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81 inédito
adj.unpublished, un-published.* * *► adjetivo1 (libro) unpublished2 (nuevo) new, unheard of3 (desconocido) unknown* * *ADJ1) [texto] unpublished2) (=nuevo) new3) (=nunca visto) hitherto unheard-of* * *- ta adjetivoa) <obra/autor> unpublishedb) (nuevo, sin precedente) unprecedented* * *= unpublished, uncollected.Ex. Many libraries have special collections of foreign, unpublished or unusual materials which include items unlikely to be acquired by other libraries.Ex. Below is a list of all of the known uncollected short stories by Stephen King.* * *- ta adjetivoa) <obra/autor> unpublishedb) (nuevo, sin precedente) unprecedented* * *= unpublished, uncollected.Ex: Many libraries have special collections of foreign, unpublished or unusual materials which include items unlikely to be acquired by other libraries.
Ex: Below is a list of all of the known uncollected short stories by Stephen King.* * *inédito -ta1 ‹obra/autor› unpublished2 (nuevo, sin precedente) unprecedentedha llegado a niveles inéditos it has reached unprecedented levelsuna técnica inédita en nuestro país a technique which has never been used before in this country, a technique hitherto unknown in this country* * *
inédito◊ -ta adjetivo
inédito,-a adjetivo
1 (no editado) unpublished
2 (desconocido) unknown: emplean una técnica inédita en España, they're using a technique that's new to Spain
' inédito' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
inédita
English:
unpublished
* * *inédito, -a adj1. [no publicado] unpublished2. [nuevo] new3. [sorprendente] unheard-of, unprecedented* * *adj1 unpublished2 figunprecedented* * *inédito, -ta adj1) : unpublished2) : unprecedented -
82 servidumbre
f.1 servants (criados).2 servitude (dependencia).3 staff of servants, servants.4 easement, right of pass.* * *1 (condición) servitude3 (obligación) obligation4 figurado (sujeción) compulsion5 DERECHO servitude* * *SF1) (=conjunto de criados) staff, servants pl2) (=condición) [de criado] servitude; [de esclavo] slavery3) ( Hist) (tb: servidumbre de la gleba) serfdom4) (Jur)servidumbre de paso — rights pl of way
* * *1) ( esclavitud) servitude2) ( conjunto de criados) (domestic) staff, servants (pl)* * *= servitude, bondage, kowtow [kow-tow].Nota: Palabra de origen chino referida a la inclinación que hace un persona de rango inferior ante su superior arrollidándose y tocando el suelo con la frente.Ex. Users of the Web database will be able to search through this collection of American slave narratives by first and last name of narrator, county and state of servitude, year of birth, and name of master = Los usuarios de la base de datos web podrán consultar esta colección de relatos de esclavos americanos por nombre y apellido del narrador, país y condición de servidumbre, año de nacimiento y nombre del amo.Ex. The story of Cinque becoming a slave trader does not diminish his heroism in saving himself and his compatriots from a life of bondage.Ex. The best example of this situation is an article published in the Wall Street Journal 'Microsoft's kowtow'.----* derecho de servidumbre = easement.* * *1) ( esclavitud) servitude2) ( conjunto de criados) (domestic) staff, servants (pl)* * *= servitude, bondage, kowtow [kow-tow].Nota: Palabra de origen chino referida a la inclinación que hace un persona de rango inferior ante su superior arrollidándose y tocando el suelo con la frente.Ex: Users of the Web database will be able to search through this collection of American slave narratives by first and last name of narrator, county and state of servitude, year of birth, and name of master = Los usuarios de la base de datos web podrán consultar esta colección de relatos de esclavos americanos por nombre y apellido del narrador, país y condición de servidumbre, año de nacimiento y nombre del amo.
Ex: The story of Cinque becoming a slave trader does not diminish his heroism in saving himself and his compatriots from a life of bondage.Ex: The best example of this situation is an article published in the Wall Street Journal 'Microsoft's kowtow'.* derecho de servidumbre = easement.* * *A (esclavitud) servitudeB1 (conjunto de criados) domestic staff, staff, servants (pl)2(trabajar de criado): odiaba la servidumbre he hated being in (domestic) serviceCompuestos:right of accesswater rights (pl)right of lightright of way* * *
servidumbre sustantivo femenino
1 ( esclavitud) servitude
2 ( conjunto de criados) domestic staff, servants (pl)
servidumbre sustantivo femenino
1 (estado) servitude, subjection
2 (obligación) inevitable obligation
3 (equipo de sirvientes) servants
' servidumbre' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alzado
- servicio
English:
quarter
* * *servidumbre nf1. [criados] servants2. [dependencia, esclavitud] servitude* * *f1 ( criados) servants pl2 ( condición) servitude* * *servidumbre nf1) : servitude2) : help, servants pl -
83 frais
I.frais°1, fraîche [fʀε, fʀε∫]1. adjectivea. ( = légèrement froid) cool ; [vent] freshb. ( = sans cordialité) chillyc. ( = sain, éclatant) freshd. ( = récent) recent ; [peinture] wete. [aliment] freshf. ( = reposé) fresh• eh bien, nous voilà frais ! well, we're in a fine mess now! (inf)2. adverb• « servir frais » "serve chilled"b. ( = récemment) newly3. masculine nouna. ( = fraîcheur) prendre le frais to take a breath of fresh air• mettre (qch) au frais [+ aliment, boisson] to put (sth) in a cool placeb. ( = vent) bon frais strong breeze4. feminine nounII.frais°2 [fʀε]plural masculine noun• se mettre en frais pour qn/pour recevoir qn to put o.s. out for sb/to entertain sb• faire les frais de la conversation ( = parler) to keep the conversation going ; ( = être le sujet) to be the (main) topic of conversation• aux frais de la princesse (inf) (de l'État) at the taxpayer's expense ; (de l'entreprise) at the firm's expense► frais d'entretien [de jardin, maison] (cost of) upkeep ; [de machine, équipement] maintenance costs► frais de scolarité (à l'école, au lycée) school fees (Brit), tuition fees (US) ; (pour un étudiant) tuition fees* * *
1.
