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1 consistent reading
согласующийся [совместимый] отсчетБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > consistent reading
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2 consistent reading
согласующийся [совместимый\] отсчётАнгло-русский словарь технических терминов > consistent reading
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3 consistent reading
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4 consistent reading
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5 consistent reading
The New English-Russian Dictionary of Radio-electronics > consistent reading
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6 reading
1) чтение; считывание2) мн. ч. данные (напр. в таблице)3) снятие показаний; отсчёт показаний•to compound readings — рассматривать показания ( приборов) в совокупности;-
automatic reading
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backward reading
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consecutive readings
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consistent reading
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continuous reading
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corrected reading
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danger reading
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data reading
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dial reading
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direct reading
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distant reading
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down-scale reading
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fine reading
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full-scale readings
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graticule reading
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intermittent reading
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negative reading
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null reading
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observed reading
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out-of-tolerance reading
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positive reading
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projection reading
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remote reading
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rod reading
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rough reading
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scale reading
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scatter reading
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single reading
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sound reading
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staff reading
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steady-state reading
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test reading
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torque reading
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up-scale reading
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vernier reading
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visual reading
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zero reading -
7 reading
1) чтение; считывание2) воспроизведение (напр. записи)3) регистрация; снятие показаний; отсчёт4) показание (напр. прибора); отсчёт5) распознавание; понимание; толкование•- backward reading
- consecutive readings
- consistent reading
- continuous reading
- data reading
- dial reading
- direct reading
- distant reading
- inconsistent reading
- indirect reading
- intermittent reading
- mark reading
- observed reading
- scale reading
- scatter reading
- speculative reading
- tape reading
- vernier reading
- zero reading -
8 reading
1) чтение; считывание2) воспроизведение (напр. записи)3) регистрация; снятие показаний; отсчёт4) показание (напр. прибора); отсчёт5) распознавание; понимание; толкование•- backward reading
- consecutive readings
- consistent reading
- continuous reading
- data reading
- dial reading
- direct reading
- distant reading
- inconsistent reading
- indirect reading
- intermittent reading
- mark reading
- observed reading
- scale reading
- scatter reading
- speculative reading
- tape reading
- vernier reading
- zero readingThe New English-Russian Dictionary of Radio-electronics > reading
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9 согласующийся отсчет
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > согласующийся отсчет
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10 согласующийся отсчет
Англо-русский словарь технических терминов > согласующийся отсчет
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11 error
1) ошибка; погрешность2) искажение•error in indication — погрешность показания ( прибора); погрешность отсчёта;errors in the same sense — погрешности одного знака;error on the safe side — погрешность в сторону увеличения запаса прочности;to accumulate errors — накапливать погрешности;to combine errors — суммировать погрешности;to compensate error — 1. компенсировать ошибку ( показаний прибора) 2. возд. списывать (устранять) девиацию радиокомпаса;to distribute error of closure — геод. разбрасывать невязку;to hold measurement errors to... — удерживать погрешности измерений в пределах...;to introduce an error — вносить погрешность;to negate errors — исключать погрешности; компенсировать погрешности;to reduce errors — 1. уменьшать (снижать) погрешности 2. приводить погрешности ( к определённым условиям или определённому виду)error of approximation — погрешность приближения, погрешность аппроксимацииerror of closure — геод. невязкаerror or connection — геод. невязкаerror of direction — ошибка в определении направленияerror of division (error of graduation) — погрешность градуировкиerror of indication — погрешность показания ( прибора); погрешность отсчётаerror of observation — 1. погрешность наблюдения; погрешность отсчёта 2. геод. ошибка измерения, ошибка наблюденияerror of omission — 1. пропуск, пробел 2. упущениеerror of position — 1. погрешность в определении положения или местоположения 2. геод. координатная невязкаerror of traverse — геод. линейная невязка-
absolute error
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acceptable error
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accidental error
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accumulated error
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accumulative error
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accuracy error
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across-track error
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actual error
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additive error
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admissible error
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aggregate error
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airborne equipment error
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aliasing error
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alignment error
-
along-track error
-
altering error
-
altimeter error
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ambiguity error
-
amplitude error
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angular error
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appreciable error
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approximation error
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arithmetic error
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assigned error
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assumed error
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azimuth error
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backlash error
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base error
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basic error
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beam landing error
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bearing error
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bias error
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bias stability error
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bit error
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block mean-squared error
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boresight error
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burst error
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calibration error
