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(samuel)

  • 81 Samuel Taylor Coleridge

    סמואל טיילור קולרידג' (1772-1834), משורר ופילוסוף אנגלי, חבר ב-משוררי האגמים {האנגליים מחבל האגמים}
    * * *
    }םימגאה לבחמ םיילגנאה{ םימגאה יררושמ-ב רבח,ילגנא ףוסוליפו ררושמ,(4381-2771) 'גדירלוק רולייט לאומס

    English-Hebrew dictionary > Samuel Taylor Coleridge

  • 82 Samuel de Champlain

    סמיאל דה שנפלן (1567-1635), ימאי וחוקר צרפתי, מייסד מחוז קוויבק (בקנדה)
    * * *
    (הדנקב) קביווק זוחמ דסיימ,יתפרצ רקוחו יאמי,(5361-7651) ןלפנש הד לאימס

    English-Hebrew dictionary > Samuel de Champlain

  • 83 samuel johnson tarzında

    adj. Johnsonian

    Turkish-English dictionary > samuel johnson tarzında

  • 84 samuel sen

    سموئيل‌بزرگتر،سموئيل‌

    English to Farsi dictionary > samuel sen

  • 85 Samuel Leroy Jackson

    n. amerikansk filmskådespelare (hade en av huvudrollerna i "Pulp Fiction")

    English-Swedish dictionary > Samuel Leroy Jackson

  • 86 Samuel Goldwyn Studios

    студии Сэмюэля Голдвина ( в Голливуде). Построенные Мэри Пикфорд [*Pickford, Mary] и Дугласом Фэрбенксом [*Fairbanks, Douglas], пережили период расцвета в 1920—30-е гг. и последовавший за этим упадок. В 1980 помещение студий было куплено компанией «Братья Уорнер» и используется для телевизионных съёмок

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > Samuel Goldwyn Studios

  • 87 SAMUEL Walter /ARG, защитник/

    Страна: Argentina Номер: 6 День рождения: 23.03.1978 Рост: 179 см. Вес: 73 кг. Позиция: защитник Текущий клуб: AS Rome (ITA) Голы за сборную: 3 (27 Мая 2002) Провел матчей за сборную: 30 (27 Мая 2002) 1-ый матч за сборную: Venezuela (нет данных)

