-
41 educación estatal/privada
state/private education* * *state/private education -
42 bijzonder
1 [niet algemeen] particular4 [zeer (groot)] special5 [niet van de overheid] private♦voorbeelden:in het bijzonder • in particular, especiallyhet is niets bijzonders • it is nothing special6 met bijzondere zorg • with particular/special careII 〈 bijwoord〉1 [zeer, buitengewoon] very (much)♦voorbeelden: -
43 PEA
1) Американизм: Preliminary Environmental Assessment, Presidential Executive Agreement2) Военный термин: Preliminary Endangerment Assessment, passive experimental array, platform electronics assembly, program element administrator3) Техника: positive electron affinity4) Химия: Phenylethyl Alcohol Agar, Polyethyl Acrylate5) Грубое выражение: Push Epi Asshole6) Сокращение: Permanent Electronic Address (Brazil), Physical Education Association of Great Britain and Northern Ireland7) Физиология: Pulseless Electrical Activity (cardiac)8) Вычислительная техника: Pocket Ethernet Adapter (LAN, Ethernet)9) Экология: Public Environmental Analysis10) Менеджмент: Project Expenditure Assessment (Оценка затрат проекта)11) Образование: Private Education Aid12) Полимеры: polyethyl aery late, polyethylene adipate13) Программирование: Push Effective Absolute, Push Effective Address14) Контроль качества: physical effects analysis15) Макаров: poly (ethyl acrylate), poly (ethylene adipate)16) Расширение файла: Pocket Ethernet Adapter17) Должность: Practice Edi Administrator -
44 pea
1) Американизм: Preliminary Environmental Assessment, Presidential Executive Agreement2) Военный термин: Preliminary Endangerment Assessment, passive experimental array, platform electronics assembly, program element administrator3) Техника: positive electron affinity4) Химия: Phenylethyl Alcohol Agar, Polyethyl Acrylate5) Грубое выражение: Push Epi Asshole6) Сокращение: Permanent Electronic Address (Brazil), Physical Education Association of Great Britain and Northern Ireland7) Физиология: Pulseless Electrical Activity (cardiac)8) Вычислительная техника: Pocket Ethernet Adapter (LAN, Ethernet)9) Экология: Public Environmental Analysis10) Менеджмент: Project Expenditure Assessment (Оценка затрат проекта)11) Образование: Private Education Aid12) Полимеры: polyethyl aery late, polyethylene adipate13) Программирование: Push Effective Absolute, Push Effective Address14) Контроль качества: physical effects analysis15) Макаров: poly (ethyl acrylate), poly (ethylene adipate)16) Расширение файла: Pocket Ethernet Adapter17) Должность: Practice Edi Administrator -
45 het bijzonder onderwijs
het bijzonder onderwijsVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > het bijzonder onderwijs
-
46 count
count [kaʊnt]compte ⇒ 1 (a) chef d'accusation ⇒ 1 (c) taux ⇒ 1 (d) comte ⇒ 1 (e) compter ⇒ 2 (a), 2 (b), 3 considérer ⇒ 2 (c)1 noun∎ to have a count faire le compte, compter;∎ it took three/several counts il a fallu faire trois/plusieurs fois le compte, il a fallu compter trois/plusieurs fois;∎ to have a second count refaire le compte, recompter;∎ to lose count perdre le compte;∎ I've lost count of the number of times he's been late je ne compte plus le nombre de fois où il est arrivé en retard;∎ to keep count (of sth) tenir le compte (de qch);∎ I have a job keeping count of all your boyfriends j'ai du mal à tenir le compte de tous tes petits amis;∎ at the last count (gen) la dernière fois qu'on a compté; Administration (of people) au dernier recensement;∎ on the count of three, begin à trois, vous commencez∎ he took a count of nine il est resté à terre jusqu'à neuf;∎ to take the count être mis K-O;∎ guilty on three counts of murder coupable de meurtre sur trois chefs d'accusation;∎ the judge found him guilty on the first count, but cleared him of the second le juge l'a déclaré coupable sur le ou quant au premier chef, mais l'a acquitté pour le second;∎ figurative the argument is flawed on both counts l'argumentation est défectueuse sur les deux points;∎ I'm annoyed with you on a number of counts je suis fâché contre toi pour un certain nombre de raisons ou à plus d'un titre∎ blood (cell) count numération f globulaire(e) (nobleman) comte m∎ I counted ten people in the room j'ai compté dix personnes dans la pièce;∎ to count the votes dépouiller le scrutin;∎ figurative to count sheep (when sleepless) compter les moutons;∎ to count the pennies faire attention à ses sous;∎ you can count his good points on the fingers of one hand ses qualités se comptent sur les doigts de la main;∎ count your blessings pense à tout ce que tu as pour être heureux;∎ count your blessings that there was someone around tu peux t'estimer heureux qu'il y ait eu quelqu'un dans les parages;∎ proverb don't count your chickens (before they're hatched) il ne faut pas vendre la peau de l'ours (avant de l'avoir tué)∎ have you counted yourself? est-ce que tu t'es compté?;∎ counting Alan, there were ten