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3 glacier
glacier [glasje]masculine nounb. ( = fabricant) ice-cream maker ; ( = vendeur) ice-cream man* * *glasjenom masculin1) Géographie glacier2) ( fabricant) ice-cream maker; ( établissement) ice-cream parlour [BrE]* * *ɡlasje nm1) GÉOGRAPHIE glacier2) (= marchand) ice-cream maker* * *glacier nm1 Géog glacier;2 ⇒ Les métiers et les professions ( pâtissier) ice-cream maker;3 ( établissement) ice-cream parlourGB.[glasje] nom masculinglacier de vallée valley ou Alpine glacier2. [confiseur] ice cream man ou salesman -
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[ˈglæsɪə] (American) [ˈgleɪʃər] nouna mass of ice, formed from the snow on mountains.كُتلة جليديَّه -
7 Glacier studies
Gen Mgtresearch experiments conducted at the Glacier Metal Company in London from 1948 to 1965 to investigate the development of group relations, the effects of change, and employee roles and responsibilities. The Glacier studies were conducted by the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations with the research being headed by Elliot Jaques and Fred Emery. Findings from the initial study came from a methodology called “working-through,” which examined possible social and personal factors at play in any potential dispute. From this arose an early form of works council where employees could participate in setting policy for their department. It was also discovered that employees felt the need to have their role and status defined in a way acceptable to both themselves and their colleagues. This research into job roles led Jaques to come up with the notion of the time span of discretion, according to which all jobs, no matter how strictly defined, have some level of content that requires judgment and therefore discretion by the jobholder. Jaques then examined this phenomenon in bureaucratic organizations. In defining a bureaucracy as a hierarchical system in which employees are accountable to their bosses for the work they do, he took a different stance from Max Weber. Much like the Hawthorne experiments, the Glacier studies had far-reaching implications for the way organizations were managed. The initial findings were written up by Jaques in The Changing Culture of a Factory (1951). In 1965, Jaques published the Glacier Project Papers with Wilfred Brown, the managing director of Glacier. -
8 glacier siamois
transection glacier; transfluent glacier; twinned glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier siamois
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9 glacier tempéré
isothermal glacier; temperate glacier; warm glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier tempéré
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10 glacier de cirque
cirque glacier; corrie glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier de cirque
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11 glacier de niche
niche glacier; ural glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier de niche
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12 glacier de pulsation
surge-type glacier; surging glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier de pulsation
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13 glacier de vallée composé
compound valley glacier; dendritic glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier de vallée composé
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14 glacier dendritique
compound valley glacier; dendritic glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier dendritique
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15 glacier dilatante
expanded foot glacier; wall-sided glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier dilatante
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16 glacier froid
cold glacier; polar glacier -
17 glacier himalayen
compound valley glacier; dendritic glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier himalayen
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18 glacier polaire
cold glacier; polar glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier polaire
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19 glacier recouvert
moraine-covered glacier; turkestan-type glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier recouvert
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20 glacier soumis á la marée
tidal glacier; tidewater glacierDictionnaire français-anglais de géographie > glacier soumis á la marée
См. также в других словарях:
Glacier Re — Glacier Reinsurance AG[1] Unternehmensform Aktiengesellschaft Gründung … Deutsch Wikipedia
Glacier — Gla cier, n. [F. glacier, fr. glace ice, L. glacies.] An immense field or stream of ice, formed in the region of perpetual snow, and moving slowly down a mountain slope or valley, as in the Alps, or over an extended area, as in Greenland. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Glacier — Glacier, WA U.S. Census Designated Place in Washington Population (2000): 90 Housing Units (2000): 228 Land area (2000): 3.007073 sq. miles (7.788284 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 3.007073 sq.… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Glacier, WA — U.S. Census Designated Place in Washington Population (2000): 90 Housing Units (2000): 228 Land area (2000): 3.007073 sq. miles (7.788284 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 3.007073 sq. miles… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Glacier — Allgemeine Informationen Genre(s) Shoegazing, Independent Psychedelic Rock Gründung 2005 Website … Deutsch Wikipedia
glacier — 1. (gla sié ; l r ne se lie jamais ; au pluriel, l s se lie : des gla sié z immenses) s. m. Amas considérable de glace qu on ne rencontre que dans les hautes vallées des montagnes. Les glaciers de la Savoie. Les observateurs ont reconnu que les… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
glacier — 1744, from Fr. glacier, from Savoy dialect glacière moving mass of ice, from O.Fr. glace ice, from V.L. glacia (Cf. O.Prov. glassa, It. ghiaccia), from L. glacies (see GLACIAL (Cf. glacial)) … Etymology dictionary
Glacier — (fr., spr. Glasiëh), Eisberg, Gletscher … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Glacier — (franz., spr. glaßjĕ), Eishändler; Gletscher, Eisberg; Glacière, Eiskeller, Eisgrube … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Glacier — (frz., spr. ßĭeh), Eisberg, Gletscher; Glacière (spr. ßĭähr), Eiskeller; glacieren (spr. glaß ), mit einer glatten, glänzenden Fläche überziehen … Kleines Konversations-Lexikon
glacier — [n] mountain of ice, snow berg, floe, glacial mass, iceberg, icecap, ice field, ice floe, snow slide; concept 509 … New thesaurus