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a model citizen

  • 1 образцово-показательный гражданин

    Ironical: model citizen

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > образцово-показательный гражданин

  • 2 образцовый гражданин

    Ironical: model citizen

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > образцовый гражданин

  • 3 ejemplar

    adj.
    exemplary.
    castigo ejemplar exemplary punishment
    fue un marido ejemplar he was a model husband
    m.
    1 copy.
    ejemplares atrasados del “New Yorker” back issues of the “New Yorker”
    ejemplar de muestra specimen copy
    2 specimen.
    pescó un ejemplar de 200 kilos he caught one weighing 200 kilos
    quedan pocos ejemplares de panda gigante there are few giant pandas left
    3 issue, copy.
    * * *
    1 exemplary, model
    1 (copia) copy, number, issue
    2 (prototipo) specimen
    * * *
    noun m.
    1) copy
    * * *
    1.
    ADJ exemplary, model
    2. SM
    1) (=individuo) [gen] example; (Zool) specimen, example; [de libro] copy; [de revista] number, issue
    2) (=precedente) example, model, precedent
    * * *
    I
    adjetivo <conducta/vida> exemplary; <trabajador/padre> model (before n); < castigo> exemplary
    II
    1) (de libro, documento) copy
    2) (Bot, Zool) specimen
    * * *
    = copy [copies, -pl.], exemplary, specimen, copy book.
    Nota: Ejemplar de un libro que en los siglos XVI y XVII se le regalaba a aquellos trabajadores de la imprenta que habían intervenido en su impresión y que éstos solían vender por debajo del precio de mercado.
    Ex. Usually a central cataloguing agency is based upon a national library or copyright office, where publishers are required by law to send at least one copy of every book published in that country.
    Ex. PRECIS provides an exemplary illustration of the association and common ground between alphabetical indexing and classification.
    Ex. An object is a tree-dimensional artefact (or replica of an artefact) or a specimen of a naturally occurring entity.
    Ex. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries these ' copy books' were claimed and promptly sold at bargain prices by the London workmen.
    ----
    * área de ejemplar = copy area.
    * ejemplar adicional = additional copy.
    * ejemplar anticipado = advance copy, early sheet, advance sheets, preprint [pre-print], advance.
    * ejemplar anticipado electrónico = e-print [eprint].
    * ejemplar del apuntador = prompt-copy.
    * ejemplar de prensa = advance copy, early sheet, advance sheets.
    * ejemplar de regalo = gift copy.
    * ejemplar desmembrado = breaking copy.
    * ejemplar ficticio = made-up copy.
    * ejemplar fotocopiado = xerox copy.
    * ejemplar gratuito = gift copy, complimentary copy.
    * ejemplar impreso = hard copy [hardcopy], printed copy, print copy.
    * ejemplar para recensión = press copy, review copy.
    * ejemplar único = singleton.
    * específico para cada ejemplar = copy-specific holdings and location information.
    * etiqueta identificativa del ejemplar = book label.
    * modelo ejemplar = exemplary model.
    * número de ejemplar = copy number.
    * otro ejemplar = additional copy.
    * registro de ejemplar = copy record.
    * varios ejemplares = multiple copies.
    * * *
    I
    adjetivo <conducta/vida> exemplary; <trabajador/padre> model (before n); < castigo> exemplary
    II
    1) (de libro, documento) copy
    2) (Bot, Zool) specimen
    * * *
    = copy [copies, -pl.], exemplary, specimen, copy book.
    Nota: Ejemplar de un libro que en los siglos XVI y XVII se le regalaba a aquellos trabajadores de la imprenta que habían intervenido en su impresión y que éstos solían vender por debajo del precio de mercado.

    Ex: Usually a central cataloguing agency is based upon a national library or copyright office, where publishers are required by law to send at least one copy of every book published in that country.

    Ex: PRECIS provides an exemplary illustration of the association and common ground between alphabetical indexing and classification.
    Ex: An object is a tree-dimensional artefact (or replica of an artefact) or a specimen of a naturally occurring entity.
    Ex: In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries these ' copy books' were claimed and promptly sold at bargain prices by the London workmen.
    * área de ejemplar = copy area.
    * ejemplar adicional = additional copy.
    * ejemplar anticipado = advance copy, early sheet, advance sheets, preprint [pre-print], advance.
    * ejemplar anticipado electrónico = e-print [eprint].
    * ejemplar del apuntador = prompt-copy.
    * ejemplar de prensa = advance copy, early sheet, advance sheets.
    * ejemplar de regalo = gift copy.
    * ejemplar desmembrado = breaking copy.
    * ejemplar ficticio = made-up copy.
    * ejemplar fotocopiado = xerox copy.
    * ejemplar gratuito = gift copy, complimentary copy.
    * ejemplar impreso = hard copy [hardcopy], printed copy, print copy.
    * ejemplar para recensión = press copy, review copy.
    * ejemplar único = singleton.
    * específico para cada ejemplar = copy-specific holdings and location information.
    * etiqueta identificativa del ejemplar = book label.
    * modelo ejemplar = exemplary model.
    * número de ejemplar = copy number.
    * otro ejemplar = additional copy.
    * registro de ejemplar = copy record.
    * varios ejemplares = multiple copies.

