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Murdoch

  • 1 Murdoch

    n. Rupert Murdoch (geboren 1931), Australische media mogol (invloedrijk iemand) die in Engeland woont (eigenaar van kranten, televisienetwerken, telecommunicaties en filmbedrijven); familienaam

    English-Dutch dictionary > Murdoch

  • 2 Murdoch

    (Surnames) Murdoch /ˈmɜ:dɒk, -əx/

    English-Italian dictionary > Murdoch

  • 3 Murdoch

    n. מרדוק, שם משפחה אנגלי; רופרט קית מרדוק (יליד 1931), איל עיתונות ומוציא לאור אמריקאי יליד אוסטרליה שהתגורר באנגליה (בבעלותו מספר עיתונים, תחנות טלוויזיה, חברות טלקומוניקציה וסרטים בארה"ב)
    * * *
    (ב"הראב םיטרסו היצקינומוקלט תורבח,היזיוולט תונחת,םינותיע רפסמ ותולעבב) הילגנאב ררוגתהש הילרטסוא דילי יאקירמא רואל איצומו תונותיע ליא,(1391 דילי) קודרמ תיק טרפור ;ילגנא החפשמ םש,קודרמ

    English-Hebrew dictionary > Murdoch

  • 4 Murdoch

    n ч. ім'я
    Мердок

    English-Ukrainian dictionary > Murdoch

  • 5 Murdoch

    [mɜ:dɔk]
    proper name
    m. ime

    English-Slovenian dictionary > Murdoch

  • 6 Murdoch

    n. engelskt namn

    English-Swedish dictionary > Murdoch

  • 7 Murdoch, George Peter

    перс.
    соц. Мердок, Джорж Питер (1897-1985; американский антрополог, исследователь проблем культуры и общества; сформулировал концепцию универсальной культурной модели, концепцмю эволюции систем родства; обосновал концепцию универсальной модели культуры, внес вклад в развитие этнографии Африки; автор ареальной картотеки человеческих отношений и построенного на ее основе "Этнографического атласа")
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > Murdoch, George Peter

  • 8 Murdoch, (Keith) Rupert

    (р. 1931) Мэрдок, (Кит) Руперт
    Бизнесмен, уроженец Австралии. С 1974 в США, гражданин США с 1985. Владелец крупнейшей транснациональной корпорации "Ньюс" [News Corp.], контролирующей многие средства массовой информации, в том числе в США. В 1985 приобрел киностудию "XX век-Фокс" [ Twentieth Century Fox], создал телесеть "Фокс телевижн" [Fox Television]. В 1995 вступил в партнерские отношения с "Эм-си-ай" [ MCI, Inc.], распространив свое влияние на телекоммуникации и Интернет. Его состояние оценивается в 101 млрд. долларов (2003)

