interpreter; -- so called in the Levant and other parts of
the East.
[1913 Webster] |
Dragomans (gcide) | Dragoman \Drag"o*man\, n.; pl. Dragomans. [From F. dragoman,
or Sp. dragoman, or It. dragomanno; all fr. LGr. ?, Ar.
tarjum[=a]n, from the same source as E. targum. Cf.
Drogman, Truchman.]
An interpreter; -- so called in the Levant and other parts of
the East.
[1913 Webster] |
Drogoman (gcide) | Drogman \Drog"man\, Drogoman \Drog"o*man\, n.
See Dragoman.
[1913 Webster] |
Pegomancy (gcide) | Pegomancy \Peg"o*man`cy\, n. [Gr. phgh` fountain + -mancy.]
Divination by fountains. [R.]
[1913 Webster] |
dragoman (wn) | dragoman
n 1: an interpreter and guide in the Near East; in the Ottoman
Empire in the 18th and 19th centuries a translator of
European languages for the Turkish and Arab authorities and
most dragomans were Greek (many reached high positions in
the government) |
egomania (wn) | egomania
n 1: an intense and irresistible love for yourself and concern
for your own needs |
egomaniac (wn) | egomaniac
n 1: an abnormally egotistical person |
logomania (wn) | logomania
n 1: pathologically excessive (and often incoherent) talking
[syn: logorrhea, logomania] |
DRAGOMAN (bouvier) | DRAGOMAN. An interpreter employed in the east, and particularly at the
Turkish court.
2. The Act of Congress of August 26, 1842, c. 201, s. 8, declares that
it shall not be lawful for the president of the United States to allow a
dragoman at Constantinople, a salary of more than two thousand five hundred
dollars.
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