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21 registered
adjective[ins Standesregister] eingetragen [Taufe, Heirat]; [ins Handelsregister] eingetragen [Firma]; eingeschrieben, immatrikuliert [Student]; eingeschrieben [Brief, Post, Päckchen]registered disabled — ≈ Behinderter/Behinderte mit Schwerbehindertenausweis
by registered post — per Einschreiben
* * *adjective a registered letter.) eingeschrieben* * *reg·is·tered[ˈreʤɪstəd, AM -ɚd]adj inv registriert, gemeldet\registered charity eingetragene [o offiziell anerkannte] Hilfsorganisation\registered childminder professionelle Tagesmutter\registered Democrat/Republican AM POL demokratisches/republikanisches Parteimitglied\registered patent eingetragenes Patent\registered trademark eingetragenes Warenzeichen\registered vehicle amtlich zugelassenes Fahrzeug\registered voter eingetragener Wähler* * *['redZɪstəd]adjregistered capital — Grundkapital nt, Nominalkapital nt
a Y-registered car (Brit) — ein Auto nt mit dem Zulassungsbuchstaben Y
an American-registered ship — ein in Amerika registriertes Schiff
2) (POST) eingeschrieben, Einschreib-registered letter — eingeschriebener Brief, Einschreibbrief m
by registered post — per Einschreiben
* * *registered [ˈredʒıstə(r)d] adj1. allg registriert, eingetragen2. WIRTSCH, JURa) (handelsgerichtlich) eingetragen:registered office eingetragener (Haupt)Sitz (einer Firma etc)b) gesetzlich geschützt:3. WIRTSCH registriert, Namens…:registered bonds Namensschuldverschreibungen;registered capital autorisiertes (Aktien)Kapital;4. Postwesen: eingeschrieben, Einschreibe…:5. amtlich zugelassen (Fahrzeug):registered doctor approbierter Arzt;registered nurse US (staatlich) geprüfte Krankenschwester6. Tierzucht: Zuchtbuch…reg. abk3. registrar4. registry5. regular (regularly) regelm.6. regulation* * *adjective[ins Standesregister] eingetragen [Taufe, Heirat]; [ins Handelsregister] eingetragen [Firma]; eingeschrieben, immatrikuliert [Student]; eingeschrieben [Brief, Post, Päckchen]registered disabled — ≈ Behinderter/Behinderte mit Schwerbehindertenausweis
* * *(post) adj.eingeschrieben adj. adj.eingeschrieben adj.registriert adj. -
22 Holden, Sir Isaac
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 7 May 1807 Hurlet, between Paisley and Glasgow, Scotlandd. 13 August 1897[br]British developer of the wool-combing machine.[br]Isaac Holden's father, who had the same name, had been a farmer and lead miner at Alston in Cumbria before moving to work in a coal-mine near Glasgow. After a short period at Kilbarchan grammar school, the younger Isaac was engaged first as a drawboy to two weavers and then, after the family had moved to Johnstone, Scotland, worked in a cotton-spinning mill while attending night school to improve his education. He was able to learn Latin and bookkeeping, but when he was about 15 he was apprenticed to an uncle as a shawl-weaver. This proved to be too much for his strength so he returned to scholastic studies and became Assistant to an able teacher, John Kennedy, who lectured on physics, chemistry and history, which he also taught to his colleague. The elder Isaac died in 1826 and the younger had to provide for his mother and younger brother, but in 1828, at the age of 21, he moved to a teaching post in Leeds. He filled similar positions in Huddersfield and Reading, where in October 1829 he invented and demonstrated the lucifer match but did not seek to exploit it. In 1830 he returned because of ill health to his mother in Scotland, where he began to teach again. However, he was recommended as a bookkeeper to William Townend, member of the firm of Townend Brothers, Cullingworth, near Bingley, Yorkshire. Holden moved there in November 1830 and was soon involved in running the mill, eventually becoming a partner.In 1833 Holden urged Messrs Townend to introduce seven wool-combing machines of Collier's designs, but they were found to be very imperfect and brought only trouble and loss. In 1836 Holden began experimenting on the machines until they showed reasonable success. He decided to concentrate entirely on developing the combing machine and in 1846 moved to Bradford to form an alliance with Samuel Lister. A joint patent in 1847 covered improvements to the Collier combing machine. The "square motion" imitated the action of the hand-comber more closely and was patented in 1856. Five more patents followed in 1857 and others from 1858 to 1862. Holden recommended that the machines should be introduced into France, where they would be more valuable for the merino trade. This venture was begun in 1848 in the joint partnership of Lister \& Holden, with equal shares of profits. Holden established a mill at Saint-Denis, first with Donisthorpe machines and then with his own "square motion" type. Other mills were founded at Rheims and at Croix, near Roubaix. In 1858 Lister decided to retire from the French concerns and sold his share to Holden. Soon after this, Holden decided to remodel all their machinery for washing and carding the gill machines as well as perfecting the square comb. Four years of excessive application followed, during which time £20,000 was spent in experiments in a small mill at Bradford. The result fully justified the expenditure and the Alston Works was built in Bradford.Holden was a Liberal and from 1865 to 1868 he represented Knaresborough in Parliament. Later he became the Member of Parliament for the Northern Division of the Riding, Yorkshire, and then for the town of Keighley after the constituencies had been altered. He was liberal in his support of religious, charitable and political objectives. His house at Oakworth, near Keighley, must have been one of the earliest to have been lit by electricity.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsBaronet 1893.Bibliography1847, with Samuel Lister, British patent no. 11,896 (improved Collier combing machine). 1856. British patent no. 1,058 ("square motion" combing machine).1857. British patent no. 278 1857, British patent no. 279 1857, British patent no. 280 1857, British patent no. 281 1857, British patent no. 3,177 1858, British patent no. 597 1859, British patent no. 52 1860, British patent no. 810 1862, British patent no. 1,890 1862, British patent no. 3,394Further ReadingJ.Hogg (ed.), c.1888, Fortunes Made in Business, London (provides an account of Holden's life).Obituary, 1897, Engineer 84.Obituary, 1897, Engineering 64.E.M.Sigsworth, 1973, "Sir Isaac Holden, Bt: the first comber in Europe", in N.B.Harte and K.G.Ponting (eds), Textile History and Economic History, Essays in Honour ofMiss Julia de Lacy Mann, Manchester.W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (provides a good explanation of the square motion combing machine).RLH -
23 PP
