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81 Harrison, John
[br]b. 24 March 1693 Foulby, Yorkshire, Englandd. 24 March 1776 London, England[br]English horologist who constructed the first timekeeper of sufficient accuracy to determine longitude at sea and invented the gridiron pendulum for temperature compensation.[br]John Harrison was the son of a carpenter and was brought up to that trade. He was largely self-taught and learned mechanics from a copy of Nicholas Saunderson's lectures that had been lent to him. With the assistance of his younger brother, James, he built a series of unconventional clocks, mainly of wood. He was always concerned to reduce friction, without using oil, and this influenced the design of his "grasshopper" escapement. He also invented the "gridiron" compensation pendulum, which depended on the differential expansion of brass and steel. The excellent performance of his regulator clocks, which incorporated these devices, convinced him that they could also be used in a sea dock to compete for the longitude prize. In 1714 the Government had offered a prize of £20,000 for a method of determining longitude at sea to within half a degree after a voyage to the West Indies. In theory the longitude could be found by carrying an accurate timepiece that would indicate the time at a known longitude, but the requirements of the Act were very exacting. The timepiece would have to have a cumulative error of no more than two minutes after a voyage lasting six weeks.In 1730 Harrison went to London with his proposal for a sea clock, supported by examples of his grasshopper escapement and his gridiron pendulum. His proposal received sufficient encouragement and financial support, from George Graham and others, to enable him to return to Barrow and construct his first sea clock, which he completed five years later. This was a large and complicated machine that was made out of brass but retained the wooden wheelwork and the grasshopper escapement of the regulator clocks. The two balances were interlinked to counteract the rolling of the vessel and were controlled by helical springs operating in tension. It was the first timepiece with a balance to have temperature compensation. The effect of temperature change on the timekeeping of a balance is more pronounced than it is for a pendulum, as two effects are involved: the change in the size of the balance; and the change in the elasticity of the balance spring. Harrison compensated for both effects by using a gridiron arrangement to alter the tension in the springs. This timekeeper performed creditably when it was tested on a voyage to Lisbon, and the Board of Longitude agreed to finance improved models. Harrison's second timekeeper dispensed with the use of wood and had the added refinement of a remontoire, but even before it was tested he had embarked on a third machine. The balance of this machine was controlled by a spiral spring whose effective length was altered by a bimetallic strip to compensate for changes in temperature. In 1753 Harrison commissioned a London watchmaker, John Jefferys, to make a watch for his own personal use, with a similar form of temperature compensation and a modified verge escapement that was intended to compensate for the lack of isochronism of the balance spring. The time-keeping of this watch was surprisingly good and Harrison proceeded to build a larger and more sophisticated version, with a remontoire. This timekeeper was completed in 1759 and its performance was so remarkable that Harrison decided to enter it for the longitude prize in place of his third machine. It was tested on two voyages to the West Indies and on both occasions it met the requirements of the Act, but the Board of Longitude withheld half the prize money until they had proof that the timekeeper could be duplicated. Copies were made by Harrison and by Larcum Kendall, but the Board still continued to prevaricate and Harrison