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chaining error
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chip error
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chroma error
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closing error
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closure error in leveling
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closure error of angles
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closure error of azimuths
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closure error
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collimation error
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color error
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color-hue error
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color-purity error
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color-registration error
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combined error
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common error
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compass error
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compass turning error
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compensating errors
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complementary error
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component error
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composite error
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composition error
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computational error
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computation error
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computed error
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concealed error
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conformity error
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connection error
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consistent error
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constant error
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contributing error
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conventional error
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copying error
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course error
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crude error
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cumulative error
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cyclic error
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data error
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datum error
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day-to-day error
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dead-path error
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delay error
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detected error
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digital error
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displacement error
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distance error
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dynamic error
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dynamic phase error
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end errors
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erratic error
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estimated error
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estimation error
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excessive error
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exposure error
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extreme error
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fatal error
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fixed error
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flight technical error
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focusing error
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focus error
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folding error
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following error
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forecast error
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form error
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fractional error
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frequency error
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full-scale error
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gaging error
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gamma error
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gang error
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geometrical error
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geometric error
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glide path angular error
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graduation error
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gross error
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group-delay error
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guidance error
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guide positional error
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gyrocompass error
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hard error
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hardware error
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head-penetration error
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heeling error
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height-keeping error
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horizontal phase error
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hue error
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human error
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implementation error
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inbound error
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index error
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indicated displacement error
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indication error
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individual error
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inherent error
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inherited error
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initial error
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input error
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instrumental error
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instrument error
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interference error
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interlace error
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interpolation error
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interval error
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intolerable error
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intrinsic error
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introduced error
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ionosphere error
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lead error
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leveling error
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limiting error
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linear error
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linearity error
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logical error
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longitudinal error
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long-term error
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machine error
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marginal error
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maximum error
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maximum likely error
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maximum relative error
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maximum zero error
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mean error
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mean square error
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measurement error
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minimum error
