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1 monopoly of shipping
Рыбоводство: монопольные права на судоходство -
2 monopoly of shipping
Англо-русский сельскохозяйственный словарь > monopoly of shipping
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3 monopoly of shipping
English-Russian dictionary of fishery > monopoly of shipping
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4 monopoly of shipping
English-Russian maritime law dictionary > monopoly of shipping
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5 monopoly of shipping
English-russian dctionary of diplomacy > monopoly of shipping
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6 shipping
n1) отгрузка, погрузка, транспортировка, перевозка2) судоходство; мореплавание• -
7 торговый
прил. от торговля (тж.) commercial торговая сеть ≈ trade shops мн. большой торговый зал ≈ baza(a) r площадь торгового зала ≈ (без складов, подсобок и т. п.) floor space коммерч. торговый капитал ≈ trade capital торговый баланс ≈ balance of trade торговая политика ≈ trade policy торговые переговоры ≈ trade negotiations/talks торговые отношения ≈ trade relations торговый договор ≈ trade/commercial agreement торговый порт ≈ commercial port торговый флот ≈ merchant navy;
(совокупность торговых судов) mercantile marine торговое судно ≈ merchant ship/vessel торговый представитель ≈ trade/commercial representative торговая точка ≈ trade outlet;
shop торговый центр ≈ shopping centre, supermarket торговая монополия ≈ trade monopoly ое право ≈ commercial law торговый город ≈ market town торговый дом ≈ firmторгов|ый - commercial, trade attr. ;
~ агент commercial agent;
~ое агентство manufacturer`s representative;
~ атташе commercial attachе;
~ баланс balance of trade, trade balance;
~ое дело merchanting;
~ договор commercial treaty;
~ дом trade house;
trading/commercial firm;
~ знак brand, trade mark;
~ые издержки cost of marketing, selling/business express;
~ капитал trading capital;
~ контракт bill, trade contract;
~ая марка trade mark;
~ая монополия trade monopoly;
~ое наименование trade name;
~ обычай commercial custom;
~ оборот trade turnover, volume of business;
~ые ограничения trade barries;
~ая политика trade policy;
~ое право commercial law;
~ советник commercial counsellor;
~ая сеть commercial network;
~ое соглашение trade agreement;
~ое судно merchant vessel/shop;
~ флот merchantile marine, merchant navy;
merchant shipping;
~ центр business centre.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > торговый
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8 control
1) управление; регулирование; проверка, контроль || управлять, регулировать; проверять, контролировать2) орган управления3) pl регулирующие устройства4) борьба (напр. с сельскохозяйственными вредителями) -
9 interest
1) интерес, значение2) (материальная) заинтересованность; доля; участие || заинтересовывать; привлекать к участию3) (ссудный) процент; проценты, процентный доход4) выгода, преимущество5) pl заинтересованные лица; деловые круги6) интерес (объект страхования) -
10 agent
nагент, представитель; посредник; комиссионер; поверенный; pl агентство
- accredited agent
- acquisition agent
- active agent
- advertising agent
- authorized agent
- average agent
- break bulk agent
- business agent
- buying agent
- cargo agents
- career agent
- carrier agent
- chartered agent
- charterer's agent
- chartering agent
- collection agent
- commercial agent
- commission agent
- consignment agent
- creditworthy agent
- del credere agent
- distributing agent
- employment agent
- estate agent
- exclusive agent
- export agent
- financial agent
- firm's agent
- fiscal agent
- forwarding agent
- freight agent
- general agent
- house agent
- import agent
- insurance agent
- lessor's agent
- Lloyd's agent
- managing agent
- marine agent
- marketing agent
- monopoly agent
- official agent
- patent agent
- paying agent
- purchasing agent
- real estate agent
- redemption agent
- regional sales agent
- revenue agent
- reliable agent
- road haulage agent
- sales agent
- selling agent
- selling agents
- shipowner's agent
- shipping agent
- social insurance agent
- sole agent
- special agent
- specialized agent
- supplier agent
- supply agent
- tax agent
- trade agent
- transfer agent
- travel agent
- travelling agent
- trustworthy agent
- vendor agent
- agent for an inventor
- agent for sales
- agent of necessity
- agents of production
- act as an agent
- appoint an agent
- authorize to act as an agent
- employ an agent
- operate as an agent
- reward an agent
- secure an agent
- sign up an agent -
11 control
1. n1) управление, руководство2) контроль, проверка; контролирование; надзор3) управление; регулирование; регулировка
- accounting control
- administrative control
- air traffic control
- arms control
- automatic control
- biological control
- birth control
- border control
- budgetary control
- central control
- check-in control
- complete control
- computer control
