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61 lbw
[ˌelbi:ʼdʌbl̩ju:]the \lbw decision went against him es hieß, sein vor dem Tor stehendes Bein sei getroffen worden nAmbrose has many \lbws to his name Ambrose kann viele Würfe gegen ein vor dem Tor stehendes Bein verzeichnen -
62 Ambrosio Bierce
m.Ambrose Bierce, Ambrose Gwinett Bierce. -
63 Stanley, Robert Crooks
[br]b. 1 August 1876 Little Falls, New Jersey, USAd. 12 February 1951 USA[br]American mining engineer and metallurgist, originator of Monel Metal[br]Robert, the son of Thomas and Ada (Crooks) Stanley, helped to finance his early training at the Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, New Jersey, by working as a manual training instructor at Montclair High School. After graduating in mechanical engineering from Stevens in 1899, and as a mining engineer from the Columbia School of Mines in 1901, he accepted a two-year assignment from the S.S.White Dental Company to investigate platinum-bearing alluvial deposits in British Columbia. This introduced him to the International Nickel Company (Inco), which had been established on 29 March 1902 to amalgamate the major mining companies working the newly discovered cupro-nickel deposits at Sudbury, Ontario. Ambrose Monell, President of Inco, appointed Stanley as Assistant Superintendent of its American Nickel Works at Camden, near Philadelphia, in 1903. At the beginning of 1904 Stanley was General Superintendent of the Orford Refinery at Bayonne, New Jersey, where most of the output of the Sudbury mines was treated.Copper and nickel were separated there from the bessemerized matte by the celebrated "tops and bottoms" process introduced thirteen years previously by R.M.Thompson. It soon occurred to Stanley that such a separation was not invariably required and that, by reducing directly the mixed matte, he could obtain a natural cupronickel alloy which would be ductile, corrosion resistant, and no more expensive to produce than pure copper or nickel. His first experiment, on 30 December 1904, was completely successful. A railway wagon full of bessemerized matte, low in iron, was calcined to oxide, reduced to metal with carbon, and finally desulphurized with magnesium. Ingots cast from this alloy were successfully forged to bars which contained 68 per cent nickel, 23 per cent copper and about 1 per cent iron. The new alloy, originally named after Ambrose Monell, was soon renamed Monel to satisfy trademark requirements. A total of 300,000 ft2 (27,870 m2) of this white, corrosion-resistant alloy was used to roof the Pennsylvania Railway Station in New York, and it also found extensive applications in marine work and chemical plant. Stanley greatly increased the output of the Orford Refinery during the First World War, and shortly after becoming President of the company in 1922, he established a new Research and Development Division headed initially by A.J.Wadham and then by Paul D. Merica, who at the US Bureau of Standards had first elucidated the mechanism of age-hardening in alloys. In the mid- 1920s a nickel-ore body of unprecedented size was identified at levels between 2,000 and 3,000 ft (600 and 900 m) below the Frood Mine in Ontario. This property was owned partially by Inco and partially by the Mond Nickel Company. Efficient exploitation required the combined economic resources of both companies. They merged on 1 January 1929, when Mond became part of International Nickel. Stanley remained President of the new company until February 1949 and was Chairman from 1937 until his death.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsAmerican Society for Metals Gold Medal. Institute of Metals Platinum Medal 1948.Further ReadingF.B.Howard-White, 1963, Nickel, London: Methuen (a historical review).ASD -
64 Эмброуз
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65 Амброс
General subject: Ambrose (мужское имя) -
66 Амброуз
General subject: Ambrose -
67 Амвросиастер
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68 Амвросий Оптинский
Christianity: Ambrose of Optina (православный святой)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Амвросий Оптинский
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69 Амвросий, епископ Медиоланский
Christianity: Ambrose, bishop of Milan (христианский святой IV века)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Амвросий, епископ Медиоланский
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70 Амвросий, епископ Сарапульский
Christianity: Ambrose, bishop of Sarapul (православный святой)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Амвросий, епископ Сарапульский
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71 Облаты святого Амвросия
Christianity: Oblates of St AmbroseУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Облаты святого Амвросия
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72 Эмброуз
General subject: Ambrose -
73 амвросий
Religion: ambrose -
74 конгрегация Облаты св. Амвросия
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > конгрегация Облаты св. Амвросия
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75 Ambrosiaster
Религия: (The name given to the author of a commentary on St. Paul's letters in the New Testament, long attributed to St. Ambrose, bishop of Milan) Амвросиастер -
76 אמברוזיוס הקדוש
Saint Ambrose (340-397), citizen of Rome who was a writer and composer of hymns who became the bishop of Milan -
77 кудрявец
1) бот. ambrose -
78 марь душистая
1) бот. ambrose -
79 Ambrosian
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80 Bristoe Station, Battle of
Произошла во время Гражданской войны [ Civil War] 14 октября 1863 неподалеку от г. Вашингтона. Южане под командованием генерала А. Хилла [Hill, Ambrose] намеревались атаковать северян под командованием генерала У. Френча [French, William], но попали под огонь генерала Уоррена [Warren, G. K.], укрывшегося за железнодорожной насыпью. Южане потеряли около 1,9 тыс. человек убитыми и ранеными.тж Bristoe CampaignEnglish-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Bristoe Station, Battle of
См. также в других словарях:
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Ambrose, ND — U.S. city in North Dakota Population (2000): 23 Housing Units (2000): 41 Land area (2000): 1.066316 sq. miles (2.761745 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 1.066316 sq. miles (2.761745 sq. km) FIPS… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Ambrose — masc. proper name, from L. Ambrosius, from Gk. ambrosios immortal, belonging to the immortals (see AMBROSIA (Cf. ambrosia)). The Ambrosian Library in Milan is named for Saint Ambrose (d.397), bishop of Milan … Etymology dictionary
Ambrose — Am brose, n. A sweet scented herb; ambrosia. See {Ambrosia}, 3. Turner. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Ambrose — Ambrose, Insel, zur chilesischen Provinz S. Jago gehörig … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Ambrose — m English (and Old French) form of the Late Latin name Ambrosius, from post classical Greek Ambrosios ‘immortal’. This was borne by various early saints, most notably a 4th century bishop of Milan. The name has never been common in England, but… … First names dictionary