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1 bold design
Общая лексика: четкий чертеж -
2 bold
1. a храбрый, смелый; дерзновенный2. a наглый, дерзкий3. a самоуверенный4. a чёткий, отчётливый5. a сильный, мощный6. a жирный7. a крутойas bold as brass — бесстыжий, бесстыдный, наглый
Синонимический ряд:1. brave (adj.) aweless; boldhearted; brave; bravehearted; chin-up; confident; courageous; dauntless; doughty; fearless; gallant; game; greathearted; heroic; intrepid; lionhearted; manful; manly; mettlesome; plucky; soldierly; spunky; stalwart; stout; stouthearted; stout-hearted; unafraid; unblenched; unblenching; undauntable; undaunted; unfearful; valiant; valorous2. daring (adj.) adventuresome; adventurous; aggressive; assertive; audacious; daring; foolhardy; reckless; venturesome3. immodest (adj.) broad; frank; immodest; indelicate; indiscreet; raw; unblushing; uncensored4. insolent (adj.) bold-faced; brassy; brazen; cheeky; contumelious; defiant; forward; fresh; impertinent; impudent; insolent; nervy; pert; presumptuous; procacious; sassy; saucy; shameless; smart; smart-alecky; wise5. prominent (adj.) clear; conspicuous; definite; evident; manifest; obvious; prominent; pronounced; strong6. sheer (adj.) abrupt; arduous; precipitate; precipitous; sheer; steepАнтонимический ряд:bashful; cautious; cowardly; fearful; gentle; gradual; inconspicuous; meek; polite; shy; timid -
3 bold
[bəʋld] a1. храбрый, смелый; дерзновенныйbold plan /speech/ - смелый план /-ое выступление/
2. наглый, дерзкий3. самоуверенный4. 1) чёткий, отчётливый ( о почерке)2) сильный, мощныйbold flames - мощное /яростное/ пламя
3) жирный ( о шрифте)5. крутой ( о береге)♢
to be (so) bold as, to make (so) bold - позволить себе, осмелитьсяI'll be /I make/ bold to say - осмелюсь сказать
as bold as brass - бесстыжий, бесстыдный, наглый
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4 design
1.конструировать; разрабатывать; проектировать; планировать; чертить2.конструирование; разработка; проектирование; планирование; конструкция; конструктивное решение; проект; расчёт; схемное решение; чертёж; схема; эскиз -
5 bold
bold [bəʊld]1. adjectivea. ( = brave) audacieuxb. ( = impudent) effronté ; ( = not shy) assuré• in he came, as bold as brass il est entré, plein d'aplomb2. noun* * *[bəʊld] 1. 2.1) ( daring) [person] intrépide; [attempt, plan] audacieux/-ieuse2) ( cheeky) [person, look] effronté; [behaviour] hardi3) ( strong) [colour] vif/vive; [design] voyant; [handwriting] assuré; [outline] net/nette4) ( of typeface) gras/grasse•• -
6 bold
B adj2 ( cheeky) [person, look, stare] effronté ; [behaviour] hardi ; if I may make so bold as to suggest… sout si je peux me permettre de proposer… ;4 ( strong) [colour] vif/vive ; [design] voyant ; [handwriting, signature] assuré ; [outline] net/nette ; to paint with bold strokes of the brush peindre à grands coups de pinceau ;5 Print gras/grasse.to be as bold as brass avoir un culot monstre ○ ; to put on ou up a bold front faire front bravement. -
7 bold
[bəʊld] 1.1) (daring) [person, attempt] audace, ardito2) (cheeky) [person, look, behaviour] sfrontato, sfacciato3) (strong) [ colour] vivace; [ design] deciso; [ handwriting] chiaro; [ outline] netto4) tip. grassetto, neretto2.nome BE tip. grassetto m., neretto m.••* * *[bəuld]1) (daring or fearless: a bold plan of attack.) ardito, coraggioso2) (striking and well-marked: a dress with bold stripes.) marcato3) ((of type) thick and clear, like this.) neretto•- boldly- boldness