fraîche fʀɛ, fʀɛʃ adjectif1) ( légèrement froid) cool; ( trop froid) cold‘servir frais’ — ‘serve chilled’
il fait frais ce matin — ( c'est agréable) it's cool this morning; ( il fait froid) it's chilly this morning
2) ( récent) [nouvelles, traces, neige] fresh; [peinture] wetde fraîche date — [membre] recent
3) [produit] fresh4) ( jeune) [teint, peau] fresh; [voix] young5) ( nouveau) [troupes, équipe] fresh6) ( léger) [parfum, décor, couleur] fresh7) ( sans chaleur) [accueil, ambiance] cool
2.
3.
mettre quelque chose au frais — ( pour le conserver) to put something in a cool place; ( pour le refroidir) to put something to cool
mettre quelqu'un au frais — (colloq) ( en prison) to put somebody inside (colloq)
4.
nom masculin plurielaux frais de quelqu'un — fig at somebody's expense
faire des frais — [personne] to spend a lot of money
en être pour ses frais — (colloq) lit to have to pay; fig to get nothing for one's pains
arrêter les frais — fig to stop wasting one's time
2) ( coûts d'un service professionnel) fees3) (coûts d'un service commercial, commission) charges4) ( en comptabilité) ( coûts) costsfrais fixes/variables — fixed/variable costs
5.
à la fraîche locution adverbiale ( le matin) in the cool of the morning; ( le soir) in the cool of the eveningPhrasal Verbs:••nous voilà frais! — (colloq) now we're in a fix! (colloq)
* * *fʀɛ, fʀɛʃ (fraîche)1. adj1) (air, eau) cool"servir frais" — "serve lightly chilled"
Il fait un peu frais ce soir. — It's a bit chilly this evening.
2) (aliment, nouvelles, troupes) freshCette salade n'est pas très fraîche. — This lettuce isn't very fresh.
3) (= peu cordial) (accueil) cool2. advfrais émoulu de — fresh from, just out of
3. nm4. frais nmpl1) (= débours) expenses2) COMMERCE expenses3) (= taxe, supplément) charges4) fig* * *A adj1 ( légèrement froid) [temps, eau, nuit, endroit] cool; ( trop froid) [nuit, eau, vent, boisson] cold; les soirées sont fraîches the evenings are cold ou chilly; ‘servir frais’ ‘serve chilled’; il fait frais ce matin ( c'est agréable) it's cool this morning; ( il fait froid) it's chilly this morning; le fond de l'air est frais there's a chill in the air;2 ( récent) [nouvelles, souvenir, traces, neige] fresh; [peinture, colle, encre] wet; c'est encore très frais dans ma mémoire it's still very fresh in my memory; de fraîche date [lettre, membre] recent;5 ( nouveau) [troupes, chevaux, équipe] fresh; apporter un peu d'air frais à qch to bring a breath of fresh air to sth; de l'argent frais more money; ⇒ dispos;7 ( sans chaleur) [accueil, ambiance] cool.B adv1 ( depuis peu) frais rasé freshly shaved; des fleurs fraîches cueillies freshly-picked flowers; du foin frais coupé freshly-cut hay; un livre tout frais paru a newly-published book; frais débarqués de leur village fresh from their village;2 ( froid) il fait frais it's cool.C nm1 ( fraîcheur) se tenir au frais to stay in the cool; prendre le frais to get some fresh air; mettre qch au frais ( pour le conserver) to put sth in a cool place; ( pour le refroidir) to put sth to cool; j'ai mis le champagne au frais I've put the champagne to cool; ‘à conserver au frais’ ‘store in a cool place’; mettre qn au frais○ ( en prison) to put sb inside○;D nmpl1 gén ( dépenses) expenses; frais d'hospitalisation hospital expenses; frais annexes fringe expenses; frais d'habillement/médicaux/de justice clothing/medical/legal expenses; avoir de gros frais to have some big expenses; à peu de/grands frais at little/great expense; à moindres frais at very little cost; tous frais payés all expenses paid; le voyage est aux frais de l'entreprise the trip is being paid for by the company; le voyage est à vos frais you'll have to pay for the trip yourself; vivre aux frais de la société to live off society; aux frais de qn fig at sb's expense; partager les frais to share the cost; faire des frais [personne] to spend a lot of money; [événement, achat] to cost a lot; cela fait des frais de partir en vacances going on vacation costs a lot; rentrer dans ses frais to cover one's expenses; se mettre en frais pour qn to put oneself out for sb; en être pour ses frais○ lit to have to pay; fig to get nothing for one's pains; faire les frais de qch to bear the brunt of sth; les petites entreprises font les frais de la récession the small companies are bearing the brunt of the recession; arrêter les frais fig to stop wasting one's time; ⇒ faux;2 ( coûts d'un service professionnel) fees; frais d'agence/d'expertise agency/consultancy fees;3 Comm ( coûts d'un service commercial) charges; frais de location/transport hire/transport charges;5 Compta ( coûts) costs; frais de publicité/trésorerie advertising/finance costs; frais fixes/variables fixed/variable costs;E à la fraîche loc adv ( le matin) in the cool of the morning; ( le soir) in the cool of the evening.frais d'annulation Tourisme cancellation fees; frais bancaires Fin bank charges; frais déductibles Fisc allowable expenses; frais de déplacement ( d'employé) travel expenses; ( de réparateur) call-out charge (sg); frais divers Compta miscellaneous costs; frais d'expédition Postes postage and packing; Transp freight; frais d'exploitation Compta operating costs; frais de fonctionnement Entr running costs; frais de garde Fin ( de titres en dépôt) management charges; ( d'enfant) ( à payer) childminding fees; Fisc childminding expenses; frais généraux Compta overheads; frais de gestion Compta management costs; Fin management charges; frais d'inscription gén registration fees; Scol school fees GB, tuition fees US; Univ tuition fees, academic fees GB; frais de port Comm, Postes postage ¢; frais professionnels Fisc professional expenses; frais réels Fisc allowable expenses; frais de représentation Admin, Entr ( encourus) entertainment expenses; ( alloués) entertainment allowance (sg); frais de scolarité Scol tuition fees, school fees GB.