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101 necessario
(pl -ri) 1. adj necessary2. m: il necessario per vivere the basic necessities pl* * *necessario agg. necessary; requisite; ( indispensabile) indispensable: l'aria, il cibo e l'acqua sono necessari alla vita, air, food and water are indispensable to life; articoli necessari, necessary (o requisite) articles; i documenti necessari, the documents required; la somma necessaria per un pagamento, the money needed (o necessary) for a payment; avere il denaro necessario, to have enough money; dammi il tempo necessario per arrivare, allow me the time I need to arrive; la nuova sede è ormai diventata necessaria, the new head office has become a necessity; è necessario che egli ritorni, he must come back (o it is necessary for him to come back); è necessario che io lo veda, I must see him (o it is necessary for me to see him); è necessario che tu lo segua, you must follow him (o it is necessary for you to follow him); è necessario molto tempo per imparare bene una lingua straniera, it takes a long time to learn a foreign language well; non è necessario che tu venga, you need not come; la sola cosa necessaria è che..., the essential thing is that...; il suo arrivo rende necessario che io me ne vada, his arrival means that I must go; l'emergenza lo rende necessario, the emergency makes it necessary; rendersi necessario a qlcu., to make oneself indispensable to s.o.; ritenere necessario qlco., to consider sthg. (o to deem sthg.) necessary // (dir.) erede necessario, heir at law◆ s.m.1 ( ciò che è indispensabile) necessities (pl.), necessaries (pl.), essentials (pl.): il puro, lo stretto necessario, the bare necessities; il necessario alla vita, the necessities (o the necessaries) of life; essere privo del necessario per vivere, to be without the necessities of life (o to lack the essentials to live)2 ( cosa necessaria) (what is) necessary: farò tutto il necessario, I shall do all that is necessary (o everything necessary); non voglio fare più del necessario, I don't want to do more than is necessary; suo padre gli fornirà il necessario, his father will provide him with what he needs.* * *[netʃes'sarjo] necessario -ria, -ri, -rie1. agg(gen) necessary, (persona) indispensableè necessario che tu vada — you will have to go, you must go
è necessario far presto — we've got to hurry, it is necessary for you to go
non ho avuto il tempo necessario — I didn't have enough o sufficient time
se necessario — if need be, if necessary
rendersi necessario — (persona) to make o.s. indispensable
si rende necessario partire — it has become necessary for me (o you ecc) to leave
2. smlavorare/preoccuparsi più del necessario — to work/worry more than is necessary o more than one has to
* * *1.2.più del necessario o di quanto (non) sia necessario more than is necessary; se (è) necessario if necessary; è necessario che tu (ci) vada it is necessary for you to go, you have to go; non è necessario che tu (ci) vada you don't have to go, there's no need for you to go, it isn't necessary for you to go; non era necessario che mi sbrigassi I needn't have hurried; i voti -ri per... — the votes needed (in order) to
sostantivo maschile1) (ciò che si impone) (what is) necessary, what is neededfare il necessario — to do what is necessary, to do the necessary
2) (beni, mezzi) essentials pl.il necessario per vivere — the necessities of life, the bare essentials
3) (materiale) materials pl.* * *necessariopl. -ri, - rie /net∫es'sarjo, ri, rje/necessary (a, per for); è necessario fare it is necessary to do; trovare necessario fare to find it necessary to do; più del necessario o di quanto (non) sia necessario more than is necessary; se (è) necessario if necessary; è necessario che tu (ci) vada it is necessary for you to go, you have to go; non è necessario che tu (ci) vada you don't have to go, there's no need for you to go, it isn't necessary for you to go; non era necessario che mi sbrigassi I needn't have hurried; i voti -ri per... the votes needed (in order) to...1 (ciò che si impone) (what is) necessary, what is needed; fare il necessario to do what is necessary, to do the necessary2 (beni, mezzi) essentials pl.; il necessario per vivere the necessities of life, the bare essentials3 (materiale) materials pl.; il necessario per scrivere writing materials. -
102 безопасность безопасност·ь
safety, securityгарантировать безопасность — to guarantee / to ensure security
обеспечить безопасность — to ensure / to guarantee / to safeguard security
поддерживать безопасность при меньшей численности вооружённых сил — to maintain safeguard at a lower level of forces
