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21 Fairbairn, Sir Peter
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. September 1799 Kelso, Roxburghshire, Scotlandd. 4 January 1861 Leeds, Yorkshire, England[br]British inventor of the revolving tube between drafting rollers to give false twist.[br]Born of Scottish parents, Fairbairn was apprenticed at the age of 14 to John Casson, a mill-wright and engineer at the Percy Main Colliery, Newcastle upon Tyne, and remained there until 1821 when he went to work for his brother William in Manchester. After going to various other places, including Messrs Rennie in London and on the European continent, he eventually moved in 1829 to Leeds where Marshall helped him set up the Wellington Foundry and so laid the foundations for the colossal establishment which was to employ over one thousand workers. To begin with he devoted his attention to improving wool-weaving machinery, substituting iron for wood in the construction of the textile machines. He also worked on machinery for flax, incorporating many of Philippe de Girard's ideas. He assisted Henry Houldsworth in the application of the differential to roving frames, and it was to these machines that he added his own inventions. The longer fibres of wool and flax need to have some form of support and control between the rollers when they are being drawn out, and inserting a little twist helps. However, if the roving is too tightly twisted before passing through the first pair of rollers, it cannot be drawn out, while if there is insufficient twist, the fibres do not receive enough support in the drafting zone. One solution is to twist the fibres together while they are actually in the drafting zone between the rollers. In 1834, Fairbairn patented an arrangement consisting of a revolving tube placed between the drawing rollers. The tube inserted a "middle" or "false" twist in the material. As stated in the specification, it was "a well-known contrivance… for twisting and untwisting any roving passing through it". It had been used earlier in 1822 by J. Goulding of the USA and a similar idea had been developed by C.Danforth in America and patented in Britain in 1825 by J.C. Dyer. Fairbairn's machine, however, was said to make a very superior article. He was also involved with waste-silk spinning and rope-yarn machinery.Fairbairn later began constructing machine tools, and at the beginning of the Crimean War was asked by the Government to make special tools for the manufacture of armaments. He supplied some of these, such as cannon rifling machines, to the arsenals at Woolwich and Enfield. He then made a considerable number of tools for the manufacture of the Armstrong gun. He was involved in the life of his adopted city and was elected to Leeds town council in 1832 for ten years. He was elected an alderman in 1854 and was Mayor of Leeds from 1857 to 1859, when he was knighted by Queen Victoria at the opening of the new town hall. He was twice married, first to Margaret Kennedy and then to Rachel Anne Brindling.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1858.Bibliography1834, British patent no. 6,741 (revolving tube between drafting rollers to give false twist).Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography.Obituary, 1861, Engineer 11.W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (provides a brief account of Fairbairn's revolving tube).C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vols IV and V, Oxford: Clarendon Press (provides details of Fairbairn's silk-dressing machine and a picture of a large planing machine built by him).RLH -
22 scale
̈ɪskeɪl I
1. сущ.
1) а) собир. чешуя( рыб и т. п.) б) чешуйка
2) шелуха, тонкая пленка Syn: husk, peel
3) а) зубной камень Syn: tartar б) осадок;
накипь, минеральные отложения;
тех. окалина
4) мн. щечки, накладки (на рукоятке складного ножа) ∙
2. гл.
1) а) чистить( рыбу) ;
соскабливать, снимать чешую б) лущить (горох, арахис и т. п.)
2) соскабливать, сдирать, счищать, снимать( накипь, нарост, зубной камень и т. п.) ;
снимать окалину
3) шелушиться, отшелушиваться (тж. scale off)
4) образовывать окалину, накипь или осадок;
откладываться в виде осадка II
1. сущ.
1) чаша, чашка или платформа весов the fish turned the scale at 20 pounds ≈ в рыбе оказалось 20 фунтов весу
2) мн. а) весы (прибор для взвешивания предметов, тж. a pair of scales) б) Весы (созвездие и знак зодиака) Syn: Libra ∙
2. гл.
1) взвешивать Syn: weigh, consider
2) весить Syn: weigh III
1. сущ.
1) а) градация, шкала;
иерархия, лестница pay scale, salary scale, wage scale ≈ шкала заработной платы, тарифная сетка, расценки rate scale ≈ шкала расценок, шкала тарифных ставок social scale ≈ социальная иерархия, общественная лестница б) ступень( занимаемая в той или иной иерархии), уровень развития( по той или иной шкале)
2) а) масштаб( карты и т. п.) ;
масштабное соотношение on a large( grand) /small scale ≈ в большом/маленьком масштабе natural scale ≈ натуральная величина б) градуировка( измерительного прибора и т. п.)
3) размер, протяженность;
охват enormous scale ≈ огромный размер, большой размах moderate scale ≈ скромный размер
4) а) муз. гамма to play, practice scales ≈ играть гаммы to sing a scale ≈ петь гамму achromatic scale chromatic scale diatonic scale major scale minor scale б) живоп. цветовая гамма
5) масштабная линейка
6) мат. система счисления (тж. scale of notation)
2. гл.
1) а) определять масштаб, сводить к определенному масштабу б) представлять в определенном масштабе в) регулировать, определять (затраты;
количество, объем и т. п. чего-л.) в соответствии с какой-л. системой The nurses have offered to scale down their pay demands to a lower figure. ≈ Медсестры предложили понизить свои требования к оплате труда до меньшей суммы.
2) градуировать, наносить деления;
строить шкалу
3) быть или стать соизмеримыми, сопоставимыми (о нескольких различных объектах)
4) подниматься, взбираться( по лестнице и т. п.) Syn: climb чаш(к) а весов - to turn the * at весить (столько-то) - he tips the *s at 225 pounds он весит 225 фунтов - to turn the * (образное) склонить чашу весов, перевесить;
решить исход дела - this argument at once turned the * этот аргумент оказался решающим - to throw smth. into the * (образное) бросить что-л. на чашу весов;
повлиять на решение вопроса платформа весов обыкн. pl весы (тж. a pair of *s) - kitchen * кухонные весы - * car вагон-весы - * weight гиря - the *s of justice( образное) весы правосудия - to weight the *s on behalf of smb. (образное) склонять чашу весов в чью-л. пользу весы для взвешивания жокеев (на скачках) - Clerk of the Scales служащий, взвешивающий жокеев перед скачками - to go /to ride/ to * взвешиваться( до и после скачек - о жокеях) - to go to * at иметь (такой-то) вес, весить (столько-то - о жокеях) (the Scales) Весы (созвездие и знак зодиака) > equal /even/ * состояние равновесия или неопределенности > to be in the * быть нерешенным /неясным/ > his fate hangs in the * его судьба еще не решена > victory was long in the * долгое время трудно было сказать, кто победит > to hold the *s between two rivals не оказывать предпочтения ни одному из двух соперников > to hold the *s even /equally/ судить беспристрастно > to throw one's /the/ sword into the * использовать силу оружия в качестве решающего аргумента весить, иметь вес - to * six pounds весить шесть фунтов - I don't think she *s so much я не думаю, чтобы у нее был такой большой вес взвешивать взвешиваться чешуйка (собирательнле) чешуя - fish's * чешуя рыбы чешуеобразный тонкий слой, шелуха, пленка и т. п. - to scrape off * счищать шелуху - to rub off * соскребать пленку накипь;
осадок (техническое) окалина зубной камень тонкая металлическая пластинка - the *s of armour панцирные пластинки - * armour (историческое) чешуйчатый доспех pl щечки, накладки (на рукоятке складного ножа) (редкое) погон( из металла) (химическое) неочищенный парафин (энтомология) червец, щитовка, тля( Coccidae) > (the) *s fell from his eyes пелена спала с его глаз;
(библеизм) чешуя отпала от глаз его > to remove the *s from smb.'s eyes раскрыть кому-л. глаза (на истинное положение вещей) очищать, чистить;
снимать (чешую) - to * fish чистить рыбу лущить (горох и т. п.) соскабливать, счищать (накипь, нарост, зубной камень и т. п.) - to * a boiler чистить котел, снимать накипь с котла - to * tartar from teeth снимать камень с зубов снимать окалину (редкое) прочищать орудие( выстрелом) лупиться, шелушиться (тж. * off) - the skin *s after scarlet fever после скарлатины кожа шелушится - some of the paint has *d off местами краска облупилась покрывать накипью;
образовывать осадок;
покрывать слоем (чего-л.) - London smoke has *d the stones of its buildings лондонские дома покрыты копотью от дыма - hard water *s a boiler от жесткой воды котел покрывается накипью покрываться накипью, осадком, слоем ( чего-л.) ;
образовывать окалину - the stone which has *d with time замшелый от времени камень (диалектизм) разбрасывать, распространять масштаб (карты, чертежа) - a small * map карта мелкого масштаба - distance * линейный масштаб - the * of a drawing масштаб чертежа - what is the * of the map? каков масштаб этой карты? - (drawn) to * в масштабе соотношение, масштаб - drawing to * черчение в масштабе - a picture( of an object) reduced to a * of one twelfth of the natural size снимок( предмета), уменьшенный до 1/12 натуральной величины размер, охват;
размах - on /upon/ a large * в большом масштабе - * of living уровень жизни - to live on a grand * жить на широкую ногу - a vast * of building широкий размах строительства - mass action on a world-wide * массовые выступления в мировом масштабе;
