-
61 drive
1. n езда2. n прогулка, катание; поездка3. n подъездная дорога, аллея4. n дорога для экипажей5. n просека6. n гон, гоньба, преследованиеgame drive — загон дичи, зверя
7. n воен. наступление; атака, ударa massive export drive in African markets — массированное экспортное наступление на африканские рынки
8. n гонка, спешка9. n амер. кампанияeconomy drive — поход за экономию; борьба за режим экономии
launching a drive — начинающий кампанию; начало кампании
10. n стремление11. n энергия, напористость12. n стимул, побуждение, внутренний импульс13. n тенденция, направление14. n сплав леса15. n сплавной лес16. n удар; драйв17. n толчок18. n тех. привод, передача19. n вчт. дисковод; лентопротяжное устройство, лентопротяжный механизм20. n горн. штрек21. n дека22. v водить, вести, править; управлятьdrive home — убеждать; доводить до сознания
drive along — ехать на машине; вести машину
23. v ездить, ехатьdrive back — возвращаться, ехать обратно
24. v водить машину; управлять лошадьюto drive recklessly — лихо водить машину, быть лихачом
25. v быть хорошим или плохим в эксплуатацииthe car drives well — машину легко водить, эта машина слушается руля
computer-controlled drive — привод, управляемый ЭВМ
26. v отбрасывать, теснить27. v гнать; рассеиватьdrive away — прогонять, отсылать; отгонять, гнать от себя
28. v гнать, нести, перемещать29. v нестись; налетать; перемещаться30. v нестись, мчатьсяhe drove rudely past her into the room — оттолкнув её, он влетел в комнату
31. v загонять, забивать, вбивать; вонзать32. v входить, вонзаться33. v подгонять34. v перегружать; заваливать работой35. v разг. затягивать, оттягиватьСинонимический ряд:1. ambition (noun) ambition; energy; enterprise; enthusiasm; force; initiative; motivation2. campaign (noun) campaign; crusade; push3. effort (noun) effort; impulse; incentive; moment; motive; pressure4. ride (noun) excursion; jaunt; outing; ride; spin; tour; trip; turn5. steam (noun) hustle; punch; steam; vigour6. vigor (noun) bang; getup; get-up-and-go; go; pep; snap; starch; vigor; vitality7. way (noun) approach; avenue; driveway; freeway; highway; path; road; roadway; street; thoroughfare; way8. auto (verb) auto; charioteer; motor; pilot; steer; tool; wheel9. chase (verb) chase; herd; prod10. force (verb) force; goad; incite; punch; strike11. hunt (verb) hunt; stalk12. impress (verb) drill; grave; hammer; hit; impress; nail; pound; stamp13. make (verb) coerce; compel; constrain; make14. motivate (verb) motivate; press; urge15. move (verb) actuate; impel; mobilise; mobilize; move; propel16. overburden (verb) overburden; overtax; overwork17. plunge (verb) burst; dive; forge; lunge; pitch; plunge18. ride (verb) go; ride; spin; travel; turn19. run (verb) dig; propel; push; ram; run; shove; sink; stab; stick; thrust20. work (verb) fag; labor; labour; moil; strain; strive; sweat; task; tax; toil; travail; tug; workАнтонимический ряд:apathy; curb; discourage; drag; entice; halt; haul; hinder; incline; induce; lead; persuade; restrain -
62 step
1. n звук шаговreckless step — безрассудный шаг, опрометчивый поступок
with a sure step — уверенным шагом, твёрдой походкой
2. n небольшое расстояние, расстояние в один шаг3. n след ступни4. n походка, поступьvigorous of step — с бодрой поступью, твёрдо шагающий
5. n вид шага, шаг6. n аллюр7. n па8. n продвижение, ход; поступательное движениеwe have made a great step forward in our negotiations — наши переговоры значительно продвинулись вперёд
9. n повышение по службе10. n воен. разг. очередное звание11. n мера, действие, шаг12. n ступень, ступенька, приступка; подножка; перекладина13. n стремянка14. n тех. шаг15. n тех. ход16. n тех. тех. вкладыш17. n тех. этап18. n тех. скачокstep response — переходная характеристика; реакция на скачок
19. n муз. ступень, тон20. n муз. интервал21. n тж. мор. степс, гнездоstep dance — характерный танец со сложными па; чечётка, степ
22. n тж. мор. редан23. n тж. мор. тлв. уровень сигналаinventive step — изобретательский уровень, неочевидность
24. v шагать, ступатьstep out — бодро шагать; измерять шагами
25. v разг. уходитьI must be step ping, I must step along — мне пора идти
26. v разг. сбегать, убегать, дезертировать27. v разг. проходить небольшое расстояние, делать несколько шаговwill you step inside? — зайдите, пожалуйста