of us en comptant Alan, nous étions dix;∎ not counting public holidays sans compter les jours fériés(c) (consider) considérer, estimer;∎ to count sb among one's friends compter qn parmi ses amis;∎ do you count her as a friend? la considères-tu comme une amie?;∎ student grants are not counted as taxable income les bourses d'études ne sont pas considérées comme revenu imposable;∎ count yourself lucky you've got good friends estime-toi heureux d'avoir des amis sur qui compter;∎ I count myself as very lucky je considère ou j'estime que j'ai beaucoup de chance;∎ I count myself happy je m'estime heureux;∎ to be counted a success (person) être considéré comme quelqu'un qui a réussi; (project) être considéré comme un succès∎ to learn to count apprendre à compter;∎ to count to twenty/fifty/a hundred compter jusqu'à vingt/cinquante/cent;∎ to count on one's fingers compter sur ses doigts;∎ counting from tomorrow à partir ou à compter de demain(b) (be considered, qualify) compter;∎ two children count as one adult deux enfants comptent pour un adulte;∎ anyone over fourteen counts as an adult toutes les personnes âgées de plus de quatorze ans comptent pour des adultes;∎ unemployment benefit counts as taxable income les allocations (de) chômage comptent comme revenu imposable;∎ this exam counts towards the final mark cet examen compte dans la note finale;∎ that/he doesn't count ça/il ne compte pas;∎ she counts among my very best friends elle compte parmi mes meilleurs amis;∎ his record counted in his favour/against him son casier judiciaire a joué en sa faveur/l'a desservi(c) (be important) compter;∎ every second/minute counts chaque seconde/minute compte;∎ experience counts more than qualifications l'expérience compte davantage que les diplômes;∎ he counts for nothing il n'est pas important, il ne compte pas;∎ a private education doesn't count for much now avoir reçu une éducation privée n'est plus un grand avantage de nos jours;∎ what counts around here is enthusiasm ce qui compte ici c'est l'enthousiasme;∎ he's the one who counts around here c'est lui qui décide ici►► Grammar count noun nom m comptablejouer contrefaire le compte à rebours(include) compter, inclure;∎ to count sb in on sth inclure ou compter qn dans qch;∎ will we count you in for the weekend or not? on te compte pour le week-end ou pas?;∎ count me in! je suis partant!, j'en suis!American compter∎ we're counting on you nous comptons sur toi;∎ I wouldn't count on him turning up, if I were you si j'étais vous, je ne m'attendrais pas à ce qu'il vienne;∎ you can always count on him to be late tu peux compter sur lui pour être en retard, tu peux être sûr qu'il sera en retard;∎ can we count on your vote? pouvons-nous compter sur votre voix?;∎ you can count on it/me vous pouvez compter dessus/sur moi;∎ I wouldn't count on it je n'y compterais pas∎ I wasn't counting on getting here so early je ne comptais pas arriver si tôt;∎ I wasn't counting on my husband being here je ne comptais ou pensais pas que mon mari serait ici(a) (money, objects) compter∎ (you can) count me out ne compte surtout pas sur moi∎ to be counted out être déclaré K-O➲ count upcompter, additionner;∎ figurative when you count it all up en fin de comptecompter, additionner= count on -
47 Совет за американское частное образование
General subject: Council for American Private EducationУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Совет за американское частное образование
-
48 обучение в частной школе
Economy: private educationУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > обучение в частной школе
-
49 частное образование
American: private educationУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > частное образование
-
50 частное обучение
Advertising: private education -
51 argument
noun1) (reason) Begründung, diearguments for/against something — Argumente für/gegen etwas
assume something for argument's sake — etwas rein theoretisch annehmen
3) (debate) Auseinandersetzung, dieget into an argument/get into arguments with somebody — mit jemandem in Streit geraten
* * *1) (a quarrel or unfriendly discussion: They are having an argument about/over whose turn it is.) der Streit2) (a set of reasons; a piece of reasoning: The argument for/against going; a philosophical argument.) die Beweisführung* * *ar·gu·ment[ˈɑ:gjəmənt, AM ˈɑ:rg-]nwithout any \argument ohne weitere Diskussionento be engaged in \argument in eine Auseinandersetzung verwickelt seinto get into/have an \argument [with sb] [mit jdm] streitenthere's a strong \argument for banning cars from the city centre es spricht einiges dafür, Autos aus der Innenstadt zu verbannen\argument of a book These f eines Buches\argument separator Argumenttrennzeichen nt* * *['Aːgjʊmənt]n1) (= discussion) Diskussion fto spend hours in argument about how to do sth — stundenlang darüber diskutieren, wie man etw macht
