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and associated methods

  • 1 shoes employing monitoring devices, and associated methods

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > shoes employing monitoring devices, and associated methods

  • 2 Summary of Biopharmaceutic Studies and Associated Analytical Methods

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Summary of Biopharmaceutic Studies and Associated Analytical Methods

  • 3 Обувь, имеющая средства мониторинга, и сопутствующие технологии

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Обувь, имеющая средства мониторинга, и сопутствующие технологии

  • 4 Резюме биофармацевтичесих исследований и связанных с ними аналитических методов

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Резюме биофармацевтичесих исследований и связанных с ними аналитических методов

  • 5 distribuir

    v.
    to distribute.
    distribuyen comida entre los pobres they give out food to the poor, they distribute food among the poor
    distribuir las tareas to divide up o share out the tasks
    Ella distribuyó las provisiones She distributed the provisions.
    Ellos distribuyeron los volantes They distributed=handed out the fliers.
    * * *
    Conjugation model [ HUIR], like link=huir huir
    1 (repartir) to distribute
    2 (correo) to deliver; (trabajo) to share, allot; (agua, gas, etc) to supply
    3 (un piso) to lay out
    4 (colocar) to arrange, place
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    1. VT
    1) (=repartir) [+ víveres, mercancía, película] to distribute; [+ correo] to deliver; [+ trabajo, tarea] to allocate; [+ folletos] [en buzones] to distribute; [en mano] to hand out
    2) (=entregar) [+ premios] to give out; [+ dividendos] to pay
    3) (Téc) [+ carga] to stow, arrange; [+ peso] to distribute equally
    4) (Arquit) to plan, lay out
    2.
    See:
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo
    a) <dinero/víveres/panfletos> to hand out, distribute; < ganancias> to distribute; < tareas> to allocate, assign; <carga/peso> to distribute, spread
    b) <producto/película> to distribute
    c) canal/conducto < agua> to distribute
    d) (disponer, dividir)
    2.
    distribuirse v pron (refl) to divide up
    * * *
    = allot, circulate, disperse, distribute, hand (over), host, scatter, spread (over/throughout), propagate out to, hand out, apportion, dispense, pass out, sequence, spread out, lay out, cascade, space out.
    Ex. Money is allotted with the library fund subfunction.
    Ex. The discussions, debates, submissions and decisions of conferences are often printed and circulated to delegates and made available to other interested parties.
    Ex. For example, Recreation, previously dispersed over several main classes, is now brought together as a new main class, and Space Science has been added between Astronomy and the Earth Sciences.
    Ex. A bulletin will be a printed list, or set list for consultation on a VDU, which is published and distributed to a number of users on a specific subject area, say, building products or cancer research.
    Ex. Eventually, teachers should be able to ' hand the chalk over to the students' and take a back seat.
    Ex. Most computer bureaux which host the factual data bases have their own world-wide networks.
    Ex. Similar and closely related subjects are likely to be scattered under different keywords.
    Ex. This should illustrate rather dramatically how failure to adopt a single well-defined form of name could spread entries throughout the alphabet.
    Ex. We must develop and study intelligent interfaces that propagate out to the information universe and report back to us.
    Ex. An aggressive approach is made to publicity, with posters and leaflets distributed widely, visits to local shops, post offices, doctors surgeries etc, to drum up business, and the use of volunteers to hand out leaflets at street corners = Se inicia una campaña de publicidad enérgica, distribuyendo de forma general folletos y pósteres, visitando las tiendas, oficinas de correos y consultorías médicas de la localidad, etc., para promocionar el negocio, además de utilizar voluntarios para distribuir prospectos por las esquinas de las calles.
    Ex. However, procedures for apportioning collection budgets have not been designed specifically for the school context.
    Ex. This paper describes the role of the federal government in dispensing aid to public libraries as part of the combat against the Great Depression of the 1930s.
    Ex. At the Closing Session Danish flags were suddenly produced and passed out among the crowd who began waving them enthusiastically.
    Ex. The coefficients of eigenvectors associated with the largest eigenvalue provide the basis for sequencing atoms which are ordered according to the relative magnitudes of the coefficients.
    Ex. For instance, in reproduction of Renoir's work under the subject IMPRESSIONISM, Renoir's works would not stand together in the catalog but be spread out according to their titles.
    Ex. There should be plenty of space to lay out all the books attractively and for people to move about without feeling too crowded.
    Ex. This project is designed to provide a network of practising librarians with a programme in educational methods and skills which can then be disseminated, or ' cascaded', to a wider network of professional colleagues.
    Ex. The results of a study suggest that people remember more high school material when learning occurs spaced out over several years.
    ----
    * distribuir aleatoriamente = randomise [randomize, -USA].
    * distribuir de un modo escalonado = lay out in + stages.
    * distribuir de un modo planificado = zone.
    * distribuir el trabajo = spread + the load.
    * distribuir la responsabilidad = spread + the load.
    * distribuirse = spread over.
    * distribuir un cuestionario = circulate + questionnaire.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo
    a) <dinero/víveres/panfletos> to hand out, distribute; < ganancias> to distribute; < tareas> to allocate, assign; <carga/peso> to distribute, spread
    b) <producto/película> to distribute
    c) canal/conducto < agua> to distribute
    d) (disponer, dividir)
    2.
    distribuirse v pron (refl) to divide up
    * * *
    = allot, circulate, disperse, distribute, hand (over), host, scatter, spread (over/throughout), propagate out to, hand out, apportion, dispense, pass out, sequence, spread out, lay out, cascade, space out.

    Ex: Money is allotted with the library fund subfunction.

    Ex: The discussions, debates, submissions and decisions of conferences are often printed and circulated to delegates and made available to other interested parties.
    Ex: For example, Recreation, previously dispersed over several main classes, is now brought together as a new main class, and Space Science has been added between Astronomy and the Earth Sciences.
    Ex: A bulletin will be a printed list, or set list for consultation on a VDU, which is published and distributed to a number of users on a specific subject area, say, building products or cancer research.
    Ex: Eventually, teachers should be able to ' hand the chalk over to the students' and take a back seat.
    Ex: Most computer bureaux which host the factual data bases have their own world-wide networks.
    Ex: Similar and closely related subjects are likely to be scattered under different keywords.
    Ex: This should illustrate rather dramatically how failure to adopt a single well-defined form of name could spread entries throughout the alphabet.
    Ex: We must develop and study intelligent interfaces that propagate out to the information universe and report back to us.
    Ex: An aggressive approach is made to publicity, with posters and leaflets distributed widely, visits to local shops, post offices, doctors surgeries etc, to drum up business, and the use of volunteers to hand out leaflets at street corners = Se inicia una campaña de publicidad enérgica, distribuyendo de forma general folletos y pósteres, visitando las tiendas, oficinas de correos y consultorías médicas de la localidad, etc., para promocionar el negocio, además de utilizar voluntarios para distribuir prospectos por las esquinas de las calles.
    Ex: However, procedures for apportioning collection budgets have not been designed specifically for the school context.
    Ex: This paper describes the role of the federal government in dispensing aid to public libraries as part of the combat against the Great Depression of the 1930s.
    Ex: At the Closing Session Danish flags were suddenly produced and passed out among the crowd who began waving them enthusiastically.
    Ex: The coefficients of eigenvectors associated with the largest eigenvalue provide the basis for sequencing atoms which are ordered according to the relative magnitudes of the coefficients.
    Ex: For instance, in reproduction of Renoir's work under the subject IMPRESSIONISM, Renoir's works would not stand together in the catalog but be spread out according to their titles.
    Ex: There should be plenty of space to lay out all the books attractively and for people to move about without feeling too crowded.
    Ex: This project is designed to provide a network of practising librarians with a programme in educational methods and skills which can then be disseminated, or ' cascaded', to a wider network of professional colleagues.
    Ex: The results of a study suggest that people remember more high school material when learning occurs spaced out over several years.
    * distribuir aleatoriamente = randomise [randomize, -USA].
    * distribuir de un modo escalonado = lay out in + stages.
    * distribuir de un modo planificado = zone.
    * distribuir el trabajo = spread + the load.
    * distribuir la responsabilidad = spread + the load.
    * distribuirse = spread over.
    * distribuir un cuestionario = circulate + questionnaire.

