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after+his+death

  • 61 soon

    1) bald; (quickly) schnell
    2) (early) früh

    no sooner said than done — gesagt, getan

    no sooner had I arrived than... — kaum war ich angekommen, da...

    the sooner [...] the better — (coll.) je früher od. eher [...], desto besser

    3)

    we'll set off just as soon as he arrivessobald er ankommt, machen wir uns auf den Weg

    as soon as possibleso bald wie möglich

    just as soon [as...] — genauso gern [wie...]

    she would sooner die than... — sie würde lieber sterben, als...

    they would kill you as soon as look at you(coll.) sie würden dich auf der Stelle umbringen

    * * *
    [su:n]
    1) (in a short time from now or from the time mentioned: They'll be here sooner than you think; I hope he arrives soon.) bald
    2) (early: It's too soon to tell.) bald
    3) (willingly: I would sooner stand than sit.) gern
    - academic.ru/115115/as_soon_as">as soon as
    - no sooner... than
    - sooner or later
    - the sooner the better
    * * *
    [su:n]
    1. (in a short time) bald
    \soon after sth kurz nach etw dat
    \soon after agreeing to go, she... kurz nachdem sie zugestimmt hatte mitzugehen,...
    no \sooner said than done gesagt, getan
    no \sooner had I started mowing the lawn than it started raining kaum hatte ich angefangen, den Rasen zu mähen, begann es zu regnen
    how \soon wie schnell
    \sooner or later früher oder später
    \sooner rather than later lieber früher als später
    as \soon as possible so bald wie möglich
    they'd shoot you as \soon as look at you ( fam) die würden dich abknallen, ohne mit der Wimper zu zucken fam
    2. (early) früh
    Monday is the \soonest we can deliver the chairs wir können die Stühle frühestens am Montag liefern
    the \sooner we leave, the \sooner we'll get there je eher wir fahren, desto schneller sind wir dort
    the \sooner the better je eher [o früher], desto besser
    not a moment too \soon gerade noch rechtzeitig
    3. (rather) lieber
    I'd \sooner not speak to him ich würde lieber nicht mit ihm sprechen
    * * *
    [suːn]
    adv
    1) (= in a short time from now) bald; (= early) früh; (= quickly) schnell

    how soon would you like it back?wann or bis wann möchtest du es wiederhaben?

    we got there too soon —

    as soon as possibleso schnell wie möglich

    when can I have it? – as soon as you like — wann kann ichs kriegen? – wann du willst!

    2)

    I would (just) as soon you didn't tell him — es wäre mir lieber, wenn du es ihm nicht erzählen würdest

    * * *
    soon [suːn] adv
    1. bald:
    at the soonest frühestens; afterwards
    2. (sehr) bald, (sehr) schnell:
    no sooner had he entered the room than … kaum hatte er oder er hatte kaum das Zimmer betreten, als …;
    no sooner said than done gesagt, getan; mend A 3
    3. bald, früh:
    as ( oder so) soon as so bald wie oder als;
    if he starts any of his nonsense I’ll throw him out as soon as I look at him werfe ich ihn sofort oder auf der Stelle raus;
    sooner or later früher oder später;
    the sooner, the better je früher, desto besser
    4. gern:
    (just) as soon ebensogut;
    I would sooner … than … ich möchte lieber oder würde eher … als …
    * * *
    1) bald; (quickly) schnell
    2) (early) früh

    no sooner said than done — gesagt, getan

    no sooner had I arrived than... — kaum war ich angekommen, da...

    the sooner [...] the better — (coll.) je früher od. eher [...], desto besser

    3)

    we'll set off just as soon as he arrives — sobald er ankommt, machen wir uns auf den Weg

    just as soon [as...] — genauso gern [wie...]

    she would sooner die than... — sie würde lieber sterben, als...

    they would kill you as soon as look at you(coll.) sie würden dich auf der Stelle umbringen

    * * *
    adv.
    bald adv.
    demnächst adv.
    früh adv.
    sobald adv.

    English-german dictionary > soon

  • 62 Cort, Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1740 Lancaster, England
    d. 1800 Hampstead, near London, England
    [br]
    English ironmaster, inventor of the puddling process and grooved rollers for forming iron into bars.
    [br]
    His father was a mason and brickmaker but, anxious to improve himself, Cort set up in London in 1765 as a navy agent, said to have been a profitable business. He recognized that, at that time, the conversion of pig iron to malleable or wrought iron, which was needed in increasing quantities as developments in industry and mechanical engineering gathered pace, presented a bottleneck in the ironmaking process. The finery hearth was still in use, slow and inefficient and requiring the scarce charcoal as fuel. To tackle this problem, Cort gave up his business and acquired a furnace and slitting mill at Fontley, near Fareham in Hampshire. In 1784 he patented his puddling process, by which molten pig iron on the bed of a reverberatory furnace was stirred with an iron bar and, by the action of the flame and the oxygen in the air, the carbon in the pig iron was oxidized, leaving nearly pure iron, which could be forged to remove slag. In this type of furnace, the fuel and the molten iron were separated, so that the cheaper coal could be used as fuel. It was the stirring action with the iron bar that gave the name "puddling" to the process. Others had realized the problem and reached a similar solution, notably the brothers Thomas and George Cranage, but only Cort succeeded in developing a commercially viable process. The laborious hammering of the ball of iron thus produced was much reduced by an invention of the previous year, 1783. This too was patented. The iron was passed between grooved rollers to form it into bars. Cort entered into an agreement with Samuel Jellico to set up an ironworks at Gosport to exploit his inventions. Samuel's father Adam, Deputy Paymaster of the Navy, advanced capital for this venture, Cort having expended much of his own resources in the experimental work that preceded his inventions. However, it transpired that Jellico senior had, unknown to Cort, used public money to advance the capital; the Admiralty acted to recover the money and Cort lost heavily, including the benefits from his patents. Rival ironmasters were quick to pillage the patents. In 1790, and again the following year, Cort offered unsuccessfully to work for the military. Finally, in 1794, at the instigation of the Prime Minister, William Pitt the Younger, Cort was paid a pension of £200 per year in recognition of the value of his improvements in the technology of ironmaking, although this was reduced by deductions to £160. After his death, the pension to his widow was halved, while some of his children received a pittance. Without the advances made by Cort, however, the iron trade could not have met the rapidly increasing demand for iron during the industrial revolution.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1787, A Brief State of Facts Relative to the New Method of Making Bar Iron with Raw Pit Coal and Grooved Rollers (held in the Science Museum Library archive collection).
    Further Reading
    H.W.Dickinson, 1941, "Henry Cort's bicentary", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 21: 31–47 (there are further references to grooved rollers and the puddling process in Vol. 49 of the same periodical (1978), on pp. 153–8).
    R.A.Mott, 1983, Henry Con, the Great Finery Creator of Puddled Iron, Sheffield: Historical Metallurgy Society.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Cort, Henry

