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81 andén
m.1 platform.2 emergency lane.3 dock, loading platform, freight platform.* * *1 platform* * *noun m.* * *SM1) (Ferro) platform2) (Náut) quayside* * *1) ( en estación) platform2) (AmC, Col) ( acera) sidewalk (AmE), pavement (BrE)* * *= platform.Ex. For example at a station we might inquire 'What platform for the London train?' and get the response 'The 11:30 has been cancelled. There has been a derailment at Hitchin'.* * *1) ( en estación) platform2) (AmC, Col) ( acera) sidewalk (AmE), pavement (BrE)* * *= platform.Ex: For example at a station we might inquire 'What platform for the London train?' and get the response 'The 11:30 has been cancelled. There has been a derailment at Hitchin'.
* * *A (en una estación) platformel autobús saldrá del andén número 5 the bus will depart from bay 5* * *
Del verbo andar: ( conjugate andar)
anden es:
3ª persona plural (ellos/ellas/ustedes) presente subjuntivo3ª persona plural (ellos/ellas/ustedes) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
andar
andén
andar 1 ( conjugate andar) verbo intransitivo
1
◊ ¿has venido andando? did you come on foot?, did you walk?b) (AmL):◊ andén a caballo/en bicicleta to ride (a horse/a bicycle)
2 (marchar, funcionar) to work;◊ el coche anda de maravilla the car's running o (BrE) going like a dream
3 (+ compl)
◊ ¿cómo andas? how are you?, how's it going? (colloq);
¿quién anda por ahí? who's there?;
anda en Londres he's in London;
anda buscando pelea he's out for o he's looking for a fight;
me anda molestando (AmL fam) he keeps bothering meb) andén con algn ( juntarse) to mix with sb;
( salir con) to go out with sb;
c) andén detrás de or tras algn/algo (buscar, perseguir) to be after sb/sth
4 ( rondar):◊ andéná por los 60 (años) he must be around o about 60
5 andén con algo (esp AmL fam) ‹con revólver/dinero› to carry sth;
‹con traje/sombrero› to wear sth
6 ( en exclamaciones)a) (expresando sorpresa, incredulidad):◊ ¡anda! ¡qué casualidad! good heavens! what a coincidence!;
¡anda! ¡mira quién está aquí! well, well! look who's here!b) (expresando irritación, rechazo):◊ ¡anda! ¡déjame en paz! oh, leave me alone!;
¡anda! ¡se me ha vuelto a olvidar! damn! I've forgotten it again! (colloq)c) ( instando a hacer algo):◊ préstamelo, anda go on, lend it to me!;
¡ándale (Méx) or (Col) ándele que llegames tarde! come on, we'll be late! (colloq)
verbo transitivo
1 ( caminar) to walk
2 (AmC) ( llevar):
siempre ando shorts I always wear shorts
andarse verbo pronominal
1 andénse con algo:
ándate con cuidado take care, be careful
2 ( en imperativo) (AmL) ( irse):
ándate luego get going, get a move on (colloq)
andar 2 sustantivo masculino,◊ andares sustantivo masculino plural
gait, walk
andén sustantivo masculino
andar
I verbo intransitivo
1 to walk
2 (moverse) to move
3 (funcionar) to work: este reloj no anda bien, this clock doesn't keep good time
4 (aproximarse a una cantidad) andará por los cincuenta, she's about fifty
5 (realizar una acción: + gerundio) anda contando por ahí tu vida y milagros, he's telling everybody all about you
6 (estar) ¿cómo andamos de tiempo?, how are we off for time?
