-
101 entrata
f entrancein parcheggio entrance, way inin un paese entryinformation technology input( guadagno) earningsentrata libera admission free* * *entrata s.f.1 ( l'entrare) entrance, entry, admission: entrata libera, admission (o admittance) free; l'entrata è dalle cinque alle otto, admission from five to eight; (teatr.) biglietto di entrata, admission ticket; lo applaudirono fin dall'entrata in scena, they were already applauding him on his first entrance; entrata in carica, entrance into office; fare un'entrata trionfale, to make a triumphant entry // l'entrata fallosa del terzino l'ha atterrato, the fullback's foul takle brought him down2 ( ingresso) entrance, entry: entrata principale, front (o main) entrance; entrata sul retro, back entrance; l'entrata della villa era maestosa, the entrance to the villa was majestic (o imposing); un lungo viale andava dal cancello all'entrata del palazzo, a long avenue led from the gate to the palace entrance; all' entrata del cinema distribuivano volantini, they were handing out leaflets at the entrance to the cinema; ci troveremo alle tre davanti all'entrata, we'll meet at three in front of the entrance3 ( lemma) entry4 (spec. pl.) ( reddito) income; ( guadagno) earning; ( proventi) revenue, receipts, takings: (amm.) entrate e uscite, debit and credit; entrate e uscite di cassa, cash receipts and payments // (econ.): entrate pubbliche, public (o government) revenue (o income); entrate straordinarie, additional (o extraordinary) receipts; entrate delle partite invisibili, invisible earnings; entrate dello stato, (government) revenue; entrate doganali, customs receipts; entrate erariali, revenue receipts; entrate e spese in bilancio, revenue and expenditure; entrate in natura, income in kind; entrate lorde, gross receipts; entrate nette, net receipts; entrate previste, estimated revenue5 (miner.) adit.* * *[en'trata]sostantivo femminile1) (ingresso) entrance (di to)"entrata" — "entrance", "way in" BE
2) (anticamera) hall, entry3) (l'entrare) entry, entrance; (di veicoli, merci) entry; (ammissione) admission"entrata libera" — "free admission o entry"
in entrata — [ merci] inward-bound
4) teatr. entrance5) (reddito)le -e — income, revenues; amm. receipts
6) sport tackle•entrata in carica — entrance into office, appointment
* * *entrata/en'trata/sostantivo f.2 (anticamera) hall, entry3 (l'entrare) entry, entrance; (di veicoli, merci) entry; (ammissione) admission; "entrata libera" "free admission o entry"; in entrata [ merci] inward-bound4 teatr. entrance6 sport tackleentrata in carica entrance into office, appointment; entrata in guerra entry into the war; entrata principale main entrance; entrata di servizio service entrance; entrata in vigore coming into effect. -
102 irregular
adjective2) (in duration, order, etc.) unregelmäßig3) (abnormal) sonderbar; eigenartig4) (not symmetrical) unregelmäßig; uneben [Oberfläche, Gelände]5) (Ling.) unregelmäßig* * *[i'reɡjulə]1) (not happening etc regularly: His attendance at classes was irregular.) unregelmäßig2) (not formed smoothly or evenly: irregular handwriting.) unregelmäßig3) (contrary to rules.) regellos•- academic.ru/39389/irregularly">irregularly- irregularity* * *ir·regu·lar[ɪˈregjələʳ, AM -ɚ]I. adj1. (unsymmetrical) arrangement, pattern unregelmäßig, ungleichmäßig, uneinheitlich\irregular shape ungleichförmige Gestalt\irregular surface/terrain unebene Oberfläche/unebenes Gelände\irregular teeth unregelmäßige Zähne\irregular verbs unregelmäßige Verben2. (intermittent) unregelmäßig, ungleichmäßigat \irregular intervals in unregelmäßigen Abständen\irregular meals/payments unregelmäßige Mahlzeiten/Zahlungen\irregular pulse [or heartbeat] unregelmäßiger [o ungleichmäßiger] Herzschlag3. ( form: failing to accord) behaviour, conduct regelwidrig, ordnungswidrig, vorschriftswidrig form; document nicht ordnungsmäßig form\irregular action ungesetzliche Aktion\irregular banknote ungültige Banknote\irregular economy amtlich nicht erfasste Wirtschaft, Schattenwirtschaft f fig\irregular habits ungeregelte Lebensweise\irregular method unsystematische Methodik\irregular proceedings an Formfehlern leidendes Verfahren\irregular shirt Hemd nt mit Fabrikationsfehlern; (peculiar) customs, practices sonderbar, eigenartig, absonderlichmost \irregular höchst sonderbar; (improper) ungehörig, ungebührlich\irregular dealings zwielichtige Geschäfte\irregular private life ausschweifendes Privatleben\irregular troops irreguläre Truppen* * *[ɪ'regjʊlə(r)]1. adjthe windows are deliberately irregular — die Fenster sind bewusst uneinheitlich
to keep irregular hours — ein ungeregeltes Leben führen, keine festen Zeiten haben
he's been a bit irregular recently (inf) — er hat in letzter Zeit ziemlich unregelmäßigen Stuhlgang
2) (= not conforming) unstatthaft; (= contrary to rules) unvorschriftsmäßig; (= contrary to law) ungesetzlich; marriage ungültig; behaviour ungebührlich, ungehörigit's a most irregular request, but... — das ist ein höchst unübliches Ersuchen, aber...
because of irregular procedures, the contract was not valid — wegen einiger Formfehler war der Vertrag ungültig
4) troops irregulär2. n (MIL)Irreguläre(r) mf* * *irregular [ıˈreɡjʊlə(r)]A adj (adv irregularly)1. unregelmäßig:irregular teeth unregelmäßige Zähnec) ungeordnet, unsystematischd) unpünktlich:at irregular intervals in unregelmäßigen Abständen2. uneben (Gelände etc)3. a) regelwidrigb) vorschriftswidrig, nicht ordnungsgemäß (Dokumente etc)c) ungesetzlich, ungültig (Vorgehen etc)4. a) ungeregelt, unordentlich (Leben etc)b) ungehörig, ungebührlich (Benehmen etc)c) unstet, ausschweifend (Person)5. nicht regulär, nicht voll gültig oder anerkannt:an irregular physician kein richtiger Arzt, ein Kurpfuscher6. LING unregelmäßig (Verb etc)7. MIL irregulärB s MILa) Irreguläre(r) m, irregulärer Soldatb) pl irreguläre Truppe(n pl)* * *adjective1) unkorrekt [Verhalten, Handlung usw.]2) (in duration, order, etc.) unregelmäßig3) (abnormal) sonderbar; eigenartig4) (not symmetrical) unregelmäßig; uneben [Oberfläche, Gelände]5) (Ling.) unregelmäßig* * *adj.irregulär adj.ordnungswidrig adj.ungeregelt adj.ungleich adj.unregelmäßig adj. -
103 trap
1. noun1) (lit. or fig.) Falle, dieset a trap for an animal — eine Falle für ein Tier legen od. [auf]stellen
set a trap for somebody — (fig.) jemandem eine Falle stellen
fall into a/somebody's trap — (fig.) in die/jemandem in die Falle gehen
3) (carriage) (leichter zweirädriger) Einspänner2. transitive verb,- pp-1) (catch) [in od. mit einer Falle] fangen [Tier]; (fig.) in eine Falle locken [Person]be trapped — (fig.) in eine Falle gehen/in der Falle sitzen
be trapped in a cave/by the tide — in einer Höhle festsitzen/von der Flut abgeschnitten sein
she trapped him into contradicting himself — sie brachte ihn durch eine List dazu, sich zu widersprechen
2) (confine) einschließen; (immobilize) einklemmen [Person, Körperteil]trap one's finger/foot — sich (Dat.) den Finger/Fuß einklemmen
3) (entangle) verstricken* * *[træp] 1. noun2) (a plan or trick for taking a person by surprise: She led him into a trap; He fell straight into the trap.) die Falle2. verb(to catch in a trap or by a trick: He lives by trapping animals and selling their fur; She trapped him into admitting that he liked her.) fangen- academic.ru/76335/trapper">trapper- trap-door* * *trap1[træp]I. nto set a \trap eine Falle aufstellenoh, shut your \trap! ach, halt's Maul! derbto keep one's \trap shut die Schnauze halten derbII. vt<- pp->1. (snare)▪ to \trap an animal ein Tier [in einer Falle] fangen▪ to be \trapped eingeschlossen seinto feel \trapped sich akk gefangen fühlenJack left the job because he was beginning to feel \trapped Jack kündigte, weil er begann sich eingeengt zu fühlen3. (trick)▪ to \trap sb jdn in die Falle locken▪ to \trap sb into sth/doing sth jdn dazu bringen, etw zu tun4. (catch and hold)to \trap the ball SPORT den Ball stoppento \trap one's finger/foot in the door sich dat den Finger/Fuß in der Tür einklemmento \trap a nerve sich dat einen Nerv einklemmentrap2[træp]* * *[trp]1. n1) (for animal fig) Falle fbe careful of this question, there is a trap in it — pass bei dieser Frage auf, da ist ein Haken dabei
the lawyer had caught him in a trap — er war dem Rechtsanwalt in die Falle gegangen
to fall into the trap of doing sth — den Fehler begehen, etw zu tun
4) (Brit: vehicle) zweirädriger Pferdewagen5) Falltür f; (THEAT) Versenkung fshut your trap! — (halt die) Klappe! (inf), halt die Fresse (vulg) or Schnauze
keep your trap shut about this — darüber hältst du aber die Klappe (inf), halt ja die Schnauze! (inf)
2. vt1) animal (mit einer Falle) fangenhe realized he was trapped — er merkte, dass er in der Falle saß
to trap sb into saying sth —
I was trapped into saying I would organize the party — ich hatte mich darauf eingelassen, die Party zu organisieren
she trapped him into marriage — sie hat ihn geködert (inf), sie hat ihn ins Netz gelockt
3) (= block off, leave no way of escape) in die Enge treibenthe ship was trapped in the port by the storm — das Schiff saß wegen des Sturms im Hafen fest
to be trapped in the snow — im Schnee festsitzen
the soldiers found themselves trapped at the end of the gully — am Ende des Hohlweges stellten die Soldaten fest, dass sie in der Falle saßen
he feels trapped in his marriage —
4) (= catch) ball stoppento trap one's finger/one's foot in the door — sich (dat) den Finger/Fuß in der Tür einklemmen
to trap a nerve — sich (dat) einen Nerv (ein)klemmen
5) gas, liquid stauenpools of water lay trapped among the rocks as the tide receded — als die Flut zurückging, blieben Wasserpfützen zwischen den Felsen zurück
3. vi(trapper) Trapper sein* * *trap1 [træp]A s1. JAGD Falle f (auch fig):a) eine Falle für ein Tier aufstellen,b) jemandem eine Falle stellen;set traps for mice Mäusefallen aufstellen;2. CHEM (Ab)Scheider m3. TECHa) Auffangvorrichtung fb) Dampf-, Wasserverschluss mc) (Sperr)Klappe fd) Traps m, Geruchsverschluss m (im Klosett)4. ELEK (Funk)Sperrkreis m5. pl MUS sl Schießbude f (Schlagzeug)10. Br ein leichter zweirädriger Einspänner11. sl Schnauze f, Fresse f:keep one’s trap shut die Schnauze haltenB v/t2. einschließen:be trapped under an avalanche unter einer Lawine begraben sein3. fig in eine Falle locken:they trapped him into admitting that … er ging ihnen auf den Leim und gab zu, dass …4. Fallen aufstellen in (dat)5. TECHb) Gas etc abfangenC v/i Fallen aufstellentrap2 [træp] s2. pl umga) Siebensachen plb) Gepäck ntrap3 [træp] s GEOL Trapp m (treppenartig übereinanderliegender Basalt)* * *1. noun1) (lit. or fig.) Falle, dieset a trap for an animal — eine Falle für ein Tier legen od. [auf]stellen
set a trap for somebody — (fig.) jemandem eine Falle stellen
fall into a/somebody's trap — (fig.) in die/jemandem in die Falle gehen
3) (carriage) (leichter zweirädriger) Einspänner2. transitive verb,- pp-1) (catch) [in od. mit einer Falle] fangen [Tier]; (fig.) in eine Falle locken [Person]be trapped — (fig.) in eine Falle gehen/in der Falle sitzen
be trapped in a cave/by the tide — in einer Höhle festsitzen/von der Flut abgeschnitten sein
she trapped him into contradicting himself — sie brachte ihn durch eine List dazu, sich zu widersprechen
2) (confine) einschließen; (immobilize) einklemmen [Person, Körperteil]trap one's finger/foot — sich (Dat.) den Finger/Fuß einklemmen
3) (entangle) verstricken* * *v.einfangen v.fangen v.(§ p.,pp.: fing, gefangen)verschließen v. n.Falle -n f.Fallgrube f.Fallstrick m. -
104 geben