he just said that for the sake of argument — das hat er nur gesagt, um etwas (dagegen) zu sagen
2) (= quarrel) Auseinandersetzung fto have an argument — sich streiten; (over sth trivial) sich zanken
first state your theory, then list the arguments for and against — stellen Sie erst Ihre These auf und nennen Sie dann die Gründe und Gegengründe
of private education —
there's an even stronger argument than that that's not a rational argument, it's just a dogmatic assertion — es gibt ein noch stärkeres Argument das ist kein rationales Argument, das ist bloß eine dogmatische Behauptung
5) (= statement of proof) Beweis mProfessor Ayer's argument is that... —
the Ontological/Teleological Argument — der ontologische/teleologische Gottesbeweis
all the various arguments for the existence of a god — all die verschiedenen Gottesbeweise
I don't think that's a valid argument — ich glaube, das ist kein gültiger Beweis
* * *argument [ˈɑː(r)ɡjʊmənt] sbeyond argument einwandfrei2. Argumentation f, Beweisführung f:argument from design PHIL teleologischer Gottesbeweis3. Erörterung f, Debatte f:hold an argument diskutieren;settle a dispute by argument einen Streit mit Worten beilegen4. obs Streitfrage fclosing arguments Schlussanträge6. Wortwechsel m, Auseinandersetzung f:get into an argument sich in die Haare geraten, in Streit geraten ( beide:with mit;about über akk, wegen);have an argument Streit haben;start an argument with sb sich mit jemandem anlegen;without argument widerspruchslos7. Thema n, Gegenstand m8. Kurzfassung f, Zusammenfassung f9. MATH Argument n (unabhängige Veränderliche einer Funktion)* * *noun1) (reason) Begründung, diearguments for/against something — Argumente für/gegen etwas
3) (debate) Auseinandersetzung, dieget into an argument/get into arguments with somebody — mit jemandem in Streit geraten
* * *n.Argument -e n.Auseinandersetzung f.Diskussion f.Wortwechsel m. -
52 enseñanza privada
private education -
53 concertada
-
54 házitanítás
-
55 magánoktatás
-
56 Crampton, Thomas Russell
[br]b. 6 August 1816 Broadstairs, Kent, Englandd. 19 April 1888 London, England[br]English engineer, pioneer of submarine electric telegraphy and inventor of the Crampton locomotive.[br]After private education and an engineering apprenticeship, Crampton worked under Marc Brunel, Daniel Gooch and the Rennie brothers before setting up as a civil engineer in 1848. His developing ideas on locomotive design were expressed through a series of five patents taken out between 1842 and 1849, each making a multiplicity of claims. The most typical feature of the Crampton locomotive, however, was a single pair of driving wheels set to the rear of the firebox. This meant they could be of large diameter, while the centre of gravity of the locomotive remained low, for the boiler barrel, though large, had only small carrying-wheels beneath it. The cylinders were approximately midway along the boiler and were outside the frames, as was the valve gear. The result was a steady-riding locomotive which neither pitched about a central driving axle nor hunted from side to side, as did other contemporary locomotives, and its working parts were unusually accessible for maintenance. However, adhesive weight was limited and the long wheelbase tended to damage track. Locomotives of this type were soon superseded on British railways, although they lasted much longer in Germany and France. Locomotives built to the later patents incorporated a long, coupled wheelbase with drive through an intermediate crankshaft, but they mostly had only short lives. In 1851 Crampton, with associates, laid the first successful submarine electric telegraph cable. The previous year the brothers Jacob and John Brett had laid a cable, comprising a copper wire insulated with gutta-percha, beneath the English Channel from Dover to Cap Gris Nez: signals were passed but within a few hours the cable failed. Crampton joined the Bretts' company, put up half the capital needed for another attempt, and designed a much stronger cable. Four gutta-percha-insulated copper wires were twisted together, surrounded by tarred hemp and armoured by galvanized iron wires; this cable was successful.Crampton was also active in railway civil engineering and in water and gas engineering, and c. 1882 he invented a hydraulic tunnel-boring machine intended for a Channel tunnel.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsVice-President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Officier de la Légion d'Honneur (France).Bibliography1842, British patent no. 9,261.1845. British patent no. 10,854.1846. British patent no. 11,349.1847. British patent no. 11,760.1849, British patent no. 12,627.1885, British patent no. 14,021.Further ReadingM.Sharman, 1933, The Crampton Locomotive, Swindon: M.Sharman; P.C.Dewhurst, 1956–7, "The Crampton locomotive", Parts I and II, Transactions of the Newcomen Society 30:99 (the most important recent publications on Crampton's locomotives).C.Hamilton Ellis, 1958, Twenty Locomotive Men, Shepperton: Ian Allen. J.Kieve, 1973, The Electric Telegraph, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles, 102–4.R.B.Matkin, 1979, "Thomas Crampton: Man of Kent", Industrial Past 6 (2).PJGRBiographical history of technology > Crampton, Thomas Russell