tus llaves tienen que andar por casa, your keys must be somewhere in the house
7 (llevar consigo) LAm to have on, to carry/take with oneself: la llave la andaba con él a todas partes, he carried the key with him everywhere he went
II vtr (recorrer) to walk: andaré el tortuoso camino que lleva a tu casa, I'll walk the winding road that leads to your door
andar m, andares mpl walk sing, gait sing
andén sustantivo masculino platform
' andén' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
marquesina
- salir
- servicio
English:
platform
- side
* * *andén nm1. [en estación] platform2. Andes, CAm [acera] Br pavement, US sidewalk* * *m1 platform2 L.Am.sidewalk, Brpavement* * *1) : (train) platform2) CA, Col : sidewalk* * *andén n platform -
82 andén
Del verbo andar: ( conjugate andar) \ \
anden es: \ \3ª persona plural (ellos/ellas/ustedes) presente subjuntivo3ª persona plural (ellos/ellas/ustedes) imperativoMultiple Entries: andar andén
andar 1 ( conjugate andar) verbo intransitivo 1◊ ¿has venido andando? did you come on foot?, did you walk?b) (AmL):◊ andén a caballo/en bicicleta to ride (a horse/a bicycle)2 (marchar, funcionar) to work;◊ el coche anda de maravilla the car's running o (BrE) going like a dream3 (+ compl)◊ ¿cómo andas? how are you?, how's it going? (colloq);¿quién anda por ahí? who's there?; anda en Londres he's in London; anda buscando pelea he's out for o he's looking for a fight; me anda molestando (AmL fam) he keeps bothering meb) andén con algn ( juntarse) to mix with sb;( salir con) to go out with sb;c) andén detrás de or tras algn/algo (buscar, perseguir) to be after sb/sth4 ( rondar):◊ andéná por los 60 (años) he must be around o about 605 andén con algo (esp AmL fam) ‹con revólver/dinero› to carry sth; ‹con traje/sombrero› to wear sth 6 ( en exclamaciones)a) (expresando sorpresa, incredulidad):◊ ¡anda! ¡qué casualidad! good heavens! what a coincidence!;¡anda! ¡mira quién está aquí! well, well! look who's here!b) (expresando irritación, rechazo):◊ ¡anda! ¡déjame en paz! oh, leave me alone!;¡anda! ¡se me ha vuelto a olvidar! damn! I've forgotten it again! (colloq)c) ( instando a hacer algo):◊ préstamelo, anda go on, lend it to me!;¡ándale (Méx) or (Col) ándele que llegames tarde! come on, we'll be late! (colloq) verbo transitivo 1 ( caminar) to walk 2 (AmC) ( llevar): siempre ando shorts I always wear shorts andarse verbo pronominal 1 andénse con algo: ándate con cuidado take care, be careful 2 ( en imperativo) (AmL) ( irse): ándate luego get going, get a move on (colloq)
andar 2 sustantivo masculino,◊ andares sustantivo masculino pluralgait, walk
andén sustantivo masculino
andar
I verbo intransitivo
1 to walk
2 (moverse) to move
3 (funcionar) to work: este reloj no anda bien, this clock doesn't keep good time
4 (aproximarse a una cantidad) andará por los cincuenta, she's about fifty
5 (realizar una acción: + gerundio) anda contando por ahí tu vida y milagros, he's telling everybody all about you
6 (estar) ¿cómo andamos de tiempo?, how are we off for time?
tus llaves tienen que andar por casa, your keys must be somewhere in the house
7 (llevar consigo) LAm to have on, to carry/take with oneself: la llave la andaba con él a todas partes, he carried the key with him everywhere he went
II vtr (recorrer) to walk: andaré el tortuoso camino que lleva a tu casa, I'll walk the winding road that leads to your door
andar m, andares mpl walk sing, gait sing
andén sustantivo masculino platform ' andén' also found in these entries: Spanish: marquesina - salir - servicio English: platform - side -
83 turn
n. draai, bocht; beurt; ommekeer--------v. draaien; omslaan; omkeren; worden; veranderen; omzetten; wendenturn1[ tə:n]3 wending ⇒ draai, (verandering van) richting4 beurt7 〈 benaming voor〉 korte bezigheid ⇒ wandelingetje, ommetje; ritje, tochtje; nummer(tje) 〈 in circus, show〉; 〈 bij uitbreiding〉 artiest 〈 in show〉♦voorbeelden:turn of the tide • getijwisseling, kentering 〈 ook figuurlijk〉the tide is on the turn • het tij keertthe next right turn • de volgende afslag rechts4 is it my turn to cook tonight? • moet ik vanavond koken?take turns at something • iets om beurten doen, elkaar aflossen met ietswait one's turn • zijn beurt afwachtenturn and turn about • om en om, om de beurtby turns • om en om, om de beurtin turn • om de beurt, achtereenvolgens; op zijn beurttake it in turn(s) to do something • iets om beurten doenin one's turn • op zijn beurtyour turn • jij bentbe of a musical turn (of mind) • muzikaal aangelegd zijnat every turn • bij elke stap/gelegenheid, overaldone to a turn • perfect klaargemaakt, precies gaar genoeg→ good good/♦voorbeelden:————————turn23 〈 benaming voor〉 van richting veranderen ⇒ afslaan, draaien, een bocht/draai maken; (zich) omkeren, (zich) omdraaien; een keer nemen, kenteren 〈 van getijde〉♦voorbeelden:his thoughts turned to his mother • hij dacht aan zijn moederturn aside (from) • zich afwenden (van)turn to a book • een boek raadplegenturn to drink • aan de drank rakenthe car turned left, right, and then turned into Bond Street • de auto sloeg saf, rechtsaf, en draaide toen Bond Street inturn about • zich omkerenabout turn! • rechtsom(keert)! 