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21 полицейский
1) General subject: Robert, beetle crusher, blue coat, bluecoat, bull, constable, constabulary, copper, flatfoot, flattie, jemadar, law, officer, pandoor, pandour, peon, police, police constable, police officer, policeman, ranger, raw ( unboiled) lobster, shamus, zaptiah (в Турции), zaptieh (в Турции), lawman, blue (США), Man, (напр., делающий поквартирный обход, занимающийся сбором данных и т.п.) legman5) French: flic6) Obsolete: runner8) History: Miltonian9) Law: law enforcer (патрульный), peace officer, police servant, policial10) Australian slang: jack, trap (особ. конный), trooper (особ. конный), walloper (от wallop - бить, избивать, наносить мощные удары)11) Scornful: bacon12) Jargon: Johnny-be-good, Johny, Old Bill (британский сленг), Peter Jay, Uncle nab, badge, beetle-crusher, big John, bluebird, claw, cozzpot, flattle, flatty, fuzz, geerus, goms, headbeater, min, nab, oink, peeler, pounder, rozzer (Британский сленг), slewfoot, slop, slop about, speed-cop, squadrol, the Bill (британский сленг, сокращение от "the Old Bill"), tin-badge, trap, uzz-fay, bottle (Blimey - I think the bottles are on to me!), gimpy (Gimpy has been around asking about you. Полицейский крутился здесь спрашивал про тебя.), grasshopper (He got nabbed by the grasshoppers. Его задержали/арестовали полицейские.), hog (Who called the hogs? Кто вызвал полицейских?), five-o (амер.), sharmus, Sam and Dave, mallet, nabber, nail-em-and-jail-em, Johnny Low, five oh, John, John Law, arm, azul, badge bandit, bogie bogy, collar, cookie-cutter cooky-cutter, cow-boy, cowboy, dick, elbow, finger, fink, flat-head, fuzzy, fuzzy=le, harness boll, leatherhead, long-arm, mug, mugg, mulligan, occifer, ossifer, paddy, patty, peel, penny, pig, potsie, potsy, pottsy, roach, shammus (особенно детектив или частный детектив), shamos (особенно детектив или частный детектив), shamus (особенно детектив или частный детектив), shomimus (особенно детектив или частный детектив), skull-buster, slough, snake, stick, tin13) Police term: law enforcement officer14) American English: shommus15) leg.N.P. police officer (as a noun), policeman (as a noun)16) Makarov: man in blue, officer (часто как обращение к полицейскому)18) Security: bizzy, bobby, constable (в Великобритании), man in uniform, officer of police -
22 тщательно
1) General subject: accurately, carefully, choicely, closely, elaborate, elaborately, in depth, inly, intently, meticulously, microscopically, narrowly, point device, point-device, root and branch, scrupulously, thoroughly, to a nail, well, with accuracy, with great deliberation, assiduously2) Colloquial: backward and forward, backwards and forward4) Engineering: extensively5) Construction: painstakingly6) Mathematics: cautiously, circumspectly, exhaustively, in detail, laboriously, with great care7) Science: intimately8) Makarov: intensively, nicely -
23 Flagge
Flag·ge <-, -n> [ʼflagə] fflag;die englische/französische \Flagge führen to fly the English/French flag [or ( Brit) colours] [or (Am) colors];die \Flagge streichen to strike the flagWENDUNGEN:\Flagge zeigen to nail one's colours [or (Am) -ors] to the mast -
24 ongle
n. m.1. Payer rubis sur l'ongle: To pay 'cash on the nail', to settle a debt promptly and in full.2. Avoir les ongles en deuil: To have dirty fingernails. (This expression is self-evident to the French for whom all correspondence relating to mourning is edged in black.) -
25 Dyer, Joseph Chessborough
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 15 November 1780 Stonnington Point, Connecticut, USAd. 2 May 1871 Manchester, England[br]American inventor of a popular type of roving frame for cotton manufacture.[br]As a youth, Dyer constructed an unsinkable life-boat but did not immediately pursue his mechanical bent, for at 16 he entered the counting-house of a French refugee named Nancrède and succeeded to part of the business. He first went to England in 1801 and finally settled in 1811 when he married Ellen Jones (d. 1842) of Gower Street, London. Dyer was already linked with American inventors and brought to England Perkins's plan for steel engraving in 1809, shearing and nail-making machines in 1811, and also received plans and specifications for Fulton's steamboats. He seems to have acted as a sort of British patent agent for American inventors, and in 1811 took out a patent for carding engines and a card clothing machine. In 1813 there was a patent for spinning long-fibred substances such as hemp, flax or grasses, and in 1825 there was a further patent for card making machinery. Joshua Field, on his tour through Britain in 1821, saw a wire drawing machine and a leather splitting machine at Dyer's works as well as the card-making machines. At first Dyer lived in Camden Town, London, but he had a card clothing business in Birmingham. He moved to Manchester c.1816, where he developed an extensive engineering works under the name "Joseph C.Dyer, patent card manufacturers, 8 Stanley Street, Dale Street". In 1832 he founded another works at Gamaches, Somme, France, but this enterprise was closed in 1848 with heavy losses through the mismanagement of an agent. In 1825 Dyer improved on Danforth's roving frame and started to manufacture it. While it was still a comparatively crude machine when com-pared with later versions, it had the merit of turning out a large quantity of work and was very popular, realizing a large sum of money. He patented the machine that year and must have continued his interest in these machines as further patents followed in 1830 and 1835. In 1821 Dyer had been involved in the foundation of the Manchester Guardian (now The Guardian) and he was linked with the construction of the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway. He was not so successful with the ill-fated Bank of Manchester, of which he was a director and in which he lost £98,000. Dyer played an active role in the community and presented many papers to the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society. He helped to establish the Royal Institution in London and the Mechanics Institution in Manchester. In 1830 he was a member of the delegation to Paris to take contributions from the town of Manchester for the relief of those wounded in the July revolution and to congratulate Louis-Philippe on his accession. He called for the reform of Parliament and helped to form the Anti-Corn Law League. He hated slavery and wrote several articles on the subject, both prior to and during the American Civil War.[br]Bibliography1811, British patent no. 3,498 (carding engines and card clothing machine). 1813, British patent no. 3,743 (spinning long-fibred substances).1825, British patent no. 5,309 (card making machinery).1825, British patent no. 5,217 (roving frame). 1830, British patent no. 5,909 (roving frame).1835, British patent no. 6,863 (roving frame).Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography.J.W.Hall, 1932–3, "Joshua Field's diary of a tour in 1821 through the Midlands", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 6.Evan Leigh, 1875, The Science of Modern Cotton Spinning, Vol. II, Manchester (provides an account of Dyer's roving frame).D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution: The Diffusion of TextileTechnologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (describes Dyer's links with America).See also: Arnold, AzaRLHBiographical history of technology > Dyer, Joseph Chessborough
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