посягать на безопасность — to encroach upon (smb.'s) security
укреплять / усиливать безопасность — to boost / to enhance security
система коллективной безопасности — system of collective security, collective security system
личная безопасность — personal security, inviolability / safety of one's person
одинаковая / равная безопасность — equal security, equality of security
безопасность государства / страны — national / state security
наносить ущерб безопасности страны — to be prejudicial to / to harm / to diminish the security of a country
безопасность фланговых стран / флангов — security of flanking countries, flank security
укреплять / усиливать гарантии безопасности — to strengthen security guarantees
договор об обеспечении безопасности — securing pact / treaty
меры безопасности — security arrangements / measures
ненанесение ущерба безопасности всех участников конвенции — undiminished security for all convention participants
обоюдная / равная заинтересованность в безопасности — equal security interests
основные предпосылки для безопасности подвергаются сомнению — the basic assumptions of security are called into question
отсутствие безопасности в мире — internation-al / global / world insecurity
требования безопасности — security needs; (на производстве) safety requirements
Russian-english dctionary of diplomacy > безопасность безопасност·ь
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103 shokuiku
( JAPAN)lit. “basic knowledge of food”. -
104 need
[niːd] negative short form needn't [ˈniːdnt]1. verb1) to require:يَحْتاجDo you need any help?
2) to be obliged:يَجِب، عَلَيْك، بِحاجَهShe needn't have given me such an expensive present.
2. noun1) something essential, that one must have:حاجَهFood is one of our basic needs.
2) poverty or other difficulty:حاجَه، فَقْرMany people are in great need.
3) a reason:سَبَب، حاجَهThere is no need for panic.
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105 Carroll, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 1888 Melbourne, Victoria, Australiad. 22 February 1968 Australia[br]Australian engineer responsible for many innovations in combine-harvester design, and in particular associated with the Massey Harris No. 20 used in the "Harvest Brigade" during the Second World War.[br]Carroll worked first with the Buckeye Harvester Co., then with J.J.Mitchell \& Co. In 1911 he was hired by the Argentinian distributor for Massey Harris to help in the introduction of their new horse-drawn reaper-thresher. Carroll recommended modifications to suit Argentinian conditions, and these resulted in the production of a new model. In 1917 he joined the Toronto staff of Massey Harris as a product design leader, the No. 5 reaper-thresher being the first designed under him. Many significant new developments can be attributed to Carroll: welded sections, roller chains, oil-bath gears, antifriction ball bearings and the detachable cutting table allowing easy transfer of combines between fields were all innovations of which he was the source.In the 1930s he became Chief Engineer with responsibility for the design of a self-propelled harvester. The 20 SP was tested in Argentina only eight months after design work had begun, and it was to this machine that the name "combine harvester" was applied for the first time. Improvements to this original design produced a lighter 12 ft (3.65 m) cut machine which came off the production line in 1941. Three years later 500 of these machines were transported to the southern United States, and then gradually harvested their way northwards as the corn ripened. It has been estimated that the famous "Harvest Brigade" harvested over 1 million acres, putting 25 million bushels into store, with a saving in excess of 300,000 labour hours and half a million gallons of fuel.Carroll retired from Massey Ferguson in 1961.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsAmerican Society of Agricultural Engineers C.H. McCormick Gold Medal 1958.Bibliography1948, "Basic requirements in the design and development of the self propelled combine"Agricultural Engineer. 29(3), 101–5.Further ReadingG.Quick and W.Buchele, 1978, The Grain Harvesters, American Society of Agricultural Engineers (provides a detailed account of the development of the combine harvester).K.M.Coppick, 1972, gave an account of the wartime effort, which he mistakenly called "Massey Ferguson Harvest Brigade", presented to the Canadian Society forAgricultural Engineers, Paper 72–313.AP -
106 Cartwright, Revd Edmund
