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61 search
1) поиск || искать; осуществлять поиск || поисковый2) вчт. команда или программа поиска3) исследование; изучение || исследовать; изучать•- area search
- automated search
- automatic program search
- automatic search
- backtracking search
- beam search
- best-first search
- binary search
- bisection search
- blind search
- Boolean search
- branch-and-bound search
- breadth-first search
- Brent's search
- brute force search
- case-insensitive search
- case-sensitive search
- catalog search
- chaining search
- chapter search
- Charalambous' search
- conjunctive search
- content-addressable search
- contextual search
- database search
- depth-first search
- dichotomizing search
- directory search
- disjunctive search
- exhaustive search of memory
- eyeball search
- fast search
- Fibonacci numbers search
- Fibonacci search
- file search
- fixed-format search
- folder search
- frequency-agile search
- geometrical search
- golden section search
- graph search
- hash search
- heuristic search
- holographic information search
- hybrid bisection-cubic search
- indexed search
- key search
- keyword search
- limit-type search
- linear search
- logarithmic search
- multiple-string search
- optimum tree search
- ordered search
- parallel search
- patent search
- pattern matching search
- proximity search
- quadratic quotient search
- quantum search
- radar search
- random search
- reconnaissance search
- search for extraterrestrial intelligence
- search in problem space
- search in state space
- self-terminating search
- semantic search
- sequential search
- sequential tree search
- serial search
- skip search
- stepped search
- straightforward search
- tree search
- variable search by value
- weighted search
- word searchThe New English-Russian Dictionary of Radio-electronics > search
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62 office
1) служба, должность, пост2) ведомство; министерство3) управление; контора, офис, отдел, бюро -
63 office
1) должность2) ведомство; учреждение; министерство; управление3) контора; канцелярия; служебное помещение4) расследование по вопросам, связанным с имущественным правом короны•continuance in office — пребывание в должности;
elevation in office — продвижение по службе;
elevation to office — занятие более высокой должности;
office found — решение присяжных по расследованию, устанавливающему факты, которые определяют право короны на данное имущество;
party in office — политическая партия, находящаяся у власти;
through the offices of — через кого-л. ; пользуясь услугами кого-л. ; используя кого-л. в качестве представителя;
under the colour of office — под предлогом отправления должности;
under the colour of exercising the duties of an office — под предлогом исполнения должностных обязанностей;
- office of profitunder the pretence of office — под видом отправления должности;
- office of state
- office of trust
- appointed office
- assay office
- branch office
- central office
- civil office
- consular office
- criminal office
- elective office
- field office
- general office
- good offices
- government office
- head office
- honorary office
- industrial property office
- judicial office
- legal office
- life office
- ministerial office
- paper office
- patent office
- personnel office
- police office
- public office
- registered office
- registry office
- revenue office
- statutory office
- stipendiary office
- appointive office -
64 code
n1) кодекс, свод законов2)3) код; шифр
- account code
- activity code
- alphabetic code
- alphanumeric code
- antidumping code
- area code
- bank indentifier code
- bar code
- branch code
- cable code
- cipher code
- Civil Code
- classification code
- commercial code
- Commercial Code
- cost code
- country code
- cover type code
- credit general ledger code
- criminal code
- customs code
- distribution code
- enumerator code
- external ledger code
- general analysis code
- general ledger classification code
- geographic code
- group code
- highway code
- identifying code
- industrial code
- industry code
- institution code
- Internal Revenue Code
- international code
- International Code of Signals
- International rating code
- labour code
- land code
- letter code
- mailing code
- material code
- merchant marine code
- merchant shipping code
- occupation code
- occupational code
- officer code
- operation code
- order code
- patent code
- penal code
- personal code
- postal code
- product code
- project code
- rate code
- real general ledger code
- region code
- revenue code
- run code
- safety code
- security code
- sort code
- standard code
- tax code
- telegraphic code
- teletype code
- Uniform Commercial Code
- United Nations Code
- Uniform Traffic Code
- United States Code
- universal product code
- user code
- user identification code
- VAT code
- vendor code
- Code of Commercial Law
- code of conduct
- Code of Conduct on Technology Transfer
- code of ethics
- code of fair competition
- code of international conduct
- code of international law
- code of laws
- code of on-line trade
- code of practice
- crack the code of on-line trade
- draw a bar code
- enact a code
- simplify the tax code -
65 department
n1) отдел; отделение; подразделение; служба2) департамент; управление; амер. министерство, ведомство
- accounting department
- accounts department
- administrative department
- advice department
- advertising department
- analysis department
- appeals department
- audit department
- auditing department
- auxiliary department
- bank department
- bank trust department
- bespoke department
- billing department
- bond department
- bookkeeping department
- branch department
- business department
- cash department
- certification department
- claims department
- collection department
- common service department
- contract department
- cost department
- coupons paying department
- custody department
- delivery department
- deposit department
- design department
- development department
- discount department
- distribution department
- drafting department
- employees' department
- employment department
- engineering department
- examining department
- examination department
- exchange department
- executive department
- export department
- field service department
- filing department
- finance department
- finance-and-accounts department
- finance-and-economy department
- foreign exchange department
- forwarding department
- functional department
- general accounting department
- general bookkeeping department
- general service department
- goods department
- government department
- indirect department
- information department
- inquiry department
- inspection department
- internal audit department
- inventory department
- labour and wages department
- law department
- leased department
- legal department
- lost and found department
- maintenance department
- manufacturing department
- manufacturing engineering department
- marketing department
- marking department
- materials department
- merchandise development department
- methods and procedures department
- new business department
- nonproductive departments
- operating department
- operational department
- order department
- organization department
- outpatients' department
- packing department
- patent department
- payroll department
- personnel department
- planning department
- preproduction department
- pricing department
- process department
- processing department
- procurement department
- production department
- production control department
- production scheduling and control department
- promotion department
- protocol department
- publication department
- publicity department
- purchasing department
- quality control department
- receiving department
- record department
- requisitioning department
- Revenue Department
- sales department
- sales order department
- savings department
- scheduling department
- securities department
- selling department
- service department
- shipping department
- shop-training department
- staff department
- staff training department
- standards department
- State Department
- statistics department
- stock department
- storage department
- stores department
- subcontractors department
- supply department
- technical department
- thrift department
- traffic department
- training department
- transport department
- transportation department
- trust department
- visa department
- wages department
- work study department
- Department of Agriculture
- Department of Commerce
- Department of Economic Affairs
- Department of Health, Education and Welfare
- Department of Industry
- Department of Justice
- Department of Labor
- Department of Overseas Trade
- Department of State
- Department of the Interior
- Department of the Navy
- Department of the Treasury
- Department of Transportation
- establish a department
- make up a department
- reequip a departmentEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > department
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66 dependent
1. a зависимый, зависящий, обусловленный2. a несамостоятельный, подчинённый; подвластный; зависимыйdependent failure — зависимый отказ; вторичный отказ
signal dependent stereo — стереоприем, зависимый от сигнала
3. a надеющийся, рассчитывающий, полагающийсяdependent entirely on oneself — ни от кого не зависящий, живущий собственным трудом
4. a получающий помощь; находящийся на иждивении; живущий за счёт5. a юр. неразрешённый; находящийся на рассмотрении, ожидающий решения6. a грам. подчинённый; косвенный7. a редк. свисающий, висящий; ниспадающийСинонимический ряд:1. contingent (adj.) ancillary; conditional; conditioned; contingent; relative; subject; tentative2. defenseless (adj.) defenseless; reliant; vulnerable3. helpless (adj.) clinging; helpless; immature; indigent; minor; poor4. inferior (adj.) inferior; lesser5. subordinate (adj.) collateral; secondary; sub; subordinate; subservient; tributary; under6. charge (noun) charge; subject7. ward (noun) client; delinquent; minor; orphan; protegee; wardАнтонимический ряд:categorical; free; guardian; independent; irrelative; unconditional -
67 senior
1. n старший; пожилой человекsenior citizen — гражданин старшего поколения,
2. n вышестоящий, старший3. n студент последнего курса4. n амер. ученик выпускного класса средней школыsenior school — старшие классы, средняя школа
5. n спортсмен старшего возрастаsenior citizenship — старость, преклонный возраст
6. a старейший7. a эвф. принадлежащий к старшему поколению; пожилой; пенсионного возрастаСинонимический ряд:1. old (adj.) advanced; aged; elderly; old2. older or higher up (adj.) elder; higher; higher in rank; higher ranking; more advanced; of greater dignity; older; older or higher up; over and above; superior3. elderly person (noun) ancestor; better; brass hat; elder; elderly person; first born; forebear; higher-up; master; older person; patriarch; superior4. oldster (noun) ancient; golden-ager; oldster; old-timer; senior citizen5. scholastic rank (noun) person in the graduating class; scholastic rank; twelfth-grader; undergraduate; upper classman -
68 ложь
1. liesнеспособный лгать, неспособный на ложь — incapable to lie
2. false; pseudoпереход по значению "ложь" — branch of false
3. lie; falsehood4. deceptionискусная ложь; ловкий трюк — clever deception
5. falsehood6. falsenessСинонимический ряд:неправда (сущ.) брех; брехню; брехня; враки; вранье; дезинформацию; дезинформация; измышление; неправда; обманАнтонимический ряд:истина; истину; правда; правду -
69 Chevenard, Pierre Antoine Jean Sylvestre
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 31 December 1888 Thizy, Rhône, Franced. 15 August 1960 Fontenoy-aux-Roses, France[br]French metallurgist, inventor of the alloys Elinvar and Platinite and of the method of strengthening nickel-chromium alloys by a precipitate ofNi3Al which provided the basis of all later super-alloy development.[br]Soon after graduating from the Ecole des Mines at St-Etienne in 1910, Chevenard joined the Société de Commentry Fourchambault et Decazeville at their steelworks at Imphy, where he remained for the whole of his career. Imphy had for some years specialized in the production of nickel steels. From this venture emerged the first austenitic nickel-chromium steel, containing 6 per cent chromium and 22–4 per cent nickel and produced commercially in 1895. Most of the alloys required by Guillaume in his search for the low-expansion alloy Invar were made at Imphy. At the Imphy Research Laboratory, established in 1911, Chevenard conducted research into the development of specialized nickel-based alloys. His first success followed from an observation that some of the ferro-nickels were free from the low-temperature brittleness exhibited by conventional steels. To satisfy the technical requirements of Georges Claude, the French cryogenic pioneer, Chevenard was then able in 1912 to develop an alloy containing 55–60 per cent nickel, 1–3 per cent manganese and 0.2–0.4 per cent carbon. This was ductile down to −190°C, at which temperature carbon steel was very brittle.By 1916 Elinvar, a nickel-iron-chromium alloy with an elastic modulus that did not vary appreciably with changes in ambient temperature, had been identified. This found extensive use in horology and instrument manufacture, and even for the production of high-quality tuning forks. Another very popular alloy was Platinite, which had the same coefficient of thermal expansion as platinum and soda glass. It was used in considerable quantities by incandescent-lamp manufacturers for lead-in wires. Other materials developed by Chevenard at this stage to satisfy the requirements of the electrical industry included resistance alloys, base-metal thermocouple combinations, magnetically soft high-permeability alloys, and nickel-aluminium permanent magnet steels of very high coercivity which greatly improved the power and reliability of car magnetos. Thermostatic bimetals of all varieties soon became an important branch of manufacture at Imphy.During the remainder of his career at Imphy, Chevenard brilliantly elaborated the work on nickel-chromium-tungsten alloys to make stronger pressure vessels for the Haber and other chemical processes. Another famous alloy that he developed, ATV, contained 35 per cent nickel and 11 per cent chromium and was free from the problem of stress-induced cracking in steam that had hitherto inhibited the development of high-power steam turbines. Between 1912 and 1917, Chevenard recognized the harmful effects of traces of carbon on this type of alloy, and in the immediate postwar years he found efficient methods of scavenging