массовое движение, охватившее весь мир шкала, градуировка (обыкн. измерительного инструмента) - Fahrenheit * шкала Фаренгейта - the * of a thermometer шкала термометра - a * of inches дюймовая шкала - the * on this ruler is in both centimetres and inches деления на этой линейке и в сантиметрах, и в дюймах - a measuring * for colours шкала цвета - wave-length * (радиотехника) шкала волн градация;
шкала, такса - * of wages шкала заработной платы - * of hardness (техническое) шкала твердости - * of slopes (топография) шкала заложений - * of age возрастные группы (в демографии) - * of payments( for work) шкала ставок оплаты( за труд) ;
шкала заработной платы - tonnage * (морское) шкала вместимости - * of taxes, taxation * шкала ставок налогового обложения - to mark examination papers on the * of one hundred per cent оценивать экзаменационные работы по стопроцентной шкале (психологическое) серия тестов (разной сложности) для проверки способностей или успехов учащихся (музыкальное) гамма - diatonic * диатоническая гамма - the * of F гамма фа мажор - to sing * петь гаммы - to practice the *s on the piano разучивать гаммы на фортепиано - to learn one's *s учить гаммы;
начинать учиться музыке, быть начинающим в музыке гамма цветов - a * of colours цветовая гамма - a long * of tones богатая гамма оттенков уровень, ступень ( развития) ;
положение, место - to be high in the * of civilization стоять на высокой ступени цивилизации - to be at the top of the * стоять на высшей ступени (чего-л.) - the *of animal life период /ступень/ животной жизни - ae we rise in the zoological *... по мере того, как человек поднимался по ступеням зоологической лестницы... - to be high in the social * занимать высокое положение в обществе - to sink in the social * спуститься по общественной лестнице (устаревшее) лестница;
ступени лестницы масштабная линейка (математика) система счисления (тж. * of notation) - decimal * шкала в десятичном счислении > * points( специальное) пункты оценки, статьи экстерьера изображать в определенном масштабе - to * a building вычертить здание в масштабе вычислить или определить по масштабу - to * a map определять расстояние по карте сводить к общим масштабам, к одному масштабу быть соизмеримым, сопоставимым, иметь общий масштаб градуировать, наносить деления вычислять размах (чего-л.), охват (чем-л.) ;
регулировать объем (чего-л.) - a production schedule *d to actual needs производственный график, составленный с учетом практических потребностей - to * smth. up постепенно повышать, увеличивать что-л. - to * up wages повышать /подтягивать/ зарплату - to * up armaments наращивать вооружения - to * up production расширять производство - to * smth& down постепенно сокращать - to * down prices снижать цены - to * down imports постепенно сокращать импорт - the effect of inflation is to * down people's spending инфляция ведет к тому, что люди начинают урезывать расходы подниматься, взбираться (особ. по приставной лестнице) - to * a castle wall взобраться по стене замка, взять замок штурмом - to * a mountain взбираться на гору - to * the heights of philosophical abstraction овладевать высотами философской абстракции перелезать (через забор, стену и т. п.) absolute ~ абсолютная шкала ascending ~ возрастающая шкала ~ ступень, уровень (развития) ;
to be high in the social scale занимать высокое положение в обществе drawing ~ масштабная линейка enlarged ~ увеличенный масштаб fast time ~ вчт. ускоренный масштаб времени full ~ полный масштаб fuzzy ~ размытая шкала graduated ~ градуированная шкала graphic rating ~ шкала оценок gray ~ полутоновая шкала hammer ~ тех. молотобоина, окалина scale ( the Scales) = Libra;
to hold the scales even судить беспристрастно image ~ масштаб изображения large ~ крупномасштабный( о карте) large ~ крупный масштаб;
on a large scale в крупном масштабе large ~ широкий, массовый( о жилищном строительстве и т. п.) log ~ логарифмическая шкала metric ~ метрическая шкала ~ масштаб;
размер;
on a large (или grand) scale в большом масштабе;
on a small scale в маленьком масштабе large ~ крупный масштаб;
on a large scale в крупном масштабе ~ масштаб;
размер;
on a large (или grand) scale в большом масштабе;
on a small scale в маленьком масштабе ~ муз. гамма;
to practice scales играть гаммы preference ~ шкала предпочтений probability ~ шкала вероятностей progressive ~ прогрессивная шкала ~ градация, шкала;
rate scale шкала расценок ratio ~ шкала оценок reduced ~ уменьшенный масштаб relative ~ относительная шкала salary ~ шкала заработной платы salary ~ шкала окладов salary ~ шкала ставок оплаты за труд scale (the Scales) = Libra;
to hold the scales even судить беспристрастно ~ быть соизмеримыми, сопоставимыми to ~ в масштабе ~ весить ~ pl весы ~ весы ~ взвешивать ~ муз. гамма;
to practice scales играть гаммы ~ градация, шкала;
rate scale шкала расценок ~ градация ~ камень (на зубах) ~ лущить ~ масштаб;
размер;
on a large (или grand) scale в большом масштабе;
on a small scale в маленьком масштабе ~ масштаб ~ масштабная линейка ~ образовывать окалину, накипь ~ тех. окалина, накипь;
scales fell from his eyes пелена спала с его глаз ~ охват ~ подниматься, взбираться (по лестнице и т. п.) ~ подробные данные о выпуске серийных облигаций ~ размах ~ размер ~ сводить к определенному масштабу;
определять масштаб;
to scale down prices понижать цены;
to scale up wages повышать заработную плату ~ мат. система счисления (тж. scale of notation) ~ система счисления ~ ставка заработной платы ~ ступень, уровень (развития) ;
to be high in the social scale занимать высокое положение в обществе ~ ступень развития ~ такса ~ уровень ~ чашка весов;
to turn (или to tip) the scale at so many pounds весить столько-то фунтов ~ чешуя (у рыб и т. п.) ~ чистить, соскабливать чешую ~ шелуха ~ шелушиться ~ шкала ~ шкала ставок по различным операциям ~ pl щечки, накладки (на рукоятке складного ножа) the ~ to be 1:50 000 в масштабе 1:50 000;
to scale по масштабу ~ down постепенно понижать ~ down снижать цены ~ down сокращать налоги ~ down уменьшать масштаб ~ сводить к определенному масштабу;
определять масштаб;
to scale down prices понижать цены;
to scale up wages повышать заработную плату ~ of basic rates шкала базисных ставок ~ of basic rates шкала основных ставок заработной платы ~ of pay шкала ставок оплаты за труд ~ of pensions шкала пенсий ~ of premium rates шкала страховых взносов ~ of prices масштаб цен ~ of prices шкала цен ~ of rates applied per wagon-load шкала тарифов для вагона как весовой единицы ~ of wages шкала ставок заработной платы the ~ to be 1:50 000 в масштабе 1:50 000;
to scale по масштабу ~ сводить к определенному масштабу;
определять масштаб;
to scale down prices понижать цены;
to scale up wages повышать заработную плату ~ тех. окалина, накипь;
scales fell from his eyes пелена спала с его глаз to sink in the ~ опуститься на более низкую ступень;
утратить( прежнее) значение, опуститься sliding ~ движок логарифмической или счетной линейки sliding ~ скользящая шкала slow time ~ замедленный масштаб времени small ~ мелкая структура social ~ социальная шкала tax ~ шкала ставок налогового обложения time ~ масштаб времени tip the ~ перевесить чашу весов tip the ~ склонять чашу весов tip: ~ перевешивать;
to tip the scale(s) = склонить чашу весов;
решить исход дела turn the ~ решать исход дела turn the ~ склонять чашу весов turn: to ~ loose освобождать;
to turn yellow струсить;
to turn the scale( или the balance) решить исход дела ~ чашка весов;
to turn (или to tip) the scale at so many pounds весить столько-то фунтов universal ~ универсальная шкала wage ~ шкала заработной платы wage: ~ attr. связанный с заработной платой, относящийся к заработной плате;
wage scale шкала заработной платы;
wage labour наемный труд -
23 pressure
ˈpreʃə сущ.
1) давление, сжатие, стискивание She kicked at the door with her foot, and the pressure was enough to open it. ≈ Она толкнула ногой дверь, сила удара оказалась достаточной, чтобы открыть ее. The pressure of his fingers had relaxed. ≈ Его хватка( давление его пальцев) ослабла. The best way to treat such bleeding is to apply firm pressure. ≈ Наилучший способ остановить такое кровотечение - это наложить жгут (применить сильное сжатие/давление). Syn: compression
2) а) давление;
воздействие, нажим pressure from ≈ давление с чьей-л. стороны under pressure ≈ под давлением under relentless pressure ≈ под неослабевающим давлением/натиском to build up pressure, to increase ( the) pressure ≈ увеличивать давление/нажим to ease, relieve( the) pressure ≈ ослабить давление/нажим/натиск на кого-л. to exert, place, put pressure on smb. ≈ оказывать давление/нажим на кого-л. to face pressure ≈ встретить сопротивление to face inexorable pressure from the media ≈ встретить сильное давление со стороны средств массовой информации to resist pressure ≈ противостоять давлению, натиску to resist pressure from extremist groups ≈ противостоять натиску экстремистских группировок Syn: stress б) спец. чрезмерно активная эксплуатация( какого-л. оборудования) ;
слишком активное использование( природных ресурсов)
3) стесненность, затруднительные обстоятельства;
крайность, тяжелое положение Syn: exigency
4) гнет;
бремя( каких-л. обстоятельств) pressure of poverty ≈ гнет нищеты They were people who work well under pressure. ≈ Они принадлежат к той категории людей, которые хорошо справляются с работой в экстремальных условиях.
5) а) физ. давление;
сжатие б) метеор. атмосферное давление air pressure ≈ давление воздуха atmospheric, barometric pressure ≈ атмосферное давление high pressure ≈ высокое давление low pressure ≈ низкое давление pressure builds up, increases, rises ≈ давление растет pressure eases, falls ≈ давление падает Warm air is now being drawn in from another high pressure area over the North Sea. ≈ Теплый воздух поступает из области высокого давления над Северным морем.
