-
1 working knowledge
-
2 working knowledge
1) Общая лексика: знание (напр., а working knowledge of written German)2) Техника: владение (навыками)3) Реклама: общее представление, рабочее знание4) Контроль качества: практические знания -
3 working knowledge
-
4 working knowledge
например, умение практически использовать языки программирования, ОС, СУБД и т. д.Syn:см. тж. knowledgeАнгло-русский толковый словарь терминов и сокращений по ВТ, Интернету и программированию. > working knowledge
-
5 working knowledge
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > working knowledge
-
6 working knowledge
практическое знание, рабочее владениеАнгло-русский большой универсальный переводческий словарь > working knowledge
-
7 working knowledge
применение на практике (ТУ, стандарта и т.д.)English-Russian dictionary of scientific and technical difficulties vocabulary > working knowledge
-
8 working knowledge
-
9 working knowledge
практи́ческое зна́ниеThe Americanisms. English-Russian dictionary. > working knowledge
-
10 working knowledge
-
11 working knowledge
Англо-русский словарь по исследованиям и ноу-хау > working knowledge
-
12 working knowledge
The English-Russian dictionary on reliability and quality control > working knowledge
-
13 working knowledge of a foreign language
Общая лексика: практическое знание иностранного языкаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > working knowledge of a foreign language
-
14 have a working knowledge of a language
Общая лексика: практически владеть (каким-л.) языкомУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > have a working knowledge of a language
-
15 have a working knowledge of language
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > have a working knowledge of language
-
16 to have a working knowledge a German
English-Russian combinatory dictionary > to have a working knowledge a German
-
17 to have a working knowledge of computer
English-Russian combinatory dictionary > to have a working knowledge of computer
-
18 knowledge
['nɔlɪdʒ]nзнание, знания, сведения, познание, эрудиция, наукаHe has a profound knowledge of the subject. — Он глубоко знает/понимает этот предмет.
All knowledge comes to us through our senses. — Все наши знания поставляются нам органами чувств. /Мы познаем все через органы чувств.
Knowledge is power. — ◊ Знание - сила.
- superfictal knowledgeA little knowledge is a dangerous thing. — ◊ Полузнание - опасно.
- theoretical knowledge
- necessary knowledge
- direct knowledge
- human knowledge
- first-hand knowledge
- stored knowledge
- knowledge base
- knowledge engeneer
- knowledge engineering
- knowledge box
- knowledge on the subject
- knowledge of the laws
- inside knowledge of the situation
- knowledge gained through long research
- lack of knowledge
- thirst for knowledge
- scraps of knowledge
- all branches of knowledge
- matter of common knowledge
- without the knowledge of her parents
- get knowledge of the subject
- rub up brush up one's knowledge of history
- have good knowledge
- have a working knowledge of computer
- have a good knowledge of smth
- have a reading knowledge of German
- have a working knowledge a German
- gain knowledge
- spread the knowledge of smth
- test smb's knowledge
- employ one's knowledge
- speak from one's own knowledge
- act from one's own knowledge
- speak with full knowledge of the facts
- be armed with knowledge
- acquire knowledge
- follow knowledge
- accumulate knowledge
- communicate knowledge
- possess the knowledge
- reach after knowledge
- show off one's knowledge
- base one's conclusions on knowledge
- best of my knowledge
- my certain knowledge...
