Перевод: с английского на английский

с английского на английский

exit

  • 1 exit interview

    HR
    a meeting between an employee and a management representative on the employee’s departure from an organization. An exit interview is conducted in order to ascertain why an employee is leaving, either because of pull factors, such as better pay and conditions, or push factors, such as poor training or management. Another purpose of the exit interview is to capture information relating to the departing employee’s knowledge and experience.

    The ultimate business dictionary > exit interview

  • 2 exit PE ratio

    Fin
    the price-earnings ratio when a company changes hands

    The ultimate business dictionary > exit PE ratio

  • 3 barrier to exit

    Gen Mgt
    a factor preventing a company from leaving a market in which it is currently doing business. A barrier to exit makes it difficult for a company to abandon an unprofitable product or service because of factors such as possession of specialist equipment only suited to the manufacture of one product, high costs of retraining the workforce in different skills, or the detrimental effect of withdrawing one product from a range on the rest of the product family. There may also be legal considerations or labor union agreements that prevent closure of a factory or redundancies.

    The ultimate business dictionary > barrier to exit

  • 4 Bulleid, Oliver Vaughan Snell

    [br]
    b. 19 September 1882 Invercargill, New Zealand
    d. 25 April 1970 Malta
    [br]
    New Zealand (naturalized British) locomotive engineer noted for original experimental work in the 1940s and 1950s.
    [br]
    Bulleid's father died in 1889 and mother and son returned to the UK from New Zealand; Bulleid himself became a premium apprentice under H.A. Ivatt at Doncaster Works, Great Northern Railway (GNR). After working in France and for the Board of Trade, Bulleid returned to the GNR in 1912 as Personal Assistant to Chief Mechanical Engineer H.N. Gresley. After a break for war service, he returned as Assistant to Gresley on the latter's appointment as Chief Mechanical Engineer of the London \& North Eastern Railway in 1923. He was closely associated with Gresley during the late 1920s and early 1930s.
    In 1937 Bulleid was appointed Chief Mechanical Engineer of the Southern Railway (SR). Concentration of resources on electrification had left the Southern short of up-to-date steam locomotives, which Bulleid proceeded to provide. His first design, the "Merchant Navy" class 4–6– 2, appeared in 1941 with chain-driven valve gear enclosed in an oil-bath, and other novel features. A powerful "austerity" 0−6−0 appeared in 1942, shorn of all inessentials to meet wartime conditions, and a mixed-traffic 4−6−2 in 1945. All were largely successful.
    Under Bulleid's supervision, three large, mixed-traffic, electric locomotives were built for the Southern's 660 volt DC system and incorporated flywheel-driven generators to overcome the problem of interruptions in the live rail. Three main-line diesel-electric locomotives were completed after nationalization of the SR in 1948. All were carried on bogies, as was Bulleid's last steam locomotive design for the SR, the "Leader" class 0−6−6−0 originally intended to meet a requirement for a large, passenger tank locomotive. The first was completed after nationalization of the SR, but the project never went beyond trials. Marginally more successful was a double-deck, electric, suburban, multiple-unit train completed in 1949, with alternate high and low compartments to increase train capacity but not length. The main disadvantage was the slow entry and exit by passengers, and the type was not perpetuated, although the prototype train ran in service until 1971.
    In 1951 Bulleid moved to Coras Iompair Éireann, the Irish national transport undertaking, as Chief Mechanical Engineer. There he initiated a large-scale plan for dieselization of the railway system in 1953, the first such plan in the British Isles. Simultaneously he developed, with limited success, a steam locomotive intended to burn peat briquettes: to burn peat, the only native fuel, had been a long-unfulfilled ambition of railway engineers in Ireland. Bulleid retired in 1958.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Bulleid took out six patents between 1941 and 1956, covering inter alia valve gear, boilers, brake apparatus and wagon underframes.
    Further Reading
    H.A.V.Bulleid, 1977, Bulleid of the Southern, Shepperton: Ian Allan (a good biography written by the subject's son).
    C.Fryer, 1990, Experiments with Steam, Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens (provides details of the austerity 0–6–0, the "Leader" locomotive and the peat-burning locomotive: see Chs 19, 20 and 21 respectively).
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Bulleid, Oliver Vaughan Snell