    * * *
    1 ‹conducta/vida› exemplary; ‹trabajador/padre› model ( before n)
    2 ‹castigo› exemplary
    A (de un libro, periódico, documento) copy
    B ( Bot, Zool) specimen
    un magnífico ejemplar de su especie a magnificent example of its species
    su novio es un ejemplar de mucho cuidado her boyfriend's a really nasty character o a nasty piece of work
    * * *

     

    ejemplar adjetivo ‹conducta/vida/castigo exemplary;
    trabajador/padre model ( before n)
    ■ sustantivo masculino
    a) (de libro, documento) copy

    b) (Bot, Zool) specimen

    ejemplar
    I sustantivo masculino
    1 (de un libro) copy
    (de publicación periódica) number, issue
    2 (de una especie animal, vegetal) specimen: quedan pocos ejemplares de lobo ibérico, there are very few Iberian wolves left
    II adjetivo exemplary, model
    ' ejemplar' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    sobra
    - atrasado
    - espécimen
    English:
    copy
    - example
    - exemplary
    - hook
    - model
    - specimen
    - entry
    - existence
    * * *
    adj
    1. [modélico] exemplary;
    tuvo un comportamiento ejemplar his behaviour was exemplary;
    fue un marido ejemplar he was a model husband
    2. [aleccionador] exemplary;
    castigo ejemplar exemplary punishment
    nm
    1. [de libro, diario] copy;
    [de revista] issue, number; [de moneda, sello] example;
    una tirada de diez mil ejemplares a print run of ten thousand copies;
    ejemplares atrasados del “New Yorker” back issues of the “New Yorker”
    ejemplar de muestra specimen copy;
    ejemplar de regalo [libro] complimentary copy
    2. [de especie, raza] specimen;
    pescó un ejemplar de 200 kilos he caught one weighing 200 kilos;
    quedan pocos ejemplares de panda gigante there are few giant pandas left;
    un magnífico ejemplar de secuoya gigante a magnificent specimen of the giant sequoia o redwood;
    Fam
    ¡menudo ejemplar! he's/she's a sly one!
    * * *
    I adj alumno, padre etc model atr, exemplary
    II m
    1 de libro copy; de revista tb
    issue
    2 animal, planta specimen
    * * *
    : exemplary, model
    1) : copy (of a book, magazine, etc.)
    2) : specimen, example
    * * *
    ejemplar n copy [pl. copies]

    Spanish-English dictionary > ejemplar

  • 4 σπέρμα

    σπέρμα, ατος, τό (σπείρω; Hom.+)
    the source from which someth. is propagated, seed
    seed of plants pl. seeds 1 Cl 24:5; AcPlCor 2:26, 28 (Ath. 33, 1); (kinds of) seeds (ApcMos 29; Mel., P. 48, 341) Mt 13:32; Mk 4:31; 1 Cor 15:38 (MDahl, The Resurrection of the Body [ 1 Cor 15], ’62, 121–25). Sing., collective (POslo 32, 15 [1 A.D.] τὸ εἰς τ. γῆν σπέρμα) Mt 13:24, 27, 37f; 2 Cor 9:10 v.l. (Is 55:10). See Papias (1:3, Lat.).
    male seed or semen (Pind. et al.; ApcEsdr 5:12 p. 30, 7 Tdf.; Just., A I, 19, 1 al.; Ath. 21, 1; 22, 4), so perh. Hb 11:11 (s. καταβολή 2 and s. 2b below, also Cadbury [αἷμα 1a]) and J 7:42; Ro 1:3; 2 Ti 2:8; IEph 18:2; IRo 7:3 (s. also 2a below on these passages). Then, by metonymy
    the product of insemination, posterity, descendants
    descendants, children, posterity (in Pind. and Trag., but mostly of an individual descendant; Pla., Leg. 9, 853c ἄνθρωποί τε καὶ ἀνθρώπων σπέρμασιν νομοθετοῦμεν. The pl. also 4 Macc 18:1; Ps.-Phoc. 18; Jos., Ant. 8, 200) in our lit. (as well as Aeschyl.; Soph., Trach. 1147; Eur., Med. 669 and, above all, LXX; TestAbr A 8 p. 85, 21 [Stone 18, 21]; ApcEsdr 3:10 p. 27, 19 Tdf.; ApcMos 41; Just., A I, 32, 14 al.) collective τῷ Ἀβραὰμ καὶ τῷ σπέρματι αὐτοῦ Lk 1:55. See J 8:33, 37; Ac 7:5, 6 (Gen 15:13); 13:23; Ro 4:13; 11:1; 2 Cor 11:22; Hb 2:16; 11:18 (Gen 21:12); 1 Cl 10:4–6 (Gen 13:15f; 15:5); 16:11 (Is 53:10); 32:2 (cp. Gen 22:17); 56:14 (Job 5:25); B 3:3 (Is 58:7); Hv 2, 2, 2; Hs 9, 24. Of Salome σπ. εἰμὶ ʼ Αβραὰμ καὶ Ἰσαὰκ καὶ Ἰακώβ GJs 20:2.—ἀνιστάναι σπ. τινί raise up children for someone Mt 22:24 (s. ἀνίστημι 3 and Dt 25:5); GJs 1:3b. Also ἐξανιστάναι σπ. Mk 12:19; Lk 20:28 (s. ἐξανίστημι 2). ἔχειν σπ. Mt 22:25; ἀφιέναι σπ. Mk 12:20, 22; also καταλείπειν σπ. vs. 21. ποιεῖν σπ. (Is 37:31) GJs 1:2f. ὅπως εὐλογηθῇ τὸ σπ. σου so that your posterity may be blessed 15:4.—Hb 11:11 may belong here (s. καταβολή 1 and s. 1b above); ἐκ (τοῦ) σπέρματος Δαυίδ w. ref. to Jesus may be classed here (s. Ps 88:5 and s. 1b above) J 7:42; Ro 1:3; 2 Ti 2:8; IEph 18:2; IRo 7:3; AcPlCor 2:5.—In imagistic use of metonymy σπ. is also used w. ref. to Abraham’s spiritual descendants, i.e. those who have faith like his Ro 4:16, 18 (Gen 15:5); 9:8; cp. vs. 7ab (Gen 21:12); Gal 3:29.—It is contrary to normal OT usage (for, even if Gen 4:25; 1 Km 1:11 σπέρμα is used w. ref. to a single individual, he stands as the representative of all the descendants) when one person, i.e. the Messiah, is called σπέρμα and thus is exalted above the mass of Abraham’s descendants (s. MWilcox, JSNT 5, 79, 2–20 on Targumim and rabbinic sources for application to individuals). In Ac 3:25 the promise of Gen 22:18 is referred to him, and s. esp. Gal 3:16, 19 (EBurton, ICC Gal 1921, 505–10).—In Rv 12:17 the Christians are called οἱ λοιποὶ τοῦ σπέρματος αὐτῆς the rest (in addition to the son just born to her) of her (the heavenly woman’s) children.
    of a few survivors, fr. whom a new generation will arise (cp. Wsd 14:6; 1 Esdr 8:85; Jos., Ant. 11, 144; 12, 303; also Pla., Tim. 23c; Phlegon: 257 Fgm. 36 II, 3, 8 vs. 21 Jac. [p. 1174] ὅ τί που καὶ σπέρμα λίποιτο) Ro 9:29 (Is 1:9). Then
    genetic character, nature, disposition, character, of the divine σπέρμα (acc. to BWeiss = the word of God; acc. to EHaupt, Westcott, HHoltzmann, OBaumgarten, OHoltzmann, HHWendt, FHauck = the beginning or germ of a new life, planted in us by the Spirit of God; acc. to HWindisch and THaering, who are uncertain, = word or spirit; acc. to WWrede = the grace that makes us holy; RSV et al. ‘nature’) that dwells in one who is γεγεννημένος ἐκ τοῦ θεοῦ (γεννάω 1b) and makes it ‘impossible for such a pers. to sin’ 1J 3:9 (JPainter, NTS 32, ’86, 48–71). The imagery suggests a person of exceptional merit, in Greco-Roman circles a model citizen, possesser of ἀρετή (q.v.; on the importance of ancestral virtue s. Pind., O. 7, 90–92; P. 10, 11–14; N. 3, 40–42; 6, 8–16; cp. Epict. 1, 13, 3: the slave has, just as you do, τὸν Δία πρόγονον, ὥσπερ υἱὸς ἐκ τῶν αὐτῶν σπερμάτων γέγονεν; s. also Herm. Wr. 9, 3; 4a; 6 ἀπὸ τ. θεοῦ λαβὼν τὰ σπέρματα; Philo, Ebr. 30 τὰ τοῦ θεοῦ σπέρματα al.; Synes., Ep. 151 p. 289b τὸ σπ. τὸ θεῖον; Just. A I, 32, 8 τὸ παρὰ τοῦ θεοῦ σπέρμα, ὁ λόγο.—Musonius p. 8, 1 ἀρετῆς σπ. Maximus Tyr. 10, 4g σπ. ψυχῆς.—Pind., P. 3, 15 σπέρμα θεοῦ καθαρόν refers to Asclepius, Apollo’s son by Coronis.).—B. 505. DELG s.v. σπείρω. M-M. EDNT. TW.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > σπέρμα

  • 5 pijvri

    Construction: prije+virnu heroic, model citizen Structure: x1 = prije1 (wise) = virnu1 (brave), x2 = prije2 (object of wisdom) = virnu2 (brave activity), x3 = virnu3 (brave standard), x4 = prije3 (views as wise)

