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limited+effects+technology

  • 1 Limited Effects Technology

    Abbreviation: LET (e.g., nonlethal weapons)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Limited Effects Technology

  • 2 restringido

    adj.
    1 restricted, limited, qualified.
    2 frugally restricted, frugal.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: restringir.
    * * *
    (f. - restringida)
    adj.
    limited, restricted
    * * *
    ADJ restricted, limited
    * * *
    - da adjetivo < libertad> restricted, limited; <posibilidades/cantidad> limited
    * * *
    = reduced, restrictive, restricted, curtailed, unapproved, hampered.
    Ex. The model shows that market concentration rises with inelastic demand, reduced marginal costs and efficient technology.
    Ex. These beliefs will determine how restrictive or nonrestrictive the library will be in terms of providing physical and intellectual access to information.
    Ex. Librarians are experiencing dissatisfaction with the restricted opportunities available to them to find expression for, and recognition of, their skills in the present climate of change.
    Ex. Most of their libraries offer 9.00 a.m. to 10.00 p.m. opening on weekdays, and a somewhat curtailed opening day on Saturdays.
    Ex. Tenure came into being to protect the academic freedom of scholars who intellectually venture into new or unapproved areas of knowledge.
    Ex. Such effects are often explicable in terms of the inability of the hampered roots to supply the shoot with water or nutrients.
    ----
    * acceso restringido = restricted access.
    * biblioteca de acceso restringido = closed-stack library.
    * cada vez más restringido = tightening.
    * campo restringido = limit field.
    * de acceso restringido = closed access.
    * estar restringido = be constrained.
    * fondos de acceso restringido = closed access collection, closed stacks.
    * no restringido = non-restrictive, unconfined.
    * ser restringido = be constrained.
    * * *
    - da adjetivo < libertad> restricted, limited; <posibilidades/cantidad> limited
    * * *
    = reduced, restrictive, restricted, curtailed, unapproved, hampered.

    Ex: The model shows that market concentration rises with inelastic demand, reduced marginal costs and efficient technology.

    Ex: These beliefs will determine how restrictive or nonrestrictive the library will be in terms of providing physical and intellectual access to information.
    Ex: Librarians are experiencing dissatisfaction with the restricted opportunities available to them to find expression for, and recognition of, their skills in the present climate of change.
    Ex: Most of their libraries offer 9.00 a.m. to 10.00 p.m. opening on weekdays, and a somewhat curtailed opening day on Saturdays.
    Ex: Tenure came into being to protect the academic freedom of scholars who intellectually venture into new or unapproved areas of knowledge.
    Ex: Such effects are often explicable in terms of the inability of the hampered roots to supply the shoot with water or nutrients.
    * acceso restringido = restricted access.
    * biblioteca de acceso restringido = closed-stack library.
    * cada vez más restringido = tightening.
    * campo restringido = limit field.
    * de acceso restringido = closed access.
    * estar restringido = be constrained.
    * fondos de acceso restringido = closed access collection, closed stacks.
    * no restringido = non-restrictive, unconfined.
    * ser restringido = be constrained.

    * * *
    ‹libertad› restricted, limited; ‹posibilidades› limited
    un número restringido de personas a limited number of people
    * * *

    Del verbo restringir: ( conjugate restringir)

    restringido es:

    el participio

    Multiple Entries:
    restringido    
    restringir
    restringido
    ◊ -da adjetivo ‹ libertad restricted, limited;


    posibilidades/cantidad limited
    restringir ( conjugate restringir) verbo transitivo
    to restrict
    restringir vtr (el acceso a un lugar, derecho) to restrict, limit
    (el consumo, distribución de algo) to cut back, restrict
    ' restringido' also found in these entries:
    English:
    open
    - clamp
    - narrow
    * * *
    restringido, -a adj
    limited, restricted
    * * *
    restringido, -da adj
    limitado: limited, restricted

