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  • 1 título lucrativo

    • lucrative title

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > título lucrativo

  • 2 título gratuito

    m.
    gratuitous title, lucrative title, title acquired gratuitously.

    Spanish-English dictionary > título gratuito

  • 3 título gratuito

    • gratuitous loan
    • gratuitously
    • lucrative title
    • title acquired gratuitously

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > título gratuito

  • 4 возмездно приобретённый правовой титул

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > возмездно приобретённый правовой титул

  • 5 выгодный правовой титул

    Insurance: lucrative title

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > выгодный правовой титул

  • 6 право, приобретённое безвозмездно

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > право, приобретённое безвозмездно

  • 7 título lucrativo

    m.
    lucrative title.

    Spanish-English dictionary > título lucrativo

  • 8 abrirse camino

    v.
    1 to push through, to get somewhere, to make headway, to hack one's way through.
    Ellos se abrieron camino fácilmente They pushed through easily.
    2 to bulldoze through, to burst through.
    La maquinaria se abre camino The machines bulldoze through.
    3 to get one's way paved.
    Se nos abre camino We get our way paved.
    * * *
    to make one's way
    * * *
    (v.) = plough through, elbow + Posesivo + way into, elbow into, foist + Posesivo + way into, make + Posesivo + way in the world
    Ex. The article has the title ' Plowing through Chicago: SLJ's report on ALA's midwinter meeting '78'.
    Ex. In her view, it is high time for the plays by this versatile and prolific dramatist to begin elbowing their way into the American repertoire.
    Ex. More and more companies are already elbowing into this fledgling but potentially lucrative industry.
    Ex. Moreover, her fatness is an act of defiance; in a world in which women are taught to take up as little space as possible, Lilian learns to foist her way into the public sphere.
    Ex. He had already made his way in the world as a soloist before becoming a stage star.
    * * *
    abrirse camino (a empujones)
    (v.) = push + Posesivo + way across/into

    Ex: Now the mobile telephone has pushed its way into our everyday lives in new ways.

    (v.) = plough through, elbow + Posesivo + way into, elbow into, foist + Posesivo + way into, make + Posesivo + way in the world

    Ex: The article has the title ' Plowing through Chicago: SLJ's report on ALA's midwinter meeting '78'.

    Ex: In her view, it is high time for the plays by this versatile and prolific dramatist to begin elbowing their way into the American repertoire.
    Ex: More and more companies are already elbowing into this fledgling but potentially lucrative industry.
    Ex: Moreover, her fatness is an act of defiance; in a world in which women are taught to take up as little space as possible, Lilian learns to foist her way into the public sphere.
    Ex: He had already made his way in the world as a soloist before becoming a stage star.

    Spanish-English dictionary > abrirse camino

  • 9 Erwerb

    Erwerb m 1. BÖRSE, FIN, GEN, RECHT acquisition (bei Ehegatten); 2. STEUER acquisition; 3. WIWI purchase
    * * *
    m 1. <Börse, Finanz, Geschäft, Recht> bei Ehegatten acquisition; 2. < Steuer> acquisition; 3. <Vw> purchase
    * * *
    Erwerb
    acquisition, purchase, buy[ing], acquest, obtainment, (Verdienst) earnings, gains (US), getting, income, profit;
    auf Erwerb gerichtet acquisitive, profitable;
    nicht auf Erwerb gerichtet non-profit;
    abgeleiteter (nicht originärer) Erwerb derivative acquisition;
    bedingter Erwerb conditional purchase;
    gemeinschaftlicher Erwerb joint purchase;
    gutgläubiger Erwerb innocent (bona-fide) purchase, innocent purchase for value without notice, bona-fide transaction (acquisition);
    nachhängiger Erwerb (Wertpapiere) subsequent acquisition;
    vorteilhafter Erwerb lucrative succession (Scot.);
    Erwerb von Anlagegütern im Leasingverfahren sale-lease back (US);
    Erwerb von Anlagepapieren in gewaltigem Umfang giant-scale buying of securities;
    Erwerb übrig gebliebenen Anzeigenraums remnant buying;
    Erwerb von Ausrüstungsgegenständen equipment purchase;
    Erwerb unter Eigentumsvorbehalt acquisition with reservation of title;
    Erwerb eines Grundstücks purchase of real estate (land);
    Erwerb eines Heimfallrechts purchase of reversion;
    Erwerb in fremdem Namen purchase in the name of another;
    Erwerb von Neufahrzeugen purchase of new vehicles;
    lastenfreier Erwerb von Vermögenswerten donated assets;
    Erwerb in der verkaufsarmen Zeit off-season buy;
    seinem Erwerb nachgehen to earn one’s living.

