Лучшие произведения Джерома К. Джерома / The Best of Jerome K. Jerome

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160
platz – place (German)
161
the Criterion – a West End complex of a theatre, restaurant, dining and ballrooms
162
Hunden verboten – no dogs (German)
163
Ausgang – exit (German)
164
Zampa – Zampa (or the Marble Bride), comic opera by French composer Louis Hérold
165
Ditto – the same (Italian)
166
bath-chairs – a bath chair is a light carriage with a folding hood and a glass front, on three or four wheels and pushed by hand, used by invalids
167
Ouida – pseudonym of Maria Louise Ramé (1839–1908), English novelist, famous for her melodramatic romances of fashionable life
168
Wirtschaft – household (German)
169
‘mittagstisch’ – something for lunch (German)
170
Kneipe – a pub (German)
171
Korps, crack – sports club (German)
172
Burschenschaft – a students’ association (German)
173
Landsmannschaft – an association of people from the same area (German)
174
Mensur – a duel (German)
175
reductio ad absurdum – leading to absurdity (Latin)
176
Fruhschoppen – an early cup (German)
177
Prosit – to your health! (German)
178
Sunt – We are (German)
179
Ad exercitium Salamandri – Let Salamander be (Latin)
180
the Bogie Man – the main character of a comic book, a Scottish mental patient who only can solve the “mystery” of his own construction
181
Belegete-semmel – a roll cut in two with some ham or cheese (German)
182
Aufschnitt – a meat dish (German)
183
Spiegeleier – fried eggs (German)
184
The Robbers – a play by Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805)
185
statutory law – created by legislative regulations
186
strike attitudes – to speak or act in ways that make it very clear what you want others to think you believe or support
187
sponging upon – “to sponge on (upon)” is “to be parasitic on smb”
188
Adelphi – a district in the Strand (London), named after the buildings erected here in 1768
189
He crosses the African desert in patent-leather boots, does the stage hero – Here the “question” word order and the auxiliary verb are used to strengthen the meaning (ironically, of course)
190
Dost see yonder star – poetic way to say “Do you see that star” (archaic)
191
nabbed – to be caught or arrested
192
swag – plunder or loot
193
to pall – to lose interest because of familiarity
194
orangamatang – perhaps, orang-utang
195
Y.M.C.A – Young Men’s Christian Association
196
Tit Bits – a British weekly magazine (from “titbits”, small pieces of tasty food or something pleasant, even gossip!)
197
it is next door to impossible – hardly ever possible
198
grit and go – backbone (courage) and activity
199
sit on the comic man – “to sit on smb” means “to hold him back”
200
it was fifteen and nine, his style – evidently, it was a mannequin with clothes’ sizes
201
the wooping-cough – Pertussis, a highly contagious bacterial disease
202
is doing his two years’ hard – “to do one’s time” is “to stay in prison”
203
cavendish – tobacco, prepared by a special method
204
Mr. Gilbert – perhaps, Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874–1936), English Christian philosopher and writer
205
spooning – “to spoon” is “to behave in amorous way, to kiss” (archaic)
206
Shure, Bedad, Beghorra – perhaps, Irish variant of pronouncing “sure”, “be dead” and “big horror”
207
a bob’s worth – a bob = 1 shilling (12 pence)
208
Machiavellian – Niccolo Machiavelli (1469–1527) was an Italian historian, statesman, and political philosopher. His name is a synonym for amoral deception and cunning.
209
Shiver my timbers – an exclamation of surprise or annoyance, mostly associated with pirates
210
R. and L. – right and left