    Lojban-English lujvo dictionary > pijvri

  • 6 ciudadano

    adj.
    civic.
    m.
    citizen, countryman, member of the public, townsman.
    * * *
    1 civic
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 citizen
    1 townspeople, city dwellers
    * * *
    (f. - ciudadana)
    noun
    * * *
    ciudadano, -a
    1.
    ADJ civic, city antes de s
    2.
    SM / F citizen
    * * *
    I
    - na adjetivo < vida> city (before n)
    II
    - na masculino, femenino
    1) ( habitante) citizen
    2) (Ven frml) ( al dirigirse - a un hombre) sir; (- a una mujer) madam
    * * *
    = citizen, national, constituent, private citizen, burgess, member of the public, punter.
    Ex. This paper reports a conference on present and future possibilities for interstate cooperation in the effective delivery of community information to citizens.
    Ex. This collection includes also works about the Maltese Islands and those written by Maltese nationals but published abroad.
    Ex. This service was formed in 1792 to give constituents free information on the activity of their government.
    Ex. Except for civil laws, and the individual right of the private citizen etc., the king is bound to public law, constitutional law and divine law.
    Ex. They claimed that they and all of their ancestors as burgesses had held a market on these days from time out of mind, without interruption.
    Ex. As well as voting for candidates it is possible for a member of the public to decide to stand for election themselves.
    Ex. It could mean simply the ability of the punter to move between pieces of information in much the same way as he or she uses the remote controller to change channels on analogue television.
    ----
    * centro de atención al ciudadano = advice centre.
    * Centro de Información al Ciudadano = Public Information Center (PIC).
    * centro de información ciudadana = community information centre.
    * ciudadano británico = Briton.
    * ciudadano de edad avanzada = elderly citizen.
    * ciudadano de la tercera edad = senior citizen.
    * ciudadano medio, el = average man, the.
    * ciudadano normal = ordinary citizen, member of the public.
    * ciudadano, particular = private citizen.
    * ciudadanos = citizenry, townspeople.
    * ciudadano soldado = citizen soldier.
    * conciudadano = fellow citizen.
    * defensor de los derechos de los ciudadanos = citizen activist.
    * defensor de los intereses del ciudadano = watchdog.
    * derechos del ciudadano = civil liberties.
    * el ciudadano de a pie = the average Joe.
    * el ciudadano medio = the average Joe.
    * grupo de acción ciudadana = citizen action group, community action group.
    * grupo de ciudadanos desatentido = unserved, the.
    * grupo de protección ciudadana = civic trust group.
    * inseguridad ciudadana = street crime.
    * instrucción sobre los derechos de los ciudadanos = community education.
    * la ciudadana de a pie = the average Jane.
    * la ciudadana media = the average Jane.
    * Oficina de Información al Ciudadano (CAB) = Citizens' Advice Bureau (CAB).
    * participación ciudadana = community involvement.
    * seguridad ciudadana = public safety.
    * servicio de información ciudadana = community information service.
    * simple ciudadano, el = man-on-the-street, man in the street, the.
    * * *
    I
    - na adjetivo < vida> city (before n)
    II
    - na masculino, femenino
    1) ( habitante) citizen
    2) (Ven frml) ( al dirigirse - a un hombre) sir; (- a una mujer) madam
    * * *
    = citizen, national, constituent, private citizen, burgess, member of the public, punter.

    Ex: This paper reports a conference on present and future possibilities for interstate cooperation in the effective delivery of community information to citizens.

    Ex: This collection includes also works about the Maltese Islands and those written by Maltese nationals but published abroad.
    Ex: This service was formed in 1792 to give constituents free information on the activity of their government.
    Ex: Except for civil laws, and the individual right of the private citizen etc., the king is bound to public law, constitutional law and divine law.
    Ex: They claimed that they and all of their ancestors as burgesses had held a market on these days from time out of mind, without interruption.
    Ex: As well as voting for candidates it is possible for a member of the public to decide to stand for election themselves.
    Ex: It could mean simply the ability of the punter to move between pieces of information in much the same way as he or she uses the remote controller to change channels on analogue television.
    * centro de atención al ciudadano = advice centre.
    * Centro de Información al Ciudadano = Public Information Center (PIC).
    * centro de información ciudadana = community information centre.
    * ciudadano británico = Briton.
    * ciudadano de edad avanzada = elderly citizen.
    * ciudadano de la tercera edad = senior citizen.
    * ciudadano medio, el = average man, the.
    * ciudadano normal = ordinary citizen, member of the public.
    * ciudadano, particular = private citizen.
    * ciudadanos = citizenry, townspeople.
    * ciudadano soldado = citizen soldier.
    * conciudadano = fellow citizen.
    * defensor de los derechos de los ciudadanos = citizen activist.
    * defensor de los intereses del ciudadano = watchdog.
    * derechos del ciudadano = civil liberties.
    * el ciudadano de a pie = the average Joe.
    * el ciudadano medio = the average Joe.
    * grupo de acción ciudadana = citizen action group, community action group.
    * grupo de ciudadanos desatentido = unserved, the.
    * grupo de protección ciudadana = civic trust group.
    * inseguridad ciudadana = street crime.
    * instrucción sobre los derechos de los ciudadanos = community education.
    * la ciudadana de a pie = the average Jane.
    * la ciudadana media = the average Jane.
    * Oficina de Información al Ciudadano (CAB) = Citizens' Advice Bureau (CAB).
    * participación ciudadana = community involvement.
    * seguridad ciudadana = public safety.
    * servicio de información ciudadana = community information service.
    * simple ciudadano, el = man-on-the-street, man in the street, the.

    * * *
    ciudadano1 -na
    la vida ciudadana town o city life
    la inseguridad ciudadana the lack of safety in towns o cities
    el deber ciudadano de acudir a las urnas the duty of every citizen to use his or her vote
    la colaboración ciudadana the cooperation of the people
    ciudadano2 -na
    masculine, feminine
    A (habitante) citizen
    el alcalde ha pedido la colaboración de todos los ciudadanos the mayor has asked everyone in the town o all of the townspeople o all of the residents to help
    la seguridad de todos los ciudadanos the security of all citizens o of the population as a whole
    Compuesto:
    el ciudadano de a pie the man in the street, the ordinary o average person
    B
    1 ( Ven frml) (al dirigirsea un hombre) sir; (— a una mujer) madam
    ciudadana, ¿me permite su licencia de conducir? could I see your license please, madam?
    todos los ciudadanos deben acudir a la taquilla all visitors o everyone should go to the ticket office
    2 ( Ven iró) (individuo) character ( iro)
    * * *

    ciudadano
    ◊ -na adjetivo ‹ vida city ( before n);

    la inseguridad ciudadana the lack of safety in towns o cities;
    es un deber ciudadano it's the duty of every citizen
    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino ( habitante) citizen
    ciudadano,-a
    I sustantivo masculino y femenino citizen
    el ciudadano de a pie, the man in the street
    II adjetivo civic

