What does it mean to ford a river. Dictionary word "ford". Modern combined dream book

    WIDE, adv. (usually with ch. go over, go over). Walking along the bottom of the river (in a shallow place); ant. swim (cf. ford in 2 meanings). Cross the river. It's not deep here, you can wade. Explanatory Dictionary of Ushakov. D.N. Ushakov. 1935 1940 ... Explanatory Dictionary of Ushakov

    I will pass, you will pass, please. passed, passed; passed; having crossed and (colloquially) having crossed, owls. (to go to (1)). 1. what and through what. Walking, move, cross on one side of something. to the other, from one end to the other. Troops moved... Explanatory Dictionary of Ushakov

    WIDE, adv. Along the ford, along the bottom in a shallow place, do not swim. Cross the river in Explanatory dictionary of Ozhegov. S.I. Ozhegov, N.Yu. Shvedova. 1949 1992 ... Explanatory dictionary of Ozhegov

    adv. In a shallow place, along the bottom (rivers, lakes, etc.); don't swim. Cross to. Cross the river to... encyclopedic Dictionary

    wade- adv. In a shallow place, along the bottom (rivers, lakes, etc.); don't swim. Cross over. Cross the river... Dictionary of many expressions

    cross over- to wade... Dictionary of archaisms of the Russian language

    - - scientist and writer, full member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, professor of chemistry at St. Petersburg University; was born in the village Denisovka, Arkhangelsk province, November 8, 1711, died in St. Petersburg on April 4, 1765. At present… … Big biographical encyclopedia

    Dzungarian Alatau- Contents 1 Administrative affiliation 2 Geography 3 Climate 4 Administrative obstacles 4.1 Registration ... Tourist Encyclopedia

    Caucasian War of 1817 1864 ... Wikipedia

    to cross, cross, cross a ford or across a river, cross a ford. | He barely crossed the room, crossed the street, crossed with difficulty, out of weakness. | to ferment from place to place, to roam, to stagger; roam. | to ferment, to ferment, ... ... Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

1. Adverbs are written together (in one word), formed by combining a preposition-prefix with an adverb: utterly, forever, the day after tomorrow.

Note. Separately written combinations of prepositions with invariable words, used in this case in the meaning of a noun, should be distinguished from such words: nullify, do at random, go with a bang etc. Compare:

For tomorrow the patient felt better("felt when?" - in the meaning of the adverb). The meeting is scheduled for tomorrow (“what time is it?” as a noun).

2. Adverbs are written together (in one word), formed by combining the preposition-prefix in or on with the collective numeral: twice, in two (but: in two).

3. Adverbs are written together (in one word), formed by combining a preposition-prefix with a short form of an adjective: to the left, for a long time, tightly, red-hot, long ago, to the right, for a long time, in vain, nearby or with the form of the comparative degree of the adjective: more, more.

4. Adverbs are written together (in one word), formed by combining a preposition-prefix with the full form of an adjective or with a pronoun: close (to approach), scattered (to throw), manually (to do), blindly (to wander), blindly (to play), outright(‘get resigned’), draw (play), with might and main (swing).

Remember: if an adjective begins with a vowel in an adverb, then the preposition is written separately with it: act openly.

Some adverbial formations are also written separately (in two words), with a preposition for: on the side, on the world, on the back.

5. Adverbs are written together (in one word), having in their composition such nouns or such nominal forms that are not used in the modern literary language:

enough

to smithereens

locked up

back home

back to back

in a mess

by surprise

soft-boiled

secretly

down to the ground

for the familiar

flush

from within

frowningly

on the sly

outside

down to earth

obliquely

down the drain

hastily

alert

on an empty stomach

at random

alert

in reality

unaware

by chance

unbearable

out of place

on the ground

rightly so

at some distance

across

in half

afternoon

behind

outside

early in the morning

awake

childhood

too much etc.

Note. Some of these adverbs contain nouns that can also be used as independent words, but relatively rarely, usually in a special context: near (cf.: glasses for distance and near); suction (cf .: air suction); distillation (cf .: dry distillation); from time immemorial (cf.: about old people tell miracles); across (cf .: cutting line); across (cf .: recounting names); snapped up (cf.: instant snap); hearsay (cf. a rumor spread about his unseemly act).

