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1 Fearnought Machine
A machine used for opening wool preparatory to carding. It is also known as a " tenterhook willow."Dictionary of the English textile terms > Fearnought Machine
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2 станок с ЧПУ для подготовительных операций
Automation: preparatory NC machineУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > станок с ЧПУ для подготовительных операций
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3 подготовительно-заключительное время
machine-setting time, preparatory time, setup timeРусско-английский исловарь по машиностроению и автоматизации производства > подготовительно-заключительное время
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4 Arkwright, Sir Richard
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 23 December 1732 Preston, Englandd. 3 August 1792 Cromford, England[br]English inventor of a machine for spinning cotton.[br]Arkwright was the youngest of thirteen children and was apprenticed to a barber; when he was about 18, he followed this trade in Bol ton. In 1755 he married Patients Holt, who bore him a son before she died, and he remarried in 1761, to Margaret Biggins. He prospered until he took a public house as well as his barber shop and began to lose money. After this failure, he travelled around buying women's hair for wigs.In the late 1760s he began spinning experiments at Preston. It is not clear how much Arkwright copied earlier inventions or was helped by Thomas Highs and John Kay but in 1768 he left Preston for Nottingham, where, with John Smalley and David Thornley as partners, he took out his first patent. They set up a mill worked by a horse where machine-spun yarn was produced successfully. The essential part of this process lay in drawing out the cotton by rollers before it was twisted by a flyer and wound onto the bobbin. The partners' resources were not sufficient for developing their patent so Arkwright found new partners in Samuel Need and Jedediah Strutt, hosiers of Nottingham and Derby. Much experiment was necessary before they produced satisfactory yarn, and in 1771 a water-driven mill was built at Cromford, where the spinning process was perfected (hence the name "waterframe" was given to his spinning machine); some of this first yarn was used in the hosiery trade. Sales of all-cotton cloth were initially limited because of the high tax on calicoes, but the tax was lowered in 1774 by Act of Parliament, marking the beginning of the phenomenal growth of the cotton industry. In the evidence for this Act, Arkwright claimed that he had spent £12,000 on his machine. Once Arkwright had solved the problem of mechanical spinning, a bottleneck in the preliminary stages would have formed but for another patent taken out in 1775. This covered all preparatory processing, including some ideas not invented by Arkwright, with the result that it was disputed in 1783 and finally annulled in 1785. It contained the "crank and comb" for removing the cotton web off carding engines which was developed at Cromford and solved the difficulty in carding. By this patent, Arkwright had mechanized all the preparatory and spinning processes, and he began to establish water-powered cotton mills even as far away as Scotland. His success encouraged many others to copy him, so he had great difficulty in enforcing his patent Need died in 1781 and the partnership with Strutt ended soon after. Arkwright became very rich and financed other spinning ventures beyond his immediate control, such as that with Samuel Oldknow. It was estimated that 30,000 people were employed in 1785 in establishments using Arkwright's patents. In 1786 he received a knighthood for delivering an address of thanks when an attempt to assassinate George III failed, and the following year he became High Sheriff of Derbyshire. He purchased the manor of Cromford, where he died in 1792.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1786.Bibliography1769, British patent no. 931.1775, British patent no. 1,111.Further ReadingR.S.Fitton, 1989, The Arkwrights, Spinners of Fortune, Manchester (a thorough scholarly work which is likely to remain unchallenged for many years).R.L.Hills, 1973, Richard Arkwright and Cotton Spinning, London (written for use in schools and concentrates on Arkwright's technical achievements).R.S.Fitton and A.P.Wadsworth, 1958, The Strutts and the Arkwrights, Manchester (concentrates on the work of Arkwright and Strutt).A.P.Wadsworth and J.de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, Manchester (covers the period leading up to the Industrial Revolution).F.Nasmith, 1932, "Richard Arkwright", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 13 (looks at the actual spinning invention).R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (discusses the technical problems of Arkwright's invention).RLH -
5 Flax Scutching
BaleTwo cwt. of scutched flax enclosed in a bessian bag. The unit of flax for despatch to the spinner.Blades, Tapered - A turbine scutching machine in which the scutching blades are tapered in width in the first third of each compartment in contradistinction to the usual parallel sided blades. Blades, Tapered and Coned - A turbine scutching machine in which the blades are tapered and at the same time the first third of each scutching rotor is coned. Bunch - The aggregate of pieces which is tied up with two or more ties preparatory to baling. Conditioning - The operation of adding moisture to or abstracting moisture from straw to put it in the optimum condition for scutching. Decortication - The term sometimes applied to the scutching of unretted straw in contradistinction to retted straw. Handles - See Scutching Wheel or Handles. Piece - The small handful which is the unit of scutched flax. Scutching - The mechanical operation of separating the fibre from the woody part of the de-seeded or retted flax straw. Scutching, Automatic - See Scutching, machine or turbine or automatic. Scutching, Hand - The operation of scutching as carried out on a Belgian or Irish scutching wheel. Scutching, Machine, or Turbine, or Automatic - The operation of scutching flax entirely mechanically. Scutching Machine, Monoblade - Similar in principle to a turbine machine, but each compartment has a single steel blade on one shaft in place of multiple blades on two shafts. Scutching Machine, Turbine - A scutching outfit consisting generally of (a) prebreaking rollers to crimp the centre of the straw (b) a set of fluted breaking rollers to crimp the ends of the straw (c) a conveyor to hold the straw during processing; (d) a root end compartment where intersecting steel blades scutch the root end and middle of the flax; (e) a top end compartment where similar blades scutch the middle and top end of the flax; (f) a delivery bar where the scutched flax is piled up for removal. Scutching Wheel, or Handles - The machine on which hand scutching is done. It consists of an upright wooden or metal stock in a notch of which the broken flax straw is held and is there operated on by a number of wooden blades mounted equidistantly on a central shaft. Scutching Wheel, Belgian - A scutch wheel which usually has 12 light blades of walnut. Scutching Wheel Irish - A scutch wheel which usually has 6 blades, much heavier than those in the Belgian wheel. Strick (v.) - To divide straw from the breakers into suitable pieces and to level the ends before hand scutching. -
6 Hargreaves, James
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. c.1720–1 Oswaldtwistle, near Blackburn, Englandd. April 1778 Nottingham, England[br]English inventor of the first successful machine to spin more than a couple of yarns of cotton or wool at once.[br]James Hargreaves was first a carpenter and then a hand-loom weaver at Stanhill, Blackburn, probably making Blackburn Checks or Greys from linen warps and cotton weft. An invention ascribed to him doubled production in the preparatory carding process before spinning. Two or three cards were nailed to the same stock and the upper one was suspended from the ceiling by a cord and counterweight. Around 1762 Robert Peel (1750–1830) sought his assistance in constructing a carding engine with cylinders that may have originated with Daniel Bourn, but this was not successful. In 1764, inspired by seeing a spinning wheel that continued to revolve after it had been knocked over accidentally, Hargreaves invented his spinning jenny. The first jennies had horizontal wheels and could spin eight threads at once. To spin on this machine required a great deal of skill. A length of roving was passed through the clamp or clove. The left hand was used to close this and draw the roving away from the spindles which were rotated by the spinner turning the horizontal wheel with the right hand. The spindles twisted the fibres as they were being drawn out. At the end of the draw, the spindles continued to be rotated until sufficient twist had been put into the fibres to make the finished yarn. This was backed off from the tips of the spindles by reversing them and then, with the spindles turning in the spinning direction once more, the yarn was wound on by the right hand rotating the spindles, the left hand pushing the clove back towards them and one foot operating a pedal which guided the yarn onto the spindles by a faller wire. A piecer was needed to rejoin the yarns when they broke. At first Hargreaves's jenny was worked only by his family, but then he sold two or three of them, possibly to Peel. In 1768, local opposition and a riot in which his house was gutted forced him to flee to Nottingham. He entered into partnership there with Thomas James and established a cotton mill. In 1770 he followed Arkwright's example and sought to patent his machine and brought an action for infringement against some Lancashire manufacturers, who offered £3,000 in settlement. Hargreaves held out for £4,000, but he was unable to enforce his patent because he had sold jennies before leaving Lancashire. Arkwright's "water twist" was more suitable for the Nottingham hosiery industry trade than jenny yarn and in 1777 Hargreaves replaced his own machines with Arkwright's. When he died the following year, he is said to have left property valued at £7,000 and his widow received £400 for her share in the business. Once the jenny had been made public, it was quickly improved by other inventors and the number of spindles per machine increased. In 1784, there were reputed to be 20,000 jennies of 80 spindles each at work. The jenny greatly eased the shortage of cotton weft for weavers.[br]Bibliography1770, British patent no. 962 (spinning jenny).Further ReadingC.Aspin and S.D.Chapman, 1964, James Hargreaves and the Spinning Jenny, Helmshore Local History Society (the fullest account of Hargreaves's life and inventions).For descriptions of his invention, see W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London; R.L. Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester; and W.A.Hunter, 1951–3, "James Hargreaves and the invention of the spinning jenny", Transactions ofthe Newcomen Society 28.A.P.Wadsworth and J. de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, Manchester (a good background to the whole of this period).RLH -
7 Sinclair, Sir Clive Maries
[br]b. 30 July 1940[br]English electronic engineer and inventor.[br]The son of G.W.C.Sinclair, a machine tool engineer, the young Sinclair's education was disrupted by the failure of his father's business. Aged 12 he left Boxgrove preparatory school and went through twelve more schools before leaving St George's School, Weybridge, at the age of 17. His first job was as an editorial assistant on a hobbyist's magazine, Practical Wireless, and his next as an editor at Bernard Books, writing a series of technical manuals. In 1961 he registered Sinclair Radionics and in the following year announced its first product, a micro-amplifier. This was the first of a series of miniaturized radio products that he put on the market while retaining his editorial job. In 1972 he launched the Sinclair Executive calculator, selling originally at £79.95 but later at £24.95. In 1976, the Black Watch, an electronic watch with digital light-emitting diode (LED) display, was marketed, to be followed by the TV1A, a miniature television with a 2 in. (5 cm) monochrome screen. During the latter part of this period, Sinclair Radionics was supported by investment from the UK National Enterprise Board, who appointed an outside managing director; after making a considerable loss, they closed the company in 1979. However, Sinclair Electronics had already been set up and started to market the UK's first cheap computer kit, the MK 14, which was followed by the ZX 80 and later the ZX 81. Price was kept at a minimum by the extensive use of existing components, though this was a restriction on performance. The small memory was enhanced from one kilobyte to seventeen kilobytes with the addition of a separate memory unit. In January 1985 Sinclair produced the Sinclair C5, a small three-wheeled vehicle driven by a washing-machine engine, intended as a revolutionary new form of personal transport; perceived as unsafe and impractical, it did not prove popular, and the failure of this venture resulted in a contraction of Sinclair's business activities. Later in 1985, a rival electronics company, Amstrad, paid £35,000,000 for all rights to existing Sinclair computer products.In March 1992, the irrepressible Sinclair launched his latest brainchild, the Zike electric bicycle; a price of £499 was forecast. This machine, powered by an electric motor but with pedal assistance, had a top speed of 19 km/h (12 mph) and, on full power, would run for up to one hour. Its lightweight nickel-cadmium battery could be recharged either by a generator or by free-wheeling. Although more practical than the C5, it did not bring Sinclair success on the scale of his earlier micro-electronic products.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1983.Further ReadingI.Adamson and R.Kennedy, 1986, Sinclair and the "Sunrise" Technology, Harmondsworth: Penguin.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Sinclair, Sir Clive Maries
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8 Smith, J.
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]fl. 1830s Scotland[br]Scottish inventor of the first endless chain of flats for carding.[br]Carding by hand required a pair of hand cards. The lump of tangled fibres was teased out by pulling one card across the other to even out the fibres and transfer them onto one of the cards from which they could be rolled up into a rollag or slubbing. When Arkwright began to use cylinder cards, the fibres were teased out as they passed from one cylinder to the next. In order to obtain a greater carding area, he soon introduced smaller cylinders and placed strips of flat card above the periphery of the main cylinder. These became clogged with short fibres and dirt, so they had to be lifted off and cleaned or "stripped" at intervals. The first to invent a self-stripping card was Archibald Buchanan, at the Catrine mills in Ayrshire, with his patent in 1823. In his arrangement each flat was turned upside down and stripped by a rotary brush. This was improved by Smith in 1834 and patented in the same year. Smith fixed the flats on an endless chain so that they travelled around the periphery of the top of the main cylinder. Just after the point where they left the cylinder, Smith placed a rotary brush and a comb to clear the brush. In this way each flat in turn was properly and regularly cleaned.Smith was an able mechanic and Managing Partner of the Deanston mills in Scotland. He visited Manchester, where he was warmly received on the introduction of his machine there at about the same time as he patented it in Scotland. The carding engine he designed was complex, for he arranged a double feed to obtain greater production. While this part of his patent was not developed, his chain or endless flats became the basis used in later cotton carding engines. He took out at least half a dozen other patents for textile machinery. These included two in 1834, the first for a self-acting mule and the second with J.C. Dyer for improvements to winding on to spools. There were further spinning patents in 1839 and 1844 and more for preparatory machinery including carding in 1841 and 1842. He was also interested in agriculture and invented a subsoil plough and other useful things.[br]Bibliography1834, British patent no. 6,560 (self-stripping card). 1834, British patent no. 656 (self-acting mule). 1839, British patent no. 8,054.1841, British patent no. 8,796 (carding machine). 1842, British patent no. 9,313 (carding machine).1844, British patent no. 10,080.Further ReadingE.Leigh, 1875, The Science of Modern Cotton Spinning Manchester (provides a good account of Smith's carding engine).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (covers the development of the carding engine).RLH -
9 подготовительно-заключительное время
1) Engineering: setting-up time2) Economy: lead time, leadtime, setup time3) Mechanics: preparatory time4) Automation: machine-setting time, machine-setup timeУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > подготовительно-заключительное время
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10 установка
1) General subject: adjustment, aligner, arrangement, assembling, assembly, bump-in, establishment, fitting, fixing (предмета), guidepost, installation, line, mounting, orientation, placing, plant, policy, prescription, set, setting, setup, directive, precept, tenet2) Geology: positioning3) Aviation: deadheading, rigging up4) Naval: building up, installation (инструмента)6) Sports: stance7) Military: (действие)(устройство) installation, mount (для орудия), (действие)(монтирование) mounting, (действие) placing, (силовая) plant, setting (данных), (действие)(устройство) unit8) Engineering: complex, device, erecting work, erection, erection (машины), erection work, fixing, gear, incorporation, installation process, level (технологического параметра), machine (производственная), outfit, placement, range, rig, rigging, set-in, setup (регулируемой величины), site, startup, system9) Agriculture: water conveyance and delivery efficiency10) Construction: adjusting, building-up, erecting, thermostat setting, laying11) Mathematics: aim, (детали на станок) loading, purpose, set (up)12) Railway term: spacing (в определенном порядке или через отдельные интервалы)13) Economy: fitting (оборудовани)14) Accounting: installation (технологическая), process15) Linguistics: attitude, background assumption16) Automobile industry: making-ready, refitting, unit (величины)17) Architecture: (технологическая) plant18) Mining: mobile emergency winding equipment, rigging-up, setup (оборудования)19) Diplomatic term: philosophy20) Cinema: mental set21) Forestry: assemblage, manifold, mill, planting22) Metallurgy: contrivance23) Polygraphy: stand (для испытания)24) Psychology: (психологическая) attitude, mindset25) Telecommunications: initialization (в исходное состояние), set-up26) Electronics: bench, insertion (компонентов)27) Information technology: install, set point, setting movement, situation28) Oil: aggregate, equipment, holddown, installation (оборудования), landing (колонны труб в скважине), lay down, mounting (процесс), positioned operation, seating, setting up, setting-up, seek29) Special term: tube30) Astronautics: azimuth mount, fixture, installing, loading, set up, stand31) Geophysics: array, circuit, configuration, layout, spread32) Mechanic engineering: set hands square34) Mechanics: setting-out35) Coolers: work37) Advertising: target38) Business: operation39) Drilling: instl (installation; оборудование)40) Production: production plant41) Microelectronics: tool42) Solar energy: utility43) Programming: (принудительная) coercion44) Automation: docking (напр. фиксирующего пальца в отверстие), fitment, insertion (компонентов при сборке), (производственная) installation, interpretation, locating (заготовки или детали), location (заготовки или детали), register, registration45) Quality