received the full amount of the prize in 1773 only after George III had intervened on his behalf.Although Harrison had shown that it was possible to construct a timepiece of sufficient accuracy to determine longitude at sea, his solution was too complex and costly to be produced in quantity. It had, for example, taken Larcum Kendall two years to produce his copy of Harrison's fourth timekeeper, but Harrison had overcome the psychological barrier and opened the door for others to produce chronometers in quantity at an affordable price. This was achieved before the end of the century by Arnold and Earnshaw, but they used an entirely different design that owed more to Le Roy than it did to Harrison and which only retained Harrison's maintaining power.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsRoyal Society Copley Medal 1749.Bibliography1767, The Principles of Mr Harrison's Time-keeper, with Plates of the Same, London. 1767, Remarks on a Pamphlet Lately Published by the Rev. Mr Maskelyne Under theAuthority of the Board of Longitude, London.1775, A Description Concerning Such Mechanisms as Will Afford a Nice or True Mensuration of Time, London.Further ReadingR.T.Gould, 1923, The Marine Chronometer: Its History and Development, London; reprinted 1960, Holland Press.—1978, John Harrison and His Timekeepers, 4th edn, London: National Maritime Museum.H.Quill, 1966, John Harrison, the Man who Found Longitude, London. A.G.Randall, 1989, "The technology of John Harrison's portable timekeepers", Antiquarian Horology 18:145–60, 261–77.J.Betts, 1993, John Harrison London (a good short account of Harrison's work). S.Smiles, 1905, Men of Invention and Industry; London: John Murray, Chapter III. Dictionary of National Biography, Vol. IX, pp. 35–6.DV -
82 jackpot
['‹ækpot](in playing cards, some competitions etc, a fund of prize-money that goes on increasing until it is won.) jackpot* * *['‹ækpot](in playing cards, some competitions etc, a fund of prize-money that goes on increasing until it is won.) jackpot -
83 jackpot
'‹ækpot(in playing cards, some competitions etc, a fund of prize-money that goes on increasing until it is won.) premio gordo, apuesta acumuladajackpot n premio gordotr['ʤækpɒt]1 (premio) gordo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto hit the jackpot tocarle a alguien el gordojackpot ['ʤæk.pɑt] n1) : primer premio m, gordo m2)to hit the jackpot : sacarse la lotería, sacarse el gordon.• bote s.m.• premio máximo (de una máquina tragaperras) s.m.noun (in bingo, lottery) bote m, pozo mto hit the jackpot — ( do very well) hacer* su (or mi etc) agosto, sacarse* la lotería; ( win highest prize) sacarse* la lotería or (fam) el gordo
['dʒækpɒt]N premio m gordoto hit the jackpot — sacar el premio gordo; (fig) ser todo un éxito or un exitazo
* * *noun (in bingo, lottery) bote m, pozo mto hit the jackpot — ( do very well) hacer* su (or mi etc) agosto, sacarse* la lotería; ( win highest prize) sacarse* la lotería or (fam) el gordo
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84 jackpot
['dʒækpɒt]nome jackpot m., monte premi m.••to hit the jackpot — (win prize) fare una grossa vincita, vincere un terno al lotto; (have great success) sfondare, avere un gran successo
* * *['‹ækpot](in playing cards, some competitions etc, a fund of prize-money that goes on increasing until it is won.) montepremi* * *jackpot /ˈdʒækpɒt/n.2 grossa vincita; piatto ricco3 (fig.) vittoria; successo strabiliante● (fam.) to hit the jackpot, vincere la posta in palio, portarsi a casa il montepremi; (fig.) fare un colpo grosso, vincere, avere successo, sfondare.* * *['dʒækpɒt]nome jackpot m., monte premi m.••to hit the jackpot — (win prize) fare una grossa vincita, vincere un terno al lotto; (have great success) sfondare, avere un gran successo
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85 MacCready, Paul
