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  • 121 integrity

    •• Integrity 1. quality of being honest and upright in character. 2. state of being complete (A.S. Hornby).

    •• Среди предлагаемых в словарях переводов этого слова – честность, неподкупность. Например, a man of integrity – честный, неподкупный человек. В Уставе ООН integrity – добросовестность. На мой взгляд, ближе всего к этому английскому слову русское принципиальность, кстати, не всегда легко поддающееся переводу на английский. Такое значение слова integrity хорошо видно из следующей цитаты из статьи в журнале Time о «поколении Икс» – американской молодежи рождения 1965–1976 годов: 71% of Gen Xers – a higher percentage than their parents or grandparents – believe that “In this world, sometimes you have to compromise your principles.” Do they identify more with success or with integrity? More than half choose success; only a third of their elders select it.
    •• В статье в газете Financial Times опубликованной через несколько дней после похорон принцессы Дианы, автор, критикуя английские телеканалы за чрезмерное, по его мнению, внимание к этому событию (...a search through all the terrestrial channels revealed nothing but the Diana story), пишет: It was left for Channel 4 to emerge with some credit and integrity intact. – Лишь четвертый канал сохранил хоть какое-то достоинство и принципиальность.
    •• * Несмотря на, казалось бы, вполне освоенный русским языком корень (интеграл, интеграция и т.д.), слово integrity – одно из трудных для переводчика.
    •• У этого слова по существу два значения – одно из них можно назвать «физическим» (словари иногда подразделяют его на два, но такое дробление кажется мне излишним), другое относится к сфере морали.
    •• У первого значения в русском языке есть устойчивое соответствие – целостность, хотя оно не всегда дает стопроцентное попадание. Скажем, в словосочетании integrity of the World Bank русским соответствием будет устойчивость. В некоторых контекстах – сохранность. Structural integrity – прочность конструкции. Timing integrity – синхронизация. Equipment integrity – работоспособность оборудования.
    •• Но гораздо труднее в переводе – второе значение. Лучшее его определение – в словаре Merriam-Webster: steadfast adherence to a strict moral or ethical code. Как мне кажется, это определение выявляет общий модуль двух значений, который можно было бы условно определить словом соответствие (прежнему состоянию или какой-то идеальной модели). Англо-русские словари дают очень ограниченный набор вариантов русского перевода. Например, Новый БАРСчестность, прямота, неподкупность. Нет даже слова добросовестность (Устав ООН: The paramount consideration in the employment of the staff and in the determination of the conditions of service shall be the necessity of securing the highest standards of efficiency, competence, and integrityПри приеме на службу и определении условий службы следует руководствоваться, главным образом, необходимостью обеспечить высокий уровень работоспособности, компетентности и добросовестности). Во многих случаях удачным вариантом будет принципиальность («обратное соответствие», которое дает, например, словарь Д. Ермоловича и Т. Красавиной, – adherence to one’s principles – не совсем удачно, так как по-русски имеется в виду все-таки приверженность не «своим принципам», а чему-то «более высокому», то есть скорее adherence to principle) или ответственность. Например, американская организация Office of Research Integrity занимается, судя по ее Интернет-сайту, следующим: monitors institutional investigations of research misconduct and facilitates the responsible conduct of research through educational, preventive, regulatory activities. По-русски ее название можно передать как управление по проблемам ответственности/добросовестности в научных исследованиях или научной этики.
    •• Слово этика оказывается кстати и в других случаях. Вот слова журналиста Роберта Новака, обидевшегося на коллегу во время телепередачи и даже демонстративно покинувшего студию (случай в США редчайший): He said I was trying to please the editorial writers of The Wall Street Journal. I thought that was an unacceptable questioning of my integrity. В переводе, видимо, лучший вариант <...> я счел это неприемлемой попыткой поставить под сомнение мою журналистскую этику. Здесь подойдет также доброе имя – вариант, который лучше всего передает и смысл реакции шефа лондонской полиции Иана Блэра на обвинения, последовавшие за убийством в лондонском метро бразильца Жана-Шарля де Менезиса: Those accusations <...> strike at the integrity of this office and the integrity of the Metropolitan Police, and I fundamentally reject them.
    •• Все эти варианты заслуживают, на мой взгляд, включения в словари. Но они не охватывают всего многообразия употребления слова integrity, которое во многих случаях требует поиска метонимического контекстуального соответствия. Пример из сообщения агентства Associated Press: Citing a United Nations-commissioned poll that showed “a high level of discontent and pessimism among staff concerning the integrity of the organization,” the report said that it had found “the morale is dismal.” Думаю, что здесь мы имеем дело с тем случаем, когда реальное словоупотребление вольно или невольно смешивает и несколько смазывает значения слова, и трудно найти лучший вариант, чем пессимизм относительно будущего организации, хотя в первом приближении удачным кажется и слово авторитет.

