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required subjects

  • 1 required subjects

    Американизм: обязательные курсы

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > required subjects

  • 2 required subjects

    образ
    В средней школе к ним относятся: английский язык, математика, точные науки, "социальные науки" (история, география, права и обязанности гражданина, экономика) и физподготовка. Продолжительность каждого курса варьируется от округа к округу [ school district] по решению местного Совета по образованию [ Board of Education]

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > required subjects

  • 3 required subjects

    образ обяза́тельные предме́ты (в средней школе: английский, математика, точные науки, обществоведение и физподготовка)

    The Americanisms. English-Russian dictionary. > required subjects

  • 4 required

    rɪˈkwaɪəd прил.
    1) необходимый;
    обязательный required studies ≈ обязательные курсы required subject ≈ обязательные предметы Syn: necessary, essential
    2) требуемый;
    указанный, назначенный in the required time ≈ в назначенный срок необходимый, обязательный - * studies /subjects/ (американизм) (университетское) обязательные курсы - these books are * reading эти книги входят в программусписок обязательной литературы/ - qualities * for this post данные, необходимые для назначения на этот пост требуемый;
    указанный, назначенный - in the * time в назначенный срок - to cut smth. to the * length обрезать что-л. до нужной длины - we have the money * требуемая сумма у нас есть as ~ по требованию required p. p. от require ~ необходимый;
    обязательный;
    required studies амер. унив. обязательные курсы ~ необходимый ~ обязательный ~ требуемый ~ by prudence требуемый из соображений благоразумия ~ необходимый;
    обязательный;
    required studies амер. унив. обязательные курсы sum ~ требуемая сумма

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > required

  • 5 required

    [rıʹkwaıəd] a
    1) необходимый, обязательный

    required studies /subjects/ - амер. унив. обязательные курсы

    these books are required reading - эти книги входят в программу /в список обязательной литературы/

    qualities required for this post - данные, необходимые для назначения на этот пост

    2) требуемый; указанный, назначенный

    to cut smth. to the required length - обрезать что-л. до нужной длины

    НБАРС > required

  • 6 curriculum

    1. образ
    Составляется по каждому предмету в высшем учебном заведении. Курсы при этом могут делиться на обязательные для всех [ core curriculum] (обычно на первом курсе), обязательные [ required subjects] для данной специальности [ major] (обычно 10-12 курсов) и для второй специальности [ minor] (обычно 8 курсов), курсы по выбору [ elective]
    2.
    курсы, предлагаемые в университете
    Полный набор учебных предметов, предлагаемых студентам в университете, в колледже (из которых студент должен сделать соответствующий выбор).
    3.
    Охватывает собственно учебные планы данного университета (колледжа), и все остальные виды деятельности, которые предлагаются студенту на время учебы в данном учебном заведении (клубы, драмкружки, спорт и т.д.)

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > curriculum

  • 7 require

    1) тре́бовать

    if circumstances require — в слу́чае необходи́мости

    2) нужда́ться в чём-л. ( need)