1) Общая лексика: project participant2) Компьютерная техника: Parallel Port, Post Processing, Presentation Position, Pretty Print, Printed Page, Processing Problem, Programming Project, Prolog Profile, Pure Perl3) Биология: pyrophosphate4) Медицина: pulse pressure5) Американизм: Policy Procedure, Postage Paid6) Спорт: Possible Points, Power Play, Power Points7) Латинский язык: Pater Patriae8) Военный термин: Physical Plant, Preprogramed, Princess Pat's, paper play, passage point, pay period, percussion primer, personnel property, petrol point, pickup point, picrate powder, pilotless plane, pinpoint, planning purpose, power plant, present position, principle point, private property, procurement plan, production phase, progress payments, project proposal, promotion pamphlet, propulsion power, provisioning procedures, purchased parts9) Техника: packet-by-packet, partial pay, peak-to-peak, per procurationem, per pro, phosphoroprotein, physical protection, pilot plan, pilot production, plasma physics, plate pulse, power package, preprocessor, preset parameter, pressure part, pressure pickup, pressure pipe, pressure port, primary pressure, pulse pair10) Сельское хозяйство: Pig Powder, Potbelly Pig11) Шутливое выражение: Precious Piggy12) Религия: Papa Pontifex, Pope And Pontiff13) Юридический термин: Private Person, Protected Person, Psychopathic Personality14) Экономика: per pro15) Фармакология: procaine penicillin16) Биржевой термин: Percentage Point, Percentage Points17) Кино: Promotes Promiscuity18) Музыка: Pianissimo19) Политика: Papua New Guinea, Peace Party, People's Party, Peoples Party, Political Party20) Телекоммуникации: Payload Pointer21) Сокращение: Parcel Post, Pay Period (MODS report abbreviation), Petroleum Point, Point-to-Point, Primary Point, panel point, past participle, peak to peak, piping, present participle, Post Pay (payphone)22) Текстиль: Pocket Pair23) Физика: Physical Principle24) Физиология: Positive Pressure, Post Partum, Postprandial, Postpartum, Presenting Problem, Private Physician25) Электроника: Positive Pulse, Propagation Prediction26) Вычислительная техника: Pre-Processor, physical plane, pilot punch, Physical Plane (IN), Physical Partition (LVM), Post Pay (payphone, Telephony), (pages) страницы27) Нефть: production payment, pulled pipe, pump pressure, натянутая труба, оплата за продукцию (production payment), поднятая труба (pulled pipe), payback period28) Социология: Планирование рождаемости ( Planned Parenthood)29) Транспорт: Length between Perpendiculars30) Пищевая промышленность: Peak Picking31) Воздухоплавание: Plane Parallel32) Парфюмерия: полипропилен33) Фирменный знак: Parsons, Phillips Perron, Protein Protein, Pulp And Paper34) СМИ: Printers Proof, Published Play, Publisher Or Publishers35) Деловая лексика: Principal Part, Professional Practice, Published Price36) Нефтепромысловый: pore pressure37) Образование: Pet Pals38) Инвестиции: patent pending, plant patent39) Сетевые технологии: peripheral processor, периферийный процессор40) Полимеры: peak power, polypropylene, porous by precipitator, pre-primed, pressure-proof41) Автоматика: pitch point, postprocessor42) Сахалин Ю: propane43) Химическое оружие: Process Procedure44) Расширение файла: Parallel Processor45) Нефть и газ: pour point46) Электротехника: push-pull47) Общественная организация: Pet Partners48) Должность: Parish Priest49) Чат: Practically Perfect, Pretty Pathetic50) НАСА: Post Pass51) Единицы измерений: Page Or Pages, Per Particle, Per Person52) Международная торговля: Purchase Price -
24 Pp
1) Общая лексика: project participant2) Компьютерная техника: Parallel Port, Post Processing, Presentation Position, Pretty Print, Printed Page, Processing Problem, Programming Project, Prolog Profile, Pure Perl3) Биология: pyrophosphate4) Медицина: pulse pressure5) Американизм: Policy Procedure, Postage Paid6) Спорт: Possible Points, Power Play, Power Points7) Латинский язык: Pater Patriae8) Военный термин: Physical Plant, Preprogramed, Princess Pat's, paper play, passage point, pay period, percussion primer, personnel property, petrol point, pickup point, picrate powder, pilotless plane, pinpoint, planning purpose, power plant, present position, principle point, private property, procurement plan, production phase, progress payments, project proposal, promotion pamphlet, propulsion power, provisioning procedures, purchased parts9) Техника: packet-by-packet, partial pay, peak-to-peak, per procurationem, per pro, phosphoroprotein, physical protection, pilot plan, pilot production, plasma physics, plate pulse, power package, preprocessor, preset parameter, pressure part, pressure pickup, pressure pipe, pressure port, primary pressure, pulse pair10) Сельское хозяйство: Pig Powder, Potbelly Pig11) Шутливое выражение: Precious Piggy12) Религия: Papa Pontifex, Pope And Pontiff13) Юридический термин: Private Person, Protected Person, Psychopathic Personality14) Экономика: per pro15) Фармакология: procaine penicillin16) Биржевой термин: Percentage Point, Percentage Points17) Кино: Promotes Promiscuity18) Музыка: Pianissimo19) Политика: Papua New Guinea, Peace Party, People's Party, Peoples Party, Political Party20) Телекоммуникации: Payload Pointer21) Сокращение: Parcel Post, Pay Period (MODS report abbreviation), Petroleum Point, Point-to-Point, Primary Point, panel point, past participle, peak to peak, piping, present participle, Post Pay (payphone)22) Текстиль: Pocket Pair23) Физика: Physical Principle24) Физиология: Positive Pressure, Post Partum, Postprandial, Postpartum, Presenting Problem, Private Physician25) Электроника: Positive Pulse, Propagation Prediction26) Вычислительная техника: Pre-Processor, physical plane, pilot punch, Physical Plane (IN), Physical Partition (LVM), Post Pay (payphone, Telephony), (pages) страницы27) Нефть: production payment, pulled pipe, pump pressure, натянутая труба, оплата за продукцию (production payment), поднятая труба (pulled pipe), payback period28) Социология: Планирование рождаемости ( Planned Parenthood)29) Транспорт: Length between Perpendiculars30) Пищевая промышленность: Peak Picking31) Воздухоплавание: Plane Parallel32) Парфюмерия: полипропилен33) Фирменный знак: Parsons, Phillips Perron, Protein Protein, Pulp And Paper34) СМИ: Printers Proof, Published Play, Publisher Or Publishers35) Деловая лексика: Principal Part, Professional Practice, Published Price36) Нефтепромысловый: pore pressure37) Образование: Pet Pals38) Инвестиции: patent pending, plant patent39) Сетевые технологии: peripheral processor, периферийный процессор40) Полимеры: peak power, polypropylene, porous by precipitator, pre-primed, pressure-proof41) Автоматика: pitch point, postprocessor42) Сахалин Ю: propane43) Химическое оружие: Process Procedure44) Расширение файла: Parallel Processor45) Нефть и газ: pour point46) Электротехника: push-pull47) Общественная организация: Pet Partners48) Должность: Parish Priest49) Чат: Practically Perfect, Pretty Pathetic50) НАСА: Post Pass51) Единицы измерений: Page Or Pages, Per Particle, Per Person52) Международная торговля: Purchase Price -
25 pp