  • 63 Taylor, Frederick Winslow

    [br]
    b. 20 March 1856 Germantown, Pennsylvania, USA
    d. 21 March 1915 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
    [br]
    American mechanical engineer and pioneer of scientific management.
    [br]
    Frederick W.Taylor received his early education from his mother, followed by some years of schooling in France and Germany. Then in 1872 he entered Phillips Exeter Academy, New Hampshire, to prepare for Harvard Law School, as it was intended that he should follow his father's profession. However, in 1874 he had to abandon his studies because of poor eyesight, and he began an apprenticeship at a pump-manufacturing works in Philadelphia learning the trades of pattern-maker and machinist. On its completion in 1878 he joined the Midvale Steel Company, at first as a labourer but then as Shop Clerk and Foreman, finally becoming Chief Engineer in 1884. At the same time he was able to resume study in the evenings at the Stevens Institute of Technology, and in 1883 he obtained the degree of Mechanical Engineer (ME). He also found time to take part in amateur sport and in 1881 he won the tennis doubles championship of the United States.
    It was while with the Midvale Steel Company that Taylor began the systematic study of workshop management, and the application of his techniques produced significant increases in the company's output and productivity. In 1890 he became Manager of a company operating large paper mills in Maine and Wisconsin, until 1893 when he set up on his own account as a consulting engineer specializing in management organization. In 1898 he was retained exclusively by the Bethlehem Steel Company, and there continued his work on the metal-cutting process that he had started at Midvale. In collaboration with J.Maunsel White (1856–1912) he developed high-speed tool steels and their heat treatment which increased cutting capacity by up to 300 per cent. He resigned from the Bethlehem Steel Company in 1901 and devoted the remainder of his life to expounding the principles of scientific management which became known as "Taylorism". The Society to Promote the Science of Management was established in 1911, renamed the Taylor Society after his death. He was an active member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and was its President in 1906; his presidential address "On the Art of Cutting Metals" was reprinted in book form.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Paris Exposition Gold Medal 1900. Franklin Institute Elliott Cresson Gold Medal 1900. President, American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1906. Hon. ScD, University of Pennsylvania 1906. Hon. LLD, Hobart College 1912.
    Bibliography
    F.W.Taylor was the author of about 100 patents, several papers to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, On the Art of Cutting Metals (1907, New York) and The Principles of Scientific Management (1911, New York) and, with S.E.Thompson, 1905 A Treatise on Concrete, New York, and Concrete Costs, 1912, New York.
    Further Reading
    The standard biography is Frank B.Copley, 1923, Frederick W.Taylor, Father of Scientific Management, New York (reprinted 1969, New York) and there have been numerous commentaries on his work: see, for example, Daniel Nelson, 1980, Frederick W.Taylor and the Rise of Scientific Management, Madison, Wis.
    RTS

    Biographical history of technology > Taylor, Frederick Winslow

  • 64 Tompion, Thomas

    SUBJECT AREA: Horology
    [br]
    baptized 25 July 1639 Ickwell Green, England
    d. 20 November 1713 London, England
    [br]
    English clock-and watchmaker of great skill and ingenuity who laid the foundations of his country's pre-eminence in that field.
    [br]
    Little is known about Tompion's early life except that he was born into a family of blacksmiths. When he was admitted into the Clockmakers' Company in 1671 he was described as a "Great Clockmaker", which meant a maker of turret clocks, and as these clocks were made of wrought iron they would have required blacksmithing skills. Despite this background, he also rapidly established his reputation as a watchmaker. In 1674 he moved to premises in Water Lane at the sign of "The Dial and Three Crowns", where his business prospered and he remained for the rest of his life. Assisted by journeymen and up to eleven apprentices at any one time, the output from his workshop was prodigious, amounting to over 5,000 watches and 600 clocks. In his lifetime he was famous for his watches, as these figures suggest, but although they are of high quality they do not differ markedly from those produced by other London watchmakers of that period. He is now known more for the limited number of elaborate clocks that he produced, such as the equation clock and the spring-driven clock of a year's duration, which he made for William III. Around 1711 he took into partnership his nephew by marriage, George Graham, who carried on the business after his death.
    Although Tompion does not seem to have been particularly innovative, he lived at a time when great advances were being made in horology, which his consummate skill as a craftsman enabled him to exploit. In this he was greatly assisted by his association with Robert Hooke, for whom Tompion constructed a watch with a balance spring in 1675; at that time Hooke was trying to establish his priority over Huygens for this invention. Although this particular watch was not successful, it made Tompion aware of the potential of the balance spring and he became the first person in England to apply Huygens's spiral spring to the balance of a watch. Although Thuret had constructed such a watch somewhat earlier in France, the superior quality of Tompion's wheel work, assisted by Hooke's wheel-cutting engine, enabled him to dominate the market. The anchor escapement (which reduced the amplitude of the pendulum's swing) was first applied to clocks around this time and produced further improvements in accuracy which Tompion and other makers were able to utilize. However, the anchor escapement, like the verge escapement, produced recoil (the clock was momentarily driven in reverse). Tompion was involved in attempts to overcome this defect with the introduction of the dead-beat escapement for clocks and the horizontal escapement for watches. Neither was successful, but they were both perfected later by George Graham.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Master of the Clockmakers' Company 1703.
    Bibliography
    1695, with William Houghton and Edward Barlow, British patent no. 344 (for a horizontal escapement).
    Further Reading
    R.W.Symonds, 1951, Thomas Tompion, His Life and Work, London (a comprehensive but now slightly dated account).
    H.W.Robinson and W.Adams (eds), 1935, The Diary of Robert Hooke (contains many references to Tompion).
    D.Howse, 1970, The Tompion clocks at Greenwich and the dead-beat escapement', Antiquarian Horology 7:18–34, 114–33.
    DV

