Repair iPhone. Testing the Pedant service center

His father couldn't understand him..."
“A learned fellow, but a pedant...” A.S. Pushkin "Eugene Onegin".
How to distinguish a hardworking student from a pedantic student?
Pedant (French p;dant, from Italian pedante, originally - teacher, pedagogue), a person distinguished by excessive, exaggerated accuracy, pettiness, formalism, and literalism.
Pedant (Italian - educator, teacher)1. a person distinguished by minute precision, adherence to established habits, adherence to external order; formalist (V.A. Zhmurov. Large explanatory dictionary of psychiatry terms. Elista.: JSC "NPP "Dzhangar" 2010. p. 446)
Pedantry is exceptional accuracy, scrupulousness in what concerns minor aspects of a matter. The term contains a negative connotation, since it implies that the individual overlooks important things or devalues ​​them (ibid. p. 446)
hardworking - travailleur, industrieux, laborieux (hardworking); diligent (diligent); assidu (zealous) hardworking person
Hardworking, modest, but mediocre person ---. He works from morning to night. Chekhov, A boring story.
Pedant students are very efficient. They want and try to do everything very carefully, accurately and precisely. The feeling of increased responsibility often causes them to lack self-confidence and prompts them to frequently double-check what they have done. If a pedantic student is assigned to do large and urgent work, then their inadequacy is revealed. Therefore, it is better not to entrust them with urgent and large work. Deprived of the opportunity to demonstrate their super-carefulness and precision, pedantic students can become agitated and come into conflict with others.
T.A. Shishkovets believes that the personality characteristics of pedants lie in the fact that under unfavorable conditions difficulties may arise in communicating with them. To eliminate such a state, it is necessary to accustom pedants to discipline. to form in them the willpower that allows them not to endlessly plunge into their doubts, but to move on in a timely manner to subsequent actions or mental operations [T.A. Shishkovets. Difficult behavior of adolescents. M.: "5 for knowledge. 2006.p.44]


DISCUSSION

January 29 - Marina Viktorovna Salomatina turn off
Aleks Veniamin, you know I have observed such pedantry in children suffering (as they say, but I have not seen them suffer from it) autism.
January 30 - Taisiya Olegovna Kuchina turn off
Where care is needed...
That..pedant..find..Yes..!
He will do everything very accurately..
Carefully...but not urgently...

He will use his talent...
Executive..dude..
Please note this feature...
Teach them discipline...

Build willpower...
And self-confidence..
So as not to immerse yourself...
And I had no doubts...

To see the matter as a whole...
Not separately in parts..
To meet your deadline...
Yes, and I calculated the time..

Author: Taisiya Olegovna Kuchina
www.stihi.ru/2011/01/30/1350


You can click on this photo to go to its page

I’ll add a little about pedantry... here it is presented as a feature of hardworking and very diligent people... it is useful for teachers and parents to know that if a child tries, but does not have time... it is not because he does not want to... he needs to be taught to calculate time according to plan, to begin with, assign something simple, feasible, so that he has time to do it, and the child needs to be encouraged with gratitude for the help and noted how he completed it carefully and exactly on time, so that the child feels more confident in his own abilities and so on step by step strengthen his willpower and ability to complete more complex tasks on time without worry..
The manager, knowing this feature of a Person, and having noticed it in a subordinate, can also help him, step by step complicating the tasks. and will receive a valuable employee..