    ' ciudadano' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    ciudadana
    - súbdita
    - súbdito
    - citadino
    - medio
    - nacional
    English:
    citizen
    - man
    - model
    - national
    - Briton
    * * *
    ciudadano, -a
    adj
    [deberes, conciencia] civic; [urbano] city;
    seguridad ciudadana public safety;
    vida ciudadana city life
    nm,f
    citizen;
    un ciudadano de Buenos Aires a citizen of Buenos Aires;
    el ciudadano de a pie the man in the street
    * * *
    I adj civic;
    seguridad ciudadana public safety
    II m, ciudadana f citizen;
    el ciudadano de a pie the man in the street
    * * *
    ciudadano, -na adj
    : civic, city
    ciudadano, -na n
    1) nacional: citizen
    2) habitante: resident, city dweller
    * * *
    ciudadano n citizen

    Spanish-English dictionary > ciudadano

  • 7 serie

    "set;
    Satz;
    sedimento"
    * * *
    f invar series
    articolo m di serie mass produced item
    produzione f in serie mass production
    * * *
    serie s.f.
    1 series*; ( successione) succession; sequence: la serie degli imperatori romani, the succession of Roman emperors; una serie di insuccessi, a series (o succession) of failures; una serie di conferenze, a series of lectures; l'editore ha iniziato una nuova serie di pubblicazioni scientifiche, the publisher has begun a new series of scientific publications; una serie di telefilm, a TV series; una serie televisiva sulla natura, a nature series for TV; commettere una serie di gaffe, to make a series of gaffes // (comm.): in serie, mass-produced; produzione in serie, mass production; modello di serie, current (o production) model; prodotti di serie, mass-produced (o current) articles; modello fuori serie, special (o custom-built) model; abiti fatti in serie, ready-to-wear suits // numero di serie, (di banconote, titoli) serial number // serie economica, economic lot (o series)
    2 ( complesso, assieme) set: una serie di chiavi, a set of keys; una serie di francobolli, monete, a set of stamps, coins // (amm.): serie di conti, set of accounts; serie di cambiali, set of bills; serie di libri contabili, set of books
    3 ( fila) row, line, range: una serie di case, a row of houses; oggetti disposti in serie ordinata, objects ranged in neat rows
    4 (sport) division: ( calcio) (in GB) serie A, Premier League; serie B, First Division // di serie B, (fig.) second-rate (o second-class): un film di serie B, a second-rate film; un cittadino di serie B, a second-class citizen
    5 (scient.) series*: (fis.) serie radioattiva, radioactive series // (chim.): serie del metano, methane series; accoppiamento in serie, connection in series // (mat.): serie armonica, harmonic series; serie di potenze, power series // (stat.): serie statistica, statistical series; serie temporale, ciclica, time series
    6 (inform.) set: serie di caratteri, character string; serie di dati, (IBM) data set; serie completa di caratteri, (character) font; serie completa di caratteri a barre, bar font; serie di istruzioni, instruction set.
    * * *
    ['sɛrje]
    sostantivo femminile invariabile
    1) (sequenza, successione) series*

    una serie di omicidi, attentati — a series of murders, a wave of attacks

    2) ind.
    4) giorn. rad. telev. series*
    5) sport (categoria) division

    serie A, B, C, — = in Italy, division of the football league corresponding respectively to the Premier League, the First Division and the Second Division

    6) chim. mat. el. series*
    * * *
    serie
    /'sεrje/
    f.inv.
     1 (sequenza, successione) series*; una serie di omicidi, attentati a series of murders, a wave of attacks
     2 ind. numero di serie serial number; modello di serie production model; produrre in serie to mass-produce; produzione in serie mass production
     3 (raccolta) una serie di fumetti a set of comics; una serie di francobolli a series of stamps
     4 giorn. rad. telev. series*
     5 sport (categoria) division; serie A, B, C, = in Italy, division of the football league corresponding respectively to the Premier League, the First Division and the Second Division
     6 chim. mat. el. series*
    serie limitata limited production.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > serie

  • 8 Taylor, David Watson

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 4 March 1864 Louisa County, Virginia, USA
    d. 29 July 1940 Washington, DC, USA
    [br]
    American hydrodynamicist and Rear Admiral in the United States Navy Construction Corps.
    [br]
    Taylor's first years were spent on a farm in Virginia, but at the age of 13 he went to RandolphMacon College, graduating in 1881, and from there to the US Naval Academy, Annapolis. He graduated at the head of his class, had some sea time, and then went to the Royal Naval College in Greenwich, England, where in 1888 he again came top of the class with the highest-ever marks of any student, British or overseas.
    On his return to the United States he held various posts as a constructor, ending this period at the Mare Island Navy Yard in California. In 1894 he was transferred to Washington, where he joined the Bureau of Construction and started to interest the Navy in ship model testing. Under his direction, the first ship model tank in the United States was built at Washington and for fourteen years operated under his control. The work of this establishment gave him the necessary information to write the highly acclaimed text The Speed and Power of Ships, which with revisions is still in use. By the outbreak of the First World War he was one of the world's most respected naval architects, and had been retained as a consultant by the British Government in the celebrated case of the collision between the White Star Liner Olympic and HMS Hawke.
    In December 1914 Taylor became a Rear-Admiral and was appointed Chief Constructor of the US Navy. His term of office was extremely stressful, with over 1,000 ships constructed for the war effort and with the work of the fledgling Bureau for Aeronautics also under his control. The problems were not over in 1918 as the Washington Treaty required drastic pruning of the Navy and a careful reshaping of the defence force.
    Admiral Taylor retired from active service at the beginning of 1923 but retained several consultancies in aeronautics, shipping and naval architecture. For many years he served as consultant to the ship-design company now known as Gibbs and Cox. Many honours came his way, but the most singular must be the perpetuation of his name in the David Taylor Medal, the highest award of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers in the United States. Similarly, the Navy named its ship test tank facility, which was opened in Maryland in 1937, the David W. Taylor Model Basin.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers 1925–7. United States Distinguished Service Medal. American Society of Civil Engineers John Fritz Medal. Institution of Naval Architects Gold Medal 1894 (the first American citizen to receive it). Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers David W.Taylor Medal 1936 (the first occasion of this award).
    Bibliography
    Resistance of Ships and Screw Propulsion. 1911, The Speed and Power of Ships, New York: Wiley.
    Taylor gave many papers to the Maritime Institutions of both the United States and the United Kingdom.
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Taylor, David Watson