ge·ben <gibt, gab, gegeben> [ʼge:bn̩]vt1) ( reichen)jdm etw \geben to give sb sth, to give sth to sb;gibst du mir bitte mal das Brot? could you give [or hand] me the bread, please? [or pass];ich würde alles darum \geben, ihn noch einmal zu sehen I would give anything to see him again; ( beim Kartenspiel) to deal;du hast mir 3 Joker gegeben you've dealt me 3 jokers;wer gibt jetzt? whose turn is it to deal?2) ( schenken) to give [as a present]3) ( mitteilen)er ließ sich die Speisekarte \geben he asked for the menujdm etw \geben to get sb sth;( bezahlen)was darf ich Ihnen \geben? what can I get you?;darf ich Ihnen sonst noch was \geben? can I get you anything else?;\geben Sie mir bitte fünf Brötchen I'd like five bread rolls please;ich gebe Ihnen 500 Euro für das Bild I'll give you [or let you have] 500 euros for the picture;Preisnachlass/Skonto \geben to give a reduction/cash discount5) ( spenden)etw gibt jdm etw sth gives [sb] sth;6) ( verleihen)einen Preis \geben to award a prize;Titel/Namen \geben to give a title/name;diese erfreuliche Nachricht gab ihr neue Zuversicht this welcome piece of news gave her new confidence;der Gedanke an eine Rettung gab uns immer wieder Kraft the thought of being rescued always gave us strengthjdm jdn \geben to put sb through to sb;\geben Sie mir bitte Frau Schmidt can I speak to Mrs Smith, please8) ( stellen)jdm etw \geben to give [or set] sb sth;9) ( abhalten)etw \geben to give sth;der Minister wird eine Pressekonferenz \geben the minister will give [or hold] a press conference10) (bieten, gewähren, zukommen lassen)jd gibt [jdm] etw sb gives [or allows] [sb] sth;jdm einen Namen \geben to name a person;jdm ein Interview \geben to grant sb an interview;jdm eine Verwarnung \geben to give sb a warning; sport to book sb;der Schiedsrichter gab dem Spieler eine Verwarnung wegen Foulspiels the referee booked the player for a foul;ein Theaterstück \geben to put on a playein Fest \geben to give a partysein Auto in [die] Reparatur \geben to have one's car repaired;sein Kind in ein Internat \geben to send one's child to boarding school;dürfen wir während unseres Urlaubs unsere Katze zu euch \geben? can you take our cat while we're away?Wein in die Soße \geben to add wine to the sauceetw \geben to produce sth;sieben mal sieben gibt neunundvierzig seven times seven equals forty-nine, seven sevens are forty-nine;Rotwein gibt Flecken red wine stains [or leaves stains];keinen Sinn \geben that makes no sense;ein Wort gab das andere one word led to anotheretw \geben to teach sth;Nachhilfestunden \geben to give private tuition;Unterricht \geben to teach;jdm etw zu tun \geben to give sb sth to doer gab wenig Worte von sich he said very little;WENDUNGEN:jdm etw zu tun \geben to give sb sth to do;das wird ihm für die nächsten Monate zu tun geben! that'll keep him busy for the next few months!;das sollte der Firmenleitung zu denken \geben that should give the company management something to think about!;jdm ist etw nicht gegeben sth is not given to sb;nicht allen ist es gegeben, einem solchen Ereignis beizuwohnen not everybody gets the opportunity to be present at such an event;es war ihm nicht gegeben, seine Heimatstadt wiederzusehen he was not destined to see his home town again;ich gebe nicht viel auf die Gerüchte I don't pay much attention to rumours;gib's ihm! let him have it!vijetzt hast du genug gemischt, gib endlich! you've shuffled enough now, just deal them!du gibst! it's your serve1) ( gereicht werden)es gibt etw there is sth;hoffentlich gibt es bald was zu essen! I hope there's something to eat soon!;was gibt es zum Frühstück? what's for breakfast?;freitags gibt es bei uns immer Fisch we always have fish on Fridays2) ( eintreten)es gibt etw there is sth;heute gibt es noch Regen it'll rain today;hat es sonst noch etwas gegeben, als ich weg war? has anything else happened while I was away;was wird das noch geben? where will it all lead to?;gleich gibt es was ( fam) there's going to be trouble3) (existieren, passieren)etw/ jdn gibt es there's sth/sb;das gibt es nicht! ( fam) no way!, nothing doing!, forget it!;das gibt es nicht, dass du einfach meinen Wagen nimmst there's no way that you're taking [or using] my car;ein Bär mit zwei Köpfen? das gibt es nicht! a bear with two heads? there's no such thing!;das gibt es doch nicht! ( fam) that's unbelievable;so was gibt es bei uns nicht! that's not on [as far as we're concerned]!;was es nicht alles gibt! ( fam) well, I'll be damned! ( fam), stone me! (sl), stone the crows ( Brit) (sl)WENDUNGEN:da gibt es nichts! ( fam) there are no two ways about it;seine Lieder sind einmalig, da gibt es nichts! there's no doubt about it, his songs are uniquevr1) ( nachlassen)etw gibt sich sth eases [off] [or lets up];das gibt sich it will sort itself out;die Kopfschmerzen werden sich \geben your headache will go off;diese Aufsässigkeit wird sich bald von ganz alleine \geben this rebelliousness will soon die down of its own accord; ( sich erledigen) to sort itself out;manches gibt sich von selbst wieder some things sort themselves out;das wird sich schon \geben it will all work out [for the best]2) (sich benehmen, aufführen)sich als etw \geben to behave in a certain way;sie gab sich sehr überrascht she acted very surprised;nach außen gab er sich heiter outwardly he behaved cheerfully;sie gibt sich, wie sie ist she doesn't try to be anything she isn't;sich von der besten Seite \geben to show one's best side3) (sich finden, ergeben)etw gibt sich sth arises;es wird sich schon noch eine Gelegenheit \geben there's sure to be another opportunity -
105 East Timor
Colony of Portugal from the 16th century to December 1975, with an area of 40,000 square kilometers (18,989 square miles). East Timor is located on the eastern portion of the island of Timor in the Indonesian archipelago. From 1975 to August 1999, when it was forcibly annexed and occupied by Indonesia, until May 2002, when it achieved full independence, East Timor was, in effect, a ward of the United Nations.In the 16th century, the Portuguese established trading posts on the island, but for centuries few Portuguese settled there, and the "colony" remained isolated and neglected. After the Dutch won control of Indonesia, there was a territorial dispute with Portugal as to who "owned" what on the island of Timor. In 1859, this question was decided as the Dutch and Portuguese governments formally divided the island into a Dutch portion (west) and the Portuguese colony (east) and established the frontier. From the late 19th century to World War I, Portugal consolidated its control of East Timor by means of military campaigns against the Timorese tribes. In addition to colonial officials, a few Portuguese missionaries and merchants occupied East Timor, but few Portuguese ever settled there.East Timor's geographic location close to the north coast of Australia and its sharing of one island in the Dutch colony catapulted it into world affairs early in World War II. To forestall a Japanese invasion of Timor, a joint Dutch-Australian expedition landed on 17 December 1941; the Portuguese authorities neither resisted nor cooperated. In February 1942, when Japanese troops landed in Timor, the small allied force fled to the hills and later was evacuated to Australia. Japan occupied all of Timor and the remainder of the Dutch East Indies until Japan's surrender in September 1945. Portugal soon reassumed control.After the Revolution of 25 April 1974, East Timorese nationalist parties hoped for rapid decolonization and independence with Lisbon's cooperation. But on 28 November 1975, before a preoccupied Portugal could work out a formal transfer of power, the Revolutionary Front of Independent East Timor (FRETILIN), then in control of the former colony's capital, declared independence, and, on 7 December 1975, Indonesian armed forces swiftly invaded, occupied, and annexed East Timor. In the following years, a tragic loss of life occurred. Portugal refused to recognize Indonesia's sovereignty over East Timor and claimed legal sovereignty before the United Nations.As Indonesia persistently and brutally suppressed Timorese nationalist resistance, world media attention focused on this still remote island. Several sensational international and Indonesian events altered the status of occupied East Timor, following the continuation of FRETILIN guerrilla resistance. In November 1991, world media disseminated information on the Indonesian forces' slaughter of East Timorese protesters at a cemetery demonstration in the capital of Dili. In 1996, two East Timorese, Bishop Belo and José Ramos Horta, each a symbol of East Timorese resistance and the desire for independence, shared the Nobel Peace Prize. Then, in 1998, in Indonesia, the Suharto regime collapsed and was replaced by a more democratic government, which in January 1999 pledged a free referendum in East Timor. On 30 August 1999, the referendum was held, and nearly 80 percent of the East Timorese voters voted for independence from Indonesia.However, Indonesian armed forces and militias reacted brutally, using intimidation, murder, mayhem, and razing of buildings to try to reverse the people's will. Following some weeks of confusion, a United Nations (UN) armed forces, led by Australia, took control of East Timor and declared it a UN protectorate, to last until East Timor was secure from Indonesian aggression and prepared for full independence. East Timor had changed from a Portuguese colony to an Indonesian protectorate/colony to a fledgling nation-in-the-making.The status of East Timor as a ward of the UN was made official on 25 October 1999, as the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor began to prepare the country for independence. Appalling conditions prevailed: 70 percent of the country's buildings had been destroyed and nearly half of the population of 800,000 had been driven out of East Timor into uneasy refuge in West Timor, under Indonesian control. A territory without an economy, East Timor lacked police, civil servants, schools, and government records.With UN assistance, general elections were held in the spring of 2002; the majority of parliamentary seats were won by FRETILIN, and José "Xanana" Gusmão was elected the first president. On 20 May 2002, East Timor became independent. World luminaries adorned the independence celebrations: UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, former U.S. president Bill Clinton, and other celebrities attended. But East Timor's travails continued with civil strife and uncertainty. -
106 Armstrong, Edwin Howard
[br]b. 18 December 1890 New York City, New York, USAd. 31 January 1954 New York City, New York, USA[br]American engineer who invented the regenerative and superheterodyne amplifiers and frequency modulation, all major contributions to radio communication and broadcasting.[br]Interested from childhood in anything mechanical, as a teenager Armstrong constructed a variety of wireless equipment in the attic of his parents' home, including spark-gap transmitters and receivers with iron-filing "coherer" detectors capable of producing weak Morse-code signals. In 1912, while still a student of engineering at Columbia University, he applied positive, i.e. regenerative, feedback to a Lee De Forest triode amplifier to just below the point of oscillation and obtained a gain of some 1,000 times, giving a receiver sensitivity very much greater than hitherto possible. Furthermore, by allowing the circuit to go into full oscillation he found he could generate stable continuous-waves, making possible the first reliable CW radio transmitter. Sadly, his claim to priority with this invention, for which he filed US patents in 1913, the year he graduated from Columbia, led to many years of litigation with De Forest, to whom the US Supreme Court finally, but unjustly, awarded the patent in 1934. The engineering world clearly did not agree with this decision, for the Institution of Radio Engineers did not revoke its previous award of a gold medal and he subsequently received the highest US scientific award, the Franklin Medal, for this discovery.During the First World War, after some time as an instructor at Columbia University, he joined the US Signal Corps laboratories in Paris, where in 1918 he invented the superheterodyne, a major contribution to radio-receiver design and for which he filed a patent in 1920. The principle of this circuit, which underlies virtually all modern radio, TV and radar reception, is that by using a local oscillator to convert, or "heterodyne", a wanted signal to a lower, fixed, "intermediate" frequency it is possible to obtain high amplification and selectivity without the need to "track" the tuning of numerous variable circuits.Returning to Columbia after the war and eventually becoming Professor of Electrical Engineering, he made a fortune from the sale of his patent rights and used part of his wealth to fund his own research into further problems in radio communication, particularly that of receiver noise. In 1933 he filed four patents covering the use of wide-band frequency modulation (FM) to achieve low-noise, high-fidelity sound broadcasting, but unable to interest RCA he eventually built a complete broadcast transmitter at his own expense in 1939 to prove the advantages of his system. Unfortunately, there followed another long battle to protect and exploit his patents, and exhausted and virtually ruined he took his own life in 1954, just as the use of FM became an established technique.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsInstitution of Radio Engineers Medal of Honour 1917. Franklin Medal 1937. IERE Edison Medal 1942. American Medal for Merit 1947.Bibliography1922, "Some recent developments in regenerative circuits", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 10:244.1924, "The superheterodyne. Its origin, developments and some recent improvements", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 12:549.1936, "A method of reducing disturbances in radio signalling by a system of frequency modulation", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 24:689.Further ReadingL.Lessing, 1956, Man of High-Fidelity: Edwin Howard Armstrong, pbk 1969 (the only definitive biography).W.R.Maclaurin and R.J.Harman, 1949, Invention \& Innovation in the Radio Industry.J.R.Whitehead, 1950, Super-regenerative Receivers.A.N.Goldsmith, 1948, Frequency Modulation (for the background to the development of frequency modulation, in the form of a large collection of papers and an extensive bibliog raphy).KFBiographical history of technology > Armstrong, Edwin Howard
