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1 private
['praɪvɪt] 1. прил.1)а) частный, личный, персональный, приватныйб) личный, собственный; сокровенный2)а) частный, личный, собственный, отдельныйprivate apartment — частная квартира, собственные апартаменты
private vehicle — частный, личный автомобиль
б) частный, негосударственный•Syn:3) частный, частнопрактикующийprivate investigator / detective / eye — частный сыщик, частный детектив
4)а) частный, неофициальныйShe attended these events in a private capacity. — Она присутствовала на этих мероприятиях как частное лицо.
б) не на государственной службе, не занимающий официального постаprivate MP — член парламента, не занимающий никакого государственного поста
5) уединённыйSyn:6)а) конфиденциальный, секретный, тайныйI kept it private. — Я никому об этом не рассказывал
Syn:б) закрытый, необщедоступныйprivate view(ing) — закрытый просмотр (кинофильма, выставки)
•Ant:7) рядовой ( о военнослужащем)8) скрытный ( о человеке)2. сущ.1) воен. рядовой2) ( privates) гениталии•• -
2 attend
attend [ə'tend]∎ will you be attending the meeting? assisterez-vous à la réunion?;∎ she attends the same course as me elle suit les mêmes cours que moi;∎ I attended a private school j'ai fait mes études dans une école privée;∎ the concert was well attended il y avait beaucoup de monde au concert(b) (look after, care for) servir, être au service de;∎ he was always attended by a manservant un valet de chambre l'accompagnait partout;∎ a doctor attended the children un médecin a soigné les enfants∎ serious consequences attend such an action de telles actions entraînent de graves conséquences;∎ the mission was attended by great difficulties la mission comportait de grandes difficultés(a) (be present) être présent;∎ let us know if you are unable to attend prévenez-nous si vous ne pouvez pas venir(b) (pay attention) faire ou prêter attention∎ she attended on her guests elle s'est occupée de ses invités(a) (deal with → matter) s'occuper de; (→ one's business) vaquer à; (→ one's interests) veiller à; (→ one's health, appearance) soigner; (→ order) exécuter;∎ I shall attend to it je m'en occuperai, je m'en chargerai(b) (customer) s'occuper de;∎ are you being attended to? est-ce qu'on s'occupe de vous?∎ attend to what I'm saying écoutez attentivement ce que je dis➲ attend upon = attend on -
3 école
école [ekɔl]1. feminine nouna. ( = établissement) school• envoyer or mettre un enfant à l'école to send a child to school• grande école prestigious higher education institute with competitive entrance examination → GRANDES ÉCOLESb. ( = enseignement) schooling ; ( = système scolaire) school systemc. ( = mouvement artistique, de pensée) school2. compounds► école des Beaux-Arts ≈ art college• faire l'école buissonnière to play truant (Brit) or hooky (US) ► École centrale prestigious college of engineering► École normale ≈ teacher training college → GRANDES ÉCOLES━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Nursery school ( l'école maternelle) is publicly funded in France and, though not compulsory, is attended by most children between the ages of three and six. Statutory education begins with primary (grade) school (« l'école primaire ») and is attended by children between the ages of six and 10 or 11.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━The École nationale d'administration or ÉNA, in Strasbourg (formerly in Paris), is a competitive-entrance college training top civil servants. Because so many ministers and high-ranking decision-makers are « énarques » (ex-students of ÉNA), the school has often been criticized for exercising too much influence, and French political life is perceived by some as being monopolized by the so-called « énarchie ». → CONCOURS* * *The French school system has three tiers: l'école maternelle (from the age of two); l'école primaire comprising cours préparatoire (CP), cours élémentaire 1 et 2 ( CE1, CE2), cours moyen 1 et 2 ( CM1, CM2); and l'école secondaire ( collège and lycée). School attendance is compulsory between the ages of 6 and 16* * *ekɔl nf1) school2)* * *école nf1 