  • 9 Salt, Sir Titus

    [br]
    b. 20 September 1803 Morley, Yorkshire, England
    d. 29 December 1876 Saltaire, Yorkshire, England
    [br]
    English industrialist, social reformer and entrepreneur who made his fortune by overcoming the problems of utilizing alpaca wool in the production of worsted, and established the early model town at Saltaire.
    [br]
    Titus Salt arrived in Bradford with his father, who was a wool merchant in the town, in 1822. He soon set up his own company and it was there that he experimented with the textile worsted. Alpaca wool comes from an animal of the camel family that resembles the llama, and flocks of domesticated breeds of the animal had been raised in the high Andes since the days of the Incas. The wool was introduced into Europe via Spain and, later, Germany and France. The first attempts to spin and weave the yarn in England were made in 1808, but despite experimentation over the years the material was difficult to work. It was in 1836 that Salt evolved his method of utilizing a cotton warp with part alpaca weft. The method proved a great success and Bradford gained a reputation as a manufacturing centre for alpaca wool, exporting both yarn and cloth in quantity, especially to the USA. By 1850 Salt, who owned six mills, was Bradford's biggest employer and was certainly its richest citizen. He decided to move out of the city and built a new mill works, the architects of which were Lockwood and Mawson, on the banks of the River Aire a few miles from the city. Around the works, between 1851 and 1871, he built houses, a hospital, library, church, institute and almshouses for his workers. The buildings were solid, good-standard structures of local stone and the houses were pleasantly situated, with their amenities making them seem palaces compared to the slums in which other Bradford textile workers lived at the time. The collection of buildings was the first example in Britain of a "model new town", and was, indeed still is, a remarkable prototype of its kind. Apart from being a philanthropist and social reformer, Salt was also concerned with taking advantage of the technical developments of his time. His mill works, which eventually covered ten acres of land, was of fashionably Italianate architectural style (its chimney even a copy of the campanile of the Church of Santa Maria Gloriosa in Venice), although its structure was of iron framing. The weaving shed held 1,200 looms and had capacity for 3,000 workers, who produced 30,000 yards of cloth per day. Water from the river was used to produce steam to power the matchinery used in the manufacturing processes of scouring, dyeing and finishing. For the export of goods, the nearby Leeds-Liverpool Canal linked the works to Britain's chief ports, and the Midland Railway (an extension of the LeedsBradford line which opened in 1846) was of great use for the same purpose.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Created Baronet 1869.
    Further Reading
    Dictionary of National Biography.
    Visitors Guide to Salt aire, Bradford City Council.
    DY

    Biographical history of technology > Salt, Sir Titus

  • 10 nacionalizar

    v.
    1 to nationalize (banca, bienes).
    El gobierno nacionalizó esa costumbre The government nationalized that...
    2 to naturalize (person).
    3 to put under government control, to federalize, to nationalize.
    Nacionalizaron los impuestos They federalized the taxes.
    * * *
    1 (persona) to naturalize
    2 (empresa) to nationalize
    1 (persona) to become naturalized
    nacionalizarse español/británico/etc to take up Spanish/British/etc citizenship
    * * *
    1.
    VT [+ persona] to naturalize; [+ industria] to nationalize
    2.
    See:
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo < industria> to nationalize; < persona> to naturalize
    2.
    nacionalizarsev pron persona to become naturalized
    * * *
    = nationalise [nationalize, -USA].
    Ex. After the revolution all banks were nationalised = Tras la revolución se nacionalizaron todos los bancos.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo < industria> to nationalize; < persona> to naturalize
    2.
    nacionalizarsev pron persona to become naturalized
    * * *
    = nationalise [nationalize, -USA].

    Ex: After the revolution all banks were nationalised = Tras la revolución se nacionalizaron todos los bancos.

