Moby Dick - translation to ολλανδικά
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Moby Dick - translation to ολλανδικά

1851 NOVEL BY HERMAN MELVILLE
MobyDick; Moby Dick; Moby-dick; Moby Dick; or, The Whale; Moby dick; The Pequod; Pequod (ship); Moby-Dick (novel); Dagoo; Moby-Dick: Captain Ahab; Moby Dick: Captain Ahab; Starbuck: Moby Dick; Moby Dick (Novel); Moby-Dick; or, The White Whale; Timor Tim; Moby-Dick; or, The Whale; Ahab's Wife, Or, The Star-Gazer; Ahabian; Fast-Fish and Loose-Fish; The Whale (novel)
  • Arrowhead]], the house in [[Pittsfield, Massachusetts]], in which Melville worked on ''Moby-Dick''
  • Herman Melville
  • Melville's copy of ''Natural History of the Sperm Whale'', 1839
  • Moby Dick, as illustrated in a 1902 edition
  • Moby Dick attacking a whaling boat
  • Queequeg, as illustrated in a 1902 edition

Moby Dick         
novelle door Herman Melville (gepubliceerd in 1851)
Tom, Dick and Harry         
PHRASE USED TO REFER TO UNIDENTIFIED PEOPLE
Tom Dick Harry; Tom Dick And Harry; Tom, Dick, and Harry; Tom, Dick or Harry; Tom Dick and Harry
iedereen
Melville      
n. Melville (Herman, Amerikaans schrijver, samensteller van "Moby Dick"; naam)

Ορισμός

moby
<jargon> /moh'bee/ (From MIT, seems to have been in use among model railroad fans years ago. Derived from Melville's "Moby Dick", some say from "Moby Pickle") 1. Large, immense, complex, impressive. "A Saturn V rocket is a truly moby frob." "Some MIT undergrads pulled off a moby hack at the Harvard-Yale game." 2. (Obsolete) The maximum address space of a computer (see below). For a 680[234]0 or VAX or most modern 32-bit architectures, it is 4,294,967,296 8-bit bytes (four gigabytes). 3. A title of address (never of third-person reference), usually used to show admiration, respect, and/or friendliness to a competent hacker. "Greetings, moby Dave. How's that address-book thing for the Mac going?" 4. In backgammon, doubles on the dice, as in "moby sixes", "moby ones", etc. Compare this with bignum: double sixes are both bignums and moby sixes, but moby ones are not bignums (the use of "moby" to describe double ones is sarcastic). 5. The largest available unit of something which is available in discrete increments. Thus a "moby Coke" is not just large, it's the largest size on sale. This term entered hackerdom with the Fabritek 256K memory added to the MIT AI PDP-6 machine, which was considered unimaginably huge when it was installed in the 1960s (at a time when a more typical memory size for a time-sharing system was 72 kilobytes). Thus, a moby is classically 256K 36-bit words, the size of a PDP-6 or PDP-10 moby. Back when address registers were narrow the term was more generally useful, because when a computer had virtual memory mapping, it might actually have more physical memory attached to it than any one program could access directly. One could then say "This computer has six mobies" meaning that the ratio of physical memory to address space is six, without having to say specifically how much memory there actually is. That in turn implied that the computer could timeshare six "full-sized" programs without having to swap programs between memory and disk. Nowadays the low cost of processor logic means that address spaces are usually larger than the most physical memory you can cram onto a machine, so most systems have much *less* than one theoretical "native" moby of core. Also, more modern memory-management techniques (especially paging) make the "moby count" less significant. However, there is one series of widely-used chips for which the term could stand to be revived --- the Intel 8088 and 80286 with their incredibly brain-damaged segmented-memory designs. On these, a "moby" would be the 1-megabyte address span of a segment/offset pair (by coincidence, a PDP-10 moby was exactly one megabyte of nine-bit bytes). [Jargon File] (1997-10-01)

Βικιπαίδεια

Moby-Dick

Moby-Dick; or, The Whale is an 1851 novel by American writer Herman Melville. The book is the sailor Ishmael's narrative of the maniacal quest of Ahab, captain of the whaling ship Pequod, for vengeance against Moby Dick, the giant white sperm whale that bit off his leg on the ship's previous voyage. A contribution to the literature of the American Renaissance, Moby-Dick was published to mixed reviews, was a commercial failure, and was out of print at the time of the author's death in 1891. Its reputation as a Great American Novel was established only in the 20th century, after the 1919 centennial of its author's birth. William Faulkner said he wished he had written the book himself, and D. H. Lawrence called it "one of the strangest and most wonderful books in the world" and "the greatest book of the sea ever written". Its opening sentence, "Call me Ishmael", is among world literature's most famous.

Melville began writing Moby-Dick in February 1850 and finished 18 months later, a year after he had anticipated. Melville drew on his experience as a common sailor from 1841 to 1844, including on whalers, and on wide reading in whaling literature. The white whale is modeled on a notoriously hard-to-catch albino whale Mocha Dick, and the book's ending is based on the sinking of the whaleship Essex in 1820. The detailed and realistic descriptions of whale hunting and of extracting whale oil, as well as life aboard ship among a culturally diverse crew, are mixed with exploration of class and social status, good and evil, and the existence of God. The book's literary influences include Shakespeare, Carlyle and the Bible. In addition to narrative prose, Melville uses styles and literary devices ranging from songs, poetry, and catalogs to Shakespearean stage directions, soliloquies, and asides. In August 1850, with the manuscript perhaps half finished, he met Nathaniel Hawthorne and was deeply impressed by his Mosses from an Old Manse, which he compared to Shakespeare in its cosmic ambitions. This encounter may have inspired him to revise and deepen Moby-Dick, which is dedicated to Hawthorne, "in token of my admiration for his genius".

The book was first published (in three volumes) as The Whale in London in October 1851, and under its definitive title, Moby-Dick, or, The Whale, in a single-volume edition in New York in November. The London publisher, Richard Bentley, censored or changed sensitive passages; Melville made revisions as well, including a last-minute change of the title for the New York edition. The whale, however, appears in the text of both editions as "Moby Dick", without the hyphen. Reviewers in Britain were largely favorable, though some objected that the tale seemed to be told by a narrator who perished with the ship, as the British edition lacked the epilogue recounting Ishmael's survival. American reviewers were more hostile.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για Moby Dick
1. Starbucks, named after the first mate in Herman Melville‘s ‘Moby Dick,‘ was founded in 1'71.
2. Eventually, they would be ‘monstrous‘ creatures designed along the lines of Moby Dick.
3. And then, for the pièce de résistance, we saw "Moby Dick," starring Gregory Peck and Richard Basehart.
4. After the sequestered, shadowy intensities of Hawthorne and Poe, we enter, in Typee and Moby–Dick, far–flung outdoor space.
5. Mahfouz was widely read in western fiction and particularly admired Flaubert, Stendhal, and Proust, and Melville‘s Moby Dick.