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from his earliest years

  • 1 year

    noun
    1) Jahr, das

    she gets £10,000 a year — sie verdient 10 000 Pfund im Jahr

    year in year out — jahrein, jahraus

    year after yearJahr für od. um Jahr

    all [the] year round — das ganze Jahr hindurch

    in a year['s time] — in einem Jahr

    once a year, once every year — einmal im Jahr

    Christian or Church or ecclesiastical year — (Eccl.) Kirchenjahr, das; liturgisches Jahr (kath. Kirche)

    a ten-year-old — ein Zehnjähriger/eine Zehnjährige

    a ten-year[s]-old child — ein zehn Jahre altes Kind

    in her thirtieth yearin ihrem 30. Lebensjahr

    financial or fiscal or tax year — Finanz- od. Rechnungsjahr, das

    calendar or civil year — Kalenderjahr, das

    school year — Schuljahr, das

    for a year and a day — ein Jahr und einen Tag [lang]

    a year [from] today — etc. heute usw. in einem Jahr

    a year [ago] today — etc. heute usw. vor einem Jahr

    ... of the year — (best)... des Jahres

    take years off somebody/somebody's life — jemanden um Jahre jünger/älter machen; see also academic.ru/9940/by">by I 1. 23); from 2)

    2) (group of students) Jahrgang, der

    first-year student — Student/Studentin im ersten Jahr

    3) in pl. (age)

    be getting on/be well on in years — in die Jahre kommen/in vorgerücktem Alter sein (geh.)

    * * *
    [jiə] 1. noun
    1) (the period of time the earth takes to go once round the sun, about 365 days: We lived here for five years, from November 1968 to November 1973; a two-year delay.) das Jahr
    2) (the period from January 1 to December 31, being 365 days, except in a leap year, when it is 366 days: in the year 1945.) das Jahr
    2. adverb
    (every year: The festival is held yearly.) jährlich
    - year-book
    - all the year round
    - all year round
    - long
    * * *
    [jɪəʳ, AM jɪr]
    n
    1. (twelve months) Jahr nt
    it's taken them a \year to get this far sie haben ein Jahr gebraucht, um so weit zu kommen
    she got two \years sie bekam zwei Jahre [Gefängnis]
    it'll be a \year next August kommenden August ist es ein Jahr her
    in the \year of Our Lord 1492 im Jahre des Herrn 1492
    how much does he earn a \year? wie viel verdient er im Jahr?
    calendar \year Kalenderjahr nt
    two \years' work zwei Jahre Arbeit
    a \year ago vor einem Jahr
    all [the] \year round das ganze Jahr über
    every other \year alle zwei Jahre
    fiscal \year Geschäftsjahr nt, Rechnungsjahr nt; revenue Steuerjahr nt
    last/next/this \year letztes/nächstes/dieses Jahr
    he retires in March of next \year er geht im März nächsten Jahres in Rente
    last \year FIN Vorjahr nt
    \year by \year Jahr für Jahr
    during the \year FIN unterjährig
    for two \years zwei Jahre lang
    five times a \year fünfmal im [o pro] Jahr
    2. (age, time of life) [Lebens]jahr nt
    he dances very well for a man of his \years für einen Mann in seinem Alter tanzt er sehr gut
    a two-\year-old child ein zweijähriges Kind
    \years pl Jahre pl
    \year in, \year out Jahr ein, Jahr aus
    for \years (since a long time ago) seit Jahren; (regularly) regelmäßig; (for a long time) jahrelang
    over the \years mit den Jahren, im Laufe der Jahre
    4. (academic year) SCH Schuljahr nt; UNIV Studienjahr nt; (group) Klasse f
    he was in my \year at college er war am College in meinem Semester
    she was in the \year above [or AM ahead of] /below [or AM behind] me at school/university sie war in der Schule/Uni[versität] ein Jahr/zwei Semester über/unter mir
    a two-/three-\year course ein zwei-/dreijähriger Kurs
    the \year 9 pupils BRIT die Neuntklässler pl
    school \year Schuljahr nt
    a first-/second-\year student ein Student m/eine Studentin im ersten/zweiten Studienjahr
    academic \year akademisches Jahr
    the second-\years BRIT UNIV die Studenten, Studentinnen m, f im zweiten Studienjahr; SCH die Schüler(innen) m(f) der zweiten Klasse
    5. (season) Jahr nt
    the time of the \year die Jahreszeit
    to be a bad [or poor] /good \year for sth ein schlechtes/gutes Jahr für etw akk sein
    1988 was an extremely good \year — if you can find a bottle of that, buy it 1988 war ein äußerst gutes Jahr — wenn du eine Flasche davon finden kannst, kaufe sie
    6.
    from [or since] the \year dot BRIT, AUS seit Urzeiten [o ewigen Zeiten] fam
    to put \years on sb jdn um Jahre älter machen
    to take \years off sb jdn jünger wirken lassen
    * * *
    [jɪə(r)]
    n
    1) Jahr nt

    this/last year — dieses/letztes Jahr

    in the year 1989 —

    year by year, from year to year — von Jahr zu Jahr

    year in, year out — jahrein, jahraus

    it'll be a year in or next January (duration) — es wird nächsten Januar ein Jahr sein; (point in time) es wird nächsten Januar ein Jahr her sein

    a hundred-year-old tree —

    a hundred-year-old treeein hundert Jahre alter Baum, ein hundertjähriger Baum

    he is in his fortieth yearer steht (geh) or ist im vierzigsten Lebensjahr

    he gets £23,000 a year — er bekommt £ 23.000 jährlich or pro Jahr or im Jahr

    it's taken years off my lifees hat mich Jahre meines Lebens gekostet

    2) (UNIV, SCH of coin, stamp, wine) Jahrgang m

    the 2001/02 academic year —

    first-year student, first year — Student(in) m(f) im ersten Jahr

    3)
    * * *
    year [jıə; jɜː; US jıər] s
    1. Jahr n:
    (a hundred) years pl of tradition jahrelange (eine hundertjährige) Tradition;
    this year’s winner der (die) diesjährige Sieger(in);
    five-year plan WIRTSCH Fünfjahresplan m;
    three-year contract Dreijahresvertrag m;
    many years’ experience langjährige Erfahrung;
    after two years of marriage nach zwei Ehejahren;
    for a year and a day JUR auf Jahr und Tag;
    a) jahrelang, seit Jahren,
    b) auf Jahre hinaus;
    year in, year out jahraus, jahrein;
    year by year, from year to year, year after year Jahr für Jahr;
    in the year one hum vor undenklichen Zeiten;
    not in years seit Jahren nicht (mehr);
    since the year dot umg seit einer Ewigkeit;
    twice a year zweimal jährlich oder im Jahr;
    take years off sb jemanden um Jahre jünger machen oder aussehen lassen; old A 2, over A 11, service1 A 1
    2. (Kalender-, Kirchen- etc) Jahr n:
    year-2000 conversion IT Jahr-2000-Umstellung f;
    year-2000 problem IT Jahr-2000-Problem n, Problem n 2000; grace A 7, old A 4
    3. pl Alter n:
    he bears his years well er ist für sein Alter noch recht rüstig; get on A 1, well1 A 10
    4. SCHULE, UNIV Jahrgang m:
    5. ASTRON Umlaufzeit f, Periode f (eines Planeten)
    y. abk
    1. yard ( yards pl)
    2. year ( years pl)
    yr abk
    1. year ( years pl)
    3. your
    * * *
    noun
    1) Jahr, das

    she gets £10,000 a year — sie verdient 10 000 Pfund im Jahr

    year in year out — jahrein, jahraus

    year after yearJahr für od. um Jahr

    all [the] year round — das ganze Jahr hindurch

    in a year['s time] — in einem Jahr

    once a year, once every year — einmal im Jahr

    Christian or Church or ecclesiastical year — (Eccl.) Kirchenjahr, das; liturgisches Jahr (kath. Kirche)

    a ten-year-old — ein Zehnjähriger/eine Zehnjährige

    a ten-year[s]-old child — ein zehn Jahre altes Kind

    in her thirtieth year — in ihrem 30. Lebensjahr

    financial or fiscal or tax year — Finanz- od. Rechnungsjahr, das

    calendar or civil year — Kalenderjahr, das

    school year — Schuljahr, das

    for a year and a day — ein Jahr und einen Tag [lang]

    a year [from] today — etc. heute usw. in einem Jahr

    a year [ago] today — etc. heute usw. vor einem Jahr

    ... of the year — (best)... des Jahres

    take years off somebody/somebody's life — jemanden um Jahre jünger/älter machen; see also by I 1. 23); from 2)

    2) (group of students) Jahrgang, der

    first-year student — Student/Studentin im ersten Jahr

    3) in pl. (age)

    be getting on/be well on in years — in die Jahre kommen/in vorgerücktem Alter sein (geh.)

    * * *
    n.
    Jahr -e n.

    English-german dictionary > year

  • 2 year

    jiə
    1. noun
    1) (the period of time the earth takes to go once round the sun, about 365 days: We lived here for five years, from November 1968 to November 1973; a two-year delay.) año
    2) (the period from January 1 to December 31, being 365 days, except in a leap year, when it is 366 days: in the year 1945.) año

    2. adverb
    (every year: The festival is held yearly.) anualmente
    - all the year round
    - all year round
    - long

    year n
    1. año
    2. curso
    tr[jɪəːSMALLr/SMALL]
    1 año
    she earns 14,000 pounds a year gana 14.000 libras al año
    2 SMALLEDUCATION/SMALL curso
    \
    SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL
    all the year round durante todo el año
    since the year dot desde el año de la nana
    to take years off somebody rejuvenecer a alguien
    year in, year out año tras año
    year ['jɪr] n
    1) : año m
    last year: el año pasado
    he's ten years old: tiene diez años
    2) : curso m, año m (escolar)
    3) years npl
    ages: siglos mpl, años mpl
    I haven't seen them in years: hace siglos que no los veo
    n.
    añada s.f.
    año s.m.
    jɪr, jɪə(r)
    1) ( period of time) año m

    next year — el año que viene, el próximo año

    this time last year... — el año pasado por estas fechas...

    every year — todos los años, cada año

    every other o every second year — cada dos años, un año sí y otro no

    it costs $500 a year — cuesta 500 dólares al año

    it'll be a year next Monday/August — el lunes que viene/en agosto hará un año

    in all my years as a teacher... — en todos mis años que ha trabajado de profesor,...

    I'll return in a year o in a year's time — volveré dentro de un año

    over the years I've grown accustomed to itcon el tiempo or con los años me he ido acostumbrando

    year after year/year in, year out — año tras año

    she got five years — (colloq) le cayeron cinco años (fam)

    the year one o (BrE) the year dot — (colloq) el año de Maricastaña or de la pera (fam)

    2) years pl

    it's years since I saw him, I haven't seen him for years — hace años que no lo veo

    years ago, there was a church here — años atrás, aquí había una iglesia

    it put years on meme avejentó or me envejeció, me echó años encima

    b) ( age)
    3)
    a) ( Educ) curso m, año m
    b) ( of wine) cosecha f
    ['jɪǝ(r)]
    N
    1) (=twelve months) año m

    it takes years — es cosa de años, se tarda años

    three times a year — tres veces al año

    in after years — liter en los años siguientes, años después

    to reckon sth by the year — calcular algo por años

    year endfinal m del año

    year of graceaño m de gracia

    year in, year out — año tras año, todos los años sin falta

    last year — el año pasado

    next year — (looking to future) el año que viene

    the next year (in past time) el año siguiente

    she's three years oldtiene tres años

    the work has put years on him — el trabajo lo ha envejecido

    all (the) year rounddurante todo el año

    that hairstyle takes years off you *ese peinado te quita un montón de años *

    2) (=age)

    in my early years — en mi infancia, en mi juventud

    he looks old/young for his years — aparenta más/menos años de los que tiene

    he's getting on in years — va para viejo

    in his later years — en sus últimos años

    3) (Brit) (Scol, Univ) curso m, año m
    4) [of wine] cosecha f, vendimia f

    1982 was a good/bad year — 1982 fue una buena/mala cosecha or vendimia, 1982 fue un buen/mal año

    * * *
    [jɪr, jɪə(r)]
    1) ( period of time) año m

    next year — el año que viene, el próximo año

    this time last year... — el año pasado por estas fechas...

    every year — todos los años, cada año

    every other o every second year — cada dos años, un año sí y otro no

    it costs $500 a year — cuesta 500 dólares al año

    it'll be a year next Monday/August — el lunes que viene/en agosto hará un año

    in all my years as a teacher... — en todos mis años que ha trabajado de profesor,...

