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kay's

  • 1 Kay

    Czech-English dictionary > Kay

  • 2 kay

    [Tag. kay]: for

    Waray-English dictionary > kay

  • 3 kay

    (ex) certainly, of course. Ite le mu kay. It's you, of course.

    Mandinka-English dictionary > kay

  • 4 kay

    building, dwelling, house, quail

    Haitian-English dictionary > kay

  • 5 kay

    English Definition: (pron) singular SA proper noun marker; also marks possession; the plural form is KINA, to, from, for

    Tagalog-English dictionary > kay

  • 6 kay

    tribe

    Old Turkish to English > kay

  • 7 kay

    tribe

    Old Turkish to English > kay

  • 8 kay

    of, for

    Tagalog-English dictionary > kay

  • 9 kay...

    how

    Tagalog-English dictionary > kay...

  • 10 kay

    1 dwelling
    2 house

    Kreyol-angle Diksyonè > kay

  • 11 kay

    ,-yyı vomiting. - etmek to vomit.

    Saja Türkçe - İngilizce Sözlük > kay

  • 12 kay

    1) vti pakkay [m2]vt
    2) vti carry (on the back)

    Ainu-English dictionary > kay

  • 13 kay-way

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > kay-way

  • 14 Kay (of Bury), John

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 16 July 1704 Walmersley, near Bury, Lancashire, England
    d. 1779 France
    [br]
    English inventor of the flying shuttle.
    [br]
    John Kay was the youngest of five sons of a yeoman farmer of Walmersley, near Bury, Lancashire, who died before his birth. John was apprenticed to a reedmaker, and just before he was 21 he married a daughter of John Hall of Bury and carried on his trade in that town until 1733. It is possible that his first patent, taken out in 1730, was connected with this business because it was for an engine that made mohair thread for tailors and twisted and dressed thread; such thread could have been used to bind up the reeds used in looms. He also improved the reeds by making them from metal instead of cane strips so they lasted much longer and could be made to be much finer. His next patent in 1733, was a double one. One part of it was for a batting machine to remove dust from wool by beating it with sticks, but the patent is better known for its description of the flying shuttle. Kay placed boxes to receive the shuttle at either end of the reed or sley. Across the open top of these boxes was a metal rod along which a picking peg could slide and drive the shuttle out across the loom. The pegs at each end were connected by strings to a stick that was held in the right hand of the weaver and which jerked the shuttle out of the box. The shuttle had wheels to make it "fly" across the warp more easily, and ran on a shuttle race to support and guide it. Not only was weaving speeded up, but the weaver could produce broader cloth without any aid from a second person. This invention was later adapted for the power loom. Kay moved to Colchester and entered into partnership with a baymaker named Solomon Smith and a year later was joined by William Carter of Ballingdon, Essex. His shuttle was received with considerable hostility in both Lancashire and Essex, but it was probably more his charge of 15 shillings a year for its use that roused the antagonism. From 1737 he was much involved with lawsuits to try and protect his patent, particularly the part that specified the method of winding the thread onto a fixed bobbin in the shuttle. In 1738 Kay patented a windmill for working pumps and an improved chain pump, but neither of these seems to have been successful. In 1745, with Joseph Stell of Keighley, he patented a narrow fabric loom that could be worked by power; this type may have been employed by Gartside in Manchester soon afterwards. It was probably through failure to protect his patent rights that Kay moved to France, where he arrived penniless in 1747. He went to the Dutch firm of Daniel Scalongne, woollen manufacturers, in Abbeville. The company helped him to apply for a French patent for his shuttle, but Kay wanted the exorbitant sum of £10,000. There was much discussion and eventually Kay set up a workshop in Paris, where he received a pension of 2,500 livres. However, he was to face the same problems as in England with weavers copying his shuttle without permission. In 1754 he produced two machines for making card clothing: one pierced holes in the leather, while the other cut and sharpened the wires. These were later improved by his son, Robert Kay. Kay returned to England briefly, but was back in France in 1758. He was involved with machines to card both cotton and wool and tried again to obtain support from the French Government. He was still involved with developing textile machines in 1779, when he was 75, but he must have died soon afterwards. As an inventor Kay was a genius of the first rank, but he was vain, obstinate and suspicious and was destitute of business qualities.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1730, British patent no. 515 (machine for making mohair thread). 1733, British patent no. 542 (batting machine and flying shuttle). 1738, British patent no. 561 (pump windmill and chain pump). 1745, with Joseph Stell, British patent no. 612 (power loom).
    Further Reading
    B.Woodcroft, 1863, Brief Biographies of Inventors or Machines for the Manufacture of Textile Fabrics, London.
    J.Lord, 1903, Memoir of John Kay, (a more accurate account).
    Descriptions of his inventions may be found in A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London; R.L. Hills, 1970, Power in the
    Industrial Revolution, Manchester; and C.Singer (ed.), 1957, A History of
    Technology, Vol. III, Oxford: Clarendon Press. The most important record, however, is in A.P.Wadsworth and J. de L. Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial
    Lancashire, Manchester.
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Kay (of Bury), John

