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61 rural
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62 tax
1) (державний) податок, мито, збір; тягар; обкладання2) оподатковувати, обкладати податком (податками); обкладати митом; таксувати; збирати (стягувати) членські внески; робити догану; засуджувати ( не в суді); визначати розмір збитків ( штрафу тощо); визначати розмір судових витрат•tax credit to adoptive parents for the adoption of children with physical or mental handicaps — податкова пільга прийомним батькам за усиновлення дитини із фізичними або розумовими вадами
- tax accounttax deduction based on degree of disability — зниження ставки податку в залежності від групи інвалідності
- tax accounting
- tax accounts
- tax administration
- tax advantage
- tax adviser
- tax agreement
- tax allocation
- tax allowance
- tax amount
- tax arrears
- tax assessment
- tax assessment act
- tax assessment authority
- tax assessment complaint
- tax assessment law
- tax assessment method
- tax assessment notice
- tax assessment scheme
- tax assessments act
- tax assessments law
- tax assessor
- tax at source
- tax-at-source
- tax audit
- tax auditing
- tax auditor
- tax authorities
- tax authority
- tax avoidance
- tax avoidance scheme
- tax barrier
- tax base
- tax basis
- tax bearer
- tax benefit
- tax benefit entailment
- tax bill
- tax book
- tax bracket
- tax break
- tax bribery
- tax burden
- tax capitalization
- tax case
- tax ceiling
- tax ceiling income
- tax certificate
- tax charge
- tax code
- tax collection
- tax collection rate
- tax collector
- tax collector's district
- tax collector's office
- tax committee
- tax concession
- tax consultant
- tax contingency provisions
- tax control
- tax control act
- tax control law
- tax cop
- tax counselor
- tax counsellor
- tax court
- tax court expenses
- tax credit
- tax credit to adoptive parents
- tax creditor
- tax crime
- tax debt
- tax declaration scheme
- tax deducted
- tax-deductible
- tax deduction
- tax deduction basis
- tax deed
- tax deferral
- tax delinquent
- tax discrimination
- tax-dodge
- tax dodger
- tax dodging
- tax domicile
- tax effect
- tax equalization
- tax equalization account
- tax evader
- tax evador
- tax evasion
- tax evasion by an individual
- tax evasion by an organization
- tax-exempt
- tax-exempt basic amount
- tax-exempt bond
- tax-exempt gain
- tax-exempt minimum
- tax-exempt minimum threshold
- tax exemption
- tax exile
- tax expense
- tax expenses
- tax expert
- tax fiddle
- tax field audit
- tax filing date
- tax form
- tax fraud
- tax-free
- tax-free allowance
- tax-free amount
- tax-free covenant clause
- tax-free covenant bond
- tax-free gift
- tax-free sale
- tax-free treatment
- tax-gatherer
- tax haven
- tax heavily
- tax holiday
- tax identification number
- tax in arrears
- tax in kind
- tax incentive
- tax incidence
- tax income
- tax increase
- tax inspection
- tax inspector
- tax inspectorate
- tax law
- tax laws
- tax lawyer
- tax leasing
- tax legislation
- tax levy
- tax liability
- tax lien
- tax load -
63 SIVOM
sivɔm abr nmSyndicat intercommunal à vocation multiple association of "communes"* * *SIVOM nm (abbr = Syndicat intercommunal à vocation multiple) inter-district action committee.nom propre masculin, -
64 ས་གནས་
[sa gnas]local authorities, sacred kusha grass, district, region, country, landscape, local manifestation of energy, power place, species of bird -
65 सरस्वती
sarasvatīsárasvatī
N. of a river (celebrated in RV. andᅠ held to be a goddess whose identity is much disputed;
most authorities hold that the name Sárasvatī is identical with the Avestan Haraquaiti river in Afghanistan, but that it usually means the Indus in the RV., andᅠ only occasionally the small sacred rivers in Madhya-deṡa < seeᅠ below>;
the river-goddess has seven sisters andᅠ is herself sevenfold, she is called the mother of streams, the best of mothers, of rivers, andᅠ of goddesses;
the Ṛishis always recognize the connection of the goddess with the river, andᅠ invoke her to descend from the sky, to bestow vitality, renown, andᅠ riches;
elsewhere she is described as moving along a golden path andᅠ as destroying Vṛitra etc.;
