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121 monsieur
c black Monsieur [məsjø](plural Messieurs) [mesjø]masculine noun• entrez, Monsieur Smith come in, Mr Smith━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► Lorsque Monsieur n'est pas suivi d'un nom de famille, il ne se traduit généralement pas ; l'anglais sir s'utilise pour s'adresser à quelqu'un qu'on ne connaît pas, par exemple un client dans un restaurant ou dans un hôtel. À la troisième personne, on peut utiliser the gentleman.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• merci, Monsieur thank you• Monsieur, vous avez oublié quelque chose excuse me, you've left something• et pour Monsieur ? (au restaurant) and for you, sir?• Monsieur ! (en classe) please sir!• bonsoir, Messieurs Dames good eveningc. (suivi d'un titre) Monsieur le Président, je proteste Mr Chairman, I object━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► Le français épistolaire est moins direct que l'anglais et l'équivalent anglais des formules de début de lettre sera donc toujours plus personnel que le français: Monsieur devient Dear Sir, si l'on ne connaît pas le nom du monsieur, ou Dear Mr + nom de famille ; Cher Monsieur devient Dear Mr + nom de famille, par exemple Dear Mr Smith.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• Cher Monsieur Dear Mr + nom de famillec black e. ( = homme) gentleman• ces messieurs désirent ? what would you like, gentlemen?━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✦ The on is pronounced like the e in the.* * *pl messieurs məsjø, mesjø nom masculin1) ( titre donné à un inconnu)Monsieur — ( dans une lettre) Dear Sir
bonjour, monsieur — good morning
2) (titre donné à un homme dont on connaît le nom, par exemple Bon)bonjour, monsieur — good morning, Mr Bon
cher Monsieur — ( dans une lettre) Dear Mr Bon
Monsieur le ministre — ( en lui parlant) Minister
merci Monsieur le président — (de club, d'association) thank you Mr Chairman; ( de la République) thank you Mr President
moi Monsieur! — ( à un enseignant) please sir!
3) ( homme) man‘Monsieur a sonné?’ — ‘you rang sir?’
tu comprends, Monsieur a ses habitudes! — iron His Lordship is rather set in his ways you see!
5) HistoireMonsieur, frère du roi — Monsieur, the king's brother
•Phrasal Verbs:* * *mesjø Messieurs plnm (= monsieur)1) (avec nom propre) MrMonsieur Dupont,... (dans une lettre) — Dear Mr Dupont,...
2) (avec titre)Pardon, monsieur l'agent. — I beg your pardon, officer.
Monsieur le proviseur (en s'adressant) — Headmaster, (à la troisième personne) the head
Monsieur,... (dans une lettre) — Dear Sir,...
Dans l'attente d'une réponse, je vous prie d'agréer, monsieur, l'expression de mes sentiments distingués — Yours faithfully
* * *1 ( titre donné à un inconnu) Monsieur ( dans une lettre) Dear Sir; bonjour, monsieur good morning; pardon monsieur, je cherche la poste excuse me, I'm looking for the post office; monsieur? ( à un guichet) can I help you, sir?; occupez-vous de monsieur ( dans un magasin) could you attend to this gentleman, please?; et pour monsieur, une vodka comme d'habitude? will it be the usual, sir?; mesdames, mesdemoiselles, messieurs, bonsoir ( dans un discours) good evening ladies and gentlemen; madame, monsieur, bonsoir (à la radio, télévision) good evening;2 (titre donné à un homme dont on connaît le nom, pour l'exemple Bon) bonjour, monsieur good morning, Mr Bon; cher Monsieur ( dans une lettre) Dear Mr Bon; Monsieur Rosec ( sur une enveloppe) Mr Rosec; M. Brun est en réunion Mr Brun is in a meeting; Monsieur le curé Father Bon; Monsieur le ministre ( en lui parlant) Minister; merci Monsieur le président (de club, d'association) thank you Mr Chairman; ( de la République) thank you Mr President; moi Monsieur! ( à un enseignant) please sir!;3 ( homme) man; un vieux monsieur an old man; deux messieurs m'attendaient two men were waiting for me; un monsieur d'une cinquantaine d'années a man of about fifty; ‘dis bonjour au monsieur’ ‘say hello to the nice man’; le monsieur avec la veste rouge the man in the red jacket; le simple/double messieurs the men's singles/doubles; c'était un (grand) monsieur! he was a (true) gentleman!;4 ( formule de respect utilisée avec un homme dont on connaît le nom) ‘Monsieur a sonné?’ ‘you rang sir?’; tu comprends, Monsieur a ses habitudes! iron His Lordship is rather set in his ways you see!;5 Hist Monsieur, frère du roi Monsieur, the king's brother.monsieur Tout-le-Monde the man in the street.[məsjø] ( pluriel messieurs [mesjø]) nom masculin -