step this way, please — сюда, пожалуйста
28. v разг. делать па; танцеватьto take a false step — сделать неверный шаг; совершить ошибку
29. v разг. двигаться легко и быстро30. v разг. наступать31. v разг. нажимать32. v разг. вымерять, отмерять шагами33. v разг. достигать, получать сразу, одним махом34. v разг. делать ступенькиставить, устанавливать
Синонимический ряд:1. gait (noun) footfall; footprint; footstep; gait; hop; pace; spoor; stepping; stride; track; tract; vestige2. phase (noun) degree; grade; level; maneuver; manoeuvre; measure; move; notch; peg; phase; point; procedure; proceeding; process; rank; rest; round; stage; tactic3. stair (noun) curb; jog; path; riser; run; rung; stair; tread; way4. move (verb) advance; go; go on; move; proceed; stride; tramp5. walk (verb) ambulate; dance; foot; foot it; hoof; hoof it; pace; prance; traipse; tread; troop; walk -
63 scale
scale [skeɪl]1 noun(a) (of model, drawing) échelle f;∎ the sketch was drawn to scale l'esquisse était à l'échelle;∎ the map is on a scale of 1 cm to 1 km l'échelle de la carte est de 1 cm pour 1 km;∎ the scale of the map is 1 to 50,000 la carte est au 50 millième;∎ the drawing is out of scale or is not to scale le croquis n'est pas à l'échelle(b) (for measurement, evaluation) échelle f; (of thermometer) échelle f (graduée), graduation f; (of salaries, taxes) échelle f, barème m; (of values) échelle f;∎ the social scale l'échelle f sociale;∎ at the top of the scale en haut de l'échelle;∎ it all depends on your scale of values tout dépend de votre échelle de valeurs;∎ to judge sth on a scale of one to ten noter qch sur dix∎ the scale of the devastation l'étendue f des dégâts;∎ the sheer scale of the problem/task l'énormité f du problème/de la tâche;∎ to do sth on a large scale faire qch sur une grande échelle;∎ on an industrial scale à l'échelle industrielle;∎ economies of scale économies fpl d'échelle∎ to practise or to do one's scales faire ses gammes;∎ the scale of D major la gamme de ré majeur∎ figurative the scales fell from her eyes les écailles lui sont tombées des yeux(g) (of paint, plaster, rust) écaille f, écaillure f(h) (scale pan) plateau m (de balance)(a) (climb over → wall, fence) escalader(paint, rust) s'écailler; (skin) peler, se desquamer(for food) balance f; (for letters) pèse-lettre m; (in bathroom etc) pèse-personne m; (for babies) pèse-bébé m; (public) bascule f;∎ pair of scales balance f à plateaux;∎ (a pair of) kitchen scales une balance de cuisine►► scale drawing dessin m à l'échelle;Entomology scale insect coccidé m;(b) (figures, demands) réduire, baisser, diminuer;∎ production is being scaled down on a entrepris de réduire la production(paint, rust) s'écaillerécailler(b) (figures, demands) réviser à la hausse, augmenter;∎ allowances were scaled up by 10 percent les allocations ont été augmentées de 10 pour cent -
64 Atwood, George
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 1746 Englandd. July 1807 London, England[br]English mathematician author of a theory on ship stability.[br]Atwood was educated at Westminster School and entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1765 with a scholarship. He graduated with high honours (third wrangler) in 1796, and went on to become a fellow and tutor of his college. In 1776 he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society. Eight years later, William Pitt the Younger (1759–1806) appointed him a senior officer of the Customs, this being a means of reimbursing him for the arduous and continuing task of calculating the national revenue. As a lecturer he was greatly renowned and his abilities as a calculator and as a musician were of a high order.In the late 1790s Atwood presented a paper to the Royal Society that showed a means of obtaining the righting lever on a ship inclined from the vertical; this was a major step forward in the study of ship stability. Among his other inventions was a machine to exhibit the accelerative force of gravity.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1776.Further ReadingA.M.Robb, 1952, Theory of Naval Architecture, London: Charles Griffin (for a succinct description of the various factors in ship stability, and the importance of Atwood's contribution).FMW -