as a goddess she is often connected with other deities e.g.. with Pūshan, Indra, the Maruts andᅠ the Aṡvins;
in the Āpri hymns she forms a triad with the sacrificial goddesses Iḍā andᅠ Bhātrati;
accord. toᅠ a myth told in the VS. XIX, 12, Sárasvatī through speech < vācā> communicated vigour to Indra;
in the BrShmaṇas she is identified with vāc, « Speech», andᅠ in later times becomes goddess of eloquence seeᅠ below) RV. etc. etc.;
N. of a well-known small river (held very sacred by the Hindūs;
identified with the modern Sursooty, at, d formerly marking with the Dṛishadvatī one of the boundaries of the region Ārya-deṡa andᅠ of the sacred district called Brahmâvarta < seeᅠ Mn. II, 17 > in RV. VII, 95, 2,
this river is represented as flowing into the sea, although later legends make it disappear underground andᅠ join the Ganges andᅠ Jumnā at Allahibād;
seeᅠ tri-veṇī, prayāga) ib. ;
N. of various rivers (esp. of rivers which in sacredness are equal to Sárasvatī andᅠ which are three accord. toᅠ AV. VI, 101,
andᅠ seven accord. toᅠ MBh. IX, 2188);
any river Naigh. I, 13 ;
N. of the goddess of eloquence andᅠ learning (cf. above;
she is opposed to Ṡri orᅠ Lakshmī <cf. Vikr. V, 24 >, andᅠ sometimes considered as the daughter andᅠ alsoᅠ wife of Beahmā, the proper wife of that god being rather Sāvitri orᅠ Gāyatri;
she is alsoᅠ identified with Durgā, orᅠ even with the wife of Vishṇu andᅠ of Manu, andᅠ held to be the daughter of Daksha) Mn. MBh. etc.;
speech orᅠ the power of speech, eloquence, learning wisdom MBh. Kāv. etc.;
a celestial orᅠ oracular voice Kālid. Kathās. Rājat. ;
a cow VS. VIII, 43 ;
an excellent woman (= strī-ratna) L. ;
N. of various plants (Cardiospermum Halicacabum, Egle Marmelos, Ruta Graveolens etc.) L. ;
N. of a twoyear-old girl representing Durgā at her festival L. ;
of a poetess Cat. ;
of various other women (esp. of the wives of Dadhica, Ṡaṃkarâcārya, Maṇḍaṇamiṡra etc.) ib. ;
of one of the ten mendicant orders traced back to Ṡarnkaracārya (whose members add the word sarasvatī to their names)
- सरस्वतीकण्ठाभरण
- सरस्वतीकुटुम्ब
- सरस्वतीकृत
- सरस्वतीतन्त्र
- सरस्वतीतीर्थ
- सरस्वतीदण्डक
- सरस्वतीदशश्लोकी
- सरस्वतीदानविधि
- सरस्वतीद्वादशनामस्तोत्र
- सरस्वतीनिवास
- सरस्वतीपुराण
- सरस्वतीपूजन
- सरस्वतीपूजा
- सरस्वतीप्रक्रिया
- सरस्वतीप्रयेग
- सरस्वतीबालवाणी
- सरस्वतीमन्त्र
- सरस्वतीमाहात्म्य
- सरस्वतीरहस्योपनिषद्
- सरस्वतीवत्
- सरस्वतीविनशन
- सरस्वतीविलास
- सरस्वतीव्रत
- सरस्वतीषट्श्लोकी
- सरस्वतीसरस्
- सरस्वतीसूक्त
- सरस्वतीसूत्र
- सरस्वतीस्तव
- सरस्वतीस्तोत्र
- सरस्वतीस्वामिन्
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66 maistraatti
yks.nom. maistraatti; yks.gen. maistraatin; yks.part. maistraattia; yks.ill. maistraattiin; mon.gen. maistraattien; mon.part. maistraatteja; mon.ill. maistraatteihinadministrative council (noun)city administrative court (noun)Municipal Administrative Court (noun)* * *law• administrative council• city administrative courtlaw• district registrylaw• municipal administrative court• municipal authorities -
67 administracj|a
f 1. sgt (zarządzanie) management U, administration U- oddać coś pod czyjąś administrację to give sth over to sb’s administration- wziąć coś w administrację to take over the administration of sth- zajmować się administracją majątku to manage a property a. an estate- Wydział Prawa i Administracji Faculty of Law and Public Administration2. (G pl administracji) (biuro) administration (department), management office; (zespół kierujący) (the) administration, (the) management- administracja i pracownicy management and workers- administracja domów komunalnych housing office3. (G pl administracji) Admin. (organy władzy państwowej) (the) civil service; (organy władzy samorządowej) local authorities; (czynności) (państwowa) central government (administration) U; (samorządowa) local government (administration) U- administracja publiczna (the) civil service- organy administracji państwowej central government bodies- administracja terenowa a local a. district authority4. (G pl administracji) (rząd USA) (gabinet) administration; (ogólnie) government- administracja Reagana the Reagan administrationThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > administracj|a
