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1 through
1. preposition1) durch; (fig.)search/read through something — etwas durchsuchen/durchlesen
live through something — (survive) etwas überleben; (experience) etwas erleben
2) (Amer.): (up to and including) bis [einschließlich]3) (by reason of) durch; infolge von [Vernachlässigung, Einflüssen]it was all through you that we were late — es war nur deine Schuld, dass wir zu spät gekommen sind
2. adverbit happened through no fault of yours — es geschah nicht durch deine Schuld
1)be through with a piece of work/with somebody — mit einer Arbeit fertig/mit jemandem fertig (ugs.) sein
2) (Teleph.)3. attributive adjectivebe through — durch sein (ugs.)
durchgehend [Zug]through coach or carriage — Kurswagen, der ( for nach)
through traffic — Durchgangsverkehr, der
‘no through road’ — "keine Durchfahrt[sstraße]"
through ticket — [alle Umsteigestationen umfassende] Fahrkarte
can I buy a through ticket to Warsaw? — kann ich bis Warschau durchlösen?
* * *[Ɵru:] 1. preposition1) (into from one direction and out of in the other: The water flows through a pipe.) durch3) (from the beginning to the end of: She read through the magazine.) durch4) (because of: He lost his job through his own stupidity.) durch5) (by way of: He got the job through a friend.) durch2. adverb(into and out of; from one side or end to the other; from beginning to end: He went straight/right through.) durch3. adjective1) ((of a bus or train) that goes all the way to one's destination, so that one doesn't have to change (buses or trains): There isn't a through train - you'll have to change.) durchgehend2) (finished: Are you through yet?) fertig•- academic.ru/74787/throughout">throughout4. adverb(in every part: The house was furnished throughout.) ganz und gar- all through- soaked
- wet through
- through and through
- through with* * *[θru:]I. prepwe drove \through the tunnel wir fuhren durch den Tunnelshe looked \through the camera sie sah durch die Kamera2. (in)they took a trip \through Brazil sie machten eine Reise durch Brasilienthey walked \through the store sie gingen durch den Ladenher words kept running \through my head ihre Worte gingen mir ständig durch den Kopfhe went \through the streets er ging durch die Straßenthey took a walk \through the woods sie machten einen Spaziergang im Waldshe works Monday \through Thursday sie arbeitet von Montag bis Donnerstagthe sale is going on \through next week der Ausverkauf geht bis Ende nächster Woche4. (during) währendit rained right \through June es regnete den ganzen Juni überthey drove \through the night sie fuhren durch die Nacht, durch + akk\through fear aus Angstshe couldn't see anything \through the smoke sie konnte durch den Rauch nichts erkennenI can't hear you \through all this noise ich kann dich bei diesem ganzen Lärm nicht verstehen6. (into pieces)he cut \through the string er durchschnitt die Schnurhe shot a hole \through the tin can er schoss ein Loch in die DoseI got my car \through my brother ich habe mein Auto über meinen Bruder bekommenwe sold the bike \through advertising wir haben das Fahrrad über eine Anzeige verkauft\through chance durch Zufallshe looked \through her mail sie sah ihre Post durchhe skimmed \through the essay er überflog den Aufsatzto go \through sth etw durchgehento go \through hell durch die Hölle gehento go \through a tough time/a transition eine harte Zeit/eine Übergangsphase durchmachen10. (to the finish)to be \through sth durch etw akk durch seinto get \through sth [or to make it \through sth] etw durchstehen11. (to be viewed by)we'll put your proposition \through the council wir werden Ihren Vorschlag dem Rat vorlegenthe bill went \through parliament der Gesetzentwurf