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1 Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians
English-german dictionary > Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians
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2 Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians
Общая лексика: член Королевского терапевтического колледжа (Великобритания)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians
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3 Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians
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4 fellow
fellow ['feləʊ]1 noun∎ a good fellow un type ou gars bien;∎ an old fellow un vieux bonhomme;∎ poor old fellow pauvre vieux;∎ the poor fellow's just lost his job le pauvre vient juste de perdre son travail;∎ the poor little fellow (animal) la pauvre bête;∎ hello, old fellow salut, mon vieux;∎ my dear fellow mon cher ami;∎ give a fellow a chance! donne-moi une chance!(b) literary (comrade) ami(e) m,f, camarade mf; (other human being) semblable mf; (person in same profession) confrère m, consœur f;∎ fellows in misfortune compagnons (compagnes) mpl, fpl d'infortune;∎ school fellow camarade mf d'école(c) University (professor) professeur m (faisant également partie du conseil d'administration); (postgraduate student) étudiant(e) m,f de troisième cycle (souvent chargé de cours)(d) (of learned society) membre m;∎ Fellow of the Craft (in freemasonry) compagnon m;∎ British Fellow of the Royal College of Music = membre du "Royal College of Music";∎ Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians = membre du "Royal College of Physicians";∎ Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons = membre du "Royal College of Surgeons";∎ Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons = membre du "Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons";∎ Fellow of the Royal Society = membre de la Société royale (de Londres)∎ where is the fellow to this sock/glove? où est la chaussette/le gant qui va avec celle-là/celui-là?∎ fellow prisoner/student camarade mf de prison/d'études;∎ fellow passenger/sufferer/soldier compagnon m de voyage/d'infortune/d'armes;∎ fellow being or creature semblable mf, pareil(eille) m,f;∎ one's fellow man son semblable;∎ fellow worker (in office) collègue mf (de travail); (in factory) camarade mf (de travail), compagnon m de travail;∎ fellow citizen concitoyen(enne) m,f;∎ fellow countryman/countrywoman compatriote mf;∎ it's rare to meet a fellow hang-glider c'est rare de rencontrer un autre adepte du deltaplane;∎ an opportunity to meet your fellow translators une occasion de rencontrer vos confrères traducteurs►► fellow feeling sympathie f;fellow traveller (companion on journey) compagnon (compagne) m,f de voyage ou de route; figurative compagnon m de route; Politics communisant(e) m,f -
5 Chamberlen (the Elder), Peter
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. c. 1601 London, Englandd. 22 December 1683 Woodham Mortimer, Essex, England[br]English obstetrician who was a member of a family of obstetricians of the same name who made use of a secret design of obstetric forceps (probably designed by him).[br]Of Huguenot stock, his ancestor William having probably come to England in 1569, he was admitted to Cambridge University in 1615 at the age of 14. He graduated Doctor of Medicine in Padua in 1619, having also spent some time at Heidelberg. In 1628 he was elected a Fellow of the College of Physicians, though with some reservations on account of his dress and conduct; these appear to have had some foundation for he was dismissed from the fellowship for repeated contumacy in 1659. Nonetheless, he was appointed Physician in Ordinary to Charles I in 1660. There are grounds for suspecting that in later years he developed some signs of insanity.Chamberlen was engaged extensively in the practice of midwifery, and his reputation and that of the other members of the family, several of whom were also called Peter, was enhanced by their possession of their own pattern of obstetric forceps, hitherto unknown and kept carefully guarded as a family secret. The original instruments were discovered hidden at the family home in Essex in 1815 and have been preserved by the Royal Society of Medicine. Chamberlen appears to have threatened the physicians' obstetric monopoly by attempting to organize mid-wives into a corporate company, to be headed by himself, a move which was successfully opposed by the College of Physicians.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPhysician in Ordinary to King Charles I, King Charles II, King James II, Queen Mary and Queen Anne.Bibliography1662, The Accomplished Midwife. The Sober Mans Vindication, discovering the true cause and manner how Dr. Chamberlen came to be reported mad, London.Further ReadingMariceau, 1668, Des Malades des femmes grosses et accouchées, Paris. J.H.Aveling, 1883, The Chamberlens and the Midwifery Forceps, London.MGBiographical history of technology > Chamberlen (the Elder), Peter
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6 FRCP
FRCP [‚efɑ:‚si:'pi:]British ( abbreviation Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians) = membre du "Royal College of Physicians" -
7 Wright, Basil Martin
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 20 December 1912 Dulwich, London, England[br]English physician and research physiologist, inventor of the Wright Respirometer peak-flow meter for measurement of respiratory ventilatory capacity and of "fluid lens" spectacles.[br]He qualified at St Bartholomew's Hospital in 1938 and after early hospital posts served in the Army as a specialist in pathology in West Africa and Singapore. In 1947 he joined the Medical Research Council (MRC) and until 1957 he was involved with the Pneumoconiosis Research Unit in investigation of dust inhalation. In 1957 he transferred to the National Institute for Medical Research, to concentrate on instrument development, and in 1969 to the Bioengineering Division of the MRC Clinical Research Centre at Northwick Park Hospital. He was responsible for a number of instrumental developments and inventions in the fields, amongst others, of respiration measurement, blood alcohol levels and variable adjustable spectacle lenses (achieved by altering the curvature of the surface of a thinwalled transparent fluid cell).[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFellow of the Royal College of Physicians 1989. Doctor of Medicine, Cambridge, 1969. International Inventors Fair Design Awards and Gold Medal.Bibliography1955, "A respiratory anemometer", Journal of Physiology.1959, with McKerrow, "Maximum forced expiatory flow rate as a measure of respiratory capacity", British Medical Journal.1978, "Variable focus spectacles", Transactions of the Ophthalmological Society of theUK.1986, "Patient-triggered ventilation in the new-born", Lancet.MG -
8 FRCP