    * * *
    vt
    1 (repartir) ‹dinero/víveres/panfletos› to hand out, distribute; ‹ganancias› to distribute; ‹tareas› to allocate, assign; ‹carga/peso› to distribute, spread
    un país donde la riqueza está muy mal distribuida a country where wealth is very unevenly distributed
    2 ‹producto/película› to distribute
    3 «canal/conducto» ‹agua› to distribute
    4
    (disponer, dividir): las habitaciones están muy bien distribuidas the rooms are very well laid out o arranged
    los distribuyeron en tres grupos they divided them into three groups
    ( refl) to divide up
    * * *

     

    Multiple Entries:
    distribuir    
    distribuir algo
    distribuir ( conjugate distribuir) verbo transitivo
    a)dinero/víveres/panfletos to hand out, distribute;

    ganancias to distribute;
    tareas to allocate, assign;
    carga/peso to distribute, spread
    b)producto/película to distribute

    c) [canal/conducto] ‹ agua to distribute


    e) ( dividir) to divide … up;


    distribuirse verbo pronominal ( refl) to divide up
    distribuir verbo transitivo
    1 (repartir productos) to distribute: ¿quién distribuye esta revista en España?, who distributes this magazine in Spain?
    2 (dar la parte correspondiente) to share out: voy a distribuir las pocas patatas que quedan, I'll divide up the few potatoes left
    3 (poner varias cosas en un sitio adecuado) to arrange: ¿qué te parece cómo he distribuido los muebles?, how do you like my furniture arrangement?
    ' distribuir' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    escalonar
    - repartir
    English:
    distribute
    - dole out
    - give out
    - hand round
    - issue
    - pass out
    - syndicate
    - deal
    - give
    - hand
    - share
    * * *
    vt
    1. [repartir] [dinero, alimentos, medicamentos] to distribute, to hand out;
    [carga, trabajo] to spread; [pastel, ganancias] to divide up; [correo] to deliver;
    distribuyen comida entre los pobres they give out food to the poor, they distribute food among the poor;
    distribuir propaganda por los buzones to deliver advertising leaflets through Br letter boxes o US mailboxes;
    distribuir la riqueza más justamente to share out o distribute wealth more justly;
    distribuir el trabajo/las tareas to divide up o share out the work/the tasks;
    trata de distribuir bien tu tiempo try to manage your time carefully
    2. Com [mercancías, productos, películas] to distribute;
    una empresa que distribuye material de papelería a firm distributing stationery materials
    3. [disponer]
    una casa muy bien distribuida a house with a very nice layout;
    nos distribuyeron en grupos de cinco they divided o split us into groups of five;
    distribuyó los libros por temas she arranged the books by topic
    * * *
    v/t
    1 distribute; beneficio share out
    2
    :
    distribuir en grupos divide into groups
    * * *
    distribuir {41} vt
    : to distribute
    * * *
    1. (en general) to distribute
    hay que distribuir la riqueza, el saber y el poder we must distribute wealth, knowledge and power
    2. (trabajo) to share out

    Spanish-English dictionary > distribuir

  • 6 eliminación

    f.
    1 elimination, removal, discard, disposal.
    2 put-out.
    3 elimination.
    * * *
    1 elimination
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *
    SF
    1) (=de posibilidades) elimination
    2) [de concursante, deportista] elimination
    3) (=desaparición) [de mancha, obstáculo] removal; [de residuos] disposal
    4) [de incógnita] elimination
    5) (Fisiol) elimination
    * * *
    femenino elimination
    * * *
    = clearance, cutoff, deletion, elimination, erasure, removal, removing, suppression, withdrawal, disposal, disbandment, eradication, excision, axing, disbanding, overturning, clearing, wiping out.
    Ex. Most of the larger cities have set up wholesale slum clearance programmes and rehousing in council housing and high-rise flats.
    Ex. This is very important to remember in assessing the true significance of the potential of the LC catalog cutoff, to which Mr. Welsh refers.
    Ex. The query number Q0001 is needed for deletion at a later date.
    Ex. Left hand truncation, which involves the neglect of prefixes or the elimination of characters from the beginning of a word, is also possible in many systems.
    Ex. This method has the advantage of simplicity and ease of erasure.
    Ex. Other references follow, with the progressive removal of terms.
    Ex. The activities assigned were the following: unpacking and drying wet books; cleaning and removing mould; and dry cleaning techniques for papers and books.
    Ex. The practice of modifying the citation order prescribed by chain procedure can be extended beyond the suppression of time and form concepts.
    Ex. This situation has been severely aggravated by the sudden withdrawal of nearly a decade of federal largesse toward education and education-related activities.
    Ex. The current agricultural research programme includes scientific and technical research to improve land use and effluent disposal.
    Ex. The methods employed and labour costs associated with the disbandment are detailed.
    Ex. The background papers on education prepared for the conference did not include the role of libraries in the eradication of illiterary.
    Ex. In the light of unpopular decisions about the financing of local government, public libraries have been prime candidates for excision.
    Ex. This article reports briefly on the axing of the Wilson Library Bulletin.
    Ex. Disbanding of serials departments may result from the integration into automated systems of serials processing.
    Ex. This fight has caused the overturning of the tradition ofprivate ownership of presidential records.
    Ex. This clearing of the terminological undergrowth is only half the battle.
    Ex. He promoted a program of racial persecution and racism involving the wiping out of the Jews.
    ----
    * eliminación de ambigüedades = disambiguation.
    * eliminación de basura = waste disposal.
    * eliminación de la cafeina = decaffeination.
    * eliminación del intermediario = disintermediation.
    * eliminación de los duplicados = deduplication.
    * eliminación del sarro = descaling.
    * eliminación de registros duplicados = duplicate elimination.
    * eliminación de virus = virus elimination.
    * * *
    femenino elimination
    * * *
    = clearance, cutoff, deletion, elimination, erasure, removal, removing, suppression, withdrawal, disposal, disbandment, eradication, excision, axing, disbanding, overturning, clearing, wiping out.

    Ex: Most of the larger cities have set up wholesale slum clearance programmes and rehousing in council housing and high-rise flats.

    Ex: This is very important to remember in assessing the true significance of the potential of the LC catalog cutoff, to which Mr. Welsh refers.
    Ex: The query number Q0001 is needed for deletion at a later date.
    Ex: Left hand truncation, which involves the neglect of prefixes or the elimination of characters from the beginning of a word, is also possible in many systems.
    Ex: This method has the advantage of simplicity and ease of erasure.
    Ex: Other references follow, with the progressive removal of terms.
    Ex: The activities assigned were the following: unpacking and drying wet books; cleaning and removing mould; and dry cleaning techniques for papers and books.
    Ex: The practice of modifying the citation order prescribed by chain procedure can be extended beyond the suppression of time and form concepts.
    Ex: This situation has been severely aggravated by the sudden withdrawal of nearly a decade of federal largesse toward education and education-related activities.
    Ex: The current agricultural research programme includes scientific and technical research to improve land use and effluent disposal.
    Ex: The methods employed and labour costs associated with the disbandment are detailed.
    Ex: The background papers on education prepared for the conference did not include the role of libraries in the eradication of illiterary.
    Ex: In the light of unpopular decisions about the financing of local government, public libraries have been prime candidates for excision.
    Ex: This article reports briefly on the axing of the Wilson Library Bulletin.
    Ex: Disbanding of serials departments may result from the integration into automated systems of serials processing.
    Ex: This fight has caused the overturning of the tradition ofprivate ownership of presidential records.
    Ex: This clearing of the terminological undergrowth is only half the battle.
    Ex: He promoted a program of racial persecution and racism involving the wiping out of the Jews.
    * eliminación de ambigüedades = disambiguation.
    * eliminación de basura = waste disposal.
    * eliminación de la cafeina = decaffeination.
    * eliminación del intermediario = disintermediation.
    * eliminación de los duplicados = deduplication.
    * eliminación del sarro = descaling.
    * eliminación de registros duplicados = duplicate elimination.
    * eliminación de virus = virus elimination.

