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21 odvjetništvo
n solicitor's/lawyer's itd. profession ili occupation (- odvjetnik) I posvetiti se odvjetništvou join/enter the legal profession, become a solicitor/lawyer itd. (- otvoriti odvjetničku praksu); dobiti pravo na obavljanje odvjetništvoa* UK be called to the Bar, US be amditted t* * *• bar -
22 адвокатский
прил.- адвокатское сословиебыть принятым (вступить) в адвокатское сословие (получить право адвокатской практики) — to be admitted (called) to the Bar; go to (join) the Bar
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23 вступать в адвокатуру
to be admitted (called) to the Bar; go to (join) the BarРусско-английский юридический словарь > вступать в адвокатуру
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24 получивший звание барристера
1) Law: called to the barrister2) Business: called to the barУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > получивший звание барристера
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25 Grimthorpe (of Grimthorpe), Edmund Beckett, Baron
SUBJECT AREA: Horology[br]b. 12 May 1816 Newark, Nottinghamshire, Englandd. 29 April 1905 St Albans, Hertfordshire, England[br]English lawyer and amateur horologist who was the first successfully to apply the gravity escapement to public clocks.[br]Born Edmund Beckett Denison, he was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he studied mathematics, graduating in 1838. He was called to the Bar in 1841 and became a Queen's Counsel in 1854. He built up a large and lucrative practice which gave him the independence to pursue his many interests outside law. His interest in horology may have been stimulated by a friend and fellow lawyer, J.M. Bloxham, who interestingly had invented a gravity escapement with an affinity to the escapement eventually used by Denison. Denison studied horology with his usual thoroughness and by 1850 he had published his Rudimentary Treatise on Clock and Watchmaking. It was natural, therefore, that he should have been invited to be a referee when a disagreement arose over the design of the clock for the new Houses of Parliament. Typically, he interpreted his brief very liberally and designed the clock himself. The most distinctive feature of the clock, in its final form, was the incorporation of a gravity escapement. A gravity escapement was particularly desirable in a public clock as it enabled the pendulum to receive a constant impulse (and thus swing with a constant amplitude), despite the variable forces that might be exerted by the wind on the exposed hands. The excellent performance of the prestigious clock at Westminster made Denison's form of gravity escapement de rigueur for large mechanical public clocks produced in Britain and in many other countries. In 1874 he inherited his father's baronetcy, dropping the Denison name, but later adopted the name Grimthorpe when he was created a Baron in 1886.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPeerage 1886. President, British Horological Institute 1868–1905.BibliographyHis highly idiosyncratic A Rudimentary Treatise on Clocks and Watchmaking first published in 1850, went through eight editions, with slight changes of title, and became the most influential work in English on the subject of public clocks.Further ReadingVaudrey Mercer, 1977, The Life and Letters of Edward John Dent, London, pp. 650–1 (provides biographical information relating to horology; also contains a reliable account of Denison's involvement with the clock at Westminster).A.L.Rawlings, 1948, The Science of Clocks and Watcher, repub. 1974, pp. 98–102 (provides a technical assessment of Denison's escapement).DVBiographical history of technology > Grimthorpe (of Grimthorpe), Edmund Beckett, Baron
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26 Grove, Sir William Robert
SUBJECT AREA: Electricity[br]b. 11 July 1811 Swansea, Walesd. 1 August 1896 London, England[br]Welsh chemist and physicist, inventor of the Grove electrochemical primary cell.[br]After education at Brasenose College, Oxford, Grove was called to the Bar in 1835. Instead of immediately practising, he became involved in electrical research, devising in 1839 the cell that bears his name. He became Professor of Experimental Philosophy at the London Institution from 1840 to 1845; it was during this period that he built up his high reputation among physicists. In 1846 he published On the Correlation of Physical Forces, which was based on a course of his lectures. He returned to the practice of law, becoming a judge in 1871, but retained his interest in scientific research during his sixteen-year occupancy of the Bench. He served as a member of the Council of the Royal Society in 1846 and 1847 and played a leading part in its reform. Contributing to the science of electrochemistry, he invented the Grove cell, which together with its modification by Bunsen became an important source of electrical energy during the middle of the nineteenth century, before mechanically driven generators became available. The Grove cell had a platinum electrode immersed in strong nitric acid, separated by a porous diaphragm from a zinc electrode in weak sulphuric acid. The hydrogen formed at the platinum electrode was immediately oxidized by the acid, turning it into water. This avoided the polarization which occurred in the early copper-zinc cells. It was a very powerful primary cell with a high voltage and a low internal resistance, but it produced objectionable fumes. Grove also invented his "gas battery", the earliest fuel cell, in which a current resulted from the chemical energy released from combining oxygen and hydrogen. This was developed by Rawcliffe and others, and found applications as a power source in manned spacecraft.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1872. FRS 1840. Fellow of the Chemistry Society 1841. Royal Society Royal Medal 1847.Bibliography1846, On the Correlation of Physical Forces, London; 1874, 6th edn, with reprints of many of Grove's papers (his only book, an early view on the conservation of energy).1839, "On a small voltaic battery of great energy", Philosophical Magazine 15:287–93 (his account of his cell).Further ReadingObituary, 1896, Electrician 37:483–4.K.R.Webb, 1961, "Sir William Robert Grove (1811–1896) and the origin of the fuel cell", Journal of the Royal Institute of Chemistry 85: 291–3 (for the present-day significance of Grove's experiments).C.C.Gillispie (ed.), 1972, Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Vol. V, New York, pp. 559–61.GWBiographical history of technology > Grove, Sir William Robert
