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1 assistant lecturer
Макаров: ассистент, младший преподаватель (вуза) -
2 assistant lecturer
docent -
3 assistant lecturer
[ə,sɪstənt'lektʃərə]ассисте́нт, мла́дший преподава́тель ( колледжа или университета)English-Russian Great Britain dictionary (Великобритания. Лингвострановедческий словарь) > assistant lecturer
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4 assistant lecturer
Англо-русский словарь по исследованиям и ноу-хау > assistant lecturer
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5 lecturer
lecturer ['lektʃərə(r)]∎ she's a lecturer in English at the University of Dublin elle enseigne l'anglais à l'université de Dublin;∎ assistant lecturer ≃ assistant(e) m,f;∎ is she a good lecturer? est-ce que c'est un bon professeur?;∎ senior lecturer ≃ maître m de conférences -
6 lecturer
noun1) Vortragende, der/die2) (Univ.) Lehrbeauftragte, der/diesenior lecturer — Dozent, der/Dozentin, die
be a lecturer in French — Dozent/Dozentin für Französisch sein
* * *noun (a person who lectures, especially to students: He is a lecturer in the English department.) der/die Dozent(in)* * *lec·tur·er[ˈlektʃərəʳ, AM -ɚɚ]n* * *['lektSərə(r)]nDozent(in) m(f); (= speaker) Redner(in) m(f)assistant lecturer — ≈ Assistent(in) m(f)
* * *lecturer [ˈlektʃərə(r)] s1. Vortragende(r) m/f(m):he is an excellent lecturer er trägt ausgezeichnet vor2. UNIVa) Br Dozent(in) (in für)b) US Lehrbeauftragte(r) m/f(m)lect. abk2. lecturer* * *noun1) Vortragende, der/die2) (Univ.) Lehrbeauftragte, der/diesenior lecturer — Dozent, der/Dozentin, die
be a lecturer in French — Dozent/Dozentin für Französisch sein
* * *(US) n.Hochschullehrer m. n.Vortragende m.,f. -
7 assistant
1. n помощник; ассистент; референт2. n сотрудник; работник3. n вспомогательное средствоassistant to memory — средство, способствующее запоминанию, мнемоническое средство
4. a замещающий, помогающий5. a младший, рядовойassistant lecturer — ассистент, младший преподаватель
Синонимический ряд:1. aid (noun) aid; aide-de-camp; coadjutant; coadjutor2. aide (noun) accessory; adjutant; aide; ancilla; apprentice; associate; attachй; attendant; auxiliary; confederate; deputy; follower; friend; help; helper; lieutenant; second; striker; subordinate; subsidiaryАнтонимический ряд: -
8 assistant
1. [əʹsıst(ə)nt] n1. (to) помощник; ассистент; референтassistant to the Secretary of State [to the manager, to the editor] - помощник государственного секретаря [директора, редактора]
manager's assistant - помощник директора ( технический; ср. assistant manager [см. assistant II 1])
2. сотрудник; работник(senior [junior]) research assistant - (старший [младший]) научный сотрудник
3. вспомогательное средство2. [əʹsıst(ə)nt] aassistant to memory - средство, способствующее запоминанию, мнемоническое средство
1. замещающий, помогающий2. младший, рядовойassistant lecturer - ассистент, младший преподаватель ( вуза)
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9 lecturer lec·tur·er n Brit
['lɛktʃ(ə)rə(r)]Univ professore (-essa), docente m/f (universitario (-a), (speaker) conferenziere (-a) -
10 lecturer
s conferenciant, professorAssistant lecturer professor adjunt -
11 lecturer
lecturer [ˈlekt∫ərər]• senior lecturer ≈ maître m de conférences* * *['lektʃərə(r)]1) ( speaker) conférencier/-ière m/f2) GB University enseignant/-e m/f (du supérieur)junior lecturer — ≈ assistant/-e m/f
senior lecturer — ≈ maître m de conférences
3) US University ≈ chargé m de cours -
12 lecturer
1 ( speaker) conférencier/-ière m/f ;2 GB Univ enseignant/-e m/f (du supérieur) ; junior lecturer ≈ assistant/-e m/f ; senior lecturer ≈ maître m de conférences ; she's a maths lecturer ou a lecturer in maths elle enseigne les maths (à l'université) ;3 US Univ ≈ chargé m de cours. -
13 nursing assistant
assistant lecturer — ассистент, младший преподаватель
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14 associate professor (in the US and Canada, a university teacher lower in rank than a full professor but higher than an assistant professor and in New Zealand a senior lecturer holding the rank below professor)
Общая лексика: старший доУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > associate professor (in the US and Canada, a university teacher lower in rank than a full professor but higher than an assistant professor and in New Zealand a senior lecturer holding the rank below professor)
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15 ассистент
муж.