- bold as brass* * *bold /bəʊld/a.1 audace; ardito; coraggioso; baldanzoso: a bold decision, una decisione audace; He was bold enough to speak up, ha avuto il coraggio di farsi sentire2 spavaldo; sfacciato; sfrontato; impudente3 nitido; netto; vivido; chiaro; marcato: bold outlines, contorni netti; a bold geometric pattern, un motivo geometrico marcato; bold writing, calligrafia chiara4 deciso; sicuro: He painted with quick, bold strokes, dipingeva a pennellate rapide e sicure● as bold as brass, con una bella faccia tosta □ bold-faced ► boldfaced □ (tipogr.) bold type, neretto; grassetto □ to be (o to make) so bold as to, osare; permettersi di □ to make bold with, prendersi delle libertà con (q.); servirsi liberamente di (qc.)boldly avv. boldness n. [u].* * *[bəʊld] 1.1) (daring) [person, attempt] audace, ardito2) (cheeky) [person, look, behaviour] sfrontato, sfacciato3) (strong) [ colour] vivace; [ design] deciso; [ handwriting] chiaro; [ outline] netto4) tip. grassetto, neretto2.nome BE tip. grassetto m., neretto m.•• -
8 bold
bəuld1) (daring or fearless: a bold plan of attack.) valiente, audaz, atrevido2) (striking and well-marked: a dress with bold stripes.) nítido, vivo3) ((of type) thick and clear, like this.) en negrita•- boldly- boldness
- bold as brass
bold adj1. valiente / audaz / atrevido2. fuerte / vivotr[bəʊld]1 (brave) valiente2 (daring) audaz, atrevido,-a3 (cheeky) descarado,-a, fresco,-a4 (vivid) vivo,-a5 (print) en negrita\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLas bold as brass tan fresco,-ato make so bold as to do something literal permitirse hacer algobold features rasgos nombre masculino plural marcadosbold face negritabold ['bo:ld] adj1) courageous: valiente2) insolent: insolente, descarado3) daring: atrevido, andaz♦ boldly advadj.• adelantado, -a adj.• arrestado, -a adj.• arriscado, -a adj.• arrojado, -a adj.• atrevido, -a adj.• audaz adj.• denodado, -a adj.• descarado, -a adj.• farruco, -a adj.• gallardo, -a adj.• osado, -a adj.• procaz adj.• sobrado, -a adj.
I bəʊld adjective -er, -est
1) ( daring) audaz, atrevido2) ( impudent) <smile/advances> descarado, atrevidoif I may be so bold as to... — si me permite el atrevimiento de...
II bold (face)
mass noun negrita f[bǝʊld]1. ADJ(compar bolder) (superl boldest)1) (=brave) [person, attempt, plan] atrevido, audaz2) (=forward) [child, remark] atrevido, descaradoif I may be or make so bold — frm si me permite el atrevimiento frm
to make bold with sth — frm servirse de algo como si fuera suyo
- as bold as brass3) (=striking) [colour, clothes, design] llamativo; [brush stroke, handwriting, move] enérgico; [shape, relief, contrast] marcado4) (Typ) [letters] en negrita2.N (Typ) negrita f3.CPD* * *
I [bəʊld] adjective -er, -est
1) ( daring) audaz, atrevido2) ( impudent) <smile/advances> descarado, atrevidoif I may be so bold as to... — si me permite el atrevimiento de...
II bold (face)
mass noun negrita f -
9 bold
bəuld прил.
1) отважный, смелый, храбрый I make bold to say... ≈ осмелюсь сказать... He ventured on a very bold step. ≈ Он решился на очень смелый шаг. Syn: audacious
1), brave
1.
1), courageous, daring, intrepid Ant: afraid, cowardly
1., modest, timid
2) бесстыдный, наглый as bold as brass ≈ наглый, дерзкий to make bold with ≈ позволять себе вольности с Syn: audacious
2), impudent, insolent, presumptuous
3) уст. самоуверенный Syn: self-confident, self-assured
4) сильный, энергичный Syn: vigorous
5) четкий( о почерке), жирный( о шрифте) ;
подчеркнутый, рельефный
6) крутой, обрывистый bold cliffs ≈ крутые скалы Syn: sheer I
1. 3, steep I
1.
