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Paper stereotyping

  • 1 paper stereotyping

    English-Russian big polytechnic dictionary > paper stereotyping

  • 2 paper stereotyping

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > paper stereotyping

  • 3 paper stereotyping

    Англо-русский словарь по полиграфии и издательскому делу > paper stereotyping

  • 4 stereotyping

    1) стереотипия
    2) изготовление матриц

    Англо-русский словарь по полиграфии и издательскому делу > stereotyping

  • 5 stereotyping

    English-Russian big polytechnic dictionary > stereotyping

  • 6 stereotyping

    English-Russian base dictionary > stereotyping

  • 7 изготовление бумажных матриц

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > изготовление бумажных матриц

  • 8 perjudicial

    adj.
    harmful.
    * * *
    1 harmful
    * * *
    adj.
    * * *
    1.
    ADJ damaging, harmful, detrimental frm
    2.
    SM Méx ** secret policeman
    * * *
    adjetivo damaging, harmful, detrimental (frml)
    * * *
    = adverse, bad [worse -comp., worst -sup.], detrimental, damaging, harmful, crippling, prejudicial, disruptive, destructive, deleterious, untoward.
    Ex. An increase in recall tends to have an adverse effect on another measure of performance, precision -- as recall is increased precision is lowered.
    Ex. I'm not saying that it is bad, but it is a real difference of interest between the needs and purposes of research libraries and the public libraries, and I would also throw in the school and almost certainly junior college libraries.
    Ex. But the proposal to enter all serials under their titles, while obviously easier to apply, is equally detrimental to the integrity of the catalog.
    Ex. Potentially as damaging are errors that result from poor editing and proofreading.
    Ex. These multiple-concept terms yield greater precision, but are associated with a rather larger indexing language and a higher likelihood of harmful scatter.
    Ex. Can we avoid racism, sexism and the crippling effects of other forms of prejudicial stereotyping without recourse to censorship?.
    Ex. Decentralisation of corporate libraries into smaller units can be prejudicial to the technical and market development in the company.
    Ex. The crisis in South African education -- particularly black education -- has resulted from the disruptive effects of apartheid.
    Ex. The Archives are located in an area that experiences severe air pollution and levels of ozone that are very destructive to paper and parchment.
    Ex. This article attempts to show the influence of man on the beneficial or deleterious use of information.
    Ex. Efforts to destigmatize euthanasia or even encourage it for some groups may have the untoward effect of promoting suicide in other groups.
    ----
    * efecto perjudicial = harmful effect.
    * hacer que sea perjudicial para = render + detrimental to.
    * perjudicial para = injurious to.
    * perjudicial para el entorno = environmentally-damaging.
    * perjudicial para el medioambiente = environmentally-damaging.
    * * *
    adjetivo damaging, harmful, detrimental (frml)
    * * *
    = adverse, bad [worse -comp., worst -sup.], detrimental, damaging, harmful, crippling, prejudicial, disruptive, destructive, deleterious, untoward.

    Ex: An increase in recall tends to have an adverse effect on another measure of performance, precision -- as recall is increased precision is lowered.

    Ex: I'm not saying that it is bad, but it is a real difference of interest between the needs and purposes of research libraries and the public libraries, and I would also throw in the school and almost certainly junior college libraries.
    Ex: But the proposal to enter all serials under their titles, while obviously easier to apply, is equally detrimental to the integrity of the catalog.
    Ex: Potentially as damaging are errors that result from poor editing and proofreading.
    Ex: These multiple-concept terms yield greater precision, but are associated with a rather larger indexing language and a higher likelihood of harmful scatter.
    Ex: Can we avoid racism, sexism and the crippling effects of other forms of prejudicial stereotyping without recourse to censorship?.
    Ex: Decentralisation of corporate libraries into smaller units can be prejudicial to the technical and market development in the company.
    Ex: The crisis in South African education -- particularly black education -- has resulted from the disruptive effects of apartheid.
    Ex: The Archives are located in an area that experiences severe air pollution and levels of ozone that are very destructive to paper and parchment.
    Ex: This article attempts to show the influence of man on the beneficial or deleterious use of information.
    Ex: Efforts to destigmatize euthanasia or even encourage it for some groups may have the untoward effect of promoting suicide in other groups.
    * efecto perjudicial = harmful effect.
    * hacer que sea perjudicial para = render + detrimental to.
    * perjudicial para = injurious to.
    * perjudicial para el entorno = environmentally-damaging.
    * perjudicial para el medioambiente = environmentally-damaging.

    * * *
    damaging, harmful, detrimental ( frml)
    el alcohol y el tabaco son perjudiciales para la salud alcohol and tobacco are harmful o damaging o detrimental to your health
    esta sequía es muy perjudicial para el campo this drought is very bad for agriculture o is seriously damaging agriculture
    resultaría perjudicial para la economía it would be damaging o prejudicial to the economy
    * * *

    perjudicial adjetivo [ser] damaging, harmful, detrimental (frml);
    perjudicial para algo/algn damaging o harmful o detrimental to sth/sb
    perjudicial adjetivo damaging, harmful: esa amistad es perjudicial para ti, that friendship is bad for you
    ' perjudicial' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    fatal
    - costar
    - demasía
    English:
    damaging
    - detrimental
    - disruptive
    - harmful
    - injurious
    - damage
    - untoward
    * * *
    harmful ( para to);
    el exceso de colesterol es perjudicial para la salud too much cholesterol is damaging to your health;
    * * *
    adj harmful, damaging;
    perjudicial para la salud harmful to one’s health
    * * *
    : harmful, detrimental
    * * *
    perjudicial adj bad / harmful

    Spanish-English dictionary > perjudicial

  • 9 Stanhope, Charles, 3rd Earl

    [br]
    b. 3 August 1753 London, England
    d. 15 December 1816 Chevening, Kent, England
    [br]
    English politician, scientist and inventor.
    [br]
    Stanhope's schooling at Eton was interrupted in 1764 when the family moved to Geneva; there, he soon showed a talent for scientific pursuits. In 1771 he contributed a paper on the pendulum to the Swedish Academy, which awarded him a prize for it. After his return to London in 1774, he threw himself into politics, earning himself not only a reputation for promoting the liberty of the individual, but also unpopularity for championing the French Revolution.
    Stanhope is best known for his inventions in printing. In 1800 he introduced the first successful iron press, known by his name. Its iron frame enabled a whole forme to be printed at one pull, thus speeding up production. The press retained the traditional screw but incorporated a system of levers which increased the pressure on the platen up to the moment of contact with the type, so that fine, sharp impressions were obtained and the work of the pressman was made easier. Stanhope's process for moulding and reproducing formes, known as stereotyping, became important when curved formes were required for cylinder presses. His invention of logotypes for casting type, however, proved a failure. Throughout his political activities, Stanhope devoted time and money to scientific and mechanical matters. Of these, the development of steamships is noteworthy. He took out patents in 1790 and 1807, and in 1796 he constructed the Kent for the Admiralty, but it was unsuccessful. In 1810, however, he claimed that a vessel 110 ft (33.5 m) long and 7 ft (2.1 m) in draught "outsailed the swiftest vessels in the Navy".
    [br]
    Further Reading
    G.Stanhope, 1914, The Life of Charles, Third Earl Stanhope, London.
    H.Hart, 1966, Charles Earl Stanhope and the Oxford University Press, London: Printing Historical Society (a reprint of a paper, originally published in 1896, describing Stanhope's printing inventions; with copious quotations from Stanhope's own writings, together with an essay on the Stanhope press by James Moran).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Stanhope, Charles, 3rd Earl

  • 10 Bruce, David

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. c.1801 USA
    d. 13 September 1892 USA
    [br]
    American inventor of the first successful typecaster.
    [br]
    He was the son of David Bruce, typefounder, who introduced stereotyping into the USA. As a boy, he was employed on various tasks about the typefoundry and printing works of D. \& G. Bruce until 1819, when he was apprenticed to William Fry of Philadelphia, at that time the most eminent printer in America. However, he ran away from Fry and returned to his father, from whom he continued to learn the typefounder's trade. Around 1828 he moved to Albany, where he took charge of a typefoundry. Two years later he was back in New York and joined the firm of George Bruce \& Co. In 1834 he moved to New Jersey, where he set about producing the improved form of typecasting machine for which he is chiefly known. Having achieved success, he set up in business again in New York and remained there until his retirement some twenty-five years before his death. Bruce in fact invented the first effective typecasting machine in New York in 1838 and patented it the same year. His machine incorporated a force pump to drive the molten metal from the pot into the mould. The machine, operated by a wheel turned by hand, could produce forty sorts of various sizes per minute. The machine speeded up the production of type: between 3,000 and 7,000 pieces of type could be cast by hand, whereas these figures were raised to between 12,000 and 20,000 by the casting machine. The Bruce caster was not introduced into Britain until 1853. It was later supplanted by improved machines, notably that invented by Wicks.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1887, letter, Inland Printer (September) (provides some biographical details).
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1892, Inland Printer (November): 150.
    James Moran, 1965, The Composition of Reading Matter, London: Wace (provides some details of the Bruce machine).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Bruce, David

  • 11 Ged, William

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 1690 Edinburgh, Scotland
    d. 19 October 1749 Edinburgh, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish inventor of stereotyping.
    [br]
    While in business as a goldsmith and jeweller, he came across the earliest known attempt to make stereotypes, that by Van der Meys of Leiden in the sixteenth century. He soldered types to the bases of a bed of type, but the process proved too expensive to be adopted. Ged took out a patent of privilege in 1725 to develop Mey's method, agreeing with a printer that if they could make casts of made-up pages of type they "would make a fortune". After many experiments to find a suitable metal, he arrived at an alloy similar to type metal. However, Ged's efforts to promote his stereotypes were blocked by the indifference of the printers and the opposition of the compositors. He tried his luck in London but failed again for much the same reason as in Edinburgh. Thither he returned, but he died in poverty.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Nichols, 1781, Biographical Memoir of William Ged (the 1819 edition includes "Supplementary narrative of William Ged and his inventions, written by his daughter").
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Ged, William

  • 12 Mergenthaler, Ottmar

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 11 May 1854 Hachtel, Germany
    d. 28 October 1899 Baltimore, Maryland, USA
    [br]
    German/American inventor of the Linotype typesetting machine.
    [br]
    Mergenthaler came from a family of teachers, but following a mechanical bent he was apprenticed to a clockmaker. Having served his time, Mergenthaler emigrated to the USA in 1872 to avoid military service. He immediately secured work in Washington, DC, in the scientific instrument shop of August Hahl, the son of his former master. He steadily acquired a reputation for skill and ingenuity, and in 1876, when Hahl transferred his business to Baltimore, Mergenthaler went too. Soon after, they were commissioned to remedy the defects in a model of a writing machine devised by James O.Clephane of Washington. It produced print by typewriting, which was then multiplied by lithography. Mergenthaler soon corrected the defects and Clephane ordered a full-size version. This was completed in 1877 but did not work satisfactorily. Nevertheless, Mergenthaler was moved to engage in the long battle to mechanize the typesetting stage of the printing process. Clephane suggested substituting stereotyping for lithography in his device, but in spite of their keen efforts Mergenthaler and Hahl were again unsuccessful and they abandoned the project. In spare moments Mergenthaler continued his search for a typesetting machine. Late in 1883 it occurred to him to stamp matrices into type bars and to cast type metal into them in the same machine. From this idea, the Linotype machine developed and was completed by July 1884. It worked well and a patent was granted on 26 August that year, and Clephane and his associates set up the National Typographic Company of West Virginia to manufacture it. The New York Tribune ordered twelve Linotypes, and on 3 July 1886 the first of these set part of that day's issue. During the previous year the company had passed into the hands of a group of newspaper owners; increasing differences with the Board led to Mergenthaler's resignation in 1888, but he nevertheless continued to improve the machine, patenting over fifty modifications. The Linotype, together with the Monotype of Tolbert Lanston, rapidly supplanted earlier typesetting methods, and by the 1920s it reigned supreme, the former being used more for newspapers, the latter for book work.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Franklin Institute John Scott Medal, Elliott Cresson Medal.
    Bibliography
    Further Reading
    J.Moran, 1964, The Composition of Reading Matter, London.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Mergenthaler, Ottmar

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