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1 crise de 1929
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2 crise
crise [kʀiz]1. feminine nouna. [d'appendicite, asthme, rhumatisme] attackb. [de colère, rage, jalousie] fit• piquer une or sa crise (inf) to fly off the handlec. ( = bouleversement) crisis• crise de confiance/conscience crisis of confidence/conscience• crise économique/d'identité economic/identity crisis2. compounds• il nous a fait une crise de nerfs parce qu'il n'en voulait pas he threw a tantrum because he didn't want any ► crise de la quarantaine midlife crisis* * *kʀiz1) ( phase difficile) crisisen (pleine) crise — [secteur, pays] in (the middle of a) crisis
la crise — Économie the economic crisis
2) ( pénurie) shortagecrise de main-d'œuvre — shortage of labour [BrE]
3) Médecine attack4) ( accès) fitfaire/piquer (colloq) une or sa crise — [enfant] to have/to throw a tantrum; [adulte] to have/to throw a fit (colloq)
•Phrasal Verbs:* * *kʀiz nf1) (politique, économique) crisis2) (= accès) fit3) MÉDECINE attack, fit* * *crise nf1 gén crisis; crise conjugale/d'adolescence marital/adolescent crisis; crise de conscience crisis of conscience; crise d'identité identity crisis; la crise de l'Église/de l'Université the crisis in the Church/in the Universities; être en crise [couple, éducation] to be in crisis; traverser/connaître une crise to undergo/to experience a crisis;2 Pol, Écon crisis; crise ministérielle/gouvernementale ministerial/government crisis; crise constitutionnelle constitutional crisis; crise bancaire/boursière/pétrolière banking/stock market/oil crisis; crise agricole crisis in the agricultural industry; crise de l'énergie energy crisis; en (pleine) crise [secteur, pays] in (the middle of a) crisis; en période or temps de crise in times of crisis; être au bord de la crise to be on the verge of a crisis; la crise the economic crisis, the slump; ressentir les effets de/sortir de la crise to feel the effects of/to come out of the economic crisis ou the slump; la crise de 1929 the Great Depression, the Slump;4 Méd attack; crise d'asthme asthma attack; crise de paludisme/d'urticaire attack of malaria/of hives; en cas de crise in case of an attack; crise d'angoisse panic ou anxiety attack; crise d'appendicite appendicitis; crise d'épilepsie epileptic fit; crise de rhumatisme bout of rheumatism; crise de toux coughing fit;5 ( accès) fit; crise de colère/jalousie fit of rage/jealousy; crise de larmes crying fit; elle a été prise d'une crise de rangement she had a sudden urge to tidy up; une crise de fou rire (a fit of) the giggles (pl); avoir une crise de fou rire to get the giggles;6 ○( colère) outburst; ne fais pas attention à mes crises! don't take any notice of my outbursts!; faire/piquer○ une or sa crise [enfant] to have/to throw a tantrum; [adulte] to have/to throw a fit○.crise cardiaque heart attack; crise de foie indigestion; crise de nerfs hysterics (pl); avoir une crise de nerfs to have hysterics.[kriz] nom féminin1. [période, situation difficile] crisistraverser une crise to go through a crisis ou a critical timecrise du logement/papier housing/paper shortagea. [grave] crisis ou panic on the Stock Exchangeb. [passagère] blip on the Stock Exchangecrise économique economic crisis ou slump, recession[de colère] (fit of) rage[besoin urgent]4. MÉDECINEcrise d'appendicite/d'arthrose attack of appendicitis/arthritiscrise épileptique ou d'épilepsie epileptic fittu vas attraper une crise de foie à manger tous ces chocolats (familier) you'll make yourself sick if you eat all these chocolatescrise de nerfs fit of hysterics, attack of nerves————————en crise locution adjectivale -
3 crisi
f crisismedicine fitcrisi energetica energy crisiscrisi degli alloggi housing shortage* * *crisi s.f.1 crisis*; ( depressione finanziaria) slump; recession: crisi commerciale, economica, finanziaria, commercial, economic, financial crisis (o recession); l'industria italiana sta uscendo dalla crisi, Italian industry is beginning to emerge from the recession; siamo in piena crisi, we're in the middle of a crisis; crisi degli alloggi, housing shortage (o housing problem); crisi del dollaro, dollar crisis; crisi della Borsa, slump on the Stock Exchange; crisi ministeriale, cabinet crisis; scoppio di una crisi, outbreak of a crisis; unità di crisi, crisis team; task force; attraversare una crisi, essere in periodo di crisi, to pass (o go) through a crisis; superare una crisi, to get over (o to surmount) a crisis // (st.) la grande crisi ( del 1929), the great crash (of 1929)2 (med.) fit, attack, outburst, paroxysm: crisi di nervi, nervous fit (o attack); una crisi di pianto, a fit of crying.* * *['krizi]sostantivo femminile invariabile1) (difficoltà) crisis* (anche pol. econ.)mettere qcn. in crisi — to put sb. in a difficult position
la grande crisi — stor. the Great Depression, the Slump
2) (penuria) shortage, crisis*crisi degli alloggi — housing crisis o crunch
3) (accesso) attack, fit, outburstcrisi di pianto — burst of weeping, fit of crying
avere una crisi di nervi — to throw a blue fit, to go into hysterics
•crisi d'astinenza — withdrawal symptoms, cold turkey colloq.
