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iron+industry

  • 81 железорудная промышленность

    iron ore industry

    Англо-русский словарь технических терминов > железорудная промышленность

  • 82 strike

    1. noun
    1) (Industry) Streik, der; Ausstand, der

    be on/go [out] or come out on strikein den Streik getreten sein/in den Streik treten

    2) (Finance, Mining, Oil Industry) Treffer, der (fig. ugs.)

    make a strike — sein Glück machen; (Mining) fündig werden

    3) (sudden success)

    [lucky] strike — Glückstreffer, der

    4) (act of hitting) Schlag, der
    5) (Mil.) Angriff, der (at auf + Akk.)
    2. transitive verb,
    struck, struck or (arch.) stricken
    1) (hit) schlagen; [Schlag, Geschoss:] treffen [Ziel]; [Blitz:] [ein]schlagen in (+ Akk.), treffen; (afflict) treffen; [Epidemie, Seuche, Katastrophe usw.:] heimsuchen

    strike one's head on or against the wall — mit dem Kopf gegen die Wand schlagen

    2) (delete) streichen (from, off aus)
    3) (deliver)

    who struck [the] first blow? — wer hat zuerst geschlagen?

    strike a blow against somebody/against or to something — (fig.) jemandem/einer Sache einen Schlag versetzen

    strike a blow for something(fig.) eine Lanze für etwas brechen

    4) (produce by hitting flint) schlagen [Funken]; (ignite) anzünden [Streichholz]
    5) (chime) schlagen
    6) (Mus.) anschlagen [Töne auf dem Klavier]; anzupfen, anreißen [Töne auf der Gitarre]; (fig.) anschlagen [Ton]
    7) (impress) beeindrucken

    strike somebody as [being] silly — jemandem dumm zu sein scheinen od. dumm erscheinen

    it strikes somebody that... — es scheint jemandem, dass...

    how does it strike you?was hältst du davon?

    8) (occur to) einfallen (+ Dat.)
    9) (cause to become)

    a heart attack struck him deader erlag einem Herzanfall

    be struck blind/dumb — erblinden/verstummen

    10) (attack) überfallen; (Mil.) angreifen
    11) (encounter) begegnen (+ Dat.)
    12) (Mining) stoßen auf (+ Akk.)

    strike gold — auf Gold stoßen; (fig.) einen Glückstreffer landen (ugs.) (in mit)

    13) (reach) stoßen auf (+ Akk.) [Hauptstraße, Weg, Fluss]
    14) (adopt) einnehmen [[Geistes]haltung]
    15) (take down) einholen [Segel, Flagge]; abbrechen [Zelt, Lager]
    3. intransitive verb,
    struck, struck or (arch.) stricken
    1) (deliver a blow) zuschlagen; [Pfeil:] treffen; [Blitz:] einschlagen; [Unheil, Katastrophe, Krise, Leid:] hereinbrechen (geh.); (collide) zusammenstoßen; (hit) schlagen ( against gegen, [up]on auf + Akk.)
    2) (ignite) zünden
    3) (chime) schlagen
    4) (Industry) streiken
    5) (attack; also Mil.) zuschlagen (fig.)
    6) (make a find) (Mining) fündig werden
    7) (direct course)

    strike southetc. sich nach Süden usw. wenden

    Phrasal Verbs:
    - academic.ru/118652/strike_at">strike at
    * * *
    1. past tense - struck; verb
    1) (to hit, knock or give a blow to: He struck me in the face with his fist; Why did you strike him?; The stone struck me a blow on the side of the head; His head struck the table as he fell; The tower of the church was struck by lightning.) (ein)schlagen
    2) (to attack: The enemy troops struck at dawn; We must prevent the disease striking again.) zuschlagen
    3) (to produce (sparks or a flame) by rubbing: He struck a match/light; He struck sparks from the stone with his knife.) entzünden, schlagen
    4) ((of workers) to stop work as a protest, or in order to force employers to give better pay: The men decided to strike for higher wages.) streiken
    5) (to discover or find: After months of prospecting they finally struck gold/oil; If we walk in this direction we may strike the right path.) finden, stoßen auf
    6) (to (make something) sound: He struck a note on the piano/violin; The clock struck twelve.) (an)schlagen, spielen
    7) (to impress, or give a particular impression to (a person): I was struck by the resemblance between the two men; How does the plan strike you?; It / The thought struck me that she had come to borrow money.) beeindrucken
    8) (to mint or manufacture (a coin, medal etc).) schlagen
    9) (to go in a certain direction: He left the path and struck (off) across the fields.) den Weg einschlagen
    10) (to lower or take down (tents, flags etc).) abbrechen, streichen
    2. noun
    1) (an act of striking: a miners' strike.) der Streik
    2) (a discovery of oil, gold etc: He made a lucky strike.) der Treffer
    - striker
    - striking
    - strikingly
    - be out on strike
    - be on strike
    - call a strike
    - come out on strike
    - come
    - be within striking distance of
    - strike at
    - strike an attitude/pose
    - strike a balance
    - strike a bargain/agreement
    - strike a blow for
    - strike down
    - strike dumb
    - strike fear/terror into
    - strike home
    - strike it rich
    - strike lucky
    - strike out
    - strike up
    * * *
    strike1
    [straɪk]
    I. n
    1. (of labour) Streik m, Ausstand m
    sit-down \strike Sitzstreik m
    solidarity \strike Solidaritätsstreik m
    steel \strike Stahlarbeiterstreik m
    sympathy \strike Sympathiestreik m
    a wave of \strikes eine Streikwelle
    wildcat \strike esp AM wilder Streik
    to be [out] on \strike streiken
    to be on \strike against sth/sb AM etw/jdn bestreiken
    to call a \strike einen Streik ausrufen
    to call for a \strike zu einem Streik aufrufen
    to go [or come out] on \strike in [den] Streik treten, streiken
    one-\strike-and-you're-out policy Politik f des harten Durchgreifens
    II. vi streiken, in den Ausstand treten form
    to \strike for sth für etw akk streiken
    the right to \strike das Recht zu streiken, das Streikrecht
    striking workers streikende Arbeiter
    strike2
    [straɪk]
    I. n
    1. MIL Angriff m, Schlag m ( against gegen + akk)
    air \strike Luftangriff m
    military \strike Militärschlag m
    missile \strike Raketenangriff m
    nuclear \strike Atomschlag m, Atomangriff m
    pre-emptive \strike Präventivschlag m; ( fig) vorbeugende Maßnahme
    retaliatory \strike Vergeltungsschlag m, Vergeltungsangriff m
    surgical \strike gezielter Angriff
    to launch a \strike einen Angriff starten, einen Schlag durchführen
    2. (discovery) Fund m
    gold/oil \strike Gold-/Ölfund m
    to make a gold \strike auf Gold stoßen
    3. AM ( also fig: conviction) Verurteilung f a. fig
    if you're poor and you've been to prison you've already got two \strikes against you ( fig fam) wenn man arm ist und im Gefängnis war, ist man von vornherein doppelt benachteiligt
    4. AM (in baseball) Fehlschlag m
    5. STOCKEX Basispreis f einer Option
    II. vt
    <struck, struck or OLD, AM also stricken>
    1. (beat)
    to \strike sb/an animal [with sth] jdn/ein Tier [mit etw dat] schlagen; (bang against)
    to \strike sth [with sth] [mit etw dat] gegen etw akk schlagen; (bang on)
    to \strike sth [with sth] [mit etw dat] auf etw akk schlagen
    to \strike the door/table with one's fist mit der Faust gegen die Tür/auf den Tisch schlagen
    to \strike sb in the face jdn ins Gesicht schlagen
    2. (send by hitting)
    to \strike a ball einen Ball schlagen/schießen
    you struck the ball perfectly! das war ein perfekter Schlag/Schuss!
    3. usu passive (reach, damage)
    to be struck by a bullet/missile/by lightning von einer Kugel/Rakete/vom Blitz getroffen werden
    to \strike sth gegen etw akk stoßen; (drive against)
    to \strike sth gegen etw akk fahren
    to \strike sb jdn anfahren; (sail into)
    to \strike sth auf etw akk auflaufen; (collide with)
    to \strike sth mit etw dat zusammenstoßen
    her head struck the kerb sie schlug mit dem Kopf auf die Bordsteinkante
    he was struck by a car er wurde von einem Auto angefahren
    5. (knock, hurt)
    to \strike sth against/on sth mit etw dat gegen/auf etw akk schlagen
    to \strike one's fist against the door/on the table mit der Faust gegen die Tür/auf den Tisch schlagen
    to \strike one's elbow/head against [or on] sth mit dem Ellbogen/Kopf gegen etw akk schlagen
    6. (inflict)
    to \strike a blow zuschlagen
    to \strike two blows zweimal zuschlagen
    to \strike sb a blow jdm einen Schlag versetzen
    to \strike a blow against [or at] sb/sth ( fig) jdm/etw einen Schlag versetzen fig
    to \strike a blow for sth ( fig) eine Lanze für etw akk brechen geh
    the judge's ruling \strikes a blow for racial equality das Urteil des Richters ist ein wichtiger Sieg im Kampf für die Rassengleichheit
    to \strike sb/sth jdn/etw heimsuchen
    the flood struck Worcester die Flut brach über Worcester herein
    8. (give an impression)
    to \strike sb as... jdm... scheinen
    almost everything he said struck me as absurd fast alles, was er sagte, schien mir ziemlich verworren [o kam mir ziemlich verworren vor]
    how does Jimmy \strike you? wie findest du Jimmy?
    she doesn't \strike me as [being] very motivated sie scheint mir nicht besonders motiviert [zu sein]
    it \strikes sb that... es scheint jdm, dass...
    it \strikes me that she's not very motivated es scheint mir, dass sie nicht besonders motiviert ist
    to \strike sb forcibly jdn sehr beeindrucken
    to be struck by sth von etw dat beeindruckt sein
    to be struck on sb/sth ( fam: be infatuated) sich akk in jdn/etw verguckt haben fam
    10. (arouse, induce)
    to \strike sb's fancy jds Interesse erregen
    to \strike fear [or terror] into sb jdn in Angst versetzen
    11. (achieve)
    to \strike sth etw erreichen
    how can we \strike a balance between economic growth and environmental protection? wie können wir einen Mittelweg zwischen Wirtschaftswachstum und Umweltschutz finden?
    one of the tasks of a chairperson is to \strike a balance between the two sides es gehört zu den Aufgaben eines Vorsitzenden, beiden Seiten gerecht zu werden
    to \strike a deal [or AM also bargain] with sb mit jdm eine Vereinbarung treffen
    to \strike coins/a medal Münzen/eine Medaille prägen
    to \strike sth auf etw akk stoßen
    to \strike gold/oil auf Gold/Öl stoßen; ( fig fam) einen Glückstreffer landen fig
    to \strike gold ( fig fam: at the Olympics) die Goldmedaille gewinnen
    14. (play)
    to \strike a chord/note einen Akkord/Ton anschlagen
    to \strike the right note den richtigen Ton treffen
    to \strike an attitude ( pej) sich akk in Szene setzen pej
    to \strike a note of warning about sth vor etw dat warnen
    to \strike a false [or wrong] note sich akk im Ton vergreifen
    to \strike more serious note eine ernstere Tonart [o einen ernsteren Ton] anschlagen
    to \strike the right note den richtigen Ton treffen
    to \strike a pose eine Pose einnehmen
    they have chosen to \strike a pose of resistance ( fig) sie haben sich zu einer ablehnenden Haltung entschieden
    16. clock
    to \strike midnight/the hour Mitternacht/die [volle] Stunde schlagen
    to \strike twelve zwölf schlagen
    the clock struck twelve die Uhr schlug zwölf, es schlug zwölf Uhr
    to \strike sb jdm einfallen
    she was suddenly struck by the thought that... plötzlich kam ihr der Gedanke, dass...
    has it ever struck you that...? ist dir je der Gedanke gekommen dass...?
    it's just struck me that... mir ist gerade eingefallen, dass...
    18. (remove)
    to \strike camp das Lager abbrechen
    to \strike one's flag die Flaggen streichen
    to \strike sb/a name off a list jdn/einen Namen von einer Liste streichen
    to \strike sth from the record AM LAW etw aus den Aufzeichnungen streichen
    to \strike sb off the register jdm die Zulassung entziehen
    to \strike a match ein Streichholz anzünden
    to \strike sparks Funken schlagen
    20. (render)
    to be struck dumb sprachlos sein
    21.
    to \strike a chord with sb (memories) bei jdm Erinnerungen wecken; (agreement) bei jdm Anklang finden
    to \strike a responsive chord with sb bei jdm auf großes Verständnis stoßen
    to \strike a familiar note [with sb] [jdm] bekannt vorkommen
    to \strike it lucky ( fam) einen Glückstreffer landen fig
    to \strike it rich das große Geld machen fam
    III. vi
    <struck, struck or OLD, AM also stricken>
    1. (reach aim, have impact) treffen; lightning einschlagen
    lightning never \strikes in the same place ein Blitz schlägt nie zweimal an derselben Stelle ein
    to \strike at sb/sth jdn/etw treffen
    the missiles struck at troops based around the city die Raketen trafen Stellungen rund um die Stadt
    to \strike at the heart of sth etw vernichtend treffen
    we need to \strike at the heart of this problem wir müssen dieses Problem an der Wurzel packen
    to \strike at the heart of sb ( fig) jdn ins Herz treffen fig
    to \strike home ins Schwarze treffen fig
    the message seems to have struck home die Botschaft ist offensichtlich angekommen
    2. (act) zuschlagen; (attack) angreifen
    the snake \strikes quickly die Schlange beißt schnell zu
    the police have warned the public that the killer could \strike again die Polizei hat die Bevölkerung gewarnt, dass der Mörder erneut zuschlagen könnte
    to \strike at sb/sth jdn/etw angreifen; hit out nach jdm/etw schlagen
    sometimes terrorists \strike at civilians manchmal greifen Terroristen Zivilisten an
    3. (cause suffering) illness, disaster ausbrechen; fate zuschlagen
    4. clock schlagen
    midnight has just struck es hat gerade Mitternacht geschlagen
    to \strike on/upon sth etw finden
    she has just struck upon an idea ihr ist gerade eine Idee gekommen, sie hatte gerade eine Idee
    6.
    to \strike while the iron is hot ( prov) das Eisen schmieden, solange es heiß ist prov
    to \strike lucky BRIT, AUS ( fam) einen Glückstreffer landen fig
    * * *
    [straɪk] vb: pret struck, ptp struck or ( old) stricken
    1. n
    1) Streik m, Ausstand m