1) храбрый, смелый;
дерзновенный - * thinker смелый мыслитель - * plan смелый план наглый, дерзкий самоуверенный четкий, отчетливый( о почерке) - * design четкий чертеж - in * relief рельефно сильный, мощный - * flames мощное пламя жирный (о шрифте) крутой (о береге) > to be (so) * as, to make (so) * позволить себе, осмыслиться > I'll be /I make/ * to say осмелюсь сказать > as * as brass бесстыжий, бесстыдный, наглый ~ наглый, бесстыдный;
as bold as brass наглый, дерзкий;
to make bold with позволять себе вольности с bold вчт. выделять жирным шрифтом ~ крутой, обрывистый ~ наглый, бесстыдный;
as bold as brass наглый, дерзкий;
to make bold with позволять себе вольности с ~ отчетливый (о почерке, шрифте) ;
подчеркнутый, рельефный ~ вчт. полужирный ~ самоуверенный ~ смелый;
I make bold to say осмелюсь сказать ~ храбрый, смелый ~ смелый;
I make bold to say осмелюсь сказать ~ наглый, бесстыдный;
as bold as brass наглый, дерзкий;
to make bold with позволять себе вольности с -
10 site design
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11 четкий чертеж
General subject: bold design -
12 Cordovan Embroidery
A form of applique work using gold or silver cloth and serge. A bold design is traced on the gold or silver cloth, this is cut out and placed upon thick canvas and the two pasted together. The canvas is then cut out to the pattern when the paste is dry. These motifs are then stitched on to a ground fabric of wool serge with silk thread. Stems, sprays and small effects are worked in between the applique motifs.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Cordovan Embroidery
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13 audace
bold* * *audace agg.1 bold, audacious, fearless, daring: un navigatore audace, a fearless navigator; un gesto audace, a daring gesture; un progetto audace, a bold project3 ( provocante) bold, daring, risqué; ( irriguardoso) impudent, spicy: un abito audace, a daring dress; una scollatura audace, a plunging (o daring) neckline; una barzelletta audace, a risqué joke◆ s.m. e f. bold person, fearless person.* * *[au'datʃe]1) (coraggioso) [ persona] bold, daring, audacious2) (arrischiato) [ impresa] risky3) (provocante) [sguardo, vestito] provocative; (scabroso) [libro, film] risqué4) (sfacciato) [battuta, risposta] audacious, brash5) (innovativo) [teoria, design] daring* * *audace/au'dat∫e/1 (coraggioso) [ persona] bold, daring, audacious2 (arrischiato) [ impresa] risky3 (provocante) [sguardo, vestito] provocative; (scabroso) [libro, film] risqué4 (sfacciato) [battuta, risposta] audacious, brash5 (innovativo) [teoria, design] daring. -
14 atrevido
adj.1 daring, adventurous, bold, brave.2 cheeky, brassy, bold-faced, pert.f. & m.cheeky person, insolent person.past part.past participle of spanish verb: atreverse.* * *1→ link=atreverse atreverse► adjetivo1 (osado) daring, bold2 (insolente) insolent, impudent3 (indecoroso) daring, risqué* * *(f. - atrevida)adj.daring, bold* * *atrevido, -a1. ADJ1) [persona] (=audaz) daring, bold; (=insolente) cheeky, sassy (EEUU)el periodista le hizo preguntas muy atrevidas — the reporter asked him some very daring o bold questions
2) [chiste] daring, risqué2.SM / F cheeky person* * *I- da adjetivoa) ( insolente) sassy (AmE colloq), cheeky (BrE colloq)el atrevido diseño del edificio — the bold o adventurous design of the building
c) ( valiente) braveII- da masculino, femeninoa) ( insolente)es un atrevido y un maleducado — he is sassy (AmE) o (BrE) cheeky and bad-mannered
b) ( valiente)el mundo es de los atrevidos — fortune favors the brave
* * *= brave [braver -comp., bravest -sup.], presumptuous, adventurous, cheeky [cheekier -comp., cheekiest -sup.], risqué, bawdy [bawdier -comp., bawdiest -sup.], fearless, impudent, bold [bolder -comp., boldest -sup.], pert, audacious, buccaneering.Ex. It would be a brave man who would predict that such a process will always remain clumsy, slow and faulty in detail.Ex. Many feel that it is presumptuous to think that a 150- to 250-word abstract can carry enough information from a well-written 3,000-word paper to be of much use except as a guide.Ex. Many say the role of consumer advice centres as being simply mediators between the consumer and the retailer/manufacturer; only a few adventurous authorities encouraged the aggressive championing of consumer complaints.Ex. The young man in the picture is myself snapped twenty-five years or so ago by a cheeky thirteen-year-old during the first few months of my first teaching job.Ex. However, some of the central premises of the film are flawed, and the risqué touches, whether racial or erotic innuendo, are primarily there to titillate and make the film seem hot and controversial.Ex. Their secondary aim was to print piratical, scurrilous and bawdy material for the people of Dublin.Ex. He describes the decoration of the tombs, explaining that this artwork is a fearless thumbing of the nose at death itself.Ex. The Library Association is impudent in suggesting that it will impose sanctions on those who fail to keep abreast of developments in librarianship.Ex. 'Would it be bold of me to ask,' she said hesitantly, 'why is the Medical Center library virtually an autonomous unit?'.Ex. He lingered round the bookstall looking at the books and papers till a pert girl behind the counter asked him if he wouldn't like a chair.Ex. One of Belgium's most dangerous criminals, who staged an audacious jailbreak on a hijacked helicopter, has been tracked down to Morocco.Ex. But whatever we make of their buccaneering spirit, the apostolic passion firing their hearts is surely beyond contention.----* ignorancia es muy atrevida, la = ignorance is very daring.* persona atrevida = risk taker.* ser atrevido = make + a bold statement.* * *I- da adjetivoa) ( insolente) sassy (AmE colloq), cheeky (BrE colloq)el atrevido diseño del edificio — the bold o adventurous design of the building
c) ( valiente) braveII- da masculino, femeninoa) ( insolente)es un atrevido y un maleducado — he is sassy (AmE) o (BrE) cheeky and bad-mannered
b) ( valiente)el mundo es de los atrevidos — fortune favors the brave
* * *= brave [braver -comp., bravest -sup.], presumptuous, adventurous, cheeky [cheekier -comp., cheekiest -sup.], risqué, bawdy [bawdier -comp., bawdiest -sup.], fearless, impudent, bold [bolder -comp., boldest -sup.], pert, audacious, buccaneering.Ex: It would be a brave man who would predict that such a process will always remain clumsy, slow and faulty in detail.
