other - определение. Что такое other
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Что (кто) такое other - определение

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Other (movie); The Other (disambiguation); The Other (film); Other (album); Other (disambiguation); The Other; The Other (song); The Other (novel)
Найдено результатов: 1653
other         
adj.
second
every other (I jog every other day)
other         
(others)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
Note: When 'other' follows the determiner 'an', it is written as one word: see 'another'.
1.
You use other to refer to an additional thing or person of the same type as one that has been mentioned or is known about.
They were just like any other young couple...
The communique gave no other details.
ADJ: det ADJ, ADJ n
Other is also a pronoun.
Four crewmen were killed, one other was injured...
In 1914 he (like so many others) lied about his age so that he could join the war effort.
PRON
2.
You use other to indicate that a thing or person is not the one already mentioned, but a different one.
Calls cost 36p per minute cheap rate and 48p per minute at all other times...
He would have to accept it; there was no other way...
ADJ: det ADJ, ADJ n
Other is also a pronoun.
This issue, more than any other, has divided her cabinet...
Some of these methods will work. Others will not.
PRON
3.
You use the other to refer to the second of two things or people when the identity of the first is already known or understood, or has already been mentioned.
The Captain was at the other end of the room...
Half of PML's scientists have first degrees, the other half have PhDs.
ADJ: det ADJ
The other is also a pronoun.
Almost everybody had a cigarette in one hand and a martini in the other...
PRON: the PRON
4.
You use other at the end of a list or a group of examples, to refer generally to people or things like the ones just mentioned.
Queensway Quay will incorporate shops, restaurants and other amenities...
Place them in a jam jar, porcelain bowl, or other similar container.
ADJ: det ADJ, ADJ n
Other is also a pronoun.
Descartes received his stimulus from the new physics and astronomy of Copernicus, Galileo, and others.
PRON
5.
You use the other to refer to the rest of the people or things in a group, when you are talking about one particular person or thing.
When the other pupils were taken to an exhibition, he was left behind.
ADJ: det ADJ
The others is also a pronoun.
Aubrey's on his way here, with the others.
PRON: the PRON
6.
Other people are people in general, as opposed to yourself or a person you have already mentioned.
The suffering of other people appals me...
She likes to be with other people.
ADJ: ADJ n
Others means the same as other people
.
His humour depended on contempt for others.
PRON
7.
You use other in informal expressions of time such as the other day, the other evening, or the other week to refer to a day, evening, or week in the recent past.
I rang her the other day and she said she'd like to come round...
ADJ: the ADJ n
8.
You use expressions like among other things or among others to indicate that there are several more facts, things, or people like the one or ones mentioned, but that you do not intend to mention them all.
He moved to England in 1980 where, among other things, he worked as a journalist...
His travels took him to Dublin, among other places...
He is expected to be supported at the meeting by Dennis Skinner and Tony Benn among others.
PHRASE: PHR with cl, oft PHR n [vagueness]
9.
If something happens, for example, every other day or every other month, there is a day or month when it does not happen between each day or month when it happens.
Their food is adequate. It includes meat at least every other day, vegetables and fruit...
Now that their children have grown up she joins Paddy in London every other week.
PHRASE: usu PHR after v
10.
You use every other to emphasize that you are referring to all the rest of the people or things in a group.
The same will apply in every other country.
PHRASE: PHR n [emphasis]
11.
You use none other than and no other than to emphasize the name of a person or thing when something about that person or thing is surprising in a particular situation.
He called together all his employees and announced that the manager was none other than his son.
PHRASE: PHR n [emphasis]
12.
You use nothing other than and no other than when you are going to mention a course of action, decision, or description and emphasize that it is the only one possible in the situation.
Nothing other than an immediate custodial sentence could be justified...
The rebels would not be happy with anything other than the complete removal of the current regime...
They have left us with no other choice than to take formal action.
PHRASE: PHR n [emphasis]
13.
You use or other in expressions like somehow or other and someone or other to indicate that you cannot or do not want to be more precise about the information that you are giving.
The Foundation is holding a dinner in honour of something or other...
Somehow or other he's involved.
PHRASE: n/adv PHR [vagueness]
14.
You use other than after a negative statement to say that the person, item, or thing that follows is the only exception to the statement.
She makes no reference to any feminist work other than her own...
PHRASE: with brd-neg, PHR n/-ing
15.
each other: see each
one after the other: see one
one or other: see one
this, that and the other: see this
in other words: see word
Other         
·adv Otherwise.
II. Other ·pron & ·adj Left, as opposed to right.
III. Other ·pron & ·adj Not this, but the contrary; opposite; as, the other side of a river.
IV. Other ·conj Either;
- used with other or or for its correlative (as either ... or are now used).
V. Other ·pron & ·adj Different from that which, or the one who, has been specified; not the same; not identical; additional; second of two.
