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41 Slavery and Slave trade, Portuguese
The Portuguese role in the Atlantic slave trade (ca. 1500-1850), next to Portugal's motives for empire and the nature of her colonial rule, remains one of the most controversial historical questions. The institution of slavery was conventional in Roman and Visigothic Portugal, and the Catholic Church sanctioned it. The origins of an international traffic in enslaved African captives in the Atlantic are usually dated to after the year 1411, when the first black African slaves were brought to Portugal (Lagos) and sold, but there were activities a century earlier that indicated the beginnings. In the 1340s, under King Afonso IV, Portuguese had captured native islanders on voyages to the Canary Islands and later used them as slave labor in the sugar plantations of Madeira. After 1500, and especially after the 1550s, when African slave-worked plantations became established in Brazil and other American colonies, the Atlantic slave trade became a vast international enterprise in which Portugal played a key role. But all the European maritime powers were involved in the slave trade from 1500 to 1800, including Great Britain, France, and Holland, those countries that eventually pressured Portugal to cease the slave trade in its empire.No one knows the actual numbers of Africans enslaved in the nefarious business, but it is clear that millions of persons during more than three-and-a-half centuries were forcibly stolen from African societies and that the survivors of the terrible slave voyages helped build the economies of the Americas. Portugal's role in the trade was as controversial as its impact on Portuguese society. Comparatively large numbers of African slaves resided in Portugal, although the precise number remains a mystery; by the last quarter of the 18th century, when the prime minister of King José I, the Marquis of Pombal abolished slavery in Portugal, the African racial element had been largely absorbed in Portuguese society.Great Portuguese fortunes were built on the African slave trade in Portugal, Brazil, and Angola, and the slave trade continued in the Portuguese empire until the 1850s and 1860s. The Angolan slave trade across the Atlantic was doomed after Brazil banned the import of slaves in 1850, under great pressure from Britain. As for slavery in Portugal's African empire, various forms of this institution, including forced labor, continued in Angola and Mozambique until the early 1960s. A curious vestige of the Portuguese role in the African slave trade over the centuries is found in the family name, appearing in Lisbon telephone books, of Negreiro, which means literally, "One who trades in (African) Negro slaves."Historical dictionary of Portugal > Slavery and Slave trade, Portuguese
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42 go up
1) (to increase in size, value etc: The temperature/price has gone up.) subir, aumentar2) (to be built: There are office blocks going up all over town.) construirsego up vb subirv.• ascender v.• ir arriba v.• remontar v.• subir v.v + adv1)a) ( ascend) \<\<person\>\> subir; \<\<balloon/plane\>\> subir, ascender* (frml); \<\<curtain\>\> ( Theat) levantarseb) ( approach)to go up (to somebody/something) — acercarse* (a alguien/algo)
c) ( toward the north) ir*d) ( to another place) (esp BrE) ir*2)a) ( increase) \<\<temperature/price/cost\>\> subir, aumentar; \<\<population/unemployment\>\> aumentarto go up in price — subir or aumentar de precio
b) ( improve) \<\<standard\>\> mejorar3)a) (be built, erected)b) ( be put up)4) ( burst into flames) prenderse fuego; ( explode) estallarVI + ADV1) (=rise) [temperature, price] subirthe total goes up to... — el total asciende a...
Hartlepool should go up this season — (Sport) el Hartlepool debería ascender esta temporada
2) (=travel)3) (=approach)to go up to sb — acercarse a algn, abordar a algn
4) (=go upstairs) subir (a la planta de arriba)5) (=be built) [tower block, building] levantarse6) (=explode) estallarto go up in flames — arder en llamas, ser pasto de las llamas
7) (=be heard)8) (Brit)(Univ)to go up to university — (to begin studies) entrar en la universidad; (after vacation) volver a la universidad
9) (Theat) [curtain] subir, abrirse, levantarse; [lights] encenderse* * *v + adv1)a) ( ascend) \<\<person\>\> subir; \<\<balloon/plane\>\> subir, ascender* (frml); \<\<curtain\>\> ( Theat) levantarseb) ( approach)to go up (to somebody/something) — acercarse* (a alguien/algo)
c) ( toward the north) ir*d) ( to another place) (esp BrE) ir*2)a) ( increase) \<\<temperature/price/cost\>\> subir, aumentar; \<\<population/unemployment\>\> aumentarto go up in price — subir or aumentar de precio
b) ( improve) \<\<standard\>\> mejorar3)a) (be built, erected)b) ( be put up)4) ( burst into flames) prenderse fuego; ( explode) estallar -
43 Wright, Frank Lloyd
SUBJECT AREA: Architecture and building[br]b. 8 June 1869 Richland Center, Wisconsin, USAd. 9 April 1959 Phoenix, Arizona, USA[br]American architect who, in an unparalleled career spanning almost seventy years, became the most important figure on the modern architectural scene both in his own country and far further afield.[br]Wright began his career in 1887 working in the Chicago offices of Adler \& Sullivan. He conceived a great admiration for Sullivan, who was then concentrating upon large commercial projects in modern mode, producing functional yet decorative buildings which took all possible advantage of new structural methods. Wright was responsible for many of the domestic commissions.In 1893 Wright left the firm in order to set up practice on his own, thus initiating a career which was to develop into three distinct phases. In the first of these, up until the First World War, he was chiefly designing houses in a concept in which he envisaged "the house as a shelter". These buildings displayed his deeply held opinion that detached houses in country areas should be designed as an integral part of the landscape, a view later to be evidenced strongly in the work of modern Finnish architects. Wright's designs were called "prairie houses" because so many of them were built in the MidWest of America, which Wright described as a "prairie". These were low and spreading, with gently sloping rooflines, very plain and clean lined, built of traditional materials in warm rural colours, blending softly into their settings. Typical was W.W.Willit's house of 1902 in Highland Park, Illinois.In the second phase of his career Wright began to build more extensively in modern materials, utilizing advanced means of construction. A notable example was his remarkable Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, carefully designed and built in 1916–22 (now demolished), with special foundations and structure to withstand (successfully) strong earthquake tremors. He also became interested in the possibilities of reinforced concrete; in 1906 he built his church at Oak Park, Illinois, entirely of this material. In the 1920s, in California, he abandoned his use of traditional materials for house building in favour of precast concrete blocks, which were intended to provide an "organic" continuity between structure and decorative surfacing. In his continued exploration of the possibilities of concrete as a building material, he created the dramatic concept of'Falling Water', a house built in 1935–7 at Bear Run in Pennsylvania in which he projected massive reinforced-concrete terraces cantilevered from a cliff over a waterfall in the woodlands. In the later 1930s an extraordinary run of original concepts came from Wright, then nearing 70 years of age, ranging from his own winter residence and studio, Taliesin West in Arizona, to the administration block for Johnson Wax (1936–9) in Racine, Wisconsin, where the main interior ceiling was supported by Minoan-style, inversely tapered concrete columns rising to spreading circular capitals which contained lighting tubes of Pyrex glass.Frank Lloyd Wright continued to work until four days before his death at the age of 91. One of his most important and certainly controversial commissions was the Solomon R.Guggenheim Museum in New York. This had been proposed in 1943 but was not finally built until 1956–9; in this striking design the museum's exhibition areas are ranged along a gradually mounting spiral ramp lit effectively from above. Controversy stemmed from the unusual and original design of exterior banding and interior descending spiral for wall-display of paintings: some critics strongly approved, while others, equally strongly, did not.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsRIBA Royal Gold Medal 1941.Bibliography1945, An Autobiography, Faber \& Faber.Further ReadingE.Kaufmann (ed.), 1957, Frank Lloyd Wright: an American Architect, New York: Horizon Press.H.Russell Hitchcock, 1973, In the Nature of Materials, New York: Da Capo.T.A.Heinz, 1982, Frank Lloyd Wright, New York: St Martin's.DY -
44 Dale, David