être frais comme une rose or un gardon to be as fresh as a daisy; nous voilà frais○! now we're in a fix○!I[frɛ] nom masculin plurielà grands frais with much expense, (very) expensivelyfrais de déplacement ou de mission ou de voyage travelling expensesrentrer dans ses frais to break even, to recoup one's expensesaux frais de la princesse (familier) : hôtel cinq étoiles, restaurants de luxe, tout ça aux frais de la princesse (familier) five-star hotel, smart restaurants, all on expenses2. [en comptabilité] outgoingsfrais d'envoi ou d'expédition postage3. DROITfrais d'inscription registration fee, membership feeIIla blessure ou la plaie est encore fraîche the wound is still freshde fraîche date recent, newavoir la bouche ou l'haleine fraîche to have sweet breath5. [reposé] freshfrais et dispos, frais comme une rose as fresh as a daisy6. [éclatant] fresh7. [indifférent - accueil, réception] cool8. (familier) [en mauvais état]9. ÉCONOMIE————————[frɛ] adverbe————————adverbe1. [nouvellement] newly2. [froid]servir frais serve cold ou chilled————————nom masculin[air frais]si on allait prendre un peu le frais à la campagne? how about going to the countryside for a breath of (fresh) air?————————fraîche nom féminin1. [heure] cool (of evening)2. (très familier & argot milieu) cash————————au frais locution adverbiale1. [dans un lieu froid] in a cool place -
84 BISKUP
* * *(-s, -ar), m.1) bishop;* * *m., in very old MSS. spelt with y and o (byskop), but commonly in the MSS. contracted ‘bp̅,’ so that the spelling is doubtful; but biscop (with i) occurs Bs. i. 356, byscop in the old fragm. i. 391–394; biskup is the common form in the Edd. and at present, vide Bs. i. ii, Sturl. S., Íb. [Gr. επίσκοπος; A. S. biscop; Engl. bishop; Germ. bischof]:—a bishop. Icel. had two sees, one at Skalholt, erected A. D. 1056; the other at Hólar, in the North, erected A. D. 1106. They were united at the end of the last century, and the see removed to Reykjavik. Biographies of ten of the bishops of the 11th to the 14th century are contained in the Bs., published 1858, and of the later bishops in the Biskupa Annálar (from A. D. 1606), published in Safn til Sögu Íslands, vol. i. and Bs. ii, and cp. farther the Biskupaæfi, by the Icel. historian Jón Halldórsson (died A. D. 1736), and the Hist. Eccl. (H. E.). by Finn Jonsson (Finnus Johannæus, son of the above-mentioned Jón Halldórsson). During two hundred years of the commonwealth till the middle of the 13th century, the bishops of Skalholt and Hólar were elected by the people or by the magnates, usually (at least the bishops of Skalholt) in parliament and in the lögrétta (the legislative council), vide the Hungrv. ch. 2 (valinn til b. af allri alþýðu á Íslandi), ch. 5, 7, 13, 16, Sturl. 2, ch. 26, Kristni S. ch. 12, Íb. ch. 10, Þorl. S. ch. 9, Páls. S. ch. 2, Guðm. S. ch. 40, Jóns S. ch. 7 (þá kaus Gizurr biskup Jón prest Ögmundarson með samþykki allra lærðra manna ok úlærðra í Norðlendinga fjórðungi). Magnús Gizurarson (died A. D. 1237) was the last popularly elected bishop of Skalholt; bishop Gudmund (died A. D. 1237) the last of Hólar; after that time bishops were imposed by the king of Norway or the archbishop.COMPDS: biskupabúningr, biskupafundr, biskupaþáttr, biskupaþing, biskupsbrunnr, biskupsbúr, biskupsdómr, biskupsdóttir, biskupsdæmi, biskupsefni, biskupsfrændi, biskupsgarðr, biskupsgisting, biskupskjör, biskupskosning, biskupslauss, biskupsmaðr, biskupsmark, biskupsmágr, biskupsmessa, biskupsmítr, biskupsnafn, biskupsríki, biskupssekt, biskupsskattr, biskupsskip, biskupsskrúði, biskupssonr, biskupsstafr, biskupsstofa, biskupsstóll, biskupssýsla, biskupstign, biskupstíund, biskupstíundarmál, biskupsvatn, biskupsveldi, biskupsvígsla. -
85 Danskr