    Business german-english dictionary > Erwerb

  • 10 Cousteau, Jacques-Yves

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 11 June 1910 Saint-André-de-Cubzac, France
    [br]
    French marine explorer who invented the aqualung.
    [br]
    He was the son of a country lawyer who became legal advisor and travelling companion to certain rich Americans. At an early age Cousteau acquired a love of travel, of the sea and of cinematography: he made his first film at the age of 13. After an interrupted education he nevertheless passed the difficult entrance examination to the Ecole Navale in Brest, but his naval career was cut short in 1936 by injuries received in a serious motor accident. For his long recuperation he was drafted to Toulon. There he met Philippe Tailliez, a fellow naval officer, and Frédéric Dumas, a champion spearfisher, with whom he formed a long association and began to develop his underwater swimming and photography. He apparently took little part in the Second World War, but under cover he applied his photographic skills to espionage, for which he was awarded the Légion d'honneur after the war.
    Cousteau sought greater freedom of movement underwater and, with Emile Gagnan, who worked in the laboratory of Air Liquide, he began experimenting to improve portable underwater breathing apparatus. As a result, in 1943 they invented the aqualung. Its simple design and robust construction provided a reliable and low-cost unit and revolutionized scientific and recreational diving. Gagnan shunned publicity, but Cousteau revelled in the new freedom to explore and photograph underwater and exploited the publicity potential to the full.
    The Undersea Research Group was set up by the French Navy in 1944 and, based in Toulon, it provided Cousteau with the Opportunity to develop underwater exploration and filming techniques and equipment. Its first aims were minesweeping and exploration, but in 1948 Cousteau pioneered an extension to marine archaeology. In 1950 he raised the funds to acquire a surplus US-built minesweeper, which he fitted out to further his quest for exploration and adventure and named Calypso. Cousteau also sought and achieved public acclaim with the publication in 1953 of The Silent World, an account of his submarine observations, illustrated by his own brilliant photography. The book was an immediate success and was translated into twenty-two languages. In 1955 Calypso sailed through the Red Sea and the western Indian Ocean, and the outcome was a film bearing the same title as the book: it won an Oscar and the Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival. This was his favoured medium for the expression of his ideas and observations, and a stream of films on the same theme kept his name before the public.
    Cousteau's fame earned him appointment by Prince Rainier as Director of the Oceanographie Institute in Monaco in 1957, a post he held until 1988. With its museum and research centre, it offered Cousteau a useful base for his worldwide activities.
    In the 1980s Cousteau turned again to technological development. Like others before him, he was concerned to reduce ships' fuel consumption by harnessing wind power. True to form, he raised grants from various sources to fund research and enlisted technical help, namely Lucien Malavard, Professor of Aerodynamics at the Sorbonne. Malavard designed a 44 ft (13.4 m) high non-rotating cylinder, which was fitted onto a catamaran hull, christened Moulin à vent. It was intended that its maiden Atlantic crossing in 1983 should herald a new age in ship propulsion, with large royalties to Cousteau. Unfortunately the vessel was damaged in a storm and limped to the USA under diesel power. A more robust vessel, the Alcyone, was fitted with two "Turbosails" in 1985 and proved successful, with a 40 per cent reduction in fuel consumption. However, oil prices fell, removing the incentive to fit the new device; the lucrative sales did not materialize and Alcyone remained the only vessel with Turbosails, sharing with Calypso Cousteau's voyages of adventure and exploration. In September 1995, Cousteau was among the critics of the decision by the French President Jacques Chirac to resume testing of nuclear explosive devices under the Mururoa atoll in the South Pacific.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Légion d'honneur. Croix de Guerre with Palm. Officier du Mérite Maritime and numerous scientific and artistic awards listed in such directories as Who's Who.
    Bibliography
    Further Reading
    R.Munson, 1991, Cousteau, the Captain and His World, London: Robert Hale (published in the USA 1989).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Cousteau, Jacques-Yves