    English-Russian FIFA World Cup 2002 dictionary > SAMUEL Walter /ARG, защитник/

  • 88 Samuel Prorok

     1-2 Sm - Самуїл, пророк

    Praktyczny słownik polsko-ukraiński > Samuel Prorok

  • 89 Samuel Beckett

    Wikipedia English-Arabic glossary > Samuel Beckett

  • 90 Samuel F. B. Morse

    Wikipedia English-Arabic glossary > Samuel F. B. Morse

  • 91 Crompton, Samuel

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 3 December 1753 Firwood, near Bolton, Lancashire, England
    d. 26 June 1827 Bolton, Lancashire, England
    [br]
    English inventor of the spinning mule.
    [br]
    Samuel Crompton was the son of a tenant farmer, George, who became the caretaker of the old house Hall-i-th-Wood, near Bolton, where he died in 1759. As a boy, Samuel helped his widowed mother in various tasks at home, including weaving. He liked music and made his own violin, with which he later was to earn some money to pay for tools for building his spinning mule. He was set to work at spinning and so in 1769 became familiar with the spinning jenny designed by James Hargreaves; he soon noticed the poor quality of the yarn produced and its tendency to break. Crompton became so exasperated with the jenny that in 1772 he decided to improve it. After seven years' work, in 1779 he produced his famous spinning "mule". He built the first one entirely by himself, principally from wood. He adapted rollers similar to those already patented by Arkwright for drawing out the cotton rovings, but it seems that he did not know of Arkwright's invention. The rollers were placed at the back of the mule and paid out the fibres to the spindles, which were mounted on a moving carriage that was drawn away from the rollers as the yarn was paid out. The spindles were rotated to put in twist. At the end of the draw, or shortly before, the rollers were stopped but the spindles continued to rotate. This not only twisted the yarn further, but slightly stretched it and so helped to even out any irregularities; it was this feature that gave the mule yarn extra quality. Then, after the spindles had been turned backwards to unwind the yarn from their tips, they were rotated in the spinning direction again and the yarn was wound on as the carriage was pushed up to the rollers.
    The mule was a very versatile machine, making it possible to spin almost every type of yarn. In fact, Samuel Crompton was soon producing yarn of a much finer quality than had ever been spun in Bolton, and people attempted to break into Hall-i-th-Wood to see how he produced it. Crompton did not patent his invention, perhaps because it consisted basically of the essential features of the earlier machines of Hargreaves and Arkwright, or perhaps through lack of funds. Under promise of a generous subscription, he disclosed his invention to the spinning industry, but was shabbily treated because most of the promised money was never paid. Crompton's first mule had forty-eight spindles, but it did not long remain in its original form for many people started to make improvements to it. The mule soon became more popular than Arkwright's waterframe because it could spin such fine yarn, which enabled weavers to produce the best muslin cloth, rivalling that woven in India and leading to an enormous expansion in the British cotton-textile industry. Crompton eventually saved enough capital to set up as a manufacturer himself and around 1784 he experimented with an improved carding engine, although he was not successful. In 1800, local manufacturers raised a sum of £500 for him, and eventually in 1812 he received a government grant of £5,000, but this was trifling in relation to the immense financial benefits his invention had conferred on the industry, to say nothing of his expenses. When Crompton was seeking evidence in 1811 to support his claim for financial assistance, he found that there were 4,209,570 mule spindles compared with 155,880 jenny and 310,516 waterframe spindles. He later set up as a bleacher and again as a cotton manufacturer, but only the gift of a small annuity by his friends saved him from dying in total poverty.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    H.C.Cameron, 1951, Samuel Crompton, Inventor of the Spinning Mule, London (a rather discursive biography).
    Dobson \& Barlow Ltd, 1927, Samuel Crompton, the Inventor of the Spinning Mule, Bolton.
    G.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, Inventor of the Spinning Machine Called the Mule, London.
    The invention of the mule is fully described in H. Gatling, 1970, The Spinning Mule, Newton Abbot; W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London; R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester.
    C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. IV, Oxford: Clarendon Press (provides a brief account).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Crompton, Samuel

  • 92 Slater, Samuel

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 9 June 1768 Belper, Derbyshire, England
    d. 21 April 1835 USA
    [br]
    Anglo-American manufacturer who established the first American mill to use Arkwright's spinning system.
    [br]
    Samuel's father, William, was a respected independent farmer who died when his son was aged 14; the young Slater was apprenticed to his father's friend, Jedediah Strutt for six and a half years at the beginning of 1783. He showed mathematical ability and quickly acquainted himself thoroughly with cotton-spinning machinery made by Arkwright, Hargreaves and Crompton. After completing his apprenticeship, he remained for a time with the Strutts to act as Supervisor for a new mill.
    At that time it was forbidden to export any textile machinery or even drawings or data from England. The emigration of textile workers was forbidden too, but in September 1789 Slater left for the United States in disguise, having committed the details of the construction of the cotton-spinning machinery to memory. He reached New York and was employed by the New York Manufacturing Company.
    In January 1790 he met Moses Brown in Providence, Rhode Island, and on 5 April 1790 he signed a contract to construct Arkwright's spinning machinery for Almy \& Brown. It took Slater more than a year to get the machinery operational because of the lack of skilled mechanics and tools, but by 1793 the mill was running under the name of Almy, Brown \& Slater. In October 1791 Slater had married Hannah Wilkinson, and in 1798 he set up his own mill in partnership with his father-in-law, Orziel Wilkinson. This mill was built in Pawtucket, near the first mill, but other mills soon followed in Smithville, Rhode Island, and elsewhere. Slater was the Incorporator, and for the first fifteen years was also President of the Manufacturer's Bank in Pawtucket. It was in his business role and as New England's first industrial capitalist that Slater made his most important contributions to the emergence of the American textile industry.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    G.S.White, 1836, Memoirs of Samuel Philadelphia (theearliestaccountofhislife). Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. XVII. Scientific American 63. P.E.Rivard, 1974, Samuel Slater, Father of American Manufactures, Slater Mill. D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution. The Diffusion of Textile
    Technologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (covers Slater's activities in the USA very fully).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Slater, Samuel