    Biographical history of technology > Tompion, Thomas

  • 65 Gilpin, Thomas

    SUBJECT AREA: Canals
    [br]
    b. 18 March 1728 Chester County, Pennsylvania, USA
    d. 30 April 1778 Winchester, Virginia, USA
    [br]
    American manufacturer.
    [br]
    Thomas Gilpin belonged to a wealthy Quaker family descended from Joseph Gilpin, who had emigrated from England in 1696. He received little formal education and was mainly self-educated in mathematics, surveying and science, in which subjects he was particularly interested. With estates in Delaware and Maryland, he was involved in farming and manufacturing. He moved to Philadelphia in 1769, which further extended his activities. With his fortune he was able to indulge his interest in science, and he was one of the original members of the American Philosophical Society in 1769. He wrote papers on the wheat fly, the seventeen-year locust and the migration of herrings. It was through this Society that he became friendly with Benjamin Franklin, to whom he wrote on 10 October 1769 setting out his proposals for and advocacy of a canal linking the Elk River on Chesapeake Bay with the Delaware River and Bay, thereby cutting off a long haul of several hundred miles for vessels around Cape Charles with a dangerous passage unto the Atlantic Ocean. Gilpin also invented a hydraulic pump that delighted Franklin very much. Gilpin had visited England in 1768 during the formation of his ideas for the Chesapeake \& Delaware Canal, and probably visited the Bridgewater Canal while there. Despite his pressing advocacy the canal had to wait until after his death, but later his son Joshua, a director from 1803 to 1824, saw the canal through many difficulties although he had resigned before the official opening in 1829. At the outbreak of the American War of Independence, in 1777, Gilpin, together with other Quakers, was arrested in Philadelphia owing to suspicions of his loyalty on the grounds that as a Quaker he refused to sign the Oath of Allegiance. He was later exiled to Winchester, Virginia, where he died in April 1778.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    1925, "Memoir of Thomas Gilpin", Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.
    R.D.Gray, 1967, The National Waterway: A History of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, 1769–1985, Urbana: Illinois University Press.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Gilpin, Thomas

  • 66 Aesculapius

    Aescŭlāpĭus, i, m., = Asklêpios, acc. to fable, the son of Apollo and the nymph Coronis, deified after his death on account of his great knowledge of medicine, Cic. N. D. 3, 22; Cels. 1 praef. He had a temple at Rome, on the island in the Tiber. Upon the kind of worship paid to him, and his attributes, v. Festus, p. 82. Huic gallinae immolabantur, id. ib. The principal seat of his worship in Greece was Epidaurus. In his temple there was a magnificent statue of ivory and gold, the work of Thrasymedes, in which he was represented as a noble figure, resembling that of Zeus. He was seated on a throne, holding in one hand a staff, and with the other resting on the head of a dragon (serpent), and by his side lay a dog. There were also other representations, one even as beardless, very common at an earlier period, Müll. Archaeol. d. Kunst, S. 534 and 535. Serpents, prob. as symbols of prudence and renovation. were everywhere connected with his worship; cf. Spreng. Gesch. d. Medic. 1, 205.
    Adj.:

    anguis Aesculapius,

    Plin. 29, 4, 22, § 72.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > Aesculapius

  • 67 Vicente, Gil

    (ca. 1465-ca. 1537)
       Sixteenth-century Portuguese playwright, perhaps Portugal's greatest, who was also a talented goldsmith, musician, actor, and dramatist. Born in humble circumstances, Gil Vicente rose to become an important figure, recognized and celebrated in the royal court of his day. His first play or auto was performed in 1502, and his last piece was produced in 1536. Vicente's work was influenced not only by the religious plays of late medieval Portugal, but by work from contemporary humanism and the Renaissance.
       There were at least four basic aspects of Vicentine plays: dramatization of rural folklore, social satire, imaginative analysis of nature, and religious themes. What was remarkable about Vicente, in addition to his great versatility (he was the goldsmith who produced the gold monstrance in the Monastery of Jerônimos) and brilliance, was that he was popular with both the people and the elite, and was a masterful dramatist in a country lacking extraordinary dramatic traditions. Some of his plays were censored by the Inquisition after his death, and it was only during the 19th-century romantic era that Portuguese writers sought a revival of his reputation.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Vicente, Gil