a. Danish;dönsk tunga, the Danish (or old Scandinavian) language.* * *adj., Danir, pl. Danes; Dan-mörk, f. Denmark, i. e. the mark, march, or border of the Danes; Dana-veldi, n. the Danish empire; Dana-virki, n. the Danish wall, and many compds, vide Fms. xi. This adj. requires special notice, because of the phrase Dönsk tunga ( the Danish tongue), the earliest recorded name of the common Scandinavian tongue. It must be borne in mind that the ‘Danish’ of the old Saga times applies not to the nation, but to the empire. According to the researches of the late historian P.A. Munch, the ancient Danish empire, at least at times, extended over almost all the countries bordering on the Skagerac (Vík); hence a Dane became in Engl. synonymous with a Scandinavian; the language spoken by the Scandinavians was called Danish; and ‘Dönsk tunga’ is even used to denote Scandinavian extraction in the widest extent, vide Sighvat in Fms. iv. 73, Eg. ch. 51, Grág. ii. 71, 72. During the 11th and 12th centuries the name was much in use, but as the Danish hegemony in Scandinavia grew weaker, the name became obsolete, and Icel. writers of the 13th and 14th centuries began to use the name ‘Norræna,’ Norse tongue, from Norway their own mother country, and the nearest akin to Icel. in customs and idiom. ‘Swedish’ never occurs, because Icel. had little intercourse with that country, although the Scandinavian tongue was spoken there perhaps in a more antique form than in the sister countries. In the 15th century, when almost all connection with Scandinavia was broken off for nearly a century, the Norræna in its turn became an obsolete word, and was replaced by the present word ‘Icelandic,’ which kept its ground, because the language in the mean time underwent great changes on the Scandinavian continent. The Reformation, the translation of the Old and New Testaments into Icelandic (Oddr Gotskalksson, called the Wise, translated and published the N. T. in 1540, and bishop Gudbrand the whole Bible in 1584), a fresh growth of religious literature, hymns, sermons, and poetry (Hallgrímr Pétrsson, Jón Vídalín), the regeneration of the old literature in the 17th and 18th centuries (Brynjólfr Sveinsson, Arni Magnússon, Þormóðr Torfason),—all this put an end to the phrases Dönsk tunga and Norræna; and the last phrase is only used to denote obsolete grammatical forms or phrases, as opposed to the forms and phrases of the living language. The translators of the Bible often say ‘vort Íslenzkt mál,’ our Icelandic tongue, or ‘vort móður mál,’ our mother tongue; móður-málið mitt, Pass. 35. 9. The phrase ‘Dönsk tunga’ has given rise to a great many polemical antiquarian essays: the last and the best, by which this question may be regarded as settled, is that by Jon Sigurdsson in the preface to Lex. Poët.; cp. also that of Pál Vídalín in Skýr. s. v., also published in Latin at the end of the old Ed. of Gunnl. Saga, 1775. -
86 novità
f invar novelty( notizia) piece or item of newsessere una novità sul mercato be new on the market* * *novità s.f.1 novelty; newness; ( originalità) originality: la novità di una situazione, the novelty of a situation; quelle poesie colpiscono per la novità della forma, those poems are particularly striking because of the originality of their form; questi mobili sono notevoli per la novità della linea, this furniture is remarkable for the newness of its design2 ( cosa nuova) novelty; ( innovazione) innovation, change: le novità della moda, the latest fashions; non ero stato informato della novità, I had not been informed of the change; per loro fu una novità, it was a new experience for them; i vecchi odiano le novità, old people hate change; tenersi al corrente delle novità, to keep up with new ideas; queste sono le ultime novità del settore, these are the latest developments in the field; introdurre delle novità in un processo produttivo, to introduce innovations into (o to make changes in) a production process // novità libraria, new book; novità teatrale, new play; novità discografiche, new releases3 ( notizia) news [U]: le novità del giorno, the news of the day; che novità ci sono?, what is the news?; non ho altre novità da raccontarti, I haven't got any other news to tell you // che novità sono queste?, what ever is the world coming to?* * *[novi'ta]sostantivo femminile invariabile1) (aspetto nuovo, originalità) novelty, freshnessfare qcs. per il gusto della novità — to do sth. for the novelty
2) (cosa nuova) novelty; (sviluppo, cambiamento) innovation, changenovità d'autunno — abbigl. new autumn fashions
"novità editoriali" — "just out", "just published"
3) (notizia) news U* * *novità/novi'ta/f.inv.1 (aspetto nuovo, originalità) novelty, freshness; fare qcs. per il gusto della novità to do sth. for the novelty2 (cosa nuova) novelty; (sviluppo, cambiamento) innovation, change; non è una novità! that's nothing new! è una novità per me that's a new one on me; l'ultima novità the latest word; novità d'autunno abbigl. new autumn fashions; le ultime novità della moda the latest in fashion; "novità editoriali" "just out", "just published"3 (notizia) news U; ci sono novità? any news? telefonami se ci sono novità give me a ring if there is anything new. -
87 serial
nounFortsetzungsgeschichte, die; (on radio, television) Serie, die* * *see academic.ru/66060/series">series* * *se·rial[ˈsɪəriəl, AM ˈsɪri-]I. n MEDIA, PUBL Fortsetzungsgeschichte fTV \serial TV-Serie fII. adj1. (broadcasting, publishing) Serien-2. (repeated) Serien-3. COMPUT seriell, in Reihe* * *['sIərɪəl]1. adjSerien-; radio/TV programme in Fortsetzungen; writer von Fortsetzungsromanen; (COMPUT) printer, interface etc seriellhe is a serial rapist — er ist ein Serientäter, der bereits mehrere Vergewaltigungen begangen hat
serial drama (TV) — (Fernseh)serie f
serial novel/story — Fortsetzungsroman m/-geschichte f