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 6 January 1739 Stewarton, Ayrshire, Scotlandd. 17 March 1806 Glasgow, Scotland[br]Scottish developer of a large textile business in find around Glasgow, including the cotton-spinning mills at New Lanark.[br]David Dale, the son of a grocer, began his working life by herding cattle. His connection with the textile industry started when he was apprenticed to a Paisley weaver. After this he travelled the country buying home-spun linen yarns, which he sold in Glasgow. At about the age of 24 he settled in Glasgow as Clerk to a silk merchant. He then started a business importing fine yarns from France and Holland for weaving good-quality cloths such as cambrics. Dale was to become one of the pre-eminent yarn dealers in Scotland. In 1778 he acquired the first cotton-spinning mill built in Scotland by an English company at Rothesay on the Isle of Bute. In 1784 he met Richard Arkwright, who was touring Scotland, and together they visited the Falls of the Clyde near the town of Lanark. Arkwright immediately recognized the potential of the site for driving water-powered mills. Dale acquired part of the area from Lord Braxfield and in 1785 began to build his first mill there in partnership with Arkwright. The association with Arkwright soon ceased, however, and by c.1795 Dale had erected four mills. Because the location of the mills was remote, he built houses for the workers and then employed pauper children brought from the slums of Edinburgh and Glasgow; at one time there were over 400 of them. Dale's attitude to his workers was benevolent and humane. He tried to provide reasonable working conditions and the mills were well designed with a large workshop in which machinery was constructed. Dale was also a partner in mills at Catrine, Newton Stewart, Spinningdale in Sutherlandshire and some others. In 1785 he established the first Turkey red dye works in Scotland and was in partnership with George Macintosh, the father of Charles Macintosh. Dale manufactured cloth in Glasgow and from 1783 was Agent for the Royal Bank of Scotland, a lucrative position. In 1799 he was persuaded by Robert Owen to sell the New Lanark mills for £60,000 to a Manchester partnership which made Owen the Manager. Owen had married Dale's daughter, Anne Caroline, in 1799. Possibly due in part to poor health, Dale retired in 1800 to Rosebank near Glasgow, having made a large fortune. In 1770 he had withdrawn from the established Church of Scotland and founded a new one called the "Old Independents". He visited the various branches of this Church, as well as convicts in Bridewell prison, to preach. He was also a great benefactor to the poor in Glasgow. He had a taste for music and sang old Scottish songs with great gusto.[br]Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography.R.Owen, 1857, The Life of Robert Owen, written by himself, London (mentions Dale).Through his association with New Lanark and Robert Owen, details about Dale may be found in J.Butt (ed.), 1971, Robert Owen, Prince of Cotton Spinners, Newton Abbot; S.Pollard and J.Salt (eds), 1971, Robert Owen, Prophet of the Poor: essays in honour of the two-hundredth anniversary of his birth, London.RLH -
45 build
A n carrure f ; a man of stocky/average build un homme carré/de carrure moyenne ; he has the build of an athlete il a la carrure d'un athlète ; she is slender in build elle est mince.1 ( construct) construire [factory, city, railway] ; édifier [church, monument] ; construire [nest] ; to build sb a house, to build a house for sb construire une maison pour qn ; to build a wall from ou out of bricks construire un mur en briques ; to build a nest out of twigs construire un nid avec des brindilles ; to build an extension onto a house agrandir une maison ;2 ( assemble) construire [car, engine, ship] ;4 ( establish) bâtir [career, future] ; établir [relations, relationship] ; fonder [empire] ; créer [prosperity] ; former [team] ; to build a new China bâtir une Chine nouvelle ; to build a future for our country/our children bâtir un avenir pour notre pays/nos enfants ; to build one's hopes on sth fonder ses espoirs sur qch ; to build a presence in the European market faire sentir sa présence sur le marché européen ;5 Games former [sequence, set, word].1 ( construct) construire ;2 fig ( use as a foundation) to build on tirer parti de [popularity, success] ; to build on the excitement generated by the first film tirer parti de l'enthousiasme suscité par le premier film ; the scheme would build on the existing system le projet se fonderait sur le système existant ; the company wishes to build on its Asian base la société souhaite se développer à partir de sa base en Asie.■ build in:▶ build [sth] in, build in [sth]1 ( construct) encastrer [mirror, bookcase] ; to build a wardrobe into a wall encastrer une penderie dans un mur ;2 ( incorporate) introduire [clause, provision, guarantee] ; to build a safeguard into a contract introduire une garantie dans un contrat.■ build up:▶ build up [gas, silt, deposits] s'accumuler ; [traffic] s'intensifier ; [business, trade] se développer ; [tension, pressure, excitement] monter ;▶ build up [sth], build [sth] up1 ( accumulate) accumuler [weapons, wealth] ;2 ( boost) établir [self-confidence, trust] ; gonfler [morale] ; don't build your hopes up too high ne te fais pas d'illusions ;3 ( establish) constituer [collection] ; créer [business, organization] ; constituer [army] ; établir [picture, profile] ; créer [database] ; se faire [reputation] ; the college built up a large library le collège s'est constitué une importante bibliothèque ;▶ build [sth/sb] up, build up [sth/sb]1 (through eating, exercise) affermir [muscles] ; to build up one's forearms se muscler les avant-bras ; to build oneself up, to build up one's strength prendre des forces ;2 ( promote) they built him up to be a star ils l'ont lancé pour en faire une star. -
46 pinnacle
['pinəkl]1) (a tall thin spire built on the roof of a church, castle etc.) spids2) (a high pointed rock or mountain: It was a dangerous pinnacle to climb.) tinde3) (a high point (of achievement, success etc): He has reached the pinnacle of his career.) højdepunkt; top* * *['pinəkl]1) (a tall thin spire built on the roof of a church, castle etc.) spids2) (a high pointed rock or mountain: It was a dangerous pinnacle to climb.) tinde3) (a high point (of achievement, success etc): He has reached the pinnacle of his career.) højdepunkt; top -
47 pier
[pɪə(r)]1) (at seaside resort) molo m.2) (part of harbour) (built of stone) molo m.; (landing stage) imbarcadero m.3) ing. (of bridge, dam, foundations) pilone m.; (pillar in church, of gateway) pilastro m.; (wall between openings) trumeau m.* * *[piə](a platform of stone, wood etc stretching from the shore into the sea, a lake etc, used as a landing-place for boats or as a place of entertainment: The passengers stepped down on to the pier.) molo, pontile* * *pier /pɪə(r)/n.1 (naut.) frangiflutti2 (naut.) banchina; gettata; molo; pontile4 (edil.) piedritto; montante; pilastro● (naut.) pier dues ► pierage □ pier face, fronte del molo □ pier-glass, specchiera ( tra due finestre) □ pier-head, testa (o punta) di molo □ pier-table, mensola ( tra due finestre).* * *[pɪə(r)]1) (at seaside resort) molo m.2) (part of harbour) (built of stone) molo m.; (landing stage) imbarcadero m.3) ing. (of bridge, dam, foundations) pilone m.; (pillar in church, of gateway) pilastro m.; (wall between openings) trumeau m. -
48 Breuer, Marcel Lajos
[br]b. 22 May 1902 Pécs, Hungaryd. 1 July 1981 New York (?), USA[br]Hungarian member of the European Bauhaus generation in the 1920s, who went on to become a leader in the modern school of architectural and furniture design in Europe and the United States.[br]Breuer began his student days following an art course in Vienna, but joined the Bauhaus at Weimar, where he later graduated, in 1920. When Gropius re-established the school in purpose-built structures at Dessau, Breuer became a member of the teaching staff in charge of the carpentry and furniture workshops. Much of his time there was spent in design and research into new materials being applied to furniture and interior decoration. The essence of his contribution was to relate the design of furniture to industrial production; in this field he developed the tubular-steel structure, especially in chair design, and experimented with aluminium as a furniture material as well as pieces of furniture made up from modular units. His furniture style was characterized by an elegance of line and a careful avoidance of superfluous detail. By 1926 he had furnished the Bauhaus with such furniture in chromium-plated steel, and two years later had developed a cantilevered chair.Breuer left the Bauhaus in 1928 and set up an architectural practice in Berlin. In the early 1930s he also spent some time in Switzerland. Notable from these years was his Harnischmacher Haus in Wiesbaden and his apartment buildings in the Dolderthal area of Zurich. His architectural work was at first influenced by constructivism, and then by that of Le Corbusier (see Charles-Edouard Jeanneret). In 1935 he moved to England, where in partnership with F.R.S. Yorke he built some houses and continued to practise furniture design. The Isokon Furniture Co. commissioned him to develop ideas that took advantage of the new bending and moulding processes in laminated wood, one result being his much-copied reclining chair.In 1937, like so many of the European architectural refugees from Nazism, he found himself under-occupied due to the reluctance of English clients to embrace the modern architectural movement. He went to the United States at Gropius's invitation to join him as a professor at Harvard. Breuer and Gropius were influential in training a new generation of American architects, and in particular they built a number of houses. This partnership ended in 1941 and Breuer set up practice in New York. His style of work from this time on was still modern, but became more varied. In housing, he adapted his style to American needs and used local materials in a functional manner. In the Whitney Museum (1966) he worked in a sculptural, granite-clad style. Often he utilized a bold reinforced-concrete form, as in his collaboration with Pier Luigi Nervi and Bernard Zehrfuss in the Paris UNESCO Building (1953–8) and the US Embassy in the Hague (1954–8). He displayed his masterly handling of poured concrete used in a strikingly expressionistic, sculptural manner in his St John's Abbey (1953–61) in Collegeville, Minnesota, and in 1973 his Church of St Francis de Sale in Michigan won him the top award of the American Institute of Architects.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsAmerican Institute of Architects Medal of Honour 1964, Gold Medal 1968. Jefferson Foundation Medal 1968.Bibliography1955, Sun and Shadow, the Philosophy of an Architect, New York: Dodd Read (autobiography).Further ReadingC.Jones (ed.), 1963, Marcel Breuer: Buildings and Projects 1921–1961, New York: Praeger.T.Papachristou (ed.), 1970, Marcel Breuer: New Buildings and Projects 1960–1970, New York: Praeger.DY -