    * * *
    vt
    1 ‹industria/empresa› to nationalize
    2 ‹persona› to naturalize
    «persona» to become naturalized
    se nacionalizó española she became a naturalized Spaniard
    * * *

    nacionalizar ( conjugate nacionalizar) verbo transitivo industria to nationalize;
    persona to naturalize
    nacionalizarse verbo pronominal [ persona] to become naturalized
    nacionalizar verbo transitivo
    1 (a una persona) to naturalize
    2 Econ (hacer estatal) to nationalize
    ' nacionalizar' also found in these entries:
    English:
    nationalize
    - naturalize
    * * *
    vt
    1. [banca, bienes] to nationalize
    2. [persona] to naturalize
    * * *
    I v/t
    1 COM nationalize
    2 persona naturalize
    * * *
    nacionalizar {21} vt
    1) : to nationalize
    2) : to naturalize (as a citizen)

    Spanish-English dictionary > nacionalizar

  • 11 soldado1

    1 = soldier, serviceman [servicemen, -pl.], army man, serviceperson.
    Ex. The 'strategic computing' plan announced by the United States in early 1984 envisages, among others, the use of automatic co-pilots which respond to human voice, and the use of expert systems to help train soldiers to operate and repair complex equipment.
    Ex. Personal readers' guidance was provided to World War I servicemen.
    Ex. The writer discusses the victualling of 17,000 army men in the two weeks leading up to the battle of Naseby in June 1645.
    Ex. Soaked to the skin in the pelting rain of a tropical storm, they said that guarding the tomb was the highest honor that can be afforded to a serviceperson.
    ----
    * antiguo soldado = ex-soldier.
    * ciudadano soldado = citizen soldier.
    * mujer soldado = servicewoman.
    * profesión de soldado = soldiering.
    * soldado alemán = Jerry.
    * soldado americano = GI.
    * soldado de caballería = cavalryman [cavalrymen, -pl.].
    * soldado de infantería = infantryman.
    * soldado de juguete = model soldier.
    * soldado enemigo = enemy soldier.
    * soldado militar = military soldier.
    * soldado raso = army private, private.
    * soldados = military personnel.
    * soldado sanitario = corpsman [corpsmen, -pl.].
    * soldado veterano = veteran soldier.

    Spanish-English dictionary > soldado1

  • 12 soldado

    adj.
    welded.
    f. & m.
    soldier, enlisted soldier, fighting man, GI.
    m.
    soldier.
    el soldado desconocido the unknown Soldier
    soldado de plomo tin soldier
    soldado raso private
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: soldar.
    * * *
    1 soldier
    \
    soldado de caballería cavalryman, trooper
    soldado raso private
    * * *
    noun mf.
    * * *
    I

    soldado raso — private, private first class (EEUU)

    II
    ADJ [junta] welded
    * * *
    masculino y femenino soldier

    alistarse como soldado — to enlist, to join up, to join the army

    * * *
    masculino y femenino soldier

    alistarse como soldado — to enlist, to join up, to join the army

    * * *
    soldado1
    1 = soldier, serviceman [servicemen, -pl.], army man, serviceperson.

    Ex: The 'strategic computing' plan announced by the United States in early 1984 envisages, among others, the use of automatic co-pilots which respond to human voice, and the use of expert systems to help train soldiers to operate and repair complex equipment.

    Ex: Personal readers' guidance was provided to World War I servicemen.
    Ex: The writer discusses the victualling of 17,000 army men in the two weeks leading up to the battle of Naseby in June 1645.
    Ex: Soaked to the skin in the pelting rain of a tropical storm, they said that guarding the tomb was the highest honor that can be afforded to a serviceperson.
    * antiguo soldado = ex-soldier.
    * ciudadano soldado = citizen soldier.
    * mujer soldado = servicewoman.
    * profesión de soldado = soldiering.
    * soldado alemán = Jerry.
    * soldado americano = GI.
    * soldado de caballería = cavalryman [cavalrymen, -pl.].
    * soldado de infantería = infantryman.
    * soldado de juguete = model soldier.
    * soldado enemigo = enemy soldier.
    * soldado militar = military soldier.
    * soldado raso = army private, private.
    * soldados = military personnel.
    * soldado sanitario = corpsman [corpsmen, -pl.].
    * soldado veterano = veteran soldier.

    soldado2
    2 = welded.

    Ex: As an alternative, surveyors may accept the insulation being secured by means of welded steel pins bent at right angles over the galvanised wire netting.

    * * *
    soldier
    alistarse como soldado to enlist, to join up, to join the army
    el Soldado Desconocido the Unknown Soldier
    Compuestos:
    ≈ private first class ( in US), ≈ lance corporal ( in UK)
    ≈ airman first class ( in US), ≈ leading aircraftsman ( in UK)
    private
    private
    soldado or soldadito de plomo
    tin soldier
    * * *

    Del verbo soldar: ( conjugate soldar)

    soldado es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    soldado    
    soldar
    soldado sustantivo masculino y femenino
    soldier;

    soldado de infantería infantryman;

    ;

    soldado or soldadito de plomo tin soldier
    soldar ( conjugate soldar) verbo transitivo ( con estaño) to solder;

    ( sin estaño) to weld
    soldado sustantivo masculino soldier
    soldado raso, private
    soldar verbo transitivo to weld
    ' soldado' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    cuadrarse
    - franquicia
    - rasa
    - raso
    - acto
    - amotinado
    - caer
    - combatir
    - cuadrar
    - guardia
    - indisciplinado
    - licenciar
    - mochila
    - paisano
    - plomo
    - ronda
    - simple
    English:
    crossfire
    - discharge
    - enlist
    - flourish
    - lance corporal
    - man
    - marine
    - private
    - rank
    - redcoat
    - servicewoman
    - soldier
    - squaddie
    - storm-trooper
    - enlisted man
    - ex-serviceman
    - GI
    - service
    - trooper
    * * *
    soldier
    soldado de caballería cavalryman;
    soldado de plomo tin soldier;
    soldado de primera Br lance corporal, US private first class;
    soldado raso private
    * * *
    m/f soldier
    * * *
    1) : soldier
    2)
    soldado raso : private, enlisted man
    * * *
    soldado n soldier