Scol ( établissement) school; être à l'école to be at GB ou in US school; aller à l'école to go to school; le directeur a réuni toute l'école the headteacher assembled the whole school; école de garçons/filles boys'/girls' school; enfants des écoles schoolchildren; la grande/petite école primary/nursery school;2 ( enseignement) school; l'école est finie school is over; avoir école to have school; mettre un enfant à l'école to send a child to school; dès l'école from the very first days at school; quitter l'école à 16 ans to leave school at 16;3 ( système) education system; réformer l'école to reform the education system;4 Univ (grande) école higher education institution with competitive entrance examination; une école d'ingénieurs a Grande École of Engineering; une école de commerce a business school;5 ( source de formation) training (de in); la lexicographie est une école de patience lexicography is a training in patience; être à bonne école to be in good hands; être de la vieille école to be of the old school; l'école de la vie the university of life;6 ( mouvement) school; école flamande/romantique Flemish/Romantic school; école de pensée school of thought; faire école to gain a following.école communale local school; école de conduite driving school; école de danse dancing school; école élémentaire primary school; école de gestion Univ business school, school of business and management GB; école hôtelière hotel management school; école d'infirmières nursing college; école de journalisme school of journalism; école de langues language school; école libre ( système) independent education; ( établissement) independent school; école maternelle nursery school; école militaire military academy; école de musique music school; école normale, EN primary teacher training college; école obligatoire compulsory schooling; école parallèle progressive school GB, alternative school; école de pilotage flying school; école de police police college GB, police academy US; école primaire primary school; école privée private school; école professionnelle training college; école publique ( établissement) state school GB, public school US; ( système) state education GB, public education US; école de secrétariat secretarial college; École centrale des arts et manufactures, Centrale○ Grande École of Engineering; École des chartes, les Chartes○ School of Palaeography and Archival Studies; École des Mines, les Mines○ Grande École of Mining Studies; École nationale d'administration, ENA Grande École of Public Management; École nationale des ponts et chaussées, les Ponts et chaussées○, les Ponts○ Grande École of Civil Engineering; École nationale supérieure des arts et métiers, les Arts et métiers○, les Arts○, ENSAM Grande École of Engineering; École normale supérieure, ENS Grande École preparing teachers for higher education.École The French school system has three tiers: l'école maternelle (from the age of two); l'école primaire comprising cours préparatoire (CP), cours élémentaire 1 et 2 ( CE1, CE2), cours moyen 1 et 2 ( CM1, CM2); and l'école secondaire ( collège and lycée). School attendance is compulsory between the ages of 6 and 16.[ekɔl] nom féminin1. [établissement] school2. [cours] school3. [système]4. [collège supérieur]École (centrale) des arts et manufactures, École centrale prestigious engineering schoolÉcole nationale d'administration → link=ENA ENA5. [lieu spécialisé] school6. [pédagogie]7. [disciples] school8. (figuré)The separation of Church and State, which reflects the republican ideal and became law in 1905, is an important aspect of French culture. Since that date State education has been independent of the Church, and explicitly excludes religious instruction and religious ceremony. -
4 college
noun2) (place of further education) Fach[hoch]schule, diego to college — (esp. Amer.) studieren
start college — (esp. Amer.) sein Studium aufnehmen