- constant control
- consumer credit control
- contamination control
- continuous control
- cost control
- credit control
- crop pest control
- currency control
- current control
- customs control
- cycle control
- day-to-day control
- depletion control
- direct control
- economic control
- effective control
- environmental control
- exchange control
- export control
- feedback control
- financial control
- fiscal control
- follow-up control
- foreign control
- foreign exchange control
- functional control
- government control
- humidity control
- import control
- inadequate control
- individual control
- inflation control
- information control
- insurance control
- internal control
- international control of liquidity
- internal administrative control
- interoperational control
- inventory control
- labour control
- lax control
- machine control
- managerial control
- mandatory control
- manual control
- manufacturing control
- market control
- marketing control
- material control
- material quality control
- maximum-minimum inventory control
- monetary control
- monetary base control
- monopoly control
- nongovernmental control
- numerical control
- on-site control
- operating control
- operational control
- order control
- ordering and stock control
- order intake control
- output control
- outside control
- overall control
- partial control
- passport control
- percentage control
- periodic control
- pest control
- pollution control
- population control
- price control
- process control
- product control
- production control
- product quality control
- product status control
- profitability control
- programme control
- progress control
- property control
- public control
- quality control
- quantity control
- regular control
- remote control
- rent control
- routine control
- running control
- selection control
- selective control
- selective credit control
- selective price control
- sequential control
- shipping control
- shop floor control
- shortage control
- social control
- special control
- spending control
- standard control
- standard cost control
- state control
- statistical control
- statutory control
- stock control
- stores control
- strict control
- stringent control
- supervisory control
- supplier control
- technical control
- tight control
- traffic control
- uniform control
- unit stock control
- vehicle exhaust control
- wage control
- wage-price control
- work control
- workers' control
- working control
- control of goods received
- control of investment
- control of materials and supplies inventories
- control over export and import
- control over prices
- under the control of
- assume control
- bring under control
- carry out control
- drop control
- effect control
- ensure effective control
- establish control
- exercise control
- exert control
- gain control of a company
- get beyond control
- get out of control
- have control
- impose control
- keep under control
- lift control
- lose control
- maintain control
- perform control
- place under control
- put under control
- relinquish control
- set up control
- strengthen control
- take out of control
- take under control2. v1) управлять, руководить2) контролировать, проверять3) регулировать, контролироватьEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > control
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12 enterprise
n1) предприятие
- agro-industrial enterprise
- ailing enterprise
- artisan enterprise
- auxiliary enterprise
- bankrupt enterprise
- business enterprise
- collective enterprise
- commercial enterprise
- commercial manufacturing enterprise
- competitive enterprise
- concessional enterprise
- cooperating enterprise
- cooperative enterprise
- corporate enterprise
- debtor enterprise
- defaulted enterprise
- defaulter enterprise
- derfaulting enterprise
- diversified enterprise
- domestic enterprise
- export enterprise
- family-owned enterprise
- faltering enterprise
- farm enterprise
- farming enterprise
- foreign enterprise
- foreign trade enterprise
- free enterprise
- fuel and energy enterprise
- governmental enterprise
- government-owned enterprise
- group enterprise
- income-generating enterprise
- income-producing enterprise
- incorporated enterprise
- independent enterprise
- industrial enterprise
- insurance enterprise
- integrated enterprise
- joint enterprise
- large enterprise
- large-scale enterprise
- leading enterprise
- leased enterprise
- loss-making enterprise
- main enterprise
- manufacturing enterprise
- medium-sized enterprise
- mixed enterprise
- monopoly enterprise
- motor transport enterprise
- multi-activity enterprise
- multinational enterprise
- municipal enterprise
- mushroom enterprise
- national enterprise
- nationalized enterprise
- operating enterprise
- parent enterprise
- partner enterprise
- paying enterprise
- private enterprise
- privately-owned enterprise
- privatized enterprise
- processing enterprise
- profitable enterprise