6) тех. прессование
7) электр. напряжение
8) уст. отпечаток;
оттиск Syn: impression, stamp
1. ∙ work at high pressure work at low pressure давление, надавливание;
сжатие - it needs a bit more * надо нажать /надавить/ посильнее - I felt the slight * of his hand я почувствовал, как он слегка сжал мне руку давление, воздействие;
нажим - population * давление избытка населения;
экономическое перенаселение;
демографическое давление - * of business /work/ загруженность работой - *s of modern life напряжение /нагрузки/ современной жизни - to put * upon smb., to bring * to bear upon smb. оказывать давление /нажим/ на кого-л. - under the * of world public opinion под давлением мирового общественного мнения - he did it under * он сделал это под давлением /по принуждению/ чрезмерная эксплуатация или использование (природных ресурсов) затруднительные обстоятельства, трудное положение - financial * финансовые затруднения - * for money нехватка денежных средств гнет - * of powerty гнет нищеты - * fo taxation налоговый пресс неотложность, безотлагательность( специальное) давление, сжатие - dynamic * (физическое) динамическое давление - blood * (медицина) кровяное давление - * vessel сосуд или резервуар высокого давления - * head (гидрология) гидростатический напор;
приемник давления - * casting литье под давлением - * hose (техническое) напорный рукав - * lubrication( техническое) смазка под давлением( от насоса) - * stroke( техническое) ход давления /сжатия/ - * turbine реактивная турбина - the tyre *s are low давление в шинах низкое (метеорология) атмосферное давление (тж. atmospheric *) - * sense( физиологическое) чувство давления - * gradient (физическое) перепад давления - * contours изобары на синоптической карте - * drag (авиация) сопротивление давления( техническое) прессование, вдавливание( редкое) (электротехника) напряжение (редкое) печатание отпечаток ~ перен. давление;
воздействие, нажим;
to act under pressure действовать под давлением, недобровольно to bring ~ to bear (upon smb.), to put ~ (upon smb.) оказывать давление (на кого-л.) ;
time pressure спешка;
pressure of work загруженность работой exert ~ оказывать давление external ~ давление извне ~ стесненность, затруднительные обстоятельства;
financial pressure денежные затруднения financial ~ финансовое давление inflationary ~ давление воздуха inflationary ~ инфляционное давление pressure воздействие, нажим ~ воздействие ~ гнет ~ физ. давление;
сжатие ~ перен. давление;
воздействие, нажим;
to act under pressure действовать под давлением, недобровольно ~ давление ~ затруднительное обстоятельство ~ метео атмосферное давление ~ эл. напряжение ~ напряжение ~ неотложность ~ уст. отпечаток ~ тех. прессование ~ сжатие, стискивание ~ стесненность, затруднительные обстоятельства;
financial pressure денежные затруднения to bring ~ to bear (upon smb.), to put ~ (upon smb.) оказывать давление (на кого-л.) ;
time pressure спешка;
pressure of work загруженность работой to bring ~ to bear (upon smb.), to put ~ (upon smb.) оказывать давление (на кого-л.) ;
time pressure спешка;
pressure of work загруженность работой selling ~ наплыв предложений на продажу to bring ~ to bear (upon smb.), to put ~ (upon smb.) оказывать давление (на кого-л.) ;
time pressure спешка;
pressure of work загруженность работой upward ~ давление в сторону повышения курса to work at high (low) ~ работать быстро, энергично (вяло, с прохладцей)Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > pressure
-
24 Crompton, Samuel
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 3 December 1753 Firwood, near Bolton, Lancashire, Englandd. 26 June 1827 Bolton, Lancashire, England[br]English inventor of the spinning mule.[br]Samuel Crompton was the son of a tenant farmer, George, who became the caretaker of the old house Hall-i-th-Wood, near Bolton, where he died in 1759. As a boy, Samuel helped his widowed mother in various tasks at home, including weaving. He liked music and made his own violin, with which he later was to earn some money to pay for tools for building his spinning mule. He was set to work at spinning and so in 1769 became familiar with the spinning jenny designed by James Hargreaves; he soon noticed the poor quality of the yarn produced and its tendency to break. Crompton became so exasperated with the jenny that in 1772 he decided to improve it. After seven years' work, in 1779 he produced his famous spinning "mule". He built the first one entirely by himself, principally from wood. He adapted rollers similar to those already patented by Arkwright for drawing out the cotton rovings, but it seems that he did not know of Arkwright's invention. The rollers were placed at the back of the mule and paid out the fibres to the spindles, which were mounted on a moving carriage that was drawn away from the rollers as the yarn was paid out. The spindles were rotated to put in twist. At the end of the draw, or shortly before, the rollers were stopped but the spindles continued to rotate. This not only twisted the yarn further, but slightly stretched it and so helped to even out any irregularities; it was this feature that gave the mule yarn extra quality. Then, after the spindles had been turned backwards to unwind the yarn from their tips, they were rotated in the spinning direction again and the yarn was wound on as the carriage was pushed up to the rollers.The mule was a very versatile machine, making it possible to spin almost every type of yarn. In fact, Samuel Crompton was soon producing yarn of a much finer quality than had ever been spun in Bolton, and people attempted to break into Hall-i-th-Wood to see how he produced it. Crompton did not patent his invention, perhaps because it consisted basically of the essential features of the earlier machines of Hargreaves and Arkwright, or perhaps through lack of funds. Under promise of a generous subscription, he disclosed his invention to the spinning industry, but was shabbily treated because most of the promised money was never paid. Crompton's first mule had forty-eight spindles, but it did not long remain in its original form for many people started to make improvements to it. The mule soon became more popular than Arkwright's waterframe because it could spin such fine yarn, which enabled weavers to produce the best muslin cloth, rivalling that woven in India and leading to an enormous expansion in the British cotton-textile industry. Crompton eventually saved enough capital to set up as a manufacturer himself and around 1784 he experimented with an improved carding engine, although he was not successful. In 1800, local manufacturers raised a sum of £500 for him, and eventually in 1812 he received a government grant of £5,000, but this was trifling in relation to the immense financial benefits his invention had conferred on the industry, to say nothing of his expenses. When Crompton was seeking evidence in 1811 to support his claim for financial assistance, he found that there were 4,209,570 mule spindles compared with 155,880 jenny and 310,516 waterframe spindles. He later set up as a bleacher and again as a cotton manufacturer, but only the gift of a small annuity by his friends saved him from dying in total poverty.[br]Further ReadingH.C.Cameron, 1951, Samuel Crompton, Inventor of the Spinning Mule, London (a rather discursive biography).Dobson \& Barlow Ltd, 1927, Samuel Crompton, the Inventor of the Spinning Mule, Bolton.G.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, Inventor of the Spinning Machine Called the Mule, London.The invention of the mule is fully described in H. Gatling, 1970, The Spinning Mule, Newton Abbot; W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London; R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester.C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. IV, Oxford: Clarendon Press (provides a brief account).RLH -
25 Hargreaves, James
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. c.1720–1 Oswaldtwistle, near Blackburn, Englandd. April 1778 Nottingham, England[br]English inventor of the first successful machine to spin more than a couple of yarns of cotton or wool at once.[br]James Hargreaves was first a carpenter and then a hand-loom weaver at Stanhill, Blackburn, probably making Blackburn Checks or Greys from linen warps and cotton weft. An invention ascribed to him doubled production in the preparatory carding process before spinning. Two or three cards were nailed to the same stock and the upper one was suspended from the ceiling by a cord and counterweight. Around 1762 Robert Peel (1750–1830) sought his assistance in constructing a carding engine with cylinders that may have originated with Daniel Bourn, but this was not successful. In 1764, inspired by seeing a spinning wheel that continued to revolve after it had been knocked over accidentally, Hargreaves invented his spinning jenny. The first jennies had horizontal wheels and could spin eight threads at once. To spin on this machine required a great deal of skill. A length of roving was passed through the clamp or clove. The left hand was used to close this and draw the roving away from the spindles which were rotated by the spinner turning the horizontal wheel with the right hand. The spindles twisted the fibres as they were being drawn out. At the end of the draw, the spindles continued to be rotated until sufficient twist had been put into the fibres to make the finished yarn. This was backed off from the tips of the spindles by reversing them and then, with the spindles turning in the spinning direction once more, the yarn was wound on by the right hand rotating the spindles, the left hand pushing the clove back towards them and one foot operating a pedal which guided the yarn onto the spindles by a faller wire. A piecer was needed to rejoin the yarns when they broke. At first Hargreaves's jenny was worked only by his family, but then he sold two or three of them, possibly to Peel. In 1768, local opposition and a riot in which his house was gutted forced him to flee to Nottingham. He entered into partnership there with Thomas James and established a cotton mill. In 1770 he followed Arkwright's example and sought to patent his machine and brought an action for infringement against some Lancashire manufacturers, who offered £3,000 in settlement. Hargreaves held out for £4,000, but he was unable to enforce his patent because he had sold jennies before leaving Lancashire. Arkwright's "water twist" was more suitable for the Nottingham hosiery industry trade than jenny yarn and in 1777 Hargreaves replaced his own machines with Arkwright's. When he died the following year, he is said to have left property valued at £7,000 and his widow received £400 for her share in the business. Once the jenny had been made public, it was quickly improved by other inventors and the number of spindles per machine increased. In 1784, there were reputed to be 20,000 jennies of 80 spindles each at work. The jenny greatly eased the shortage of cotton weft for weavers.[br]Bibliography1770, British patent no. 962 (spinning jenny).Further ReadingC.Aspin and S.D.Chapman, 1964, James Hargreaves and the Spinning Jenny, Helmshore Local History Society (the fullest account of Hargreaves's life and inventions).For descriptions of his invention, see W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London; R.L. Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester; and W.A.Hunter, 1951–3, "James Hargreaves and the invention of the spinning jenny", Transactions ofthe Newcomen Society 28.A.P.Wadsworth and J. de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, Manchester (a good background to the whole of this period).RLH -
26 scale
I1. [skeıl] n1. 1) чаш(к)а весовto turn the scale - образн. склонить чашу весов, перевесить; решить исход дела
to throw smth. into the scale - образн. бросить что-л. на чашу весов; повлиять на решение вопроса
2) платформа весов2. 1) обыкн. pl весы (тж. a pair of scales)the scales of justice - образн. весы правосудия
to weight the scales on behalf of smb. - образн. склонять чашу весов в чью-л. пользу
2) весы для взвешивания жокеев ( на скачках)Clerk of the Scales - служащий, взвешивающий жокеев перед скачками
to go /to ride/ to scale - взвешиваться ( до и после скачек - о жокеях)
to go to scale at - иметь ( такой-то) вес, весить ( столько-то - о жокеях)
3. (the Scales) поэт. Весы ( созвездие и знак зодиака)♢
equal /even/ scale - состояние равновесия или неопределённостиto be in the scale - быть нерешённым /неясным/
victory was long in the scale - долгое время трудно было сказать, кто победит
to hold the scales between two rivals - не оказывать предпочтения ни одному из двух соперников
to hold the scales even /equally/ - судить беспристрастно
to throw one's /the/ sword into the scale - использовать силу оружия в качестве решающего аргумента
2. [skeıl] v1. весить, иметь весI don't think she scales so much - я не думаю, чтобы у неё был такой большой вес
2. 1) взвешивать2) взвешиватьсяII1. [skeıl] n1. 1) чешуйка2) собир. чешуяfish's [lizard's, snake's] scale - чешуя рыбы [ящерицы, змеи]
2. чешуеобразный тонкий слой, шелуха, плёнка и т. п.3. 1) накипь; осадок2) тех. окалина4. зубной камень5. тонкая металлическая пластинкаscale armour - ист. чешуйчатый доспех
6. pl щёчки, накладки ( на рукоятке складного ножа)7. редк. погон ( из металла)8. хим. неочищенный парафин9. энт. червец, щитовка, тля ( Coccidae)♢
(the) scales fell from his eyes - а) пелена спала с его глаз; б) библ. чешуя отпала от глаз егоto remove the scales from smb.'s eyes - раскрыть кому-л. глаза ( на истинное положение вещей)
2. [skeıl] v1. 1) очищать, чистить; снимать ( чешую)2) лущить (горох и т. п.)2. 1) соскабливать, счищать (накипь, нарост, зубной камень и т. п.)to scale a boiler - чистить котёл, снимать накипь с котла
2) снимать окалину3) редк. прочищать орудие ( выстрелом)3. лупиться, шелушиться (тж. scale off)4. 1) покрывать накипью; образовывать осадок; покрывать слоем (чего-л.)London smoke has scaled the stones of its buildings - лондонские дома покрыты копотью от дыма
2) покрываться накипью, осадком, слоем (чего-л.); образовывать окалину5. диал. разбрасывать, распространятьII1. [skeıl] n1. 1) масштаб (карты, чертежа)a small [a large] scale map - карта мелкого [крупного] масштаба
what is the scale of the map? - каков масштаб этой карты?
