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amount subject

  • 1 subject to collection

    Fin
    dependent upon the ability to collect the amount owed

    The ultimate business dictionary > subject to collection

  • 2 a little bit, a small amount of something

    General subject: skosh

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > a little bit, a small amount of something

  • 3 and amount, type and height of base of cloud above surface elevation at (place of observation)?

    General subject: QUB

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > and amount, type and height of base of cloud above surface elevation at (place of observation)?

  • 4 с ограниченной суммой денег (with a limited amount of money)

    General subject: on a budget

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > с ограниченной суммой денег (with a limited amount of money)

  • 5 and amount, type and height of base of cloud above surface elevation at ?

    General subject: (place of observation) QUB

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > and amount, type and height of base of cloud above surface elevation at ?

  • 6 cantidad expuesta

    • amount subject

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > cantidad expuesta

  • 7 cantidad sujeta

    • amount subject

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > cantidad sujeta

  • 8 сумма к выплате

    2) Insurance: amount subject
    4) SAP. payment amount, repayment amount

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > сумма к выплате

  • 9 сумма, подлежащая выплате

    1) General subject: total amount payable
    2) Insurance: amount subject

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > сумма, подлежащая выплате

  • 10 Beschwerdesumme

    1. amount in dispute; amount subject to appeal;
    2. ≈ minimum amount required to file an appeal or objection

    German-english law dictionary > Beschwerdesumme

  • 11 Berufungssumme

    Be·ru·fungs·sum·me
    f JUR amount subject to appeal

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Berufungssumme

  • 12 cantidad expuesta

    f.
    amount subject.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cantidad expuesta

  • 13 cantidad sujeta

    f.
    amount subject.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cantidad sujeta

  • 14 taxable base

    Fin
    the amount subject to taxation

    The ultimate business dictionary > taxable base

  • 15 cantidad a pagar

    = amount payable, amount due
    Ex. Please note that the amount payable depends on the current bank commissions and shipping charges, and is subject to change without notice.
    Ex. The minimum amount due is the amount you are required to pay to keep your account in good credit standing.
    * * *
    = amount payable, amount due

    Ex: Please note that the amount payable depends on the current bank commissions and shipping charges, and is subject to change without notice.

    Ex: The minimum amount due is the amount you are required to pay to keep your account in good credit standing.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cantidad a pagar

  • 16 importe a pagar

    = amount payable, amount due
    Ex. Please note that the amount payable depends on the current bank commissions and shipping charges, and is subject to change without notice.
    Ex. The minimum amount due is the amount you are required to pay to keep your account in good credit standing.
    * * *
    = amount payable, amount due

    Ex: Please note that the amount payable depends on the current bank commissions and shipping charges, and is subject to change without notice.

    Ex: The minimum amount due is the amount you are required to pay to keep your account in good credit standing.

    Spanish-English dictionary > importe a pagar

  • 17 dependiendo de

    = subject to, depending on/upon
    Ex. Subject to local circumstances, the size of a reserve store should be limited to the accommodation required for about five years' accessions at current rates.
    Ex. The amount of statistical information maintained by a library will vary often depending on the size of the library.
    * * *
    = subject to, depending on/upon

    Ex: Subject to local circumstances, the size of a reserve store should be limited to the accommodation required for about five years' accessions at current rates.

    Ex: The amount of statistical information maintained by a library will vary often depending on the size of the library.