1) Общая лексика: project participant2) Компьютерная техника: Parallel Port, Post Processing, Presentation Position, Pretty Print, Printed Page, Processing Problem, Programming Project, Prolog Profile, Pure Perl3) Биология: pyrophosphate4) Медицина: pulse pressure5) Американизм: Policy Procedure, Postage Paid6) Спорт: Possible Points, Power Play, Power Points7) Латинский язык: Pater Patriae8) Военный термин: Physical Plant, Preprogramed, Princess Pat's, paper play, passage point, pay period, percussion primer, personnel property, petrol point, pickup point, picrate powder, pilotless plane, pinpoint, planning purpose, power plant, present position, principle point, private property, procurement plan, production phase, progress payments, project proposal, promotion pamphlet, propulsion power, provisioning procedures, purchased parts9) Техника: packet-by-packet, partial pay, peak-to-peak, per procurationem, per pro, phosphoroprotein, physical protection, pilot plan, pilot production, plasma physics, plate pulse, power package, preprocessor, preset parameter, pressure part, pressure pickup, pressure pipe, pressure port, primary pressure, pulse pair10) Сельское хозяйство: Pig Powder, Potbelly Pig11) Шутливое выражение: Precious Piggy12) Религия: Papa Pontifex, Pope And Pontiff13) Юридический термин: Private Person, Protected Person, Psychopathic Personality14) Экономика: per pro15) Фармакология: procaine penicillin16) Биржевой термин: Percentage Point, Percentage Points17) Кино: Promotes Promiscuity18) Музыка: Pianissimo19) Политика: Papua New Guinea, Peace Party, People's Party, Peoples Party, Political Party20) Телекоммуникации: Payload Pointer21) Сокращение: Parcel Post, Pay Period (MODS report abbreviation), Petroleum Point, Point-to-Point, Primary Point, panel point, past participle, peak to peak, piping, present participle, Post Pay (payphone)22) Текстиль: Pocket Pair23) Физика: Physical Principle24) Физиология: Positive Pressure, Post Partum, Postprandial, Postpartum, Presenting Problem, Private Physician25) Электроника: Positive Pulse, Propagation Prediction26) Вычислительная техника: Pre-Processor, physical plane, pilot punch, Physical Plane (IN), Physical Partition (LVM), Post Pay (payphone, Telephony), (pages) страницы27) Нефть: production payment, pulled pipe, pump pressure, натянутая труба, оплата за продукцию (production payment), поднятая труба (pulled pipe), payback period28) Социология: Планирование рождаемости ( Planned Parenthood)29) Транспорт: Length between Perpendiculars30) Пищевая промышленность: Peak Picking31) Воздухоплавание: Plane Parallel32) Парфюмерия: полипропилен33) Фирменный знак: Parsons, Phillips Perron, Protein Protein, Pulp And Paper34) СМИ: Printers Proof, Published Play, Publisher Or Publishers35) Деловая лексика: Principal Part, Professional Practice, Published Price36) Нефтепромысловый: pore pressure37) Образование: Pet Pals38) Инвестиции: patent pending, plant patent39) Сетевые технологии: peripheral processor, периферийный процессор40) Полимеры: peak power, polypropylene, porous by precipitator, pre-primed, pressure-proof41) Автоматика: pitch point, postprocessor42) Сахалин Ю: propane43) Химическое оружие: Process Procedure44) Расширение файла: Parallel Processor45) Нефть и газ: pour point46) Электротехника: push-pull47) Общественная организация: Pet Partners48) Должность: Parish Priest49) Чат: Practically Perfect, Pretty Pathetic50) НАСА: Post Pass51) Единицы измерений: Page Or Pages, Per Particle, Per Person52) Международная торговля: Purchase Price -
26 Eisler, Paul
[br]b. 1907 Vienna, Austria[br]Austrian engineer responsible for the invention of the printed circuit.[br]At the age of 23, Eisler obtained a Diploma in Engineering from the Technical University of Vienna. Because of the growing Nazi influence in Austria, he then accepted a post with the His Master's Voice (HMV) agents in Belgrade, where he worked on the problems of radio reception and sound transmission in railway trains. However, he soon returned to Vienna to found a weekly radio journal and file patents on graphical sound recording (for which he received a doctorate) and on a system of stereoscopic television based on lenticular vertical scanning.In 1936 he moved to England and sold the TV patent to Marconi for £250. Unable to find a job, he carried out experiments in his rooms in a Hampstead boarding-house; after making circuits using strip wires mounted on bakelite sheet, he filed his first printed-circuit patent that year. He then tried to find ways of printing the circuits, but without success. Obtaining a post with Odeon Theatres, he invented a sound-level control for films and devised a mirror-drum continuous-film projector, but with the outbreak of war in 1939, when the company was evacuated, he chose to stay in London and was interned for a while. Released in 1941, he began work with Henderson and Spalding, a firm of lithographic printers, to whom he unwittingly assigned all future patents for the paltry sum of £1. In due course he perfected a means of printing conducting circuits and on 3 February 1943 he filed three patents covering the process. The British Ministry of Defence rejected the idea, considering it of no use for military equipment, but after he had demonstrated the technique to American visitors it was enthusiastically taken up in the US for making proximity fuses, of which many millions were produced and used for the war effort. Subsequently the US Government ruled that all air-borne electronic circuits should be printed.In the late 1940s the Instrument Department of Henderson and Spalding was split off as Technograph Printed Circuits Ltd, with Eisler as Technical Director. In 1949 he filed a further patent covering a multilayer system; this was licensed to Pye and the Telegraph Condenser Company. A further refinement, patented in the 1950s, the use of the technique for telephone exchange equipment, but this was subsequently widely infringed and although he negotiated licences in the USA he found it difficult to license his ideas in Europe. In the UK he obtained finance from the National Research and Development Corporation, but they interfered and refused money for further development, and he eventually resigned from Technograph. Faced with litigation in the USA and open infringement in the UK, he found it difficult to establish his claims, but their validity was finally agreed by the Court of Appeal (1969) and the House of Lords (1971).As a freelance inventor he filed many other printed-circuit patents, including foil heating films and batteries. When his Patent Agents proved unwilling to fund the cost of filing and prosecuting Complete Specifications he set up his own company, Eisler Consultants Ltd, to promote food and space heating, including the use of heated cans and wallpaper! As Foil Heating Ltd he went into the production of heating films, the process subsequently being licensed to Thermal Technology Inc. in California.[br]Bibliography1953, "Printed circuits: some general principles and applications of the foil technique", Journal of the British Institution of Radio Engineers 13: 523.1959, The Technology of Printed Circuits: The Foil Technique in Electronic Production.1984–5, "Reflections of my life as an inventor", Circuit World 11:1–3 (a personal account of the development of the printed circuit).1989, My Life with the Printed Circuit, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania: Lehigh University Press.KF -
27 Page, Charles Grafton
