Meaning not for a penny in the spelling dictionary. Benedict sarnoff I don’t give a penny to the writers union

See also `Grosh` in other dictionaries

m. 1) Copper coin in denomination of two kopecks (in the Russian state, 1654-1838), later - in half a kopeck (in the Russian state, 1838-1917). 2) transfer. colloquial Very low price for smth.

m. two kopecks, two-kopeck copper; with the transfer of the account to silver, this name is falling out of use, like money, half. | A penny or more pennies south. money in general; | tax, see penny. Good for your penny everywhere. I didn’t buy it for my penny, and don’t stir it up. Give me a penny, but let the pig in the rye, so it will be good. At least a penny, but your own. If you have a penny, so will rye. Not your penny, and do not stir. And don't say a word, just show me a penny. If there were rye in the undersea, there would be a penny in your pocket. He does not give him a penny. Not worth a penny. Not worth a penny. And the whole thing is not worth a penny. Not worth a penny, but looks like a ruble. For him, give a penny - not give, and give two - pass. There is no broken or blind penny. You don't eat much for a penny. They give him a penny, so you see, it's not good. The poor man has two pennies, otherwise the heap is good. Where you scratch with your fingernail, there is a penny (and a louse). Good: he gave the devil a penny for him, but hesitated! She walked well, but did not bow; gave a penny. but didn’t come back. Stranded, curve: a penny on the shelf! I'll give you a penny ...

GROSH (Polish grosz) is a coin from different times and countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17-18 centuries. copper two-, from the 19th century. half-penny coin. Modern bargaining chip for Poland (1 grosz = 1/100 zloty) and Austria (German Groschen); 1 grosz - 1/100 shilling).

see shilling, thaler.

1. Monetary unit of Italy (12th century).
2. "Give ..., so you will be good" (last).
3. The name of this coin comes from the German "Grosse" - value, since the value of these coins was larger than others.
4. The name of this coin comes from the Latin word "big", but we associate it with something very small, insignificant.
5. "Broken" coin.
6. Maugham's novel "The Moon and ...".
7. Very low price.
8. Monetary unit of Russia (17-19 centuries).
9. Monetary unit of Austria.
10. Monetary unit of Poland.

Penny

Russian coin equal to 1/2 kopeck.


Reference commercial dictionary. - M .: Edition of Tsentrosoyuz. Edited by prof. N.G. Filimonova. 1926 .

Monetary unit in Russia in the 17th-18th centuries, equal to two kopecks, later - half a kopeck (1838-1917).

penny

noun, m., uptr. cf. often

Morphology: (no) what? penny and penny what? penny and a penny, (see) what? penny, how? penny and penniless, about what? about a pittance and about a pittance; pl. what? pennies and pennies, (no) what? penniless and pennies what? pennies and pennies, (see) what? pennies and pennies, how? pennies and pennies, about what?<...>

penny genus. p. penny, groshevik "a coin in one penny", at Kotoshikhin (112), Ukrainian. grish, blr. penny, in Western Russian. and Galician texts from the XIV century; see Shear. I, 598. Through Polish. grosz from old. German Grosch, Groschen, spread thanks to the Bohemian imperial chancellery and going back to lat. (dēnarius) grossus; see Bernecker 1, 354; Kluge-Goetze 218 et seq. Etymological dictionary of the Russian language. - M .: Progress M.R.Fasmer 1964-1973

Penny

The first pennies were battered at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslas II (1191-1194); These were big silver coins, minted from 14-tilot silver, 1/4 of a lot each weighing (hence 84-th test). The G. Meissen and Thuringian, and then the Tours appeared somewhat later; the latter were minted by French kings - in Tours. The very name of the coin (Groschen, Gros) comes from the German. Grösse is a value, since these coins had a larger value than others. Since the 13th century, gems have become almost ubiquitous in Europe, especially in Germany, and they take different names depending on the images placed on them: schwerdgrogens, shieldgroshen, engelgroshen and so on. During the Thirty Years' War, it manifested ...

small bargaining chip. G. appeared in Russia in the 17th century. and then took its place in the form of a copper coin in denominations of 2 kopecks.