control: bed, setup (заданной величины), station46) Plastics: making true47) Robots: insertion (компонентов в печатную плату), setting (в определённое состояние), setup (в определённое состояние), site (напр. вычислительная)48) Sakhalin R: processing unit, unit (технологическая)49) Cables: facilities, installation (действие), mounting (действие)50) General subject: mount (механизм), positioning (угла поворотной шайбы)51) Aviation medicine: disposition, preparatory set52) Psychoanalysis: suggestion (в гипнозе)53) Makarov: adjustment (процесс), adjustment (регулировка), adjustment (регулировка величины по прибору), app (apparatus), apparatus (устройство, прибор), assembly (процесс сборки, монтажа), erection (напр., машины), erection (процесс сборки, монтажа), facility (устройство, прибор), fit, fit (в проектное положение), fitting-up, fixation, frame, framework, installation (оборудование), installation (производственная), installation (процесс), installation (процесс сборки, монтажа), installation (устройство, прибор), interposition, maker, mounting (процесс сборки, монтажа), plant (агрегат), plant (в зависимости от производства, получения какого-л. продукта, материала и т.п.), plant (устройство, прибор), set (агрегат), set-up (конкретной величины), setting (конкретной величины), stage (процесс), unit (агрегат), unit (устройство, прибор)54) Security: housing (оборудования), installation (объект), setting (параметров)55) Gold mining: setup (приборов и т.д.)56) SAP.tech. fetching57) oil&gas: (напр. по очистке газа) plant58) Combustion gas turbines: setting (чего-л.) -
11 prac|a
Ⅰ f 1. sgt (działalność) work; (fizyczna) labour- mieć dużo pracy to have a lot of work (to do)- jest jeszcze dużo pracy there’s still a lot of work to be done- zabrać się a. wziąć się do pracy to set to a. get down to a. go to work- przykładać się do pracy to apply oneself to one’s work- przerwać pracę (zastrajkować) to come out a. go (out) on strike- włożyć w coś wiele pracy to put a lot of work into sth- dojść do majątku (własną) pracą to get wealthy through one’s own efforts- wszystko osiągnął ciężką pracą he owes everything to his own hard work- cała jego praca poszła na marne all his work came to naught a. went down the drain pot.- (jego) praca nad filmem/nową rolą (his) work on a film/a new role- praca przy a. na komputerze/taśmie work on the computer/the production line- praca z dziećmi upośledzonymi umysłowo work with mentally handicapped children- praca z młodzieżą youth work- praca fizyczna physical work, manual labour- praca zarobkowa paid work, gainful employment- praca badawcza research work- praca społeczna voluntary a. community work- praca polityczna political activity- praca charytatywna charity work- praca papierkowa paperwork- praca niewolnicza slave labour- praca ponad siły superhuman work- praca zespołowa team work- praca w grupach group work- praca wykonywana z zamiłowaniem a labour of love- człowiek pracy a working man- świat pracy the working classes, the world of work- narzędzia pracy tools; przen. the tools of the trade- nawał a. ogrom pracy pressure of work- podział pracy Ekon. the division of labour- tempo pracy the pace of work- mieć pracę to be in work, to have a job- nie mieć pracy to be out of work a. out of a job- szukać pracy to look a. to be looking for work a. a job, to job-hunt- iść do pracy (zacząć zarabiać) to begin a. start work- rozpoczynać/kończyć pracę to begin a. start/finish work- dostać/stracić pracę to get/lose a job- zmienić pracę to change jobs- żyć z pracy własnych rąk to earn one’s living by honest work- dać komuś pracę to give sb work a. a job- zwolnić kogoś z pracy to give sb (their) notice, to dismiss sb- podziękować komuś za pracę to let sb go euf.- praca w pełnym/niepełnym wymiarze godzin a full-time/a part-time job- praca w systemie zmianowym shift work- praca etatowa/stała a permanent/a steady job- praca sezonowa seasonal work- praca sezonowa przy zbiorze truskawek seasonal work as a strawberry picker- praca wakacyjna a holiday job- praca dodatkowa an extra job- praca na akord piecework- praca zlecona a. na zlecenie contract work- dorabiał do pensji pracami zleconymi he supplemented his income with contract work- praca na własny rachunek self-employment- praca zawodowa career- praca zawodowa przy domowym terminalu telecommuting- praca z utrzymaniem a live-in job, work with bed and board- dobrze płatna praca a well-paid job- ciągłość pracy continuity of employment- staż pracy seniority, length of service- długi/krótki staż pracy long/short service- czas pracy working time a. hours- ruchomy czas pracy flexitime- skrócony czas pracy short time- dzień pracy a working day- dzień wolny od pracy a holiday- miejsce pracy work(place)- tworzenie nowych miejsc pracy job creation- rynek pracy the labour market- zakład pracy workplace- umowa o pracę contract of employment, employment contract- nagroda za 10 lat pracy a bonus for 10 years of service3. (miejsce zatrudnienia) work- być w pracy to be at work- pójść/przyjść do pracy to go/come to work- jeszcze nie wrócił (do domu) z pracy he’s not home from work yet- ona zawsze spóźnia się do pracy she’s always late for work- nie dzwoń do mnie do pracy don’t phone me at work- koledzy/koleżanki z pracy colleagues from work, fellow workers, workmates- nieobecność w pracy absence from work4. (utwór, książka, obraz) work- praca monograficzna a monograph- praca źródłowa a study based on sources a. on source materials- praca o muzyce/sztuce a. na temat muzyki/sztuki a work on a. about music/art- praca z (zakresu a. dziedziny) genetyki a work on genetics- napisać/ogłosić pracę z zakresu fizyki to write/publish a paper on physics- wystawa prac młodych artystów an exhibition of work(s) by young artists- na konkurs zgłoszono 20 prac there were 20 entries for the competition- praca domowa homework- odrabiać pracę domową to do homework- zadać uczniom pracę domową to give pupils homework a. an assignment US- praca klasowa a class test- praca semestralna a term a. an end-of-term paper- praca egzaminacyjna an examination paper a. script- praca dyplomowa/magisterska a Bachelor’s dissertation/a Master’s dissertation a. master’s thesis- praca doktorska/habilitacyjna a doctoral/a postdoctoral dissertation- praca pisemna z języka polskiego a Polish essay- poprawiać prace studentów to mark students’ work6. sgt (funkcjonowanie) workings pl, functioning, operation- praca serca the action of the heart- zatrzymanie pracy serca cardiac arrest- praca mięśni the work of the muscles- praca nerek the functioning of the kidneys- praca umysłu ludzkiego the workings of the human mind- praca maszyny/silnika the work a. operation of a machine/an engine- praca bez zakłóceń smooth running- tryb pracy (urządzenia) a mode7. Komput. job- sterowanie pracami job control- język sterowania pracami job control language- kolejka prac a job queue8. sgt Fiz. work- jednostka pracy unit of workⅡ prace plt work U- prace badawcze/badawczo-rozwojowe research/research and development work- prace przygotowawcze/wykończeniowe preparatory/completion work- prace murarskie/transportowe masonry a. bricklaying work/transport- prace remontowe/restauracyjne repair/restoration work- prace polowe/żniwne work in the field/harvesting- prace budowlane building work(s)- prace ziemne earthworks- prace budowlane jeszcze trwają the building work is still going on a. in progress- praca nakładcza outwork- praca nieprodukcyjna Ekon. non-productive labour- praca organiczna Hist. ≈ organic work (a programme of economic and cultural development, launched by the Polish positivists)- praca produkcyjna Ekon. productive labour- praca u podstaw Hist. ≈ work at the grass roots (a programme of spreading literacy and popularizing science among the masses, launched by the Polish positivists)- prace domowe housework- prace ręczne Szkol. handicrafts■ praca benedyktyńska książk. painstaking work- praca herkulesowa a Herculean task- praca syzyfowa książk. Sisyphean task a. labours- bez pracy nie ma kołaczy przysł. no gains without pains- jaka praca, taka płaca przysł. ≈ you only get paid for what you do- żadna praca nie hańbi przysł. ≈ honest work is nothing to be ashamed of- praca nie zając, nie ucieknie pot. work can waitThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > prac|a
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12 переговоры переговор·ы
negotiations, talks; (обыкн. военные) parleyвести переговоры — to be in negotiations, to carry on / to conduct / to pursue / to hold negotiations, to bargain, to negotiate; (о заключении соглашения и т.п.) to treat
вести переговоры лично — to conduct negotiations in person / by a personal interview
вести переговоры о мире — to carry on / to conduct peace negotiations / talks, to negotiate for peace
вести переговоры от имени кого-л. — to act as smb.'s ambassador in negotiations
вести переговоры под флагом перемирия, сдачи — to negotiate under a flag of truce or surrender
возобновить переговоры — to renew / to resume / to reopen negotiations / talks
вступать в переговоры — to enter into negotiations (with), to approach smb.
завершить переговоры — to round off negotiations / talks, to bring the negotiations to a conclusion
завести переговоры в тупик — to deadlock / to stalemate / to bog down negotiations, to lead negotiations into a blind alley
затруднять проведение переговоров — to hamper / to obstruct / to impede / talks / negotiations
затянуть переговоры — to drag out / to hold up / to protract negotiations / talks
мешать проведению переговоров — to bedevil negotiations, to militate against negotiations
начать переговоры — to start negotiations, to open discussions
обмануть на переговорах — to trick smb. in the talks
подорвать основу переговоров — to destroy the basis / foundation for negotiations
прервать переговоры — to break off / to cut off / to interrupt negotiations
продолжить переговоры — to resume negotiations / talks
срывать / торпедировать переговоры — to ruin / to thwart / to torpedo / to subvert the talks
в переговорах приняли участие с российской стороны... — attending the talks on the Russian side were...