[br]b. 24 April 1743 Marnham, Nottingham, Englandd. 30 October 1823 Hastings, Sussex, England[br]English inventor of the power loom, a combing machine and machines for making ropes, bread and bricks as well as agricultural improvements.[br]Edmund Cartwright, the fourth son of William Cartwright, was educated at Wakefield Grammar School, and went to University College, Oxford, at the age of 14. By special act of convocation in 1764, he was elected Fellow of Magdalen College. He married Alice Whitaker in 1772 and soon after was given the ecclesiastical living of Brampton in Derbyshire. In 1779 he was presented with the living of Goadby, Marwood, Leicestershire, where he wrote poems, reviewed new works, and began agricultural experiments. A visit to Matlock in the summer of 1784 introduced him to the inventions of Richard Arkwright and he asked why weaving could not be mechanized in a similar manner to spinning. This began a remarkable career of inventions.Cartwright returned home and built a loom which required two strong men to operate it. This was the first attempt in England to develop a power loom. It had a vertical warp, the reed fell with the weight of at least half a hundredweight and, to quote Gartwright's own words, "the springs which threw the shuttle were strong enough to throw a Congreive [sic] rocket" (Strickland 19.71:8—for background to the "rocket" comparison, see Congreve, Sir William). Nevertheless, it had the same three basics of weaving that still remain today in modern power looms: shedding or dividing the warp; picking or projecting the shuttle with the weft; and beating that pick of weft into place with a reed. This loom he proudly patented in 1785, and then he went to look at hand looms and was surprised to see how simply they operated. Further improvements to his own loom, covered by two more patents in 1786 and 1787, produced a machine with the more conventional horizontal layout that showed promise; however, the Manchester merchants whom he visited were not interested. He patented more improvements in 1788 as a result of the experience gained in 1786 through establishing a factory at Doncaster with power looms worked by a bull that were the ancestors of modern ones. Twenty-four looms driven by steam-power were installed in Manchester in 1791, but the mill was burned down and no one repeated the experiment. The Doncaster mill was sold in 1793, Cartwright having lost £30,000, However, in 1809 Parliament voted him £10,000 because his looms were then coming into general use.In 1789 he began working on a wool-combing machine which he patented in 1790, with further improvements in 1792. This seems to have been the earliest instance of mechanized combing. It used a circular revolving comb from which the long fibres or "top" were. carried off into a can, and a smaller cylinder-comb for teasing out short fibres or "noils", which were taken off by hand. Its output equalled that of twenty hand combers, but it was only relatively successful. It was employed in various Leicestershire and Yorkshire mills, but infringements were frequent and costly to resist. The patent was prolonged for fourteen years after 1801, but even then Cartwright did not make any profit. His 1792 patent also included a machine to make ropes with the outstanding and basic invention of the "cordelier" which he communicated to his friends, including Robert Fulton, but again it brought little financial benefit. As a result of these problems and the lack of remuneration for his inventions, Cartwright moved to London in 1796 and for a time lived in a house built with geometrical bricks of his own design.Other inventions followed fast, including a tread-wheel for cranes, metallic packing for pistons in steam-engines, and bread-making and brick-making machines, to mention but a few. He had already returned to agricultural improvements and he put forward suggestions in 1793 for a reaping machine. In 1801 he received a prize from the Board of Agriculture for an essay on husbandry, which was followed in 1803 by a silver medal for the invention of a three-furrow plough and in 1805 by a gold medal for his essay on manures. From 1801 to 1807 he ran an experimental farm on the Duke of Bedford's estates at Woburn.From 1786 until his death he was a prebendary of Lincoln. In about 1810 he bought a small farm at Hollanden near Sevenoaks, Kent, where he continued his inventions, both agricultural and general. Inventing to the last, he died at Hastings and was buried in Battle church.