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21 практичный метод
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > практичный метод
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22 Browning And Stem Break
" Browning " is a very familiar feature in flax fields in the North of Ireland. It begins to appear not long before pulling time, in more or less isolated and restricted spots. These, however, rapidly spread in extent, particularly under wet weather conditions, until the whole crop takes on a brown appearance instead of being of a golden-yellow colour. " Browning" considerably reduces the yield of fibre; and, since it is a fungus disease, which, like seedling " blight," is transmitted by means of infected seed, no attempt should be made to save seed for sowing purposes from a crop suffering from " browning," since no satisfactory practical method of rendering infected seed free from the disease has yet been worked out. " Stem-break " is caused by the same fungus as that which causes " browning " and results when the attack is fairly low down on the stem, and at an early stage. Owing to the attack the tissues of the stem are weakened and the latter becomes partially fractured, although often not entirely killed.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Browning And Stem Break
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23 Pragmatism
Pragmatism According to William James, pragmatism is a method of solving various types of problems, such as "Does God exist?" or "Is man's will free?" by looking at the practical consequences of accepting this or that answer. James says, "The pragmatic method tries to interpret each notion (or theory) by tracing its respective practical consequences.... If no practical differences whatever can be traced... they mean practically the same thing," and ends the argument. As a theory of truth, James says that an idea is true if it works in daily life. (Stumpf, 1994, p. 938)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Pragmatism
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24 Bibliography
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Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Bibliography
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25 convenience
[kən'viːnɪəns]the convenience of — i vantaggi di [lifestyle, method]; la comodità o la praticità di [instant food, device]
for our convenience — per nostra comodità, per nostro comodo
at your convenience — a vostro comodo o con comodo
at your earliest convenience — comm. al più presto o non appena possibile
2) (practical feature) comodità f."modern conveniences" — (in ad) "ogni comfort"
* * *1) (the state or quality of being convenient; freedom from trouble or difficulty: the convenience of living near the office.) comodità2) (any means of giving ease or comfort: the conveniences of modern life.) comodità3) ((also public convenience) a public lavatory.) gabinetto pubblico* * *convenience /kənˈvi:nɪəns/n.1 [u] comodità; facilità d'uso: I've arranged the list alphabetically for convenience, ho steso l'elenco in ordine alfabetico per comodità; I liked the house immediately for its convenience, la casa mi piacque subito perché era in una zona ben servita; for the sake of convenience, per maggiore comodità2 [u] (form.) utile personale; convenienza: a marriage of convenience, un matrimonio di convenienza (o d'interesse)3 apparecchiatura utile; (al pl.) comodità: The flat has all the latest conveniences, l'appartamento è fornito di tutte le comodità● convenience food, cibi pronti, alimenti già preparati ( in scatola, disidratati, surgelati, ecc.) □ convenience goods, beni di consumo di acquisto ricorrente (o di uso generale); articoli di rapida rotazione □ ( USA) convenience store, negozio di alimentari e casalinghi ( con orario di apertura più lungo) □ at your convenience, con tuo comodo; a tuo agio □ (form.) at your earliest convenience, appena ti è possibile; il più presto possibile; con cortese sollecitudine (form.)FALSI AMICI: convenience non significa convenienza in senso economico o convenienze nel senso di norme di comportamento.* * *[kən'viːnɪəns]the convenience of — i vantaggi di [lifestyle, method]; la comodità o la praticità di [instant food, device]
for our convenience — per nostra comodità, per nostro comodo
at your convenience — a vostro comodo o con comodo
at your earliest convenience — comm. al più presto o non appena possibile
2) (practical feature) comodità f."modern conveniences" — (in ad) "ogni comfort"
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26 convenient
[kən'viːnɪənt]1) (suitable) [place, date] comodo, adattoto be convenient for sb. (to do) — essere comodo per qcn. o andare bene a qcn. (fare)