    Spanish-English dictionary > restringido

  • 3 recuperar

    v.
    to recover.
    recuperar el tiempo perdido to make up for lost time
    recuperó la salud she got better, she recovered
    recuperó la libertad tras diez años en la cárcel he regained his freedom after ten years in prison
    Ellos rescataron el dinero They retrieved the money.
    * * *
    1 (gen) to recover, recuperate, retrieve
    2 (afecto) to win back; (conocimiento) to regain; (salud) to recover; (tiempo, clases) to make up
    1 (disgusto, emoción) to get over (de, -), recover (de, from)
    2 (enfermedad) to recover (de, from), recuperate (de, from)
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    1. VT
    1) (=recobrar)
    a) [+ bienes] to recover; [+ costes, pérdidas, inversión] to recoup, recover

    no recuperamos el dinero robado — we didn't get the stolen money back, we didn't recover the stolen money más frm

    b) [+ credibilidad, poder, libertad, control] to regain; [+ fuerzas] to get back, regain

    al verte recuperó la sonrisathe smile came back o returned to her face when she saw you

    nunca recuperó la memoria — she never got her memory back, she never regained o recovered her memory

    c) [+ clase, día] to make up
    d) (Inform) to retrieve
    2) (=reutilizar)
    a) [+ edificio] to restore; [+ tierras] to reclaim; [+ chatarra, vidrio] to salvage
    b) [del olvido] [+ artista, obra] to revive; [+ tradiciones] to restore, revive
    3) (Educ) to retake, resit
    2.
    See:
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo
    a) <dinero/joyas/botín> to recover, get back; < pérdidas> to recoup
    b) < vista> to recover

    recuperar la salud — to get better, recover

    recuperar la confianza en sí mismoto regain o recover one's self-confidence

    c) ( compensar)
    d) <examen/asignatura> to retake, make up (AmE)
    2.
    recuperarse v pron

    recuperarse DE algo de enfermedad to recover from something, recuperate from something (frml); de sorpresa/desgracia to get over something, recover from something

    * * *
    = hit, recall, recoup, recover, retrieve, reclaim, effect + retrieval, recuperate, redeem, catch up on, resuscitate, give + a second life, turn + Nombre + (a)round, regain.
    Ex. FIB$3 will hit words where the stem 'FIB' is followed by no more than three characters.
    Ex. Word processing software available for use on mainframe computers, microcomputers and word processors was originally designed for application where it is convenient to be able to store a text, then recall this text, and re-use it with minor modifications, at a later date.
    Ex. If some records are acquired by only a limited number of libraries, it will be difficult to recoup the cost of creating and maintaining these records.
    Ex. In order to fulfil this function, the information which is stored in the library must be recovered, or retrieved, from the store.
    Ex. Step 1 Familiarisation: A searcher must be adequately familiar with that which he wishes to retrieve.
    Ex. The article ' Reclaiming our technological future' discusses the effects of electronic technology on the future development of libraries and librarians.
    Ex. Further, menu screens will be necessary until the user has specified the task that he wishes executed or the information that he wishes to retrieve sufficiently for execution or retrieval to be effected.
    Ex. Competition with superstores has forced them to recuperate sales by focusing on specific areas.
    Ex. Eliot somehow suggests that a mix of blood and electricity might yet redeem the petty materialism of the modern world that he had previously seen only as a wasteland.
    Ex. Non-book materials will need positive discrimination to catch up on the neglect in the past.
    Ex. An ambitious study of the interrelationships of folklore and literature, this book resuscitates the figure of the granny using oral history and fieldwork.
    Ex. This book will show you how to give a second life to everything from plastic containers to bubble wrap to pantyhose and more.
    Ex. When he was younger he really turned the library around, from a backwater, two-bit operation to the respected institution it is today.
    Ex. Once he regained his weight, he began to play like he did in 2006, when he won the tournament.
    ----
    * ayudar a Alguien a recuperarse = help + Nombre + get on + Posesivo + feet.
    * fácil de recuperar = easily-retrievable.
    * recuperar de = resurrect from.
    * recuperar el aliento = catch + Posesivo + breath.
    * recuperar el conocimiento = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.
    * recuperar el prestigio = regain + Posesivo + prestige.
    * recuperar el sentido = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.
    * recuperar el tiempo perdido = make up for + lost time.
    * recuperar gastos = recoup + costs, recoup against + costs.
    * recuperar la confianza = boost + Posesivo + confidence, bolster + confidence.
    * recuperar la energía = regain + Posesivo + strength.
    * recuperar la fuerza = regain + Posesivo + strength, gain + strength.
    * recuperar la salud = regain + Posesivo + health.
    * recuperar las fuerzas = recoup + energy, gain + strength.
    * recuperar + Posesivo + antigua gloria = regain + Posesivo + former glory.
    * recuperar + Posesivo + antigua grandeza = regain + Posesivo + former glory.
    * recuperar + Posesivo + antiguo esplendor = regain + Posesivo + former glory.
    * recuperarse = rally + Reflexivo, find + Posesivo + feet, rebound, pick up, rally, turn + a corner, get + a second wind, get back into + the game, pick up + the pieces.
    * recuperarse de = reel from.
    * recuperarse totalmente = be up to strength.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo
    a) <dinero/joyas/botín> to recover, get back; < pérdidas> to recoup
    b) < vista> to recover

