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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / Soar in the clouds

Winged words, phraseological units. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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Wind in the clouds

Proverbs and sayings
Proverbs and sayings

Phraseologism: Soar in the clouds.

Meaning: Indulge in unrealizable dreams, not noticing the surroundings.

Origin: The Old Slavonic verb vitati meant "to live, dwell". In the Old Russian language, this meaning was supported by the connection of the verb to soar with a number of its derivatives. It is also assumed that the phrase "hover in the clouds" arose on the basis of the expression "hover in the empyrean" as a result of the replacement of a foreign word with the original one.

Random phraseology:

Take on the zugunder.

Meaning:

To subject to punishment, to bring to account (obsolete).

Origin:

The origin of the phraseologism is associated with the times of German drill in the Russian army, and the zugunder is a distorted "zu hundert", which literally means "to a hundred" (strike) and is an order to punish the offender. However, there is another version, according to which zugunder is a distorted German "zu Hunden" (literally "to the dogs", in a swearing sense).

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Liquid with piezoelectric effect 11.04.2023

American scientists have discovered a liquid that turns mechanical force into an electrical charge.

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Physicists have found extraordinary characteristics by working with ionic liquids. These are salts that remain liquid at unusually low temperatures (the lower boiling point of water). Composed only of positively and negatively charged ions, the material is a viscous structure that resembles machine oil or maple syrup.

The study showed that when ionic liquids were placed in a cylinder and compressed by a piston, they generated electricity proportional to the applied force. Scientists also found the opposite effect: the optical properties of ionic liquids changed under the influence of an electric current. For example, when the researchers placed these liquids in a lens-shaped container, they found that an electrical charge could change the focal length.

Piezoelectricity has been known to scientists since the XNUMXth century, but all traditional research has studied only rigid bodies. They emit electricity under pressure, and under the influence of electricity they can change shape. Physicists do not yet understand how the piezoelectric effect occurs in ionic liquids. They will continue research to uncover the nature of this phenomenon.

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