    Spanish-English dictionary > dependiendo de

  • 18 Shannon, Claude Elwood

    [br]
    b. 30 April 1916 Gaylord, Michigan, USA
    [br]
    American mathematician, creator of information theory.
    [br]
    As a child, Shannon tinkered with radio kits and enjoyed solving puzzles, particularly crypto-graphic ones. He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1936 with a Bachelor of Science in mathematics and electrical engineering, and earned his Master's degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1937. His thesis on applying Boolean algebra to switching circuits has since been acclaimed as possibly the most significant this century. Shannon earned his PhD in mathematics from MIT in 1940 with a dissertation on the mathematics of genetic transmission.
    Shannon spent a year at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, then in 1941 joined Bell Telephone Laboratories, where he began studying the relative efficiency of alternative transmission systems. Work on digital encryption systems during the Second World War led him to think that just as ciphers hide information from the enemy, "encoding" information could also protect it from noise. About 1948, he decided that the amount of information was best expressed quantitatively in a two-value number system, using only the digits 0 and 1. John Tukey, a Princeton colleague, named these units "binary digits" (or, for short, "bits"). Almost all digital computers and communications systems use such on-off, or two-state logic as their basis of operation.
    Also in the 1940s, building on the work of H. Nyquist and R.V.L. Hartley, Shannon proved that there was an upper limit to the amount of information that could be transmitted through a communications channel in a unit of time, which could be approached but never reached because real transmissions are subject to interference (noise). This was the beginning of information theory, which has been used by others in attempts to quantify many sciences and technologies, as well as subjects in the humanities, but with mixed results. Before 1970, when integrated circuits were developed, Shannon's theory was not the preferred circuit-and-transmission design tool it has since become.
    Shannon was also a pioneer in the field of artificial intelligence, claiming that computing machines could be used to manipulate symbols as well as do calculations. His 1953 paper on computers and automata proposed that digital computers were capable of tasks then thought exclusively the province of living organisms. In 1956 he left Bell Laboratories to join the MIT faculty as Professor of Communications Science.
    On the lighter side, Shannon has built many devices that play games, and in particular has made a scientific study of juggling.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    National Medal of Science. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Medal of Honor, Kyoto Prize.
    Bibliography
    His seminal paper (on what has subsequently become known as information theory) was entitled "The mathematical theory of communications", first published in Bell System Technical Journal in 1948; it is also available in a monograph (written with Warren Weaver) published by the University of Illinois Press in 1949, and in Key Papers in the Development of Information Theory, ed. David Slepian, IEEE Press, 1974, 1988. For readers who want all of Shannon's works, see N.J.A.Sloane and A.D.Wyner, 1992, The
    Collected Papers of Claude E.Shannon.
    HO

    Biographical history of technology > Shannon, Claude Elwood

  • 19 McNeill, Sir James McFadyen

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 19 August 1892 Clydebank, Scotland
    d. 24 July 1964 near Glasgow, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish naval architect, designer of the Cunard North Atlantic Liners Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth.
    [br]
    McNeill was born in Clydebank just outside Glasgow, and was to serve that town for most of his life. After education at Clydebank High School and then at Allan Glen's in Glasgow, in 1908 he entered the shipyard of John Brown \& Co. Ltd as an apprentice. He was encouraged to matriculate at the University of Glasgow, where he studied naval architecture under the (then) unique Glasgow system of "sandwich" training, alternately spending six months in the shipyard, followed by winter at the Faculty of Engineering. On graduating in 1915, he joined the Army and by 1918 had risen to the rank of Major in the Royal Field Artillery.
    After the First World War, McNeill returned to the shipyard and in 1928 was appointed Chief Naval Architect. In 1934 he was made a local director of the company. During the difficult period of the 1930s he was in charge of the technical work which led to the design, launching and successful completion of the great liners Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth. Some of the most remarkable ships of the mid-twentieth century were to come from this shipyard, including the last British battleship, HMS Vanguard, and the Royal Yacht Britannia, completed in 1954. From 1948 until 1959, Sir James was Managing Director of the Clydebank part of the company and was Deputy Chairman by the time he retired in 1962. His public service was remarkable and included chairmanship of the Shipbuilding Conference and of the British Ship Research Association, and membership of the Committee of Lloyd's Register of Shipping.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order 1954. CBE 1950. FRS 1948. President, Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland 1947–9. Honorary Vice-President, Royal Institution of Naval Architects. Military Cross (First World War).
    Bibliography
    1935, "Launch of the quadruple-screw turbine steamer Queen Mary", Transactions of the Institution of Naval Architects 77:1–27 (in this classic paper McNeill displays complete mastery of a difficult subject; it is recorded that prior to launch the estimate for travel of the ship in the River Clyde was 1,194 ft (363.9 m), and the actual amount recorded was 1,196 ft (364.5m)!).
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > McNeill, Sir James McFadyen

