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1 date of the grant of a patent
Патенты: дата выдачи патентаУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > date of the grant of a patent
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2 date of the grant of a patent
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3 date
1) дата; число; день ( месяца)2) срок, период3) датировать•- date of application
- date of availability for public
- date of commencement
- date of conception
- date of constructive reduction to practice
- date of decision
- date of expiration
- date of filing
- date of final rejection
- date of first publication
- date of forfeiture
- date of grant
- date of initial patent application
- date of issuance
- date of issue
- date of licensing
- date of licensing contract
- date of mailing of the patent application
- date of original decision
- date of patent
- date of patenting
- date of payment
- date of post-office stamp
- date of priority
- date of publication
- date of rejection
- date of the appeal
- date of the grant of a patent
- date of the Official Letter
- actual filing date
- anticipatory date
- application date
- citation date
- closing date
- conception date
- convention date
- convention priority date
- due date
- effective date
- effective filing date
- expiration date
- expiry date
- filing date of an application
- first conception date
- first filing date
- foreign filing date
- foreign priority date
- imprimatur date
- international filing date under the PCT
- international registration date under the TRT
- invention date
- key date
- later date of priority
- patenting date
- reciprocity date
- sealing date
- terminal date of prior patents -
4 date
1. n1) дата, число, день2) время; срок, период
- acceptance date
- acquisition date
- actual date
- alongside date
- application date
- arrival date
- average due date
- bid date
- billing date
- bond redemption date
- border crossing date
- broken date
- cancellation date
- cancelling date
- closing date
- cock date
- commissioning date
- completion date
- contract date
- convenient date
- coupon date
- crucial date
- cutoff date
- data date
- dated date
- dealt currency value date
- decisive date
- declaration date
- delivery date
- departure date
- depreciation date
- dispatch date
- drawing date
- drawn date
- due date
- effective date
- effective date of a contract
- end date
- ending date
- estimated date
- ex-dividend date
- expected date
- expiration date
- expiry date
- facility expiry date
- facility start date
- filing date
- final date
- final date for payment
- finishing date
- fixed date
- holder-of-record date
- initial date
- interest date
- interest fixing date
- interest payment date
- invoice date
- issue date of an invoice
- issuing date
- key date
- last availability date
- last interest posting date
- licence expiration date
- loading date
- mailing date
- maturity date
- odd dates
- operational date
- order date
- original date
- patent date
- payment date
- posting date
- principal repayment date
- priority date
- project completion date
- prompt date
- publication date
- record date
- redemption date
- reference date
- release date
- remittance date
- repayment date
- return date
- rollover date
- rough date
- sailing date
- schedule date
- scheduled date
- settlement date
- shipment date
- shipping date
- short dates
- start-up date
- target date
- tax-filing date
- tender date
- termination date
- trade date
- value date
- vesting date
- date of acceptance
- date of an agreement
- date of appeal
- date of application
- date of arrival
- date of balance sheet
- date of a bill
- date of birth
- date of cancellation
- date of check
- date of a claim
- date of coming into effect
- date of a contract
- date of delivery
- date of departure
- date of dispatch
- date of entering into force
- date of entry
- date of filing
- date of grant
- date of an insurance policy
- date of an invoice
- date of issuance
- date of issue
- date of issue of a bill
- date of a letter
- date of a letter of credit
- date of licensing
- date of mailing
- date of manufacture
- date of maturity
- date of an offer
- date of an order
- date of payment
- date of posting
- date of a postmark
- date of a post office stamp
- date of a protocol
- date of publication
- date of readiness
- date of receipt
- date of record
- date of repayment
- date of resale
- date of retirement
- date of shipment
- date of signing
- date of a test
- date of transaction
- after date
- as of a balance-sheet date