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 29 September 1925 New Haven, Connecticut, USA[br]American designer of man-powered aeroplanes, one of which flew across the English Channel in 1979.[br]As a boy, Paul MacCready was an enthusiastic builder of flying model aeroplanes; he became US National Junior Champion in 1941. He learned to fly and became a pilot with the US Navy in 1943. he developed an interest in gliding in 1945 and became National Soaring Champion in 1948 and 1949. After graduating from the California Institute of Technology (Cal Tech) as a meteorologist, he set up Meteorological Research Inc. In 1953 MacCready became the first American to win the World Gliding Championship. When hang-gliders became popular in the early 1970s MacCready studied their performance and compared them with soaring birds: he came to the conclusion that man-powered flight was a possibility. In an effort to generate an interest in man-powered flight, a cash prize had been offered in Britain by Henry Kremer, a wealthy industrialist and fitness enthusiast. A man-powered aircraft had to complete a one-mile (1.6km) figure-of-eight course in order to win. However, the figure-of-eight proved to be a major obstacle and the prize money was increased over the years to £50,000. In 1976 MacCready and his friend Dr Peter Lissaman set to work on their computer and came up with their optimum design for a man-powered aircraft. The Gossamer Condor had a wing span of 96 ft (27.4 m), about the same as a Douglas DC-9 airliner, yet it weighed just 70 lb (32 kg). It was a tail-first design with a pedaldriven pusher propeller just behind the pilot. Bryan Allen, a biologist, pilot and racing cyclist, joined the team to provide the muscle-power. After over two hundred flights they were ready to make an attempt on the prize, and on 23 August 1977 they succeeded where many had failed, in 7 minutes. Kremer then offered £100,000 for the first manpowered flight across the English Channel. Many thought this would be impossible, but MacCready and his team set about the task of designing a new machine based on their Condor, which they called the Gossamer Albatross. Bryan Allen also had a major task: getting fit for a flight which might take three hours of pedalling. The weather was more of a problem than in California, and after a long delay the Gossamer Albatross took off, on 12 June 1979. After pedalling for 2 hours 49 minutes, Bryan Allen landed in France: it was seventy years since Blériot's flight, although Blériot was much quicker.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsWorld Gliding Champion 1953.Bibliography1979, "The Channel crossing and the future", Man Powered Aircraft Symposium, London: Royal Aeronautical Society.Further ReadingM.Grosser, 1981, Gossamer Odyssey, London (provides a brief biography and detailed accounts of the two aircraft).M.F.Jerram, 1980, Incredible Flying Machines, London (a short survey of pedal planes).Articles by Ron Moulton on the Gossamer Albatross appeared in Aerospace (Royal Aeronautical Society) London, August/September 1979, and the Aeromodeller, London, September 1979.JDS -
86 split
split
1. verbpresent participle splitting: past tense, past participle split)1) (to cut or (cause to) break lengthwise: to split firewood; The skirt split all the way down the back seam.) rajar2) (to divide or (cause to) disagree: The dispute split the workers into two opposing groups.) dividir
2. noun(a crack or break: There was a split in one of the sides of the box.) grieta, raja- split second
- splitting headache
- the splits