〈 bevel aan troepen〉turn (a)round • zich omdraaien 〈 van iemand〉; een ommekeer maken 〈 bijvoorbeeld van economie〉; van gedachten/mening veranderenturn back • terugkeren, omkerenturn down a side street • een zijstraat inslaanwe turned off the M1 at Hatfield • we gingen van de M1 af bij Hatfieldhe turned to teaching • hij switchte naar (het) onderwijsturn into • veranderen in, wordenthe success of a film turns on many factors • het succes van een film hangt van vele factoren afwater turns to ice • water wordt ijsturn (up)on someone • iemand aanvallen, zich tegen iemand keren→ turn down turn down/, turn in turn in/, turn off turn off/, turn on turn on/, turn out turn out/, turn over turn over/, turn up turn up/2 〈 benaming voor〉 omdraaien ⇒ (doen) omkeren; omploegen, omspitten; omslaan, keren 〈 kraag〉; omvouwen4 verzuren ⇒ zuur worden/maken♦voorbeelden:the wheels turn fast • de wielen draaien snelshe turned the car • zij keerde de autoshe turned my old coat • zij keerde mijn oude jas (binnenstebuiten)turn the collar • de kraag omslaanturn the page • de bladzijde omslaanturn about • omkeren, omdraaienturn (a)round • ronddraaien; omkeren, omdraaienturn back • omvouwen, omslaanturn back the sheets • de lakens omslaan/open slaanturn something inside out • iets binnenstebuiten keren; 〈 figuurlijk〉grondig doorzoeken, overhoophalenit seemed as if the world had turned topsy-turvy • het leek wel de omgekeerde wereldturn upside down • ondersteboven kerenturn to page seven • sla bladzijde zeven opturn a phrase • iets mooi zeggenthe warm weather turned the milk • door het warme weer verzuurde de melk4 (doen) veranderen (van) ⇒ omzetten, verzetten; (ver)maken; een wending geven aan 〈 gesprek〉; bocht/draai laten maken, draaien; afwenden, omleiden♦voorbeelden:1 turn a circle • een cirkel maken/beschrijventurn the conversation • een andere wending aan het gesprek geventurn a stream • een stroom omleidenturn the switch • de wissel omzettenturn into • veranderen in, (ver)maken tot; omzetten in〈 figuurlijk〉 the terrible hangover turned him off drink for some time • door de enorme kater had hij een tijdje geen enkele interesse in drankturn the conversation to something different • het gesprek op iets anders brengenturn a gun on someone • een geweer op iemand richtenshe turned her face away from the corpses • zij wendde haar hoofd af van de lijkenturn a child against his parents • een kind tegen zijn ouders opstoken〈 Amerikaans-Engels〉 turn loose • los/vrijlatenmy wife is/has turned fifty • mijn vrouw is de vijftig gepasseerd/is vijftig gewordenit is/has turned six o'clock • het is zes uur geweestturn away • wegsturen, wegjagen, ontslaan; 〈 figuurlijk〉verwerpen, afwijzenwe were turned back at the entrance • bij de ingang werden we teruggestuurdturn someone into the street • iemand op straat zetten→ turn down turn down/, turn in turn in/, turn off turn off/, turn on turn on/, turn out turn out/, turn over turn over/, turn up turn up/IV 〈 koppelwerkwoord〉1 worden♦voorbeelden:her skin turned brown • haar vel werd bruinhis wife turned Catholic • zijn vrouw werd katholiekthe milk turned sour • de melk werd zuur -
84 Gillette, King Camp
[br]b. 5 January 1855 Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, USAd. 9 July 1932 Los Angeles, California, USA[br]American inventor and manufacturer, inventor of the safety razor.