3) (esp. Brit.): (school) Internatsschule, die; Kolleg, das* * *['koli‹]((any or all of the buildings housing) a higher-education institution: He studies at agricultural college.) das College* * *col·lege[ˈkɒlɪʤ, AM ˈkɑ:-]nart \college Kunstakademie fto drop out of \college vom Kolleg [o Gymnasium] abgehen; BRIT, AUS (children's private school) Privatschule fto go to \college auf die Universität gehen, studierenI attended the C\college of Arts and Sciences ich habe an der kunst- und naturwissenschaftlichen Fakultät studiert; (college building) Universitätsgebäude nt, Hochschulgebäude nt\college of Medicine Ärztekollegium nt\college of Physicians Ärztekammer f, Ärztebund m* * *College ist ein allgemeiner Oberbegriff für höhere Bildungsinstitute. In Großbritannien kann er sich auf Einrichtungen beziehen, in denen man in einzelnen Fachbereichen, wie Kunst oder Musik, einen Hochschulabschluss erwerben kann, aber ebenso auf Schulen ohne weiteren Abschluss, z. B. für Sekretärinnen oder Friseure. Einige britische Universitäten, darunter Oxford und Cambridge, setzen sich aus Colleges zusammen. In diesen collegiate universities sorgen die Colleges für die Unterbringung und Ausbildung der Studenten, auch wenn die Universität dann die Abschlüsse verleiht. Zu den bekanntesten Colleges zählen wohl das King's College in Cambridge und das Magdalen College in Oxford. In den USA werden die Universitäten in Verwaltungseinheiten unterteilt, die als Colleges bezeichnet werden: zum Beispiel das "College of Arts and Sciences" oder das "College of Medicine". Graduate schools, die normalerweise Teil einer Universität sind, bieten auf dem bachelor aufbauende Studiengänge zur weiteren Spezialisierung an. Junior oder community colleges sind Institute, an denen man nach zweijähriger Studienzeit einen berufsbezogenen Abschluss machen kann sie bieten auch Weiterbildungen für Berufstätige an See: → DEGREE, OXBRIDGE* * *1. Br College n:a) einer Universität angegliederte Lehranstalt mit Wohngemeinschaft von Dozenten und Studentenb) zur Hochschulreife führende private Internatsschule: → academic.ru/25170/Eton_College">Eton College2. US College n (Eingangsstufe der Universität), weitS. Universität f:go to college studieren3. Fach(hoch)schule f:college of education schott pädagogische Hochschule;college of music Musikhochschule;college of technology technische Hochschule4. College(gebäude) n5. Kollegium n:a) organisierte Vereinigung von Personen mit gemeinsamen Pflichten und Rechten6. REL (Kardinals- etc) Kollegium n:7. Br sl obs Kittchen n (Gefängnis)col. abk1. collected2. collector3. college4. colony5. color (colour)6. colored (coloured)7. columncoll. abk1. collection2. collective3. collector4. college5. colloquial* * *noun1) (esp. Brit.): (independent corporation in university) College, das2) (place of further education) Fach[hoch]schule, diego to college — (esp. Amer.) studieren
start college — (esp. Amer.) sein Studium aufnehmen
3) (esp. Brit.): (school) Internatsschule, die; Kolleg, das* * *n.Hochschule -n f. -
5 college
col·lege [ʼkɒlɪʤ, Am ʼkɑ:-] nart \college Kunstakademie f;to drop out of \college vom Kolleg [o Gymnasium] abgehen;Cheltenham Ladies' C\college private Mädchenschule in Cheltenham ( boarding school) Internatsschule fto go to \college auf die Universität gehen, studieren( members of college) College ntI attended the C\college of Arts and Sciences ich habe an der kunst- und naturwissenschaftlichen Fakultät studiert;\college of Medicine Ärztekollegium nt;\college of Physicians Ärztekammer f, Ärztebund m¿ Kultur?College bezeichnet die Zeit an der Universität bis zum Abschluss des bachelor's degree, normalerweise drei Jahre. Universitäten, an denen die Studenten nur bachelor's degrees erwerben können und gewisse Berufsschulen, werden oft colleges genannt. Richtige universities - Universitäten dagegen bieten auch higher degrees - höhere Abschlüsse an, wie master's degrees und doctorates. An junior colleges kann man die ersten zwei Collegejahre absolvieren oder einen technischen Beruf erlernen. -
6 Gordon, Lewis Dunbar Brodie