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsBoard of Agriculture Prize 1801 (for an essay on agriculture). Society of Arts, Silver Medal 1803 (for his three-furrow plough); Gold Medal 1805 (for an essay on agricultural improvements).Bibliography1785. British patent no. 1,270 (power loom).1786. British patent no. 1,565 (improved power loom). 1787. British patent no. 1,616 (improved power loom).1788. British patent no. 1,676 (improved power loom). 1790, British patent no. 1,747 (wool-combing machine).1790, British patent no. 1,787 (wool-combing machine).1792, British patent no. 1,876 (improved wool-combing machine and rope-making machine with cordelier).Further ReadingM.Strickland, 1843, A Memoir of the Life, Writings and Mechanical Inventions of Edmund Cartwright, D.D., F.R.S., London (remains the fullest biography of Cartwright).Dictionary of National Biography (a good summary of Cartwright's life). For discussions of Cartwright's weaving inventions, see: A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London; R.L. Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester. F.Nasmith, 1925–6, "Fathers of machine cotton manufacture", Transactions of theNewcomen Society 6.H.W.Dickinson, 1942–3, "A condensed history of rope-making", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 23.W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (covers both his power loom and his wool -combing machine).RLHBiographical history of technology > Cartwright, Revd Edmund
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107 Evans, Oliver
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 13 September 1755 Newport, Delaware, USAd. 15 April 1819 New York, USA[br]American millwright and inventor of the first automatic corn mill.[br]He was the fifth child of Charles and Ann Stalcrop Evans, and by the age of 15 he had four sisters and seven brothers. Nothing is known of his schooling, but at the age of 17 he was apprenticed to a Newport wheelwright and wagon-maker. At 19 he was enrolled in a Delaware Militia Company in the Revolutionary War but did not see active service. About this time he invented a machine for bending and cutting off the wires in textile carding combs. In July 1782, with his younger brother, Joseph, he moved to Tuckahoe on the eastern shore of the Delaware River, where he had the basic idea of the automatic flour mill. In July 1782, with his elder brothers John and Theophilus, he bought part of his father's Newport farm, on Red Clay Creek, and planned to build a mill there. In 1793 he married Sarah Tomlinson, daughter of a Delaware farmer, and joined his brothers at Red Clay Creek. He worked there for some seven years on his automatic mill, from about 1783 to 1790.His system for the automatic flour mill consisted of bucket elevators to raise the grain, a horizontal screw conveyor, other conveying devices and a "hopper boy" to cool and dry the meal before gathering it into a hopper feeding the bolting cylinder. Together these components formed the automatic process, from incoming wheat to outgoing flour packed in barrels. At that time the idea of such automation had not been applied to any manufacturing process in America. The mill opened, on a non-automatic cycle, in 1785. In January 1786 Evans applied to the Delaware legislature for a twenty-five-year patent, which was granted on 30 January 1787 although there was much opposition from the Quaker millers of Wilmington and elsewhere. He also applied for patents in Pennsylvania, Maryland and New Hampshire. In May 1789 he went to see the mill of the four Ellicot brothers, near Baltimore, where he was impressed by the design of a horizontal screw conveyor by Jonathan Ellicot and exchanged the rights to his own elevator for those of this machine. After six years' work on his automatic mill, it was completed in 1790. In the autumn of that year a miller in Brandywine ordered a set of Evans's machinery, which set the trend toward its general adoption. A model of it was shown in the Market Street shop window of Robert Leslie, a watch-and clockmaker in Philadelphia, who also took it to England but was unsuccessful in selling the idea there.In 1790 the Federal Plant Laws were passed; Evans's patent was the third to come within the new legislation. A detailed description with a plate was published in a Philadelphia newspaper in January 1791, the first of a proposed series, but the paper closed and the series came to nothing. His brother Joseph went on a series of sales trips, with the result that some machinery of Evans's design was adopted. By 1792 over one hundred mills had been equipped with Evans's machinery, the millers paying a royalty of $40 for each pair of millstones in use. The series of articles that had been cut short formed the basis of Evans's