split1 n raja / hendidurasplit2 vb1. partir2. rajarsemy trousers split when I bent down al agacharme, se me rajó el pantalón3. dividir / repartirtr[splɪt]1 (crack, cut, break) grieta, hendidura, raja3 (division - gen) división nombre femenino, ruptura, cisma nombre masculino; (- in politics) escisión nombre femenino, cisma nombre masculino, ruptura4 (division, sharing out) reparto2 (divided - gen) dividido,-a; (- in politics) dividido,-a, escindido,-a1 (crack, break) agrietar, hender; (cut) partir2 (tear - garment) rajar, desgarrar; (- seam) descoser3 SMALLPHYSICS/SMALL (atom) desintegrar4 (divide, separate) dividir (up, -); (political party etc) dividir, escindir5 (share) repartir, dividir■ we had to split the prize money between 10 people tuvimos que repartir el premio entre 10 personas1 (crack) agrietarse, henderse, rajarse; (in two parts) partirse2 (tear - garment) rajarse, desgarrarse; (- seams) descoserse3 (divide - gen) dividirse (up, -); (- in politics) dividirse, escindirse4 familiar (tell tales) acusar, soplar, chivarse (on, de)\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLin a split second en una fracción de segundo, en menos de un segundoto do the splits abrir las piernas en cruzto split hairs rizar el rizo, buscarle tres pies al gatoto split one's head open romperse la crisma, partirse la crismato split one's sides laughing partirse de risa, troncharse de risato split the difference partir la diferenciacream split / jam split pastelito relleno de nata / pastelito relleno de mermeladasplit decision decisión nombre femenino no unánimesplit infinitive SMALLLINGUISTICS/SMALL infinitivo con un adverbio intercalado entre el "to" y el verbosplit peas guisantes nombre masculino plural secossplit pin chavetasplit personality desdoblamiento de personalidadsplit ring llaverosplit shift horario partido1) cleave: partir, henderto split wood: partir madera2) burst: romper, rajarto split open: abrir3) divide, share: dividir, repartirsplit vi1) : partirse (dícese de la madera, etc.)2) burst, crack: romperse, rajarsesplit n1) crack: rajadura f2) tear: rotura f3) division: división f, escisión fadj.• dividido, -a adj.• grieta adj.• hendido, -a adj.• partido, -a adj.• raja adj.• separarse adj.n.• cisma s.m.• despatarrada s.f.• división s.f.• hendedura s.f.• hendidura s.f.• quebraja s.f.• raja s.f.• rendija s.f.• resquebrajadura s.f.• ruptura s.f.pret., p.p.(Preterito definido y participio pasivo de "to split")v.(§ p.,p.p.: split) = cachar v.• cascar v.• desdoblar v.• dividir v.• escindir v.• grietarse v.• hender v.• partir v.• resquebrajar v.• tronchar v.splɪt
I
1)a) (in garment, cloth - in seam) descosido m; (- part of design) abertura f, raja f, tajo m (CS)b) (in wood, glass) rajadura f, grieta f2)b) ( break up) ruptura f, separación fc) (share-out, distribution)a six-way split would give everyone $1,500 — si se dividiera la suma en seis partes, cada uno se llevaría $1.500
3) splits plto do the splits — abrirse* completamente de piernas, hacer* el spagat (Esp)
4) ( bottle) (AmE) botella individual de vino o champán
II
1)2)a) ( divided)split decision — decisión f no unánime
split shift — horario m (de trabajo) partido or no corrido
b) ( in factions) dividido
III
1.
1)a) ( break) \<\<wood/stone\>\> partirto split the atom — fisionar or desintegrar el átomo
to split something in two/in half — partir algo en dos/por la mitad
b) ( burst)she split her head open — se partió or se abrió la cabeza
to split one's sides (laughing) — partirse or troncharse or desternillarse de risa
c) ( divide into factions) \<\<nation/church\>\> dividir, escindir2) (divide, share) \<\<cost/food\>\> dividirdo you want to split a bottle? — ¿nos tomamos una botella a medias?
2.
vi1) (crack, burst) \<\<wood/rock\>\> partirse, rajarse; \<\<leather/seam\>\> abrirse*, romperse*his bag split (open) — se le rompió or rajó la bolsa
2) \<\<political party/church\>\> dividirse, escindirse3) ( leave) (sl) abrirse* (arg), largarse* (fam)4) ( denounce) (BrE colloq)to split ON somebody — acusar or (Méx fam) rajar a alguien, chivarse de alguien (Esp fam)
•Phrasal Verbs:- split up[splɪt] (vb: pt, pp split)1. N1) (=crack) (in wood, rock) hendidura f, grieta f2) (=rift) ruptura f, escisión f•
there are threats of a split in the progressive party — se oyen voces or hay amenazas de escisión en el partido progresista3) (=division) división f•
