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partnership+farm

  • 1 partnership farm

    эк., юр., с.-х., амер., канад. партнерское хозяйство* (фермерское хозяйство, ведение которого осуществляется двумя или большим числом лиц на правах компаньонов)
    Syn:
    Ant:
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > partnership farm

  • 2 partnership farm

    Экономика: фермерское хозяйство, ведение которого осуществляется двумя или большим числом лиц на правах компаньонов

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > partnership farm

  • 3 partnership farm

    фермерское хозяйство, ведение которого осуществляется двумя или большим числом лиц на правах компаньонов

    Англо-русский словарь по экономике и финансам > partnership farm

  • 4 partnership

    сущ.
    1) общ. сотрудничество

    working partnership — сотрудничество, совместные действия

    scientists working in close partnership with colleagues overseas — ученые, работающие в сотрудничестве с зарубежными коллегами

    2) эк., юр. партнерство, товарищество
    а) амер. (форма предпринимательства, представляющая собой объединение двух или более партнеров, т. е. лиц, совместно осуществляющих коммерческую деятельность; для организации этой формы требуется устное или письменное соглашение партнеров об их вкладах, участии в прибыли, ответственности и т. п.; партнерство не образует юридического лица)
    See:
    б) брит. (ассоциация небольшого количества лиц, каждое из которых является агентом всех остальных; не образует юридического лица; английскому праву известны два вида товариществ, создание и деятельность которых регламентируются законодательными актами: general partnership и limited partnership; по общему правилу, количество членов товариществ не должно превышать 20; однако для некоторых видов предпринимательской деятельности, таких, напр., как оказание юридических, аудиторских услуг, это ограничение не действует; в то же время в этих сферах товарищества должны создаваться в форме полных)
    See:
    3) общ., собир. партнеры (лица, ведущие совместную коммерческую деятельность; члены партнерства)

    * * *
    товарищество: ассоциация двух и более лиц для создания коммерческого предприятия (участвуют как в риске, так и в прибыли); в Великобритании - ассоциация от двух до двадцати лиц (до десяти в случае банка), занимающихся тем или иным бизнесом с целью получения прибыли; партнеры несут неограниченную ответственность по обязательствам товарищества (солидарную или индивидуальную); в США неограниченную ответственность обычно несут "общие" партнеры, занимающиеся повседневным руководством деятельностью товарищества, а "пассивные" партнеры отвечают только своим вкладом; см. general partner;
    * * *
    . Акционерное общество, основанное двумя или более физическими лицами, некоторые из которых могут, но не обязаны нести ограниченную ответственность. См. General partnership (товарищество с неограниченной ответственностью),Limited partnership (товарищество с ограниченной ответственностью) и Master limited partnership (основное товарищество с ограниченной ответственностью) . Инвестиционная деятельность .
    * * *
    юридическая форма организации предприятия, которой регулируются права и обязанности пайщиков (партнеров), возмещение общих расходов и т. д.

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > partnership

  • 5 farm

    Англо-русский словарь по экономике и финансам > farm

  • 6 farm

    [fɑːm] 1. n
    фе́рма, (селя́нське) господа́рство

    arable farm — землеро́бська фе́рма

    corporation farm — фе́рма акціоне́рної компа́нії

    crop-growing farm — росли́нницька (зернова́) фе́рма

    dairy farm — моло́чна фе́рма

    factory farm — вели́ке (промисло́ве) фе́рмерське господа́рство

    father-son farm — сільськогоспода́рське підприє́мство, що нале́жить ба́тьку і си́ну

    leasehold farm — орендо́вана фе́рма

    livestock farm — твари́нницька фе́рма

    farm management — керува́ння сільськогоспода́рським підприє́мством

    owner-occupied farm — господа́рство фе́рмера-вла́сника

    partnership farm — партне́рське фе́рмерське господа́рство

    private farm — прива́тна фе́рма

    rented [tenant] farm — орендо́вана фе́рма

    2. v
    займа́тися фе́рмерським (сільськи́м) господарюва́нням; обробля́ти зе́млю

    to farm out — здава́ти фе́рму в оре́нду

    English-Ukrainian transcription dictionary > farm

  • 7 farm partnership

    эк., юр., с.-х. фермерское товарищество (объединение на паях нескольких фермеров с целью совместного ведения хозяйства; часто такое товарищество организуют члены одной семьи)

    Operating a farm partnership with my husband’s brother, we grow 800 acres of cash crops. — Управляя фермерским товариществом, мы с братом моего мужа выращиваем 800 акров урожая.

    Syn:
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > farm partnership

  • 8 farm partnership

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > farm partnership

  • 9 farm partnership

    s.
    aparcería, medianería.