-
107 Brunel, Isambard Kingdom
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering, Land transport, Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering, Ports and shipping, Public utilities, Railways and locomotives[br]b. 9 April 1806 Portsea, Hampshire, Englandd. 15 September 1859 18 Duke Street, St James's, London, England[br]English civil and mechanical engineer.[br]The son of Marc Isambard Brunel and Sophia Kingdom, he was educated at a private boarding-school in Hove. At the age of 14 he went to the College of Caen and then to the Lycée Henri-Quatre in Paris, after which he was apprenticed to Louis Breguet. In 1822 he returned from France and started working in his father's office, while spending much of his time at the works of Maudslay, Sons \& Field.From 1825 to 1828 he worked under his father on the construction of the latter's Thames Tunnel, occupying the position of Engineer-in-Charge, exhibiting great courage and presence of mind in the emergencies which occurred not infrequently. These culminated in January 1828 in the flooding of the tunnel and work was suspended for seven years. For the next five years the young engineer made abortive attempts to find a suitable outlet for his talents, but to little avail. Eventually, in 1831, his design for a suspension bridge over the River Avon at Clifton Gorge was accepted and he was appointed Engineer. (The bridge was eventually finished five years after Brunel's death, as a memorial to him, the delay being due to inadequate financing.) He next planned and supervised improvements to the Bristol docks. In March 1833 he was appointed Engineer of the Bristol Railway, later called the Great Western Railway. He immediately started to survey the route between London and Bristol that was completed by late August that year. On 5 July 1836 he married Mary Horsley and settled into 18 Duke Street, Westminster, London, where he also had his office. Work on the Bristol Railway started in 1836. The foundation stone of the Clifton Suspension Bridge was laid the same year. Whereas George Stephenson had based his standard railway gauge as 4 ft 8½ in (1.44 m), that or a similar gauge being usual for colliery wagonways in the Newcastle area, Brunel adopted the broader gauge of 7 ft (2.13 m). The first stretch of the line, from Paddington to Maidenhead, was opened to traffic on 4 June 1838, and the whole line from London to Bristol was opened in June 1841. The continuation of the line through to Exeter was completed and opened on 1 May 1844. The normal time for the 194-mile (312 km) run from Paddington to Exeter was 5 hours, at an average speed of 38.8 mph (62.4 km/h) including stops. The Great Western line included the Box Tunnel, the longest tunnel to that date at nearly two miles (3.2 km).Brunel was the engineer of most of the railways in the West Country, in South Wales and much of Southern Ireland. As railway networks developed, the frequent break of gauge became more of a problem and on 9 July 1845 a Royal Commission was appointed to look into it. In spite of comparative tests, run between Paddington-Didcot and Darlington-York, which showed in favour of Brunel's arrangement, the enquiry ruled in favour of the narrow gauge, 274 miles (441 km) of the former having been built against 1,901 miles (3,059 km) of the latter to that date. The Gauge Act of 1846 forbade the building of any further railways in Britain to any gauge other than 4 ft 8 1/2 in (1.44 m).The existence of long and severe gradients on the South Devon Railway led to Brunel's adoption of the atmospheric railway developed by Samuel Clegg and later by the Samuda brothers. In this a pipe of 9 in. (23 cm) or more in diameter was laid between the rails, along the top of which ran a continuous hinged flap of leather backed with iron. At intervals of about 3 miles (4.8 km) were pumping stations to exhaust the pipe. Much trouble was experienced with the flap valve and its lubrication—freezing of the leather in winter, the lubricant being sucked into the pipe or eaten by rats at other times—and the experiment was abandoned at considerable cost.Brunel is to be remembered for his two great West Country tubular bridges, the Chepstow and the Tamar Bridge at Saltash, with the latter opened in May 1859, having two main spans of 465 ft (142 m) and a central pier extending 80 ft (24 m) below high water mark and allowing 100 ft (30 m) of headroom above the same. His timber viaducts throughout Devon and Cornwall became a feature of the landscape. The line was extended ultimately to Penzance.As early as 1835 Brunel had the idea of extending the line westwards across the Atlantic from Bristol to New York by means of a steamship. In 1836 building commenced and the hull left Bristol in July 1837 for fitting out at Wapping. On 31 March 1838 the ship left again for Bristol but the boiler lagging caught fire and Brunel was injured in the subsequent confusion. On 8 April the ship set sail for New York (under steam), its rival, the 703-ton Sirius, having left four days earlier. The 1,340-ton Great Western arrived only a few hours after the Sirius. The hull was of wood, and was copper-sheathed. In 1838 Brunel planned a larger ship, some 3,000 tons, the Great Britain, which was to have an iron hull.The Great Britain was screwdriven and was launched on 19 July 1843,289 ft (88 m) long by 51 ft (15.5 m) at its widest. The ship's first voyage, from Liverpool to New York, began on 26 August 1845. In 1846 it ran aground in Dundrum Bay, County Down, and was later sold for use on the Australian run, on which it sailed no fewer than thirty-two times in twenty-three years, also serving as a troop-ship in the Crimean War. During this war, Brunel designed a 1,000-bed hospital which was shipped out to Renkioi ready for assembly and complete with shower-baths and vapour-baths with printed instructions on how to use them, beds and bedding and water closets with a supply of toilet paper! Brunel's last, largest and most extravagantly conceived ship was the Great Leviathan, eventually named The Great Eastern, which had a double-skinned iron hull, together with both paddles and screw propeller. Brunel designed the ship to carry sufficient coal for the round trip to Australia without refuelling, thus saving the need for and the cost of bunkering, as there were then few bunkering ports throughout the world. The ship's construction was started by John Scott Russell in his yard at Millwall on the Thames, but the building was completed by Brunel due to Russell's bankruptcy in 1856. The hull of the huge vessel was laid down so as to be launched sideways into the river and then to be floated on the tide. Brunel's plan for hydraulic launching gear had been turned down by the directors on the grounds of cost, an economy that proved false in the event. The sideways launch with over 4,000 tons of hydraulic power together with steam winches and floating tugs on the river took over two months, from 3 November 1857 until 13 January 1858. The ship was 680 ft (207 m) long, 83 ft (25 m) beam and 58 ft (18 m) deep; the screw was 24 ft (7.3 m) in diameter and paddles 60 ft (18.3 m) in diameter. Its displacement was 32,000 tons (32,500 tonnes).The strain of overwork and the huge responsibilities that lay on Brunel began to tell. He was diagnosed as suffering from Bright's disease, or nephritis, and spent the winter travelling in the Mediterranean and Egypt, returning to England in May 1859. On 5 September he suffered a stroke which left him partially paralysed, and he died ten days later at his Duke Street home.[br]Further ReadingL.T.C.Rolt, 1957, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, London: Longmans Green. J.Dugan, 1953, The Great Iron Ship, Hamish Hamilton.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Brunel, Isambard Kingdom
-
108 Coolidge, William David
[br]b. 23 October 1873 Hudson, Massachusetts, USAd. 3 February 1975 New York, USA[br]American physicist and metallurgist who invented a method of producing ductile tungsten wire for electric lamps.[br]Coolidge obtained his BS from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1896, and his PhD (physics) from the University of Leipzig in 1899. He was appointed Assistant Professor of Physics at MIT in 1904, and in 1905 he joined the staff of the General Electric Company's research laboratory at Schenectady. In 1905 Schenectady was trying to make tungsten-filament lamps to counter the competition of the tantalum-filament lamps then being produced by their German rival Siemens. The first tungsten lamps made by Just and Hanaman in Vienna in 1904 had been too fragile for general use. Coolidge and his life-long collaborator, Colin G. Fink, succeeded in 1910 by hot-working directly dense sintered tungsten compacts into wire. This success was the result of a flash of insight by Coolidge, who first perceived that fully recrystallized tungsten wire was always brittle and that only partially work-hardened wire retained a measure of ductility. This grasped, a process was developed which induced ductility into the wire by hot-working at temperatures below those required for full recrystallization, so that an elongated fibrous grain structure was progressively developed. Sintered tungsten ingots were swaged to bar at temperatures around 1,500°C and at the end of the process ductile tungsten filament wire was drawn through diamond dies around 550°C. This process allowed General Electric to dominate the world lamp market. Tungsten lamps consumed only one-third the energy of carbon lamps, and for the first time the cost of electric lighting was reduced to that of gas. Between 1911 and 1914, manufacturing licences for the General Electric patents had been granted for most of the developed work. The validity of the General Electric monopoly was bitterly contested, though in all the litigation that followed, Coolidge's fibering principle was upheld. Commercial arrangements between General Electric and European producers such as Siemens led to the name "Osram" being commonly applied to any lamp with a drawn tungsten filament. In 1910 Coolidge patented the use of thoria as a particular additive that greatly improved the high-temperature strength of tungsten filaments. From this development sprang the technique of "dispersion strengthening", still being widely used in the development of high-temperature alloys in the 1990s. In 1913 Coolidge introduced the first controllable hot-cathode X-ray tube, which had a tungsten target and operated in vacuo rather than in a gaseous atmosphere. With this equipment, medical radiography could for the first time be safely practised on a routine basis. During the First World War, Coolidge developed portable X-ray units for use in field hospitals, and between the First and Second World Wars he introduced between 1 and 2 million X-ray machines for cancer treatment and for industrial radiography. He became Director of the Schenectady laboratory in 1932, and from 1940 until 1944 he was Vice-President and Director of Research. After retirement he was retained as an X-ray consultant, and in this capacity he attended the Bikini atom bomb trials in 1946. Throughout the Second World War he was a member of the National Defence Research Committee.[br]Bibliography1965, "The development of ductile tungsten", Sorby Centennial Symposium on the History of Metallurgy, AIME Metallurgy Society Conference, Vol. 27, ed. Cyril Stanley Smith, Gordon and Breach, pp. 443–9.Further ReadingD.J.Jones and A.Prince, 1985, "Tungsten and high density alloys", Journal of the Historical Metallurgy Society 19(1):72–84.ASDBiographical history of technology > Coolidge, William David
-
109 Du Cane, Peter