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27 Lanston, Tolbert
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 3 February 1844 Troy, Ohio, USAd. 18 February 1913 Washington, DC, USA[br]American inventor of the Monotype typesetting machine.[br]Although reared in a farming community, Lanston was able to develop his mechanical talent. After serving in the American Civil War he secured a clerkship in the Pensions Office in Washington, where he remained for twenty-two years. He studied law in his spare time and was called to the Bar. At the same time, he invented a whole variety of mechanical devices, many of which he patented. Around 1883 Lanston began taking an interest in machines for composing printers' type, probably stimulated by Ottmar Mergenthaler, who was then in Washington and working in this field. Four years' work were rewarded on 7 June 1887 by the grant of a patent, followed by three more, for a machine "to produce justified lines of type". The machine, the Monotype, consisted of two components: first a keyboard unit produced a strip of paper tape with holes punched in patterns corresponding to the characters required; this tape controlled the matrices in the caster, the second and "hot metal" component, from which types were ejected singly and fed to an assembly point until a complete line of type had been formed. Lanston resigned his post and set up the Lanston Type Machine Company in Washington. He laboured for ten years to convert the device defined in his patents into a machine that could be made and used commercially. In 1897 the perfected Monotype appeared. The company was reorganized as the Lanston Monotype Manufacturing Company of Philadelphia, and Lanston devoted himself to promoting and improving the machine. Monotype, with Mergenthaler's Linotype, steadily supplanted hand-setting and the various inadequate mechanical methods that were then in use, and by the 1920s they reigned supreme, until the 1960s, when they themselves began to be superseded by computer-controlled photosetting methods.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFranklin Institute Cresson Gold Medal 1896.Further ReadingObituary, 1913, American Printer (March).L.A.Legros and J.C.Grant, 1916, Typographical Printing Surfaces, London.J.Moran, 1964, The Composition of Reading Matter, London.LRD -
28 получать право адвокатской практики в суде
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > получать право адвокатской практики в суде
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29 быть назначенным королевским адвокатом
General subject: to be called within the BarУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > быть назначенным королевским адвокатом
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30 быть принятым в адвокатуру
Law: be called to the barУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > быть принятым в адвокатуру
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31 получивший право адвокатской практики
Business: called to the barУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > получивший право адвокатской практики
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32 получить звание барристера
Law: be called to the barУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > получить звание барристера
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33 получить назначение на должность королевского адвоката
General subject: be called within the BarУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > получить назначение на должность королевского адвоката
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34 принятый в адвокатуру
Business: called to the barУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > принятый в адвокатуру
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35 стать барристером
Diplomatic term: be called to the Bar -
36 ставати адвокатом
Українсько-англійський юридичний словник > ставати адвокатом
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37 адвокат
м.лишать звания адвоката (вн.) — disbar (d.)
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38 أصبح محاميا
v. be called to the bar -
39 إستدعى إلى البار
v. be called to the bar -
40 адвокат
м.lawyer; attorney амер.; ( выступающий в суде) barrister брит.; counselor амер.; ( поверенный) solicitor брит.стать адвока́том — be called to the bar
лиша́ть зва́ния адвока́та (вн.) — disbar (d)
См. также в других словарях:
called within the bar — Made Queen s (or King s) Counsel in the UK • • • Main Entry: ↑bar … Useful english dictionary
called to the bar — Admitted as barrister or advocate • • • Main Entry: ↑bar … Useful english dictionary
one called to the bar — index advocate (counselor), counselor, jurist Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
be called to the bar — phrase to officially become a lawyer Thesaurus: appearing in courthyponym Main entry: call … Useful english dictionary
called to the bar — adjective licensed to argue cases in a superior court … Wiktionary
the bar — UK US (also the Bar) /bɑːr/ noun [S] LAW ► UK the group of barristers (= lawyers who are allowed to argue a case in a higher court), or the profession of such lawyers: »a member of the bar »He was called to the bar (= became a barrister) in 2006 … Financial and business terms
be called to the Bar — ► be called (or go) to the Bar Brit. be admitted as a barrister. Main Entry: ↑bar … English terms dictionary
be called to the bar — receive authorization from the Bar Association to work as a lawyer … English contemporary dictionary
Call to the Bar — The Call to the Bar is a legal term of art in most common law jurisdictions. Common law jurisdictions were all at one time part of the British Empire.Fact|date=August 2007 Being called to the Bar has its origin in the royal summons that was… … Wikipedia
The Bar Wizards — The BarWizards (Neil Lowrey and Neil Garner) are a British Flair bartending act. They first rose to fame when they were finalists in the first series of the British television talent show Britain s Got Talent in 2007,[1] in which they lost to the … Wikipedia
be called within the Bar — Brit. be appointed a Queen s Counsel. → bar … English new terms dictionary