    I'll return in a year o in a year's time — volveré dentro de un año

    over the years I've grown accustomed to itcon el tiempo or con los años me he ido acostumbrando

    year after year/year in, year out — año tras año

    she got five years — (colloq) le cayeron cinco años (fam)

    the year one o (BrE) the year dot — (colloq) el año de Maricastaña or de la pera (fam)

    2) years pl

    it's years since I saw him, I haven't seen him for years — hace años que no lo veo

    years ago, there was a church here — años atrás, aquí había una iglesia

    it put years on meme avejentó or me envejeció, me echó años encima

    b) ( age)
    3)
    a) ( Educ) curso m, año m
    b) ( of wine) cosecha f

    English-spanish dictionary > year

  • 3 year

    year [jɪər]
       a. an m, année f
    he earns $25,000 a year il gagne 25 000 dollars par an
    year in, year out année après année
    year on year + noun annuel ; + verb annuellement chaque année
    it's put years on me! cela m'a vieilli de vingt ans !
       c. (at school, university) année f
    he's in second year (University) il est en deuxième année ; (secondary school) ≈ il est en cinquième
    * * *
    [jɪə(r), jɜː(r)] 1.
    1) ( period of time) an m, année f

    over the yearsau cours des ans or des années

    to earn £30,000 a year — gagner 30000 livres sterling par an

    to be 19 years old ou 19 years of age — avoir 19 ans

    3) School, University année f
    4) GB School ( pupil)

    first/second-year — ≈ élève mf de sixième/cinquième

    2.
    years plural noun
    1) ( age) âge m
    2) (colloq) ( a long time)

    English-French dictionary > year

  • 4 year

    A n
    1 ( period of time) an m, année f ; in the year 1789/2000 en 1789/l'an 2000 ; every year/every other year tous les ans/tous les deux ans ; two years ago il y a deux ans ; all (the) year round toute l'année ; during the year au cours de l'année ; over the years au cours des ans or des années ; the year before last il y a deux ans ; year by year d'année en année ; three years running trois ans or années d'affilée or de suite ; year in year out tous les ans, chaque année ; in years to come dans les années à venir ; at the end of the year à la fin de l'année ; I shall retire in two years je prendrai ma retraite dans deux ans ; we hope to build the bridge in two years nous espérons construire le pont en deux ans ; they have been living in Paris for years ils habitent Paris depuis des années, il y a des années qu'ils habitent Paris ; they lived in Paris for years ils ont habité Paris pendant des années ; they will probably live there for years ils y habiteront sans doute pendant des années ; for the first time in years pour la première fois depuis des années ; it was a year ago last October that I heard the news il y a eu un an en octobre que j'ai appris la nouvelle ; it will be four years in July since he died cela fera quatre ans en juillet qu'il est mort ; it's a year since I heard from him je n'ai plus de ses nouvelles depuis un an or il y a un an que je n'ai plus de nouvelles de lui ; from one year to the next d'une année à l'autre ; in all my years as a journalist dans toute ma carrière de journaliste ; to earn £30,000 a year gagner 30 000 livres sterling par an ;
    2 ( indicating age) to be 19 years old ou 19 years of age avoir 19 ans ; a two-year-old child un enfant de deux ans ; he's in his fiftieth year il est dans sa cinquantième année ;
    3 Sch, Univ année f ; to be in one's first year at Cambridge être en première année à Cambridge ; is that boy in your year? est-ce que ce garçon est dans la même année que toi? ;
    4 GB Sch ( pupil) first/second-year élève mf de sixième/cinquième ;
    5 ( prison sentence) an m ; to get 15 years être condamné à 15 ans de prison.
    1 ( age) âge m ; from her earliest years dès son plus jeune âge ; a man of your years and experience un homme de votre âge et de votre expérience ;
    2 ( a long time) ( used in exaggeration) but that would take years! ça prendrait une éternité or un siècle! ; it's years since we last met! ça fait un siècle qu'on ne s'est pas vus!
    this job has put years on me! ce travail m'a vieilli de 10 ans! ; losing weight takes years off you perdre du poids, ça rajeunit! ; I gave you the best years of my life je t'ai sacrifié les plus belles années de ma vie.

    Big English-French dictionary > year

  • 5 Haynes, Elwood

    [br]
    b. 14 October 1857 Portland, Indiana, USA
    d. 13 April 1925 Kokomo, Indiana, USA
    [br]
    American inventor ofStellite cobalt-based alloys, early motor-car manufacturer and pioneer in stainless steels.
    [br]
    From his early years, Haynes was a practising Presbyterian and an active prohibitionist. He graduated in 1881 at Worcester, Massachusetts, and a spell of teaching in his home town was interrupted in 1884–5 while he attended the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. In 1886 he became permanently diverted by the discovery of natural gas in Portland. He was soon appointed Superintendent of the local gas undertaking, and then in 1890 he was hired by the Indiana Natural Gas \& Oil Company. While continuing his gas-company employment until 1901, Haynes conducted numerous metallurgical experiments. He also designed an automobile: this led to the establishment of the Haynes- Apperson Company at Kokomo as one of the earliest motor-car makers in North America. From 1905 the firm traded as the Haynes Automobile Company, and before its bankruptcy in 1924 it produced more than 50,000 cars. After 1905, Haynes found the first "Stellite" alloys of cobalt and chromium, and in 1910 he was publicizing the patented material. He then discovered the valuable hardening effect of tungsten, and in 1912 began applying the "improved" Stellite to cutting tools. Three years later, the Haynes Stellite Company was incorporated, with Haynes as President, to work the patents. It was largely from this source that Haynes became a millionaire in 1920. In April 1912, Haynes's attempt to patent the use of chromium with iron to render the product rustless was unsuccessful. However, he re-applied for a US patent on 12 March 1915 and, although this was initially rejected, he persevered and finally obtained recognition of his modified claim. The American Stainless Steel Company licensed the patents of Brearley and Haynes jointly in the USA until the 1930s.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    John Scott Medal 1919 (awarded for useful inventions).
    Bibliography
    Haynes was the author of more than twenty published papers and articles, among them: 1907, "Materials for automobiles", Proceedings of the American Society of Mechanical
    Engineers 29:1,597–606; 1910, "Alloys of nickel and cobalt with chromium", Journal of Industrial Engineering
    and Chemistry 2:397–401; 1912–13, "Alloys of cobalt with chromium and other metals", Transactions of the American Institute of 'Mining Engineers 44:249–55;
    1919–20, "Stellite and stainless steel", Proceedings of the Engineering Society of West
    Pennsylvania 35:467–74.
    1 April 1919, US patent no. 1,299,404 (stainless steel).
    The four US patents worked by the Haynes Stellite Company were: 17 December 1907, patent no. 873,745.
    1 April 1913, patent no. 1,057,423.
    1 April 1913, patent no. 1,057, 828.
    17 August 1915, patent no. 1,150, 113.
    Further Reading
    R.D.Gray, 1979, Alloys and Automobiles. The Life of Elwood Haynes, Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society (a closely documented biography).
    JKA

    Biographical history of technology > Haynes, Elwood

  • 6 year

    {jiə}
    1. година
    astronomical/solar/common/calendar YEAR астрономическа/слънчева/невисокосна/календарна година
    YEAR of Grace/of our Lord лето господне
    all the YEAR round през цялата година
    YEAR in, YEAR out година след година
    in the YEAR dot/one рaзг. много отдавна
    academic/school YEAR учебна година
    financial/fiscal/tax YEAR отчетна/бюджетна година (зaпочвaща в Англия от 1 април)
    to see the new YEAR in the old YEAR out посрещам новата/изпращам старата година
    a YEAR (from) today точно преди/след една година
    a student in his second YEAR, a second-YEAR student студент втора година/курс, второкурсник
    2. pl възраст
    he is 30 YEARs of age/30 YEARs old той e тридесетгодишен
    to be in one's tenth YEAR деветгодишен съм, карам десетата
    from one's earliest YEARs от най-ранна възраст
    young for his YEARs не му личат годините, младее
    (getting on) in YEARs стар
    to show one's YEARs личат ми годините, старея, състарявам се
    to take off/to put on YEARs on someone подмладявам/състарявам някого
    a man of YEARs възрастен/стар човек
    3. годишнина на периодично издание
    * * *
    {jiъ} n 1. година; astronomical/solar/ common/calendar year астроно
    * * *
    n година;year; n 1. година; astronomical/solar/ common/calendar year астрономическа/слънчева/невисокосна
    * * *
    1. (getting on) in years стар 2. a man of years възрастен/стар човек 3. a student in his second year, a second-year student студент втора година/курс, второкурсник 4. a year (from) today точно преди/след една година 5. academic/school year учебна година 6. all the year round през цялата година 7. astronomical/solar/common/calendar year астрономическа/слънчева/невисокосна/календарна година 8. financial/fiscal/tax year отчетна/бюджетна година (зaпочвaща в Англия от 1 април) 9. from one's earliest years от най-ранна възраст 10. he is 30 years of age/30 years old той e тридесетгодишен 11. in the year dot/one рaзг. много отдавна 12. pl възраст 13. to be in one's tenth year деветгодишен съм, карам десетата 14. to see the new year in the old year out посрещам новата/изпращам старата година 15. to show one's years личат ми годините, старея, състарявам се 16. to take off/to put on years on someone подмладявам/състарявам някого 17. year in, year out година след година 18. year of grace/of our lord лето господне 19. young for his years не му личат годините, младее 20. година 21. годишнина на периодично издание
    * * *
    year[jə:, jiə] n 1. година; astronomical ( solar, leap, common, calendar) \year астрономическа (слънчева, високосна, невисокосна, календарна) година; \year of Grace ( of our Lord) лето Господне; in this \year of grace ирон. в нашите блажени времена; New Y.'s Day Нова година, първи януари; to see the new \year in посрещам новата година; to see the old \year out изпращам старата година; for donkey's \years, since ( from) the \year dot от памтивека; 500 a \year 500 лири на година (годишно); once a \year (по) веднъж в годината; from \year to \year, \year by \year с всяка измината година, от година на година; \year in \year out през цялата година, непрекъснато, целогодишно; by the \year за една година (за наемане и пр.); he is in his twentieth \year той кара двадесет години; a student in his third \year студент трети курс; a five-\year plan петгодишен план; twelve \years' labour дванадесетгодишен труд; small \years детски години; tender \years млади години, младини; \years of discretion възрастта, от която човек се смята отговорен за своите постъпки (в Англия - 14 години); for \years от години; beyond o.'s \years не за годините си; \years (and \years) цяла вечност; to advance ( get on) in \years влизам в години, остарявам; to show o.'s \years личат ми годините, старея; to wear o.'s \years well не ми личат годините, младея; to put \years on s.o. карам (правя) някого да изглежда по-стар, състарявам; to take \years off s.o. карам (правя) да изглежда по-млад, подмладявам; 2. годишнина (на периодично издание); a \year and a day цяла година.

    English-Bulgarian dictionary > year

  • 7 early

    'ə:li
    1. adverb
    1) (near the beginning (of a period of time etc): early in my life; early in the afternoon.) en los inicios, al principio; pronto; temprano
    2) (sooner than others; sooner than usual; sooner than expected or than the appointed time: He arrived early; She came an hour early.) temprano

    2. adjective
    1) (belonging to, or happening, near the beginning of a period of time etc: early morning; in the early part of the century.) temprano
    2) (belonging to the first stages of development: early musical instruments.) antiguo; los primeros; primitivo
    3) (happening etc sooner than usual or than expected: the baby's early arrival; It's too early to get up yet.) temprano
    4) (prompt: I hope for an early reply to my letter.) pronto
    - early bird
    early adj adv temprano / pronto
    do you usually get up early? ¿sueles levantarte temprano?
    El comparativo de early se escribe earlier; el superlativo se escribe earliest
    tr['ɜːlɪ]
    adjective (comp earlier, superl earliest)
    1 (before expected) temprano,-a, pronto
    2 (initial) primero,-a
    what are your earliest memories? ¿cuáles son tus primeros recuerdos?
    1 (before expected) temprano, pronto; (soon) pronto
    2 (near beginning) temprano
    early in the morning a primera hora de la mañana, por la mañana temprano
    3 (in good time) con tiempo, con anticipación
    \
    SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL
    at the earliest como muy pronto
    earlier on antes
    it's still early days aún es pronto
    at your earliest convenience con la mayor brevedad
    the early bird catches the worm a quien madruga Dios le ayuda
    to have an early night acostarse pronto
    to make an early start salir temprano
    early bird / early riser madrugador,-ra
    early man el hombre nombre masculino primitivo
    early retirement jubilación nombre femenino anticipada
    early warning system sistema de alerta roja
    the early hours / the early morning la madrugada
    early ['ərli] adv, earlier ; - est : temprano, pronto
    he arrived early: llegó temprano
    as early as possible: lo más pronto posible, cuanto antes
    ten minutes early: diez minutos de adelanto
    early adj, earlier ; - est
    the early stages: las primeras etapas
    in early May: a principios de mayo
    2) (referring to antiquity) : primitivo, antiguo
    early man: el hombre primitivo
    early painting: la pintura antigua
    3) (referring to a designated time) : temprano, antes de la hora, prematuro
    he was early: llegó temprano
    early fruit: frutas tempraneras
    an early death: una muerte prematura
    adj.
    adelantado, -a adj.
    primero, -a adj.
    primitivo, -a adj.
    pronto, -a adj.
    tempranero, -a adj.
    temprano, -a adj.
    adv.
    al principio adv.
    temprano adv.

    I 'ɜːrli, 'ɜːli
    adjective -lier, -liest
    1) ( before expected time) <arrival/elections> anticipado

    to be early\<\<person\>\> llegar* temprano; \<\<baby\>\> adelantarse

    the bus was earlyel autobús pasó (or salió etc) antes de la hora

    2)

    to have an early night/lunch — acostarse*/comer temprano

    early retirementjubilación f anticipada

    b) <crop/variety> temprano, tempranero

    in the early hours of the morning — en las primeras horas de la mañana, de madrugada

    in early Junea principios or a comienzos de junio

    from an early age — desde pequeño, desde temprana edad (liter)

    5) ( in near future) pronto

    at the earliest possible momentlo antes or lo más pronto posible


    II
    adverb -lier, -liest
    1) ( before expected time) temprano
    2) ( before usual time) temprano, pronto (Esp)
    3) ( long ago)

    it was known as early as 200 BC — ya se sabía en el año 200 A.C

    early in the morning/afternoon — por la mañana/tarde temprano

    early in the week/year — a principios de semana/año

    5) ( soon) pronto
    ['ɜːlɪ] (compar earlier) (superl earliest)
    1. ADJ
    1) (=before appointed time)

    to be early — llegar temprano or pronto

    you're early! — ¡llegas temprano or pronto!