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. Englandd. 31 October 1984[br]English engineer, one of the foremost designers of small high-speed ships.[br]Peter Du Cane was appointed a midshipman in the Royal Navy in 1913, having commenced as a cadet at the tender age of 13. At the end of the First World War he transferred to the engineering branch and was posted ultimately to the Yangtze River gunboat fleet. In 1928 he resigned, trained as a pilot and then joined the shipbuilders Vosper Ltd of Portsmouth. For thirty-five years he held the posts of Managing Director and Chief Designer, developing the company's expertise in high-speed, small warships, pleasure craft and record breakers. During the Second World War the company designed and built many motor torpedo-boats, air-sea rescue craft and similar ships. Du Cane served for some months in the Navy, but at the request of the Government he returned to his post in the shipyard. The most glamorous products of the yard were the record breakers Bluebird II, with which Malcolm Campbell took the world water speed record in 1939, and the later Crusader, in which John Cobb lost his life. Despite this blow the company went from strength to strength, producing the epic Brave class fast patrol craft for the Royal Navy, which led to export orders. In 1966 the yard merged with John I.Thornycroft Ltd. Commander Du Cane retired seven years later.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCommander of the Royal Navy. CBE 1965.Bibliography1951, High Speed Small Craft, London: Temple Press.Further ReadingC.Dawson, 1972, A Quest for Speed at Sea, London: Hutchinson.FMW -
110 Freyssinet, Eugène
[br]b. 13 July 1879 Objat, Corrèze, Franced. 8 June 1962 Saint-Martin Vésubié, France[br]French civil engineer who is generally recognized as the originator of pre-stressed reinforced concrete.[br]Eugène Freyssinet was an army engineer during the First World War who pioneered pre-stressed reinforced concrete and experimented with building concrete bridges. After 1918 he formed his own company to develop his ideas. He investigated the possibilities of very high-strength concrete, and in so doing studied shrinkage and creep. He combined high-quality concrete with highly stressed, stretched steel to give top quality results. His work in 1926 on Plougastel Bridge, at that time the longest reinforced concrete bridge, is a notable example of his use of this technique. In 1916 Freyssinet had built his famous airship hangars at Orly, which were destroyed in the Second World War; the hangars were roofed in parabolic sections to a height of about 200 ft. In 1934 he succeeded in saving the Ocean Terminal at Le Havre from sinking into the mud and being covered by the sea by using his pre-stressing techniques. By 1938 he had developed a superior method of pre-stressing with steel which led to widespread adoption of his methods.[br]Further ReadingC.C.Stanley, 1979, Highlights in the History of Concrete, Cement and Concrete Association.1977, Who's Who in Architecture, Weidenfeld and Nicolson.DY -
111 King, James Foster
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 9 May 1862 Erskine, Scotlandd. 11 August 1947 Glasgow, Scotland[br]Scottish naval architect and classification society manager who made a significant contribution to the safety of shipping.[br]King was educated at the High School of Glasgow, and then served an apprenticeship with the Port Glasgow shipyard of Russell \& Co. This was followed by experience in drawing offices in Port Glasgow, Hull and finally in Belfast, where he was responsible for the separate White Star Line drawing office of Harland \& Wolff Ltd, which was then producing the plans for the Atlantic passenger liners Majestic and Teutonic. Following certain unpopular government shipping enactments in 1890, a protest from shipbuilders and shipowners in Ireland, Liverpool and the West of Scotland led to the founding of a new classification society to compete against Lloyd's Register of Shipping. It became known as the British Corporation Register and had headquarters in Glasgow. King was recruited to the staff and by 1903 had become Chief Surveyor, a position he held until his retirement thirty-seven years later. By then the Register was a world leader, with hundreds of thousands of tons of shipping on its books; it acted as consultant to many governments and international agencies. Throughout his working life, King did everything in his power to quantify the risks and problems of ship operation: his contribution to the Load Lines Convention of 1929 was typical, and few major enactments in shipping were designed without his approval. During the inter-war period the performance of the British Corporation outshone that of all rivals, for which King deserved full credit. His especial understanding was for steel structures, and in this respect he ensured that the British Corporation enabled owners to build ships of strengths equal to any others despite using up to 10 per cent less steel within the structure. In 1949 Lloyd's Register of Shipping and the British Corporation merged to form the largest and most influential ship classification society in the world.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCBE 1920. Honorary Member, Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland 1941; North East Coast Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders (Newcastle) 1943; British Corporation 1940. Honorary Vice-President, Institution of Naval Architects.Further ReadingG.Blake, 1960, Lloyd's Register of Shipping 1760–1960, London: Lloyd's Register. F.M.Walker, 1984, Song of the Clyde. A History of Clyde Shipbuiding, Cambridge: PSL. 1947, The British Corporation Register of Shipping and Aircraft 1890–1947, AnIllustrated Record, 1947, Glasgow.1946, The British Corporation Register. The War Years in Retrospect, 1956, Glasgow.FMW -
112 Marconi, Marchese Guglielmo
[br]b. 25 April 1874 Bologna, Italyd. 20 July 1937 Rome, Italy[br]Italian radio pioneer whose inventiveness and business skills made radio communication a practical proposition.[br]Marconi was educated in physics at Leghorn and at Bologna University. An avid experimenter, he worked in his parents' attic and, almost certainly aware of the recent work of Hertz and others, soon improved the performance of coherers and spark-gap transmitters. He also discovered for himself the use of earthing and of elevated metal plates as aerials. In 1895 he succeeded in transmitting telegraphy over a distance of 2 km (1¼ miles), but the Italian Telegraph authority rejected his invention, so in 1896 he moved to England, where he filed the first of many patents. There he gained the support of the Chief Engineer of the Post Office, and by the following year he had achieved communication across the Bristol Channel.The British Post Office was also slow to take up his work, so in 1897 he formed the Wireless Telegraph \& Signal Company to work independently. In 1898 he sold some equipment to the British Army for use in the Boer War and established the first permanent radio link from the Isle of Wight to the mainland. In 1899 he achieved communication across the English Channel (a distance of more than 31 miles or 50 km), the construction of a wireless station at Spezia, Italy, and the equipping of two US ships to report progress in the America's Cup yacht race, a venture that led to the formation of the American Marconi Company. In 1900 he won a contract from the British Admiralty to sell equipment and to train operators. Realizing that his business would be much more successful if he could offer his customers a complete radio-communication service (known today as a "turnkey" deal), he floated a new company, the Marconi International Marine Communications Company, while the old company became the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company.His greatest achievement occurred on 12 December 1901, when Morse telegraph signals from a transmitter at Poldhu in Cornwall were received at St John's, Newfoundland, a distance of some 2,100 miles (3,400 km), with the use of an aerial flown by a kite. As a result of this, Marconi's business prospered and he became internationally famous, receiving many honours for his endeavours, including the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1909. In 1904, radio was first used to provide a daily bulletin at sea, and in 1907 a transatlantic wireless telegraphy service was inaugurated. The rescue of 1,650 passengers from the shipwreck of SS Republic in 1909 was the first of many occasions when wireless was instrumental in saving lives at sea, most notable being those from the Titanic on its maiden voyage in April 1912; more lives would have been saved had there been sufficient lifeboats. Marconi was one of those who subsequently pressed for greater safety at sea. In 1910 he demonstrated the reception of long (8 km or 5 miles) waves from Ireland in Buenos Aires, but after the First World War he began to develop the use of short waves, which were more effectively reflected by the ionosphere. By 1918 the first link between England and Australia had been established, and in 1924 he was awarded a Post Office contract for short-wave communication between England and the various parts of the British Empire.With his achievements by then recognized by the Italian Government, in 1915 he was appointed Radio-Communications Adviser to the Italian armed forces, and in 1919 he was an Italian delegate to the Paris Peace Conference. From 1921 he lived on his yacht, the Elettra, and although he joined the Fascist Party in 1923, he later had reservations about Mussolini.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsNobel Prize for Physics (jointly with K.F. Braun) 1909. Russian Order of S t Anne. Commander of St Maurice and St Lazarus. Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown (i.e. Knight) of Italy 1902. Freedom of Rome 1903. Honorary DSc Oxford. Honorary LLD Glasgow. Chevalier of the Civil Order of Savoy 1905. Royal Society of Arts Albert Medal. Honorary knighthood (GCVO) 1914. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Medal of Honour 1920. Chairman, Royal Society of Arts 1924. Created Marquis (Marchese) 1929. Nominated to the Italian Senate 1929. President, Italian Academy 1930. Rector, University of St Andrews, Scotland, 1934.Bibliography1896, "Improvements in transmitting electrical impulses and in apparatus thereof", British patent no. 12,039.1 June 1898, British patent no. 12,326 (transformer or "jigger" resonant circuit).1901, British patent no. 7,777 (selective tuning).1904, British patent no. 763,772 ("four circuit" tuning arrangement).Further ReadingD.Marconi, 1962, My Father, Marconi.W.J.Baker, 1970, A History of the Marconi Company, London: Methuen.KFBiographical history of technology > Marconi, Marchese Guglielmo
-
113 McNeill, Sir James McFadyen
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 19 August 1892 Clydebank, Scotlandd. 24 July 1964 near Glasgow, Scotland[br]Scottish naval architect, designer of the Cunard North Atlantic Liners Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth.[br]McNeill was born in Clydebank just outside Glasgow, and was to serve that town for most of his life. After education at Clydebank High School and then at Allan Glen's in Glasgow, in 1908 he entered the shipyard of John Brown \& Co. Ltd as an apprentice. He was encouraged to matriculate at the University of Glasgow, where he studied naval architecture under the (then) unique Glasgow system of "sandwich" training, alternately spending six months in the shipyard, followed by winter at the Faculty of Engineering. On graduating in 1915, he joined the Army and by 1918 had risen to the rank of Major in the Royal Field Artillery.After the First World War, McNeill returned to the shipyard and in 1928 was appointed Chief Naval Architect. In 1934 he was made a local director of the company. During the difficult period of the 1930s he was in charge of the technical work which led to the design, launching and successful completion of the great liners Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth. Some of the most remarkable ships of the mid-twentieth century were to come from this shipyard, including the last British battleship, HMS Vanguard, and the Royal Yacht Britannia, completed in 1954. From 1948 until 1959, Sir James was Managing Director of the Clydebank part of the company and was Deputy Chairman by the time he retired in 1962. His public service was remarkable and included chairmanship of the Shipbuilding Conference and of the British Ship Research Association, and membership of the Committee of Lloyd's Register of Shipping.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order 1954. CBE 1950. FRS 1948. President, Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland 1947–9. Honorary Vice-President, Royal Institution of Naval Architects. Military Cross (First World War).Bibliography1935, "Launch of the quadruple-screw turbine steamer Queen Mary", Transactions of the Institution of Naval Architects 77:1–27 (in this classic paper McNeill displays complete mastery of a difficult subject; it is recorded that prior to launch the estimate for travel of the ship in the River Clyde was 1,194 ft (363.9 m), and the actual amount recorded was 1,196 ft (364.5m)!).FMWBiographical history of technology > McNeill, Sir James McFadyen
