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reputedly

  • 101 lamingtons

       Sponge cake cubes dipped in chocolate icing, then coconut. Reputedly named for popular-nineteenth century Queensland Governor Baron Lamington.

    Italiano-Inglese Cucina internazionale > lamingtons

  • 102 по общему мнению

    Sokrat personal > по общему мнению

  • 103 supposedly

    adv предположительно
    Синонимический ряд:
    1. allegedly (other) allegedly; ostensibly; pretendedly; professedly; purportedly
    2. as if (other) apparently; as if; as though; evidently; just as if; just as though; presumably
    3. conjecturally (other) conjecturally; putatively; reputedly
    4. hypothetically (other) hypothetically; suppositionally; suppositiously; tentatively; theoretically

    English-Russian base dictionary > supposedly

  • 104 Δαΐφαντος

    Δαΐφαντος reputedly a son of Pindar, Vit. Ambr., p. 3, 3. Dr.: Δαίφαντον, ᾧ καὶ δαφνηφορικὸν ᾆσμα ἔγραψεν v. ad. fr. 94c.

    Lexicon to Pindar > Δαΐφαντος

  • 105 Almeida, Antônio josé de

    (1866-1929)
       Leading political figure in the First Republic, stalwart of republican politics, and the only president of the republic to serve a full term of office during that political experience (1910-26). Like a number of the leading political figures of his generation, Almeida was educated at Coimbra University's medical school and was a staunch republican opponent of the monarchy. Almeida was reputedly the finest speaker and debater of the republican leaders. When the provisional government was named following the Republican Revolution of 5 October 1910, Almeida was included. Compared to Afonso Costa, a moderate republican, Almeida was involved in the fragmenting of the Republican Party (PRP) in 1911-12 and formed an alternate Republican Party, the Evolutionist Republican Party (PRE) or Evolutionists. Almeida headed one government as prime minister (1916-17), but rapidly became exhausted and disillusioned by the First Republic's unstable, ineffective politics and government. After the assassination of Sidónio Pais in late 1918, and the failed right-wing revolution of 1919, Almeida declared himself nonpartisan and his party, the PRE, was dissolved. Loyal to the idea of the republic, however, Almeida wished to serve in some capacity. Due to his image of being above the political fray, he was elected by the congress as president of the republic and served his full term (1919-23). Prematurely aged by the experience, he withdrew from politics and died in Lisbon in 1929.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Almeida, Antônio josé de

  • 106 Estoril

       Composed of the towns of São Pedro, São João, Monte Estoril, and Estoril, and located about 32 kilometers (15 miles) west of Lisbon along the coast, Estoril forms the heart of a tourist region. Once described in tourist literature as the Sun Coast ( Costa do Sol), this coast—in order not to be confused with a region with a similar name in neighboring Spain (Costa del Sol)—has been renamed the "Lisbon Coast." Its origins go back to several developments in the late 19th century that encouraged the building of a resort area that would take advantage of the coast's fine climate and beaches from Carcav-elos to Cascais. Sporty King Carlos I (r. 1889-1908) and his court liked summering in Cascais (apparently the first tennis in Portugal was played here), then only a simple fishing village. There are medicinal spring waters in Estoril, and the inauguration (1889) of a new train line from Lisbon to Cascais provided a convenient way of bringing in visitors before the age of automobiles and superhighways.
       As a high-class resort town, Estoril was developed beginning in the 1920s and 1930s, due in part to the efforts of the entrepreneur Fausto de Figueiredo, whose memorial statue graces the now famous Casino Gardens. Soon Estoril possessed a gambling casino, restaurants, and several fine hotels.
       Estoril's beginnings as a small but popular international resort and watering spot were slow and difficult, however, and what Estoril became was determined in part by international economy and politics. The resort's backers and builders modeled Estoril to a degree on Nice, a much larger, older, and better-known resort in the French Riviera. The name "Estoril," in fact, which was not found on Portuguese maps before the 20th century, was a Portuguese corruption of the French word for a mountain range near Nice. Estoril hotel designs, such as that of reputedly the most luxurious hotel outside Lisbon, the Hotel Palácio-Estoril, looked to earlier hotel designs on the French Riviera.
       It was remarkable, too, that Estoril's debut as a resort area with full services (hotels, casino, beach, spa) and sports (golf, tennis, swimming) happened to coincide with the depth of the world Depression (1929-34) that seemed to threaten its future. Less expensive, with a more reliably mild year-round climate and closer to Great Britain and North America than the older French Riviera, the "Sun Coast" that featured Estoril had many attractions. The resort's initial prosperity was guaranteed when large numbers of middle-class and wealthy Spaniards migrated to the area after 1931, during the turbulent Spanish Republic and subsequent bloody Civil War (1936-39). World War II (when Portugal was neutral) and the early stages of the Cold War only enhanced the Sun Coast's resort reputation. After 1939, numbers of displaced and dethroned royalty from Europe came to Portugal to live in a sunny, largely tax-free climate. In the early 1950s, Estoril's casino became known to millions of readers and armchair travelers when it was featured in one of the early James Bond books by Ian Fleming, Casino Royale (1953). In the 1980s and 1990s, the Casino was expanded and rehabilitated, while the Hotel Palacio Estoril was given a face-lift along with a new railroad station and the addition of more elegant restaurants and shops. In 2003, in the Estoril Post Office building, a Museum of Exiles and Refugees of World War II was opened.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Estoril

