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Daily Mirror - vertaling naar Engels

BRITISH NEWSPAPER
London Daily Mirror; The Daily Mirror; The Scurra; Mirror.co.uk; We Love Telly; Celeb on Sunday; Monday Mania; Irish Daily Mirror; Mirror (UK); Mirror Online; The Mirror (United Kingdom); Irish Mirror; Dailymirror; Daily mirror; The Mirror (UK); The Irish Mirror; IrishMirror.ie
  • [[Alfred Harmsworth]] (later Lord Northcliffe), founder of the ''Daily Mirror''
  • Daily Mirror Building (1957–1960) in Langham Place, London
  • Front page of the ''Mirror'' 24 June 1996, with headline "ACHTUNG! SURRENDER For you Fritz, ze Euro 96 Championship is over", and accompanying contribution from the editor, "Mirror declares football war on Germany"
  • [[Harold Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Rothermere]]

Daily Mirror         

[,deɪlɪ'mɪrə]

общая лексика

"Дейли миррор" (ежедневная малоформатная газета [tabloid], рассчитанная на массового читателя; по некоторым вопросам поддерживает Лейбористскую партию [Labour Party]; публикует много сенсационно-развлекательных и рекламных материалов; тир. ок. 3 млн. экз.; издаётся в Лондоне концерном "Миррор групп ньюспейперз" [Mirror Group Newspapers]. Основана в 1903)

синоним

popular paper

Mirror         
  • Convex mirror placed at the [[parking garage]].
  • ''Grove Of Mirrors'' by [[Hilary Arnold Baker]], [[Romsey]]
  • Mirrors in interior design:
"Waiting room in the house of M.me B.", [[Art Deco]] project by Italian architect [[Arnaldo dell'Ira]], Rome, 1939.
  • Glasses with mirrors – Prezi HQ
  • A dielectric coated mirror used in a [[dye laser]]. The mirror is over 99% reflective at 550 [[nanometer]]s, (yellow), but will allow most other colors to pass through.
  • constructively interfere]]. Stacks may consist of a few to hundreds of individual coats.
  • Dunville's Whiskey]].
  • [[E-ELT]] mirror segments under test
  • A [[first-surface mirror]] coated with aluminium and enhanced with [[dielectric]] coatings. The angle of the incident light (represented by both the light in the mirror and the shadow behind it) exactly matches the angle of reflection (the reflected light shining on the table).
  • Four different mirrors, showing the difference in reflectivity. Clockwise from upper left: dielectric (80%), aluminium (85%), chrome (25%), and enhanced silver (99.9%). All are first-surface mirrors except the chrome mirror. The dielectric mirror reflects yellow light from the first-surface, but acts like an [[antireflection coating]] to purple light, thus produced a ghost reflection of the lightbulb from the second-surface.
  • Chinese painter]] [[Gu Kaizhi]], c. 344–405 AD
  • A hot mirror used in a camera to reduce red eye
  • corrective optics]].
  • A side-mirror on a [[racing car]]
  • A cheval glass
  • 18th century [[vermeil]] mirror in the [[Musée des Arts décoratifs, Strasbourg]]
  • A multi-facet mirror in the [[Kibble Palace]] conservatory, [[Glasgow]], Scotland
  • A sculpture of a lady looking into a mirror, from [[Halebidu]], [[India]], 12th century
  • angle of incidence]]. When the surface is at a 90°, horizontal angle from the object, the image appears inverted 180° along the vertical (right and left remain on the correct sides, but the image appears upside down), because the normal angle of incidence points down vertically toward the water.
  • diffract]] more light than they reflect, the beam appears much brighter when reflecting back toward the observer.
  • A dielectric mirror used in [[tunable laser]]s. With a center wavelength of 600 nm and bandwidth of 100 nm, the coating is totally reflective to the orange construction paper, but only reflects the reddish hues from the blue paper.
  • Rear-view mirror
  • Flatness errors, like rippled dunes across the surface, produced these artifacts, distortion, and low image quality in the [[far field]] reflection of a household mirror.
  • A mirror reflects light waves to the observer, preserving the wave's curvature and divergence, to form an image when focused through the lens of the eye. The angle of the impinging wave, as it traverses the mirror's surface, matches the angle of the reflected wave.
  • A large convex mirror. Distortions in the image increase with the viewing distance.
  • A mirror reflects a real image (blue) back to the observer (red), forming a virtual image; a perceptual illusion that objects in the image are behind the mirror's surface and facing the opposite direction (purple). The arrows indicate the direction of the real and perceived images, and the reversal is analogous to viewing a movie with the film facing backwards, except the "screen" is the viewer's retina.
  • Mirror with lacquered back inlaid with 4 phoenixes holding ribbons in their mouths. Tang Dynasty. Eastern Xi'an city
  • Mirrored building in Manhattan - 2008
  • Roman fresco]] of a woman fixing her hair using a mirror, from [[Stabiae]], Italy, 1st century AD
  • Chimneypiece]] and overmantel mirror, c. 1750 V&A Museum no. 738:1 to 3–1897
  • Parabolic troughs near [[Harper Lake]] in [[California]]
  • Grimm]]-version fairytale
  • Deformable thin-shell mirror. It is 1120 millimetres across but just 2 millimetres thick, making it much thinner than most glass windows.<ref name=eso2013/>
  • trigrams]] and a demon-warding mirror. These charms are believed to frighten away evil spirits and to protect a dwelling from bad luck
  • Detail of the convex mirror from the [[Arnolfini portrait]], [[Bruges]], 1434 AD
  • [[Titian]]'s ''[[Venus with a Mirror]]''
  • 401 N. Wabash Ave.]] reflects the skyline along the [[Chicago River]] in downtown Chicago
  • Universum museum]] in Mexico City. The image splits between the convex and concave curves.
  • focal point]]. Sound waves are much longer than light waves, thus the object produces diffuse reflections in the visual spectrum.
SURFACE, TYPICALLY GLASS COATED WITH A METAL AMALGAM, WHICH REFLECTS A CLEAR IMAGE
Looking glass; Mirror types; Hand mirror; Reflective glass; Handmirror; Hand-mirror; Handmirrors; Hand-mirrors; Hand mirrors; Glass mirror; Cheval glass; Decorative mirrors; Mirrors; Vanity mirror; Bar mirror; Pub mirror; Silver mirror; 🪞