Penny I B' noun cm. _ Appendix II

(old coin)

Grosha pl. pennies pennies

there was not a penny, but suddenly altyn (proverb)

I know that in eternal spring

Birch soul blows

But a beard with gray hair,

Youth with a song ...

Penny

pennies

(Source: "Complete Accentuated Paradigm According to A. A. Zaliznyak")


Penny (Polish, grosz, German Groschen, from Latin denarius grossus - heavy coin)

coin of different times and countries. Chasing of G. began in Italy in the 12th century, in many Europe. countries - in the 13-14 centuries. Initially, G. was a large silver coin. In the 14-15 centuries. the weight and quality of metal in Germany declined, and it became a small change.

In Russia, minting of gems began in 1654. In the 17th and 18th centuries. in circulation were copper G., equal to 2 kopecks, from the 19th century. G. were called half a penny. G. is a modern bargaining chip of Poland and Austria: Polish G. = 1/100 zloty (coins are circulated in 50, 20, 10, 5 and 1 G.), Austr. G. = 1/100 shilling (coins are circulated in 50, 20, 10, 2, 1 1/2 G.). In a figurative sense, the term ...

Grosh

Penny cried what. Novg. Shuttle-iron. A very small amount of smth. Sergeeva 2004, 164.

A penny price [on market day] to whom; to what. Spread. Contempt. Smb., Smth. no good, no value, no value. FSRYa, 112; BMS 1998, 138; BTS, 230; Mokienko 1990, 118; ZS 1996, 33.

A penny price and a fathom of firewood to whom; to what. Sib. Also. FSS, 49.

Not worth the price and out of the way. Sib. Contempt. About a person who does not know how to do the job for which he took up. FSS, 49.

Tremble for a penny. Bitter. Contempt. Be mean. BalSok, 36.

Broken penny. Psk. Not at all, absolutely nothing. POS 8, 42.

Penny

penny, - \ "a, creative. P.- \ "ohm


Russian spelling dictionary. / The Russian Academy of Sciences. Inst rus. lang. them. V.V. Vinogradov. - M .: "Azbukovnik". V.V. Lopatin (executive editor), B.Z.Bukchina, N.A.Eskova and others.. 1999 .

GROSH (from the Latin grossus - thick, large), coin different countries... It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17th - 18th centuries. copper two-, from the 19th century. half-penny coin. Modern bargaining chip for Poland (1 grosz = 1/100 zloty) and Austria (German Groschen; 1 grosz = 1/100 schilling).

Borrowing from Polish, where grosz, in turn, is borrowing from Czech, and goes back through German to Latin grossus denarius - "heavy coin". It is curious that the components of this combination are familiar to us. Latin grossus has penetrated into many European languages ​​in the meaning of "large", and the word denarius is used, say, in the Gospel story, which has the name "denarius of Caesar."

Silver coin, minted in Italy at the end of the 12th century. In Russia, the penny appeared in the 17th century. as a small bargaining chip and then took its place in the form of a copper coin in denomination of 2 kopecks ...

Big Dictionary of Economics

  • - The first pennies of the bat at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslas II; these were large silver coins, minted from 14-lot silver, 1/4 lot each weighing ...

    Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron

  • - a coin of different times and countries. Chasing of G. began in Italy in the 12th century, in many Europe. countries - in the 13-14 centuries. Initially, G. was a large silver coin ...

    Great Soviet Encyclopedia

  • - a coin from different times and countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17-18 centuries. copper two-, from the 19th century. half-penny coin. Modern bargaining chip for Poland and Austria; 1 grosz - 1/100 shilling) ...

    Big encyclopedic dictionary

  • - husband. two kopecks, two-kopeck copper; with the transfer of the account to silver, this name is falling out of use, like money, half. | A penny or more pennies south. money in general; | tax, see penny ...

    Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - noun, m., uptr. cf. often Morphology: what? and a penny, why? wow and not a penny, what? penny, what? oh and a penny, about what? about her and about a pittance ...

    Dmitriev's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - Borrowing from Polish, where grosz, in turn, is borrowing from Czech, and goes back through German to Latin grossus denarius - "heavy coin". It is curious that the components of this combination are familiar to us ...

    Etymological dictionary of the Russian language Krylov

  • - I, R. a /, TV. o / m; pl. i /, R. e / i II, TV. gro / shem ...

    Spelling dictionary of the Russian language

  • - -and husband. 1. Antique copper coin of two kopecks, later half a kopeck. Not a penny. D. the price of someone. or Mr. copper is the price of someone. or not worth a dime. Not to put someone-n in the city. ...

    Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - a penny, husband. 1. A coin worth half a kopeck. 2. more often than not. Little money, negligible price. This work is not profitable: it pays a pittance for it. It costs a penny. For a penny or for a penny to buy, sell something ...

    Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - penny I m. Copper coin in denomination of two kopecks, later - half a kopeck. II predicate. colloquial 1. Evaluating the characteristic of any amount of money as very small; pennies. 2 ...

    Efremova's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - See STRANGE -...

    IN AND. Dahl. Russian proverbs

  • - Eagle. Do not get the benefits of the exchange. SOG 1994, 125 ...

    A large dictionary of Russian sayings

  • "not for a penny" in the books

    Copper Penny

    From the book Remember, Can't Forget the author Kolosova Marianna

    A COPPER FARE There is no path left, no trace From those who have gone into obscurity forever. Were. Lived. And somewhere they all left From loved ones, from friends and from the earth. And the fields, as before, are green, And the forests are dense and dark. Where the Old Believer sketes used to be, Today there are grasses and azure flowers. There

    Benedikt Sarnoff I WILL NOT BOTTLE THE UNION OF WRITERS

    From the book Transparent stars. Absurd dialogues the author Yulis Oleg

    Benedikt Sarnoff I WILL NOT PUT WRITER'S UNION IN A FAREWELL - Most of the actors I have spoken to claim to find the character traits of most of the characters they play. Tell us about the relationship of the famous literary critic

    the author Dotsenko Vitaly Dmitrievich

    "... BUT AS A FLEET MAN - HIM THE PRICE!"

    From the book Myths and Legends of the Russian Navy the author Dotsenko Vitaly Dmitrievich

    "... BUT AS A FLEET MAN - HIM THE PRICE!" Over the three hundred year history of its existence, the regular Russian fleet suffered only three major defeats: the first - at Rochensalm in 1790, when the commander of the Baltic galley fleet, Prince of Nassau-Siegen, trying to please

    Penny

    From the book Encyclopedic Dictionary (D-D) author Brockhaus F.A.

    Grosh Grosh. - The first pennies of the bat at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslas II (1191 - 1194); these were large silver coins, minted from 14 lots of silver, 1/4 lot each weighing (hence the 84th standard). A little later, G. Meissen and

    Moon and penny

    From the book All the masterpieces of world literature in a summary. Plots and characters. Foreign literature of the XX century. Book 1 author Novikov V.I.

    The Moon and Sixpence Novel (1919) After his death, the artist Charles Strickland was recognized as a genius, and, as is usually the case, everyone who has seen him at least once rushes to write his memoirs and interpret his work. Some make Strickland a good-natured family man, a caring husband and

    Penny

    From the book Great Soviet Encyclopedia (GR) of the author TSB

    Grosh Grosh (Polish, grosz, German Groschen, from Latin denarius grossus - heavy coin), a coin of different times and countries. Chasing of G. began in Italy in the 12th century, in many Europe. countries - in the 13-14 centuries. Initially, G. was a large silver coin. In the 14-15 centuries. the weight and quality of metal in G. decreased, and it

    Prague penny

    From the book Great Soviet Encyclopedia (PR) of the author TSB

    Happiness for a penny

    From the book New Psychological Tips for Every Day the author Stepanov Sergei Sergeevich

    Happiness for a penny In the debate about whether money can make a person happy, many copies have been broken. The results of many psychological observations and experiments force us to at least partially recognize the old truth: "Money is not happiness." Proven: breaking out of poverty,

    Chatter is not worth the price!