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Murdoch, (Keith) Rupert

  • 9 Murdock (Murdoch), William

    [br]
    b. 21 August 1754 Cumnock, Ayrshire, Scotland
    d. 15 November 1839 Handsworth, Birmingham, England
    [br]
    Scottish engineer and inventor, pioneer in coal-gas production.
    [br]
    He was the third child and the eldest of three boys born to John Murdoch and Anna Bruce. His father, a millwright and joiner, spelled his name Murdock on moving to England. He was educated for some years at Old Cumnock Parish School and in 1777, with his father, he built a "wooden horse", supposed to have been a form of cycle. In 1777 he set out for the Soho manufactory of Boulton \& Watt, where he quickly found employment, Boulton supposedly being impressed by the lad's hat. This was oval and made of wood, and young William had turned it himself on a lathe of his own manufacture. Murdock quickly became Boulton \& Watt's representative in Cornwall, where there was a flourishing demand for steam-engines. He lived at Redruth during this period.
    It is said that a number of the inventions generally ascribed to James Watt are in fact as much due to Murdock as to Watt. Examples are the piston and slide valve and the sun-and-planet gearing. A number of other inventions are attributed to Murdock alone: typical of these is the oscillating cylinder engine which obviated the need for an overhead beam.
    In about 1784 he planned a steam-driven road carriage of which he made a working model. He also planned a high-pressure non-condensing engine. The model carriage was demonstrated before Murdock's friends and travelled at a speed of 6–8 mph (10–13 km/h). Boulton and Watt were both antagonistic to their employees' developing independent inventions, and when in 1786 Murdock set out with his model for the Patent Office, having received no reply to a letter he had sent to Watt, Boulton intercepted him on the open road near Exeter and dissuaded him from going any further.
    In 1785 he married Mary Painter, daughter of a mine captain. She bore him four children, two of whom died in infancy, those surviving eventually joining their father at the Soho Works. Murdock was a great believer in pneumatic power: he had a pneumatic bell-push at Sycamore House, his home near Soho. The pattern-makers lathe at the Soho Works worked for thirty-five years from an air motor. He also conceived the idea of a vacuum piston engine to exhaust a pipe, later developed by the London Pneumatic Despatch Company's railway and the forerunner of the atmospheric railway.
    Another field in which Murdock was a pioneer was the gas industry. In 1791, in Redruth, he was experimenting with different feedstocks in his home-cum-office in Cross Street: of wood, peat and coal, he preferred the last. He designed and built in the backyard of his house a prototype generator, washer, storage and distribution plant, and publicized the efficiency of coal gas as an illuminant by using it to light his own home. In 1794 or 1795 he informed Boulton and Watt of his experimental work and of its success, suggesting that a patent should be applied for. James Watt Junior was now in the firm and was against patenting the idea since they had had so much trouble with previous patents and had been involved in so much litigation. He refused Murdock's request and for a short time Murdock left the firm to go home to his father's mill. Boulton \& Watt soon recognized the loss of a valuable servant and, in a short time, he was again employed at Soho, now as Engineer and Superintendent at the increased salary of £300 per year plus a 1 per cent commission. From this income, he left £14,000 when he died in 1839.
    In 1798 the workshops of Boulton and Watt were permanently lit by gas, starting with the foundry building. The 180 ft (55 m) façade of the Soho works was illuminated by gas for the Peace of Paris in June 1814. By 1804, Murdock had brought his apparatus to a point where Boulton \& Watt were able to canvas for orders. Murdock continued with the company after the death of James Watt in 1819, but retired in 1830 and continued to live at Sycamore House, Handsworth, near Birmingham.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Royal Society Rumford Gold Medal 1808.
    Further Reading
    S.Smiles, 1861, Lives of the Engineers, Vol. IV: Boulton and Watt, London: John Murray.
    H.W.Dickinson and R.Jenkins, 1927, James Watt and the Steam Engine, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
    J.A.McCash, 1966, "William Murdoch. Faithful servant" in E.G.Semler (ed.), The Great Masters. Engineering Heritage, Vol. II, London: Institution of Mechanical Engineers/Heinemann.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Murdock (Murdoch), William

  • 10 Rupert Murdoch

    n. Rupert Murdoch (invloedrijk iemand in Australische perswereld, eigenaar van kranten, televisienetwerken, telecommunicatie en films

    English-Dutch dictionary > Rupert Murdoch

  • 11 Rupert Murdoch

    n. ררופרט קית מרדוק (יליד 1931), איל עיתונות ומוציא לאור אמריקאי יליד אוסטרליה שהתגורר באנגליה (בבעלותו מספר עיתונים, תחנות טלוויזיה, חברות טלקומוניקציה וסרטים בארה"ב)
    * * *
    (ב"הראב םיטרסו היצקינומוקלט תורבח,היזיוולט תונחת,םינותיע רפסמ ותולעבב) הילגנאב ררוגתהש הילרטסוא דילי יאקירמא רואל איצומו תונותיע ליא,(1391 דילי) קודרמ תיק טרפורר