122 vitesse
vitesse [vitεs]1. feminine nouna. ( = promptitude) speed• à la vitesse de 60 km/h at (a speed of) 60km/h• à quelle vitesse allait-il ? how fast was he going?• à une vitesse vertigineuse [conduire, avancer] at a dizzying speed ; [augmenter, se multiplier] at a dizzying rateb. [de voiture] gear• société/justice à deux vitesses two-tier society/justice systemc. (locutions)• faites-moi ça, et en vitesse ! hurry up and do it!• écrire un petit mot en vitesse to scribble a hasty note► à toute vitesse, en quatrième vitesse at full speed• il est arrivé en quatrième vitesse or à toute vitesse he came very quickly2. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━The speed limit in France is generally 50 km/h in built-up areas (although it can on occasion be as low as 30 km/h); 70 km/h on secondary roads; 90 km/h on main roads; and 130 km/h on motorways (but 110 km/h when it is raining).* * *vitɛs1) ( rapidité) speedà deux vitesses — [courrier, système] two-tier (épith)
faire de la vitesse — [automobiliste] to drive fast
gagner or prendre quelqu'un de vitesse — lit, fig to outstrip somebody
en vitesse — ( vite) quickly; ( trop vite) in a rush
passer en vitesse — [personne] to pop in (colloq)
range ta chambre, et en vitesse! — tidy up your room, and be quick about it!
(il s'enfuit) de toute la vitesse de ses petites jambes — (he ran away) as fast as his little legs would carry him
2) Technologie (engrenage, rapport) gearpasser les vitesses — to change gear GB, to shift gear US
passer la vitesse supérieure/inférieure — to change up/down a gear
passer à la vitesse supérieure — fig to speed things up
•Phrasal Verbs:••à la vitesse grand V, en quatrième vitesse — at top speed
* * *vitɛs nf1) (= rapidité) speedprendre de la vitesse — to pick up speed, to gather speed
à toute vitesse — at full speed, at top speed
2) AUTOMOBILES (= dispositif) gear3) MATHÉMATIQUE, PHYSIQUE speedprendre qn de vitesse — to outstrip sb, to get ahead of sb
être en perte de vitesse [avion] — to lose speed, [parti, tendance] to be losing momentum, [artiste] to be losing popularity
* * *vitesse ⇒ La vitesse nf1 ( rapidité) speed; à grande/petite vitesse [se déplacer, circuler] at high/low speed; à une vitesse folle at an incredible speed; à la vitesse d'un cheval au galop/de 50 km/h at the speed of a galloping horse/at a speed of 50 km/h; à la vitesse moyenne de at an average speed of; prendre/perdre de la vitesse to gather/lose speed; vitesse de pointe maximum speed; vitesse du son/de la lumière speed of sound/of light; il travaille à une vitesse! he works so fast!; partir à toute vitesse to rush away; la voiture est passée à toute vitesse the car flashed past; à deux vitesses [courrier, système, régime] two-tier ( épith); faire de la vitesse [automobiliste] to drive fast; gagner or prendre qn de vitesse lit, fig to outstrip sb; en vitesse ( vite) quickly; ( trop vite) in a rush; passer en vitesse [personne] to pop in○; nous avons mangé en vitesse avant de partir we had a quick meal before leaving; je vous écris en vitesse depuis l'aéroport I'm writing you a quick note from the airport; range ta chambre, et en vitesse! tidy up your room, and be quick about it!; (il s'enfuit) de toute la vitesse de ses petites jambes (he ran away) as fast as his little legs would carry him;2 Tech (engrenage, rapport) gear; voiture à cinq vitesses car with five gears; boîte à cinq vitesses five-speed gearbox; il y a une cinquième vitesse sur sa voiture his car has a fifth gear; passer les vitesses to change gear GB, to shift gear US; passer la vitesse supérieure/inférieure to change up/down a gear; passer ses vitesses en douceur to go smoothly through the gears; faire grincer les vitesses to crunch the gears; bicyclette à trois/douze vitesses three-/twelve-speed bicycle; passer à la vitesse supérieure fig to speed things up.vitesse angulaire Mécan angular velocity; vitesse initiale Mécan initial velocity; (de balle, obus) muzzle velocity; vitesse de libération Astronaut, Phys escape velocity; vitesse de propagation Phys velocity of propagation; vitesse radiale Astron radial velocity; vitesse de réaction Chimie, Psych speed of reaction; vitesse de rotation Mécan rotational velocity; vitesse de sédimentation Biol, Méd sedimentation rate.