49 spire
(a tall, pointed tower, especially one built on the roof of a church.) spir* * *(a tall, pointed tower, especially one built on the roof of a church.) spir -
50 high
high [haɪ]haut ⇒ 1 (a), 1 (b), 1 (d), 1 (f), 1 (g), 1 (m), 1 (o), 1 (p), 2 (a), 2 (b), 3 (a), 3 (b) élevé ⇒ 1 (b)-(e), 1 (k) grand ⇒ 1 (c), 1 (d) noble ⇒ 1 (e) aigu ⇒ 1 (g) excité ⇒ 1 (s) en haut ⇒ 2 (a)∎ how high is that building? quelle est la hauteur de ce bâtiment?;∎ the walls are three metres high les murs ont ou font trois mètres de haut, les murs sont hauts de trois mètres;∎ the building is eight storeys high c'est un immeuble de ou à huit étages;∎ the highest mountain in the country la plus haute montagne du pays;∎ when I was only so high quand je n'étais pas plus grand que ça∎ built on high ground construit sur un terrain élevé;∎ the sun was high in the sky le soleil était haut(c) (above average → number) grand, élevé; (→ speed, value) grand; (→ cost, price, rate) élevé; (→ salary) élevé, gros (grosse); (→ pressure) élevé, haut; (→ polish) brillant;∎ to the highest degree au plus haut degré, à l'extrême;∎ of the highest importance de première importance;∎ to pay a high price payer le prix fort;∎ to fetch a high price se vendre cher;∎ to make a higher bid faire une offre supérieure, surenchérir;∎ highest bidder surenchérisseur(euse) m,f;∎ she suffers from high blood pressure elle a de la tension;∎ also figurative to play for high stakes jouer gros (jeu);∎ built to withstand high temperatures conçu pour résister à des températures élevées;∎ he has a high temperature il a beaucoup de température ou fièvre;∎ areas of high unemployment des régions à fort taux de chômage;∎ ore with a high mineral content minerai m à haute teneur;∎ milk is high in calcium le lait contient beaucoup de calcium;∎ high winds des vents mpl violents, de grands vents mpl;∎ Mathematics the highest common factor le plus grand commun diviseur(d) (better than average → quality) grand, haut; (→ standard) haut, élevé; (→ mark, score) élevé, bon; (→ reputation) bon;∎ our chances of success remain high nos chances de succès restent très bonnes;∎ to have a high opinion of sb avoir une bonne ou haute opinion de qn;∎ he has a high opinion of himself il a une haute idée de lui-même;∎ to have a high profile être très en vue;∎ she speaks of you in the highest terms elle dit le plus grand bien de vous;∎ one of the highest honours in the arts l'un des plus grands honneurs dans le monde des arts;∎ a man of high principles un homme qui a des principes (élevés);∎ he took a very high moral tone il prit un ton très moralisateur;∎ she has very high moral standards elle a des principes (de moralité) très élevés(f) (of great importance or rank) haut, important;∎ a high official un haut fonctionnaire;∎ we have it on the highest authority nous le tenons de la source la plus sûre;∎ to have friends in high places avoir des relations haut placées, avoir le bras long;∎ of high rank de haut rang∎ high summer plein été m;∎ it was high summer c'était au cœur de l'été;∎ it's high time we were leaving il est grand temps qu'on parte∎ resentment was high il y avait énormément de ressentiment;∎ moments of high drama des moments mpl extrêmement dramatiques;∎ high adventure grande aventure f;∎ to be high farce tourner à la farce∎ to have a high colour avoir le visage congestionné(k) (elaborate, formal → language, style) élevé, soutenu(l) (prominent → cheekbones) saillant∎ the highest card la carte maîtresse∎ a high Tory un tory ultra-conservateur;∎ a high Anglican un(e) anglican(e) de tendance conservatrice∎ to be in high spirits être plein d'entrain;∎ our spirits were high nous avions le moral;∎ high on cocaine défoncé à la cocaïne;∎ figurative they were high on success ils ne se sentaient plus après ce succès;∎ figurative he gets high on sailing il prend son pied en faisant de la voile;∎ they were (as) high as kites (drunk) ils étaient bien partis; (drugged) ils planaient; (happy) ils avaient la pêche2 adverb∎ up high en haut;∎ higher up plus haut;∎ higher and higher de plus en plus haut;∎ he raised both hands high il a levé les deux mains en l'air;∎ the kite flew high up in the sky le cerf-volant est monté très haut dans le ciel;∎ she threw the ball high into the air elle a lancé le ballon très haut;∎ the geese flew high over the fields les oies volaient très haut au-dessus des champs;∎ the shelf was high above her head l'étagère était bien au-dessus de sa tête;∎ he rose high in the company il a accédé aux plus hauts échelons de la société;∎ figurative we looked high and low for him nous l'avons cherché partout;∎ figurative to set one's sights high, to aim high viser haut;∎ figurative they're flying high ils visent haut, ils voient grand;∎ also figurative to hold one's head high porter la tête haute;∎ figurative to leave sb high and dry laisser qn en plan(b) (in intensity) haut;∎ they set the price/standards too high ils ont fixé un prix/niveau trop élevé;∎ I turned the heating up high j'ai mis le chauffage à fond;∎ he rose higher in my esteem il est monté encore plus dans mon estime;∎ salaries can go as high as £50,000 les salaires peuvent monter jusqu'à ou atteindre 50 000 livres;∎ I had to go as high as £50 il a fallu que j'aille ou que je monte jusqu'à 50 livres;∎ the card players played high les joueurs de cartes ont joué gros (jeu);∎ feelings were running high les esprits se sont échauffés∎ I can't sing that high je ne peux pas chanter aussi haut∎ to live high off or on the hog vivre comme un roi ou nabab3 noun∎ humorous the decision came from on high la décision fut prononcée en haut lieu(b) (great degree or level) haut m;∎ to reach a new high atteindre un nouveau record;∎ prices are at an all-time high les prix ont atteint leur maximum;∎ the Stock Market reached a new high la Bourse a atteint un nouveau record ou maximum;∎ the highs and lows (of share prices, career, life) les hauts mpl et les bas mpl(c) (setting → on iron, stove)∎ I put the oven on high j'ai mis le four sur très chaud∎ she's been on a permanent high since he came back elle voit tout en rose depuis son retour∎ Religion the Most High le Très-Haut►► Religion high altar maître-autel m;History High Antiquity Haute Antiquité f;Swimming high board plongeoir m le plus haut;high camp (affectation) affectation f, cabotinage m; (effeminate behaviour) manières fpl efféminées; (style) kitsch m;high chair chaise f haute (pour enfants);1 noun= fraction de l'Église d'Angleterre accordant une grande importance à l'autorité du prêtre, au rituel etc(a) = de tendance conservatrice dans l'Église anglicane;British Religion High Churchman = membre du mouvement conservateur à l'intérieur de l'Église anglicane;high comedy Theatre comédie f au dialogue brillant;∎ figurative the debate ended in scenes of high comedy le débat se termina par des scènes du plus haut comique;Military high command haut commandement m;Administration high commission haut-commissariat m;Administration high commissioner haut-commissaire m;Law the High Court (of Justice) ≃ le tribunal de grande instance (principal tribunal civil en Angleterre et au pays de Galles);Law High Court judge ≃ juge m du tribunal de grande instance;Law the High Court of Judiciary = la plus haute instance de justice en Écosse;Military high explosive explosif m puissant;high fashion haute couture f;high fidelity haute-fidélité f;high finance haute finance f;familiar high five = tape amicale donnée dans la paume de quelqu'un, bras levé, pour le saluer, le féliciter ou en signe de victoire;∎ they always give each other a high five when they meet ils se tapent dans la main à chaque fois qu'ils se voient;Electronics high frequency haute fréquence f;∎ figurative they moved into high gear ils se sont dépêchés;High German haut allemand m;high heels hauts talons mpl;high jump Sport saut m en hauteur;∎ British familiar figurative you're for the high jump when he finds out! qu'est-ce que tu vas prendre quand il l'apprendra!;Sport high jumper sauteur(euse) m,f (qui fait du saut en hauteur);the high life la grande vie;∎ she has a taste for the high life elle a des goûts de luxe;∎ to lead or to live the high life mener la grande vie;Computing high memory mémoire f haute;Computing high memory area zone f de mémoire haute;History the High Middle Ages le Haut Moyen Âge;high noon plein midi m;∎ at high noon à midi pile;American Transport High Occupancy Vehicle = voiture particulière transportant au moins deux passagers;Religion high place haut lieu m;high point (major event → of news) événement m le