    The Americanisms. English-Russian dictionary. > require

  • 8 Dickson, William Kennedy Laurie

    [br]
    b. August 1860 Brittany, France
    d. 28 September 1935 Twickenham, England
    [br]
    Scottish inventor and photographer.
    [br]
    Dickson was born in France of English and Scottish parents. As a young man of almost 19 years, he wrote in 1879 to Thomas Edison in America, asking for a job. Edison replied that he was not taking on new staff at that time, but Dickson, with his mother and sisters, decided to emigrate anyway. In 1883 he contacted Edison again, and was given a job at the Goerk Street laboratory of the Edison Electric Works in New York. He soon assumed a position of responsibility as Superintendent, working on the development of electric light and power systems, and also carried out most of the photography Edison required. In 1888 he moved to the Edison West Orange laboratory, becoming Head of the ore-milling department. When Edison, inspired by Muybridge's sequence photographs of humans and animals in motion, decided to develop a motion picture apparatus, he gave the task to Dickson, whose considerable skills in mechanics, photography and electrical work made him the obvious choice. The first experiments, in 1888, were on a cylinder machine like the phonograph, in which the sequence pictures were to be taken in a spiral. This soon proved to be impractical, and work was delayed for a time while Dickson developed a new ore-milling machine. Little progress with the movie project was made until George Eastman's introduction in July 1889 of celluloid roll film, which was thin, tough, transparent and very flexible. Dickson returned to his experiments in the spring of 1891 and soon had working models of a film camera and viewer, the latter being demonstrated at the West Orange laboratory on 20 May 1891. By the early summer of 1892 the project had advanced sufficiently for commercial exploitation to begin. The Kinetograph camera used perforated 35 mm film (essentially the same as that still in use in the late twentieth century), and the kinetoscope, a peep-show viewer, took fifty feet of film running in an endless loop. Full-scale manufacture of the viewers started in 1893, and they were demonstrated on a number of occasions during that year. On 14 April 1894 the first kinetoscope parlour, with ten viewers, was opened to the public in New York. By the end of that year, the kinetoscope was seen by the public all over America and in Europe. Dickson had created the first commercially successful cinematograph system. Dickson left Edison's employment on 2 April 1895, and for a time worked with Woodville Latham on the development of his Panoptikon projector, a projection version of the kinetoscope. In December 1895 he joined with Herman Casier, Henry N.Marvin and Elias Koopman to form the American Mutoscope Company. Casier had designed the Mutoscope, an animated-picture viewer in which the sequences of pictures were printed on cards fixed radially to a drum and were flipped past the eye as the drum rotated. Dickson designed the Biograph wide-film camera to produce the picture sequences, and also a projector to show the films directly onto a screen. The large-format images gave pictures of high quality for the period; the Biograph went on public show in America in September 1896, and subsequently throughout the world, operating until around 1905. In May 1897 Dickson returned to England and set up as a producer of Biograph films, recording, among other subjects, Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee celebrations in 1897, Pope Leo XIII in 1898, and scenes of the Boer War in 1899 and 1900. Many of the Biograph subjects were printed as reels for the Mutoscope to produce the "what the butler saw" machines which were a feature of fairgrounds and seaside arcades until modern times. Dickson's contact with the Biograph Company, and with it his involvement in cinematography, ceased in 1911.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Gordon Hendricks, 1961, The Edison Motion Picture Myth.
    —1966, The Kinetoscope.
    —1964, The Beginnings of the Biograph.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Dickson, William Kennedy Laurie

  • 9 distribution requirements

    1. образ
    Делятся на программы, включающие обязательные для изучения предметы [required (precsribed) subjects], обязательные более широкие дисциплины [minimally prescribed] и рекомендуемые программы [recommended distribution guidelines]. При таких программах выбор студентом учебных курсов ограничен определенными областями знаний или учебными предметами.
    2.
    Количество курсов, которые студент должен прослушать на каждом факультете или уровне [ division]

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > distribution requirements

  • 10 list

    [lɪst]
    n
    список, перечень, реестр

    His name was taken out of the list. — Его фамилия была вычеркнута из списка.

    We didn't find the name in the list. — Мы не нашли этой фамилии в списке.

    Is my name on the list? — Мое имя есть в списке? /Я в списе

    - long list
    - shopping list
    - alphabetical list
    - diplomatic list
    - free list
    - active list
    - black list
    - passenger list
    - priority list
    - reference list
    - check list
    - employment list
    - danger list
    - best-seller list
    - word list
    - publisher's list
    - visiting list
    - retired list
    - price list
    - list price
    - list of words
    - list of applicants
    - list of people present
    - list of subjects
    - in the foregoing list
    - on a list
    - be on the list
    - add smb, smth to the list
    - be on the black list
    - be placed on the black list
    - be on the waiting list
    - be on the sick list
    - be included in the previous list
    - be next on the list
    - be placed first on the class list
    - check the list
    - check the names with the list
    - check off the names on the list
    - combine two electoral lists
    - draw up make a list of the best novels
    - keep a list of those present
    - look down the list
    - make a full list
    - open the subscription list
    - place smb's name on the mailing list
    - put forward a list of candidates
    - stand high on the list
    - take smb off the list
    - write one's name into the list
    - list for subscription is closed
    - books on the required reading list

    English-Russian combinatory dictionary > list

  • 11 discussion board

    E-com
    an area on a Web site that allows people to contribute opinions, ideas, and announcements. It is particularly suitable for casual, one-off interactions because little commitment is required from participants. They can generally review a discussion topic without subscribing, although they do have to subscribe if they want to contribute something themselves.
         It is not essential for the Web site owner to moderate discussion boards, although it is important to watch out for the emergence of “off-topic” subjects—contributions that are unnecessarily negative or perhaps libelous—and copyright infringement.
         A prime example of the success of the discussion board approach is how Amazon.com uses it to allow its consumers to publish book reviews.