2) (useful, practical) [tool, method] pratico, utile3) (in location) [shops, amenities] vicino, comodo; [chair, table] a portata di manoto be convenient for — BE
to be convenient to — AE essere comodo per [station, shops, facilities]
4) iron. spreg. (expedient) [excuse, explanation] comodo, facile* * *[kən'vi:njənt]1) (suitable; not causing trouble or difficulty: When would it be convenient for me to come?) comodo2) (easy to use, run etc: a convenient size of house.) comodo3) (easy to reach etc; accessible: Keep this in a convenient place.) pratico•- convenience* * *[kən'viːnɪənt]1) (suitable) [place, date] comodo, adattoto be convenient for sb. (to do) — essere comodo per qcn. o andare bene a qcn. (fare)
2) (useful, practical) [tool, method] pratico, utile3) (in location) [shops, amenities] vicino, comodo; [chair, table] a portata di manoto be convenient for — BE
to be convenient to — AE essere comodo per [station, shops, facilities]
4) iron. spreg. (expedient) [excuse, explanation] comodo, facile -
27 working
1. n работа, действие, функционирование2. n эксплуатация3. n обработка4. n горн. частоpressman's working area — участок, обслуживаемый печатником
5. n выработки6. n разработкаworking out — разрабатывающий; разработка
7. n метал. ведение плавки8. n режим работыworking conditions — условия труда, работы
working towards — работающий для; работа для
9. n воен. результат операций10. n движение11. n брожение12. a позволяющий осуществлять работу13. a способствующий работеworking state — состояние "работа"
14. a отведённый для работы15. a пригодный для работы16. a связанный с работойlive working — работа с проводкой, находящейся под током
17. a работающий18. a спец. действующий; рабочий19. a спец. эксплуатационный20. a спец. поэт. бушующий21. a спец. дёргающийсяСинонимический ряд:1. busy (adj.) busy; engaged; occupied2. going (adj.) active; alive; dynamic; functioning; going; live; operative; running3. hired (adj.) employed; hired; jobholding4. practical (adj.) applicable; applied; practical5. reaction (noun) behaviour; functioning; operation; performance; reaction6. acting (verb) acting; behaving; performing; reacting; taking7. kneading (verb) kneading; manipulating8. running (verb) functioning; going; handling; operating; running; using9. solving (verb) fixing; resolving; solving; work out; working out10. tending (verb) cultivating; culturing; dressing; tending; tilling11. working (verb) driving; fagging; laboring; labouring; moiling; straining; striving; sweating; tasking; taxing; toiling; travailing; tugging; working -
28 Berthollet, Claude-Louis
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 9 November 1748 Talloise, near Lake Annecy, Franced. 6 November 1822 Arceuil, France[br]French chemist who made important innovations in textile chemistry.[br]Berthollet qualified as a medical doctor and pursued chemical researches, notably into "muriatic acid" (chlorine), then recently discovered by Scheele. He was one of the first chemists to embrace the new system of chemistry advanced by Lavoisier. Berthollet held several official appointments, among them inspector of dye works (from 1784) and Director of the Manufacture Nationale des Gobelins. These appointments enabled him to continue his researches and embark on a series of publications on the practical applications of chlorine, prussic acid (hydrocyanic acid) and ammonia. He clearly demonstrated the benefits of the French practice of appointing scientists to the state manufactories.There were two practical results of Berthollet's studies of chlorine. First, he produced a powerful explosive by substituting potassium chlorate, formed by the action of chlorine on potash, in place of nitre (potassium nitrate) in gunpowder. Then, mainly from humanitarian motives, he followed up Scheele's observation of the bleaching properties of chlorine water, in order to release for cultivation the considerable areas of land that had hitherto been required by the old bleaching process. The chlorine method greatly speeded up bleaching; this was a vital factor in the revolution in the textile industries.After a visit to Egypt in 1799, Berthollet carried out many experiments on dyeing, seeking to place this ancient craft onto a scientific basis. His work is summed up in his Eléments de l'art de la teinture, Paris, 1791.[br]Bibliography1791, Eléments de Van de la teinture, Paris (covers his work on dyeing).Berthollet published two books of importance in the early history of physical chemistry: 1801, Recherches sur les lois de l'affinité, Paris.1803, Essai de statique chimique, Paris.Annales de Chimie.Further ReadingE.F.Jomard, 1844, Notice sur la vie et les ouvrages de Claude-Louis Berthollet, Annecy.E.Farber, 1961, Great Chemists, New York: Interscience, pp. 32–4 (includes a short biographical account).LRDBiographical history of technology > Berthollet, Claude-Louis