V. G. Belinsky

Pedant
Literary type

Collected works in nine volumes M., "Fiction", 1979 Volume four. Articles, reviews and notes. March 1841 - March 1842 All scientists and educated people know that literature, that is, literature, should have the goal - teach, delight 1 . The late Merzlyakov, a great connoisseur and teacher of fine arts, even translated (and beautifully), it seems, from Tass, wonderful poems on this subject; So the doctor of a sick baby brings a vial to his lips, full of sweets around the edges: The happy one is seduced, drinks bitter medicine, Deception gave him life, deception gave him salvation! 2 In other words: literature is the art of “gilding pills.” Morality is a good thing, there is no doubt about it, but it is also boring and bitter - which again no one will argue against; therefore, it is necessary to sweeten it, so that she achieves her goal, that is, corrects morals, makes a fool smart, a drunkard sober, a bribe-taker, etc. an embezzler - disinterested, a mediocre scribbler weaned from writing, a snitch and a slanderer from false denunciations... Further, all enlightened Europe knows that “an ideal is nothing more than a collection into one figure of different traits scattered in nature and reality - - but it is not reality itself that is possible. There is no need for creativity here: if you want to portray a beauty, look closely at all the beauties you have the opportunity to see; draw the nose of one, the eyes of another, the lips of a third, etc. - in this way. you will draw a beauty, better than which it is impossible to imagine. I find both of these definitions - “literature” and “ideal” - extremely thorough and I believe them unconditionally. They are especially good because, firstly, they relieve the author of the need to have. talent and imagination, and secondly, they destroy the opportunity to write such images in which anyone, no matter who they are, could recognize themselves and, as a result, complain about individuals... It goes without saying that this view of “literature” and “ideals " is especially convenient for "types" such as those now known as "Ours" 3. Gogol said the great truth that “in our country, if you say something about one collegiate assessor, then all the collegiate assessors, from Riga to Kamchatka, will certainly take it personally” (“Contemporary” 1836, vol. III, p. 60.) 4 . Therefore, I find it much more decent and convenient to portray types that do not exist at all in reality, but which would be very funny: through this, the author will achieve two goals at once - he will please his readers and will not offend anyone. These are the reasons that forced me to take up a pen that had long been forgotten by me, and try to sketch one of these, which do not exist and cannot exist, but which can exist in the idle imagination of a person, like me, who has free time to scribble paper. If my pedant does not make you laugh and does not give you pleasure, this will only reveal my inability and my lack of talent. I deliberately took the subject for the type from a sphere that in our country does not represent either class or caste. All these reservations of mine stem from the fatal premonition that my type, instead of smiling, will make you yawn, and instead of making you laugh, will put you to sleep; for - I confess to you - I don’t rely too much on my talent in terms of types... “So why are you taking it?” - you say. Firstly, I would like to try - “maybe” is a great word for a Russian person who does a lot of things “maybe”; then, persistent requests from friends: “You know pedants and can portray them; now types are in fashion, our in progress; who told you that you can’t? you are a man with talent."... What will you do! You don’t know what kind of people these are - my friends! When they pester you, they will certainly persuade you; they will try to prove to you that you are a man with talent - really, write a novel, although I wish I could study mathematics or agriculture all my life... Well, whatever happens, I begin and, to calm my fast-beating heart, I ask you to also note that this is not a type per se, but rather an essay or a project for a type... Don’t imagine imagine my pedant as an old man, gray-haired, toothless, kind and stupid, an admirer of Kheraskov, an admirer of Sumarokov, a follower of the philosophy of Baumeister, the pietism of Apollos and the rhetoric of Mr. Tolmachev: 5 then a pedant of the good old days, a dead pedant - peace be upon him! , I want to cut out for you the silhouette of a pedant of modern times, a romantic pedant who is so young that he has not yet been born; so familiar to you that you will not believe me, that he could be found on the moon, not only on earth. But if you’re going to chat, you have to chat in detail, pretending that you’re telling the truth: that’s what’s funny about my type... My pedant is the son of poor but noble parents. Without claiming wealth, he claims to be a noble family 6. My pedant's name is: Liodor Ippolitovich Kartofelin 7. He is quite short in stature; in his youth he was lean and frail, but now he is quite dignified and has a belly that is somewhat quadrangular and looks like a tome. If it were not for the annoyance at the successes of others and at my own failures to convince the world of my genius, my pedant would have been so fat that, despite his small stature, he would have looked like a huge quarto (a book of a quarter of a page (lat.). - Ed.). His eyes are gray, and his hair is medium between light brown and reddish; on the right cheek there is a wart with a rather long pigtail. I don't remember when he was born; I know that in the twenties of this century, when all our magazines turned into talk about classicism and romanticism, Kartofelin was brought up in the only boarding school in the provincial town 8 in which he was born. The boarding house was run by a Russified German - let's call him Gofrat (I heard that all Germans are Gofrat). Kartofelin showed brilliant abilities and was the first student in all subjects, especially in Russian literature. His diligence was