6. Adverbs are written together (in one word) if a definition (adjective, numeral, pronoun) cannot be inserted between the preposition-prefix and the noun from which the adverb was formed without changing the meaning, or if a case question cannot be posed to the noun:

wade

plenty

in addition

flight

together

instantly

hire

for nothing

again

in time

truly

around

after

in a row

out of line

up to

half

half-jokingly

Or half seriously

subsequently

really

entitled

for the future

randomly

out of order

contrary

soon

aloud

dry ration

awake

for free

married

at once

in a row

by the way

towards

protruding

bulging

right through

Takeaway

release

cut out

at attention

utterly

out of spite

by heart

at the ready

inside out

the day before

on the face

vice versa

flatly

vying at the ready

vying with each other

intercept

for show

half

finally

for example

for rent

all the way

through

wide open

in a singsong voice

along with

violently

at random

frankly

unbearable

partly

sideways

sometimes

after midnight

in the morning

shouldered

ever

in a row, etc.

Note. Many of these words, depending on the context (presence of explanatory words) and meaning, act as a combination of a preposition with a noun and are written separately (in two words). Wed:

wade

ford

to be really ('actually')

believe in the truth

happy have the right to act that way

no doubt about the right to do so

smash

put on your head

act in secret('secretly')

keep secret ('secret')

learn by heart

give a tooth

do it out of spite

complain about evil and injustice

drawl('stretching')

give the boots a stretch

(cf.: in re-stretching)

lean to one side

turn on your side(cf .: on the right side)

on the side of the bake

from side to side

live side by side

live side by side

stand to the death

go to death

come back in the morning('in the morning')

reschedule in the morning

not to see from birth

thirty years old

too much

over three meters

against other people's opinion

get cut in the arm

They are written together ( in one word) many adverbs of a terminological and professional nature with a preposition-prefix v- and a final syllable -ku

after

puff

rolling in

saddle

overlay

rushing

jousting

waddling

rolled up

racing

interspersed

mixed up

side by side

to the selection

pinch

bending down

keep an eye out

snugly

squeeze

back-to-back

glued

in an adventure

chained

bait

covertly

biting

skipping

side by side

in a jiffy

prizhuzhka

squatting

back-to-back

very tightly

back to back

tack

in a sip

crunchy

squint

broken down

scattered

waddle

swinging

discharged

swinging

hype

in a frenzy

Written separately (in two words): in mockery, in installments, in curiosity, as well as adverbial combinations in which the noun begins with a vowel: tight, hugging and etc.

7. Adverbs with spatial and temporal meanings are written together (in one word), having nouns in their composition top, bottom, front, back, height, distance, depth, breadth, beginning, end, age:up, up, to the top, up, up; down, below, down, below; forward; back; up; away, away; deep into; in breadth; at first, at first; finally; finally; forever, forever, forever, forever.

Notes: 1. The possibility of inserting a defining word between a preposition-prefix and a noun (cf.: up - to the top) does not entail a separate spelling of the adverb.

These adverbs are written separately (in two words) only if there is an explanatory word for the indicated nouns in the sentence: to the bottom of the dress, into the depths of the ocean, into the foggy distance, at the beginning of autumn, forever and ever, forever and ever. Wed: Need to repeat the lesson from the beginning ('from the beginning'). — Need to start over(‘anew, again, again’).

2. Some of the adverbs given in paragraph 7 can be used as prepositions with a controlled noun: there was light at the bottom of the door(‘the light came from under the door, and did not illuminate the bottom of the door’); the date was at the top of the letter; stop in the middle of the road; to be at the top of bliss; feel at the top of well-being(the word above has a figurative meaning), etc.

8. Adverbs why, then, why, why, why, therefore, why, why, how much are written together (in one word), in contrast to consonant combinations of prepositions with pronouns, which are written in two words. Wed:

Why raise false hopes?

Why go and find(Last).

He didn't talk about it then, to arouse in us simple curiosity.