  • 68 Galilei, Galileo

    [br]
    b. 15 February 1564 Pisa, Italy
    d. 8 January 1642 Arcetri, near Florence, Italy
    [br]
    Italian mathematician, astronomer and physicist who established the principle of the pendulum and was first to exploit the telescope.
    [br]
    Galileo began studying medicine at the University of Pisa but soon turned to his real interests, mathematics, mechanics and astronomy. He became Professor of Mathematics at Pisa at the age of 25 and three years later moved to Padua. In 1610 he transferred to Florence. While still a student he discovered the isochronous property of the pendulum, probably by timing with his pulse the swings of a hanging lamp during a religious ceremony in Pisa Cathedral. He later designed a pendulum-controlled clock, but it was not constructed until after his death, and then not successfully; the first successful pendulum clock was made by the Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens in 1656. Around 1590 Galileo established the laws of motion of falling bodies, by timing rolling balls down inclined planes and not, as was once widely believed, by dropping different weights from the Leaning Tower of Pisa. These and other observations received definitive treatment in his Discorsi e dimostrazioni matematiche intorno a due nuove scienzi attenenti alla, meccanica (Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences…) which was completed in 1634 and first printed in 1638. This work also included Galileo's proof that the path of a projectile was a parabola and, most importantly, the development of the concept of inertia.
    In astronomy Galileo adopted the Copernican heliocentric theory of the universe while still in his twenties, but he lacked the evidence to promote it publicly. That evidence came with the invention of the telescope by the Dutch brothers Lippershey. Galileo heard of its invention in 1609 and had his own instrument constructed, with a convex object lens and concave eyepiece, a form which came to be known as the Galilean telescope. Galileo was the first to exploit the telescope successfully with a series of striking astronomical discoveries. He was also the first to publish the results of observations with the telescope, in his Sidereus nuncius (Starry Messenger) of 1610. All the discoveries told against the traditional view of the universe inherited from the ancient Greeks, and one in particular, that of the four satellites in orbit around Jupiter, supported the Copernican theory in that it showed that there could be another centre of motion in the universe besides the Earth: if Jupiter, why not the Sun? Galileo now felt confident enough to advocate the theory, but the advance of new ideas was opposed, not for the first or last time, by established opinion, personified in Galileo's time by the ecclesiastical authorities in Rome. Eventually he was forced to renounce the Copernican theory, at least in public, and turn to less contentious subjects such as the "two new sciences" of his last and most important work.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1610, Sidereus nuncius (Starry Messenger); translation by A.Van Helden, 1989, Sidereus Nuncius, or the Sidereal Messenger; Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    1623, Il Saggiatore (The Assayer).
    1632, Dialogo sopre i due massimi sistemi del mondo, tolemaico e copernicano (Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, Ptolemaic and Copernican); translation, 1967, Berkeley: University of California Press.
    1638, Discorsi e dimostrazioni matematiche intorno a due nuove scienzi attenenti alla
    meccanica (Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences…); translation, 1991, Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books (reprint).
    Further Reading
    G.de Santillana, 1955, The Crime of Galileo, Chicago: University of Chicago Press; also 1958, London: Heinemann.
    H.Stillman Drake, 1980, Galileo, Oxford: Oxford Paperbacks. M.Sharratt, 1994, Galileo: Decisive Innovator, Oxford: Blackwell.
    J.Reston, 1994, Galileo: A Life, New York: HarperCollins; also 1994, London: Cassell.
    A.Fantoli, 1994, Galileo: For Copemicanism and for the Church, trans. G.V.Coyne, South Bend, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Galilei, Galileo

  • 69 Gilbert, John

    [br]
    b. 1724 Cotton Hall, Cotton, Staffordshire, England
    d. 3 August 1795 Worsley, Lancashire, England
    [br]
    English land agent, mining engineer and canal entrepreneur.
    [br]
    Younger son of a gentleman farmer, Gilbert was apprenticed to Matthew Boulton, a buckle maker of Birmingham and father of the Matthew Boulton who was associated with James Watt. He also gained mining experience. Through the influence of his older brother, Thomas Gilbert, he became Land Agent to the Duke of Bridgewater (Francis Egerton) for the Worsley estate. He proposed extensions to the underground waterway system and also made a preliminary survey for a canal from Worsley to Salford, a project which Brindley joined as Assistant Engineer. Gilbert was therefore the prime mover in the construction of the Bridgewater Canal, which received its Act in 1759. He then collected evidence for the second Act to permit construction of the aqueduct across the Irwell at Barton. He was involved in a consortium with his brother Thomas and Earl Gower to develop the Earl's East Shropshire mines and to build the Shrewsbury and the Shropshire Coal Canals. He also excavated the Speedwell Mine at Castleton in Derbyshire between 1774 and 1781 and constructed the underground canal to serve the workings. With his brother, he was involved in the promotion of the Trent \& Mersey Canal and was a shareholder in the undertaking. Among his other entrepreneurial activities, he entered the canal-carrying business. His last work was beginning the underground inclined planes at Worsley, but these were not completed until after his death. His important place in the historical development of the inland navigational system in England has been very much overlooked.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    P.Lead, 1990, Agents of Revolution: John and Thomas Gilbert-Entrepreneurs, Keele University Centre for Local History.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Gilbert, John

  • 70 Holtzapffel, Charles

    [br]
    b. 1806 London, England
    d. 11 April 1847 London, England
    [br]
    English mechanical engineer and author of Turning and Mechanical Manipulation.
    [br]
    Charles Holtzapffel was the son of John Holtzapffel, a native of Germany who settled in London c.1787 and set up as a manufacturer of lathes and tools for amateur mechanics. Charles Holtzapffel received a good English education and training in his father's workshop, and subsequently became a partner and ultimately succeeded to the business. He was engaged in the construction of machinery for printing banknotes, of lathes for cutting rosettes and for ornamental and plain turning. Holtzapffel is chiefly remembered for his monumental work entitled Turning and Mechanical Manipulation, intended as a work of general reference and practical instruction on the lathe. Publication began in 1843 and only the first two volumes were published in his lifetime. A third volume was edited by his widow from his notes and published shortly after his death. The fourth and fifth volumes were completed by his son, John Jacob Holtzapffel, more than thirty years later. Holtzapffel was an Associate of the Institution of Civil Engineers and served on its Council: he was also a member of the Society of Arts and Chairman of its Committee on Mechanics.
    RTS