  • 107 Misericórdia

       Historic, Catholic charitable institution, formally, Holy Houses of Mercy, which ministered welfare, medical, and other types of assistance to the poor and to prisoners beginning in the Middle Ages in Portugal. Although its origins lay in Christian charitable brotherhoods in medieval Portugal, the Hospitals of Mercy (Misericórdia) began in the late 15th century under royal patronage of Queen Leonor (1458-1525), wife of King João II, who founded the first Misericórdia in Lisbon. From the capital, this institution spread into other towns and regions of Portugal. She also founded the Misericórdia at Caldas da Rainha, a town north of Lisbon, where reputedly it became the world's first thermal (waters) treatment hospital, with more than 100 beds for patients. The Holy Houses of Mercy were responsible also for assisting orphans, invalids, and foundlings, as well as for feeding prisoners in jails and burying the executed. The administration of clerical brotherhood staff of these institutions increasingly was composed of persons of high social and professional standing in their communities.
       After 1500, the Misericórdias spread beyond continental Portugal to the Atlantic islands of Portugal, as well as to the overseas empire in Brazil, Cape Verdes, Angola, Mozambique, Portuguese India, Macau, and Japan. In Brazil alone, for example, there were more than 300 such places. Their activities went beyond hospital and other charity work and extended into education, learning, the founding of convents and presses, and patronage of the arts. More secular than religious today, the Houses of Mercy still function in Portugal by means of dispensing private welfare and mutual aid.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Misericórdia

  • 108 beweren

    claimbetogen contend, allege iets onbewezens
    voorbeelden:
    1   durven te beweren dat dare to claim that
         ik meen te mogen beweren dat … I submit that …
         dat zou ik niet willen beweren I wouldn't (go as far as to) say that
         zij beweerde onschuldig te zijn she claimed to be innocent
         wat ik wil beweren is dat … the point I want to make is that …
         dat is precies wat wij beweren that's the very point we're making
         hij beweert dat hij niets gehoord heeft he maintains that he did not hear anything
         met klem beweren dat contend that
         er wordt beweerd dat hij erbij was he is alleged to have been involved
         naar hij zelf beweert by his own account, according to his (own) claim(s)
         naar beweerd wordt/men beweert reputedly, allegedly, supposedly

    Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > beweren

  • 109 naar beweerd wordt/men beweert

    naar beweerd wordt/men beweert
    reputedly, allegedly, supposedly

    Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > naar beweerd wordt/men beweert

  • 110 Willie Sutton rule

    Gen Mgt
    the maxim that it is most logical to concentrate on areas that yield most profit. The Willie Sutton rule is based on an alleged remark made by bank robber Willie Sutton. He was reputedly asked why he robbed banks and replied “Because that’s where the money is.” A person or organization following this rule will focus their effort on those activities that give the greatest return.

