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clair-e

  • 41 clairvoyant clair·voy·ant adj , n

    [klɛə'vɔɪənt]

    English-Italian dictionary > clairvoyant clair·voy·ant adj , n

  • 42 Saint Clair Shores

    Сент-Клэр-Шорс (США, шт. Мичиган)

    Англо-русский географический словарь > Saint Clair Shores

  • 43 St Clair, Lake

    оз. Сент-Клэр (Канада/США)

    Англо-русский географический словарь > St Clair, Lake

  • 44 en clair

    • nešifrovan

    English-Serbian dictionary > en clair

  • 45 en clair

    нешифрованный, открытым текстом

    Новый англо-русский словарь > en clair

  • 46 Saint Clair

    Сент-Клэр Озеро в Сев. Америке, в системе Великих озер, между озерами Гурон и Эри. 1.2 тыс. кв. км, глубина до 7.6 м.

    Англо-русский словарь географических названий > Saint Clair

  • 47 en\ clair

    tavakeeles, kõigile arusaadavalt

    English-Estonian dictionary > en\ clair

  • 48 en clair

    English-Russian military dictionary > en clair

  • 49 Lake Saint Clair

    оз. Сент-Клэр (Канада и США)

    Англо-русский географический словарь > Lake Saint Clair

  • 50 Saint Clair

    р. Сент-Клэр (Канада и США)

    Англо-русский географический словарь > Saint Clair

  • 51 Cradle Mountain–Lake St Clair National Park

    Национальный парк гора Крэдл–озеро Сент-Клэр (внесён в списки памятников мирового культурного наследия; расположен на о-ве Тасмания; занимает площадь 126 га. Популярное место ловли форели, бушуокинга и др. видов отдыха)

    Australia and New Zealand. English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Cradle Mountain–Lake St Clair National Park

  • 52 en clair

    фр.
    в незашифрованном виде, с открытым текстом

    Large English-Russian phrasebook > en clair

  • 53 en clair

    фр. открытым текстом, клером

    English-Russian base dictionary > en clair

  • 54 Kilby, Jack St Clair

    [br]
    b. 8 November 1923 Jefferson City, Missouri, USA
    [br]
    American engineer who filed the first patents for micro-electronic (integrated) circuits.
    [br]
    Kilby spent most of his childhood in Great Bend, Kansas, where he often accompanied his father, an electrical power engineer, on his maintenance rounds. Working in the blizzard of 1937, his father borrowed a "ham" radio, and this fired Jack to study for his amateur licence (W9GTY) and to construct his own equipment while still a student at Great Bend High School. In 1941 he entered the University of Illinois, but four months later, after the attack on Pearl Harbor, he was enlisted in the US Army and found himself working in a radio repair workshop in India. When the war ended he returned to his studies, obtaining his BSEE from Illinois in 1947 and his MSEE from the University of Wisconsin. He then joined Centralab, a small electronics firm in Milwaukee owned by Globe-Union. There he filed twelve patents, including some for reduced titanate capacitors and for Steatite-packing of transistors, and developed a transistorized hearing-aid. During this period he also attended a course on transistors at Bell Laboratories. In May 1958, concerned to gain experience in the field of number processing, he joined Texas Instruments in Dallas. Shortly afterwards, while working alone during the factory vacation, he conceived the idea of making monolithic, or integrated, circuits by diffusing impurities into a silicon substrate to create P-N junctions. Within less than a month he had produced a complete oscillator on a chip to prove that the technology was feasible, and the following year at the 1ERE Show he demonstrated a germanium integrated-circuit flip-flop. Initially he was granted a patent for the idea, but eventually, after protracted litigation, priority was awarded to Robert Noyce of Fairchild. In 1965 he was commissioned by Patrick Haggerty, the Chief Executive of Texas Instruments, to make a pocket calculator based on integrated circuits, and on 14 April 1971 the world's first such device, the Pocketronic, was launched onto the market. Costing $150 (and weighing some 2½ lb or 1.1 kg), it was an instant success and in 1972 some 5 million calculators were sold worldwide. He left Texas Instruments in November 1970 to become an independent consultant and inventor, working on, amongst other things, methods of deriving electricity from sunlight.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Franklin Institute Stuart Ballantine Medal 1966. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers David Sarnoff Award 1966; Cledo Brunetti Award (jointly with Noyce) 1978; Medal of Honour 1986. National Academy of Engineering 1967. National Science Medal 1969. National Inventors Hall of Fame 1982. Honorary DEng Miami 1982, Rochester 1986. Honorary DSc Wisconsin 1988. Distinguished Professor, Texas A \& M University.
    Bibliography
    6 February 1959, US patent no. 3,138,743 (the first integrated circuit (IC); initially granted June 1964).
    US patent no. 3,819,921 (the Pocketronic calculator).
    Further Reading
    T.R.Reid, 1984, Microchip. The Story of a Revolution and the Men Who Made It, London: Pan Books (for the background to the development of the integrated circuit). H.Queisser, 1988, Conquest of the Microchip, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Kilby, Jack St Clair