    * * *
    1 (de posibilidades) elimination
    solucionaron el problema por eliminación they solved the problem by (a) process of elimination
    2 (de una competición) elimination
    3 (de grasas, toxinas) elimination
    4 (de una incógnita) elimination
    5 (de residuos) disposal
    la eliminación de los residuos the disposal of the waste products
    * * *

    eliminación sustantivo femenino
    elimination;
    ( de residuos) disposal
    eliminación sustantivo femenino elimination
    ' eliminación' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    residuo
    English:
    disposal
    - elimination
    - removal
    * * *
    1. [en juego, deporte, concurso] elimination
    2. [de contaminación, grasas, toxinas] elimination;
    [de residuos] disposal; [de fronteras, obstáculos] removal, elimination eliminación de residuos waste o garbage disposal
    3. Mat [de incógnita] elimination;
    Fig
    hallar algo por eliminación to work sth out by a process of elimination
    4. Euf [de persona] elimination
    * * *
    f
    1 elimination
    2 de desperdicios disposal
    3 INFOR deletion
    * * *
    eliminación nf, pl - ciones : elimination, removal
    * * *
    1. (en general) elimination
    2. (de una mancha) removal

    Spanish-English dictionary > eliminación

  • 7 disolución

    f.
    1 breakup, separation, bust-up, break-up.
    2 dilution, dissolution.
    3 dissoluteness, dissolution, dissipation.
    * * *
    1 (gen) dissolution
    2 (anulación) invalidation
    3 figurado (relajación) looseness, dissoluteness
    4 QUÍMICA solution, dissolution
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *
    SF
    1) (=acto) dissolution
    2) (Quím) solution
    3) (Com) liquidation
    4) [moral] dissoluteness, dissipation
    * * *
    a) (de contrato, matrimonio) annulment; ( de organización) dissolution; ( del parlamento) dissolution
    b) ( de manifestación) breaking up
    c) (Quím) ( solución) solution; ( acción) dissolving
    * * *
    = breakdown, dissolution, disbandment, disintegration, breakup [break-up], blurring, disbanding, winding up.
    Ex. They believe that the excessive breadth of disclosure and claim in some chemical patents could lead to the breakdown of data bases.
    Ex. Indeed, if they are not successful at such attempts toward renewal, dissolution and displacement are inevitable.
    Ex. The methods employed and labour costs associated with the disbandment are detailed.
    Ex. This paper alerts the library community to the possible implosion, collapse, or disintegration of the cataloguing function listing eight indicators that cataloguing is in danger.
    Ex. This concern will likely increase due to the breakup of the Soviet Union and dispersal of its nuclear arsenal and the growth of global nuclear smuggling rings.
    Ex. Read from the perspective of Bakhtin, this blurring of genres is also a blurring of idealogies.
    Ex. Disbanding of serials departments may result from the integration into automated systems of serials processing.
    Ex. The author discusses the winding up of the CompuServe's project Red Dog.
    * * *
    a) (de contrato, matrimonio) annulment; ( de organización) dissolution; ( del parlamento) dissolution
    b) ( de manifestación) breaking up
    c) (Quím) ( solución) solution; ( acción) dissolving
    * * *
    = breakdown, dissolution, disbandment, disintegration, breakup [break-up], blurring, disbanding, winding up.

    Ex: They believe that the excessive breadth of disclosure and claim in some chemical patents could lead to the breakdown of data bases.

    Ex: Indeed, if they are not successful at such attempts toward renewal, dissolution and displacement are inevitable.
    Ex: The methods employed and labour costs associated with the disbandment are detailed.
    Ex: This paper alerts the library community to the possible implosion, collapse, or disintegration of the cataloguing function listing eight indicators that cataloguing is in danger.
    Ex: This concern will likely increase due to the breakup of the Soviet Union and dispersal of its nuclear arsenal and the growth of global nuclear smuggling rings.
    Ex: Read from the perspective of Bakhtin, this blurring of genres is also a blurring of idealogies.
    Ex: Disbanding of serials departments may result from the integration into automated systems of serials processing.
    Ex: The author discusses the winding up of the CompuServe's project Red Dog.

    * * *
    1 (de un contrato, matrimonio) annulment; (de una organización) dissolution; (del parlamento) dissolution
    3 ( Quím) (solución) solution; (acción) dissolving
    * * *

    disolución sustantivo femenino
    a) (de contrato, matrimonio) annulment;

    (de organización, del parlamento) dissolution

    c) (Quím) ( acción) dissolving

    disolución sustantivo femenino dissolution: la disolución de las Cortes se pospone hasta final de julio, dissolution of Parliament is being postponed until the end of July
    ' disolución' also found in these entries:
    English:
    dilution
    - dissolution
    - break
    * * *
    1. [acción] dissolving
    2. [de familia, manifestación] breaking up;
    [de empresa, partido] dissolution, winding up; [de parlamento, matrimonio] dissolution, dissolving; [de contrato] rescinding
    3. [mezcla] solution
    disolución acuosa solution in water;
    disolución saturada saturated solution
    * * *
    f dissolution
    * * *
    1) : dissolution, dissolving
    2) : breaking up
    3) : dissipation

    Spanish-English dictionary > disolución

  • 8 desaparición

    f.
    disappearance, extinction.
    * * *
    1 disappearance
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *
    SF
    1) [de persona, objeto] disappearance
    2) [de especie] extinction
    * * *
    b) (euf & frml) ( muerte) passing (euph & frml)
    * * *
    = demise, disappearance, disbandment, disbanding, withering away, effacement.
    Ex. Murra described a number of these enterprises, their virtues and weaknesses and the possible explanations for their demise.
    Ex. If the disappearance of these latter two media are a problem, use dummies on the shelf and store the item at the circulation desk.
    Ex. The methods employed and labour costs associated with the disbandment are detailed.
    Ex. Disbanding of serials departments may result from the integration into automated systems of serials processing.
    Ex. Free software is the vital first step in the withering away of the intellectual property system.
    Ex. Meanwhile a coalition of cells has been effected at intervals through the effacement of their walls.
    ----
    * desaparición de las diferencias = blurring of differences, blurring of roles, blurring of boundaries.
    * desaparición de las diferencias entre = blurring of distinctions between.
    * desaparición de los límites = blurring of boundaries.
    * * *
    b) (euf & frml) ( muerte) passing (euph & frml)
    * * *
    = demise, disappearance, disbandment, disbanding, withering away, effacement.

    Ex: Murra described a number of these enterprises, their virtues and weaknesses and the possible explanations for their demise.

    Ex: If the disappearance of these latter two media are a problem, use dummies on the shelf and store the item at the circulation desk.
    Ex: The methods employed and labour costs associated with the disbandment are detailed.
    Ex: Disbanding of serials departments may result from the integration into automated systems of serials processing.
    Ex: Free software is the vital first step in the withering away of the intellectual property system.
    Ex: Meanwhile a coalition of cells has been effected at intervals through the effacement of their walls.
    * desaparición de las diferencias = blurring of differences, blurring of roles, blurring of boundaries.
    * desaparición de las diferencias entre = blurring of distinctions between.
    * desaparición de los límites = blurring of boundaries.