    English-Hebrew dictionary > Rupert Murdoch

  • 12 Rupert Murdoch

    australiensisk media-mogul som lever i England (han äger dagstidningar, tv-nät, telekommunikation- och filmföretag)

    English-Swedish dictionary > Rupert Murdoch

  • 13 Sopwith, Sir Thomas (Tommy) Octave Murdoch

    SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace
    [br]
    b. 18 January 1888 London, England
    d. 27 January 1989 Stockbridge, Hampshire, England
    [br]
    English aeronautical engineer and industrialist.
    [br]
    Son of a successful mining engineer, Sopwith did not shine at school and, having been turned down by the Royal Navy as a result, attended an engineering college. His first interest was motor cars and, while still in his teens, he set up a business in London with a friend in order to sell them; he also took part in races and rallies.
    Sopwith's interest in aviation came initially through ballooning, and in 1906 he purchased his own balloon. Four years later, inspired by the recent flights across the Channel to France and after a joy-ride at Brooklands, he bought an Avis monoplane, followed by a larger biplane, and taught himself to fly. He was awarded the Royal Aero Society's Aviator Certificate No. 31 on 21 November 1910, and he quickly distinguished himself in flying competitions on both sides of the Atlantic and started his own flying school. In his races he was ably supported by his friend Fred Sigrist, a former motor engineer. Among the people Sopwith taught to fly were an Australian, Harry Hawker, and Major Hugh Trenchard, who later became the "father" of the RAF.
    In 1912, depressed by the poor quality of the aircraft on trial for the British Army, Sopwith, in conjunction with Hawker and Sigrist, bought a skating rink in Kingston-upon-Thames and, assisted by Fred Sigrist, started to design and build his first aircraft, the Sopwith Hybrid. He sold this to the Royal Navy in 1913, and the following year his aviation manufacturing company became the Sopwith Aviation Company Ltd. That year a seaplane version of his Sopwith Tabloid won the Schneider Trophy in the second running of this speed competition. During 1914–18, Sopwith concentrated on producing fighters (or "scouts" as they were then called), with the Pup, the Camel, the 1½ Strutter, the Snipe and the Sopwith Triplane proving among the best in the war. He also pioneered several ideas to make flying easier for the pilot, and in 1915 he patented his adjustable tailplane and his 1 ½ Strutter was the first aircraft to be fitted with air brakes. During the four years of the First World War, Sopwith Aviation designed thirty-two different aircraft types and produced over 16,000 aircraft.
    The end of the First World War brought recession to the aircraft industry and in 1920 Sopwith, like many others, put his company into receivership; none the less, he immediately launched a new, smaller company with Hawker, Sigrist and V.W.Eyre, which they called the H.G. Hawker Engineering Company Ltd to avoid any confusion with the former company. He began by producing cars and motor cycles under licence, but was determined to resume aircraft production. He suffered an early blow with the death of Hawker in an air crash in 1921, but soon began supplying aircraft to the Royal Air Force again. In this he was much helped by taking on a new designer, Sydney Camm, in 1923, and during the next decade they produced a number of military aircraft types, of which the Hart light bomber and the Fury fighter, the first to exceed 200 mph (322 km/h), were the best known. In the mid-1930s Sopwith began to build a large aviation empire, acquiring first the Gloster Aircraft Company and then, in quick succession, Armstrong-Whitworth, Armstrong-Siddeley Motors Ltd and its aero-engine counterpart, and A.V.Roe, which produced Avro aircraft. Under the umbrella of the Hawker Siddeley Aircraft Company (set up in 1935) these companies produced a series of outstanding aircraft, ranging from the Hawker Hurricane, through the Avro Lancaster to the Gloster Meteor, Britain's first in-service jet aircraft, and the Hawker Typhoon, Tempest and Hunter. When Sopwith retired as Chairman of the Hawker Siddeley Group in 1963 at the age of 75, a prototype jump-jet (the P-1127) was being tested, later to become the Harrier, a for cry from the fragile biplanes of 1910.
    Sopwith also had a passion for yachting and came close to wresting the America's Cup from the USA in 1934 when sailing his yacht Endeavour, which incorporated a number of features years ahead of their time; his greatest regret was that he failed in his attempts to win this famous yachting trophy for Britain. After his retirement as Chairman of the Hawker Siddeley Group, he remained on the Board until 1978. The British aviation industry had been nationalized in April 1977, and Hawker Siddeley's aircraft interests merged with the British Aircraft Corporation to become British Aerospace (BAe). Nevertheless, by then the Group had built up a wide range of companies in the field of mechanical and electrical engineering, and its board conferred on Sopwith the title Founder and Life President.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1953. CBE 1918.
    Bibliography
    1961, "My first ten years in aviation", Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society (April) (a very informative and amusing paper).
    Further Reading
    A.Bramson, 1990, Pure Luck: The Authorized Biography of Sir Thomas Sopwith, 1888– 1989, Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens.
    B.Robertson, 1970, Sopwith. The Man and His Aircraft, London (a detailed publication giving plans of all the Sopwith aircraft).
    CM / JDS