    From the book Rules. Success laws author Canfield Jack

    Chatter is not worth the price! To succeed, you need to follow those who have already achieved it, and those who have achieved it are focused on tireless activity. I have already explained how to think over your dreams and ideas, set goals, break them down into smaller tasks, like

    Not worth all the moralizing

    From the book Black Swan [Under the Sign of Unpredictability] the author Taleb Nassim Nicholas

    It’s not worth all moral teachings To overload your texts with quotations from famous philosophers is a bad habit, unless, of course, you are going to laugh at the greats or provide historical information. Not that there was no meaning in these sayings, but sonorous maxims

    Penny price

    From the book Letters to Presidents the author Minkin Alexander Viktorovich

    Not worth a price February 20, 2009Year presidents, Comrades Supreme Commanders, congratulations on your victory! Law and conscience have triumphed! For the first time, the court ruled: the state must pay the mother of the crippled soldier for moral damage. Until now, if it succeeded

    Not worth the price / Politics and economics / How much

    From the book Results No. 5 (2012) author Results Magazine

    A penny price / Politics and economics / What is 1 ruble per square meter - this is the annual rental rate for dilapidated buildings that are monuments of history and architecture, established by the Moscow government. But only cheese in a mousetrap is free

    Part three "Ah, Pan, Panov, there is no heat for a penny ..."

    From the book Our Tireless Ark. Experience of overcoming adversity the author Beilezon Svetlana Vitalievna

    Part three "Oh, Pan, Panov, there is no heat for a penny ..." Well, let it be ashamed. Whoever cannot, will still not give anything, but what if someone still hears and wants to help? I live on Leninsky. I went on a big shopping trip. I talked about our children, but I don’t

    Maxim Semelyak The last penny of a soul

    From the book Backwoods (November 2007) the author Russian life magazine

    Maxim Semelyak The last penny of a soul The Leningrad group is releasing a new album Aurora. Shnurov couldn’t come up with a name for a long time. Initially, the title contained the word “Quadrille”, then a wild pun “Lyu.ce.her” arose. Having approved the final version of "Aurora", Shnurov did not

      Husband. two kopecks, two-kopeck copper; with the transfer of the account to silver, this name is falling out of use, like money, half. | A penny or more pennies south. money in general; | tax, see penny. Good for your penny everywhere. I didn't buy it for my penny, ... ... Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

      - (German Groschen). Copper coin in Russia and Poland = 1/2 kopeck; in the old days a copper coin of 2 kopecks in banknotes; in Germany silver (silbergroshen) = 1/30 thaler = 3 kopecks; also a coin in Spain, Switzerland, Italy. Dictionary foreign words,… … Dictionary of foreign words of the Russian language

      GROSH, ah, husband. 1. Antique copper coin of two kopecks, later half a kopeck. Not a penny (absolutely no money; colloquial). D. price to whom what n. or g. copper (broken) price to whom what n. or a penny of copper (broken) is not worth (worth nothing, nowhere ... ... Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

      Lost for a penny. Ruined him not for a penny. See UNDERWORK ...