kam durchs Parlament12. (into)we were cut off halfway \through the conversation unser Gespräch wurde mittendrin unterbrochenshe was halfway \through the article sie war halb durch den Artikel durchI'm not \through the book yet ich bin noch nicht durch das Buch durchfive \through ten is two Zehn durch Fünf gibt Zweiwe're \through ( fam: finished relationship) mit uns ist es aus fam; (finished job) es ist alles erledigtas soon as the scandal was made public he was \through as a politician als der Skandal publik wurde, war er als Politiker erledigtare you \through with that atlas? bist du fertig mit diesem Atlas?▪ to be \through bestanden habenHenry is \through to the final Henry hat sich für das Finale qualifiziert\through coach [or carriage] Kurswagen m\through flight Direktflug m\through station Durchgangsbahnhof m1. (to a destination) durchI battled \through the lesson with the class ich habe die Lektion mit der Klasse durchgepauktto go \through to sth bis zu etw dat durchgehenthe train goes \through to Hamburg der Zug fährt bis nach Hamburg durchgo right \through, I'll be with you in a minute gehen Sie schon mal durch, ich bin gleich bei Ihnen2. (from beginning to end) [ganz] durchPaul saw the project \through to its completion Paul hat sich bis zum Abschluss um das Projekt gekümmertto be halfway \through sth mit etw dat bis zur Häfte durch seinto flick \through sth etw [schnell] durchblätternto get \through to sb TELEC eine Verbindung zu jdm bekommento put sb \through to sb TELEC jdn mit jdm verbindento read sth \through etw [ganz] durchlesento think sth \through etw durchdenken3. (from one side to another) ganz durchthe tree, only half cut \through, would fall as soon as the next storm arrived der Baum war nur halb abgeschnitten und würde beim nächsten Sturm umbrechen4. (from outside to inside) durch und durch, ganz, völligthe pipes have frozen \through die Rohre sind zugefrorencooked \through durchgegartwhen she cut the cake she found that it was not cooked right \through als sie den Kuchen aufschnitt, merkte sie, dass er noch nicht ganz durch warsoaked \through völlig durchnässtthawed \through ganz aufgetautto be wet \through durch und durch nass sein* * *(US) [ɵruː]1. prep1) (place) durchhe couldn't get through the hedge — er konnte nicht durch die Hecke durchkommen or (hin)durchschlüpfen
to listen through the door — durch die (geschlossene) Tür mithören, lauschen
he has come through many hardships —
we're through that stage now — wir sind jetzt durch dieses Stadium hindurch
that happens halfway/three-quarters of the way through the book — das passiert in der Mitte/im letzten Viertel des Buches
2)(time)
all through his life — sein ganzes Leben langhe lives there through the week — er wohnt da während or unter (dial) der Woche or die Woche über
he slept through the film —
3) (US: up to and including) bis (einschließlich)4) (= means, agency) durchor mail (US) —
2. adv(time, place) durchhe's a liar/gentleman through and through — er ist durch und durch verlogen/ein Gentleman
he knew all through what I was getting at — er wusste die ganze Zeit (über), worauf ich hinauswollte
he's through in the other office — er ist (drüben) im anderen Büro
3. adj pred1)(= finished)
to be through with sb/sth — mit jdm/etw fertig sein (inf)I'm through with him — der ist für mich gestorben or erledigt, ich bin fertig mit ihm (all inf)
I'm through with that kind of work —
you're through, Kowalski, fired are you through? — wir sind mit Ihnen fertig, Kowalski, Sie fliegen! sind Sie fertig?
2) (Brit TELEC)to be through (to sb/London) — mit jdm/London verbunden sein
to get through (to sb/London) — zu jdm/nach London durchkommen
you're through, caller — Ihre Verbindung!, Ihr Gespräch!
