-
1 hler
-
2 Hlér
n. listening; standa á hleri, to stand eaves-dropping or listening.* * * -
3 hler-tjöld
n. pl. ‘ear-lids,’ poët. the ears, Ad. 9. -
4 Fehler
m; -s, -1. beim Rechnen, Schreiben etc.: mistake, error; EDV error; einen Fehler machen make a mistake; mir ist ein Fehler unterlaufen I’ve slipped up; hier hat sich ein Fehler eingeschlichen an error has crept in here; häufige Fehler common errors; etw. als Fehler anstreichen mark s.th. wrong2. (Versehen, Irrtum) mistake, error; (Lapsus) blunder; (Fehltritt) slip, lapse; (Schuld) fault; einen Fehler machen make a mistake; (taktlos sein etc.) make a wrong move; stärker: put one’s foot in it; in den Fehler verfallen zu (+ Inf.) oder den Fehler begehen zu (+ Inf.) make the mistake of (+ Ger.) ich halte es für einen Fehler, länger zu warten I think it would be wrong ( oder a mistake) to wait any longer; es ist allein dein Fehler, dass... it’s all your fault that..., you are entirely to blame for...3. charakterlich: fault, weakness, shortcoming; körperlich: (physical) defect; jeder hat seine Fehler nobody’s perfect, we all have our little failings ( oder foibles)4. am Material etc.: fault, flaw, defect; (Makel) flaw, blemish; (Nachteil, schlechte Seite) drawback; (Haken) snag; Computerprogramm: bug; mit kleinen Fehlern WIRTS. with slight flaws; fig. with minor flaws; das hat den Fehler, dass... the drawback ( oder the trouble with this) is that...; das hat nur den Fehler, dass... the only snag ( oder problem) is that...5. Springreiten, Tennis etc.: fault; auf Fehler erkennen oder entscheiden Schiedsrichter: call a fault* * *der Fehleraberration; mistake; trip; blemish; failure; blunder; flaw; error; blooper; shortcoming; slip; boob; fault; bobble; defect; lack; demerit; slipup* * *['feːlɐ]m -s, -1) (= Irrtum, Unrichtigkeit) mistake, error; (SPORT) fault; (COMPUT) error; (= Programmierfehler) bugeinen Féhler machen or begehen — to make a mistake or error
ihr ist ein Féhler unterlaufen — she's made a mistake
voller Féhler (Comput) Programm, Software — bug-ridden
2) (= Mangel) fault, defect; (= Charakterfehler auch) failingeinen Féhler aufweisen — to prove faulty
jeder hat seine Féhler — we all have our faults, nobody's perfect
das ist nicht mein Féhler — that's not my fault
er hat den Féhler an sich, immer dazwischenzureden or dass er immer dazwischenredet — the trouble with him is that he's always interrupting
in den Féhler verfallen, etw zu tun — to make the mistake of doing sth
* * *der1) (an imperfection; something wrong: There is a fault in this machine; a fault in his character.) fault2) (a small fault in a person's speech: A stammer is a speech impediment.) impediment5) (a fault or weakness: He may have his failings, but he has always treated his children well.) failing6) (a fault; something which makes something not perfect: a flaw in the material.) flaw7) (a wrong act or judgement: a spelling mistake; It was a mistake to trust him; I took your umbrella by mistake - it looks like mine.) mistake* * *Feh·ler<-s, ->[ˈfe:lɐ]m1. (Irrtum) error, mistakeeinen \Fehler auffangen to trap an erroreinen \Fehler beheben to remove a mistakeeinen \Fehler machen [o begehen] to make a mistakejds \Fehler sein to be sb's faultjdm ist ein \Fehler unterlaufen sb has made a mistake2. SCH error, mistakeeinen \Fehler haben to have a defect, to be defect4. (schlechte Eigenschaft) faultjeder hat [seine] \Fehler everyone has [their] faultsdu hast den \Fehler, dass du immer mehr verlangst the trouble with you is, you're always asking for more5. SPORT faultauf \Fehler erkennen [o entscheiden] to indicate a foul6. INFORM bug* * *der; Fehlers, Fehler2) (schlechte Eigenschaft) fault; shortcoming; (Gebrechen) [physical] defect3) (schadhafte Stelle) flaw; blemishPorzellan mit kleinen Fehlern — porcelain with small flaws or imperfections