-
114 Stibitz, George R.
SUBJECT AREA: Electronics and information technology[br]b. 20 April 1904 York, Pennsylvania, USA[br]American mathematician responsible for the conception of the Bell Laboratories "Complex " computer.[br]Stibitz spent his early years in Dayton, Ohio, and obtained his first degree at Denison University, Granville, Ohio, his MS from Union College, Schenectady, New York, in 1927 and his PhD in mathematical physics from Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, in 1930. After working for a time for General Electric, he joined Bell Laboratories to work on various communications problems. In 1937 he started to experiment at home with telephone relays as the basis of a calculator for addition, multiplication and division. Initially this was based on binary arithmetic, but later he used binary-coded decimal (BCD) and was able to cope with complex numbers. In November 1938 the ideas were officially taken up by Bell Laboratories and, with S.B.Williams as Project Manager, Stibitz built a complex-number computer known as "Complex", or Relay I, which became operational on 8 January 1940.With the outbreak of the Second World War, he was co-opted to the National Defence Research Council to work on anti-aircraft (AA) gun control, and this led to Bell Laboratories Relay II computer, which was completed in 1943 and which had 500 relays, bi-quinary code and selfchecking of errors. A further computer, Relay III, was used for ballistic simulation of actual AA shell explosions and was followed by more machines before and after Stibitz left Bell after the end of the war. Stibitz then became a computer consultant, involved in particular with the development of the UNIVAC computer by John Mauchly and J.Presper Eckert.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Emanuel R.Priore Award 1977.Bibliography1957, with J.A.Larrivee, Mathematics and Computers, New York: McGraw-Hill. 1967, "The Relay computer at the Bell Laboratories", Datamation 35.Further ReadingE.Loveday, 1977, "George Stibitz and the Bell Labs Relay computer", Datamation 80. M.R.Williams, 1985, A History of Computing Technology, London: Prentice-Hall.KF -
115 Wiles, Philip
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 18 August 1899 London, Englandd. 17 May 1967 Kingston, Jamaica[br]English orthopaedic surgeon involved in the development of hip-replacement surgery.[br]From 1917, Wiles served during the First World War in the artillery, air force and army service corps. After a short postwar period in the City, he qualified in medicine at the Middlesex Hospital in 1928. His distinguished student career led to posts at the Middlesex and the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital. He served as a brigadier orthopaedic surgeon in the Army during the Second World War and in 1946 returned as Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon to the Middlesex.He made outstanding contributions to postwar developments in orthopaedics and, as well as practising, wrote extensively on a variety of subjects including joint replacement. Taking early retirement in 1959 he moved to Jamaica, where he was involved in the affairs of the University of the West Indies.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPresident, British Orthopaedic Association 1955. Honorary Member of the American Orthopedic Association. Middlesex Hospital Lyell Gold Medal 1927.Bibliography1965, Essentials of Orthopaedics.1960, Fractures, Dislocations and Sprains.MG -
116 display
dɪsˈpleɪ
1. сущ.
1) показ, проявление, демонстрация an occasion for the display of his powers ≈ возможность демонстрации своей силы Syn: demonstration, showing, exhibition, manifestation, exhibition
2) а) выставка, представление, спектакль, шоу The display of dahlias was most excellent. ≈ Выставка георгинов была великолепна. constant parades and military displays with bands and flags ≈ постоянные парады и военные представления с оркестрами и флагами Syn: show, exhibition б) орнит. брачные танцы самцов
3) выставление напоказ;
хвастовство lavish display, ostentatious display ≈ действие на показ, игра на публику public display ≈ проявление на публике to make a public display of grief ≈ выставлять свое горе на общее обозрение put on a display Syn: ostentation, show
1.
4) полигр. выделение особым шрифтом
5) дисплей a graphic display ≈ графический дисплей
2. гл.
1) выставлять, показывать;
демонстрировать Syn: show
2) обнаруживать, проявлять to display great skill ≈ проявить большую ловкость
3) хвастаться He liked to display his erudition. ≈ Он любит похвастаться своей эрудицией. Syn: boast I
2., brag
2., show off
4) орнит. исполнять брачные танцы
5) полигр. выделять особым шрифтом показ, демонстрация - military *, * of troops военный парад - fashion * демонстрация мод - simultaneous * (шахматное) сеанс одновременной игры - * note надпись на выставочном стенде - * stand( техническое) демонстрационный /ремонтный/ стенд - * window витрина выставка - * of pictures выставка картин экспонат - in the local musuem many rooms were devoted to * s about the war в местном музее многие залы были отведены под военные экспонаты проявление, демонстрация - * of loyalty демонстрация лояльности - to give a * of courage проявить мужество - to give a * of stupidity показать /обнаружить/ свою глупость выставление напоказ;
хвастовство - to make a * of wit щеголять своим остроумием - to make a * of generosity кичиться своей щедростью - he is fond of * он любит порисоваться (полиграфия) выделение особым шрифтом воспроизводящее устройство( магнитофона и т. п.) (специальное) дисплей (устройство для визуального отображения информации) ;
экран дисплея;
монитор - black-and-white * дисплей с черно-белым изображением - computer * дисплей ЭВМ - * capacity емкость дисплея - * field поле экрана дисплея;
окно индикация, отображение( информации) показывать, демонстрировать - to * the national flag вывесить национальный флаг - to * goods in a shop-window выставить товары в витрине магазина - she pulled up her sleeve to * a scratch она завернула /отогнула/ рукав, чтобы показать царапину проявлять, демонстрировать - to * one's intelligence проявить ум выказывать, выдавать;
обнаруживать - to * one's ignorance выдать свое невежество /незнание/ - to * one's plans обнаружить свои намерения - he *ed no sign of the emotion he was feeling он ни единым знаком не выдал своих чувств выставлять напоказ;
кичиться, хвастать( полиграфия) выделять особым шрифтом (компьютерное) воспроизводить на (видео) дисплее active ~ вчт. активный дисплей all-points-addressable ~ вчт. полноадресуемый дисплей alphanumeric ~ вчт. алфавитно-цифровой дисплей binary ~ вчт. двоичное отображение bit-map ~ вчт. дисплей с поточечной адресацией bit-mapped ~ вчт. дисплей с поточечной адресацией black-and-white ~ вчт. черно-белый дисплей calligraphic ~ вчт. векторный дисплей cathode ray tube ~, CRT ~ вчт. дисплей (с электронно-лучевой трубкой) color ~ вчт. цветной дисплей color ~ system вчт. цветная дисплейная система colour ~ вчт. дисплей с цветным изображением colour ~ вчт. цветной дисплей control and ~ вчт. символ управления и индикации cathode ray tube ~, CRT ~ вчт. дисплей (с электронно-лучевой трубкой) CRT ~ вчт. дисплей с электронно-лучевой трубкой data ~ вчт. вывод данных на дисплей data ~ вчт. вывод данных на устройство отображения data ~ вчт. индикатор данных data ~ информационное табло data ~ вчт. информационное табло data ~ вчт. информационный дисплей data ~ вчт. отображение данных data ~ вчт. отображение информации direct-beam ~ вчт. векторный дисплей directory ~ вчт. изображение каталога display вчт. выводить данные на экран ~ выдавать ~ полигр. выделение особым шрифтом ~ полигр. выделять особым шрифтом ~ высветить ~ высвечивать ~ выставка ~ выставление напоказ;
хвастовство;
to make great display of generosity хвастаться своей щедростью ~ выставлять, показывать;
демонстрировать;
to display the colours украсить флагами ~ выставлять напоказ ~ демонстрация ~ демонстрировать ~ вчт. дисплей ~ вчт. дисплейный ~ изображение ~ вчт. индикатор ~ вчт. индикация ~ вчт. индицировать ~ обнаруживать ~ вчт. отображать данные ~ вчт. отображение ~ отображение данных ~ показ, выставка;
there was a great display of goods было выставлено много товаров ~ показ ~ показывать ~ проявление (смелости и т. п.) ~ проявлять, обнаруживать ~ вчт. устройство индикации ~ вчт. устройство отображения ~ хвастаться ~ экспонат ~ вчт. электронное табло ~ of force демонстрация силы ~ of price указание цены ~ выставлять, показывать;
демонстрировать;
to display the colours украсить флагами dot-matrix ~ вчт. растровый дисплей enhanced color ~ вчт. дисплей с расширенными цветовыми возможностями fill-in-blanks ~ вчт. документальный дисплей flat ~ вчт. плоский дисплей flat-panel ~ вчт. плоский дисплей flicker-free ~ вчт. немерцающий дисплей formatted ~ вчт. форматированный отображение forms ~ вчт. документальный дисплей full-page ~ вчт. полностраничный дисплей gas-plasma ~ вчт. плазменный дисплей green-phosphor ~ вчт. дисплей зеленого свечения image ~ вчт. графический дисплей incremental ~ вчт. представление в приращениях intensified ~ вчт. дисплей с подсветкой частей изображения isometric ~ вчт. изометрическое изображение keyboard ~ вчт. дисплей с клавиатурой landscape ~ вчт. ландшафтный дисплей LED ~ вчт. светодиодный индикатор liquid-crystal ~ вчт. дисплей на жидких кристаллах ~ выставление напоказ;
хвастовство;
to make great display of generosity хвастаться своей щедростью makeup ~ вчт. верстальный дисплей matrix ~ вчт. матричный дисплей monochrome ~ вчт. монохроматический дисплей monochrome ~ вчт. монохромный дисплей multiple window ~ вчт. полиэкранный дисплей multiuser ~ вчт. многопользовательский дисплей numeric ~ вчт. цифровой дисплей operator's ~ вчт. операторский дисплей plasma ~ вчт. плазменная панель plasma ~ вчт. плазменный дисплей plasma ~ вчт. плазменный индикатор plasma-panel ~ вчт. плазменный дисплей portrait ~ вчт. портретный дисплей raster ~ вчт. растровый дисплей remote ~ вчт. дистанционный дисплей status ~ вчт. информация о состоянии television ~ вчт. телевизионный дисплей ~ показ, выставка;
there was a great display of goods было выставлено много товаров unformatted ~ вчт. неформатированное отображение vector-mode ~ вчт. векторный дисплей video ~ вчт. видеодисплей video ~ вчт. индикатор video ~ вчт. устройство визуальной индикации video ~ вчт. устройство отображения video ~ вчт. электронное табло -
117 toil
tɔɪl
1. сущ. тяжелый труд arduous toil ≈ тяжелый труд physical toil ≈ физический труд unremitting toil ≈ упорный труд Syn: labour
2. гл.