- profit-making enterprise
- public enterprise
- publicly-owned enterprise
- public sector enterprise
- related enterprise
- remunerative enterprise
- risky enterprise
- rival enterprise
- self-governed and self-financing enterprise
- shipping enterprise
- small enterprise
- small-scale enterprise
- state enterprise
- state-owned enterprise
- state-owned commercial enterprise
- state unitary enterprise
- subordinate enterprise
- subsidiary enterprise
- subsidized enterprise
- trade enterprise
- trading enterprise
- transnational enterprise
- unincorporated enterprise
- unitary enterprise
- unprofitable enterprise
- upcoming enterprise
- urban development enterprise
- wholesale enterprise
- enterprise in deafult
- enterprise in duress
- on the balance sheet of an enterprise
- abandon an enterprise
- close down an enterprise
- declare an enterprise financially solvent
- establish an enterprise
- hold an enterprise
- launch an enterprise
- make an enterprise bankrupt
- run an enterprise
- sell an enterprise by auctionEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > enterprise
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13 agent
агент, представитель; посредник; комиссионер; поверенный• -
14 enterprise
1) предприятие• -
15 Foyn, Svend
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 1809 Tønsberg, Norwayd. after 1873[br]Norwegian founder of the modern whaling industry; sea captain and sealer.[br]Svend Foyn's background typified the best of the Norwegian merchant marine: good seamanship, deep religious faith and an investigative and adventurous approach to life based on sound commercial judgement. After the period of training normal to his time, Foyn became a shipmaster and then followed the sealer's trade. By the early 1860s he had amassed a considerable sum of money and began to look around for an area of further conquest. He built whale catchers and operated them with scientific care, and by 1862 his work was recognized in Norway, Scotland and some other countries as personifying the whaling industry. Foyn's inventive approach to this new trade ensured that innovative ideas were accepted and that his inventions—such as the rubber accumulator, the recoil absorber and the harpoon braking system—became an accepted part of the whaler's trade. It is said that his first harpoon gun, invented in 1864, weighed 1 ton. Foyn designed a special whaling winch in 1873 that was protected by patent, the same year that the Norwegian Government granted him a ten-year monopoly on his system for catching whales.[br]Further ReadingJ.H.Harland, 1992, Catchers and Corvettes, the Steam Whalecatcher in Peace and War 1860–1960, Rotherfield, East Sussex: Jean Boudriot.P.Budker, 1958, Whales and Whaling, London: Harrap.FMW -
16 Stevens, John
[br]b. 1749 New York, New York, USAd. 6 March 1838 Hoboken, New Jersey, USA[br]American pioneer of steamboats and railways.[br]Stevens, a wealthy landowner with an estate at Hoboken on the Hudson River, had his attention drawn to the steamboat of John Fitch in 1786, and thenceforth devoted much of his time and fortune to developing steamboats and mechanical transport. He also had political influence and it was at his instance that Congress in 1790 passed an Act establishing the first patent laws in the USA. The following year Stevens was one of the first recipients of a US patent. This referred to multi-tubular boilers, of both watertube and firetube types, and antedated by many years the work of both Henry Booth and Marc Seguin on the latter.A steamboat built in 1798 by John Stevens, Nicholas J.Roosevelt and Stevens's brother-in-law, Robert R.Livingston, in association was unsuccessful, nor was Stevens satisfied with a boat built in 1802 in which a simple rotary steam-en-gine was mounted on the same shaft as a screw propeller. However, although others had experimented earlier with screw propellers, when John Stevens had the Little Juliana built in 1804 he produced the first practical screw steamboat. Steam at 50 psi (3.5 kg/cm2) pressure was supplied by a watertube boiler to a single-cylinder engine which drove two contra-rotating shafts, upon each of which was mounted a screw propeller. This little boat, less than 25 ft (7.6 m) long, was taken backwards and forwards across the Hudson River by two of Stevens's sons, one of whom, R.L. Stevens, was to help his father with many subsequent experiments. The boat, however, was ahead of its time, and steamships were to be driven by paddle wheels until the late 1830s.In 1807 John Stevens declined an invitation to join with Robert Fulton and Robert R.Living-ston in their development work, which culminated in successful operation of the PS Clermont that summer; in 1808, however, he launched his own paddle steamer, the Phoenix. But Fulton and Livingston had obtained an effective monopoly of steamer operation on the Hudson and, unable to reach agreement with them, Stevens sent Phoenix to Philadelphia to operate on the Delaware