- as of a specific date
- at a certain date
- at an early date
- by the due date
- from date
- of this date
- on set dates
- out of date
- date
- up to date
- with blank due date
- without date
- be up to date
- bear a date
- bring up to date
- fix a date
- go out of date
- keep up to date
- put a date
- stipulate a date2. v
- date ahead
- date back -
5 date
1) дата2) датувати; мати дату, датуватися; виходити з ужитку•- date as per postmark
- date-line
- date-lined
- date-mark
- date notation
- date of accounts
- date of appeal
- date of appearance
- date of birth
- date of contract
- date of conviction
- date of death
- date of decision
- date of execution
- date of expiration
- date of expiry
- date of forfeiture
- date of grant
- date of issuance
- date of issue
- date of judgment
- date of judgement
- date of licensing
- date of maturity
- date of patent
- date of performance
- date of possession
- date of presentation
- date of ratification
- date of renewal
- date of settlement
- date of signature
- date of term
- date of transaction
- date of transfer
- date of trial
- date of verdict
- date proclaimed
- date sold
- date specified
- date the birth -
6 дата выдачи патента
date of patent, date of the grant of a patentРусско-английский словарь по патентам и товарным знакам > дата выдачи патента
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7 дата выдачи патента
1) British English: date of the patent2) Economy: patent date3) Patents: date of the grant of a patent4) Business: date of patent5) Investment: PatentedУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > дата выдачи патента
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8 Ravenscroft, George
[br]b. 1632 Alconbury, Huntingdonshire, Englandd. 7 June 1683 Barnet, Hertfordshire, England[br]English inventor of lead-crystal glass.[br]George's father James was a successful lawyer and merchant, engaging in overseas trade.A devout but necessarily circumspect Catholic, James sent his sons to the English College at Douai, now in northern France. Leaving there in 1651, George began to learn his father's business and spent some fifteen years in Venice. He took an increasingly important part in it, doubtless dealing in Venice's leading products of lace and glass. By 1666 he was back in England and, perhaps because the supply of Venetian glass was beginning to decline, he started to manufacture glass himself. In 1673 he set up a glassworks in the Savoy in London and succeeded so well that in the following year he petitioned the King for the grant of a patent to make glassware. This was granted on 16 May 1674, stimulating the Glass Sellers' Company to enter into an agreement with Ravenscroft to buy the glassware he produced. Later in 1674 the company allowed Ravenscroft to establish a second glasshouse at Henley-onThames. At first his ware was beset with "crizzling", i.e. numerous fine surface cracks. The Glass Sellers probably urged Ravenscroft to cure this defect, and this he achieved in 1675 by replacing crushed flint with increasing amounts of lead oxide, rising finally to a content of 30 per cent. He thereby obtained a relatively soft, heavy glass with high refractive index and dispersive power. This made it amenable to deep cutting, to produce the brilliant prismatic effects of cut glass. At about the same time, the Duke of Buckingham, a considerable promoter of the glass industry, agreed that Ravenscroft should manage his works at Vauxhall for the making of plate glass for mirrors. Ravenscroft terminated his agreement with the Glass Sellers in 1678, the date of the last evidence of his activities as a maker of crystal glass, and the patent expired in 1681. His new glass had immediately rivalled the best Venetian crystal glass and has been a valued product ever since.[br]Further ReadingR.F.Moody, 1988, The life of George Ravenscroft', Glass Technology 29 (1):198–210;Glass Technology 30(5):191–2 (additional notes on his life).LRD -
9 Lee, Revd William