* * *1. beim Rechnen, Schreiben etc: mistake, error; IT error;einen Fehler machen make a mistake;mir ist ein Fehler unterlaufen I’ve slipped up;hier hat sich ein Fehler eingeschlichen an error has crept in here;häufige Fehler common errors;etwas als Fehler anstreichen mark sth wrongeinen Fehler machen make a mistake; (taktlos sein etc) make a wrong move; stärker: put one’s foot in it;in den Fehler verfallen zu (+inf) oderich halte es für einen Fehler, länger zu warten I think it would be wrong ( oder a mistake) to wait any longer;jeder hat seine Fehler nobody’s perfect, we all have our little failings ( oder foibles)4. am Material etc: fault, flaw, defect; (Makel) flaw, blemish; (Nachteil, schlechte Seite) drawback; (Haken) snag; Computerprogramm: bug;das hat den Fehler, dass … the drawback ( oder the trouble with this) is that …;das hat nur den Fehler, dass … the only snag ( oder problem) is that …5. Springreiten, Tennis etc: fault;* * *der; Fehlers, Fehler1) mistake; error; (falsches Verhalten, Sport) fault2) (schlechte Eigenschaft) fault; shortcoming; (Gebrechen) [physical] defect3) (schadhafte Stelle) flaw; blemishPorzellan mit kleinen Fehlern — porcelain with small flaws or imperfections
* * *- m.bug n.defect n.error n.fault n.flaw n.mistake n.nonconformance n.slip n. -
5 Bibliography
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Westport, CT: Praeger.■ Wagman, M. (2000). Scientific discovery processes in humans and computers: Theory and research in psychology and artificial intelligence. Westport, CT: Praeger.■ Wall, R. (1972). Introduction to mathematical linguistics. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.■ Wallas, G. (1926). The Art of Thought. New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co.■ Wason, P. (1977). Self contradictions. In P. Johnson-Laird & P. Wason (Eds.), Thinking: Readings in cognitive science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.■ Wason, P. C., & P. N. Johnson-Laird. (1972). Psychology of reasoning: Structure and content. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.■ Watson, J. (1930). Behaviorism. New York: W. W. Norton.■ Watzlawick, P. (1984). Epilogue. In P. Watzlawick (Ed.), The invented reality. New York: W. W. Norton, 1984.■ Weinberg, S. (1977). The first three minutes: A modern view of the origin of the uni verse. New York: Basic Books.■ Weisberg, R. W. (1986). Creativity: Genius and other myths. New York: W. H. Freeman.■ Weizenbaum, J. (1976). Computer power and human reason: From judgment to cal culation. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman.■ Wertheimer, M. (1945). Productive thinking. New York: Harper & Bros.■ Whitehead, A. N. (1925). Science and the modern world. New York: Macmillan.■ Whorf, B. L. (1956). In J. B. Carroll (Ed.), Language, thought and reality: Selected writings of Benjamin Lee Whorf. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.■ Whyte, L. L. (1962). The unconscious before Freud. New York: Anchor Books.■ Wiener, N. (1954). The human use of human beings. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.■ Wiener, N. (1964). God & Golem, Inc.: A comment on certain points where cybernetics impinges on religion. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.■ Winograd, T. (1972). Understanding natural language. New York: Academic Press.■ Winston, P. H. (1987). Artificial intelligence: A perspective. In E. L. Grimson & R. S. Patil (Eds.), AI in the 1980s and beyond (pp. 1-12). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.■ Winston, P. H. (Ed.) (1975). The psychology of computer vision. New York: McGrawHill.■ Wittgenstein, L. (1953). Philosophical investigations. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.■ Wittgenstein, L. (1958). The blue and brown books. New York: Harper Colophon.■ Woods, W. A. (1975). What's in a link: Foundations for semantic networks. In D. G. Bobrow & A. Collins (Eds.), Representations and understanding: Studies in cognitive science (pp. 35-84). New York: Academic Press.■ Woodworth, R. S. (1938). Experimental psychology. New York: Holt; London: Methuen (1939).■ Wundt, W. (1904). Principles of physiological psychology (Vol. 1). E. B. Titchener (Trans.). New York: Macmillan.■ Wundt, W. (1907). Lectures on human and animal psychology. J. E. Creighton & E. B. Titchener (Trans.). New York: Macmillan.■ Young, J. Z. (1978). Programs of the brain. New York: Oxford University Press.■ Ziman, J. (1978). Reliable knowledge: An exploration of the grounds for belief in science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Bibliography