    I was half an hour early for the meeting — llegué a la reunión con media hora de adelanto, llegué a la reunión media hora antes de que empezase

    2) (=before usual time) [death, menopause] prematuro, temprano

    early frostsheladas fpl prematuras or tempranas

    to have an early lunch — almorzar temprano, comer temprano

    she was pressurized into an early marriagela presionaron para que se casase muy joven

    to have an early nightacostarse temprano

    early retirementjubilación f anticipada

    it was an early summer — el verano se había adelantado, el verano había llegado pronto

    3) (=soon) pronto

    at your earliest convenience — (Comm) con la mayor brevedad posible

    4) (=towards beginning)

    we need two seats on an early flightnecesitamos dos plazas en un vuelo que salga por la mañana temprano or un vuelo a primera hora de la mañana

    to get up at an early hour — levantarse temprano, levantarse de madrugada

    it was early in the morning — era muy de mañana, era muy temprano

    to be an early riserser madrugador

    to get off to or make an early startsalir temprano

    b) [period, process]

    the early days/months/years of sth — los primeros días/meses/años de algo

    in the early 60s/70s — a principios de los 60/70

    she's in her early forties/seventies — tiene poco más de cuarenta/setenta años, tiene cuarenta/setenta y pocos (años)

    in early January/March — a principios de enero/marzo

    it's still early (in process) es pronto todavía

    at an early agea una edad temprana

    from an early age — desde pequeño, desde una edad temprana frm

    his early career/ childhood — los primeros años de su carrera/infancia

    it was early eveningera media tarde

    the disease is hard to detect in its early stageses difícil detectar la enfermedad en sus fases iniciales

    he's in his early teenstendrá unos trece o catorce años

    his early youthsu primera juventud

    it's early days yet —

    we may have to modify the plans, but it's early days yet — (esp Brit) quizás tengamos que modificar los planes, pero aún es pronto para saberlo

    5) (=first) [man, Church] primitivo; [settlers, pioneers, Christians] primer
    6) (Hort) [fruit, vegetable, crop] temprano
    2. ADV
    1) (=ahead of time) [arrive, leave, get up, go to bed] temprano, pronto

    he arrived ten minutes early — llegó diez minutos antes de la hora, llegó con diez minutos de anticipación

    - early to bed, early to rise
    bright 2.
    2) (=soon) pronto

    as early as possible — lo más pronto posible, cuanto antes

    3) (=towards beginning of sth)
    a) (in morning) temprano

    you get up too early — te levantas demasiado temprano, madrugas demasiado

    b) (in period, process)

    early in sth, early in the afternoon — a primera hora de la tarde

    early last century — a principios del siglo pasado

    early next year — a principios del año que viene

    early on in his career — en los primeros años de su carrera

    earlier on — anteriormente, antes

    early this month — a principios de (este) mes

    3.
    CPD

    early bird * Nmadrugador(a) m / f

    early closing N (also: early-closing day) (Brit) día en que muchas tiendas solo abren por la mañana

    early warning radar system Nsistema m de radar de alerta temprana

    early warning system Nsistema m de alarma temprana or precoz, sistema m de alerta temprana or precoz

    * * *

    I ['ɜːrli, 'ɜːli]
    adjective -lier, -liest
    1) ( before expected time) <arrival/elections> anticipado

    to be early\<\<person\>\> llegar* temprano; \<\<baby\>\> adelantarse

    the bus was earlyel autobús pasó (or salió etc) antes de la hora

    2)

    to have an early night/lunch — acostarse*/comer temprano

    early retirementjubilación f anticipada

    b) <crop/variety> temprano, tempranero

    in the early hours of the morning — en las primeras horas de la mañana, de madrugada

    in early Junea principios or a comienzos de junio

    from an early age — desde pequeño, desde temprana edad (liter)

    5) ( in near future) pronto

    at the earliest possible momentlo antes or lo más pronto posible


    II
    adverb -lier, -liest
    1) ( before expected time) temprano
    2) ( before usual time) temprano, pronto (Esp)
    3) ( long ago)

    it was known as early as 200 BC — ya se sabía en el año 200 A.C

    early in the morning/afternoon — por la mañana/tarde temprano

    early in the week/year — a principios de semana/año

    5) ( soon) pronto

    English-spanish dictionary > early

  • 8 Stephenson, George

    [br]
    b. 9 June 1781 Wylam, Northumberland, England
    d. 12 August 1848 Tapton House, Chesterfield, England
    [br]
    English engineer, "the father of railways".
    [br]
    George Stephenson was the son of the fireman of the pumping engine at Wylam colliery, and horses drew wagons of coal along the wooden rails of the Wylam wagonway past the house in which he was born and spent his earliest childhood. While still a child he worked as a cowherd, but soon moved to working at coal pits. At 17 years of age he showed sufficient mechanical talent to be placed in charge of a new pumping engine, and had already achieved a job more responsible than that of his father. Despite his position he was still illiterate, although he subsequently learned to read and write. He was largely self-educated.
    In 1801 he was appointed Brakesman of the winding engine at Black Callerton pit, with responsibility for lowering the miners safely to their work. Then, about two years later, he became Brakesman of a new winding engine erected by Robert Hawthorn at Willington Quay on the Tyne. Returning collier brigs discharged ballast into wagons and the engine drew the wagons up an inclined plane to the top of "Ballast Hill" for their contents to be tipped; this was one of the earliest applications of steam power to transport, other than experimentally.
    In 1804 Stephenson moved to West Moor pit, Killingworth, again as Brakesman. In 1811 he demonstrated his mechanical skill by successfully modifying a new and unsatisfactory atmospheric engine, a task that had defeated the efforts of others, to enable it to pump a drowned pit clear of water. The following year he was appointed Enginewright at Killingworth, in charge of the machinery in all the collieries of the "Grand Allies", the prominent coal-owning families of Wortley, Liddell and Bowes, with authorization also to work for others. He built many stationary engines and he closely examined locomotives of John Blenkinsop's type on the Kenton \& Coxlodge wagonway, as well as those of William Hedley at Wylam.
    It was in 1813 that Sir Thomas Liddell requested George Stephenson to build a steam locomotive for the Killingworth wagonway: Blucher made its first trial run on 25 July 1814 and was based on Blenkinsop's locomotives, although it lacked their rack-and-pinion drive. George Stephenson is credited with building the first locomotive both to run on edge rails and be driven by adhesion, an arrangement that has been the conventional one ever since. Yet Blucher was far from perfect and over the next few years, while other engineers ignored the steam locomotive, Stephenson built a succession of them, each an improvement on the last.
    During this period many lives were lost in coalmines from explosions of gas ignited by miners' lamps. By observation and experiment (sometimes at great personal risk) Stephenson invented a satisfactory safety lamp, working independently of the noted scientist Sir Humphry Davy who also invented such a lamp around the same time.
    In 1817 George Stephenson designed his first locomotive for an outside customer, the Kilmarnock \& Troon Railway, and in 1819 he laid out the Hetton Colliery Railway in County Durham, for which his brother Robert was Resident Engineer. This was the first railway to be worked entirely without animal traction: it used inclined planes with stationary engines, self-acting inclined planes powered by gravity, and locomotives.
    On 19 April 1821 Stephenson was introduced to Edward Pease, one of the main promoters of the Stockton \& Darlington Railway (S \& DR), which by coincidence received its Act of Parliament the same day. George Stephenson carried out a further survey, to improve the proposed line, and in this he was assisted by his 18-year-old son, Robert Stephenson, whom he had ensured received the theoretical education which he himself lacked. It is doubtful whether either could have succeeded without the other; together they were to make the steam railway practicable.
    At George Stephenson's instance, much of the S \& DR was laid with wrought-iron rails recently developed by John Birkinshaw at Bedlington Ironworks, Morpeth. These were longer than cast-iron rails and were not brittle: they made a track well suited for locomotives. In June 1823 George and Robert Stephenson, with other partners, founded a firm in Newcastle upon Tyne to build locomotives and rolling stock and to do general engineering work: after its Managing Partner, the firm was called Robert Stephenson \& Co.
    In 1824 the promoters of the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway (L \& MR) invited George Stephenson to resurvey their proposed line in order to reduce opposition to it. William James, a wealthy land agent who had become a visionary protagonist of a national railway network and had seen Stephenson's locomotives at Killingworth, had promoted the L \& MR with some merchants of Liverpool and had carried out the first survey; however, he overreached himself in business and, shortly after the invitation to Stephenson, became bankrupt. In his own survey, however, George Stephenson lacked the assistance of his son Robert, who had left for South America, and he delegated much of the detailed work to incompetent assistants. During a devastating Parliamentary examination in the spring of 1825, much of his survey was shown to be seriously inaccurate and the L \& MR's application for an Act of Parliament was refused. The railway's promoters discharged Stephenson and had their line surveyed yet again, by C.B. Vignoles.
    The Stockton \& Darlington Railway was, however, triumphantly opened in the presence of vast crowds in September 1825, with Stephenson himself driving the locomotive Locomotion, which had been built at Robert Stephenson \& Co.'s Newcastle works. Once the railway was at work, horse-drawn and gravity-powered traffic shared the line with locomotives: in 1828 Stephenson invented the horse dandy, a wagon at the back of a train in which a horse could travel over the gravity-operated stretches, instead of trotting behind.
    Meanwhile, in May 1826, the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway had successfully obtained its Act of Parliament. Stephenson was appointed Engineer in June, and since he and Vignoles proved incompatible the latter left early in 1827. The railway was built by Stephenson and his staff, using direct labour. A considerable controversy arose c. 1828 over the motive power to be used: the traffic anticipated was too great for horses, but the performance of the reciprocal system of cable haulage developed by Benjamin Thompson appeared in many respects superior to that of contemporary locomotives. The company instituted a prize competition for a better locomotive and the Rainhill Trials were held in October 1829.
    Robert Stephenson had been working on improved locomotive designs since his return from America in 1827, but it was the L \& MR's Treasurer, Henry Booth, who suggested the multi-tubular boiler to George Stephenson. This was incorporated into a locomotive built by Robert Stephenson for the trials: Rocket was entered by the three men in partnership. The other principal entrants were Novelty, entered by John Braithwaite and John Ericsson, and Sans Pareil, entered by Timothy Hackworth, but only Rocket, driven by George Stephenson, met all the organizers' demands; indeed, it far surpassed them and demonstrated the practicability of the long-distance steam railway. With the opening of the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway in 1830, the age of railways began.
    Stephenson was active in many aspects. He advised on the construction of the Belgian State Railway, of which the Brussels-Malines section, opened in 1835, was the first all-steam railway on the European continent. In England, proposals to link the L \& MR with the Midlands had culminated in an Act of Parliament for the Grand Junction Railway in 1833: this was to run from Warrington, which was already linked to the L \& MR, to Birmingham. George Stephenson had been in charge of the surveys, and for the railway's construction he and J.U. Rastrick were initially Principal Engineers, with Stephenson's former pupil Joseph Locke under them; by 1835 both Stephenson and Rastrick had withdrawn and Locke was Engineer-in-Chief. Stephenson remained much in demand elsewhere: he was particularly associated with the construction of the North Midland Railway (Derby to Leeds) and related lines. He was active in many other places and carried out, for instance, preliminary surveys for the Chester \& Holyhead and Newcastle \& Berwick Railways, which were important links in the lines of communication between London and, respectively, Dublin and Edinburgh.
    He eventually retired to Tapton House, Chesterfield, overlooking the North Midland. A man who was self-made (with great success) against colossal odds, he was ever reluctant, regrettably, to give others their due credit, although in retirement, immensely wealthy and full of honour, he was still able to mingle with people of all ranks.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers, on its formation in 1847. Order of Leopold (Belgium) 1835. Stephenson refused both a knighthood and Fellowship of the Royal Society.
    Bibliography
    1815, jointly with Ralph Dodd, British patent no. 3,887 (locomotive drive by connecting rods directly to the wheels).
    1817, jointly with William Losh, British patent no. 4,067 (steam springs for locomotives, and improvements to track).
    Further Reading
    L.T.C.Rolt, 1960, George and Robert Stephenson, Longman (the best modern biography; includes a bibliography).
    S.Smiles, 1874, The Lives of George and Robert Stephenson, rev. edn, London (although sycophantic, this is probably the best nineteenthcentury biography).
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Stephenson, George

