-
1 использование достижение
Русско-английский политический словарь > использование достижение
-
2 развитие успеха
-
3 развитие успеха
1) General subject: follow through2) Military: exploitation, exploitation (боевых действий), exploitation of a success, exploitation of success, exploitation operation, exploitation-type operation, exploiting a strike, exploiting a success, follow-through, follow-up, pressing the success -
4 закрепит успех
1. consolidate a success2. consolidating a successРусско-английский военно-политический словарь > закрепит успех
-
5 добиваться успеха
achieve success (refl.)Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > добиваться успеха
-
6 увенчаться успехом
be crowned with success (refl.)Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > увенчаться успехом
-
7 служащий гарантией успеха
Бизнес, юриспруденция. Русско-английский словарь > служащий гарантией успеха
-
8 развивать успех
1) Military: exploit, exploit a drive, exploit a strike, exploit a strike (в наступлении, при нанесении удара), exploit a success, exploiter, follow up, launch the exploitation, press success, press the success, reinforce success2) Makarov: exploit success, follow up an advantage, exploit a strike (достигнутый в результате удара) -
9 добиться успеха
Антонимический ряд: -
10 добившийся успеха
achieving success (refl.)Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > добившийся успеха
-
11 развитие
с. (в разн. знач.)development, progressразвитие промышленности — development / growth of industry
умственное, физическое развитие — mental, physical development
в развитие чего-л. — in elaboration of smth.
-
12 развитие
с.1) ( совершенствование) development, progress, advanceразви́тие о́бщества — progress of society
разви́тие промы́шленности — development / growth of industry
разви́тие на́выков — development of skills / habits
2) ( продолжение) continuation, extension; (уточнение, детализация) elaboration (on)разви́тие собы́тий — further developments pl
разви́тие успе́ха воен. — exploitation of success
3) ( развитость) (level of) developmentу́мственное [физи́ческое] разви́тие — intellectual [physical] development
коэффицие́нт интеллектуа́льного разви́тия — intelligence quotient (сокр. IQ)
••в разви́тие чего́-л — in elaboration of smth
-
13 médiatique
médiatique [medjatik]adjective* * *medjatik1) ( par les médias) [exploitation] by the media2) ( dans les médias) [succès] media (épith)3) ( attirant l'attention des médias) media (épith)4) ( utilisant les médias) [personne] media-conscious; [campagne électorale] conducted through the media5) ( des médias)milieu médiatique — media (pl)
* * *medjatik adjmedia modif* * *médiatique adj1 ( par les médias) [exploitation, amplification] by the media;3 ( attirant l'attention des médias) [événement] media ( épith); geste médiatique publicity-grabbing gesture; vedette médiatique media personality; l'aspect médiatique de qch the way sth attracts media attention; il n'est pas très médiatique he doesn't come over well on television and in the press;4 ( utilisant les médias) [personne] media-conscious; [campagne électorale] conducted through the media;[medjatik] adjectifmedia (modificateur)a. [il passe bien à la télévision] he comes over well on televisionb. [il exploite les médias] he uses the media very successfully————————[medjatik] nom féminin -
14 paralelo
adj.1 parallel, equidistant and not intersecting.2 parallel, analogous.3 parallel, simultaneous.m.1 parallel, analogon, comparison.2 parallel, parallel of latitude.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: paralelar.* * *► adjetivo1 parallel1 parallel————————1 parallel* * *1. (f. - paralela)adj.2. noun m.* * *1. ADJ1) [líneas] parallel (a to)[vidas, caracteres] parallel2) (=no oficial) unofficial, irregular; pey illegalimportaciones paralelas — unauthorized imports, illegal imports
2.SM parallelen paralelo — (Elec) in parallel
rodar en paralelo — [ciclistas] to cycle two abreast
* * *I- la adjetivo1)a) <líneas/planos> parallelb) (como adv) <marchar/crecer> parallel2) (Elec)II1) (Astron, Geog) parallel2) ( comparación) parallel* * *= parallel, colinear, parallel.Nota: Adjetivo.Ex. Although there are parallels between searching and indexing, it is important to remember that successful information retrieval does not depend only upon effective exploitation of indexing.Ex. The possession of a doctoral degree and the occupation of college or university educator are very likely to be colinear variables.Ex. The increasing demand for paper of all sorts, which the giant productivity of the Fourdrinier machine could easily meet, resulted in a parallel demand for rags which was soon outstripping the supply.----* columnas paralelas = parallel columns.* edición paralela = parallel-text edition, parallel edition.* encabezamiento paralelo = parallel heading.* en paralelo = in parallel.* establecer un paralelo = draw + parallel.* interfaz de comunicación en paralelo = parallel interface.* ir en paralelo con = run + parallel to.* proceso en paralelo = parallel processing.* sin paralelo = unparalleled.* tener paralelo = have + parallel.* título paralelo = parallel title.* * *I- la adjetivo1)a) <líneas/planos> parallelb) (como adv) <marchar/crecer> parallel2) (Elec)II1) (Astron, Geog) parallel2) ( comparación) parallel* * *= parallel, colinear, parallel.Nota: Adjetivo.Ex: Although there are parallels between searching and indexing, it is important to remember that successful information retrieval does not depend only upon effective exploitation of indexing.