    * * *
    1 disappearance
    la policía investiga la desaparición de una niña de ocho años the police are investigating the disappearance of an eight-year-old girl
    la desaparición de la delegación provocará problemas administrativos the closure of the local office will cause administrative problems
    2 ( euf frml) (muerte) passing ( euph frml), passing away ( euph frml)
    * * *

    desaparición sustantivo femenino
    disappearance;

    desaparición sustantivo femenino
    1 disappearance
    2 frml euf extinction

    ' desaparición' also found in these entries:
    English:
    demise
    - disappearance
    - go on
    - inquire into
    - poof
    - probe into
    * * *
    1. [de objeto, animal, persona] disappearance;
    especies/tradiciones en vías de desaparición endangered species/traditions;
    la desaparición de este ministerio perjudicó a muchos many people were adversely affected by the closure of the ministry;
    los represores practicaron la desaparición de militantes the instigators of the repression were responsible for the disappearance of activists
    2. Euf [muerte] death
    * * *
    f disappearance
    * * *
    desaparición nf, pl - ciones : disappearance
    * * *
    desaparición n disappearance

    Spanish-English dictionary > desaparición

  • 9 sondear

    v.
    1 to sound out.
    Ellos sondearon el fondo del mar They sounded out the bottom of the sea.
    3 to feel out.
    El detective sondea a los chicos The detective feels out the boys.
    * * *
    1 MEDICINA to sound, probe
    2 MARÍTIMO to sound
    3 (subsuelo) to drill, bore
    4 figurado (encuestar) to sound out, test
    \
    sondear la opinión pública figurado to sound out public opinion
    * * *
    verbo transitivo < opinión> to sound out; < mercado> to test; sondar b), c), d)
    * * *
    = survey, poll, plumb + the depths of.
    Ex. Chapters 7 and 8 introduced the problems associated with author cataloguing and have surveyed the purpose of cataloguing codes.
    Ex. College freshman enrolled in English composition classes were polled to determine their attitudes towards two different methods of bibliographic instruction: the lecture-discussion practicum and the workbook.
    Ex. The article has the title 'Mapping the unmappable: plumbing the depths of cross-file and cross-system navigation'.
    ----
    * sondear la opinión pública = gauge + public opinion.
    * sondear la opinión sobre = gauge + opinion on.
    * * *
    verbo transitivo < opinión> to sound out; < mercado> to test; sondar b), c), d)
    * * *
    = survey, poll, plumb + the depths of.

    Ex: Chapters 7 and 8 introduced the problems associated with author cataloguing and have surveyed the purpose of cataloguing codes.

    Ex: College freshman enrolled in English composition classes were polled to determine their attitudes towards two different methods of bibliographic instruction: the lecture-discussion practicum and the workbook.
    Ex: The article has the title 'Mapping the unmappable: plumbing the depths of cross-file and cross-system navigation'.
    * sondear la opinión pública = gauge + public opinion.
    * sondear la opinión sobre = gauge + opinion on.

    * * *
    sondear [A1 ]
    vt
    ‹opinión› to sound out; ‹mercado› to test sondar vt 2. (↑ sondar), sondar vt 3. (↑ sondar), sondar vt 4. (↑ sondar)
    * * *

    sondear verbo transitivo
    1 Náut to sound, plumb
    2 Geol to drill into
    3 (a una persona, una situación) to sound out
    ' sondear' also found in these entries:
    English:
    plumb
    - poll
    - sound out
    - sounding
    - survey
    - sound
    * * *
    1. [sonsacar] to sound out;
    sondéalo, a ver si te cuenta qué planean sound him out, maybe he'll tell you what they're planning;
    sondeó el parecer de todos los miembros del comité he sounded out the opinions of all the committee members
    2. [medir profundidad] to sound
    3. Min [terreno] to test, to bore;
    [roca] to drill
    * * *
    v/t fig
    survey, poll
    * * *
    1) : to sound
    2) : to probe
    3) : to sound out, to test (opinions, markets)

    Spanish-English dictionary > sondear

  • 10 encuestar

    v.
    to poll.
    * * *
    1 to poll
    * * *
    VT to poll, take a poll of

    el 69 por 100 de los encuestados — 69% of those polled

    * * *
    = survey, poll.
    Ex. Chapters 7 and 8 introduced the problems associated with author cataloguing and have surveyed the purpose of cataloguing codes.
    Ex. College freshman enrolled in English composition classes were polled to determine their attitudes towards two different methods of bibliographic instruction: the lecture-discussion practicum and the workbook.
    * * *
    = survey, poll.

    Ex: Chapters 7 and 8 introduced the problems associated with author cataloguing and have surveyed the purpose of cataloguing codes.

    Ex: College freshman enrolled in English composition classes were polled to determine their attitudes towards two different methods of bibliographic instruction: the lecture-discussion practicum and the workbook.

    * * *
    encuestar [A1 ]
    vt
    to survey
    * * *

    encuestar verbo transitivo to poll
    ' encuestar' also found in these entries:
    English:
    survey
    * * *
    to poll
    * * *
    v/t poll
    * * *
    : to poll, to take a survey of

    Spanish-English dictionary > encuestar

  • 11 installation

    1. электроустановка
    2. установка (процесс)
    3. установка (оборудования)
    4. установка (напр., оборудования)
    5. установка
    6. система чистого помещения
    7. расположение
    8. пуск в действие
    9. оборудование
    10. инсталляция
    11. внедрение (в практику)
    12. ввод в эксплуатацию
    13. введение в должность

     

    введение в должность

    [А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    ввод в эксплуатацию
    Событие, фиксирующее готовность изделия к использованию по назначению, документально оформленное в установленном порядке.
    Примечание - Для специальных видов техники к вводу в эксплуатацию дополнительно относят подготовительные работы, контроль, приемку и закрепление изделия за эксплуатирующим подразделением
    [ ГОСТ 25866-83 Эксплуатация техники. Термины и определения.]

    FR


    Параллельные тексты EN-RU

    No more pulleys nor belts to adjust during start up and service
    [Lennox]

    Не нужно регулировать положение шкивов и натяжение ремней при вводе в эксплуатацию и во время технического обслуживания.
    [Перевод Интент]


    START-UP
    Once the equipment has been placed in its definitive location, Schneider Electric CPCS factory-trained service personnel will energize and check the functionality of the equipment in all modes of operation and conduct various tests to obtain internal power supply voltage readings, temperature, pressure and other critical checks.

    CPCS - Critical Power & Cooling Services
    [Schneider Electric]


    Putting into operation vs. Commissioning

    Hello!
    What is the difference in the use of terms "commissioning" and "putting into operation"?
    Are they absolutely interchangeable or there are certain tints in their meaning, which limit their applicatoin in this or that context?
    =======================================

    I am an engineer who works in the field, commissioning equipment.

    Commissioning is the process where everything associated with the equipment is fully checked, all items are simulated or caused to happen, all possible events are tested, all methods of failure are accounted for. In other words, the complete design of the equipment is tested. Then, and only then, equipment is run and shown to be according to the design.

    This is commissioning.

    You could put equipment into operation without fully checking all systems. You can just run equipment and hope that all safety systems work according to plan.