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]d. c. 1615[br]English inventor of the first knitting machine, called the stocking frame.[br]It would seem that most of the stories about Lee's invention of the stocking frame cannot be verified by any contemporary evidence, and the first written accounts do not appear until the second half of the seventeenth century. The claim that he was Master of Arts from St John's College, Cambridge, was first made in 1607 but cannot be checked because the records have not survived. The date for the invention of the knitting machine as being 1589 was made at the same time, but again there is no supporting evidence. There is no evidence that Lee was Vicar of Calverton, nor that he was in Holy Orders at all. Likewise there is no evidence for the existence of the woman, whether she was girlfriend, fiancée or wife, who is said to have inspired the invention, and claims regarding the involvement of Queen Elizabeth I and her refusal to grant a patent because the stockings were wool and not silk are also without contemporary foundation. Yet the first known reference shows that Lee was the inventor of the knitting machine, for the partnership agreement between him and George Brooke dated 6 June 1600 states that "William Lee hath invented a very speedy manner of making works usually wrought by knitting needles as stockings, waistcoats and such like". This agreement was to last for twenty-two years, but terminated prematurely when Brooke was executed for high treason in 1603. Lee continued to try and exploit his invention, for in 1605 he described himself as "Master of Arts" when he petitioned the Court of Aldermen of the City of London as the first inventor of an engine to make silk stockings. In 1609 the Weavers' Company of London recorded Lee as "a weaver of silk stockings by engine". These petitions suggest that he was having difficulty in establishing his invention, which may be why in 1612 there is a record of him in Rouen, France, where he hoped to have better fortune. If he had been invited there by Henry IV, his hopes were dashed by the assassination of the king soon afterwards. He was to supply four knitting machines, and there is further evidence that he was in France in 1615, but it is thought that he died in that country soon afterwards.The machine Lee invented was probably the most complex of its day, partly because the need to use silk meant that the needles were very fine. Henson (1970) in 1831 took five pages in his book to describe knitting on a stocking frame which had over 2,066 pieces. To knit a row of stitches took eleven separate stages, and great care and watchfulness were required to ensure that all the loops were equal and regular. This shows how complex the machines were and points to Lee's great achievement in actually making one. The basic principles of its operation remained unaltered throughout its extraordinarily long life, and a few still remained in use commercially in the early 1990s.[br]Further ReadingJ.T.Millington and S.D.Chapman (eds), 1989, Four Centuries of Machine Knitting, Commemorating William Lee's Invention of the Stocking Frame in 1589, Leicester (N.Harte examines the surviving evidence for the life of William Lee and this must be considered as the most up-to-date biographical information).Dictionary of National Biography (this contains only the old stories).Earlier important books covering Lee's life and invention are G.Henson, 1970, History of the Framework Knitters, reprint, Newton Abbot (orig. pub. 1831); and W.Felkin, 1967, History of the Machine-wrought Hosiery and Lace Manufactures, reprint, Newton Abbot (orig. pub. 1867).M.Palmer, 1984, Framework Knitting, Aylesbury (a simple account of the mechanism of the stocking frame).R.L.Hills, "William Lee and his knitting machine", Journal of the Textile Institute 80(2) (a more detailed account).M.Grass and A.Grass, 1967, Stockings for a Queen. The Life of William Lee, the Elizabethan Inventor, London.RLH -
10 Trevithick, Richard
[br]b. 13 April 1771 Illogan, Cornwall, Englandd. 22 April 1833 Dartford, Kent, England[br]English engineer, pioneer of non-condensing steam-engines; designed and built the first locomotives.[br]Trevithick's father was a tin-mine manager, and Trevithick himself, after limited formal education, developed his immense engineering talent among local mining machinery and steam-engines and found employment as a mining engineer. Tall, strong and high-spirited, he was the eternal optimist.About 1797 it occurred to him that the separate condenser patent of James Watt could be avoided by employing "strong steam", that is steam at pressures substantially greater than atmospheric, to drive steam-engines: after use, steam could be exhausted to the atmosphere and the condenser eliminated. His first winding engine on this principle came into use in 1799, and subsequently such engines were widely used. To produce high-pressure steam, a stronger boiler was needed than the boilers then in use, in which the pressure vessel was mounted upon masonry above the fire: Trevithick designed the cylindrical boiler, with furnace tube within, from which the Cornish and later the Lancashire boilers evolved.Simultaneously he realized that high-pressure steam enabled a compact steam-engine/boiler unit to be built: typically, the Trevithick engine comprised a cylindrical boiler with return firetube, and a cylinder recessed into the boiler. No beam intervened between connecting rod and crank. A master patent was taken out.Such an engine was well suited to driving vehicles. Trevithick built his first steam-carriage in 1801, but after a few days' use it overturned on a rough Cornish road and was damaged beyond repair by fire. Nevertheless, it had been the first self-propelled vehicle successfully to carry passengers. His second steam-carriage was driven about the streets of London in 1803, even more successfully; however, it aroused no commercial interest. Meanwhile the Coalbrookdale Company had started to build a locomotive incorporating a Trevithick engine for its tramroads, though little is known of the outcome; however, Samuel Homfray's ironworks at Penydarren, South Wales, was already building engines to Trevithick's design, and in 1804 Trevithick built one there as a locomotive for the Penydarren Tramroad. In this, and in the London steam-carriage, exhaust steam was turned up the chimney to draw the fire. On 21 February the locomotive hauled five wagons with 10 tons of iron and seventy men for 9 miles (14 km): it was the first successful railway locomotive.Again, there was no commercial interest, although Trevithick now had nearly fifty stationary engines completed or being built to his design under licence. He experimented with one to power a barge on the Severn and used one to power a dredger on the Thames. He became Engineer to a project to drive a tunnel beneath the Thames at Rotherhithe and was only narrowly defeated, by quicksands. Trevithick then set up, in 1808, a circular tramroad track in London and upon it demonstrated to the admission-fee-paying public the locomotive Catch me who can, built to his design by John Hazledine and J.U. Rastrick.In 1809, by which date Trevithick had sold all his interest in the steam-engine patent, he and Robert Dickinson, in partnership, obtained a patent for iron tanks to hold liquid cargo in ships, replacing the wooden casks then used, and started to manufacture them. In 1810, however, he was taken seriously ill with typhus for six months and had to return to Cornwall, and early in 1811 the partners were bankrupt; Trevithick was discharged from bankruptcy only in 1814.In the meantime he continued as a steam engineer and produced a single-acting steam engine in which the cut-off could be varied to work the engine expansively by way of a three-way cock actuated by a cam. Then, in 1813, Trevithick was approached by a representative of a company set up to drain the rich but flooded silver-mines at Cerro de Pasco, Peru, at an altitude of 14,000 ft (4,300 m). Low-pressure steam engines, dependent largely upon atmospheric pressure, would not work at such an altitude, but Trevithick's high-pressure engines would. Nine engines and much other mining plant were built by Hazledine and Rastrick and despatched to Peru in 1814, and Trevithick himself followed two years later. However, the war of independence was taking place in Peru, then a Spanish colony, and no sooner had Trevithick, after immense difficulties, put everything in order at the mines then rebels arrived and broke up the machinery, for they saw the mines as a source of supply for the Spanish forces. It was only after innumerable further adventures, during which he encountered and was assisted financially by Robert Stephenson, that Trevithick eventually arrived home in Cornwall in 1827, penniless.He petitioned Parliament for a grant in recognition of his improvements to steam-engines and boilers, without success. He was as inventive as ever though: he proposed a hydraulic power transmission system; he was consulted over steam engines for land drainage in Holland; and he suggested a 1,000 ft (305 m) high tower of gilded cast iron to commemorate the Reform Act of 1832. While working on steam propulsion of ships in 1833, he caught pneumonia, from which he died.[br]BibliographyTrevithick took out fourteen patents, solely or in partnership, of which the most important are: 1802, Construction of Steam Engines, British patent no. 2,599. 1808, Stowing Ships' Cargoes, British patent no. 3,172.Further ReadingH.W.Dickinson and A.Titley, 1934, Richard Trevithick. The Engineer and the Man, Cambridge; F.Trevithick, 1872, Life of Richard Trevithick, London (these two are the principal biographies).E.A.Forward, 1952, "Links in the history of the locomotive", The Engineer (22 February), 226 (considers the case for the Coalbrookdale locomotive of 1802).See also: Blenkinsop, JohnPJGR -