à la vitesse grand V, en quatrième vitesse at top speed; expédier qch en petite vitesse Rail to send sth by goods train.[vitɛs] nom féminin1. [d'un coureur, d'un véhicule] speedà la vitesse de 180 km/h at (a speed of) 180 km/hla vitesse est limitée à 90 km/h the speed limit is 90 km/hfaire de la vitesse to drive ou to go fastprendre de la vitesse to pick up speed, to speed upgagner/perdre de la vitesse to gather/to lose speedvitesse de pointe top ou maximum speedgagner ou prendre quelqu'un de vitessea. [à pied] to walk faster than somebodyb. [en voiture] to go ou to drive faster than somebodyc. (figuré) to beat somebody to it, to pip somebody at the post (UK), to beat somebody by a nose (US)[de la lumière] speeda. [généralement] initial speedvitesse de réaction reaction velocity ou speedpremière/deuxième/troisième vitesse first/second/third gearb. [en rétrogradant] to go down through the gearsà toute vitesse locution adverbialepasser à toute vitesse [temps, moto] to fly by————————en vitesse locution adverbiale[rapidement] quickly[à la hâte] in a rush ou hurrydéjeuner/se laver en vitesse to have a quick lunch/washsors d'ici, et en vitesse! get out of here and be sharp about it!il a déguerpi en vitesse! he left at the double!, he didn't hang around! -
123 adhuc
ăd-huc, adv.I.Prop., of place, to this place, hitherto, thus far (designating the limit, inclusive of the whole space traversed: hence often joined with usque; cf.II.ad, A. 1. B.): conveniunt adhuc utriusque verba,
thus far, to this point, the statements of both agree, Plaut. Truc. 4, 3, 20:adhuc ea dixi, causa cur Zenoni non fuisset,
Cic. Fin. 4, 16, 44; cf. Auct. Her. 1, 9, 16:his oris, quas angulo Baeticae adhuc usque perstrinximus,
Mel. 3, 6, 1.—Hence, in the desig. of measure or degree, so far, to such a degree:et ipse Caesar erat adhuc impudens, qui exercitum et provinciam invito senatu teneret,
Cic. Fam. 16, 11, 4; so Liv. 21, 18, 4; Quint. 2, 19, 2; 8, 5, 20.—More frequently,Transf.A.Of time, until now, hitherto, as yet (designating the limit, together with the period already passed; cf.B.ad, 1. B.): res adhuc quidem hercle in tuto est,
Plaut. Merc. 2, 3, 48:celabitur itidem ut celata adhuc est,
Ter. Phorm. 4, 3, 20:sicut adhuc fecerunt, speculabuntur,
Cic. Cat. 1, 2, 6:ille vidit non modo, quot fuissent adhuc philosophorum de summo bono, sed quot omnino esse possent sententiae,
id. Fin. 5, 6, 16:haec adhuc (sc. acta sunt): sed ad praeterita revertamur,
id. Att. 5, 20; so ib. 3, 14 fin.; 5, 17, 46; id. Agr. 3, 1, 1:Britanni, qui adhuc pugnae expertes,
Tac. Agr. 37; so Curt. 7, 7, 8 al.—With usque or semper:usque adhuc actum est probe,
Plaut. Mil. 2, 6, 107; so id. Ps. 4, 7, 14; Ter. And. 1, 5, 27; id. Ad. 4, 4, 23; 5, 4, 5; id. Hec. 4, 1, 29; Cic. Rep. 2, 20:quod adhuc semper tacui et tacendum putavi,
Cic. de Or. 1, 26, 119.—With dum in subordinate propositions, for the purpose of more accurate desig. of time:quae adhuc te carens, dum hic fui, sustentabam,
what I have endured during the whole time that I have been here, until now, Plaut. Capt. 5, 1, 4:adhuc dum mihi nullo loco deesse vis, numquam te confirmare potuisti,
Cic. Fam. 16, 4; so ib. 18.—Hence the adverbial expression (occurring once in Plautus): adhuc locorum, until now, hitherto: ut adhuc locorum feci, faciam sedulo, Capt. 2, 3, 25.— Adhuc denotes not merely a limitation of time in the present, but also, though more rarely, like usque eo and ad id tempus, and the Engl. as yet, in the past:adhuc haec erant, ad reliqua alacri tendebamus animo,
Cic. Div. 2, 2, 4:Abraham vero adhuc stabat,
Vulg. Gen. 18, 22:unam adhuc a te epistulam acceperam,