1) assistant ассистент профессора ≈ demonstrator, famulus ассистент иллюзиониста ≈ famulus
2) (в университете и т.п.) junior member of teaching or research staffБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > ассистент
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16 Davy, Sir Humphry
[br]b. 17 December 1778 Penzance, Cornwall, Englandd. 29 May 1829 Geneva, Switzerland[br]English chemist, discoverer of the alkali and alkaline earth metals and the halogens, inventor of the miner's safety lamp.[br]Educated at the Latin School at Penzance and from 1792 at Truro Grammar School, Davy was apprenticed to a surgeon in Penzance. In 1797 he began to teach himself chemistry by reading, among other works, Lavoisier's elementary treatise on chemistry. In 1798 Dr Thomas Beddoes of Bristol engaged him as assistant in setting up his Pneumatic Institution to pioneer the medical application of the newly discovered gases, especially oxygen.In 1799 he discovered the anaesthetic properties of nitrous oxide, discovered not long before by the chemist Joseph Priestley. He also noted its intoxicating qualities, on account of which it was dubbed "laughing-gas". Two years later Count Rumford, founder of the Royal Institution in 1800, appointed Davy Assistant Lecturer, and the following year Professor. His lecturing ability soon began to attract large audiences, making science both popular and fashionable.Davy was stimulated by Volta's invention of the voltaic pile, or electric battery, to construct one for himself in 1800. That enabled him to embark on the researches into electrochemistry by which is chiefly known. In 1807 he tried decomposing caustic soda and caustic potash, hitherto regarded as elements, by electrolysis and obtained the metals sodium and potassium. He went on to discover the metals barium, strontium, calcium and magnesium by the same means. Next, he turned his attention to chlorine, which was then regarded as an oxide in accordance with Lavoisier's theory that oxygen was the essential component of acids; Davy failed to decompose it, however, even with the aid of electricity and concluded that it was an element, thus disproving Lavoisier's view of the nature of acids. In 1812 Davy published his Elements of Chemical Philosophy, in which he presented his chemical ideas without, however, committing himself to the atomic theory, recently advanced by John Dalton.In 1813 Davy engaged Faraday as Assistant, perhaps his greatest service to science. In April 1815 Davy was asked to assist in the development of a miner's lamp which could be safely used in a firedamp (methane) laden atmosphere. The "Davy lamp", which emerged in January 1816, had its flame completely surrounded by a fine wire mesh; George Stephenson's lamp, based on a similar principle, had been introduced into the Northumberland pits several months earlier, and a bitter controversy as to priority of invention ensued, but it was Davy who was awarded the prize for inventing a successful safety lamp.In 1824 Davy was the first to suggest the possibility of conferring cathodic protection to the copper bottoms of naval vessels by the use of sacrificial electrodes. Zinc and iron were found to be equally effective in inhibiting corrosion, although the scheme was later abandoned when it was found that ships protected in this way were rapidly fouled by weeds and barnacles.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1812. FRS 1803; President, Royal Society 1820. Royal Society Copley Medal 1805.Bibliography1812, Elements of Chemical Philosophy.1839–40, The Collected Works of Sir Humphry Davy, 9 vols, ed. John Davy, London.Further ReadingJ.Davy, 1836, Memoirs of the Life of Sir Humphry Davy, London (a classic biography). J.A.Paris, 1831, The Life of Sir Humphry Davy, London (a classic biography). H.Hartley, 1967, Humphry Davy, London (a more recent biography).J.Z.Fullmer, 1969, Cambridge, Mass, (a bibliography of Davy's works).ASD -
17 Riva-Rocci, Scipione