  • 55 Riche, Gaspard-Clair-François-Marie, Baron de Prony

    [br]
    b. c. 1755 France d. c. 1839
    [br]
    French mathematician who used the method of differences to calculate logarithms and trigonometric functions,
    [br]
    Whilst Directeur of the Bureau du Cadastre, Prony was made responsible for a project to determine the trigonometric functions of the centesimal units of 90°, i.e. the right angle was successively divided into 100 grades containing 100 minutes, which in turn each consisted of 100 seconds. This work produced tables (known as the Table de Cadastre) of the natural sines to twenty-two decimal places and the logarithms of sines and tangents to fourteen places. Although the tables as calculated were never published, tables based on them (presumably derived for the more familiar degree, minute and second sub-divisions of a right-angle by interpolation) have since appeared.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Riche, Gaspard-Clair-François-Marie, Baron de Prony

  • 56 en clair

    /Ỵ:ɳ'kleə/ * phó từ - bằng chữ thường (không phải mật mã) (bức điện...)

    English-Vietnamese dictionary > en clair

  • 57 clairobscure


    clair-obscure
    1> светотень
    2> контрасты; контрастное сопоставление (в поэзии)
    3> _полигр. чиароскуро

    НБАРС > clairobscure

  • 58 clairvoyance

    [clair·voy·ance || kleə'vɔɪəns]
    n. חוש ששי, הארה; ראיה חדה
    * * *
    הדח היאר ;הראה,ישש שוח

    English-Hebrew dictionary > clairvoyance

  • 59 clairvoyant

    [clair'voy·ant || -nt]
    n. גלוי עיניים, רואה דברים שמעבר לחושים
    * * *
    םישוחל רבעמש םירבד האור,םייניע יולג

    English-Hebrew dictionary > clairvoyant

  • 60 clairaudience

    clair.au.d.ience
    [klɛər'ɔ:diəns] n clariaudiência.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > clairaudience

См. также в других словарях:

  • clair — clair, claire [ klɛr ] adj., n. m. et adv. • XIVe; cler XIIe; clar Xe; lat. clarus I ♦ Adj. A ♦ (Concret) 1 ♦ Qui a l éclat du jour. ⇒ éclatant, lumineux …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • clair — clair, claire (klêr, klê r ) adj. 1°   Qui a l éclat du jour, de la lumière. Le bois sec fait un feu très clair. •   Mais, ô planète belle et claire...., MALH. II, 4. •   Adieu donc, clairs soleils si divins et si beaux, Adieu l honneur sacré des …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • clair — CLAIR, AIRE. adj. Éclatant, lumineux, qui jette, qui répand de la lumière. Le soleil est le plus clair de tous les Astres. La lune est claire. Le feu est clair de sa nature. Ce bois fait un feu très clair. f♛/b] En ce sens il se prend quelquefois …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798

  • clair — CLAIR, [cl]aire. adj. Eclatant, lumineux, qui jette, qui respand de la lumiere. Le soleil est le plus clair de tous les astres. la lune est claire. le feu est clair de sa nature. ce bois fait un feu clair. il a les yeux clairs & petillants. Il se …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • +Clair — + Clair + Clair Genre Information sur les média Présenté par Daphné Roulier (2002 2005) puis Florence Dauchez (2005 2007) et Charlotte le Grix de la Salle (2007 2009) Pays  France Langue(s) …   Wikipédia en Français

  • + clair — Genre Information sur les média Présenté par Daphné Roulier (2002 2005) puis Florence Dauchez (2005 2007) et Charlotte le Grix de la Salle (2007 2009) Pays  France Langue(s) …   Wikipédia en Français

  • + Clair — Genre Information sur les média Présentation Daphné Roulier (2002 2005) puis Florence Dauchez (2005 2007) et Charlotte le Grix de la Salle (2007 2009) Pays …   Wikipédia en Français

  • clair — clair·audience; clair·audient; clair; clair·sentience; clair·sentient; clair·voy·ance; clair·voy·ante; clair·voy·ant; clair·au·di·ent·ly; clair·voy·an·cy; clair·voy·ant·ly; …   English syllables

  • Clair — heißt der Ort Clair (New Brunswick) in Kanada Clair ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Jany Clair (* 1938), französische Schauspielerin Julia Clair (* 1994), französische Skispringerin René Clair (1898–1981), französischer Regisseur Sandie… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • CLAIR (R.) — CLAIR RENÉ CHOMETTE dit RENÉ (1898 1981) Auteur de films et, accessoirement, critique, essayiste et romancier. Après des débuts comme journaliste (L’Intransigeant ), comme parolier (pour Damia), comme comédien (notamment pour Feuillade), comme… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • clair — clair, e adj. Il est clair, il est dans un état normal (ni ivre, ni drogué) ; il n a rien à se reprocher ; il sait où il va. / Clair comme de l eau de roche, parfaitement compréhensible. Clair comme de l eau de vaisselle, incompréhensible. /… …   Dictionnaire du Français argotique et populaire

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