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29 Curr, John
[br]b. 1756 Kyo, near Lanchester, or in Greenside, near Ryton-on-Tyne, Durham, Englandd. 27 January 1823 Sheffield, England[br]English coal-mine manager and engineer, inventor of flanged, cast-iron plate rails.[br]The son of a "coal viewer", Curr was brought up in the West Durham colliery district. In 1777 he went to the Duke of Norfolk's collieries at Sheffield, where in 1880 he was appointed Superintendent. There coal was conveyed underground in baskets on sledges: Curr replaced the wicker sledges with wheeled corves, i.e. small four-wheeled wooden wagons, running on "rail-roads" with cast-iron rails and hauled from the coal-face to the shaft bottom by horses. The rails employed hitherto had usually consisted of plates of iron, the flange being on the wheels of the wagon. Curr's new design involved flanges on the rails which guided the vehicles, the wheels of which were unflanged and could run on any hard surface. He appears to have left no precise record of the date that he did this, and surviving records have been interpreted as implying various dates between 1776 and 1787. In 1787 John Buddle paid tribute to the efficiency of the rails of Curr's type, which were first used for surface transport by Joseph Butler in 1788 at his iron furnace at Wingerworth near Chesterfield: their use was then promoted widely by Benjamin Outram, and they were adopted in many other English mines. They proved serviceable until the advent of locomotives demanded different rails.In 1788 Curr also developed a system for drawing a full corve up a mine shaft while lowering an empty one, with guides to separate them. At the surface the corves were automatically emptied by tipplers. Four years later he was awarded a patent for using double ropes for lifting heavier loads. As the weight of the rope itself became a considerable problem with the increasing depth of the shafts, Curr invented the flat hemp rope, patented in 1798, which consisted of several small round ropes stitched together and lapped upon itself in winding. It acted as a counterbalance and led to a reduction in the time and cost of hoisting: at the beginning of a run the loaded rope began to coil upon a small diameter, gradually increasing, while the unloaded rope began to coil off a large diameter, gradually decreasing.Curr's book The Coal Viewer (1797) is the earliest-known engineering work on railway track and it also contains the most elaborate description of a Newcomen pumping engine, at the highest state of its development. He became an acknowledged expert on construction of Newcomen-type atmospheric engines, and in 1792 he established a foundry to make parts for railways and engines.Because of the poor financial results of the Duke of Norfolk's collieries at the end of the century, Curr was dismissed in 1801 despite numerous inventions and improvements which he had introduced. After his dismissal, six more of his patents were concerned with rope-making: the one he gained in 1813 referred to the application of flat ropes to horse-gins and perpendicular drum-shafts of steam engines. Curr also introduced the use of inclined planes, where a descending train of full corves pulled up an empty one, and he was one of the pioneers employing fixed steam engines for hauling. He may have resided in France for some time before his death.[br]Bibliography1788. British patent no. 1,660 (guides in mine shafts).1789. An Account of tin Improved Method of Drawing Coals and Extracting Ores, etc., from Mines, Newcastle upon Tyne.1797. The Coal Viewer and Engine Builder's Practical Companion; reprinted with five plates and an introduction by Charles E.Lee, 1970, London: Frank Cass, and New York: Augustus M.Kelley.1798. British patent no. 2,270 (flat hemp ropes).Further ReadingF.Bland, 1930–1, "John Curr, originator of iron tram roads", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 11:121–30.R.A.Mott, 1969, Tramroads of the eighteenth century and their originator: John Curr', Transactions of the Newcomen Society 42:1–23 (includes corrections to Fred Bland's earlier paper).Charles E.Lee, 1970, introduction to John Curr, The Coal Viewer and Engine Builder's Practical Companion, London: Frank Cass, pp. 1–4; orig. pub. 1797, Sheffield (contains the most comprehensive biographical information).R.Galloway, 1898, Annals of Coalmining, Vol. I, London; reprinted 1971, London (provides a detailed account of Curr's technological alterations).WK / PJGR -