the residual carbon by controlled additions of reactive metals. This led to the development of a range of stabilized austenitic stainless steels which were free from the problems of intercrystalline corrosion and weld decay that then caused so much difficulty to the manufacturers of chemical plant.Chevenard soon concluded that only the nickel-chromium system could provide a satisfactory basis for the subsequent development of high-temperature alloys. The first published reference to the strengthening of such materials by additions of aluminium and/or titanium occurs in his UK patent of 1929. This strengthening approach was adopted in the later wartime development in Britain of the Nimonic series of alloys, all of which depended for their high-temperature strength upon the precipitated compound Ni3Al.In 1936 he was studying the effect of what is now known as "thermal fatigue", which contributes to the eventual failure of both gas and steam turbines. He then published details of equipment for assessing the susceptibility of nickel-chromium alloys to this type of breakdown by a process of repeated quenching. Around this time he began to make systematic use of the thermo-gravimetrie balance for high-temperature oxidation studies.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPresident, Société de Physique. Commandeur de la Légion d'honneur.Bibliography1929, Analyse dilatométrique des matériaux, with a preface be C.E.Guillaume, Paris: Dunod (still regarded as the definitive work on this subject).The Dictionary of Scientific Biography lists around thirty of his more important publications between 1914 and 1943.Further Reading"Chevenard, a great French metallurgist", 1960, Acier Fins (Spec.) 36:92–100.L.Valluz, 1961, "Notice sur les travaux de Pierre Chevenard, 1888–1960", Paris: Institut de France, Académie des Sciences.ASDBiographical history of technology > Chevenard, Pierre Antoine Jean Sylvestre
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70 Owens, Michael Joseph
[br]b. 1 January 1859 Mason County, Virginia, USAd. 27 December 1923 Toledo, Ohio, USA[br]American inventor of the automatic glass bottle making machine.[br]To assist the finances of a coal miner's family, Owens entered a glassworks at Wheeling, Virginia, at the tender age of 10, stoking coal into the "glory hole" or furnace where glass was resoftened at various stages of the hand-forming process. By the age of 15 he had become a glassblower.In 1888 Owens moved to the glassworks of Edward Drummond Libbey at Toledo, Ohio, where within three months he was appointed Superintendent and, not long after, a branch manager. In 1893 Owens supervised the company's famous exhibit at the World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago. He had by then begun experiments that were to lead to the first automatic bottle-blowing machine. He first used a piston pump to suck molten glass into a mould, and then transferred the gathered glass over another mould into which the bottle was blown by reversing the pump. The first patents were taken out in 1895, followed by others incorporating improvements and culminating in the patent of 8 November 1904 for an essentially perfected machine. Eventually it was capable of producing four bottles a second, thus effecting a revolution in bottle making. Owens, with Libbey and others, set up the Owens Bottle Machine Company in 1903, which Owens himself managed from 1915 to 1919, becoming Vice-President from 1915 until his death. A plant was also established in Manchester in 1905.Besides this, Owens and Libbey first assisted Irving W.Colburn with his experiments on the continuous drawing of flat sheet glass and then in 1912 bought the patents, forming the Owens-Libbey Sheet Glass Company. In all, Owens was granted forty-five US patents, mainly relating to the manufacture and processing of glass. Owens's undoubted inventive genius was hampered by a lack of scientific knowledge, which he made good by judicious consultation.[br]Further Reading1923, Michael J.Owens (privately printed) (a series of memorial articles reprinted from various sources).G.S.Duncan, 1960, Bibliography of Glass, Sheffield: Society of Glass Manufacturers (cites references to Owens's papers and patents).LRD -
71 Vignoles, Charles Blacker