Following that a shot rang out.

Then and came to get the information you need(‘came for some purpose’).

Then and came what I was looking for(‘came for some object’).

Why (‘why’) I love you, silent night?(J.P.)

There was something to be sad about (‘there was a reason for this state’).

Misunderstandings often happen because ('because') that people don't understand each other...

Further depends from that how things turn out.

Why (‘for what reason’) Are you that bad at judging people?

For what (‘by what signs’) do you judge the change in the weather?

I did not recognize familiar places only because, that have not been here for a long time.

Changes in life cannot be judged only because, what you see at a glance.

How much (‘at what price’) are potatoes on the market now?

They beat on anything.

Remember: the combination after that is written in three words.

The choice of continuous (adverb) or separate (a combination of a preposition with a pronoun) spelling is sometimes determined by the context.

So, the correlation of the question and the answer matters. Wed:

Why did he come here? - To get the information you need- the goal that is expressed by the adverb.

Why did he come here? - For the necessary information- an object that is expressed by a pronoun in combination with a preposition.

In other cases, the definition of correlation helps to choose the spelling. homogeneous members suggestions. Wed:

From constant winds and therefore, that rains rarely fall in these places, the soil here is noticeably weathered- homogeneous circumstances of the cause.

In some cases, a double interpretation of the text is possible and, therefore, the use of an adverb or pronoun with a preposition:

From the speech of the speaker and from the fact what will be said in the debate, you can expect a lot of interesting things - uniform additions.

From what he speaks (‘engaged in conversations’), there is little sense.

What he says (‘the content of his sayings’) is of little use.

Note. In colloquial speech, there are constructions whose spelling deviates from the rule: - Why Are you angry with me? - Yes by the same (separating spelling is explained by the presence of the word itself, acting as an intensifying particle).

9. Adverbs are written through a hyphen with a prefix in -, formed from the full forms of adjectives and from pronouns and ending in -th / -him, -ki, -i:apparently; in an empty way; work in a new way; let's do it seriously(from possessive adjective serezhin ← Seryozha) ; still; let it be your way; advise in a friendly way; speak French; cheat like a fox and also in Latin.

Remember: in adverbs with the prefix po-, formed from compound adjectives with hyphenated writing, the hyphen is written only after the prefix: in a social democratic way, in a non-commissioned officer's way.

10. Adverbs are written through a hyphen with the prefix в- / в-, formed from ordinal numbers: first, fourth, last(the last spelling is similar to the previous ones).

Hyphens connect parts of such rare formations as twenty-fifth, one hundred-thirty-seventh, two hundred-forty-two etc.

11. Hyphenated indefinite adverbs with suffixes and prefixes (particles) something, something, something, something and also with the particle -the same: sometime, anywhere, anytime, anywhere, anytime.

12. Adverbs are written with a hyphen, formed by the repetition of the same word or the same stem, as well as a combination of two synonymous or associated words: barely, just a little, after all, crosswise, tightly, tightly, little by little, suddenly, unexpectedly, in a good way, from the bay, floundering, quietly, at the very least, at the very least.

13. The adverb-term on-mountain (‘on the surface of the earth’) is written with a hyphen.

THESE ADVERBS ARE WRITTEN CONTINUOUSLY

in addition

after

enough

to smithereens

locked up

really

in launches

puff

saddle

truly

back home

in a row

waddling

out of line

distillation

interspersed

mixed up

half-turn

half

halfway

in a hurry

fit (‘to measure’)

subsequently

in the dark

keep an eye out

biting

skipping

squatting

starving

awake

broken down

randomly

scattered

waddle

out of order

discharged

by surprise

scattered

stretched out

hand to hand

in passing

soon

continuous

dry ration

secretly ( do in secret‘secretly’, but: keep secret- 'secret')

secretly

in a hurry

exorbitantly

four times

foursome

red hot

utterly

dead

for the familiar

often

from afar

sparkling

gradually

frowningly

on the sly

sideways

for sure

tipsy

back

unlikely

forever and ever

towards

inside out

release

at attention

bald (‘about a haircut’)