Cic. Att. 7, 2:cum adhuc sustinuisset multos dies,
Vulg. Act. 18, 18:scripsi etiam illud quodam in libello... disertos me cognōsse nonnullos, eloquentem adhuc neminem,
id. de Or. 1, 21:una adhuc victoria Carus Metius censebatur,
Tac. Agr. 45.—Adhuc non, or neque adhuc, not as yet, not to this time: nihil adhuc, nothing as yet, or not at all as yet: numquam adhuc, never as yet, never yet:C.cupidissimi veniendi maximis injuriis affecti, adhuc non venerunt,
Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 27, 65:me adhuc non legisse turpe utrique nostrum est,
id. Fam. 7, 24, 7; so id. 3, 8, 25; 6, 14; 14, 6, 2; Mart. 7, 89, 10:cui neque fulgor adhuc nec dum sua forma recessit,
Verg. A. 11, 70:nihil adhuc peccavit etiam,
Plaut. Pers. 4, 4, 78:nihil adhuc est, quod vereare,
Ter. Heaut. 1, 2, 1:sed quod quaeris, quando, qua, quo, nihil adhuc scimus,
Cic. Fam. 9, 7, 4; so 9, 17, 7; Caes. B. C. 3, 57; Nep. Milt. 5:numquam etiam quicquam adhuc verborum est prolocutus perperam,
Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 92; cf. id. Capt. 5, 2, 7.—For etiam nunc, yet, still; to denote continuance (apparently not used by Cic.):D.stertis adhuc?
are you still snoring? Pers. 3, 58;adhuc tranquilla res est,
it is still quiet, Ter. Ph. 3, 1, 15; so id. Ad. 1, 2, 42:Ephesi regem est consecutus fluctuantem adhuc animo,
Liv. 33, 49, 7; so 21, 43, 14; Tac. A. 1, 8, 17; id. H. 2, 44, 73; 4, 17; id. Germ. 28; Suet. Aug. 56, 69; Plin. Ep. 4, 13, 1; Curt. 8, 6, 18: quinque satis fuerant; nam sex septemve libelli est nimium: quid adhuc ludere, Musa, juvat? why play still, still more, or further? Mart. 8, 3; so id. 4, 91.—Hence also to denote that a thing is still remaining or existing:E.at in veterum comicorum adhuc libris invenio,
I yet find in the old comic poets, Quint. 1, 7, 22:quippe tres adhuc legiones erant,
were still left, Tac. H. 3, 9; so id. G. 34; id. Ann. 2, 26; Mart. 7, 44, 1.—With vb. omitted:si quis adhuc precibus locus, exue mentem,
Verg. A. 4, 319.—To denote that a thing has only reached a certain point, now first, just now: cum adhuc ( now for the first time) naso odos obsecutus es meo, da vicissim meo gutturi gaudium, Plaut. Curc. 1, 2, 9:F.gangraenam vero, si nondum plane tenet, sed adhuc incipit, curare non difficillimum est,
Cels. 5, 26, 34; so Mart. 13, 102.—Hence, with deinde or aliquando following:quam concedis adhuc artem omnino non esse, sed aliquando,
Cic. de Or. 1, 58, 246:senatus priusquam edicto convocaretur ad curiam concurrit, obseratisque adhuc foribus, deinde apertis, tantas mortuo gratias agit, etc.,
Suet. Tit. 11; so Tac. A. 11, 23.—To denote that a thing had reached a certain limit before another thing happened (in prose only after Livy), still, yet, while yet:G.inconditam multitudinem adhuc disjecit,
he dispersed the multitude while yet unarranged, Tac. A. 3, 42.—For etiam, insuper, praeterea, to denote that a thing occurs beside or along with another (belonging perhaps only to popular language, hence once in Plaut., and to the post-Aug. per.), besides, further, moreover:H.addam minam adhuc istic postea,
Plaut. Truc. 5, 18:unam rem adhuc adiciam,
Sen. Q. N. 4, 8:sunt adhuc aliquae non omittendae in auro differentiae,
Plin. 33, 2, 10, § 37; so Quint. 2, 21, 6; 9, 4, 34; Val. Fl. 8, 429; Tac. A. 1, 17; id. Agr. 29; ib. 33; Flor. 1, 13, 17; Vulg. Amos, 4, 7; ib. Joan. 16, 12; ib. Heb. 11, 32.—In later Lat. adhuc is used like etiam in the Cic. per., = eti, yet, still, for the sake of emphasis in comparisons; then, if it cnhances the comparative, it stands before it; but follows it, if that which the comp. expresses is added by way of augmentation; as, he has done a still greater thing, and he has still done a greater thing (this is the view of Hand, Turs. I. p. 166):I. a.tum Callicles adhuc concitatior,
Quint. 2, 15, 28:adhuc difficilior observatio est per tenores,
id. 1, 5, 22:si marmor illi (Phidiae), si adhuc viliorem materiem obtulisses, fecisset, etc.,
Sen. Ep. 85, 34:adhuc diligentius,
Plin. 18, 4: cui gloriae amplior [p. 36] adhuc ex opportunitate cumulus accessit, Suet. Tib. 17:Di faveant, majora adhuc restant,