    Biographical history of technology > Holtzapffel, Charles

  • 71 Pascal, Blaise

    [br]
    b. 19 June 1623 Clermont Ferrand, France
    d. 19 August 1662 Paris, France
    [br]
    French mathematician, physicist and religious philosopher.
    [br]
    Pascal was the son of Etienne Pascal, President of the Court of Aids. His mother died when he was 3 years old and he was brought up largely by his two sisters, one of whom was a nun at Port Royal. They moved to Paris in 1631 and again to Rouen ten years later. He received no formal education. In 1654 he was involved in a carriage accident in which he saw a mystical vision of God and from then on confined himself to philosophical rather than scientific matters. In the field of mathematics he is best known for his work on conic sections and on the laws of probability. As a youth he designed a calculating machine of which, it is said, some seventy were made. His main contribution to technology was his elucidation of the laws of hydrostatics which formed the basis of all hydrostatic machines in subsequent years. Pascal, however, did not put these laws to any practical use: that was left to the English cabinet-maker and engineer Joseph Bramah more than a century later. Suffering from indifferent health, Pascal persuaded his brother-in-law Périer to repeat the experiments of Evangelista Torricelli on the pressure of the atmosphere. This involved climbing the 4,000 ft (1,220 m) of the Puy de Dôme, a mountain close to Clermont, with a heavy mercury-in-glass barometer. The experiment was reported in the 1647 pamphlet "Expériences nouvelles touchant le vide". The Hydrostatic Law was laid down by Pascal in Traité de l'équilibre des liqueurs, published a year after his death. In this he established the fact that in a fluid at rest the pressure is transmitted equally in all directions.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1647, "Expériences nouvelles touchant le vide". 1663, Traité de l'équilibre des liqueurs.
    Further Reading
    J.Mesnard, 1951, Pascal, His Life and Works.
    I.McNeil, 1972, Hydraulic Power, London: Longmans.
    IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Pascal, Blaise