2) соотношение, масштабa picture (of an object) reduced to a scale of one twelfth of the natural size - снимок (предмета), уменьшенный до 1/12 натуральной величины
2. размер, охват; размахon /upon/ a large [a small] scale - в большом [в малом] масштабе
a vast [an unprecedented, a tremendous] scale of building - широкий [небывалый, огромный] размах строительства
mass action on a world-wide scale - массовые выступления в мировом масштабе, массовое движение, охватившее весь мир
3. 1) шкала, градуировка (обыкн. измерительного инструмента)the scale on this ruler is in both centimetres and inches - деления на этой линейке и в сантиметрах и в дюймах
wave-length scale - радио шкала волн
2) градация; шкала, таксаscale of wages [of pensions] - шкала заработной платы [пенсий]
scale of hardness - тех. шкала твёрдости
scale of slopes - топ. шкала заложений
scale of payments (for work) - шкала ставок оплаты (за труд); шкала заработной платы
tonnage scale - мор. шкала вместимости
scale of taxes, taxation scale - шкала ставок налогового обложения
to mark examination papers on the scale of one hundred per cent - оценивать экзаменационные работы по стопроцентной шкале
4. 1) муз. гаммаdiatonic [chromatic, major, minor] scale - диатоническая [хроматическая, мажорная, минорная] гамма
to learn one's scales - а) учить гаммы; б) начинать учиться музыке, быть начинающим в музыке
2) гамма цветов5. 1) уровень, ступень ( развития); положение, местоto be high [low] in the scale of civilization - стоять на высокой [низкой] ступени цивилизации
to be at the top [at the bottom] of the scale - стоять на высшей [низшей] ступени (чего-л.)
the scale of animal life - период /ступень/ животной жизни
as we rise in the zoological scale... - по мере того, как человек поднимался по ступеням зоологической лестницы...
to sink [to rise] in the social scale - спуститься [подняться] по общественной лестнице
2) уст. лестница; ступени лестницы6. масштабная линейка7. мат. система счисления (тж. scale of notation)decimal [binary] scale - шкала в десятичном [двоичном] счислении
♢
scale points - спец. пункты оценки, статьи экстерьера2. [skeıl] v1. 1) изображать в определённом масштабе2) вычислить или определить по масштабу3) сводить к общим масштабам, к одному масштабу2. быть соизмеримым, сопоставимым, иметь общий масштаб3. градуировать, наносить деления4. вычислять размах (чего-л.), охват (чем-л.); регулировать объём (чего-л.)a production schedule scaled to actual need - производственный график, составленный с учётом практических потребностей
to scale smth. up - постепенно повышать, увеличивать что-л.
to scale up wages - повышать /подтягивать/ зарплату
to scale smth. down - постепенно сокращать
to scale down prices [taxes] - снижать цены [налоги]
the effect of inflation is to scale down people's spending - инфляция ведёт к тому, что люди начинают урезывать расходы
5. 1) подниматься, взбираться (особ. по приставной лестнице)to scale a castle wall - взобраться по стене замка, взять замок штурмом
to scale the heights of philosophical abstraction - овладевать высотами философской абстракции
2) перелезать (через забор, стену и т. п.) -
27 new
{nju:}
I. 1. нов
NEW soil целина
as good as NEW като нов
2. нов, моден, модерен, съвременен, последен
the NEW poor/rich наскоро обеднелите/забогателите
NEW deal нова социално-икономическа политика
the NEW Deal икономическата политика на Франклин Рузвелт
3. нов, друг, още един
4. нов, непознат, непривикнал, отскорошен
I was NEW to the job не бях още запознат с работата
I am NEW to this town не познавам още града, отскоро съм в града
NEW from school току-що свършил училище
the horse is NEW to the plough конят още не е свикнал с плуга
5. пресен (за хляб, мляко), млад (за зеленчук, вино), неотлежал (за сирене и пр.)
to turn over a NEW leaf започвам друг/нов живот
this is a NEW one on me! и това не бях чувал
II. n the NEW новост
III. 1. adv само в съчет. с глаголи наново
to NEW-build построявам наново
2. с прил. и прич. ново-
NEW-blown току-що разцъфнал
NEW-coined word новоизкована дума* * *{nju:} I. a 1. нов; new soil целина; as good as new като нов; 2. нов,(2) {nju:} adv само в съчет.: 1. с глаголи наново; to new-build пос* * *последен; пресен; друг; непознат; неотлежал; непривикнал; незапознат;* * *1. as good as new като нов 2. i am new to this town не познавам още града, отскоро съм в града 3. i was new to the job не бях още запознат с работата 4. i. нов 5. ii. n the new новост 6. iii. adv само в съчет. с глаголи наново 7. new deal нова социално-икономическа политика 8. new from school току-що свършил училище 9. new soil целина 10. new-blown току-що разцъфнал 11. new-coined word новоизкована дума 12. the horse is new to the plough конят още не е свикнал с плуга 13. the new deal икономическата политика на Франклин Рузвелт 14. the new poor/rich наскоро обеднелите/забогателите 15. this is a new one on me! и това не бях чувал 16. to new-build построявам наново 17. to turn over a new leaf започвам друг/нов живот 18. нов, друг, още един 19. нов, моден, модерен, съвременен, последен 20. нов, непознат, непривикнал, отскорошен 21. пресен (за хляб, мляко), млад (за зеленчук, вино), неотлежал (за сирене и пр.) 22. с прил. и прич. ново-* * *new [nju:] I. adj 1. нов;
ew issue нова емисия;
ew moon нова луна; новолуние;
ew soil целина;
ew trial ново (повторно) разглеждане на делото; 2. нов, моден, модерен, съвременен, последен; 3. нов, друг; още един; to lead a
ew life, to turn over a
ew leaf започвам друг (нов) живот; 4. нов, непознат; незапознат, непривикнал; отскорошен;
ew from college току-що завършил колеж; I am
ew to this town не познавам този град; a
ew one on me нещо ново (непознато) за мен; ново двайсет; 5. пресен (за хляб, мляко, зеленчук); млад (за вино); неотлежал (за сирене и пр.); II. adv само в съчет.: 1. с глаголи наново;
ew-build построявам наново; 2. с прил. и прич. ново-
ew-blown току-що разцъфнал;
ew-built новопостроен;
ew-coined word новоизкована дума;
ew-come новодошъл;
ew-drawn прясно наточен (за вино и пр.). -
28 see
see [si:]voir ⇒ 1 (a)-(h), 1 (j)-(o), 1 (q)-(s), 1 (u), 2 (a)-(e) consulter ⇒ 1 (d) rencontrer ⇒ 1 (e) recevoir ⇒ 1 (g) comprendre ⇒ 1 (j) s'imaginer ⇒ 1 (l) s'assurer ⇒ 1 (p) connaître ⇒ 1 (r) accompagner ⇒ 1 (t) comprendre ⇒ 2 (d)(a) (perceive with eyes) voir;∎ can you see me? est-ce que tu me vois?;∎ I can't see a thing je ne vois rien;∎ she could see a light in the distance elle voyait une lumière au loin;∎ I could see she'd been crying je voyais qu'elle avait pleuré;∎ he saw her talk or talking to the policeman il l'a vue parler ou qui parlait au policier;∎ did anyone see you take it? est-ce que quelqu'un t'a vu le prendre?;∎ did you see what happened? avez-vous vu ce qui s'est passé?;∎ let me see your hands fais-moi voir ou montre-moi tes mains;∎ now see what you've done! regarde ce que tu as fait!;∎ can I see your newspaper a minute? puis-je voir votre journal ou jeter un coup d'œil sur votre journal un instant?;∎ I see her around a lot je la croise assez souvent;∎ I don't want to be seen with him je ne veux pas être vu ou qu'on me voie avec lui;∎ there wasn't a car to be seen il n'y avait pas une seule voiture en vue;∎ the cathedral can be seen from a long way off on voit la cathédrale de très loin;∎ nothing more was ever seen of her on ne l'a plus jamais revue;∎ it has to be seen to be believed il faut le voir pour le croire;∎ she began to see spies everywhere elle s'est mise à voir des espions partout;∎ there's nothing there, you're seeing things! il n'y a rien, tu as des hallucinations!;∎ I could see what was going to happen (a mile off) je le voyais venir (gros comme une maison);∎ familiar they saw you coming (a mile off) ils t'ont vu arriver de loin;∎ could you see your way (clear) to lending me £20? est-ce que vous pourriez me prêter 20 livres?;∎ to see the back or last of sth en avoir fini avec qch;∎ I'll be glad to see the back or last of her je serai content d'être débarrassé d'elle(b) (watch → movie, play, programme) voir;∎ I saw it on the news je l'ai vu au journal télévisé;∎ did you see the match last night? as-tu vu le match hier soir?(c) (refer to → page, chapter) voir;∎ see page 317 voir page 317;∎ see above voir plus haut;∎ see (on) the back voir au verso(d) (consult → doctor, lawyer) consulter, voir;∎ you should see a doctor tu devrais voir ou consulter un médecin;∎ I'll be seeing my lawyer about this je vais consulter mon avocat à ce sujet;∎ I'll be seeing the candidates next week je verrai les candidats la semaine prochaine;∎ I want to see the manager je veux voir le directeur;∎ can I see you for a minute in my office? je peux vous voir un instant dans mon bureau?;∎ I'd like to see you on business je voudrais vous parler affaires(e) (meet by chance) voir, rencontrer;∎ guess who I saw at the supermarket! devine qui j'ai vu ou qui j'ai rencontré au supermarché!(f) (visit → person, place) voir;∎ come round and see me some time passe me voir un de ces jours;∎ they came to see me in hospital ils sont venus me voir à l'hôpital;∎ I've always wanted to see China j'ai toujours voulu voir la Chine(g) (receive a visit from) recevoir, voir;∎ he's too ill to see anyone il est trop malade pour voir qui que ce soit;∎ she can't see you right now, she's busy elle ne peut pas vous recevoir ou voir maintenant, elle est trop occupée∎ do you still see the Browns? est-ce que vous voyez toujours les Brown?;∎ we've seen quite a lot of them recently nous les avons beaucoup vus dernièrement;∎ we see less of them these days nous les voyons moins en ce moment;∎ is he seeing anyone at the moment? (going out with) est-ce qu'il a quelqu'un en ce moment?∎ see you!, (I'll) be seeing you! salut!;∎ see you later! à tout à l'heure!;∎ see you around! à un de ces jours!;∎ see you tomorrow! à demain!;∎ see you in London! on se verra à Londres!