  • 9 run

    1. I
    1) set off running пуститься бежать; run and fetch the doctor сбегай за врачом; when I called he came running когда я позвал его, он тут же прибежал /примчался/; the enemy ran противник бежал; he dropped his gun and ran он бросил ружье и пустился наутек; I must run мне надо бежать /срочно идти/
    2) a ball (a sledge, etc.) runs мяч и т.д. катится; a wheel (a spindle, etc.) runs колесо вращается /вертится/
    3) water (blood, etc.) runs вода и т.д. течет /льется/; the pus was running сочился гной; the ice cream (the jelly, the coating, etc.) is beginning to run мороженое и т.д. потекло; the candle ran свеча оплыла; the butter ran масло растаяло; this ink does not run эти чернила не расплываются; colours are guaranteed not to run прочность красок гарантируется; I'm afraid the colours ran when I washed that skirt к сожалению, юбка в стирке полиняла; wash this towel separately the dye runs стирай это полотенце отдельно run оно линяет || let water run спустить воду
    4) the tap (the barrel, the vessel, the kettle, etc.) runs кран и т.д. течет; who has left the tap running? кто оставил кран открытым /не закрыл кран/?; this pen runs ручка течет /сажает кляксы/; his nose is running у него течет из носу, у него насморк; his eyes are running у него слезятся глаза; we laughed till our eyes ran мы смеялись до слез; an ulcer (a wound, a sore, etc.) that runs язва и т.д., которая гноится
    5) trains (buses, boats, ships, etc.) run поезда и т.д. ходят; trams are not running трамваи не ходят
    6) a motor (a machine, the works, etc.) runs мотор и т.д. работает; the lift is not running лифт не работает; leave the engine running не выключай мотор; the plant has ceased running завод встал /остановился/; the clock (the watch) runs часы идут /ходят/
    7) time runs время летит /мчится/
    8) several days running несколько дней подряд; he hit the target seven times running он попал в цель семь раз подряд
    9) the agreement (the contract, the lease of the house, etc.) has two more years to run срок соглашения и т.д. действует еще два года
    10) my stocking has run у меня на чулке спустилась петля; stockings guaranteed not to run чулки с неспускающимися петлями
    2. II
    1) run in some manner run run fast (slowly, noiselessly, etc.) бегать быстро и т.д.; the horse runs well лошадь хорошо бежит /идет/, у лошади хороший ход; run somewhere run about бегать повсюду, суетиться, сновать взад и вперед; let the dogs run about пусть собаки побегают /порезвятся/; the children are running about дети играют /резвятся/; chickens run about as soon as they are out of the shell стоит только цыплятам вылупиться, как они начинают бегать; run up /upstairs/ (down/downstairs/) бегать вверх (вниз) [по лестнице]; run upstairs and get the iodine сбегай наверх и принеси йод; run at some time I must run now мне пора бежать /уходить/
    2) run in some manner the river runs quietly (smoothly, sluggishly, etc.) река течет спокойно и т.д.; the current is running strong сейчас сильное течение; the tide is running strong вода сильно поднимается (при приливе), blood ran in torrents кровь лилась ручьями; his ideas ran freely его мысли текли свободно; run somewhere the water has run out вся вода вытекла
    3) run at some time these pens (such taps, etc.) often run эти ручки и т.д. часто текут
    4) run at some time these trains (the steamers, the buses, etc.) run daily /every day/ (every ten minutes, etc.) эти поезда и т.д. ходят ежедневно и т.д.; the traffic runs day and night движение на улице не прекращается ни днем ни ночью; the 9 o'clock train is not running today девятичасовой поезд сегодня отменен /не ходит/
    5) run in some manner an engine (a sewing-machine, etc.) runs smoothly (well, badly, efficiently, etc.) мотор и т.д. работает ритмично и т.д.; the саг is running nicely машина идет хорошо; the printing-press doesn't run properly печатный станок плохо работает; the drawer doesn't run easily ящик открывается /выдвигается/ с трудом; how does your new watch runrun? как идут ваши новые часы?
    7) run somewhere the road (the boundary, the forest, etc.) runs east (north and south, up, etc.) дорога и т.д. идет /тянется/ на восток и т.д.; the river runs south река течет на юг; new streets will run here здесь пройдут /будут проложены/ новые улицы
    8) run in some manner months (years, days, etc.) run fast быстро проходит месяц за месяцем; time runs fast время летит быстро; his life runs smoothly (quietly, etc.) жизнь его течет спокойно /гладко/ и т.д.; how time runs! как бежит /летит/ время!
    9) run for some time this law (this bill) will run much longer этот закон (этот билль) будет действовать значительно дольше; run at /in/ some place regions (places, offices, etc.) where these rules do not run районы и т.д., где не действуют эти правила /на которые не распространяются эти правила/; this writ doesn't run here здесь это постановление /распоряжение/ не действует / не имеет силы/
    10) run in some manner the letter (the note, the clause, the contract, etc.) ran thus... письмо и т.д. гласило следующее...; so the story ran вот что говорилось в рассказе; this is how the tune runs вот как звучит эта мелодия; I don't remember how the first line runs я не помню первую строку
    11) run somewhere the ship /the boat/ ran aground корабль сел на мель; the boat ran ashore лодка врезалась в берег
    12) run at some time silk stockings often (sometimes) run на шелковых чулках часто (иногда) спускаются петли; run in some manner these stockings run easily на этих чулках очень легко спускаются петли; эти чулки быстро рвутся
    13) run in some manner all my arrangements ran smoothly все шло, как было обусловлено; is everything running well in your office? на работе у вас все в порядке?, дела на работе идут нормально?
    3. III
    1) run smth. run a mile (six miles. etc.) пробежать милю и т.д., участвовать в беге на одну милю и т.д.; run a distance бежать на какую-л. дистанцию; run a race участвовать в забеге /в скачках/; the children ran races дети бегали наперегонки
    2) run smth. run errands /messages/ быть посыльным; быть на посылках; I want you to run an errand я хочу послать тебя с поручением
    3) run smb., smth. run a fox (a hare, a stag, etc.) гнать /преследовать лису/ и т.д.; run a false scent идти по ложному следу; run cattle (horses, etc.) гнать скот и т.д.; run logs сплавлять /гнать/ лес /бревна/
    4) run smth. run extra (special) trains пускать дополнительные (специальные) поезда
    5) run smth. run cargoes (a cargo of coffee, etc.) перевозить /транспортировать/ грузы и т.д.; run arms (drugs, liquor, narcotics. etc.) нелегально /контрабандой/ ввозить в страну оружие и т.д.
    6) run smth., smb. run a blockade прорвать /прорваться через/ блокаду; run the rapids пройти /преодолеть/ пороги; run the guard проскользнуть /пройти незамеченным/ мимо охраны
    7) run smth. run a саг (a bus, a taxi, etc.) водить машину и т.д.; he runs a blue Volga он ездит на голубой "Волге"; run the engine запускать мотор /двигатель/; run a tractor (a sewing-machine, a ferry, etc.) работать на тракторе и т.д.; can you run a washing-machine? вы умеете обращаться со стиральной машиной?; run a bath наполнить ванну
    10) run some distance the river (the road, etc.) run 200 miles река (дорога и т.д.) тянется на 200 миль
    11) || run its course идти своим чередом; the illness must run its course болезнь должна идти своим ходом; the war was running its course война все продолжалась
    12) run smth. run a business (a bus company, a factory, etc.) управлять предприятием и т.д.; run a theatre (a newspaper, a youth club, etc.) руководить театром и т.д.; run a shop (a hotel, etc.) заведовать магазином и т.д.; run a competition (a match, a race, etc.) проводить соревнования и т.д.; run the external affairs of a country направлять внешнюю политику государства, руководить внешней политикой страны; run a new system of payment осуществлять /внедрять/ новую систему оплаты; run smb.'s house вести чье-л. хозяйство; she runs the household она ведет хозяйство; весь дом на ней; run the show cool. заправлять чем-л.; who is running the show? кто здесь главный?; run one's life (one's fortune) самому строить свою жизнь (свое счастье); run experiments ставить /проводить/ опыты; run a blood test сделать анализ крови
    13) run smb. run a candidate выставлять чью-л. кандидатуру, выдвигать кого-л. кандидатом
    14) semiaux run smth. run debts залезать в /делать/ долги; run a temperature температурить
    15) id run smth. run a risk (the risk of discovery, the risk of losing one's job, a danger, the danger of being fired, the chance of being suspect of theft, etc.) подвергаться риску и т.д.; run chances положиться на счастье
    4. IV
    1) run smth. т some time this bus (a car, ale.) runs 40 miles (an hour, etc.) автобус и т.д. делает сорок миль в час и т.д.; we ran 20 knots a day мы делали двадцать узлов в день
    2) run smb. in some manner run smb. (too) fast гнать кого-л. (очень) быстро; run smb. somewhere run a horse up and down прохаживать лошадь [взад и вперед]; run the gun out выкапывать орудие; run the car downhill (uphill) ехать на машине с горы (в гору)
    3) run smth. at some time run a bus every three minutes отправлять автобус каждые три минуты; run cars day and night держать машины на линии круглые сутки, обеспечивать работу у машин круглосуточно
    4) run smb. somewhere run smb. home отвозить кого-л. домой; run smb. out выгнать кого-л.
    5) run smth. for (in) some time run the machine (the press, etc.) 24 hours a day работать на машине и т.д. двадцать четыре часа в сутки /круглосуточно/; run 500 barrels of oil daily (1000 bottles of milk a day, etc.) выпускать 500 бочек масла и т.д. в день
    6) run smth. at some time run a film often (twice a week, six times, etc.) демонстрировать /показывать/ фильм часто и т.д.; I'll run the first part of the film through again я прокручу еще раз первую часть фильма
    7) run smth. at some time interviews (oral examinations, the programme, etc.) ran twenty minutes behind интервью и т.д. началось на двадцать минут позже; the rehearsal (the meeting, etc.) can ten minutes earlier репетиция и т.д. началась на десять минут раньше
    8) run smth. somewhere run a ship aground посадить корабль на мель; run a boat (a ship) ashore направить лодку корабль) к берегу
    5. V
    1) run smb. some distance run a fox (a hare, etc.) five miles (a long distance, the length of the field, etc.) преследовать /гнать/ лису и т.д. пять миль и т.д.
    2) run smb. some sum of money the dress (this picture, this boat, the new house, this car, etc.) will run you a considerable sum of money это платье и т.д. будет вам дорого стоить
    6. VI
    semiaux run smb. to some state run smb. breathless гонять кого-л. до изнеможения || run smb. close (hard) не уступать кому-л., быть чьим-л. опасным противником /соперником/; run smth. close быть почти равным чему-л.; run it fine иметь (времени, денег) в обрез
    7. XI
    1) be run after she is much run after a) с ней многие ищут знакомства; б) за ней многие ухаживают; I hate to feel that I am being run after терпеть не могу, когда за мной бегают
    2) || be run off one's feet coll. сбиться с ног; I was run off my feet that day я набегался за день
    3) be run into smth. molten metal is run into moulds расплавленный металл разливают в формы
    4) be run at some time sleepingcars (express trains, these boats, etc.) are run twice a week (on week days, etc.) поезда со спальными вагонами и т.д. ходят два раза в неделю и т.д.; be run somewhere these trains are run between X and Y эти поезда курсируют между X и Y
    5) be run on smth. trains (buses, etc.) are run on electricity (on coal, on steam, etc.) поезда и т.д. работают на электричестве и т.д.; be run at smth. be run at some cost обходиться в определенную сумму (об эксплуатации машины и т.п.); this car can be run at a small cost расходы на эксплуатацию этой машины очень невелика
    6) be run on smth. this book is to be run on good paper эта книга будет издана на хорошей бумаге
    7) be run through he was run through and through ему было нанесено множество колотых ран; be run through by smth. he was run through by a bayonet его пронзили штыком, его закололи штыком
    8) be run at some time the race (the match, the competition, etc.) will be run tomorrow (next week, etc.) скачки и т.д. состоятся /будут проводиться/ завтра и т.д.; the cup will be run for today сегодня состоятся соревнования на кубок /состоится розыгрыш кубка/; be run in some condition the Derby was run in a snowstorm (in rain, etc.) дерби проводилось во время сильного снегопада /вьюги/ и т.д.; be run as (on) smth. this business (it, this scheme, etc.) is run /is being run/ as a commercial enterprise /on a commercial basis/ это дело и т.д. ведется на коммерческой основе; be run by smb. he is (hard) run by his wife (by his secretary, etc.) он под башмаком у своей жены и т.д.; the school is run by a committee школа управляется советом
    8. XIII
    run to do smth. run to catch the train (to meet us, to see what is going on, etc.) бежать /торопиться/, чтобы успеть на писал и т.д.; she ran to help us она бросилась нам на помощь
    9. XV
    1) run in some state run free /loose/ бегать на свободе; let the dog run loose дай собаке побегать на воле
    2) run in some order run second (third, etc.) a) бежать вторым и т.д.; б) идти /прийти/ вторым и т.д.; my horse ran last моя лошадь пришла последней /заняла последнее место/
    3) abs run parallel идти /бежать/ параллельно /бок о бок/ || run foul of smth. налететь на что-л.; run foul of a hidden reef налететь на скрытый риф; run foul of the law нарушить закон; run foul of smb. вызвать чье-л. недовольство; the ships ran foul of each other корабли столкнулись [в море]
    4) semiaux run to some state run low /short/ a) понижаться, опускаться; б) иссякать; our provisions /our supplies, our stock, our stores /are running low /short/ наши запасы кончаются /на исходе/; I am running short of time у меня остается мало времени; run dry высыхать, пересыхать; the well ran dry колодец высох; the river ran dry река пересохла; my imagination ran dry моя фантазия иссякла, мое воображение истощилось; run cold похолодеть; my blood ran cold у меня кровь застыла в жилах; run hot нагреваться; wait till the water runs hot at the tap подожди, пока из крана пойдет горячая вода; run clear быть чистым; rivers run clear вода в реках частая; run high a) подниматься; б) возрастать; the sea runs high море волнуется; the waves run high волны вздымаются; the tide runs high /strong/ прилив нарастает, вода прибывает; feelings /passions/ run high страсти бушуют; the debates ran high споры разгорелись; the prices run high цены растут; run strong набирать силу; run mad сходить с ума; run wild не знать удержу; she lets her children run wild она оставляет детей без присмотра; the garden ran wild сад запущен; we are letting the flowers run wild за цветами у нас никто не ухаживает; his imagination ran wild у него разыгралось воображение; run a certain size apples (pears, potatoes, etc.) run big (small, etc.) this year яблоки и т.д. в этом году крупные и т.д.
    10. XVI
    1) run about (across, around, up, down, in, etc.) smth. run about the streets (about the fields, about the garden, in the pastures, in the yard, etc.) бегать по улицам и т.д.; run across the road (across the street, across the square, etc.) перебегать дорогу и т.д.; run down the road (down the street, down the hill, down the path, down the mountain, down the lane, etc.) бежать вниз по дороге и т.д.; run along the wall (along the bank of the river, etc.) бежать вдоль стены и т.д.; run up the path (up the mountain, etc.) бежать вверх по тропинке и т.д.; run out of the house (out of the room, etc.) выбежать из дома и т.д.; run into a room вбежать в комнату; run through the garden (through the yard, through the village, etc.) пробегать через сад и т.д.; every morning he ran around the garden to keep in condition каждое утро он бегал по саду, чтобы быть в форме; run to /towards/ smth., smb. run towards the door (to the coming visitors, to her son, etc.) подбежать /броситься/ к двери и т.д.; run before (behind, past, by, etc.) smb. run before the crowd (behind the marchers, by her past the waiting people, etc.) бежать впереди толпы и т.д.; he ran past her without saying "hello" он пробежал мимо и даже не поздоровался; run before the wind идти по ветру
    2) run after smb., smth. run after the burglar (after the thief, after a rabbit, etc.) гнаться за грабителем и т.д.; don't bother running after the bus, you'll never catch it какой толк бежать за автобусом, все равно его не догонишь; run after him, he's left his wallet behind догони его, он забыл свой бумажник; who's running after you? кто за вами гонится?; I can't keep running after you all day! coll. я не могу бегать за тобой весь день!; run from smth., smb. run from the village (from the enemy, from danger, etc.) бежать из деревни и т.д.; run to (for) smth., smb. run to smb.'s help поспешить кому-л. на помощь; run to the post-office сбегать на почту; run for the doctor (for the police, etc.) сбегать за врачом и т.д.; run for a prize бежать на приз; run to smb. for help бежать к кому-л. за помощью; run to his mother (to his parents, etc.) with every little problem бегать к матери и т.д. с каждой мелочью; run in smth. run in a race участвовать в забеге /в соревнованиях по бегу/ || run for one's life colt. бежать во весь дух; run for it coll, бежать что есть мочи
    3) run after smb. coll. she runs after every good-looking man in the village она бегает за каждым красивым парнем в деревне; you shouldn't run after him не надо вешаться ему на шею, run after the great увлекаться великими людьми: run after smth. coll. he runs after the country club set он стремится попасть в круг членов загородного клуба; run after new theories увлекаться новыми веяниями
    4) run along (over, past, on, etc.) smth. run along the highway (along the streets, over the hill, over slippery roads, through the city, etc.) двигаться /мчаться, нестись/ по шоссе и т.д.; cars run along these roads по этим дорогам движутся автомобили; sledges run well over frozen snow сани хорошо скользят по мерзлому снегу, the train ran past the signal поезд проскочил светофор; the ball ran past the hole шарик прокатился мимо лунки; the ball ran over the curb and into the street мяч перекатился через обочину и попал /выкатился/ на дорогу; run on snow (on macadam roads, etc.) передвигаться /катиться, скользить/ по снегу и т.д.; trains run on rails поезда ходят по рельсам; the table runs on wheels стол передвигается на колесиках; file drawers run on ball bearings каталожные ящики двигаются /выдвигаются, ходят/ на подшипниках; the fire ran along the ground огонь побежал по земле the fire ran through the-building огонь охватил все здание; run at some speed run at a very high speed (at full speed, at 60 miles an hour, etc.) двигаться с очень большой скоростью и т.д. the train ran at an illegal speed поезд шел с превышением предела скорости