2. n(= novel) Fortsetzungsroman m; (in periodical) Serie f; (RAD) Sendereihe f (in Fortsetzungen); (TV) Serie f; (spec = magazine) (periodisch erscheinende) Zeitschriftit was published/broadcast as a serial — es wurde in Fortsetzungen veröffentlicht/gesendet
* * *serial [ˈsıərıəl]A s1. in Fortsetzungen oder in regelmäßiger Folge erscheinende Veröffentlichung, besonders Fortsetzungsroman m2. (Veröffentlichungs)Reihe f, Serie f, periodisch erscheinende Zeitschrift, Serien-, Lieferungswerk n3. a) Sendereihe fb) (Hörspiel-, Fernseh) Folge f, Serie fc) Film m in FortsetzungenB adj (adv serially)1. Serien…, Fortsetzungs…:serial story Fortsetzungsgeschichte f;2. serienmäßig, Reihen…, Serien…:serial killer Serienmörder(in);a) laufende Nummer, Seriennummer f,b) WIRTSCH Fabrikationsnummer f;serial photograph Reihenbild n3. COMPUT, MUS: seriellser. abk1. serial2. series3. sermon* * *nounFortsetzungsgeschichte, die; (on radio, television) Serie, die* * *adj.hintereinander adj. -
88 printed
adjective1) (Printing) gedrucktprinted characters or letters — Druckbuchstaben
2) (written like print) in Druckschrift3) (published) veröffentlicht [Artikel, Roman, Ansichten usw.]4) (Textiles) bedruckt [Stoff]* * *['prIntɪd]adjDruck-, gedruckt; (= written in capitals) in Großbuchstaben; fabric bedrucktprinted matter/papers — Büchersendung f
the printed word —
the printed book the printed page — das gedruckte or veröffentlichte Buch die gedruckte Seite
in printed form —
* * *adjective1) (Printing) gedrucktprinted characters or letters — Druckbuchstaben
2) (written like print) in Druckschrift3) (published) veröffentlicht [Artikel, Roman, Ansichten usw.]4) (Textiles) bedruckt [Stoff]* * *adj.abgedruckt adj.bereits gedruckt adj.gedruckt adj. -
89 publikacj|a
f 1. sgt (ogłoszenie drukiem) publication, publishing (czegoś of sth)- przygotować coś do publikacji to prepare sth for publication- domagać się publikacji tajnych akt to demand the publication a. publishing of secret records a. documents- starał się o publikację swojej nowej książki he tried to get his new book published- oświadczenie w formie nadającej się do publikacji a statement in a publishable form2. (G pl publikacji) (tekst) publication- publikacja naukowa/oświatowa an academic/educational publication- publikacja książkowa a book- (on) ma w swym dorobku dwie publikacje he has two publications to his name- czy ma pan na swoim koncie jakieś publikacje? have you published anything?The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > publikacj|a
-
90 book
[buk] 1. сущ.1) книга, том, печатное изданиеillustrated / picture book — иллюстрированная книга
to charge / check a book (out of a library) — заказывать книгу (из библиотеки)
2) книга, сочинение, литературное произведение, научный трактатto bring out / publish / put out a book — опубликовать произведение
to ban a book — запрещать издание какой-л. книги
to copyright a book — зарегистрировать авторское право на какую-л. книгу
to dedicate / inscribe a book — посвятить книгу кому-л.
to expurgate a book — подвергнуть цензуре книгу (вычеркнуть все нежелательные для кого-л. места)
to pirate a book — нарушать авторские права на какую-л. книгу
to proofread a book — вычитывать / корректировать книгу
to review a book — сделать обзор какого-л. издания
to revise a book — вносить правки / корректуру в книгу
to translate a book — переводить книгу, делать перевод книги
a book appears / comes out / is published — книга выходит в свет
3) ( the Book) Библия4) том, часть, книга ( часть крупного литературного произведения)5) либретто ( музыкального произведения); сценарий6) ( books)а) конторская книга, бухгалтерская книгаSyn:б) сборник отчётов (коммерческого предприятия, научного общества)7) букмекерская книга записи ставок ( на тотализаторе); запись заключаемых пари8) книжечка (билетов, марок)9) пакет листового золота (25 листов в пакете, проложенных бумагой)10) набор преступлений, в которых кто-л. обвиняется- throw the book at smb.- do the book11) карт. первые шесть взяток одной из сторон ( в висте)••to read smb. like a book — прекрасно понимать кого-л., видеть насквозь
to know a thing like a book — знать что-л. как свои пять пальцев
- without bookto be in smb.'s good (bad, black) books — быть у кого-л. на хорошем (плохом) счету
- speak by the book
- be on the books
- suit smb.'s book
- bring to book 2. гл.1) записывать, вносить в книгу, регистрироватьTo seize and book every object worth noticing. — Схватить и описать любой предмет, достойный внимания.
2) заказывать; бронировать; брать билет4) заручаться согласием; заставлять кого-л. давать обещание5) заводить на кого-л. досье, дело6) заносить в список; рекрутировать; производить переписьHe caused the marchers to book their men. — Он приказал начальникам пограничных территорий переписать своих людей.
7) подписываться ( при сборе денег)8) разг. поймать с поличнымRebecca's been booked for speeding. — Ребекка попалась за превышение скорости.
•- book in- book off
- book out
- book through 3. прил.1) книжный, почерпнутый из книгbook learning — знания, взятые из книг; теоретические знания
2) записанный, занесённый в книгуThe course of lectures will be published in book form. — Курс лекций будет опубликован в форме книги.