1) усиленно трудиться (at, on, through - над чем-л.)
2) с трудом идти, тащиться( обыкн. toil up, toil along) ∙ toil at toil out тяжелый труд - intellectual * напряженная умственная работа - * and trouble труды и заботы - the *s of war тяготы войны - for years he led a life of unremitting * в течение многих лет он ничего не знал в жизни кроме тяжелого изнурительного труда - some books are a * to read некоторые книги очень трудно читать усиленно работать, трудиться - to * at a task трудиться над задачей - to * with one's hands for a living тяжелым физическим трудом добывать себе хлеб насущный - he had to * hard to maintain his family он вынужден был много работать, чтобы прокормить семью достигать( чего-л.) тяжелым трудом (тж. * out) - to * one's way с трудом пробиться( куда-л.) с трудом идти, тащиться - to * up a hill с трудом взбираться на холм - to * along the road тащиться по дороге > to * and moil исполнять тяжелую, утомительную работу обыкн. pl сеть, силок, тенета - the *s of a spider паутина > in the *s в сетях, в западне;
под властью > in the *s of smth. очарованный /околдованный/ чем-л.;
во власти чего-л. > to be taken /to get caught/ in the *s попасть в сети /в тенета/ > to catch smb. in one's *s поймать кого-л. в сети > caught in his own *s запутавшийся в собственных сетях загонять в западню (дичь) опутывать toil с трудом идти, тащиться (обыкн. toil up, toil along) ~ тяжелый труд ~ усиленно трудиться (at, on, through - над чем-л.) -
118 wrong
rɔŋ
1. сущ.
1) неправда;
заблуждение, ошибочность Is anything wrong with the documents? ≈ Разве что-нибудь не в порядке с документами? do wrong be in the wrong Syn: untruth, lie
2) а) зло;
несправедливость б) юр. правонарушение Syn: injustice, unfairness, sin
2. прил.
1) неправильный, ошибочный;
несправедливый be quite wrong
2) неподходящий;
несоответствующий
3) изнаночный( о стороне) wrong side out wrong side foremost
4) неисправный, сломаный ∙ go wrong
3. нареч. неверно, неправильно
4. гл.
1) вредить;
причинять зло, обижать Syn: abuse, maltreat, oppress, persecute Ant: favour, help, nurse, protect, uphold
2) быть несправедливым (к кому-л.) ;
приписывать дурные побуждения (кому-л.) Syn: mistreat вред;
зло;
обида - right and * добро и зло - to make * right называть черное белым - to right a * исправить зло неправда;
неправильность;
ошибочность несправедливость;
неправомерность;
неоправданность (юридическое) правонарушение, деликт - private *s нарушения законных прав и интересов частных лиц - public *s нарушения государственных или общественных прав и интересов > the king can do no * (юридическое) король не несет ответственности( за политику кабинета при конституционной монархии) > to be in the * быть неправым, ошибаться;
быть виновным > to acknowledge oneself in the * признать свою ошибку /вину/ > the dead are always * (пословица) мертвые всегда виноваты;
на мертвых все можно свалить > to do * to smb. быть несправедливым к кому-л., обидеть кого-л.;
неправильно судить о ком-л. > to suffer * терпеть обиду /несправедливость/ > to labour under a sense of * действовать под влиянием обиды;
считать себя обиженным /обойденным/ неправильный, неверный, ошибочный;
ложный - * answer неверный ответ - * decision неправильное решение - * hypothesis ошибочная гипотеза - * statement неправильное заявление - * ideas ложные представления - * note (музыкальное) фальшивая нота - * use of a word неправильное употребление слова - a * move неверный шаг;
неудачный /ошибочный/ ход( в шахматах и т. п.) - to put smb. on the * track пустить кого-л. по ложному следу - to be on the * track /scent/ идти по ложному следу - to be * ошибаться;
быть неправым в чем-л. - that's just where you are * в этом как раз и состоит ваша ошибка неподходящий, несоответствующий;
не тот, который нужен - to take the * turning свернуть не туда, куда нужно - to swallow the * way подавиться - to get the * number не туда попасть (по телефону) - sorry, * number! вы не туда попали!;
простите, я не туда попал! - to drive on the * side of the road ехать по полосе встречного движения - you've been given the * number /connection/ вас неправильно соединили - you're doing it in the * way вы делаете это не так, как нужно - you've brought the * book вы принесли не ту книгу - we got into the * train мы сели не в тот поезд - at the * time в неподходящее время;
не в назначенное время - it went the * way не в то горло попало (о еде) - quite the * dress for the hot weather совершенно неподходящее платье для жаркой погоды - this is the * hat for you эта шляпа вам не идет неуместный - to laugh in the * place засмеяться некстати - that was the * thing to say этого говорить не следовало;
это было очень неудачно /неуместно/ сказано дурной;
порочный, аморальный;
неэтичный - he thought war was * он считал войну злом - you were * to borrow his bicycle without asking his permission ты поступил непорядочно, взяв его велосипед без разрешения несправедливый;
неоправданный - * act (юридическое) неправомерное действие неудовлетворительный - what's * with you? что с вами?, что у вас случилось? - I hope there is nothing * надеюсь, ничего( неприятного) не произошло - there's something * with his nerves у него неважно /неладно/ с нервами - there is something * with me мне что-то не по себе, мне нездоровится - * in the head (разговорное) психически неуравновешенный;
с приветом неисправный - something is * with the machinery механизм неисправен - there's something * somewhere здесь что-то не так - my watch is * мои часы идут неточно - this watch goes two minutes *, either way часы то отстают, то спешат на две минуты левый, изнаночный ( о стороне) - * side out наизнанку (полиграфия) чужой( о шрифте) - * fount "чужой" (указание в корректуре) > not far * почти верный > you are not far * да, это почти так;
вы в основном правы > * side up вверх дном > to get out of bed on the * side встать с левой ноги > to be born on the * side of the tracks родиться в бедной семье, выйти из низов > to be on smb.'s * side не пользоваться расположением кого-л. > on the * side of forty за сорок (лет) > to get off on the * foot неудачно начать;
произвести плохое впечатление > to have hold of the * end of the stick неправильно понять, превратно истолковать, извратить( что-л.) > to be in the * box быть в затруднительном или ложном положении > what's * with it? чем это плохо?, почему это не подходит?;
почему бы не...;
что же тут такого? > what's * with a cup of tea? почему бы не выпить чашку чая? > to stroke the cat the * way гладить кошку против шерсти неправильно, неверно, ошибочно - to guess * ошибиться в догадке - to answer * ответить неправильно /неверно/ - you led me * вы ввели меня в заблуждение - you've got it * вы просчитались;
вы неправильно /не так/ поняли - don't get me * (разговорное) поймите меня правильно предосудительно;
неподобающе - embarrassment made him act * от смущения он делал не то, что следовало дурно, плохо;
несправедливо - it would be * to punish him будет несправедливо наказывать его в неправильном направлении - he turned * at the junction на перекрестке он повернул не в ту сторону > to go * сбиться с пути( истинного) ;
провалиться;
не выйти, не получиться;
выйти из строя;
начать работать с перебоями( о механизме и т. п.) ;
испортиться > a girl who has gone * сбившаяся с пути девушка > everything went * все вышло не так (как было задумано) > all our plans went * все наши замыслы провалились > his watch has gone * его часы стали шалить > my digestion has gone * у меня неладно с пищеварением > to get in * with smb. попасть к кому-л. в немилость > to get smb. in * подвести кого-л., поставить кого-л. под удар, подставить кого-л. быть несправедливым (к кому-л.) ;
приписывать дурные побуждения (кому-л.) - he *ed me when he said I was envious он без всяких оснований обвинил меня в зависти вредить, причинять зло;
обижать позорить, бесчестить обесчестить( женщину) ;
соблазнить, совратить (of) отнимать;
лишать (обманом, силой) нанести телесное повреждение ~ не тот (который нужен) ;
несоответствующий;
at the wrong time в неподходящее время I can prove you ~ я могу доказать, что вы неправы;
to be quite wrong жестоко ошибаться be ~ быть неправым be ~ ошибаться ~ неправда;
неправильность, ошибочность, заблуждение;
to do wrong заблуждаться;
грешить;
to be in the wrong быть неправым to go ~ не удаваться;
everything went wrong все шло не так to go ~ выйти из строя( о машине и т. п.) ;
to get hold of the wrong end of the stick неправильно понять, превратно истолковать (что-л.) to get off on the ~ foot произвести плохое впечатление;
неудачно начать;
on the wrong side of 40 за сорок (лет) to go ~ выйти из строя (о машине и т. п.) ;
to get hold of the wrong end of the stick неправильно понять, превратно истолковать (что-л.) to go ~ не удаваться;
everything went wrong все шло не так to go ~ сбиться с пути истинного, согрешить;
опуститься (морально) he took the ~ street он пошел не по той улице;
to talk to the wrong man обращаться не по адресу I can prove you ~ я могу доказать, что вы неправы;
to be quite wrong жестоко ошибаться ~ неправильно, неверно;
I'm afraid you got me wrong боюсь, вы меня не так поняли legal ~ правонарушение ~ неисправный;
something is wrong with the motor мотор неисправен;
my liver is wrong у меня что-то не в порядке с печенью ~ неправильный, ошибочный;
the whole calculation is wrong весь расчет неверен;
my watch is wrong мои часы неверны to get off on the ~ foot произвести плохое впечатление;
неудачно начать;
on the wrong side of 40 за сорок (лет) public ~ вред публичного характера public ~ преступление public ~ уголовно наказуемое деяние ~ зло;
несправедливость;
обида;
to put (smb.) in the wrong свалить вину (на кого-л.) ~ неисправный;
something is wrong with the motor мотор неисправен;
my liver is wrong у меня что-то не в порядке с печенью he took the ~ street он пошел не по той улице;
to talk to the wrong man обращаться не по адресу what's ~ with it ~ почему бы не...;
what's wrong with a cup of coffee? почему бы не выпить чашечку кофе? what's ~ with it ~ почему бы не...;