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minimum mean-square error
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minimum prediction error
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mismatch error
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mispositioning error
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momentary error
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multiple error
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navigation error
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near-extreme error
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negative error
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noise error
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nominal error
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nonlinear error
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observation error
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observed error
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offset error
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omission error
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operator's error
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optimistic error
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outbound error
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output error
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overall error
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overlay error
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parity check error
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parity error
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partial error
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particular error
-
parts-to-platen error
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patching error
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path following error
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peak error
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peak-to-peak error
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permissible error
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personal error
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pessimistic error
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phase error
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pitch error
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platen-to-machine error
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pointing error
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position error
-
position following error
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positional error
-
positioning error
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positive error
-
predicted following error
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prediction error
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probable error
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procedural error
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propagation delay error
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quadrantal error
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quadratic phase error
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quadrature error
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quantization error
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radial displacement error
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radiation error
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random error
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range error
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ratio error
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reader error
-
reading error
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reasonable error
-
recoverable error
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reduced error
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reference limiting error
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registration error
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relative error
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residual error
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resistance error
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resolution error
-
resultant error
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root-mean-square error
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rounding error
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routine/routine interface error
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run-time error
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sampling error
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saturation error
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scale calibration error
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scale error
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scanning error
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select error
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sequence error
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servo excess error
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servo following error
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sextant error
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shade error
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shading error
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sighting error
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significant error
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single error
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skew error
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slide-position error
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soft error
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software error
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speed error
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sporadic error
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standard error
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static error
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statistical error
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steady-state error
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steering error
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step-up error
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substitution error
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superposition error
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systematic error
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tape speed errors
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targeting error
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temperature error
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temporary error
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tilt error
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time error
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time-base error
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tool setting error
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total error
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tracking error
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transfer error
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transient error
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true error
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truncation error
-
typing error
-
typographic error
-
unconcealable error
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uncorrectable error
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undetected error
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unrecoverable error
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unsuspected error
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user clock time bias error
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velocity error
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vertical phase error
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voltage error
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weighted mean error
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wiring error
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zero end error
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zero error
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zero setting error
