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(not+developed)

  • 21 rustic

    ساذَج \ na]ve: too simple to be sensible; lacking wisdom and experience: a na]ve question; a na]ve young girl. primitive: simple, as in ancient times; not developed or modern: primitive tools of the Stone Age. rustic: (of country things, compared with town things) plain and simple. sheepish: feeling foolish and uncomfortable, not knowing how to behave in the company of others: My son gave me a sheepish smile when he saw me reading his school report (which was not at all good). simple: not clever; having a rather weak brain, easily deceived. \ See Also بدائي (بِدائيّ)، ريفي (رِيفِيّ)، أبله (أَبْلَه)، مغفل (مُغَفَّل)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > rustic

  • 22 sheepish

    ساذَج \ na]ve: too simple to be sensible; lacking wisdom and experience: a na]ve question; a na]ve young girl. primitive: simple, as in ancient times; not developed or modern: primitive tools of the Stone Age. rustic: (of country things, compared with town things) plain and simple. sheepish: feeling foolish and uncomfortable, not knowing how to behave in the company of others: My son gave me a sheepish smile when he saw me reading his school report (which was not at all good). simple: not clever; having a rather weak brain, easily deceived. \ See Also بدائي (بِدائيّ)، ريفي (رِيفِيّ)، أبله (أَبْلَه)، مغفل (مُغَفَّل)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > sheepish

  • 23 simple

    ساذَج \ na]ve: too simple to be sensible; lacking wisdom and experience: a na]ve question; a na]ve young girl. primitive: simple, as in ancient times; not developed or modern: primitive tools of the Stone Age. rustic: (of country things, compared with town things) plain and simple. sheepish: feeling foolish and uncomfortable, not knowing how to behave in the company of others: My son gave me a sheepish smile when he saw me reading his school report (which was not at all good). simple: not clever; having a rather weak brain, easily deceived. \ See Also بدائي (بِدائيّ)، ريفي (رِيفِيّ)، أبله (أَبْلَه)، مغفل (مُغَفَّل)‏

    Arabic-English glossary > simple

  • 24 अव्याकृत _avyākṛta

    अव्याकृत a.
    1 Not developed, not manifest; तद्धेदं तर्ह्यव्याकृतमासीत् इदं नामरूपाभ्यामव्याकृतम् S. B.; Bṛi. Up. 1.4.7.
    -2 Not decomposed, elementary.
    -3 Incompre- hensible (अतर्क्य); अव्याकृत विहाराय सर्वव्याकृतसिद्धये । हृषीकेश नमस्ते$स्तु Bhāg.1.16.47.
    -तम् (In Vedānta Phil.)
    1 An elementary substance from which all things were created (considered identical with Brahman.)
    -2 (In Sāṅ. Phil.) The prime germ of nature (प्रधान).

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > अव्याकृत _avyākṛta

  • 25 Mercer, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 21 February 1791 Great Harwood, Lancashire, England
    d. 30 November 1866 Oakenshaw, Lancashire, England
    [br]
    English pioneer in textile chemistry.
    [br]
    Mercer began work at the age of 9 as a bobbinwinder and then a hand-loom weaver. He had no formal education in chemistry but taught himself and revealed remarkable ability in both theoretical and applied aspects of the subject. He became the acknowledged "father of textile chemistry" and the Royal Society elected him Fellow in 1850. His name is remembered in connection with the lustrous "mercerized" cotton which, although not developed commercially until 1890, arose from his discovery, c. 1844, of the effect of caustic soda on cotton linters. He also discovered that cotton could be dissolved in a solution of copper oxide in ammonia, a phenomenon later exploited in the manufacture of artificial silk. As a youth, Mercer experimented at home with dyeing processes and soon acquired sufficient skill to set up as an independent dyer. Most of his working life was, however, spent with the calico-printing firm of Oakenshaw Print Works in which he eventually became a partner, and it was there that most of his experimental work was done. The association was a very appropriate one, for it was a member of this firm's staff who first recognized Mercer's potential talent and took the trouble in his spare time to teach him reading, writing and arithmetic. Mercer developed manganese-bronze colours and researched into catalysis and the ferrocyanides. Among his innovations was the chlorination of wool in order to make it print as easily as cotton. It was many years later that it was realized that this treatment also conferred valuable shrink-resisting qualities. Becoming interested in photochemistry, he devised processes for photographic printing on fabric. Queen Victoria was presented with a handkerchief printed in this way when she visited the Great Exhibition of 1851, of which Mercer was a juror. A photograph of Mercer himself on cloth is preserved in the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester. He presented papers to the British Association and was a member of the Chemical Society.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1850.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, Manchester Memoirs, Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society.
    Dictionary of National Biography.
    E.A.Parnell, 1886. The Life and Labours of John Mercer, F.R.S., London (biography). 1867, biography, Journal of the Chemical Society.
    A.E.Musson and E.Robinson, 1969, Science and Technology in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (includes a brief reference to Mercer's work).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Mercer, John