Ex: Many feel that it is presumptuous to think that a 150- to 250-word abstract can carry enough information from a well-written 3,000-word paper to be of much use except as a guide.Ex: Many say the role of consumer advice centres as being simply mediators between the consumer and the retailer/manufacturer; only a few adventurous authorities encouraged the aggressive championing of consumer complaints.Ex: The young man in the picture is myself snapped twenty-five years or so ago by a cheeky thirteen-year-old during the first few months of my first teaching job.Ex: However, some of the central premises of the film are flawed, and the risqué touches, whether racial or erotic innuendo, are primarily there to titillate and make the film seem hot and controversial.Ex: Their secondary aim was to print piratical, scurrilous and bawdy material for the people of Dublin.Ex: He describes the decoration of the tombs, explaining that this artwork is a fearless thumbing of the nose at death itself.Ex: The Library Association is impudent in suggesting that it will impose sanctions on those who fail to keep abreast of developments in librarianship.Ex: 'Would it be bold of me to ask,' she said hesitantly, 'why is the Medical Center library virtually an autonomous unit?'.Ex: He lingered round the bookstall looking at the books and papers till a pert girl behind the counter asked him if he wouldn't like a chair.Ex: One of Belgium's most dangerous criminals, who staged an audacious jailbreak on a hijacked helicopter, has been tracked down to Morocco.Ex: But whatever we make of their buccaneering spirit, the apostolic passion firing their hearts is surely beyond contention.* ignorancia es muy atrevida, la = ignorance is very daring.* persona atrevida = risk taker.* ser atrevido = make + a bold statement.* * *2 (osado) ‹escote/vestido› daring; ‹chiste› risquéel atrevido diseño del edificio the bold o adventurous design of the buildingme parece algo atrevido decir una cosa así I think it would be rash to say such a thingun escritor atrevido a daring writer3 (valiente) brave¿te vas a vivir allí? eres muy atrevido are you going to live there? that's very brave of youmasculine, feminine1(insolente): ese niño es un atrevido y un maleducado that little boy is mouthy ( AmE) o sassy ( AmE) o ( BrE) cheeky and bad-mannered ( colloq)2(valiente): el mundo es de los atrevidos fortune favors the brave* * *
Del verbo atreverse: ( conjugate atreverse)
atrevido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
atreverse
atrevido
atreverse ( conjugate atreverse) verbo pronominal
to dare;◊ ¡anda, atrévete! go on then, I dare you (to);
no me atrevo a decírselo I daren't tell him;
¿cómo te atreves a pegarle? how dare you hit him?;
¿a que conmigo no te atreves? I bet you wouldn't dare take me on
atrevido -da adjetivo
‹ chiste› risqué;
‹ diseño› bold
atreverse verbo reflexivo to dare: ¿te atreves a hacerlo?, do you dare to do it? o dare you do it? ➣ Ver nota en dare
atrevido,-a adjetivo
1 (descarado) daring, bold
2 (insolente) cheeky, impudent
3 (un vestido) risqué
' atrevido' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
arrojada
- arrojado
- atrevida
- desvergonzada
- desvergonzado
- impertinente
- lanzada
- lanzado
English:
audacious
- daredevil
- daring
- naughty
- presumptuous
- revealing
- forward
- risqué
- sassy
- unadventurous
* * *atrevido, -a♦ adj1. [osado] daring;es muy atrevido, le encantan los deportes de riesgo he's very daring, he loves dangerous sports;un escote atrevido a daring neckline;una película/escultura atrevida a bold movie/sculpture2. [caradura] cheeky♦ nm,f1. [osado] daring person2. [caradura] cheeky person;¡qué atrevido, contestar así a tu madre! what a cheek, answering your mother back like that!* * *adj1 ( insolente) sassy fam, Brcheeky fam2 ( valiente) brave, daring* * *atrevido, -da adj1) : bold, daring2) : insolent* * *atrevido adj1. (audaz) daring -
