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121 opbouw
• building-up• development• erection• installation• set-up• setting-up• structure• up-building -
122 Comité d'entreprise
Works council. Structure representing the interests of employers and employees within a company or place of work. Comités d'entreprise have been obligatory since 1945 in all companies with 50 employees or more. When a company has more than one site, they are called Comités d'Etablissement. These committees must, by law, meet at periodic intervals, and are the channel through which management normally communicates important information to the workforce. Employers must consult with the committees on a number of major types of development concerning the future of the company, such as restructuring, collective layoffs, or significant changes in work practices. However in such matters the committees have only a consultative role, and cannot impose their view on management. Their main active role is to manage social and cultural activities in the company. Comités d'entreprise are made up of management, elected representatives of the workforce, and sometimes - as non-voting observers - appointed trade union representatives. Elected members serve a term of between 2 and 4 years. Frequently, but by no means always, they are trade union representatives.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Comité d'entreprise
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123 SDL
satellite common channel signaling data link — общая линия передачи сигнализационной информации в системе спутниковой связи ( система спутниковой связи) -
124 πνέω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to blow, to breathe, to respire, to smell'.Other forms: ep. πνείω (metr. length.), aor. πνεῦσαι (Il.), ipv. ἄμπνυε, midd. -ῡτο, -ύ̄( ν)θη (Hom.), fut. πνεύ-σομαι (IA.). - σοῦμαι (Ar., Arist.), - σω (hell.), perf. πέπνευκα (Att.), pass. πνευσ-θῆναι (Thphr.), - θήσομαι (Aret.).Derivatives: 1. πνοή, Dor. πνο(ι)ά, ep. πνοιή (- οι- metr. condit. after πνείω, Risch 119; on other explanations, which are not to be preferred, Scheller Oxytonierung 83 n. 2 w. lit.) f. `wind, breeze, breath' (Il.); ἀνα-, δια-, ἐκ-πνέω etc. etc.; very often as 2. member, e.g. ἡδύ- ( ἁδύ-)πνοος, - πνους `with a pleasant wind, breath' (Pi., S., E.), ἐπί-πνοος, - πνους `inspired' with ἐπίπνο-ια f. `inspiration' (A., Pl.); - πνοια also beside - πνοή in ἀνά-, ἀπό-, διά- πνέω a.o.; here ἀναπνο-ϊκος `concerning breathing' (Ptol.). 2. πνεῦμα ( ἄμ-, πρόσ- πνέω) n. `wind, breeze, breath, ghost' (Pi., IA.) with πνευμά-τιον (hell.), - τικός `concerning the wind etc.' (Arist.; on the further life (Nachleben) in the westeur. languages. Chantraine Studii clasice 2, 70f.), - τιος `bringing wind' (Arat.), - τώδης `wind-, breathlike of nature, windy' (Hp., Arist.), - τίας m. `asthmatic' (Hp.) with - τιάω `to gasp' (sch.); - τόω, - τόομαι `to blow up, to (cause to) vaporize' (Anaxipp., Arist.) with - τωσις, - τωτικός; - τίζω ( ἀπο-) `to fan by blowing' (Antig., H.) with - τισμός. 3. πνεῦσις f. `blowing', more usu. the compp., e.g. ἀνάπνευ-σις `to breathe again, to inhale, respite' (Il.). 4. With second. σ and τ-suffix as in ἄ-πνευσ-τος, - τί, - τία: πνευσ-τικός `belonging to breathing' (Gal.), more usu. ἀνα-πνέω (Arist.) a.o.; - τιάω `to gasp' (Hp., Arist.). 5. εἴσπν-ηλος, - ήλας `loving, lover' (Call., Theoc., EM), from εἰσ-πνέω `to inspire (love)' with analog. - ηλος; cf. Chantraine Form. 242.Etymology: The regular structure of the above forms is clearly the result of a generalising development, which will also have had zero grade formations as πνεῦσις, ἄπνευστος. Outside the general pattern there are only the isolated ep. forms ἄμ-πνυ-ε etc. `take breath' = `recover from', which may provide a bridge to the semantically slightly deviating but certainly belonging here πέ-πνυ-μαι, - μένος, `mentally active, animated, be sedate'; cf. Ruijgh L'élém. ach. 134 f. Not here prob. πινυ-τή, πινυτός a. cognates, which have only been connected on difficult assumptions; s.v. In any case ἄμπνυε, πέπνυ-μαι are not with Schulze Q. 322 ff. to be separated from πνέω. -- From other languages only some Germ. formations can be compared: OWNo. fnýsa `sniff', OE fnēosan `sneeze', which like πνευ- may contain an IE eu-diphthong; beside them there are however several variants, e.g. OWNo. fnasa, OHG fnehan, which show the unstable character of these orig. onomatop. words. Uncertain is the connection of Skt. abhi-knū́yate `be moist, sound, stink' (Dhātup., Lex.) with dissim. from * abhi-pn- (Mayrhofer s. knū́yate). -- The further analysis of πνέ(Ϝ)-ω in * p-ne-u-mi with nasal infix to the root pu- (assumption by Schwyzer 696 α after Pedersen IF 2, 314) is in the case of a word of this meaning hardly convincing. Further forms w. lit. in WP. 2, 85, Pok. 838f. Here also ποιπνύω; cf. also πνί̄γω.Page in Frisk: 2,566-567Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πνέω