    Biographical history of technology > Sopwith, Sir Thomas (Tommy) Octave Murdoch

  • 14 Rupert Murdoch

    Wikipedia English-Arabic glossary > Rupert Murdoch

  • 15 come to pieces

    1) пропасть, погибнуть, опуститься, потерять человеческий облик

    ...he knew that except for me he'd go all to pieces. (W. S. Maugham, ‘Up at the Villa’, ch. III) —...мой муж понимал, что, если бы не я, он спился бы и погиб.

    I began to go to pieces... I got careless about my duties. I began to drink. (Gr. Greene, ‘The Power and the Glory’, part III, ch. III) — Я опустился... забросил свои дела и начал пить.

    ‘Sometimes I think you're just going to pieces, Barney.’ ‘Well, if I am going to pieces whose fault is that?’ (I. Murdoch, ‘The Red and the Green’, ch. 10) — - Сдается мне, ты катишься на дно, Барни. - Ну а если и так, кто в этом виноват?

    It was many years since he had seen his aunt, and although he retained intact, like old snapshots, some attractive memories of her, these had been gradually overlaid by his mother's continual though vague remarks about Millie's being so "tiresome", or being about to "go to pieces", a fate which was for some reason persistently foreseen by her sister-in-law. (I. Murdoch, ‘The Red and the Green’, ch. 4) — Эндрю не видел тетку много лет, но хранил смутные и теплые воспоминания о ней, как хранят любительские снимки. На эти воспоминания постепенно наслоились многозначительные замечания матери насчет того, что Милли "невыносима", что вот-вот "сорвется" - судьба, которую невестка почему-то упорно ей предрекала.

    2) рухнуть, развалиться; ≈ пойти прахом; трещать по всем швам (тж. fall to pieces)

    He made more money breaking and dealing in horses than he did farming, he said, by way of explaining why the homestead at July Creek was falling to pieces. (K. S. Prichard, ‘Working Bullocks’, ch. IV) — А если Уолли Берна спрашивали, почему усадьба на Июльском ручье пришла в такой упадок, он отвечал, что объезжает лошадей, так как на лошадях можно заработать больше, чем ковыряя землю.

    She could hardly ever be persuaded to take a day off, because she felt, with some justification, that the hotel would go to pieces without her. (M. Dickens, ‘The Winds of Heaven’, ch. 61) — Сибилу нельзя было убедить взять выходной. Она считала, и не без оснований, что без нее гостиница развалится как карточный домик.

    ‘And so the case fell to pieces?’ said Dr. Pender. ‘And so the case fell to piecies,’ said Sir Henry gravely. ‘We could not take the risk of arresting Jones with nothing to, so upon.’ (A. Christie, ‘The Thirteen Problems’, ch. 1) — - Выходит, дело провалилось? - спросил доктор Пендер. - Выходит, провалилось, - ответил сэр Генри мрачно. - Не могли же мы пойти на такой риск - арестовать Джонса без всяких оснований.