15 Sullivan, Louis Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Architecture and building[br]b. 3 September 1856 Boston, Massachusetts, USAd. 14 April 1924 Chicago, Illinois, USA[br]American architect whose work came to be known as the "Chicago School of Architecture" and who created a new style of architecture suited specifically to steel-frame, high-rise structures.[br]Sullivan, a Bostonian, studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Soon he joined his parents, who had moved to Chicago, and worked for a while in the office of William Le Baron Jenney, the pioneer of steel-frame construction. After spending some time studying at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, in 1875 Sullivan returned to Chicago, where he later met and worked for the Danish architect Dankmar Adler, who was practising there. In 1881 the two architects became partners, and during the succeeding fifteen years they produced their finest work and the buildings for which Sullivan is especially known.During the early 1880s in Chicago, load-bearing, metal-framework structures that made lofty skyscrapers possible had been developed (see Jenney and Holabird). Louis H.Sullivan initiated building design to stress and complement the metal structure rather than hide it. Moving onwards from H.H.Richardson's treatment of his Marshall Field Wholesale Store in Chicago, Sullivan took the concept several stages further. His first outstanding work, built with Adler in 1886–9, was the Auditorium Building in Chicago. The exterior, in particular, was derived largely from Richardson's Field Store, and the building—now restored—is of bold but simple design, massively built in granite and stone, its form stressing the structure beneath. The architects' reputation was established with this building.The firm of Sullivan \& Adler established itself during the early 1890s, when they built their most famous skyscrapers. Adler was largely responsible for the structure, the acoustics and function, while Sullivan was responsible for the architectural design, concerning himself particularly with the limitation and careful handling of ornament. In 1892 he published his ideas in Ornament in Architecture, where he preached restraint in its quality and disposition. He established himself as a master of design in the building itself, producing a rhythmic simplicity of form, closely related to the structural shape beneath. The two great examples of this successful approach were the Wainwright Building in St Louis, Missouri (1890–1) and the Guaranty Building in Buffalo, New York (1894–5). The Wainwright Building was a ten-storeyed structure built in stone and brick and decorated with terracotta. The vertical line was stressed throughout but especially at the corners, where pilasters were wider. These rose unbroken to an Art Nouveau type of decorative frieze and a deeply projecting cornice above. The thirteen-storeyed Guaranty Building is Sullivan's masterpiece, a simple, bold, finely proportioned and essentially modern structure. The pilaster verticals are even more boldly stressed and decoration is at a minimum. In the twentieth century the almost free-standing supporting pillars on the ground floor have come to be called pilotis. As late as the 1920s, particularly in New York, the architectural style and decoration of skyscrapers remained traditionally eclectic, based chiefly upon Gothic or classical forms; in view of this, Sullivan's Guaranty Building was far ahead of its time.[br]BibliographyArticle by Louis H.Sullivan. Address delivered to architectural students June 1899, published in Canadian Architecture Vol. 18(7):52–3.Further ReadingHugh Morrison, 1962, Louis Sullivan: Prophet of Modern Architecture.Willard Connely, 1961, Louis Sullivan as He Lived, New York: Horizon Press.DY -
16 Großzügigkeit
f; nur Sg. (Freigebigkeit) generosity; (Toleranz) liberality, broad-mindedness; von Planung: bold conception ( oder design)* * *die Großzügigkeitgenerousness; liberality; lordliness; spaciousness; broad-mindedness; generosity; liberalness; tolerance* * *Groß|zü|gig|keit [-tsyːgɪçkait]f -, no plgenerosity; (= Weiträumigkeit) spaciousness; (von Plan) (large) scale, ambitiousness; (inf = Ungenauigkeit) generousness, liberality* * *Groß·zü·gig·keit<->1. (Generosität) generosity2. (Toleranz) leniency* * *1) generosity* * *Großzügigkeit f; nur sg (Freigebigkeit) generosity; (Toleranz) liberality, broad-mindedness; von Planung: bold conception ( oder design)* * *1) generosity2) (großes Ausmaß) grand scale* * *f.generosity n.liberality n.liberalness n. -
17 jazzy
1) (bright or bold in colour or design: a jazzy shirt.) smart2) (of or like jazz: jazzy music.) jazzagtig* * *1) (bright or bold in colour or design: a jazzy shirt.) smart2) (of or like jazz: jazzy music.) jazzagtig -
18 print
1. nounclear/large print — deutlicher/großer Druck
editions in large print — Großdruckbücher; see also academic.ru/68194/small_print">small print
3) (published or printed state)be in/out of print — [Buch:] erhältlich/vergriffen sein