plus marquant; (→ of evening, holiday) point m culminant, grand moment m; (→ of film, novel) point m culminant;∎ the high point of the party le clou de la soirée;high priest Religion grand prêtre m;∎ figurative the high priests of fashion les gourous mpl de la mode;high priestess Religion grande prêtresse f;∎ figurative the high priestess of rock la grande prêtresse du rock;Linguistics high register language langage m élevé ou soutenu;Art high relief haut-relief m;high rise tour f (immeuble);high road (main road) route f principale, grand-route f; figurative (most direct route) bonne voie f;∎ he's on the high road to success il est en bonne voie de réussir;∎ the high road to fame la voie de la gloire;high school School (in UK) = établissement d'enseignement secondaire regroupant collège et lycée; (in US) lycée m;∎ she's still at high school elle est toujours scolarisée ou va toujours au lycée;the high seas la haute mer;∎ on the high seas en haute ou pleine mer;high season haute ou pleine saison f;∎ during the high season en haute ou pleine saison;British Administration High Sheriff = dans les comtés anglais et gallois, représentant officiel du monarque;American high sign signe m;∎ to give sb the high sign faire signe à qn;high society haute société f, grand monde m;high spirits pétulance f, vitalité f, entrain m;∎ to be in high spirits avoir de l'entrain, être plein d'entrain;∎ to put sb in high spirits mettre qn de bonne humeur;(a) (major event → of news) événement m le plus marquant; (→ of evening, holiday) point m culminant, grand moment m; (→ of film, novel) point m culminant∎ we hit all the high spots (tourists) nous avons vu toutes les attractions touristiques;British the high street (street) la grand-rue, la rue principale; (shops) les commerçants mpl, le commerce;∎ Commerce & Economics the high street has been badly hit by the recession les commerçants ont été durement touchés par la récession;British high table (for guests of honour) table f d'honneur; School & University table f des professeurs;British high tea = repas léger pris en début de soirée et accompagné de thé;∎ at high tide à marée haute;Theatre high tragedy grande tragédie f;high treason haute trahison f;Electricity high voltage haute tension f;∎ the river is at high water le fleuve est en crue;high wire corde f raide ou de funambule;∎ to walk the high wire marcher sur la corde raide -
51 Cartwright, Revd Edmund
[br]b. 24 April 1743 Marnham, Nottingham, Englandd. 30 October 1823 Hastings, Sussex, England[br]English inventor of the power loom, a combing machine and machines for making ropes, bread and bricks as well as agricultural improvements.[br]Edmund Cartwright, the fourth son of William Cartwright, was educated at Wakefield Grammar School, and went to University College, Oxford, at the age of 14. By special act of convocation in 1764, he was elected Fellow of Magdalen College. He married Alice Whitaker in 1772 and soon after was given the ecclesiastical living of Brampton in Derbyshire. In 1779 he was presented with the living of Goadby, Marwood, Leicestershire, where he wrote poems, reviewed new works, and began agricultural experiments. A visit to Matlock in the summer of 1784 introduced him to the inventions of Richard Arkwright and he asked why weaving could not be mechanized in a similar manner to spinning. This began a remarkable career of inventions.Cartwright returned home and built a loom which required two strong men to operate it. This was the first attempt in England to develop a power loom. It had a vertical warp, the reed fell with the weight of at least half a hundredweight and, to quote Gartwright's own words, "the springs which threw the shuttle were strong enough to throw a Congreive [sic] rocket" (Strickland 19.71:8—for background to the "rocket" comparison, see Congreve, Sir William). Nevertheless, it had the same three basics of weaving that still remain today in modern power looms: shedding or dividing the warp; picking or projecting the shuttle with the weft; and beating that pick of weft into place with a reed. This loom he proudly patented in 1785, and then he went to look at hand looms and was surprised to see how simply they operated. Further improvements to his own loom, covered by two more patents in 1786 and 1787, produced a machine with the more conventional horizontal layout that showed promise; however, the Manchester merchants whom he visited were not interested. He patented more improvements in 1788 as a result of the experience gained in 1786 through establishing a factory at Doncaster with power looms worked by a bull that were the ancestors of modern ones. Twenty-four looms driven by steam-power were installed in Manchester in 1791, but the mill was burned down and no one repeated the experiment. The Doncaster mill was sold in 1793, Cartwright having lost £30,000, However, in 1809 Parliament voted him £10,000 because his looms were then coming into general use.In 1789 he began working on a wool-combing machine which he patented in 1790, with further improvements in 1792. This seems to have been the earliest instance of mechanized combing. It used a circular revolving comb from which the long fibres or "top" were. carried off into a can, and a smaller cylinder-comb for teasing out short fibres or "noils", which were taken off by hand. Its output equalled that of twenty hand combers, but it was only relatively successful. It was employed in various Leicestershire and Yorkshire mills, but infringements were frequent and costly to resist. The patent was prolonged for fourteen years after 1801, but even then Cartwright did not make any profit. His 1792 patent also included a machine to make ropes with the outstanding and basic invention of the "cordelier" which he communicated to his friends, including Robert Fulton, but again it brought little financial benefit. As a result of these problems and the lack of remuneration for his inventions, Cartwright moved to London in 1796 and for a time lived in a house built with geometrical bricks of his own design.Other inventions followed fast, including a tread-wheel for cranes, metallic packing for pistons in steam-engines, and bread-making and brick-making machines, to mention but a few. He had already returned to agricultural improvements and he put forward suggestions in 1793 for a reaping machine. In 1801 he received a prize from the Board of Agriculture for an essay on husbandry, which was followed in 1803 by a silver medal for the invention of a three-furrow plough and in 1805 by a gold medal for his essay on manures. From 1801 to 1807 he ran an experimental farm on the Duke of Bedford's estates at Woburn.From 1786 until his death he was a prebendary of Lincoln. In about 1810 he bought a small farm at Hollanden near Sevenoaks, Kent, where he continued his inventions, both agricultural and general. Inventing to the last, he died at Hastings and was buried in Battle church.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsBoard of Agriculture Prize 1801 (for an essay on agriculture). Society of Arts, Silver Medal 1803 (for his three-furrow plough); Gold Medal 1805 (for an essay on agricultural improvements).Bibliography1785. British patent no. 1,270 (power loom).1786. British patent no. 1,565 (improved power loom). 1787. British patent no. 1,616 (improved power loom).1788. British patent no. 1,676 (improved power loom). 1790, British patent no. 1,747 (wool-combing machine).1790, British patent no. 1,787 (wool-combing machine).1792, British patent no. 1,876 (improved wool-combing machine and rope-making machine with cordelier).Further ReadingM.Strickland, 1843, A Memoir of the Life, Writings and Mechanical Inventions of Edmund Cartwright, D.D., F.R.S., London (remains the fullest biography of Cartwright).Dictionary of National Biography (a good summary of Cartwright's life). For discussions of Cartwright's weaving inventions, see: A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London; R.L. Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester. F.Nasmith, 1925–6, "Fathers of machine cotton manufacture", Transactions of theNewcomen Society 6.H.W.Dickinson, 1942–3, "A condensed history of rope-making", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 23.W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (covers both his power loom and his wool -combing machine).RLHBiographical history of technology > Cartwright, Revd Edmund
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52 Wren, Sir Christopher