  • 93 Fuller, Samuel

    1912-1997
       Cineasta excesivo, con el cine en la sangre, Samuel Fuller es uno de los grandes, y semidesconocidos hoy, realizadores norteamericanos. Nacido en Worcester, Massachusetts, periodista de formacion, es novelista cronologicamente antes que cineasta, lo que le facilita la entrada en el mundo del cine como guionista, a mediados de los anos 30. No sera hasta 1949 cuando debutaria en la direccion con Balas vengadoras. Casi desde su primer filme, parece dispuesto a poner en practica el concepto del cine que haria explicito en su pequena intervencion en la pelicula de Jean-Luc Godard Pierrot, el loco (Pierrot le fou, 1965): «Una pelicula es como una batalla, amor, odio, accion, violencia, muerte; en una palabra, emocion ». No es de extranar, pues, que cada una de sus peliculas belicas sea una obra maestra, desde Casco de acero (The Steel Helmet, 1950), pasando por Invasion en Birmania (Merrill’s Marauders, 1962), hasta Uno rojo: division de choque (The Big Red One, 1979). Pero tambien lo son sus historias criminales, empezando por la magistral Manos peligrosas (Pickup on South Street, 1953), casi bressoniana, siguiendo con la iconoclasta La casa de bambu (House of Bamboo, 1955), y terminando con Underworld U.S.A. (1961). Implacable en el desarrollo de sus dramas humanos (Corredor sin retorno, Shock Corridor, 1963; Una luz en el hampa, The Naked Kiss, 1964), sus cuatro westerns, dos tempranos, dos de madurez, son ejemplares en su coherencia, tanto interna como formal. Maestro de las angulaciones de camara arriesgadas y de los primeros planos asfixiantes, la experiencia de acercarse a las peliculas firmadas por Samuel Fuller es impagable.
        I Shot Jesse James (Balas vengadoras). 1949. 81 minutos. Blanco y Ne gro. Lippert-Screen Guild. Preston Foster, Barbara Britton, John Ireland.
        The Baron of Arizona. 1950. 97 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Deputy Corp./ Lippert. Vincent Price, Ellen Drew, Beulah Bondi.
        Forty Guns. 1957. 80 minutos. Blanco y Negro. CinemaScope. Globe Enterprises (Fox). Barbara Stanwyck, Barry Sullivan, Dean Jagger, John Ericson.
        Run of the Arrow (Yuma). 1957. 86 minutos. Technicolor. Globe Enterprises (RKO). Rod Steiger, Sara Montiel, Brian Keith, Ralph Meeker.

    English-Spanish dictionary of western films > Fuller, Samuel

  • 94 Need, Samuel

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 1718
    d. 14 April 1781 Bread Street, Cheapside, London, England
    [br]
    English manufacturer of hosiery who helped to finance Arkwright's spinning machine and early cotton mills.
    [br]
    Samuel Need was apprenticed as a framework knitter and entered the hosiery trade c. 1742. He was a Dissenter and later became an Independent Congregationalist. He married Elizabeth Gibson of Hacking, Middlesex, who survived him and died in 1781. He had a warehouse in Nottingham, where he was made a burgess in 1739–40. In 1747 he bought a mill there and had a house adjoining it, but in 1777 he bought an estate at Arnold, outside the city. From about 1759 he supported Jedediah Strutt and William Woollat in their development of Strutt's invention of the rib attachment to the knitting machine. Need became a partner with Strutt in 1762 over the patent and then they shared a joint hosiery business. When Arkwright sought financial assistance from Ichabod and John Wright, the Nottingham bankers, to develop his spinning mill in that town, the Wrights turned him over to Samuel Need. Need, having profited so much from the successful patent with Strutt, was ready to exploit another; on 19 January 1770 Need and Strutt, on payment of £500, became co-partners with Arkwright, Smalley and Thornley for the remainder of Arkwright's patent. In Need, Arkwright had secured the patronage of the leading hosier in Nottingham. Need was leader of the Hosiers' Federation in 1779 when the framework knitters petitioned Parliament to better their conditions. He gave evidence against the workers' demands and, when their bill failed, the Nottingham workers attacked first his Nottingham house and then the one at Arnold.
    Need was to remain a partner with Arkwright until his death in 1781. He was involved in die mill at Cromford and also with some later ones, such as the Birkacre mill near Chorley, Lancashire, in 1777. He made a fortune and died at his home in London.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    M.L.Walker, 1963, A History of the Family of Need of Arnold, Nottinghamshire, London (a good biography).
    R.S.Fitton, 1989, The Arkwrights, Spinners of Fortune, Manchester (covers Need's relationship with Arkwright).
    R.S.Fitton and A.P.Wadsworth, 1958, The Strutts and the Arkwrights, 1758–1830, Manchester.
    S.D.Chapman, 1967, The Early Factory Masters, Newton Abbot (describes his wider contacts with the Midlands hosiery industry).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Need, Samuel