-
57 Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph
[br]b. 12 June 1851 Penkhull, Staffordshire, Englandd. 22 August 1940 Lake, near Salisbury, Wiltshire, England[br]English physicist who perfected Branly's coherer; said to have given the first public demonstration of wireless telegraphy.[br]At the age of 8 Lodge entered Newport Grammar School, and in 1863–5 received private education at Coombs in Suffolk. He then returned to Staffordshire, where he assisted his father in the potteries by working as a book-keeper. Whilst staying with an aunt in London in 1866–7, he attended scientific lectures and became interested in physics. As a result of this and of reading copies of English Mechanic magazine, when he was back home in Hanley he began to do experiments and attended the Wedgewood Institute. Returning to London c. 1870, he studied initially at the Royal College of Science and then, from 1874, at University College, London (UCL), at the same time attending lectures at the Royal Institution.In 1875 he obtained his BSc, read a paper to the British Association on "Nodes and loops in chemical formulae" and became a physics demonstrator at UCL. The following year he was appointed a physics lecturer at Bedford College, completing his DSc in 1877. Three years later he became Assistant Professor of Mathematics at UCL, but in 1881, after only two years, he accepted the Chair of Experimental Physics at the new University College of Liverpool. There began a period of fruitful studies of electricity and radio transmission and reception, including development of the lightning conductor, discovery of the "coherent" effect of sparks and improvement of Branly's coherer, and, in 1894, what is said to be the first public demonstration of the transmission and reception (using a coherer) of wireless telegraphy, from Lewis's department store to the clock tower of Liverpool University's Victoria Building. On 10 May 1897 he filed a patent for selective tuning by self-in-ductance; this was before Marconi's first patent was actually published and its priority was subsequently upheld.In 1900 he became the first Principal of the new University of Birmingham, where he remained until his retirement in 1919. In his later years he was increasingly interested in psychical research.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1902. FRS 1887. Royal Society Council Member 1893. President, Society for Psychical Research 1901–4, 1932. President, British Association 1913. Royal Society Rumford Medal 1898. Royal Society of Arts Albert Medal 1919. Institution of Electrical Engineers Faraday Medal 1932. Fourteen honorary degrees from British and other universities.Bibliography1875, "The flow of electricity in a plane", Philosophical Magazine (May, June and December).1876, "Thermo-electric phenomena", Philosophical Magazine (December). 1888, "Lightning conductors", Philosophical Magazine (August).1889, Modern Views of Electricity (lectures at the Royal Institution).10 May 1897, "Improvements in syntonized telegraphy without line wires", British patent no. 11,575, US patent no. 609,154.1898, "Radio waves", Philosophical Magazine (August): 227.1931, Past Years, An Autobiography, London: Hodder \& Stoughton.Further ReadingW.P.Jolly, 1974, Sir Oliver Lodge, Psychical Resear cher and Scientist, London: Constable.E.Hawks, 1927, Pioneers of Wireless, London: Methuen.See also: Hertz, Heinrich RudolphKFBiographical history of technology > Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph
-
58 Percy, John
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 23 March 1817 Nottingham, Englandd. 19 June 1889 London, England[br]English metallurgist, first Professor of Metallurgy at the School of Mines, London.[br]After a private education, Percy went to Paris in 1834 to study medicine and to attend lectures on chemistry by Gay-Lussac and Thenard. After 1838 he studied medicine at Edinburgh, obtaining his MD in 1839. In that year he was appointed Professor of Chemistry at Queen's College, Birmingham, moving to Queen's Hospital at Birmingham in 1843. During his time at Birmingham, Percy became well known for his analysis of blast furnace slags, and was involved in the manufacture of optical glass. On 7 June 1851 Percy was appointed Metallurgical Professor and Teacher at the Museum of Practical Geology established in Jermyn Street, London, and opened in May 1851. In November of 1851, when the Museum became the Government (later Royal) School of Mines, Percy was appointed Lecturer in Metallurgy. In