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21 stanziare
somma di denaro allocate, earmark* * *stanziare v.tr. to allocate, to appropriate, to set* aside: stanziare un fondo per gli immigrati, to set aside a fund for immigrants; stanziare una somma per la costruzione di un ospedale, to appropriate (o to allocate) a sum for the building of a hospital // (amm.) stanziare una spesa in bilancio, to enter an expense in the budget (o to budget for an expense)◆ v. intr. (mil.) to be quartered, to be garrisoned.◘ stanziarsi v.intr.pron. to settle, to establish oneself: i popoli germanici si stanziarono in questa zona, Germanic peoples settled in this area.* * *[stan'tsjare]1. vt2. vip (stanziarsi)(gen) to settle, Mil to be stationed* * *[stan'tsjare] 1. 2.* * *stanziare/stan'tsjare/ [1]II stanziarsi verbo pronominale[ popolazione] to settle. -
22 garrison
I 1. ['gærɪsn]nome guarnigione f.2. II ['gærɪsn]* * *['ɡærisn] 1. noun(a number of soldiers, for guarding a fortress, town etc.) guarnigione2. adjectivea garrison town.) fortificato3. verb(to supply (a town etc) with troops to guard it.) fornire di guarnigione* * *garrison /ˈgærɪsn/n. (mil.)1 guarnigione; distaccamento; presidio2 piazza fortificata; fortezza● garrison cap, (berretto a) bustina □ garrison town, città sede di presidio.(to) garrison /ˈgærɪsn/v. t. (mil.)1 fornire di guarnigione; presidiare● (mil.) to be garrisoned at, essere di guarnigione a.* * *I 1. ['gærɪsn]nome guarnigione f.2. II ['gærɪsn] -
23 garrison
gar·ri·son [ʼgærɪsən, Am ʼgerə-] nGarnison f n1) ( at the garrison)\garrison duty Dienst m in der Garnison2) ( with a garrison)\garrison town Garnisonsstadt f vtto be \garrisoned in Garnison liegen;to \garrison a place einen Ort mit einer Garnison belegen -
24 Garnison
Gar·ni·son <-, -en> [garniʼzo:n] fgarrison; -
25 presidiato
presidiato agg. garrison (attr.); garrisoned: città presidiata, garrison town; una fabbrica presidiata, ( picchettata) a picketed factory. -
26 مرابط
مُرَابِط (في مَوْقِعٍ عَسْكَرِيّ)stationed, positioned, posted, garrisoned -
27 garrison
s.1 guarnición.2 tropa, guarnición militar.3 Garrison, nombre propio.s. & adj.guarnición, plaza de armas guarnecida de tropavt.1 acuartelar (troops)2 guarnicionar, poner en guarnición, guarnecer de tropas. (pt & pp garrisoned) -
28 urbanicianus
urbānĭcĭānus, a, um, adj. [urbanus]; in milit. lang., garrisoned in the city (of Rome):milites,
Dig. 4, 6, 35, § 4; Spart. Carac. 4; id. Get. 6 (called urbanae cohor tes, Dig. 25, 1, 8, § 9). -
29 garnizoen houden
garnizoen houdenbe garrisoned (at/in)Van Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > garnizoen houden
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30 garnizoen
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31 garrison
A n garnison f.C vtr [officer] placer une garnison dans [town, zone] ; [troops] tenir garnison dans [town, zone] ; to garrison troops in the area mettre des troupes en garnison dans la région ; to be garrisoned in être en garnison à. -
32 garrison
garrison ['gærɪsən]1 noungarnison f∎ they were garrisoned in Scotland ils étaient en garnison en Écosse►► garrison town ville f de garnison;garrison troops (troupes fpl de) garnison f -
33 გარნიზონი ჩააყენა
vgarrisoned -
34 Somerset, Edward, 2nd Marquis of Worcester
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]b. 1601d. 3 April 1667 Lambeth (?), London, England[br]English inventor of a steam-operated pump for raising water, described in his work A Century of…Inventions.[br]Edward Somerset became 6th Earl and 2nd Marquis of Worcester and Titular Earl of Glamorgan. He was educated privately and then abroad, visiting Germany, Italy and France. He was made Councillor of Wales in 1633 and Deputy Lord Lieutenant of Monmouthshire in 1635. On the outbreak of the Civil War, he was commissioned to levy forces against the Scots in 1640. He garrisoned Raglan Castle for the King and was employed by Charles I to bring troops in from Ireland. He was declared an enemy of the realm by Parliament and was banished, remaining in France for some years. On the Restoration, he recovered most of his estates, principally in South Wales, and was able to devote most of his time to mechanical studies and experiments.Soon after 1626, he had employed the services of a skilled Dutch or German mechanic, Caspar Kaltoff, to make small-scale models for display to interested people. In 1638 he showed Charles I a 14 ft (4.3m) diameter wheel carrying forty weights that was claimed to have solved the problem of perpetual motion. He wrote his Century of the Names and Scantlings of Such Inventions as at Present I Can Call to Mind to have Tried and Perfected in 1655, but it was not published until 1663: no. 68 describes "An admirable and most forcible way to drive up water by fire", which has been claimed as an early steam-engine. Before the Civil War he made experiments at Raglan Castle, and after the war he built one of his engines at Vauxhall, London, where it raised water to a height of 40 ft (12 m). An Act of Parliament enabling Worcester to receive the benefit and profits of his water-commanding engine for ninety-nine years did not restore his fortunes. Descriptions of this invention are so vague that it cannot be reconstructed.[br]Bibliography1655, Century of the Names and Scantlings of Such Inventions as at Present I Can Call to Mind to have Tried and Perfected.Further ReadingH.Dircks, 1865, The Life, Times and Scientific Labours of the Second Marquis of Worcester.Dictionary of National Biography, 1898, Vol. L, London: Smith Elder \& Co. (mainly covers his political career).H.W.Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (discusses his steam engine invention).W.H.Thorpe, 1932–3, "The Marquis of Worcester and Vauxhall", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 13.RLHBiographical history of technology > Somerset, Edward, 2nd Marquis of Worcester
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