  • 5 Todd, Leonard Jennett

    [br]
    fl. 1885 London, England
    [br]
    English (?) patentee of steam engines incorporating the uniflow principle.
    [br]
    In a uniflow system, the steam enters a steam engine cylinder at one end, pushes the pistons along, and exhausts through a ring of ports at the centre of the cylinder that are uncovered by movement of the piston. The piston is returned by steam then entering the other end of the cylinder, moving the piston arrangement back, and again making its exit through the central ports. This gave the thermodynamic advantage of the cylinder ends remaining hot and the centre colder with reheating the ends of the cylinder through compression of the residual steam. The principle was first patented by Jacob Perkins in England in 1827 and was tried in America in 1856.
    Little is known about Todd. The addresses given in his patent specifications show that he was living first at South Hornsey and then Stoke Newington, both in Middlesex (now in London). No obituary notices have been traced. He took out a patent in 1885 for a "terminal exhaust engine" and followed this with two more in 1886 and 1887. His aim was to "produce a double acting steam engine which shall work more efficiently, which shall produce and maintain within itself an improved gradation of temperature extending from each of its two Hot Inlets to its common central Cold Outlet". His later patents show the problems he faced with finding suitable valve gears and the compression developing during the return stroke of the piston. It was this last problem, particularly when starting a condensing engine, that probably defeated him through excessive compression pressures. There is some evidence that he hoped to apply his engines to railway locomotives.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1885, British patent no. 7,301 (terminal exhaust engine). 1886, British patent no. 2,132.
    1887, British patent no. 6,666.
    Further Reading
    R.L.Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (provides the fullest discussion of his patents). H.W.Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press.
    J.Stumpf, 1912, The Una-Flow Steam Engine, Munich: R.Oldenbourg.
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Todd, Leonard Jennett

См. также в других словарях:

  • exit — exit …   Dictionnaire des rimes

  • Exit — or exit (lat. exit he/she leaves , pl. exeunt ) may refer to:*Exit, denoting a way out of a building, city, or place * Emergency exit, or fire exit, used in case of an emergency * Exit ramp, or slip road, used to leave an expressway or motorway * …   Wikipedia

  • exit — ex‧it [ˈegzt, ˈekst] verb [intransitive, transitive] 1. to leave a market, a type of business, or an agreement: • The bank has made great efforts to exit the long term lending business. exit from • The company plans to exit from the real estate …   Financial and business terms

  • exit — [ ɛgzit ] v. et n. m. • v. 1840 ; mot lat. « il sort », de exire 1 ♦ Exit (tel personnage) : il sort (indication scénique dans une pièce de théâtre). ♢ Par ext. Fam. Exit Un tel, se dit de qqn aux fonctions duquel on a mis fin, qui disparaît. 2 ♦ …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • EXIT — (engl. „Ausgang“) bezeichnet: Ausgang, den (Not )Ausgang in Gebäuden auf Englisch Exit (Schweiz), die Schweizer Organisation für Sterbehilfe Exit Deutschland, die Neonazi Aussteiger Organisation Exit (Hörspiel), deutsches Hörspiel von Michael… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Exit — (engl. „Ausgang“, vom lateinischen „Exitus“) bezeichnet: den (Not )Ausgang in Gebäuden in der englischen Sprache, siehe Erschließung (Gebäude) Exit (Schweiz), Schweizer Organisation für Sterbehilfe Exit Deutschland, Neonazi Aussteiger… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Exit-13 — Жанры Грайндкор Авангардный грайнд Неограйнд Годы 1989 1997 Страна …   Википедия

  • Exit — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Exit Desarrollador: Taito Corporation Editor: Ubisoft, Taito Corporation …   Wikipedia Español

  • Exit — команда многих командных оболочек операционных систем и языков программирования, вызывающая завершение работы программы или командного интерпретатора с состоянием выхода (англ. exit status), равным указанному параметру n. Если параметр n опущен,… …   Википедия

  • exit — (as a stage direction) indicating that a character leaves the stage: → exit exit noun 1》 a way out of a building, room, or passenger vehicle.     ↘a place for traffic to leave a major road or roundabout. 2》 an act of leaving; a departure. 3》… …   English new terms dictionary

  • Exit/In — is a music venue in Nashville, Tennessee. Exit/In is located in the former Elliston Place Village near Vanderbilt University. It opened in 1971 under the management of Owsley Manier and Brugh Reynolds. It developed its unique reputation in the… …   Wikipedia

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»