30 PIM
1) Компьютерная техника: Parallel Inference Machine, Платформенно-независимая модель (Platform Independent Model)2) Американизм: Politically Important Murder, Procurement Information Memoranda3) Спорт: Penalties In Minutes4) Военный термин: Paladin Integrated Management, Path of Intended Movement, Pre-trained Individual Manpower, plan of intended movement, point of intended movement, position and intended movement, production information memoranda, program integration manual5) Техника: plant issues matrix6) Математика: Parallel Iterative Method, Parallel Iterative Methods7) Религия: Partners In Ministry8) Статистика: Метод постоянной инвентаризации ( Perpetual Inventory Method)9) Грубое выражение: Pubes In Mouth10) Оптика: pulse intensity modulation, pulse interval modulation11) Телекоммуникации: Personal Information Management12) Сокращение: Position of Intended Movement, Precision Indicator of the Meridian, Precision Instrument Mount, Previously Intended Movement, Processor-in-Memory, Product Information Management, управление информацией о продуктах (product information management), Protocal Independent Multicasting13) Университет: Pathology Immunology And Microbiology14) Физиология: Protein Interaction Map15) Вычислительная техника: Personal Information Manager / Management, Port Interface Module, Protocol Independent Multicast (ACM, Multicast), Parallel Inference Machine (FGCS, AI)17) Транспорт: Pressure In Manifold18) Фирменный знак: Profiles In Magic19) Энергетика: pre-installation meeting20) СМИ: Print Image Matching, Print Innovation Monitor21) Деловая лексика: Practical Implementing Measures, Programme Integration Management22) Глоссарий компании Сахалин Энерджи: pipeline integrity monitoring, preliminary information memorandum (for tenders), Preliminary Information Memorandum (for lenders), preliminary information memorandum (for tenders), Project Information Memorandum23) Сетевые технологии: Personal Information Manager24) Программирование: platform-independent model25) Автоматика: physically integrated manufacturing26) Телефония: Peripheral interface manager27) Сахалин Р: Preliminary Information Memo28) Химическое оружие: project integration manager29) Макаров: polymeric inclusion membrane30) Безопасность: Personal Information Manual31) Расширение файла: Primary Interface Module, Protocol-Independent Multicast, Pascal text mode image file (Ultimate Draw)32) Газоперерабатывающие заводы: Project Information Memorandum ( project information33) Высокочастотная электроника: passive intermodulation34) Должность: Professional In Multimedia, Project Information Manager35) NYSE. Putnam Master International Income Fund36) Программное обеспечение: Per Installed Measure, Projective Indecomposable Module -
31 Ducos du Hauron, Arthur-Louis
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 1837 Langon, Bordeaux, Franced. 19 August 1920 Agen, France[br]French scientist and pioneer of colour photography.[br]The son of a tax collector, Ducos du Hauron began researches into colour photography soon after the publication of Clerk Maxwell's experiment in 1861. In a communication sent in 1862 for presentation at the Académie des Sciences, but which was never read, he outlined a number of methods for photography of colours. Subsequently, in his book Les Couleurs en photographie, published in 1869, he outlined most of the principles of additive and subtractive colour photography that were later actually used. He covered additive processes, developed from Clerk Maxwell's demonstrations, and subtractive processes which could yield prints. At the time, the photographic materials available prevented the processes from being employed effectively. The design of his Chromoscope, in which transparent reflectors could be used to superimpose three additive images, was sound, however, and formed the basis of a number of later devices. He also proposed an additive system based on the use of a screen of fine red, yellow and blue lines, through which the photograph was taken and viewed. The lines blended additively when seen from a certain distance. Many years later, in 1907, Ducos du Hauron was to use this principle in an early commercial screen-plate process, Omnicolore. With his brother Alcide, he published a further work in 1878, Photographie des Couleurs, which described some more-practical subtractive processes. A few prints made at this time still survive and they are remarkably good for the period. In a French patent of 1895 he described yet another method for colour photography. His "polyfolium chromodialytique" involved a multiple-layer package of separate red-, green-and blue-sensitive materials and filters, which with a single