crisi energetica — energy crunch o crisis
* * *crisi/'krizi/f.inv.1 (difficoltà) crisis* (anche pol. econ.); crisi coniugale marital crisis; in crisi in crisis; mettere qcn. in crisi to put sb. in a difficult position; la grande crisi stor. the Great Depression, the Slump2 (penuria) shortage, crisis*; crisi occupazionale job shortage; crisi degli alloggi housing crisis o crunch3 (accesso) attack, fit, outburst;; crisi di pianto burst of weeping, fit of crying; avere una crisi di nervi to throw a blue fit, to go into hystericscrisi d'asma asthma attack; crisi d'astinenza withdrawal symptoms, cold turkey colloq.; crisi cardiaca heart attack; crisi energetica energy crunch o crisis; crisi epilettica epileptic fit; crisi di governo government crisis; crisi d'identità identity crisis; crisi isterica hysterics; crisi di rigetto rejection (crisis). -
4 депрессия депресси·я
эк.depression, recession, decline; (большая) doldrums, slumpнаходиться в состоянии депрессии — to be in the doldrums / in a state of depression
Великая депрессия (1929-1933 гг., США) — the Great Depression
длительная / затяжная депрессия — prolonged depression
период депрессии — period of depression / slump-phase of contraction
Russian-english dctionary of diplomacy > депрессия депресси·я
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5 Boeing, William Edward
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 1 October 1881 Detroit, Michigan, USAd. 28 September 1956 USA[br]American aircraft designer, creator of one of the most successful aircraft manufacturing companies in the world.[br]In 1915 William E.Boeing and his friend Commander Conrad Westervelt decided that they could improve on the aeroplanes then being produced in the United States. Boeing was a prominent Seattle businessman with interests in land and timber, while Westervelt was an officer in the US Navy. They bought a Martin Model T float-plane in order to gain some experience and then produced their own design, the B \& W, which first flew in June 1916. Westervelt was transferred to the East, leaving Boeing to continue the production of the B \& W floatplanes, for which purpose he set up the Pacific Aero Products Company. On 26 April 1917 this became the Boeing Airplane Company, which prospered following the US involvement in the First World War.In March 1919 Boeing and Edward Hubbard inaugurated the world's first international airmail service between Seattle and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The Boeing Company then had to face the slump in aircraft manufacturing after the war: they survived, and by 1922 they had started producing a successful series of fighters while continuing to develop their flying-boat and floatplane designs. Boeing set up the Boeing Air Transport Corporation to tender for lucrative airmail contracts and then produced aircraft which could out-perform those of his rivals. The company went from strength to strength and by the end of the 1920s a huge conglomerate had been built up: the United Aircraft and Transport Corporation. They produced an advanced high-speed monoplane mailplane, the model 200 Monomail in 1930, which saw the birth of a new era of Boeing designs.The Wall Street crash of 1929 and legislation in 1934, which banned any company from both building aeroplanes and running an airline, were setbacks which the Boeing Airplane Company overcame, moving ahead to become world leaders. William E.Boeing decided that it was time he retired, but he returned to work during the Second World War.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsGuggenheim Medal 1934.Further ReadingC.Chant, 1982, Boeing: The World's Greatest Planemakers, Hadley Wood, England (describes William E.Boeing's part in the founding and building up of the Boeing Company).P.M.Bowers, 1990, Boeing Aircraft since 1916, 3rd edn, London (covers Boeing's aircraft).Boeing Company, 1977, Pedigree of Champions: Boeing since 1916, Seattle.JDS -
6 Morris, William Richard, Viscount Nuffield