  • 72 leave

    ̈ɪli:v I сущ.
    1) а) позволение, разрешение to ask leave (to do smth.) ≈ просить позволения (сделать что-л.) Syn: permission б) воен. увольнительная, увольнение( разрешение об отлучке, выданное служащему армии)
    2) отпуск (тж. leave of absence) to cancel smb.'s leave ≈ выйти из отпуска to extend smb.'s leave ≈ продлевать чей-л. отпуск to give, grant a leave ≈ давать отпуск to go on leave ≈ уходить в отпуск to overstay one's leave ≈ засидеться в отпуске to take a leave ≈ брать отпуск annual leave maternity leave paid leave research leave sabbatical leave sick leave terminal leave leave without pay leave allowance leave travel
    3) а) отъезд, уход;
    отправление, отход б) расставание, прощание Syn: departure, parting ∙ to take leave of one's sensesпотерять рассудок II гл.;
    прош. вр. и прич. прош. вр. - left
    1) а) покидать( кого-л.;
    какое-л. место) Syn: abandon, desert, go, retire, forsake Ant: come, remain, stay at, stay in, stay with, stick to, stick with, approach б) переезжать, уезжать to leave Paris for London ≈ переезжать из Парижа в Лондон She left her comfortable home for a rugged life in the desert. ≈ Она променяла свой уютный дом на суровую жизнь в пустыне. He was left for dead on the battlefield. ≈ Его оставили на поле брани как убитого. Syn: depart, withdraw, quit
    2) а) оставлять (след) the wound left an deep scar ≈ после раны остался глубокий шрам б) забывать, оставлять I left my keys at my grandma's. ≈ Я забыла ключи у бабушки. в) оставатьсякакой-либо части) Ten minus five leaves five. ≈ От десяти отнять пять - останется пять.
    3) оставлять в том же состоянии to leave smth. unsaid ≈ не сказать( чего-л., о чем-л.) to leave smth. undoneне сделать( чего-л.) They left the fields fallow. ≈ Они оставили поля под паром. I left him working in the garden. ≈ Когда я уходил, он работал в саду. The film left me cold. ≈ Фильм не тронул его. Ant: keep, persevere in
    4) оставлять, передавать, поручать( with) to leave word for smb. ≈ велеть передать кому-л. (что-либо) They left the children with her mother. ≈ Они оставили детей с ее матерью. She left her books with us. ≈ Она оставила нам книги.
    5) приводить в какое-л. состояние The insult left him speechless. ≈ Оскорбление лишило его дара речи. The flood left them homeless. ≈ Потоп оставил их без крова.
    6) предоставлять She left the report for me. ≈ Она поручила доклад мне. We left them to muddle through on their own. ≈ Мы предоставили им самим довести это дело до конца. Syn: entrust
    7) а) завещать, оставлять (наследство) After his death she was well left. ≈ После его смерти она была хорошо обеспечена наследством. He left his estate to her. ≈ Он оставил ей наследство. Syn: bequeath, devise
    2. б) оставить( после себя) He left a widow and two children. ≈ (После его смерти) осталась вдова с двумя детьми.
    8) прекращать It is time to leave talking and begin acting. ≈ Пора перестать разговаривать и начать действовать.
    9) разг., амер. разрешать, позволять Syn: allow, permit, let ∙ leave alone leave aside leave out of leave behind leave off leave out leave over to leave oneself wide open амер. ≈ подставить себя под удар to leave smth. in the air ≈ оставлять незаконченным (мысль, речь и т. п.) to leave smb. to himself ≈ не вмешиваться в чьи-л. дела it leaves much to be desiredоставляет желать много лучшего to be/get (nicely) left разг. ≈ быть покинутым, обманутым, одураченным leave open leave up III гл. покрываться листвой The poplars were leaved out. ≈ Тополя покрылись листвой Syn: leaf
    2. разрешение, позволение - by /with/ your * с вашего позволения - * of court разрешение суда - to ask /to beg/ * to do smth. спрашивать /просить/ разрешение /позволения/ сделать что-л. - to give /to grant/ smb. to smth. дать кому-л. разрешение /позволение/ сделать что-л.;
    позволить /разрешить/ кому-л. сделать что-л. - who gave you * to go? кто разрешил вам уйти? (тж. * of absence) отпуск - on * в отпуске - sick * отпуск по болезни - six mounth' * шестимесячный отпуск - research * (американизм) творческий отпуск (военное) увольнение - * pass увольнительная записка;
    отпускное свидетельство - * allowance отпускное денежное содержание - compassionate * увольнение по семейным обстоятельствам прощание, расставание - to take (one's) * прощаться, уходить - to take * of one's friends попрощаться с друзьями исходная позиция (для бильярдных шаров) > to take * of one's senses сойти с ума, рехнуться уходить, уезжать - to * the room выйти из комнаты - to * the Moscow уехать из Москвы - when does the train *? когда отходит поезд? (for) направляться, уезжать ( куда-л.) - to * for London уезжать в Лондон оставлять - to * one's coat in the hall повесить /оставить/ пальто в прихожей - to * smth. for smb. to eat оставить что-л. кому-л. поесть - we left room in the car for your sister мы оставили в машине место для вашей сестры - "to be left until called for" "до востребования" (надпись на конверте) оставлять после себя - the wound left an ugly scar после раны остался некрасивый шрам - the train left a trail of smoke поезд оставил за собой хвост дыма (по) забыть - I've left my notebook at home я забыл тетрадь дома покидать;
    бросать - to * one's job бросить работу, уйти с работы - to * school бросить школу;
    окончить школу - to * society удалиться от общества;
    покинуть общество - to * one's wife оставить /бросить/ жену - to * the track /the rails/ сойти с рельсов - his cold did not * him for weeks он долго не мог избавиться от простуды оставлять в каком-л. положении или состоянии - to * the door open оставить дверь открытой - to * a question open оставить вопрос открытым;
    не выносить окончательного решения - to * oneself open открываться (бокс) - to * oneself wide open (американизм) ставить себя под удар - to * smth. undone оставить что-л. несделанным - some things are better left unsaid есть вещи, о которых лучше не говорить - to * smb. cool /cold, unmoved/ не производить впечатления на кого-л. - his illness has left him weak он ослабел после болезни - her words left him furious ее слова привели его в бешенство - his behaviour *s much to be desired его поведение оставляет желать (много) лучшего откладывать, переносить - to * smth. until tomorrow оставить /отложить/ что-л. на /до/ завтра завещать - to * smb. $100 завещать кому-л. 100 долларов - to be badly /poorly/ left получить маленькое /скудное/ наследство оставлять после смерти - he left a widow and two children после него осталась вдова и двое детей - he left many water-colour sketches после него осталось много акварелей оставлять неиспользованным - give what is left to the dog остатки отдай собаке получать, оставаться в остатке - seven from ten *s three десять минус семь равняется трем, от десяти отнять семь, получится /будет/ три предоставить, поручить - to * smth. to chance /to accident/ предоставить дело случаю - to * the matter in smb.'s hands передать дело в чьи-л. руки - he left his relative in charge of the house он поручил родственнику присматривать за домом - * it to me предоставьте это (дело) мне передавать, оставлять - to * a card on smb. оставить кому-л. свою визитную карточку - to * word for smb. (that) велеть передать кому-л. (что) - did he * any message for me? он не оставил мне записки?;
    он ничего не велел мне передатЬ? позволять, разрешать - to * smb. to do smth. позволять кому-л. делать что-л. - to * smb. to go отпускать кого-л. - to * smb. to attend to the matter позволить кому-л. заняться этим делом - * him do it! не мешайте ему! отпускать, выпускать, не держать;
    не удерживать - to * go /hold/ of smth. выпустить что-л. из рук, перестать держаться за что-л. - * go on my hair! не тяни меня за волосы! проходить мимо, миновать - to * the church on the left оставить церковь по левую руку, обойти церковь с правой стороны > to * smb. alone оставить кого-л. в покое, не трогать кого-л. > * me alone! отстань от меня! > I should * that question alone if I were you я бы на вашем месте не поднимал этого вопроса > * well alone, (американизм) * well enough alone не трогайте (уже сделанную работу) ;
    не пытайтесь улучшить( картину и т. п.) > to * smb. be оставить кого-л. в покое, не трогать кого-л. > * him be! не приставай /не лезь/ к нему! > the baby is crying, but * him be, he'll soon stop ребенок плачет, но ты его не трогай /не обращай внимания/, он скоро перестанет > to get /to be/ (nicely) left быть покинутым /обманутым, одураченным/;