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6 kühl
I Adj.1. cool; Wetter, Raum etc.: auch chilly; mir ist kühl I feel a bit chilly; kühles Bier cold beer; kühl werden cool (down); kühl stellen (Wein etc.) chill, (Speisen) leave to cool2. fig. cool; einen kühlen Kopf bewahren keep a cool head; (nicht zornig werden) keep one’s cool umg.; kühl bis ans Herz hinan cold as ice, icy* * *coolish; chilly; cool; detached* * *[kyːl]1. adj (lit, fig)cool; (= abweisend) coldmir wird etwas kǘhl — I'm getting rather chilly
abends wurde es kǘhl — in the evenings it got cool
ein kǘhler Kopf (fig) — a cool-headed person
einen kǘhlen Kopf bewahren — to keep a cool head, to keep cool
ein kǘhler Rechner — a cool, calculating person
2. advcoolly; (= nüchtern) coolly, calmlyetw kǘhl lagern — to store sth in a cool place
"kühl servieren" — "serve chilled"
* * *1) (cold: a chill wind.) chill2) (slightly cold: cool weather.) cool3) (calm or not excitable: He's very cool in a crisis.) cool4) (not very friendly: He was very cool towards me.) cool* * *[ky:l]I. adj1. (recht kalt) cool, chilly2. (reserviert) coolII. adv1. (recht kalt)etw \kühl lagern to store sth in a cool placeetw \kühl servieren KOCHK to serve sth cool [or chilled]etw \kühl stellen KOCHK to leave sth in a cool place2. (reserviert) coolly* * *1.1) coolmir ist/wird kühl — I feel/I'm getting chilly
etwas kühl lagern/aufbewahren — store/keep something in a cool place
2) (abweisend, nüchtern) cool2.ein kühler Rechner — a cool, calculating person
adverbial (abweisend, nüchtern) coolly* * *A. adj1. cool; Wetter, Raum etc: auch chilly;mir ist kühl I feel a bit chilly;kühles Bier cold beer;kühl werden cool (down);2. fig cool;kühl bis ans Herz hinan cold as ice, icyB. adv coolly;lagern! keep in a cool place* * *1.1) coolmir ist/wird kühl — I feel/I'm getting chilly
etwas kühl lagern/aufbewahren — store/keep something in a cool place
2) (abweisend, nüchtern) cool2.ein kühler Rechner — a cool, calculating person
adverbial (abweisend, nüchtern) coolly* * *adj.chilly adj.cool adj. -
7 Kühler
m; -s, -1. cooler* * *der Kühlerradiator; cooler* * *Küh|ler ['kyːlɐ]m -s, - (TECH)cooler; (AUT) radiator; (inf = Kühlerhaube) bonnet (Brit), hood (US); (= Sektkühler) ice bucketich hätte die alte Frau beinah[e] auf den Kǘhler genommen (inf) — the old lady almost ended up on my bonnet (Brit) or car hood (US)
jdm vor den Kǘhler rennen (inf) — to run (out) right in front of sb or right under sb's front wheels
* * *(an apparatus in a car which, with a fan, cools the engine.) radiator* * *Küh·ler<-s, ->[ˈky:lɐ]m1. AUTO bonnet2. (Sektkühler) ice bucket3. CHEM condenser* * *der; Kühlers, Kühlerjemanden auf den Kühler nehmen — (ugs.) drive or run into or hit somebody
2) (SektKühler) ice-bucket* * *1. cooler* * *der; Kühlers, Kühlerjemanden auf den Kühler nehmen — (ugs.) drive or run into or hit somebody
2) (SektKühler) ice-bucket* * *- m.cooler n.radiator n. -
8 Insight