[br]b. 25 January 1812 Salem, Massachusetts, USAd. 5 May 1868 Washington, DC, USA[br]American scientist and inventor of electric motors.[br]Page graduated from Harvard in 1832 and subsequently attended Boston Medical School. He began to practise in Salem and also engaged in experimental research in electricity, discovering the improvement effected by substituting bundles of iron wire for solid bars in induction coils. He also created a device which he termed a Dynamic Multiplier, the prototype of the auto-transformer. Following a period in medical practice in Virginia, in 1841 he became one of the first two principal examiners in the United States Patent Office. He also held the Chair of Chemistry and Pharmacy at Columbian College, later George Washington University, between 1844 and 1849.A prolific inventor, Page completed several large electric motors in which reciprocating action was converted to rotary motion, and invested an extravagant sum of public money in a foredoomed effort to develop a 10-ton electric locomotive powered by primary batteries. This was unsuccessfully demonstrated in April 1851 on the Washington-Baltimore railway and seriously damaged his reputation. Page approached Thomas Davenport with an offer of partnership, but Davenport refused.After leaving the Patent Office in 1852 he became a patentee himself and advocated the reform of the patent procedures. Page returned to the Patent Office in 1861, and later persuaded Congress to pass a special Act permitting him to patent the induction coil. This was the cause, after his death, of protracted and widely publicized litigation.[br]Bibliography1867, History of Induction: The American Claim to the Induction Coil and itsElectrostatic Developments, Washington, DC.Further ReadingR.C.Post, 1976, Physics, Patents and Politics, New York (a biography which treats Page as a focal point for studying the American patent system).——1976, "Stray sparks from the induction coil: the Volta prize and the Page patent", Proceedings of the Institute of Electrical Engineers 64: 1,279–86 (a short account).W.J.King, 1962, The Development of Electrical Technology in the 19th Century, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, Paper 28.GW -
28 Whitney, Eli
[br]b. 8 December 1765 Westborough, Massachusetts, USAd. 8 January 1825 New Haven, Connecticut, USA[br]American inventor of the cotton gin and manufacturer of firearms.[br]The son of a prosperous farmer, Eli Whitney as a teenager showed more interest in mechanics than school work. At the age of 15 he began an enterprise business manufacturing nails in his father's workshop, even having to hire help to fulfil his orders. He later determined to acquire a university education and, his father having declined to provide funds, he taught at local schools to obtain the means to attend Leicester Academy, Massachusetts, in preparation for his entry to Yale in 1789. He graduated in 1792 and then decided to study law. He accepted a position in Georgia as a tutor that would have given him time for study; this post did not materialize, but on his journey south he met General Nathanael Greene's widow and the manager of her plantations, Phineas Miller (1764–1803). A feature of agriculture in the southern states was that the land was unsuitable for long-staple cotton but could yield large crops of green-seed cotton. Green-seed cotton was difficult to separate from its seed, and when Whitney learned of the problem in 1793 he quickly devised a machine known as the cotton gin, which provided an effective solution. He formed a partnership with Miller to manufacture the gin and in 1794 obtained a patent. This invention made possible the extraordinary growth of the cotton industry in the United States, but the patent was widely infringed and it was not until 1807, after amendment of the patent laws, that Whitney was able to obtain a favourable decision in the courts and some financial return.In 1798 Whitney was in financial difficulties following the failure of the initial legal action against infringement of the cotton gin patent, but in that year he obtained a government contract to supply 10,000 muskets within two years with generous advance payments. He built a factory at New Haven, Connecticut, and proposed to use a new method of manufacture, perhaps the first application of the system of interchangeable parts. He failed to supply the firearms in the specified time, and in fact the first 500 guns were not delivered until 1801 and the full contract was not completed until 1809.In 1812 Whitney made application for a renewal of his cotton gin patent, but this was refused. In the same year, however, he obtained a second contract from the Government for 15,000 firearms and a similar one from New York State which ensured the success of his business.[br]Further ReadingJ.Mirsky and A.Nevins, 1952, The World of Eli Whitney, New York (a good biography). P.J.Federico, 1960, "Records of Eli Whitney's cotton gin patent", Technology and Culture 1: 168–76 (for details of the cotton gin patent).R.S.Woodbury, 1960, The legend of Eli Whitney and interchangeable parts', Technology and Culture 1:235–53 (challenges the traditional view of Eli Whitney as the sole originator of the "American" system of manufacture).See also Technology and Culture 14(1973):592–8; 18(1977):146–8; 19(1978):609–11.RTS -
29 office
n1) служба, место, должность2) ведомство, министерство; управление3) контора, офис
- accountancy office
- accountant's office
- administrative office
- advance booking office
- assay office
- audit office
- back office
- booking office
- box office
- branch office
- brokerage office
- buyers' office
- cash office
- cashier's office
- central office
- central administration office
- central administrative office
- central statistical office
- chief administrative office
- clearing office
- clerical office
- Companies Registration Office
- consultation office
- conversion office
- cost office
- currency control office
- customs office
- design office
- director's office
- dispatch office
- district office
- drawing office
- editorial office
- employment office
- exchange office
- excise office
- executive office
- export office
- fair office
- field office
- Foreign Office
- front office
- freight office
- frontier customs office
- general office
- general accounting office
- General Accounting Office
- General Post Office
- General Procurator's Office
- government office
- head office
- Home Office
- home office
- import office
- information office
- Inland Revenue Office
- inquiry office
- insurance office
- legal advice office
- legal consultation office
- life office
- loan office
- mail dispatching office
- main office
- money office
- notarial office
- notary office
- notary's
- ombudsman's office
- open plan office
- order office
- passport and visa office
- patent office
- patent agent's office
- patent attorney's office
- pay office
- paying office
- personnel office
- post office
- principal office
- public office
- public relations office
- publicity office
- purchasing office
- receiving office
- record office
- record-keeping office
- regional office
- register office
- registered office
- registration office
- registry office
- remote office
- revenue office
- representative office
- sales office
- selling office
- Serious Fraud Office
- shipping office
- shop office
- social insurance office
- solicitor's office
- state office of a notary public
- state attorney-general's office
- state notary's office
- statutory office
- stock brokerage office
- surveyor's office
- tax office
- trade fair office
- traffic office
- transport office
- transportation office
- travel office
- treasurer's office
- visa office
- Office of Fair Trading
- appoint to an office
- assume an office
- be in office
- come to office
- continue in office
- dismiss from office
- hold an office
- man an office by personnel
- occupy an office
- qualify for an office
- quit office
- raid the office
- remove from office
- resign one's office
- retire from office
- set up an office
- share an office
- stand for an office
- start an office
- succeed smb in office
- suspend from office
- take officeEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > office
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30 Mitscherlich, Alexander
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 28 May 1836 Berlin, Germanyd. 31 May 1918 Oberstdorf, Germany[br]German inventor of sulphite wood pulp for papermaking.[br]Mitscherlich had an impeccable scientific background; his father was the celebrated chemist Eilhardt Mitscherlich, discoverer of the law of isomorphism, and his godfather was Alexander von Humboldt. At first his progress at school failed to live up to this auspicious beginning and his father would only sanction higher studies if he first qualified as a teacher so as to assure a means of livelihood. Alexander rose to the occasion and went on to gain his doctorate at the age of 25 in the field of mineralogical chemistry. He worked for a few years as Assistant to the distinguished chemists Wöhler in Göttingen and Wurtz in Paris. On his father's death in 1863, he succeeded him as teacher of chemistry in the University of Berlin. In 1868 he accepted a post in the newly established Forest Academy in Hannoversch-Munden, teaching chemistry, physics and geology. The post offered little financial advantage, but it left him more time for research. It was there that he invented the process for producing sulphite wood pulp.The paper industry was seeking new raw materials. Since the 1840s pulp had been produced mechanically from wood, but it was unsuitable for making fine papers. From the mid-1860s several chemists began tackling the problem of separating the cellulose fibres from the other constituents of wood by chemical means. The American Benjamin C.Tilghman was granted patents in several countries for the treatment of wood with acid or bisulphite. Carl Daniel Ekman in Sweden and Karl Kellner in Austria also made sulphite pulp, but the credit for devising the process that came into general use belongs to Mitscherlich. His brother Oskar came to him at the Academy with plans for producing pulp by the action of soda, but the results were inferior, so Mitscherlich substituted calcium bisulphite and in the laboratory obtained good results. To extend this to a large-scale process, he was forced to set up his own mill, where he devised the characteristic towers for making the calcium bisulphite, in which water trickling down through packed lime met a rising current of sulphur dioxide. He was granted a patent in Luxembourg in 1874 and a German one four years later. The sulphite process did not make him rich, for there was considerable opposition to it; government objected to the smell of sulphur dioxide, forestry authorities were anxious about the inroads that might be made into the forests and his patents were contested. In 1883, with the support of an inheritance from his mother, Mitscherlich resigned his post at the Academy to devote more time to promoting his invention. In 1897 he at last succeeded in settling the patent disputes and achieving recognition as the inventor of sulphite pulp. Without this raw material, the paper industry could never have satisfied the insatiable appetite of the newspaper presses.[br]Further ReadingH.Voorn "Alexander Mitscherlich, inventor of sulphite wood pulp", Paper Maker 23(1): 41–4.LRDBiographical history of technology > Mitscherlich, Alexander
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31 Robert, Nicolas Louis
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 2 December 1761 Paris, Franced. 8 August 1828 Dreux, France[br]French inventor of the papermaking machine.[br]Robert was born into a prosperous family and received a fair education, after which he became a lawyer's clerk. In 1780, however, he enlisted in the Army and joined the artillery, serving with distinction in the West Indies, where he fought against the English. When dissatisfied with his prospects, Robert returned to Paris and obtained a post as proof-reader to the firm of printers and publishers owned by the Didot family. They were so impressed with his abilities that they promoted him, c. 1790, to "clerk inspector of workmen" at their paper mill at Essonnes, south of Paris, under the control of Didot St Leger.It was there that Robert conceived the idea of a continuous papermaking machine. In 1797 he made a model of it and, after further models, he obtained a patent in 1798. The paper was formed on a continuously revolving wire gauze, from which the sheets were lifted off and hung up to dry. Didot was at first scathing, but he came round to encouraging Robert to make a success of the machine. However, they quarrelled over the financial arrangements and Robert left to try setting up his own mill near Rouen. He failed for lack of capital, and in 1800 he returned to Essonnes and sold his patent to Didot for part cash, part proceeds from the operation of the mill. Didot left for England to enlist capital and technical skills to exploit the invention, while Robert was left in charge at Essonnes. It was the Fourdrinier brothers and Bryan Donkin who developed the papermaking machine into a form in which it could succeed. Meanwhile the mill at Essonnes under Robert's direction had begun to falter and declined to the point where it had to be sold. He had never received the full return from the sale of his patent, but he managed to recover his rights in it. This profited him little, for Didot obtained a patent in France for the Fourdrinier machine and had two examples erected in 1814 and the following year, respectively, neatly side-tracking Robert, who was now without funds or position. To support himself and his family, Robert set up a primary school in Dreux and there passed his remaining years. Although it was the Fourdrinier papermaking machine that was generally adopted, it is Robert who deserves credit for the original initiative.[br]Further ReadingR.H.Clapperton, 1967, The Papermaking Machine, Oxford: Pergamon Press, pp. 279–83 (provides a full description of Robert's invention and patent, together with a biography).LRD -
32 Saniter, Ernest Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1863 Middlesbrough, Englandd. 2 November 1934 Rotherham, Yorkshire[br]English chemist and metallurgist who introduced a treatment to remove sulphur from molten iron.[br]Saniter spent three years as a pupil in J.E.Stead's chemical laboratory in Middlesbrough, and then from 1883 was employed in the same town as Assistant Chemist at the new North-Eastern Steelworks. In 1890 he became Chief Chemist to the Wigan Coal and Iron Company in Lancashire. There he devised a desulphurizing treatment for molten iron and steel, based upon the presence of abundant lime together with calcium chloride. Between 1898 and 1904 he was in the Middlesbrough district once more, employed by Dorman Long \& Co. and Bell Brothers in experiments which led to the establishment of Teesside's first large-scale basic open-hearth steel plant. Calcium fluoride (fluorspar), mentioned in Saniter's 1892 patent, soon came to replace the calcium chloride; with this modification, his method retained wide applicability throughout the era of open-hearth steel. In 1904 Saniter became chief metallurgist to Steel, Peech \& Tozer Limited of Sheffield, and he remained in this post until 1928. Throughout the last forty years of his life he participated in the discussion of steelmaking developments and practices.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsVice-President, Iron and Steel Institute 1927–34. Iron and Steel Institute (London) Bessemer Gold Medal 1910.Bibliography1892. "A new process for the purification of iron and steel from sulphur", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 2:216–22.1893. "A supplementary paper on a new process for desulphurising iron and steel", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 1:73–7. 29 October 1892, British patent no. 8,612.15 October 1892, British patent no. 8,612A. 29 July 1893, British patent no. 17, 692.28 October 1893, British patent no. 23,534.Further ReadingK.C.Barraclough, 1990, Steelmaking: 1850–1900 458, London: Institute of Metals, 271– 8.JKA -
33 Sholes, Christopher Latham
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 14 February 1819 Mooresburg, Pennsylvania, USAd. 17 February 1890 USA[br]American inventor of the first commercially successful typewriter.[br]Sholes was born on his parents' farm, of a family that had originally come from England. After leaving school at 14, he was apprenticed for four years to the local newspaper, the Danville Intelligencer. He moved with his parents to Wisconsin, where he followed his trade as journalist and printer, within a year becoming State Printer and taking charge of the House journal of the State Legislature. When he was 20 he left home and joined his brother in Madison, Wisconsin, on the staff of the Wisconsin Enquirer. After marrying, he took the editorship of the Southport Telegraph, until he became Postmaster of Southport. His experiences as journalist and postmaster drew him into politics and, in spite of the delicate nature of his health and personality, he served with credit as State Senator and in the State Assembly. In 1860 he moved to Milwaukee, where he became Editor of the local paper until President Lincoln offered him the post of Collector of Customs at Milwaukee.That position at last gave Sholes time to develop his undoubted inventive talents. With a machinist friend, Samuel W.Soule, he obtained a patent for a paging machine and another two years later for a machine for numbering the blank pages of a book serially. At the small machine shop where they worked, there was a third inventor, Carlos Glidden. It was Glidden who suggested to Sholes that, in view of his numbering machine, he would be well equipped to develop a letter printing machine. Glidden drew Sholes's attention to an account of a writing machine that had recently been invented in London by John Pratt, and Sholes was so seized with the idea that he devoted the rest of his life to perfecting the machine. With Glidden and Soule, he took out a patent for a typewriter on June 1868 followed by two further patents for improvements. Sholes struggled unsuccessfully for five years to exploit his invention; his two partners gave up their rights in it and finally, on 1 March 1873, Sholes himself sold his rights to the Remington Arms Company for $12,000. With their mechanical skills and equipment, Remingtons were able to perfect the Sholes typewriter and put it on the market. This, the first commercially successful typewriter, led to a revolution not only in office work, but also in work for women, although progress was slow at first. When the New York Young Women's Christian Association bought six Remingtons in 1881 to begin classes for young women, eight turned up for the first les-son; and five years later it was estimated that there were 60,000 female typists in the USA. Sholes said, "I feel that I have done something for the women who have always had to work so hard. This will more easily enable them to earn a living."Sholes continued his work on the typewriter, giving Remingtons the benefit of his results. His last patent was granted in 1878. Never very strong, Sholes became consumptive and spent much of his remaining nine years in the vain pursuit of health.[br]Bibliography23 June 1868, US patent no. 79,265 (the first typewriter patent).Further ReadingM.H.Adler, 1973, The Writing Machine, London: Allen \& Unwin.LRDBiographical history of technology > Sholes, Christopher Latham
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34 Woodbury, Walter Bentley
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1834 Manchester, Englandd. 1885 Margate, Kent, England[br]English photographer, inventor of the Woodburytype process.[br]Having been apprenticed to be an engineer, Woodbury left England in 1851 to seek his fortune in the Australian gold-fields. Like many others, he failed, and after a series of transient jobs found a post as Draughtsman at the Melbourne Waterworks. He then went on to Java, where he practised wet-collodion photography before returning to England finally in 1863. Woodbury settled in Birmingham, where like most contemporary photographers he was concerned to find a solution to the troublesome problem of fading prints. He began working the carbon process, and in 1866 and 1867 took out a series of patents which were to lead to the development of the process that took his name. Woodburytypes were continuous-tone prints of high quality that could be mass produced more cheaply than the traditional silver print. This was an important innovation and Woodburytypes were extensively used for quality book illustrations until the introduction of more versatile photomechanical processes in the 1890s. In all, Woodbury took out twenty patents between 1864 and 1884, some relating to a wide range of photographic devices. He was still working to simplify the Woodburytype process when he died from an overdose of laudanum.[br]BibliographyWoodbury took out a series of patents on his process, the most significant being: 23 September 1864, British patent no. 2,338; 12 January 1866, British patent no. 105; 11 February 1866, British patent no. 505; 8 May 1866, British patent no. 1,315; 24 July 1866, British patent no. 1,918.Further ReadingG.Tissandier, 1876, A History and Handbook of Photography, trans. J.Thomson.B.E.Jones (ed.), 1911, Cassell's Cyclopaedia of Photography, London (a brief biography).J.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans. E. Epstean, New York.JWBiographical history of technology > Woodbury, Walter Bentley