River. The intervening voyage over 150 miles (240 km) of open sea made Phoenix the first ocean-going steamer.From about 1810 John Stevens turned his attention to the possibilities of railways. He was at first considered a visionary, but in 1815, at his instance, the New Jersey Assembly created a company to build a railway between the Delaware and Raritan Rivers. It was the first railway charter granted in the USA, although the line it authorized remained unbuilt. To demonstrate the feasibility of the steam locomotive, Stevens built an experimental locomotive in 1825, at the age of 76. With flangeless wheels, guide rollers and rack-and-pinion drive, it ran on a circular track at his Hoboken home; it was the first steam locomotive to be built in America.[br]Bibliography1812, Documents Tending to Prove the Superior Advantages of Rail-ways and Steam-carriages over Canal Navigation.He took out patents relating to steam-engines in the USA in 1791, 1803, and 1810, and in England, through his son John Cox Stevens, in 1805.Further ReadingH.P.Spratt, 1958, The Birth of the Steamboat, Charles Griffin (provides technical details of Stevens's boats).J.T.Flexner, 1978, Steamboats Come True, Boston: Little, Brown (describes his work in relation to that of other steamboat pioneers).J.R.Stover, 1961, American Railroads, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Transactions of the Newcomen Society (1927) 7: 114 (discusses tubular boilers).J.R.Day and B.G.Wilson, 1957, Unusual Railways, F.Muller (discusses Stevens's locomotive).PJGR -
17 Williams, Thomas
[br]b. 13 May 1737 Cefn Coch, Anglesey, Walesd. 29 November 1802 Bath, England[br]Welsh lawyer, mine-owner and industrialist.[br]Williams was articled by his father, Owen Williams of Treffos in Anglesey, to the prominent Flintshire lawyer John Lloyd, whose daughter Catherine he is believed to have married. By 1769 Williams, lessee of the mansion and estate of Llanidan, was an able lawyer with excellent connections in Anglesey. His life changed dramatically when he agreed to act on behalf of the Lewis and Hughes families of Llysdulas, who had begun a lawsuit against Sir Nicholas Bayly of Plas Newydd concerning the ownership and mineral rights of copper mines on the western side of Parys mountain. During a prolonged period of litigation, Williams managed these mines for Margaret Lewis on behalf of Edward Hughes, who was established after a judgement in Chancery in 1776 as one of two legal proprietors, the other being Nicholas Bayly. The latter then decided to lease his portion to the London banker John Dawes, who in 1778 joined Hughes and Thomas Williams when they founded the Parys Mine Company.As the active partner in this enterprise, Williams began to establish his own smelting and fabricating works in South Wales, Lancashire and Flintshire, where coal was cheap. He soon broke the power of Associated Smelters, a combine holding the Anglesey mine owners to ransom. The low production cost of Anglesey ore gave him a great advantage over the Cornish mines and he secured very profitable contracts for the copper sheathing of naval and other vessels. After several British and French copper-bottomed ships were lost because of corrosion failure of the iron nails and bolts used to secure the sheathing, Williams introduced a process for manufacturing heavily work-hardened copper bolts and spikes which could be substituted directly for iron fixings, avoiding the corrosion difficulty. His new product was adopted by the Admiralty in 1784 and was soon used extensively in British and European dockyards.In 1785 Williams entered into partnership with Lord Uxbridge, son and heir of Nicholas Bayly, to run the Mona Mine Company at the Eastern end of Parys Mountain. This move ended much enmity and litigation and put Williams in effective control of all Anglesey copper. In the same year, Williams, with Matthew Boulton and John Wilkinson, persuaded the Cornish miners to establish a trade cooperative, the Cornish Metal Company, to market their ores. When this began to fall in 1787, Williams took over its administration, assets and stocks and until 1792 controlled the output and sale of all British copper. He became known as the "Copper King" and the output of his many producers was sold by the Copper Offices he established in London, Liverpool and Birmingham. In 1790 he became Member of Parliament for the borough of Great Marlow, and in 1792 he and Edward Hughes established the Chester and North Wales Bank, which in 1900 was absorbed by the Lloyds group.After 1792 the output of the Anglesey mines started to decline and Williams began to buy copper from all available sources. The price of copper rose and he was accused of abusing his monopoly. By this time, however, his health had begun to deteriorate and he retreated to Bath.[br]Further ReadingJ.R.Harris, 1964, The "Copper King", Liverpool University Press.ASD
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