the split between the rich and the poor — la división entre ricos y pobres•
a three- way split — una división en tres partes4)• to do the splits — (Gymnastics) hacer el spagat; (accidentally) abrirse completamente de piernas, espatarrarse *
5) (Culin)6) (Sew) (in skirt) abertura f2. ADJ1) (=cracked) [wood, rock] partido, hendido2) (=divided) dividido•
the party was split — el partido estaba escindido or dividido•
the votes are split 15-13 — los votos están repartidos 15 a 133. VT1) (=break) partir- split hairs- split one's sides laughing2) (=divide, share) repartir•
let's split the money between us — repartámonos el dinero•
to split sth into three parts — dividir algo en tres partes•
to split the vote — (Pol) repartirse los votos3) (fig) [+ government, group] dividir; [+ party] escindir, dividirthe dispute split the party — la disputa escindió or dividió el partido
4. VI1) (=come apart) [stone etc] henderse, rajarsethe jeans split the first time she wore them — los vaqueros se le abrieron por las costuras la primera vez que se los puso
2) (fig) [government, group] dividirse; [party] escindirse, dividirse3) * (=tell tales) chivatear **, soplar *to split on sb — chivatear contra algn **, soplar contra algn *
4) (esp US) * (=leave) largarse **, irse5.CPDsplit ends NPL — puntas fpl abiertas
split infinitive N — infinitivo en el que un adverbio o una frase se intercala entre "to" y el verbo
split personality N — personalidad f desdoblada
split pin N — (Brit) chaveta f, pasador m
split-screensplit screen N — pantalla f partida
split second N — fracción f de segundo
split-secondin a split second — en un instante, en un abrir y cerrar de ojos
split shift N — jornada f partida
split ticket N (US) —
•
to vote a split ticket — dar el voto fraccionado, votar a candidatos de diferentes partidos en la misma papeleta- split up* * *[splɪt]
I
1)a) (in garment, cloth - in seam) descosido m; (- part of design) abertura f, raja f, tajo m (CS)b) (in wood, glass) rajadura f, grieta f2)b) ( break up) ruptura f, separación fc) (share-out, distribution)a six-way split would give everyone $1,500 — si se dividiera la suma en seis partes, cada uno se llevaría $1.500
3) splits plto do the splits — abrirse* completamente de piernas, hacer* el spagat (Esp)
4) ( bottle) (AmE) botella individual de vino o champán
II
1)2)a) ( divided)split decision — decisión f no unánime
split shift — horario m (de trabajo) partido or no corrido
b) ( in factions) dividido
III
1.
1)a) ( break) \<\<wood/stone\>\> partirto split the atom — fisionar or desintegrar el átomo
to split something in two/in half — partir algo en dos/por la mitad
b) ( burst)she split her head open — se partió or se abrió la cabeza
to split one's sides (laughing) — partirse or troncharse or desternillarse de risa
c) ( divide into factions) \<\<nation/church\>\> dividir, escindir2) (divide, share) \<\<cost/food\>\> dividirdo you want to split a bottle? — ¿nos tomamos una botella a medias?
2.
vi1) (crack, burst) \<\<wood/rock\>\> partirse, rajarse; \<\<leather/seam\>\> abrirse*, romperse*his bag split (open) — se le rompió or rajó la bolsa
2) \<\<political party/church\>\> dividirse, escindirse3) ( leave) (sl) abrirse* (arg), largarse* (fam)4) ( denounce) (BrE colloq)to split ON somebody — acusar or (Méx fam) rajar a alguien, chivarse de alguien (Esp fam)
•Phrasal Verbs:- split up -
87 Roe, Sir Edwin Alliott Verdon
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 26 April 1877 Manchester, Englandd. 4 January 1958 London, England[br]English designer of one of the most successful biplanes of all time, the Avro 504.