(j) (understand) voir, comprendre;∎ I see what you mean je vois ou comprends ce que vous voulez dire;∎ I don't see what's so funny! je ne vois pas ce qu'il y a de si drôle!;∎ he can't see the joke il ne comprend pas la plaisanterie;∎ I could see his point je voyais ce qu'il voulait dire;∎ I don't see any point in going back now je ne vois pas du tout l'intérêt qu'il y aurait à y retourner maintenant;∎ I can see why you were worried je vois pourquoi vous étiez inquiet;∎ I can't see that it matters je ne vois pas quelle importance ça a(k) (consider, view) voir;∎ try to see things from my point of view essayez de voir les choses de mon point de vue;∎ we see things differently nous ne voyons pas les choses de la même façon;∎ you'll see things differently in the morning demain tu verras les choses d'un autre œil;∎ that's how I see it c'est comme ça que je vois les choses;∎ he doesn't see his drinking as a problem il ne se considère pas comme un alcoolique;∎ how do you see the current situation? que pensez-vous de la situation actuelle?;∎ as I see it, it's the parents who are to blame à mon avis, ce sont les parents qui sont responsables(l) (envisage, picture) voir, s'imaginer;∎ I can't see him getting married je ne le vois pas ou je ne me l'imagine pas se mariant;∎ I can't see them accepting this je ne peux pas croire qu'ils vont accepter cela;∎ I can't see you as a boxer je ne te vois pas en boxeur;∎ she just couldn't see herself as a wife and mother elle ne s'imaginait pas se mariant et ayant des enfants;∎ I can't see it myself je n'y crois pas trop;∎ they say this will be more efficient but I don't see it ils disent que cela sera plus efficace, mais je n'y crois pas;∎ I don't see any chance of that à mon avis c'est peu probable;∎ can I borrow the car? - I don't see why not est-ce que je peux prendre la voiture? - je n'y vois pas d'inconvénients;∎ will you finish in time? - I don't see why not vous aurez fini à temps? - il n'y a pas de raison;∎ what do you see happening next? d'après vous, qu'est-ce qui va se passer ensuite?;∎ how do you see things developing? comment est-ce que vous envisagez l'avenir?(m) (try to find out) voir;∎ I'll see if I can fix it je vais voir si je peux le réparer;∎ I'll see what I can do je vais voir ce que je peux faire;∎ go and see if he's still asleep va voir s'il dort encore;∎ she called by to see what had happened elle est venue pour savoir ce qui s'était passé(n) (perceive) voir;∎ I can't see any improvement je ne vois pas d'amélioration;∎ to see oneself in one's children se reconnaître dans ses enfants;∎ what can she possibly see in him? qu'est-qu'elle peut bien lui trouver?;∎ they must have seen how worried I was ils ont dû voir combien j'étais inquiet(o) (discover, learn) voir;∎ I'm pleased to see you're enjoying life je suis heureux de voir que tu profites de la vie;∎ I'll be interested to see how he gets on je serais curieux de voir comment il se débrouillera;∎ I see (that) he's getting married j'ai appris qu'il allait se marier;∎ I saw it in the paper this morning je l'ai vu ou lu ce matin dans le journal;∎ as we shall see in a later chapter comme nous le verrons dans un chapitre ultérieur;∎ I see she's in the new Scorsese movie je vois qu'elle est dans le nouveau film de Scorsese(p) (make sure) s'assurer, veiller à;∎ see that all the lights are out before you leave assurez-vous que ou veillez à ce que toutes les lumières soient éteintes avant de partir;∎ see that everything's ready for when they arrive veillez à ce que tout soit prêt pour leur arrivée;∎ I shall see that he comes je me charge de le faire venir;∎ familiar she'll see you right elle veillera à ce que tu ne manques de rien□, elle prendra bien soin de toi□(q) (inspect → file, passport, ticket) voir;∎ can I see your ticket, sir? puis-je voir votre ticket, Monsieur?(r) (experience) voir, connaître;∎ he thinks he's seen it all il croit tout savoir;∎ most recruits never see active service la plupart des recrues ne voient jamais la guerre de près;∎ our car has seen better days notre voiture a connu des jours meilleurs;∎ the city hasn't seen such crowds in decades la ville n'a pas connu une foule pareille depuis des dizaines d'années;∎ the country saw many changes le pays a connu de grands changements∎ they have seen their purchasing power halved ils ont vu leur pouvoir d'achat diminuer de moitié;∎ last year saw an increase in profits l'année dernière a vu une augmentation des bénéfices;∎ the next decade will see enormous changes la prochaine décennie verra se produire des changements considérables;∎ I never thought I'd see the day when he'd admit he was wrong je n'aurais jamais cru qu'un jour il admettrait avoir tort;∎ you don't see athletes like her any more! il n'y a plus beaucoup d'athlètes comme elle!(t) (accompany) accompagner;∎ I'll see you to the bus stop je t'accompagne à ou jusqu'à l'arrêt du bus;∎ I'll see you home je te raccompagne chez toi;∎ see Mr Smith to the door, please veuillez raccompagner M. Smith jusqu'à la porte;∎ he saw her into a taxi/onto the train il l'a mise dans un taxi/le train;∎ to see sb across the road aider qn à traverser la rue(u) (in poker) voir;∎ I'll see you je vous vois;∎ I'll see your $10 and raise you 20 je vous suis à 10 dollars et je relance de 20(a) (perceive with eyes) voir;∎ I can't see without (my) glasses je ne vois rien sans mes lunettes;∎ he may never see again il se peut qu'il ne voie plus jamais;∎ on a clear day you can see as far as the coast par temps clair on voit jusqu'à la mer;∎ you can see for miles around la vue s'étend sur des kilomètres;∎ cats can see in the dark les chats voient dans l'obscurité;∎ I haven't quite finished - so I see je n'ai pas tout à fait terminé - c'est ce que je vois;∎ to see into the future voir ou lire dans l'avenir;∎ she can't see any further than the end of her nose elle ne voit pas plus loin que le bout de son nez;∎ for all to see au vu et au su de tous∎ can I see? je peux voir?;∎ let me see!, let's see! fais voir!;∎ see for yourself voyez par vous-même;∎ familiar see! I told you he wouldn't let us down tu vois! je t'avais dit qu'il ne nous laisserait pas tomber(c) (find out) voir;∎ is that the baby crying? - I'll go and see c'est le bébé qu'on entend pleurer? - je vais voir;∎ you'll see! tu verras!;∎ we shall see nous verrons (bien);∎ we'll soon see on le saura vite;∎ we'll soon see if… on saura vite si…(d) (understand) voir, comprendre;∎ it makes no difference as far as I can see autant que je puisse en juger, ça ne change rien;∎ you see, there's something else you should know tu vois, il y a quelque chose d'autre que tu devrais savoir;∎ I was tired, you see, and… j'étais fatigué, voyez-vous, et…;∎ I see je vois;∎ familiar I don't want any trouble, see? je ne veux pas d'histoires, OK?;∎ let me or let's see voyons voir;∎ it was, let me see, in 1938 c'était, voyons (voir), en 1938;∎ Mum said you'd take us to the fair - we'll see Maman a dit que tu nous amènerais à la foire - on verra (ça)3 noun(a) (deal with) s'occuper de;∎ I'll see about making the reservations je m'occuperai des réservations;∎ they're sending someone to see about the gas ils envoient quelqu'un pour vérifier le gaz(b) (consider) voir;∎ I'll see about it je verrai ça;∎ we'll have to see about getting a new car il va falloir songer à acheter une nouvelle voiture;∎ familiar they won't let us in - we'll (soon) see about that! ils ne veulent pas nous laisser entrer - c'est ce qu'on va voir!➲ see in∎ to see in the New Year fêter le Nouvel Anvoir à l'intérieur;∎ the curtains were drawn, so we couldn't see in les rideaux étaient tirés, nous ne pouvions pas voir à l'intérieur(a) (say goodbye to) dire au revoir à;∎ she came to see me off at the station elle est venue à la gare me dire au revoir(b) (chase away) chasser;∎ see him off! (to dog) chasse-le!(c) (repel → attack) repousser(a) (accompany to the door) reconduire ou raccompagner à la porte;∎ can you see yourself out? pouvez-vous trouver la sortie tout seul?;∎ goodbye, I'll see myself out au revoir, ce n'est pas la peine de me raccompagner∎ I'll see another year out here then go home je vais passer une autre année ici puis je rentrerai;∎ we've got enough food to see the week out nous avons assez à manger pour tenir jusqu'à la fin de la semaine;∎ I don't think these boots will see the winter out je ne crois pas que ces bottes feront l'hiver;∎ he isn't expected to see out the week il y a peu de chances qu'il survive jusqu'à la fin de la semaine;∎ he'll see us all out! (will survive us) il nous enterrera tous!∎ to see out the Old Year fêter le Nouvel Anvisiter;∎ they came to see round the house ils sont venus pour visiter la maison(a) (window, fabric) voir à travers(b) (be wise to → person) percer à jour, voir dans le jeu de; (→ trick, scheme, behaviour) ne pas se laisser tromper par;∎ I saw through him je l'ai percé à jour, j'ai vu dans son jeu;∎ she saw through his apparent cheerfulness elle ne s'est pas laissée tromper par ou elle n'a pas été dupe de son apparente bonne humeur;∎ I saw through their little game j'ai vite compris leur petit jeu(a) (bring to a successful end) mener à bonne fin;∎ we can count on her to see the job through on peut compter sur elle pour mener l'affaire à bien∎ to see a show/film through assister à un spectacle/regarder un film jusqu'au bout(c) (support, sustain)∎ I've got enough money to see me through the week j'ai assez d'argent pour tenir jusqu'à la fin de la semaine;∎ £20 should see me through (to Monday) 20 livres devraient me suffire (jusqu'à lundi);∎ their love has seen them through many a crisis leur amour les a aidés à surmonter de nombreuses crises;∎ her good humour will always see her through any difficulties sa bonne humeur lui permettra toujours de traverser les moments difficiles(a) (look after) s'occuper de;∎ I'll see to the dinner je m'occuperai du dîner;∎ I'll see to it je vais m'en occuper, je m'en charge;∎ see to it that everything's ready by 5 p.m. veillez à ce que tout soit prêt pour 17 heures;∎ she saw to it that our picnic was ruined elle a fait en sorte de gâcher notre pique-nique∎ you should get the brakes seen to tu devrais faire réparer les freins -
