für Ordnung sorgen - définition. Qu'est-ce que für Ordnung sorgen
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est für Ordnung sorgen - définition

GERMAN PROVERB
Ordnung Muss Sein

Pelt         
  • Down, awn and guard hairs of a domestic tabby cat
  • disruptively colored]] coat provides [[camouflage]] for this [[ambush predator]].
  • [[Opossum]] fur
  • Computer generated image of wet fur}}
THICK GROWTH OF HAIR THAT COVERS THE SKIN OF MANY DIFFERENT ANIMALS, PARTICULARLY MAMMALS
Down hair; Pelage; Furs; Guard hairs; Underfur; Pelts; Fur-bearer; Furbearer; Animal fur; FUR; Dog hair; Furbearers; Fur bearer; Fur bearers; Fur-bearers; Furbearing; Fur bearing; Fur-bearing; Dog fur; Animal hair; Pet hair; Cat fur; Pelt; Hairless mammals
·noun The human skin.
II. Pelt ·vi To throw missiles.
III. Pelt ·vi To throw out words.
IV. Pelt ·noun A blow or stroke from something thrown.
V. Pelt ·noun The body of any quarry killed by the hawk.
VI. Pelt ·vt To Throw; to use as a missile.
VII. Pelt ·vt To strike with something thrown or driven; to assail with pellets or missiles, as, to pelt with stones; pelted with hail.
VIII. Pelt ·noun The skin of a beast with the hair on; a raw or undressed hide; a skin preserved with the hairy or woolly covering on it. ·see 4th Fell.
pelt         
  • Down, awn and guard hairs of a domestic tabby cat
  • disruptively colored]] coat provides [[camouflage]] for this [[ambush predator]].
  • [[Opossum]] fur
  • Computer generated image of wet fur}}
THICK GROWTH OF HAIR THAT COVERS THE SKIN OF MANY DIFFERENT ANIMALS, PARTICULARLY MAMMALS
Down hair; Pelage; Furs; Guard hairs; Underfur; Pelts; Fur-bearer; Furbearer; Animal fur; FUR; Dog hair; Furbearers; Fur bearer; Fur bearers; Fur-bearers; Furbearing; Fur bearing; Fur-bearing; Dog fur; Animal hair; Pet hair; Cat fur; Pelt; Hairless mammals
(pelts, pelting, pelted)
1.
The pelt of an animal is its skin, which can be used to make clothing or rugs.
...a bed covered with beaver pelts.
= hide
N-COUNT: usu pl
2.
If you pelt someone with things, you throw things at them.
Some of the younger men began to pelt one another with snowballs...
VERB: V n with n
3.
If the rain is pelting down, or if it is pelting with rain, it is raining very hard. (INFORMAL)
The rain now was pelting down...
It's pelting with rain...
We drove through pelting rain.
VERB: usu cont, V adv, it V with n, V-ing
4.
If you pelt somewhere, you run there very fast. (INFORMAL)
Without thinking, she pelted down the stairs in her nightgown.
= dash
VERB: V prep
5.
If you do something full pelt or at full pelt, you do it very quickly indeed. (INFORMAL)
Alice leapt from the car and ran full pelt towards the emergency room...
PHRASE: PHR after v
underfur         
  • Down, awn and guard hairs of a domestic tabby cat
  • disruptively colored]] coat provides [[camouflage]] for this [[ambush predator]].
  • [[Opossum]] fur
  • Computer generated image of wet fur}}
THICK GROWTH OF HAIR THAT COVERS THE SKIN OF MANY DIFFERENT ANIMALS, PARTICULARLY MAMMALS
Down hair; Pelage; Furs; Guard hairs; Underfur; Pelts; Fur-bearer; Furbearer; Animal fur; FUR; Dog hair; Furbearers; Fur bearer; Fur bearers; Fur-bearers; Furbearing; Fur bearing; Fur-bearing; Dog fur; Animal hair; Pet hair; Cat fur; Pelt; Hairless mammals
¦ noun an inner layer of short, fine fur or down underlying an animal's outer fur.

Wikipédia

Ordnung muss sein

Ordnung muss sein (reformed) or Ordnung muß sein (traditional) is a German proverbial expression which translates as "there must be order". The idea of "order" is generally recognized as a key cliche for describing German culture. Franz von Papen, for instance, cited it in 1932 as Frederick the Great's "classic expression". As a slogan used by Paul von Hindenburg, it became "world famous" in 1930, according to The New York Times. A longer version is contained in a mid-19th century collection of proverbs where the title is a Wellerism: Ordnung muß sein, sagte Hans, da brachten sie ihn ins Spinnhaus (in English: "Order must be, said Hans, as they took him to the prison)."

Related German proverbs are Ordnung ist das halbe Leben, literally "order is half of life", humorously extended in the antiproverb und Unordnung die andere Hälfte ("and disorder the other half"). Similarly, a proverb says Wer Ordnung hält, ist nur zu faul zum Suchen meaning "he who keeps order is just too lazy to spend his time searching".

Present interpretation of the expression distorts its original meaning. The expression was introduced by Martin Luther as Ordnung muss sein unter den Leuten ("Law must be among people"), Ordnung in the sense of True Law of God as opposed to human rules, for Orden und Regeln sind nichts ("Orders and rules are nothing") (on the same page) and Liebe zu Geld... ist nicht Gottes Werk oder Ordnung (Love for money... is not God's work or “Ordnung”).

There is an Ordnungsamt (Public Office for Order, Code enforcement) in every German municipality and city. Minor or petty offenses are called Ordnungswidrigkeiten (meaning "offense", or rather "contrarity to (public) order", or indeed the American (among others) similar concept of disorderly conduct).