    Nuevo Diccionario Inglés-Español > farm partnership

  • 10 family farm partnership

    эк., юр., с.-х., амер., канад. семейное сельскохозяйственное товарищество (сельскохозяйственное товарищество, владельцами паев в которой выступают члены семьи)
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > family farm partnership

  • 11 cooperative farm

    с.-х. кооперативное фермерское хозяйство (сельскохозяйственное предприятие, управляемое несколькими фермерами-пайщиками)
    Syn:
    * * *

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > cooperative farm

  • 12 family operated farm

    c.-х. семейная ферма (на которой работают только члены семьи без привлечения наемной рабочей силы)

    Creek Farm is a small family-operated farm located in Goldvein, currently raising Alpine dairy goats, lamb/sheep and chickens. — Ферма "Крик" представляет собой небольшую семейную ферму, расположенную в Голдвайне, на которой выращивают альпийских молочных коз, овец и цыплят.

    Syn:
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > family operated farm

  • 13 family partnership

    эк. семейное товарищество (организационная форма бизнеса, при которой пайщиками выступают члены семьи)

    A "family partnership" is really nothing more than a limited partnership. — "Семейное товарищество" на самом деле не более чем товарищество с ограниченной ответственностью.

    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > family partnership

  • 14 farming partnership

    эк., юр., с.-х. = farm partnership

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > farming partnership

  • 15 Strutt, Jedediah

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 26 July 1726 South Normanton, near Alfreton, Derbyshire, England
    d. 7 May 1797 Derby, England
    [br]
    English inventor of a machine for making ribbed knitting.
    [br]
    Jedediah Strutt was the second of three sons of William, a small farmer and maltster at South Normanton, near Alfreton, Derbyshire, where the only industry was a little framework knitting. At the age of 14 Jedediah was apprenticed to Ralph Massey, a wheelwright near Derby, and lodged with the Woollats, whose daughter Elizabeth he later married in 1755. He moved to Leicester and in 1754 started farming at Blackwell, where an uncle had died and left him the stock on his farm. It was here that he made his knitting invention.
    William Lee's knitting machine remained in virtually the same form as he left it until the middle of the eighteenth century. The knitting industry moved away from London into the Midlands and in 1730 a Nottingham workman, using Indian spun yarn, produced the first pair of cotton hose ever made by mechanical means. This industry developed quickly and by 1750 was providing employment for 1,200 frameworkers using both wool and cotton in the Nottingham and Derby areas. It was against this background that Jedediah Strutt obtained patents for his Derby rib machine in 1758 and 1759.
    The machine was a highly ingenious mechanism, which when placed in front of an ordinary stocking frame enabled the fashionable ribbed stockings to be made by machine instead of by hand. To develop this invention, he formed a partnership first with his brother-in-law, William Woollat, and two leading Derby hosiers, John Bloodworth and Thomas Stamford. This partnership was dissolved in 1762 and another was formed with Woollat and the Nottingham hosier Samuel Need. Strutt's invention was followed by a succession of innovations which enabled framework knitters to produce almost every kind of mesh on their machines. In 1764 the stocking frame was adapted to the making of eyelet holes, and this later lead to the production of lace. In 1767 velvet was made on these frames, and two years later brocade. In this way Strutt's original invention opened up a new era for knitting. Although all these later improvements were not his, he was able to make a fortune from his invention. In 1762 he was made a freeman of Nottingham, but by then he was living in Derby. His business at Derby was concerned mainly with silk hose and he had a silk mill there.
    It was partly his need for cotton yarn and partly his wealth which led him into partnership with Richard Arkwright, John Smalley and David Thornley to exploit Arkwright's patent for spinning cotton by rollers. Together with Samuel Need, they financed the Arkwright partnership in 1770 to develop the horse-powered mill in Nottingham and then the water-powered mill at Cromford. Strutt gave advice to Arkwright about improving the machinery and helped to hold the partnership together when Arkwright fell out with his first partners. Strutt was also involved, in London, where he had a house, with the parliamentary proceedings over the passing of the Calico Act in 1774, which opened up the trade in British-manufactured all-cotton cloth.
    In 1776 Strutt financed the construction of his own mill at Helper, about seven miles (11 km) further down the Derwent valley below Cromford. This was followed by another at Milford, a little lower on the river. Strutt was also a partner with Arkwright and others in the mill at Birkacre, near Chorley in Lancashire. The Strutt mills were developed into large complexes for cotton spinning and many experiments were later carried out in them, both in textile machinery and in fireproof construction for the mills themselves. They were also important training schools for engineers.
    Elizabeth Strutt died in 1774 and Jedediah never married again. The family seem to have lived frugally in spite of their wealth, probably influenced by their Nonconformist background. He had built a house near the mills at Milford, but it was in his Derby house that Jedediah died in 1797. By the time of his death, his son William had long been involved with the business and became a more important cotton spinner than Jedediah.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1758. British patent no. 722 (Derby rib machine). 1759. British patent no. 734 (Derby rib machine).
    Further Reading
    For the involvement of Strutt in Arkwright's spinning ventures, there are two books, the earlier of which is R.S.Fitton and A.P.Wadsworth, 1958, The Strutts and the Arkwrights, 1758–1830, Manchester, which has most of the details about Strutt's life. This has been followed by R.S.Fitton, 1989, The Arkwrights, Spinners of Fortune, Manchester.
    R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (for a general background to the textile industry of the period).
    W.Felkin, 1967, History of the Machine-wrought Hosiery and Lace Manufactures, reprint, Newton Abbot (orig. pub. 1867) (covers Strutt's knitting inventions).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Strutt, Jedediah