[br]Gillette's formal education in Chicago was brought to an end when a disastrous fire destroyed all his father's possessions. Forced to fend for himself, he worked first in the hardware trade in Chicago and New York, then as a travelling salesman. Gillette inherited the family talent for invention, but found that his successful inventions barely paid for those that failed. He was advised by a previous employer, William Painter (inventor of the Crown Cork), to look around for something that could be used widely and then thrown away. In 1895 he succeeded in following that advice of inventing something which people could use and then throw away, so that they would keep coming back for more. An idea came to him while he was honing an old-fashioned razor one morning; he was struck by the fact that only a short piece of the whole length of a cutthroat razor is actually used for shaving, as well as by the potentially dangerous nature of the implement. He "rushed out to purchase some pieces of brass, some steel ribbon used for clock springs, a small hand vise and some files". He thought of using a thin steel blade sharpened on each side, placed between two plates and held firmly together by a handle. Though coming from a family of inventors, Gillette had no formal technical education and was entirely ignorant of metallurgy. For six years he sought a way of making a cheap blade from sheet steel that could be hardened, tempered and sharpened to a keen edge.Gillette eventually found financial supporters: Henry Sachs, a Boston lamp manufacturer; his brother-in-law Jacob Heilbron; and William Nickerson, who had a considerable talent for invention. By skilled trial and error rather than expert metallurgical knowledge, Nickerson devised ways of forming and sharpening the blades, and it was these that brought commercial success. In 1901, the American Safety Razor Company, later to be renamed the Gillette Safety Razor Company, was set up. When it started production in 1903 the company was badly in debt, and managed to sell only fifty-one razors and 168 blades; but by the end of the following year, 90,000 razors and 12.4 million blades had been sold. A sound invention coupled with shrewd promotion ensured further success, and eight plants manufacturing safety razors were established in various parts of the world. Gillette's business experiences led him into the realms of social theory about the way society should be organized. He formulated his views in a series of books published over the years 1894 to 1910. He believed that competition led to a waste of up to 90 per cent of human effort and that want and crime would be eliminated by substituting a giant trust to plan production centrally. Unfortunately, the public in America, or anywhere else for that matter, were not ready for this form of Utopia; no omniscient planners were available, and human wants and needs were too various to be supplied by a single agency. Even so, some of his ideas have found favour: air conditioning and government provision of work for the unemployed. Gillette made a fortune from his invention and retired from active participation in the business in 1913, although he remained President until 1931 and Director until his death.[br]Bibliography"Origin of the Gillette razor", Gillette Blade (February/March).Further ReadingObituary, 1932, New York Times (11 July).J.Jewkes, D.Sawers and R.Stillerman, 1958, The Sources of Invention, London: Macmillan.LRD / IMcN -
85 Heathcote, John
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 7 August 1783 Duffield, Derbyshire, Englandd. 18 January 1861 Tiverton, Devonshire, England[br]English inventor of the bobbin-net lace machine.[br]Heathcote was the son of a small farmer who became blind, obliging the family to move to Long Whatton, near Loughborough, c.1790. He was apprenticed to W.Shepherd, a hosiery-machine maker, and became a frame-smith in the hosiery industry. He moved to Nottingham where he entered the employment of an excellent machine maker named Elliott. He later joined William Caldwell of Hathern, whose daughter he had married. The lace-making apparatus they patented jointly in 1804 had already been anticipated, so Heathcote turned to the problem of making pillow lace, a cottage industry in which women made lace by arranging pins stuck in a pillow in the correct pattern and winding around them thread contained on thin bobbins. He began by analysing the complicated hand-woven lace into simple warp and weft threads and found he could dispense with half the bobbins. The first machine he developed and patented, in 1808, made narrow lace an inch or so wide, but the following year he made much broader lace on an improved version. In his second patent, in 1809, he could make a type of net curtain, Brussels lace, without patterns. His machine made bobbin-net by the use of thin brass discs, between which the thread was wound. As they passed through the warp threads, which were arranged vertically, the warp threads were moved to each side in turn, so as to twist the bobbin threads round the warp threads. The bobbins were in two rows to save space, and jogged on carriages in grooves along a bar running the length of the machine. As the strength of this fabric depended upon bringing