-
1 mahón
-
2 mahoń
The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > mahoń
-
3 mahoń maho·ń
-
4 alhelí de Mahón
• Virginia stock -
5 Magonae*
Mahón (Spain) [sp] -
6 седловидная сетчатая насадка Мак-Магона
Engineering: Mac-Mahon packingУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > седловидная сетчатая насадка Мак-Магона
-
7 mahoniowiec
The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > mahoniowiec
-
8 Маон
( Испания) Mahón -
9 maho
yks.nom. maho; yks.gen. mahon; yks.part. mahoa; yks.ill. mahoon; mon.gen. mahojen; mon.part. mahoja; mon.ill. mahoihinbarren (adje)* * *• barren -
10 maho|ń
m (G mahoniu) 1. (G pl mahoni a. mahoniów) Bot. (drzewo) mahogany 2. sgt (drewno) mahogany- biurko z mahoniu a mahogany desk3. sgt (kolor) mahogany- zrobiła się na mahoń she dyed her hair a reddish brownThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > maho|ń
-
11 nègre
n. m.1. Ghost-writer, one who does the literary donkey-work for a famous and otherwise busy author.2. Faire le nègre: To be landed with all the chores.3. Faire comme le nègre, continuer: To carry on with what one is doing. (The origin of what could loosely be called an ironical catch phrase is to be found in the seemingly pointless comment uttered by Marshal Mac-Mahon, President of the French Republic in the 1870s. When visiting a military academy he asked a junior recruit what his functions were and when told 'Je suis le nègre', i.e. one acting as a temporary batman, MacMahon, always lost for a word, simply said:'Eh bien, continuez!'. the French equivalent to the military: 'Carry on as you were!')4. Parler petit nègre: To speak broken French. ( Petit nègre is the French counterpart to pidgin English.)5. C'est comme un combat de nègres dans un tunnel (joc. & iron.): I defy anyone to make head or tail of all this! -
12 Mago
I.A Carthaginian, the brother of Hannibal, Nep. Hann. 7, 4; 8, 2; Liv. 21, 47; 4, 6; Aur. Vict. Vir. Ill. 49; Sil. 11, 556; and perhaps also id. 4, 564.—II.Another Carthaginian, the author of a work on agriculture, which was afterwards translated into Latin by order of the Roman Senate, Cic. Or. 1, 58, 249; Varr. R. R. 1, 1, 10; Col. 1, 1, 13; Plin. 18, 3, 5, § 22.—III.A son of Hamilcar the elder, Just. 19, 2, 1.—IV.A town in the Balearic islands, now Port Mahon, Plin. 3, 5, 11, § 77. -
13 Magon
I.A Carthaginian, the brother of Hannibal, Nep. Hann. 7, 4; 8, 2; Liv. 21, 47; 4, 6; Aur. Vict. Vir. Ill. 49; Sil. 11, 556; and perhaps also id. 4, 564.—II.Another Carthaginian, the author of a work on agriculture, which was afterwards translated into Latin by order of the Roman Senate, Cic. Or. 1, 58, 249; Varr. R. R. 1, 1, 10; Col. 1, 1, 13; Plin. 18, 3, 5, § 22.—III.A son of Hamilcar the elder, Just. 19, 2, 1.—IV.A town in the Balearic islands, now Port Mahon, Plin. 3, 5, 11, § 77. -
14 Bode, Hendrik Wade
[br]b. 24 December 1905 Madison, Wisconsin, USAd. 21 June 1982 Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA[br]American engineer who developed an extensive theoretical understanding of the behaviour of electronic circuits.[br]Bode received his bachelor's and master's degrees from Ohio State University in 1924 and 1926, respectively, and his PhD from Columbia University, New York, in 1935. In 1926 he joined the Bell Telephone Laboratories, where he made many theoretical contributions to the understanding of the behaviour of electronic circuits and, in particular, in conjunction with Harry Nyquist, of the conditions under which amplifier circuits become unstable.During the Second World War he worked on the design of gun control systems and afterwards was a member of a team that worked with Douglas Aircraft to develop the Nike anti-aircraft missile. A member of the Bell Laboratories Mathematical Research Group from 1929, he became its Director in 1952, and then Director of Physical Sciences. Finally he became Vice-President of the Laboratories, with responsibility for systems engineering, and a director of Bellcomm, a Bell company involved in the Moon-landing programme. When he retired from Bell in 1967, he became Professor of Systems Engineering at Harvard University.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPresidential Certificate of Merit 1946. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Edison Medal 1969.Bibliography1940, "Relation between attenuation and phase in feedback amplifier design", Bell System Technical Journal 19:421.1945, Network Analysis and Feedback Amplifier Design, New York: Van Nostrand.1950, with C.E.Shannon, "A simplified derivation of linear least squares smoothing and prediction theory", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 38:417.1961, "Feedback. The history of an idea", Proceedings of the Symposium on Active Networks and Feedback Systems, Brooklyn Polytechnic.1971, Synergy: Technical Integration and Technical Innovation in the Bell System Bell Laboratories, Bell Telephone Laboratories (provides background on his activities at Bell).Further ReadingP.C.Mahon, 1975, Mission Communications, Bell Telephone Laboratories. See also Black, Harold Stephen; Shannon, Claude Elwood.KF -