utterly

ready

for tomorrow

by heart ( learn by heart but: give a tooth)

at the ready

inside out

by heart

obliquely

obliquely

the day before

vying with each other

intercept

without a doubt

half

finally

for example

for rent

all the way

through

recklessly

against

straight ahead

wide open

in a singsong voice

snapped up

through

how much

down the drain

to death

so

alert

strictly

at random

firmly

vice versa

backhand

vying with each other

at the ready

race

contrary to

crosswise

across

frankly

not far away

unaware

by chance

unbearable

out of place

incessantly

unbearable

not without reason (‘not without reason’)

shortly

out of place

for a short time (left for a while)

repeatedly

for a reason

age (had never seen but: fifteen years old)

nearby

by platoon

cheaper

longer

clean up

the day before yesterday

truly

meanwhile

little by little

in vain

hearsay

willy-nilly

little by little

one by one

in turn

afternoon

after midnight

simply

now

therefore (he fell ill, therefore he did not appear, but: be according to this)

because the

day after tomorrow

per cent

middle and middle

article by article

slowly

in excess of (top to bottom, top to bottom)

too (too much, but: over a kilometer)

blind and blind

from the beginning

early in the morning

awake

awake

drunk and drunk

headlong

long time ago

childhood

childhood

Wade … Spelling Dictionary

WIDE, adv. (usually with ch. go over, go over). Walking along the bottom of the river (in a shallow place); ant. swim (cf. ford in 2 meanings). Cross the river. It's not deep here, you can wade. Explanatory Dictionary of Ushakov. D.N. Ushakov. 1935 1940 ... Explanatory Dictionary of Ushakov

wade- ford, adv. He crossed the river... merged. Separately. Through a hyphen.

wade- ford Tourists crossed the river ford But: ford, before, with noun. They entered the ford... Spelling difficult adverbs

adv. qualities. the situation 1. Along the bottom in a shallow place (about crossing a river, lake, etc.). 2. Used as an inconsistent definition. Explanatory Dictionary of Ephraim. T. F. Efremova. 2000... Modern explanatory dictionary of the Russian language Efremova

Adverb, number of synonyms: 1 ford (1) ASIS synonym dictionary. V.N. Trishin. 2013 ... Synonym dictionary

wade- ford, adverb ... Russian spelling dictionary

adv. In a shallow place, along the bottom (rivers, lakes, etc.); don't swim. Cross to. Cross the river to... encyclopedic Dictionary

adv. Wandering, moving along the bottom of a river, lake, etc. in a shallow place. [Across the stream] it was necessary to ford, to the great despair of the doctor, because every time his horse stopped in the water. Lermontov, Princess Mary. [Sanya] slides on… … Small Academic Dictionary

wade- adv. In a shallow place, along the bottom (rivers, lakes, etc.); don't swim. Cross over. Cross the river... Dictionary of many expressions

Books

  • Freelancers, Mine Reid. Mine Reed's first novel, FREE GUNS, published in 1850, describes the events of the war between Mexico and the United States (1846-1848) and tells the adventures of a brave and noble captain ...
  • Time to ford, Julia Rezina. Julia Rezina - was born in Moscow. Candidate of Medical Sciences. For many years she led research expeditions on icebreakers in Arctic navigation. Author of two poetic...

See also interpretations, synonyms, meanings of the word and what is VBROD in Russian in dictionaries, encyclopedias and reference books:

  • WIDE in the Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    , adv. Along the ford, along the bottom in a shallow place, do not swim. Cross the river...
  • WIDE in the New explanatory and derivational dictionary of the Russian language Efremova:
  • WIDE in the Dictionary of the Russian Language Lopatin:
    wade, ...
  • WIDE in the Complete Spelling Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    wade, ...
  • WIDE in the Spelling Dictionary:
    wade, ...
  • WIDE in the Dictionary of the Russian Language Ozhegov:
    along the ford, along the bottom in a shallow place, do not swim Cross the river ...
  • WIDE in the Explanatory Dictionary of Efremova:
    adv. Passing, moving along the bottom (rivers, lakes, etc.) in a shallow ...
  • WIDE in the New Dictionary of the Russian Language Efremova:
    adv. quality.-circumstances. 1. Along the bottom in a shallow place (about crossing a river, lake, etc.). 2. Used as inconsistent ...
  • WIDE in the Big Modern explanatory dictionary Russian language:
    adv. quality.-circumstances. 1. Along the bottom in a shallow place (about crossing a river, lake, etc.). 2. Used ...
  • MOLEBSKY TRIANGLE (M-SKY TRIANGLE OR PERM ZONE) in the Directory of Miracles, Unusual Phenomena, UFOs, and More:
    a well-known geoanomalous zone located opposite the village of Molebki (on the border of the Perm and Sverdlovsk regions) on the left bank of the Sylva. The discoverer of this zone ...
  • MILTON FRIEDMAN at the Wiki Quote:
    Data: 2009-05-21 Time: 02:14:47 * The government's solution to a problem is usually worse than the problem itself. * Governments never learn anything. Learning only...
  • BORIS BORISOVICH GREBENSCHIKOV in the Wiki Quote.
  • OCEAN
    Seeing a calm ocean in a dream is good, a sailor will have a pleasant and successful voyage. A business man will be pleased with the move ...
  • SNAKE in Miller's Dream Book, dream book and interpretation of dreams:
    If a woman dreams that a dead snake bites her, it means that the anger of a hypocritical friend will make her suffer. Dreams about snakes are ...
  • FORD in Miller's Dream Book, dream book and interpretation of dreams:
    If in a dream you wade clear water, this means that you will take part in fleeting, but refined joys. …
  • KHODYNKA in the Directory of Rivers, streams, lakes, ponds and ravines of Moscow:
    Khodyn, Khodynya, a river in the west of Moscow, l. Tarakanovka Ave. Length approx. 3 km, enclosed in a pipe. It originates in the district ...
  • EUSTATHIUS PLACIDA in the Orthodox Encyclopedia Tree:
    Open Orthodox Encyclopedia "TREE". Eustathius Plakida (+ c. 118), military leader, great martyr. Commemorated 20 September. Holy Great Martyr Eustathius...
  • YANG-ZI-JIANG
    (Yang-tse-kiang, literally translated from the conditional English transcription Yang-tze-kiang) is the most significant river in China and one of the greatest rivers of the earth ...
  • KARS REGION in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    I occupies the southwestern part of the Caucasian region (Transcaucasia), borders on the north from the lips. Kutaisi and Tiflis, to the east from the Erivan province., ...
  • KARATAL in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    (in Kyrgyz it means "black willow") - one of the large rivers of the Semirechensk region, originates in the snows of the Semirechensk Alatau, merging from 3 ...
  • ILI REGION in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron.
  • ZERAFSHAN in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    (Polythemet at Strabo) - r. in Central Asia, flowing partly in the Samarkand region, partly in the Bukhara borders and lost in ...
  • YANG-ZI-JIANG in the Encyclopedia of Brockhaus and Efron:
    (Yang-tse-kiang by literal translation from conditional English transcription Yang-tze-kiang) ? the most significant river in China and one of the greatest rivers of the earth...

River crossing.

If there are rivers on the route of the hike, most likely you will have to wade them. At the same time, it is important right choice places for fording. In order to most safely cross the river, there are several rules:

1. Establish the general character of the river(determine the width of the channel, the possible depth, the state of the bottom and the speed of the current) and the meteorological situation (rain or melting snow can very quickly raise the level of the river, especially mountainous).

You can determine the speed of the current as follows: disperse with your friend by about 10 meters. Let the one of you who is upstream on command throw a chip into the water, and the second participant (standing below) will mark the time. The speed of the current will be equal to the distance divided by the time. Do not forget that it is dangerous to ford the river when the current speed is over 3-4 m/s.

2. Decide where you will approach the shore, and in which, roughly, are you going to exit on the other side;

3. To be as safe as possible crossing, select locations for interceptors (participants who help fallen and washed ashore get to shore) and inspect the area for the presence of local crossing facilities.