what's wrong with a cup of coffee? почему бы не выпить чашечку кофе? what's ~ with it ~ почему это вам не нравится или не подходит? what's ~ with it ~ что же тут такого? ~ неправильный, ошибочный;
the whole calculation is wrong весь расчет неверен;
my watch is wrong мои часы неверны wrong быть несправедливым (к кому-л.) ;
приписывать дурные побуждения (кому-л.) ~ вред ~ вредить;
причинять зло, обижать ~ деликт ~ дурной, несправедливый ~ зло;
несправедливость;
обида;
to put (smb.) in the wrong свалить вину (на кого-л.) ~ левый, изнаночный (о стороне) ;
wrong side out наизнанку;
wrong side foremost задом наперед ~ нарушение законных прав ~ не тот (который нужен) ;
несоответствующий;
at the wrong time в неподходящее время ~ неисправный;
something is wrong with the motor мотор неисправен;
my liver is wrong у меня что-то не в порядке с печенью ~ неправда;
неправильность, ошибочность, заблуждение;
to do wrong заблуждаться;
грешить;
to be in the wrong быть неправым ~ неправда ~ неправильно, неверно;
I'm afraid you got me wrong боюсь, вы меня не так поняли ~ неправильный, ошибочный;
the whole calculation is wrong весь расчет неверен;
my watch is wrong мои часы неверны ~ неправильный ~ несправедливый ~ ошибочность ~ ошибочный ~ юр. правонарушение ~ правонарушение, деликт, вред ~ правонарушение ~ причинять вред ~ левый, изнаночный (о стороне) ;
wrong side out наизнанку;
wrong side foremost задом наперед ~ левый, изнаночный (о стороне) ;
wrong side out наизнанку;
wrong side foremost задом наперед -
119 over
1. [ʹəʋvə] n1. излишек, избыток2. приплата3. воен. перелёт ( снаряда)5. радио переход на приём2. [ʹəʋvə] a1. верхний; внешний2. вышестоящий3. излишний, избыточный; чрезмерный3. [ʹəʋvə] adv1. 1) нахождение или движение над чем-л. наверху; наверхto hang over - нависать, висеть над головой
2) движение через что-л. - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой пере-the pot was full and the soup was boiling over - кастрюля была полна, и суп убежал
3) изменение положения, переворачивание, переход из вертикального положения в горизонтальное и т. п. - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой пере-to turn smth. over - перевернуть что-л. на другую сторону
please, turn over - смотри на обороте ( надпись)
to knock smb. over - сбить кого-л. с ног
to knock smth. over - опрокинуть что-л.
he gave me a push and over I went - он толкнул меня, и я упал
he stooped over to lace his shoes - он наклонился, чтобы зашнуровать ботинки
4) переход на противоположную сторону, изменение позиции - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой пере-Over! Over to you! - радио перехожу на приём!
he drove us over to the other side of town - он отвёз нас в другой конец города
5) приближение к какому-л. месту или лицу или переход к чему-л. - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой под-to go over to see smb. - разг. зайти к кому-л., навестить кого-л.
we have guests coming over this evening - сегодня вечером к нам придут гости
to go over to the store - сходить в магазин /за покупками/
6) нахождение на какой-л. стороне:over there - а) (вон) там; there's a good spot over there - там есть хорошее местечко; б) амер. разг. там, в Европе ( не в Америке)
over by the hill - там, за холмом
2. повторение вновь, опять, ещё разover again, over and over (again) - опять, снова, много раз (подряд)
he said the same thing over and over (again) - он всё время повторял одно и то же
to do smth. over - переделывать что-л.
he did that problem three times over - он трижды принимался за решение этой проблемы
3. 1) тщательность выполнения действия или доведение его до конца - часто передается глагольными приставками про-, пере-to think smth. over - продумать что-л.
to read a newspaper over - прочитать газету (от первой до последней страницы)
to look over - осмотреть; проверить
may I look the house over? - можно осмотреть дом?
dig the ground over well before planting the flowers - прежде чем сажать цветы, тщательно перекопайте землю
2) окончание чего-л.:the lesson [the concert] is over - урок [концерт] окончен
4. нерешённость, незаконченность, неурегулированность:to lay over - откладывать; отсрочивать
to hold over a decision - откладывать принятие решения; повременить с решением
let's hold it over until the next meeting - давайте отложим это до следующего собрания
5. распространение по всему данному месту, по всей территории и т. п. ( часто all over):to be all over in dust [in mud] - быть покрытым пылью [грязью] с головы до ног
to paint the wall over - закрасить /покрасить/ всю стену
a dress covered over with jewels - платье, усыпанное драгоценностями
6. длительность протекания действия в течение какого-л. периода времени или по истечении этого периода времени:please stay over until Monday - оставайтесь, пожалуйста, у нас до понедельника
7. передачу или переход чего-л. от одного лица к другому - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой пере-to hand smth. over to smb. - передать что-л. кому-л.
to take over a job from smb. - продолжать работу, начатую кем-л. другим
to make a property over to smb. - передать имущество кому-л., переписать имущество на кого-л.
to get one's point over to smb. - разг. втолковать кому-л. что-л.
8. 1) излишек, избыток вдобавок, сверх тогоto pay the full sum and smth. over - заплатить сполна и ещё прибавить
you will keep what is left over - оставьте себе, что осталось (о сдаче, о продуктах и т. п.)
nineteen divided by five makes three, and four over - девятнадцать, делённое на пять, равно трём и четыре в остатке
they were gone three hours or over - их тут нет уже три часа, а то и больше
2) избыток или высшую степень качества чрезвычайно, сверхa board [a tree] a foot over - доска [дерево] в один фут в диаметре
10. в сочетаниях:over against - а) напротив; Dover is over against Calais - Дувр расположен против Кале; б) против, по сравнению
all over - эмоц.-усил. типичный (для кого-л.)
that rudeness is George all over - такая грубость, характерна для Джорджа
she is her mother all over - она точная копия своей матери, она вся в мать
over with - разг. сделанный, законченный
let's hurry and get the job over with - давай(те) поторопимся и закончим наше дело /покончим с этим/
it is all over with him - с ним всё кончено; он погиб; он разорён
that's over and done with - с этим всё покончено, это предано забвению
over and above - а) к тому же, кроме того, вдобавок к; over and above, he is younger than you - и к тому же /кроме того/ он моложе вас; б) слишком, чересчур
др. сочетания см. под соответствующими словами4. [ʹəʋvə] prep1. указывает на1) нахождение или движение над каким-л. предметом надto bend /to lean/ over smb., smth. - наклониться /склониться/ над кем-л., чем-л.
2) положение на каком-л. предмете или поверх него наhis hat was pulled low over his eyes - его шляпа была низко надвинута на глаза
3) положение поперёк чего-л. черезhe had a towel over his shoulder - через плечо у него было перекинуто полотенце
4) местоположение по другую сторону чего-л. по ту сторону, заover the sea - а) за морем; б) за пределами страны, за границей
to sell smth. over the counter - торговать чем-л. за прилавком
5) положение у, около чего-л. уto sit over the fire - сидеть у огня /у костра/
6) надевание, натягивание чехла и т. п. на7) движение через что-л., по чему-л. или через какое-л. препятствие через, поto leap over smth. - перепрыгнуть через что-л.
to help smb. over the road - помочь кому-л. перейти дорогу
to go over the bridge - пройти через мост /по мосту/
they looked over his shoulder into the room - они заглядывали в комнату через плечо
she fell over a stone - она упала, споткнувшись о камень
8) движение или распространение по какой-л. поверхности в определённом или разных направлениях по; на ( часто all over)he spread the butter over a slice of bread - он намазал ломтик хлеба маслом
9) прикосновение к поверхности чего-л. поhis hands moved over the papers on the table - он перебирал бумаги на столе
his fountain-pen drove briskly over the paper - его перо быстро и легко скользило по бумаге
2. указывает на1) период протекания действия в течение, заover a long term /many/ of years - в течение долгих лет
2) включение в действие какого-л. момента, отрезка времени и т. п. включая; доcan you stay over the week-end? - можете ли вы остаться до понедельника?
the meeting was adjourned over the holidays - совещание было прервано с тем, чтобы возобновиться после праздников
3) протекание действия во время какого-л. занятия заhow long will he be over it? - сколько времени у него это займёт?
3. указывает на1) большее количество свыше, сверх, больше2) больший возраст, время и т. п. больше4. указывает на1) более высокое положение, преимущество, преобладание, господство, власть и т. п. надsuperiority over smb. - превосходство над кем-л.
an advantage over smb. - преимущество перед кем-л.
to triumph over smth. - восторжествовать над чем-л.
to rule over smth. - управлять /править/ чем-л.
2) более высокий ранг, положение выше, старше5. указывает на1) предмет мысли, спора и т. п. о, относительно, по поводу, касательноa dispute over smth. - спор о чём-л.
to quarrel over a matter - ссориться по поводу чего-л.
there was disagreement over the agenda - при обсуждении повестки дня возникли разногласия
to think over smth. - обдумывать что-л., думать над чем-л.
to laugh over smth. - смеяться над чем-л.
2) предмет рассмотрения, просмотра и т. п. - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой про-to go over smb.'s notes - (внимательно) прочесть чьи-л. заметки
to go over the details - вспомнить /мысленно представить себе/ все подробности
he went over everything in his pockets - он тщательно проверил всё, что у него было в карманах
6. указывает на преодоление трудностей, препятствий и т. п.:7. указывает на способ передвижения, пересылки, передачи по8. указывает на лицо, с которым что-л. происходит или случается:what has come over you? - разг. что (это) на вас нашло?