    The ultimate business dictionary > Willie Sutton rule

  • 111 Hertz, Heinrich Rudolph

    [br]
    b. 22 February 1857 Hamburg, Germany
    d. 1 January 1894 Bonn, Germany
    [br]
    German physicist who was reputedly the first person to transmit and receive radio waves.
    [br]
    At the age of 17 Hertz entered the Gelehrtenschule of the Johaneums in Hamburg, but he left the following year to obtain practical experience for a year with a firm of engineers in Frankfurt am Main. He then spent six months at the Dresden Technical High School, followed by year of military service in Berlin. At this point he decided to switch from engineering to physics, and after a year in Munich he studied physics under Helmholtz at the University of Berlin, gaining his PhD with high honours in 1880. From 1883 to 1885 he was a privat-dozent at Kiel, during which time he studied the electromagnetic theory of James Clerk Maxwell. In 1885 he succeeded to the Chair in Physics at Karlsruhe Technical High School. There, in 1887, he constructed a rudimentary transmitter consisting of two 30 cm (12 in.) rods with metal balls separated by a 7.5 mm (0.3 in.) gap at the inner ends and metallic plates at the outer ends, the whole assembly being mounted at the focus of a large parabolic metal mirror and the two rods being connected to an induction coil. At the other side of his laboratory he placed a 70 cm (27½ in.) diameter wire loop with a similar air gap at the focus of a second metal mirror. When the induction coil was made to create a spark across the transmitter air gap, he found that a spark also occurred at the "receiver". By a series of experiments he was not only able to show that the invisible waves travelled in straight lines and were reflected by the parabolic mirrors, but also that the vibrations could be refracted like visible light and had a similar wavelength. By this first transmission and reception of radio waves he thus confirmed the theoretical predictions made by Maxwell some twenty years earlier. It was probably in his experiments with this apparatus in 1887 that Hertz also observed that the voltage at which a spark was able to jump a gap was significantly reduced by the presence of ultraviolet light. This so-called photoelectric effect was subsequently placed on a theoretical basis by Albert Einstein in 1905. In 1889 he became Professor of Physics at the University of Bonn, where he continued to investigate the nature of electric discharges in gases at low pressure until his death after a long and painful illness. In recognition of his measurement of radio and other waves, the international unit of frequency of an oscillatory wave, the cycle per second, is now universally known as the Hertz.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Royal Society Rumford Medal 1890.
    Bibliography
    Much of Hertz's work, including his 1890 paper "On the fundamental equations of electrodynamics for bodies at rest", is recorded in three collections of his papers which are available in English translations by D.E.Jones et al., namely Electric Waves (1893), Miscellaneous Papers (1896) and Principles of Mechanics (1899).
    Further Reading
    J.G.O'Hara and W.Pricha, 1987, Hertz and the Maxwellians, London: Peter Peregrinus. J.Hertz, 1977, Heinrich Hertz, Memoirs, Letters and Diaries, San Francisco: San Francisco Press.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Hertz, Heinrich Rudolph

  • 112 Stalkartt, Marmaduke

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 6 April 1750 London (?), England
    d. 24 September 1805 Calcutta, India
    [br]
    English naval architect and author of a noted book on shipbuilding.
    [br]
    For a man who contributed much to the history of shipbuilding in Britain, surprisingly little is known of his life and times. The family are reputedly descendants of Danish or Norwegian shipbuilders who emigrated to England around the late seventeenth century. It is known, however, that Marmaduke was the fourth child of his father, Hugh Stalkartt, but the second child of Hugh's second wife.
    Stalkartt is believed to have served an apprenticeship at the Naval Yard at Deptford on the Thames. He had advanced sufficiently by 1796 for the Admiralty to send him to India to establish shipyards dedicated to the construction of men-of-war in teak. The worsening supply of oak from England, and to a lesser extent Scotland, coupled with the war with France was making ship procurement one of the great concerns of the time. The ready supply of hardwoods from the subcontinent was a serious attempt to overcome this problem. For some years one of the shipyards in Calcutta was known as Stalkartt's Yard and this gives some credence to the belief that Stalkartt left the Navy while overseas and started his own shipbuilding organization.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1781, Naval Architecture; or, the Rudiments and Rules of Shipbuilding; repub. 1787, 1803 (an illustrated textbook).
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Stalkartt, Marmaduke

  • 113 angeblich

    1. alleged
    2. allegedly
    3. colorable
    4. colorably adv
    5. ostensible
    6. ostensibly adv
    7. pretended
    8. purportedly
    9. reportedly adv
    10. reputed
    11. reputedly adv
    12. soi disant
    13. supposed
    14. supposedly

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > angeblich

  • 114 reputed

    ks. dianggap. She is r. to be wealthy Menurut anggapan orang ia kaya. -reputedly kk. kata orang.

    English-Malay dictionary > reputed

См. также в других словарях:

  • Reputedly — Re*put ed*ly (r? p?t ?d l?), adv. In common opinion or estimation; by repute. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • reputedly — adverb according to general belief, according to reputation, allegedly, assumedly, assumptively, presumably, reportedly, rumored, seemingly, supposedly Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • reputedly — /ri pyooh tid lee/, adv. according to reputation or popular belief: a reputedly honest man. [1680 90; REPUTED + LY] * * * …   Universalium

  • reputedly — See allegedly. See allegedly, reportedly, reputedly …   Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • reputedly — adv. Reputedly is used with these verbs: ↑earn, ↑haunt …   Collocations dictionary

  • reputedly — re|put|ed|ly [rıˈpju:tıdli] adv [sentence adverb] according to what some people say = ↑reportedly →↑allegedly ▪ The committee had reputedly spent over $3000 on business entertainment …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • reputedly — adverb (sentence adverb) according to what most people say or think: The committee had reputedly spent over $3000 on business entertainment …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • reputedly — adverb this is reputedly the handwriting of Saddam s oldest son Syn: supposedly, by all accounts, so I m told, so people say, allegedly …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • reputedly — repute ► NOUN 1) the opinion generally held of someone or something. 2) the state of being highly regarded. ► VERB 1) (be reputed) be generally regarded as having done something or as having particular characteristics. 2) (reputed) generally… …   English terms dictionary

  • reputedly — adverb by repute; according to general belief fish with reputedly poisonous flesh …   Useful english dictionary

  • reputedly — adverb Date: 1687 according to reputation or general belief …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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