    When he fell in love with Brett his tennis game went all to pieces. People beat him who had never had a chance with him. (E. Hemingway, ‘The Sun Also Rises’, ch. VI) — После того как Роберт Кол влюбился в Бретт, все его мастерство пошло прахом. Он стал проигрывать таким теннисистам, которые никогда и не мечтали побить его.

    3) потерять самообладание, душевный покой, присутствие духа; расстроиться

    He went all to pieces on cross-examination at the trial yesterday. (E. S. Gardner, ‘The Case of the Restless Redhead’, ch. 4) — Вчера на перекрестном допросе Гарри Боулс потерял самообладание.

    The poor girl went all to pieces. She was on the verge of a nervous breakdown when she came from the... Motel after you'd embarrassed her in front of Clint Huffman and Stanley Prichard. (E. Caldwell, ‘Jenny by Nature’, ch. XIV) — Бедная девушка совсем расстроилась. Она вернулась из... мотеля чуть ли не в истерике, после того как вы ее так опозорили перед Клинтом Хафменом и Стэнли Причардом.

    ‘I'm sorry,’ she said quietly. ‘I don't know what's come over me in the past few months. I chatter and gabble and can't seem to stop myself. It's as if I were going to pieces.’ (M. Wilson, ‘Live with Lightning’, book II, ch. VII) — - Простите меня, - тихо сказала она. - Я сама не понимаю, что со мной происходит в последнее время. Я болтаю и трещу без умолку и никак не могу остановиться. Я просто не могу взять себя в руки.

    His nerves had gone to pieces. The sound of the doorbell made his heart palpitate madly. (A. J. Cronin, ‘The Citadel’, ch. 20) — Нервы его вконец расшатались, сердце бешено колотилось даже от дверного звонка.

    5) подорвать здоровье; ≈ выйти из строя

    Faye was never really well again. She would make a little gain and then go to pieces. (J. Steinbeck, ‘East of Eden’, part II, ch. 21) — Фей никак не могла поправиться. То ей становилось лучше, то она опять выходила из строя.

    It was horrible, terrifying, as if he was coming all to pieces. (J. B. Priestley, ‘Faraway’, ch. IX) — Уильям чувствовал себя ужасно, хуже некуда. Ему казалось, его разламывает на части.