  • 20 Albone, Daniel

    [br]
    b. c.1860 Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, England
    d. 1906 England
    [br]
    English engineer who developed and manufactured the first commercially successful lightweight tractor.
    [br]
    The son of a market gardener, Albone's interest lay in mechanics, and by 1880 he had established his own business as a cycle maker and repairer. His inventive mind led to a number of patents relating to bicycle design, but his commercial success was particularly assisted by his achievements in cycle racing. From this early start he diversified his business, designing and supplying, amongst other things, axle bearings for the Great Northern Railway, and also building motor cycles and several cars. It is possible that he began working on tractors as early as 1896. Certainly by 1902 he had built his first prototype, to the three-wheeled design that was to remain in later production models. Weighing only 30 cwt, yet capable of pulling two binders or a two-furrow plough, Albone's Ivel tractor was ahead of anything in its time, and its power-to-weight ratio was to be unrivalled for almost a decade. Albone's commercial success was not entirely due to the mechanical tractor's superiority, but owed a considerable amount to his ability as a showman and demonstrator. He held two working demonstrations a month in the village of Biggleswade in Bedfordshire, where the tractors were made. The tractor was named after the river Ivel, which flowed through the village. The Ivel tractor gained twenty-six gold and silver medals at agricultural shows between 1902 and 1906, and was a significant contributor to Britain's position as the world's largest exporter of tractors between 1904 and 1914. Albone tried other forms of his tractor to increase its sales. He built a fire engine, and also an armoured vehicle, but failed to impress the War Office with its potential.
    Albone died at the age of 46. His tractor continued in production but remained essentially unimproved, and the company finally lost its sales to other designs, particularly those of American origin.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Detailed contemporary accounts of tractor development occur in the British periodical Implement and Machinery Review. Accounts of the Ivel appear in "The Trials of Agricultural Motors", Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England (1910), pp. 179–99. A series of general histories by Michael Williams have been published by Blandfords, of which Classic Farm Tractors (1984) includes an entry on the Ivel.
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Albone, Daniel

См. также в других словарях:

  • amount subject — noun : any value estimated by an underwriter to be the expected loss as a result of a fire or casualty, variable according to the risk involved …   Useful english dictionary

  • Subject-matter jurisdiction — is the authority of a court to hear cases of a particular type or cases relating to a specific subject matter. For instance, bankruptcy court has the authority to only hear bankruptcy cases.Subject matter jurisdiction must be distinguished from… …   Wikipedia

  • subject to average — ► INSURANCE used about an insurance agreement when the amount of insurance on a property is less than the real value of the property, so the amount paid out by the company will be reduced: »You must adequately insure yourself otherwise you may… …   Financial and business terms

  • subject matter jurisdiction — see jurisdiction Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. subject matter jurisdiction …   Law dictionary

  • amount — The whole effect, substance, quantity, import, result, or significance. The sum of principal and interest. See also sum certain @ amount covered In insurance, the amount that is insured, and for which underwriters are liable for loss under a… …   Black's law dictionary

  • amount — The whole effect, substance, quantity, import, result, or significance. The sum of principal and interest. See also sum certain @ amount covered In insurance, the amount that is insured, and for which underwriters are liable for loss under a… …   Black's law dictionary

  • amount in controversy — The amount or value of the subject matter in litigation according to which the jurisdiction of a court may be limited. 20 Am J2d Cts § 154. A term involved in determining the jurisdiction of a court, either from the standpoint of the minimum… …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • subject — sub|ject1 W2S2 [ˈsʌbdʒıkt] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(thing talked about)¦ 2¦(at school)¦ 3¦(in art)¦ 4¦(in a test)¦ 5¦(grammar)¦ 6¦(citizen)¦ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: Latin subjectus, from subicere …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • amount to — phr verb Amount to is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑arrears, ↑bill, ↑expenditure, ↑sale Amount to is used with these nouns as the object: ↑acknowledgement, ↑discrimination, ↑per cent, ↑snub …   Collocations dictionary

  • subject to final payment — A familiar condition in the banking business. Where checks received by a bank from a depositor are credited to his account subject to final payment, which provision is sometimes printed in the depositors pass books as applying to out of town… …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • Library of Congress Subject Headings — The Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) comprise a thesaurus (in the information technology sense) of subject headings, maintained by the United States Library of Congress, for use in bibliographic records. LC Subject Headings are an… …   Wikipedia

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