  • 16 Massey, Daniel

    [br]
    b. 1798 Vermont, USA
    d. 1856 Canada
    [br]
    American agricultural machinery manufacturer and co-founder of the Massey Harris Company (now Massey Ferguson).
    [br]
    In about 1800 Daniel Massey's family moved to Upper Canada. At the age of 6 he was sent back to stay with his grandparents in Waterton, USA, where he attended school for three years. He returned to his parents in 1807, and for the next twelve years he remained on his father's farm.
    At the age of 19 he forfeited his rights to his inheritance and rented land further west, which he began to clear. By the age of 21 he owned 200 acres, and during the next twelve years he bought, cleared and sold a further 1,200 acres. In 1820 he married Lucina Bradley from Water-town and returned with her to Canada.
    In 1830 he decided to settle down to farming and brought one of the first US threshing machines into Canada. From frequent visits to his family in the US he would return with new farm equipment, and in 1844 he handed his farm over to his eldest son so that he could concentrate on the development of his farm workshop. In 1845 he formed a brief partnership with R.F.Vaughan, who owned a small factory in Durham County near Lake Ontario. He began the production of ploughs, harrows, scufflers and rollers at a time when the Canadian Government was imposing heavy import duties on agricultural equipment being brought in from the USA. His business flourished and within six months he bought out his partner.
    In 1848 he bought another foundry in Newcastle, together with 50 acres of land, and in 1851 his son Hart joined him in the business. The following year Hart returned from the USA with the sole rights to manufacture the Ketchum mower and the Burrell reaper.
    The advent of the railway four years later opened up wider markets, and from these beginnings the Massey Company was to represent Canada at the Paris Exhibition of 1867. The European market was secured by the successes of the Massey reaper in the "World" trials held in France in 1889. Two years later the company merged with the Harris Company of Canada, to become the Massey Harris Company. Daniel Massey retired from the company four years after his son joined it, and he died the following year.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Graeme Quick and Wesley Buchele, 1978, The Grain Harvesters, American Society of Agricultural Engineers (gives an account of harvest machinery development, in which Massey Harris played a vital role).
    Merrill Denison, 1949, Harvest Triumphant: The Story of Massey Harris, London.
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Massey, Daniel

  • 17 Darby, Abraham

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 1678 near Dudley, Worcestershire, England
    d. 5 May 1717 Madely Court, Coalbrookdale, Shropshire, England
    [br]
    English ironmaster, inventor of the coke smelting of iron ore.
    [br]
    Darby's father, John, was a farmer who also worked a small forge to produce nails and other ironware needed on the farm. He was brought up in the Society of Friends, or Quakers, and this community remained important throughout his personal and working life. Darby was apprenticed to Jonathan Freeth, a malt-mill maker in Birmingham, and on completion of his apprenticeship in 1699 he took up the trade himself in Bristol. Probably in 1704, he visited Holland to study the casting of brass pots and returned to Bristol with some Dutch workers, setting up a brassworks at Baptist Mills in partnership with others. He tried substituting cast iron for brass in his castings, without success at first, but in 1707 he was granted a patent, "A new way of casting iron pots and other pot-bellied ware in sand without loam or clay". However, his business associates were unwilling to risk further funds in the experiments, so he withdrew his share of the capital and moved to Coalbrookdale in Shropshire. There, iron ore, coal, water-power and transport lay close at hand. He took a lease on an old furnace and began experimenting. The shortage and expense of charcoal, and his knowledge of the use of coke in malting, may well have led him to try using coke to smelt iron ore. The furnace was brought into blast in 1709 and records show that in the same year it was regularly producing iron, using coke instead of charcoal. The process seems to have been operating successfully by 1711 in the production of cast-iron pots and kettles, with some pig-iron destined for Bristol. Darby prospered at Coalbrookdale, employing coke smelting with consistent success, and he sought to extend his activities in the neighbourhood and in other parts of the country. However, ill health prevented him from pursuing these ventures with his previous energy. Coke smelting spread slowly in England and the continent of Europe, but without Darby's technological breakthrough the ever-increasing demand for iron for structures and machines during the Industrial Revolution simply could not have been met; it was thus an essential component of the technological progress that was to come.
    Darby's eldest son, Abraham II (1711–63), entered the Coalbrookdale Company partnership in 1734 and largely assumed control of the technical side of managing the furnaces and foundry. He made a number of improvements, notably the installation of a steam engine in 1742 to pump water to an upper level in order to achieve a steady source of water-power to operate the bellows supplying the blast furnaces. When he built the Ketley and Horsehay furnaces in 1755 and 1756, these too were provided with steam engines. Abraham II's son, Abraham III (1750–89), in turn, took over the management of the Coalbrookdale works in 1768 and devoted himself to improving and extending the business. His most notable achievement was the design and construction of the famous Iron Bridge over the river Severn, the world's first iron bridge. The bridge members were cast at Coalbrookdale and the structure was erected during 1779, with a span of 100 ft (30 m) and height above the river of 40 ft (12 m). The bridge still stands, and remains a tribute to the skill and judgement of Darby and his workers.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    A.Raistrick, 1989, Dynasty of Iron Founders, 2nd edn, Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust (the best source for the lives of the Darbys and the work of the company).
    H.R.Schubert, 1957, History of the British Iron and Steel Industry AD 430 to AD 1775, London: Routledge \& Kegan Paul.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Darby, Abraham

  • 18 Harris, Alanson

    [br]
    b. 1816 Ingersoll, Ontario, Canada
    d. 1894 Canada
    [br]
    Canadian manufacturer of agricultural machinery and co-founder of the Massey Harris Company (later Massey Ferguson).
    [br]
    Alanson Harris was the first often children born to the wife of a circuit rider and preacher. His father's wanderings left Alanson at an early age in charge of the running of the family farm on the Grand River in Canada; also, his father's preference was for tinkering with machines rather than for farming. However, when he was 13 Alanson had to go out to work in order to bring badly needed cash to augment the family income. He worked at a sawmill in the small village of Boston, becoming Boss Sawyer and then Foreman after ten years. In 1839 the family moved to Mount Pleasant, and the following year Alanson married Mary Morgan, the daughter of a well-to-do pioneer Welsh farmer. He entered into a brief partnership with his father to build a sawmill at Whiteman's Creek, but within a few months his father returned to preaching and Alanson became the sole proprietor. After a successful early period Alanson recognized the signs of decline in the timber market, and in 1857 he sold the mill, moved to Beamsville, Niagara, and bought a small factory from which he produced the flop-over hay rake invented by his father. In 1863 he took his eldest son into partnership; the latter returned from a visit to the United States with the sole rights to produce the Kirby mower and reaper. The Crimean War created a market for corn, which gave a great boost to North American farming and, in its turn, to machinery production. This was reinforced by the tariff agreements between the United States and Canada. By the 1880s Harris and Massey between them accounted for two thirds of the harvesting machines sold in Canada, and they also supplied machines abroad. By the end of the decade the mutual benefits of joining forces were apparent and by 1891 an agreement was reached, with Alanson Harris and A.H.Massey on the first board.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    G.Quick and W.Buchele, 1978, The Grain Harvesters, American Society of Agricultural Engineers (refers to Harris and Massey Harris Company in its account of the development of harvest machinery).
    M.Denison, 1949, Harvest Triumphant: The Story of Massey Harris, London (gives a more detailed account of Massey Harris Company).
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Harris, Alanson