    5) run at smb. run at the enemy (на)броситься на врага
    6) run down ( along, into, to, from, at, etc.) smth. run down the wind screen (down the rain-pipe, down the slope, down smb.'s face, down her cheeks,.etc.) катится /стекать/ по ветровому стеклу и т.д.; the rapids run over the rocks на камнях вода образовывает пороги; run over the table (over the floor, etc.) растекаться или рассыпаться по столу и т.д.; wax ran down the burning candle воск оплывал и стекал по горящей свече; the river runs into the ocean (into the sea, etc.) река впадает в океан и т.д.; water is running into the bath в ванну наливается вода; water runs from a tap (from a cistern from a cask, etc.) из крана и т.д. бежит /льётся вода; sweat was running from his forehead (from his face) у него по лбу (по лицу) струился пот; blood ran from a wound (from a cut, etc.) из раны и т.д. потекла кровь; tears ran from her eyes у нее из глаз катились слезы; he is running at the nose (at the mouth) у него течет из носу (изо рта); I felt tile blood running to my head я чувствовал, как кровь бросилась мне в голову; good blood runs in his veins в его жилах течет хорошая кровь; the colours (the dyes) run in the washing при стирке краски линяют; run with smth. run with sweat взмокнуть от пота, обливаться потом; his eyes ran with tears у него глаза наполнились слезами; the floor (the streets, etc.) ran with water (with blood, with wine, etc.) пол и т.д. был залит водой и т.д.; run off smb. water ran off him с него стекала вода id run off smb. as /like/ water off a duck's back = как с гуся вода; her words (scoldings, admonitions, etc.) ran off him like water off a duck's back на все ее слова и т.д. он не обращал ни малейшего внимания
    7) run to (between) smth. a morning train runs to Paris (to the south, to this city, etc.) в Париж и т.д. ходит утренний поезд; trains (boats, buses, etc.) run between the capitals of these countries (between these towns, between London and the coast. etc.) между столицами этих стран и т.д. ходят /курсируют/ поезда и т.д.
    8) run on (off) smth. cars run on gasoline автомобили работают на бензине; the apparatus runs off the mains аппаратура работает от сети
    9) run for some time the play ran for 200 nights (for a year) пьеса выдержала двести спектаклей (шла целый год); the picture runs for 3 hours фильм идет три часа; the interval sometimes runs to as much as half an hour антракт иногда длится полчаса; run at some place the play (the film) is now running at the Lyceum пьеса сейчас идет в театре "Лицеум"
    10) run across ( along, through, over, up, etc.) smth. the road (the path, etc.) runs across the plain (along the river, along the shore, through the wood, over a hill, up the mountain, close to the village, right by my house, at right angles to the highway, etc.) дорога и т.д. проходит по равнине и т.д.; a corridor runs through the house по всей длине дома тянется коридор; shelves run round the walls (round the room) по всем стенам (по всей комнате) идут полки; a fence runs round the house дом обнесен забором: ivy runs all over the wall (up the side of the house, upon other plants, etc.) плющ вьется по всей стене и т.д.; vine.runs over the porch крыльцо увито виноградом; a scar runs across his left cheek через всю его левую щеку проходит шрам; run from smth. to smth. the chain of mountains runs from north to south горная цепь тянется с севера на юг; shelves run from floor to ceiling полки идут от пола до потолка; this road runs from the village to the station эта дорога идет от деревни к станции; run for some distance the river ( the unpaved section, the path, etc.) runs for 200 miles (for eight miles, etc.) река и т.д. тянется на двести миль и т.д.
    11) run in smth. what sizes do these dresses run in? каких размеров бывают в продаже эти платья?; run in certain numbers иметь определенные номера; on this side house numbers run in odd numbers по этой стороне [улицы] идут нечетные номера домов
    12) run over smth. his fingers ran over the strings (over the piano, over the keys, etc.) он пробежал пальцами по струнам и т.д.; run over one's pockets ощупать свой карманы; run over the seams of the boat осмотреть /ощупать/ швы лодки
    13) run down ( over, through, etc.) smth. a cheer ran down the line (down the ranks of spectators) возгласы одобрения /крики ура/ прокатились по строю (по рядам зрителей); a murmur (a whisper) ran through the crowd по толпе пробежал /прокатился/ ропот (шепот); the news ran all over the town новость облетела весь город; rumours ran through the village (through the town, etc.) no деревне и т.д. прошли /разнеслись/ слухи; a thought (an idea, etc.) ran in /through/ his head /his mind/ у него в голове пронеслась /промелькнула/ мысль и т.д.; this idea run-s through the whole book эта идея проходит через /пронизывает/ всю книгу; the song (the old tune, his words, a snatch of their conversation, etc.) kept running in my mind /through my head/ эта песенка и т.д. неотвязно звучала у меня в ушах; his influence runs through every department его влияние чувствуется /ощущается/ во всех отделах; run up /down/ smth. a cold shiver ran up /down/ his spine холодная дрожь пробежала у него по спине; a sharp pain ran up /down/ his arm (his spine, his leg, etc.) он почувствовал острую боль в руке и т.д.
    14) run into smth. days ran into weeks дни складывались в недели; one year ran into the next шел год за годом
    15) run (up)on smth. the talk (the whole argument, etc.) ran on this point (on this subject, upon the past, on this problem, on the matter, on the same event, on the recent occurrence, etc.) разговор и т.д. вертелся вокруг этого вопроса и т.д.; the conversation ran on politics разговор шел о политике; the boy's thoughts /mind/ kept running on the same theme (on food, on the event, etc.) мальчик все время думал об одном и том же и т.д. || run along familiar lines касаться привычных тем, думать или говорить традиционно
    16) run for some time the law (the contract, the lease, etc.) runs for 3 years этот закон и т.д. имеет /сохраняет/ силу в течение трех лет; your interest runs from January 1st to December 31 вам начисляются проценты с первого января по тридцать первое декабря
    17) run out of smth. we have run out of sugar (out of provisions, out of food, out of petrol, out of tobacco, out of bread, etc.) у нас кончился сахар и т.д.
    18) run over (through, down) smth. run over one's notes (over these proofs, over the story, through one's mail, through the main points of the subject, down the list of names, etc.) просмотреть /пробежать глазами/ свои заметки и т.д.; her eyes ran over the room она окинула комнату беглым взглядом; his eyes ran down the front row and stopped suddenly он глазами пробежал по первому ряду, и вдруг его взгляд на ком-то задержался; don't run through your work so fast не делайте свою работу в спешке
    19) run over/through/ smth. just run over /through/ my lines with me before the rehearsal begins повторите со мной роль до начала репетиции; we'll run over that song again мы еще раз пропоем эту песенку; she ran over his good points она перечислила его достоинства; run through the scene оживить в своей памяти эту сцену
    20) run in (on, etc.) smth. the account (the story, the article, etc.) ran in all the papers сообщение и т.д. было напечатано /опубликовано/ во всех газетах; this item ran under a sensational heading эта информация была напечатана под сенсационным заголовком; political cartoons run on the editorial page политические карикатуры печатаются /помещаются/ на той же полосе, где и передовая статья || run in certain words быть сформулированным определённым образом; the order ran in these words приказ был сформулирован именно следующими словами
    21) run into /through /smth. the book (his novel, etc.) ran into /through/ 5 editions (10 impressions, thousands of copies, etc.) эта книга выдержала пять изданий и т.д.
    22) run through smth. run through a fortune (through the money he won, through his winnings, etc.) растратить /растранжирить/ наследство и т.д.; he ran through his father's money very quickly он очень быстро промотал отцовские деньги; money runs through his fingers [like water through a sieve], he runs through money quickly деньги у него не задерживаются; we run through a lot of sugar in a week мы расходуем много сахара за неделю
    23) run in (to) some amount his income (her bank account, their inheritance, etc.) runs to ten or twelve thousand pounds его доходы и т.д. исчисляются в десять-двенадцать тысяч фунтов; our hotel bill ran to t 500 наш счет за гостиницу достиг суммы в пятьсот фунтов /равняется пятистам фунтам/; the losses run into five figures убытки выражаются в пятизначных числах; a boat like that runs into a lot of money (to a pretty penny) такая лодка стоит больших денег (станет в копеечку); prices run from 50 pence to a pound цены колеблются от пятидесяти пенсов до одного фунта; my money won't run to a car на машину у меня не хватит денег; we can't run to a holiday abroad this year в этом году мы себе не можем позволить провести отпуск за границей; the story (the manuscript, etc.) runs to 16 pages (to three volumes, etc.) рассказ и т.д. занимает шестнадцать страниц и т.д.; her letter ran to a great length она написала очень длинное письмо
    24) run against (into, on, at, etc.) smth. run against /into/ a tree (into a wall, into a bank of soft mud, at the railing, etc.) налететь на дерево и т.д., врезаться в дерево и т.д.; run against a rock (on a mine, etc.) наскочить на скалу и т.д.; run into a patch of thick mist (into a gale, into a storm, etc.) попасть в густой туман и т.д.
    25) run into (across, etc.) smb. run into each other (into an old classmate, into an old friend, etc.) случайно встретить друг друга и т.д.; run across smb. in the street столкнуться с кем-л. на улице; when did you last run across him? когда вы с ним последний раз виделись?; you never know whom you'll run into at a party никогда не знаешь, кого встретишь на вечеринке
    26) run into (across) smth. run into danger (into trouble, into mischief, etc.) попасть в опасное положение и т.д.; run into difficulties очутиться в затруднительном положении; run into debts залезть в долга; run across one of his earliest recordings (across the first edition of this book in a second-hand bookshop, etc.) натолкнуться на /случайно найти/ одну из его ранних записей и т.д.; he ran across her name in the phone book он случайно встретил /увидел/ ее имя в телефонной книге; run against smth. this runs against my interests это идет вразрез с моими интересами
    27) run for smth. run for parliament (for office, for the presidency, for governor, etc.) баллотироваться в члены парламента и т.д.; run in smth. run in an election баллотироваться на выборах; how many candidates is the Liberal Party running in the General Election? сколько кандидатов выставляет либеральная партия на выборах?; run against smb. whom will the Republicans run against the Democratic candidate? кого выставят республиканцы против кандидата от демократической партии?
    28) aux run in smth. musical talent (courage, broadmindedness, red hair, etc) runs in the family (in the blood) музыкальность и т.д. - их семейная черта (у них в крови); run to smth. run to sentiment /to sentimentality/ (to fat, etc.) быть склонным /расположенным/ к сентиментальности и т.д.; they run to big noses (to red hair, to being overweight, etc.) in that family в их семье у всех большие носы и т.д.; the novel runs to long descriptions в романе слишком много затянутых описаний
    11. XIX1
    1) run like smb., smth. run like a deer /like a hare, like the devil, like hell, like blazes, like anything/ бежать во весь опор /что есть мочи/
    2) run like smth. news (rumours) run like wildfire (like lightning) новости (слухи) распространяются как лесной пожар (с быстротой молнии)
    12. XX3
    2) || run as follows гласить следующее; the conversation ran as follows... разговор был такой...
    13. XXI1
    1) run smth. in (over) smth. run two miles in six minutes проехать две мили за шесть минут; run a race over a mile бежать на дистанцию в одну милю;
    2) run smb. across (out of, etc.) smth. run a horse across a field погонять лошадь по полю; run oneself out of breath бежать так, что начинаешь задыхаться
    3) run smb., smth. (in)to (off, out of, etc.) smth. run a fox to cover /to earth/ загнать лису в нору; they ran him off his property его согнали с собственной земля; run smb. out of the country выдворить кого-л. из страны; run a саг into a garage (a ship into harbour, a cart into the yard, etc.) завезти машину в гараж и т.д.
    4) run smth. in (to) smth. run some water into glasses (milk into casks, lead into moulds, etc.) наливать воду в стаканы и т.д.; run bullets into a mould отливать пули; run oil in a still рафинировать масло; run smth. for smb., smth. run a hot tub for smb. сделать для кого-л. горячую ванну; run the water for a tub наполнять ванну водой
    5) run smth. to smth. run ships (trains, etc.) to London водить корабли и т.д. в Лондон; run smth. between smth. run trains (buses, etc.) between these towns пускать поезда и т.д. между этими городами; run a ferry between these villages соединить эти деревни паромом; run smth. from smth. to smth. run trains ( line of mail-boats, etc.) from the capital to other cities пускать поезда и т.д. из столицы в другие города; run smth. during smth. run extra trains during rush hours пускать дополнительные поезда в часы пик
    6) run smth., smb. across (into, to, etc.) smth. run guns (narcotics, drugs, etc.) across the border (into the country) провозить /переправлять/ оружие и т.д. [контрабандой] через границу (в какую-л. страну); run smb. up to town отвозить кого-л. в город
    7) run smth. at smth. run a factory at a loss иметь от фабрики один убытки; run a саг at small cost тратить на содержание машины немного денег; run smth. off smth. she runs her electric sewing-machine off the mains ее электрическая швейная машина работает от сети; run smth., smb. in smth. run a car (a bicycle, etc.) in a race участвовать в автогонках и т.д.; he runs horses in races a) он жокей; б) он держит конюшню /скаковых лошадей/
    8) run smth. across (around, from... to, etc.) smth. run a partition across a room разгородить комнату перегородкой; run a rope across the street натянуть канат через улицу; run a fence around the lot обнести участок забором; run a telephone cable from one place to another проложить /провести/ телефонный кабель от одного пункта в другой, соединять два пункта телефонным кабелем
    9) run smth. against (over, through, etc.) smth. run one's fingers (one's hand) against a door (over a surface, over the seams of the boat, etc.) провести пальцами (рукой) по двери и т.д.; ощупать дверь и т.д.; run a comb through one's hair расчесать волосы гребнем; run one's hand over one's hair пригладить волосы ладонью; run one's fingers over the strings of a harp (over the keys of a piano, etc.) пробежать пальцами по струнам арфы и т.д.; run one's eyes over a page (over a letter, etc.) пробежать глазами страницу и т.д.; run one's finger down the list просмотреть список, водя по строчкам пальцем; run one's pencil through these names (through a word, etc.) зачеркнуть эти фамилии и т.д. карандашом; run a line on a map (over a surface, etc.) провести /прочертить/ линию на карте и т.д.
    10) run smth. behind smth. run a few minutes behind schedule (behind time) не укладываться в расписание (во времени); if we run ten minutes behind schedule the whole evening's viewing will be thrown out of gear если расписание сдвинется больше, чем на десять минут, то программа всего вечера будет нарушена; the programmes are running 10 minutes behind schedule наши программы сегодня запаздывают на десять минут
    11) run smb., smth. through smth. run the actors through their parts заставить актеров повторить свои роли или партии; I'd like to run you through that scene я бы хотел, чтобы вы еще раз провели эту сцену
    12) run smth. to smth. run tile rumour to its source выяснить источник слухов; run a quotation to earth выяснить, откуда взята цитата
    13) run smth. on smth. run the story (this account, the article, this cartoon, etc.) on page one напечатать рассказ и т.д. на первой странице
    14) run smth., smb. into (on) smth., smb. run a саг into a tree (into a wall, into a post, etc.) врезаться машиной в дерево и т.д.; run a ship on a rock разбить корабль о скалу; run the troops into an ambush загнать или заманить войска в засаду; he ran me into a сор из-за него я налетел на полицейского; run smb. into a corner загнать кого-л. в угол; run smth. against smth. run one's head against a wall стукнуться /удариться/ головой о стену; run one's nose against a post (against a wall, etc.) разбить нос о столб и т.д.
    15) run smth. into (through) smth., smb. run a nail into a board забить /загнать/ гвоздь в доску; run a splinter into one's toe (into one's foot, into one's finger, etc.) занозить палец и т.д.; run a thorn (a needle) into one's finger загнать шип (иголку) в палец; run a knife into a loaf разрезать буханку хлеба ножом; run a thread through an eyelet (a rope through a loop) продеть нитку в иголку (веревку в петлю); run a sword through one's enemy пронзить /проколоть/ своего противника шпагой; run smb. through with smth. run a man through with a sword проткнуть кого-л. шпагой
    16) || run a stocking on smth. рвать чулок обо что-л.; run a stocking on a nail разодрать чулок о гвоздь
    17) run smth. for smb. who runs his house for him? кто ведет у него хозяйство?
    18) run smb. (in)to smth. run smb. into expense ввести кого-л. в расход; run smb. into debts заставить кого-л. влезть в долги; run oneself to death до смерти забегаться || this ran me clean off my legs я из-за этого столько бегал, что теперь ног под собой не чую
    19) aux run smth. on (at) smth. I can't afford to run a car on my salary на свою зарплату я не могу содержать машину; run 60 head of cattle on this ranch держать на ранчо шестьдесят голов скота; run an account at the grocery иметь счет у бакалейщика
    14. XXV
    1) run if... (when..., etc.) you'll have to run if you want to catch the train тебе придется бежать, если ты хочешь успеть на поезд; he used to run when he was at college когда он был студентом, он занимался бегом
    2) run when the colour of the dress ran when it was washed платье полиняло в стирке
    3) run that... the story (the rumour) runs that... по рассказам (по слухам)...