65 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 -
66 Lithgow, James
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 27 January 1883 Port Glasgow, Renfrewshire, Scotlandd. 23 February 1952 Langbank, Renfrewshire, Scotland[br]Scottish shipbuilder; creator of one of the twentieth century's leading industrial organizations.[br]Lithgow attended Glasgow Academy and then spent a year in Paris. In 1901 he commenced a shipyard apprenticeship with Russell \& Co., where his father, William Lithgow, was sole proprietor. For years Russell's had topped the Clyde tonnage output and more than once had been the world's leading yard. Along with his brother Henry, Lithgow in 1908 was appointed a director, and in a few years he was Chairman and the yard was renamed Lithgows Ltd. By the outbreak of the First World War the Lithgow brothers were recognized as good shipbuilders and astute businessmen. In 1914 he joined the Royal Artillery; he rose to the rank of major and served with distinction, but his skills in administration were recognized and he was recalled home to become Director of Merchant Shipbuilding when British shipping losses due to submarine attack became critical. This appointment set a pattern, with public duties becoming predominant and the day-to-day shipyard business being organized by his brother. During the interwar years, Lithgow served on many councils designed to generate work and expand British commercial interests. His public appointments were legion, but none was as controversial as his directorship of National Shipbuilders Security Ltd, formed to purchase and "sterilize" inefficient shipyards that were hindering recovery from the Depression. To this day opinions are divided on this issue, but it is beyond doubt that Lithgow believed in the task in hand and served unstintingly. During the Second World War he was Controller of Merchant Shipbuilding and Repairs and was one of the few civilians to be on the Board of Admiralty. On the cessation of hostilities, Lithgow devoted time to research boards and to the expansion of the Lithgow Group, which now included the massive Fairfield Shipyard as well as steel, marine engineering and other companies.Throughout his life Lithgow worked for the Territorial Army, but he was also a devoted member of the Church of Scotland. He gave practical support to the lona Community, no doubt influenced by unbounded love of the West Highlands and Islands of Scotland.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsMilitary Cross and mentioned in dispatches during the First World War. Baronet 1925. Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire 1945. Commander of the Order of the Orange-Nassau (the Netherlands). CB 1947. Served as the employers' representative on the League of Nations International Labour Conference in the 1930s. President, British Iron and Steel Cofederation 1943.Further ReadingJ.M.Reid, 1964, James Lithgow, Master of Work, London: Hutchinson.FMW -
67 McCoy, Elijah
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. 1843 Colchester, Ontario, Canadad. 1929 Detroit, Michigan (?), USA[br]African-American inventor of steam-engine lubricators.[br]McCoy was born into a community of escaped African-American slaves. As a youth he went to Scotland and served an apprenticeship in Edinburgh in mechanical engineering. He returned to North America and ended up in Ypsilanti, Michigan, seeking employment at the headquarters of the Michigan Central Railroad Company. In spite of his training, the only job McCoy could obtain was that of locomotive fireman. Still, that enabled him to study at close quarters the problem of lubricating adequately the moving parts of a steam locomotive. Inefficient lubrication led to overheating, delays and even damage. In 1872 McCoy patented the first of his lubricating devices, applicable particularly to stationary engines. He assigned his patent rights to W. and S.C.Hamlin of Ypsilanti, from which he derived enough financial resources to develop his invention. A year later he patented an improved hydrostatic lubricator, which could be used for both stationary and locomotive engines, and went on