переговоры возобновились в обстановке полной секретности — the talks reconvened under a total news blackout
переговоры всё ещё продолжаются — the negotiations are still going on / under way
переговоры вышли / вырвались из тупика — the talks have broken / escaped the deadlock
переговоры зашли в тупик — negotiations / talks have been stalemated / bogged down / have come to a deadlock
"глобальные переговоры" (по проблемам сырья, энергетики, торговли, экономического развития) — "global negotiations"
закулисные переговоры — backstage / clandestine / secret negotiations / talks
затянувшиеся переговоры — protracted discussions, long-stalled / extended negotiations
зашедшие в тупик переговоры — deadlocked / stalled / stalemated talks / negotiations
ожидаемые / предполагаемые переговоры — prospective talks
поэтапные переговоры — stage-by-stage / step-by-step negotiations
предварительные переговоры — preliminary negotiations, preliminaries
предварительные переговоры, определяющие позиции сторон — exploratory talks
трудные / тяжёлые переговоры — arduous / exacting talks
предоставить большие полномочия для ведения переговоров — to give smb. greater scope to negotiate
затягивание переговоров на неопределённый срок — indefinite prolongation of talks / negotiations
окончание переговоров — completion of negotiations / talks
переговоры, касающиеся космических и ядерных вооружений — talks on space and nuclear weapons
переговоры между вооружёнными силами воюющих сторон — negotiations between the armed forces of belligerents
переговоры на высшем уровне — summit / top-level talks
переговоры на основе ассимметричных сокращений — negotiations on the basis of asymmetrical reductions
переговоры о крупных, пятидесятипроцентных сокращениях — talks on large-scale, 50 per cent reductions
переговоры о ликвидации ядерных ракет средней и меньшей дальности — talks on the elimination of medium and shorter range nuclear missiles
переговоры о пересмотре (договора и т.п.) — renegotiation
переговоры о сокращении вооружённых сил и вооружений в Центральной Европе — negotiations on the reduction of armed forces and armaments in Central Europe
переговоры о сокращении стратегических вооружений — Strategic Arms Reduction Talks, START
переговоры об ограничении продажи и поставок обычных видов вооружений — negotiations on limiting conventional arms transfers
переговоры по ограничению стратегических вооружений, ОСВ — Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, SALT
переговоры по основным / существенным вопросам — substantive talks
переговоры по разоружению — disarmament / arms negotiations
переговоры по широкому кругу проблем — full-scale negotiations; wide ranging talks
переговоры, проводимые в два этапа — two-phase negotiations
переговоры, проводимые с перерывами — on-off talks разг.
переговоры с позиции силы — negotiations "from strength"
предмет и цели переговоров — the range and objectives of the talks, the subject and purpose of the negotiations
прекращение переговоров — breakdown of / in negotiations
путём переговоров — by means of / by negotiations
раунд / тур переговоров — round of talks
второй / третий раунд переговоров — second / third round of talks / negotiations
очередной раунд / тур переговоров — new round of talks
содержание, сроки и результаты переговоров — content, timing and outcome of negotiations
стол переговоров — negotiating / bargaining table
за столом переговоров — at the bargaining / negotiating table
вернуть кого-л. за стол переговоров — to draw smb. back to the bargaining table
сторона, участвующая в переговорах — party to negotiations
ход переговоров — progress / course of negotiations
Russian-english dctionary of diplomacy > переговоры переговор·ы
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13 Cone Drawing Box
A preparatory machine in worsted spinning. The wool is positively wound on to suitable sized bobbins without strain in this system whereas twist is given to the sliver in the ordinary drawing box system to give it strength to pull the bobbin round. With the cone box the silvers are drawn softer and as larger bobbins are used there is more economical working. -
14 Faller Gills
Part of a machine used for combing fibres preparatory to spinning. Faller gills have a series of steel bars which carry upright pins that comb the sheet of fibre under treatment. When a bar reaches the end of its traverse it falls down and is returned by suitable mechanism to the front position when the pins again enter the material. Gills are used for preparing wools for worsted, flax, hemp and other long fibres, for the spinning process. -
15 Flax Breaking
FLAX BREAKING, or ROLLINGThe operation of passing flax straw either endways or sideways through a series of fluted rollers to crimp or break the woody part of the straw preparatory to scutching. Rollers, Annsborough - A special form of pre-breaker consisting of 4-6 pairs of fluted rollers through which straw is fed diagonally to break the centre portion prior to entry to a turbine scutcher. Rollers, Crimper - A special form of roller designed to put a very fine crimp into the straw and to break up the woody part into very small pieces. Rollers, Dodd-Gillespie - A special form of breaker consisting of 36 or more pairs of graduated fluted rollers designed to give an intense breaking of the woody part of the straw prior to scutching on a Monoblade machine, or in preparation for hackling without scutching. Rolling - See Breaking or rolling. -