♢
it is over my head - это выше моего пониманияover head and ears, head over ears - по уши; по горло
to be head over ears in love - быть безумно /по уши/ влюблённым
head over heels - кувырком, вверх ногами; вверх тормашками
it will suit you perfectly well. - Over the left! - это вам очень подойдёт. - Скажете тоже!
over the signature of smb., over smb.'s signature - за подписью кого-л., за чьей-л. подписью
др. сочетания см. под соответствующими словами -
120 over
1. [ʹəʋvə] n1. излишек, избыток2. приплата3. воен. перелёт ( снаряда)5. радио переход на приём2. [ʹəʋvə] a1. верхний; внешний2. вышестоящий3. излишний, избыточный; чрезмерный3. [ʹəʋvə] adv1. 1) нахождение или движение над чем-л. наверху; наверхto hang over - нависать, висеть над головой
2) движение через что-л. - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой пере-the pot was full and the soup was boiling over - кастрюля была полна, и суп убежал
3) изменение положения, переворачивание, переход из вертикального положения в горизонтальное и т. п. - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой пере-to turn smth. over - перевернуть что-л. на другую сторону
please, turn over - смотри на обороте ( надпись)
to knock smb. over - сбить кого-л. с ног
to knock smth. over - опрокинуть что-л.
he gave me a push and over I went - он толкнул меня, и я упал
he stooped over to lace his shoes - он наклонился, чтобы зашнуровать ботинки
4) переход на противоположную сторону, изменение позиции - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой пере-Over! Over to you! - радио перехожу на приём!
he drove us over to the other side of town - он отвёз нас в другой конец города
5) приближение к какому-л. месту или лицу или переход к чему-л. - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой под-to go over to see smb. - разг. зайти к кому-л., навестить кого-л.
we have guests coming over this evening - сегодня вечером к нам придут гости
to go over to the store - сходить в магазин /за покупками/
6) нахождение на какой-л. стороне:over there - а) (вон) там; there's a good spot over there - там есть хорошее местечко; б) амер. разг. там, в Европе ( не в Америке)
over by the hill - там, за холмом
2. повторение вновь, опять, ещё разover again, over and over (again) - опять, снова, много раз (подряд)
he said the same thing over and over (again) - он всё время повторял одно и то же
to do smth. over - переделывать что-л.
he did that problem three times over - он трижды принимался за решение этой проблемы
3. 1) тщательность выполнения действия или доведение его до конца - часто передается глагольными приставками про-, пере-to think smth. over - продумать что-л.
to read a newspaper over - прочитать газету (от первой до последней страницы)
to look over - осмотреть; проверить
may I look the house over? - можно осмотреть дом?
dig the ground over well before planting the flowers - прежде чем сажать цветы, тщательно перекопайте землю
2) окончание чего-л.:the lesson [the concert] is over - урок [концерт] окончен
4. нерешённость, незаконченность, неурегулированность:to lay over - откладывать; отсрочивать
to hold over a decision - откладывать принятие решения; повременить с решением
let's hold it over until the next meeting - давайте отложим это до следующего собрания
5. распространение по всему данному месту, по всей территории и т. п. ( часто all over):to be all over in dust [in mud] - быть покрытым пылью [грязью] с головы до ног
to paint the wall over - закрасить /покрасить/ всю стену
a dress covered over with jewels - платье, усыпанное драгоценностями
6. длительность протекания действия в течение какого-л. периода времени или по истечении этого периода времени:please stay over until Monday - оставайтесь, пожалуйста, у нас до понедельника
7. передачу или переход чего-л. от одного лица к другому - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой пере-to hand smth. over to smb. - передать что-л. кому-л.
to take over a job from smb. - продолжать работу, начатую кем-л. другим
to make a property over to smb. - передать имущество кому-л., переписать имущество на кого-л.
to get one's point over to smb. - разг. втолковать кому-л. что-л.
8. 1) излишек, избыток вдобавок, сверх тогоto pay the full sum and smth. over - заплатить сполна и ещё прибавить
you will keep what is left over - оставьте себе, что осталось (о сдаче, о продуктах и т. п.)
nineteen divided by five makes three, and four over - девятнадцать, делённое на пять, равно трём и четыре в остатке
they were gone three hours or over - их тут нет уже три часа, а то и больше
2) избыток или высшую степень качества чрезвычайно, сверхa board [a tree] a foot over - доска [дерево] в один фут в диаметре
10. в сочетаниях:over against - а) напротив; Dover is over against Calais - Дувр расположен против Кале; б) против, по сравнению
all over - эмоц.-усил. типичный (для кого-л.)
that rudeness is George all over - такая грубость, характерна для Джорджа
she is her mother all over - она точная копия своей матери, она вся в мать
over with - разг. сделанный, законченный
let's hurry and get the job over with - давай(те) поторопимся и закончим наше дело /покончим с этим/
it is all over with him - с ним всё кончено; он погиб; он разорён
that's over and done with - с этим всё покончено, это предано забвению
over and above - а) к тому же, кроме того, вдобавок к; over and above, he is younger than you - и к тому же /кроме того/ он моложе вас; б) слишком, чересчур
др. сочетания см. под соответствующими словами4. [ʹəʋvə] prep1. указывает на1) нахождение или движение над каким-л. предметом надto bend /to lean/ over smb., smth. - наклониться /склониться/ над кем-л., чем-л.
2) положение на каком-л. предмете или поверх него наhis hat was pulled low over his eyes - его шляпа была низко надвинута на глаза
3) положение поперёк чего-л. черезhe had a towel over his shoulder - через плечо у него было перекинуто полотенце
4) местоположение по другую сторону чего-л. по ту сторону, заover the sea - а) за морем; б) за пределами страны, за границей
to sell smth. over the counter - торговать чем-л. за прилавком
5) положение у, около чего-л. уto sit over the fire - сидеть у огня /у костра/
6) надевание, натягивание чехла и т. п. на7) движение через что-л., по чему-л. или через какое-л. препятствие через, поto leap over smth. - перепрыгнуть через что-л.
to help smb. over the road - помочь кому-л. перейти дорогу
to go over the bridge - пройти через мост /по мосту/
they looked over his shoulder into the room - они заглядывали в комнату через плечо
she fell over a stone - она упала, споткнувшись о камень
8) движение или распространение по какой-л. поверхности в определённом или разных направлениях по; на ( часто all over)he spread the butter over a slice of bread - он намазал ломтик хлеба маслом
9) прикосновение к поверхности чего-л. поhis hands moved over the papers on the table - он перебирал бумаги на столе
his fountain-pen drove briskly over the paper - его перо быстро и легко скользило по бумаге
2. указывает на1) период протекания действия в течение, заover a long term /many/ of years - в течение долгих лет
2) включение в действие какого-л. момента, отрезка времени и т. п. включая; доcan you stay over the week-end? - можете ли вы остаться до понедельника?
the meeting was adjourned over the holidays - совещание было прервано с тем, чтобы возобновиться после праздников
3) протекание действия во время какого-л. занятия заhow long will he be over it? - сколько времени у него это займёт?
3. указывает на1) большее количество свыше, сверх, больше2) больший возраст, время и т. п. больше4. указывает на1) более высокое положение, преимущество, преобладание, господство, власть и т. п. надsuperiority over smb. - превосходство над кем-л.
an advantage over smb. - преимущество перед кем-л.
to triumph over smth. - восторжествовать над чем-л.
to rule over smth. - управлять /править/ чем-л.
2) более высокий ранг, положение выше, старше5. указывает на1) предмет мысли, спора и т. п. о, относительно, по поводу, касательноa dispute over smth. - спор о чём-л.
to quarrel over a matter - ссориться по поводу чего-л.
there was disagreement over the agenda - при обсуждении повестки дня возникли разногласия
to think over smth. - обдумывать что-л., думать над чем-л.
to laugh over smth. - смеяться над чем-л.
2) предмет рассмотрения, просмотра и т. п. - часто передаётся глагольной приставкой про-to go over smb.'s notes - (внимательно) прочесть чьи-л. заметки
to go over the details - вспомнить /мысленно представить себе/ все подробности
he went over everything in his pockets - он тщательно проверил всё, что у него было в карманах
6. указывает на преодоление трудностей, препятствий и т. п.:7. указывает на способ передвижения, пересылки, передачи по8. указывает на лицо, с которым что-л. происходит или случается:what has come over you? - разг. что (это) на вас нашло?
♢
it is over my head - это выше моего пониманияover head and ears, head over ears - по уши; по горло
to be head over ears in love - быть безумно /по уши/ влюблённым
head over heels - кувырком, вверх ногами; вверх тормашками
it will suit you perfectly well. - Over the left! - это вам очень подойдёт. - Скажете тоже!
over the signature of smb., over smb.'s signature - за подписью кого-л., за чьей-л. подписью
др. сочетания см. под соответствующими словами
См. также в других словарях:
Led Zeppelin II — Studioalbum von Led Zeppelin Veröffentlichung 22. Oktober 1969 Label Atlantic Records … Deutsch Wikipedia
War of 1812 — This article is about the Anglo American War of 1812 to 1815. For other wars in 1812, see War of 1812 (disambiguation). War of 1812 The unfinished United States Capitol after the burning of Washington. Watercolor and i … Wikipedia
War in Afghanistan (2001–present) — War in Afghanistan Part of the Afghan civil war and the War on Terror … Wikipedia
War of the Spanish Succession — Philip V of Spain and the Duke of Vendôme commanded the Franco Spanish charge at the Battle of Villaviciosa by Jean Alaux (1840) … Wikipedia
War of the Pyrenees — Part of the French Revolutionary Wars The Panissars blockhouse, looking south from the Fort de Bellegarde into Spain. The town of La Junquera is left of center … Wikipedia
Led Zeppelin III — Studioalbum von Led Zeppelin Veröffentlichung 5. Oktober 1970 Label Atlantic Records … Deutsch Wikipedia
LED-Scheinwerfer — sind Scheinwerfer, bei denen Leuchtdioden (englisch light emitting diode, LED) als Leuchtmittel eingesetzt werden. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Funktionsprinzip 2 Aufbau 3 Einsatz … Deutsch Wikipedia
War of the Austrian Succession — The Battle of Fontenoy by Édouard Detaille. Oil on canvas … Wikipedia
War in the Age of Intelligent Machines — (1991) is a book by Manuel de Landa that traces the history of warfare and of technology. It is influenced in part by Michel Foucault s Discipline and Punish (1978), and also reinterprets the concepts of war machines and the machinic phylum,… … Wikipedia
War of the Confederation — Date 1836–1839 Location Present day Bolivia and Peru Result United Restorative Army victory, dissolution of the confederation. Argentina fails to conquer Tarija … Wikipedia
War in Vietnam (1945–1946) — War in Vietnam (1945 1946) Part of the Indochina Wars and the Cold War A Japanese off … Wikipedia