    быть побежденным > let's * it at that! не будем больше( говорить) об этом! > to * smb. to himself /to one's own devices/ предоставить кого-л. самому себе покрываться листьями, одеваться листьями annual ~ ежегодный отпуск to be (или to get) (nicely) left разг. быть покинутым, обманутым, одураченным leave завещать, оставлять (наследство) ;
    to be well left быть хорошо обеспеченным наследством care ~ отпуск по уходу (за больным, ребенком, инвалидом и т. п.) child care ~ отпуск по уходу за ребенком child-care ~ отпуск по уходу за ребенком compassionate ~ отпуск по семейным обстоятельствам educational ~ отпуск для прохождения обучения (курсов переквалификации, очной сессии в заочном учебном заведении), учебный отпуск educational ~ учебный отпуск I should ~ that question alone if I were you на вашем месте я не касался бы этого вопроса ~ разрешение, позволение;
    by (или with) your leave с вашего разрешения;
    I take leave to say беру на себя смелость сказать ~ приводить в (какое-л.) состояние;
    the insult left him speechless оскорбление лишило его дара речи ~ прекращать;
    it is time to leave talking and begin acting пора перестать разговаривать и начать действовать;
    leave it at that! разг. оставьте!, довольно! it leaves much to be desired оставляет желать много лучшего leave завещать, оставлять (наследство) ;
    to be well left быть хорошо обеспеченным наследством ~ завещать ~ оставлять ~ оставлять;
    to leave the rails сойти с рельсов;
    to leave hold of выпустить из рук;
    seven from ten leaves three 10 - 7 = = 3 ~ оставлять в том же состоянии;
    the story leaves him cold рассказ не трогает его;
    to leave (smth.) unsaid (undone) не сказать (не сделать) (чего-л.) ~ отпуск ~ отпуск (тж. leave of absence) ;
    on leave в отпуске;
    on sick leave в отпуске по болезни;
    paid leave оплачиваемый отпуск ~ отъезд, уход;
    прощание;
    to take one's leave (of smb.) прощаться (с кем-л.) ~ передавать, оставлять;
    to leave a message (for smb.) оставлять (кому-л.) записку;
    просить передать (что-л.) ;
    to leave word (for smb.) велеть передать (кому-л. что-л.) ~ позволение ~ покидать ~ (left) покидать ~ покрываться листвой ~ предоставлять;
    leave it to me предоставьте это мне;
    nothing was left to accident все было предусмотрено;
    всякая случайность была исключена ~ прекращать;
    it is time to leave talking and begin acting пора перестать разговаривать и начать действовать;
    leave it at that! разг. оставьте!, довольно! ~ разрешение, позволение;
    by (или with) your leave с вашего разрешения;
    I take leave to say беру на себя смелость сказать ~ разрешение ~ приводить в (какое-л.) состояние;
    the insult left him speechless оскорбление лишило его дара речи ~ воен. увольнение ~ уезжать, переезжать;
    my sister has left for Moscow моя сестра уехала в Москву;
    when does the train leave? когда отходит поезд? ~ передавать, оставлять;
    to leave a message (for smb.) оставлять (кому-л.) записку;
    просить передать (что-л.) ;
    to leave word (for smb.) велеть передать (кому-л. что-л.) message: ~ сообщение, донесение;
    письмо, послание;
    send me a message известите меня;
    to leave a message (for smb.) просить передать (что-л. кому-л.) ~ allowance воен. отпускное денежное содержание;
    leave travel воен. поездка в отпуск или из отпуска ~ for work допуск к работе ~ оставлять;
    to leave the rails сойти с рельсов;
    to leave hold of выпустить из рук;
    seven from ten leaves three 10 - 7 = = 3 to ~ open оставить открытым (вопрос и т. п.) ;
    to leave oneself wide open амер. подставить себя под удар;
    to leave (smth.) in the air оставлять незаконченным (мысль, речь и т. п.) ~ прекращать;
    it is time to leave talking and begin acting пора перестать разговаривать и начать действовать;
    leave it at that! разг. оставьте!, довольно! ~ предоставлять;
    leave it to me предоставьте это мне;
    nothing was left to accident все было предусмотрено;
    всякая случайность была исключена ~ off останавливаться ~ off останавливаться;
    where did we leave off last time? на чем мы остановились в прошлый раз?;
    we left off at the end of chapter мы остановились в конце третьей главы ~ off переставать делать (что-л.), бросать привычку;
    to leave off one's winter clothes перестать носить, снять теплые вещи;
    to leave off smoking бросить курить ~ off прекращать ~ off переставать делать (что-л.), бросать привычку;
    to leave off one's winter clothes перестать носить, снять теплые вещи;
    to leave off smoking бросить курить ~ off переставать делать (что-л.), бросать привычку;
    to leave off one's winter clothes перестать носить, снять теплые вещи;
    to leave off smoking бросить курить to ~ open оставить открытым (вопрос и т. п.) ;
    to leave oneself wide open амер. подставить себя под удар;
    to leave (smth.) in the air оставлять незаконченным (мысль, речь и т. п.) to ~ open оставить открытым (вопрос и т. п.) ;
    to leave oneself wide open амер. подставить себя под удар;
    to leave (smth.) in the air оставлять незаконченным (мысль, речь и т. п.) open: leave ~ оставлять нерешенным leave ~ оставлять открытым ~ out не учитывать ~ out пропускать, не включать ~ out пропускать ~ out упускать ~ over откладывать ~ оставлять;
    to leave the rails сойти с рельсов;
    to leave hold of выпустить из рук;
    seven from ten leaves three 10 - 7 = = 3 ~ to appeal право на апелляцию ~ to appeal разрешение на апелляцию ~ to defend право на защиту to ~ (smb.) to himself не вмешиваться( в чьи-л. дела) ~ allowance воен. отпускное денежное содержание;
    leave travel воен. поездка в отпуск или из отпуска ~ оставлять в том же состоянии;
    the story leaves him cold рассказ не трогает его;
    to leave (smth.) unsaid (undone) не сказать (не сделать) (чего-л.) ~ without pay отпуск без сохранения содержания ~ передавать, оставлять;
    to leave a message (for smb.) оставлять (кому-л.) записку;
    просить передать (что-л.) ;
    to leave word (for smb.) велеть передать (кому-л. что-л.) maternity ~ отпуск по беременности и родам, декретный отпуск maternity ~ отпуск по беременности и родам maternity: ~ benefit пособие роженице;
    maternity leave отпуск по беременности и родам ~ уезжать, переезжать;
    my sister has left for Moscow моя сестра уехала в Москву;
    when does the train leave? когда отходит поезд? ~ предоставлять;
    leave it to me предоставьте это мне;
    nothing was left to accident все было предусмотрено;
    всякая случайность была исключена nursing ~ отпуск по уходу за маленьким ребенком ~ отпуск (тж. leave of absence) ;
    on leave в отпуске;
    on sick leave в отпуске по болезни;
    paid leave оплачиваемый отпуск ~ отпуск (тж. leave of absence) ;
    on leave в отпуске;
    on sick leave в отпуске по болезни;
    paid leave оплачиваемый отпуск paid educational ~ оплаченный учебный отпуск paid educational ~ оплачиваемый учебный отпуск ~ отпуск (тж. leave of absence) ;
    on leave в отпуске;
    on sick leave в отпуске по болезни;
    paid leave оплачиваемый отпуск paid sick ~ оплаченный отпуск по болезни parental ~ родительский отпуск paternity ~ отпуск отцу (например, по уходу за ребенком) paternity ~ отпуск по причине отцовства ~ оставлять;
    to leave the rails сойти с рельсов;
    to leave hold of выпустить из рук;
    seven from ten leaves three 10 - 7 = = 3 sick ~ отпуск по болезни some things are better left unsaid есть вещи, о которых лучше не говорить ~ оставлять в том же состоянии;
    the story leaves him cold рассказ не трогает его;
    to leave (smth.) unsaid (undone) не сказать (не сделать) (чего-л.) study ~ отпуск на учебу;
    учебный отпуск to take ~ of one's senses потерять рассудок ~ отъезд, уход;
    прощание;
    to take one's leave (of smb.) прощаться (с кем-л.) ticket of ~ досрочное освобождение заключенного ~ off останавливаться;
    where did we leave off last time? на чем мы остановились в прошлый раз?;
    we left off at the end of chapter мы остановились в конце третьей главы ~ уезжать, переезжать;
    my sister has left for Moscow моя сестра уехала в Москву;
    when does the train leave? когда отходит поезд? ~ off останавливаться;
    where did we leave off last time? на чем мы остановились в прошлый раз?;
    we left off at the end of chapter мы остановились в конце третьей главы

