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1 standard Navy list
Military: SNSLУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > standard Navy list
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2 Navy Register список кораблей и командного состава военно-морских сил
American: Navy ListУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Navy Register список кораблей и командного состава военно-морских сил
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3 Consolidated Operational Shipboard Allowance List
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Consolidated Operational Shipboard Allowance List
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4 standard Navy distribution list
Military: SNDLУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > standard Navy distribution list
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5 список кораблей и командного состава военно-морских сил
1) American: Navy Register2) Makarov: Navy ListУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > список кораблей и командного состава военно-морских сил
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6 список личного состава военного флота
Naval: Navy listУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > список личного состава военного флота
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7 список офицерского состава ВМС
Military: Navy listУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > список офицерского состава ВМС
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8 список судов военного флота
Naval: Navy listУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > список судов военного флота
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9 список торговых судов
Naval: Mercantile Navy listУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > список торговых судов
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10 табель стандартных запасов материальных средств ВМС
Military: standard Navy listУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > табель стандартных запасов материальных средств ВМС
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11 Rangliste
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12 Rickover, Admiral Hyman George
[br]b. 27 January 1900 Russian Polandd. 8 July 1986 Arlington, Virginia, USA[br]Polish/American naval officer, one of the principal architects of the United States nuclear submarine programme.[br]Born in Poland, Rickover was brought to the United States early in his life by his father, who settled in Chicago as a tailor. Commissioned into the US Navy in 1922, he specialized in electrical engineering (graduating from the US Naval Postgraduate School, Columbia, in 1929), quali-fied as a Submariner in 1931 and then held various posts until appointed Head of the Electrical Section of the Bureau of Ships in 1939. He held this post until the end of the Second World War.Rickover was involved briefly in the "Manhattan" atomic bomb project before being assigned to an atomic energy submarine project in 1946. Ultimately he was made responsible for the development and building of the world's first nuclear submarine, the USS Nautilus. He was convinced of the need to make the nuclear submarine an instrument of strategic importance, and this led to the development of the ballistic missile submarine and the Polaris programme.Throughout his career he was no stranger to controversy; indeed, his remaining on the active service list as a full admiral until the age of 82 (when forced to retire on the direct intervention of the Navy Secretary) indicates a man beyond the ordinary. He imposed his will on all around him and backed it with a brilliant and clear-thinking brain; his influence was even felt by the Royal Navy during the building of the first British nuclear submarine, HMS Dreadnought. He made many friends, but he also had many detractors.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsUS Distinguished Service Medal with Gold Star. Honorary CBE. US Congress Special Gold Medal 1959. Numerous awards and honorary degrees.BibliographyRickover wrote several treatises on education and on the education of engineers. He also wrote on several aspects of the technical history of the US Navy.Further ReadingW.R.Anderson and C.Blair, 1959, Nautilus 90 North, London: Hodder \& Stoughton. E.L.Beach, 1986, The United States Navy, New York: Henry Holt.FMWBiographical history of technology > Rickover, Admiral Hyman George
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13 alistar
v.1 to enlist, to enrol, to recruit.Ricardo alistó a su hijo en la milicia Richard enlisted his son in the army.2 to get ready.3 -vr.4 to make ready, to fix, to deploy, to prepare.Ella alista su estrategia She makes ready her strategy.* * *1 to enlist, recruit1 to enlist, join up, enrol (US enroll)\¡alístate! MILITAR join the army!, join up!* * *1. VT1) (=registrar) to list, put on a list; (=matricular) to enrol, enroll (EEUU); (Mil) to enlist2) (=disponer) to prepare, get ready3) CAm [+ zapato] to sew, sew up2.See:* * *= conscript, recruit.Ex. This film tells the moving story of the more than 40,000 Koreans who were forcibly conscripted as laborers by the Japanese during the Second World War.Ex. Reduced establishments have made it very difficult to recruit new IT talent.----* alistar en el ejército = join + the army.* * *= conscript, recruit.Ex: This film tells the moving story of the more than 40,000 Koreans who were forcibly conscripted as laborers by the Japanese during the Second World War.