In October 1838 that is, fifteen months after I had begun my systematic enquiry, I happened to read for amusement "Malthus on Population," and being well prepared to appreciate the struggle for existence which everywhere goes on from long-continued observation of the habits of animals and plants, it at once struck me that under these circumstances favorable variations would tend to be preserved, and unfavorable ones to be destroyed. (Darwin, 1911, p. 68)The insight of the chimpanzee shows itself to be principally determined by his optical apprehension of the situation. (KoЁhler, 1925, p. 267)Then I turned my attention to the study of some arithmetical questions apparently without much success and without a suspicion of any connection with my preceding researches. Disgusted with my failure, I went to spend a few days at the seaside, and thought of something else. One morning, walking on the bluff, the idea came to me, with just the same characteristics of brevity, suddenness and immediate certainty, that the arithmetic transformations of indeterminate ternary quadratic forms were identical with those of non-Euclidean geometry. (Poincareґ, 1929, p. 388)The direct awareness of determination... may also be called insight. When I once used this expression in a description of the intelligent behavior of apes, an unfortunate misunderstanding was, it seems, not entirely prevented.... Apparently, some readers interpreted this formulation as though it referred to a mysterious mental agent or faculty which was made responsible for the apes' behavior. Actually, nothing of this sort was intended... the concept is used in a strictly descriptive fashion. (KoЁhler, 1947, pp. 341-342)The task must be neither so easy that the animal solves the problem at once, thus not allowing one to analyze the solution; nor so hard that the animal fails to solve it except by rote learning in a long series of trials. With a problem of such borderline difficulty, the solution may appear out of a blue sky. There is a period first of fruitless effort in one direction, or perhaps a series of attempted solutions. Then suddenly there is a complete change in the direction of effort, and a cleancut solution of the task. This then is the first criterion of the occurrence of insight. The behavior cannot be described as a gradual accretion of learning; it is evident that something has happened in the animal at the moment of solution. (What happens is another matter.) (Hebb, 1949, p. 160)If the subject had not spontaneously solved the problem [of how to catch hold at the same time of two strings hung from the ceiling so wide apart that he or she could only get hold of one at a time, when the only available tool was a pair of pliers, by tying the pliers to one string and setting it into pendular motion] within ten minutes, Maier supplied him with a hint; he would "accidentally" brush against one of the strings, causing it to swing gently. Of those who solved the problem after this hint, the average interval between hint and solution was only forty-two seconds.... Most of those subjects who solved the problem immediately after the hint did so without any realization that they had been given one. The "idea" of making a pendulum with pliers seemed to arise spontaneously. (Osgood, 1960, p. 633)There seems to be very little reason to believe that solutions to novel problems come about in flashes of insight, independently of past experience.... People create solutions to new problems by starting with what they know and later modifying it to meet the specific problem at hand. (Weisberg, 1986, p. 50)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Insight
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9 Hamilton & Lake Erie Railway
Railway term: HLERУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Hamilton & Lake Erie Railway
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10 Fühler
m; -s, -1. ZOOL. feeler, antenna; bei Weichtieren: auch tentacle; Schnecke: horn, feeler; die Fühler ausstrecken Schnecke: put out its horns; fig. put out feelers ( nach for)* * *der Fühler(Insekten) feeler; tentacle; antenna;(Schnecke) horn;(Sensor) sensor* * *Füh|ler ['fyːlɐ]m -s, - (ZOOL)feeler, antenna; (von Schnecke) horn* * *der2) ((in certain animals, insects etc) an organ for touching, especially one of the two thread-like parts on an insect's head.) feeler* * *Füh·ler<-s, ->mdie \Fühler ausstrecken/einziehen to put out [or extend]/retract its horns [or feelers2. (Messfühler) sensor, probe3.* * *der; Fühlers, Fühler feeler; antennaseine/die Fühler ausstrecken — (fig.) put out feelers