approximate; behavior consistent with diligence. At ceremonial events, he always spoke speeches and poems to the public, 9 in the lower classes - the works of his teachers, and in the higher classes - his own creation. He was the first to encourage his comrades to publish a magazine, of course, a written one, and every week a notebook, neatly and neatly copied by Potato’s hand, called “Northern Flora”, No. such and such, passed through the boys’ hands. The notebook almost entirely consisted of the works of Kartofelin, or Bezbrezhina, as he called himself in romantic language: there were poems, stories, criticism and a mixture 10. Poems and criticism were always the works of Liodor Bezbrezhin: he declared himself a monopolist of these two branches. Mr. Gofrat almost cried with emotion at the sight of the success and comprehensive activity of the luminary of his boarding house: after each new romantic poem, he took Potato by the ears, slightly lifted him and gently kissed him on the head. All the students looked at him as if he were a genius; and the literature teacher, who had once studied according to Burgius 11 and, therefore, a classicist against his will, was even afraid of him. Burdened with laurels, my Kartofelin, this grandson (alas, not last!) Vasily Kirillovich Trediakovsky 12, came to one of our capitals - let's say, to Moscow. I don’t remember what he did for several years; but here he is a teacher of “Russian literature”... Yes, I certainly want to make my pedant a teacher of literature: the famous grandfather of all pedants, Vasily Kirillovich Trediakovsky, was “a professor of eloquence, and most of all of pyitic tricks”: this reason alone is already too enough so that I make my pedant a teacher of “Russian literature”; Moreover, I am convinced with all my heart that no title suits a pedant better than the title of teacher of “Russian literature.” Yes, this “Russian literature” is mainly useful for charlatans and pedants: you can put anything into it, and you can take out any theories from there, without fear of paying a fee for chatter. I don’t mean by this that every literature teacher is a pedant—it would be ridiculous and strange to entertain such an exclusive and false idea! Good and worthy people are everywhere. I just want to say that a pedant must certainly be a teacher of Russian literature. But my pedant did not limit himself to teaching: he, as one would expect, ventured into literature. All almanacs and magazines were filled with his poems 13. The poems were smooth but heavy; full of thoughts - but these thoughts responded with something intense, refined and wild, so that inside they looked like complete nonsense - not only nonsense, but on the outside they seemed extremely deep and sublime 14. Although the crowd sees more from the outside than from the inside, they did not read Kartofelin’s poems and remained with only respect for them. At that time, one clever industrialist founded a magazine, which, according to his plan, was to be distinguished by conscientiousness, learning and selflessness. The last article dealt exclusively with some ; the publisher had his own concept about it, which he did not consider necessary to explain publicly 15. The cunning entrepreneur immediately realized what kind of bird Kartofelin was. He realized that this inky knight was ready to work until he sweated blood just for the sake of “glory,” out of the sheer pleasure of counting every day how many new lines he had added to the number of those already written: the pure and noble pleasure of all pedants! Oh, the pedant is similar in this respect to a miser who, when going to bed, counts how many rubles and kopecks he has received since the morning... The journalist was not mistaken: Kartofelin turned out to be a golden man for him: he shouldered all the work, but he will live allowed the owner, who, however, considered it necessary, out of decency, to assure him that he uses the small profits from the magazine to publish useful books and help poor people 16, and he himself is nourished by a disinterested love of science and lofty thoughts. The good-natured pedant believed: he was as disinterested, honest and trusting as he was rash... And this is not at all surprising: narrow-mindedness is so often combined with good-natured honesty - at least until they are teased, intentionally or unintentionally, her petty pride... But here’s what may seem incredible to many: with his prosaic articles, Kartofelin attracted general attention as a person with taste, intelligence and talent 17 - and I must admit that such an opinion about Kartofelin was only exaggerated, but fundamentally it is not entirely unfair. My pedant - if you please see - is really not crazy and not without abilities; he is only limited, but not stupid, only pettyly proud, but not mediocre; he, as a pedant, must acquire the last virtues later, when his petty pride, in alliance with his years, crushes in him the little that nature has given him. Moreover, the circumstances of the time greatly contributed to Kartofelin even being considered a genius - at least among his friends and fellow boarding school employees - the employees of the handwritten "Northern Flora": the pedants of former times trudged along the well-worn track of Batteux and Lagarpov, and my Kartofelin set to work on non-mechanics. He was a hard-working, diligent little boy; his memory was healthy; He learned German as a child. I am sure that by instinct he would have chosen Klopstock and Nicolai as his heroes, but the glory of Goethe and Schiller was already in all its colossal greatness, and the Schlegels were then still considered great people: - so to him, you know, with ready-made concepts, in someone else’s mind and with phrasing language it was not difficult to appear to be something other than what he was. .. 18 Moreover, in youth, every person is more lively, and, consequently, smarter than in old age, and by instinct defends the new against the old... However, even then many already noticed in Kartofelin’s syllable something plump, flabby, some kind of then artificial simplicity and strained originality, something that resonates with licorice root and satiety... And these people were not mistaken, as we will see below. employees philologists And, where for each verse of the great poet one hundred thousand volumes of explanations and notes are written. I don’t know what he did there for seven whole years, but I know that he sent ancient poems from there 19. Finally, my Potato returns to his dear fatherland... My God, how he has changed! 20 He went as a young writer, whose real value few understood, and returned as a pedant, whose significance is already clear to everyone... The seeds bore fruit, and his nature showed... To begin with, he arrived with a paunch - proof that he suffered about the fate of humanity in his poems... The tense importance of his face, with a funny figure and round belly, made him look like a frog, which, in Aesop's fable, wants to swell into an ox 21. His vanity really swelled up like a pimple: it was scary and disgusting to touch him. The pedant began to take society for his school, a salon for an audience, secular people for schoolchildren: he speaks in a condescending manner, as if he were giving a lecture, and if anyone does not listen to him with reverence, he looks at them contemptuously, and if anyone speaks, at least at the opposite end of the hall, he will look at how Olympian Jupiter is - with anger and waving his eyebrows... His favorite story is about how he went to worship the great novelist in Paris 22. In Germany the pedant was passing through; He didn't like her. “The Germans,” he said, “have become friends with life in their abstraction; they despise the greatest of sciences - philology; they prefer philosophy to it, this violent deification of reason... I was in Berlin - and my poor skull crackled from the sophisticated things that I heard at the university there... The Germans have forgotten the great Bachmann and prefer to him the dry, abstract, scholastic Hegel, this Andrammelech of the latest philosophy. fistula, as if from the debilitating fullness of sensations in an empty chest, as if from exhaustion due to frequent ex-officio recitation (on official duty (lat.). - Ed.). He brings with him a carafe of sugar water to school, with which he washes down almost every sentence he says... And so, in a fit of my inspiration, it seems to me that I see him on the teacher’s chair, sitting with decent importance, I hear his consumptive voice, constantly interrupted by the fullness of pedantic complacency and loaves of sugar water: “Dear sirs! I was there and there, but you were not; but this is nothing: after what I tell you about those countries, it will seem to you that you yourself were there... The Germans decided to reconcile philosophy with life - they imagine that this flourishing life can be made the content of soulless logical formulas... The Germans don’t like letters... but I, gentlemen, I - I confess - love letters... So I was about to read Hegel’s aesthetics, but was forced to throw it under the table: have mercy, gentlemen, books are written for pleasure, and not for racking your brains..." 24 The pedant, of course, did not abandon literature; but his activity has already changed: he no longer says a word about the Germans and German... His style has become wild to the last degree. Wanting to raise his friend's stories to the seventh heaven, he says that his friend has opened all the drawers in the complex bureau of the human heart... Starting to admire his homeland, he makes questions like the following: what if our Volga, taking with it the Oka and Kama and having connected with the Lena, Yenisei, Ob and Dnieper, she climbed the Alps, and from there - oo-oo-oo-oo! to all ends of Europe; Where would all these French little girls go?.. 25 Isn’t it true, such questions are only appropriate for either a pedant or a peasant boy who says: “What, daddy, if our roan gelding turned into a brown cow, - after all Would mom give me some more milk?"...Are you laughing, readers? Does my prank seem like a farce to you, a flat joke? Laugh, but I stand by the fact that a pedant is still capable of writing something else. After all, I warned you that I am writing a fiction, a play of my idle imagination, and not slavishly copying it from reality: so don’t stop me from inventing. So, I am sure that my pedant will not say a word in simplicity - everything is with an antics: for example, instead of saying that Petersburg was built on level ground, he will say that a level surface has rolled under the huge houses of the city of Petrov... and etc. etc. 26 . (French). - Ed.) 27 . With particular zeal he wrote articles about balls and masquerades; in these articles one could see the fatigue from dancing, because each phrase was followed by at least three dots... 28 The pedant liked this so much that without dots after each of his phrases he could not write anything. typical: this is a man who, living his life in a barrel, made houses and villages for himself; a man who, for his entire life engaged exclusively in the buying and resale of garbage, broken dishes, old iron and bricks, managed to assure everyone that he was both a scientist and a writer; a man who, throughout his life as a speculator, assured everyone that he was the ideal of honesty, unselfishness and conscientiousness; a man who himself has done nothing but untidy publications and bad translations, and who repeats to everyone with cynical brevity: “we need to do something, we need to satisfy current needs”; a man who, even if he published several bad books, was concocted by someone else’s hands, but became famous for his activity; people whom! when in need he will lend you a trifle and force you to translate a book, the benefits of which he will honestly share with you like this: verbal gratitude to you, and money for himself... 30 Yes, you never know how many more such types can be written? And what about newspapers, journalists, feuilletonists, novelists, nouveaulists, vaudeville artists and other “ists”?.. This is where the inexhaustible treasures for “Nashi” lie...

NOTES

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

The following abbreviations are used in the text of the notes: Annenkov - P.V. Annenkov. Literary Memoirs. M., Goslitizdat, 1960. Belinsky, USSR Academy of Sciences - V. G. Belinsky. Full collection cit., vols. I-XIII. M., Publishing House of the USSR Academy of Sciences, 1953-1959.

GBL - State Library named after. V.I. Lenin.

For the first time - "Notes of the Fatherland", 1842, vol. XXI, No. 3, dep. VII "Mixture", p. 39-45 (printed on February 28; published on March 1). Signed: Petr Buldogov. Included in KSSB, part VI, p. 485-496. The article was significantly distorted by censorship. In the “Journal” of the meetings of the St. Petersburg Censorship Committee dated February 24, 1842, it is written: “The Committee allowed the publication of the article, excluding all allusions to Italy and the poems “Rome”, because they can give rise to an application to the general characteristics of the pedant to any person known in our literature" (TsGIA, f. 777, on. 27, 1842, No. 35, l. 15). In turn, Belinsky wrote to Botkin on March 14, 1842: “And the article was not bad, but the censorship committee threw out everything about Italy and Polevoy’s poems - an evil parody of Shevyrka’s poems.” And in a letter dated March 31, 1842 to the same addressee: “I will certainly send you a list "Pedant", so that you can see that it is really well written if you read it without censorship corrections." Whether the manuscript of the article was sent to Botkin and what its further fate is is unknown. The pamphlet is directed against S. P. Shevyrev, poet, critic and theorist literature. From the very beginning of the 40s, Shevyrev became the ideologist of the “official people”, a militant opponent of any democratic trend in literary public life, a servile servant of the pillars of the Nicholas regime. “Pedant” perpetuated the contemptuous characterization of Shevyrev in his entire life; the path is presented by Belinsky as the consistent formation of this “literary type.” However, the truly odious activities of Shevyrev, which unfolded in these years, obscured from the critic the early period of his work, which requires a more objective attitude towards itself. gg. was “a writer with true talent, a critic who has earned the trust of enlightened readers” (Pushkin, vol. VII, p. 471). This review does not contradict all the other judgments of Pushkin, who, despite their many disagreements, invariably emphasized the vastness of knowledge of Shevyrev, who was also the author of “Thought” - “one of the most remarkable poems of current literature” (ibid., vol. X, p. .247). M., "Science", 1975, p. 298-303). Finally, the study of ancient Russian literature as a professor at Moscow University (from 1834) led Shevyrev to the fact that “he actually discovered a new scientific discipline - a merit that cannot be disputed with him, despite all the tendentiousness or fallacy of specific interpretations... "("The Emergence of Russian Science of Literature", p. 325). S. Shchepkina, when Ketcher read Shevyrka’s article aloud there. Still not knowing how and what I would answer, I immediately realized from the impression made on me by Shevyrka’s denunciation that I would write something good...” Of course, even inexperienced readers had no doubt at whom the pamphlet was aimed. “Pedant” evoked the warm approval of Belinsky’s like-minded people. The offended Shevyrev publicly asked his university colleague, T. N. Granovsky, if he could now shake hands with Belinsky “How! give a hand? - answered Granovsky, flushing. “I’ll embrace you in the square” (Annenkov, pp. 225-226). Belinsky’s opponents were outraged; on March 14, 1842, V.P. Botkin wrote to Belinsky: “The blow produced an effect that exceeded expectations: Shevyrev’s face lengthened, and he didn’t was shown this week in societies. In the synclite of Khomyakov and Kireevsky, if they start talking about this, it is with foam at the mouth and curses... Kireevsky cries terribly: he scolds Belinsky with words that make every Orthodox believer tremble" ("Report of the Imperial Public Library for 1889", St. Petersburg, 1893, pp. 43-45). On March 13, 1842, A.D. Galakhov wrote to A.A. Kraevsky that Shevyrev’s entourage was very irritated and was going to complain about Belinsky to A.Kh. Benkendorf and that this was supported by the Moscow Governor General D.V. Golitsyn (see: “Wreath to Belinsky.” M., 1924, p. 143; A.D. Galakhov reported the same to A.I. Ivanov for transmission to Kraevsky - see: LN, vol. 56, p. 165). The pseudonym - Buldogov - was formed from the nickname that was given to the critic by Bulgarin. Seeing Belinsky for the first time, Bulgarin, according to Panaev, asked: “So this is the bulldog who was discharged from Moscow to poison us. ?.." (Panaev, p. 293; cf. Belinsky’s letter to Botkin dated November 22, 1839). 1 Paraphrased maxim of Bulgarin: “to teach is to amuse,” which is in the preface to the novel “Mazepa” (1834) - - the task of the writer was determined. This statement represents the canon of classicism poetics adapted for the needs of the “moral-satirical” direction (see: “The Science of Poetry” - Horation. Complete collected works. M., “Academia”, 1936, p. 350). : present t., p. 501-503; see also the preamble to this review). The subtitle of "Pedant" indicates that Belinsky, who suggested that the editor of the almanac depict literary types, himself realized this wish. Shevyrev recalled “the period of influence of German philosophy, especially Schelling, whose teaching was introduced by professors Pavlov and Davydov” (N.V. Sushkov. Moscow University Noble Boarding House... M., 1858, Appendix, p. 75). : N. P. Barsukov. Life and works of M. P. Pogodin, book. II. St. Petersburg, 1889, p. 130-134). There were also rumors that the power-hungry editor of Moskovsky Vestnik was unscrupulous in financial relationships, but there is no reliable information about this. - Ed.) aroused in him a darkness of new thoughts and desires; but that, despite this, he will certainly enter into some competition with you and offer you his own objections" (quoted from: M. Aronson. Poetry of S.P. Shevyrev, p. XXIX). Upon Shevyrev’s return from Italy, his judgments about Russian verse were challenged by Pushkin (see Shevyrev’s letter to S. A. Sobolevsky dated October 6, 1832 - LN, vol. 16-18, p. 750), but the latter constantly emphasized his respect for the erudition of the promoter of the Russian octave (Pushkin’s reviews are briefly summarized in the book: L. A. Chereysky. Pushkin and his entourage. L., “Nauka”, 1975, pp. 469-471). Belinsky called Shevyrev’s translations from T. Tasso “prehistoric.” accompanied his treatise “On the Possibility of Introducing the Italian Octave into Russian Versification” (1831). 20 Shevyrev’s ideological reorientation actually began in Italy. In a letter to Pogodin in 1831, he wrote: “In general, I am in a state of ferment about all opinions: everything is the same for me. something is reborn and something new comes out, from its own Russian root" (quoted from: M. Aronson. Poetry of S. P. Shevyrev, p. IX). See, for example, his poem “Petrograd” (1830), which served as one of the sources of Pushkin’s “Bronze Horseman” (see: M. Aronson. On the history of “The Bronze Horseman”. - In the book: “Pushkin. Temporary of the Pushkin Commission ", vol. I. M.-L., Publishing House of the USSR Academy of Sciences, 1936, pp. 221-226).

my
Holes in the law, gray on the alert,
Someone is heating the bathhouse, someone is drowning, and someone is drowning!
Everything is the same to be different,
And we clink glasses and wash away the calcium.
Luck is hiding in front of everyone's eyes,
The guitar is crying in his brother's arms.
When fate turns back,
Those who swagger always have sparkling heels.
My brothers are nearby, they won’t turn on the back one,
Don't be a fool to be between a rock and a hard place.
With me is the one who sincerely loves,
With it you can throw a mattress on the floor and call it a bedroom.
This motive flies, leads this route,
Through Moscow from Rostov-on-Don to Barnaul.
It's nice to see our faces on the poster,




We write about what we live, we live what we write.
Years after years, fingers across lots!
I'll make wishes, but what's wrong with that?

Someone there is a pedant, and I don’t give a fuck,
At times we are driven by fear,
At times in places, commas on sheets.
The heavens don't weigh above us here,
Years after years fly by, people don’t give a damn.
You believe in God, but are not afraid of the cross,
We sin a lot, but our conscience is clear.
And purely from the heart we fire at the top of the beat,
Basat salute, life will crush the cop.
It was blowing across the floors, at... it was blowing in half,
The wounds did not heal, they only gave vent to talent.
Mom, I'm not the same as I was before,
The ice is thinner, I'm older, I'll move on with my life.
Life is a web, I am a tarantula in it,
Fist for the truth, and good luck to your brother.
There is freedom in the barracks, roads for fools,

We write about what we live, we live what we write.
Years after years, fingers across lots!
I'll make wishes, but what's wrong with that?
Don't rub salt into the wounds, I'll be cruel.

We write about what we live, we live what we write.
Years after years, fingers across lots!
I'll make wishes, but what's wrong with that?
I remember the leaves slowly, slowly down.

I remember the leaves slowly falling to the bottom.
Black cat, not a good sign, Cannabis is not a grain,
I am raising a black flag on a white ship.
Breathes in basata T-shirts, from trial to trial,
This topic melts steel, ladies and gentlemen know.
Where there was a drone, there was trouble! Mark dates on the calendar,
Demons are pouring into the station, there will be a room full of brothers,
Remove the frequencies from above, leave only the bottom. Hole-in-law, gray on the lookout,
Someone drowns bath, someone drown and who is drowning!
At the same everything would be different,
And we tremble cups washed out calcium.
Good luck hiding in front of everyone,
Guitar crying bratuha have on hand.
When fate puts in the return line,
Those who swaggers always sparkle heels.
Beside my brothers, not cut back,
Take not a bastard to be between a rock and a hard place.
With me is that truly loves,
With it, you can throw a mattress on the floor and call it a bedroom.
Flies this motif, leads this route
Through Moscow from Rostov-on-Don, Barnaul.
Nice to see our faces on the poster,
We write about what we live, we live so that we write.


Wish make only fuck is it?

Years after years, the fingers on lots!
Wish make only fuck is it?
Someone out there pedant, but I pohuist,

At times, we are driven by fear,
From time to time in the field, the commas on the sheets.
Heaven above us here do not weigh,
Years after years of flying, people do not bullshit me.
Believe in God, but not afraid of the cross,
We have a lot of sin, but our conscience is clear.
A pure soul from the burning we top a bit,
Salute Basat life crush ment.
By sex blew, blew in half...,
Wounds have not healed, only gave vent talent.
Mama I"m not the one that was before,
The ice is thinner, I"m older, live on (a).
Life web, I"m in it tarantula
Fist of the truth, and the brother of luck.
In the barracks freedom fools road
Not rash insult to injury, ill will.

Years after years, the fingers on lots!
Wish make only fuck is it?
Someone out there pedant, but I pohuist,
I remember the leaves slowly, slowly to the bottom.

Years after years, the fingers on lots!
Wish make only fuck is it?
Someone out there pedant, but I pohuist,
I remember the leaves slowly fall to the bottom.

Black cat, not a good sign, is not Cannabis herb
I am a white ship raise the black flag.
Breathe T-shirts Basat, from the court before the trial,
This topic melt steel, know ladies and gentlemen.
Where was the drone, there"s trouble! Met the date on the calendar
Soon the freedom uncles, so yours and tell.
The Devils knocked on the station, will take full hall,
Get out of the top frequencies, leave only the bottom.

Pedant

Pedant

PEDANT

1. A scientist who does not want to know anything other than his science, a literalist, a formalist in science. Dry pedant.

|| Comic image of a scientist in an ancient comedy (historical lit.). Moliere's pedants. Sumarokov gave the image of the pedant Tressotinius.

2. A person who flaunts his learning, teaches others, takes on the role of mentor (obsolete). “Onegin was, in the opinion of many, a decisive and strict judge, a learned fellow, but a pedant.” Pushkin .

3. A person who stubbornly follows the accepted way of thinking, established habits and demands the same from others is a routiner. “They laughed at the letter yat for a long time and called all its lovers pedants.” Druzhinin . “In duels, the classic and the pedant.” Pushkin .

4. A person characterized by excessive, exaggerated neatness, committed to order down to the smallest detail. “In other matters one cannot help but be a pedant: the slightest inaccuracy spoils everything.” Dahl . Tiresome pedant.


Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary.


D.N. Ushakov.:

1935-1940.

    Synonyms See what a “pedant” is in other dictionaries:

    - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ... Dictionary of foreign words of the Russian language pedant

    - a, m. pedant, German. Pedant it. pedante. 1. outdated A picky teacher and mentor who demands adherence to formal order. BAS 1. Suddenly, a terrible pedant’s voice was heard in the distance. Fluff. Memory. Among their infantile undertakings. Suddenly it leads... Historical Dictionary of Gallicisms of the Russian Language

    Book-eater, neatist, formalist, teacher, aristarchus, cracker, teacher Dictionary of Russian synonyms. pedant cracker (colloquial irony) see also formalist Dictionary of synonyms of the Russian language. Practical guide. M.: Russian language... Synonym dictionary

    Husband. pedant female, French a strict, precise, picky petty mechanic who demands adherence to appearances, roundaboutness, and order in business; a heavy and stubborn follower of the once accepted, one-sided order; a self-confident scientist who inappropriately demands from... ... Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

    - (French pedant, from Italian pedante, originally teacher, pedagogue), a person distinguished by excessive accuracy, precision, formalism ... Modern encyclopedia

    - (French pedant from Italian pedante, originally teacher, educator), a person distinguished by excessive accuracy, precision, formalism ... Big Encyclopedic Dictionary

    PEDANT, huh, husband. A person who is overly strict in fulfilling all formal requirements (in science, in life). | wives pedant, etc. | adj. pedantic, oh, oh. Ozhegov's explanatory dictionary. S.I. Ozhegov, N.Yu. Shvedova. 1949 1992 … Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

    Pedant- (French pedant, from Italian pedante, originally teacher, pedagogue), a person distinguished by excessive accuracy, precision, formalism. ... Illustrated Encyclopedic Dictionary

    - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ...- a, m. 1. A person who is overly strict in observing a certain order. And there are prim dandies, implacable pedants, and there is no remedy for fools. // Lermontov. Tambov Treasurer //; The architect was a pedant and wanted symmetry, the owner... ... Dictionary of forgotten and difficult words from works of Russian literature of the 18th-19th centuries

Books

  • Pedant, Oleg Ovchinnikov. Sometimes when contacting the most powerful aliens, the main quality needed is pedantry. Moreover, the one that is characteristic primarily of small ones... eBook

Enter a word and click Find Synonyms.

Sentences containing "pedant"

We found 25 sentences containing the word "pedant". Also see synonyms for "pedant".
Meaning of the word

  • In university classrooms and corridors, in student rooms " Pedanta"read and re-read.
  • And now the image of another Andrei has surfaced in my memory: handsome, athlete, but big pedant.
  • This old man is German - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ... terrible, having served on the Amur for almost 20 years.
  • But I think that his homeland is somewhere else, and he was sent to Florence to study (under the rod pedant) and there he sins with despondency.
  • I remember how some - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ..., a teacher with a German surname, forced us to precisely formulate where, for example, a given chair stood.
  • Certainly, - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ... Petzoldt will not make such admissions.
  • For such pedant, like Mehlis, this seems simply impossible, especially since it was a personal order from the leader.
  • Plehve in Moscow had a reputation as a man too immersed in details, details, pedant.
  • Indeed: why does he preach from a university pulpit? - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ... and the informer Shevyrev?
  • At first I thought that this master was just - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ..., that’s why he repeats the same thing every day.
  • Cyrano de Bergerac's co-star in the comedy "Mocked" - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ...“I didn’t yet know my true path, but I was already making my first attempts at creativity.
  • This heavy German - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ... enjoyed his great respect.
  • He - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ..., born at a bad time, as I said.
  • In search of a plot, he began to look through his old notebooks and decided to portray the type of young pedant.
  • Certainly, " Pedanta"read not only at the university.
  • Well, you want to add one minute nineteen seconds if you are like that - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ....
  • One should not, however, exaggerate the real or possible influence of the archaist and pedant Koshansky.
  • In fact it was vain - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ..., who also had a weakness for poetry.
  • A very decent man, but - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ... and cracker.
  • Prudent-looking, like an accountant, smoothly combed, round glasses on his nose, strict in everyday life - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ....
  • He always dressed well, he even loved to dress up and was - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ... in fashion relations.
  • Maintained order himself and demanded the same from others, indignant, irritated and aggressive - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ....
  • The best depiction is of the young man himself - (it.). A petty person, strictly adhering to form, a difficult and stubborn follower of a once accepted one-sided order, incapable of either broad generalizations or higher spiritual movements. Dictionary of foreign words included in... ... Damis and his father Chrysander.
  • Shevyrev was cruelly branded by Belinsky in the pamphlet “ Pedant"(1842).
  • It was difficult, after all the failures, to expect anything from the dry, stubborn pedant Bürleiga.

Source – introductory fragments of books from liters.

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