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68 praefectura
praefectūra, ae ( dat. plur. PRAEFECTVREIS, Inscr. Corp. Lat. 206, 83), f. [id.], the office of a president or overseer, a presidency, superintendence, prefecture.I.In gen.:II.villae,
Varr. R. R. 1, 17 fin.; cf. Plaut. Cas. 1, 11 (infra, B. 2. b.): morum, the superintendence of the public morals (a part of the duty of the censor), Suet. Caes. 76:hanc de se praefecturam servo dare,
Plin. 28, 5, 14, § 56:equitum Gallorum,
the command of the cavalry, Hirt. B. G. 8, 12:alarum,
Suet. Aug. 38:urbis,
Plin. 7, 14, 12, § 62; Suet. Aug. 37; id. Tib. 42; id. Vesp. 1; Dig. 1, 12, 1 (al. Urbi):praetorio,
Aur. Vict. Caes. 9, 11:praefectura domūs Siculā non mitior aulā,
Juv. 6, 486.—In partic.A.In milit. lang., the office of commander or governor in the provinces, the government of a country or town (which was conferred by the proconsuls and proprætors), a prefectship, prefecture:B.praefecturas sumere,
Cic. Att. 6, 1, 4; cf.:praefecturam petivit: negavi me cuiquam negotianti dare,
id. ib. 5, 21, 10:multorum consulum praetorumque praefecturas delatas sic accepit, ut, etc.,
Nep. Att. 6, 4.—The administration of a province: aliquem ad praefecturam Aegypti provehere, Suet. Aug. 66:2.Aegypti,
id. Ner. 47.—Hence,Transf.a.An Italian city governed by Roman authorities (praefecti) and according to their edicts, a prefecture:b.praefecturae eae appellabantur in Italiā, in quibus et jus dicebatur et nundinae agebantur, et erat quaedam earum res publica, neque tamen magistratus suos habebant, in quas legibus praefecti mittebantur quotannis qui jus dicerent, etc.,
Fest. p. 233 Müll.; Cic. Sest. 14, 32; id. Pis. 22, 51; id. Phil. 2, 24, 58:Capua in formam praefecturae redacta,
Vell. 2, 44, 4; cf. Liv. 26, 16; Inscr. Orell. 3699.—The territory of a prefecture, a district, province, government (anteclass. and post-Aug.):C.quin ruri es in praefecturā tuā?... abi rus, abi directus tuam in provinciam,
Plaut. Cas. 1, 11 and 15:nunc ibo in meam praefecturam, ut jus dicam lardo,
id. Capt. 4, 3, 7:Aegyptus dividitur in praefecturas oppidorum, quas nomos vocant,
Plin. 5, 9, 9, § 49:proximae praefecturae,
Tac. A. 11, 8: praefecturae magis quam imperia, Front. Princ. Hist. med. —In the agrimensores, the land allotted to a colony, Sicul. Flacc. Condit. Agr. p. 21 Goes.; Front. Limit. p. 43 ib.; Aggen. ap. Front. p. 56 ib. -
69 town
1. n город; городокtown centre — городской центр, центр города
walled town — укреплённый город; город-крепость
market town — город, в котором происходят базары
2. n амер. местечко3. n центр деловой или торговой жизни городаtown father — отец города, влиятельный гражданин
4. n административный центр; самый большой из близлежащих городов; близлежащий город5. n столица6. n жители городаtown talk — то, о чём говорит весь город, городская сплетня
town peopled with memories — город, вызывающий воспоминания
7. n амер. жители местечкаghost town — город-призрак; город, покинутый жителями
8. n городская жизнь9. n амер. городская община; муниципалитетtown center — городской центр, центральная часть города
town house — городская квартира; городской дом, особняк
10. n село, в котором есть базарtown ditch — ров, окружающий стены города
town redolent of age — город, где всё дышит стариной
11. n арх. светское обществоa man about town — светский человек, богатый повеса, жуир
12. n шотл. дом, ферма с надворными постройкамигруппа домов; деревня, деревушка
13. n скопление нор степных собак; гнездовье пингвинов14. v редк. застраивать городами15. v редк. делать городом, превращать в городhis native town — город, где он родился
Синонимический ряд:1. citizenry (noun) citizenry; inhabitants; population; townspeople2. city (noun) borough; burg; burgh; city; community; district; hamlet; locale; metropolis; municipality; neighbourhood; township; vicinity; village -
70 gedoogzone
1 〈area of town where the authorities allow certain (illegal) activities to take place, esp. prostitution〉⇒ ±red-light district -
71 gemeentebestuur