Curt. 9, 6, 23; so Quint. 10, 1, 99; Tac. G. 19; Suet. Ner. 10.Ita res successit meliusque adhuc, Plaut. Bacch. 4, 9, 18:b.Tellurem Nymphasque et adhuc ignota precatur flumina,
Verg. A. 7, 137:Nil parvum sapias et adhuc sublimia cures,
Hor. Ep. 1, 12, 15; so ib. 2, 2, 114; Liv. 22, 49, 10; Sen. Ep. 49, 4.—Absol.:gens non astuta nec callida aperit adhuc secreta pectoris licentiā joci,
Tac. G. 22:cetera similes Batavis, nisi quod ipso adhuc terrae suae solo et caelo acrius animantur,
ib. 29, 3 (cf.: ipse adeo under adeo, II., and at the end); so Stat. S. 1, 2, 55.—See more upon this word, Hand, Turs. I. pp. 156-167. -
124 Garrett, João Baptista de Almeida
(1799-1854)One of Portugal's greatest 19th-century writers, Garrett was a diplomat, civil servant, journalist, and intellectual. In exile abroad due to his adherence to the cause of constitutional liberal monarchy, during the period 1823-36 especially, Garrett studied and was influenced by his readings of Shakespeare and romantic writers such as Lord Byron and Walter Scott. He studied law at the University of Coimbra. Following the triumph of King Pedro IV's cause in the War of the Brothers, Garrett served in the new government as a diplomat in Belgium. In a later second residence abroad, he was influenced by his study of German literature.It was in the field of letters that Garrett made his greatest mark, and he was active in all aspects of literary endeavor: poetry, essays, theater, journalism, and the novel. He was the founder of Portugal's national theater, Teatro Nacional de D. Maria II, and several of his plays become standard in Portuguese theater repertory, including his adaptations of plays by Gil Vicente. Government censorship, however, prevented the staging of several of his plays. His classic play Frei Luís de Sousa premiered in 1843, in a private theater.Like so many other romantic writers of his era in Europe, Garrett collected, edited, and published Portuguese folk stories, poems, and songs from a rich rural heritage and preserved them for later generations. Many were collected in his Romanceiro e Cancioneiro, in three volumes. Uncomfortable in the maelstrom of unstable politics and already named a peer of the realm, Garrett accepted the post of minister of foreign affairs in 1852. Quickly disillusioned, he retired in 1853 to private life and to writing another novel, left unfinished at his death in the following year.Historical dictionary of Portugal > Garrett, João Baptista de Almeida
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125 Sholes, Christopher Latham
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 14 February 1819 Mooresburg, Pennsylvania, USAd. 17 February 1890 USA[br]American inventor of the first commercially successful typewriter.[br]Sholes was born on his parents' farm, of a family that had originally come from England. After leaving school at 14, he was apprenticed for four years to the local newspaper, the Danville Intelligencer. He moved with his parents to Wisconsin, where he followed his trade as journalist and printer, within a year becoming State Printer and taking charge of the House journal of the State Legislature. When he was 20 he left home and joined his brother in Madison, Wisconsin, on the staff of the Wisconsin Enquirer. After marrying, he took the editorship of the Southport Telegraph, until he became Postmaster of Southport. His experiences as journalist and postmaster drew him into politics and, in spite of the delicate nature of his health and personality, he served with credit as State Senator and in the State Assembly. In 1860 he moved to Milwaukee, where he became Editor of the local paper until President Lincoln offered him the post of Collector of Customs at Milwaukee.That position at last gave Sholes time to develop his undoubted inventive talents. With a machinist friend, Samuel W.Soule, he obtained a patent for a paging machine and another two years later for a machine for numbering the blank pages of a book serially. At the small machine shop where they worked, there was a third inventor, Carlos Glidden. It was Glidden who suggested to Sholes that, in view of his numbering