  • 95 Baruch Samuel Blumberg

    n. Baruch Samuel Blumberg, (geboren 1925) Amerikaanse fysicus en biochemicus, in 1976 winnaar van de Nobelprijs voor geneeskunde of fysiologie met Daniel Carleton Gajdusek

    English-Dutch dictionary > Baruch Samuel Blumberg

  • 96 Herbert Samuel

    Herbert Samuel (de eerste hoge commissaris van het Engelse mandaat)

    English-Dutch dictionary > Herbert Samuel

  • 97 Herbert Samuel

    Herbert Samuel (första överkommissarie under det brittiska madatet)

    English-Swedish dictionary > Herbert Samuel

  • 98 Hill Samuel

    [,hɪl'sæmjuəl]
    "Хилл Са́мьюэл" (крупнейший лондонский торговый банк [ merchant bank]. Основан в 1831)
    полн. Hill Samuel Group Ltd

    English-Russian Great Britain dictionary (Великобритания. Лингвострановедческий словарь) > Hill Samuel

  • 99 Diege, Samuel

    1902-1939
       Muerto en plena juventud, Samuel Diege solo tuvo tiempo para dirigir cuatro peliculas, despues de haber ejercido durante un par de anos como ayudante de direccion. Se trata de cuatro westerns intrascendentes, tres de ellos con la cowgirl cantante Dorothy Page.
        King of the Sierras (co-d.: Arthur Rosson). 1938. 53 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Grand National. Hobart Bosworth, Harry Harvey, Jr.
        Water Rustlers. 1938. 54 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Coronado/Grand National. Dorothy Page, Dave O’Brien, Vince Barnett.
        Ride’ Em Cowgirl. 1938. 52 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Coronado/Grand National. Dorothy Page, Vince Barnett.
        The Singing Cowgirl. 1939. 59 minutos. Blanco y Negro. Coronado/Grand National. Dorothy Page, Dave O’Brien, Vince Barnett.

    English-Spanish dictionary of western films > Diege, Samuel

  • 100 Bentham, Sir Samuel

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 11 January 1757 England
    d. 31 May 1831 London, England
    [br]
    English naval architect and engineer.
    [br]
    He was the son of Jeremiah Bentham, a lawyer. His mother died when he was an infant and his early education was at Westminster. At the age of 14 he was apprenticed to a master shipwright at Woolwich and later at Chatham Dockyard, where he made some small improvements in the fittings of ships. In 1778 he completed his apprenticeship and sailed on the Bienfaisant on a summer cruise of the Channel Fleet where he suggested and supervised several improvements to the steering gear and gun fittings.
    Unable to find suitable employment at home, he sailed for Russia to study naval architecture and shipbuilding, arriving at St Petersburg in 1780, whence he travelled throughout Russia as far as the frontier of China, examining mines and methods of working metals. He settled in Kritchev in 1782 and there established a small shipyard with a motley work-force. In 1784 he was appointed to command a battalion. He set up a yard on the "Panopticon" principle, with all workshops radiating from his own central office. He increased the armament of his ships greatly by strengthening the hulls and fitting guns without recoil, which resulted in a great victory over the Turks at Liman in 1788. For this he was awarded the Cross of St George and promoted to Brigadier- General. Soon after, he was appointed to a command in Siberia, where he was responsible for opening up the resources of the country greatly by developing river navigation.
    In 1791 he returned to England, where he was at first involved in the development of the Panopticon for his brother as well as with several other patents. In 1795 he was asked to look into the mechanization of the naval dockyards, and for the next eighteen years he was involved in improving methods of naval construction and machinery. He was responsible for the invention of the steam dredger, the caisson method of enclosing the entrances to docks, and the development of non-recoil cannonades of large calibre.
    His intervention in the maladministration of the naval dockyards resulted in an enquiry that brought about the clearing-away of much corruption, making him very unpopular. As a result he was sent to St Petersburg to arrange for the building of a number of ships for the British navy, in which the Russians had no intention of co-operating. On his return to England after two years he was told that his office of Inspector-General of Navy Works had been abolished and he was appointed to the Navy Board; he had several disagreements with John Rennie and in 1812 was told that this office, too, had been abolished. He went to live in France, where he stayed for thirteen years, returning in 1827 to arrange for the publication of some of his papers.
    There is some doubt about his use of his title: there is no record of his having received a knighthood in England, but it was assumed that he was authorized to use the title, granted to him in Russia, after his presentation to the Tsar in 1809.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Mary Sophia Bentham, Life of Brigadier-General Sir Samuel Bentham, K.S.G., Formerly Inspector of Naval Works (written by his wife, who died before completing it; completed by their daughter).
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Bentham, Sir Samuel