      At the age of seven, seventy-seven troubles were overwhelmed. We live, we cough, we walk, we limp. With a bit of a cough, with a bit of dandruff. Every day, then joy, but tears do not wane. What's next is better, and you won't cry. Our living (or: living, living) ... ... IN AND. Dahl. Russian proverbs

      What you don’t look for, you won’t find (you won’t find). Seek will find it, but it will open to the one who pushes it. Seek and find, push and open. For what you go, you will find. Whoever follows what will find it. You go for the thin one, and you will find the thin one. Language to Kiev ... ... IN AND. Dahl. Russian proverbs

      The censer smokes on the poor man. Better to serve over the doorstep than to stand at the doorstep. Better to serve through the window than to stand under the window. God forbid to give, God forbid to take (i.e. alms). Bring God to submit, God forbid to accept! A rich old age, but a poor one ... ... IN AND. Dahl. Russian proverbs

      The century will stretch, everyone (everyone) will get it. Day after day does not come. Day after day does not fall, hour after hour does not fall. Anything can happen in the world (and it happens that nothing happens). A mountain will not converge with a mountain, but a person with a person (or: a pot with ... ... IN AND. Dahl. Russian proverbs

      Cross yourself and get some sleep! Bow to Makar, and Makar to seven sides. He began with the spirit and ended with the belly. He sits in trouble and smokes in trouble. Conceived for health, and brought together for peace. Neither from the box, nor into the box. Does not fit into the box, does not come out of the box and does not give the box. No dignity ... IN AND. Dahl. Russian proverbs

      Masterforex-V- (Masterforex 5) Masterforex V is an educational Internet project in the field of the Forex currency market Exposing the Masterforex V training project, the organizer and teachers of the Masterforex 5 fraudulent academy, methods of deceiving project clients ... ... Investor encyclopedia

    Penny /. Morphemic-spelling dictionary

  • penny - Borrowing from Polish, where grosz, in turn, is borrowing from Czech, and goes back through German to Latin grossus denarius - "heavy coin". It is curious that the components of this combination are familiar to us. Krylov's etymological dictionary
  • Penny - The first pennies of the bat at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslas II (1191-1194); these were large silver coins, minted from 14-tilot silver, 1/4 lot each weighing (hence the 84th standard). A little later they appeared ... Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron
  • penny - Not a penny (colloquial) - no money at all. Every day not a penny in your pocket. Copper penny or broken price to someone or a penny (copper, broken) is not worth (colloquial iron.) - it costs nothing, very bad, good for nothing. Such a friendship is worth a copper penny. Phraseological dictionary Volkova
  • penny - GROSH -a; m. [Polish. grosz, it. Grosch from lat. (denarius) grossus - thick (denarius)]. 1. In Russia: from 1657 to 1838: a copper coin in denomination of two kopecks, later (from 1838 to 1917) - in half a kopeck. Beef cost Mr. per pound, in the summer three kopecks. Explanatory dictionary Kuznetsov
  • penny - penny, penny, husband. 1. Coin with a value of half a kopeck (· obsolete). 2. more often than not. Little money, negligible price. This work is not profitable: it pays a pittance for it. It costs a penny. For a penny or for a penny to buy, sell something (very cheap, almost for nothing). Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary
  • penny - -a, m. 1. An ancient monetary unit equal to two kopecks (from 1657 to 1838), later - half a kopeck (from 1838 to 1917). Beef cost us a penny a pound, three kopecks in the summer. Dostoevsky, Notes from a dead house. 2. usually pl. h. (pennies, s). colloquial Small academic dictionary
  • penny - penny I m. Copper coin in denomination of two kopecks (in the Russian state, 1654 - 1838), later - in half a kopeck (in the Russian state, 1838 - 1917). II predicate. colloquial Efremova's Explanatory Dictionary
  • GROSH - GROSH (Polish. Grosz) - a coin of different times and countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17-18 centuries. copper two-, from the 19th century. half-penny coin. Modern bargaining chip for Poland (1 grosz = 1/100 zloty) and Austria (German Groschen); 1 grosz - 1/100 shilling). Big encyclopedic dictionary
  • penny - noun, number of synonyms: 6 penny 1 money 4 money 129 kokur 4 coin 298 penny 5 Dictionary of synonyms of the Russian language
  • Grosh - (Polish, grosz, German Groschen, from Latin denarius grossus - heavy coin) a coin of different times and countries. Chasing of G. began in Italy in the 12th century, in many Europe. countries - in the 13-14 centuries. Initially, G. was a large silver coin. In the 14-15 centuries. Great Soviet Encyclopedia
  • GROSH - (see SHILLING, THALER). Philatelic Dictionary
  • penny - orph. penny, -a, tv. oh Spelling dictionary Lopatin
  • penny - noun, m., upotr. cf. often (not) what? penny and penny, why? penny and penny, (see) what? penny, what? penny and penny, about what? about a pittance and a pittance; pl. what? pennies and pennies, (no) what? pennies and pennies, what? pennies and pennies, (see) what? pennies and pennies, what? ... Dmitriev's Explanatory Dictionary
  • penny - Rod. p. penny, groshevik "a coin in one penny", at Kotoshikhin (112), Ukrainian. grish, blr. penny, in Western Russian. and Galician texts from the XIV century; see Shear. I, 598. Through Polish. grosz from old. German Etymological Dictionary of Max Vasmer
  • Nothing for a penny

