Толковый словарь английского языка - date
Date
date
I. noun see: dactyl Date: 14th century the oblong edible fruit of a palm (Phoenix dactylifera), the tall palm with pinnate leaves that yields the ~, II. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Late Latin data, from data (as in data Romae given at Rome), feminine of Latin datus, past participle of dare to give; akin to Latin dos gift, dowry, Greek didonai to give Date: 14th century 1. the time at which an event occurs , a statement of the time of execution or making , duration , the period of time to which something belongs, 4. an appointment to meet at a specified time, a person with whom one has a usually romantic ~, an engagement for a professional performance (as of a dance band), III. verb (~d; dating) Date: 15th century transitive verb to determine the ~ of , to record the ~ of ; mark with the ~, 3. to mark with characteristics typical of a particular period, to show up plainly the age of, to make or have a ~ with, intransitive verb to reckon chronologically, originate , to become ~d, to go out on usually romantic ~s, datable also ~able adjective ~r noun
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1. n. & v. --n. 1 a day of the month, esp. specified by a number. 2 a particular day or year, esp. when a given event occurred. 3 a statement (usu. giving the day, month, and year) in a document or inscription etc., of the time of composition or publication. 4 the period to which a work of art etc. belongs. 5 the time when an event happens or is to happen. 6 colloq. a an engagement or appointment, esp. with a person of the opposite sex. b US a person with whom one has a social engagement. --v. 1 tr. mark with a date. 2 tr. a assign a date to (an object, event, etc.). b (foll. by to) assign to a particular time, period, etc. 3 intr. (often foll. by from, back to, etc.) have its origins at a particular time. 4 intr. be recognizable as from a past or particular period; become evidently out of date (a design that does not date). 5 tr. indicate or expose as being out of date (that hat really dates you). 6 colloq. a tr. make an arrangement with (a person) to meet socially. b intr. meet socially by agreement (they are now dating regularly). Phrases and idioms date-line 1 the line from north to south partly along the meridian 180° from Greenwich, to the east of which the date is a day earlier than it is to the west. 2 a line at the head of a dispatch or special article in a newspaper showing the date and place of writing. date-stamp n. 1 an adjustable rubber stamp etc. used to record a date. 2 the impression made by this. --v.tr. mark with a date-stamp. out of date ( attrib. out-of-date) old-fashioned, obsolete. to date until now. up to date ( attrib. up-to-date) meeting or according to the latest requirements, knowledge, or fashion; modern. Etymology: ME f. OF f. med.L data, fem. past part. of dare give: from the L formula used in dating letters, data (epistola) (letter) given or delivered (at a particular time or place) 2. n. 1 a dark oval single-stoned fruit. 2 (in full date-palm) the tall tree Phoenix dactylifera, native to W. Asia and N. Africa, bearing this fruit. Etymology: ME f. OF f. L dactylus f. Gk daktulos finger, from the...Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
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