15 Jansky, Karl Guthe
[br]b. 22 October 1905 Norman, Oklahoma, USAd. 14 February 1950 Red Bank, New Jersey, USA[br]American radio engineer who discovered stellar radio emission.[br]Following graduation from the University of Wisconsin in 1928 and a year of postgraduate study, Jansky joined Bell Telephone Laboratories in New Jersey with the task of establishing the source of interference to telephone communications by radio. To this end he constructed a linear-directional short-wave antenna and eventually, in 1931, he concluded that the interference actually came from the stars, the major source being the constellation Sagittarius in the direction of the centre of the Milky Way. Although he continued to study the propagation of short radio waves and the nature of observed echoes, it was left to others to develop the science of radioastronomy and to use the creation of echoes for radiolocation. Although he received no scientific award for his discovery, Jansky's name is primarily honoured by its use as the unit of stellar radio-emission strength.[br]Bibliography1935, "Directional studies of atmospherics at high frequencies", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 23:1,158.1935, "A note on the sources of stellar interference", Proceedings of the Institute of RadioEngineers.1937, "Minimum noise levels obtained on short-wave radio receiving systems", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 25:1,517.1941, "Measurements of the delay and direction of arrival of echoes from nearby short-wave transmitters", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 29:322.Further ReadingP.C.Mahon, 1975, BellLabs, Mission Communication. The Story of the Bell Labs.W.I.Sullivan (ed.), 1984, The Early Years of Radio-Astronomy: Reflections 50 Years after Jansky's Discovery, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.See also: Appleton, Sir Edward VictorKF
См. также в других словарях:
Mahon — Mahón (alternately, Maó in Catalan), is a municipality and the capital city of the Balearic Island of Minorca (the Balearic Islands form an autonomous Spanish community), located in the eastern part of the island. Mahon has the second deepest… … Wikipedia
Mahon — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Bernard M Mahon (1775?–1816), irisch amerikanischer Gärtner und Botaniker Derek Mahon (* 1941), irischer Dichter und Übersetzer Gabriel H. Mahon (1889–1962), US amerikanischer Politiker George Herman Mahon … Deutsch Wikipedia
mahon — MAHÓN s.m. Nume dat mai multor specii de arbori din regiunea tropicală a Americii, cu lemnul de culoare brună roşiatică, foarte rezistent, întrebuinţat la confecţionarea mobilelor de lux. p.restr. lemnul acestor arbori; acaju. – Din tc. mahun,… … Dicționar Român
mahoń — I {{/stl 13}}{{stl 8}}rz. mnż III, D. mahońoniu; lm D. mahońoni || mahońoniów {{/stl 8}}{{stl 7}} drzewo wysokości 20–30 m, o korze łuszczącej się małymi płatami oraz drewnie odznaczającym się pięknym rysunkiem słojów; występuje w wielu gatunkach … Langenscheidt Polski wyjaśnień
Mahon — Nom porté dans l Oise, également présent en Alsace et dans le Doubs. Il s agit sans doute d un ancien nom de baptême, formé à partir de Mahaut (= Mathilde). A noter cependant qu en ancien français le mot mahom correspond à Mahomet, et donc à tout … Noms de famille
mahón — (De Mahón, en Menorca, donde en el siglo XVIII los buques ingleses transbordaban los cargamentos destinados a puertos españoles de Levante). m. Tela fuerte y fresca de algodón escogido, de diversos colores, que primeramente se fabricó en la… … Diccionario de la lengua española
mahón — sustantivo masculino 1. (no contable) Queso tierno o seco, salado y de color amarillento, propio de Mahón, ciudad española en las Islas Baleares … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
Mahon [1] — Mahon, türkisches Ruderfahrzeug … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Mahon [2] — Mahon (Port M.), Stadt u. Hauptort der spanischen Insel Menorca, auf der Ostküste, stark befestigt (das sonstige Fort Philipp liegt jetzt in Trümmern), Hasen (durch mehre Batterien gedeckt, mit schönem Molo), 3 Kirchen, 3 Klöster, Marinearsenal,… … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Mahon [3] — Mahon (spr. Mahong), Herzog von M., so v.w. Crillon 2) 5) … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Mahon [4] — Mahon (spr. Meh n), Phil. Henry Stanhope, Viscount M., Sohn des 1855 verstorbenen Grafen Stauhope, geb. 30. Jan. 1805 auf Walmer Castle, trat 1830 für Wooton Basset in das Unterbaus u. war von Ende 1834 bis April 1835 Unterstaatssecretär des… … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon