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new+brunswick

  • 81 NB

    NB [enˈbi:]
       a. ( ABBR OF nota bene) NB
       b. ( ABBR OF New Brunswick)

    English-French dictionary > NB

  • 82 All.N.B.

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > All.N.B.

  • 83 Ber.

    сокр. от Berton's Reports, New Brunswick
    сборник судебных решений, Нью-Брунсвик, составитель Бертон (1835-1839)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Ber.

  • 84 Chip.

    сокр. от Chipman's Reports, New Brunswick
    сборник судебных решений Нью-Брунсвика, составитель Чипмен (1825-1838)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Chip.

  • 85 Kerr

    сокр. от Kerr's New Brunswick Reports
    сборник судебных решений по Нью-Брунсвику, составитель Керр (1840-1848)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Kerr

  • 86 N.B.Eq.R.

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > N.B.Eq.R.

  • 87 N.B.R.

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > N.B.R.

  • 88 Pugs.

    сокр. от Pugsley's Reports, New Brunswick
    сборник судебных решений, Нью-Брунсвик, составитель Пагсли (1872-1877)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Pugs.

  • 89 Pugs.&Bur.

    сокр. от Pugsley and Burbidge's Reports, New-Brunswick
    сборник судебных решений, Нью-Брунсвик, составители Пагсли и Бербидж (1878-1882)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Pugs.&Bur.

  • 90 Stock.

    сокр. от Stockton's Admiralty Reports, New Brunswick
    сборник решений по морским делам, Нью-Брунсвик, составитель Стоктон (1879-1891)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Stock.

  • 91 Tru.

    сокр. от Trueman's Equity Cases, New Brunswick
    сборник судебных решений права справедливости, Нью-Брунсвик, составитель Трумэн (1876-1893)

    Англо-русский юридический словарь > Tru.

  • 92 NB

    I сокр. от nota bene; лат.
    нотабене, обрати особое внимание
    II сокр. от New Brunswick III сокр. от northbound

    Англо-русский современный словарь > NB

  • 93 N.B.

    N.B.
    nota bene лат. нотабене; обратите особое внимание ————————
    N.B.
    New Brunswick Нью-Брансуик (провинция Канады) ————————
    N.B.
    North Britain (Scotland) Северная Британия (Шотландия)

    English-Russian dictionary of modern abbreviations > N.B.

  • 94 N.B.

    лат. нотабене; обратите особое внимание Нью-Брансуик ( провинция Канады) Северная Британия ( Шотландия)

    English-Russian dictionary of modern abbreviations > N.B.

  • 95 Ebener, Erasmus

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 21 December 1511 Nuremberg, Germany
    d. 24 November 1577 Helmstedt, Germany
    [br]
    German mining entrepreneur who introduced a new method ofbrassmaking.
    [br]
    A descendant of Nuremberg nobility, Ebener became recognized as a statesman in his native city and was employed also by foreign dignitaries. His appointment as Privy Councillor to the Dukes of Brunswick involved him in mining and metallurgical affairs at the great Rammelsberg mixed-ore mine at Goslar in the Harz mountains. About 1550, at Rammelsberg, Ebener is believed to have made brass by incorporating accretions of zinc formed in crevices of local lead-smelting furnaces. This small-scale production of impure zinc, formerly discarded as waste, could be used to replace calamine, the carbonate ore of zinc, which by tradition had been combined with copper in European brassmaking. Ercker, writing in 1574, mentions the accretions at Goslar obtained by removing furnace sections to make this material available for brass. The true nature of the zinc ore, calamine, and zinc metal compared with these accretions was determined only much later, but variation in quality with respect to impurities made the material most suitable for cast brassware rather than beaten goods. As quantities were small and much valued, distribution from Goslar was limited, not normally reaching Britain, where production of brasses continued to rely on calamine or expensive zinc imports from the East. Rammelsberg profited from the waste material accumulating over the years and its use at Bundheim brassworks east of Goslar. Ebener partnered Duke Henry the Younger of Brunswick in financing a new drainage adit at Rammelsberg, and was later granted several iron mines and smelting works. From 1556 he was granted rights to market calamine from the Lower Harz and copper sulphate from Rammelsberg. Ebener later had an important role at the court of Duke Julius, son of Henry, advising him on the founding of Helmstedt University.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1572, "Sundry expositions on mines, metals and other useful things found in the Harz and especially at the Rammelsberg", reproduced and annotated by F.J.F.Meyer and J.F.L.Hausmann, 1805 Hercynian Archive.
    Further Reading
    Beckmann, 1846, History of Inventions, Vol. II, trans. William Johnston, London (the most concise account).
    W.Bornhardt, 1989, "The History of Rammelsberg Mine", trans. T.A.Morrison, The Mining Journal (has additional brief references to Ebener in the context of Rammelsberg).
    JD

    Biographical history of technology > Ebener, Erasmus

  • 96 Guericke, Otto von

    [br]
    b. 20 November 1602 Magdeburg, Saxony, Germany
    d. 11 May 1686 Hamburg, Germany
    [br]
    German engineer and physicist, inventor of the air pump and investigator of the properties of a vacuum.
    [br]
    Guericke was born into a patrician family in Magdeburg. He was educated at the University of Leipzig in 1617–20 and at the University of Helmstedt in 1620. He then spent two years studying law at Jena, and in 1622 went to Leiden to study law, mathematics, engineering and especially fortification. He spent most of his life in politics, for he was elected an alderman of Magdeburg in 1626. After the destruction of Magdeburg in 1631, he worked in Brunswick and Erfurt as an engineer for the Swedish government, and then in 1635 for the Electorate of Saxony. He was Mayor of Magdeburg for thirty years, between 1646 and 1676. He was ennobled in 1666 and retired from public office in 168land went to Hamburg. It was through his attendances at international congresses and at princely courts that he took part in the exchange of scientific ideas.
    From his student days he was concerned with the definition of space and posed three questions: can empty space exist or is space always filled? How can heavenly bodies affect each other across space and how are they moved? Is space, and so also the heavenly bodies, bounded or unbounded? In c. 1647 Guericke made a suction pump for air and tried to exhaust a beer barrel, but he could not stop the leaks. He then tried a copper sphere, which imploded. He developed a series of spectacular demonstrations with his air pump. In 1654 at Rattisbon he used a vertical cylinder with a well-fitting piston connected over pulleys by a rope to fifty men, who could not stop the piston descending when the cylinder was exhausted. More famous were his copper hemispheres which, when exhausted, could not be drawn apart by two teams of eight horses. They were first demonstrated at Magdeburg in 1657 and at the court in Berlin in 1663. Through these experiments he discovered the elasticity of air and began to investigate its density at different heights. He heard of the work of Torricelli in 1653 and by 1660 had succeeded in making barometric forecasts. He published his famous work New Experiments Concerning Empty Space in 1672. Between 1660 and 1663 Guericke constructed a large ball of sulphur that could be rotated on a spindle. He found that, when he pressed his hand on it and it was rotated, it became strongly electrified; he thus unintentionally became the inventor of the first machine to generate static electricity. He attempted to reach a complete physical explanation of the world and the heavens with magnetism as a primary force and evolved an explanation for the rotation of the heavenly bodies.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1672, Experimenta nova (ut vocantur) Magdeburgica de vacuo spatio (New Experiments Concerning Empty Space).
    Further Reading
    F.W.Hoffmann, 1874, Otto von Guericke (a full biography).
    T.I.Williams (ed.), 1969, A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists, London: A. \& C.Black (contains a short account of his life).
    Chambers Concise Dictionary of Scientists, 1989, Cambridge.
    Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Vol. V, New York.
    C.Singer (ed.), 1957, A History of Technology, Vols. III and IV, Oxford University Press (includes references to Guericke's inventions).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Guericke, Otto von

  • 97 Voigtländer, Peter Wilhelm Friedrich

    [br]
    b. 1812 Vienna, Austria d. 1878
    [br]
    Austrian manufacturer of the first purpose-designed photographic objective; key member of a dynasty of optical instrument makers.
    [br]
    Educated at the Polytechnic Institute in Vienna, Voigtländer travelled widely before taking over the family business in 1837. The business had been founded by Voigtländer's grandfather in 1756, and was continued by his father, Johann Friedrich, the inventor of the opera glass, and by the 1830s enjoyed one of the highest reputations in Europe. When Petzval made the calculations for the first purpose-designed photographic objective in 1840, it was inevitable that he should go to Peter Voigtländer for advice. The business went on to manufacture Petzval's lens, which was also fitted to an all-metal camera of totally original design by Voigtländer.
    The Petzval lens was an extraordinary commercial success and Voigtländer sold specimens all over the world. Unfortunately Petzval had no formal agreement with Voigtländer and made little financial gain from his design, a fact which was to lead to dispute and separation; the Voigtländer concern continued to prosper, however. To meet the increasing demand for his products, Peter Voigtländer built a new factory in Brunswick and closed the business in Vienna. The closure is seen by at least one commentator as the death blow to Vienna's optical industry, a field in which it was once preeminent. The Voigtländer dynasty continued long after Peter's death and the name enjoyed a reputation for high-quality photographic equipment well into the twentieth century.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Hereditary Peerage bestowed by the Emperor of Austria 1868.
    Further Reading
    L.W.Sipley, 1965, Photography's Great Inventors, Philadelphia (a brief biography). J.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans. E.Epstean, New York.
    JW

    Biographical history of technology > Voigtländer, Peter Wilhelm Friedrich

  • 98 WCTC

    3) Фирменный знак: Wood County Telephone Company

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > WCTC

См. также в других словарях:

  • New Brunswick — Nouveau Brunswick Neubraunschweig Wappen Flagge (Details) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • NEW BRUNSWICK — NEW BRUNSWICK, U.S. industrial city on the Raritan River, in New Jersey, approximately 30 miles S.W. of New York City. It is the home of Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey. It is estimated that the Jewish population of… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • New Brunswick — New Brunswick, NJ U.S. city in New Jersey Population (2000): 48573 Housing Units (2000): 13893 Land area (2000): 5.226576 sq. miles (13.536770 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.520696 sq. miles (1.348597 sq. km) Total area (2000): 5.747272 sq. miles… …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

  • New Brunswick, NJ — U.S. city in New Jersey Population (2000): 48573 Housing Units (2000): 13893 Land area (2000): 5.226576 sq. miles (13.536770 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.520696 sq. miles (1.348597 sq. km) Total area (2000): 5.747272 sq. miles (14.885367 sq. km)… …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

  • New Brunswick —   [njuː brʌnzwɪk],    1) Stadt in New Jersey, USA, 50 km südwestlich von New York, 41 700 Einwohner; Rutgers University (1766 als College gegründet, seit 1924 Universität, seit 1945 Staatsuniversität von New Jersey); Herstellung von chirurgischen …   Universal-Lexikon

  • New Brunswick — [named to honor George III, who was also elector of Brunswick Lüneburg] province of SE Canada, on the Gulf of St. Lawrence: 28,354 sq mi (73,437 sq km); pop. 738,000; cap. Fredericton: abbrev. NB …   English World dictionary

  • New Brunswick — (spr. Njuh Brönnswick), 1) so v.w. Neu Braunschweig; 2) Hauptstadt der Grafschaft Middlesex im Staate New Jersey (Nordamerika), am Raritan River u. der New Jersey Eisenbahn; Rutger s College (1770 gegründet), Theologisches Seminar der Holländisch …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • New Brunswick [2] — New Brunswick (spr. njū brönnswick), Hauptstadt der Grafschaft Middlesex des nordamerikan. Staates New Jersey, am schiffbaren Raritan, den ein 67 km langer Kanal mit dem Delaware verbindet, mit bedeutender Kautschuk , Leder und Maschinenindustrie …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • New Brunswick [1] — New Brunswick (spr. njū brönnswick), kanadische Provinz, s. Neubraunschweig …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • New Brunswick — (spr. njuh brönns ). 1) Provinz von Kanada, s. Neubraunschweig. – 2) Stadt im nordamerik. Staate Neujersey, am Raritan River und am Ende des Delaware Raritan Kanals, (1900) 20.006 E …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • New Brunswick — This article is about the Canadian province. For the city in New Jersey, see New Brunswick, New Jersey. New Brunswick Nouveau Brunswick …   Wikipedia

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