  • 26 अभावित

    අභාවිත abhaavita abhāvita adj
    not developed; not practised.

    Pali-English dictionary > अभावित

  • 27 immature

    im·ma·ture [ˌɪməʼtjʊəʳ, Am -ʼtʊr, -ʼtjʊr] adj
    1) (pej: not mature) unreif;
    ( childish) kindisch ( meist pej)
    2) ( not developed) unreif;
    ( sexually) nicht geschlechtsreif;
    an \immature fruit eine unreife Frucht;
    an \immature plan ein unausgereifter Plan;
    an \immature wine ein junger Wein

    English-German students dictionary > immature

  • 28 truncus

    1.
    truncus, a, um, adj [root tark-, truc-, to break, tear; cf. torqueo], maimed, mutilated, mangled, dismembered, disfigured, deprived of some of its parts (mostly poet. and perh. not ante-Aug.; syn.: mutilus, mancus).
    I.
    Lit.:

    trunca manu pinus regit (Polyphemum),

    i. e. the trunk of a pinetree, Verg. A. 3, 659:

    trunca illa et retorrida manus Mucii,

    Sen. Ep. 66, 51:

    nemora,

    i. e. trees stripped of their branches, Stat. Th. 4, 455:

    truncas mhonesto vulnere nares,

    Verg. A. 6, 497:

    vultus naribus auribusque,

    Mart. 2, 83, 3:

    frons,

    deprived of its horn, Ov. M. 9, 1; 9, 86; Sil. 3, 42:

    frontem lumina truncam,

    deprived of its eyes, id. 9, 400:

    bracchia non habuit, truncoque repandus in undas Corpore desiluit,

    deprived of its limbs, Ov. M. 3, 680; cf. Just. 2, 9, 19:

    puerum trunci corporis in agro Romano natum,

    Liv. 41, 9, 5:

    varie ex integris truncos gigni, ex truncis integros,

    Plin. 7, 11, 10, § 50:

    tela,

    i.e. broken in pieces, Verg. A. 11, 9; cf.:

    trunci enses et fractae hastae,

    Stat. Th. 2, 711:

    truncum lignum, i. e. hasta fracta,

    Val. Fl. 6, 251: membra carmae, Ov M. 11, 560; cf.

    alnus,

    without oars, Val. Fl. 2, 300:

    truncae atque mutilae litterae,

    Gell. 17, 9, 12:

    exta,

    Val. Max. 1, 6, 9.—
    (β).
    Poet., with gen.:

    animalia trunca pedum,

    without feet, Verg. G. 4, 310: truncus capitis, Sil 10, 311.—
    B.
    Transf.
    1.
    Of things, not developed, imperfect, or wanting in their parts:

    quaedam imperfecta (animalia) suisque Trunca vident numeris,

    Ov. M. 1, 428:

    ranae pedibus,

    id. ib. 15, 376:

    ipse (nanus) jactabat truncas manus,

    Prop. 4 (5), 8, 42—
    2.
    Of members cut off:

    bracchia,

    Val. Fl. 4, 181:

    manus,

    Sen. Contr 1, 4.—
    II.
    Trop., maimed, mutilated:

    (Capua) urbs trunca, sine senatu, sine plebe, sine magistratibus,

    Liv. 31, 29, 11:

    pecus,

    without a leader, Stat. Th. 5, 333:

    manus vero, sine quibus trunca esset actio ac debilis, vix dici potest, quot motus habeant,