    English-Russian nonsystematic dictionary > integrity

  • 122 employee

    English-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > employee

  • 123 commission

    1. n доверенность, полномочие

    in commission — имеющий полномочия; уполномоченный

    2. n заказ
    3. n ком. поручение
    4. n комиссионное вознаграждение, комиссионные
    5. n комиссия, комитет

    commission of inquiry — комиссия по расследованию, следственная комиссия

    permanent commission — постоянная комиссия, постоянный комитет

    6. n офицерское звание
    7. n присвоение офицерского звания
    8. n документ, патент офицера
    9. n патент, выдаваемый мировому судье при назначении его на должность
    10. n совершение проступка

    a ship in commission — судно, готовое к плаванию

    intentional commission — намеренное, умышленное совершение

    11. v уполномочивать; поручать
    12. v назначать на должность
    13. v присвоить офицерское звание
    14. v заказывать
    15. v мор. подготавливать к плаванию

    ship in commission — судно, готовое к плаванию

    16. v мор. укомплектовывать личным составом
    17. v мор. передавать под командование
    Синонимический ряд:
    1. committee (noun) agency; board; commissioners; committee; council; delegation; deputation; legation; representatives
    2. duty (noun) duty; function; obligation; responsibility; trust; work
    3. entrustment (noun) assignment; authorizing; commitment; deputizing; empowering; entrusting; entrustment; sending
    4. office (noun) errand; mission; office; position; rank; task
    5. order (noun) authorisation; authorization; command; dictate; direction; injunction; license; order; ordinance; permission
    6. performance (noun) performance; perpetration; transaction
    7. remuneration (noun) compensation; cut; fee; indemnity; payment; percentage; portion; remuneration; royalty; salary; stipend
    8. contract (verb) contract; order; request; requisition
    9. empower (verb) accredit; adjure; appoint; assign; authorise; authorize; bid; command; dictate; empower; enable; entitle; license; qualify
    10. entrust (verb) charge; delegate; depute; deputise; deputize; endow; entrust; invest; promote

    English-Russian base dictionary > commission

  • 124 Boxer, Major-General Edward Mourrier

    SUBJECT AREA: Weapons and armour
    [br]
    b. February 1822
    d. 11 January 1897 Isle of Wight, England
    [br]
    English Ammunition designer and inventor of the brass, fully obturating cartridge case.
    [br]
    Commissioned into the Royal Artillery in 1839, Boxer's flair for the technical aspects of gunnery led to his appointment, at the early age of 33, as Superintendent of the Laboratory at the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich. He was able to devote his attention to the design of more effective shells, cartridges and fuses, with his greatest achievement being the invention, in 1866, of the Boxer cartridge, which had a case made of brass and a percussion cap set into the base. The real significance of the cartridge was that for the first time the chamber could be fully sealed, by way of the propellant gases expanding the case against the chamber wall, with the result that effective weapon range and accuracy could be dramatically increased. His achievement was recognized when Parliament voted a special financial grant, and the Boxer cartridge is still in wide use today. Boxer was promoted Colonel in 1868 and retired the following year as an honorary Major-General.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1858.
    Bibliography
    1855, Treatise on Artillery. Prepared for the Use of the Practical Class, Royal Military Academy, London: Eyre \& Spottiswode.
    1858, Diagrams to Illustrate the Service and Management of Heavy Ordnance Referred
    to in Treatise on Artillery, London: Eyre \& Spottiswode.
    CM