Ex: The possession of a doctoral degree and the occupation of college or university educator are very likely to be colinear variables.Ex: The increasing demand for paper of all sorts, which the giant productivity of the Fourdrinier machine could easily meet, resulted in a parallel demand for rags which was soon outstripping the supply.* columnas paralelas = parallel columns.* edición paralela = parallel-text edition, parallel edition.* encabezamiento paralelo = parallel heading.* en paralelo = in parallel.* establecer un paralelo = draw + parallel.* interfaz de comunicación en paralelo = parallel interface.* ir en paralelo con = run + parallel to.* proceso en paralelo = parallel processing.* sin paralelo = unparalleled.* tener paralelo = have + parallel.* título paralelo = parallel title.* * *A2 ( como adv) ‹marchar/crecer› parallellas dos calles corren paralelas the two streets run parallel (to each other)B ( Elec):en paralelo in parallelB (comparación) parallelson dos situaciones que no admiten paralelo no parallel can be drawn between these two situationsun fraude sin paralelo an unparalleled fraud* * *
paralelo 1◊ -la adjetivo
paralelo A algo parallel to sth
paralelo 2 sustantivo masculino
parallel
paralelo,-a adjetivo & sustantivo masculino y femenino parallel
' paralelo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
paralela
- mercado
English:
parallel
- unparalleled
* * *paralelo, -a♦ adj1. [en el espacio] parallel;la cordillera corre paralela al mar the mountain range runs parallel to the sea2. [en el tiempo] at the same time;dos computadores funcionando en paralelo two computers working in parallel3. [semejante] parallel, similar;los dos políticos han seguido caminos paralelos the two politicians have followed similar paths♦ nm1. Geog parallel2. [comparación] comparison;trazar un paralelo con to draw a comparison o parallel with* * *m/adj parallel;no admite paralelo there is no parallel o comparison* * *paralelo, -la adj: parallelparalelo nm: parallel* * *paralelo adj parallel -
15 Gramme, Zénobe Théophile
[br]b. 4 April 1826 Jehay-Bodignée, Belgiumd. 20 January 1901 Bois de Colombes, Paris, France[br]Belgian engineer whose improvements to the dynamo produced a machine ready for successful commercial exploitation.[br]Gramme trained as a carpenter and showed an early talent for working with machinery. Moving to Paris he found employment in the Alliance factory as a model maker. With a growing interest in electricity he left to become an instrument maker with Heinrich Daniel Rühmkorff. In 1870 he patented the uniformly wound ring-armature dynamo with which his name is associated. Together with Hippolyte Fontaine, in 1871 Gramme opened a factory to manufacture his dynamos. They rapidly became a commercial success for both arc lighting and electrochemical purposes, international publicity being achieved at exhibitions in Vienna, Paris and Philadelphia. It was the realization that a Gramme machine was capable of running as a motor, i.e. the reversibility of function, that illustrated the entire concept of power transmission by electricity. This was first publicly demonstrated in 1873. In 1874 Gramme reduced the size and increased the efficiency of his generators by relying completely on the principle of self-excitation. It was the first practical machine in which were combined the features of continuity of commutation, self-excitation, good lamination of the armature core and a reasonably good magnetic circuit. This dynamo, together with the self-regulating arc lamps then available, made possible the innumerable electric-lighting schemes that followed. These were of the greatest importance in demonstrating that electric lighting was a practical and economic means of illumination. Gramme also designed an alternator to operate Jablochkoff candles. For some years he took an active part in the operations of the Société Gramme and also experimented in his own workshop without collaboration, but made no further contribution to electrical technology.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnight Commander, Order of Leopold of Belgium 1897. Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur. Chevalier, Order of the Iron Crown, Austria.Bibliography9 June 1870, British patent no. 1,668 (the ring armature machine).1871, Comptes rendus 73:175–8 (Gramme's first description of his invention).Further ReadingW.J.King, 1962, The Development of Electrical Technology in the 19th Century, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, Paper 30, pp. 377–90 (an extensive account of Gramme's machines).S.P.Thompson, 1901, obituary, Electrician 66: 509–10.C.C.Gillispie (ed.), 1972, Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Vol. V, New York, p. 496.GWBiographical history of technology > Gramme, Zénobe Théophile
-
16 Swan, Sir Joseph Wilson