    English-Russian dictionary of verb phrases > run

  • 10 Clymer, George E.

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 1754 Bucks County, Pennsylvania, USA
    d. 27 August 1834 London, England
    [br]
    American inventor of the Columbian printing press.
    [br]
    Clymer was born on his father's farm, of a family that emigrated from Switzerland in the early eighteenth century. He attended local schools, helping out on the farm in his spare time, and he showed a particular talent for maintaining farm machinery. At the age of 16 he learned the trade of carpenter and joiner, which he followed in the same district for over twenty-five years. During that time, he showed his talent for mechanical invention in many ways, including the invention of a plough specially adapted to the local soils. Around 1800, he moved to Philadelphia, where his interest was aroused by the erection of the first bridge over the Schuylkill River. He devised a pump to remove water from the cofferdams at a rate of 500 gallons per day, superior to any other pumps then in use. He obtained a US patent for this in 1801, and a British one soon after.
    Clymer then turned his attention to the improvement of the printing press. For three and a half centuries after its invention, the old wooden-framed press had remained virtually unchanged except in detail. The first real change came in 1800 with the introduction of the iron press by Earl Stanhope. Modified versions were developed by other inventors, notably George Clymer, who after more than ten years' effort achieved his Columbian press. With its new system of levers, it enabled perfect impressions to be obtained with far less effort by the pressman. The Columbian was also notable for its distinctive cast-iron ornamentation, including a Hermes on each pillar and alligators and other reptiles on the levers. Most spectacular, it was surmounted by an American spread eagle, usually covered in gilt, which also served as a counterweight to raise the platen. The earliest known Columbian, surviving only in an illustration, bears the inscription Columbian Press/No.25/invented by George Clymer/Anno Domini 1813/Made in Philadelphia 1816. Few American printers could afford the US$400 selling price, so in 1817 Clymer went to England, where it was taken up enthusiastically. He obtained a British patent for it the same year, and by the following March it was being manufactured by the engineering firm R.W.Cope, although Clymer was probably making it on his own account soon afterwards. The Columbian was widely used for many years and continued to be made even into the twentieth century. The King of the Netherlands awarded Clymer a gold medal for his invention and the Tsar of Russia gave him a present for installing the press in Russia. Doubtless for business reasons, Clymer spent most of his remaining years in England and Europe.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Moran, 1973, Printing Presses, London: Faber \& Faber.
    —1969, contributed a thorough survey of the press in J. Printing Hist. Soc., no. 3.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Clymer, George E.

  • 11 Cotton, William

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 1819 Seagrave, Leicestershire, England
    d. after 1878
    [br]
    English inventor of a power-driven flat-bed knitting machine.
    [br]
    Cotton was originally employed in Loughborough and became one of the first specialized hosiery-machine builders. After the introduction of the latch needle by Matthew Townsend in 1856, knitting frames developed rapidly. The circular frame was easier to work automatically, but attempts to apply power to the flat frame, which could produce fully fashioned work, culminated in 1863 with William Cotton's machine. In that year he invented a machine that could make a dozen or more stockings or hose simultaneously and knit fashioned garments of all kinds. The difficulty was to reduce automatically the number of stitches in the courses where the hose or garment narrowed to give it shape. Cotton had early opportunities to apply himself to the improvement of hosiery machines while employed in the patent shop of Cartwright \& Warner of Loughborough, where some of the first rotaries were made. He remained with the firm for twenty years, during which time sixty or seventy of these machines were turned out. Cotton then established a factory for the manufacture of warp fabrics, and it was here that he began to work on his ideas. He had no knowledge of the principles of engineering or drawing, so his method of making sketches and then getting his ideas roughed out involved much useless labour. After twelve years, in 1863, a patent was issued for the machine that became the basis of the Cotton's Patent type. This was a flat frame driven by rotary mechanism and remarkable for its adaptability. At first he built his machine upright, like a cottage piano, but after much thought and experimentation he conceived the idea of turning the upper part down flat so that the needles were in a vertical position instead of being horizontal, and the work was carried off horizontally instead of vertically. His first machine produced four identical pieces simultaneously, but this number was soon increased. Cotton was induced by the success of his invention to begin machine building as a separate business and thus established one of the first of a class of engineering firms that sprung up as an adjunct to the new hosiery manufacture. He employed only a dozen men and turned out six machines in the first year, entering into an agreement with Hine \& Mundella for their exclusive use. This was later extended to the firm of I. \& R.Morley. In 1878, Cotton began to build on his own account, and the business steadily increased until it employed some 200 workers and had an output of 100 machines a year.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1863, British patent no. 1,901 (flat-frame knitting machine).
    Further Reading
    F.A.Wells, 1935, The British Hosiery and Knitwear Industry: Its History and Organisation, London (based on an article in the Knitters' Circular (Feb. 1898).
    A brief account of the background to Cotton's invention can be found in T.K.Derry and T.I. Williams, 1960, A Short History of Technology from the Earliest Times to AD 1900, Oxford; C. Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. V, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
    F.Moy Thomas, 1900, I. \& R.Morley. A Record of a Hundred Years, London (mentions cotton's first machines).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Cotton, William

  • 12 Petzval, Josef Max

    [br]
    b. 1807 Spisska-Beila, Hungary
    d. 17 September 1891 Vienna, Austria
    [br]
    Hungarian mathematician and photographic-lens designer, inventor of the first "rapid" portrait lens.
    [br]
    Although born in Hungary, Petzval was the son of German schoolteacher. He studied engineering at the University of Budapest and after graduation was appointed to the staff as a lecturer. In 1835 he became the University's Professor of Higher Mathematics. Within a year he was offered a similar position at the more prestigious University of Vienna, a chair he was to occupy until 1884.
    The earliest photographic cameras were fitted with lenses originally designed for other optical instruments. All were characterized by small apertures, and the long exposures required by the early process were in part due to the "slow" lenses. As early as 1839, Petzval began calculations with the idea of producing a fast achromatic objective for photographic work. For technical advice he turned to the Viennese optician Peter Voigtländer, who went on to make the first Petzval portrait lens in 1840. It had a short focal length but an extremely large aperture for the day, enabling exposure times to be reduced to at least one tenth of that required with other contemporary lenses. The Petzval portrait lens was to become the basic design for years to come and was probably the single most important development in making portrait photography possible; by capturing public imagination, portrait photography was to drive photographic innovation during the early years.
    Petzval later fell out with Voigtländer and severed his connection with the company in 1845. When Petzval was encouraged to design a landscape lens in the 1850s, the work was entrusted to another Viennese optician, Dietzler. Using some early calculations by Petzval, Voigtländer was able to produce a similar lens, which he marketed in competition, and an acrimonious dispute ensued. Petzval, embittered by the quarrel and depressed by a burglary which destroyed years of records of his optical work, abandoned optics completely in 1862 and devoted himself to acoustics. He retired from his professorship on his seventieth birthday, respected by his colleagues but unloved, and lived the life of a recluse until his death.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Member of the Hungarian Academy of Science 1873.
    Further Reading
    J.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans. E. Epstean, New York (provides details of Petzval's life and work; Eder claims he was introduced to Petzval by mutual friends and succeeded in obtaining personal data).
    Rudolf Kingslake, 1989, A History of the Photographic Lens, Boston (brief biographical details).
    L.W.Sipley, 1965, Photography's Great Inventors, Philadelphia (brief biographical details).
    JW

    Biographical history of technology > Petzval, Josef Max

  • 13 Young, Arthur

    [br]
    b. 11 September 1741 London, England
    d. 20 April 1820 Bradford, England
    [br]
    English writer and commentator on agricultural affairs; founder and Secretary of the Board of Agriculture (later the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food).
    [br]
    He was the youngest of the three children of Dr Arthur Young, who was at one time Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons. He learned Latin and Greek at Lavenham School, and at the age of 17 was apprenticed to a mercantile house, an occupation he disliked. He first published The Theatre of the Present War in North America in 1758. He then wrote four novels and began to produce the literary magazine The Universal Museum. After his father's death he returned home to manage his father's farm, and in 1765 he married Martha Allen.
    Young learned farming by experiment, and three years after his return he took over the rent of a 300 acre farm, Samford Hall in Essex. He was not a practical farmer, and was soon forced to give it up in favour of one of 100 acres (40.5 hectares) in Hertfordshire. He subsidized his farming with his writing, and in 1768 published The Farmer's Letters to the People of England. The first of his books on agricultural tours, Six Weeks Tours through the Counties of England and Wales, was published in 1771. Between 1784 and 1809 he published the Annals of Agriculture, one of whose contributors was George III, who wrote under the pseudonym of Ralph Robinson.
    By this time he was corresponding with all of influence in agricultural matters, both at home and abroad. George Washington wrote frequently to Young, and George III was reputed to travel always with a copy of his book. The Empress of Russia sent students to him and had his Tours published in Russian. Young made three trips to France in 1787, 1788 and 1789–90 respectively, prior to and during the French Revolution, and his Travels in France (1792) is a remarkable account of that period, made all the more fascinating by his personal contact with people differing as widely as Mirabeau, the French revolutionary leader, and King Louis XVI.
    Unfortunately, in 1811 an unsuccessful cataract operation left him blind, and he moved from London to his native Bradford, where he remained until his death.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Chairman, Agricultural Committee of the Society of Arts 1773: awarded three Gold Medals during his career for his achievements in practical agriculture. FRS. Honorary Member of the Dublin, York and Manchester learned societies, as well as the Economic Society of Berne, the Palatine Academy of Agriculture at Mannheim, and the Physical Society of Zurich. Honourary member, French Royal Society of Agriculture. Secretary, Board of Agriculture 1793.
    Bibliography
    His first novels were The Fair Americans, Sir Charles Beaufort, Lucy Watson and Julia Benson.
    His earliest writings on agriculture appeared as collected letters in a periodical with the title Museum Rusticum in 1767.
    In 1770 he published a two-volume work entitled A Course of Experimental Agriculture, and between 1766 and 1775 he published The Farmer's Letters, Political Arithmetic, Political Essays Concerning the Present State of the British Empire and Southern, Northern and Eastern Tours, and in 1779 he published The Tour of Ireland.
    In addition he was author of the Board of Agriculture reports on the counties of Suffolk, Lincoln, Norfolk, Hertford, Essex and Oxford.
    Further Reading
    J.Thirsk (ed.), 1989, The Agrarian History of England and Wales, Vol. VI (deals with the years 1750 to 1850, the period associated with Young).
    T.G.Gazeley, 1973, "The life of Arthur Young, 1741–1820", Memoirs, American Philosophical Society 97.
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Young, Arthur