    Biographical history of technology > Boxer, Major-General Edward Mourrier

  • 125 Leonardo da Vinci

    [br]
    b. 15 April 1452 Vinci, near Florence, Italy,
    d. 2 May 1519 St Cloux, near Amboise, France.
    [br]
    Italian scientist, engineer, inventor and artist.
    [br]
    Leonardo was the illegitimate son of a Florentine lawyer. His first sixteen years were spent with the lawyer's family in the rural surroundings of Vinci, which aroused in him a lifelong love of nature and an insatiable curiosity in it. He received little formal education but extended his knowledge through private reading. That gave him only a smattering of Latin, a deficiency that was to be a hindrance throughout his active life. At sixteen he was apprenticed in the studio of Andrea del Verrochio in Florence, where he received a training not only in art but in a wide variety of crafts and technical arts.
    In 1482 Leonardo went to Milan, where he sought and obtained employment with Ludovico Sforza, later Duke of Milan, partly to sculpt a massive equestrian statue of Ludovico but the work never progressed beyond the full-scale model stage. He did, however, complete the painting which became known as the Virgin of the Rocks and in 1497 his greatest artistic achievement, The Last Supper, commissioned jointly by Ludovico and the friars of Santa Maria della Grazie and painted on the wall of the monastery's refectory. Leonardo was responsible for the court pageants and also devised a system of irrigation to supply water to the plains of Lombardy. In 1499 the French army entered Milan and deposed Leonardo's employer. Leonardo departed and, after a brief visit to Mantua, returned to Florence, where for a time he was employed as architect and engineer to Cesare Borgia, Duke of Romagna. Around 1504 he completed another celebrated work, the Mona Lisa.
    In 1506 Leonardo began his second sojourn in Milan, this time in the service of King Louis XII of France, who appointed him "painter and engineer". In 1513 Leonardo left for Rome in the company of his pupil Francesco Melzi, but his time there was unproductive and he found himself out of touch with the younger artists active there, Michelangelo above all. In 1516 he accepted with relief an invitation from King François I of France to reside at the small château of St Cloux in the royal domain of Amboise. With the pension granted by François, Leonardo lived out his remaining years in tranquility at St Cloux.
    Leonardo's career can hardly be regarded as a success or worthy of such a towering genius. For centuries he was known only for the handful of artistic works that he managed to complete and have survived more or less intact. His main activity remained hidden until the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, during which the contents of his notebooks were gradually revealed. It became evident that Leonardo was one of the greatest scientific investigators and inventors in the history of civilization. Throughout his working life he extended a searching curiosity over an extraordinarily wide range of subjects. The notes show careful investigation of questions of mechanical and civil engineering, such as power transmission by means of pulleys and also a form of chain belting. The notebooks record many devices, such as machines for grinding and polishing lenses, a lathe operated by treadle-crank, a rolling mill with conical rollers and a spinning machine with pinion and yard divider. Leonardo made an exhaustive study of the flight of birds, with a view to designing a flying machine, which obsessed him for many years.
    Leonardo recorded his observations and conclusions, together with many ingenious inventions, on thousands of pages of manuscript notes, sketches and drawings. There are occasional indications that he had in mind the publication of portions of the notes in a coherent form, but he never diverted his energy into putting them in order; instead, he went on making notes. As a result, Leonardo's impact on the development of science and technology was virtually nil. Even if his notebooks had been copied and circulated, there were daunting impediments to their understanding. Leonardo was left-handed and wrote in mirror-writing: that is, in reverse from right to left. He also used his own abbreviations and no punctuation.
    At his death Leonardo bequeathed his entire output of notes to his friend and companion Francesco Melzi, who kept them safe until his own death in 1570. Melzi left the collection in turn to his son Orazio, whose lack of interest in the arts and sciences resulted in a sad period of dispersal which endangered their survival, but in 1636 the bulk of them, in thirteen volumes, were assembled and donated to the Ambrosian Library in Milan. These include a large volume of notes and drawings compiled from the various portions of the notebooks and is now known as the Codex Atlanticus. There they stayed, forgotten and ignored, until 1796, when Napoleon's marauding army overran Italy and art and literary works, including the thirteen volumes of Leonardo's notebooks, were pillaged and taken to Paris. After the war in 1815, the French government agreed to return them but only the Codex Atlanticus found its way back to Milan; the rest remained in Paris. The appendix to one notebook, dealing with the flight of birds, was later regarded as of sufficient importance to stand on its own. Four small collections reached Britain at various times during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; of these, the volume in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle is notable for its magnificent series of anatomical drawings. Other collections include the Codex Leicester and Codex Arundel in the British Museum in London, and the Madrid Codices in Spain.
    Towards the end of the nineteenth century, Leonardo's true stature as scientist, engineer and inventor began to emerge, particularly with the publication of transcriptions and translations of his notebooks. The volumes in Paris appeared in 1881–97 and the Codex Atlanticus was published in Milan between 1894 and 1904.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    "Premier peintre, architecte et mécanicien du Roi" to King François I of France, 1516.
    Further Reading
    E.MacCurdy, 1939, The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci, 2 vols, London; 2nd edn, 1956, London (the most extensive selection of the notes, with an English translation).
    G.Vasari (trans. G.Bull), 1965, Lives of the Artists, London: Penguin, pp. 255–271.
    C.Gibbs-Smith, 1978, The Inventions of Leonardo da Vinci, Oxford: Phaidon. L.H.Heydenreich, Dibner and L. Reti, 1981, Leonardo the Inventor, London: Hutchinson.
    I.B.Hart, 1961, The World of Leonardo da Vinci, London: Macdonald.
    LRD / IMcN