29 Savery, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]b. c. 1650 probably Shilston, near Modbury, Devonshire, Englandd. c. 15 May 1715 London, England[br]English inventor of a partially successful steam-driven pump for raising water.[br]Little is known of the early years of Savery's life and no trace has been found that he served in the Army, so the title "Captain" is thought to refer to some mining appointment, probably in the West of England. He may have been involved in the Glorious Revolution of 1688, for later he was well known to William of Orange. From 1705 to 1714 he was Treasurer for Sick and Wounded Seamen, and in 1714 he was appointed Surveyor of the Water Works at Hampton Court, a post he held until his death the following year. He was interested in mechanical devices; amongst his early contrivances was a clock.He was the most prolific inventor of his day, applying for seven patents, including one in 1649, for polishing plate glass which may have been used. His idea for 1697 for propelling ships with paddle-wheels driven by a capstan was a failure, although regarded highly by the King, and was published in his first book, Navigation Improved (1698). He tried to patent a new type of floating mill in 1707, and an idea in 1710 for baking sea coal or other fuel in an oven to make it clean and pure.His most famous invention, however, was the one patented in 1698 "for raising water by the impellent force of fire" that Savery said would drain mines or low-lying land, raise water to supply towns or houses, and provide a source of water for turning mills through a water-wheel. Basically it consisted of a receiver which was first filled with steam and then cooled to create a vacuum by having water poured over the outside. The water to be pumped was drawn into the receiver from a lower sump, and then high-pressure steam was readmitted to force the water up a pipe to a higher level. It was demonstrated to the King and the Royal Society and achieved some success, for a few were installed in the London area and a manufactory set up at Salisbury Court in London. He published a book, The Miner's Friend, about his engine in 1702, but although he made considerable improvements, due to excessive fuel consumption and materials which could not withstand the steam pressures involved, no engines were installed in mines as Savery had hoped. His patent was extended in 1699 until 1733 so that it covered the atmospheric engine of Thomas Newcomen who was forced to join Savery and his other partners to construct this much more practical engine.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1706.Bibliography1698, Navigation Improved.1702, The Miner's Friend.Further ReadingThe entry in the Dictionary of National Biography (1897, Vol. L, London: Smith Elder \& Co.) has been partially superseded by more recent research. The Transactions of the Newcomen Society contain various papers; for example, Rhys Jenkins, 1922–3, "Savery, Newcomen and the early history of the steam engine", Vol. 3; A.Stowers, 1961–2, "Thomas Newcomen's first steam engine 250 years ago and the initial development of steam power", Vol. 34; A.Smith, 1977–8, "Steam and the city: the committee of proprietors of the invention for raising water by fire", 1715–1735, Vol. 49; and J.S.P.Buckland, 1977–8, "Thomas Savery, his steam engine workshop of 1702", Vol. 49. Brief accounts may be found in H.W. Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press, and R.L. Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press. There is another biography in T.I. Williams (ed.), 1969, A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists, London: A. \& C.Black.RLH -
30 Shillibeer, George
SUBJECT AREA: Land transport[br]fl. early nineteenth century[br]English coachbuilder who introduced the omnibus to London.[br]Little is known of Shillibeer's early life except that he was for some years resident in France. He served as a midshipman in the Royal Navy before joining the firm of Hatchetts in Long Acre, London, to learn coachbuilding. He set up as a coachbuilder in Paris soon after the end of the Napoleonic Wars, and prospered. Early in the 1820s Jacques Laffite ordered two improved buses from Shillibeer. Their success prompted Shillibeer to sell up his business and return to London to start a similar service. His first two buses in London ran for the first time on 4 July 1829, from the Yorkshire Stingo at Paddington to the Bank, a distance of 9 miles (14 km) which had taken three hours by the existing short-stagecoaches. Shillibeer's vehicle was drawn by three horses abreast, carried twenty-two passengers at a charge of one shilling for the full journey or sixpence for a part-journey. These fares were a third of that charged for an inside seat on a short-stagecoach. The conductors were the sons of friends of Shillibeer from his naval days. He was soon earning £1,000 per week, each bus making twelve double journeys a day. Dishonesty was rife among the conductors, so Shillibeer fitted a register under the entrance step to count the passengers; two of the conductors who had been discharged set out to wreck the register and its inventor. Expanded routes were soon being travelled by a larger fleet but the newly formed Metropolitan Police force complained that the buses were too wide, so the next buses had only two horses and carried sixteen passengers inside with two on top. Shillibeer's partner, William Morton, failed as competition grew. Shillibeer sold out in 1834 when he had sixty buses, six hundred horses and stabling for them. He started a long-distance service to Greenwich, but a competing railway opened in 1835 and income declined; the Official Stamp and Tax Offices seized the omnibuses and the business was bankrupted. Shillibeer then set up as an undertaker, and prospered with a new design of hearse which became known as a "Shillibeer".[br]Further ReadingA.Bird, 1969, Road Vehicles, London: Longmans Industrial Archaeology Series.IMcN -
31 breath
breƟ1) (the air drawn into, and then sent out from, the lungs: My dog's breath smells terrible.) aliento, respiración2) (an act of breathing: Take a deep breath.) respiración•- breathlessly
- breathlessness
- hold one's breath
- out of breath
- under one's breath
breath n alientotr[breɵ]1 (of person) aliento; (of animal) hálito2 (of air) soplo3 (of perfume) olor nombre masculino, olorcillo4 (life) aliento, vida5 (breathing) resuello, respiración nombre femenino6 (of scandal) rumor nombre masculino\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLout of breath sin aliento, sin resuelloshort of breath corto,-a de resuellounder one's breath en voz bajain the next breath a continuación, inmediatamente despuésin the same breath todo a la vez, al mismo tiempoto draw breath respirar, vivirto draw one's last breath exhalar el último suspiroto get one's breath back recobrar el alientoto take a deep breath respirar hondoto take one's breath away dejar pasmado,-a a unoa breath of fresh air una bocanada de aire frescobad breath mal aliento, halitosis nombre femeninobreath of life cosa imprescindible, requisito indispensablebreath test SMALLBRITISH ENGLISH/SMALL prueba del alcoholbreath ['brɛɵ] n1) breathing: aliento mto hold one's breath: aguantar la respiración2) breeze: soplo ma breath of fresh air: un soplo de aire freson.• aliento s.m.• aspiración s.f.• huelgo s.m.• hálito s.m.• respiración s.f.• respiro s.m.• resuello s.m.• soplo s.m.• suspiro s.m.• vaharada s.f.• vaho s.m.breθcount & mass noun ( air exhaled or inhaled) aliento mto have bad breath — tener* mal aliento
to take a breath — aspirar, inspirar
in the same o next breath — a continuación, a renglón seguido
to be a breath of fresh air — ser* (como) una bocanada de aire fresco
to draw breath — (lit: breathe) respirar; ( live) (liter) vivir
to draw one's last breath — (liter) exhalar el último suspiro (liter)
to hold one's breath — contener* la respiración or el aliento
he promised - well, don't hold your breath — (colloq & hum) lo prometió - sí, pero mejor espera sentado (fam & hum)
to say something under one's breath — decir* algo entre dientes
to take somebody's breath away — dejar a alguien sin habla
to waste one's breath — gastar saliva
[breθ]with bated breath — con el corazón en un puño; save I 3) a)
1. N1) (lit) (=respiration) aliento mwithout pausing for breath — sin detenerse ni un momento para recobrar el aliento or la respiración
•
to have bad breath — tener mal aliento•
he stopped running to catch his breath — dejó de correr para recobrar el aliento or la respiraciónhe was one of the meanest people who ever drew breath — era una de las personas más mezquinas que jamás ha visto este mundo
•
to get one's breath back — recobrar el aliento or la respiración(fig)•
to hold one's breath — (lit) contener la respiración"he said he would be here" - "well, I wouldn't hold your breath" — -dijo que vendría -sí, pues yo le esperaría sentado *
•
to lose one's breath — perder el aliento•
to be/get out of breath — estar/quedar sin aliento•
she felt hot and short of breath — tenía calor y se ahogabashe has asthma and sometimes gets short of breath — tiene asma y a veces se ahoga or le falta el aliento
•
she sucked in her breath — tomó aliento, aspiró•
to take a breath — respirarbated, save I, 1., 4)•
he muttered something under his breath — dijo algo entre dientes or en voz baja2) (fig) (=puff) soplo m•
a breath of fresh air, we went out for a breath of fresh air — salimos a tomar el (aire) fresco2.CPDbreath freshener N — spray m bucal
breath-testbreath test N — (Aut) prueba f de alcoholemia
* * *[breθ]count & mass noun ( air exhaled or inhaled) aliento mto have bad breath — tener* mal aliento
to take a breath — aspirar, inspirar
in the same o next breath — a continuación, a renglón seguido
to be a breath of fresh air — ser* (como) una bocanada de aire fresco
to draw breath — (lit: breathe) respirar; ( live) (liter) vivir
to draw one's last breath — (liter) exhalar el último suspiro (liter)
to hold one's breath — contener* la respiración or el aliento
he promised - well, don't hold your breath — (colloq & hum) lo prometió - sí, pero mejor espera sentado (fam & hum)
to say something under one's breath — decir* algo entre dientes
to take somebody's breath away — dejar a alguien sin habla
to waste one's breath — gastar saliva
with bated breath — con el corazón en un puño; save I 3) a)
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32 Ackermann, Rudolph