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91 Pessoa, Fernando
(1888-1935)Portugal's most celebrated and talented modern poet and one of Europe's greatest 20th-century poets, whose works are now translated into many languages. Pessoa was born in Portugal but was raised and educated in South Africa, and for a period, English became almost his first language. He returned to Portugal at age 12, and wrote poetry from an early age. He wrote poetry and essays both in English and in Portuguese under various names. Beyond that unusual practice, Pessoa created different personalities with names such as Alberto Caeiro, Ricardo Reis, Álvaro de Campos, and Bernardo Soares, his heteronyms. He became one of Europe's greatest modernist poets, although he did not publish much of his poetry in book form during his lifetime. His book Mensagem (Message), published in 1934 in Lisbon and receiving a government prize, appeared only a year before his premature death at age 47. Although he had published poems in scattered, ephemeral periodicals in Portugal, much of his writings remained unpublished, stored in a family trunk. -
92 e-mail mailing list
E-coma marketing technique particularly suited to discussing complex topics over a period of time. Members can be drawn from anywhere in the world, and come together to share information and experience on a particular theme or subject area. It works as follows: a moderator compiles a list of e-mail addresses for possible members, and mails them with the theme for discussion. People then join up, via e-mail or Web form. The moderator invites contributions, which are duly published by email; subscribers then react to the initial publication with their opinions and feedback. A selection of these reactions is published in the next e-mail sent out—and so on. If successful, a feedback and opinion loop is created, with new topics being introduced as older topics have received sufficient discussion. -
93 Ducos du Hauron, Arthur-Louis
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1837 Langon, Bordeaux, Franced. 19 August 1920 Agen, France[br]French scientist and pioneer of colour photography.[br]The son of a tax collector, Ducos du Hauron began researches into colour photography soon after the publication of Clerk Maxwell's experiment in 1861. In a communication sent in 1862 for presentation at the Académie des Sciences, but which was never read, he outlined a number of methods for photography of colours. Subsequently, in his book Les Couleurs en photographie, published in 1869, he outlined most of the principles of additive and subtractive colour photography that were later actually used. He covered additive processes, developed from Clerk Maxwell's demonstrations, and subtractive processes which could yield prints. At the time, the photographic materials available prevented the processes from being employed effectively. The design of his Chromoscope, in which transparent reflectors could be used to superimpose three additive images, was sound, however, and formed the basis of a number of later devices. He also proposed an additive system based on the use of a screen of fine red, yellow and blue lines, through which the photograph was taken and viewed. The lines blended additively when seen from a certain distance. Many years later, in 1907, Ducos du Hauron was to use this principle in an early commercial screen-plate process, Omnicolore. With his brother Alcide, he published a further work in 1878, Photographie des Couleurs, which described some more-practical subtractive processes. A few prints made at this time still survive and they are remarkably good for the period. In a French patent of 1895 he described yet another method for colour photography. His "polyfolium chromodialytique" involved a multiple-layer package of separate red-, green-and blue-sensitive materials and filters, which with a single exposure would analyse the scene in terms of the three primary colours. The individual layers would be separated for subsequent processing and printing. In a refined form, this is the principle behind modern colour films. In 1891 he patented and demonstrated the anaglyph method of stereoscopy, using superimposed red and green left and right eye images viewed through green and red filters. Ducos du Hauron's remarkable achievement was to propose theories of virtually all the basic methods of colour photography at a time when photographic materials were not adequate for the purpose of proving them correct. For his work on colour photography he was awarded the Progress Medal of the Royal Photographic Society in 1900, but despite his major contributions to colour photography he remained in poverty for much of his later life.[br]Further ReadingB.Coe, 1978, Colour Photography: The First Hundred Years, London. J.S.Friedman, 1944, History of Colour Photography, Boston. E.J.Wall, 1925, The History of Three-Colour Photography, Boston. See also Cros, Charles.BCBiographical history of technology > Ducos du Hauron, Arthur-Louis
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94 Elgar, Francis
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. April 1845 Portsmouth, Englandd. 16 January 1909 Monte Carlo, Monaco[br]English naval architect and shipbuilder.[br]Elgar enjoyed a fascinating professional life, during which he achieved distinction in the military, merchant, academic and political aspects of his profession. At the age of 14 he was apprenticed as a shipwright to the Royal Dockyard at Portsmouth but when he was in his late teens he was selected as one of the Admiralty students to further his education at the Royal School of Naval Architecture at South Kensington, London. On completion of the course he was appointed to Birkenhead, where the ill-fated HMS Captain was being built, and then to Portsmouth Dockyard. In 1870 the Captain was lost at sea and Francis Elgar was called on to prepare much of the evidence for the Court Martial. This began his life-long interest in ship stability and in ways of presenting this information in an easily understood form to ship operators.In 1883 he accepted the John Elder Chair of Naval Architecture at Glasgow University, an appointment which formalized the already well-established teaching of this branch of engineering at Glasgow. However, after only three years he returned to public service in the newly created post of Director of Royal Dockyards, a post that he held for a mere six years but which brought about great advances in the speed of warship construction, with associated reductions in cost. In 1892 he was made Naval Architect and Director of the Fairfield Shipbuilding Company in Glasgow, remaining there until he retired in 1907. The following year he accepted the post of Chairman of the Birkenhead shipyard of Cammell Laird \& Co.; this was a recent amalgamation of two companies, and he retained this position until his death. Throughout his life, Elgar acted on many consultative bodies and committees, including the 1884 Ship Load Line Enquiry. His work enabled him to keep abreast of all current thinking in ship design and construction.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS. FRSE. Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur.BibliographyElgar produced some remarkable papers, which were published by the Institutions of Naval Architects, Civil Engineers and Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland as well as by the Royal Society. He published several books on shipbuilding.FMW -
95 Goddard, Dr Robert Hutchings