    Biographical history of technology > Leonardo da Vinci

  • 126 Mergenthaler, Ottmar

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 11 May 1854 Hachtel, Germany
    d. 28 October 1899 Baltimore, Maryland, USA
    [br]
    German/American inventor of the Linotype typesetting machine.
    [br]
    Mergenthaler came from a family of teachers, but following a mechanical bent he was apprenticed to a clockmaker. Having served his time, Mergenthaler emigrated to the USA in 1872 to avoid military service. He immediately secured work in Washington, DC, in the scientific instrument shop of August Hahl, the son of his former master. He steadily acquired a reputation for skill and ingenuity, and in 1876, when Hahl transferred his business to Baltimore, Mergenthaler went too. Soon after, they were commissioned to remedy the defects in a model of a writing machine devised by James O.Clephane of Washington. It produced print by typewriting, which was then multiplied by lithography. Mergenthaler soon corrected the defects and Clephane ordered a full-size version. This was completed in 1877 but did not work satisfactorily. Nevertheless, Mergenthaler was moved to engage in the long battle to mechanize the typesetting stage of the printing process. Clephane suggested substituting stereotyping for lithography in his device, but in spite of their keen efforts Mergenthaler and Hahl were again unsuccessful and they abandoned the project. In spare moments Mergenthaler continued his search for a typesetting machine. Late in 1883 it occurred to him to stamp matrices into type bars and to cast type metal into them in the same machine. From this idea, the Linotype machine developed and was completed by July 1884. It worked well and a patent was granted on 26 August that year, and Clephane and his associates set up the National Typographic Company of West Virginia to manufacture it. The New York Tribune ordered twelve Linotypes, and on 3 July 1886 the first of these set part of that day's issue. During the previous year the company had passed into the hands of a group of newspaper owners; increasing differences with the Board led to Mergenthaler's resignation in 1888, but he nevertheless continued to improve the machine, patenting over fifty modifications. The Linotype, together with the Monotype of Tolbert Lanston, rapidly supplanted earlier typesetting methods, and by the 1920s it reigned supreme, the former being used more for newspapers, the latter for book work.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Franklin Institute John Scott Medal, Elliott Cresson Medal.
    Bibliography
    Further Reading
    J.Moran, 1964, The Composition of Reading Matter, London.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Mergenthaler, Ottmar

  • 127 Monell, Ambrose

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1874 New York, USA
    d. 2 May 1921 Beacon, New York, USA
    [br]
    American metallurgist who gave his name to a successful nickel-copper alloy.
    [br]
    After graduating from Columbia University in 1896. Monell became a metallurgical engineer to the Carnegie Steel Company, rising in six years to be Assistant to the President. In 1900, while Manager of the company's open-hearth steelworks at Pittsburg, he patented a procedure for making high-carbon steel in basic conditions on the hearth of a fixed/stationary furnace; the method was intended to refine pig-iron containing substantial proportions of phosphorus and to do so relatively quickly. The process was introduced at the Homestead Works of the Carnegie Steel Company in February 1900, where it continued in use for some years. In April 1902 Monell was among those who launched the International Nickel Company of New Jersey in order to bring together a number of existing nickel interests; he became the new company's President. In 1904–5, members of the company's metallurgical staff produced an alloy of about 70 parts nickel and 30 copper which seemed to show great commercial promise on account of its high resistance to corrosion and its good appearance. Monell agreed to the suggestion that the new alloy should be given his name; for commercial reasons it was marketed as "Monel metal". In 1917, following the entry of the USA into the First World War, Monell was commissioned Colonel in the US Army (Aviation) for overseas service, relinquishing his presidency of the International Nickel Company but remaining as a director. At the time of his death he was also a director in several other companies in the USA.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1900, British patent no. 5506 (taken out by O. Imray on behalf of Monell).
    Monell insinuated an account of his steel-making procedure at a meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute held in London and reported in The Journal of the Iron and Steel
    Institute (1900) 1:71–80; some of the comments made by other speakers, particularly B.Talbot, were adverse. The following year (1901) Monell produced a general historical review: "A summary of development in open-hearth steel", Iron Trade
    Review 14(14 November):39–47.
    Further Reading
    A.J.Wadhams, 1931, "The story of the nickel industry", Metals and Alloys 2(3):166–75 (mentions Monell among many others, and includes a portrait (p. 170)).
    JKA

    Biographical history of technology > Monell, Ambrose

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