    Quint. 11, 3, 85:

    trunca et debilis medicina (sine rerum naturae cognitione), Cels. praef.: sermo (volucrum),

    Stat. Th. 12, 478:

    trunca quaedam ex Menandro,

    fragments, Gell. 2, 23, 21.—Hence, subst.:
    2.
    truncus, i, m., the stem, stock, bole, or trunk of a tree (without regard to its branches).
    I.
    Lit.:

    cibus... Per truncos ac per ramos diffunditur omnes,

    Lucr. 1, 353:

    quid? in arboribus, in quibus non truncus, non rami, non folia sunt denique, nisi, etc.,

    Cic. de Or. 3, 46, 179; cf. id. Sen. 15, 52; id. N. D. 2, 47, 120; id. Lael. 13, 48; Caes. B. G. 4, 17; 7, 73, Verg. G. 2, 78; 3, 233; Hor S. 1, 8, 1; id. C. 2, 17, 27; 3, 4, 55; Ov. M. 2, 358; 8, 346; id. H. 9, 93; Col. Arb. 17, 1; Sen. Ep. 86, 17.—
    B.
    Transf.
    1.
    Of the human body, the trunk, the body, apart from the limbs:

    status erectus et celsus, nullā mollitiā cervicum: trunco magis toto se ipse moderans,

    Cic. Or. 18, 59:

    nemo illum ex trunco corporis spectabat,

    id. Rosc. Com. 10, 28:

    recto pugnat se attollere trunco,

    Ov. M. 2, 822; cf. id. ib. 7, 640:

    et caput abscisum calido viventeque trunco,

    Lucr. 3, 654: jacet litore truncus. Verg. A. 2, 557.—
    2.
    Of a column.
    (α).
    The shaft, Vitr. 4, 1 med.
    (β).
    The cubical trunk of a pedestal, the die or dado, Vitr. 3, 3; cf. Plin. 16, 40, 76, § 201.—
    3.
    A piece cut off, as a branch of a tree for an our:

    frondentes,

    Val. Fl. 8, 287;

    a piece of flesh for smoking (cf. trunculus),

    Verg. M. 57.—
    4.
    Like caudex, stipes, and the Engl. stock, for blockhead, dunce, dolt:

    quī potest esse in ejusmodi trunco sapientia?

    Cic. N. D. 1, 30, 84:

    tamquam truncus atque stipes,

    id. Pis. 9, 19. —
    * II.
    Trop., a trunk, stem:

    quae (stirpes aegritudinis) ipso trunco everso omnes eligendae (elidendae, Kühn.) sunt,

    Cic. Tusc. 3, 34, 83.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > truncus

  • 29 MRND

    Военный термин: maintenance requirements not developed

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > MRND

  • 30 (месторождения , находящиеся)в опытно-промышленной эксплуатации

    oil&gas: not developed

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > (месторождения , находящиеся)в опытно-промышленной эксплуатации

  • 31 потребности в средствах ТО не определены

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > потребности в средствах ТО не определены

  • 32 в опытно-промышленной эксплуатации

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > в опытно-промышленной эксплуатации

  • 33 coding convention

    Software that was not developed according to strict coding conventions stands no chance of achieving certification. — У программного продукта, разработанного без соблюдения жёстких требований соглашения по программированию, нет шансов [успешно] пройти сертификацию.

    Syn:
    см. тж. coding standard

    Англо-русский толковый словарь терминов и сокращений по ВТ, Интернету и программированию. > coding convention

  • 34 Green Cotton

    A name given to cotton picked in the unripe condition, and met with mostly at the commencement of a season. It contains a large amount of moisture. The spiral twists, characteristic of fully ripe fibres, have not developed, neither has the tubular structure of the fibre collapsed.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Green Cotton

  • 35 Flechsig, W.