* * *through [θruː]A präp1. (räumlich) durch, durch … hindurch:2. zwischen … (dat) hindurch, durch3. durch, in (dat) (überall umher):roam (all) through the country das (ganze) Land durchstreifen4. (einen Zeitraum) hindurch, während:all through his life sein ganzes Leben hindurch;the whole summer through den ganzen Sommer lang5. US (von …) bis:Monday through Friday Montag bis einschließlich Freitag6. (bis zum Ende oder ganz) durch:are you through your work? sind Sie mit Ihrer Arbeit durch oder fertig?7. fig durch:I saw through his hypocrisy ich durchschaute seine Heuchelei;get through an examination eine Prüfung bestehen, durch eine Prüfung kommen;have been through sth etwas erlebt haben8. durch, mittels:it was through him that we found out durch ihn kamen wir darauf9. aus, vor (dat), durch, in-, zufolge, wegen:through neglect infolge oder durch NachlässigkeitB adv1. durch:through and through durch und durch, ganz und gar;push a needle through eine Nadel durchstechen;he would not let us through er wollte uns nicht durchlassen;you are through TELa) Br Sie sind verbunden,b) US Ihr Gespräch ist beendet;wet through völlig durchnässt2. (ganz) durch:this train goes through to Boston dieser Zug fährt (durch) bis Boston;the bad weather lasted all through das schlechte Wetter dauerte die ganze Zeit (hindurch) an3. (ganz) durch (von Anfang bis Ende):carry a matter through eine Sache durchführen4. fertig, durch ( beide:with mit):I’m through with him umg mit dem bin ich fertig;we’re through umg mit uns ist es aus;I’m through with it umg ich habe es sattC adj durchgehend, Durchgangs…:through bolt TECH durchgehender Bolzen;“no through road” „Durchfahrt verboten!“;through traffic Durchgangsverkehr m;through train durchgehender Zug;through travel(l)er Transitreisende(r) m/f(m)* * *1. preposition1) durch; (fig.)search/read through something — etwas durchsuchen/durchlesen
live through something — (survive) etwas überleben; (experience) etwas erleben
2) (Amer.): (up to and including) bis [einschließlich]3) (by reason of) durch; infolge von [Vernachlässigung, Einflüssen]2. adverbit was all through you that we were late — es war nur deine Schuld, dass wir zu spät gekommen sind
1)be through with a piece of work/with somebody — mit einer Arbeit fertig/mit jemandem fertig (ugs.) sein
2) (Teleph.)3. attributive adjectivebe through — durch sein (ugs.)
durchgehend [Zug]through coach or carriage — Kurswagen, der ( for nach)
through traffic — Durchgangsverkehr, der
‘no through road’ — "keine Durchfahrt[sstraße]"
through ticket — [alle Umsteigestationen umfassende] Fahrkarte
* * *adj.durch adj.durch... adj.hindurch adj.räumlich adj. -
2 through
[ɵru:] prepwe drove \through the tunnel wir fuhren durch den Tunnel;she looked \through the camera sie sah durch die Kamera2) (in)\through sth durch etw akk;they took a trip \through Brazil sie machten eine Reise durch Brasilien;they walked \through the store sie gingen durch den Laden;her words kept running \through my head ihre Worte gingen mir ständig durch den Kopf;he went \through the streets er ging durch die Straßen;they took a walk \through the woods sie machten einen Spaziergang im Waldshe works Monday \through Thursday sie arbeitet von Montag bis Donnerstag;the sale is going on \through next week der Ausverkauf geht bis Ende nächster Woche4) ( during) während;it rained right \through June es regnete den ganzen Juni über;they drove \through the night sie fuhren nachts\through fear aus Angst;she couldn't see anything \through the smoke sie konnte durch den Rauch nichts erkennen;I can't hear you \through all this noise ich kann dich bei diesem ganzen Lärm nicht verstehen6) ( into pieces)he cut \through the string er durchschnitt die Schnur;he shot a hole \through the tin can er schoss ein Loch in die DoseI got my car \through my brother ich habe mein Auto über meinen Bruder bekommen;we sold the bike \through advertising wir haben das Fahrrad über eine Anzeige verkauft;\through chance durch Zufall8) (at) durch +akk;she looked \through her mail sie sah ihre Post durch;he skimmed \through the essay er überflog den Aufsatz;to go \through sth etw durchgehento go \through hell durch die Hölle gehen;to go \through a hard time/ a transition eine harte Zeit/eine Übergangsphase durchmachen10) ( to the finish)to be \through sth durch etw akk durch sein;to get \through sth [or to make it \through sth] etw durchstehenwe'll put your proposition \through the council wir werden Ihren Vorschlag dem Rat vorlegen;the bill went \through parliament der Gesetzentwurf kam durchs Parlamentwe were cut off halfway \through conversation unser Gespräch wurde mittendrin unterbrochen;she was halfway \through the article sie war halb durch den Artikel durch;I'm not \through the book yet ich bin noch nicht durch das Buch durchfive \through ten is two Zehn durch Fünf gibt Zwei adjwe're \through (fam: finished relationship) mit uns ist es aus ( fam) ( finished job) es ist alles erledigt;as soon as the scandal was made public he was \through as a politician als der Skandal publik wurde, war er als Politiker erledigt;are you \through with that atlas? hast du diesen Atlas durch?to be \through bestanden haben;to be \through to sth zu etw dat vorrücken, eine Prüfung bestehen;Henry is \through to the final Henry hat sich für das Finale qualifiziert\through flight Direktflug m;\through station Durchgangsbahnhof m;1) ( to a destination) durch;I battled \through the lesson with the class ich habe die Lektion mit der Klasse durchgepaukt;to go \through to sth bis zu etw dat durchgehen;the train goes \through to Hamburg der Zug fährt bis nach Hamburg durch;go right \through, I'll be with you in a minute gehen Sie schon mal durch, ich bin gleich bei Ihnen2) ( from beginning to end) [ganz] durch;Paul saw the project \through to its completion Paul hat sich bis zum Abschluss um das Projekt gekümmert;to be halfway \through sth etw halb durch haben;to flick \through sth etw [schnell] durchblättern;to get \through to sb telec eine Verbindung zu jdm bekommen;to put sb \through to sb telec jdn mit jdm verbinden;to read sth \through etw [ganz] durchlesen;to think sth \through etw durchdenken3) ( from one side to another) ganz durch;the tree, only half cut \through, would fall as soon as the next storm arrived der Baum war nur halb abgeschnitten und würde beim nächsten Sturm umbrechen4) ( from outside to inside) durch und durch, ganz, völlig;the pipes have frozen \through die Rohre sind zugefroren;cooked \through durchgegart;when she cut the cake she found that it was not cooked right \through als sie den Kuchen aufschnitt, merkte sie, dass er noch nicht ganz durch war;soaked \through völlig durchnässt;thawed \through ganz aufgetaut;to be wet \through durch und durch nass sein -
3 diminuto
adj.tiny, diminutive, little, minute.* * *► adjetivo1 tiny, minute* * *(f. - diminuta)adj.minute, tiny* * *ADJ tiny, diminutive* * *- ta adjetivo tiny, minute* * *= minute, microscopic, tiny [tinier -comp., tiniest -sup.], poky [pokier -comp., pokiest -sup.], dinky [dinkier -comp., dinkiest -sup.], diminute.Ex. A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.Ex. The 120 mm diameter disc contains more than 20,000 tracks within which sound is represented in the same physical form (by microscopic pits and plateaus) as in an optical video disc.Ex. With an estimated 300,000 'titles' in print it is clear that no bookshop can hope to stock more than a tiny fraction of those titles.Ex. A few were great establishments with ten or more presses, run by masters of discrimination and learning, but many were poky little shops with one, two, or three presses (and eight or ten workmen in all) with masters lacking all but the most rudimentary skills.Ex. Pluto, scorned by astronomers who considered it too dinky and distant, was unceremoniously stripped of its status as a planet Thursday.Ex. Nature is even more wonderful in its diminute products: the smallest and most negligible insects are those that better reveal Nature's art.----* parque diminuto = vest-pocket park.* * *- ta adjetivo tiny, minute* * *= minute, microscopic, tiny [tinier -comp., tiniest -sup.], poky [pokier -comp., pokiest -sup.], dinky [dinkier -comp., dinkiest -sup.], diminute.Ex: A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.
Ex: The 120 mm diameter disc contains more than 20,000 tracks within which sound is represented in the same physical form (by microscopic pits and plateaus) as in an optical video disc.Ex: With an estimated 300,000 'titles' in print it is clear that no bookshop can hope to stock more than a tiny fraction of those titles.Ex: A few were great establishments with ten or more presses, run by masters of discrimination and learning, but many were poky little shops with one, two, or three presses (and eight or ten workmen in all) with masters lacking all but the most rudimentary skills.Ex: Pluto, scorned by astronomers who considered it too dinky and distant, was unceremoniously stripped of its status as a planet Thursday.Ex: Nature is even more wonderful in its diminute products: the smallest and most negligible insects are those that better reveal Nature's art.* parque diminuto = vest-pocket park.* * *diminuto -tatiny, minute, diminutive ( frml)* * *
diminuto◊ -ta adjetivo
tiny, minute
diminuto,-a adjetivo minute, tiny
' diminuto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
diminuta
- minúsculo
English:
diminutive
- dwarf
- itsy-bitsy
- itty-bitty
- miniature
- minute
- tiny
- poky
* * *diminuto, -a adjtiny, minute* * *adj tiny, diminutive* * *diminuto, -ta adj: minute, tiny* * * -
4 microproyector
Ex. A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.* * *Ex: A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.
