several

several
1. [ʹsev(ə)rəl] n
некоторое число или количество

several of them - некоторые из них

several of us saw it - некоторые из нас это видели

I already have several - у меня уже есть несколько (штук)

in the struggle several received in juries - в этой схватке несколько человек получило ранения

2. [ʹsev(ə)rəl] a
1. 1) несколько

several times [days, men] - несколько раз [дней, человек]

several books on the same subjects - несколько книг по одному и тому же вопросу

2) разный, различный

the works of several artists - работы различных художников

the several items in an account - различные статьи счёта

2. 1) арх. каждый, отдельный, отдельно взятый

each several - каждый отдельный; каждый из

each several house - каждый дом в отдельности

federal union of the several states - федерация отдельных штатов

2) отдельный, особый, свой

they went their several ways - каждый из них пошёл своей дорогой

we are all busy at our several tasks - каждый из нас занят своей работой

all have their several reasons (for wishing it) - у каждого свои причины (желать этого)

3) юр. индивидуальный, принадлежащий одному лицу

they have no several estates - у них нет своей личной /отдельной/ собственности

joint and several liability - ответственность совместная и каждого лица за себя

3. юр. делимый, отделимый

in several - а) в особенности, в частности; б) редк. как отдельное лицо


Новый большой англо-русский словарь. 2001.

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Смотреть что такое "several" в других словарях:

  • several — sev·er·al adj [Anglo French, from Medieval Latin separalis, from Latin separ separate] 1 a: of or relating separately to each individual involved; specif: enforceable separately against each party each promisor owed a several duty see also… …   Law dictionary

  • Several — Sev er*al, a. [OF., fr. LL. separalis, fr. L. separ separate, different. See {Sever}, {Separate}.] 1. Separate; distinct; particular; single. [1913 Webster] Each several ship a victory did gain. Dryden. [1913 Webster] Each might his several… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Several — Sev er*al, n. 1. Each particular taken singly; an item; a detail; an individual. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] There was not time enough to hear . . . The severals. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. Persons oe objects, more than two, but not very many. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • several — is an adjective and pronoun. As an adjective, it is only used with plural countable nouns (several people but not several furniture) and is more positive in implication than a few. However, unlike a few, several cannot be qualified by an adverb… …   Modern English usage

  • several — [sev′ər əl, sev′rəl] adj. [ME < Anglo Fr < ML separalis < L separ, separate, back form. < separare: see SEPARATE] 1. existing apart; separate; distinct; individual 2. different; respective [parted and went their several ways] 3. more… …   English World dictionary

  • Several — Sev er*al, adv. By itself; severally. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Every kind of thing is laid up several in barns or storehoudses. Robynson (More s Utopia). [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • several — early 15c., existing apart, from Anglo Fr. several, from M.Fr. seperalis separate, from L. separe (ablative of *separ distinct ), back formation from separare to separate (see SEPARATE (Cf. separate)). Meaning various, diverse, different is… …   Etymology dictionary

  • several — 1 *distinct, separate, discrete Analogous words: individual, particular, *special, especial 2 *many, sundry, various, divers, numerous, multifarious Analogous words: *single, separate, particular: detached, disengaged (see …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • several — [adj] assorted, various a few, a lot, any, certain, considerable, definite, different, disparate, distinct, divers, diverse, handful, hardly any, indefinite, individual, infrequent, manifold, many, not many, numerous, only a few, particular,… …   New thesaurus

  • several — ► DETERMINER & PRONOUN ▪ more than two but not many. ► ADJECTIVE ▪ separate or respective. DERIVATIVES severally adverb. ORIGIN Old French, from Latin separ separate, different …   English terms dictionary

  • several — sev|er|al [ sev(ə)rəl ] function word, quantifier *** Several can be used in the following ways: as a determiner (followed by a plural noun): Several buildings were damaged by the explosion. as a pronoun: If you want to see Edward s paintings,… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English


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