11 Wyatt, John
[br]b. April 1700 Thickbroom, Weeford, near Lichfield, Englandd. 29 November 1766 Birmingham, England[br]English inventor of machines for making files and rolling lead, and co-constructor of a cotton-spinning machine.[br]John Wyatt was the eldest son of John and Jane Wyatt, who lived in the small village of Thickbroom in the parish of Weeford, near Lichfield. John the younger was educated at Lichfield school and then worked as a carpenter at Thickbroom till 1730. In 1732 he was in Birmingham, engaged by a man named Heely, a gunbarrel forger, who became bankrupt in 1734. Wyatt had invented a machine for making files and sought the help of Lewis Paul to manufacture this commercially.The surviving papers of Paul and Wyatt in Birmingham are mostly undated and show a variety of machines with which they were involved. There was a machine for "making lead hard" which had rollers, and "a Gymcrak of some consequence" probably refers to a machine for boring barrels or the file-making machine. Wyatt is said to have been one of the unsuccessful competitors for the erection of London Bridge in 1736. He invented and perfected the compound-lever weighing machine. He had more success with this: after 1744, machines for weighing up to five tons were set up at Birmingham, Chester, Gloucester, Hereford, Lichfield and Liverpool. Road construction, bridge building, hydrostatics, canals, water-powered engines and many other schemes received his attention and it is said that he was employed for a time after 1744 by Matthew Boulton.It is certain that in April 1735 Paul and Wyatt were working on their spinning machine and Wyatt was making a model of it in London in 1736, giving up his work in Birmingham. The first patent, in 1738, was taken out in the name of Lewis Paul. It is impossible to know which of these two invented what. This first patent covers a wide variety of descriptions of the vital roller drafting to draw out the fibres, and it is unknown which system was actually used. Paul's carding patent of 1748 and his second spinning patent of 1758 show that he moved away from the system and principles upon which Arkwright built his success. Wyatt and Paul's spinning machines were sufficiently promising for a mill to be set up in 1741 at the Upper Priory, Birmingham, that was powered by two asses. Wyatt was the person responsible for constructing the machinery. Edward Cave established another at Northampton powered by water while later Daniel Bourn built yet another at Leominster. Many others were interested too. The Birmingham mill did not work for long and seems to have been given up in 1743. Wyatt was imprisoned for debt in The Fleet in 1742, and when released in 1743 he tried for a time to run the Birmingham mill and possibly the Northampton one. The one at Leominster burned down in 1754, while the Northampton mill was advertised for sale in 1756. This last mill may have been used again in conjunction with the 1758 patent. It was Wyatt whom Daniel Bourn contacted about a grant for spindles for his Leominster mill in 1748, but this seems to have been Wyatt's last association with the spinning venture.[br]Further ReadingG.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, London (French collected many of the Paul and Wyatt papers; these should be read in conjunction with Hills 1970).R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (Hills shows that the rollerdrafting system on this spinning machine worked on the wrong principles). A.P.Wadsworth and J.de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, 1600–1780, Manchester (provides good coverage of the partnership of Paul and Wyatt and of the early mills).E.Baines, 1835, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, London (this publication must be mentioned, although it is now out of date).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a more recent account).W.A.Benton, "John Wyatt and the weighing of heavy loads", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 9 (for a description of Wyatt's weighing machine).RLH -
12 dépôt