    official/unofficial strike — offizieller/wilder Streik

    to be on strike — streiken, im Ausstand sein

    to be on official/unofficial strike — offiziell/wild streiken

    to come out on strike, to go on strike — in den Streik or Ausstand treten

    See:
    2) (= discovery of oil, gold etc) Fund m

    a lucky strikeein Treffer m, ein Glücksfall m

    3) (BASEBALL) verfehlter Schlag; (TENPIN BOWLING) Strike m, alle zehne

    to get a strike to have the strike (Cricket) — alle zehne werfen, abräumen (inf) schlagen

    three strikes and you're out — wenn du den Ball dreimal verfehlst, bist du draußen

    it/she has two strikes against it/her ( esp US inf ) — es/sie hat zwei Nachteile

    4) (FISHING)
    5) (MIL: attack) Angriff m
    6) (= act of striking) Schlag m
    2. vt
    1) (= hit) schlagen; door schlagen an or gegen (+acc); nail, table schlagen auf (+acc); metal, hot iron etc hämmern; (stone, blow, bullet etc) treffen; (snake) beißen; (pain) durchzucken, durchfahren; (misfortune, disaster) treffen; (disease) befallen

    to strike one's fist on the table, to strike the table with one's fist — mit der Faust auf den Tisch schlagen

    to strike sb/sth a blow — jdm/einer Sache einen Schlag versetzen

    to be struck by lightning —

    he struck his forehead in surprise to strike 38 ( per minute) — er schlug sich (dat) überrascht an die Stirn 38 Ruderschläge (pro Minute) machen

    2) (= collide with, meet person) stoßen gegen; (spade) stoßen auf (+acc); (car) fahren gegen; ground aufschlagen or auftreffen auf (+acc); (ship) auflaufen auf (+acc); (sound, light) ears, eyes treffen; (lightning) person treffen; tree einschlagen in (+acc), treffen

    to strike one's head against sth — mit dem Kopf gegen etw stoßen, sich (dat) den Kopf an etw (acc) stoßen

    3) (= sound) instrument zu spielen anfangen; string, chord, note anschlagen; (clock) schlagen

    that struck a familiar note — das kam mir/ihm etc bekannt vor

    See:
    note
    4) (HORT) cutting schneiden; (plant) roots schlagen
    5) (= occur to) in den Sinn kommen (+dat)

    to strike sb as cold/unlikely etc — jdm kalt/unwahrscheinlich etc vorkommen

    the funny side of it struck me latererst später ging mir auf, wie lustig das war

    6) (= impress) beeindrucken

    how does it strike you? — wie finden Sie das?, was halten Sie davon?

    See:
    → also struck
    7) (= produce, make) coin, medal prägen; (fig) agreement, truce sich einigen auf (+acc), aushandeln; pose einnehmen

    to strike a match —

    to be struck blind/deaf/dumb — blind/taub/stumm werden, mit Blindheit/Taubheit/Stummheit geschlagen werden (geh)

    to strike fear or terror into sb/sb's heart —

    strike a light! (inf)ach du grüne Neune! (inf), hast du da noch Töne! (inf)

    8) (= find) gold, oil, correct path finden, stoßen auf (+acc)
    See:
    oil
    9) (= make) path hauen
    10) (= take down) camp, tent abbrechen; (NAUT) flag, sail einholen, streichen; mast kappen, umlegen; (THEAT) set abbauen
    11) (= remove) streichen

    stricken from a list/the record — von einer Liste/aus dem Protokoll gestrichen werden

    3. vi
    1) (= hit) treffen; (lightning) einschlagen; (snake) zubeißen; (tiger) die Beute schlagen; (attack, MIL ETC) zuschlagen, angreifen; (disease) zuschlagen; (panic) ausbrechen

    to strike at sb/sth (lit) — nach jdm/etw schlagen; ( fig : at democracy, existence ) an etw (dat) rütteln

    to be/come within striking distance of sth — einer Sache (dat) nahe sein

    to come within striking distance of doing sth — nahe daran sein, etw zu tun

    they were within striking distance of success —

    See:
    home, iron
    2) (clock) schlagen
    3) (workers) streiken
    4) (match) zünden, angehen
    5) (NAUT: run aground) auflaufen (on auf +acc)
    6) (FISHING) anbeißen
    7)

    inspiration struck — er/sie etc hatte eine Eingebung

    to strike on a new idea — eine neue Idee haben, auf eine neue Idee kommen

    8) (= take root) Wurzeln schlagen
    9)