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35 PTO
1) Общая лексика: (произносится по буквам: пи ти оу) пожалуйста, переверните страницу, больничный (редко), оплачиваемое время отдыха (paid time off), см. на об., смотри на обороте, Permit to Operate, отгул2) Компьютерная техника: Process Time Out3) Военный термин: Pacific Theater Of Operations, Personal Time Off, Preliminary Technical Order, participating test organization, physical training officer, project technical officer, propellant transfer operation4) Техника: permanently tuned oscillator5) Сельское хозяйство: Pretty Tractor Operator6) Шутливое выражение: Pull Toyota Out7) Юридический термин: Permission To Occupy, Pre Trial Order8) Автомобильный термин: механизм отбора мощности, power take off (4WD Option)9) Оптика: public telecommunications operator10) Телекоммуникации: Оператор телекоммуникационной сети общего пользования11) Сокращение: Please Turn Over, Power Take-Off, painted12) Физиология: Patella Tracking Orthosis13) Электроника: Permeability Tuned Oscillator14) Вычислительная техника: Patent and Trademark Office, Patent and Trademark Office (organization, USA)15) Картография: post and telegraph office16) Транспорт: Please Take Off17) Патенты: Патентное ведомство (аббревиатура от Patent and Trademark Office, Официально используется, в частности, в составе аббревиатуры USPTO - United States Patent and Trademark Office)18) Деловая лексика: Project Team And Organization, переверните, пожалуйста (please turn over), смотрите на обороте (please turn over), оплачиваемый отпуск (PTO( paid time off))19) Глоссарий компании Сахалин Энерджи: вал отбора мощности, коробка отбора мощности20) Образование: Parent Teacher Organization21) Американский английский: родительский комитет (Parent-Teacher Organization)22) Автоматика: power takeoff, pulse train output23) Нефть и газ: механический привод, устройство для передачи механической мощности от главного двигателя к дополнительному оборудованию24) Должность: Paid Time Off, Public Telephone Operator25) Аэропорты: Pato Branco, PR, Brazil -
36 pto
1) Общая лексика: (произносится по буквам: пи ти оу) пожалуйста, переверните страницу, больничный (редко), оплачиваемое время отдыха (paid time off), см. на об., смотри на обороте, Permit to Operate, отгул2) Компьютерная техника: Process Time Out3) Военный термин: Pacific Theater Of Operations, Personal Time Off, Preliminary Technical Order, participating test organization, physical training officer, project technical officer, propellant transfer operation4) Техника: permanently tuned oscillator5) Сельское хозяйство: Pretty Tractor Operator6) Шутливое выражение: Pull Toyota Out7) Юридический термин: Permission To Occupy, Pre Trial Order8) Автомобильный термин: механизм отбора мощности, power take off (4WD Option)9) Оптика: public telecommunications operator10) Телекоммуникации: Оператор телекоммуникационной сети общего пользования11) Сокращение: Please Turn Over, Power Take-Off, painted12) Физиология: Patella Tracking Orthosis13) Электроника: Permeability Tuned Oscillator14) Вычислительная техника: Patent and Trademark Office, Patent and Trademark Office (organization, USA)15) Картография: post and telegraph office16) Транспорт: Please Take Off17) Патенты: Патентное ведомство (аббревиатура от Patent and Trademark Office, Официально используется, в частности, в составе аббревиатуры USPTO - United States Patent and Trademark Office)18) Деловая лексика: Project Team And Organization, переверните, пожалуйста (please turn over), смотрите на обороте (please turn over), оплачиваемый отпуск (PTO (paid time off))19) Глоссарий компании Сахалин Энерджи: вал отбора мощности, коробка отбора мощности20) Образование: Parent Teacher Organization21) Американский английский: родительский комитет (Parent-Teacher Organization)22) Автоматика: power takeoff, pulse train output23) Нефть и газ: механический привод, устройство для передачи механической мощности от главного двигателя к дополнительному оборудованию24) Должность: Paid Time Off, Public Telephone Operator25) Аэропорты: Pato Branco, PR, Brazil -
37 date
1) дата; число; день ( месяца)2) срок, период3) датировать•- date of application
- date of availability for public
- date of commencement
- date of conception
- date of constructive reduction to practice
- date of decision
- date of expiration
- date of filing
- date of final rejection
- date of first publication
- date of forfeiture
- date of grant
- date of initial patent application
- date of issuance
- date of issue
- date of licensing
- date of licensing contract
- date of mailing of the patent application
- date of original decision
- date of patent
- date of patenting
- date of payment
- date of post-office stamp
- date of priority
- date of publication
- date of rejection
- date of the appeal
- date of the grant of a patent
- date of the Official Letter
- actual filing date
- anticipatory date
- application date
- citation date
- closing date
- conception date
- convention date
- convention priority date
- due date
- effective date
- effective filing date
- expiration date
- expiry date
- filing date of an application
- first conception date
- first filing date
- foreign filing date
- foreign priority date
- imprimatur date
- international filing date under the PCT
- international registration date under the TRT
- invention date
- key date
- later date of priority
- patenting date
- reciprocity date
- sealing date
- terminal date of prior patents -
38 Lee, Edmund
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]d. mid-1763 Brock Mill, Wigan, England[br]English inventor of the fantail, used to turn windmills automatically to face the wind.[br]On 9 December 1745 Edmund Lee was granted letters patent for his invention of the windmill fantail. In the preamble to Lee's patent he is described as a smith of Brock Mill, near Wigan, where he ran a millwright's business. Brock Mill is known to have been a substantial water-powered iron forge by the River Douglas to the north of Wigan. The drawing accompanying the patent shows a tower mill with its tail pole reaching the ground, and this is connected to a frame or carriage supporting a seven-bladed wind wheel. This tail projected some distance from the back of the tower, and when the wind caught it and turned it the cap was turned to face the wind by means of the gears which linked the cap to the fantail. The next logical step from Lee's invention was to place the fantail at a high level on the cap or at the foot of the ladder of a post mill. There is also an inferred connection between the Lee fantail and the annular sail of the wind engine or of a windmill such as that at Haverhill in Suffolk.[br]Further ReadingStephen Buckland, 1987, Lee's Patent Windmill, London KM -
39 Smith, Sir Francis Pettit