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering[br]b. 6 March 1815 Edinburgh, Scotlandd. 1876[br]Scottish civil engineer.[br]Lewis Gordon attended the High School in Edinburgh and Edinburgh University. He was unusual amongst British engineers of his generation in also spending some time at foreign educational establishments, including the School of Mines at Freiberg in Saxony and the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris. He served under Marc Brunel in the final stages of the construction of the Thames Tunnel, from 1837 to 1840. After this, he set up a civil engineering partnership with Lawrence Hill in Glasgow in 1840 and was then appointed as the first holder of the Regius Chair of Civil Engineering and Mechanics at Glasgow University, 1841–55. He seems to have been frustrated by the lack of facilities at Glasgow, and handed over to his deputy, W.J.M. Rankine in 1855, in order to concentrate on his growing private practice which he had been building up during his professorship at the university. His practice was involved in designing iron bridges and introducing wire rope into Britain; he also became involved with submarine cables and telegraphy. With Charles Liddell, he was the engineer for several railways in England and Wales, including the Crumlin Viaduct on the Newport, Abergavenny and Hereford Railway.[br]Further ReadingAlthough he was frequently referred to in accounts of the period, there appears to be no good biographical work on Gordon. However, see Buchanan, 1989, The Engineers.ABBiographical history of technology > Gordon, Lewis Dunbar Brodie
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7 Lanchester, Frederick William
[br]b. 28 October 1868 Lewisham, London, Englandd. 8 March 1946 Birmingham, England[br]English designer and builder of the first all-British motor car.[br]The fourth of eight children of an architect, he spent his childhood in Hove and attended a private preparatory school, from where, aged 14, he went to the Hartley Institution (the forerunner of Southampton University). He was then granted a scholarship to the Royal College of Science, South Kensington, and also studied practical engineering at Finsbury Technical College, London. He worked first for a draughtsman and pseudo-patent agent, and was then appointed Assistant Works Manager of the Forward Gas Engine Company of Birmingham, with sixty men and a salary of £1 per week. He was then aged 21. His younger brother, George, was apprenticed to the same company. In 1889 and 1890 he invented a pendulum governor and an engine starter which earned him royalties. He built a flat-bottomed river craft with a stern paddle-wheel and a vertical single-cylinder engine with a wick carburettor of his own design. From 1892 he performed a number of garden experiments on model gliders relating to problems of lift and drag, which led him to postulate vortices from the wingtips trailing behind, much of his work lying behind the theory of modern aerodynamics. The need to develop a light engine for aircraft led him to car design.In February 1896 his first experimental car took the road. It had a torsionally rigid chassis, a perfectly balanced and almost noiseless engine, dynamically stable steering, epicyclic gear for low speed and reverse with direct drive for high speed. It turned out to be underpowered and was therefore redesigned. Two years later an 8 hp, two-cylinder flat twin appeared which retained the principle of balancing by reverse rotation, had new Lanchester valve-gear and a new method of ignition based on a magneto generator. For the first time a worm and wheel replaced chain-drive or bevel-gear transmission. Lanchester also designed the machinery to make it. The car was capable of about 18 mph (29 km/h): future cars of his travelled at twice that speed. From 1899 to 1904 cars were produced for sale by the Lanchester Engine Company, which was formed in 1898. The company had to make every component except the tyres. Lanchester gave up the managership but remained as Chief Designer, and he remained in this post until 1914.In 1907–8 his two-volume treatise Aerial Flight was published; it included consideration of skin friction, boundary-layer theory and the theory of stability. In 1909 he was appointed to the Government's Committee for Aeronautics and also became a consultant to the Daimler Company. At the age of 51 he married Dorothea Cooper. He remained a consultant to Daimler and worked also for Wolseley and Beardmore until 1929 when he started Lanchester Laboratories, working on sound reproduction. He also wrote books on relativity and on the theory of dimensions.