machine, he would be well equipped to develop a letter printing machine. Glidden drew Sholes's attention to an account of a writing machine that had recently been invented in London by John Pratt, and Sholes was so seized with the idea that he devoted the rest of his life to perfecting the machine. With Glidden and Soule, he took out a patent for a typewriter on June 1868 followed by two further patents for improvements. Sholes struggled unsuccessfully for five years to exploit his invention; his two partners gave up their rights in it and finally, on 1 March 1873, Sholes himself sold his rights to the Remington Arms Company for $12,000. With their mechanical skills and equipment, Remingtons were able to perfect the Sholes typewriter and put it on the market. This, the first commercially successful typewriter, led to a revolution not only in office work, but also in work for women, although progress was slow at first. When the New York Young Women's Christian Association bought six Remingtons in 1881 to begin classes for young women, eight turned up for the first les-son; and five years later it was estimated that there were 60,000 female typists in the USA. Sholes said, "I feel that I have done something for the women who have always had to work so hard. This will more easily enable them to earn a living."Sholes continued his work on the typewriter, giving Remingtons the benefit of his results. His last patent was granted in 1878. Never very strong, Sholes became consumptive and spent much of his remaining nine years in the vain pursuit of health.[br]Bibliography23 June 1868, US patent no. 79,265 (the first typewriter patent).Further ReadingM.H.Adler, 1973, The Writing Machine, London: Allen \& Unwin.LRDBiographical history of technology > Sholes, Christopher Latham
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126 Stuart, James
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]b. 2 January 1843 Balgonie, Fife, Scotlandd. 12 October 1913 Norwich, Norfolk, England[br]Scottish engineer and educator.[br]James Stuart established the teaching of engineering as a university discipline at Cambridge. He was born at Balgonie in Fife, where his father managed a linen mill. He attended the University of St Andrews and then studied mathematics at Cambridge University. In 1867 he took up a post as Assistant Tutor at Trinity College, Cambridge, where his skills as a teacher were quickly recognized. The University was at that time adapting itself to the new systems of instruction recommended by the Royal Commission on university reform in the 1850s, and Stuart took an active part in the organization of a new structure of inter-collegiate lecture courses. He made an even more significant contribution to the establishment of extramural courses from which the Cambridge University extension lecture programme developed. This began in 1867, when Stuart took adult classes in Manchester and Crewe. The latter, in particular, brought him into close contact with those involved in practical mechanics and stimulated his interest in the applied sciences. In 1875 he was elected to the newly created Chair of Mechanism and Engineering in Cambridge, and he set out energetically to recruit students and to build up a flourishing unit with its own workshop and foundry, training a new generation of engineers in the applied sciences.In November 1884 Stuart was elected to Parliament and embarked on an active but somewhat undistinguished career in politics as a radical Liberal, becoming amongst other things a keen supporter of the women's suffrage movement. This did not endear him to his academic colleagues, and the Engineering School suffered from neglect by Stuart until he resigned the Chair in 1890. By the time he left, however, the University was ready to recognize Engineering as a Tripos subject and to accept properly equipped teaching laboratories, so that his successor J.A. Ewing was able to benefit from Stuart's pioneering work. Stuart continued his political activities and was appointed a Privy Councillor in 1909. He married Elizabeth Colman after resigning the Chair, and on the death of his father-in-law in 1898 he moved to Norwich to take on the direction of the family mustard firm, J. \& J.Colman Ltd.[br]Further ReadingHilken, 1967, Engineering at Cambridge, Ch. 3, pp. 58–106.AB -