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5 microscopio
m.microscope.microscopio electrónico electron microscope* * *1 microscope* * *noun m.* * *SM microscope* * *masculino microscopemirar algo al or por el microscopio — to look at something under the microscope
* * *= microscope.Ex. A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.----* microscopio electrónico = electron microscope.* platina de microscopio = microscope slide.* portaobjeto de microscopio = microscope slide.* * *masculino microscopemirar algo al or por el microscopio — to look at something under the microscope
* * *= microscope.Ex: A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.
* microscopio electrónico = electron microscope.* platina de microscopio = microscope slide.* portaobjeto de microscopio = microscope slide.* * *microscopemirar algo al or por el microscopio to look at sth under the microscopeCompuesto:electron microscope* * *
microscopio sustantivo masculino
microscope;
mirar algo al or por el microscopio to look at sth under the microscope
microscopio sustantivo masculino microscope
' microscopio' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
platina
English:
microscope
- slide
- microscopic
* * *microscopio nmmicroscopemicroscopio electrónico electron microscope* * *m microscope* * *microscopio nm: microscope* * *microscopio n microscope -
6 platina de microscopio
(n.) = microscope slideEx. A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.* * *(n.) = microscope slideEx: A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.
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7 portaobjeto de microscopio
(n.) = microscope slideEx. A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.* * *(n.) = microscope slideEx: A microscope slide is a slide designed for holding a minute object to be viewed through a microscope or by a microprojector.
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8 Ducos du Hauron, Arthur-Louis
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1837 Langon, Bordeaux, Franced. 19 August 1920 Agen, France[br]French scientist and pioneer of colour photography.[br]The son of a tax collector, Ducos du Hauron began researches into colour photography soon after the publication of Clerk Maxwell's experiment in 1861. In a communication sent in 1862 for presentation at the Académie des Sciences, but which was never read, he outlined a number of methods for photography of colours. Subsequently, in his book Les Couleurs en photographie, published in 1869, he outlined most of the principles of additive and subtractive colour photography that were later actually used. He covered additive processes, developed from Clerk Maxwell's demonstrations, and subtractive processes which could yield prints. At the time, the photographic materials available prevented the processes from being employed effectively. The design of his Chromoscope, in which transparent reflectors could be used to superimpose three additive images, was sound, however, and formed the basis of a number of later devices. He also proposed an additive system based on the use of a screen of fine red, yellow and blue lines, through which the photograph was taken and viewed. The lines blended additively when seen from a certain distance. Many years later, in 1907, Ducos du Hauron was to use this principle in an early commercial screen-plate process, Omnicolore. With his brother Alcide, he published a further work in 1878, Photographie des Couleurs, which described some more-practical subtractive processes. A few prints made at this time still survive and they are remarkably good for the period. In a French patent of 1895 he described yet another method for colour photography. His "polyfolium chromodialytique" involved a multiple-layer package of separate red-, green-and blue-sensitive materials and filters, which with a single exposure would analyse the scene in terms of the three primary colours. The individual layers would be separated for subsequent processing and printing. In a refined form, this is the principle behind modern colour films. In 1891 he patented and demonstrated the anaglyph method of stereoscopy, using superimposed red and green left and right eye images viewed through green and red filters. Ducos du Hauron's remarkable achievement was to propose theories of virtually all the basic methods of colour photography at a time when photographic materials were not adequate for the purpose of proving them correct. For his work on colour photography he was awarded the Progress Medal of the Royal Photographic Society in 1900, but despite his major contributions to colour photography he remained in poverty for much of his later life.[br]Further ReadingB.Coe, 1978, Colour Photography: The First Hundred Years, London. J.S.Friedman, 1944, History of Colour Photography, Boston. E.J.Wall, 1925, The History of Three-Colour Photography, Boston. See also Cros, Charles.BCBiographical history of technology > Ducos du Hauron, Arthur-Louis
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9 Demenÿ, Georges