    recuperar la salud — to get better, recover

    recuperar la confianza en sí mismoto regain o recover one's self-confidence

    c) ( compensar)
    d) <examen/asignatura> to retake, make up (AmE)
    2.
    recuperarse v pron

    recuperarse DE algo de enfermedad to recover from something, recuperate from something (frml); de sorpresa/desgracia to get over something, recover from something

    * * *
    = hit, recall, recoup, recover, retrieve, reclaim, effect + retrieval, recuperate, redeem, catch up on, resuscitate, give + a second life, turn + Nombre + (a)round, regain.

    Ex: FIB$3 will hit words where the stem 'FIB' is followed by no more than three characters.

    Ex: Word processing software available for use on mainframe computers, microcomputers and word processors was originally designed for application where it is convenient to be able to store a text, then recall this text, and re-use it with minor modifications, at a later date.
    Ex: If some records are acquired by only a limited number of libraries, it will be difficult to recoup the cost of creating and maintaining these records.
    Ex: In order to fulfil this function, the information which is stored in the library must be recovered, or retrieved, from the store.
    Ex: Step 1 Familiarisation: A searcher must be adequately familiar with that which he wishes to retrieve.
    Ex: The article ' Reclaiming our technological future' discusses the effects of electronic technology on the future development of libraries and librarians.
    Ex: Further, menu screens will be necessary until the user has specified the task that he wishes executed or the information that he wishes to retrieve sufficiently for execution or retrieval to be effected.
    Ex: Competition with superstores has forced them to recuperate sales by focusing on specific areas.
    Ex: Eliot somehow suggests that a mix of blood and electricity might yet redeem the petty materialism of the modern world that he had previously seen only as a wasteland.
    Ex: Non-book materials will need positive discrimination to catch up on the neglect in the past.
    Ex: An ambitious study of the interrelationships of folklore and literature, this book resuscitates the figure of the granny using oral history and fieldwork.
    Ex: This book will show you how to give a second life to everything from plastic containers to bubble wrap to pantyhose and more.
    Ex: When he was younger he really turned the library around, from a backwater, two-bit operation to the respected institution it is today.
    Ex: Once he regained his weight, he began to play like he did in 2006, when he won the tournament.
    * ayudar a Alguien a recuperarse = help + Nombre + get on + Posesivo + feet.
    * fácil de recuperar = easily-retrievable.
    * recuperar de = resurrect from.
    * recuperar el aliento = catch + Posesivo + breath.
    * recuperar el conocimiento = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.
    * recuperar el prestigio = regain + Posesivo + prestige.
    * recuperar el sentido = regain + Posesivo + consciousness.
    * recuperar el tiempo perdido = make up for + lost time.
    * recuperar gastos = recoup + costs, recoup against + costs.
    * recuperar la confianza = boost + Posesivo + confidence, bolster + confidence.
    * recuperar la energía = regain + Posesivo + strength.
    * recuperar la fuerza = regain + Posesivo + strength, gain + strength.
    * recuperar la salud = regain + Posesivo + health.
    * recuperar las fuerzas = recoup + energy, gain + strength.
    * recuperar + Posesivo + antigua gloria = regain + Posesivo + former glory.
    * recuperar + Posesivo + antigua grandeza = regain + Posesivo + former glory.
    * recuperar + Posesivo + antiguo esplendor = regain + Posesivo + former glory.
    * recuperarse = rally + Reflexivo, find + Posesivo + feet, rebound, pick up, rally, turn + a corner, get + a second wind, get back into + the game, pick up + the pieces.
    * recuperarse de = reel from.
    * recuperarse totalmente = be up to strength.