    (= go in a certain direction) to strike across country — querfeldein gehen

    * * *
    strike [straık]
    A s
    1. Schlag m, Hieb m, Stoß m
    2. (Glocken) Schlag m
    3. Schlag(werk) m(n) (einer Uhr)
    4. WIRTSCH Streik m, Ausstand m:
    be on strike streiken;
    go on strike in (den) Streik oder in den Ausstand treten;
    on strike streikend
    5. Bowling: Strike m (Abräumen beim 1. Wurf)
    6. Angeln:
    a) Ruck m mit der Angel
    b) Anbeißen n (des Fisches)
    7. Münzherstellung: Prägungsmenge f
    a) Streichen n (der Schichten)
    b) (Streich)Richtung f
    9. umg Treffer m, Glücksfall m:
    a lucky strike ein Glückstreffer
    10. MIL
    a) (besonders Luft-) Angriff m
    b) (Atom) Schlag m
    B v/t prät struck [strʌk], pperf struck, stricken [ˈstrıkən]
    1. schlagen, Schläge oder einen Schlag versetzen (dat), allg treffen:
    strike sb in the face jemanden ins Gesicht schlagen;
    strike together zusammen-, aneinanderschlagen;
    she was struck by a stone sie wurde von einem Stein getroffen;
    he was struck dead by lightning er wurde vom Blitz erschlagen;
    strike me dead! sl so wahr ich hier stehe!
    2. ein Messer etc stoßen ( into in akk)
    3. einen Schlag führen: blow2 1
    4. MUS einen Ton, auch eine Glocke, Saite, Taste anschlagen: chord1 2, note A 9, A 11
    5. a) ein Streichholz anzünden, ein Feuer machen
    b) Funken schlagen
    6. mit dem Kopf, Fuß etc stoßen oder schlagen ( against gegen)
    7. stoßen oder schlagen gegen oder auf (akk), zusammenstoßen mit, SCHIFF auflaufen auf (akk), einschlagen in (akk) (Geschoss, Blitz)
    8. fallen auf (akk) (Licht), auftreffen auf (akk), das Auge oder Ohr treffen:
    a sound struck his ear ein Laut schlug an sein Ohr;
    strike sb’s eye jemandem ins Auge fallen
    9. fig jemandem einfallen oder in den Sinn kommen:
    an idea struck him ihm kam oder er hatte eine Idee
    10. jemandem auffallen:
    what struck me was … was mir auffiel oder worüber ich staunte, war …
    11. Eindruck machen auf (akk), jemanden beeindrucken:
    be struck by beeindruckt oder hingerissen sein von;
    be struck on a girl umg in ein Mädchen verknallt sein
    12. jemandem gut etc vorkommen:
    how does it strike you? was hältst du davon?;
    it struck her as ridiculous es kam ihr lächerlich vor
    13. stoßen auf (akk), (zufällig) treffen oder entdecken, Gold etc finden: oil A 1, rich A 7
    14. Wurzeln schlagen: root1 A 1
    15. THEAT Kulissen etc abbauen
    16. ein Zelt etc abbrechen: camp1 A 1
    17. SCHIFF
    a) die Flagge, Segel streichen
    b) (weg)fieren: flag1 A 1, A 2, sail A 1
    18. den Fisch mit einem Ruck (der Angel) auf den Haken spießen
    19. a) seine Beute schlagen (Habicht etc)
    b) die Giftzähne schlagen in (akk) (Schlange)
    20. TECH glatt streichen
    21. a) MATH den Durchschnitt, das Mittel nehmen
    b) WIRTSCH die Bilanz, den Saldo ziehen
    c) WIRTSCH eine Dividende ausschütten: balance A 7, mean3 B 1, B 2
    22. streichen ( off von einer Liste etc): Medical Register, roll A 2, strike off 2, strike through
    23. eine Münze, Medaille schlagen, prägen
    24. die Stunde etc schlagen (Uhr): twelve A
    25. fig jemanden schlagen, heimsuchen, treffen (Unglück, Not etc), befallen (Krankheit)
    26. jemanden erfüllen ( with mit Schrecken, Schmerz etc)
    27. jemanden blind, taub etc machen: dumb A 3
    28. ein Tempo, eine Gangart anschlagen
    29. eine Haltung oder Pose an-, einnehmen
    30. WIRTSCH einen Handel abschließen: bargain Bes Redew
    a) WIRTSCH die Arbeit niederlegen,
    b) Feierabend machen
    C v/i
    1. a) (zu)schlagen, (-)stoßen: iron A 1
    b) fig zuschlagen:
    2. schlagen, treffen:
    a) jemanden oder nach jemandem schlagen,
    b) fig zielen auf (akk): root1 A 1
    3. fig zuschlagen, angreifen
    4. zubeißen (Schlange)
    5. (on)
    a) schlagen, stoßen (an akk, gegen)
    b) SCHIFF auflaufen (auf akk), (auf Grund) stoßen
    6. fallen (Licht), auftreffen (Lichtstrahl, Schall etc) (on auf akk)
    7. strike on auf Öl, Erz etc stoßen ( B 13)
    8. schlagen (Uhr): hour 3
    9. sich entzünden (Streichholz)
    10. ELEK sich (plötzlich) entladen (Funke): strike across
    11. einschlagen, treffen (Blitz, Geschoss)
    12. BOT Wurzeln schlagen
    13. den Weg einschlagen, sich (plötzlich) wenden ( beide:
    to the right, etc nach rechts etc):
    strike for home umg heimgehen;
    a) einbiegen in (akk), einen Weg einschlagen,
    b) fig plötzlich verfallen in (akk), etwas beginnen;
    strike into a gallop in Galopp verfallen;
    strike into a subject sich einem Thema zuwenden
    14. WIRTSCH streiken ( for um; against gegen)
    15. SCHIFF die Flagge streichen (to vor dat) (auch fig)
    16. GEOL streichen (Schicht)
    17. Angeln:
    a) anbeißen (Fisch)
    b) den Fisch mit einem Ruck (der Angel) auf den Haken spießen
    18. (durch)dringen (to zu; into in akk; through durch) (Kälte etc)
    * * *
    1. noun
    1) (Industry) Streik, der; Ausstand, der

    be on/go [out] or come out on strike — in den Streik getreten sein/in den Streik treten

    2) (Finance, Mining, Oil Industry) Treffer, der (fig. ugs.)

    make a strike — sein Glück machen; (Mining) fündig werden

    [lucky] strike — Glückstreffer, der

    4) (act of hitting) Schlag, der
    5) (Mil.) Angriff, der (at auf + Akk.)
    2. transitive verb,
    struck, struck or (arch.) stricken
    1) (hit) schlagen; [Schlag, Geschoss:] treffen [Ziel]; [Blitz:] [ein]schlagen in (+ Akk.), treffen; (afflict) treffen; [Epidemie, Seuche, Katastrophe usw.:] heimsuchen

    strike one's head on or against the wall — mit dem Kopf gegen die Wand schlagen

    2) (delete) streichen (from, off aus)

    who struck [the] first blow? — wer hat zuerst geschlagen?

    strike a blow against somebody/against or to something — (fig.) jemandem/einer Sache einen Schlag versetzen

    strike a blow for something(fig.) eine Lanze für etwas brechen

    4) (produce by hitting flint) schlagen [Funken]; (ignite) anzünden [Streichholz]
    5) (chime) schlagen
    6) (Mus.) anschlagen [Töne auf dem Klavier]; anzupfen, anreißen [Töne auf der Gitarre]; (fig.) anschlagen [Ton]
    7) (impress) beeindrucken

    strike somebody as [being] silly — jemandem dumm zu sein scheinen od. dumm erscheinen

    it strikes somebody that... — es scheint jemandem, dass...

    8) (occur to) einfallen (+ Dat.)

    be struck blind/dumb — erblinden/verstummen

    10) (attack) überfallen; (Mil.) angreifen
    11) (encounter) begegnen (+ Dat.)
    12) (Mining) stoßen auf (+ Akk.)

    strike gold — auf Gold stoßen; (fig.) einen Glückstreffer landen (ugs.) (in mit)

    13) (reach) stoßen auf (+ Akk.) [Hauptstraße, Weg, Fluss]
    14) (adopt) einnehmen [[Geistes]haltung]
    15) (take down) einholen [Segel, Flagge]; abbrechen [Zelt, Lager]
    3. intransitive verb,
    struck, struck or (arch.) stricken
    1) (deliver a blow) zuschlagen; [Pfeil:] treffen; [Blitz:] einschlagen; [Unheil, Katastrophe, Krise, Leid:] hereinbrechen (geh.); (collide) zusammenstoßen; (hit) schlagen ( against gegen, [up]on auf + Akk.)
    2) (ignite) zünden
    3) (chime) schlagen
    4) (Industry) streiken
    5) (attack; also Mil.) zuschlagen (fig.)
    6) (make a find) (Mining) fündig werden

    strike southetc. sich nach Süden usw. wenden

    Phrasal Verbs:
    * * *
    n.
    Stoß ¨-e m.
    Streik -s m.
    Treffer - m. v.
    (§ p.,p.p.: struck)
    or p.p.: stricken•) = anzünden v.
    auffallen v.
    drücken v.
    schlagen v.
    (§ p.,pp.: schlug, geschlagen)
    stoßen v.
    (§ p.,pp.: stieß, gestossen)
    streiken v.
    treffen v.
    (§ p.,pp.: traf, getroffen)

    English-german dictionary > strike

  • 83 Dudley, Dud

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1599
    d. 25 October 1684 Worcester, England
    [br]
    English ironmaster who drew attention to the need to change from charcoal to coal as a fuel for iron smelting.
    [br]
    Dudley was the fourth natural son of Edward Sutton, fifth Baron Dudley. In 1619 he was summoned from Balliol College, Oxford, to superintend his father's ironworks at Pensnet in Worcestershire. There had long been concern at the destruction of the forests in order to make charcoal for the smelting of iron ore, and unsuccessful attempts had been made to substitute coal as a fuel. Finding that charcoal was in short supply and coal plentiful near Pensnet, Dudley was stimulated by these attempts to try the process for himself. He claimed to have made good, marketable iron and in 1621 his father obtained a patent from the King to protect his process for thirty-one years. After a serious flood, Dudley moved to Staffordshire and continued his efforts there. In 1639 he was granted a further patent for making iron with coal. Although he probably made some samples of good iron, more by luck than judgement, it is hardly possible that he achieved consistent success. He blamed this on the machinations of other ironmasters. The day that King Charles II landed in England to assume his throne', Dudley petitioned him to renew his patents, but he was refused and he ceased to promote his invention. In 1665, however, he published his celebrated book Metallum Martis, Iron Made with Pit-Coaky Sea-Coale…. In this he described his efforts in general terms, but neither there nor in his patents does he give any technical details of his methods. He implied the use of slack or small coal from the Staffordshire Thick or Ten Yard coal, but this has a sulphur content that would have rendered the iron unusable; in addition, this coal would not have been suitable for converting to coke in order to remove the sulphur. Nevertheless, Dudley recognized the need to change from charcoal to coal as a fuel for iron smelting and drew attention to it, even though he himself achieved little success.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    H.R.Schubert, 1957, History of the British Iron and Steel Industry AD 430 to AD 1775, London: Routledge \& Kegan Paul.
    W.K.V.Gale, 1967, The British Iron and Steel Industry: A Technical History, London (provides brief details of Dudley's life in relation to the history of ironmaking).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Dudley, Dud

  • 84 Albert, Wilhelm August Julius

    [br]
    b. 24 January 1787 Hannover, Germany
    d. 4 July 1846 Clausthal, Harz, Germany
    [br]
    German mining official, successful applier of wire cable.
    [br]
    After studying law at the University of Göttingen, Albert turned to the mining industry and in 1806 started his career in mining administration in the Harz district, where he became Chief Inspector of mines thirty years later. His influence on the organization of the mining industry was considerable and he contributed valuable ideas for the development of mining technology. For example, he initiated experiments with Reichenbach's water-column pump in Harz when it had been working successfully in the transportation of brine in Bavaria, and he encouraged Dörell to work on his miner's elevator.
    The increasing depths of shafts in the Harz district brought problems with hoisting as the ropes became too heavy and tended to break. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, iron link chains replaced the hempen ropes which were expensive and wore out too quickly, especially in the wet conditions in the shafts. After he had experimented for six years using counterbalancing iron link chains, which broke too easily, in 1834 he conceived the idea of producing stranded cables from iron wires. Their breaking strength and flexibility depended greatly on the softness of the iron and the way of laying the strands. Albert produced the cable by attaching the wires to strings which he turned evenly; this method became known as "Albert lay". He was not the first to conceive the idea of metal cables: there exists evidence for such cables as far back as Pompeii; Leonardo da Vinci made sketches of cables made from brass wires; and in 1780 the French engineer Reignier applied iron cables for lightning conductors. The idea also developed in various other mining areas, but Albert cables were the first to gain rapidly direct common usage worldwide.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1835, "Die Anfertigung von Treibseilen aus geflochtenem Eisendraht", Karstens Archiv 8: 418–28.
    Further Reading
    K.Karmarsch, "W.A.J.Albert", Allgemeine deutsche Biographie 1:212–3.
    W.Bornhardt, 1934, W.A.J.Albert und die Erfindung der Eisendrahtseile, Berlin (a detailed description of his inventions, based on source material).
    C.Bartels, 1992, Vom frühneuzeitlichen Montangewerbe zur Bergbauindustrie, Bochum: Deut sches Bergbau-Museum (evaluates his achievements within the framework of technological development in the Harz mining industry).
    WK