См. также в других словарях:

  • Samuel — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Samuel El profeta Samuel, en un fresco del monasterio de Mikhailovskr, Kiev (1112) Origen Hebreo Género …   Wikipedia Español

  • SAMUEL — (Heb. שְׁמוּאֵל), Israelite judge and prophet who lived in the 11th century B.C.E. His name is very close to that of the ancient Babylonian royal ancestor of Hammurapi, Sūmû la il, and similar in form to other amorite names such as Sūmû Abum,… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Samuel — samuel. m. C. Rica. Acción de samuelear. || echar un samuel. fr. C. Rica. samuelear. * * * Samuel, Herbert Louis (Šemū´ēl) …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • SAMUEL — (Mar or Samuel Yarhina ah; end of second century to mid third century), Babylonian amora. Samuel was born at Nehardea and studied with his father, abba b. abba ha kohen (Zev. 26a) and also with Levi b. Sisi (Shab. 108b),who had emigrated to… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Samuel — may refer to: *Samuel (Bible), Biblical prophet *Books of Samuel of the Bible *Samuel of Nehardea, Jewish Talmudist *Sam (name) *Samuel Jackson (1912 2002), American golfer *Samuel L. Jackson (born 1948), Actor *Adriana Samuel (born 1966),… …   Wikipedia

  • Samuel — (hebräisch שמואל : Sein Name ist Gott) steht für den männlichen Vornamen und Familiennamen, siehe Samuel (Name) für Namensträger den Propheten Samuel des Alten Testaments der Bibel, siehe Samuel (Prophet) das nach dem Propheten benannte Buch …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Samuel — m Biblical name (Hebrew Shemuel), possibly meaning ‘He (God) has hearkened’ (presumably to the prayers of a mother for a son). It may also be understood as a contracted form of Hebrew sha ul me el meaning ‘asked of God’. In the case of Samuel the …   First names dictionary

  • Samuel — (livres de) livres historiques de la Bible (I Samuel, 31 chapitres; II Samuel, 24 chapitres) rédigés v. la fin du VIIe s. av. J. C., chronique des règnes de Saül et de David. Dans la Vulgate et les Septante, ils forment les deux premiers livres… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Samuel — [sam′yo͞o əl, sam′yool] n. [LL(Ec) < Gr(Ec) Samouēl < Heb shemuel, lit., name of God] 1. a masculine name: dim. Sam, Sammy 2. Bible a) a Hebrew judge and prophet b) either of the two books (1 Samuel, 2 Samuel) telling of Samuel, Saul, and… …   English World dictionary

  • samuel — m. C. Rica. Acción de samuelear. echar un samuel. fr. C. Rica. samuelear …   Diccionario de la lengua española

  • Samuel — Samuel, Sohn des Elkana u. der Hanna, aus dem Stamme Levi, Prophet u. letzter auf Lebenszeit erwählter Richter der Israeliten, wurde von seiner Mutter zum Nasiräat bestimmt, von Kindheit auf unter Eli beim Heiligthum zu Silo erzogen, erhielt die… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

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