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 5 October 1882 Worcester, Massachusetts, USAd. 10 August 1945 Baltimore, Maryland, USA[br]American inventory developer of rocket propulsion.[br]At the age of seventeen Goddard climbed a tree and, seeing the view from above, he became determined to make some device with which to ascend towards the planets. In an autobiography, published in 1959 in the journal Astronautics, he stated, "I was a different boy when I descended the ladder. Life now had a purpose for me." His first idea was to launch a projectile by centrifugal force, but in 1909 he started to design a rocket that was to be multi-stage and fuelled by liquid oxygen and hydrogen. Not long before the First World War he produced a report, "A method of reaching extreme altitudes", which was for the Smithsonian Institution and was published in book form in 1919. During the war he worked on solid-fuelled rockets as weapons. His book contained notes on the amount of fuel required to raise 1 lb (454 g) of payload to an infinite altitude. He incurred ridicule as "the moon man" when he proposed the use of flash powder to indicate successful arrival on the moon. In 1923 he severed his connections with military work and returned to the University of Massachusetts. On 16 March 1926 he launched the world's first liquid-fuelled rocket from his aunt's farm in Auburn, Massachusetts; powered by gasoline and liquid oxygen, it flew to a height of 12 m (40 ft) and travelled 54 m (177 ft) in 2.4 seconds.In November 1929 he met the aviator Charles Lindbergh, who persuaded both the Guggenheim Foundation and the Carnegie Institute to support Goddard's experiments financially. He moved to the more suitable location of the Mescalere Ranch, near Roswell, New Mexico, where he worked until 1941. His liquid-fuelled rockets reached speeds of 1,100 km/h (700 mph) and heights of 2,500 m (8,000ft). He investigated the use of the gyroscope to steady his rockets and the assembly of power units in clusters to increase the total thrust. In 1941 he moved to the naval establishment at Annapolis, Maryland, working on liquid-fuelled rockets to assist the take-off of aircraft from carriers. He worked for the US Government on this and the development of military rockets until his death from throat cancer in 1945. In all, he was granted 214 patents, roughly three per year of his life.In 1960 the US Government admitted infringement of Goddard's patents during the rocket programme of the 1950s and awarded his widow a payment of $1,000,000, while the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) honoured him by naming the Goddard Spaceflight Center near Washington, DC, after him. The Goddard Memorial Library at Clark University, in his home town of Worcester, Massachusetts, was also named in his honour.[br]Further ReadingA.Osman, 1983, Space History, London: Michael Joseph. P.Marsh, 1985, The Space Business, Harmondsworth: Penguin.K.C.Parley, 1991, Robert H.Goddard, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Silver Burdett Press. T.Streissguth, 1994, Rocket Man: The Story of Robert Goddard, Minneapolis: Carolrhoda Books.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Goddard, Dr Robert Hutchings
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96 Maddox, Richard Leach
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1816 Bath, Englandd. 1902 Southampton, England[br]English physician, amateur photographer and photomicrographer, inventor of the first practicable gelatine silver halide emulsion.[br]Maddox studied medicine, but dogged by ill health he travelled widely, eventually settling in Constantinople (now Istanbul), where he married in 1849. After further migrations, Maddox returned to England in the 1870s. He had become interested in photography and was awarded medals for his photomicrographs. Searching for a substitute for collodion to hold the sensitive silver salts, Maddox devised a gelatine bromide emulsion that gave acceptable results, and he published details in 1871. Gelatine had been tried by earlier experimenters, but the results were poor; the plates made by Maddox were slow and lacked density, but they pointed the way to the modern gelatine halide emulsions which continued to form the basis of photographic emulsions in the 1990s.[br]Bibliography1871, British Journal of Photography 8 (September):422–3 (first published details of Mad-dox's emulsion).Further ReadingJ.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans E. Epstean, New York.H.Gernsheim and A, Gernsheim, 1969, The History of Photography, rev. edn, London: Phandon.JW -
97 Russell, John Scott
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 9 May 1808 Parkhead, near Glasgow, Scotlandd. 8 June 1882 Isle of Wight, England[br]Scottish engineer, naval architect and academic.[br]A son of the manse, Russell was originally destined for the Church and commenced studies at the University of St Andrews, but shortly afterwards he transferred to Glasgow, graduating MA in 1825 when only 17 years old. He began work as a teacher in Edinburgh, working up from a school to the Mechanics Institute and then in 1832 to the University, where he took over the classes in natural philosophy following the death of the professor. During this period he designed and advised on the application of steam power to road transport and to the Forth and Clyde Canal, thereby awakening his interest in ships and naval architecture.Russell presented papers to the British Association over several years, and one of them, The Wave Line Theory of Ship Form (although now superseded), had great influence on ship designers of the time and helped to establish the formal study of hydromechanics. With a name that was becoming well known, Russell looked around for better opportunities, and on narrowly missing appointment to the Chair of Mathematics at Edinburgh University he joined the upand-coming Clyde shipyard of Caird \& Co., Greenock, as Manager in 1838.Around 1844 Russell and his family moved to London; following some business problems he was in straitened circumstances. However, appointment as Secretary to the Committee setting up the Great Exhibition of 1851 eased his path into London's intellectual society and allowed him to take on tasks such as, in 1847, the purchase of Fairbairn's shipyard on the Isle of Dogs and the subsequent building there of I.K. Brunel's Great Eastern steamship. This unhappy undertaking was a millstone around the necks of Brunel and Russell and broke the health of the former. With the yard failing to secure the order for HMS Warrior, the Royal Navy's first ironclad, Russell pulled out of shipbuilding and for the remainder of his life was a designer, consultant and at times controversial, but at all times polished and urbane, member of many important committees and societies. He is remembered as one of the founders of the Institution of Naval Architects in 1860. His last task was to design a Swiss Lake steamer for Messrs Escher Wyss, a company that coincidentally had previously retained Sir William Fairbairn.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1847.BibliographyJohn Scott Russell published many papers under the imprint of the British Association, the Royal Society of Arts and the Institution of Naval Architects. His most impressive work was the mammoth three-volume work on shipbuilding published in London in 1865 entitled The Modern System of Naval Architecture. Full details and plans of the Great Eastern are included.Further ReadingG.S.Emmerson, 1977, John Scott Russell, a Great Victorian Engineer and Naval Architect, London: MurrayFMW -
98 Seppings, Robert