[br]b. 31 May 1793 Woodbrook, Co. Wexford, Irelandd. 17 November 1875 Hythe, Hampshire, England[br]English surveyor and civil engineer, pioneer of railways.[br]Vignoles, who was of Huguenot descent, was orphaned in infancy and brought up in the family of his grandfather, Dr Charles Hutton FRS, Professor of Mathematics at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. After service in the Army he travelled to America, arriving in South Carolina in 1817. He was appointed Assistant to the state's Civil Engineer and surveyed much of South Carolina and subsequently Florida. After his return to England in 1823 he established himself as a civil engineer in London, and obtained work from the brothers George and John Rennie.In 1825 the promoters of the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway (L \& MR) lost their application for an Act of Parliament, discharged their engineer George Stephenson and appointed the Rennie brothers in his place. They in turn employed Vignoles to resurvey the railway, taking a route that would minimize objections. With Vignoles's route, the company obtained its Act in 1826 and appointed Vignoles to supervise the start of construction. After Stephenson was reappointed Chief Engineer, however, he and Vignoles proved incompatible, with the result that Vignoles left the L \& MR early in 1827.Nevertheless, Vignoles did not sever all connection with the L \& MR. He supported John Braithwaite and John Ericsson in the construction of the locomotive Novelty and was present when it competed in the Rainhill Trials in 1829. He attended the opening of the L \& MR in 1830 and was appointed Engineer to two railways which connected with it, the St Helens \& Runcorn Gap and the Wigan Branch (later extended to Preston as the North Union); he supervised the construction of these.After the death of the Engineer to the Dublin \& Kingstown Railway, Vignoles supervised construction: the railway, the first in Ireland, was opened in 1834. He was subsequently employed in surveying and constructing many railways in the British Isles and on the European continent; these included the Eastern Counties, the Midland Counties, the Sheffield, Ashton-under-Lyme \& Manchester (which proved for him a financial disaster from which he took many years to recover), and the Waterford \& Limerick. He probably discussed rail of flat-bottom section with R.L. Stevens during the winter of 1830–1 and brought it into use in the UK for the first time in 1836 on the London \& Croydon Railway: subsequently rail of this section became known as "Vignoles rail". He considered that a broader gauge than 4 ft 8½ in. (1.44 m) was desirable for railways, although most of those he built were to this gauge so that they might connect with others. He supported the atmospheric system of propulsion during the 1840s and was instrumental in its early installation on the Dublin \& Kingstown Railway's Dalkey extension. Between 1847 and 1853 he designed and built the noted multi-span suspension bridge at Kiev, Russia, over the River Dnieper, which is more than half a mile (800 m) wide at that point.Between 1857 and 1863 he surveyed and then supervised the construction of the 155- mile (250 km) Tudela \& Bilbao Railway, which crosses the Cantabrian Pyrenees at an altitude of 2,163 ft (659 m) above sea level. Vignoles outlived his most famous contemporaries to become the grand old man of his profession.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFellow of the Royal Astronomical Society 1829. FRS 1855. President, Institution of Civil Engineers 1869–70.Bibliography1830, jointly with John Ericsson, British patent no. 5,995 (a device to increase the capability of steam locomotives on grades, in which rollers gripped a third rail).1823, Observations upon the Floridas, New York: Bliss \& White.1870, Address on His Election as President of the Institution of Civil Engineers.Further ReadingK.H.Vignoles, 1982, Charles Blacker Vignoles: Romantic Engineer, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (good modern biography by his great-grandson).See also: Samuda, Joseph d'AguilarPJGRBiographical history of technology > Vignoles, Charles Blacker
См. также в других словарях:
Patent — Pat ent (p[a^]t ent or p[=a]t ent), a. [L. patens, entis, p. pr. of patere to be open: cf. F. patent. Cf. {Fathom}.] 1. Note: (Oftener pronounced p[=a]t ent in this sense) Open; expanded; evident; apparent; unconcealed; manifest; public;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Patent leather — Patent Pat ent (p[a^]t ent or p[=a]t ent), a. [L. patens, entis, p. pr. of patere to be open: cf. F. patent. Cf. {Fathom}.] 1. Note: (Oftener pronounced p[=a]t ent in this sense) Open; expanded; evident; apparent; unconcealed; manifest; public;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Patent office — Patent Pat ent (p[a^]t ent or p[=a]t ent), a. [L. patens, entis, p. pr. of patere to be open: cf. F. patent. Cf. {Fathom}.] 1. Note: (Oftener pronounced p[=a]t ent in this sense) Open; expanded; evident; apparent; unconcealed; manifest; public;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Patent right — Patent Pat ent (p[a^]t ent or p[=a]t ent), a. [L. patens, entis, p. pr. of patere to be open: cf. F. patent. Cf. {Fathom}.] 1. Note: (Oftener pronounced p[=a]t ent in this sense) Open; expanded; evident; apparent; unconcealed; manifest; public;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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