    not for a sin (perish, abyss)

    Orthographic dictionary. 2012

    See also the interpretations, synonyms, meanings of the word and what is NOT FOR A DIFFERENT in Russian in dictionaries, encyclopedias and reference books:

    • Nothing for a penny
      not for a grab (perish, ...
    • Nothing for a penny
      adverb qualities.-quantities. colloquial 1. Very cheap. 2. transfer. Completely in vain; ...
    • Grosh in the Dictionary of Economic Terms:
      - small bargaining chip. G. appeared in Russia in the 17th century. and then took his place in the form of a copper coin ...
    • NO in the Brief Church Slavonic Dictionary:
      - not, …
    • Grosh in the Big Encyclopedic Dictionary:
      (Polish. grosz) coin of different times and countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17-18 centuries. copper ...
    • Grosh in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
      (Polish, grosz, German Groschen, from Latin denarius grossus - heavy coin), a coin of different times and countries. Chasing of G. began in ...
    • Grosh in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
      The first pennies were battered at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslas II (1191-1194); these were large silver coins minted from a 14-tilot ...
    • Grosh in the Modern Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    • Grosh
      (from Latin grossus - thick, large), coins of various countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia at 17 ...
    • Grosh in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
      pennies pennies, pl. pennies, to her and pennies, to her, m. 1. genus. penny, pl. pennies, her, ist. Antique copper coin worth ...
    • NO in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
      , particle. 1. Combined with the genus. p. means the complete absence of someone, the non-existence of something. Not a cloud. Not a soul around. No ...
    • PER in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
      who-what and who-what, an excuse with wines. and tv. p. I .1. On the other side, outside, behind someone. Step over the threshold. ...
    • Grosh in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
      , -a, m. 1. Old copper coin of two kopecks, later half a kopeck. Not a penny (no money at all; colloquial). G. …
    • Grosh in the Big Russian Encyclopedic Dictionary:
      (Polish grosz), diff. times and countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17-18 centuries. copper ...
    • Grosh in the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedia:
      ? The first pennies were bat at the end of the 12th century by the Bohemian king Wenceslas II (1191-1194); these were large silver coins minted from ...
    • Grosh in the Complete Accentuated Paradigm by Zaliznyak:
      penny "w, penny", penny ", penny" d, penny ", penny" m, gro "w, pennies", penny "m, penny" mi, penny ", ...
    • Grosh in the Dictionary for solving and compiling scanwords:
      Austrian ...
    • Grosh in Abramov's Dictionary of Synonyms:
      || penniless, gagging for a penny, not a penny, not a penny to waste, sitting penniless, hammering together ...
    • NO in the dictionary of Synonyms of the Russian language.
    • Grosh in the dictionary of Synonyms of the Russian language:
      penny, money, money, coin, ...
    • NO
    • Grosh in the New Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language by Efremova:
    • NO in the Dictionary of the Russian language Lopatin:
      nor, the particle is amplifying and ...
    • Grosh in the Dictionary of the Russian language Lopatin:
      penny, -`a, tv. ...
    • NO
      nor, the particle is amplifying and ...
    • Grosh in the Complete Spelling Dictionary of the Russian Language:
      penny, -a, tv. ...
    • NO in the Spelling Dictionary:
      nor, the particle is amplifying and ...
    • Grosh in the Spelling Dictionary:
      penny, -`a, tv. ...
    • NO ...