to make further improvements. McCoy's lubricators were widely taken up by other railroads and his employers promoted him from the footplate to the task of giving instruction in the use of his lubricating equipment. Many others had been attempting to achieve the same result and many rival products were on the market, but none was superior to McCoy's, which came to be known as "the Real McCoy", a term that has since acquired a wider application than to engine lubricators. McCoy moved to Detroit, Michigan, as a patent consultant in the railroad business. Altogether, he took out over fifty patents for various inventions, so that he became one of the most prolific of nineteenth-century black inventors, whose activities had been so greatly stimulated by the freedoms they acquired after the American Civil War. His more valuable patents were assigned to investors, who formed the Elijah McCoy Manufacturing Company. McCoy himself, however, was not a major shareholder, so he seems not to have derived the benefit that was due to him.[br]Further ReadingP.P.James, 1989, The Real McCoy: African-American Invention and Innovation 1619– 1930, Washington: Smithsonian Institution, pp. 73–5.LRD -
68 MTA
MTA, MAC transportation authorization————————MTA, maintenance task analysis————————MTA, maintenance technical assistance————————MTA, major training areaглавный район учений (НГ); Бр основной район подготовки ЛС————————MTA, Military Training Act————————MTA, military training airspace————————MTA, military training area————————MTA, missile transfer area————————MTA, mobile training assistanceEnglish-Russian dictionary of planing, cross-planing and slotting machines > MTA
См. также в других словарях:
task — [tɑːsk ǁ tæsk] noun [countable] 1. a piece of work that must be done, especially one that must be done regularly: • Scheduling is a key task for most managers. • day to day management tasks • computers that can do dozens of tasks at the same time … Financial and business terms
Major Disaster — Publication information Publisher DC Comics First appearance … Wikipedia
Task Force Faith — Task Force Faith, also sometimes referred to as Task Force Maclean (and by its official designation, RCT 31) was a United States Army unit destroyed in fighting at the Battle of Chosin Reservoir during the Korean War between November 27 and… … Wikipedia
Task analysis — is the analysis of how a task is accomplished, including a detailed description of both manual and mental activities, task and element durations, task frequency, task allocation, task complexity, environmental conditions, necessary clothing and… … Wikipedia
Task Force Barker — war ein militärisches US Spezialkommando im Vietnamkrieg. Er startete am 1. Januar 1968 und existierte nur einige Monate. Die TF Barker wurde auf die Gemarkung Son My in der Provinz Quang Ngai am Batangan Peninsula angesetzt. Sie war benannt nach … Deutsch Wikipedia
Major General — or Major General is a military rank used in many countries. It is derived from the older rank of Sergeant Major General. A Major General is a high ranking officer normally subordinate to a Lieutenant General and senior to a Brigadier General. In… … Wikipedia
Major League Baseball on ABC — Genre Sport Developed by ABC Sports Directed by Chet Forte Craig Janoff Starring Major League Baseball on ABC broadcasters … Wikipedia
Task Force 16 — is one of the most storied task forces in the United States Navy, a major participant in a number of the most important battles of the Pacific War.It was formed in mid February 1942 around Enterprise (CV 6), with Vice Admiral William F. Halsey in … Wikipedia
Major Force — Major Force, in Green Lantern (vol. 3) #178. Art by Luke Ross. Publication information Publisher … Wikipedia
Task Force 73/Commander, Logistics Group Western Pacific — Commander, Logistics Group Western Pacific Active 1992–Present (when renamed as CLWP) Country United States … Wikipedia
Major Charles Alva Dale and SSG David Stanley Demmon — Major Charles Alva Dale and Staff Sergeant David Stanley Demmon were United States Army soldiers whose plane crashed or was shot down during the Vietnam War on June 9, 1965. Final Flight Charles Dale of Phoenix, Arizona, and David Demmon of… … Wikipedia