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 9 February 1808 Copperhurst Farm, near Hythe, Kent, Englandd. 12 February 1874 South Kensington, London, England[br]English inventor of the screw propeller.[br]Smith was the only son of Charles Smith, Postmaster at Hythe, and his wife Sarah (née Pettit). After education at a private school in Ashford, Kent, he took to farming, first on Romney Marsh, then at Hendon, Middlesex. As a boy, he showed much skill in the construction of model boats, especially in devising their means of propulsion. He maintained this interest into adult life and in 1835 he made a model propelled by a screw driven by a spring. This worked so well that he became convinced that the screw propeller offered a better method of propulsion than the paddle wheels that were then in general use. This notion so fired his enthusiasm that he virtually gave up farming to devote himself to perfecting his invention. The following year he produced a better model, which he successfully demonstrated to friends on his farm at Hendon and afterwards to the public at the Adelaide Gallery in London. On 31 May 1836 Smith was granted a patent for the propulsion of vessels by means of a screw.The idea of screw propulsion was not new, however, for it had been mooted as early as the seventeenth century and since then several proposals had been advanced, but without successful practical application. Indeed, simultaneously but quite independently of Smith, the Swedish engineer John Ericsson had invented the ship's propeller and obtained a patent on 13 July 1836, just weeks after Smith. But Smith was completely unaware of this and pursued his own device in the belief that he was the sole inventor.With some financial and technical backing, Smith was able to construct a 10 ton boat driven by a screw and powered by a steam engine of about 6 hp (4.5 kW). After showing it off to the public, Smith tried it out at sea, from Ramsgate round to Dover and Hythe, returning in stormy weather. The screw performed well in both calm and rough water. The engineering world seemed opposed to the new method of propulsion, but the Admiralty gave cautious encouragement in 1839 by ordering that the 237 ton Archimedes be equipped with a screw. It showed itself superior to the Vulcan, one of the fastest paddle-driven ships in the Navy. The ship was put through its paces in several ports, including Bristol, where Isambard Kingdom Brunel was constructing his Great Britain, the first large iron ocean-going vessel. Brunel was so impressed that he adapted his ship for screw propulsion.Meanwhile, in spite of favourable reports, the Admiralty were dragging their feet and ordered further trials, fitting Smith's four-bladed propeller to the Rattler, then under construction and completed in 1844. The trials were a complete success and propelled their lordships of the Admiralty to a decision to equip twenty ships with screw propulsion, under Smith's supervision.At last the superiority of screw propulsion was generally accepted and virtually universally adopted. Yet Smith gained little financial reward for his invention and in 1850 he retired to Guernsey to resume his farming life. In 1860 financial pressures compelled him to accept the position of Curator of Patent Models at the Patent Museum in South Kensington, London, a post he held until his death. Belated recognition by the Government, then headed by Lord Palmerston, came in 1855 with the grant of an annual pension of £200. Two years later Smith received unofficial recognition when he was presented with a national testimonial, consisting of a service of plate and nearly £3,000 in cash subscribed largely by the shipbuilding and engineering community. Finally, in 1871 Smith was honoured with a knighthood.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1871.Further ReadingObituary, 1874, Illustrated London News (7 February).1856, On the Invention and Progress of the Screw Propeller, London (provides biographical details).Smith and his invention are referred to in papers in Transactions of the Newcomen Society, 14 (1934): 9; 19 (1939): 145–8, 155–7, 161–4, 237–9.LRDBiographical history of technology > Smith, Sir Francis Pettit
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40 PAT
1) Компьютерная техника: Personal Applied Technology, Point And Transfer, pointing and tracking2) Медицина: Polygon Attribute Table, Pain Assessment Tool3) Спорт: Point After Touchdown4) Военный термин: Patrick Air Force Base, Payload Associated Transporter, Physical Attack Table, Planning Assistance Team, Poisoned Arrow Trap, Preliminary Acceptance Test, Product Acceptance Test, Product Assurance Test, parts accountability technique, passive angle tracking, pattern analysis test, permanent analysis team, personnel authorization table, phased array tracking, plenum air tread, post-acceptance trials, post-availability trials, power assisted traverse, preadmission testing, preliminary acceptance trials, priority air transportation, priority air travel, problem action team, production acceptance test, production assessment test, program analysis team, programmable automatic tester, property and accounting technician5) Техника: passive acoustic torpedo, performance appraisal team, plutonium air transportable, production-assessment test6) Химия: Proline Alanine And Threonine7) Бухгалтерия: profit after tax8) Оптика: pointing, acquisition and tracking9) Телекоммуникации: Portable Appliance Testing10) Сокращение: Passive Angle Track, Power-Assisted Traverse, Process Action Team, Process Activated Training, patrol, pattern, paroxysmal atrial tachycardia11) Физиология: Peripheral Arterial Tonometry, Pet Assisted Therapy12) Вычислительная техника: Program Association Table, port and address translation, Port and Address Translation (IOS, Cisco, LAN, IP), Performance Acceleration Technique (Intel, MCH), таблица ассоциаций программ13) Нефть: Pipe Analysis Tool14) Онкология: Physical Ability Test15) Транспорт: Port Authority Transit, Power Angle And Tilt, Power Attitude Trim16) Деловая лексика: Process Analytical Technology17) Образование: Parents Appreciate Teachers, Parents As Teachers, Personal Attributes Training, Phonological Auditory Training, Phonological Awareness Test, Preferred Activity Time18) Инвестиции: Patents Appeal Tribunal19) Сетевые технологии: Peripheral Attribute Table20) Полимеры: polyaminotriazole21) Контроль качества: process-assessment test, Pre-acceptance test22) Телефония: Port address translation, Per-hop behavior23) Авиационная медицина: preflight adaptation training24) Расширение файла: Programmer's Aptitude Test, Bitmap graphics (1bit, Patent data, US Patent and Trademark Office), Hatch patterns (AutoCAD - Photostyler), Gravis Ultrasound Patch (Convert (c) Villena), Vector fill files (CorelDraw), Sound patch (Gravis Ultrasound), Polygon Attribute Table (link geographic locations to databases)25) Электротехника: Portable Appliance Tester, портативный тестер электрооборудования26) Hi-Fi. Picture-And-Text29) Программное обеспечение: PHP Administration Tools, Practical Application Tool, Property Assignment Tool
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