  • 14 Carothers, Wallace Hume

    [br]
    b. 27 April 1896 Burlington, Iowa, USA
    d. 29 April 1937 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
    [br]
    American chemist, inventor of nylon.
    [br]
    After graduating in chemistry, Carothers embarked on academic research at several universities, finally at Harvard University. His earliest published papers, from 1923, heralded the brilliance and originality of his later work. In 1928, Du Pont de Nemours persuaded him to forsake the academic world to lead their new organic-chemistry group in a programme of fundamental research at their central laboratories at Wilmington, Delaware. The next nine years were extraordinarily productive, yielding important contributions to theoretical organic chemistry and the foundation of two branches of chemical industry, namely the production of synthetic rubber and of wholly synthetic fibres.
    Carothers began work on high molecular weight substances yielding fibres and introduced polymerization by condensation: polymerization by addition was already known. He developed a clear understanding of the relation between the repeating structural units in a large molecule and its physical chemical properties. In 1931, Carothers found that chloroprene could be polymerized much faster than isoprene, the monomer in natural rubber. This process yielded polychloroprene or neoprene, a synthetic rubber with improved properties. Manufacture began the following year, and the material has continued to be used for speciality rubbers.
    There followed many publications announcing new condensations polymers. On 2 January 1935, he obtained a patent for the formation of new polyamides, including one from adipic acid and hexamethylenediamene. After four years of development work, which cost Du Pont some $27 million, this new polyamide, or nylon, reached the stage of commercial production, beginning on 23 October 1938. Nylon stockings appeared the following year and 64 million were sold during the first twelve months. However, Carothers saw none of this spectacular success: he had died by his own hand in 1937, after a long history of gradually intensifying depression.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Elected to the National Academy of Science 1936 (he was the first industrial organic chemist to be so honoured).
    Bibliography
    H.M.Whitby and G.S.Whitby, 1940, Collected Papers of Wallace H.Carothers on Polymerisation, New York.
    Further Reading
    R.Adams, 1939, memoir, Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences 20:293–309 (includes a complete list of Carothers's sixty-two scientific papers and most of his sixty-nine US patents).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Carothers, Wallace Hume

  • 15 Wollaston, William Hyde

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 6 August 1766 East Dereham, Norfolk, England
    d. 22 December 1828 London, England
    [br]
    English chemist and metallurgist who discovered palladium and rhodium, pioneer in the fabrication of platinum.
    [br]
    Wollaston qualified in medicine at Cambridge University but gave up his practice in 1800 to devote himself to chemistry and metallurgy, funded from the profits from making malleable platinum. In partnership with Smithson Tennant, a friend from his Cambridge days, he worked on the extraction of platinum by dissolving it in aqua regia. In 1802 he found that in addition to platinum the solution contained a new metal, which he named palladium. Two years later he identified another new metal, rhodium.
    Wollaston developed a method of forming platinum by means of powder metallurgy and was the first to produce malleable and ductile platinum on a commercial scale. He produced platinum vessels for sulphuric acid manufacture and scientific apparatus such as crucibles. He devised an elegant method for forming fine platinum wire. He also applied his inventive talents to improving scientific apparatus, including the sextant and microscope and a reflecting goniometer for measuring crystal angles. In 1807 he was appointed Joint Secretary of the Royal Society with Sir Humphry Davy, which entailed a heavy workload and required them to referee all the papers submitted to the Society for publication.
    Wollaston's output of platinum began to decline after 1822. Due to ill health he ceased business operations in 1828 and at last made public the details of his secret platinum fabrication process. It was fully described in the Bakerian Lecture he delivered to the Royal Society on 28 November 1828, shortly before his death.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1793.
    Bibliography
    His scientific papers were published in various journals, nearly all listed in the Royal Society Catalogue of Scientific Papers.
    Further Reading
    There is no good general biography, the best general account being the entry in
    Dictionary of Scientific Biography.
    D.McDonald, 1960, A History of Platinum from the Earliest Times to the Eighteen- Eighties, London (provides a good discussion of his work on platinum).
    M.E.Weeks, 1939, "The discovery of the elements", Journal of Chemical Education: 184–5.
    ASD

    Biographical history of technology > Wollaston, William Hyde

  • 16 Preece, Sir William Henry

    [br]
    b. 15 February 1834 Bryn Helen, Gwynedd, Wales
    d. 6 November 1913 Penrhos, Gwynedd, Wales
    [br]
    Welsh electrical engineer who greatly furthered the development and use of wireless telegraphy and the telephone in Britain, dominating British Post Office engineering during the last two decades of the nineteenth century.
    [br]
    After education at King's College, London, in 1852 Preece entered the office of Edwin Clark with the intention of becoming a civil engineer, but graduate studies at the Royal Institution under Faraday fired his enthusiasm for things electrical. His earliest work, as connected with telegraphy and in particular its application for securing the safe working of railways; in 1853 he obtained an appointment with the Electric and National Telegraph Company. In 1856 he became Superintendent of that company's southern district, but four years later he moved to telegraph work with the London and South West Railway. From 1858 to 1862 he was also Engineer to the Channel Islands Telegraph Company. When the various telegraph companies in Britain were transferred to the State in 1870, Preece became a Divisional Engineer in the General Post Office (GPO). Promotion followed in 1877, when he was appointed Chief Electrician to the Post Office. One of the first specimens of Bell's telephone was brought to England by Preece and exhibited at the British Association meeting in 1877. From 1892 to 1899 he served as Engineer-in-Chief to the Post Office. During this time he made a number of important contributions to telegraphy, including the use of water as part of telegraph circuits across the Solent (1882) and the Bristol Channel (1888). He also discovered the existence of inductive effects between parallel wires, and with Fleming showed that a current (thermionic) flowed between the hot filament and a cold conductor in an incandescent lamp.
    Preece was distinguished by his administrative ability, some scientific insight, considerable engineering intuition and immense energy. He held erroneous views about telephone transmission and, not accepting the work of Oliver Heaviside, made many errors when planning trunk circuits. Prior to the successful use of Hertzian waves for wireless communication Preece carried out experiments, often on a large scale, in attempts at wireless communication by inductive methods. These became of historic interest only when the work of Maxwell and Hertz was developed by Guglielmo Marconi. It is to Preece that credit should be given for encouraging Marconi in 1896 and collaborating with him in his early experimental work on radio telegraphy.
    While still employed by the Post Office, Preece contributed to the development of numerous early public electricity schemes, acting as Consultant and often supervising their construction. At Worcester he was responsible for Britain's largest nineteenth-century public hydro-electric station. He received a knighthood on his retirement in 1899, after which he continued his consulting practice in association with his two sons and Major Philip Cardew. Preece contributed some 136 papers and printed lectures to scientific journals, ninety-nine during the period 1877 to 1894.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    CB 1894. Knighted (KCB) 1899. FRS 1881. President, Society of Telegraph Engineers, 1880. President, Institution of Electrical Engineers 1880, 1893. President, Institution of Civil Engineers 1898–9. Chairman, Royal Society of Arts 1901–2.
    Bibliography
    Preece produced numerous papers on telegraphy and telephony that were presented as Royal Institution Lectures (see Royal Institution Library of Science, 1974) or as British Association reports.
    1862–3, "Railway telegraphs and the application of electricity to the signaling and working of trains", Proceedings of the ICE 22:167–93.
    Eleven editions of Telegraphy (with J.Sivewright), London, 1870, were published by 1895.
    1883, "Molecular radiation in incandescent lamps", Proceedings of the Physical Society 5: 283.
    1885. "Molecular shadows in incandescent lamps". Proceedings of the Physical Society 7: 178.
    1886. "Electric induction between wires and wires", British Association Report. 1889, with J.Maier, The Telephone.
    1894, "Electric signalling without wires", RSA Journal.
    Further Reading
    J.J.Fahie, 1899, History of Wireless Telegraphy 1838–1899, Edinburgh: Blackwood. E.Hawkes, 1927, Pioneers of Wireless, London: Methuen.
    E.C.Baker, 1976, Sir William Preece, F.R.S. Victorian Engineer Extraordinary, London (a detailed biography with an appended list of his patents, principal lectures and publications).
    D.G.Tucker, 1981–2, "Sir William Preece (1834–1913)", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 53:119–36 (a critical review with a summary of his consultancies).
    GW / KF

    Biographical history of technology > Preece, Sir William Henry

  • 17 Jia Sixie (Chia Ssu-Hsieh)

    [br]
    b. sixth century AD China
    d. sixth century AD China
    [br]
    Chinese writer on agricultural practice.
    [br]
    Jia Sixie was the author of the Qi Min Yao Shu (Chhi Min Yao Shu), the earliest complete Chinese agricultural treatise to have survived. The survey quotes from over 160 other texts and the author himself relates how he collected from a wide range of sources, including folk songs and the anecdotes of old men. Little is known of Jia Sixie. It is assumed that he was a middle-ranking official and that his agricultural experience derives from his own work in the Shantung region. In addition to husbandry information, the treatise deals with the problems of running an agricultural estate. Details of experiments are also given, indicating that the text may have been aimed more at the estate owner than the peasant farmer. Culinary matters are also commented upon. Discussions of the range of crops available to the Chinese farmer, and of the-rotational practices implemented to make best use of those crops, give a clear indication that a much higher productivity was being achieved than in Europe at that time or for almost another thousand years. Crop diversity and rotations, as well as technologies such as green manuring and implements such as rollers and seed-drills, were combined to achieve these substantial yields.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    F.Bray, vol. VI.2 of J.Needham (ed.), Science and Civilisation in China (provides a comprehensive discussion on Chinese agricultural practice, and an early chapter gives details of her sources).
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Jia Sixie (Chia Ssu-Hsieh)

  • 18 Deverill, Hooton

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    fl. c.1835 England
    [br]
    English patentee of the first successful adaptation of the Jacquard machine for patterned lacemaking.
    [br]
    After John Levers had brought out his lacemaking machine in 1813, other lacemakers proceeded to elaborate their machinery so as to imitate the more complicated forms of handwork. One of these was Samuel Draper of Nottingham, who took out one patent in 1835 for the use of a Jacquard mechanism on a lace making machine, followed by another in 1837. However, material made on his machine cost more than the handmade article, so the experiment was abandoned after three years. Then, in Nottingham in 1841, Hooton Deverill patented the first truly successful application of the Jacquard to lacemaking. The Jacquard needles caused the warp threads to be pushed sideways to form the holes in the lace while the bobbins were moved around them to bind them together. This made it possible to reproduce most of the traditional patterns of handmade lace in both narrow and wide pieces. Lace made on these machines became cheap enough for most people to be able to hang it in their windows as curtains, or to use it for trimming clothing. However, it raised in a most serious form the problem of patent rights between the two patentees, Deverill and Draper, threatening much litigation. Deverill's patent was bought by Richard Birkin, who with his partner Biddle relinquished the patent rights. The lacemaking trade on these machines was thus thrown open to the public and a new development of the trade took place. Levers lace is still made in the way described here.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1841, British patent no. 8,955 (adaptation of Jacquard machine for patterned lacemaking).
    Further Reading
    W.Felkin, 1867, History of Machine-Wrought Hosiery and Lace Manufacture (provides an account of Deverill's patent).
    C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of'Technology, Vol. V, Oxford: Clarendon Press (a modern account).
    T.K.Derry and T.I.Williams, 1960, A Short History of Technology from the Earliest
    Times to AD 1900, Oxford.
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Deverill, Hooton

  • 19 early

    1. adjective

    I am a bit early — ich bin etwas zu früh gekommen od. (ugs.) dran

    have an early nightfrüh ins Bett gehen

    early riser — Frühaufsteher, der/-aufsteherin, die

    in the early afternoon/evening — am frühen Nachmittag/Abend

    into the early hoursbis in die frühen Morgenstunden

    at/from an early age — in jungen Jahren/von klein auf

    at an early stage, in its early stages — im Frühstadium

    2. adverb

    as early as tomorrowschon od. bereits morgen

    earlier on this week/year — früher in der Woche/im Jahr

    * * *
    ['ə:li] 1. adverb
    1) (near the beginning (of a period of time etc): early in my life; early in the afternoon.) früh
    2) (sooner than others; sooner than usual; sooner than expected or than the appointed time: He arrived early; She came an hour early.) zu früh
    2. adjective
    1) (belonging to, or happening, near the beginning of a period of time etc: early morning; in the early part of the century.) früh
    2) (belonging to the first stages of development: early musical instruments.) frühzeitig
    3) (happening etc sooner than usual or than expected: the baby's early arrival; It's too early to get up yet.) zu früh
    4) (prompt: I hope for an early reply to my letter.) baldig
    - academic.ru/23091/earliness">earliness
    - early bird
    * * *
    ear·ly
    <-ier, -iest or more \early, most \early>
    [ˈɜ:li, AM ˈɜ:r-]
    I. adj
    1. (in the day) früh
    she usually has an \early breakfast sie frühstückt meistens zeitig
    \early edition Morgenausgabe f
    the \early hours die frühen Morgenstunden
    in the \early morning am frühen Morgen
    \early morning call Weckruf m
    \early riser Frühaufsteher(in) m(f)
    2. (of a period) früh, Früh-
    she is in her \early thirties sie ist Anfang dreißig
    in the \early afternoon am frühen Nachmittag
    at an \early age in jungen Jahren
    from an \early age von klein auf
    in the \early 15th century Anfang [o zu Beginn] des 15. Jahrhunderts
    \early education Früherziehung f, Vorschulerziehung f
    to score an \early goal ein frühes Tor erzielen
    \early potatoes Frühkartoffeln pl
    \early returns erste Wahlergebnisse
    \early Romantic Frühromantiker(in) m(f)
    \early stage Anfangsstadium nt, Frühstadium f
    3. attr ( form: prompt) schnell, baldig
    \early payment appreciated um baldige Zahlung wird gebeten
    4. (ahead of expected time) vorzeitig; (comparatively early) [früh]zeitig
    I took an \early train home from work today ich habe heute nach der Arbeit einen früheren Zug genommen
    you are \early du bist früh dran fam
    to have an \early dinner/lunch früh zu Abend/Mittag essen
    to have an \early night früh schlafen [o zu Bett] gehen
    \early parole vorzeitige [Haft]entlassung
    \early retirement vorzeitiger [o vorgezogener] Ruhestand, Frühpension f ÖSTERR, SCHWEIZ
    to take \early retirement vorzeitig in den Ruhestand gehen, in Frühpension gehen ÖSTERR, SCHWEIZ
    5. attr (first) erste(r, s), frühe(r, s)
    the \early Christians die ersten Christen
    the E\early Church die Urkirche
    the \early masters ART die frühen Meister
    II. adv
    1. (in the day) früh, zeitig
    to get up [or rise] \early früh aufstehen
    2. (in good time) vorzeitig
    to arrive \early zeitig eintreffen
    3. (ahead of expected time) vorzeitig; (prematurely) zu früh; (comparatively early) [früh]zeitig
    the plane landed 20 minutes \early das Flugzeug landete 20 Minuten früher [als geplant]
    to die \early früh sterben
    4. (of a period) früh
    I'll call you \early next Monday/tomorrow ich rufe dich Montag/morgen Vormittag an
    \early [on] in life früh im Leben
    \early in the week Anfang der Woche
    \early in October Anfang Oktober
    \early next week Anfang nächster Woche
    * * *
    ['ɜːlɪ]
    1. adv
    1)

    early in 1915/in February — Anfang 1915/Februar

    early (on) in the year/(the) winter

    early (on) in his/her/their etc life — in jungen Jahren

    early (on) in the evening/morning —

    he got up very early in the morninger stand sehr früh (am Morgen) auf

    early this month/year —

    early next month/year — Anfang nächsten Monats/Jahres

    early today/this morning — heute früh

    2) (= before the expected time) früher (als erwartet); (= before the appointed time) zu früh; (= earlier than usual) früh

    to be five minutes/an hour early —

    he left school early (went home) — er ging früher von der Schule nach Hause; (finished education) er ging vorzeitig von der Schule ab

    to get up/go to bed early —

    good morning, you're early today — guten Morgen, Sie sind heute ja früh dran

    early to bed, early to rise (makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise) (Prov)früh ins Bett und früh heraus, frommt dem Leib, dem Geist, dem Haus (Prov)