    Biographical history of technology > Albert, Wilhelm August Julius

  • 85 strike

    strike [straɪk]
    grève1 (a) raid1 (b) attaque1 (b) escadre1 (c) découverte1 (d) sonnerie1 (e) frapper3 (a), 3 (c)-(e), 3 (n), 4 (a) toucher3 (a) atteindre3 (a) heurter3 (b) sonner3 (f), 4 (d) jouer3 (g) conclure3 (h) rendre3 (j) découvrir3 (l) attaquer3 (q), 4 (b) faire grève4 (c)
    (pt & pp struck [strʌk], cont striking)
    1 noun
    (a) Industry grève f;
    to go on strike se mettre en ou faire grève;
    to be (out) on strike être en grève;
    to threaten strike action menacer de faire ou de se mettre en grève;
    the Italian air strike la grève des transports aériens en Italie;
    railway strike grève f des chemins de fer;
    teachers' strike grève f des enseignants;
    coal or miners' strike grève f des mineurs;
    postal or post office strike grève f des postes;
    rent strike grève f des loyers
    (b) Military raid m, attaque f; (by bird of prey, snake) attaque f;
    to carry out air strikes against or on enemy bases lancer des raids aériens contre des bases ennemies;
    retaliatory strike raid m de représailles; (nuclear) deuxième frappe f
    (c) Aviation & Military (planes) escadre f (d'avions participant à un raid)
    a gold strike la découverte d'un gisement d'or;
    the recent oil strikes in the North Sea la découverte récente de gisements de pétrole en mer du Nord;
    it was a lucky strike c'était un coup de chance
    (e) (of clock → chime, mechanism) sonnerie f;
    life was regulated by the strike of the church clock la vie était rythmée par la cloche de l'église
    the strike of iron on iron le bruit du fer qui frappe le fer;
    he adjusted the strike of the keys on the platen roll il a réglé la frappe des caractères contre le cylindre
    (g) (in baseball) strike m; American figurative (black mark) mauvais point m;
    figurative he has two strikes against him il est mal parti;
    figurative being too young was another strike against her le fait d'être trop jeune constituait un handicap supplémentaire pour elle
    (h) (in bowling) honneur m double;
    to get or to score a strike réussir un honneur double
    (i) Fishing (by fisherman) ferrage m; (by fish) touche f
    at the strike of day à la pointe ou au point du jour
    (a) (committee, movement) de grève
    (b) Military (mission) d'intervention, d'attaque; (aircraft) d'assaut
    (a) (hit → gen) frapper; (→ of bullet, torpedo, bomb) toucher, atteindre;
    she raised her hand to strike him elle leva la main pour le frapper;
    he struck me with his fist il m'a donné un coup de poing;
    the chairman struck the table with his gavel le président donna un coup de marteau sur la table;
    she took the vase and struck him on or over the head elle saisit le vase et lui donna un coup sur la tête;
    she struck him across the face elle lui a donné une gifle;
    a light breeze struck the sails une légère brise gonfla les voiles;
    the phenomenon occurs when warm air strikes cold ce phénomène se produit lorsque de l'air chaud entre en contact avec de l'air froid;
    a wave struck the side of the boat une vague a heurté le côté du bateau;
    the arrow struck the target la flèche a atteint la cible;
    a hail of bullets struck the car la voiture a été mitraillée;
    he was struck by a piece of shrapnel il a été touché par ou il a reçu un éclat de grenade;
    to be struck by lightning être frappé par la foudre, être foudroyé;
    he went for them striking blows left and right il s'est jeté sur eux, distribuant les coups de tous côtés;
    who struck the first blow? qui a porté le premier coup?, qui a frappé le premier?;
    he struck the tree a mighty blow with the axe il a donné un grand coup de hache dans l'arbre;
    the trailer struck the post a glancing blow la remorque a percuté le poteau en passant;
    figurative to strike a blow for democracy/women's rights (law, event) faire progresser la démocratie/les droits de la femme; (person, group) marquer des points en faveur de la démocratie/des droits des femmes
    (b) (bump into, collide with) heurter, cogner;
    his foot struck the bar on his first jump son pied a heurté la barre lors de son premier saut;
    she fell and struck her head on or against the kerb elle s'est cogné la tête contre le bord du trottoir en tombant;
    the Volvo struck the bus head on la Volvo a heurté le bus de plein fouet;
    Nautical we've struck ground! nous avons touché (le fond)!
    (c) (afflict → of drought, disease, worry, regret) frapper; (→ of storm, hurricane, disaster, wave of violence) s'abattre sur, frapper;
    an earthquake struck the city un tremblement de terre a frappé la ville;
    he was struck by a heart attack il a eu une crise cardiaque;
    the pain struck her as she tried to get up la douleur l'a saisie au moment où elle essayait de se lever;
    I was struck by or with doubts j'ai été pris de doute, le doute s'est emparé de moi
    (d) (occur to) frapper;
    only later did it strike me as unusual ce n'est que plus tard que j'ai trouvé ça ou que cela m'a paru bizarre;
    it suddenly struck him how little had changed il a soudain pris conscience du fait que peu de choses avaient changé;
    did it never strike you that you weren't wanted there? ne vous est-il jamais venu à l'esprit que vous étiez de trop?;
    a terrible thought struck her une idée affreuse lui vint à l'esprit;
    it strikes me as useless/as the perfect gift ça me semble ou paraît inutile/être le cadeau idéal;
    he strikes me as (being) sincere il me paraît sincère;
    it doesn't strike me as being the best course of action il ne me semble pas que ce soit la meilleure voie à suivre
    (e) (impress) frapper, impressionner;
    the first thing that struck me was his pallor la première chose qui m'a frappé, c'était sa pâleur;
    what strikes you is the silence ce qui (vous) frappe, c'est le silence;
    how did she strike you? quelle impression vous a-t-elle faite?, quel effet vous a-t-elle fait?;
    how did Tokyo/the film strike you? comment avez-vous trouvé Tokyo/le film?;
    we can eat here and meet them later, how does that strike you? on peut manger ici et les retrouver plus tard, qu'en penses-tu?;
    I was very struck British with or American by the flat l'appartement m'a plu énormément;
    I wasn't very struck British with or American by his colleague son collègue ne m'a pas fait une grande impression
    (f) (chime) sonner;
    the church clock struck five l'horloge de l'église a sonné cinq heures;
    it was striking midnight as we left minuit sonnait quand nous partîmes
    (g) (play → note, chord) jouer;
    she struck a few notes on the piano elle a joué quelques notes sur le piano;
    when he struck the opening chords the audience applauded quand il a joué ou plaqué les premiers accords le public a applaudi;
    to strike a false note Music faire une fausse note; figurative (speech) sonner faux;
    his presence/his words struck a gloomy note sa présence a/ses paroles ont mis une note de tristesse;
    the report strikes an optimistic note/a note of warning for the future le rapport est très optimiste/très alarmant pour l'avenir;
    does it strike a chord? est-ce que cela te rappelle ou dit quelque chose?;
    to strike a chord with the audience faire vibrer la foule;
    her description of company life will strike a chord with many managers beaucoup de cadres se reconnaîtront dans sa description de la vie en entreprise
    (h) (arrive at, reach → deal, treaty, agreement) conclure;
    to strike a bargain conclure un marché;
    I'll strike a bargain with you je te propose un marché;
    it's not easy to strike a balance between too much and too little freedom il n'est pas facile de trouver un équilibre ou de trouver le juste milieu entre trop et pas assez de liberté
    to strike fear or terror into sb remplir qn d'effroi
    to strike sb blind/dumb rendre qn aveugle/muet;
    the news struck us speechless with horror nous sommes restés muets d'horreur en apprenant la nouvelle;
    I was struck dumb by the sheer cheek of the man! je suis resté muet devant le culot de cet homme!;
    a stray bullet struck him dead il a été tué par une balle perdue;
    she was struck dead by a heart attack elle a été foudroyée par une crise cardiaque;
    God strike me dead if I lie! je jure que c'est la vérité!
    (k) (ignite → match) frotter, allumer; (→ sparks) faire jaillir;
    he struck a match or a light il a frotté une allumette;
    British familiar old-fashioned strike a light! nom de Dieu!
    (l) (discover → gold) découvrir; (→ oil, water) trouver; (path) tomber sur, découvrir;
    familiar British to strike it lucky, American to strike it rich (make material gain) trouver le filon; (be lucky) avoir de la veine
    (m) (adopt → attitude) adopter;
    he struck an attitude of wounded righteousness il a pris un air de dignité offensée
    (n) (mint → coin, medal) frapper
    (o) (take down → tent) démonter; Nautical (→ sail) amener, baisser;
    to strike camp lever le camp;
    Nautical to strike the flag or the colours amener les couleurs;
    Theatre to strike the set démonter le décor
    (p) (delete → name, remark, person) rayer; (→ from professional register) radier;
    that remark must be struck or American stricken from the record cette remarque doit être retirée du procès-verbal
    (q) (attack) attaquer
    the union is striking four of the company's plants le syndicat a déclenché des grèves dans quatre des usines de la société;
    students are striking their classes les étudiants font la grève des cours;
    the dockers are striking ships carrying industrial waste les dockers refusent de s'occuper des cargos chargés de déchets industriels
    to strike roots prendre racine;
    the tree had struck deep roots into the ground l'arbre avait des racines très profondes
    (a) (hit) frapper;
    she struck at me with her umbrella elle essaya de me frapper avec son parapluie;
    to strike home (blow) porter; (missile, remark) faire mouche;
    familiar to strike lucky avoir de la veine;
    proverb strike while the iron is hot il faut battre le fer pendant qu'il est chaud
    (b) (attack → gen) attaquer; (→ snake) mordre; (→ wild animal) sauter ou bondir sur sa proie; (→ bird of prey) fondre ou s'abattre sur sa proie;
    the bombers struck at dawn les bombardiers attaquèrent à l'aube;
    the murderer has struck again l'assassin a encore frappé;
    these are measures which strike at the root/heart of the problem voici des mesures qui attaquent le problème à la racine/qui s'attaquent au cœur du problème;
    this latest incident strikes right at the heart of government policy ce dernier incident remet complètement en cause la politique gouvernementale
    (c) Industry faire grève;
    they're striking for more pay ils font grève pour obtenir une augmentation de salaire;
    the nurses struck over the minister's decision to freeze wages les infirmières ont fait grève suite à la décision du ministre de bloquer les salaires
    (d) (chime) sonner;
    midnight had already struck minuit avait déjà sonné
    (e) (happen suddenly → illness, disaster, earthquake) survenir, se produire, arriver;
    we were travelling quietly along when disaster struck nous roulions tranquillement lorsque la catastrophe s'est produite;
    the first tremors struck at 3 a.m. les premières secousses sont survenues à 3 heures du matin
    (f) (travel, head)
    to strike across country prendre à travers champs;
    they then struck west ils sont ensuite partis vers l'ouest
    (g) Sport (score) marquer
    (h) Fishing (fisherman) ferrer; (fish) mordre (à l'hameçon)
    (i) (of cutting) prendre (racine)
    ►► strike ballot = vote avant que les syndicats ne décident d'une grève;
    Insurance strike clause clause f pour cas de grève;
    strike force (nuclear capacity) force f de frappe; (of police, soldiers → squad) détachement m ou brigade f d'intervention; (→ larger force) force f d'intervention;
    strike fund = caisse de prévoyance permettant d'aider les grévistes;
    strike pay salaire m de gréviste (versé par le syndicat ou par un fonds de solidarité);
    Finance strike price (for share) prix m d'exercice
    (a) (retaliate) se venger; Military contre-attaquer;
    the government struck back at its critics le gouvernement a répondu à ceux qui le critiquaient
    (b) Sport (score in response) marquer à son tour
    foudroyer, terrasser;
    figurative struck down by disease terrassé par la maladie
    (a) (delete, remove → from list) rayer, barrer; (→ from professional register) radier;
    to be struck off (doctor, solicitor) être radié
    (b) (sever) couper
    (c) Typography tirer
    (go) to strike off to the left prendre à gauche;
    we struck off into the forest nous sommes entrés ou avons pénétré dans la forêt
    British (solution, right answer) trouver (par hasard), tomber sur; (plan) trouver; (idea) avoir
    (a) (cross out) rayer, barrer
    (b) (in baseball) éliminer
    (a) (set up on one's own) s'établir à son compte
    she struck out across the fields elle prit à travers champs;
    figurative they decided to strike out into a new direction ils ont décidé de prendre une nouvelle direction
    we struck out for the shore nous avons commencé à nager en direction de la côte
    (d) (aim a blow) frapper;
    she struck out at him elle essaya de le frapper; figurative elle s'en est prise à lui;
    they struck out in all directions with their truncheons ils distribuaient des coups de matraque à droite et à gauche
    (e) (in baseball) être éliminé
    British (cross out) rayer, barrer
    to strike up a conversation with sb engager la conversation avec qn;
    they immediately struck up a conversation ils sont immédiatement entrés en conversation;
    to strike up an acquaintance/a friendship with sb lier connaissance/se lier d'amitié avec qn
    (b) Music (start playing) commencer à jouer;
    the band struck up the national anthem l'orchestre commença à jouer l'hymne national ou entonna les premières mesures de l'hymne national
    (musician, orchestra) commencer à jouer; (music) commencer

    Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > strike

  • 86 service

    (the ships of a country that are employed in trading, and their crews: His son has joined the merchant navy.) marina mercante
    1. servicio
    the food is good, but the service is slow la comida es buena, pero el servicio es lento
    2. oficio religioso
    3. revisión
    4. saque
    first service! ¡primer saque!
    tr['sɜːvɪs]
    is service included? ¿el servicio está incluido?
    2 (organization, system, business) servicio
    there's a 24-hour service hay un servicio permanente, hay un servicio las 24 horas
    3 (work, duty) servicio
    4 (use) servicio
    5 (maintenance of car, machine) revisión nombre femenino
    6 SMALLRELIGION/SMALL oficio, oficio religioso
    7 (of dishes) vajilla; (for tea, coffee) juego
    8 (tennis) saque nombre masculino, servicio
    9 SMALLLAW/SMALL entrega, citación nombre femenino, notificación nombre femenino
    1 (for use of workers) de servicio
    2 (military) de militar
    1 (car, machine) revisar, hacer una revisión de
    2 (organization, group) atender, servir
    3 (debt, loan) pagar los intereses de
    1 (work, act, help) servicios nombre masculino plural
    1 SMALLMILITARY/SMALL las fuerzas nombre femenino plural armadas
    which of the services were you in? ¿en qué cuerpo estuviste?
    \
    SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALL
    at your service a su disposición, para servirle
    how can I be of (any) service (to you)? ¿en qué puedo servirle?
    it's all part of the service está incluido en el servicio
    to do somebody a service hacer un favor a alguien
    service area área de servicio
    service flat apartamento con servicios incluidos
    service industry/sector sector nombre masculino de servicios
    service road vía de acceso
    service station estación nombre femenino de servicio
    service ['sərvəs] vt, - viced ; - vicing
    1) maintain: darle mantenimiento a (una máquina), revisar
    2) repair: arreglar, reparar
    1) help, use: servicio m
    to do someone a service: hacerle un servicio a alguien
    at your service: a sus órdenes
    to be out of service: no funcionar
    2) ceremony: oficio m (religioso)
    3) department, system: servicio m
    social services: servicios sociales
    train service: servicio de trenes
    4) set: juego m, servicio m
    tea service: juego de té
    5) maintenance: mantenimiento m, revisión f, servicio m
    6) : saque m (en deportes)
    7)
    armed services : fuerzas fpl armadas
    n.
    entrega s.f.
    juego s.m.
    mantenimiento (Automóvil) s.m.
    misa s.f.
    prestación s.f.
    servicio s.m.
    v.
    atender v.
    mantener v.
    (§pres: -tengo, -tienes...-tenemos) pret: -tuv-
    fut/c: -tendr-•)
    reparar v.

    I 'sɜːrvəs, 'sɜːvɪs
    1) u
    a) (duty, work) servicio m
    c) (given by a tool, machine)

    to come into serviceentrar en servicio or en funcionamiento

    2) u c (of professional, tradesman, company) servicio m

    services 1 mile — (BrE) área de servicio a 1 milla

    3) c u ( assistance) servicio m

    my staff are at your servicemis empleados están a sus órdenes or a su entera disposición or a su servicio

    how can I be of service to you? — ¿en qué puedo ayudarlo or servirlo?

    4) c (organization, system) servicio m

    telephone/postal service — servicio telefónico/postal

    the bus/rail service — el servicio de autobusesenes

    there's a daily/an hourly service to Boston — hay un servicio diario/un tren (or autobús etc) cada hora a Boston

    5) ( Mil)
    6) u (in shop, restaurant) servicio m
    7) c u (overhaul, maintenance) revisión f, servicio m (AmL), service m (RPl); (before n) <contract, package> de mantenimiento

    service engineer — técnico, -ca m,f de mantenimiento

    8) c ( Relig) oficio m religioso

    wedding serviceceremonia f de boda

    9) c ( in tennis) servicio m, saque m

    first/second service! — primer/segundo saque or servicio!

    to break somebody's service — romper* el servicio de alguien, romperle* el servicio a alguien

    10) c ( dinner service) vajilla f

    II
    1) (overhaul, maintain) \<\<car\>\> hacerle* una revisión or (AmL) un servicio or (RPl) un service a; \<\<machine/appliance\>\> hacerle* el mantenimiento a
    2) ( Fin) \<\<debt/loan\>\> atender* el servicio de (frml)
    ['sɜːvɪs]
    1. N
    1) (=work)
    a) (=period of work) trabajo m

    he saw service in Egypt — combatió en Egipto

    b) (=work provided) servicio m

    the company has a reputation for good service — la empresa tiene fama de dar un buen servicio (a los clientes)

    they offered their services free of charge — ofrecieron sus servicios gratuitamente

    they provide a 24-hour service — proporcionan un servicio de 24 horas

    to be in service — ser criado(-a), servir

    she was in service at Lord Olton'sera criada or servía en casa de Lord Olton

    to go into service (with sb) — entrar a servir (en casa de algn)

    2) (=organization, system) servicio m

    the diplomatic service — el servicio diplomático

    they are attempting to maintain essential services — están intentando mantener en funcionamiento los servicios mínimos

    the postal service — el servicio postal

    rail services were disrupted by the strike — el servicio ferroviario se vio afectado por la huelga

    the train service to Pamplona — el servicio de trenes a Pamplona

    secret 3., social 3.
    3) (=help, use) servicio m

    Tristram Shandy, at your service! — ¡Tristram Shandy, para servirle or a sus órdenes!

    to be of service — ayudar, servir

    how can I be of service? — ¿en qué puedo ayudar or servir?

    the new buses were brought into service in 1995 — los autobuses nuevos entraron en servicio en 1995

    to come into service — [vehicle, weapon] entrar en servicio

    to do sth/sb a service, you have done me a great service — me ha hecho un gran favor, me ha sido de muchísima ayuda

    they do their country/profession no service — no hacen ningún favor a su patria/profesión

    to be out of service — (Mech) no funcionar, estar fuera de servicio

    community 2.
    4) (in hotel, restaurant, shop) servicio m
    room 3.
    5) services (Econ) (=tertiary sector) sector m terciario or (de) servicios; (on motorway) área f de servicio
    6) (Mil)

    service life didn't suit him — la vida militar no le pegaba

    the Services — las fuerzas armadas

    military 3., national 3.
    7) (Rel) (=mass) misa f ; (other) oficio m (religioso)
    funeral 2., wedding 2.
    8) (Aut, Mech) revisión f

    the car is in for a service — están revisando el coche, están haciendo una revisión al coche

    9) (=set of crockery) vajilla f

    dinner service — vajilla f

    tea service — juego m or servicio m de té

    10) (Tennis) servicio m, saque m

    a break of service — una ruptura de servicio

    to hold/ lose one's service — ganar/perder el servicio

    2. VT
    1) [+ car] revisar, hacer la revisión a; [+ appliance] realizar el mantenimiento de
    2) [+ organization, committee, customers] dar servicio a, proveer de servicios a
    3) [+ debt] pagar el interés de
    3.
    CPD

    service area N (on motorway) área f de servicio

    service charge N (in restaurant) servicio m ; [of flat] gastos mpl de comunidad or de escalera (Sp), gastos mpl comunes (LAm)

    service department N(=repair shop) taller m de reparaciones

    service economy Neconomía f de servicios

    service elevator N (US)= service lift

    service engineer Ntécnico(-a) m / f (de mantenimiento)

    service families NPLfamilias fpl de miembros de las fuerzas armadas

    service flat N(Brit) piso o apartamento con servicio de criada y conserje

    service hatch Nventanilla f de servicio

    service history N[of car] historial m de reparaciones

    service industry N(=company) empresa f de servicios

    the service industry or industries — el sector terciario or (de) servicios

    service line N — (Tennis) línea f de servicio or saque

    service provider N — (Internet) proveedor m de (acceso a) Internet, proveedor m de servicios

    service road Nvía f de acceso or de servicio

    service sector N — (Econ) sector m terciario or (de) servicios

    service station Ngasolinera f, estación f de servicio, bencinera f (Chile), grifo m (Peru)

    service wife Nesposa f de un miembro de las fuerzas armadas

    * * *

    I ['sɜːrvəs, 'sɜːvɪs]
    1) u
    a) (duty, work) servicio m
    c) (given by a tool, machine)

    to come into serviceentrar en servicio or en funcionamiento

    2) u c (of professional, tradesman, company) servicio m

    services 1 mile — (BrE) área de servicio a 1 milla

    3) c u ( assistance) servicio m

    my staff are at your servicemis empleados están a sus órdenes or a su entera disposición or a su servicio

    how can I be of service to you? — ¿en qué puedo ayudarlo or servirlo?