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS.Bibliographybht=1907–8, Aerial Flight, 2 vols.Further ReadingP.W.Kingsford, 1966, F.W.Lanchester, Automobile Engineer.E.G.Semler (ed.), 1966, The Great Masters. Engineering Heritage, Vol. II, London: Institution of Mechanical Engineers/Heinemann.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Lanchester, Frederick William
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8 pubblico
(pl -ci) 1. adj publicPubblico Ministero public prosecutor2. m public( spettatori) audiencein pubblico in public* * *pubblico agg.1 public; ( statale) state (attr.); ( civile) civil: opinione, salute, vita pubblica, public opinion, health, life; servizi pubblici, public services; lavori pubblici, public works; istruzione pubblica, state education; scuola pubblica, state (o maintained) school; biblioteca pubblica, public library; giardini pubblici, public gardens; forza pubblica, police force (o civil police); nemico pubblico, public enemy; pubblico funzionario, civil servant; pubblico ufficiale, public officer (o civil servant); pubblico notaio, notary public; pubblico banditore, (public) auctioneer; pubblico registro, registry; spese pubbliche, public expenses: a spese pubbliche, at public expense; bilancio pubblico, national budget; debito pubblico, national (o public) debt; amministrazione pubblica, public authority (o civil service); questione d'interesse pubblico, public matter, ( d'importanza nazionale) matter of national importance; pubbliche relazioni, public relations; lavorare per il bene pubblico, to work for the common good // atto pubblico, deed under seal; diritto pubblico, public law2 ( noto a tutti, fatto davanti a tutti) public: le conferenze sono pubbliche, the lectures are public; fare una pubblica confessione, protesta, to make a public confession, protest; tenere una pubblica riunione, to hold (o to have) an open (o public) meeting; bisogna fare qualcosa prima che la notizia diventi di pubblico dominio, something must be done before the news becomes public // rendere pubblico, to make public (o to broadcast) // personaggio pubblico, public personality◆ s.m.1 public: il pubblico dei lettori, the reading public; i gusti del pubblico, the tastes of the public; l'opinione del pubblico, public opinion; un giardino aperto al pubblico, a garden open to the public; il pubblico non è ammesso, the public is (o are) not admitted; il pubblico è pregato di..., the public is (o are) requested to... // in pubblico, in public: mettere in pubblico, to make public (o to broadcast o to reveal o to disclose)2 (di teatro, concerto, conferenza ecc.) audience: il pubblico ha applaudito gli attori, the audience applauded the actors; parlare a un pubblico numeroso, to speak to a large audience; al concerto c'è stata una grande affluenza di pubblico, the concert was very well attended // indagine sul pubblico, audience research // pubblico prigioniero, ( di messaggi pubblicitari) captive audience3 ( sfera pubblica) public life: separare il pubblico dal privato, to separate public life from private life.* * *['pubbliko] pubblico -a, -ci, -che1. agg(gen) public, (statale: scuola) state attrun pubblico esercizio — a catering (o hotel o entertainment) business
ministero della Pubblica Istruzione — Department for Education Brit, Department of Health, Education and Welfare Am
2. sm* * *I 1.1) (statale) [ scuola] public, state attrib.; [ azienda] state-owned; [ ospedale] state-run; [ debito] national, publicservizio pubblico — public service o utility
2) (della collettività) [opinione, pericolo, nemico] public3) (accessibile a tutti) [ luogo] public2.sostantivo maschileII1) (gente) publicportare qcs. a conoscenza del pubblico — to make sth. public audience, spectators pl.; (ascoltatori) audience, listeners pl.