5) (Photog.) Abzug, der; (Cinemat.) Kopie, die6) (Textiles) (cloth with design) bedruckter Stoff2. transitive verb1) drucken [Buch, Zeitschrift, Geldschein usw.]2) (write) in Druckschrift schreiben3) (cause to be published) veröffentlichen [Artikel, Roman, Ansichten usw.]4) (Photog.) abziehen; (Cinemat.) kopieren5) (Textiles) bedrucken [Stoff]Phrasal Verbs:* * *[print] 1. noun1) (a mark made by pressure: a footprint; a fingerprint.) der Abdruck2) (printed lettering: I can't read the print in this book.) der Druck3) (a photograph made from a negative: I entered three prints for the photographic competition.) der Abzug4) (a printed reproduction of a painting or drawing.) der Druck2. verb1) (to mark (letters etc) on paper (by using a printing press etc): The invitations will be printed on white paper.) drucken2) (to publish (a book, article etc) in printed form: His new novel will be printed next month.) drucken3) (to produce (a photographic image) on paper: He develops and prints his own photographs.) abziehen4) (to mark designs on (cloth etc): When the cloth has been woven, it is dyed and printed.) bedrucken5) (to write, using capital letters: Please print your name and address.) in Druckbuchstaben schreiben•- printer- printing
- printing-press
- print-out
- in / out of print* * *[prɪnt]I. nbold \print Fettdruck min large \print in Großschriftto write sth in \print etw in Druckschrift schreibento appear in \print veröffentlicht [o gedruckt] werdento be in/out of \print erhältlich/vergriffen seinto get into \print erscheinen, gedruckt werdento go out of \print nicht mehr gedruckt [o aufgelegt] werdento put sth into \print etw in Druck gebento rush sth into \print etw schnell veröffentlichen3. (printed media)▪ in \print in der Pressefloral \print Blumenmuster ntto leave \prints Fingerabdrücke hinterlassento take sb's \prints jds Fingerabdrücke nehmen\printmaker Grafiker(in) m(f)\print scandal Presseskandal m\print union Druckergewerkschaft fIII. vt▪ to \print sth1. TYPO etw druckento \print a magazine/newspaper eine Zeitschrift/Zeitung herausgebento be \printed in hardback in gebundener Ausgabe erscheinento \print a special issue eine Sonderausgabe herausbringento \print only lies nur Lügen druckento \print the truth about sb/sth die Wahrheit über jdn/etw veröffentlichen3. COMPUT etw ausdrucken5. (on fabric) etw bedrucken\printed by hand handbedrucktto \print a pattern on sth etw mit einem Muster bedrucken, ein Muster auf etw akk [auf]drucken6. (write by hand) etw in Druckschrift [o Druckbuchstaben] schreibenplease \print your name below your signature schreiben Sie bitte ihren Namen in Druckbuchstaben unter ihre UnterschriftIV. vithe book is \printing das Buch ist im Druck2. (make copy) druckento \print in black and white/colour in schwarzweiß/Farbe drucken3. (write in unjoined letters) in Druckschrift [o Druckbuchstaben] schreibento \print clearly/sloppily deutlich/unleserlich schreiben* * *[prɪnt]1. nhe'll never get into print — er wird nie etwas veröffentlichen
See:→ also small print2) (= picture) Druck m4) (= fabric) bedruckter Stoff; (= cotton print) Kattun m; (= dress) bedrucktes Kleid; (of cotton) Kattunkleid nt5) (= impression of foot, hand etc) Abdruck ma thumb/paw print — ein Daumen-/Pfotenabdruck m
2. vt2) (= publish) story, picture veröffentlichen3) (= write in block letters) in Druckschrift schreiben5)hoof marks printed in the sand — Hufabdrücke pl im Sand
3. vi1) (printer, printing machine) druckenready to print (book) — druckfertig; machine druckbereit
2) (= write in block letters) in Druckschrift schreiben* * *print [prınt]A v/t1. drucken (lassen), in Druck geben:print in italics kursiv drucken;print waste makulieren2. ein Buch etc verlegen, herausgeben3. (ab)drucken:printed circuit ELEK gedruckter Schaltkreis4. bedrucken:printed (wall)paper bedruckte Tapete(n pl);printed goods Druckstoffe5. in Druckschrift schreiben:printed characters Druckbuchstaben6. einen Stempel etc aufdrücken (on dat), drücken (on auf akk), einen Eindruck, eine Spur hinterlassen (on auf dat), ein Muster etc ab-, aufdrucken, drücken (in in akk)8. print outb) COMPUT ausdruckenB v/i1. drucken:b) Abdrucke machenc) Drucker(in) sein2. gedruckt werden, sich im Druck befinden:3. in Druckschrift schreiben4. a) sich drucken lassenb) FOTO sich abziehen lassen:print badly schlechte Abzüge liefernC s1. TYPO Druck m:a) im Druck (erschienen),b) vorrätig (Buch);out of print vergriffen3. Druckschrift f, -buchstaben pl4. Drucksache f, -schrift f, besonders US Zeitung f, Blatt n:daily prints bes US Tageszeitungen;the prints pl bes US die Presse;rush into print sich in die Öffentlichkeit flüchten;appear in print im Druck erscheinen5. Aufdruck m6. Druck m (Bild etc)7. Druck m:a) (Stahl-, Kupfer) Stich m, Radierung fb) Holzschnitt mc) Lithografie f8. Zeitungspapier n10. (Finger- etc) Abdruck m, Eindruck m, Spur f:prints of steps Fußspuren oder -(s)tapfen;print of a wheel Radspur;print of a fox Fuchsfährte f11. Druckmuster n12. bedruckter Kattun, Druckstoff m:print dress Kattunkleid n13. FOTO Abzug m, Kopie f14. Lichtpause f15. TECHa) Stempel m, Form f:print cutter Formenschneider mb) (Butter- etc) Form f, (-)Model mc) Gesenk n (zum Formen von Metall)* * *1. nounclear/large print — deutlicher/großer Druck