    [br]
    fl. c.1938 Germany
    [br]
    German engineer notable for early patents that foreshadowed the development of the shadowmask colour cathode ray tube.
    [br]
    In 1938, whilst working for a German electrical company, Flechsig filed a patent in which he described the use of an array of stretched parallel wires to control the landing of either one or three electron beams on separate red, green and blue phosphor stripes within a single cathode ray tube. Whilst the single-beam arrangement required subsidiary deflection to alternate the beam landing angle, the three-beam version effectively used the wires to "mask" the landing of the electron beams so that each one only illuminated the relevant colour phosphor stripes. Although not developed at the time, the concept anticipated the subsequent invention of the shadowmask tube by RCA in the early 1950s and, even more closely, the development of the Sony Trinitron some years later.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1938, German patent no. 736, 575.
    1941, French patent no. 866, 065.
    Further Reading
    E.W.Herold, 1976, "A history of colour television displays", Proceedings of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 64:1,331.
    K.G.Freeman, "The history of colour CRTs. A personal view", International Conference on the History of Television, Institution of Electrical Engineers Publication no. 271, p.
    38.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Flechsig, W.

  • 36 Smith, J.

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    fl. 1830s Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish inventor of the first endless chain of flats for carding.
    [br]
    Carding by hand required a pair of hand cards. The lump of tangled fibres was teased out by pulling one card across the other to even out the fibres and transfer them onto one of the cards from which they could be rolled up into a rollag or slubbing. When Arkwright began to use cylinder cards, the fibres were teased out as they passed from one cylinder to the next. In order to obtain a greater carding area, he soon introduced smaller cylinders and placed strips of flat card above the periphery of the main cylinder. These became clogged with short fibres and dirt, so they had to be lifted off and cleaned or "stripped" at intervals. The first to invent a self-stripping card was Archibald Buchanan, at the Catrine mills in Ayrshire, with his patent in 1823. In his arrangement each flat was turned upside down and stripped by a rotary brush. This was improved by Smith in 1834 and patented in the same year. Smith fixed the flats on an endless chain so that they travelled around the periphery of the top of the main cylinder. Just after the point where they left the cylinder, Smith placed a rotary brush and a comb to clear the brush. In this way each flat in turn was properly and regularly cleaned.
    Smith was an able mechanic and Managing Partner of the Deanston mills in Scotland. He visited Manchester, where he was warmly received on the introduction of his machine there at about the same time as he patented it in Scotland. The carding engine he designed was complex, for he arranged a double feed to obtain greater production. While this part of his patent was not developed, his chain or endless flats became the basis used in later cotton carding engines. He took out at least half a dozen other patents for textile machinery. These included two in 1834, the first for a self-acting mule and the second with J.C. Dyer for improvements to winding on to spools. There were further spinning patents in 1839 and 1844 and more for preparatory machinery including carding in 1841 and 1842. He was also interested in agriculture and invented a subsoil plough and other useful things.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1834, British patent no. 6,560 (self-stripping card). 1834, British patent no. 656 (self-acting mule). 1839, British patent no. 8,054.
    1841, British patent no. 8,796 (carding machine). 1842, British patent no. 9,313 (carding machine).
    1844, British patent no. 10,080.
    Further Reading
    E.Leigh, 1875, The Science of Modern Cotton Spinning Manchester (provides a good account of Smith's carding engine).
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (covers the development of the carding engine).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Smith, J.

  • 37 MRND

    MRND, maintenance requirements not developed
    "потребности в средствах ТО не определены"

    English-Russian dictionary of planing, cross-planing and slotting machines > MRND

  • 38 بدائي

    بُدائيّ \ primitive: simple, as in ancient times; not developed or modern: primitive tools of the Stone Age. \ بُدائيّ (إنسان)‏ \ savage: old use sb. living in an undeveloped society, seen as fierce and wild and likely to attack strangers. \ See Also غير مُتَمدِّن

    Arabic-English dictionary > بدائي

  • 39 primitive

    بُدائيّ \ primitive: simple, as in ancient times; not developed or modern: primitive tools of the Stone Age. \ بِدائيّ \ primitive. \ See Also عَتيقُ الطِّراز

    Arabic-English glossary > primitive

  • 40 yiriwaa

    I
    (n) development. Yiriwaa ka domaŋ domaŋ ne. Development is done gradually.
    II
    (v) to develop, big enough. Alila saatee maŋ yiriwaa baake. Your town is not developed much.

    Mandinka-English dictionary > yiriwaa

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