  • 15 Kay (of Warrington), John

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    fl. c.1770 England
    [br]
    English clockmaker who helped Richard Arkwright to construct his spinning machine.
    [br]
    John Kay was a clockmaker of Warrington. He moved to Leigh, where he helped Thomas Highs to construct his spinning machine, but lack of success made them abandon their attempts. Kay first met Richard Arkwright in March 1767 and six months later was persuaded by Arkwright to make one or more models of the roller spinning machine he had built under Highs's supervision. Kay went with Arkwright to Preston, where they continued working on the machine. Kay also went with Arkwright when he moved to Nottingham. It was around this time that he entered into an agreement with Arkwright to serve him for twenty-one years and was bound not to disclose any details of the machines. Presumably Kay helped to set up the first spinning machines at Arkwright's Nottingham mill as well as at Cromford. Despite their agreement, he seems to have left after about five years and may have disclosed the secret of Arkwright's crank and comb on the carding engine to others. Kay was later to give evidence against Arkwright during the trial of his patent in 1785.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    R.S.Fitton, 1989, The Arkwrights, Spinners of Fortune, Manchester (the most detailed account of Kay's connections with Arkwright and his evidence during the later patent trials).
    A.P.Wadsworth and J. de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, Manchester (mentions Kay's association with Arkwright).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Kay (of Warrington), John

  • 16 Kay, Robert

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. probably before 1747
    d. 1801 Bury, Lancashire, England
    [br]
    English inventor of the drop box, whereby shuttles with different wefts could be stored and selected when needed.
    [br]
    Little is known about the early life of Robert Kay except that he may have moved to France with his father, John Kay of Bury in 1747 but must have returned to England and their home town of Bury soon after. He may have been involved with his father in the production of a machine for making the wire covering for hand cards to prepare cotton for spinning. However, John Aikin, writing in 1795, implies that this was a recent invention. Kay's machine could pierce the holes in the leather backing, cut off a length of wire, bend it and insert it through the holes, row after row, in one operation by a person turning a shaft. The machine preserved in the Science Museum, in London's South Kensington, is more likely to be one of Robert's machine than his father's, for Robert carried on business as a cardmaker in Bury from 1791 until his death in 1801. The flying shuttle, invented by his father, does not seem to have been much used by weavers of cotton until Robert invented the drop box in 1760. Instead of a single box at the end of the sley, Robert usually put two, but sometimes three or four, one above another; the boxes could be raised or lowered. Shuttles with either different colours or different types of weft could be put in the boxes and the weaver could select any one by manipulating levers with the left hand while working the picking stick with the right to drive the appropriate shuttle across the loom. Since the selection could be made without the weaver having to pick up a shuttle and place it in the lath, this invention helped to speed up weaving, especially of multi-coloured checks, which formed a large part of the Lancashire output.
    Between 1760 and 1763 Robert Kay may have written a pamphlet describing the invention of the flying shuttle and the attack on his father, pointing out how much his father had suffered and that there had been no redress. In February 1764 he brought to the notice of the Society of Arts an improvement he had made to the flying shuttle by substituting brass for wood, which enabled a larger spool to be carried.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    A.P.Wadsworth and J. de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, Manchester.
    A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London; and R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (for details about the drop box).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Kay, Robert

  • 17 Kay, John

    Biographical history of technology > Kay, John

  • 18 Kay and Johnson's Chancery Reports

    Law: K.&J., Kay&Johns.

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Kay and Johnson's Chancery Reports

  • 19 Kay's Chancery Reports

    Law: Kay

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Kay's Chancery Reports

  • 20 Kay Algorithmic Realtime Music Architecture

    Computers: KARMA

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Kay Algorithmic Realtime Music Architecture

См. также в других словарях:

  • Kay — ist: eine Variante des Vornamens Kai, siehe Kai (Vorname) ein US amerikanischer Gitarrenhersteller, siehe Kay Guitars eine andere Form des Namens für Cei fab Cynyr oder Keie, ein Ritter der Tafelrunde eine Kurzform von okay Kay ist der Name… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • kay — kay·an; kay·en·ta; mc·kay; twan·kay; kay; kay·ak; to·kay; kay·ak·er; …   English syllables

  • Kay — /kay/, n. 1. Sir, Arthurian Romance. the rude, boastful foster brother and seneschal of Arthur. 2. Ulysses Simpson /simp seuhn/, born 1917, U.S. composer. 3. a female or male given name: from a Greek word meaning rejoice. * * * (as used in… …   Universalium

  • Kay — Kay,   Alan, US amerik. Informatiker, *Springfield (Massachusetts, USA) 1940, nach Studium der Mathematik, Molekularbiologie und Elektrotechnik arbeitete Kay bei verschiedenen Forschungszentren und war 1972 1983 am Xerox PARC tätig. Nach einem… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Kay — f, m English: 1 (f.) Pet form of any of the various female names beginning with the letter K (cf. DEE (SEE Dee) and JAY (SEE Jay)), most notably KATHERINE (SEE Katherine) and its variants. 2 (m.) Comp …   First names dictionary

  • Kay [1] — Kay, s. Kai …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Kay [2] — Kay, Dorf im Kreise Züllichau Schwiebus des Regierungsbezirks Frankfurt der preußischen Provinz Brandenburg, 400 Ew.; hier am 23. Juli 1759 Sieg der Russen unter Soltikow über die Preußen unter Wedell, s. Siebenjähriger Krieg …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Kay — Kay, Dorf bei Züllichau in der Mark Brandenburg, mit 660 Einw.; hier wurden 23. Juli 1759 die Preußen unter General v. Wedell mit einem Verluste von 8000 Mann durch die Russen unter Soltikow geschlagen. Vgl. Leeder, Die Schlacht von K. (Grünberg… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Kay — Kay, Dorf im preuß. Reg. Bez. Frankfurt, (1900) 490 E.; hier 23. Juli 1759 Niederlage der Preußen unter Wedel durch die Russen unter Soltikow …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Kay — fem. proper name, often a shortening of KATHERINE (Cf. Katherine). As a given name for girls, from 1890s in the U.S.; in the top 100 for girls born there 1936 1945 …   Etymology dictionary

  • Kay — vgl. 2Kai …   Die deutsche Rechtschreibung

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