    Large English-Russian phrasebook > come to pieces

  • 16 private

    private ['praɪvɪt]
    privé1 (a)-(d), 1 (f), 4 personnel1 (c)-(e) particulier1 (e) intime1 (f) soldat2
    private (sign) privé, interdit au public;
    the funeral will be private les obsèques auront lieu dans la plus stricte intimité;
    they want a private wedding ils veulent se marier dans l'intimité
    they operate a private pension scheme ils ont leur propre caisse de retraite;
    the private sector le secteur privé
    (c) (personal) privé, personnel;
    for private reasons pour des raisons personnelles;
    don't interfere in my private affairs or business ne vous mêlez pas de mes affaires personnelles;
    private agreement accord m à l'amiable;
    I thought we had a private agreement about it je croyais que nous avions réglé ce problème entre nous;
    for your private information à titre confidentiel;
    it's my private opinion c'est mon opinion personnelle;
    it's a private joke c'est une blague entre nous/eux/ etc;
    she lives in her own private fantasy world elle vit dans un monde imaginaire bien à elle;
    she keeps her private thoughts to herself elle garde pour elle ses opinions personnelles
    (d) (confidential) privé, confidentiel, personnel;
    a private conversation une conversation privée ou à caractère privé;
    we had a private meeting nous nous sommes vus en privé;
    I have some private information about him j'ai des renseignements confidentiels à son sujet ou le concernant;
    keep it private gardez-le pour vous;
    can I tell him? - no, it's private je peux le lui dire? - non, c'est personnel;
    private and confidential secret et confidentiel;
    private (on envelope) personnel
    (e) (individual → bank account) personnel; (→ bathroom, lessons, tuition) particulier;
    she has private lessons in French elle prend des cours particuliers de français;
    this is a private house c'est une maison particulière ou qui appartient à des particuliers;
    in my private capacity à titre personnel;
    for your private use pour votre usage personnel;
    this is his own private room c'est sa pièce à lui
    (f) (quiet, intimate) intime, privé;
    a private place un endroit tranquille;
    he's a very private person c'est quelqu'un de très discret;
    do you have a private room where we can talk? avez-vous une pièce où l'on puisse parler tranquillement?
    a private citizen or individual un (simple) citoyen, un particulier
    2 noun
    Military (simple) soldat m, soldat m de deuxième classe;
    it belongs to Private Hopkins ça appartient au soldat Hopkins;
    the privates and the NCOs la troupe et les gradés;
    Private Murdoch! soldat Murdoch!
    familiar euphemism parties fpl génitales
    (confidentially) en privé, en confidence; (in private life) en privé, dans la vie privée; (with close family) dans l'intimité; (with friends, not in public) dans le privé;
    to sit in private (assembly) se réunir en séance privée ou à huis clos;
    Law to hear a case in private juger une affaire à huis clos;
    to speak to sb in private parler à qn en privé;
    in private she admitted she was worried en privé, elle a admis qu'elle était inquiète; (to herself) dans son for intérieur elle a admis qu'elle était inquiète
    ►► private address adresse f personnelle, domicile m;
    Law private agreement acte m sous seing privé;
    Telecommunications private automatic exchange central m automatique privé;
    private bank banque f privée;
    private bar = salon dans un pub;
    private car voiture f particulière;
    private citizen simple particulier m;
    private company entreprise f ou société f privée;
    private dance bal m sur invitation;
    private detective détective m privé;
    private education enseignement m privé;
    private enterprise entreprise f privée; (principle) libre entreprise f;
    Press Private Eye = bimensuel satirique britannique fondé en 1960, dont le ton irrévérencieux rappelle celui du 'Canard enchaîné' en France;
    familiar private eye (private detective) privé m;
    private finance initiative partenariat m public-privé;
    private fishing pêche f gardée;
    private health insurance assurance f maladie privée;
    Law private hearing audience f à huis clos;
    private hotel pension f de famille;
    private income rentes fpl;
    to live on or off a private income vivre de ses rentes;
    private industry privé m;
    private investigator détective m privé;
    Finance private investment investissement m ou placement m privé;
    Finance private investor investisseur(euse) m,f privé(e);
    private land terrain m privé;
    private life vie f privée;
    in (his) private life dans sa vie privée, en privé;
    she has no private life elle n'a pas de vie privée;
    Finance private limited company société f à responsabilité limitée;
    Telecommunications private line ligne f privée;
    private means rentes fpl, fortune f personnelle;
    a man of private means un rentier;
    Parliament private member = simple député m;
    Parliament private member's bill = proposition de loi faite par un simple député;
    private ownership propriété f privée;
    familiar euphemism private parts parties fpl génitales ;
    private party (gathering) réunion f privée ou intime; (group) groupe m de particuliers;
    private patient = patient d'un médecin dont les consultations ne sont pas prises en charge par les services de santé;
    Finance private pension retraite f complémentaire;
    Theatre private performance représentation f privée;
    Medicine private practice médecine f privée or non conventionnée;
    she's in private practice elle a un cabinet (médical) privé;
    private property propriété f privée;
    private property, keep out! (sign) propriété privée, défense d'entrer;
    private pupil élève mf (à qui l'on donne des cours particuliers);
    he has a lot of private pupils il donne beaucoup de cours particuliers;
    private road voie f privée;
    private room (in hospital) chambre f particulière;
    private sale vente f à l'amiable;
    private school école f privée;
    private secretary secrétaire mf particulier(ère); British Politics = haut fonctionnaire dont le rôle est d'assister un ministre;
    Cinema private showing projection f privée;
    private soldier simple soldat m, (soldat m de) deuxième classe m;
    private teacher précepteur(trice) m,f;
    Art private view vernissage m;
    Law private wrong atteinte f aux droits d'un individu

    Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > private

  • 17 human relations area file

    соц., сокр. HRAF ареальная картотека человеческих отношений (системный указатель этнографических материалов, разработанный Д. Мердоком, позволяющий проводить кросскультурные исследования; периодически корректируется и на сегодняшний день содержит более 700 тематических категорий)
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > human relations area file

  • 18 MAIS

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > MAIS

  • 19 Everything in this life has to be paid for, and love too has to be paid for.

    <01> За все в этой жизни надо платить, в том числе и за любовь. Murdoch (Мердок).

    Англо-русский словарь цитат, пословиц, поговорок и идиом > Everything in this life has to be paid for, and love too has to be paid for.

  • 20 New York Post, The

    "Нью-Йорк пост"
    Ежедневная вечерняя газета. Основана в 1801. Поддерживает Демократическую партию [ Democratic Party]. Издается газетным концерном Р. Мэрдока [ Murdoch, (Keith) Rupert] в г. Нью-Йорке. Тираж более 804,4 тыс. экз.

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > New York Post, The

См. также в других словарях:

  • Murdoch — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Alexi Murdoch (* 1973), schottischer Singer Songwriter Bob Murdoch (* 1947), kanadischer Eishockeyspieler und trainer Bobby Murdoch (1944–2001), schottischer Fußballspieler Colin Murdoch (1929–2008),… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • MURDOCH (I.) — MURDOCH IRIS (1919 ) Originaire de Dublin, Iris Murdoch fut professeur de philosophie avant de se consacrer à la littérature (elle a publié un très bon livre sur Sartre: Sartre, Romantic Rationalist , 1953). Elle est l’un des romanciers… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Murdoch — Murdoch, Iris * * * (as used in expressions) Murdoch, Dame (Jean) Iris Murdoch, (Keith) Rupert Sopwith, Sir Thomas (Octave Murdoch) …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Murdoch —   [ məːdɔk],    1) Dame (seit 1987) Jean Iris, englische Schriftstellerin irischer Herkunft, * Dublin 15. 7. 1919, ✝ Oxford 8. 2. 1999; 1948 67 Philosophiedozentin in Oxford und London; in ihren philosophischen Interessen spiegelnden, sorgfältig… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • MURDOCH — University, Western Australia http://www.murdoch.edu.au/ …   Acronyms

  • MURDOCH — University, Western Australia (http://www.murdoch.edu.au/) …   Acronyms von A bis Z

  • Murdoch — Murdoch, geb. 1754 auf der Bellow Mill bei Old Cumnock in Ayrshire, kam 1777 nach England u. zu Boulton u. Watt nach Soho, wurde Aufseher bei Errichtung ihrer Maschinen in den Bergwerken von Cornwall, blieb hier bis 1798 u. kehrte dann nach Soho… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Murdoch — (spr. mördŏk), Reichsverwalter Schottlands, s. Stuart …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Murdoch — [mʉr′däk΄] Dame (Jean) Iris 1919 99; Eng. writer, born in Ireland …   English World dictionary

  • Murdoch — Not to be confused with Murdoc or Murdock. Murdoch /ˈmɜrdɒk/ ( listen) may refer to: Places in Western Australia Murdoch, Western Australia, a suburb of Perth Electoral district of Murdoch Murdoch University …   Wikipedia

  • Murdoch — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Patronyme Alexi Murdoch, chanteur et compositeur britannique Keith Rupert Murdoch, actionnaire majoritaire de News Corporation. William Murdoch, ingénieur …   Wikipédia en Français

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