[br]b. 10 October 1877 Worcester, Englandd. 22 August 1963 Nuffield Place, England[br]English industrialist, car manufacturer and philanthropist.[br]Morris was the son of Frederick Morris, then a draper. He was the eldest of a family of seven, all of whom, except for one sister, died in childhood. When he was 3 years old, his father moved to Cowley, near Oxford, where he attended the village school. After a short time with a local bicycle firm he set up on his own at the age of 16 with a capital of £4. He manufactured pedal cycles and by 1902 he had designed a motor cycle and was doing car-repair work. By 1912, at the Motor Show, he was able to announce his first car, the 8.9 hp, two-seater Morris Oxford with its characteristic "bull-nose". It could perform at up to 50 mph (80 km/h) and 50 mpg (5.65 1/100 km). It cost £165.Though untrained, Morris was a born engineer as well as a natural judge of character. This enabled him to build up a reliable team of assistants in his growing business, with an order for four hundred cars at the Motor Show in 1912. Much of his business was built up in the assembly of components manufactured by outside suppliers. In he moved out of his initial premises by New College in Longwall and bought land at Cowley, where he brought out his second model, the 11.9hp Morris Oxford. This was after the First World War, during which car production was reduced to allow the manufacture of tanks and munitions. He was awarded the OBE in 1917 for his war work. Morris Motors Ltd was incorporated in 1919, and within fifteen months sales of cars had reached over 3,000 a year. By 1923 he was producing 20,000 cars a year, and in 1926 50,000, equivalent to about one-third of Britain's output. With the slump, a substantial overdraft, and a large stock of unsold cars, Morris took the bold decision to cut the prices of cars in stock, which then sold out within three weeks. Other makers followed suit, but Morris was ahead of them.Morris was part-founder of the Pressed Steel Company, set up to produce car bodies at Cowley. A clever operation with the shareholding of the Morris Motors Company allowed Morris a substantial overall profit to provide expansion capital. By 1931 his "empire" comprised, in addition to Morris Motors, the MG Car Company, the Wolseley Company, the SU Carburettor Company and Morris Commercial Cars. In 1936, the value of Morris's financial interest in the business was put at some £16 million.William Morris was a frugal man and uncomplicated, having little use for all the money he made except to channel it to charitable purposes. It is said that in all he gave away some £30 million during his lifetime, much of it invested by the recipients to provide long-term benefits. He married Elizabeth Anstey in 1904 and lived for thirty years at Nuffield Place. He lived modestly, and even after retirement, when Honorary President of the British Motor Corporation, the result of a merger between Morris Motors and the Austin Motor Company, he drove himself to work in a modest 10 hp Wolseley. His generosity benefited many hospitals in London, Oxford, Birmingham and elsewhere. Oxford Colleges were another class of beneficiary from his largesse.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsViscount 1938; Baron (Lord Nuffield) 1934; Baronet 1929; OBE 1917; GBE 1941; CH 1958. FRS 1939. He was a doctor of seven universities and an honorary freeman of seven towns.Further ReadingR.Jackson, 1964, The Nuffield Story.P.W.S.Andrews and E.Brunner, The Life of Lord Nuffield.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Morris, William Richard, Viscount Nuffield
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7 депрессия
ж.1) ( угнетённое состояние) depressionпребыва́ть в (состоя́нии) депре́ссии — be depressed
2) эк. depression, slump, decline; downturnВели́кая депре́ссия (с 1929 г до конца 1930-х гг) — the (Great) Depression
См. также в других словарях:
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