1 district council ⇒ local authority/authoritiesVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > gemeentebestuur
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72 Bateman, John Frederick La Trobe
[br]b. 30 May 1810 Lower Wyke, near Halifax, Yorkshire, Englandd. 10 June 1889 Moor Park, Farnham, Surrey, England[br]English civil engineer whose principal works were concerned with reservoirs, water-supply schemes and pipelines.[br]Bateman's maternal grandfather was a Moravian missionary, and from the age of 7 he was educated at the Moravian schools at Fairfield and Ockbrook. At the age of 15 he was apprenticed to a "civil engineer, land surveyor and agent" in Oldham. After this apprenticeship, Bateman commenced his own practice in 1833. One of his early schemes and reports was in regard to the flooding of the river Medlock in the Manchester area. He came to the attention of William Fairbairn, the engine builder and millwright of Canal Street, Ancoats, Manchester. Fairbairn used Bateman as his site surveyor and as such he prepared much of the groundwork for the Bann reservoirs in Northern Ireland. Whilst the reports on the proposals were in the name of Fairbairn, Bateman was, in fact, appointed by the company as their engineer for the execution of the works. One scheme of Bateman's which was carried forward was the Kendal Reservoirs. The Act for these was signed in 1845 and was implemented not for the purpose of water supply but for the conservation of water to supply power to the many mills which stood on the river Kent between Kentmere and Morecambe Bay. The Kentmere Head dam is the only one of the five proposed for the scheme to survive, although not all the others were built as they would have retained only small volumes of water.Perhaps the greatest monument to the work of J.F.La Trobe Bateman is Manchester's water supply; he was consulted about this in 1844, and construction began four years later. He first built reservoirs in the Longdendale valley, which has a very complicated geological stratification. Bateman favoured earth embankment dams and gravity feed rather than pumping; the five reservoirs in the valley that impound the river Etherow were complex, cored earth dams. However, when completed they were greatly at risk from landslips and ground movement. Later dams were inserted by Bateman to prevent water loss should the older dams fail. The scheme was not completed until 1877, by which time Manchester's population had exceeded the capacity of the original scheme; Thirlmere in Cumbria was chosen by Manchester Corporation as the site of the first of the Lake District water-supply schemes. Bateman, as Consulting Engineer, designed the great stone-faced dam at the west end of the lake, the "gothic" straining well in the middle of the east shore of the lake, and the 100-mile (160 km) pipeline to Manchester. The Act for the Thirlmere reservoir was signed in 1879 and, whilst Bateman continued as Consulting Engineer, the work was supervised by G.H. Hill and was completed in 1894.Bateman was also consulted by the authorities in Glasgow, with the result that he constructed an impressive water-supply scheme derived from Loch Katrine during the years 1856–60. It was claimed that the scheme bore comparison with "the most extensive aqueducts in the world, not excluding those of ancient Rome". Bateman went on to superintend the waterworks of many cities, mainly in the north of England but also in Dublin and Belfast. In 1865 he published a pamphlet, On the Supply of Water to London from the Sources of the River Severn, based on a survey funded from his own pocket; a Royal Commission examined various schemes but favoured Bateman's.Bateman was also responsible for harbour and dock works, notably on the rivers Clyde and Shannon, and also for a number of important water-supply works on the Continent of Europe and beyond. Dams and the associated reservoirs were the principal work of J.F.La Trobe Bateman; he completed forty-three such schemes during his professional career. He also prepared many studies of water-supply schemes, and appeared as professional witness before the appropriate Parliamentary Committees.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1860. President, Institution of Civil Engineers 1878, 1879.BibliographyAmong his publications History and Description of the Manchester Waterworks, (1884, London), and The Present State of Our Knowledge on the Supply of Water to Towns, (1855, London: British Association for the Advancement of Science) are notable.Further ReadingObituary, 1889, Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers 97:392– 8.Obituary, 1889, Proceedings of the Royal Society 46:xlii-xlviii. G.M.Binnie, 1981, Early Victorian Water Engineers, London.P.N.Wilson, 1973, "Kendal reservoirs", Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society 73.KM / LRDBiographical history of technology > Bateman, John Frederick La Trobe
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73 Wallis, Sir Barnes Neville
[br]b. 26 September 1887 Ripley, Derbyshire, Englandd. 30 October 1979 Leatherhead, Surrey, England[br]English aeronautical designer and inventor.[br]Wallis was apprenticed first at Thames Engineering Works, and then, in 1908, at John Samuel White's shipyard at Cowes. In 1913, the Government, spurred on by the accelerating development of the German Zeppelins (see Zeppelin, Ferdinand von), ordered an airship from Vickers; Wallis was invited to join the design team. Thus began his long association with aeronautical design and with Vickers. This airship, and the R80 that followed it, were successfully completed, but the military lost interest in them.In 1924 the Government initiated a programme for the construction of two airships to settle once and for all their viability for long-dis-tance air travel. The R101 was designed by a Government-sponsored team, but the R100 was designed by Wallis working for a subsidiary of Vickers. The R100 took off on 29 July 1930 for a successful round trip to Canada, but the R101 crashed on its first flight on 4 October, killing many of its distinguished passengers. The shock of this disaster brought airship development in Britain to an abrupt end and forced Wallis to direct his attention to aircraft.In aircraft design, Wallis is known for his use of geodesic construction, which combined lightness with strength. It was applied first to the single-engined "Wellesley" and then the twin-en-gined "Wellington" bomber, which first flew in 1936. With successive modifications, it became the workhorse of RAF Bomber Command during the Second World War until the autumn of 1943, when it was replaced by four-engined machines. In other areas, it remained in service until the end of the war and, in all, no fewer than 11,461 were built.Wallis is best known for his work on bomb design, first the bouncing bomb that was used to breach the Möhne and Eder dams in the Ruhr district of Germany in 1943, an exploit immortalized in the film Dambusters. Encouraged by this success, the authorities then allowed Wallis to realize an idea he had long urged, that of heavy, penetration bombs. In the closing stages of the war, Tallboy, of 12,000 lb (5,400 kg), and the 10-ton Grand Slam were used to devastating effect.After the Second World War, Wallis returned to aeronautical design and was given his own department at Vickers to promote his ideas, principally on variable-geometry or swing-wing aircraft. Over the next thirteen years he battled towards the prototype stage of this revolutionary concept. That never came, however; changing conditions and requirements and increasing costs led to the abandonment of the project. Bit-terly disappointed, Wallis continued his researches into high-speed aircraft until his retirement from Vickers (by then the British Aircraft Corporation), in 1971.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1968. FRS 1945.Further ReadingJ.Morpurgo, 1972, Barnes Wallis: A Biography, London: Longman (a readable account, rather biased in Wallis's favour).C.J.Heap, 1987, The Papers of Sir Barnes Wallis (1887–1979) in the Science Museum Library, London: Science Museum; with a biographical introd. by L.R.Day.LRDBiographical history of technology > Wallis, Sir Barnes Neville
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