    * * *
    recuperar [A1 ]
    vt
    1 ‹dinero/joyas/botín› to recover, get back; ‹pérdidas› to recoup
    recuperamos las joyas pero no el dinero we got the jewels back o we recovered the jewels but not the money
    por fin recuperé todos los libros que había prestado I finally got back all the books I'd lent out
    2 ‹vista› to recover
    recuperó la salud she got well again, she recovered
    pasé unos días en cama para recuperar fuerzas I stayed in bed for a couple of days to get my strength back
    nunca recuperó la confianza en sí mismo he never regained o recovered his self-confidence
    3
    (compensar): recuperar el tiempo perdido to make up for lost time
    el sábado recuperaremos la clase de hoy we'll make up today's lesson on Saturday
    tuve que recuperar los días que estuve enfermo I had to make up (for) the days I was off sick
    4 ‹delincuente› to rehabilitate
    5 ‹examen/asignatura› to retake, to make up ( AmE), to resit ( BrE)
    6 ( Inf) to undelete
    recuperarse DE algo ‹de una enfermedad› to recover FROM sth, get over sth, recuperate FROM sth ( frml); ‹de una sorpresa/una desgracia› to get over sth, recover FROM sth
    ya está recuperado del accidente he has recovered from o got(ten) over the accident
    * * *

     

    recuperar ( conjugate recuperar) verbo transitivo
    a)dinero/joyas/botín to recover, get back;

    pérdidas to recoup
    b)vista/salud to recover;

    confianza to regain;



    d)examen/asignatura to retake, make up (AmE)

    recuperarse verbo pronominal recuperarse DE algo ‹ de enfermedad› to recover from sth, recuperate from sth (frml);
    de sorpresa/desgracia to get over sth, recover from sth
    recuperar verbo transitivo
    1 (un objeto) to recover, retrieve
    2 (la salud, un sentido, etc) to recover, regain: recuperar las fuerzas, to get one's strength back
    3 (el tiempo) to make up
    4 (una asignatura) to retake
    ' recuperar' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    amortizar
    - desempeñar
    - reanimarse
    - reivindicar
    - fuerza
    English:
    catch up
    - claw back
    - get back
    - homeland
    - make up
    - recapture
    - reclaim
    - recoup
    - recover
    - regain
    - repossess
    - retrieve
    - snatch back
    - take back
    - win back
    - even
    - get
    * * *
    vt
    1. [recobrar] [lo perdido] to recover;
    [espacios naturales] to reclaim; [horas de trabajo] to make up; [conocimiento] to regain;
    recuperar el tiempo perdido to make up for lost time;
    recuperó la salud she got better, she recovered;
    recuperó la vista she regained her sight, she got her sight back;
    no recuperaron el dinero invertido they didn't get back o recoup the money they invested;
    recuperó la libertad tras diez años en la cárcel he regained his freedom after ten years in prison;
    haremos un descanso para recuperar fuerzas we'll have a break to get our strength back
    2. [rehabilitar] [local, edificio] to refurbish
    3. Informát [información dañada] to recover
    4. [reciclar] to recover
    5. [examen] to retake, Br to resit;
    tengo que recuperar la física en septiembre I have to retake physics in September
    6. [en baloncesto] to steal
    * * *
    v/t
    1 tiempo make up
    2 algo perdido recover, get back
    3 exámen retake, Br
    re-sit
    4 en baloncesto steal
    * * *
    1) : to recover, to get back, to retrieve
    2) : to recuperate
    3) : to make up for
    recuperar el tiempo perdido: to make up for lost time
    * * *
    1. (en general) to recover / to get back
    perdí el monedero, pero al día siguiente lo recuperé I lost my purse, but I got it back the next day
    2. (tiempo, clases) to make up
    3. (examen) to pass a resit