    That is the difference. No manufacturer or reputable engineering firm would simply put equipment into operation.
    [ http://www.usingenglish.com/forum/threads/136100-Putting-into-operation-vs-Commissioning]

    Тематики

    • система техн. обслуж. и ремонта техники

    EN

     

    внедрение
    1. Процесс планомерного перевода объекта (предприятия или организации, системы управления, отдельного процесса или его элемента) из существующего состояния в новое, предусмотренное проектом.
    2. Распространение нововведений, достижение практического использования прогрессивных идей, изобретений, результатов научных исследований.
    [ http://www.lexikon.ru/dict/buh/index.html]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    инсталляция
    1. Установка программного изделия на ПЭВМ.
    2. Одно из ограничений на программное изделие при продаже его фирмой.
    [Домарев В.В. Безопасность информационных технологий. Системный подход.]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    оборудование
    Совокупность связанных между собой частей или устройств, из которых по крайней мере одно движется, а также элементы привода, управления и энергетические узлы, которые предназначены для определенного применения, в частности для обработки, производства, перемещения или упаковки материала. К термину «оборудование» относят также машину и совокупность машин, которые так устроены и управляемы, что они функционируют как единое целое для достижения одной и той же цели.
    [ГОСТ ЕН 1070-2003]

    оборудование
    -

    [IEV number 151-11-25 ]

    оборудование
    Оснащение, материалы, приспособления, устройства, механизмы, приборы, инструменты и другие принадлежности, используемые в качестве частей электрической установки или в соединении с ней.
    [ ГОСТ Р МЭК 60204-1-2007]

    EN

    equipment
    single apparatus or set of devices or apparatuses, or the set of main devices of an installation, or all devices necessary to perform a specific task
    NOTE – Examples of equipment are a power transformer, the equipment of a substation, measuring equipment.
    [IEV number 151-11-25 ]

    equipment
    material, fittings, devices, components, appliances, fixtures, apparatus, and the like used as part of, or in connection with, the electrical equipment of machines
    [IEC 60204-1-2006]

    FR

    équipement, m
    matériel, m
    appareil unique ou ensemble de dispositifs ou appareils, ou ensemble des dispositifs principaux d'une installation, ou ensemble des dispositifs nécessaires à l'accomplissement d'une tâche particulière
    NOTE – Des exemples d’équipement ou de matériel sont un transformateur de puissance, l’équipement d’une sous-station, un équipement de mesure.
    [IEV number 151-11-25]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

     

    пуск в действие
    монтаж
    запуск
    ввод в действие


    [Л.Г.Суменко. Англо-русский словарь по информационным технологиям. М.: ГП ЦНИИС, 2003.]

    Тематики

    Синонимы

    EN

     

    расположение

    [Я.Н.Лугинский, М.С.Фези-Жилинская, Ю.С.Кабиров. Англо-русский словарь по электротехнике и электроэнергетике, Москва]

    Тематики

    • электротехника, основные понятия

    EN

     

    установка
    Условное наименование объекта в энергетических сооружениях, на который выпускается схема, например, главные цепи.
    [ГОСТ 2.701-84]

    установка

    Условное наименование комплекса взаимосвязанного оборудования и (или) устройств.
    [РД 01.120.00-КТН-228-06]

    установка

    Комплекс машин и оборудования, собранных в один или несколько агрегатов, предназначаемый для выполнения связанных технологической последовательностью работ
    [Терминологический словарь по строительству на 12 языках (ВНИИИС Госстроя СССР)]

    EN

    DE

    FR

     

    установка (напр., оборудования)

    [А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    установка (оборудования)
    Проведение необходимых монтажных и других подготовительных работ, предшествующих введению оборудования в эксплуатацию.
    [Л.М. Невдяев. Телекоммуникационные технологии. Англо-русский толковый словарь-справочник. Под редакцией Ю.М. Горностаева. Москва, 2002]

    Тематики

    • электросвязь, основные понятия

    EN

     

    установка (процесс)
    сборка
    монтаж


    [А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]

    Тематики

    Синонимы

    EN

     

    электроустановка
    Любое сочетание взаимосвязанного электрического оборудования в пределах данного пространства или помещения.
    [
    Макаров Е.Ф. Справочник по электрическим сетям 0,4-35 кВ и 110-1150 кВ]

    электроустановка
    Совокупность машин, аппаратов, линий и вспомогательного оборудования (вместе с сооружениями и помещениями, в которых они установлены), предназначенных для производства, преобразования, трансформации, передачи, распределения электрической энергии и преобразования ее в другие виды энергии

    [ПУЭ]

    электроустановка
    Энергоустановка, предназначенная для производства или преобразования, передачи, распределения или потребления электрической энергии.
    [ ГОСТ 19431-84]

    электроустановка
    Совокупность взаимосвязанного электрического оборудования, имеющего согласованные характеристики и предназначенного для определенной цели.
    [ ГОСТ Р МЭК 60050-826-2009]

    установка
    -
    [IEV number 151-11-26]

    EN

    electrical installation
    assembly of associated electric equipment having co-ordinated characteristics to fulfil specific purposes
    [IEV number 826-10-01]

    installation
    one apparatus or a set of devices and/or apparatuses associated in a given location to fulfil specified purposes, including all means for their satisfactory operation
    [IEV number 151-11-26]

    FR

    installation électrique, f
    ensemble de matériels électriques associés ayant des caractéristiques coordonnées en vue d'une application donnée
    [IEV number 826-10-01]

    installation, f
    appareil unique ou ensemble de dispositifs ou d'appareils associés en vue d’une application déterminée et situés en un emplacement donné, y compris les moyens nécessaires à leur fonctionnement correct
    [IEV number 151-11-26]

    Параллельные тексты EN-RU

    In water installations, harmonics are mainly generated by Variable Speed Drives, Ozone generators and UV lamps, which should all be carefully managed.

    Применение в электроустановках систем водоснабжения приводов с регулируемой частотой вращения, генераторов озона и УФ-ламп приводит к загрязнению электросети гармоническими составляющими, которые нужно тщательно отфильтровывать.
    [Перевод Интент]

     

    11.1 Стандарт распространяется на проектирование, монтаж и проверку электроустановок следующих объектов:
    a) жилых зданий;
    b) торговых предприятий;
    c) общественных зданий;
    d) производственных зданий;
    e) сельскохозяйственных и садоводческих строений;
    f) сборных зданий;
    g) жилых автофургонов, стоянок для них и аналогичных участков;
    h) строительных площадок, выставок, ярмарок и других временных сооружений;
    i) пристаней для малых судов, используемых на досуге;
    j) наружного освещения и установок аналогичного назначения (кроме перечисления е) в подразделе 11.3);
    k) медицинских учреждений;
    i) подвижных или транспортируемых средств;
    m) фотоэлектрических систем;
    n) низковольтных генераторных установок.
    Примечание - Под терминами «здание», «предприятие», «строение», «сооружение», «учреждение» понимают также земельные участки и все, что на них находится.


    ... электроустановки потребителя, расположенные вне зданий


    [ ГОСТ Р 50571. 1- 2009 ( МЭК 60364-1: 2005)]


    По условиям электробезопасности электроустановки классифицируются следующим образом:

    Тематики

    Близкие понятия

    Действия

    Синонимы

    EN

    DE

    • elektrische Anlage, f

    FR

    • installation électrique, f

    3.1.3 система чистого помещения (installation): Чистое помещение или одна или несколько чистых зон со всеми относящимися к ним структурами, системами подготовки воздуха, обслуживания и утилизации [ИСО 14644-1 (пункт 2.1.3)].

    Источник: ГОСТ Р ИСО 14644-3-2007: Чистые помещения и связанные с ними контролируемые среды. Часть 3. Методы испытаний оригинал документа

    2.82 система чистого помещения (installation): Чистое помещение (2.33) или одна или несколько чистых зон (2.34) со всеми относящимися к ним структурами, системами подготовки воздуха, обслуживания и утилизации.

    [ИСО 14644-1:1999, статья 2.1.3], [ИСО 14644-3:2005, статья 3.1.3]

    Источник: ГОСТ Р ИСО 14644-6-2010: Чистые помещения и связанные с ними контролируемые среды. Часть 6. Термины оригинал документа

    3.6.18 установка (installation): Первоначальный процесс, обеспечивающий ресурсу возможность осуществлять требуемую деятельность.