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zero-drift error -
12 copy
1) (издательский) оригинал2) копия || копировать3) оттиск; репродукция || получать оттиски4) лист бумаги формата 40,6x50,8 см5) строка текста (в фотонаборной машине)6) тетрадь7) экземплярАнгло-русский словарь по полиграфии и издательскому делу > copy
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13 Bickford, William
SUBJECT AREA: Mining and extraction technology[br]b. 1774 Devonshire, Englandd. 1834 Tuckingmill, Cornwall, England[br]English leather merchant, inventor of the safety fuse.[br]Having tried in vain to make his living as a currier in Truro, Cornwall, he set up as a leather merchant in Tuckingmill and became aware of the high casualty rates suffered by local tin-miners in shot-firing accidents. He therefore started attempts to discover a safe means of igniting charges, and came up with a form of safety fuse that made the operation of blasting much less hazardous. It was patented in 1831 and consisted of a cable of jute and string containing a thin core of powder; it provided a dependable means for conveying the flame to the charge so that the danger of hang fires was almost eliminated. Its accurate and consistent timing allowed the firing of several holes at a time without the fusing of the last being destroyed by the blast from the first. By 1840, a gutta-percha fuse had been developed which could be used in wet conditions and was an improvement until the use of dynamite for shot-firing.Accounts of the invention, after it had been described in the Report from the Select Committee on Accidents in Mines (1835, London) were widespread in various foreign mining journals, and in the 1840s factories were set up in different mining areas on the European continent, in America and in Australia. Bickford himself founded a firm at Tuckingmill in the year that he came up with his invention which was later controlled by his descendants until it finally merged with Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) after the First World War.[br]Further ReadingF.Heise, 1904, Sprengstoffe und Zündung der Sprengschüsse, Berlin (provides a detailed description of the development).W.J.Reader, 1970, Imperial Chemical Industries. A History, Vol. I, London: Oxford University Press (throws light on the tight international connections of Bickford's firm with Nobel industries).WK -
14 Darby, Abraham
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1678 near Dudley, Worcestershire, Englandd. 5 May 1717 Madely Court, Coalbrookdale, Shropshire, England[br]English ironmaster, inventor of the coke smelting of iron ore.[br]Darby's father, John, was a farmer who also worked a small forge to produce nails and other ironware needed on the farm. He was brought up in the Society of Friends, or Quakers, and this community remained important throughout his personal and working life. Darby was apprenticed to Jonathan Freeth, a malt-mill maker in Birmingham, and on completion of his apprenticeship in 1699 he took up the trade himself in Bristol. Probably in 1704, he visited Holland to study the casting of brass pots and returned to Bristol with some Dutch workers, setting up a brassworks at Baptist Mills in partnership with others. He tried substituting cast iron for brass in his castings, without success at first, but in 1707 he was granted a patent, "A new way of casting iron pots and other pot-bellied ware in sand without loam or clay". However, his business associates were unwilling to risk further funds in the experiments, so he withdrew his share of the capital and moved to Coalbrookdale in Shropshire. There, iron ore, coal, water-power and transport lay close at hand. He took a lease on an old furnace and began experimenting. The shortage and expense of charcoal, and his knowledge of the use of coke in malting, may well have led him to try using coke to smelt iron ore. The furnace was brought into blast in 1709 and records show that in the same year it was regularly producing iron, using coke instead of charcoal. The process seems to have been operating successfully by 1711 in the production of cast-iron pots and kettles, with some pig-iron destined for Bristol. Darby prospered at Coalbrookdale, employing coke smelting with consistent success, and he sought to extend his activities in the neighbourhood and in other parts of the country. However, ill health prevented him from pursuing these ventures with his previous energy. Coke smelting spread slowly in England and the continent of Europe, but without Darby's technological breakthrough the ever-increasing demand for iron for structures and machines during the Industrial Revolution simply could not have been met; it was thus an essential component of the technological progress that was to come.Darby's eldest son, Abraham II (1711–63), entered the Coalbrookdale Company partnership in 1734 and largely assumed control of the technical side of managing the furnaces and foundry. He made a number of improvements, notably the installation of a steam engine in 1742 to pump water to an upper level in order to achieve a steady source of water-power to operate the bellows supplying the blast furnaces. When he built the Ketley and Horsehay furnaces in 1755 and 1756, these too were provided with steam engines. Abraham II's son, Abraham III (1750–89), in turn, took over the management of the Coalbrookdale works in 1768 and devoted himself to improving and extending the business. His most notable achievement was the design and construction of the famous Iron Bridge over the river Severn, the world's first iron bridge. The bridge members were cast at Coalbrookdale and the structure was erected during 1779, with a span of 100 ft (30 m) and height above the river of 40 ft (12 m). The bridge still stands, and remains a tribute to the skill and judgement of Darby and his workers.[br]Further ReadingA.Raistrick, 1989, Dynasty of Iron Founders, 2nd edn, Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust (the best source for the lives of the Darbys and the work of the company).H.R.Schubert, 1957, History of the British Iron and Steel Industry AD 430 to AD 1775, London: Routledge \& Kegan Paul.LRD -
15 Dudley, Dud
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1599d. 25 October 1684 Worcester, England[br]English ironmaster who drew attention to the need to change from charcoal to coal as a fuel for iron smelting.[br]Dudley was the fourth natural son of Edward Sutton, fifth Baron Dudley. In 1619 he was summoned from Balliol College, Oxford, to superintend his father's ironworks at Pensnet in Worcestershire. There had long been concern at the destruction of the forests in order to make charcoal for the smelting of iron ore, and unsuccessful attempts had been made to substitute coal as a fuel. Finding that charcoal was in short supply and coal plentiful near Pensnet, Dudley was stimulated by these attempts to try the process for himself. He claimed to have made good, marketable iron and in 1621 his father obtained a patent from the King to protect his process for thirty-one years. After a serious flood, Dudley moved to Staffordshire and continued his efforts there. In 1639 he was granted a further patent for making iron with coal. Although he probably made some samples of good iron, more by luck than judgement, it is hardly possible that he achieved consistent success. He blamed this on the machinations of other ironmasters. The day that King Charles II landed in England to assume his throne', Dudley petitioned him to renew his patents, but he was refused and he ceased to promote his invention. In 1665, however, he published his celebrated book Metallum Martis, Iron Made with Pit-Coaky Sea-Coale…. In this he described his efforts in general terms, but neither there nor in his patents does he give any technical details of his methods. He implied the use of slack or small coal from the Staffordshire Thick or Ten Yard coal, but this has a sulphur content that would have rendered the iron unusable; in addition, this coal would not have been suitable for converting to coke in order to remove the sulphur. Nevertheless, Dudley recognized the need to change from charcoal to coal as a fuel for iron smelting and drew attention to it, even though he himself achieved little success.[br]Further ReadingH.R.Schubert, 1957, History of the British Iron and Steel Industry AD 430 to AD 1775, London: Routledge \& Kegan Paul.W.K.V.Gale, 1967, The British Iron and Steel Industry: A Technical History, London (provides brief details of Dudley's life in relation to the history of ironmaking).LRD
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