127 قطع
قَطَعَ \ cover: to travel a certain distance: We covered 300 miles in a day. cut: to separate, wound or treat with sth. sharp, esp. with a knife: I cut a branch off the tree. Please cut this apple in half. cut down: to cause to fall: He cut the tree down. cut off: to remove by cutting: He cut off the branch, to stop Our electricity supply was cut off till we paid the bill. cut short: to shorten: He cut short his visit because he felt ill. interrupt: to stop; prevent for a short time: The electricity supply was interrupted by the storm. sever: to cut through (or cut off) violently and completely: He severed the rope with a knife. His left arm was severed in the accident. shut off: to stop a supply: The water was shut off because the pipe burst. strike off: to cut off with a sharp blow: He struck the branch off with an axe. \ See Also اجتاز (اِجْتَازَ)، قصر (قَصَّرَ)، أَعَاقَ، منع (مَنَعَ) \ قَطَعَ (بانصهار الفصَّال) \ fuse: (of electrical things) to stop when the fuse melts; cause (sth. electrical) to stop in this way: The lights have fused. A worn wire in the radio fused the lights. \ See Also اِنْقَطَعَ التَّيار \ قَطَعَ الاتصال \ disconnect: to separate; pull out the wires of (sth. electrical) which join it to the main supply: The doctor disconnected the machine. \ قَطَعَ الأمل \ despair: to cease hoping: We despaired of finding our stolen car. \ See Also يئس (يَئِسَ) \ قَطَعَ بعضُه بعضًا \ cross: (of letters, roads, travellers, etc.) to meet and pass, going in different directions: Our letters crossed in the post. \ See Also تقاطع (تَقاطَع) \ قَطَعَ بفأس \ hew: to cut (with an axe, sword, etc.). \ قَطَعَ بالمِنْشار \ saw: to cut with a saw. \ قَطَعَ الشجرة \ chop down: to cause to fall by chopping: The men chopped down several trees. \ قَطَعَ الطريق على... \ intercept: to stop or catch sb. or sth. on the way: their secret message (or messenger) was intercepted by the police. One of their team intercepted the ball before it reached me. \ قَطَعَ على نَفْسِه عهدًا \ vow: to promise solemnly. -
128 оценка Паралимпийских игр
оценка Паралимпийских игр
Оценка Паралимпийских игр основывается на:
• внутренней оценке МПК при участии всех служб и рассмотрении базы данных системы отслеживания проблем во время Игр;
• отзывах организаторов Игр в городе-организаторе;
• отзывах различных клиентов, посетивших Игры.
В то время как вышеуказанный анализ в основном сосредоточен на технических аспектах и услугах, относящихся к Играм, важную роль в оценке
Паралимпийских игр по окончании Игр играют еще два элемента:
• наследие Игр на различных уровнях, особенно касающееся социального, культурного и спортивного аспектов, а также освещения в СМИ и осведомленности;
• способствование Игр популяризации ценностей и видения Паралимпийского движения; подтверждение последовательности и ясности идей, доносимых через Игры.
[Департамент лингвистических услуг Оргкомитета «Сочи 2014». Глоссарий терминов]EN
Paralympic Games evaluation
Evaluation of the Paralympic Games is based on:
• an IPC internal evaluation with input from all functions and review of the Games-time issues tracker database • feedback from the Games organizers in the Host City • feedback from the different clients who attended the Games.this analysis above mainly focuses on technical aspects and services related to the Games, two other elements play an important part in the post-Games evaluation of the Paralympic Games:
• Games legacy on various levels especially with regard to social, cultural and sports aspects as well as to the media coverage and awareness
• contribution of the Games to the values and vision of the Paralympic movement; verification of coherence and clarity of messages left through the Games.
[Департамент лингвистических услуг Оргкомитета «Сочи 2014». Глоссарий терминов]Тематики
EN
Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > оценка Паралимпийских игр
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