[br]b. 31 October 1828 Sunderland, Englandd. 27 May 1914 Warlingham, Surrey, England[br]English chemist, inventor in Britain of the incandescent electric lamp and of photographic processes.[br]At the age of 14 Swan was apprenticed to a Sunderland firm of druggists, later joining John Mawson who had opened a pharmacy in Newcastle. While in Sunderland Swan attended lectures at the Athenaeum, at one of which W.E. Staite exhibited electric-arc and incandescent lighting. The impression made on Swan prompted him to conduct experiments that led to his demonstration of a practical working lamp in 1879. As early as 1848 he was experimenting with carbon as a lamp filament, and by 1869 he had mounted a strip of carbon in a vessel exhausted of air as completely as was then possible; however, because of residual air, the filament quickly failed.Discouraged by the cost of current from primary batteries and the difficulty of achieving a good vacuum, Swan began to devote much of his attention to photography. With Mawson's support the pharmacy was expanded to include a photographic business. Swan's interest in making permanent photographic records led him to patent the carbon process in 1864 and he discovered how to make a sensitive dry plate in place of the inconvenient wet collodian process hitherto in use. He followed this success with the invention of bromide paper, the subject of a British patent in 1879.Swan resumed his interest in electric lighting. Sprengel's invention of the mercury pump in 1865 provided Swan with the means of obtaining the high vacuum he needed to produce a satisfactory lamp. Swan adopted a technique which was to become an essential feature in vacuum physics: continuing to heat the filament during the exhaustion process allowed the removal of absorbed gases. The inventions of Gramme, Siemens and Brush provided the source of electrical power at reasonable cost needed to make the incandescent lamp of practical service. Swan exhibited his lamp at a meeting in December 1878 of the Newcastle Chemical Society and again the following year before an audience of 700 at the Newcastle Literary and Philosophical Society. Swan's failure to patent his invention immediately was a tactical error as in November 1879 Edison was granted a British patent for his original lamp, which, however, did not go into production. Parchmentized thread was used in Swan's first commercial lamps, a material soon superseded by the regenerated cellulose filament that he developed. The cellulose filament was made by extruding a solution of nitro-cellulose in acetic acid through a die under pressure into a coagulating fluid, and was used until the ultimate obsolescence of the carbon-filament lamp. Regenerated cellulose became the first synthetic fibre, the further development and exploitation of which he left to others, the patent rights for the process being sold to Courtaulds.Swan also devised a modification of Planté's secondary battery in which the active material was compressed into a cellular lead plate. This has remained the central principle of all improvements in secondary cells, greatly increasing the storage capacity for a given weight.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1904. FRS 1894. President, Institution of Electrical Engineers 1898. First President, Faraday Society 1904. Royal Society Hughes Medal 1904. Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur 1881.Bibliography2 January 1880, British patent no. 18 (incandescent electric lamp).24 May 1881, British patent no. 2,272 (improved plates for the Planté cell).1898, "The rise and progress of the electrochemical industries", Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers 27:8–33 (Swan's Presidential Address to the Institution of Electrical Engineers).Further ReadingM.E.Swan and K.R.Swan, 1968, Sir Joseph Wilson Swan F.R.S., Newcastle upon Tyne (a detailed account).R.C.Chirnside, 1979, "Sir Joseph Swan and the invention of the electric lamp", IEEElectronics and Power 25:96–100 (a short, authoritative biography).GWBiographical history of technology > Swan, Sir Joseph Wilson
-
17 Tesla, Nikola
SUBJECT AREA: Electricity[br]b. 9 July 1856 Smiljan, Croatiad. 7 January 1943 New York, USA[br]Serbian (naturalized American) engineer and inventor of polyphase electrical power systems.[br]While at the technical institute in Graz, Austria, Tesla's attention was drawn to the desirability of constructing a motor without a commutator. He considered the sparking between the commutator and brushes of the Gramme machine when run as a motor a serious defect. In 1881 he went to Budapest to work on the telegraph system and while there conceived the principle of the rotating magnetic field, upon which all polyphase induction motors are based. In 1882 Tesla moved to Paris and joined the Continental Edison Company. After building a prototype of his motor he emigrated to the United States in 1884, becoming an American citizen in 1889. He left Edison and founded an independent concern, the Tesla Electric Company, to develop his inventions.The importance of Tesla's first patents, granted in 1888 for alternating-current machines, cannot be over-emphasized. They covered a complete polyphase system including an alternator and induction motor. Other patents included