    4) c (organization, system) servicio m

    telephone/postal service — servicio telefónico/postal

    the bus/rail service — el servicio de autobuses/trenes

    there's a daily/an hourly service to Boston — hay un servicio diario/un tren (or autobús etc) cada hora a Boston

    5) ( Mil)
    6) u (in shop, restaurant) servicio m
    7) c u (overhaul, maintenance) revisión f, servicio m (AmL), service m (RPl); (before n) <contract, package> de mantenimiento

    service engineer — técnico, -ca m,f de mantenimiento

    8) c ( Relig) oficio m religioso

    wedding serviceceremonia f de boda

    9) c ( in tennis) servicio m, saque m

    first/second service! — primer/segundo saque or servicio!

    to break somebody's service — romper* el servicio de alguien, romperle* el servicio a alguien

    10) c ( dinner service) vajilla f

    II
    1) (overhaul, maintain) \<\<car\>\> hacerle* una revisión or (AmL) un servicio or (RPl) un service a; \<\<machine/appliance\>\> hacerle* el mantenimiento a
    2) ( Fin) \<\<debt/loan\>\> atender* el servicio de (frml)

    English-spanish dictionary > service

  • 87 Bollée, Ernest-Sylvain

    [br]
    b. 19 July 1814 Clefmont (Haute-Marne), France
    d. 11 September 1891 Le Mans, France
    [br]
    French inventor of the rotor-stator wind engine and founder of the Bollée manufacturing industry.
    [br]
    Ernest-Sylvain Bollée was the founder of an extensive dynasty of bellfounders based in Le Mans and in Orléans. He and his three sons, Amédée (1844–1917), Ernest-Sylvain fils (1846–1917) and Auguste (1847-?), were involved in work and patents on steam-and petrol-driven cars, on wind engines and on hydraulic rams. The presence of the Bollées' car industry in Le Mans was a factor in the establishment of the car races that are held there.
    In 1868 Ernest-Sylvain Bollée père took out a patent for a wind engine, which at that time was well established in America and in England. In both these countries, variable-shuttered as well as fixed-blade wind engines were in production and patented, but the Ernest-Sylvain Bollée patent was for a type of wind engine that had not been seen before and is more akin to the water-driven turbine of the Jonval type, with its basic principle being parallel to the "rotor" and "stator". The wind drives through a fixed ring of blades on to a rotating ring that has a slightly greater number of blades. The blades of the fixed ring are curved in the opposite direction to those on the rotating blades and thus the air is directed onto the latter, causing it to rotate at a considerable speed: this is the "rotor". For greater efficiency a cuff of sheet iron can be attached to the "stator", giving a tunnel effect and driving more air at the "rotor". The head of this wind engine is turned to the wind by means of a wind-driven vane mounted in front of the blades. The wind vane adjusts the wind angle to enable the wind engine to run at a constant speed.
    The fact that this wind engine was invented by the owner of a brass foundry, with all the gear trains between the wind vane and the head of the tower being of the highest-quality brass and, therefore, small in scale, lay behind its success. Also, it was of prefabricated construction, so that fixed lengths of cast-iron pillar were delivered, complete with twelve treads of cast-iron staircase fixed to the outside and wrought-iron stays. The drive from the wind engine was taken down the inside of the pillar to pumps at ground level.
    Whilst the wind engines were being built for wealthy owners or communes, the work of the foundry continued. The three sons joined the family firm as partners and produced several steam-driven vehicles. These vehicles were the work of Amédée père and were l'Obéissante (1873); the Autobus (1880–3), of which some were built in Berlin under licence; the tram Bollée-Dalifol (1876); and the private car La Mancelle (1878). Another important line, in parallel with the pumping mechanism required for the wind engines, was the development of hydraulic rams, following the Montgolfier patent. In accordance with French practice, the firm was split three ways when Ernest-Sylvain Bollée père died. Amédée père inherited the car side of the business, but it is due to Amédée fils (1867– 1926) that the principal developments in car manufacture came into being. He developed the petrol-driven car after the impetus given by his grandfather, his father and his uncle Ernest-Sylvain fils. In 1887 he designed a four-stroke single-cylinder engine, although he also used engines designed by others such as Peugeot. He produced two luxurious saloon cars before putting Torpilleur on the road in 1898; this car competed in the Tour de France in 1899. Whilst designing other cars, Amédée's son Léon (1870–1913) developed the Voiturette, in 1896, and then began general manufacture of small cars on factory lines. The firm ceased work after a merger with the English firm of Morris in 1926. Auguste inherited the Eolienne or wind-engine side of the business; however, attracted to the artistic life, he sold out to Ernest Lebert in 1898 and settled in the Paris of the Impressionists. Lebert developed the wind-engine business and retained the basic "stator-rotor" form with a conventional lattice tower. He remained in Le Mans, carrying on the business of the manufacture of wind engines, pumps and hydraulic machinery, describing himself as a "Civil Engineer".
    The hydraulic-ram business fell to Ernest-Sylvain fils and continued to thrive from a solid base of design and production. The foundry in Le Mans is still there but, more importantly, the bell foundry of Dominique Bollée in Saint-Jean-de-Braye in Orléans is still at work casting bells in the old way.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    André Gaucheron and J.Kenneth Major, 1985, The Eolienne Bollée, The International Molinological Society.
    Cénomane (Le Mans), 11, 12 and 13 (1983 and 1984).
    KM

    Biographical history of technology > Bollée, Ernest-Sylvain

  • 88 Cort, Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1740 Lancaster, England
    d. 1800 Hampstead, near London, England
    [br]
    English ironmaster, inventor of the puddling process and grooved rollers for forming iron into bars.
    [br]
    His father was a mason and brickmaker but, anxious to improve himself, Cort set up in London in 1765 as a navy agent, said to have been a profitable business. He recognized that, at that time, the conversion of pig iron to malleable or wrought iron, which was needed in increasing quantities as developments in industry and mechanical engineering gathered pace, presented a bottleneck in the ironmaking process. The finery hearth was still in use, slow and inefficient and requiring the scarce charcoal as fuel. To tackle this problem, Cort gave up his business and acquired a furnace and slitting mill at Fontley, near Fareham in Hampshire. In 1784 he patented his puddling process, by which molten pig iron on the bed of a reverberatory furnace was stirred with an iron bar and, by the action of the flame and the oxygen in the air, the carbon in the pig iron was oxidized, leaving nearly pure iron, which could be forged to remove slag. In this type of furnace, the fuel and the molten iron were separated, so that the cheaper coal could be used as fuel. It was the stirring action with the iron bar that gave the name "puddling" to the process. Others had realized the problem and reached a similar solution, notably the brothers Thomas and George Cranage, but only Cort succeeded in developing a commercially viable process. The laborious hammering of the ball of iron thus produced was much reduced by an invention of the previous year, 1783. This too was patented. The iron was passed between grooved rollers to form it into bars. Cort entered into an agreement with Samuel Jellico to set up an ironworks at Gosport to exploit his inventions. Samuel's father Adam, Deputy Paymaster of the Navy, advanced capital for this venture, Cort having expended much of his own resources in the experimental work that preceded his inventions. However, it transpired that Jellico senior had, unknown to Cort, used public money to advance the capital; the Admiralty acted to recover the money and Cort lost heavily, including the benefits from his patents. Rival ironmasters were quick to pillage the patents. In 1790, and again the following year, Cort offered unsuccessfully to work for the military. Finally, in 1794, at the instigation of the Prime Minister, William Pitt the Younger, Cort was paid a pension of £200 per year in recognition of the value of his improvements in the technology of ironmaking, although this was reduced by deductions to £160. After his death, the pension to his widow was halved, while some of his children received a pittance. Without the advances made by Cort, however, the iron trade could not have met the rapidly increasing demand for iron during the industrial revolution.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1787, A Brief State of Facts Relative to the New Method of Making Bar Iron with Raw Pit Coal and Grooved Rollers (held in the Science Museum Library archive collection).
    Further Reading
    H.W.Dickinson, 1941, "Henry Cort's bicentary", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 21: 31–47 (there are further references to grooved rollers and the puddling process in Vol. 49 of the same periodical (1978), on pp. 153–8).
    R.A.Mott, 1983, Henry Con, the Great Finery Creator of Puddled Iron, Sheffield: Historical Metallurgy Society.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Cort, Henry

  • 89 Darby, Abraham

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1678 near Dudley, Worcestershire, England
    d. 5 May 1717 Madely Court, Coalbrookdale, Shropshire, England
    [br]
    English ironmaster, inventor of the coke smelting of iron ore.
    [br]
    Darby's father, John, was a farmer who also worked a small forge to produce nails and other ironware needed on the farm. He was brought up in the Society of Friends, or Quakers, and this community remained important throughout his personal and working life. Darby was apprenticed to Jonathan Freeth, a malt-mill maker in Birmingham, and on completion of his apprenticeship in 1699 he took up the trade himself in Bristol. Probably in 1704, he visited Holland to study the casting of brass pots and returned to Bristol with some Dutch workers, setting up a brassworks at Baptist Mills in partnership with others. He tried substituting cast iron for brass in his castings, without success at first, but in 1707 he was granted a patent, "A new way of casting iron pots and other pot-bellied ware in sand without loam or clay". However, his business associates were unwilling to risk further funds in the experiments, so he withdrew his share of the capital and moved to Coalbrookdale in Shropshire. There, iron ore, coal, water-power and transport lay close at hand. He took a lease on an old furnace and began experimenting. The shortage and expense of charcoal, and his knowledge of the use of coke in malting, may well have led him to try using coke to smelt iron ore. The furnace was brought into blast in 1709 and records show that in the same year it was regularly producing iron, using coke instead of charcoal. The process seems to have been operating successfully by 1711 in the production of cast-iron pots and kettles, with some pig-iron destined for Bristol. Darby prospered at Coalbrookdale, employing coke smelting with consistent success, and he sought to extend his activities in the neighbourhood and in other parts of the country. However, ill health prevented him from pursuing these ventures with his previous energy. Coke smelting spread slowly in England and the continent of Europe, but without Darby's technological breakthrough the ever-increasing demand for iron for structures and machines during the Industrial Revolution simply could not have been met; it was thus an essential component of the technological progress that was to come.
    Darby's eldest son, Abraham II (1711–63), entered the Coalbrookdale Company partnership in 1734 and largely assumed control of the technical side of managing the furnaces and foundry. He made a number of improvements, notably the installation of a steam engine in 1742 to pump water to an upper level in order to achieve a steady source of water-power to operate the bellows supplying the blast furnaces. When he built the Ketley and Horsehay furnaces in 1755 and 1756, these too were provided with steam engines. Abraham II's son, Abraham III (1750–89), in turn, took over the management of the Coalbrookdale works in 1768 and devoted himself to improving and extending the business. His most notable achievement was the design and construction of the famous Iron Bridge over the river Severn, the world's first iron bridge. The bridge members were cast at Coalbrookdale and the structure was erected during 1779, with a span of 100 ft (30 m) and height above the river of 40 ft (12 m). The bridge still stands, and remains a tribute to the skill and judgement of Darby and his workers.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    A.Raistrick, 1989, Dynasty of Iron Founders, 2nd edn, Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust (the best source for the lives of the Darbys and the work of the company).
    H.R.Schubert, 1957, History of the British Iron and Steel Industry AD 430 to AD 1775, London: Routledge \& Kegan Paul.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Darby, Abraham