VI. Other ·pron & ·adj Alternate; second;
- used ·esp. in connection with every; as, every other day, that is, each alternate day, every second day.
other         
¦ adjective & pronoun
1. used to refer to a person or thing that is different from one already mentioned or known.
alternative of two.
those not already mentioned.
2. additional.
3. (the other) Brit. informal sexual intercourse.
4. (usu. the Other) Philosophy & Sociology that which is distinct from, different from, or opposite to something or oneself.
Phrases
no other archaic nothing else.
the other day (or night, week, etc.) a few days (or nights, weeks, etc.) ago.
one's other half Brit. informal one's wife, husband, or partner.
the other place Brit. humorous
1. hell, as opposed to heaven.
2. Oxford University as regarded by Cambridge, and vice versa.
3. the House of Lords as regarded by the House of Commons, and vice versa.
the other woman the mistress of a married man.
Origin
OE other, of Gmc origin.
Other (philosophy)         
  • idealist]] philosopher G. W. F. Hegel introduced the concept of the Other as constituent part of human preoccupation with the Self.
  • Orientalist art: ''The Reception of the Ambassadors in Damascus'' (1511) features wildlife (the deer in the foreground) that is not native to Syria.
  • The philosopher of [[ethics]] [[Emmanuel Lévinas]] said that the infinite demand the Other places on the Self makes ethics the foundation of human existence and philosophy.
  • Cosmographia]]''" (1570), by Sebastian Münster, "[[Europa regina]]" is the cartographic centre of the world.
  • A manifestation of the Other in the form of [[scientific racism]]: In this 1857 illustration from his work ''Indigenous Races of the Earth'', anthropologist [[Josiah C. Nott]] justified anti-Black racism by claiming that the features of African-Americans had more in common with [[chimpanzee]]s than humans in comparison to white people.
  • The philosopher of existentialism Simone de Beauvoir developed the concept of The Other to explain the workings of the Man–Woman binary gender relation, as a critical base of the Dominator–Dominated relation, which characterises sexual inequality between men and women.
  • Chinese immigration]] as an existential threat to the Western world.
PHILOSOPHICAL, PSYCHOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL CONCEPT THAT REFERS TO THE OPPOSITE OF ONE'S OWN IDENTITY
Constitutive other; The other; Infinite Other; Othering; The constitutive other; Cultural otherness; Other‍ (philosophy); Otherization; The Other (philosophy); Other group; Otherisation
In phenomenology, the terms the Other and the Constitutive Other identify the other human being, in their differences from the Self, as being a cumulative, constituting factor in the self-image of a person; as acknowledgement of being real; hence, the Other is dissimilar to and the opposite of the Self, of Us, and of the Same.The Oxford Companion to Philosophy (1995) p.
Significant Other (play)         
2015 PLAY BY JOSHUA HARMON
Significant Other (2015 play)
Significant Other is an American play written by Joshua Harmon, which premiered Off-Broadway in 2015, followed by a Broadway production at the Booth Theatre in Spring 2017.
Other People's Heartache         
SERIES OF MIXTAPES
Other People's Heartache, Pt. 2; VS. (Other People's Heartache, Pt. III); Other People's Heartache Pt. 4; Other People's Heartache 4; Other People's Heartache, Pt. 4
Other People's Heartache is a series of mixtapes by Bastille. The first was released in February 2012, the second in December 2012, the third in December 2014, and the fourth in December 2018.
Languages Other Than English         
  • Australian Passport]]
  • 181x181px
  • Children at School
TERM USED TO DESCRIBE LANGUAGE SUBJECTS BESIDES ENGLISH IN PREDOMINANTLY ENGLISH-SPEAKING COUNTRIES
LOTE; Languages other than English
LOTE or Languages Other Than English is the name given to language subjects besides English in Australia, New York City, and other schools. The name evolved from 'heritage language', a term first used to refer to languages other than French and English in Canada.
Other Windsor, 6th Earl of Plymouth         
  • Sarah Archer]] (1762–1838), Countess of Plymouth & Countess Amherst of Arracan, after Andrew Plimer.
  • Obelisk dedicated to Other Windsor, 6th Earl of Plymouth
  • The Old Grange at Hewell Grange, where the 6th Earl kept his stud
  • Memorial to the 6th Earl of Plymouth at St Bartholomew's Church, [[Tardebigge]] by [[Francis Chantrey]]
ENGLISH NOBLE (1789-1833)
Other Archer Windsor; Other Archer Windsor, 6th Earl of Plymouth
Other Archer Windsor, 6th Earl of Plymouth (2 July 1789 – 20 July 1833) was an English nobleman, the eldest and only surviving son"Obituary", The Gentleman's magazine, Volume 103, Part 2, F. Jefferies, 1833 of the 5th Earl of Plymouth by his wife and cousin, Hon.
Other specified dissociative disorder         
CLUSTER OF DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS
OSDD; User:Challenger.rebecca/sandbox; Draft:Other Specified Dissociative Disorder; Other Specified Dissociative Disorder; Other specified dissociative disorders
Other specified dissociative disorder (OSDD) is a mental health diagnosis for pathological dissociation that matches the DSM-5 criteria for a dissociative disorder, but does not fit the full criteria for any of the specifically identified subtypes, which include dissociative identity disorder, dissociative amnesia, and depersonalization/derealization disorder, and the reasons why the previous diagnoses were not met are specified. "Unspecified dissociative disorder" is given when the clinician does not give a reason.

Википедия

Other

Other often refers to:

  • Other (philosophy), a concept in psychology and philosophy

Other or The Other may also refer to: