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1 экстерном
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2 экстерном
[-тэ́-] нареч.without attending classes / lecturesсдава́ть экза́мены эксте́рном — pass examinations without attending lectures
око́нчить университе́т эксте́рном — take an external degree
квалифика́ция, полу́ченная эксте́рном — external degree
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3 экстерн
муж.
1) external student, student allowed to take examinations without attending classes;
(в высшем учебном заведении) сдавать экзамены экстерном ≈ to pass examinations without attending lectures окончить университет экстерном ≈ to take an external degree
2) уст. externe (неоплачиваемый врач в больнице)м. external student;
держать экзамены ~ом sit* one`s examinations as an external student. -
4 экстерн
м. (в высшем учебном заведении)external studentокончить университет экстерном — take* an external degree
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5 екстернат
ч( у вищому навчальному закладі) external studies pl, department for students taking examinations without attending lectures -
6 Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph
[br]b. 12 June 1851 Penkhull, Staffordshire, Englandd. 22 August 1940 Lake, near Salisbury, Wiltshire, England[br]English physicist who perfected Branly's coherer; said to have given the first public demonstration of wireless telegraphy.[br]At the age of 8 Lodge entered Newport Grammar School, and in 1863–5 received private education at Coombs in Suffolk. He then returned to Staffordshire, where he assisted his father in the potteries by working as a book-keeper. Whilst staying with an aunt in London in 1866–7, he attended scientific lectures and became interested in physics. As a result of this and of reading copies of English Mechanic magazine, when he was back home in Hanley he began to do experiments and attended the Wedgewood Institute. Returning to London c. 1870, he studied initially at the Royal College of Science and then, from 1874, at University College, London (UCL), at the same time attending lectures at the Royal Institution.In 1875 he obtained his BSc, read a paper to the British Association on "Nodes and loops in chemical formulae" and became a physics demonstrator at UCL. The following year he was appointed a physics lecturer at Bedford College, completing his DSc in 1877. Three years later he became Assistant Professor of Mathematics at UCL, but in 1881, after only two years, he accepted the Chair of Experimental Physics at the new University College of Liverpool. There began a period of fruitful studies of electricity and radio transmission and reception, including development of the lightning conductor, discovery of the "coherent" effect of sparks and improvement of Branly's coherer, and, in 1894, what is said to be the first public demonstration of the transmission and reception (using a coherer) of wireless telegraphy, from Lewis's department store to the clock tower of Liverpool University's Victoria Building. On 10 May 1897 he filed a patent for selective tuning by self-in-ductance; this was before Marconi's first patent was actually published and its priority was subsequently upheld.In 1900 he became the first Principal of the new University of Birmingham, where he remained until his retirement in 1919. In his later years he was increasingly interested in psychical research.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1902. FRS 1887. Royal Society Council Member 1893. President, Society for Psychical Research 1901–4, 1932. President, British Association 1913. Royal Society Rumford Medal 1898. Royal Society of Arts Albert Medal 1919. Institution of Electrical Engineers Faraday Medal 1932. Fourteen honorary degrees from British and other universities.Bibliography1875, "The flow of electricity in a plane", Philosophical Magazine (May, June and December).1876, "Thermo-electric phenomena", Philosophical Magazine (December). 1888, "Lightning conductors", Philosophical Magazine (August).1889, Modern Views of Electricity (lectures at the Royal Institution).10 May 1897, "Improvements in syntonized telegraphy without line wires", British patent no. 11,575, US patent no. 609,154.1898, "Radio waves", Philosophical Magazine (August): 227.1931, Past Years, An Autobiography, London: Hodder \& Stoughton.Further ReadingW.P.Jolly, 1974, Sir Oliver Lodge, Psychical Resear cher and Scientist, London: Constable.E.Hawks, 1927, Pioneers of Wireless, London: Methuen.See also: Hertz, Heinrich RudolphKFBiographical history of technology > Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph
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7 ἀνήκοος
ἀνήκο-ος, ον,2 c. gen., not hearing a thing, never having heard or learnt it, Pl.Phdr. 261b, X.Mem.2.1.31: hence, ignorant of it,παιδείας Aeschin.1.141
; with no ear for,τῶν Διοννσίου ῥυθμῶν Philostr.VS1.22.3
; not attending the lectures of.., c. gen., ib.2.2. Adv.ἀνηκόως, ἔχειν ἀστρολογίας Plu.2.145c
;ἔς τι Paus.10.17.13
.b c. acc. rei, ἀνήκοος εἶναι ἔνια γεγενημένα (where ἀ. εἶναι = ἀγνοεῖν) Pl.Alc.2.141d.c abs.,σκαιὸς καὶ ἀ.
ignorant, untaught,D.
19.312, cf. Sallust.5.II unheard, Philostr.Her.12.3; without result,ἀ. τέθυται Alciphr.3.35
.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἀνήκοος
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8 attendance
noun2) (number of people present) Teilnehmerzahl, die3)* * *noun His attendance (= the number of times he attends) at school is poor; Attendances (= the number of people attending) at the concerts went down after the price of tickets increased.) das Erscheinen, die Besucherzahl* * *at·tend·ance[əˈtendən(t)s]n\attendance at lectures is compulsory bei Vorlesungen besteht Anwesenheitspflicht3. (care)to be in \attendance [on sb] [jdm] zur Verfügung stehenthe singer never goes out without his security men in \attendance der Sänger verlässt das Haus niemals ohne seine Bodyguards an seiner Seite4.* * *[ə'tendəns]n1)to be in attendance at sth —
to be in attendance on sb — jdm aufwarten, jdn bedienen
2) (= being present) Anwesenheit f (at bei)3) (= number of people present) Teilnehmerzahl frecord attendance — eine Rekordteilnehmerzahl, Rekordteilnehmerzahlen pl
* * *attendance [əˈtendəns] s1. Anwesenheit f, Besuch m:attendance compulsary Anwesenheitspflicht!;attendance at school Schulbesuch;attendance officer US Schulbeamter, der Fälle von häufigem unentschuldigtem Fehlen untersucht;attendance register Anwesenheitsbuch n2. Besucher-, Teilnehmerzahl f:there was an attendance of over 300 es waren mehr als 300 Personen anwesend3. Betreuung f:be in attendance als Brautjungfer fungieren ( → 1);attendance allowance Br Pflegegeld n (für Hilfe einer körperlich od geistig schwerbehinderten Person);attendance centre Br Heim n für Freizeitarrest (straffälliger Jugendlicher); → academic.ru/18355/dance">dance B 1, medical A 1 a4. obsa) Begleitung f, Gefolge nb) Dienerschaft f* * *noun2) (number of people present) Teilnehmerzahl, die3)* * *n.Anwesenheit f.Begleitung f.Beteiligung f.Dienstleistung f.Teilnahme f.Wartung -en f. -
9 spare
[speə] 1. verb1) (to manage without: No-one can be spared from this office.) pogrešati2) (to afford or set aside for a purpose: I can't spare the time for a holiday.) lahko pogrešati3) (to treat with mercy; to avoid injuring etc: `Spare us!' they begged.) prizanesti4) (to avoid causing grief, trouble etc to (a person): Break the news gently in order to spare her as much as possible.) prihraniti5) (to avoid using, spending etc: He spared no expense in his desire to help us.) varčevati6) (to avoid troubling (a person with something); to save (a person trouble etc): I answered the letter myself in order to spare you the bother.) prihraniti (komu kaj)2. adjective1) (extra; not actually being used: We haven't a spare (bed) room for guests in our house.) odvečen2) ((of time etc) free for leisure etc: What do you do in your spare time?) prost3. noun1) (a spare part (for a car etc): They sell spares at that garage.) nadomestni del2) (an extra wheel etc, kept for emergencies.) nadomestno kolo•- sparing- sparingly
- spare part
- spare rib
- and to spare
- to spare* * *I [spʌ/ə]transitive verbvarčevati, varčno uporabljati; prihraniti, dati na stran, imeti v rezervi; odstopiti, lahkó pogrešati, biti brez (česa), imeti odveč; prizanesti (komu), oprostiti (kazen), prihraniti (komu ali sebi) (trud itd.); ne povzročiti (sramu, rdečice); intransitive verb varčevati, skopariti; opustiti (kaj); prizanesti, pustiti (komu) življenjeenough and to spare — na pretek, še preveč, več kot preveč, obilospare my blushes! — ne spravljajte me v sramoto, prihranite mi sramoto, ne blamirajte me!can you spare the car today? — lahko pogrešate svoj avto danes?can you spare me a cigarette? — imaš cigareto odveč zame?spare us these explanations! — prizanesite nam s temi razlagami!spare my feelings! — imej obzir do mojih čustev!spare me! — prizanesite mi!, milost!spare me your objections! — prizanesite mi s svojimi ugovori!to spare o.s. — prihraniti si trudnot to spare o.s. — ne varčevati s svojimi močmito spare the rod and spoil the child — varčuj s šibo in pokvaril boš otroka, šiba novo mašo pojeI have no time to spare — ne smem izgubljati časa, nimam dosti časaII [spʌ/ə]nountechnical (često plural) nadomestni, rezervni del (zlasti pnevmatika); sport rezerva; varčevanje; American zrušenje vseh kegljev z dvema metomato make spare of obsolete varčevati zIII [spʌ/ə]adjective ( sparely adverb)varčen, skop, pičel; prost (čas); preostal, odvečen, neuporabljen, razpoložljiv; nadomesten, rezerven; mršav, suh; redek (lasje)spare money — preostali, odvečni denarspare time — prosti čas, brezdelica
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