addition to his work at Jermyn Street, Percy lectured on metallurgy to the Advanced Class of Artillery at Woolwich from 1864 until his death, and from 1866 he was Superintendent of Ventilation at the Houses of Parliament. He served from 1861 to 1864 on the Special Committee on Iron set up to examine the performance of armour-plate in relation to its purity, composition and structure.Percy is best known for his metallurgical text books, published by John Murray. Volume I of Metallurgy, published in 1861, dealt with fuels, fireclays, copper, zinc and brass; Volume II, in 1864, dealt with iron and steel; a volume on lead appeared in 1870, followed by one on fuels and refractories in 1875, and the first volume on gold and silver in 1880. Further projected volumes on iron and steel, noble metals, and on copper, did not materialize. In 1879 Percy resigned from his School of Mines appointment in protest at the proposed move from Jermyn Street to South Kensington. The rapid growth of Percy's metallurgical collection, started in 1839, eventually forced him to move to a larger house. After his death, the collection was bought by the South Kensington (later Science) Museum. Now comprising 3,709 items, it provides a comprehensive if unselective record of nineteenth-century metallurgy, the most interesting specimens being those of the first sodium-reduced aluminium made in Britain and some of the first steel produced by Bessemer in Baxter House. Metallurgy for Percy was a technique of chemical extraction, and he has been criticized for basing his system of metallurgical instruction on this assumption. He stood strangely aloof from new processes of steel making such as that of Gilchrist and Thomas, and tended to neglect early developments in physical metallurgy, but he was the first in Britain to teach metallurgy as a discipline in its own right.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1847. President, Iron and Steel Institute 1885, 1886.Bibliography1861–80, Metallurgy, 5 vols, London: John Murray.Further ReadingS.J.Cackett, 1989, "Dr Percy and his metallurgical collection", Journal of the Hist. Met. Society 23(2):92–8.RLH -
59 comunidad de educadores, la
= education community, theEx. With respect to the private sector, the education and library community should establish long-term partnerships with telephone, cable, and computer companies. -
60 международное частное морское право
Education: private international maritime lawУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > международное частное морское право
См. также в других словарях:
private education — UK US noun [countable/uncountable] [singular private education plural private educations] education that the child’s parents pay the school for directly Thesaurus: types of education or educational establishmenthy … Useful english dictionary
private education — UK / US noun [countable/uncountable] Word forms private education : singular private education plural private educations education that the child s parents pay the school for directly … English dictionary
private education — private edu cation n [U] education which parents pay for, rather than free education provided by the government … Dictionary of contemporary English
private education — private edu cation noun count or uncount education that the child s parents pay the school for directly … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
private education — noun (U) education provided for money, rather than free education provided by the government … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Fund for Assistance to Private Education — with the mandate of providing assistance to private education institutions in the Philippines.HistoryFAPE was established in the sixties from the confluence of two factors, namely: the recognition of the crucial role of private education in… … Wikipedia
Council for Private Education — Logo of CPE Agency overview Jurisdiction Government of Singapore Headquarters 2 Bukit Merah Centra … Wikipedia
Education in Portugal — Ministry of Education, Higher Education and Science Minister Nuno Crato (2011 ) National education budget (2006) … Wikipedia
Education in Singapore — Ministry of Education Minister Heng Swee Keat National education budget (2006) Budget S$6.966 billion General Details Primary Languages … Wikipedia
Education in Canada — is provided, funded and overseen by federal, provincial, and local governments.Fact|date=September 2008 Education is within provincial jurisdiction and the curriculum is overseen by the province. [Citation | first2 = author2 link = writen by… … Wikipedia
Education in Chile — is divided in preschool, primary school, secondary school, and technical or higher education (university).According to the constitution, primary and secondary school are mandatory for all Chileans. The Chilean state provides a free public system… … Wikipedia