[br]A.V.Roe served an apprenticeship at a railway works, studied marine engineering at Kings College London, served at sea as an engineer, and then took a job in the motor-car industry. His hobby was flying: after studying bird-flight, he built several flying models and in 1907 one of these won a prize offered by the Daily Mail. With the prize money he built a full-size aeroplane loosely based on the Flyer of the Wright brothers, with whom he had corresponded. In September, Roe took his biplane to the motorracing circuit at Brooklands, in Surrey, but it made only a few hops and his activities were not welcomed. Roe then moved to Essex, where he assembled his new aeroplane under the arch of a railway bridge. This was a triplane design with the engine at the front (a "tractor"), and during 1909 it made several flights (this triplane is preserved by the Science Museum in London).In 1910 Roe and his brother Humphrey founded A.V.Roe \& Co. in Manchester, they described it the "Aviator's Storehouse". During the next three years Roe designed and built aeroplanes in Manchester, then transported them to Brooklands to fly (the authorities now made him more welcome). One of the most significant of these was his Type D tractor biplane of 1911, which led to the Avro 504 two-seater trainer of 1913. This was one of the most successful trainers of all time, as around 10,000 were built. In November 1914 a flight of Avro 504s carried out the first-ever bombing raid when they attacked German airship sheds as Friedrichshafen. A.V.Roe produced the first aeroplanes with enclosed cabins during 1912: the Type F monoplane and Type G biplane. After the war, his Avian was used for several record-breaking flights. In 1928 he sold his interest in the company bearing his name and joined forces with Saunders Ltd of Cowes, on the Isle of Wight, to found Saunders-Roe Ltd. "Saro" produced a series of flying boats, from the four-seat Cutty Sark of 1929 to the large, and ill-fated, Princess of 1952.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1929 (in 1933 he incorporated his mother's name to become Sir Alliott VerdonRoe). Honorary Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society 1948.Bibliography1939, The World of Wings and Things, London.Further ReadingL.J.Ludovic, 1956, the Challenging Sky.A.J.Jackson, 1908, Avro Aircraft since 1908, London (a detailed account).JDSBiographical history of technology > Roe, Sir Edwin Alliott Verdon
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88 toward
toward [təˈwɔ:d], towards [təˈwɔ:dz] prepositiona. (direction) vers* * *[tə'wɔːd(z), tɔːd(z)]Note: When towards is used to talk about direction or position, it is almost always translated by vers: she ran toward(s) him = elle a couru vers lui. For particular usages see the entry belowWhen toward(s) is used to mean in relation to, it is translated by envers: his attitude toward(s) his parents = son attitude envers ses parents. For particular usages see the entry below= towards1) ( in the direction of) vers2) ( near) verstoward the end of — vers la fin de [day, month, life]
3) ( in relation to) enversto be friendly/hostile toward somebody — se montrer cordial/hostile envers quelqu'un
4) ( as contribution) -
89 purse
[pɜ:s, Am pɜ:rs] nchange \purse Geldbeutel m für Wechselgeld [o Kleingeld];4) ( financial resources)public \purse Staatskasse f;to be beyond one's \purse jds finanzielle Möglichkeiten übersteigen;this is beyond my \purse das kann ich mir nicht leistenPHRASES:to hold the \purse strings den Geldbeutel [o die Haushaltskasse] verwalten;to \purse one's lips/ mouth die Lippen schürzen/den Mund spitzen;( sulkily) die Lippen aufwerfen/einen Schmollmund machen viunder stress her lips would \purse slightly wenn sie angespannt war, verzog sich ihr Mund ein wenig -
90 stake