2) (spettatori)3) (seguito)4) in pubblico [parlare, esibirsi] in public* * *pubblico1pl. -ci, - che /'pubbliko, t∫i, ke/1 (statale) [ scuola] public, state attrib.; [ azienda] state-owned; [ ospedale] state-run; [ debito] national, public; servizio pubblico public service o utility2 (della collettività) [ opinione, pericolo, nemico] public3 (accessibile a tutti) [ luogo] public; diventare di dominio pubblico to fall in the public domain; rendere pubblico to releaseil pubblico e il privato the public and the private sectors- a amministrazione civil service; - che relazioni public relations.————————pubblico2pl. -ci /'pubbliko, t∫i/sostantivo m.1 (gente) public; aperto al pubblico open to the public; portare qcs. a conoscenza del pubblico to make sth. public audience, spectators pl.; (ascoltatori) audience, listeners pl.; uno spettacolo che piace al grande pubblico a very popular show3 (seguito) avere un proprio pubblico to have a following; deludere il proprio pubblico to disappoint one's public4 in pubblico [parlare, esibirsi] in public. -
9 Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph
[br]b. 12 June 1851 Penkhull, Staffordshire, Englandd. 22 August 1940 Lake, near Salisbury, Wiltshire, England[br]English physicist who perfected Branly's coherer; said to have given the first public demonstration of wireless telegraphy.[br]At the age of 8 Lodge entered Newport Grammar School, and in 1863–5 received private education at Coombs in Suffolk. He then returned to Staffordshire, where he assisted his father in the potteries by working as a book-keeper. Whilst staying with an aunt in London in 1866–7, he attended scientific lectures and became interested in physics. As a result of this and of reading copies of English Mechanic magazine, when he was back home in Hanley he began to do experiments and attended the Wedgewood Institute. Returning to London c. 1870, he studied initially at the Royal College of Science and then, from 1874, at University College, London (UCL), at the same time attending lectures at the Royal Institution.In 1875 he obtained his BSc, read a paper to the British Association on "Nodes and loops in chemical formulae" and became a physics demonstrator at UCL. The following year he was appointed a physics lecturer at Bedford College, completing his DSc in 1877. Three years later he became Assistant Professor of Mathematics at UCL, but in 1881, after only two years, he accepted the Chair of Experimental Physics at the new University College of Liverpool. There began a period of fruitful studies of electricity and radio transmission and reception, including development of the lightning conductor, discovery of the "coherent" effect of sparks and improvement of Branly's coherer, and, in 1894, what is said to be the first public demonstration of the transmission and reception (using a coherer) of wireless telegraphy, from Lewis's department store to the clock tower of Liverpool University's Victoria Building. On 10 May 1897 he filed a patent for selective tuning by self-in-ductance; this was before Marconi's first patent was actually published and its priority was subsequently upheld.In 1900 he became the first Principal of the new University of Birmingham, where he remained until his retirement in 1919. In his later years he was increasingly interested in psychical research.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1902. FRS 1887. Royal Society Council Member 1893. President, Society for Psychical Research 1901–4, 1932. President, British Association 1913. Royal Society Rumford Medal 1898. Royal Society of Arts Albert Medal 1919. Institution of Electrical Engineers Faraday Medal 1932. Fourteen honorary degrees from British and other universities.Bibliography1875, "The flow of electricity in a plane", Philosophical Magazine (May, June and December).1876, "Thermo-electric phenomena", Philosophical Magazine (December). 1888, "Lightning conductors", Philosophical Magazine (August).1889, Modern Views of Electricity (lectures at the Royal Institution).10 May 1897, "Improvements in syntonized telegraphy without line wires", British patent no. 11,575, US patent no. 609,154.1898, "Radio waves", Philosophical Magazine (August): 227.1931, Past Years, An Autobiography, London: Hodder \& Stoughton.Further ReadingW.P.Jolly, 1974, Sir Oliver Lodge, Psychical Resear cher and Scientist, London: Constable.E.Hawks, 1927, Pioneers of Wireless, London: Methuen.See also: Hertz, Heinrich RudolphKFBiographical history of technology > Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph
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10 זקק
זְקַקch. sam( Pi. זִיקֵּק (b. h.) to smelt, refine, distil. Lev. R. s. 31 עד שמְזַקְּקוֹ until he has refined the gold.Part. pass. מְזוּקָּק, f. מְזוּקֶּקֶת. Pesik. R. s. 14 התורה … ומז׳וכ׳ the Torah is clarified and distilled in forty nine ways. to chain, tie, connect), 1) to refine.Part. pass. זָקִיק. Targ. Ps. 12:7. Targ. Cant. 1:11; a. e. 2) to chain. Part. pass. as above. Targ. Is. 60:11 זְקִיקִין led in chains (h. text נהוגים). 3) to obligate. Part. pass. as ab. Y.Ber.I, 3c bot. זְקִיקִינָן למברכה we are bound to say the blessing. Y.B. Mets.X, beg.12c ז׳ אתוכ׳ thou art bound to carry me (the lower story must be kept in repair at the expense of its owner). Ib. דאינון זקוקין (read: זקי׳). Pa. זַקֵּיק 1) to refine.Part. pass. מְזוּקַּק (Hebraism). Targ. Cant. 1:11. 2) to obligate, tie. Yeb.22b top מיזקק נמי זַקִּיקָהּ Rashi (ed. זקיק) he (the bastard brother) also ties her (prevents her from remarrying). Ithpa. אִזְּדַּקֵּק, contr. אִידַּקֵּק to be cleared. Targ. Y. II Num. 5:19 חִדַּקִּי (h. text הִנָּקִי). Ithpa. אִיזְדְּקֵיק as preced. Nif. Ned.77a איזְדְּקִיקוּ ליה רבנןוכ׳ the Rabbis attended to (the absolution from vows of) the son Ib., sq. א׳ ליה רבוכ׳ Rab attended to Rabbahs vows in a private room of the school-house Y.Keth.II, 26c bot. אִיזְדְּקזּקֵיוכ׳ to sleep with -
11 זְקַק
זְקַקch. sam( Pi. זִיקֵּק (b. h.) to smelt, refine, distil. Lev. R. s. 31 עד שמְזַקְּקוֹ until he has refined the gold.Part. pass. מְזוּקָּק, f. מְזוּקֶּקֶת. Pesik. R. s. 14 התורה … ומז׳וכ׳ the Torah is clarified and distilled in forty nine ways. to chain, tie, connect), 1) to refine.Part. pass. זָקִיק. Targ. Ps. 12:7. Targ. Cant. 1:11; a. e. 2) to chain. Part. pass. as above. Targ. Is. 60:11 זְקִיקִין led in chains (h. text נהוגים). 3) to obligate. Part. pass. as ab. Y.Ber.I, 3c bot. זְקִיקִינָן למברכה we are bound to say the blessing. Y.B. Mets.X, beg.12c ז׳ אתוכ׳ thou art bound to carry me (the lower story must be kept in repair at the expense of its owner). Ib. דאינון זקוקין (read: זקי׳). Pa. זַקֵּיק 1) to refine.Part. pass. מְזוּקַּק (Hebraism). Targ. Cant. 1:11. 2) to obligate, tie. Yeb.22b top מיזקק נמי זַקִּיקָהּ Rashi (ed. זקיק) he (the bastard brother) also ties her (prevents her from remarrying). Ithpa. אִזְּדַּקֵּק, contr. אִידַּקֵּק to be cleared. Targ. Y. II Num. 5:19 חִדַּקִּי (h. text הִנָּקִי). Ithpa. אִיזְדְּקֵיק as preced. Nif. Ned.77a איזְדְּקִיקוּ ליה רבנןוכ׳ the Rabbis attended to (the absolution from vows of) the son Ib., sq. א׳ ליה רבוכ׳ Rab attended to Rabbahs vows in a private room of the school-house Y.Keth.II, 26c bot. אִיזְדְּקזּקֵיוכ׳ to sleep with -
12 Rankine, William John Macquorn
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]b. 5 July 1820 Edinburgh, Scotlandd. 1872[br][br]Rankine was educated at Ayr Academy and Glasgow High School, although he appears to have learned much of his basic mathematics and physics through private study. He attended Edinburgh University and then assisted his father, who was acting as Superintendent of the Edinburgh and Dalkeith Railway. This introduction to engineering practice was followed in 1838 by his appointment as a pupil to Sir John MacNeill, and for the next four years he served under MacNeill on his Irish railway projects. While still in his early twenties, Rankine presented pioneering papers on metal fatigue and other subjects to the Institution of Civil Engineers, for which he won a prize, but he appears to have resigned from the Civils in 1857 after an argument because the Institution would not transfer his Associate Membership into full Membership. From 1844 to 1848 Rankine worked on various projects for the Caledonian Railway Company, but his interests were becoming increasingly theoretical and a series of distinguished papers for learned societies established his reputation as a leading scholar in the new science of thermodynamics. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1853. At the same time, he remained intimately involved with practical questions of applied science, in shipbuilding, marine engineering and electric telegraphy, becoming associated with the influential coterie of fellow Scots such as the Thomson brothers, Napier, Elder, and Lewis Gordon. Gordon was then the head of a large and successful engineering practice, but he was also Regius Professor of Engineering at the University of Glasgow, and when he retired from the Chair to pursue his business interests, Rankine, who had become his Assistant, was appointed in his place.From 1855 until his premature death in 1872, Rankine built up an impressive engineering department, providing a firm theoretical basis with a series of text books that he wrote himself and most of which remained in print for many decades. Despite his quarrel with the Institution of Civil Engineers, Rankine took a keen interest in the institutional development of the engineering profession, becoming the first President of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland, which he helped to establish in 1857. Rankine campaigned vigorously for the recognition of engineering studies as a full university degree at Glasgow, and he achieved this in 1872, the year of his death. Rankine was one of the handful of mid-nineteenth century engineers who virtually created engineering as an academic discipline.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1853. First President, Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland, 1857.Bibliography1858, Manual of Applied Mechanics.1859, Manual of the Steam Engine and Other Prime Movers.1862, Manual of Civil Engineering.1869, Manual of Machinery and Millwork.Further ReadingJ.Small, 1957, "The institution's first president", Proceedings of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland: 687–97.H.B.Sutherland, 1972, Rankine. His Life and Times.ABBiographical history of technology > Rankine, William John Macquorn
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13 Wright, Arthur
[br]b. 1858 London, Englandd. 26 July 1931 Paignton, Devon, England[br]English engineer and electricity supply industry pioneer.[br]Arthur Wright, educated at Maryborough College, attended a course of training at the School of Submarine Telegraphy, Telephony and Electric Light in London. In 1882 he joined the Hammond Company in Brighton, the first company to afford a regular electricity supply in Britain on a commercial basis for street and private lighting. He invented a recording ammeter and also a thermal-demand indicator used in conjunction with a tariff based on maximum demand in addition to energy consumption. This indicator was to remain in use for almost half a century.Resigning his position in Brighton in 1889, he joined the staff of S.Z.de Ferranti and served with him during developments at the Grosvenor Gallery and Deptford stations in London. In 1891 he returned to Brighton as its first Borough Electrical Engineer. From 1900 onwards he had an extensive consulting practice designing early power stations, and was approached by many municipalities and companies in Britain, the United States, South America and Australia, primarily on finance and tariffs. Associated with the founding of the Municipal Electrical Association in 1905, the following year he became its first President.[br]Bibliography1901, British patent no. 23,153 (thermal maximum demand indicator).1922, "Early days of the Brighton electricity supply", Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers 60:497–9.Further ReadingObituary, 1931, Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers 69:1,327–8.R.H.Parsons, 1939, Early Days of the Power Station Industry, Cambridge, pp. 13–17 (describes Wright's pioneering inventions).GW
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