the bobbin threads diagonally across, in addition to the forward movement, the machine had to provide for a sideways movement of each bobbin every time the lengthwise course was completed. A high standard of accuracy in manufacture was essential for success. Called the "Old Loughborough", it was acknowledged to be the most complicated machine so far produced. In partnership with a man named Charles Lacy, who supplied the necessary capital, a factory was established at Loughborough that proved highly successful; however, their fifty-five frames were destroyed by Luddites in 1816. Heathcote was awarded damages of £10,000 by the county of Nottingham on the condition it was spent locally, but to avoid further interference he decided to transfer not only his machines but his entire workforce elsewhere and refused the money. In a disused woollen factory at Tiverton in Devonshire, powered by the waters of the river Exe, he built 300 frames of greater width and speed. By continually making inventions and improvements until he retired in 1843, his business flourished and he amassed a large fortune. He patented one machine for silk cocoon-reeling and another for plaiting or braiding. In 1825 he brought out two patents for the mechanical ornamentation or figuring of lace. He acquired a sound knowledge of French prior to opening a steam-powered lace factory in France. The factory proved to be a successful venture that lasted many years. In 1832 he patented a monstrous steam plough that is reputed to have cost him over £12,000 and was claimed to be the best in its day. One of its stated aims was "improved methods of draining land", which he hoped would develop agriculture in Ireland. A cable was used to haul the implement across the land. From 1832 to 1859, Heathcote represented Tiverton in Parliament and, among other benefactions, he built a school for his adopted town.[br]Bibliography1804, with William Caldwell, British patent no. 2,788 (lace-making machine). 1808. British patent no. 3,151 (machine for making narrow lace).1809. British patent no. 3,216 (machine for making Brussels lace). 1813, British patent no. 3,673.1825, British patent no. 5,103 (mechanical ornamentation of lace). 1825, British patent no. 5,144 (mechanical ornamentation of lace).Further ReadingV.Felkin, 1867, History of the Machine-wrought Hosiery and Lace Manufacture, Nottingham (provides a full account of Heathcote's early life and his inventions).A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London (provides more details of his later years).W.G.Allen, 1958 John Heathcote and His Heritage (biography).M.R.Lane, 1980, The Story of the Steam Plough Works, Fowlers of Leeds, London (for comments about Heathcote's steam plough).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London, and C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History ofTechnology, Vol. V, Oxford: Clarendon Press (both describe the lace-making machine).RLH -
86 Vauclain, Samuel Matthews
[br]b. 18 May 1856 Philadelphia, USAd. 4 February 1940 Rosemont, Pennsylvania, USA[br]American locomotive builder, inventor of the Vauclain compound system.[br]Vauclain entered the service of the Pennsylvania Railroad in 1872 as an apprentice in Altoona workshops and moved to the Baldwin Locomotive Works in 1883. He remained with the latter for fifty-seven years, becoming President in 1919 and Chairman of the Board in 1929.The first locomotive to his pattern of compound was built in 1889. There were four cylinders: on each side of the locomotive a high-pressure cylinder and a low-pressure cylinder were positioned one above the other, their pistons driving a common cross-head. They shared, also, a common piston valve. Large two-cylinder compound locomotives had been found to suffer from uneven distribution of power between the two sides of the locomotive: Vauclain's system overcame this problem while retaining the accessibility of a locomotive with two outside cylinders. It was used extensively in the USA and other parts of the world, but not in Britain. Among many other developments, in 1897 Vauclain was responsible for the construction of the first locomotives of the 2–8–2 wheel arrangement.[br]Bibliography1930, Steaming Up (autobiography).Further ReadingObituary, 1941, Transactions of the Newcomen Society 20:180.J.T.van Reimsdijk, 1970, The compound locomotive. Part 1:1876 to 1901', Transactions of the Newcomen Society 43:9 (describes Vauclain's system of compounding).PJGRBiographical history of technology > Vauclain, Samuel Matthews
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