editions in large print — Großdruckbücher; see also small print
be in/out of print — [Buch:] erhältlich/vergriffen sein
4) (printed picture or design) Druck, der5) (Photog.) Abzug, der; (Cinemat.) Kopie, die6) (Textiles) (cloth with design) bedruckter Stoff2. transitive verb1) drucken [Buch, Zeitschrift, Geldschein usw.]2) (write) in Druckschrift schreiben3) (cause to be published) veröffentlichen [Artikel, Roman, Ansichten usw.]4) (Photog.) abziehen; (Cinemat.) kopieren5) (Textiles) bedrucken [Stoff]Phrasal Verbs:* * *n.Druck -e m.Fotoabzug m. v.drucken v. -
19 Breuer, Marcel Lajos
[br]b. 22 May 1902 Pécs, Hungaryd. 1 July 1981 New York (?), USA[br]Hungarian member of the European Bauhaus generation in the 1920s, who went on to become a leader in the modern school of architectural and furniture design in Europe and the United States.[br]Breuer began his student days following an art course in Vienna, but joined the Bauhaus at Weimar, where he later graduated, in 1920. When Gropius re-established the school in purpose-built structures at Dessau, Breuer became a member of the teaching staff in charge of the carpentry and furniture workshops. Much of his time there was spent in design and research into new materials being applied to furniture and interior decoration. The essence of his contribution was to relate the design of furniture to industrial production; in this field he developed the tubular-steel structure, especially in chair design, and experimented with aluminium as a furniture material as well as pieces of furniture made up from modular units. His furniture style was characterized by an elegance of line and a careful avoidance of superfluous detail. By 1926 he had furnished the Bauhaus with such furniture in chromium-plated steel, and two years later had developed a cantilevered chair.Breuer left the Bauhaus in 1928 and set up an architectural practice in Berlin. In the early 1930s he also spent some time in Switzerland. Notable from these years was his Harnischmacher Haus in Wiesbaden and his apartment buildings in the Dolderthal area of Zurich. His architectural work was at first influenced by constructivism, and then by that of Le Corbusier (see Charles-Edouard Jeanneret). In 1935 he moved to England, where in partnership with F.R.S. Yorke he built some houses and continued to practise furniture design. The Isokon Furniture Co. commissioned him to develop ideas that took advantage of the new bending and moulding processes in laminated wood, one result being his much-copied reclining chair.In 1937, like so many of the European architectural refugees from Nazism, he found himself under-occupied due to the reluctance of English clients to embrace the modern architectural movement. He went to the United States at Gropius's invitation to join him as a professor at Harvard. Breuer and Gropius were influential in training a new generation of American architects, and in particular they built a number of houses. This partnership ended in 1941 and Breuer set up practice in New York. His style of work from this time on was still modern, but became more varied. In housing, he adapted his style to American needs and used local materials in a functional manner. In the Whitney Museum (1966) he worked in a sculptural, granite-clad style. Often he utilized a bold reinforced-concrete form, as in his collaboration with Pier Luigi Nervi and Bernard Zehrfuss in the Paris UNESCO Building (1953–8) and the US Embassy in the Hague (1954–8). He displayed his masterly handling of poured concrete used in a strikingly expressionistic, sculptural manner in his St John's Abbey (1953–61) in Collegeville, Minnesota, and in 1973 his Church of St Francis de Sale in Michigan won him the top award of the American Institute of Architects.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsAmerican Institute of Architects Medal of Honour 1964, Gold Medal 1968. Jefferson Foundation Medal 1968.Bibliography1955, Sun and Shadow, the Philosophy of an Architect, New York: Dodd Read (autobiography).Further ReadingC.Jones (ed.), 1963, Marcel Breuer: Buildings and Projects 1921–1961, New York: Praeger.T.Papachristou (ed.), 1970, Marcel Breuer: New Buildings and Projects 1960–1970, New York: Praeger.DY -