dépôt [depo]1. masculine nouna. ( = action de déposer) [d'argent, valeurs] deposit(ing)b. ( = garde) avoir qch en dépôt to hold sth in trustd. ( = garantie) deposite. [de liquide, lie] depositf. ( = entrepôt) warehouse ; [d'autobus, trains] depotg. ( = point de vente) il y a un dépôt de pain/de lait à l'épicerie bread/milk can be bought at the grocer'sh. ( = prison) jail2. compounds* * *deponom masculin1) ( entrepôt) warehouse; ( plus petit) store; Chemin de Fer depot; ( à la douane) bonded warehouse; Armée ( de garnison) depot2) Commerce ( succursale) outlet3) Administration, Droit ( d'acte) filing [U]; ( de marque) registration; ( de projet de loi) introduction; ( d'amendement) proposal4) ( remise en un lieu)nous recommandons le dépôt des documents chez un notaire — we recommend that the documents be deposited with a notary
en dépôt — [fonds] on deposit; [bijoux] in a safe at the bank
6) ( sédiment) deposit7) ( prison) police cells•Phrasal Verbs:* * *depo nm1) (à la banque) deposit2) (= garde)4) (= gare) depot5) (= prison) cells pl6) (= sédiment) deposit* * *dépôt nm1 ( entrepôt) warehouse; ( plus petit) store, storehouse US; Rail depot; ( à la douane) bonded warehouse; Mil ( de garnison) depot; dépôt d'autobus bus depot; être en dépôt ( à la douane) to be in a bonded warehouse;2 Comm ( succursale) outlet; l'épicerie fait dépôt de pain the grocer's sells bread; la maison a 30 dépôts the firm has 30 outlets; il y a un dépôt de gaz au garage they sell bottled gas at the garage GB ou service station US;3 ( enregistrement) Admin, Jur (d'acte, de candidature, plainte) filing ¢; (de marque, brevet) registration; ( de projet de loi) introduction; (de clause, d'amendement) tabling ¢ GB, proposal;4 ( remise en un lieu) nous recommandons le dépôt des documents chez un notaire we recommend that the documents be deposited with a notary; date limite de dépôt des déclarations d'impôt/des dossiers de demande de bourse deadline for income tax returns/grant applications;5 Fin ( de fonds) deposit; ( de titres) lodging ¢; dépôt en banque/coffre-fort bank/safe deposit; banque/compte de dépôt deposit bank/account; en dépôt [fonds] on deposit; [bijoux] in a safe at the bank; mettre des valeurs en dépôt to place securities in a safe deposit;6 ( sédiment) deposit; dépôt glaciaire glacial deposit; dépôt de tartre deposit of tartar; il y a un dépôt de calcaire dans la bouilloire the kettle is furred up;7 ( prison) police cells;dépôt d'armes arms store; ( clandestin) arms cache; dépôt de bilan voluntary liquidation; entreprises menacées de dépôt de bilan firms threatened with bankruptcy; dépôt légal formal deposit of a copy of a book, film, record, etc with an institution; dépôt de marchandises Rail goods GB ou freight US depot; dépôt de matériel Mil depot; dépôt de munitions Mil munitions store; ( au rebut) munitions dump; dépôt d'ordures (rubbish) tip ou dump GB, garbage dump US; dépôt à terme fixe/à vue fixed term/demand ou sight deposit.[depo] nom masculindépôt légal copyright deposit (in France, copies of published or recorded documents have to be deposited at the Bibliothèque nationale)3. FINANCE [démarche] depositing[somme] depositdépôt à terme/vue open-access/restricted-access deposit[couche] layerdépôt calcaire ou de tartre layer of scale ou furdépôt alluvial/de cendres/de carbone alluvial/ash/carbon deposit9. [boutique] retail outletdépôt de pain ≃ bread shop————————en dépôt locution adverbiale -
13 Annahme
Annahme f 1. BANK acceptance; 2. FIN approval (eines Vorschlags); 3. GEN assumption (Vermutung); acceptance, presumption (von Waren, Vertrag); receipt, rcpt, recpt (von Waren); 4. IND, MEDIA acceptance; 5. PAT presumption; 6. RECHT acceptance, passage (Vertrag); presumption; 7. V&M receipt, rcpt, recpt (von Waren); 8. VERSICH acceptance; 9. WIWI adoption • Annahme durch Willenserklärung nach außen bekannt geben RECHT signify acceptance by conduct (Vertrag) • die Annahme einer Tratte verweigern BANK refuse to accept a draft* * *f 1. < Bank> acceptance; 2. < Finanz> eines Vorschlags approval; 3. < Geschäft> Vermutung assumption, von Waren, Vertrag acceptance, presumption, von Waren receipt (rcpt, recpt) ; 4. <Ind, Medien> acceptance; 5. < Patent> presumption; 6. < Recht> Vertrag acceptance, passage; 7. <V&M> von Waren receipt (rcpt, recpt) ; 8. < Versich> acceptance; 9. <Vw> adoption ■ die Annahme einer Tratte verweigern < Bank> refuse to accept a draft ■ Annahme f durch Willenserklärung nach außen bekannt geben < Recht> Vertrag signify acceptance by conduct* * *Annahme
approval, idea, (Depositen) reception, (Gepäck) counter, (Gesetz) passing, (Waren) acceptance, receiving, receipt;
• gegen Annahme against acceptance;
• mangels Annahme (Wechsel) returned for want of [non-]acceptance;