    See:
    bright
    2. adj (+er)

    in early summer/autumn — zu Sommer-/Herbstanfang, im Frühsommer/Frühherbst

    in early spring/winter — zu Frühlings-/Winteranfang

    the early years/months/days — die ersten Jahre/Monate/Tage

    early January/August etc — Anfang Januar/August etc

    in the early 60s/1980s etc — Anfang der sechziger/achtziger etc Jahre or Sechziger-/Achtzigerjahre etc

    until or into the early hoursbis in die frühen Morgenstunden

    his early workseine frühen Werke, sein Frühwerk nt

    since early childhood — seit seiner/ihrer etc frühen Kindheit

    to be in one's early thirties/forties etc —

    it's too early to say/to say whether... — es ist noch zu früh, um etwas zu sagen/um zu sagen, ob...

    it is too early to know what his motives are —

    it's too early for a final decision — es ist zu früh, um eine endgültige Entscheidung zu fällen

    only her voice has changed from those early daysnur ihre Stimme ist anders als damals zu Anfang

    it's early days (yet) (esp Brit) — wir/sie etc sind noch im Anfangsstadium

    2) (= before expected time) flowers früh blühend; cabbage, peas etc, crop früh; death vorzeitig; marriage früh; menopause verfrüht
    3) (from historical perspective) settlers, man frühgeschichtlich

    the early church —

    4)

    (= soon) at an early date — bald

    at the earliest possible momentso bald wie irgend möglich

    See:
    * * *
    early [ˈɜːlı; US ˈɜrliː]
    A adv
    1. früh, (früh)zeitig;
    early in the day (year) früh am Tag (im Jahr);
    early in the morning früh am Morgen, am frühen Morgen, frühmorgens;
    early in life früh im Leben;
    early in May Anfang Mai;
    early in 1996 Anfang 1996;
    early last week Anfang letzter Woche;
    as early as May schon im Mai;
    as early as the times of Chaucer schon zu Chaucers Zeiten;
    early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise (Sprichwort) Morgenstunde hat Gold im Munde; afternoon A
    2. bald:
    as early as possible so bald wie möglich
    3. am Anfang:
    a) schon früh(zeitig),
    b) bald;
    early on in anfangs (gen)
    4. a) zu früh:
    b) früher:
    B adj
    1. früh, (früh)zeitig:
    early riser, hum early bird Frühaufsteher(in);
    be an early riser auch früh aufstehen;
    the early bird catches ( oder gets) the worm (Sprichwort) Morgenstunde hat Gold im Munde;
    keep early hours früh aufstehen und früh zu Bett gehen;
    at this early stage schon jetzt;
    the early summer der Frühsommer;
    at an early hour zu früher Stunde;
    it is still early days es ist noch zu früh am Tage;
    in the early eighties (am) Anfang der Achtzigerjahre;
    he’s in his early forties er ist Anfang der Vierziger
    2. a) vorzeitig, früh:
    his early release seine vorzeitige Entlassung;
    early school leaver Schulabbrecher(in)
    b) vorgezogen (Wahl)
    3. zu früh:
    you are early today du bist heute (etwas) zu früh (daran);
    he was born two months early er kam zwei Monate zu früh auf die Welt
    4. früh, Jugend…:
    in his early days in seiner Jugend
    5. früh (reifend):
    early fruit Frühobst n
    6. anfänglich, Früh…, früh, erst(er, e, es):
    early Christian frühchristlich;
    the early Christians die ersten Christen, die Frühchristen;
    early history Frühgeschichte f, frühe Geschichte;
    early pace SPORT Anfangstempo n
    7. baldig (Antwort etc)
    * * *
    1. adjective

    early riser — Frühaufsteher, der/-aufsteherin, die

    in the early afternoon/evening — am frühen Nachmittag/Abend

    at/from an early age — in jungen Jahren/von klein auf

    at an early stage, in its early stages — im Frühstadium

    2. adverb

    as early as tomorrowschon od. bereits morgen

    earlier on this week/year — früher in der Woche/im Jahr

    * * *
    adj.
    baldig adj.
    früh adj.
    zeitig adj.

    English-german dictionary > early

  • 20 Creativity

       Put in this bald way, these aims sound utopian. How utopian they areor rather, how imminent their realization-depends on how broadly or narrowly we interpret the term "creative." If we are willing to regard all human complex problem solving as creative, then-as we will point out-successful programs for problem solving mechanisms that simulate human problem solvers already exist, and a number of their general characteristics are known. If we reserve the term "creative" for activities like discovery of the special theory of relativity or the composition of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, then no example of a creative mechanism exists at the present time. (Simon, 1979, pp. 144-145)
       Among the questions that can now be given preliminary answers in computational terms are the following: how can ideas from very different sources be spontaneously thought of together? how can two ideas be merged to produce a new structure, which shows the influence of both ancestor ideas without being a mere "cut-and-paste" combination? how can the mind be "primed," so that one will more easily notice serendipitous ideas? why may someone notice-and remember-something fairly uninteresting, if it occurs in an interesting context? how can a brief phrase conjure up an entire melody from memory? and how can we accept two ideas as similar ("love" and "prove" as rhyming, for instance) in respect of a feature not identical in both? The features of connectionist AI models that suggest answers to these questions are their powers of pattern completion, graceful degradation, sensitization, multiple constraint satisfaction, and "best-fit" equilibration.... Here, the important point is that the unconscious, "insightful," associative aspects of creativity can be explained-in outline, at least-by AI methods. (Boden, 1996, p. 273)
       There thus appears to be an underlying similarity in the process involved in creative innovation and social independence, with common traits and postures required for expression of both behaviors. The difference is one of product-literary, musical, artistic, theoretical products on the one hand, opinions on the other-rather than one of process. In both instances the individual must believe that his perceptions are meaningful and valid and be willing to rely upon his own interpretations. He must trust himself sufficiently that even when persons express opinions counter to his own he can proceed on the basis of his own perceptions and convictions. (Coopersmith, 1967, p. 58)
       he average level of ego strength and emotional stability is noticeably higher among creative geniuses than among the general population, though it is possibly lower than among men of comparable intelligence and education who go into administrative and similar positions. High anxiety and excitability appear common (e.g. Priestley, Darwin, Kepler) but full-blown neurosis is quite rare. (Cattell & Butcher, 1970, p. 315)
       he insight that is supposed to be required for such work as discovery turns out to be synonymous with the familiar process of recognition; and other terms commonly used in the discussion of creative work-such terms as "judgment," "creativity," or even "genius"-appear to be wholly dispensable or to be definable, as insight is, in terms of mundane and well-understood concepts. (Simon, 1989, p. 376)
       From the sketch material still in existence, from the condition of the fragments, and from the autographs themselves we can draw definite conclusions about Mozart's creative process. To invent musical ideas he did not need any stimulation; they came to his mind "ready-made" and in polished form. In contrast to Beethoven, who made numerous attempts at shaping his musical ideas until he found the definitive formulation of a theme, Mozart's first inspiration has the stamp of finality. Any Mozart theme has completeness and unity; as a phenomenon it is a Gestalt. (Herzmann, 1964, p. 28)
       Great artists enlarge the limits of one's perception. Looking at the world through the eyes of Rembrandt or Tolstoy makes one able to perceive aspects of truth about the world which one could not have achieved without their aid. Freud believed that science was adaptive because it facilitated mastery of the external world; but was it not the case that many scientific theories, like works of art, also originated in phantasy? Certainly, reading accounts of scientific discovery by men of the calibre of Einstein compelled me to conclude that phantasy was not merely escapist, but a way of reaching new insights concerning the nature of reality. Scientific hypotheses require proof; works of art do not. Both are concerned with creating order, with making sense out of the world and our experience of it. (Storr, 1993, p. xii)
       The importance of self-esteem for creative expression appears to be almost beyond disproof. Without a high regard for himself the individual who is working in the frontiers of his field cannot trust himself to discriminate between the trivial and the significant. Without trust in his own powers the person seeking improved solutions or alternative theories has no basis for distinguishing the significant and profound innovation from the one that is merely different.... An essential component of the creative process, whether it be analysis, synthesis, or the development of a new perspective or more comprehensive theory, is the conviction that one's judgment in interpreting the events is to be trusted. (Coopersmith, 1967, p. 59)
       In the daily stream of thought these four different stages [preparation; incubation; illumination or inspiration; and verification] constantly overlap each other as we explore different problems. An economist reading a Blue Book, a physiologist watching an experiment, or a business man going through his morning's letters, may at the same time be "incubating" on a problem which he proposed to himself a few days ago, be accumulating knowledge in "preparation" for a second problem, and be "verifying" his conclusions to a third problem. Even in exploring the same problem, the mind may be unconsciously incubating on one aspect of it, while it is consciously employed in preparing for or verifying another aspect. (Wallas, 1926, p. 81)
       he basic, bisociative pattern of the creative synthesis [is] the sudden interlocking of two previously unrelated skills, or matrices of thought. (Koestler, 1964, p. 121)
        11) The Earliest Stages in the Creative Process Involve a Commerce with Disorder
       Even to the creator himself, the earliest effort may seem to involve a commerce with disorder. For the creative order, which is an extension of life, is not an elaboration of the established, but a movement beyond the established, or at least a reorganization of it and often of elements not included in it. The first need is therefore to transcend the old order. Before any new order can be defined, the absolute power of the established, the hold upon us of what we know and are, must be broken. New life comes always from outside our world, as we commonly conceive that world. This is the reason why, in order to invent, one must yield to the indeterminate within him, or, more precisely, to certain illdefined impulses which seem to be of the very texture of the ungoverned fullness which John Livingston Lowes calls "the surging chaos of the unexpressed." (Ghiselin, 1985, p. 4)
       New life comes always from outside our world, as we commonly conceive our world. This is the reason why, in order to invent, one must yield to the indeterminate within him, or, more precisely, to certain illdefined impulses which seem to be of the very texture of the ungoverned fullness which John Livingston Lowes calls "the surging chaos of the unexpressed." Chaos and disorder are perhaps the wrong terms for that indeterminate fullness and activity of the inner life. For it is organic, dynamic, full of tension and tendency. What is absent from it, except in the decisive act of creation, is determination, fixity, and commitment to one resolution or another of the whole complex of its tensions. (Ghiselin, 1952, p. 13)
       [P]sychoanalysts have principally been concerned with the content of creative products, and with explaining content in terms of the artist's infantile past. They have paid less attention to examining why the artist chooses his particular activity to express, abreact or sublimate his emotions. In short, they have not made much distinction between art and neurosis; and, since the former is one of the blessings of mankind, whereas the latter is one of the curses, it seems a pity that they should not be better differentiated....
       Psychoanalysis, being fundamentally concerned with drive and motive, might have been expected to throw more light upon what impels the creative person that in fact it has. (Storr, 1993, pp. xvii, 3)
       A number of theoretical approaches were considered. Associative theory, as developed by Mednick (1962), gained some empirical support from the apparent validity of the Remote Associates Test, which was constructed on the basis of the theory.... Koestler's (1964) bisociative theory allows more complexity to mental organization than Mednick's associative theory, and postulates "associative contexts" or "frames of reference." He proposed that normal, non-creative, thought proceeds within particular contexts or frames and that the creative act involves linking together previously unconnected frames.... Simonton (1988) has developed associative notions further and explored the mathematical consequences of chance permutation of ideas....
       Like Koestler, Gruber (1980; Gruber and Davis, 1988) has based his analysis on case studies. He has focused especially on Darwin's development of the theory of evolution. Using piagetian notions, such as assimilation and accommodation, Gruber shows how Darwin's system of ideas changed very slowly over a period of many years. "Moments of insight," in Gruber's analysis, were the culminations of slow long-term processes.... Finally, the information-processing approach, as represented by Simon (1966) and Langley et al. (1987), was considered.... [Simon] points out the importance of good problem representations, both to ensure search is in an appropriate problem space and to aid in developing heuristic evaluations of possible research directions.... The work of Langley et al. (1987) demonstrates how such search processes, realized in computer programs, can indeed discover many basic laws of science from tables of raw data.... Boden (1990a, 1994) has stressed the importance of restructuring the problem space in creative work to develop new genres and paradigms in the arts and sciences. (Gilhooly, 1996, pp. 243-244; emphasis in original)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Creativity

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