[br]b. 20 April 1764 Stolberg, Saxonyd. 30 March 1834 Finchley, London, England[br]German-born fine-art publisher and bookseller, noted for his arrangement of the steering of the front wheels of horse-drawn carriages, which is still used in automobiles today.[br]Ackermann's father was a coachbuilder and harness-maker who in 1775 moved to Schneeberg. Rudolph was educated there and later entered his father's workshop for a short time. He visited Dresden, among other towns in Germany, and was resident in Paris for a short time, but eventually settled in London. For the first ten years of his life there he was employed in making designs for many of the leading coach builders. His steering-gear consisted of an arrangement of the track arms on the stub axles and their connection by the track rod in such a way that the inner wheel moved through a greater angle than the outer one, so giving approximately true rolling of the wheels in cornering. A necessary condition for this is that, in the plan view, the point of intersection of the axes of all the wheels must be at a point which always lies on the projection of the rear axle. In addition, the front wheels are inclined to bring the line of contact of the front wheels under the line of the pivots, about which they turn when cornering. This mechanism was not entirely new, having been proposed for windmill carriages in 1714 by Du Quet, but it was brought into prominence by Ackermann and so has come to bear his name.In 1801 he patented a method of rendering paper, cloth and other materials waterproof and set up a factory in Chelsea for that purpose. He was one of the first private persons to light his business premises with gas. He also devoted some time to a patent for movable carriage axles between 1818 and 1820. In 1805 he was put in charge of the preparation of the funeral car for Lord Nelson.Most of his life and endeavours were devoted to fine-art printing and publishing. He was responsible for the introduction into England of lithography as a fine art: it had first been introduced as a mechanical process in 1801, but was mainly used for copying until Ackermann took it up in 1817, setting up a press and engaging the services of a number of prominent artists, including W.H.Pyne, W.Combe, Pugin and Thomas Rowlandson. In 1819 he published an English translation of J.A.Senefelder's A Complete Course of Lithography, illustrated with lithographic plates from his press. He was much involved in charitable works for widows, children and wounded soldiers after the war of 1814. In 1830 he suffered "an attack of paralysis" which left him unable to continue in business. He died four years later and was buried at St Clement Danes.[br]BibliographyHis fine-art publications are numerous and well known, and include the following:The Microcosm of London University of Oxford University of Cambridge The ThamesFurther ReadingAubrey F.Burstall, "A history of mechanical engineering", Dictionary of National Biography.IMcN -
33 long
I 1. loŋ adjective1) (measuring a great distance from one end to the other: a long journey; a long road; long legs.) lang, stor2) (having a great period of time from the first moment to the last: The book took a long time to read; a long conversation; a long delay.) lang(varig)3) (measuring a certain amount in distance or time: The wire is two centimetres long; The television programme was just over an hour long.) i lengde, stor4) (away, doing or using something etc for a great period of time: Will you be long?) lenge5) (reaching to a great distance in space or time: She has a long memory) lang2. adverb1) (a great period of time: This happened long before you were born.) lenge2) (for a great period of time: Have you been waiting long?) lenge•- longways- long-distance
- long-drawn-out
- longhand
- long house
- long jump
- long-playing record
- long-range
- long-sighted
- long-sightedness
- long-suffering
- long-winded
- as long as / so long as
- before very long
- before long
- in the long run
- the long and the short of it
- no longer
- so long! II loŋ verb((often with for) to wish very much: He longed to go home; I am longing for a drink.) lengte (etter)- longing- longinglylang--------lengeIsubst. \/lɒŋ\/1) ( fonetikk) lang stavelse, lang lyd2) lang, langt signal (i morsealfabetet)3) (amer., økonomi) haussespekulant, haussist4) ( musikk) longanote5) lang tid, langt tidsrom, lang stundlong and the short of it saken er i korthet, for å si det kort og godt, sakens kjernelongs (også amer. økonomi) langsiktige obligasjonerlongs and shorts ( også) klassisk versIIverb \/lɒŋ\/lengtelong for lengte etterIIIadj. \/lɒŋ\/1) ( også etterstilt) lang2) ( om tid) lang, langvarig, langsiktig, langtrukken, langtekkelig3) omfattende, lang4) (sport, om en ball) lang, langtgående, langtrekkende5) (om person, hverdagslig) lang, høy6) (språkvitenskap, om vokal) lang7) usannsynlig, lite trolig, dårlig8) ( om tid eller avstand) drøyt, godt og vel9) ( økonomi) haussespekulerende, hausse-11) ( hverdagslig) velforsyntas long så lang tid, så lengeas long as eller so long as så lenge (som), like lenge (som)forutsatt, hvis bare, så lengebe long about something bruke lang tid på noebe long on ha rikelig medlong in the tooth ( hverdagslig) gammellong since for lenge sidenlong time no see ( hverdagslig) lenge siden sistnot be long for this world ikke ha lenge igjen, være døendenot by a long shot på langt nærso long (sørafr.) ha det, på gjensyntake the long view ha et langsiktig perspektiv, tenke fremover, se fremoverIVadv. \/lɒŋ\/1) lenge, lenge siden• how long since he left?2) ( etter tidsuttrykk) hel, langbefore long i løpet av kort tid, snartbe long være lenge ta lang tidfor long lenge, på lenge -
34 Porter, Charles Talbot
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. 18 January 1826 Auburn, New York, USAd. 1910 USA[br]American inventor of a stone dressing machine, an improved centrifugal governor and a high-speed steam engine.[br]Porter graduated from Hamilton College, New York, in 1845, read law in his father's office, and in the autumn of 1847 was admitted to the Bar. He practised for six or seven years in Rochester, New York, and then in New York City. He was drawn into engineering when aged about 30, first through a client who claimed to have invented a revolutionary type of engine and offered Porter the rights to it as payment of a debt. Having lent more money, Porter saw neither the man nor the engine again. Porter followed this with a similar experience over a patent for a stone dressing machine, except this time the machine was built. It proved to be a failure, but Porter set about redesigning it and found that it was vastly improved when it ran faster. His improved machine went into production. It was while trying to get the steam engine that drove the stone dressing machine to run more smoothly that he made a discovery that formed the basis for his subsequent work.Porter took the ordinary Watt centrifugal governor and increased the speed by a factor of about ten; although he had to reduce the size of the weights, he gained a motion that was powerful. To make the device sufficiently responsive at the right speed, he balanced the centrifugal forces by a counterweight. This prevented the weights flying outwards until the optimum speed was reached, so that the steam valves remained fully open until that point and then the weights reacted more quickly to variations in speed. He took out a patent in 1858, and its importance was quickly recognized. At first he manufactured and sold the governors himself in a specially equipped factory, because this was the only way he felt he could get sufficient accuracy to ensure a perfect action. For marine use, the counterweight was replaced by a spring.Higher speed had brought the advantage of smoother running and so he thought that the same principles could be applied to the steam engine itself, but it was to take extensive design modifications over several years before his vision was realized. In the winter of 1860–1, J.F. Allen met Porter and sketched out his idea of a new type of steam inlet valve. Porter saw the potential of this for his high-speed engine and Allen took out patents for it in 1862. The valves were driven by a new valve gear designed by Pius Fink. Porter decided to display his engine at the International Exhibition in London in 1862, but it had to be assembled on site because the parts were finished in America only just in time to be shipped to meet the deadline. Running at 150 rpm, the engine caused a sensation, but as it was non-condensing there were few orders. Porter added condensing apparatus and, after the failure of Ormerod Grierson \& Co., entered into an agreement with Joseph Whitworth to build the engines. Four were exhibited at the 1867 Paris Exposition Universelle, but Whitworth and Porter fell out and in 1868 Porter returned to America.Porter established another factory to build his engine in America, but he ran into all sorts of difficulties, both mechanical and financial. Some engines were built, and serious production was started c. 1874, but again there were further problems and Porter had to leave his firm. High-speed engines based on his designs continued to be made until after 1907 by the Southwark Foundry and Machine Company, Philadelphia, so Porter's ideas were proved viable and led to many other high-speed designs.[br]Bibliography1908, Engineering Reminiscences, New York: J. Wiley \& Sons; reprinted 1985, Bradley, Ill.: Lindsay (autobiography; the main source of information about his life).Further ReadingR.L.Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (examines his governor and steam engine).O.Mayr, 1974, "Yankee practice and engineering theory; Charles T.Porter and the dynamics of the high-speed engine", Technology and Culture 16 (4) (examines his governor and steam engine).RLH -
35 continuous
прил.1)а) общ. непрерывный, непрекращающийся, непрерываемый; постоянный, постоянно действующийSee:, continuous assessment, continuous audit, continuous bond, continuous budget, continuous budgeting, continuous change, continuous compounding, continuous discounting, continuous improvement, continuous innovation, continuous inventory, continuous market, continuous method, continuous movement, continuous net settlement, continuous on-the-job training, continuous process, continuous production, continuous professional development, continuous scale, continuous service, continuous shift system, continuous stocktaking, continuous stock-taking, continuous premium whole lifeб) общ. бессменныйcontinuous crop — бессменная с.-х. культура
See:2) мат. непрерывная (характеристка функции, обладающей непрерывностью)A function y=f(x) is continuous if there are no breaks in its graph, or crudely, if it can be drawn without taking the pen from the paper. — Функция y=f(x) называется непрерывной, если ее график не имеет разрывов или, грубо говоря, его можно начертить, не отрывая карандаш от бумаги.