    Источник: ГОСТ Р ИСО 15531-1-2008: Промышленные автоматизированные системы и интеграция. Данные по управлению промышленным производством. Часть 1. Общий обзор оригинал документа

    Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > installation

  • 12 Riley, James

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1840 Halifax, England
    d. 15 July 1910 Harrogate, England
    [br]
    English steelmaker who promoted the manufacture of low-carbon bulk steel by the open-hearth process for tin plate and shipbuilding; pioneer of nickel steels.
    [br]
    After working as a millwright in Halifax, Riley found employment at the Ormesby Ironworks in Middlesbrough until, in 1869, he became manager of the Askam Ironworks in Cumberland. Three years later, in 1872, he was appointed Blast-furnace Manager at the pioneering Siemens Steel Company's works at Landore, near Swansea in South Wales. Using Spanish ore, he produced the manganese-rich iron (spiegeleisen) required as an additive to make satisfactory steel. Riley was promoted in 1874 to be General Manager at Landore, and he worked with William Siemens to develop the use of the latter's regenerative furnace for the production of open-hearth steel. He persuaded Welsh makers of tin plate to use sheets rolled from lowcarbon (mild) steel instead of from charcoal iron and, partly by publishing some test results, he was instrumental in influencing the Admiralty to build two naval vessels of mild steel, the Mercury and the Iris.
    In 1878 Riley moved north on his appointment as General Manager of the Steel Company of Scotland, a firm closely associated with Charles Tennant that was formed in 1872 to make steel by the Siemens process. Already by 1878, fourteen Siemens melting furnaces had been erected, and in that year 42,000 long tons of ingots were produced at the company's Hallside (Newton) Works, situated 8 km (5 miles) south-east of Glasgow. Under Riley's leadership, steelmaking in open-hearth furnaces was initiated at a second plant situated at Blochairn. Plates and sections for all aspects of shipbuilding, including boilers, formed the main products; the company also supplied the greater part of the steel for the Forth (Railway) Bridge. Riley was associated with technical modifications which improved the performance of steelmaking furnaces using Siemens's principles. He built a gasfired cupola for melting pig-iron, and constructed the first British "universal" plate mill using three-high rolls (Lauth mill).
    At the request of French interests, Riley investigated the properties of steels containing various proportions of nickel; the report that he read before the Iron and Steel Institute in 1889 successfully brought to the notice of potential users the greatly enhanced strength that nickel could impart and its ability to yield alloys possessing substantially lower corrodibility.
    The Steel Company of Scotland paid dividends in the years to 1890, but then came a lean period. In 1895, at the age of 54, Riley moved once more to another employer, becoming General Manager of the Glasgow Iron and Steel Company, which had just laid out a new steelmaking plant at Wishaw, 25 km (15 miles) south-east of Glasgow, where it already had blast furnaces. Still the technical innovator, in 1900 Riley presented an account of his experiences in introducing molten blast-furnace metal as feed for the open-hearth steel furnaces. In the early 1890s it was largely through Riley's efforts that a West of Scotland Board of Conciliation and Arbitration for the Manufactured Steel Trade came into being; he was its first Chairman and then its President.
    In 1899 James Riley resigned from his Scottish employment to move back to his native Yorkshire, where he became his own master by acquiring the small Richmond Ironworks situated at Stockton-on-Tees. Although Riley's 1900 account to the Iron and Steel Institute was the last of the many of which he was author, he continued to contribute to the discussion of papers written by others.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, West of Scotland Iron and Steel Institute 1893–5. Vice-President, Iron and Steel Institute, 1893–1910. Iron and Steel Institute (London) Bessemer Gold Medal 1887.
    Bibliography
    1876, "On steel for shipbuilding as supplied to the Royal Navy", Transactions of the Institute of Naval Architects 17:135–55.
    1884, "On recent improvements in the method of manufacture of open-hearth steel", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 2:43–52 plus plates 27–31.
    1887, "Some investigations as to the effects of different methods of treatment of mild steel in the manufacture of plates", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 1:121–30 (plus sheets II and III and plates XI and XII).
    27 February 1888, "Improvements in basichearth steel making furnaces", British patent no. 2,896.
    27 February 1888, "Improvements in regenerative furnaces for steel-making and analogous operations", British patent no. 2,899.
    1889, "Alloys of nickel and steel", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 1:45–55.
    Further Reading
    A.Slaven, 1986, "James Riley", in Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography 1860–1960, Volume 1: The Staple Industries (ed. A.Slaven and S. Checkland), Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press, 136–8.
    "Men you know", The Bailie (Glasgow) 23 January 1884, series no. 588 (a brief biography, with portrait).
    J.C.Carr and W.Taplin, 1962, History of the British Steel Industry, Harvard University Press (contains an excellent summary of salient events).
    JKA

    Biographical history of technology > Riley, James

  • 13 probability of default

    банк. !
    Русский аналог: вероятность дефолта
    В рамках рекомендованного Базельским комитетом по банковскому надзору подхода на основе внутренних рейтингов (IRB) - один из основных компонентов риска.
    "
    См. также: internal ratings-based approach (IRB); risk components
    "
    http:www.basel-ii-risk.com/Basel-II/Basel-II-Glossary/Basel-Probability-of-Default-(PD).htm
    The Probability of Default is the likelihood that a loan will not be repayed and fall into default. This PD will be calculated for each company who have a loan. The credit history of the counterparty and nature of the investment will all be taken into account to calculate the PD figures. Many banks will use external ratings agencies such as Standard and Poors. However, banks are also encouraged to use their own Internal Rating Methods as well.
    "
    o Analyse the credit risk aspects of the counterparty;
    "
    o Map the counterparty to an internal risk grade which has an associated PD: and
    o Determine the facility specific PD. This last step will gives a weighted Probability of Default for facilities that are subject to a guarantee or protected by a credit derivative. The weighting takes account of the PD of the guarantor or seller of the credit derivative.
    "
    • Probability of Default (PD) for the ""Other"" segment: is derived from a credit scoring process for a new customer and behavioral scoring for existing business. The resulting PD is mapped to an internal risk grade.
    "
    (PD) of an Obligor can be derived from an Internal Rating model that is used and maintained within the business area responsible for the counterparty relationship. For the purposes of the Accord there will be one PD associated with each risk grade representing the probability of Default within a 1 year time period.

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > probability of default

  • 14 Agricola, Georgius (Georg Bauer)

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 24 March 1494 Glauchau, Saxony
    d. 21 November 1555 Chemnitz, Germany
    [br]
    German metallurgist, who wrote the book De Re Metallica under the latinized version of his name.
    [br]
    Agricola was a physician, scientist and metallurgist of note and it was this which led to the publication of De Re Metallica. He studied at Leipzig University and between 1518 and 1522 he was a school teacher in Zwickau. Eventually he settled as a physician in Chemnitz. Later he continued his medical practice at Joachimstal in the Erzgebirge. This town was newly built to serve the mining community in what was at the time the most important ore-mining field in both Germany and Europe.
    As a physician in the sixteenth century he would naturally have been concerned with the development of medicines, which would have led him to research the medical properties of ores and base metals. He studied the mineralogy of his area, and the mines, and the miners who were working there. He wrote several books in Latin on geology and mineralogy. His important work during that period was a glossary of mineralogical and mining terms in both Latin and German. It is, however, De Re Metallica for which he is best known. This large volume contains twelve books which deal with mining and metallurgy, including an account of glassmaking. Whilst one can understand the text of this book very easily, the quality of the illustrative woodcuts should not be neglected. These illustrations detail the mines, furnaces, forges and the plant associated with them, unfortunately the name of the artist is unknown. The importance of the work lies in the fact that it is an assemblage of information on all the methods and practices current at that time. The book was clearly intended as a textbook of mining and mineralogy and as such it would have been brought to England by German engineers when they were employed by the Mines Royal in the Keswick area in the late sixteenth century. In addition to his studies in preparation for De Re Metallica, Agricola was an "adventurer" holding shares in the Gottesgab mine in the Erzegebirge.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions Bibliography
    1556, De Re Metallica, Basel; 1912, trans. H. Hoover and L.H.Hoover, London.
    KM

    Biographical history of technology > Agricola, Georgius (Georg Bauer)

  • 15 Denny, William

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 25 May 1847 Dumbarton, Scotland
    d. 17 March 1887 Buenos Aires, Argentina
    [br]
    Scottish naval architect and partner in the leading British scientific shipbuilding company.
    [br]
    From 1844 until 1962, the Clyde shipyard of William Denny and Brothers, Dumbarton, produced over 1,500 ships, trained innumerable students of all nationalities in shipbuilding and marine engineering, and for the seventy-plus years of their existence were accepted worldwide as the leaders in the application of science to ship design and construction. Until the closure of the yard members of the Denny family were among the partners and later directors of the firm: they included men as distinguished as Dr Peter Denny (1821(?)–95), Sir Archibald Denny (1860–1936) and Sir Maurice Denny (1886– 1955), the main collaborator in the design of the Denny-Brown ship stabilizer.
    One of the most influential of this shipbuilding family was William Denny, now referred to as William 3! His early education was at Dumbarton, then on Jersey and finally at the Royal High School, Edinburgh, before he commenced an apprenticeship at his father's shipyard. From the outset he not only showed great aptitude for learning and hard work but also displayed an ability to create good relationships with all he came into contact with. At the early age of 21 he was admitted a partner of the shipbuilding business of William Denny and Brothers, and some years later also of the associated engineering firm of Denny \& Co. His deep-felt interest in what is now known as industrial relations led him in 1871 to set up a piecework system of payment in the shipyard. In this he was helped by the Yard Manager, Richard Ramage, who later was to found the Leith shipyard, which produced the world's most elegant steam yachts. This research was published later as a pamphlet called The Worth of Wages, an unusual and forward-looking action for the 1860s, when Denny maintained that an absentee employer should earn as much contempt and disapproval as an absentee landlord! In 1880 he initiated an awards scheme for all company employees, with grants and awards for inventions and production improvements. William Denny was not slow to impose new methods and to research naval architecture, a special interest being progressive ship trials with a view to predicting effective horsepower. In time this led to his proposal to the partners to build a ship model testing tank beside the Dumbarton shipyard; this scheme was completed in 1883 and was to the third in the world (after the Admiralty tank at Torquay, managed by William Froude and the Royal Netherlands Navy facility at Amsterdam, under B.J. Tideman. In 1876 the Denny Shipyard started work with mild-quality shipbuilding steel on hulls for the Irrawaddy Flotilla Company, and in 1879 the world's first two ships of any size using this weight-saving material were produced: they were the Rotomahana for the Union Steamship Company of New Zealand and the Buenos Ayrean for the Allan Line of Glasgow. On the naval-architecture side he was involved in Denny's proposals for standard cross curves of stability for all ships, which had far-reaching effects and are now accepted worldwide. He served on the committee working on improvements to the Load Line regulations and many other similar public bodies. After a severe bout of typhoid and an almost unacceptable burden of work, he left the United Kingdom for South America in June 1886 to attend to business with La Platense Flotilla Company, an associate company of William Denny and Brothers. In March the following year, while in Buenos Aires, he died by his own hand, a death that caused great and genuine sadness in the West of Scotland and elsewhere.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland 1886. FRS Edinburgh 1879.
    Bibliography
    William Denny presented many papers to various bodies, the most important being to the Institution of Naval Architects and to the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland. The subjects include: trials results, the relation of ship speed to power, Lloyd's Numerals, tonnage measurement, layout of shipyards, steel in shipbuilding, cross curves of stability, etc.
    Further Reading
    A.B.Bruce, 1889, The Life of William Denny, Shipbuilder, London: Hodder \& Stoughton.
    Denny Dumbarton 1844–1932 (a souvenir hard-back produced for private circulation by the shipyard).
    Fred M.Walker, 1984, Song of the Clyde. A History of Clyde Shipbuilding, Cambridge: PSL.
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Denny, William

  • 16 Reason, Richard Edmund

    [br]
    b. 21 December 1903 Exeter, Devon, England
    d. 20 March 1987 Great Bowden, Leicestershire, England
    [br]
    English metrologist who developed instruments for measuring machined-surface roughness.
    [br]
    Richard Edmund Reason was educated at Tonbridge School and the Royal College of Science (Imperial College), where he studied under Professor A.F.C.Pollard, Professor of Technical Optics. After graduating in 1925 he joined Taylor, Taylor and Hobson Ltd, Leicester, manufacturers of optical, electrical and scientific instruments, and remained with that firm throughout his career. One of his first contributions was in the development, with E.F.Fincham, of the Fincham Coincidence Optometer. At this time the firm, under William Taylor, was mainly concerned with optical instruments and lens manufacture, but in the 1930s Reason was also engaged in developing means for measuring the roughness of machined surfaces. The need for establishing standards and methods of measurement of surface finish was called for when the subcontracting of aero-engine components became necessary during the Second World War. This led to the development by Reason of an instrument in which a stylus was moved across the surface and the profile recorded electronically. This was called the Talysurf and was first produced in 1941. Further development followed, and from 1947 Reason tackled the problem of measuring roundness, producing the first Talyrond machine in 1949. The technology developed for these instruments was used in the production of others such as the Talymin Comparator and the Talyvel electronic level. Reason was also associated with the development of optical projection systems to measure the profile of parts such as gear teeth, screw threads and turbine blades. He retired in 1968 but continued as a consultant to the company. He served for many years on committees of the British Standards Institution on surface metrology and was a representative of Britain at the International Standards Organization.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    OBE 1967. FRS 1971. Honorary DSc University of Birmingham 1969. Honorary DSc Leicester University 1971.
    Further Reading
    D.J.Whitehouse, 1990, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 36, London, pp. 437–62 (an illustrated obituary notice listing Reason's eighty-nine British patents, published between 1930 and 1972, and his twenty-one publications, dating from 1937 to 1966).
    K.J.Hume, 1980, A History of Engineering Metrology, London, 113–21 (contains a shorter account of Reason's work).
    RTS

    Biographical history of technology > Reason, Richard Edmund

  • 17 Arup, Sir Ove

    [br]
    b. 16 April 1895 Newcastle upon Tyne, England
    d. 5 February 1988 Highgate, London, England
    [br]
    English consultant engineer.
    [br]
    Of Scandinavian parentage, Arup attended school in Germany and Denmark before taking his degree in mathematics and philosophy at Copenhagen University in 1914. He then graduated as a civil engineer from the Royal Technical College in the same city, specializing in the theory of structures.
    Arup retained close ties with Europe for some time, working in Hamburg as a designer for the Danish civil engineering firm of Christiani \& Nielsen. Then, in the 1930s, he began what was to be a long career in England as an engineering consultant to a number of architects who were beginning to build with modern materials (par-ticularly concrete) and methods of construction. He became consultant to the famous firm of Tecton (under the direction of Berthold Lubetkin) and was closely associated with the leading projects of that firm at the time, notably the High-point flats at Highgate, the Finsbury Health Centre and the award-winning Penguin Pool at the Regent's Park Zoological Gardens, all in London.
    In 1945 Arup founded his own firm, Ove Arup \& Partners, working entirely as a consultant to architects, particularly on structural schemes, and in 1963 he set up a partnership of architects and engineers, Arup Associates. The many and varied projects with which he was concerned included Coventry Cathedral and the University of Sussex with Sir Basil Spence, the Sydney Opera House with Joern Utzon and St Catherine's College, Oxford, with Arne Jacobsen.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    CBE 1953. Commander of the Order of Danneborg, awarded by King Frederik of Denmark, 1975. Honorary Doctorate Tekniske Hojskole, Lyngby, Denmark 1954. Honorary DSc Durham University 1967, University of East Anglia 1968, Heriot-Watt University 1976. RIBA Gold Medal 1966. Institution of Structural Engineers Gold Medal 1973. Fellow of the American Concrete Institution 1975.
    Further Reading
    J.M.Richards, 1953, An Introduction to Modern Architecture, London: Penguin. H.Russell-Hitchcock, 1982, Architecture, Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, London: Pelican.
    C.Jencks, 1980, Late-Modern Architecture, London: Academy Editions.
    DY