  • 90 Riley, James

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1840 Halifax, England
    d. 15 July 1910 Harrogate, England
    [br]
    English steelmaker who promoted the manufacture of low-carbon bulk steel by the open-hearth process for tin plate and shipbuilding; pioneer of nickel steels.
    [br]
    After working as a millwright in Halifax, Riley found employment at the Ormesby Ironworks in Middlesbrough until, in 1869, he became manager of the Askam Ironworks in Cumberland. Three years later, in 1872, he was appointed Blast-furnace Manager at the pioneering Siemens Steel Company's works at Landore, near Swansea in South Wales. Using Spanish ore, he produced the manganese-rich iron (spiegeleisen) required as an additive to make satisfactory steel. Riley was promoted in 1874 to be General Manager at Landore, and he worked with William Siemens to develop the use of the latter's regenerative furnace for the production of open-hearth steel. He persuaded Welsh makers of tin plate to use sheets rolled from lowcarbon (mild) steel instead of from charcoal iron and, partly by publishing some test results, he was instrumental in influencing the Admiralty to build two naval vessels of mild steel, the Mercury and the Iris.
    In 1878 Riley moved north on his appointment as General Manager of the Steel Company of Scotland, a firm closely associated with Charles Tennant that was formed in 1872 to make steel by the Siemens process. Already by 1878, fourteen Siemens melting furnaces had been erected, and in that year 42,000 long tons of ingots were produced at the company's Hallside (Newton) Works, situated 8 km (5 miles) south-east of Glasgow. Under Riley's leadership, steelmaking in open-hearth furnaces was initiated at a second plant situated at Blochairn. Plates and sections for all aspects of shipbuilding, including boilers, formed the main products; the company also supplied the greater part of the steel for the Forth (Railway) Bridge. Riley was associated with technical modifications which improved the performance of steelmaking furnaces using Siemens's principles. He built a gasfired cupola for melting pig-iron, and constructed the first British "universal" plate mill using three-high rolls (Lauth mill).
    At the request of French interests, Riley investigated the properties of steels containing various proportions of nickel; the report that he read before the Iron and Steel Institute in 1889 successfully brought to the notice of potential users the greatly enhanced strength that nickel could impart and its ability to yield alloys possessing substantially lower corrodibility.
    The Steel Company of Scotland paid dividends in the years to 1890, but then came a lean period. In 1895, at the age of 54, Riley moved once more to another employer, becoming General Manager of the Glasgow Iron and Steel Company, which had just laid out a new steelmaking plant at Wishaw, 25 km (15 miles) south-east of Glasgow, where it already had blast furnaces. Still the technical innovator, in 1900 Riley presented an account of his experiences in introducing molten blast-furnace metal as feed for the open-hearth steel furnaces. In the early 1890s it was largely through Riley's efforts that a West of Scotland Board of Conciliation and Arbitration for the Manufactured Steel Trade came into being; he was its first Chairman and then its President.
    In 1899 James Riley resigned from his Scottish employment to move back to his native Yorkshire, where he became his own master by acquiring the small Richmond Ironworks situated at Stockton-on-Tees. Although Riley's 1900 account to the Iron and Steel Institute was the last of the many of which he was author, he continued to contribute to the discussion of papers written by others.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, West of Scotland Iron and Steel Institute 1893–5. Vice-President, Iron and Steel Institute, 1893–1910. Iron and Steel Institute (London) Bessemer Gold Medal 1887.
    Bibliography
    1876, "On steel for shipbuilding as supplied to the Royal Navy", Transactions of the Institute of Naval Architects 17:135–55.
    1884, "On recent improvements in the method of manufacture of open-hearth steel", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 2:43–52 plus plates 27–31.
    1887, "Some investigations as to the effects of different methods of treatment of mild steel in the manufacture of plates", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 1:121–30 (plus sheets II and III and plates XI and XII).
    27 February 1888, "Improvements in basichearth steel making furnaces", British patent no. 2,896.
    27 February 1888, "Improvements in regenerative furnaces for steel-making and analogous operations", British patent no. 2,899.
    1889, "Alloys of nickel and steel", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 1:45–55.
    Further Reading
    A.Slaven, 1986, "James Riley", in Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography 1860–1960, Volume 1: The Staple Industries (ed. A.Slaven and S. Checkland), Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press, 136–8.
    "Men you know", The Bailie (Glasgow) 23 January 1884, series no. 588 (a brief biography, with portrait).
    J.C.Carr and W.Taplin, 1962, History of the British Steel Industry, Harvard University Press (contains an excellent summary of salient events).
    JKA

    Biographical history of technology > Riley, James

  • 91 Talbot, Benjamin

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 19 September 1864 Wellington, Shropshire, England
    d. 16 December 1947 Solberge Hall, Northallerton, Yorkshire, England
    [br]
    Talbot, William Henry Fox English steelmaker and businessman who introduced a technique for producing steel "continuously" in large tilting basic-lined open-hearth furnaces.
    [br]
    After spending some years at his father's Castle Ironworks and at Ebbw Vale Works, Talbot travelled to the USA in 1890 to become Superintendent of the Southern Iron and Steel Company of Chattanooga, Tennessee, where he initiated basic open-hearth steelmaking and a preliminary slag washing to remove silicon. In 1893 he moved to Pennsylvania as Steel Superintendent at the Pencoyd works; there, six years later, he began his "continuous" steelmaking process. Returning to Britain in 1900, Talbot marketed the technique: after ten years it was in successful use in Britain, continental Europe and the USA; it promoted the growth of steel production.
    Meanwhile its originator had joined the Cargo Fleet Iron Company Limited on Teesside, where he was made Managing Director in 1907. Twelve years later he assumed, in addition, the same position in the allied South Durham Steel and Iron Company Limited. While remaining Managing Director, he was appointed Deputy Chairman of both companies in 1925, and Chairman in 1940. The companies he controlled survived the depressed 1920s and 1930s and were significant contributors to British steel output, with a capacity of more than half a million tonnes per year.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, Iron and Steel Institute 1928, and (British) National Federation of Iron and Steel Manufacturers. Iron and Steel Institute (London) Bessemer Gold Medal 1908. Franklin Institute (Philadelphia), Elliott Cresson Gold Medal, and John Scott Medal 1908.
    Bibliography
    1900, "The open-hearth continuous steel process", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 57 (1):33–61.
    1903, "The development of the continuous open-hearth process", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 63(1):57–73.
    1905, "Segregation in steel ingots", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 68(2):204–23. 1913, "The production of sound steel by lateral compression of the ingot whilst its centre is liquid", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 87(1):30–55.
    Further Reading
    G.Boyce, 1986, entry in Dictionary of Business Biography, Vol. V, ed. J.Jeremy, Butterworth.
    W.G.Willis, 1969, South Durham Steel and Iron Co. Ltd, South Durham Steel and Iron Company Ltd (includes a few pages specifically on Talbot, and a portrait photo). J.C.Carr and W.Taplin, 1962, History of the British Steel Industry, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press (mentions Talbot's business attitudes).
    JKA

    Biographical history of technology > Talbot, Benjamin

  • 92 Craufurd, Henry William

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    fl. 1830s
    [br]
    English patentee of the process of coating iron with zinc (galvanized iron).
    [br]
    Although described as Commander of the Royal Navy, other personal details of Craufurd appear to be little known. His process for coating sheet iron with a protective layer of zinc, conveyed as a communication from abroad, was granted a patent in 1837. The details closely resembled, indeed are believed to have been based upon, those developed and patented in France in 1836 by Sorel, who had worked in collaboration with Ledru. There had been French interest in substituting zinc for tin as a coating for iron from 1742 with work by Malouin. Zinc-coated iron saucepans were produced in Rouen in the 1780s, but the work was later abandoned. Craufurd's patent directed that iron objects should be dipped into molten zinc, protected from volatilization by a layer of sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride, NH4Cl which also served as a flux. The quite misleading term "galvanizing" had already been introduced by Sorel for his process. Later its pro-tective properties were discovered to depend for effectiveness on the formation of a thin layer of zinc-iron alloy between the iron sheet and its zinc coating. Craufurd's patent was infringed in England soon after being granted, and was followed by several improvements, particularly those of Edmund Morewood, collaborating with George Rogers in five patents, of which four referred to methods of corrugation. The resulting production of zinc-coated iron implements, together with corrugated iron sheeting quickly adopted for building purposes, developed into an important industry of the West Midlands, Bristol, London and other parts of Britain.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1837, British patent no. 7,355 (coating sheet iron with zinc).
    Further Reading
    H.W.Dickinson, 1943–4, "A study of galvanised and corrugated sheet metal", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 24:27–36 (the best and most concise account).
    JD

    Biographical history of technology > Craufurd, Henry William

  • 93 industria

    English-spanish dictionary > industria

  • 94 Alleyne, Sir John Gay Newton

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 8 September 1820 Barbados
    d. 20 February 1912 Falmouth, Cornwall, England
    [br]
    English iron and steel manufacturer, inventor of the reversing rolling mill.
    [br]
    Alleyne was the heir to a baronetcy created in 1769, which he succeeded to on the death of his father in 1870. He was educated at Harrow and at Bonn University, and from 1843 to 1851 he was Warden at Dulwich College, to the founder of which the family claimed to be related.
    Alleyne's business career began with a short spell in the sugar industry at Barbados, but he returned to England to enter Butterley Iron Works Company, where he remained for many years. He was at first concerned with the production of rolled-iron girders for floors, especially for fireproof flooring, and deck beams for iron ships. The demand for large sections exceeded the capacity of the small mills then in use at Butterley, so Alleyne introduced the welding of T-sections to form the required H-sections.
    In 1861 Alleyne patented a mechanical traverser for moving ingots in front of and behind a rolling mill, enabling one person to manipulate large pieces. In 1870 he introduced his major innovation, the two-high reversing mill, which enabled the metal to be passed back and forth between the rolls until it assumed the required size and shape. The mill had two steam engines, which supplied the motion in opposite directions. These two inventions produced considerable economies in time and effort in handling the metal and enabled much heavier pieces to be processed.
    During Alleyne's regime, the Butterley Company secured some notable contracts, such as the roof of St Paneras Station, London, in 1868, with the then-unparalleled span of 240 ft (73 m). The manufacture and erection of this awe-inspiring structure was a tribute to Alleyne's abilities. In 1872 he masterminded the design and construction of the large railway bridge over the Old Maas at Dordrecht, Holland. Alleyne also devised a method of determining small quantities of phosphorus in iron and steel by means of the spectroscope. In his spare time he was a skilled astronomical observer and metalworker in his private workshop.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1875, "The estimation of small quantities of phosphorus in iron and steel by spectrum analysis", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute: 62.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1912, Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute: 406–8.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Alleyne, Sir John Gay Newton