exposure would analyse the scene in terms of the three primary colours. The individual layers would be separated for subsequent processing and printing. In a refined form, this is the principle behind modern colour films. In 1891 he patented and demonstrated the anaglyph method of stereoscopy, using superimposed red and green left and right eye images viewed through green and red filters. Ducos du Hauron's remarkable achievement was to propose theories of virtually all the basic methods of colour photography at a time when photographic materials were not adequate for the purpose of proving them correct. For his work on colour photography he was awarded the Progress Medal of the Royal Photographic Society in 1900, but despite his major contributions to colour photography he remained in poverty for much of his later life.[br]Further ReadingB.Coe, 1978, Colour Photography: The First Hundred Years, London. J.S.Friedman, 1944, History of Colour Photography, Boston. E.J.Wall, 1925, The History of Three-Colour Photography, Boston. See also Cros, Charles.BCBiographical history of technology > Ducos du Hauron, Arthur-Louis
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32 Helmholtz, Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 31 August 1821 Potsdam, Germanyd. 8 September 1894 Berlin, Germany[br]German physicist and man of science, inventor of the ophthalmoscope.[br]Constrained by poverty despite displaying considerable gifts, particularly in the realm of mathematics, he became a surgeon in the Prussian Army but was able to undertake research; in 1842 he wrote a thesis on the discovery of nerve cells in ganglia. He became Professor of Physiology in Königsberg (now Kaliningrad, Russia) in 1849. moving to a similar post in Bonn in 1855, to Heidelberg in 1858, and the Chair of Physic in Berlin in 1871. This latter included the directorship of the physicotechnical institute at Charlottenburg.His investigations over the years encompassed almost the whole field of science, including physiology, physiological optics, physiological acoustics, chemistry, mathematics, electricity and magnetism, meteorology and theoretical mechanics. He also made important additions to the understanding of putrefaction and fermentation.Helmholtz's contributions to the understanding of vision and optics ranged widely, but one of the most significant was the definitive development of the ophthalmoscope in 1851. Incorporating some of the aspects of Babbage's original suggestions (which were not brought to practical fruition), his instrument inaugurated a new diagnostic era in ophthalmology, particularly when his method of direct ophthalmoscopy was supplemented by the indirect method of Ruete. His personal life was uneventful, in contrast to his inventive achievements, which were perhaps unequalled in scope in his century. Michael Faraday's tribute, "the absolute simplicity, modesty and untroubled purity of his disposition had a charm such as I have never encountered in another man", is therefore all the more to be valued.[br]Bibliography1850. "The ophthalmoscope", Physikalische Gesellschaft, Berlin.1851. Beschreibung eines Augen-Spiegels zur Untersuchung der Netzhaut im lebenden Auge, Berlin. 1856–66, Physiological Optics (2 vols).Further ReadingL.Konigsberger, 1906, trans. F.A.Welby, Hermann von Helmholtz, Oxford.MGBiographical history of technology > Helmholtz, Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von
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33 Lumière, Auguste
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 19 October 1862 Besançon, Franced. 10 April 1954 Lyon, France[br]French scientist and inventor.[br]Auguste and his brother Louis Lumière (b. 5 October 1864 Besançon, France; d. 6 June 1948 Bandol, France) developed the photographic plate-making business founded by their father, Charles Antoine Lumière, at Lyons, extending production to roll-film manufacture in 1887. In the summer of 1894 their father brought to the factory a piece of Edison kinetoscope film, and said that they should produce films for the French owners of the new moving-picture machine. To do this, of course, a camera was needed; Louis was chiefly responsible for the design, which used an intermittent claw for driving the film, inspired by a sewing-machine mechanism. The machine was patented on 13 February 1895, and it was shown on 22 March 1895 at the Société d'Encouragement pour l'In-dustrie Nationale in Paris, with a projected film showing workers leaving the Lyons factory. Further demonstrations followed at the Sorbonne, and in Lyons during the Congrès des Sociétés de Photographie in June 1895. The Lumières filmed the delegates returning from an