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1850 Douai, France d. 1917[br]French chronophotographer.[br]As a young man Georges Demenÿ was a pioneer of physical education in France, and this led him to contact the physiologist Professor Marey in 1880. Marey had made a special study of animal movement, and Demenÿ hoped to work with him on research into physiological problems related to gymnastics. He joined Marey the following year, and when in 1882 the Physiological Station was set up near Paris to develop sequence photography for the study of movement. Demenÿ was made Head of the laboratory. He worked with the multiple-image fixed-plate cameras, and was chiefly responsible for the analysis of the records, having considerable mathematical and graphical ability. He also appeared as the subject in a number of the sequences. When in 1888 Marey began the development of a film camera, Demenÿ was involved in its design and operation. He became interested in the possibility of using animated sequence photographs as an aid to teaching of the deaf. He made close-up records of himself speaking short phrases, "Je vous aime" and "Vive la France" for example, which were published in such journals as Paris Photographe and La Nature in 1891 and 1892. To present these in motion, he devised the Phonoscope, which he patented on 3 March 1892. The series of photographs were mounted around the circumference of a disc and viewed through a counter-rotating slotted disc. The moving images could be viewed directly, or projected onto a screen. La Nature reported tests he had made in which deaf lip readers could interpret accurately what was being said. On 20 December 1892 Demenÿ formed a company, Société Générale du Phonoscope, to exploit his invention, hoping that "speaking portraits" might replace family-album pictures. This commercial activity led to a rift between Marey and Demenÿ in July 1893. Deprived of access to the film cameras, Demenÿ developed designs of his own, patenting new camera models in France on 10 October 1893 and 27 July 1894. The design covered by the latter had been included in English and German patents filed in December 1893, and was to be of some significance in the early development of cinematography. It was for an intermittent movement of the film, which used an eccentrically mounted blade or roller that, as it rotated, bore on the film, pulling down the length of one frame. As the blade moved away, the film loop so formed was taken up by the rotation of the take-up reel. This "beater" movement was employed extensively in the early years of cinematography, being effective yet inexpensive. It was first employed in the Chronophotographe apparatus marketed by Gaumont, to whom Demenÿ had licensed the patent rights, from the autumn of 1896. Demenÿ's work provided a link between the scientific purposes of sequence photography— chronophotography—and the introduction of commercial cinematography.[br]Further ReadingJ.Deslandes, 1966, Histoire comparée du cinéma, Vol. I, Paris. B.Coe, 1992, Muybridge and the Chronophotographers, London.BC -
10 Anschütz, Ottomar
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1846 Lissa, Prussia (now Leszno, Poland) d. 1907[br]German photographer, chronophotographer ana inventor.[br]The son of a commercial photographer, Anschütz entered the business in 1868 and developed an interest in the process of instantaneous photography. The process was very difficult with the contemporary wet-plate process, but with the introduction of the much faster dry plates in the late 1870s he was able to make progress. Anschütz designed a focal plane shutter capable of operating at speeds up to 1/1000 of a second in 1883, and patented his design in 1888. it involved a vertically moving fabric roller-blind that worked at a fixed tension but had a slit the width of which could be adjusted to alter the exposure time. This design was adopted by C.P.Goerz, who from 1890 manufactures a number of cameras that incorporated it.Anschütz's action pictures of flying birds and animals attracted the attention of the Prussian authorities, and in 1886 the Chamber of Deputies authorized financial support for him to continue his work, which had started at the Hanover Military Institute in October 1885. Inspired by the work of Eadweard Muybridge in America, Anschütz had set up rows of cameras whose focal-plane shutters were released in sequence by electromagnets, taking twenty-four pictures in about three-quarters of a second. He made a large number of studies of the actions of people, animals and birds, and at the Krupp artillery range at Meppen, near Essen, he recorded shells in flight. His pictures were reproduced, and favourably commented upon, in scientific and photographic journals.To bring the pictures to the public, in 1887 he created the Electro-Tachyscope. The sequence negatives were printed as 90 x 120 mm transparencies and fixed around the circumference of a large steel disc. This was rotated in front of a spirally wound Geissler tube, which produced a momentary brilliant flash of light when a high voltage from an induction coil was applied to it, triggered by contacts on the steel disc. The flash duration, about 1/1000 of a second, was so short that it "froze" each