1) Военный термин: facility remote control panel2) Юридический термин: Federal Rules Of Civil Procedure3) Сокращение: Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians4) Университет: Faculty Research Commercialization Program -
9 FRCPC
1) Медицина: член Королевского терапевтического колледжа Канады2) Сокращение: член Королевской коллегии терапевтов Канады (Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians Canada (http://www.abbreviations.com/FRCPC)) -
10 FRCPI
Общая лексика: Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland -
11 FRSPSC
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12 FRCP
N ABBR(Brit) = Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians -
13 FRCP
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14 FRCP
forkortelse for Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians -
15 FRCP n abbr Brit
[ˌɛfɒːsiː'piː](= Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians) -
16 FRCP
( BRIT) n abbr= Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians -
17 Lind, James
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 1716 Edinburgh, Scotlandd. 13 July 1794 Gosport, England[br]Scottish physician and naval surgeon whose studies and investigations led to significant improvements in the living conditions on board ships; the author of the first treatise on the nature and prevention of scurvy.[br]Lind was registered in 1731 as an apprentice at the College of Surgeons in Edinburgh. By 1739 he was serving as a naval surgeon in the Mediterranean and during the ensuing decade he experienced conditions at sea off Guinea, the West Indies and in home waters. He returned to Edinburgh, taking his MD in 1748, and in 1750 was elected a Fellow of the College of Physicians of Edinburgh, becoming the Treasurer in 1757. In 1758 he was appointed Physician to the Naval Hospital at Haslar, Gosport, near Portsmouth, a post which he retained until his death.He had been particularly struck by the devastating consequences of scurvy during Anson's circumnavigation of the globe in 1740. At least 75 per cent of the crews had been affected (though it should be borne in mind that a considerable number of them were pensioners and invalids when posted aboard). Coupled with his own experiences, this led to the publication of A Treatise on the Scurvy, in 1754. Demonstrating that this condition accounted for many more deaths than from all the engagements with the French and Spanish in the current wars, he made it clear that by appropriate measures of diet and hygiene the disease could be entirely eliminated.Further editions of the treatise were published in 1757 and 1775, and the immense importance of his observations was immediately recognized. None the less, it was not until 1795 that an Admiralty order was issued on the supply of lime juice to ships. The efficacy of lime juice had been known for centuries, but it was Lind's observations that led to action, however tardy; that for economic reasons the relatively ineffective West Indian lime juice was supplied was in no way his responsibility. It is of interest that there is no evidence that Captain James Cook (1728–79) had any knowledge of Lind's work when arranging his own anti-scorbutic precautions in preparation for his historic first voyage.Lind's other work included observations on typhus, the proper ventilation of ships at sea, and the distilation of fresh from salt water.[br]Bibliography1754, A Treatise on the Scurvy, Edinburgh.1757, An Essay on the most effectual means of Preserving the Health of Seamen in the Royal Navy, Edinburgh.1767, An Essay on Diseases incidental to Europeans in Hot Climates, Edinburgh.Further ReadingL.Roddis, 1951, James Lind—Founder of Nautical Medicine. Records of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons of Edinburgh. Records of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.MG -
18 Hooke, Robert
[br]b. 18 July 1635 Freshwater, Isle of Wight, Englandd. 3 March 1703 London, England[br]English physicist, astronomer and mechanician.[br]Son of Revd John Hooke, minister of the parish, he was a sickly child who was subject to headaches which prevented protracted study. He devoted his time while alone to making mechanical models including a wooden clock. On the death of his father in October 1648 he was left £100 and went to London, where he became a pupil of Sir Peter Lely and then went to Westminster School under Dr Busby. There he learned the classical languages, some Hebrew and oriental languages while mastering six books of Euclid in one week. In 1653 he entered Christ Church College, Oxford, where he graduated MA in 1663, after studying chemistry and astronomy. In 1662 he was appointed Curator of Experiments to the Royal Society and was elected a Fellow in 1663. In 1665 his appointment was made permanent and he was given apartments in Gresham College, where he lived until his death in 1703. He was an indefatigable experimenter, perhaps best known for the invention of the universal joint named after him. The properties of the atmosphere greatly engaged him and he devised many forms of the barometer. He was the first to apply the spiral spring to the regulation of the balance wheel of the watch in an attempt to measure longitude at sea, but he did not publish his results until after Huygens's reinvention of the device in 1675. Several of his "new watches" were made by Thomas Tompion, one of which was presented to King Charles II. He is said to have invented, among other devices, thirty different ways of flying, the first practical system of telegraphy, an odometer, a hearing aid, an arithmetical machine and a marine barometer. Hooke was a small man, somewhat deformed, with long, lank hair, who went about stooped and moved very quickly. He was of a melancholy and mistrustful disposition, ill-tempered and sharp-tongued. He slept little, often working all night and taking a nap during the day. John Aubrey, his near-contemporary, wrote of Hooke, "He is certainly the greatest Mechanick this day in the World." He is said to have been the first to establish the true principle of the arch. His eyesight failed and he was blind for the last year of his life. He is best known for his Micrographia, or some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies, first published in 1665. After the Great Fire of London, he exhibited a model for the rebuilding of the City. This was not accepted, but it did result in Hooke's appointment as one of two City Surveyors. This proved a lucrative post and through it Hooke amassed a fortune of some thousands of pounds, which was found intact after his death some thirty years later. It had never been opened in the interim period. Among the buildings he designed were the new Bethlehem (Bedlam) Hospital, the College of Physicians and Montague House.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1663; Secretary 1677–82.IMcN
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