The Young Millwright and Miller's Guide, published first in 1795 after Evans had moved to Philadelphia to set up a store selling milling supplies; it was 440 pages long and ran to fifteen editions between 1795 and 1860.Evans was fairly successful as a merchant. He patented a method of making millstones as well as a means of packing flour in barrels, the latter having a disc pressed down by a toggle-joint arrangement. In 1801 he started to build a steam carriage. He rejected the idea of a steam wheel and of a low-pressure or atmospheric engine. By 1803 his first engine was running at his store, driving a screw-mill working on plaster of Paris for making millstones. The engine had a 6 in. (15 cm) diameter cylinder with a stroke of 18 in. (45 cm) and also drove twelve saws mounted in a frame and cutting marble slabs at a rate of 100 ft (30 m) in twelve hours. He was granted a patent in the spring of 1804. He became involved in a number of lawsuits following the extension of his patent, particularly as he increased the licence fee, sometimes as much as sixfold. The case of Evans v. Samuel Robinson, which Evans won, became famous and was one of these. Patent Right Oppression Exposed, or Knavery Detected, a 200-page book with poems and prose included, was published soon after this case and was probably written by Oliver Evans. The steam engine patent was also extended for a further seven years, but in this case the licence fee was to remain at a fixed level. Evans anticipated Edison in his proposal for an "Experimental Company" or "Mechanical Bureau" with a capital of thirty shares of $100 each. It came to nothing, however, as there were no takers. His first wife, Sarah, died in 1816 and he remarried, to Hetty Ward, the daughter of a New York innkeeper. He was buried in the Bowery, on Lower Manhattan; the church was sold in 1854 and again in 1890, and when no relative claimed his body he was reburied in an unmarked grave in Trinity Cemetery, 57th Street, Broadway.[br]Further ReadingE.S.Ferguson, 1980, Oliver Evans: Inventive Genius of the American Industrial Revolution, Hagley Museum.G.Bathe and D.Bathe, 1935, Oliver Evans: Chronicle of Early American Engineering, Philadelphia, Pa.IMcN -
108 Grundnahrungsmittel
nstaple foodpl1. basic foodstuffs2. staples -
109 sandang
1. shoulder strap.sandang-an sling. 2. clothing. sandang-pangan food and clothing, basic necessities. -
110 ruji
staple food; basic; main -
111 группы сервисов
группы сервисов
Основные сводные группы услуг, предоставляемых клиентам Игр, например, транспорт, питание, размещение и т.д. Ответственность за определенные услуги в рамках одной группы услуг может распределяться между разными функциональными направлениями деятельности.
[Департамент лингвистических услуг Оргкомитета «Сочи 2014». Глоссарий терминов]EN
service groups
Basic aggregated groups of services provided to the Games clients (e.g. transport, food and beverages, accommodation, etc.). Responsibility for certain services within one service group can be assigned to multiple functional areas.
[Департамент лингвистических услуг Оргкомитета «Сочи 2014». Глоссарий терминов]Тематики
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Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > группы сервисов
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112 планирование сельского хозяйства
планирование сельского хозяйства
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
agricultural planning
The development of plans and measures to achieve greater and more efficient output from agriculture; a sound agricultural policy should be able to reconcile three basic needs: the production of food and agricultural products, the protection of the environment and the maintenance of the socio-economic structure of rural areas. (Source: DOBRISa)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
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Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > планирование сельского хозяйства
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113 сельскохозяйственная единица
сельскохозяйственная единица
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
agricultural holding
As defined by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, an agricultural holding is simply a basic unit for agricultural production. (Source: GOOD)
[http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]Тематики
EN
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Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > сельскохозяйственная единица
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