  • 11 Grimthorpe (of Grimthorpe), Edmund Beckett, Baron

    SUBJECT AREA: Horology
    [br]
    b. 12 May 1816 Newark, Nottinghamshire, England
    d. 29 April 1905 St Albans, Hertfordshire, England
    [br]
    English lawyer and amateur horologist who was the first successfully to apply the gravity escapement to public clocks.
    [br]
    Born Edmund Beckett Denison, he was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he studied mathematics, graduating in 1838. He was called to the Bar in 1841 and became a Queen's Counsel in 1854. He built up a large and lucrative practice which gave him the independence to pursue his many interests outside law. His interest in horology may have been stimulated by a friend and fellow lawyer, J.M. Bloxham, who interestingly had invented a gravity escapement with an affinity to the escapement eventually used by Denison. Denison studied horology with his usual thoroughness and by 1850 he had published his Rudimentary Treatise on Clock and Watchmaking. It was natural, therefore, that he should have been invited to be a referee when a disagreement arose over the design of the clock for the new Houses of Parliament. Typically, he interpreted his brief very liberally and designed the clock himself. The most distinctive feature of the clock, in its final form, was the incorporation of a gravity escapement. A gravity escapement was particularly desirable in a public clock as it enabled the pendulum to receive a constant impulse (and thus swing with a constant amplitude), despite the variable forces that might be exerted by the wind on the exposed hands. The excellent performance of the prestigious clock at Westminster made Denison's form of gravity escapement de rigueur for large mechanical public clocks produced in Britain and in many other countries. In 1874 he inherited his father's baronetcy, dropping the Denison name, but later adopted the name Grimthorpe when he was created a Baron in 1886.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Peerage 1886. President, British Horological Institute 1868–1905.
    Bibliography
    His highly idiosyncratic A Rudimentary Treatise on Clocks and Watchmaking first published in 1850, went through eight editions, with slight changes of title, and became the most influential work in English on the subject of public clocks.
    Further Reading
    Vaudrey Mercer, 1977, The Life and Letters of Edward John Dent, London, pp. 650–1 (provides biographical information relating to horology; also contains a reliable account of Denison's involvement with the clock at Westminster).
    A.L.Rawlings, 1948, The Science of Clocks and Watcher, repub. 1974, pp. 98–102 (provides a technical assessment of Denison's escapement).
    DV

    Biographical history of technology > Grimthorpe (of Grimthorpe), Edmund Beckett, Baron

См. также в других словарях:

  • lucrative title — see title Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …   Law dictionary

  • lucrative title — A term having an origin in the Spanish law. A title derived by donation, inheritance, or devise without onerous conditions attached. Fuller v Ferguson, 26 Cal 546 …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • title — ti·tle n [Anglo French, inscription, legal right, from Old French, from Latin titulum inscription, chapter heading, part of the law that sanctions an action] 1 a: the means or right by which one owns or possesses property; broadly: the quality of …   Law dictionary

  • title — A mark, style, or designation; a distinctive appellation; the name by which anything is known. Thus, in the law of persons, a title is an appellation of dignity or distinction, a name denoting the social rank of the person bearing it; as duke or… …   Black's law dictionary

  • ganancial property — (Spanish.) That property which husband and wife, living together, acquire during matrimony, by a common title, lucrative or onerous; or that which husband and wife, or either, acquire by purchase, or by their labor and industry, as also the… …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • Benjamin Wegg-Prosser — was born in 1974, he is a British businessman currently occupying the role of Director of Corporate Development for SUP, a Moscow based Internet company. Most recently, Wegg Prosser was Tony Blair’s Director of Strategic Communications at No. 10… …   Wikipedia

  • enajenacion — /eynaheynasyown/ In Spanish and Mexican law, alienation; transfer of property. The act by which the property in a thing, by lucrative title, is transferred, as a donation; or by onerous title, as by sale or barter. In a more extended sense, the… …   Black's law dictionary

  • enajenacion — /eynaheynasyown/ In Spanish and Mexican law, alienation; transfer of property. The act by which the property in a thing, by lucrative title, is transferred, as a donation; or by onerous title, as by sale or barter. In a more extended sense, the… …   Black's law dictionary

  • Mother Bombie — Title page of Mother Bombie. Mother Bombie is an Elizabethan era stage play, a comedy by John Lyly. It is unique in Lyly s dramatic canon as a work of farce and social realism; in Mother Bombie alone, Lyly departs from his dream world of… …   Wikipedia

  • India — /in dee euh/, n. 1. Hindi, Bharat. a republic in S Asia: a union comprising 25 states and 7 union territories; formerly a British colony; gained independence Aug. 15, 1947; became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations Jan. 26, 1950.… …   Universalium

  • boxing — boxing1 /bok sing/, n. 1. the material used to make boxes or casings. 2. a boxlike enclosure; casing. 3. an act or instance of putting into or furnishing with a box. [1510 20; BOX1 + ING1] boxing2 /bok sing/, n. the act, technique, or profession… …   Universalium

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