picture as it passed the tube. The pictures succeeded each other at intervals of about 1/30 of a second, and the observer saw an apparently continuously lit moving picture. The Electro-Tachyscope was shown publicly in Berlin at the Kulturministerium from 19 to 21 March 1887; subsequently Siemens \& Halske manufactured 100 machines, which were shown throughout Europe and America in the early 1890s. From 1891 his pictures were available for the home in the form of the Tachyscope viewer, which used the principle of the zoetrope: sequence photographs were printed on long strips of thin card, perforated with narrow slots between the pictures. Placed around the circumference of a shallow cylinder and rotated, the pictures could be seen in life-like movement when viewed through the slots.In November 1894 Anschütz displayed a projector using two picture discs with twelve images each, which through a form of Maltese cross movement were rotated intermittently and alternately while a rotating shutter allowed each picture to blend with the next so that no flicker occurred. The first public shows, given in Berlin, were on a screen 6×8 m (20×26 ft) in size. From 22 February 1895 they were shown regularly to audiences of 300 in a building on the Leipzigstrasse; they were the first projected motion pictures seen in Germany.[br]Further ReadingJ.Deslandes, 1966, Histoire comparée du cinéma, Vol. I, Paris. B.Coe, 1992, Muybridge and the Chronophotographers, London.BC -
11 виден
•These lines do not show on the diagram.
•Several of these features are visible (or seen) in Fig. 18.3.
•Another smoke ring is evident near the galactic centre.
II•The secondary radiation emitted is viewed through a collimator at an angle of 90° to the incident beam.
* * *Виден -- visible, seen; apparent, in evidence, noticeableThe accumulator in the foreground is mounted on the solenoid manifold with the two solenoid valves also visible.The instrumentation console is seen in the background.The results portray a sequence of events that is also in evidence for the other Prandtl numbers.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > виден
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12 виден
•These lines do not show on the diagram.
•Several of these features are visible (or seen) in Fig. 18.3.
•Another smoke ring is evident near the galactic centre.
II•The secondary radiation emitted is viewed through a collimator at an angle of 90° to the incident beam.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > виден
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13 наблюдать за
•During rocket firing the test stands can be viewed through a periscope.
•The mine fans can be watched (or observed) from the central power station.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > наблюдать за
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14 рассматривать в микроскоп
•If a colloidal dispersion is viewed through a microscope,...
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > рассматривать в микроскоп
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15 с увеличением в ... раз
•Facets on the minute single crystals are clearly visible when viewed through a microscope of at least 30 power.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > с увеличением в ... раз
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16 peep show
[`pi:pʃəʊ] сущ. разг.1. кинетоско́пA peep show or peepshow is an exhibition of pictures, objects or people viewed through a small hole or magnifying glass.
2. подсматривание (за голыми женщинами и т.п.)3. варьете́ с голыми девушками или стриптизомАнгло-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > peep show
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17 peep-show
[`pi:pʃəʊ] сущ. разг.1. кинетоско́пA peep show or peepshow is an exhibition of pictures, objects or people viewed through a small hole or magnifying glass.
2. подсматривание (за голыми женщинами и т.п.)3. варьете́ с голыми девушками или стриптизомАнгло-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > peep-show
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18 peepshow
[`pi:pʃəʊ] сущ. разг.1. кинетоско́пA peep show or peepshow is an exhibition of pictures, objects or people viewed through a small hole or magnifying glass.
2. подсматривание (за голыми женщинами и т.п.)3. варьете́ с голыми девушками или стриптизомАнгло-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > peepshow
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19 наблюдать
•Excessive vibration was noted in the suction line.
* * *Наблюдать за - to view, to watch, to observeThe flow pattern at the back-step can be viewed through an acrylic window.The gates and valves can be watched from the control room.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > наблюдать
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20 наблюдать за
•During rocket firing the test stands can be viewed through a periscope.
•The mine fans can be watched (or observed) from the central power station.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > наблюдать за
См. также в других словарях:
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