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 11 December 1767 near Fakenham, Norfolk, Englandd. 25 April 1840 Taunton, Somerset, England[br]English naval architect who as Surveyor to the Royal Navy made fundamental improvements in wooden ship construction.[br]After the death of his father, Seppings at the age of 14 moved to his uncle's home in Plymouth, where shortly after (1782) he was apprenticed to the Master Shipwright. His indentures were honoured fully by 1789 and he commenced his climb up the professional ladder of the ship construction department of the Royal Dockyards. In 1797 he became Assistant Master Shipwright at Plymouth, and in 1804 he was appointed Master Shipwright at Chatham. In 1813 Sir William Rule, Surveyor to the Navy, retired and the number of surveyors was increased to three, with Seppings being appointed the junior. Later he was to become Surveyor to the Royal Navy, a post he held until his retirement in 1832. Seppings introduced many changes to ship construction in the early part of the nineteenth century. It is likely that the introduction of these innovations required positive and confident management, and their acceptance tells us much about Seppings. The best-known changes were the round bow and stern in men-of-war and the alteration to framing systems.The Seppings form of diagonal bracing ensured that wooden ships, which are notorious for hogging (i.e. drooping at the bow and stern), were stronger and therefore able to be built with greater length. This change was complemented by modifications to the floors, frames and futtocks (analogous to the ribs of a ship). These developments were to be taken further once iron composite construction (wooden sheathing on iron frames) was adopted in the United Kingdom mid-century.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS. Knighted (by the Prince Regent aboard the warship Royal George) 1819.BibliographyThroughout his life Seppings produced a handful of pamphlets and published letters, as well as two papers that were published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (1814 and 1820).Further ReadingA description of the thinking in the Royal Navy at the beginning of the nineteenth century can be found in: J.Fincham, 1851, A History of Naval Architecture, London; B.Lavery, 1989, Nelson's Navy. The Ships, Men and Organisation 1793–1815, London: Conway.T.Wright, 1982, "Thomas Young and Robert Seppings: science and ship construction in the early nineteenth century", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 53:55–72.Seppings's work can be seen aboard the frigate Unicorn, launched in Chatham in 1824 and now on view to the public at Dundee. Similarly, his innovations in ship construction can be readily understood from many of the models at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.FMW -
99 Smith, Oberlin
[br]b. 22 March 1840 Cincinnati, Ohio, USAd. 18 July 1926[br]American mechanical engineer, pioneer in experiments with magnetic recording.[br]Of English descent, Smith embarked on an education in mechanical engineering, graduating from West Jersey Academy, Bridgeton, New Jersey, in 1859. In 1863 he established a machine shop in Bridgeton, New Jersey, that became the Ferracute Machine Company in 1877, eventually specializing in the manufacture of presses for metalworking. He seems to have subscribed to design principles considered modern even in the 1990s, "always giving attention to the development of artistic form in combination with simplicity, and with massive strength where required" (bibliographic reference below). He was successful in his business, and developed and patented a large number of mechanical constructions.Inspired by the advent of the phonograph of Edison, in 1878 Smith obtained the tin-foil mechanical phonograph, analysed its shortcomings and performed some experiments in magnetic recording. He filed a caveat in the US Patent Office in order to be protected while he "reduced the invention to practice". However, he did not follow this trail. When there was renewed interest in practical sound recording and reproduction in 1888 (the constructions of Berliner and Bell \& Tainter), Smith published an account of his experiments in the journal Electrical World. In a corrective letter three weeks later it is clear that he was aware of the physical requirements for the interaction between magnetic coil and magnetic medium, but his publications also indicate that he did not as such obtain reproduction of recorded sound.Smith did not try to develop magnetic recording, but he felt it imperative that he be given credit for conceiving the idea of it. When accounts of Valdemar Poulsen's work were published in 1900, Smith attempted to prove some rights in the invention in the US Patent Office, but to no avail.He was a highly respected member of both his community and engineering societies, and in later life became interested in the anti-slavery cause that had also been close to the heart of his parents, as well as in the YMCA movement and in women's suffrage.[br]BibliographyApart from numerous technical papers, he wrote the book Press Working of Metals, 1896. His accounts on the magnetic recording experiments were "Some possible forms of phonograph", Electrical World (8 September 1888): 161 ff, and "Letter to the Editor", Electrical World (29 September 1888): 179.Further ReadingF.K.Engel, 1990, Documents on the Invention of Magnetic Recording in 1878, New York: Audio Engineering Society, Reprint no. 2,914 (G2) (a good overview of the material collected by the Oberlin Smith Society, Bridgeton, New Jersey, in particular as regards the recording experiments; it is here that it is doubted that Valdemar Poulsen developed his ideas independently).GB-N -
100 Whinfield, John Rex
[br]b. 16 February 1901 Sutton, Surrey, Englandd. 6 July 1955 Dorking, Surrey, England[br]English inventor ofTerylene.[br]Whinfield was educated at Merchant Taylors' School and Caius College, Cambridge, where he studied chemistry. Before embarking on his career as a research chemist, he worked as an un-paid assistant to the chemist C.F. Cross, who had taken part in the discovery of rayon. Whinfield then joined the Calico Printers' Association. There his interest was aroused by the discovery of nylon by W.H. Carothers to seek other polymers which could be produced in fibre form, usable by the textile industries. With his colleague J.T. Dickson, he discovered in 1941 that a polymerized condensate of terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol, polyethylene terephthgal-late, could be drawn into strong fibres. Whinfield and Dickson filed a patent application in the same year, but due to war conditions it was not published until 1946. The Ministry of Supply considered that the new material might have military applications and undertook further research and development. Its industrial and textile possibilities were evaluated by Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) in 1943 and "Terylene", as it came to be called, was soon recognized as being as important as nylon.In 1946, Dupont acquired rights to work the Calico Printers' Association patent in the USA and began large-scale manufacture in 1954, marketing the product under the name "Dacron". Meanwhile ICI purchased world rights except for the USA and reached the large-scale manufacture stage in 1955. A new branch of the textile industry has grown up from Whinfield's discovery: he lived to see most people in the western world wearing something made of Terylene. It was one of the major inventions of the twentieth century, yet Whinfield, perhaps because he published little, received scant recognition, apart from the CBE in 1954.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCBE 1954.Further ReadingObituary, 1966, The Times (7 July).Obituary, 1967, Chemistry in Britain 3:26.J.Jewkes, D.Sawers and R.Stillerman, 1969, The Sources of Invention, 2nd edn, London: Macmillan.LRD
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