* * *nach for)* * *der; Fühlers, Fühler feeler; antennaseine/die Fühler ausstrecken — (fig.) put out feelers
* * *- m.antennae n.feeler n.sensing device n.tentacle n. -
11 Hehler
m; -s, -; JUR. receiver of stolen goods, fence umg.* * *der Hehlerreceiver; receiver of stolen goods* * *Heh|ler ['heːlɐ]1. m -s, -,Héh|le|rin[-ərɪn]2. f -, -nenreceiver ( of stolen goods), fence (inf)* * *Heh·ler(in)<-s, ->m(f) receiver [of stolen goods], fence sl* * *der; Hehlers, Hehler: fence (coll.); receiver [of stolen goods]* * ** * *der; Hehlers, Hehler: fence (coll.); receiver [of stolen goods]* * *- m.fence* (receiver of stolen goods) n.receiver of stolen goods n. -
12 Wähler
m; -s, -; POL. voter; Freie Wähler Independent Voters, a locally-based non-party-political organization that puts up independent candidates in elections* * *der Wählervoter; elector; constituent* * *Wäh|ler I ['vɛːlɐ]m -s, - (TECH)selector II ['vɛːlɐ]1. m -s, -,Wä́h|le|rin[-ərɪn]2. f -, -nen (POL)elector, voterder or die Wä́hler — the electorate sing or pl, the electors pl
* * *Wäh·ler(in)<-s, ->* * *der; Wählers, Wähler: voter* * *Freie Wähler Independent Voters, a locally-based non-party-political organization that puts up independent candidates in elections* * *der; Wählers, Wähler: voter* * *- (Tel.) m.selector n. - m.dialer n.elector n.voter n. -
13 HLERI
a, m. or hlöri, but hleði in Korm. 10, Ísl. ii. 113; that hleri or hlöri is the better form is borne out by the mod. usage as well as by the derived hler and hlera:— a shutter or door for bedrooms and closets in old dwellings, which moved up and down in a groove or rabbet, like windows in Engl. dwellings, and locked into the threshold: the passage in Korm. S. is esp. decisive, where Kormak sees Steingerda’s feet outside between the half-shut door (hleri) and the threshold,—hann rak kerli fyrir hleðann svá at eigi gékk aptr, viz. between the threshold and the shutter, Ísl. ii. 113; hence comes the law phrase, standa á hleri (hlera?), to stand at the shutter, i. e. to stand listening, eaves-dropping, Bjarn. 43: freq. in mod. usage, as also standa of hleðum, id., Hðm. 23: in mod. usage a shutter for a window is called hleri. -
14 HLÝJA
* * *(hlý, hlýða, hlúit), v. to cover, shelter (hlýrat henni börkr né barr).* * *(mod. hlúa), pres. hlýr, pret. hløði (mod. hlúði), cp. tøði from týja; part. hlúð:—prop. to cover, shelter, with dat.; hlýrat henni börkr né barr, Hm. 49; to this belongs the poët. pret., serkir hløðut þeim = Homer’s οἱ ἤρκεσε θώρηξ, Il. xv. 529 (cp. οὐδ ἤ. θ., xiii. 371, gave them no shelter against the blow), Edda i. 418; in mod. usage, hlúa að e-m, to cover with clothes (Lat. fovere), to make one warm and snug; hér er sjór kallaðr hlér, þvíat hann hlýr allra minzt, Skálda 198; hlúðu að þér betr, þú hefr ekki hlúð vel að þér, thou art too thinly clad. -
15 Vind-lér
(i. e. Vind-hler), m. the ‘wind-listener,’ i. e. the god Heimdal, Edda. -
16 щуп
crow-billщуп зубоврачебные с расходящимися щечками broad-beaked forcepsщуп клювовидные beak-shaped crown forcepsщуп клювовидные с широкими щечками beakshaped forceps with wide gripsщуп клювовидные со сходящимися щечками beak-shaped forceps with converging gripsщуп коронковые contouring pliersщуп коронковые клювовидные crown beak-shaped forcepsщуп кусачки cutting pliersщуп ортодонтические orthodontic pliersщуп по Шредеру клювовидные S hröder tenaculum forcepsщуп прямые для удаления резцов и клыков straight forceps to extract incisors and cuspid/caninesщуп ротационные rotating forcepsщуп с S –образноизогнутыми ручками для удаления моляров forceps with S-shaped curved handles to extract molarsщуп с S –образноизогнутыми ручками для удаления премоляров forceps with S-shaped curved handles to extract premolarsщуп с желобоватым долотом Белера Bö hler rongeurщуп с узким отверстием dental forceps with narrow openingщуп с широким отверстием dental forceps with wide openingщуп стерилизационные sterilizing forcepsщуп универсальные pliersщуп штыковидные bayonet-shaped forcepsщуп экстракционные extracting pliers -
