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1 окончательное доказательство
1) General subject: definitive evidence3) Advertising: ultimate proofУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > окончательное доказательство
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2 категорическое свидетельство
General subject: definitive evidenceУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > категорическое свидетельство
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3 окончательное свидетельство
General subject: definitive evidenceУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > окончательное свидетельство
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4 endgültig
I Adj. final; Beweis: auch conclusive, definitive; Antwort: final, definitive; endgültig machen finalize, settle finally; ich kann noch nichts Endgültiges sagen I can’t say anything ( oder be umg.) definite at the moment, I am not yet in a position to resolve the matter förm. ( oder make a definitive statement)II Adv. finally; (für immer) for good; (ein für alle Mal) once and for all; das steht endgültig fest that’s definite ( oder fixed); damit ist es endgültig aus ( und vorbei) that’s over for good, that’s finished and done with umg.; damit ist die Sache endgültig entschieden that settles the matter once and for all; jetzt ist aber endgültig Schluss! it really is time to stop now!; Brit. auch energischer: right - that’s your lot! umg.* * *definitive (Adj.); final (Adj.); definite (Adj.); ultimate (Adj.); conclusive (Adj.); irrevocable (Adj.)* * *ẹnd|gül|tig1. adjfinal; Beweis auch conclusive; Antwort definiteetwas Endgültiges lässt sich noch nicht sagen — I/we etc cannot say anything definite at this stage
2. advfinallysich endgültig entscheiden — to make the final decision
das ist endgültig aus or vorbei — that's ( all) over and done with
jetzt ist endgültig Schluss! — that's the end!, that's it!
* * *1) ((of a decision etc) definite; decided and not to be changed: The judge's decision is final.) final2) definite* * *end·gül·tigI. adj finaleine \endgültige Antwort a definitive answerein \endgültiger Beweis conclusive evidence▪ etwas/nichts E\endgültiges something/nothing definiteII. adv finally\endgültig entscheiden to decide once and for all* * *1.2.etwas/nichts Endgültiges sagen/hören — say/hear something/nothing definite
das ist endgültig vorbei — that's all over and done with
* * *endgültig machen finalize, settle finally;ich kann noch nichts Endgültiges sagen I can’t say anything ( oder be umg) definite at the moment, I am not yet in a position to resolve the matter form ( oder make a definitive statement)das steht endgültig fest that’s definite ( oder fixed);damit ist es endgültig aus (und vorbei) that’s over for good, that’s finished and done with umg;damit ist die Sache endgültig entschieden that settles the matter once and for all;jetzt ist aber endgültig Schluss! it really is time to stop now!; Br auch energischer: right - that’s your lot! umg* * *1.2.etwas/nichts Endgültiges sagen/hören — say/hear something/nothing definite
* * *adj.conclusive adj.definitive adj.final adj.ultimate adj. adv.definitely adv.definitively adv.finally adv.for good adv. ausdr.once and for all expr. -
5 окончательный
1. closing2. conclusiveокончательное, решающее доказательство — conclusive evidence
3. decided4. for goodнавсегда, окончательно — for good
навсегда; окончательно — for good
5. irrevocable6. terminal7. definitive8. definitively9. ultimate10. final; definitiveокончательный платёж, окончательная выплата — final payment
Синонимический ряд:1. решительно (прил.) бесповоротно; решительно2. совершенно (проч.) совершенно; совсем -
6 concluyente
adj.conclusive.* * *► adjetivo1 conclusive, decisive* * *adj.* * *ADJ conclusive, decisive* * *adjetivo <razón/respuesta/prueba> conclusive* * *= conclusive, peremptory, rock solid.Ex. It certainly cannot be called a conclusive or exhaustive guide to library resources.Ex. The author's argumentation is vehement, sometimes peremptory, but not conclusive.Ex. The numbers in the ad, which are quite eye-opening, are rock-solid.----* de un modo concluyente = positively.* pruebas cada vez más concluyentes = mounting evidence.* * *adjetivo <razón/respuesta/prueba> conclusive* * *= conclusive, peremptory, rock solid.Ex: It certainly cannot be called a conclusive or exhaustive guide to library resources.