  • 95 Napier, Robert

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 18 June 1791 Dumbarton, Scotland
    d. 23 June 1876 Shandon, Dunbartonshire, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish shipbuilder one of the greatest shipbuilders of all time, known as the "father" of Clyde shipbuilding.
    [br]
    Educated at Dumbarton Grammar School, Robert Napier had been destined for the Church but persuaded his father to let him serve an apprenticeship as a blacksmith under him. For a while he worked in Edinburgh, but then in 1815 he commenced business in Glasgow, the city that he served for the rest of his life. Initially his workshop was in Camlachie, but it was moved in 1836 to a riverside factory site at Lancefield in the heart of the City and again in 1841 to the Old Shipyard in the Burgh of Govan (then independent of the City of Glasgow). The business expanded through his preparedness to build steam machinery, beginning in 1823 with the engines for the paddle steamer Leven, still to be seen a few hundred metres from Napier's grave in Dumbarton. His name assured owners of quality, and business expanded after two key orders: one in 1836 for the Honourable East India Company; and the second two years later for the Royal Navy, hitherto the preserve of the Royal Dockyards and of the shipbuilders of south-east England. Napier's shipyard and engine shops, then known as Robert Napier and Sons, were to be awarded sixty Admiralty contracts in his lifetime, with a profound influence on ship and engine procurement for the Navy and on foreign governments, which for the first time placed substantial work in the United Kingdom.
    Having had problems with hull subcontractors and also with the installation of machinery in wooden hulls, in 1843 Napier ventured into shipbuilding with the paddle steamer Vanguard, which was built of iron. The following year the Royal Navy took delivery of the iron-hulled Jackall, enabling Napier to secure the contract for the Black Prince, Britain's second ironclad and sister ship to HMS Warrior now preserved at Portsmouth. With so much work in iron Napier instigated studies into metallurgy, and the published work of David Kirkaldy bears witness to his open-handedness in assisting the industry. This service to industry was even more apparent in 1866 when the company laid out the Skelmorlie Measured Mile on the Firth of Clyde for ship testing, a mile still in use by ships of all nations.
    The greatest legacy of Robert Napier was his training of young engineers, shipbuilders and naval architects. Almost every major Scottish shipyard, and some English too, was influenced by him and many of his early foremen left to set up rival establishments along the banks of the River Clyde. His close association with Samuel Cunard led to the setting up of the company now known as the Cunard Line. Napier designed and engined the first four ships, subcontracting the hulls of this historic quartet to other shipbuilders on the river. While he contributed only 2 per cent to the equity of the shipping line, they came back to him for many more vessels, including the magnificent paddle ship Persia, of 1855.
    It is an old tradition on the Clyde that the smokestacks of ships are made by the enginebuilders. The Cunard Line still uses red funnels with black bands, Napier's trademark, in honour of the engineer who set them going.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knight Commander of the Dannebrog (Denmark). President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1864. Honorary Member of the Glasgow Society of Engineers 1869.
    Further Reading
    James Napier, 1904, The Life of Robert Napier, Edinburgh, Blackwood.
    J.M.Halliday, 1980–1, "Robert Napier. The father of Clyde shipbuilding", Transactions of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland 124.
    Fred M.Walker, 1984, Song of the Clyde. A History of Clyde Shipbuilding, Cambridge: PSL.
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Napier, Robert

  • 96 Rowland, Thomas Fitch

    [br]
    b. 15 March 1831 New Haven, Connecticut, USA
    d. 13 December 1907 New York City, USA
    [br]
    American engineer and manufacturer, inventor of off-shore drilling.
    [br]
    The son of a grist miller, Rowland worked in various jobs until 1859 when he established his own business for the construction of wooden and iron steamships and for structural iron works, in Greenpoint, Long Island, New York. In 1860 he founded the Continental Works and during the American Civil War he started manufacturing gun carriages and mortar beds. He fitted out many vessels for the navy, and as a contractor for John Ericsson he built heavily armoured war vessels.
    He continued shipbuilding, but later diversified his business. He devoted great attention to the design of gas-works, constructing innovative storage facilities all over the United States, and he was concerned with the improvement of welding iron and steel plates and other processes in the steel industry. In the late 1860s he also began the manufacture of steam-engines and boilers for use in the new but expanding oil industry. In 1869 he took out a patent for a fixed platform for drilling for oil off-shore up to a depth of 15 m (49 ft). With this idea, just ten years after Edwin Drake's success in on-shore oil drilling in Titusville, Pennsylvania, Rowland pioneered the technology of off-shore drilling for petroleum in which the United States later became the leading nation.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    American Society of Civil Engineers: Director 1871–3, Vice-President 1886–7, Honorary Member 1899.
    Further Reading
    "Thomas Fitch Rowland", Dictionary of American Biography.
    WK

    Biographical history of technology > Rowland, Thomas Fitch

  • 97 cramp

    cramp [kræmp]
    1 noun
    (a) (muscle pain) crampe f;
    to have cramp or American a cramp avoir une crampe;
    I've got cramp in my leg j'ai une crampe à la jambe;
    she dropped out (of the race) with cramp elle a abandonné (la course) parce qu'elle avait une crampe;
    American to have stomach cramp, to have cramps avoir des crampes d'estomac
    (b) Carpentry serre-joint m
    (c) Building industry (cramp iron) crampon m, happe f, clameau m
    (a) (hamper → person) gêner; (→ project) entraver, contrarier;
    familiar to cramp sb's style faire perdre tous ses moyens à qn, priver qn de ses moyens
    (b) Carpentry (secure with a cramp) maintenir à l'aide d'un serre-joint
    (c) Building industry (stones etc) cramponner, agrafer
    ►► Building industry cramp iron crampon m, happe f, clameau m

    Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > cramp

  • 98 Bell, Sir Isaac Lowthian

    [br]
    b. 15 February 1816 Newcastle upon Tyne, England
    d. 20 December 1904 Rounton Grange, Northallerton, Yorkshire, England
    [br]
    English ironworks proprietor, chemical manufacturer and railway director, widely renowned for his scientific pronouncements.
    [br]
    Following an extensive education, in 1835 Bell entered the Tyneside chemical and iron business where his father was a partner; for about five years from 1845 he controlled the ironworks. In 1844, he and his two brothers leased an iron blast-furnace at Wylam on Tyne. In 1850, with partners, he started chemical works at Washington, near Gateshead. A few years later, with his two brothers, he set up the Clarence Ironworks on Teesside. In the 1880s, salt extraction and soda-making were added there; at that time the Bell Brothers' enterprises, including collieries, employed 6,000 people.
    Lowthian Bell was a pioneer in applying thermochemistry to blast-furnace working. Besides his commercial interests, scientific experimentation and international travel, he found time to take a leading part in the promotion of British technical organizations; upon his death he left evidence of a prodigious level of personal activity.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Created baronet 1885. FRS 1875. Légion d'honneur 1878. MP, Hartlepool, 1875–80. President: British Iron Trade Association; Iron and Steel Institute; Institution of Mechanical Engineers; North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers; Institution of Mining Engineers; Society of the Chemical Industry. Iron and Steel Institute Bessemer Gold Medal 1874 (the first recipient). Society of Arts Albert Medal 1895.
    Bibliography
    The first of several books, Bell's Chemical Phenomena of Iron Smelting… (1872), was soon translated into German, French and Swedish. He was the author of more than forty technical articles.
    Further Reading
    1900–1910, Dictionary of National Biography.
    C.Wilson, 1984, article in Dictionary of Business Biography, Vol. I, ed. J.Jeremy, Butterworth (a more discursive account).
    D.Burn, 1940, The Economic History of Steelmaking, 1867–1939: A Study in Competition, Cambridge (2nd edn 1961).
    JKA

    Biographical history of technology > Bell, Sir Isaac Lowthian

  • 99 Thomas, Sidney Gilchrist

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 16 April 1850 London, England
    d. 1 February 1885 Paris, France
    [br]
    English inventor of basic steelmaking.
    [br]
    Thomas was educated at Dulwich College and from the age of 17, for the next twelve years, he made his living as a police-court clerk, although he studied chemistry in his spare time as an evening student at Birkbeck College, London. While there, he heard of the difficulties encountered by the Bessemer steelmaking process, which at that time was limited to using phosphorus-free iron. Any of this element present in the iron was oxidized to phosphoric acid, which would not react with the acidic lining in the converter, with the result that it would remain in the iron and render it too brittle to use. Unfortunately, phosphoric iron ores are more common than those free of this harmful element. Thomas was attracted by the view that a fortune awaited anyone who could solve this problem, and was not discouraged by the failure of several august figures in the industry, including Siemens and Lowthian Bell.
    Thomas's knowledge of chemistry taught him that whereas an acidic lining allowed the phosphorus to remain in the iron, a basic lining would react with it to form part of the slag, which could then be tapped off. His experiments to find a suitable material were conducted in difficult conditions, in his spare time with meagre apparatus. Finally he found that a converter lined with dolomite, a form of limestone, would succeed, and he appealed to his cousin Percy Carlyle Gilchrist, Chemist at the Blaenavon Ironworks in Monmouthshire, for help in carrying out pilot-scale trials. In 1879 he gave up his police-court job to devote himself to the work, and in the same year they patented the Thomas- Gilchrist process. The first licence to use it was granted to Bolckow, Vaughan \& Co. of Middlesborough, and there the first steel was made in a basic Bessemer converter on 4 April 1879. The process was rapidly taken up and spread widely in Europe and beyond and was applied to other furnaces. Thomas made a fortune, but his health did not long allow him to enjoy it, for he died at the early age of 34.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    L.G.Thompson, 1940, Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, an Invention and Its Consequences, London: Faber.
    T.G.Davies, 1978, Blaenavon and Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, Sheffield: Historical Metallurgy Society.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Thomas, Sidney Gilchrist

  • 100 siderúrgica

    siderúrgico,-a adjetivo iron and steel
    sector siderúrgico, iron and steel sector ' siderúrgica' also found in these entries: Spanish: industria English: steel industry - industry

    English-spanish dictionary > siderúrgica

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