excursion, and showed the film to the Congrès the next day. To bring the Cinématographe, as it was called, to the public, the basement of the Grand Café in the Boulevard des Capuchines in Paris was rented, and on Saturday 28 December 1895 the first regular presentations of projected pictures to a paying public took place. The half-hour shows were an immediate success, and in a few months Lumière Cinématographes were seen throughout the world.The other principal area of achievement by the Lumière brothers was colour photography. They took up Lippman's method of interference colour photography, developing special grainless emulsions, and early in 1893 demonstrated their results by lighting them with an arc lamp and projecting them on to a screen. In 1895 they patented a method of subtractive colour photography involving printing the colour separations on bichromated gelatine glue sheets, which were then dyed and assembled in register, on paper for prints or bound between glass for transparencies. Their most successful colour process was based upon the colour-mosaic principle. In 1904 they described a process in which microscopic grains of potato starch, dyed red, green and blue, were scattered on a freshly varnished glass plate. When dried the mosaic was coated with varnish and then with a panchromatic emulsion. The plate was exposed with the mosaic towards the lens, and after reversal processing a colour transparency was produced. The process was launched commercially in 1907 under the name Autochrome; it was the first fully practical single-plate colour process to reach the public, remaining on the market until the 1930s, when it was followed by a film version using the same principle.Auguste and Louis received the Progress Medal of the Royal Photographic Society in 1909 for their work in colour photography. Auguste was also much involved in biological science and, having founded the Clinique Auguste Lumière, spent many of his later years working in the physiological laboratory.[br]Further ReadingGuy Borgé, 1980, Prestige de la photographie, Nos. 8, 9 and 10, Paris. Brian Coe, 1978, Colour Photography: The First Hundred Years, London ——1981, The History of Movie Photography, London.Jacques Deslandes, 1966, Histoire comparée du cinéma, Vol. I, Paris. Gert Koshofer, 1981, Farbfotografie, Vol. I, Munich.BC -
34 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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35 Trueta, Joseph
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 28 October 1897 Barcelona, Spaind. 19 January 1977 Barcelona, Spain[br]Spanish surgeon who specialized in the treatment of trauma and invented the "Trueta" technique of wound management.[br]Trueta studied medicine at Barcelona University and graduated in 1921. He held successive surgical appointments until in 1929 he was appointed to the Caja de Provision y Socorro, an organization handling 40,000 cases of injury per year. In 1935, soon after becoming Chief Surgeon in Catalonia, he was confronted by the special problems presented by the casualties of the Spanish Civil War.With a Nationalist victory imminent in 1939, he moved to England where his special skills were recognized, and at the outbreak of the Second World War he was appointed to the Wing-field Hospital and the Radcliffe Infirmary at Oxford. After an interregnum at the end of the war, in 1949 he was appointed Nuffield Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Oxford, and held this post until his retirement in 1965, when he was able to return to Spain.His technique of wound management stressed the importance of wound cleansing, excision of non-viable tissue, drainage and immobilization, and was particularly timely in that the advent of penicillin permitted the practical pursuit of new concepts in the treatment not only of the soft tissues, but also of bone infection. He was engaged in many other research projects, in particular those concerned with "crush syndrome" and its renal implications.[br]Bibliography1939, Treatment of Wounds and Fractures with special reference to the closed method, London.1943, The Principles and Practice of War Surgery with special reference to the Biological Method of Treatment of Wounds and Fractures, London.1980, Trueta: Surgeon in War and Peace, trans. M.Strubell and M.Strubell, London (autobiography).MG -
36 scheme
1. [ski:m] n1. 1) план, проект, программаa scheme of work - график /план/ работы
a scheme of maneuver - воен. план манёвра
simple [practical, wild] scheme - простой [практически осуществимый, фантастический] план /проект/
to draw up [to make out] a scheme - набросать [разработать] план /проект/
now, what's the scheme? - разг. ну, каков план действий?
2) замысел2. система, структура, построение;an effective [an exquisite] colour scheme - эффектный [изысканный] подбор цветов
the scheme of a sonata [of a symphony] - построение сонаты [симфонии]
the scheme of the sonnet - форма /структура/ сонета
3. тайный или нечестный замысел, заговор; махинация, интригаto lay /to devise, to concoct/ a scheme to do smth. - замышлять что-л.
to thwart smb.'s schemes - сорвать чьи-л. замыслы
4. краткий план, конспект; резюмеto give the students a scheme of work for the year - дать студентам план работы на текущий год
5. схема, чертёж, диаграмма6. pl пустые мечты, прожекты7. лог., филос. схема8. диал. эскапада, весёлый кутёж9. уст. внешняя форма, внешний вид10. уст. гороскоп2. [ski:m] v1. 1) замышлять ( недоброе); строить тайные планыto scheme smb.'s downfall - строить тайные планы свержения кого-л.
2) плести интриги, интриговатьto scheme for power [for a post] - интригами добиваться власти [поста]
he had been scheming for a bigger share in the running of the business - интригами он пытался добиться большего участия в управлении предприятием
2. планировать, разрабатывать план, проект (чего-л.)to scheme out a new method of language teaching - разработать /изобрести/ новый метод преподавания языков
3. редк. сводить к схеме, к формуле -
37 application
сущ.1) обращение, заявление, просьба; требование, заявкаа) общ. (в самом общем смысле: заявление с указанием на потребность в чем-л., требование на получение чего-л. и т. п.)1to file [make, put in, send in, submit\] an application — подавать заявление [прошение\]
to reject [turn down\] an application — отказать в прошении
to withdraw an application — забирать заявление [прошение\]
membership application, application for membership — заявление о приеме в члены какой-л. организации
written application — письменное заявление [прошение\]
application for a job, job application — заявление о приеме на работу
See:insurance application, application form, application letter, application management system, applicant, applyб) банк. ( обращение за кредитом или открытием счета)See:в) банк., юр., амер. (согласно закону "О равноправии при получении кредитов": устное или письменное обращение за продлением кредита, сделанное в соответствии с установленными кредитором процедурами в отношении конкретного вида кредита)See:г) фин. заявка ( на приобретение вновь выпускаемых ценных бумаг)д) юр. ( письменное ходатайство в суд)2) общ. применение, использование, употребление, приложение (напр., теоретических идей, концепций, методов)a possible application of the rational expectations hypothesis — одно из возможных применений гипотезы рациональных ожиданий
a practical application of the method [theory\] — практическое применение метода [модели\]
managerial application of simulation — применение моделирования в управленческой практике; применение в управлении моделирования
3) общ. прилежание, рвение, вниманиеto give application to work [to study\] — усердно работать [заниматься\]
The job takes a great deal of patience and application. — Данная работа требует огромного терпения и усердия.
4) комп. приложение, прикладная программа (компьютерная программа, предназначенная для конкретной цели, напр., бухгалтерская программа, игровая программа, обучающая программа и т. п.)
* * *
заявление, заявка: 1) обращение за кредитом или открытием счета, признанием в качестве банка, брокера; 2) заявка на приобретение вновь выпускаемых ценных бумаг; 3) практическое (прикладное, коммерческое) применение научных концепций, теорий, методов; 4) письменное ходатайство суду.* * *применени; заявка. выражение намерений получить определенные услуги или товар; как правило, оформляется письменно и направляется заинтересованной стороной тому, кто обеспечивает выполнение З. По получении З. продавец направляет покупателю предложения для заключения договора на поставку. См. также запрос, заказ. . Словарь экономических терминов .* * *Ценные бумаги/Биржевая деятельность-----Банки/Банковские операции -
38 utility
1. сущ.1)а) общ. полезность, практичность; выгодность, эффективностьThe overriding goal of the project is to appraise the utility of production cooperatives as a means of pooling the financial, management, and labor resources of small farms. — Первостепенная цель проекта — оценка полезности производственных кооперативов как средства объединения финансовых, управленческих и трудовых ресурсов мелких ферм.
Long-term field tests of that kind will be needed to evaluate the practical utility of the method. — Для того, чтобы оценить практическую полезность этого метода потребуются длительные полевые испытания.
See:б) пат. полезность (один из трех критериев патентоспособности, согласно которому изобретения должны иметь функциональное предназначение и приносить обществу положительный эффект)2) эк. полезность (субъективное ощущение удовлетворения от потребления чего-л., которое испытывает человек; не имеет отношения к полезности для здоровья)See:cardinal utility, consumer utility, marginal utility, ordinal utility, util, utility function, law of diminishing marginal utility, exchange value, demand theory3) общ. что-л. полезное [практичное, выгодное\]; полезная вещь4) гос. упр. = public utilitySee:5) комп. утилита, вспомогательная программа, обслуживающая программаAn antivirus utility is a program that prevents, detects, and removes viruses from a computer's memory or storage devices. — Антивирусная утилита — это программа, которая предотвращает появление вирусов, обнаруживает и удалят вирусы из памяти компьютера или других запоминающих устройств.
6) трансп., австр. = utility vehicle2. прил.1) общ. утилитарный, практичный2) эк. (экономически) выгодный, рентабельный (используемый для извлечения прибыли, напр., о домашних животных, разводимых с целью получения мяса, шерсти и т. п., а не содержащихся как выставочные экземпляры или домашние любимцы)utility livestock — скот, разводимый с целью извлечения прибыли; скот, разводимый для продажи
3) общ. вспомогательный, второстепенный; подсобный4) эк. коммунальный (относящийся к коммунальному хозяйству, деятельности коммунальных предприятий; связанный с коммунальными услугами)See:5) торг. дешевый, невысокого качества, низкосортный; второсортныйutility beef — низкосортная говядина, говядина низкого сорта
* * *
1) польза, полезность, способность продукта или услуги удовлетворять человеческие потребности; 2) плата за ценные бумаги предприятий общественного пользования; 3) экономически выгодный, практичный, рентабельный, утилитарный.* * *электростанция; коммунальное предприятие (электричество, центральное отопление, водопровод, канализация, газ и т. п.); полезность. Полезность - показатель благосостояния или удовлетворенности инвестора или отдельного человека . Словарь экономических терминов .* * *субъективная польза, извлекаемая индивидом из потребления товара или услуги -
39 work
1) работа
2) обрабатываемый
3) обрабатывать
4) поработать
5) поработаю
6) работы
7) рабочие
8) труд
9) сочинение
10) работать
11) вычислять
12) решать
13) деятельность
14) создание
15) действие
16) обработка
17) обработать
18) завод
– bench work
– cabinet work
– capacity for work
– chucking work
– continuous work
– day's work
– design work
– development work
– developmental work
– display work
– do the prelimary work
– erection work
– false work
– field work
– finishing work
– fitness for work
– in the course of the work
– indicator work
– involute work
– job work
– lathe work
– lattice work
– line work
– obseht-field work
– office work
– open work
– overtime work
– paysheet work
– permit to work
– piece work
– pilfering at work
– practical work
– pulse work
– rescue work
– scheduled work
– shaft work
– shift work
– team work
– turned work
– unfinished work
– unit of work
– volume of work
– work adit
– work coal
– work function
– work head
– work in progress
– work in shear
– work in stone
– work in tension
– work method
– work off
– work order
– work package
– work piece
– work point
– work readily
– work schedule
– work stone
– work the heat
– work to marking-out
– work train
research and development work — опытно-конструкторская работа
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40 BPM
1) Общая лексика: Bangladesh Police Medal, Business Process Management (AD), Business Performance Management2) Спорт: Blocks Per Game3) Военный термин: Background Processing Management4) Техника: binary polarization modulation, biphase modulation, bits per minute, blows per minute, built-in protection mechanism5) Шутливое выражение: Beats Per Min6) Религия: Battle Plan Ministries7) Грубое выражение: Big Pants Man8) Телекоммуникации: Управление эффективностью деятельности9) Сокращение: Beam Propagation Method (fiber optics)10) Нефть: barrels per minute, баррелей в минуту (barrels per minute), ударов в минуту (blows per minute), число баррелей в минуту (barrels per minute), число ударов в минуту (beats per minute), business process model11) Биотехнология: biological protein materials12) Деловая лексика: Best Practicable Means, Best Practical Means, Business Performance Measurement, Business Process Management, Business Process Modeling13) Почта: Bound Printed Matter15) Автоматика: batch processing monitor16) Единицы измерений: Beats Per Measure, Blocks Per Minute, Blow Per Minute, Bombs Per Muslim
См. также в других словарях:
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