16 Rolling
FLAX BREAKING, or ROLLINGThe operation of passing flax straw either endways or sideways through a series of fluted rollers to crimp or break the woody part of the straw preparatory to scutching. Rollers, Annsborough - A special form of pre-breaker consisting of 4-6 pairs of fluted rollers through which straw is fed diagonally to break the centre portion prior to entry to a turbine scutcher. Rollers, Crimper - A special form of roller designed to put a very fine crimp into the straw and to break up the woody part into very small pieces. Rollers, Dodd-Gillespie - A special form of breaker consisting of 36 or more pairs of graduated fluted rollers designed to give an intense breaking of the woody part of the straw prior to scutching on a Monoblade machine, or in preparation for hackling without scutching. Rolling - See Breaking or rolling. ———————— In lace making a knot or twist that fastens the thread to the bobbins used in pillow lace. -
17 Froude, William
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 1810 Dartington, Devon, Englandd. 4 May 1879 Simonstown, South Africa[br]English naval architect; pioneer of experimental ship-model research.[br]Froude was educated at a preparatory school at Buckfastleigh, and then at Westminster School, London, before entering Oriel College, Oxford, to read mathematics and classics. Between 1836 and 1838 he served as a pupil civil engineer, and then he joined the staff of Isambard Kingdom Brunel on various railway engineering projects in southern England, including the South Devon Atmospheric Railway. He retired from professional work in 1846 and lived with his invalid father at Dartington Parsonage. The next twenty years, while apparently unproductive, were important to Froude as he concentrated his mind on difficult mathematical and scientific problems. Froude married in 1839 and had five children, one of whom, Robert Edmund Froude (1846–1924), was to succeed him in later years in his research work for the Admiralty. Following the death of his father, Froude moved to Paignton, and there commenced his studies on the resistance of solid bodies moving through fluids. Initially these were with hulls towed through a house roof storage tank by wires taken over a pulley and attached to falling weights, but the work became more sophisticated and was conducted on ponds and the open water of a creek near Dartmouth. Froude published work on the rolling of ships in the second volume of the Transactions of the then new Institution of Naval Architects and through this became acquainted with Sir Edward Reed. This led in 1870 to the Admiralty's offer of £2,000 towards the cost of an experimental tank for ship models at Torquay. The tank was completed in 1872 and tests were carried out on the model of HMS Greyhound following full-scale towing trials which had commenced on the actual ship the previous year. From this Froude enunciated his Law of Comparisons, which defines the rules concerning the relationship of the power required to move geometrically similar floating bodies across fluids. It enabled naval architects to predict, from a study of a much less expensive and smaller model, the resistance to motion and the power required to move a full-size ship. The work in the tank led Froude to design a model-cutting machine, dynamometers and machinery for the accurate ruling of graph paper. Froude's work, and later that of his son, was prodigious and covered many fields of ship design, including powering, propulsion, rolling, steering and stability. In only six years he had stamped his academic authority on the new science of hydrodynamics, served on many national committees and corresponded with fellow researchers throughout the world. His health suffered and he sailed for South Africa to recuperate, but he contracted dysentery and died at Simonstown. He will be remembered for all time as one of the greatest "fathers" of naval architecture.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS. Honorary LLD Glasgow University.Bibliography1955, The Papers of William Froude, London: Institution of Naval Architects (the Institution also published a memoir by Sir Westcott Abell and an evaluation of his work by Dr R.W.L. Gawn of the Royal Corps of Naval Constructors; this volume reprints all Froude's papers from the Institution of Naval Architects and other sources as diverse as the British Association, the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the Institution of Civil Engineers.Further ReadingA.T.Crichton, 1990, "William and Robert Edmund Froude and the evolution of the ship model experimental tank", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 61:33–49.FMW -
18 время подготовки
время подготовки " на местах " — on-scene preparatory time
Русско-английский словарь по информационным технологиям > время подготовки
См. также в других словарях:
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