      neither connects simple sentences in enumerative relationships, neither ... Forms pronouns with meaning. denials + nobody, nothing, nothing, nobody, nowhere, ...
    • NO in the Ozhegov Russian Language Dictionary:
      Serves to strengthen denial. + I have not met a single person. nor In an affirmative sentence combined with the pronouns "who", ...
    • PER in the Ozhegov Russian Language Dictionary:
      2 over any limit to Him over forty. The conversation started at midnight. The frost is already over thirty degrees. for 2 sake, in ...
    • Grosh in the Ozhegov Russian Language Dictionary:
      old copper coin of two kopecks, later half a kopeck Not a penny (no money at all; colloquial). D. the price of someone. or Mr. ...
    • NOR in Dahl's Dictionary:
      with negation in general, means. denial, refusal, prohibition: lack, absence; without exclusivity; firm and general denial. There is not a speck of dust. Not a penny ...
    • FOR in Dahl's Dictionary:
      offer with wines. and creator. | With the accusative to the question Where, shows the limit of movement behind, behind, outside of what. Over the night, ...
    • GROSH in Dahl's Dictionary:
      husband. two kopecks, two-kopeck copper; with the transfer of the account to silver, this name is falling out of use, like money, half. | ...
    • Grosh in the Modern Explanatory Dictionary, TSB:
      (Polish grosz), a coin from different times and countries. It began to be minted in Italy in the 12th century. In Russia in the 17-18 centuries. copper ...
    • NO
      (no blow.). Part of the pronouns "nobody" and "nothing" separated when combined with a preposition. Heard of nothing. From no one ...
    • NO in the Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language by Ushakov:
      (no punch.), particle. 1. amplifying in negative. suggestions. uptr. before a noun with the word "one", a cut It can be omitted in all cases, ...
    • PER in the Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language by Ushakov:
      grabs a straw. Proverb. 2. for what. To take something, to start something. do (colloquial fam.). Grabs on any business. They grab onto the most ...
    • PER in the Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language by Ushakov:
      (without shock., except for those cases when the stress from a noun is transferred to a preposition, for example, by the nose, overseas), a preposition with a creator. ...
    • Grosh in the Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language by Ushakov:
      penny, m. 1. Coin, worth half a kopeck (outdated). 2. more often than not. Little money, negligible price. This work is unprofitable: for her ...
    • NO
      1. Wed nescl. The name of the letter of the Greek alphabet. 2. Union Upotr. with the strengthening of the negation and connection of homogeneous members of a sentence or wholes ...
    • Grosh in the Explanatory Dictionary of Efremova:
      m. 1) Copper coin in denomination of two kopecks (in the Russian state 1654-1838), later - in half a kopeck (in the Russian state ...
    • NO
      I uncl. Wed The name of the letter of the Greek alphabet. Union II It is used when strengthening the negation and connection of homogeneous members of a sentence or wholes ...
    • Grosh in the New Dictionary of the Russian Language by Efremova:
      m. 1. outdated. Copper coin in denomination of two kopecks (in the Russian state 1654 - 1838), later - half a kopeck ...
    • NO in the Big Modern Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language:
      I uncl. Wed The name of the letter of the Greek alphabet. Union II Used to strengthen negation when connecting homogeneous members of a sentence or wholes ...
    • Grosh in the Big Modern Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language:
      I m. Copper coin in denomination of two kopecks (in the Russian state 1654 - 1838), later - ...
    • RUSSIAN ADDRESSES in the Wiki Quote.
    • LOST FOR NOTHING. KILLED HIM FOR Nothing. in the Proverbs of the Russian people Dahl.
    Share with friends or save for yourself:

    Loading...