['mɪrə]

разговорное выражение

"Миррор"

полное выражение

"Daily Mirror"

mirror site         
REPLICA OF A WEBSITE WITH A DIFFERENT URL
Mirror site (2004); Web mirror; Mirror sites; Website mirror; Website mirroring; Mirror website; Mirror (website); Partial mirror

общая лексика

зеркальный сайт

FTP- или Web-сайт, содержащий копию другого сайта в целях приближения его к географически удалённым пользователям (других стран или регионов большой страны) и ускорения загрузки контента

разговорное выражение

"зеркало"

Смотрите также

web site

Definitie

Нью-Йорк дейли ньюс
("Нью-Йорк де́йли ньюс")

ежедневная газета в США. Основана в 1919. Издаётся в Нью-Йорке. Известна публикациями реакционного характера. Тираж (1974) 2,1 млн. экземпляров, воскресного выпуска - 3,1 млн. экземпляров.

Wikipedia

Daily Mirror

The Daily Mirror is a British national daily tabloid newspaper. Founded in 1903, it is owned by parent company Reach plc. From 1985 to 1987, and from 1997 to 2002, the title on its masthead was simply The Mirror. It had an average daily print circulation of 716,923 in December 2016, dropping to 587,803 the following year. Its Sunday sister paper is the Sunday Mirror. Unlike other major British tabloids such as The Sun and the Daily Mail, the Mirror has no separate Scottish edition; this function is performed by the Daily Record and the Sunday Mail, which incorporate certain stories from the Mirror that are of Scottish significance.

Originally pitched to the middle-class reader, it was converted into a working-class newspaper after 1934, in order to reach a larger audience. It was founded by Alfred Harmsworth, who sold it to his brother Harold Harmsworth (from 1914 Lord Rothermere) in 1913. In 1963 a restructuring of the media interests of the Harmsworth family led to the Mirror becoming a part of International Publishing Corporation. During the mid-1960s, daily sales exceeded 5 million copies, a feat never repeated by it or any other daily (non-Sunday) British newspaper since. The Mirror was owned by Robert Maxwell between 1984 and 1991. The paper went through a protracted period of crisis after his death before merging with the regional newspaper group Trinity in 1999 to form Trinity Mirror.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor Daily Mirror
1. "Sorry‘s Not Good Enough," howled the indignant Daily Mirror.
2. "Dying Diana Photo Fury" was The Daily Mirror headline.
3. "It was hard to take," Rooney told the Daily Mirror.
4. He told the Daily Mirror: "Kate – a nasty old rag.
5. "It hurt like hell," Jesica, from west London, told the Daily Mirror.
Vertaling van &#39Daily Mirror&#39 naar Russisch