    The ultimate business dictionary > discussion board

  • 12 Muybridge, Eadweard

    [br]
    b. 9 April 1830 Kingston upon Thames, England
    d. 8 May 1904 Kingston upon Thames, England
    [br]
    English photographer and pioneer of sequence photography of movement.
    [br]
    He was born Edward Muggeridge, but later changed his name, taking the Saxon spelling of his first name and altering his surname, first to Muygridge and then to Muybridge. He emigrated to America in 1851, working in New York in bookbinding and selling as a commission agent for the London Printing and Publishing Company. Through contact with a New York daguerreotypist, Silas T.Selleck, he acquired an interest in photography that developed after his move to California in 1855. On a visit to England in 1860 he learned the wet-collodion process from a friend, Arthur Brown, and acquired the best photographic equipment available in London before returning to America. In 1867, under his trade pseudonym "Helios", he set out to record the scenery of the Far West with his mobile dark-room, christened "The Flying Studio".
    His reputation as a photographer of the first rank spread, and he was commissioned to record the survey visit of Major-General Henry W.Halleck to Alaska and also to record the territory through which the Central Pacific Railroad was being constructed. Perhaps because of this latter project, he was approached by the President of the Central Pacific, Leland Stanford, to attempt to photograph a horse trotting at speed. There was a long-standing controversy among racing men as to whether a trotting horse had all four hooves off the ground at any point; Stanford felt that it did, and hoped than an "instantaneous" photograph would settle the matter once and for all. In May 1872 Muybridge photographed the horse "Occident", but without any great success because the current wet-collodion process normally required many seconds, even in a good light, for a good result. In April 1873 he managed to produce some better negatives, in which a recognizable silhouette of the horse showed all four feet above the ground at the same time.
    Soon after, Muybridge left his young wife, Flora, in San Francisco to go with the army sent to put down the revolt of the Modoc Indians. While he was busy photographing the scenery and the combatants, his wife had an affair with a Major Harry Larkyns. On his return, finding his wife pregnant, he had several confrontations with Larkyns, which culminated in his shooting him dead. At his trial for murder, in February 1875, Muybridge was acquitted by the jury on the grounds of justifiable homicide; he left soon after on a long trip to South America.
    He again took up his photographic work when he returned to North America and Stanford asked him to take up the action-photography project once more. Using a new shutter design he had developed while on his trip south, and which would operate in as little as 1/1,000 of a second, he obtained more detailed pictures of "Occident" in July 1877. He then devised a new scheme, which Stanford sponsored at his farm at Palo Alto. A 50 ft (15 m) long shed was constructed, containing twelve cameras side by side, and a white background marked off with vertical, numbered lines was set up. Each camera was fitted with Muybridge's highspeed shutter, which was released by an electromagnetic catch. Thin threads stretched across the track were broken by the horse as it moved along, closing spring electrical contacts which released each shutter in turn. Thus, in about half a second, twelve photographs were obtained that showed all the phases of the movement.
    Although the pictures were still little more than silhouettes, they were very sharp, and sequences published in scientific and photographic journals throughout the world excited considerable attention. By replacing the threads with an electrical commutator device, which allowed the release of the shutters at precise intervals, Muybridge was able to take series of actions by other animals and humans. From 1880 he lectured in America and Europe, projecting his results in motion on the screen with his Zoopraxiscope projector. In August 1883 he received a grant of $40,000 from the University of Pennsylvania to carry on his work there. Using the vastly improved gelatine dry-plate process and new, improved multiple-camera apparatus, during 1884 and 1885 he produced over 100,000 photographs, of which 20,000 were reproduced in Animal Locomotion in 1887. The subjects were animals of all kinds, and human figures, mostly nude, in a wide range of activities. The quality of the photographs was extremely good, and the publication attracted considerable attention and praise.
    Muybridge returned to England in 1894; his last publications were Animals in Motion (1899) and The Human Figure in Motion (1901). His influence on the world of art was enormous, over-turning the conventional representations of action hitherto used by artists. His work in pioneering the use of sequence photography led to the science of chronophotography developed by Marey and others, and stimulated many inventors, notably Thomas Edison to work which led to the introduction of cinematography in the 1890s.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1887, Animal Locomotion, Philadelphia.
    1893, Descriptive Zoopraxography, Pennsylvania. 1899, Animals in Motion, London.
    Further Reading
    1973, Eadweard Muybridge: The Stanford Years, Stanford.
    G.Hendricks, 1975, Muybridge: The Father of the Motion Picture, New York. R.Haas, 1976, Muybridge: Man in Motion, California.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Muybridge, Eadweard

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