• mangels Annahme protestiert protested for non-acceptance;
• Annahme verweigert (Brief) refused, (Wechsel) acceptance declined;
• bedingte Annahme conditional acceptance, (Wechsel) qualified (enlarged) acceptance;
• bedingungslose Annahme general acceptance;
• eingeschränkte Annahme qualified acceptance;
• einstimmige Annahme unanimous adoption;
• teilweise Annahme partial acceptance;
• unbedingte Annahme absolute (unreserved) acceptance, (Wechsel) general (unqualified, clean) acceptance;
• vorbehaltlose Annahme outright acceptance;
• willkürliche Annahme gratuitous assumption;
• Angebot und Annahme offer and acceptance;
• Annahme der einheitlichen europäischen Akte signing of the Single European Act;
• Annahme eines Antrags carriage of a motion;
• Annahme unter einer Bedingung qualified acceptance;
• Annahme eines Berichtes adoption of a report;
• Annahme nur durch eingeschriebenen Brief acceptance by registered letter only;
• Annahme ehrenhalber (Wechsel) acceptance supra protest (for hono(u)r);
• Annahme von Einlagen reception of deposits;
• Annahme einer Erbschaft entering upon an inheritance;
• Annahme eines Geschenks approbation of a gift;
• Annahme einer Gesetzesvorlage carriage (passing, passage, US) of a bill;
• Annahme des Haushalts adoption of the budget;
• Annahme der Haushaltsvorlage budget grant;
• Annahme eines anderen Namens changing one’s name;
• Annahme unter Vorbehalt acceptance under reserve, (Wechsel) conditional (qualified) acceptance;
• unbedingte Annahme eines Wechsels unqualified acceptance of a bill;
• einstimmige Annahme erfahren to be adopted by an unanimous vote;
• Wechsel mangels Annahme protestieren to protest (note) a bill for non-acceptance;
• einem Gesetz zur Annahme zu verhelfen suchen to get a bill through Parliament;
• Annahme verweigern to decline (refuse) acceptance, to refuse [to take] delivery, (Wechsel) to dishono(u)r a bill for non-acceptance;
• zur Annahme vorlegen (Wechsel) to present for acceptance;
• Annahmebeamter receiving clerk;
• Annahmebedingungen conditions (terms) of acceptance;
• Annahmebescheinigung receipt;
• Annahmebestätigung acceptance note;
• ausdrückliche Annahmeerklärung express acceptance;
• Annahmefrist (Wechsel) period of (time for) acceptance;
• für sein Angebot eine Annahmefrist festlegen to lay down a time limit on one’s acceptance;
• Annahmeprotest protest for non-acceptance;
• Annahmeschalter deposits counter;
• Annahmeschluss (Postamt) latest acceptance time, (Werbung) closing date;
• Annahmestelle (Bank) subscription agency, (Pakete) receiving office;
• Annahmestempel receipt stamp;
• Annahmetarif (Spediteur) differential tariff;
• Annahmeübermittlung communication of acceptance;
• mit Annahmevermerk versehen to provide with acceptance;
• Annahmevermutung implied acceptance;
• Annahmeverweigerung (Waren) rejection, refusal [of goods], (Wechsel) dishono(u)r[ed] by non-acceptance, refused acceptance;
• Annahmeverzug delayed acceptance;
• sich im Annahmeverzug befinden to have been put on notice to take delivery, not to take delivery in due time;
• im Annahmeverzug sein to be in default of acceptance;
• Annahmezahl (Statistik) acceptance number. -
14 Vorrang
Vorrang m 1. GEN preference, pref., priority; 2. PAT priority • Vorrang haben vor GEN take priority over* * *m 1. < Geschäft> preference (pref.), priority; 2. < Patent> priority ■ Vorrang haben vor < Geschäft> take priority over* * *Vorrang
precedence, antecedence, primacy, (Dringlichkeit) priority, (Gläubiger) priority [of rank], rank in priority, ranking, (Hypothek) precedence, (Pfandobjekt) marshalling;
• mit Vorrang vor with priority over;
• zeitlicher Vorrang priority of date;
• Vorrang eines Anspruchs priority of a claim;
• Vorrang des Gemeinschaftsrechts primacy of Community law;
• j. mit Vorrang abfertigen to deal with s. o. with priority;
• Vorrang beanspruchen to claim priority;
• Vorrang einräumen to grant prior rank, to give place (priority to);
• Kundenwünschen Vorrang einräumen to put customer demands first;
• einer Sache absoluten Vorrang geben to raise s. th. into first priority;
• Vorrang genießen to have first priority;
• Vorrang haben to rank as preferential (in priority), to have precedence (the eminence), (Verkehr) to have the right of way;
• Vorrangaktie preferential share, classified stock (US);
• Vorrangbehandlung priority treatment;
• Vorranggebiet priority area;
• Vorranggespräch (telecom.) priority call;
• Vorranggläubiger prior (preceding) creditor;
• Vorranghypothek senior (underlying, US) mortgage.
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