17 abbas
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18 abbatia
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19 abbatissa
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20 Animal Intelligence
We can... distinguish sharply between the kind of behavior which from the very beginning arises out of a consideration of the structure of a situation, and one that does not. Only in the former case do we speak of insight, and only that behavior of animals definitely appears to us intelligent which takes account from the beginning of the lay of the land, and proceeds to deal with it in a single, continuous, and definite course. Hence follows this criterion of insight: the appearance of a complete solution with reference to the whole lay- out of the field. (KoЁhler, 1927, pp. 169-170)Signs, in [Edward] Tolman's theory, occasion in the rat realization, or cognition, or judgment, or hypotheses, or abstraction, but they do not occasion action. In his concern with what goes on in the rat's mind, Tolman has neglected to predict what the rat will do. So far as the theory is concerned the rat is left buried in thought: if he gets to the food-box at the end that is his concern, not the concern of the theory. (Guthrie, 1972, p. 172)3) A New Insight Consists of a Recombination of Pre-existent Mediating PropertiesThe insightful act is an excellent example of something that is not learned, but still depends on learning. It is not learned, since it can be adequately performed on its first occurrence; it is not perfected through practice in the first place, but appears all at once in recognizable form (further practice, however, may still improve it). On the other hand, the situation must not be completely strange; the animal must have had prior experience with the component parts of the situation, or with other situations that have some similarity to it.... All our evidence thus points to the conclusion that a new insight consists of a recombination of pre existent mediating processes, not the sudden appearance of a wholly new process. (Hebb, 1958, pp. 204-205)In Morgan's own words, the principle is, "In no case may we interpret an action as the outcome of the exercise of a higher psychical faculty, if it can be interpreted as the outcome of the exercise of one which stands lower in the psychological scale." Behaviorists universally adopted this idea as their own, interpreting it as meaning that crediting consciousness to animals can't be justified if the animal's behavior can be explained in any other way, because consciousness is certainly a "higher psychical faculty." Actually, their interpretation is wrong, since Morgan was perfectly happy with the idea of animal consciousness: he even gives examples of it directly taken from dog behavior. Thus in The Limits of Animal Intelligence, he describes a dog returning from a walk "tired" and "hungry" and going down into the kitchen and "looking up wistfully" at the cook. Says Morgan about this, "I, for one, would not feel disposed to question that he has in his mind's eye a more or less definite idea of a bone."Morgan's Canon really applies to situations where the level of intelligence credited to an animal's behavior goes well beyond what is really needed for simple and sensible explanation. Thus application of Morgan's Canon would prevent us from presuming that, when a dog finds its way home after being lost for a day, it must have the ability to read a map, or that, if a dog always begins to act hungry and pace around the kitchen at 6 P.M. and is always fed at 6:30 P.M., this must indicate that it has learned how to tell time. These conclusions involve levels of intelligence that are simply not needed to explain the behaviors. (Coren, 1994, pp. 72-73)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Animal Intelligence
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