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 7 August 1863 Almese, Piedmont, Italyd. 15 March 1937 Rapallo, Liguria, Italy[br]Italian physician, inventor and developer of the mercury sphygmomanometer for the measurement of blood pressure.[br]After graduating in medicine and surgery in 1888 from the University of Turin, he was appointed Assistant Lecturer at the University under Forlanini. In 1893 he followed Forlanini to Pavia, where for twenty-eight years he was Director and Head Physician of the Ospedale di Varese. From 1908 until 1921 he was also Lecturer in Paediatrics. He invented the sphygmomanometer in 1896 and its use was greatly encouraged by the support of Cushing, who visited Pavia in 1901 and was convinced of its value in the monitoring of anaesthesia, particularly in connection with intracranial surgery.[br]Bibliography1896, "Un nuovo sfigmomanometro", Gazzetta Medica, di Torino 447.Further ReadingJ.F.Fulton, 1946, Harvey Cushing: A Biography, Springfield, Ill.MG -
18 Pilcher, Percy Sinclair
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 16 January 1867 Bath, Englandd. 2 October 1899 Stanford Hall, Northamptonshire, England[br]English designer and glider aeronaut.[br]He was educated at HMS Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth, from 1880 to 1882. He sailed on HMS Duke of Wellington, Agincourt, Northampton and other ships and resigned from the navy on 18 April 187 after seven years at sea. In June 1887 he was apprenticed at Randolph, Elder \& Co.'s shipyard at Govan, and was then an apprentice moulder at Cairn \& Co., Glasgow. For some time he "studied" at London University (though there is no official record of his doing so) while living with his sister at Phillbeck Gardens, South Kensington. In May 1890 he was working for John H.Biles, Manager of the Southampton Naval Works Ltd. Biles was later appointed Professor of Naval Architecture at Glasgow University with Pilcher as his Assistant Lecturer. In 1895 he was building his first glider, the Bat, which was built mainly of Riga pine and weighed 44 lb (20 kg). In succeeding months he travelled to Lichterfelde to study the gliders made by the German Lilienthal and built a further three machines, the Beetle, the Gull and the Hawk. In 1896 he applied for his only aeronautical patent, for "Improved flying and soaring machines", which was accepted on March 1897. In April 1896 he resigned his position at Glasgow University to become Assistant to Sir Hiram Maxim, who was also doing experiments with flying machines at his Nordenfeld Guns and Ammunition Co. Ltd at Crayford. He took up residence in Artillery Mansions, Victoria Street, later taken over by Vickers Ltd. Maxim had a hangar at Upper Lodge Farm, Austin Eynsford, Kent: using this, Pilcher reached a height of 12 ft (3.66m) in 1899 with a cable launch. He planned to build a 2 hp (1.5 kW) petrol engine In September 1899 he went to stay with Lord Braye at Stanford Hall, Northamptonshire, where many people came to see his flying machine, a triplane. The weather was far from ideal, windy and raining, but Pilcher would not disappoint them. A bracing wire broke, the tail collapsed and the pilot crashed to the ground suffering two broken legs and concussion. He did not regain consciousness and died the following day. He was buried in Brompton Cemetery.[br]Bibliography1896, British patent no. 9144 "Improved flying and soaring machines".Further ReadingP.Jarrett, 1987, Another Icarus. Percy Pilcher and the Quest for Flight, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.A.Welch and L.Welch, 1965, The Story of Gliding, London: John Murray.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Pilcher, Percy Sinclair
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19 Williams, Sir Frederic Calland
SUBJECT AREA: Electronics and information technology[br]b. 26 June 1911 Stockport, Cheshire, Englandd. 11 August 1977 Prestbury, Cheshire, England[br]English electrical engineer who invented the Williams storage cathode ray tube, which was extensively used worldwide as a data memory in the first digital computers.[br]Following education at Stockport Grammar School, Williams entered Manchester University in 1929, gaining his BSc in 1932 and MSc in 1933. After a short time as a college apprentice with Metropolitan Vickers, he went to Magdalen College, Oxford, to study for a DPhil, which he was awarded in 1936. He returned to Manchester University that year as an assistant lecturer, gaining his DSc in 1939. Following the outbreak of the Second World War he worked for the Scientific Civil Service, initially at the Bawdsey Research Station and then at the Telecommunications Research Establishment at Malvern, Worcestershire. There he was involved in research on non-incandescent amplifiers and diode rectifiers