20 Ferranti, Sebastian Ziani de
[br]b. 9 April 1864 Liverpool, Englandd. 13 January 1930 Zurich, Switzerland[br]English manufacturing engineer and inventor, a pioneer and early advocate of high-voltage alternating-current electric-power systems.[br]Ferranti, who had taken an interest in electrical and mechanical devices from an early age, was educated at St Augustine's College in Ramsgate and for a short time attended evening classes at University College, London. Rather than pursue an academic career, Ferranti, who had intense practical interests, found employment in 1881 with the Siemens Company (see Werner von Siemens) in their experimental department. There he had the opportunity to superintend the installation of electric-lighting plants in various parts of the country. Becoming acquainted with Alfred Thomson, an engineer, Ferranti entered into a short-lived partnership with him to manufacture the Ferranti alternator. This generator, with a unique zig-zag armature, had an efficiency exceeding that of all its rivals. Finding that Sir William Thomson had invented a similar machine, Ferranti formed a company with him to combine the inventions and produce the Ferranti- Thomson machine. For this the Hammond Electric Light and Power Company obtained the sole selling rights.In 1885 the Grosvenor Gallery Electricity Supply Corporation was having serious problems with its Gaulard and Gibbs series distribution system. Ferranti, when consulted, reviewed the design and recommended transformers connected across constant-potential mains. In the following year, at the age of 22, he was appointed Engineer to the company and introduced the pattern of electricity supply that was eventually adopted universally. Ambitious plans by Ferranti for London envisaged the location of a generating station of unprecedented size at Deptford, about eight miles (13 km) from the city, a departure from the previous practice of placing stations within the area to be supplied. For this venture the London Electricity Supply Corporation was formed. Ferranti's bold decision to bring the supply from Deptford at the hitherto unheard-of pressure of 10,000 volts required him to design suitable cables, transformers and generators. Ferranti planned generators with 10,000 hp (7,460 kW)engines, but these were abandoned at an advanced stage of construction. Financial difficulties were caused in part when a Board of Trade enquiry in 1889 reduced the area that the company was able to supply. In spite of this adverse situation the enterprise continued on a reduced scale. Leaving the London Electricity Supply Corporation in 1892, Ferranti again started his own business, manufacturing electrical plant. He conceived the use of wax-impregnated paper-insulated cables for high voltages, which formed a landmark in the history of cable development. This method of flexible-cable manufacture was used almost exclusively until synthetic materials became available. In 1892 Ferranti obtained a patent which set out the advantages to be gained by adopting sector-shaped conductors in multi-core cables. This was to be fundamental to the future design and development of such cables.A total of 176 patents were taken out by S.Z. de Ferranti. His varied and numerous inventions included a successful mercury-motor energy meter and improvements to textile-yarn produc-tion. A transmission-line phenomenon where the open-circuit voltage at the receiving end of a long line is greater than the sending voltage was named the Ferranti Effect after him.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1927. President, Institution of Electrical Engineers 1910 and 1911. Institution of Electrical Engineers Faraday Medal 1924.Bibliography18 July 1882, British patent no. 3,419 (Ferranti's first alternator).13 December 1892, British patent no. 22,923 (shaped conductors of multi-core cables). 1929, "Electricity in the service of man", Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers 67: 125–30.Further ReadingG.Z.de Ferranti and R. Ince, 1934, The Life and Letters of Sebastian Ziani de Ferranti, London.A.Ridding, 1964, S.Z.de Ferranti. Pioneer of Electric Power, London: Science Museum and HMSO (a concise biography).R.H.Parsons, 1939, Early Days of the Power Station Industry, Cambridge, pp. 21–41.GWBiographical history of technology > Ferranti, Sebastian Ziani de
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