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > leave

  • 73 posthumous

    'postjuməs
    1) (happening, coming etc to a person after his death: the posthumous publication of his book.) póstumo
    2) ((of a child) born after its father has died.) póstumo
    tr['pɒstjʊməs]
    1 póstumo,-a
    posthumous ['pɑsʧəməs] adj
    : póstumo
    posthumously adv
    adj.
    póstumo, -a adj.
    'pɑːstʃəməs, 'pɒstjʊməs
    adjective póstumo
    ['pɒstjʊmǝs]
    ADJ póstumo
    * * *
    ['pɑːstʃəməs, 'pɒstjʊməs]
    adjective póstumo

    English-spanish dictionary > posthumous

  • 74 posthumous

    ['postjuməs]
    1) (happening, coming etc to a person after his death: the posthumous publication of his book.) sem gerist eftir dauða (e-s)
    2) ((of a child) born after its father has died.) fæddur eftir dauða föðurs

    English-Icelandic dictionary > posthumous

  • 75 posthumous

    posztumusz, hátrahagyott, árván született
    * * *
    ['postjuməs]
    1) (happening, coming etc to a person after his death: the posthumous publication of his book.) posztumusz
    2) ((of a child) born after its father has died.) utószülött

    English-Hungarian dictionary > posthumous

  • 76 posthumous

    ['postjuməs]
    1) (happening, coming etc to a person after his death: the posthumous publication of his book.) póstumo
    2) ((of a child) born after its father has died.) póstumo
    * * *
    post.hu.mous
    [p'ɔstjuməs] adj póstumo.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > posthumous

  • 77 posthumous

    adj. öldükten sonra gerçekleşen, öldükten sonra olan, ölümünden sonra yayınlanan, babasının ölümünden sonra doğan
    * * *
    ölüm sonrası
    * * *
    ['postjuməs]
    1) (happening, coming etc to a person after his death: the posthumous publication of his book.) ölümünden sonra
    2) ((of a child) born after its father has died.) babasının ölümünden sonra doğan

    English-Turkish dictionary > posthumous

  • 78 posthumous

    ['postjuməs]
    1) (happening, coming etc to a person after his death: the posthumous publication of his book.) posmrten
    2) ((of a child) born after its father has died.) rojen po očetovi smrti
    * * *
    [pɔstjuməs]
    adjective ( posthumously adverb)
    posmrten, rojen po očetovi smrti, postumen

    English-Slovenian dictionary > posthumous

  • 79 posthumous

    • isän kuoleman jälkeen syntynyt
    • jälkeenjäänyt
    • jälkisyntyinen
    • postuumi
    • kuolemanjälkeinen
    * * *
    'postjuməs
    1) (happening, coming etc to a person after his death: the posthumous publication of his book.) kuoleman jälkeinen
    2) ((of a child) born after its father has died.) isän kuoleman jälkeen syntynyt

    English-Finnish dictionary > posthumous

  • 80 silenzio

    m silence
    fare silenzio be quiet
    silenzio! silence!, quiet!
    * * *
    silenzio s.m.
    1 silence; quiet: silenzio assoluto, absolute (o dead) silence; silenzio glaciale, di tomba, icy, deathlike silence; il silenzio della notte, the silence (o still o quiet) of the night; la stanza era immersa nel silenzio, the room was in total silence (o was totally quiet); che silenzio qui dentro!, how silent (o quiet) it is in here!; soffrire in silenzio, to suffer in silence; stare in silenzio, to remain silent; mantenere il silenzio, to keep silent; fare silenzio, to keep quiet (o to be silent); fa' silenzio!, keep quiet (o stop talking); il suo silenzio dura da mesi, his silence has lasted for months; rompere il silenzio con qlcu., to break the silence with s.o.; raccomandò il silenzio sulla sua nomina, he asked for nothing to be said about his appointment; il silenzio del governo sulla questione è scandaloso, the government silence over the matter is a scandal // silenzio stampa, news blackout // silenzio radio, radio silence // silenzio!, silence! (o quiet! o fam. shut up!) // silenzio in aula!, ( in tribunale) silence in court! // ridurre al silenzio, to silence (o to reduce to silence): le minacce dei rapitori ridussero la famiglia al silenzio, the kidnappers threats forced the family to keep silent; ridurre al silenzio un cannone, to silence a cannon // passare qlco. sotto silenzio, to pass sthg. over in silence (o not to mention sthg.): queste cose sono passate sotto silenzio, these things have been passed over in silence; un fatto passato sotto silenzio, an event that was kept quiet // vivere nel silenzio, (fig.) ( nell'oscurità) to live in obscurity // dopo la sua morte il suo nome cadde nel silenzio, (fig.) after his death his name fell into obscurity // dispensare un monaco dal silenzio, to free a monk from his vow of silence // la chiesa del silenzio, clandestine (o underground) church // il silenzio è d'oro, (prov.) silence is golden
    2 (mil.) lights-out: suonare il silenzio, to sound lights-out.
    * * *
    pl. -zi [si'lɛntsjo, tsi] sostantivo maschile
    1) (assenza di rumore) silence, quiet, quietness

    fate silenzio!keep o be quiet! stop talking!

    in silenzio — [lavorare, soffrire] silently

    3) mil.

    il silenzio — taps, bugle call, the last post

    ••

    passare qcs. sotto silenzio — to pass sth. over in silence, to leave sth. unsaid

    * * *
    silenzio
    pl. -zi /si'lεntsjo, tsi/
    sostantivo m.
     1 (assenza di rumore) silence, quiet, quietness; silenzio di tomba dead silence; il silenzio della notte the still of the night
     2 (il tacere) silenzio! silence! hush! fate silenzio! keep o be quiet! stop talking! in silenzio [lavorare, soffrire] silently; rompere il silenzio to break one's silence
     3 mil. il silenzio taps, bugle call, the last post; suonare il silenzio to sound taps
    passare qcs. sotto silenzio to pass sth. over in silence, to leave sth. unsaid
    \
    silenzio radio radio silence; silenzio stampa news blackout.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > silenzio

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