SUBJECT AREA: Architecture and building[br]b. 20 October 1632 East Knoyle, Wiltshire, Englandd. 25 February 1723 London, England[br]English architect whose background in scientific research and achievement enhanced his handling of many near-intractable architectural problems.[br]Born into a High Church and Royalist family, the young Wren early showed outstanding intellectual ability and at Oxford in 1654 was described as "that miracle of a youth". Educated at Westminster School, he went up to Oxford, where he graduated at the age of 19 and obtained his master's degree two years later. From this time onwards his interests were in science, primarily astronomy but also physics, engineering and meteorology. While still at college he developed theories about and experimentally solved some fifty varied problems. At the age of 25 Wren was appointed to the Chair of Astronomy at Gresham College in London, but he soon returned to Oxford as Savilian Professor of Astronomy there. At the same time he became one of the founder members of the Society of Experimental Philosophy at Oxford, which was awarded its Royal Charter soon after the Restoration of 1660; Wren, together with such men as Isaac Newton, Robert Hooke, John Evelyn and Robert Boyle, then found himself a member of the Royal Society.Wren's architectural career began with the classical chapel that he built, at the request of his uncle, the Bishop of Ely, for Pembroke College, Cambridge (1663). From this time onwards, until he died at the age of 91, he was fully occupied with a wide and taxing variety of architectural problems which he faced in the execution of all the great building schemes of the day. His scientific background and inventive mind stood him in good stead in solving such difficulties with an often unusual approach and concept. Nowhere was this more apparent than in his rebuilding of fifty-one churches in the City of London after the Great Fire, in the construction of the new St Paul's Cathedral and in the grand layout of the Royal Hospital at Greenwich.The first instance of Wren's approach to constructional problems was in his building of the Sheldonian Theatre in Oxford (1664–9). He based his design upon that of the Roman Theatre of Marcellus (13–11 BC), which he had studied from drawings in Serlio's book of architecture. Wren's reputation as an architect was greatly enhanced by his solution to the roofing problem here. The original theatre in Rome, like all Roman-theatres, was a circular building open to the sky; this would be unsuitable in the climate of Oxford and Wren wished to cover the English counterpart without using supporting columns, which would have obscured the view of the stage. He solved this difficulty mathematically, with the aid of his colleague Dr Wallis, the Professor of Geometry, by means of a timber-trussed roof supporting a painted ceiling which represented the open sky.The City of London's churches were rebuilt over a period of nearly fifty years; the first to be completed and reopened was St Mary-at-Hill in 1676, and the last St Michael Cornhill in 1722, when Wren was 89. They had to be rebuilt upon the original medieval sites and they illustrate, perhaps more clearly than any other examples of Wren's work, the fertility of his imagination and his ability to solve the most intractable problems of site, limitation of space and variation in style and material. None of the churches is like any other. Of the varied sites, few are level or possess right-angled corners or parallel sides of equal length, and nearly all were hedged in by other, often larger, buildings. Nowhere is his versatility and inventiveness shown more clearly than in his designs for the steeples. There was no English precedent for a classical steeple, though he did draw upon the Dutch examples of the 1630s, because the London examples had been medieval, therefore Roman Catholic and Gothic, churches. Many of Wren's steeples are, therefore, Gothic steeples in classical dress, but many were of the greatest originality and delicate beauty: for example, St Mary-le-Bow in Cheapside; the "wedding cake" St Bride in Fleet Street; and the temple diminuendo concept of Christ Church in Newgate Street.In St Paul's Cathedral Wren showed his ingenuity in adapting the incongruous Royal Warrant Design of 1675. Among his gradual and successful amendments were the intriguing upper lighting of his two-storey choir and the supporting of the lantern by a brick cone inserted between the inner and outer dome shells. The layout of the Royal Hospital at Greenwich illustrates Wren's qualities as an overall large-scale planner and designer. His terms of reference insisted upon the incorporation of the earlier existing Queen's House, erected by Inigo Jones, and of John Webb's King Charles II block. The Queen's House, in particular, created a difficult problem as its smaller size rendered it out of scale with the newer structures. Wren's solution was to make it the focal centre of a great vista between the main flanking larger buildings; this was a masterstroke.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1673. President, Royal Society 1681–3. Member of Parliament 1685–7 and 1701–2. Surveyor, Greenwich Hospital 1696. Surveyor, Westminster Abbey 1699.Surveyor-General 1669–1712.Further ReadingR.Dutton, 1951, The Age of Wren, Batsford.M.Briggs, 1953, Wren the Incomparable, Allen \& Unwin. M.Whinney, 1971, Wren, Thames \& Hudson.K.Downes, 1971, Christopher Wren, Allen Lane.G.Beard, 1982, The Work of Sir Christopher Wren, Bartholomew.DY -
53 Hansom, Joseph Aloysius
SUBJECT AREA: Land transport[br]b. 26 October 1803 York, Englandd. 29 June 1883 Fulham, London, England[br]English architect and inventor, originator of the Hansom cab.[br]In 1816 he was apprenticed to his father, who was a joiner. After a year his abilities in design and construction were so marked that it was decided that he would have more scope as an architect. He was accordingly apprenticed to a Mr Phillips in York, becoming a clerk to Phillips in 1820. While he served his time he also worked on his own account and taught at a night school. In 1825 he married Hannah Glover and settled in Halifax, where he became Assistant to another architect. In 1828 he became a partner of Edward Welch, with whom he built a number of churches in the north of England. He designed the Town Hall for Birmingham and was responsible for the constructional work until 1833, but he had to become bond because the builders caused him to become bankrupt. He was appointed Manager of the business affairs of Dempster Hemming of Caldicote Hall, which included the landed estates, banking and coal-mining. It was during this period that he designed the "Patent Safety Cab" named after him and popular in Victorian days. The safety element consisted in lowering the centre of gravity by the use of the cranked axle. Hansom sold his rights for £10,000 to a company proposing to exploit the patent, but he was never paid, for the company got into difficulties; Hansom became its temporary Manager in 1839 and put matters right, for which he was paid £300, all he ever made out of the Hansom Cab. In 1842 he brought out the first issue of The Builder, but lack of capital caused him to retire from the journal. He devoted himself from then on to domestic and ecclesiastical architecture, designing many churches, colleges, convents and schools all over Britain and even in Australia and South America. Of note is St Walburga's church, Preston, Lancashire, whose spire is 306 ft (93 m) high. At various times he was in partnership with his younger brother, his eldest son, and with E.W.Pugin with whom he had a disagreement. He was a Catholic and much of his work was for the Catholic Church.[br]Further Reading1882, The Builder (8 July).1882, Illustrated London News (15 July).IMcNBiographical history of technology > Hansom, Joseph Aloysius
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54 Lever, William Hesketh
[br]b. 19 September 1851 Bolton, Lancashire, Englandd. 7 May 1925 Hampstead, London, England[br]English manufacturer of soap.[br]William Hesketh Lever was the son of the retail grocer James Lever, who built up the large wholesale firm of Lever \& Co. in the north-west of England. William entered the firm at the age of 19 as a commercial traveller, and in the course of his work studied the techniques of manufacture and the quality of commercial soaps available at the time. He decided that he would concentrate on the production of a soap that was not evil-smelling, would lather easily and be attractively packaged. In 1884 he produced Sunlight Soap, which became the trade mark for Lever \& Co. He had each tablet wrapped, partly to protect the soap from oxygenization and thus prevent it from becoming rancid, and partly to display his brand name as a form of advertising. In 1885 he raised a large capital sum, purchased the Soap Factory in Warrington of Winser \& Co., and began manufacture. His product contained oils from copra, palm and cotton blended with tallow and resin, and its quality was carefully monitored during production. In a short time it was in great demand and began to replace the previously available alternatives of home-made soap and poor-quality, unpleasant-smelling bars.It soon became necessary to expand the firm's premises, and in 1887 Lever purchased fifty-six acres of land upon which he set up a new centre of manufacture. This was in the Wirral in Cheshire, near the banks of the River Mersey. Production at the new factory, which was called Port Sunlight, began in January 1889. Lever introduced a number of technical improvements in the production process, including the heating systems and the recovery of glycerine (which could later be sold) from the boiling process.Like Sir Titus Salt of Saltaire before him, Lever believed it to be in the interest of the firm to house his workers in a high standard of building and comfort close to the factory.By the early twentieth century he had created Port Sunlight Village, one of the earliest and certainly the most impressive housing estates, for his employees. Architecturally the estate is highly successful, being built from a variety of natural materials and vernacular styles by a number of distinguished architects, so preventing an overall architectural monotony. The comprehensive estate comprises, in addition to the factory and houses, a church, an art gallery, schools, a cottage hospital, library, bank, fire station, post office and shops, as well as an inn and working men's institute, both of which were later additions. In 1894 Lever \& Co. went public and soon was amalgamated with other soap firms. It was at its most successful high point by 1910.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFirst Viscount Leverhulme of the Western Isles.Further Reading1985, Dictionary of Business Biography. Butterworth.Ian Campbell Bradley, 1987, Enlightened Entrepreneurs, London: Weidenfeld \& Nicolson.DY -