the polyphase transformer, synchronous motor and the star connection of three-phase machines. These were to become the basis of the whole of the modern electric power industry. The Westinghouse company purchased the patents and marketed Tesla motors, obtaining in 1893 the contract for the Niagara Falls two-phase alternators driven by 5,000 hp (3,700 kW) water turbines.After a short period with Westinghouse, Tesla resigned to continue his research into high-frequency and high-voltage phenomena using the Tesla coil, an air-cored transformer. He lectured in America and Europe on his high-frequency devices, enjoying a considerable international reputation. The name "tesla" has been given to the SI unit of magnetic-flux density. The induction motor became one of the greatest advances in the industrial application of electricity. A claim for priority of invention of the induction motor was made by protagonists of Galileo Ferraris (1847–1897), whose discovery of rotating magnetic fields produced by alternating currents was made independently of Tesla's. Ferraris demonstrated the phenomenon but neglected its exploitation to produce a practical motor. Tesla himself failed to reap more than a small return on his work and later became more interested in scientific achievement than commercial success, with his patents being infringed on a wide scale.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsAmerican Institute of Electrical Engineers Edison Medal 1917. Tesla received doctorates from fourteen universities.Bibliography1 May 1888, American patent no. 381,968 (initial patent for the three-phase induction motor).1956, Nikola Tesla, 1856–1943, Lectures, Patents, Articles, ed. L.I.Anderson, Belgrade (selected works, in English).1977, My Inventions, repub. Zagreb (autobiography).Further ReadingM.Cheney, 1981, Tesla: Man Out of Time, New Jersey (a full biography). C.Mackechnie Jarvis, 1969, in IEE Electronics and Power 15:436–40 (a brief treatment).T.C.Martin, 1894, The Inventions, Researches and Writings of Nikola Tesla, New York (covers his early work on polyphase systems).GW
См. также в других словарях:
Exploitation film — is a type of film that eschews the expense of quality productions in favor of making films inexpensively, attracting viewers by exciting their more prurient interests. Exploitation is a term in the movie industry meaning promotion or advertising … Wikipedia
exploitation — exploit ex‧ploit [ɪkˈsplɔɪt] verb [transitive] 1. to use something fully and effectively in order to gain a profit or advantage: • New TV companies are fully exploiting the potential of satellite transmission. • the ways in which natural… … Financial and business terms
exploitation — exploit ► VERB 1) make good use of (a resource). 2) make use of unfairly; benefit unjustly from the work of. ► NOUN ▪ a bold or daring feat. DERIVATIVES exploitable adjective exploitation noun exploitative adjective … English terms dictionary
B movies (The exploitation boom) — The 1960s and 1970s mark the golden age of the independent B movie, made outside of Hollywood s major film studios. As censorship pressures lifted in the early 1960s, the low budget end of the American motion picture industry increasingly… … Wikipedia
Nazi exploitation — Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS is considered the quintessential nazisploitation film. Nazi exploitation (also Nazisploitation) is a subgenre of exploitation film and sexploitation film that involves villainous Nazis committing criminal acts of a sexual … Wikipedia
Document Exploitation (DOCEX) — Paratroopers of the 82d Airborne Division secure documents after a raid in Afghanistan … Wikipedia
Viet Cong and PAVN battle tactics — Soldier of a NLF/Viet Cong Main Force Unit. They shared common arms, procedures, tactics, organization and personnel with PAVN. Viet Cong and PAVN battle tactics comprised a flexible mix of guerrilla and conventional warfare battle tactics used… … Wikipedia
Emily Kngwarreye — Emily Kame Kngwarreye (1910 – 3 September 1996) was an Australian Aboriginal artist from the Utopia community in the Northern Territory.The combined monetary value of her works are more than those of any other Australian Aboriginal artist. Her… … Wikipedia
Europe, history of — Introduction history of European peoples and cultures from prehistoric times to the present. Europe is a more ambiguous term than most geographic expressions. Its etymology is doubtful, as is the physical extent of the area it designates.… … Universalium
India — /in dee euh/, n. 1. Hindi, Bharat. a republic in S Asia: a union comprising 25 states and 7 union territories; formerly a British colony; gained independence Aug. 15, 1947; became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations Jan. 26, 1950.… … Universalium
B movie — This article is about the film type. For other uses, see B Movie (disambiguation). The King of the Bs , Roger Corman, produced and directed The Raven (1963) for American International Pictures. Vincent Price headlines a cast of veteran character… … Wikipedia