Find a ford on a flat river can be on the following grounds:

  • The river widens in the straight section of the flow;
  • Shallows, islands or rifts are visible above the surface
  • Paths or roads crossing the river clearly indicate the ford.

If you are going to cross a flat river, then for safety reasons, be sure to check if there are snags, whirlpools, flooded trees, etc. at the crossing site.

The passage of a mountain river is more difficult: Here the condition of the group (both physical and psychological), and the technical training of tourists, and the availability of special equipment (main and auxiliary ropes, carabiners and harnesses) affect the crossing. In addition, it is difficult to determine the place of the ford itself.

INTELLIGENCE SERVICE.

In order to make sure the ford is safe, conduct reconnaissance. This is done as follows: One of the group members takes a strong pole 2-2.5 meters long and begins to move somewhat at an angle to the stream, leaning on the pole. In the next step, the pole is moved UP THE DOWN. Necessarily from above - it will be pressed to the bottom by the pressure of water.

If you neglect the condition and put the pole downstream, it can be thrown off by the current, which will lead to loss of balance and unplanned bathing. If your group is carrying out reconnaissance of the crossing, then it is highly recommended to place interceptors 20-30 meters downstream.

BASIC SAFETY RULES FOR WADDING.

To reduce the risk of injury when fording rivers, it is important to apply the following rules:

  • Before crossing, make sure that you have the necessary special equipment, explore the nature of the river, conduct reconnaissance;
  • Cross the river only in the place that your group has explored;
  • Transition only dressed and shod;
  • Attach to the rope railing only with a carabiner, through the chest harness or its loops;
  • It is highly undesirable to use loops with grasping knots for tying to the railing, this can lead to jamming during the transition;
  • Do not forget that the safety of each participant in the line, pair, column or circle crossing depends on you. Hold your partner tightly by the shoulders.
  • Don't forget to deploy interceptors downstream of the river.

RIVER CROSSING.

When crossing a river, it is advisable to do this: The most experienced and physically strong participant without a backpack, always in shoes, crosses the river first. Naturally, the one who goes first must swim well. After he came ashore, all the other participants pass in turn. Moreover, if someone from the group feels insecure, then for the purpose of insurance, he is transported with a more experienced partner.

If you go ahead, it is advisable to help the rest in passing and secure them. For safety reasons, it is recommended to ford the river in one place and along one path. Unauthorized choice of a ford site can lead to injury.

PASSING DIFFICULT AREAS.

If your group has to wade difficult area rivers, in addition to the pole, use two ropes to pass, each of which is held by two people. In order to secure the one going first, fasten the main and auxiliary rope to his chest harness with a carabiner.

Then the belayers need to disperse so that the main rope is upstream and the auxiliary rope is downstream. If a tourist crossing the river slips, the main rope will keep him from going downstream, and with the help of the auxiliary one, he can be pulled to the shore.

If you are the first to cross the river, then, having gone ashore, fasten the rope to a reliable object at chest level. So you will create a railing that will help others to cross.

It is best to follow the trail, holding on to the railing, facing the current. The safest way to go is with a side step. If the current is very strong, for additional insurance, fasten your carabiner or safety loop to the railing.

If you are going to be the last to cross, do not forget to untie the rope after the other participants have crossed and fasten it to the chest harness. Cross using the pole.

OTHER WAYS OF WADDING.

  • around- when the group, hugging their shoulders, becomes a circle and crosses the river moving counterclockwise.
  • column- the whole group is transported at the same time. In order to use this method, you need to find out who is the strongest in the group, who is the second strongest, etc. The strongest stands first, the second strongest in the back of the head ... Place the weakest and inexperienced in the middle of the column. Grasp the person in front firmly with both hands. The very first is holding a pole. At his command, the whole group with side steps enters the water facing the current. With this method of movement, the main pressure of the water is assumed by the one in front, and the rest support it.
  • couple- in this case, two tourists hug each other by the shoulders and walk at a slight angle against the current, while the one walking first can lean on a pole. Do not forget that the safety of your partner in this case depends only on you. At the moment when one takes a step, the other supports it.
  • line- the same as a couple, only with more people.

Good luck with your crossing!