Ex: The author's argumentation is vehement, sometimes peremptory, but not conclusive.Ex: The numbers in the ad, which are quite eye-opening, are rock-solid.* de un modo concluyente = positively.* pruebas cada vez más concluyentes = mounting evidence.* * *‹razón› conclusive; ‹respuesta› conclusive, categorical; ‹prueba› conclusive, incontestablesus palabras fueron concluyentes: no se va a hacer ninguna concesión he was quite categorical: there are to be no concessionsfue concluyente al decir que no habrá amnistía he stated categorically that there would be no amnesty* * *
concluyente adjetivo ‹razón/respuesta/prueba› conclusive;
concluyente adjetivo conclusive: los datos son concluyentes, the data is conclusive
' concluyente' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
contundente
English:
conclusive
- inconclusive
- inconclusively
- indecisive
- positive
- hard
- positively
* * *concluyente adj[prueba] conclusive; [decisión] final; [estudio] definitive;no han conseguido probar de forma concluyente su culpabilidad they haven't been able to prove his guilt conclusively;el presidente fue concluyente, no va a dimitir the president was quite definite o categorical, he is not going to resign* * *adj conclusive* * *concluyente adj: conclusive -
7 Galilei, Galileo
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 15 February 1564 Pisa, Italyd. 8 January 1642 Arcetri, near Florence, Italy[br]Italian mathematician, astronomer and physicist who established the principle of the pendulum and was first to exploit the telescope.[br]Galileo began studying medicine at the University of Pisa but soon turned to his real interests, mathematics, mechanics and astronomy. He became Professor of Mathematics at Pisa at the age of 25 and three years later moved to Padua. In 1610 he transferred to Florence. While still a student he discovered the isochronous property of the pendulum, probably by timing with his pulse the swings of a hanging lamp during a religious ceremony in Pisa Cathedral. He later designed a pendulum-controlled clock, but it was not constructed until after his death, and then not successfully; the first successful pendulum clock was made by the Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens in 1656. Around 1590 Galileo established the laws of motion of falling bodies, by timing rolling balls down inclined planes and not, as was once widely believed, by dropping different weights from the Leaning Tower of Pisa. These and other observations received definitive treatment in his Discorsi e dimostrazioni matematiche intorno a due nuove scienzi attenenti alla, meccanica (Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences…) which was completed in 1634 and first printed in 1638. This work also included Galileo's proof that the path of a projectile was a parabola and, most importantly, the development of the concept of inertia.In astronomy Galileo adopted the Copernican heliocentric theory of the universe while still in his twenties, but he lacked the evidence to promote it publicly. That evidence came with the invention of the telescope by the Dutch brothers Lippershey. Galileo heard of its invention in 1609 and had his own instrument constructed, with a convex object lens and concave eyepiece, a form which came to be known as the Galilean telescope. Galileo was the first to exploit the telescope successfully with a series of striking astronomical discoveries. He was also the first to publish the results of observations with the telescope, in his Sidereus nuncius (Starry Messenger) of 1610. All the discoveries told against the traditional view of the universe inherited from the ancient Greeks, and one in particular, that of the four satellites in orbit around Jupiter, supported the Copernican theory in that it showed that there could be another centre of motion in the universe besides the Earth: if Jupiter, why not the Sun? Galileo now felt confident enough to advocate the theory, but the advance of new ideas was opposed, not for the first or last time, by established opinion, personified in Galileo's time by the ecclesiastical authorities in Rome. Eventually he was forced to renounce the Copernican theory, at least in public, and turn to less contentious subjects such as the "two new sciences" of his last and most important work.[br]Bibliography1610, Sidereus nuncius (Starry Messenger); translation by A.Van Helden, 1989, Sidereus Nuncius, or the Sidereal Messenger; Chicago: University of Chicago Press.1623, Il Saggiatore (The Assayer).1632, Dialogo sopre i due massimi sistemi del mondo, tolemaico e copernicano (Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, Ptolemaic and Copernican); translation, 1967, Berkeley: University of California Press.1638, Discorsi e dimostrazioni matematiche intorno a due nuove scienzi attenenti allameccanica (Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences…); translation, 1991, Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books (reprint).Further ReadingG.de Santillana, 1955, The Crime of Galileo, Chicago: University of Chicago Press; also 1958, London: Heinemann.H.Stillman Drake, 1980, Galileo, Oxford: Oxford Paperbacks. M.Sharratt, 1994, Galileo: Decisive Innovator, Oxford: Blackwell.J.Reston, 1994, Galileo: A Life, New York: HarperCollins; also 1994, London: Cassell.A.Fantoli, 1994, Galileo: For Copemicanism and for the Church, trans. G.V.Coyne, South Bend, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press.LRD -
8 Newcomen, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. January or February 1663 Dartmouth, Devon, Englandd. 5 August 1729 London, England[br]English inventor and builder of the world's first successful stationary steam-engine.[br]Newcomen was probably born at a house on the quay at Dartmouth, Devon, England, the son of Elias Newcomen and Sarah Trenhale. Nothing is known of his education, and there is only dubious evidence of his apprenticeship to an ironmonger in Exeter. He returned to Dartmouth and established himself there as an "ironmonger". The term "ironmonger" at that time meant more than a dealer in ironmongery: a skilled craftsman working in iron, nearer to today's "blacksmith". In this venture he had a partner, John Calley or Caley, who was a plumber and glazier. Besides running his business in Dartmouth, it is evident that Newcomen spent a good deal of time travelling round the mines of Devon and Cornwall in search of business.Eighteenth-century writers and others found it impossible to believe that a provincial ironmonger could have invented the steam-engine, the concept of which had occupied the best scientific brains in Europe, and postulated a connection between Newcomen and Savery or Papin, but scholars in recent years have failed to find any evidence of this. Certainly Savery was in Dartmouth at the same time as Newcomen but there is nothing to indicate that they met, although it is possible. The most recent biographer of Thomas Newcomen is of the opinion that he was aware of Savery and his work, that the two men had met by 1705 and that, although Newcomen could have taken out his own patent, he could not have operated his own engines without infringing Savery's patent. In the event, they came to an agreement by which Newcomen was enabled to sell his engines under Savery's patent.The first recorded Newcomen engine is dated 1712, although this may have been preceded by a good number of test engines built at Dartmouth, possibly following a number of models. Over one hundred engines were built to Newcomen's design during his lifetime, with the first engine being installed at the Griff Colliery near Dudley Castle in Staffordshire.On the death of Thomas Savery, on 15 May 1715, a new company, the Proprietors of the Engine Patent, was formed to carry on the business. The Company was represented by Edward Elliot, "who attended the Sword Blade Coffee House in Birchin Lane, London, between 3 and 5 o'clock to receive enquiries and to act as a contact for the committee". Newcomen was, of course, a member of the Proprietors.A staunch Baptist, Newcomen married Hannah Waymouth, who bore him two sons and a daughter. He died, it is said of a fever, in London on 5 August 1729 and was buried at Bunhill Fields.[br]Further ReadingL.T.C.Rolt and J.S.Allen, 1977, The Steam Engine of Thomas Newcomen, Hartington: Moorland Publishing Company (the definitive account of his life and work).IMcN -
9 endgültig
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10 Theophilus Presbyter
[br]fl. late eleventh/early twelfth century[br]German author of the most detailed medieval treatise relating to technology.[br]The little that is known of Theophilus is what can be inferred from his great work, De diversis artibus. He was a Benedictine monk and priest living in north-west Germany, probably near an important art centre. He was an educated man, conversant with scholastic philosophy and at the same time a skilled, practising craftsman. Even his identity is obscure: Theophilus is a pseudonym, possibly for Roger of Helmarshausen, for the little that is known of both is in agreement.Evidence in De diversis suggests that it was probably composed during 1110 to 1140. White (see Further Reading) goes on to suggest late 1122 or early 1123, on the grounds that Theophilus only learned of St Bernard of Clairvaulx's diatribe against lavish church ornamentation during the writing of the work, for it is only in the preface to Book 3 that Theophilus seeks to justify his craft. St Bernard's Apologia can be dated late 1122. No other medieval work on art combines the comprehensive range, orderly presentation and attention to detail as does De diversis. It has been described as an encyclopedia of medieval skills and crafts. It also offers the best and often the only description of medieval technology, including the first direct reference to papermaking in the West, the earliest medieval account of bell-founding and the most complete account of organ building. Many metallurgical techniques are described in detail, such as the making of a crucible furnace and bloomery hearth.The treatise is divided into three books, the first on the materials and art of painting, the second on glassmaking, including stained glass, glass vessels and the blown-cylinder method for flat glass, and the final and longest book on metalwork, including working in iron, copper, gold and silver for church use, such as chalices and censers. The main texts are no mere compilations, but reveal the firsthand knowledge that can only be gained by a skilled craftsman. The prefaces to each book present perhaps the only medieval expression of an artist's ideals and how he sees his art in relation to the general scheme of things. For Theophilus, his art is a gift from God and every skill an act of praise and piety. Theophilus is thus an indispensable source for medieval crafts and technology, but there are indications that the work was also well known at the time of its composition and afterwards.[br]BibliographyThe Wolfenbuttel and Vienna manuscripts of De diversis are the earliest, both dating from the first half of the twelfth century, while the British Library copy, in an early thirteenth-century hand, is the most complete. Two incomplete copies from the thirteenth century held at Cambridge and Leipzig offer help in arriving at a definitive edition.There are several references to De diversis in sixteenth-century printed works, such as Cornelius Agrippa (1530) and Josias Simmler (1585). The earliest printed edition ofDe diversis was prepared by G.H.Lessing in 1781 with the title, much used since, Diversarium artium schedula.There are two good recent editions: Theophilus: De diversis artibus. The Various Arts, 1964, trans. with introd. by C.R.Dodwell, London: Thomas Nelson, and On Diverse Arts. The Treatise of Theophilus, 1963, trans. with introd. and notes by J.G.Harthorne and C.S.Smith, Chicago University Press.Further ReadingLynn White, 1962, "Theophilus redivivus", Technology and Culture 5:224–33 (a comparative review of Theophilus (op. cit.) and On Diverse Arts (op. cit.)).LRD
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