55 Paul
1) Общая лексика: (мужское имя) Поль, Павел, (Italian Pope from 1464 to 1471. A patron of scholars and also a collector of antiquities and a restorer of monuments, he is responsible for founding the first printing presses at Rome, where he had built the celebrated Palace of St. Mark) Па, (Italian Pope of the Roman Catholic church - reigned 1963-78 - during a period including most of the second Vatican Council and the immediate postconciliar era, in which he issued directives and guidance to a changing Roman Catholic church) П, Пол2) Религия: (Italian Pope from 1555 to 1559, whose anti-Spanish policy renewed the war between France and the Habsburgs) Павел IV, (Italian noble who was the last of the Renaissance Popes - reigned 1534-49 -and the first Pope of the Counter-Reformation) Павел III3) Связь: (An outstanding figure in the history of Christianity, early Christian apostle and missionary and author of several New Testament epistles) апостол Павел4) Имена и фамилии: Пауль (имя, м, 100%, датский, ударение на первый слог), Пол (имя) (м, 100%, английский) -
56 paul
1) Общая лексика: (мужское имя) Поль, Павел, (Italian Pope from 1464 to 1471. A patron of scholars and also a collector of antiquities and a restorer of monuments, he is responsible for founding the first printing presses at Rome, where he had built the celebrated Palace of St. Mark) Па, (Italian Pope of the Roman Catholic church - reigned 1963-78 - during a period including most of the second Vatican Council and the immediate postconciliar era, in which he issued directives and guidance to a changing Roman Catholic church) П, Пол2) Религия: (Italian Pope from 1555 to 1559, whose anti-Spanish policy renewed the war between France and the Habsburgs) Павел IV, (Italian noble who was the last of the Renaissance Popes - reigned 1534-49 -and the first Pope of the Counter-Reformation) Павел III3) Связь: (An outstanding figure in the history of Christianity, early Christian apostle and missionary and author of several New Testament epistles) апостол Павел4) Имена и фамилии: Пауль (имя, м, 100%, датский, ударение на первый слог), Пол (имя) (м, 100%, английский) -
57 Town, Ithiel
[br]b. 1784 Thompson, Connecticut, USAd. 1844 New Haven, Connecticut, USA[br]American architect and bridge builder.[br]Town studied in Boston, Massachusetts, under Asher Benjamin. His first important work was the Center Church on New Haven Green, and in 1814 he was commissioned to build Trinity Church, also on New Haven Green. He designed many more public buildings in many cities, including the Customs House on Wall Street, New York, and the Indiana State Capitol in Indianapolis. He patented the "Town lattice" for truss bridges in 1820, which established his reputation as a bridge builder; he also built a number of covered bridges. He entered into partnership with Martin E.Thompson in 1827–8 and with Alexander J.Davis in 1829–43. He was a collector of books on architecture and fine arts, using the money from his bridge building to acquire what was said to be the best collection in the country.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFounder, National Academy of Design.Further Reading1975, Webster's American Biographies.IMcN -
58 building
['bɪldɪŋ]1) (structure) fabbricato m., costruzione f.; (with offices, apartments) immobile m.; (palace, church) edificio m.2) (industry) edilizia f.3) (action) costruzione f.* * *1) (the art or business of putting up (houses etc) ( also adjective): a building contractor.) edilizia2) (anything built: The new supermarket is a very ugly building.) edificio* * *['bɪldɪŋ]1) (structure) fabbricato m., costruzione f.; (with offices, apartments) immobile m.; (palace, church) edificio m.2) (industry) edilizia f.3) (action) costruzione f. -
59 record
̘. ̈n.ˈrekɔ:d
1. сущ.
1) а) запись;
регистрация, письменная фиксация( каких-л. фактов) the coldest day on record ≈ самый холодный отмеченный день to close a record ≈ завершать записи, прекращать ведение записей( в юридической практике) to destroy records ≈ уничтожить записи to keep, make a record ≈ вести записи to keep a record of events ≈ вести записи событий to open up a record ≈ начинать записи a matter of record ≈ зарегистрированный факт (up) on record ≈ записанный, зарегистрированный to bear record to ≈ свидетельствовать, удостоверять истинность( фактов и т. п.) accurate record ≈ точная запись attendance record ≈ список присутствующих detailed record ≈ подробная запись official record ≈ официальный документ sketchy records ≈ фрагментарные записи public record ≈ Государственный архив verbatim record ≈ дословная запись
2) а) регистрация, учет( кого-л. где-л. и т. п.) record clerk, record keeper ≈ регистратор record department, record room ≈ мед. регистратура record of attendances ≈ регистрация или список присутствующих б) мн. учетно-отчетные материалы, регистрационные данные field records ≈ спец. полевые данные record material ≈ воен. документация
3) а) официальная запись, отчет;
протокол( заседания, допроса, вскрытия, экспертизы и т. п.) to enter on the records ≈ занести в протокол б) юр. документ, письменно зафиксированное свидетельство;
письменное производство по делу of, in, by, (up) on record ≈ записанный, письменно подтвержденный court of record ≈ законный (монарший) суд judge of record ≈ законный судья to have record ≈ иметь власть, полномочия (судить, выносить приговоры и т. п.) в) (the record) преим. юр. суть дела to travel out of the record ≈ отклоняться от сути дела;
нарушать букву закона to keep to the record ≈ держаться сути дела;
не нарушать буквы закона
4) а) памятник прошлого;
исторический документ (свидетельствующий о чем угодно, не обязательно письменный) to put/place oneself on record ≈ увековечить свое имя, оставить след в истории Syn: document
1., monument, memorial
1. б) тж. мн. архивы, собрание памятников прошлого Public Record Office ≈ Государственный архив в) редк. счет прошедшим годам, подсчет прошедших лет (часто с of years, of time etc.) Syn: account
1., timing
5) а) характеристика, биография( профессиональная и т. д.) ;
досье, собрание фактов, данных( о ком-л.) his record is against him ≈ его характеристика говорит не в его пользу to have a police record ≈ состоять на учете в полиции a good academic record ≈ хорошая академическая характеристика This airline's safety record is impeccable. ≈ Репутация этой авиалинии безупречна. She has a distinguished record as a public official. ≈ Она блестяще проявила себя в роли должностного лица. б) спец. уголовная биография;
список судимостей
6) а) видео- или аудиозапись (на любом виде носителя) to make a record ≈ записывать, делать запись( видео, музыкальную и т. д.) б) грампластинка (виниловый музыкальный диск) long-playing record ≈ долгоиграющая пластинка (тж. LP) a single record ≈ сингл, сорокопятка to cut a record ≈ записывать пластинку to play a record ≈ заводить, ставить пластинку gramophone record ≈ грампластинка phonograph record ≈ грампластинка
7) особ. спорт рекорд, лучший результат;
рекордное достижение to beat/break/cut the record ≈ побить рекорд to establish, set a ( new) record ≈ установить (новый) рекорд to equal, tie a record ≈ достичь рекорда to better, surpass a record ≈ побить рекорд distinguished record ≈ выдающиеся достижения excellent record ≈ большие успехи to hold a record ≈ установить рекорд national record ≈ национальный рекорд Olympic record ≈ олимпийский рекорд speed record ≈ рекорд по скорости unbroken record ≈ непобитый рекорд world record ≈ мировой рекорд
8) компьют. запись (массив информации, обрабатываемый как одно целое)
9) уст., библ. очевидец, свидетель;
свидетельство Syn: witness
1. ∙ for the record on the record off the record of record on record
2. гл.
1) записывать, регистрировать;
заносить в список, в протокол;
оформлять как документ (какие-л. факты и т. п.)
2) а) записывать звук, изображение или информацию иного рода (на какой-л. вид носителя - пленку, диск и т. п.) ;
снимать, производить фото-, видео- или киносъемку These songs were recorded from a concert during last year's season. ≈ Эти песни были записаны на концерте в прошлом сезоне. while recording the album 3 members of the band died of heroin ≈ за время записи альбома 3 участника группы умерли от героина б) быть пригодным для записи: записывать (о пишущем приборе) ;
писаться, записываться( об инструменте и т. п.) the camera records badly ≈ камера плохо записывает the guitar didn't record clearly enough ≈ гитара недостаточно хорошо прописалась
3) о приборах а) регистрировать, записывать earthquake shocks recorded by a seismograph ≈ подземные толчки, зафиксированные сейсмографом Syn: register
2. б) показывать, отмечать( на шкале и т. д.) the thermometer recorded 90 degrees ≈ термометр показал 90 градусов Syn: indicate, read I
1.
4) свидетельствовать, являться памятником чему-л. (в переносном смысле - см. примеры) ;
оставлять след, увековечивать this shell-hole in the ground records a bomb strike that's been taken on our village ≈ эта воронка свидетельствует о бомбовом ударе на нашу деревню this monument records a moment of happiness ≈ этот монумент воздвигнут в память о минуте счастья Her sufferings are recorded on her face for the rest of her life. ≈ Ее страдания на всю оставшуюся жизнь отпечатались на ее лице.
5) петь, заливаться, выводить трели (о птице) запись, записывание;
письменное упоминание, письменный след ( чего-л.) - * centre документохранилище - * management документоведение;
делопроизводство - * of a patient (медицина) история болезни - to make a * of smth. записать что-л. - to keep a * of a conversation вести запись беседы - I can find no * of it это нигде не записано, это нигде не упоминается (письменно) - to be on * быть документально установленным /записанным/ - it is on * that... известно, что...;
история говорит, что... - the information we have on * (официальное) сведения, которыми мы располагаем регистрация, учет - * clerk, * keeper регистратор, делопроизводитель - * department, * room (медицина) регистратура - * practice( военное) зачетная стрельба - to keep a * of road accidents вести учет /регистрацию/ несчастных случаев на дорогах - there was no * of any man with those initials человек с такими инициалами нигде не числился - * of attendances список /регистрация/ присутствующих - his * of attendances is bad он часто отсутствует документация;
учетно-отчетные документы;
отчетные материалы;
данные - field *s (специальное) данные полевого журнала, полевые данные - * material (военное) документация протокол (заседания, испытания, вскрытия и т. п.) ;
стенограмма;
официальный документ - public *s судебные протоколы - abstract of * выписка из записи/ из протокола/ - * of evidence протокол допроса свидетеля - on /upon, in/ * занесенный в протокол, запротоколированный, зарегистрированный - to enter on the *s занести в протокол - I want to be on * as having... прошу занести в протокол, что я... (юридическое) материалы судебного дела, письменное производство по делу архив - *s of the Foreign Office архив министерства иностранных дел - keeper of the *s, * keeper архивариус, регистратор факты, данные ( о ком-л.) ;
характеристика, репутация - criminal * (юридическое) досье преступника, регистрация приводов, судимостей и т. п.;
уголовное прошлое;
судимость - to have a good * иметь хорошую репутацию;
прожить жизнь честно - to have /to show/ a clean * иметь безупречное прошлое;
(юридическое) не иметь судимости - he has a police * он известен полиции, у него есть приводы - his * is against him его прошлое говорит против него - as is evident from his whole * как явствует из всего, что он сделал в жизни;
свидетельством чего является вся его деятельность достижения;
результаты деятельности - the committee's * to date то, что уже сделано комитетом к настоящему времени - the committee's * is not unimpressive комитет сделал немало - that airline has a bad * эта авиалиния пользуется дурной славой /считается ненадежной/ (спортивное) рекорд - world * мировой рекорд - to beat /to break, to cut/ the * побить рекорд - to achieve a * поставить /установить/ рекорд - two *s fell два рекорда были побиты /пали/ звукозапись;
запись (звука, изображения на пластинку, пленку и т. п.) ;
фонограмма;
фотограмма;
кинограмма - sound * фонограмма, звуковая дорожка - sound-and-picture * фотофонограмма - photographic * фотозапись, фоторегистрация - camera * (фото) снимок - telemetry * телеметрическая запись - echo * (специальное) регистрация эха /отраженного импульса/ диаграмма( самописца) граммофонная пластинка - mother * матрица( пластинки) (американизм) перфорированный нотный ролик( для механического фортепьяно) (исторический) памятник (о статуе, картине, манускрипте и т. п.) - the *s of the past памятники прошлого - the *s of medieval life in the British Museum средневековые экспонаты в Британском музее - to put /to place/ oneself on * отличиться, выдвинуться;
увековечить свое имя, оставить след в истории - history has not preserved any * of... история не сохранила письменных свидетельств о... (the *) преим. (юридическое) суть дела - to keep to the * держаться сути дела - to travel out of the * приводить доводы, не относящиеся к делу;
говорить не по существу( юридическое) (библеизм) свидетельское показание;
свидетель - to bear * to свидетельствовать, удостоверять истинность (фактов и т. п.) - I can bear * to his good character я могу засвидетельствовать его добропорядочность - to call /to take/ to * призывать в свидетели;
ссылаться на - God is my * that... видит Бог, что я... память - to pass from * исчезнуть из памяти;
пройти, не оставив следа > on (the) * официальный;
гласный, открытый;
несекретный;
объявленный публично;
сделанный или предназначенный для печати( о заявлении и т. п.) > to place on * зафиксировать > I want to place on * that... надо констатировать /заявить/, что... > to go /to put oneself/ on * заявить что-л. официально;
сделать заявление для печати > off the * не для печати;
конфиденциальный, не подлежащий оглашению( особ. в печати) ;
неофициальный( о заявлении и т. п.) > he spoke off the * он выступал неофициально > this is strictly off the * пусть это останется между нами;
это строго конфиденциально > of * записанный, зафиксированный;
всем известный, несомненный > matter of * документально подтвержденный факт > their enmity was a matter of * for years из вражда уже много лет всем известна > * of service послужной список;
деятельность в прошлом, прохождение службы > to keep the * straight не допустить извращения (истины и т. п.) ;
предотвратить возможность неправильного истолкования (факта и т. п.) > to set the * straight внести поправку в протокол, документ и т. п.;
поправить чью-л. ошибку;
разъяснить недоразумение;
восстановить истинное положение вещей > I want to set the * straight я хочу внести ясность рекордный;
небывалый, неслыханный (тж. перен.) - * pace рекордная скорость - * prices неслыханные цены - * drought небывалая засуха - * audience небывалое количество присутствующих записывать, протоколировать;
заносить в список, реестр, протокол и т. п. - to * a speech записывать или стенографировать речь - to * the day's events записать события дня - to * one's thoughts in a diary заносить свои мысли в дневник - he already has several convictions *ed against him за ним уже числится несколько судимостей - this volume *s the history of the regiment в этом томе излагается история полка регистрировать, фиксировать;
показывать (о приборе) ;
записывать (о регистрирующем или самопищущем приборе) - a seismograph *s earthquakes сейсмограф регистрирует землетрясения - to * the time (спортивное) засекать время, хронометрировать - the thermometer *ed 40 degrees термометр показывал 40 градусов записывать на пленку, пластинку и т. п. - the gramophone has 8ed his voice его голос записан на граммофонную пластинку - the programme was *ed программа была записана на пленку (в отличие от прямого эфира) записываться (о звуке) - the piano does not * well звук фортепьяно плохо записывается (на пластинку и т. п.) снимать( фото- или киноаппаратом) увековечивать - he is *ed to have built this church in 1270 из истории известно, что он построил эту церковь в 1270 году - this stone *s a famous battle этим камнем отмечена историческая битва петь, заливаться (о птице) (устаревшее) свидетельствовать active ~ вчт. активная запись addition ~ вчт. добавляемая запись allocation ~ вчт. закрепленная запись amendment ~ вчт. корректурная запись backspace a ~ вчт. возвращаться на одну запись bargaining ~ протокол переговоров to bear ~ to свидетельствовать, удостоверять истинность (фактов и т. п.) ~ рекорд;
to beat (или to break, to cut) the record побить рекорд blocked ~ вчт. сблокированная запись chained ~ вчт. цепная запись change ~ вчт. запись файла изменений checkpoint ~ вчт. запись контрольной точки control ~ вчт. управляющая запись court ~ судебная выписка criminal ~ досье преступника current ~ вчт. текущая запись current ~ текущий учет data ~ вчт. запись данных delete a ~ вчт. исключать запись duplicate ~ вчт. дублирующая запись ~ протокол (заседания и т. п.) ;
to enter on the records занести в протокол fixed-length ~ вчт. запись фиксированной длины formatted ~ вчт. форматная запись growth ~ регистрация роста ~ факты, данные (о ком-л.) ;
характеристика;
to have a good (bad) record иметь хорошую (плохую) репутацию headed ~ вчт. заглавная запись header ~ вчт. запись-заголовок header ~ вчт. паспортная запись his ~ is against him его прошлое говорит против него;
record of service послужной список;
трудовая книжка history ~ вчт. ретроспективная запись home ~ вчт. начальная запись incident ~ вчт. случайная запись keep ~ of вести учет to keep to the ~ держаться сути дела;
to travel out of the record вводить( что-л.), не относящееся к делу loss ~ учет потерь loss ~ учет убытков master ~ вчт. главная запись a matter of ~ зарегистрированный факт;
(up) on record записанный, зарегистрированный multiuser ~ вчт. запись формируемая рядом пользователей no criminal ~ дело не влечет уголовного наказания notarial ~ нотариальная запись off the ~ не по существу off the ~ разг. не подлежащий оглашению (в печати) off the ~ разг. разг. неофициально, неофициальным путем a matter of ~ зарегистрированный факт;
(up) on record записанный, зарегистрированный overflow ~ вчт. запись переполнения parent ~ вчт. родительская запись performance ~ учет производительности (или эффективности) работы работника personal ~ личное дело personel ~s учет кадров personnel ~ картотека персонала primary ~ вчт. первичная запись record бухгалтерская книга ~ вести бухгалтерский учет ~ вносить в протокол ~ граммофонная пластинка;
запись на граммофонной пластинке ~ юр. документ, дающий право на владение ~ документ (оформленный надлежащим должностным лицом и содержащий доказательства зафиксированного в нем правового акта, сделки, права), публичный акт ~ документация ~ заносить в бухгалтерскую книгу ~ заносить в реестр ~ заносить в список ~ записывать, регистрировать;
протоколировать;
заносить в список, в протокол ~ записывать ~ вчт. записывать ~ записывать ~ записывать на пластинку, на пленку ~ запись;
регистрация (фактов) ;
летопись;
мемуары, рассказ о событиях ~ запись ~ вчт. запись ~ запись ~ материалы судебного дела, письменное производство по делу ~ материалы судебного дела ~ официальный документ, запись, отчет ~ официальный документ ~ официальный отчет ~ памятник прошлого ~ письменное производство по делу ~ протокол (заседания и т. п.) ;
to enter on the records занести в протокол ~ протокол ~ протоколировать ~ регистр ~ вчт. регистрация ~ регистрация ~ вчт. регистрировать ~ регистрировать ~ рекорд;
to beat (или to break, to cut) the record побить рекорд ~ сигналограмма ~ стенограмма ~ увековечивать ~ удостоверять ~ учитывать ~ фактографические данные ~ факты, данные (о ком-л.) ;
характеристика;
to have a good (bad) record иметь хорошую (плохую) репутацию ~ фиксировать ~ access block вчт. блок доступа к записи ~ attr. рекордный ~ by a notary заверять у нотариуса ~ of arrivals регистрация прибытия ~ of decisions запись решений ~ of forwarding регистрация отправки ~ of keystrokes вчт. последовательность клавиш ~ of resolutions запись решений ~ of sentence протокольная запись приговора суда his ~ is against him его прошлое говорит против него;
record of service послужной список;
трудовая книжка root ~ вчт. корневая запись sales ~ учет продаж semifixed ~ вчт. запись ограниченной длины sorted ~s вчт. отсортированные записи source ~ вчт. исходная запись space ~ вчт. разделяющая запись stock ~ книга учета запасов stock ~ учет запасов summary ~ вчт. итоговая запись target ~ вчт. целевая запись total ~ вчт. итоговая запись track ~ вчт. сведения о продвижении по службе trailer ~ вчт. заключительная запись to keep to the ~ держаться сути дела;
to travel out of the record вводить (что-л.), не относящееся к делу trial by the ~ производство по спору о наличии признанного судебным решением долга undefined-length ~ вчт. запись неопределенной длины unformatted ~ вчт. неформатная запись unit ~ вчт. единичная запись variable length ~ вчт. запись переменной длины variable-length ~ вчт. запись переменной длины variant ~ вчт. запись с вариантами -
60 record
1. [ʹrekɔ:d] n1. запись, записывание; письменное упоминание, письменный след (чего-л.)record management - а) документоведение; б) делопроизводство
record of a patient - мед. история болезни
to make a record of smth. - записать что-л.
to keep a record of a conversation - вести запись беседы [ср. тж. 2, 1)]
I can find no record of it - это нигде не записано, это нигде не упоминается (письменно)
to be on record - быть документально установленным /записанным/ [ср. тж. 3, 1) и ♢ ]
it is on record that... - известно, что...; история говорит, что...
the information we have on record - офиц. сведения, которыми мы располагаем
2. 1) регистрация, учётrecord clerk, record keeper - регистратор, делопроизводитель
record department, record room - мед. регистратура
record practice - воен. зачётная стрельба
to keep a record of road accidents - вести учёт /регистрацию/ несчастных случаев на дорогах [ср. тж. 1]
there was no record of any man with those initials - человек с такими инициалами нигде не числился
record of attendances - список /регистрация/ присутствующих
2) pl документация; учётно-отчётные документы; отчётные материалы; данныеfield records - спец. данные полевого журнала, полевые данные
record material - воен. документация
3. 1) протокол (заседания, испытания, вскрытия и т. п.); стенограмма; официальный документabstract of record - выписка из записи /из протокола/
on /upon, in/ record - занесённый в протокол, запротоколированный, зарегистрированный [ср. тж. 1 и ♢ ]
I want to be on record as having... - прошу занести в протокол, что я...
2) pl юр. материалы судебного дела, письменное производство по делу3) pl архивkeeper of the records, record keeper - архивариус, регистратор
4. 1) факты, данные (о ком-л.); характеристика, репутацияcriminal record - а) юр. досье преступника, регистрация приводов, судимостей и т. п.; б) уголовное прошлое; судимость
to have a good record - иметь хорошую репутацию; прожить жизнь честно
to have /to show/ a clean record - а) иметь безупречное прошлое; б) юр. не иметь судимости
he has a police record - он известен полиции, у него есть приводы
as is evident from his whole record - как явствует из всего, что он сделал в жизни; свидетельством чего является вся его деятельность
2) достижения; результаты деятельностиthe committee's record to date - то, что уже сделано комитетом к настоящему времени
that airline has a bad record - эта авиалиния пользуется дурной славой /считается ненадёжной/
5. спорт. рекордto beat /to break, to cut/ the record - побить рекорд
to achieve a record - поставить /установить/ рекорд
two records fell - два рекорда были побиты /пали/
6. 1) звукозапись; запись (звука, изображения на пластинку, плёнку и т. п.); фонограмма; фотограмма; кинограммаsound record - фонограмма, звуковая дорожка
photographic record - фотозапись, фоторегистрация
echo record - спец. регистрация эха /отражённого импульса/
2) диаграмма (самописца)3) граммофонная пластинка4) амер. перфорированный нотный ролик ( для механического фортепьяно)7. (исторический) памятник (о статуе, картине, манускрипте и т. п.)the records of medieval life in the British Museum - средневековые экспонаты в Британском музее
to put /to place/ oneself on record - отличиться, выдвинуться; увековечить своё имя, оставить след в истории [ср. тж. ♢ ]
history has not preserved any record of... - история не сохранила письменных свидетельств о...
8. (the record) преим. юр. суть делаto travel out of the record - а) приводить доводы, не относящиеся к делу; б) говорить не по существу
9. юр., библ. свидетельское показание; свидетельto bear record to - свидетельствовать, удостоверять истинность (фактов и т. п.)
I can bear record to his good character - я могу засвидетельствовать его добропорядочность
to call /to take/ to record - призывать в свидетели; ссылаться на
God is my record that... - видит бог, что я...
10. поэт. памятьto pass from record - исчезнуть из памяти; пройти, не оставив следа
♢
on (the) record - официальный; гласный, открытый, несекретный; объявленный публично; сделанный или предназначенный для печати (о заявлении и т. п.) [ср. тж. 1 и 3, 1)]I want to place on record that... - надо констатировать /заявить/, что...
to go /to put oneself/ on record - заявить что-л. официально; сделать заявление для печати [ср. тж. 7]
off the record - не для печати; конфиденциальный, не подлежащий оглашению (особ. в печати); неофициальный (о заявлении и т. п.)
this is strictly off the record - пусть это останется между нами; это строго конфиденциально
of record - а) записанный, зафиксированный; matter of record - документально подтверждённый факт; б) всем известный, несомненный
their enmity was a matter of record for years - их вражда уже много лет всем известна
record of service - а) послужной список; б) деятельность в прошлом, прохождение службы
to keep the record straight - не допустить извращения (истины и т. п.); предотвратить возможность неправильного истолкования (факта и т. п.)
to set the record straight - а) внести поправку в протокол, документ и т. п.; б) поправить чью-л. ошибку; разъяснить недоразумение; восстановить истинное положение вещей
2. [ʹrekɔ:d] aI want to set the record straight - ≅ я хочу внести ясность
рекордный; небывалый, неслыханный (тж. перен.)3. [rıʹkɔ:d] vrecord pace [height, output, crop] - рекордная скорость [высота, производительность, -ый урожай]
1. 1) записывать, протоколировать; заносить в список, реестр, протокол и т. п.to record a speech - записывать или стенографировать речь
he already has several convictions recorded against him - за ним уже числится несколько судимостей
this volume records the history of the regiment - в этом томе излагается история полка
2) регистрировать, фиксировать; показывать ( о приборе); записывать ( о регистрирующем или самопишущем приборе)to record the time - спорт. засекать время, хронометрировать
2. 1) записывать на плёнку, пластинку и т. п.the gramophone has recorded his voice - его голос записан на граммофонную пластинку
2) записываться ( о звуке)the piano does not record well - звук фортепьяно плохо записывается (на пластинку и т. п.)
3) снимать ( фото- или киноаппаратом)3. увековечиватьhe is recorded to have built this church in 1270 - из истории известно, что он построил эту церковь в 1270 году
this stone records a ramous battle - этим камнем отмечена историческая битва
4. петь, заливаться ( о птице)5. арх. свидетельствовать
См. также в других словарях:
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