- memory is a form of knowledgeUSAGE: -
19 knowledge
1) сведения; известные кому-л. сведенияhave basic knowledge of smth. знать основы чего-л.;working knowledge применение на практике; практическое использование (стандарта, ТУ и т.д.) ;gain a full working knowledge of полностью войти в курс дела2) test your knowledge контрольные вопросы; вопросы для самопроверки (напр., в конце раздела какого-л. руководства, учебного пособия и т.д.)3) см. background knowledgeEnglish-Russian dictionary of scientific and technical difficulties vocabulary > knowledge
-
20 knowledge
[ʹnɒlıdʒ] n1. 1) знание; познания, эрудицияknowledge of life [music, chemistry, French] - знание жизни [музыки, химии, французского языка]
knowledge on the subject - знания /познания/ по данному предмету
lack of knowledge - недостаток знаний /эрудиции/
to accumulate [to acquire, to get] knowledge - накапливать [приобретать, получать] знания
to have a reading knowledge of a language - уметь читать на каком-л. языке
to have a working knowledge of a language - практически владеть каким-л. языком
to speak with full knowledge of the facts - говорить со знанием всех обстоятельств (дела)
to speak from one's own knowledge - говорить, основываясь на собственных знаниях /-ом опыте/
2) наука; сумма знанийbranches of human knowledge - отрасли знаний, накопленных человечеством, отрасли науки
2. 1) осведомлённость, сведенияthe knowledge of the victory soon spread - известие /весть/ о победе вскоре облетела всех
to have no knowledge of anything, anybody - не иметь ни малейшего представления ни о чём, ни о ком
to come to smb.'s knowledge - стать известным кому-л.
it has come to my knowledge that you... - до меня дошли сведения, что вы...
not to my knowledge - мне это неизвестно; насколько мне известно - нет
without smb.'s knowledge - без чьего-л. ведома
it has happened twice within my knowledge - на моей памяти так было два раза
2) понимание3. знакомствоmy knowledge of Mr. X is very slight - я очень мало знаю г-на X
people of whom I had no knowledge - люди, о которых я понятия не имел
4. арх. половая близость
См. также в других словарях:
working knowledge — noun A knowledge of how to make something work without any deeper understanding of why it works, or of how to fix it if it breaks. Candidates must have a working knowledge of standard Windows applications … Wiktionary
Working knowledge — Практическое знание … Краткий толковый словарь по полиграфии
working knowledge — understanding which develops with increased experience … English contemporary dictionary
Knowledge worker — Knowledge workers in today s workforce are individuals who are valued for their ability to act and communicate with knowledge within a specific subject area. They will often advance the overall understanding of that subject through focused… … Wikipedia
knowledge — knowl‧edge [ˈnɒlɪdʒ ǁ ˈnɑː ] noun [uncountable] facts, skills and understanding gained through learning or experience: • Given its market knowledge, Price Waterhouse was able to provide a useful insight into each supplier. knowledge of • Auditors … Financial and business terms
Knowledge Management — (KM) comprises a range of practices used by organisations to identify, create, represent, distribute and enable adoption of what it knows, and how it knows it. It has been an established discipline since 1995 [Stankosky, 2005] with a body of… … Wikipedia
Knowledge transfer — in the fields of organizational development and organizational learning is the practical problem of transferring knowledge from one part of the organization to another (or all other) parts of the organization. Like Knowledge Management, Knowledge … Wikipedia
Knowledge market — is a mechanism for distributing knowledge resources. There are two views on knowledge and how knowledge markets can function. One view uses a legal construct of intellectual property to make knowledge a typical scarce resource, so the traditional … Wikipedia
working — work|ing1 W1S1 [ˈwə:kıŋ US ˈwə:r ] adj [only before noun] 1.) a) having a job that you are paid for →↑employed ▪ a working mother ▪ Many working women rely on relatives for childcare. ▪ A smaller working population will have to support a growing… … Dictionary of contemporary English
working — 1 adjective (only before noun) 1 HAVING A JOB a) having a job that you are paid for: a working mother b) having a job that requires physical rather than intellectual skill: an ordinary working man 2 CLOTHES working clothes are designed for people … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
knowledge — n. 1) to acquire, accumulate, gain knowledge 2) to demonstrate, display, show; flaunt, parade one s knowledge (of a subject) 3) to communicate, disseminate; impart knowledge 4) to absorb, assimilate, soak up knowledge 5) (esp. BE) to bring smt.… … Combinatory dictionary