See: -
36 breath
noun1) Atem, dersay something below or under one's breath — etwas vor sich (Akk.) hin murmeln
waste one's breath — seine Worte verschwenden
hold one's breath — den Atem anhalten
be out of/short of breath — außer Atem od. atemlos sein/kurzatmig sein
take somebody's breath away — (fig.) jemandem den Atem verschlagen
2) (one respiration) Atemzug, dertake or draw a [deep] breath — [tief] einatmen
in the same breath — im selben Atemzug
3) (air movement, whiff) Hauch, derthere wasn't a breath of air — es regte sich kein Lüftchen
* * *[breƟ]1) (the air drawn into, and then sent out from, the lungs: My dog's breath smells terrible.) der Atem2) (an act of breathing: Take a deep breath.) der Atemzug•- academic.ru/8882/breathless">breathless- breathlessly
- breathlessness
- hold one's breath
- out of breath
- under one's breath* * *[breθ]nbad \breath Mundgeruch mwith bated \breath mit angehaltenem Atemto take a deep \breath tief Luft holento catch one's \breath [or get one's \breath back] verschnaufento draw \breath Luft [o Atem] holen famto gasp for \breath nach Atem ringento mutter [sth] under one's \breath [etw] leise vor sich akk hin murmelnto take sb's \breath away jdm den Atem raubento waste one's \breath in den Wind redena \breath of air ein Hauch m, ein Lüftchen ntit's like a \breath of fresh air when she visits ( fig) es ist so erfrischend, wenn sie zu Besuch kommtto go out for a \breath of fresh air an die frische Luft gehen, frische Luft schnappen gehen3.▶ to be the \breath of life [to sb] für jdn so wichtig sein wie die Luft zum Atmen* * *[breɵ]n1) Atem mto take a deep breath — einmal tief Luft holen; (before diving, singing etc) einmal tief einatmen
breath — Mundgeruch m
to have bad breath — aus dem Mund riechen, Mundgeruch haben
with one's dying breath —
out of breath — außer Atem, atemlos
to stop for breath — sich verschnaufen, eine Pause zum Luftholen machen
to say sth all in one breath — etw in einem Atemzug sagen
to say sth under one's breath — etw vor sich (acc) hin murmeln
save your breath — spar dir die Spucke (inf)
you're wasting your breath — du redest umsonst
See:→ fresh air2)(= slight stirring)
breath of wind — Lüftchen ntthere wasn't a breath of air — es regte sich or wehte kein Lüftchen
* * *breath [breθ] s1. Atem(zug) m:bad breath schlechter Atem, Mundgeruch m;have bad breath aus dem Mund riechen;be out of breath außer Atem sein;he caught his breath ihm stockte der Atem;catch sb’s breath jemandem den Atem verschlagen;draw breath Atem holen;draw one’s first breath das Licht der Welt erblicken;draw one’s last breath den letzten Atemzug tun;gasp for breath nach Luft schnappen;get one’s breath (back) wieder zu Atem kommen;get out of breath außer Atem kommen;go out for a breath of (fresh) air an die e Luft gehen, frische Luft schnappen gehen;have no breath left (völlig) außer Atem sein;hold one’s breath den Atem anhalten (a. fig);lose one’s breath außer Atem kommen;take breath Atem schöpfen, verschnaufen (a. fig);take sb’s breath away jemandem den Atem verschlagen;take a deep breath tief Luft holen;waste one’s breath in den Wind reden;you are wasting your breath du kannst dir deine Worte sparen;don’t waste your breath crying for help es hat gar keinen Sinn, um Hilfe zu rufen;in the same (next) breath im gleichen (nächsten) Atemzug;be mentioned ( oder spoken of) in the same breath as in einem oder im selben Atemzug genannt werden mit; → pause B 1, short A 82. fig Hauch m, Spur f, Anflug m:not a breath of suspicion nicht der geringste Verdacht3. Lufthauch m, Lüftchen n:4. Duft m5. LING stimmloser Hauch* * *noun1) Atem, dersay something below or under one's breath — etwas vor sich (Akk.) hin murmeln
be out of/short of breath — außer Atem od. atemlos sein/kurzatmig sein
take somebody's breath away — (fig.) jemandem den Atem verschlagen
2) (one respiration) Atemzug, dertake or draw a [deep] breath — [tief] einatmen
3) (air movement, whiff) Hauch, der* * *n.Atem nur sing. m.Atemzug -¨e m.Hauch -e m. -
37 Paul, Lewis
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]d. April 1759 Brook Green, London, England[br]English inventor of hand carding machines and partner with Wyatt in early spinning machines.[br]Lewis Paul, apparently of French Huguenot extraction, was quite young when his father died. His father was Physician to Lord Shaftsbury, who acted as Lewis Paul's guardian. In 1728 Paul made a runaway match with a widow and apparently came into her property when she died a year later. He must have subsequently remarried. In 1732 he invented a pinking machine for making the edges of shrouds out of which he derived some profit.Why Paul went to Birmingham is unknown, but he helped finance some of Wyatt's earlier inventions. Judging by the later patents taken out by Paul, it is probable that he was the one interested in spinning, turning to Wyatt for help in the construction of his spinning machine because he had no mechanical skills. The two men may have been involved in this as early as 1733, although it is more likely that they began this work in 1735. Wyatt went to London to construct a model and in 1736 helped to apply for a patent, which was granted in 1738 in the name of Paul. The patent shows that Paul and Wyatt had a number of different ways of spinning in mind, but contains no drawings of the machines. In one part there is a description of sets of rollers to draw the cotton out more finely that could have been similar to those later used by Richard Arkwright. However, it would seem that Paul and Wyatt followed the other main method described, which might be called spindle drafting, where the fibres are drawn out between the nip of a pair of rollers and the tip of the spindle; this method is unsatisfactory for continuous spinning and results in an uneven yarn.The spinning venture was supported by Thomas Warren, a well-known Birmingham printer, Edward Cave of Gentleman's Magazine, Dr Robert James of fever-powder celebrity, Mrs Desmoulins, and others. Dr Samuel Johnson also took much interest. In 1741 a mill powered by two asses was equipped at the Upper Priory, Birmingham, with, machinery for spinning cotton being constructed by Wyatt. Licences for using the invention were sold to other people including Edward Cave, who established a mill at Northampton, so the enterprise seemed to have great promise. A spinning machine must be supplied with fibres suitably prepared, so carding machines had to be developed. Work was in hand on one in 1740 and in 1748 Paul took out another patent for two types of carding device, possibly prompted by the patent taken out by Daniel Bourn. Both of Paul's devices were worked by hand and the carded fibres were laid onto a strip of paper. The paper and fibres were then rolled up and placed in the spinning machine. In 1757 John Dyer wrote a poem entitled The Fleece, which describes a circular spinning machine of the type depicted in a patent taken out by Paul in 1758. Drawings in this patent show that this method of spinning was different from Arkwright's. Paul endeavoured to have the machine introduced into the Foundling Hospital, but his death in early 1759 stopped all further development. He was buried at Paddington on 30 April that year.[br]Bibliography1738, British patent no. 562 (spinning machine). 1748, British patent no. 636 (carding machine).1758, British patent no. 724 (circular spinning machine).Further ReadingG.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, London, App. This should be read in conjunction with R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester, which shows that the roller drafting system on Paul's later spinning machine worked on the wrong principles.A.P.Wadsworth and J.de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, 1600–1780, Manchester (provides good coverage of the partnership of Paul and Wyatt and the early mills).E.Baines, 1835, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, London (this publication must be mentioned, but is now out of date).A.Seymour-Jones, 1921, "The invention of roller drawing in cotton spinning", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 1 (a more modern account).RLH
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