and the development of the first practical radar system capable of identifying friendly aircraft. Later in the war, he devised an automatic radar system suitable for use by fighter aircraft.After the war he resumed his academic career at Manchester, becoming Professor of Electrical Engineering and Director of the University Electrotechnical Laboratory in 1946. In the same year he succeeded in developing a data-memory device based on the cathode ray tube, in which the information was stored and read by electron-beam scanning of a charge-retaining target. The Williams storage tube, as it became known, not only found obvious later use as a means of storing single-frame, still television images but proved to be a vital component of the pioneering Manchester University MkI digital computer. Because it enabled both data and program instructions to be stored in the computer, it was soon used worldwide in the development of the early stored-program computers.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1976. OBE 1945. CBE 1961. FRS 1950. Hon. DSc Durham 1964, Sussex 1971, Wales 1971. First Royal Society of Arts Benjamin Franklin Medal 1957. City of Philadelphia John Scott Award 1960. Royal Society Hughes Medal 1963. Institution of Electrical Engineers Faraday Medal 1972. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Pioneer Award 1973.BibliographyWilliams contributed papers to many scientific journals, including Proceedings of the Royal Society, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Wireless Engineer, Post Office Electrical Engineers' Journal. Note especially: 1948, with J.Kilburn, "Electronic digital computers", Nature 162:487; 1949, with J.Kilburn, "A storage system for use with binary digital computing machines", Proceedings of the Institution of Electrical Engineers 96:81; 1975, "Early computers at Manchester University", Radio \& Electronic Engineer 45:327. Williams also collaborated in the writing of vols 19 and 20 of the MIT RadiationLaboratory Series.Further ReadingB.Randell, 1973, The Origins of Digital Computers, Berlin: Springer-Verlag. M.R.Williams, 1985, A History of Computing Technology, London: Prentice-Hall. See also: Stibitz, George R.; Strachey, Christopher.KFBiographical history of technology > Williams, Sir Frederic Calland
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20 ayudante
ayudante sustantivo masculino y femenino assistant; ayudante de cocina kitchen assistant
ayudante mf assistant ' ayudante' also found in these entries: Spanish: asistente - ATS - script English: aide - assistant - bulk - busboy - confidential - deputy - dresser - helper - mate - PA - willing - motion
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См. также в других словарях:
Lecturer — is a term of academic rank. In the United Kingdom lecturer is the name given to university teachers in their first permanent university position. That is, lecturers are academics early in their careers, who lead research groups and supervise… … Wikipedia
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lecturer — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ English, physics, etc. ▪ guest, visiting ▪ principal, senior (both in the UK) ▪ … Collocations dictionary
assistant — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ chief, senior ▪ deputy ▪ personal ▪ I ll ask my personal assistant to deal with this. ▪ sp … Collocations dictionary
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assistant — Synonyms and related words: acolyte, adjutant, agent, aid, aide, aide de camp, aider, ancilla, assistant professor, associate, associate professor, attendant, attorney, auxiliary, benefactor, best man, co worker, coadjutant, coadjutor,… … Moby Thesaurus
lecturer — Synonyms and related words: Bible clerk, Bible reader, Boanerges, acolyte, almoner, anagnost, assistant, assistant professor, associate, associate professor, beadle, bedral, capitular, capitulary, chalk talker, choir chaplain, churchwarden, clerk … Moby Thesaurus
lecturer — /lek cheuhr euhr/, n. 1. a person who lectures. 2. an academic rank given in colleges and universities to a teacher ranking below assistant professor. [1560 70; LECTURE + ER1] * * * … Universalium
lecturer — noun a) A person who gives lectures, especially as a profession. b) A member of a university or college below the rank of assistant professor or reader … Wiktionary