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125 στοά
Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `colonnade, portico, storage room', also as des. of the stoic school ( στοὰ ποικίλη) (Att.).Compounds: As 2. member a.o. in προ-στῳ̃ον `portico located in front (of the rooms), porch' (Att.), hypostasis; Schw.-Debrunner 608 (τόποι προστῳ̃οι sch. on Υ 11).Derivatives: Dimin. στωΐδιον, στοΐδιον n. (Delos, Str. a.o.), adj. στω-ϊκός `belonging to the stoic school, stoic' (hell. a. late) with - ικεύομαι `to act like a stoic' (late); disparaging Στόαξ ( Στώαξ?) `miserable stoic' (Herm. Iamb. 1; Björck Alpha impurum 48 a. 263).Etymology: Collective formation in - ιά, *στωϜ-ιά (with shortening of the ω and loss of the ι in στοιά, στοά; Schwyzer 244, 349, 469; cf. on the phonetic development also Adrados Emer. 18, 408 ff.) from a noun *στωϜ-ος, -ᾱ̃ with full grade beside reduced resp. zero grade in σταυρός and στῦλος (s. vv.). Full grade forms are also found in Balto-Slav. and Germ., e.g. Lith. stovė́ti `stand', stovà f. `stand, position', OCS staviti `posit', stavъ m. `stand, structure', OE stōwian `hold back', stōw f. `position'; we have in all these cases as well as in Skt. sthāv-ará- `thick, firm, permanent' rather IE āu̯, IE stāu̯- = *steh₂-u̯- (beside stōu̯- = * stoh₂-u-, sth₂u̯-) an old byform of stā- ( stō-, sth₂-) in στήμων, στώμιξ, στατός; s. vv. and ἵστημι w. further lit.Page in Frisk: 2,800Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > στοά
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126 удар
shock
(при испытании на ударные нагрузки) — shock conditions, eighteen 10millisecond shocks at 15 g.
- (соударение двух масс) — impact а single collision of one mass with a second mass.
-, гидравлический — hydraulic shock
динамическое воздействие жидкости на трубопроводы при резком изменении ее скорости. — dynamic effect of the fluid on the tube wall at a sudden change in the fluid velocity.
-, динамический, при раскрытии купола парашюта — canopy opening shock load
-, звуковой — sonic boom
звук, издаваемый ударной волной от ла, летящего со звуковой или сверхзвуковой скоростью. — а noise caused by а shock wave that emanates from an aircraft traveling at or above sonic velocity.
-, обратный — back kick
явление, возникающее при запуске пд с поворотом вала в сторону, противоположную нормальному направлению вращения. — а phenomenon occuring when а reciprocating engine crankshaft turns in the direction opposite to normal rotation during starting.
-, повторный (при посадке, "козел") — rebound
- птицы (о самолет) — bird strike
-, тепловой — thermal shock
the development of a steep temperature gradient and accompanying high stresses within a structure.
- шасси о землю при посадке — impact of landing gear at touchdown
подвергать у. — subject to shock, strike do not strike or scratch the tube at any time.
раздавать мягкие вещи (одеяла, подушки) для предохранения от у. (при авар. посадке) — distribute pillows, blankets, etc., for use on impactРусско-английский сборник авиационно-технических терминов > удар
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127 broadbanding
HRthe reworking of the pay hierarchy into fewer, wider pay scales. Broadbanding provides a more flexible reward structure that is more in tune with the flat organization. Pioneered by GEC in the United States, the introduction of broadbanding can provide a method for pay increases and career development, even without a formal career ladder, and consequently can help improve motivation. -
128 strategic management
Gen Mgtthe development of corporate strategy, and the management of an organization according to that strategy.Strategic management focuses on achieving and maintaining a strong competitive advantage. It involves the application of corporate strategy to all aspects of the organization, and especially to decision making. As a discipline, strategic management developed in the 1970s, but it has evolved in response to changes in organization structure and corporate culture. With greater empowerment, strategy has become the concern not just of directors but also of employees at all levels of the organization.
См. также в других словарях:
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