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1 differ markedly
Математика: резко отличаться -
2 differ markedly from
Математика: значительно отличаться (от), резко отличаться, заметно отличаться от (The new algorithm differs noticeably from the simple method), значительно отличаться от (The new algorithm differs noticeably from the simple method) -
3 our results differ markedly from those developed by Bauer
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > our results differ markedly from those developed by Bauer
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4 differ
differ vi1 ( be different) différer (from de ; in par ; in that en ce que) ; to differ widely ou markedly être complètement différent ; tastes differ tous les goûts sont dans la nature ;2 ( disagree) différer (d'opinion) (on sth sur qch ; from sb de qn ; with sb avec qn) ; I beg to differ permettez-moi d'être d'un avis différent ; we must agree to differ nous devrons accepter nos différences d'opinion. -
5 markedly
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6 markedly
- kid-adverb (noticeably: It's markedly easier to do it by this method.) de forma notabletr['mɑːkədlɪ]1 (different) marcadamente, notablemente, acusadamente; (better) sensiblementeadv.• marcadamente adv.• notablemente adv.'mɑːrkədlimarkedly inferior — marcadamente or notablemente inferior
['mɑːkɪdlɪ]ADV1) (with adj/adv) [different] notablemente, marcadamente; [better, worse] visiblemente, notablementetheir second album has been markedly more/less successful than their first — su segundo álbum ha tenido notablemente más/menos éxito que el primero
2) (with verb) [increase, improve, decline] notablemente, sensiblemente; [differ, change, contrast] notablemente* * *['mɑːrkədli]markedly inferior — marcadamente or notablemente inferior
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7 markedly
adverbeindeutig; deutlich* * *[-kid-]* * *mark·ed·ly[ˈmɑ:kɪdli, AM ˈmɑ:rk-]adv deutlichto be \markedly different sich deutlich unterscheiden* * *['mAːkIdlɪ]advimprove, increase, differ, change merklich; quicker, slower, more, less wesentlichit is markedly better — es ist wesentlich or bedeutend besser
they are not markedly different — es besteht kein wesentlicher or großer Unterschied zwischen ihnen
* * *markedly [-ıd-] adv merklich, deutlich, ausgesprochen* * *adverbeindeutig; deutlich* * *adv.ausgesprochen adv. -
8 Tompion, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Horology[br]baptized 25 July 1639 Ickwell Green, Englandd. 20 November 1713 London, England[br]English clock-and watchmaker of great skill and ingenuity who laid the foundations of his country's pre-eminence in that field.[br]Little is known about Tompion's early life except that he was born into a family of blacksmiths. When he was admitted into the Clockmakers' Company in 1671 he was described as a "Great Clockmaker", which meant a maker of turret clocks, and as these clocks were made of wrought iron they would have required blacksmithing skills. Despite this background, he also rapidly established his reputation as a watchmaker. In 1674 he moved to premises in Water Lane at the sign of "The Dial and Three Crowns", where his business prospered and he remained for the rest of his life. Assisted by journeymen and up to eleven apprentices at any one time, the output from his workshop was prodigious, amounting to over 5,000 watches and 600 clocks. In his lifetime he was famous for his watches, as these figures suggest, but although they are of high quality they do not differ markedly from those produced by other London watchmakers of that period. He is now known more for the limited number of elaborate clocks that he produced, such as the equation clock and the spring-driven clock of a year's duration, which he made for William III. Around 1711 he took into partnership his nephew by marriage, George Graham, who carried on the business after his death.Although Tompion does not seem to have been particularly innovative, he lived at a time when great advances were being made in horology, which his consummate skill as a craftsman enabled him to exploit. In this he was greatly assisted by his association with Robert Hooke, for whom Tompion constructed a watch with a balance spring in 1675; at that time Hooke was trying to establish his priority over Huygens for this invention. Although this particular watch was not successful, it made Tompion aware of the potential of the balance spring and he became the first person in England to apply Huygens's spiral spring to the balance of a watch. Although Thuret had constructed such a watch somewhat earlier in France, the superior quality of Tompion's wheel work, assisted by Hooke's wheel-cutting engine, enabled him to dominate the market. The anchor escapement (which reduced the amplitude of the pendulum's swing) was first applied to clocks around this time and produced further improvements in accuracy which Tompion and other makers were able to utilize. However, the anchor escapement, like the verge escapement, produced recoil (the clock was momentarily driven in reverse). Tompion was involved in attempts to overcome this defect with the introduction of the dead-beat escapement for clocks and the horizontal escapement for watches. Neither was successful, but they were both perfected later by George Graham.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsMaster of the Clockmakers' Company 1703.Bibliography1695, with William Houghton and Edward Barlow, British patent no. 344 (for a horizontal escapement).Further ReadingR.W.Symonds, 1951, Thomas Tompion, His Life and Work, London (a comprehensive but now slightly dated account).H.W.Robinson and W.Adams (eds), 1935, The Diary of Robert Hooke (contains many references to Tompion).D.Howse, 1970, The Tompion clocks at Greenwich and the dead-beat escapement', Antiquarian Horology 7:18–34, 114–33.DV -
9 dialectical\ words
such special colloquial words which- are normative and devoid of any stylistic meaning in regional dialects, but used outside of them, carry a strong flavour of the locality where they belong;- markedly differ on the phonemic level: one and the same phoneme is differently pronounced in each of them;- differ also on the lexical level, having their own names for locally existing phenomena and also supplying locally circulating synonyms for the words, accepted by the language in general."son of a bitch", "whore", "whorehound"
A hut was all the (= the only) home he ever had.
Mary sits aside (= beside) of her sister on the bus.
Source: V.A.K.English-Russian dictionary of stylistics (terminology and examples) > dialectical\ words
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