    Spanish-English dictionary > soldado

  • 13 Bell, Alexander Graham

    SUBJECT AREA: Telecommunications
    [br]
    b. 3 March 1847 Edinburgh, Scotland
    d. 3 August 1922 Beinn Bhreagh, Baddeck, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada
    [br]
    Scottish/American inventor of the telephone.
    [br]
    Bell's grandfather was a professor of elocution in London and his father an authority on the physiology of the voice and on elocution; Bell was to follow in their footsteps. He was educated in Edinburgh, leaving school at 13. In 1863 he went to Elgin, Morayshire, as a pupil teacher in elocution, with a year's break to study at Edinburgh University; it was in 1865, while still in Elgin, that he first conceived the idea of the electrical transmission of speech. He went as a master to Somersetshire College, Bath (now in Avon), and in 1867 he moved to London to assist his father, who had taken up the grandfather's work in elocution. In the same year, he matriculated at London University, studying anatomy and physiology, and also began teaching the deaf. He continued to pursue the studies that were to lead to the invention of the telephone. At this time he read Helmholtz's The Sensations of Tone, an important work on the theory of sound that was to exert a considerable influence on him.
    In 1870 he accompanied his parents when they emigrated to Canada. His work for the deaf gained fame in both Canada and the USA, and in 1873 he was apponted professor of vocal physiology and the mechanics of speech at Boston University, Massachusetts. There, he continued to work on his theory that sound wave vibrations could be converted into a fluctuating electric current, be sent along a wire and then be converted back into sound waves by means of a receiver. He approached the problem from the background of the theory of sound and voice production rather than from that of electrical science, and by 1875 he had succeeded in constructing a rough model. On 7 March 1876 Bell spoke the famous command to his assistant, "Mr Watson, come here, I want you": this was the first time a human voice had been transmitted along a wire. Only three days earlier, Bell's first patent for the telephone had been granted. Almost simultaneously, but quite independently, Elisha Gray had achieved a similar result. After a period of litigation, the US Supreme Court awarded Bell priority, although Gray's device was technically superior.
    In 1877, three years after becoming a naturalized US citizen, Bell married the deaf daughter of his first backer. In August of that year, they travelled to Europe to combine a honeymoon with promotion of the telephone. Bell's patent was possibly the most valuable ever issued, for it gave birth to what later became the world's largest private service organization, the Bell Telephone Company.
    Bell had other scientific and technological interests: he made improvements in telegraphy and in Edison's gramophone, and he also developed a keen interest in aeronautics, working on Curtiss's flying machine. Bell founded the celebrated periodical Science.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Legion of Honour; Hughes Medal, Royal Society, 1913.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 7 August 1922, The Times. Dictionary of American Biography.
    R.Burlingame, 1964, Out of Silence into Sound, London: Macmillan.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Bell, Alexander Graham

  • 14 Henson, William Samuel

    SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace
    [br]
    b. 3 May 1812 Nottingham, England
    d. 22 March 1888 New Jersey, USA
    [br]
    English (naturalized American) inventor who patented a design for an "aerial steam carriage" and combined with John Stringfellow to build model aeroplanes.
    [br]
    William Henson worked in the lacemaking industry and in his spare time invented many mechanical devices, from a breech-loading cannon to an ice-machine. It could be claimed that he invented the airliner, for in 1842 he prepared a patent (granted in 1843) for an "aerial steam carriage". The patent application was not just a vague outline, but contained detailed drawings of a large monoplane with an enclosed fuselage to accommodate the passengers and crew. It was to be powered by a steam engine driving two pusher propellers aft of the wing. Henson had followed the lead give by Sir George Cayley in his basic layout, but produced a very much more advanced structural design with cambered wings strengthened by streamlined bracing wires: the intended wing-span was 150 ft (46 m). Henson probably discussed the design of the steam engine and boiler with his friend John Stringfellow (who was also in the lacemaking industry). Stringfellow joined Henson and others to found the Aerial Transit Company, which was set up to raise the finance needed to build Henson's machine. A great publicity campaign was mounted with artists' impressions of the "aerial steam carriage" flying over London, India and even the pyramids. Passenger-carrying services to India and China were proposed, but the whole project was far too optimistic to attract support from financiers and the scheme foundered. Henson and Stringfellow drew up an agreement in December 1843 to construct models which would prove the feasibility of an "aerial machine". For the next five years they pursued this aim, with no real success. In 1848 Henson and his wife emigrated to the United States to further his career in textiles. He became an American citizen and died there at the age of 75.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Henson's diary is preserved by the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences in the USA. Henson's patent of 1842–3 is reproduced in Balantyne and Pritchard (1956) and Davy (1931) (see below).
    Further Reading
    H.Penrose, 1988, An Ancient Air: A Biography of John Stringfellow, Shrewsbury.
    A.M.Balantyne and J.L.Pritchard, 1956, "The lives and work of William Samuel Henson and John Stringfellow", Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society (June) (an attempt to analyse conflicting evidence; includes a reproduction of Henson's patent).
    M.J.B.Davy, 1931, Henson and Stringfellow, London (an earlier work with excellent drawings from Henson's patent).
    JDS

    Biographical history of technology > Henson, William Samuel

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