    Biographical history of technology > Arup, Sir Ove

  • 18 Bakewell, Robert

    [br]
    b. 23 May 1725 Loughborough, England
    d. 1 October 1795 Loughborough, England
    [br]
    English livestock breeder who pioneered the practice of progeny testing for selecting breeding stock; he is particularly associated with the development of the Improved Leicester breed of sheep.
    [br]
    Robert Bakewell was the son of the tenant farming the 500-acre (200 hectare) Dishley Grange Farm, near Loughborough, where he was born. The family was sufficiently wealthy to allow Robert to travel, which he began to do at an early age, exploring the farming methods of the West Country, Norfolk, Ireland and Holland. On taking over the farm he continued the development of the irrigation scheme begun by his father. Arthur Young visited the farm during his tour of east England in 1771. At that time it consisted of 440 acres (178 hectares), 110 acres (45 hectares) of which were arable, and carried a stock of 60 horses, 400 sheep and 150 other assorted beasts. Of the arable land, 30 acres (12 hectares) were under root crops, mainly turnips.
    Bakewell was not the first to pioneer selective breeding, but he was the first successfully to apply selection to both the efficiency with which an animal utilized its food, and its physical appearance. He always had a clear idea of the animal he wanted, travelled extensively to collect a range of animals possessing the characteristics he sought, and then bred from these towards his goal. He was aware of the dangers of inbreeding, but would often use it to gain the qualities he wanted. His early experiments were with Longhorn cattle, which he developed as a meat rather than a draught animal, but his most famous achievement was the development of the Improved Leicester breed of sheep. He set out to produce an animal that would put on the most meat in the least time and with the least feeding. As his base he chose the Old Leicester, but there is still doubt as to which other breeds he may have introduced to produce the desired results. The Improved Leicester was smaller than its ancestor, with poorer wool quality but with greatly improved meat-production capacity.
    Bakewell let out his sires to other farms and was therefore able to study their development under differing conditions. However, he made stringent rules for those who hired these animals, requiring the exclusive use of his rams on the farms concerned and requiring particular dietary conditions to be met. To achieve this control he established the Dishley Society in 1783. Although his policies led to accusations of closed access to his stock, they enabled him to keep a close control of all offspring. He thereby pioneered the process now recognized as "progeny testing".
    Bakewell's fame and that of his farm spread throughout the country and overseas. He engaged in an extensive correspondence and acted as host to all of influence in British and overseas agriculture, but it would appear that he was an over-generous host, since he is known to have been in financial difficulties in about 1789. He was saved from bankruptcy by a public subscription raised to allow him to continue with his breeding experiments; this experience may well have been the reason why he was such a staunch advocate of State funding of agricultural research.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    William Houseman, 1894, biography, Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society. 1–31. H.C.Parsons, 1957, Robert Bakewell (contains a more detailed account).
    R.Trow Smith, 1957, A History of British Livestock Husbandry to 1700, London: Routledge \& Kegan Paul.
    —A History of British Livestock Husbandry 1700 to 1900 (places Bakewell within the context of overall developments).
    M.L.Ryder, 1983, Sheep and Man, Duckworth (a scientifically detailed account which deals with Bakewell within the context of its particular subject).
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Bakewell, Robert

  • 19 Koch, Robert

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 11 December 1843 Clausthal, Hannover, Germany
    d. 28 May 1910 Baden-Baden, Germany
    [br]
    German bacteriologist and innovator of many bacteriological techniques, including the process of bacteria-free water filtration and the introduction of solid cultivation media.
    [br]
    Koch studied medicine at Gottingen and graduated MD in 1866. He served in the war of 1870, and in 1872 was appointed Medical Officer at Wollstein. It was there that he commenced his bacteriological researches which led to numerous technical advances and the culture of the anthrax bacillus in 1876.
    Appointed in 1880 to the Imperial Health Office in Berlin, he perfected his methods and was appointed Professor of Hygiene in the University of Berlin in 1885. From 1886 he was editor of the Zeitschrift für Hygiene und Infektionskrank-heiten, which was published in Leipzig. In 1891 he became Director of the Institute for Infectious Diseases, founded for him in Berlin. He had already discovered the tubercle bacillus in 1882 and the cholera vibrio in 1883. He travelled extensively in India, Africa and South Africa in connection with research into bubonic plague, malaria, rinderpest and sleeping sickness. His name will always be associated with Koch's postulates, the propositions which need to be satisfied before attributing a disease to a specific infective agent.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Nobel Prize for Medicine or Physiology 1905.
    Bibliography
    1877, "Verfahrungen zur Untersuchung zum Conservieren und Photographieren der Bacterien", Beitr. Biol. Pflanzen.
    Further Reading
    M.Kirchner, 1924, Robert Koch.
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Koch, Robert

  • 20 ввод в эксплуатацию

    1. startup
    2. start-up service
    3. start-up
    4. start up
    5. putting into operation
    6. installation
    7. implementation
    8. going into operation
    9. commissioning
    10. commission
    11. bringing into service
    12. breakingin
    13. breaking-in
    14. BIS

     

    ввод в эксплуатацию
    Событие, фиксирующее готовность изделия к использованию по назначению, документально оформленное в установленном порядке.
    Примечание - Для специальных видов техники к вводу в эксплуатацию дополнительно относят подготовительные работы, контроль, приемку и закрепление изделия за эксплуатирующим подразделением
    [ ГОСТ 25866-83 Эксплуатация техники. Термины и определения.]

    FR


    Параллельные тексты EN-RU

    No more pulleys nor belts to adjust during start up and service
    [Lennox]

    Не нужно регулировать положение шкивов и натяжение ремней при вводе в эксплуатацию и во время технического обслуживания.
    [Перевод Интент]


    START-UP
    Once the equipment has been placed in its definitive location, Schneider Electric CPCS factory-trained service personnel will energize and check the functionality of the equipment in all modes of operation and conduct various tests to obtain internal power supply voltage readings, temperature, pressure and other critical checks.

    CPCS - Critical Power & Cooling Services
    [Schneider Electric]


    Putting into operation vs. Commissioning

    Hello!
    What is the difference in the use of terms "commissioning" and "putting into operation"?
    Are they absolutely interchangeable or there are certain tints in their meaning, which limit their applicatoin in this or that context?
    =======================================

    I am an engineer who works in the field, commissioning equipment.

    Commissioning is the process where everything associated with the equipment is fully checked, all items are simulated or caused to happen, all possible events are tested, all methods of failure are accounted for. In other words, the complete design of the equipment is tested. Then, and only then, equipment is run and shown to be according to the design.

    This is commissioning.

    You could put equipment into operation without fully checking all systems. You can just run equipment and hope that all safety systems work according to plan.

    That is the difference. No manufacturer or reputable engineering firm would simply put equipment into operation.
    [ http://www.usingenglish.com/forum/threads/136100-Putting-into-operation-vs-Commissioning]

    Тематики

    • система техн. обслуж. и ремонта техники

    EN

    3.14 ввод в эксплуатацию (commissioning): Действия, которые предпринимаются после испытаний давлением и перед эксплуатацией, включающие в себя удаление воды, очистку, осушку и заполнение продуктом.

    Источник: ГОСТ Р 54382-2011: Нефтяная и газовая промышленность. Подводные трубопроводные системы. Общие технические требования оригинал документа

    2.121 ввод в эксплуатацию (start up): Действие по подготовке и переводу в эксплуатацию чистого помещения со всеми подсистемами, включая комплект документации, наличие обученного персонала, вспомогательных служб и пр.

    [ИСО 14644-4:2001, статья 3.10]

    Источник: ГОСТ Р ИСО 14644-6-2010: Чистые помещения и связанные с ними контролируемые среды. Часть 6. Термины оригинал документа

    Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > ввод в эксплуатацию

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