    Spanish-English dictionary > recuperar

  • 4 анализ благосостояния

    Анализом благосостояния называется нормативная часть потребительской теории. В анализе благосостояния оцениваются воздействия изменений в окружающей среде потребителя на его благополучие. Существенное значение для анализа благосостояния имеет основанный на предпочтениях подход к потребительскому спросу. Без него мы не располагали бы средствами оценки уровня благополучия потребителя. — The normative side of consumer theory is called welfare analysis. Welfare analysis concerns itself with the evaluation of the effects of changes in the consumer's environment on his well-being. The preference-based approach to consumer demand is of critical importance for welfare analysis. Without it, we could have no means of evaluating the consumer's level of well-being.

    Нередко интересно измерить изменение уровня общественного благосостояния, которое порождается изменением рыночных условий, например улучшением технологии, новой налоговой политикой правительства или устранением некоторого рыночного несовершенства. Проведение такого анализа благосостояния является особенно простым в модели частичного равновесия. Этот факт объясняет в значительной мере популярность данной модели. — It is often of interest to measure the change in the level of social welfare that would be generated by a change in market conditions, such as an improvement in technology, a new government tax policy, or the elimination of some market imperfection. In the partial equilibrium model, it is particularly simple to carry out this welfare analysis. This fact accounts to a large extent for the popularity of the model.

    В некоторых обстоятельствах мы не можем получить функцию расходов потребителя, так как обладаем лишь ограниченной информацией о его функции спроса по Вальрасу. — In some circumstances, we may not be able to derive the consumer's expenditure function because we may have only limited information about his Walrasian demand function.

    Russian-English Dictionary "Microeconomics" > анализ благосостояния

  • 5 Yarrow, Sir Alfred Fernandez

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 13 January 1842 London, England
    d. 24 January 1932 London, England
    [br]
    English shipbuilder, naval architect, engineer and philanthropist.
    [br]
    At the conclusion of his schooling in the South of England, Yarrow became an indentured apprentice to the Thames engine-builder Ravenhill. During this five-year period various incidents and meetings sharpened his interest in scientific matters and he showed the skills that in later years were to be so beneficial to shipbuilding. For two years he acted as London representative for Ravenhill before joining up with a Mr Hedley to form a shipyard on the Isle of Dogs. The company lasted from 1868 until 1875 and in that period produced 350 small launches and other craft. This massive output enabled Yarrow to gain confidence in many aspects of ship design. Within two years of setting out on his own he built his first ship for the Royal Navy: a torpedo boat, then at the cutting edge of technology.
    In the early 1890s the company was building watertube boilers and producing destroyers with speeds in excess of 27 knots (50 km/h); it built the Russian destroyer Sokol, did pioneering work with aluminium and with high-tensile steels and worked on shipboard equipment to nullify vibrational effects. With the closure of most of the Thames shipyards and the run-down in skilled labour, Yarrow decided that the shipyard must move to some other part of the United Kingdom. After careful deliberation a green field site to the west of Glasgow was chosen, and in 1908 their first Clyde-built destroyer was launched. The company expanded, more building berths were arranged, boiler construction was developed and over the years they became recognized as specialists in smaller highspeed craft and in "knock down" ships for other parts of the world.
    Yarrow retired in 1913, but at the commencement of the First World War he returned to help the yard produce, in four years, twenty-nine destroyers with speeds of up to 40 knots (74 km/h). At the end of hostilities he gave of his time and money to many charities, including those for ex-servicemen. He left a remarkable industrial organization which remains to this day the most prolific builder of surface craft for the Royal Navy.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Created Baronet 1916. FRS 1922. Vice-President, Institution of Naval Architects 1896.
    Further Reading
    Lady Yarrow, 1924, Alfred Yarrow, His Life and Work, London: Edward Arnold. A.Borthwick, 1965, Yarrow and Company Limited, The First Hundred Years 1865–
    1965, Glasgow.
    B.Baxter, 1986, "Alfred Fernandez Yarrow", Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography, Vol. I, pp. 245–7, Slaven \& Checkland and Aberdeen University Press.
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Yarrow, Sir Alfred Fernandez

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