Ex: Reduced establishments have made it very difficult to recruit new IT talent.* alistar en el ejército = join + the army.* * *alistar [A1 ]vt( AmL) to get... ready1 ( Mil) to enlist, join upalistar en la marina/el ejército to join the navy/army2 ( AmL) (prepararse) to get ready* * *
alistar vtr Mil to recruit, enlist
' alistar' also found in these entries:
English:
enrol
- enroll
- sign up
- enlist
* * *♦ vt1. [reclutar] to recruit2. [inscribir en lista] to list3. [preparar] to prepare, to get ready* * *MIL v/t draft* * *alistar vt1) : to recruit2) : to make ready -
14 Anglo-Portuguese Alliance
The world's oldest diplomatic connection and alliance, an enduring arrangement between two very different nations and peoples, with important practical consequences in the domestic and foreign affairs of both Great Britain (England before 1707) and Portugal. The history of this remarkable alliance, which has had commercial and trade, political, foreign policy, cultural, and imperial aspects, can be outlined in part with a list of the main alliance treaties after the first treaty of commerce and friendship signed between the monarchs of England and Portugal in 1373. This was followed in 1386 by the Treaty of Windsor; then in 1654, 1661, 1703, the Methuen Treaty; and in 1810 and 1899 another treaty also signed at Windsor.Common interests in the defense of the nation and its overseas empire (in the case of Portugal, after 1415; in the case of England, after 1650) were partly based on characteristics and common enemies both countries shared. Even in the late Middle Ages, England and Portugal faced common enemies: large continental countries that threatened the interests and sovereignty of both, especially France and Spain. In this sense, the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance has always been a defensive alliance in which each ally would assist the other when necessary against its enemies. In the case of Portugal, that enemy invariably was Spain (or component states thereof, such as Castile and Leon) and sometimes France (i.e., when Napoleon's armies invaded and conquered Portugal as of late 1807). In the case of England, that foe was often France and sometimes Spain as well.Beginning in the late 14th century, England and Portugal forged this unusual relationship, formalized with several treaties that came into direct use during a series of dynastic, imperial, naval, and commercial conflicts between 1373 and 1961, the historic period when the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance had its most practical political significance. The relative world power and importance of each ally has varied over the centuries. During the period 1373-1580, the allies were similar in respective ranking in European affairs, and during the period 1480-1550, if anything, Portugal was a greater world power with a more important navy than England. During 1580-1810, Portugal fell to the status of a third-rank European power and, during 1810-1914, England was perhaps the premier world power. During 1914-61, England's world position slipped while Portugal made a slow recovery but remained a third- or fourth-rank power.The commercial elements of the alliance have always involved an exchange of goods between two seafaring, maritime peoples with different religions and political systems but complementary economies. The 1703 Methuen Treaty establ ished a trade link that endured for centuries and bore greater advantages for England than for Portugal, although Portugal derived benefits: English woolens for Portuguese wines, especially port, other agricultural produce, and fish. Since the signing of the Methuen Treaty, there has been a vigorous debate both in politics and in historical scholarship as to how much each nation benefited economically from the arrangement in which Portugal eventually became dependent upon England and the extent to which Portugal became a kind of economic colony of Britain during the period from 1703 to 1910.There is a vast literature on the Alliance, much of it in Portuguese and by Portuguese writers, which is one expression of the development of modern Portuguese nationalism. During the most active phase of the alliance, from 1650 to 1945, there is no doubt but that the core of the mutual interests of the allies amounted to the proposition that Portugal's independence as a nation in Iberia and the integrity of its overseas empire, the third largest among the colonial powers as of 1914, were defended by England, who in turn benefited from the use by the Royal Navy of Portugal's home and colonial ports in times of war and peace. A curious impact on Portuguese and popular usage had also come about and endured through the impact of dealings with the English allies. The idiom in Portuguese, "é para inglês ver," means literally "it is for the Englishman to see," but figuratively it really means, "it is merely for show."The practical defense side of the alliance was effectively dead by the end of World War II, but perhaps the most definitive indication of the end of the political significance of an alliance that still continues in other spheres occurred in December 1961, when the army of the Indian Union invaded Portugal's colonial enclaves in western India, Goa, Damão, and Diu. While both nations were now North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies, their interests clashed when it came to imperial and Commonwealth conflicts and policies. Portugal asked Britain for military assistance in the use of British bases against the army of Britain's largest former colony, India. But Portugal was, in effect, refused assistance by her oldest ally. If the alliance continues into the 21st century, its essence is historical, nostalgic, commercial, and cultural.See also Catherine of Braganza.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Anglo-Portuguese Alliance
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15 стандартный перечень рассылки ВМФ
Engineering: standard Navy distribution listУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > стандартный перечень рассылки ВМФ
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16 стандартный расчёт рассылки документов ВМС
Military: standard Navy distribution listУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > стандартный расчёт рассылки документов ВМС
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17 торговельний
trade, trading, commercial, mercantileторговельний автомат — slot machine, vending machine, slot-machine
торговельний агент — commercial agent, bargaining agent, business agent
торговельний договір — trade ( commercial) agreement
торговельний посередник — factor, reseller
торговельний флот — merchant navy; merchant marine
торговельний центр — shopping centre, supermarket, commercial centre; ( у місті) emporium
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18 pomorski
sea, marine, maritime, nautical, pomorski tovarni list bill of lading, pomorska akademija natucal academy* * *• seaside• sea-born• sea• sailorly• water-• maritime• marine• martim• nautical• naval• navy -
19 بيان
بَيَان \ account: a story; description; report: The three people all gave different accounts of the accident. declaration: an act of declaring. statement: an expression (of facts, figures, opinion, etc.): an official statement; a bank statement. \ بَيَان (مُصَوَّر) (كاتالوج) \ catalogue: a list (esp. of books or of things for sale). \ بَيَان مُعَدّ للنَّشْر في الصُّحُف \ press release: an official statement given freely to the newspapers. \ بَيَانات \ data: known facts (from which other things may be guessed or calculated). \ بَيَانات عَمَلِيّة \ manoeuvre: exercises for the army or navy in peacetime, as practice for war.
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