  • 19 Ferguson, Harry

    [br]
    b. 4 November 1884 County Down, Ireland
    d. 25 October 1960 England
    [br]
    Irish engineer who developed a tractor hydraulic system for cultivation equipment, and thereby revolutionized tractor design.
    [br]
    Ferguson's father was a small farmer who expected his son to help on the farm from an early age. As a result he received little formal education, and on leaving school joined his brother in a backstreet workshop in Belfast repairing motor bikes. By the age of 19 he had built his own bike and began hill-climbing competitions and racing. His successes in these ventures gained useful publicity for the workshop. In 1907 he built his own car and entered it into competitions, and in 1909 became the first person in Britain to build and fly a machine that was heavier than air.
    On the outbreak of the First World War he was appointed by the Irish Department of Agriculture to supervise the operation and maintenance of all farm tractors. His experiences convinced him that even the Ford tractor and the implements available for it were inadequate for the task, and he began to experiment with his own plough designs. The formation of the Ferguson-Sherman Corporation resulted in the production of thousands of the ploughs he had designed for the Ford tractor, but in 1928 Ford discontinued production of tractors, and Ferguson returned to Ireland. He immediately began to design his own tractor. Six years of development led to the building of a prototype that weighed only 16 cwt (813kg). In 1936 David Brown of Huddersfield, Yorkshire, began production of these tractors for Ferguson, but the partnership was not wholly successful and was dissolved after three years. In 1939 Ferguson and Ford reached their famous "Handshake agreement", in which no formal contract was signed, and the mass production of the Ford Ferguson system tractors began that year. During the next nine years 300,000 tractors and a million implements were produced under this agreement. However, on the death of Henry Ford the company began production, under his son, of their own tractor. Ferguson returned to the UK and negotiated a deal with the Standard Motor Company of Coventry for the production of his tractor. At the same time he took legal action against Ford, which resulted in that company being forced to stop production and to pay damages amounting to US$9.5 million.
    Aware that his equipment would only operate when set up properly, Ferguson established a training school at Stoneleigh in Warwickshire which was to be a model for other manufacturers. In 1953, by amicable agreement, Ferguson amalgamated with the Massey Harris Company to form Massey Ferguson, and in so doing added harvesting machinery to the range of equipment produced. A year later he disposed of his shares in the new company and turned his attention again to the motor car. Although a number of experimental cars were produced, there were no long-lasting developments from this venture other than a four-wheel-drive system based on hydraulics; this was used by a number of manufacturers on occasional models. Ferguson's death heralded the end of these developments.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Honorary DSc Queen's University, Belfast, 1948.
    Further Reading
    C.Murray, 1972, Harry Ferguson, Inventor and Pioneer. John Murray.
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Ferguson, Harry

  • 20 job

    1. сущ.
    1)
    а) общ. работа, дело, труд; задание, урок; (рабочая) операция

    high-paid [high-salaried, high-salary\] job — высокооплачиваемая работа

    low-paid [low-salaried, low-salary\] job — низкооплачиваемая работа

    farm job — сельскохозяйственная работа, работа на ферме

    office job — офисная работа, работа в офисе

    selling job — работа, связанная с продажами

    one-man job — работа, выполняемая одним человеком; работа, для выполнения которой требуется один человек

    two-man job — работа, выполняемая двумя людьми; работа, для выполнения которой требуется два человека

    painstaking job — трудоемкая [кропотливая\] работа

    arduous job — тяжелая [трудная\] работа

    risky job — рискованная [опасная\] работа

    rush [time-critical\] job — спешная работа; срочная работа

    See:
    б) эк. заказ

    Right now I’m working on six jobs for US and UK clients. — Непосредственно сейчас я работаю над шестью заказами американских и британских клиентов.

    See:
    в) общ., разг. трудное дело

    They'll have a bit of a job getting here in this fog anyway. — В любом случае пробраться сюда в таком тумане будет непростой задачей.

    2) общ., разг. место работы [службы\], работа; должность; рабочее место

    to take smb. off the job — отстранять кого-л. от работы

    to be out of a job — не иметь места (работы), быть без работы

    to change jobs — менять работу, переходить на другое место работы

    job applicant, applicant for a job — претендент на работу [рабочее место, должность\]

    job application, application for a job — заявление о приеме на работу

    job growth — рост числа рабочих мест, увеличение численности работающих

    job shortage — недостаток [нехватка\] рабочих мест

    See:
    3) торг. неликвид, залежалый товар ( продается по сниженной цене)
    See:
    4) общ. протекция, блат

    His appointment was a job. — Он получил назначение по протекции.

    2. гл.
    1) общ., редк. заниматься нерегулярной [случайной\] работой

    He jobs as a gardener from time to time. — Время от времени он работает садовником.

    2) бирж., редк. быть посредником [перекупщиком, джоббером\] ( перепродавать мелкие партии товаров или ценных бумаг)
    See:
    3. прил.
    1) эк. тр. сдельный, наемный (о какой-л. недолгосрочной работе); выполняемый по заказам, связанный с работой по заказам
    See:
    2) общ. относящийся к работающим [занятости\]

    * * *
    1) работа; дело; труд; 2) задание; конкретный проект; 3) функции работника.

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > job

См. также в других словарях:

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