wooden \stake Holzpfahl mthe \stake der Scheiterhaufen hist;to be burnt at the \stake auf dem Scheiterhaufen verbrannt werden;to go to the \stake auf den Scheiterhaufen kommen;to go to the \stake for sb/ sth ( fig) für etw/jdn die Hand ins Feuer legen ( fam) vt to \stake sth animal etw anbinden; plant etw hochbindenPHRASES:to \stake one's claim [to sth] sein Recht [auf etw akk] einfordern;to pull up \stakes (Am) seine Zelte abbrechenhe knows how high the \stakes are er weiß, was auf dem Spiel steht;( in games) [Wett]einsatz m;high/low \stakes hoher/geringer Einsatz;to play for high \stakes um einen hohen Einsatz spielen;to double one's \stakes seinen Einsatz verdoppeln;he holds a 40% \stake in the company ihm gehören anteilsmäßig 40 % der Firma;3) ( prize money)\stakes pl Preis m4) ( horse race)\stakes pl Pferderennen ntto be high in the popularity \stakes weit oben auf der Beliebtheitsskala stehen;this will give her a definite advantage in the management \stakes dies wird ihr im Management einen definitiven Vorteil verschaffenPHRASES:to be at \stake ( in question) zur Debatte stehen;( at risk) auf dem Spiel stehen;everything was at \stake es ging um alles oder nichts;the real issue at \stake is not... die eigentliche Frage lautet nicht,... vt1) ( wager)to \stake money Geld setzen;she has \staked everything on her friend's good faith sie verlässt sich voll und ganz auf die Treue ihres Freundes;to \stake one's future on sth seine Zukunft auf etw akk aufbauen;to \stake one's honour on sth sein Ehrenwort für etw akk geben;to \stake one's life on sth sein Leben für etw akk einsetzen;to \stake one's name on sth sein Wort auf etw akk geben2) (Am);(fig fam: support)to \stake sb to sth jdm zu etw dat verhelfen, jdm etw ermöglichen -
91 NPM
1) Компьютерная техника: Non Power Mac2) Спорт: No Prize Money3) Военный термин: nuclear planning manual4) Техника: Navy programming manual5) Религия: National Pastoral Musicians7) Горное дело: недрагоценные металлы (non precious metals)8) Сокращение: National Poetry Month, National Postal Museum, Smithsonian Institution, Naval Provost Marshal, Network Product Manager, (New Product Mangement) УНП (управление по новым продуктам)9) Университет: New Public Management10) Вычислительная техника: Network Performance Monitor11) Социология: Национальные превентивные механизмы (National Preventive Mechanism)12) Фирменный знак: Northwest Physicians Mutual Insurance Company14) Сетевые технологии: Network Power Model, network processor module -
92 equal
1. adjective1) gleichdivide a cake into equal parts/portions — einen Kuchen in gleich große Stücke/Portionen aufteilen
Michael came equal third or third equal with Richard in the class exams — bei den Klassenprüfungen kam Michael zusammen mit Richard auf den dritten Platz
be on equal terms [with somebody] — [mit jemandem] gleichgestellt sein
all/other things being equal — wenn nichts dazwischen kommt
equal rights — gleiche Rechte; Gleichberechtigung, die
2)be equal to doing something — imstande sein, etwas zu tun
3)4) (evenly balanced) ausgeglichen2. nounGleichgestellte, der/diebe somebody's/something's equal — jemandem ebenbürtig sein/einer Sache (Dat.) gleichkommen
3. transitive verb,he/she/it has no or is without equal — er/sie/es hat nicht seines-/ihresgleichen
(Brit.) - ll-1) (be equal to)equal somebody/something [in something] — jemandem/einer Sache [in etwas (Dat.)] entsprechen
three times four equals twelve — drei mal vier ist [gleich] zwölf
2) (do something equal to)equal somebody — es jemandem gleichtun
* * *['i:kwəl] 1. adjective(the same in size, amount, value etc: four equal slices; coins of equal value; Are these pieces equal in size? Women want equal wages with men.) gleich2. noun(one of the same age, rank, ability etc: I am not his equal at running.) der/die Gleichgestellte3. verb(to be the same in amount, value, size etc: I cannot hope to equal him; She equalled his score of twenty points; Five and five equals ten.) gleichkommen- academic.ru/24761/equality">equality- equalize
- equalise
- equally
- equal to* * *[ˈi:kwəl]1. (the same) gleich\equal pay for \equal work gleiche Bezahlung bei gleicher Arbeit\equal in number zahlenmäßig gleichof \equal size gleich großon \equal terms unter gleichen Bedingungen\equal in volume vom Umfang her gleichone litre is \equal to 1.76 imperial pints ein Liter entspricht 1,76 ips.Robert made an \equal division of the prize money among the winners Robert teilte das Preisgeld gleichmäßig unter den Gewinnern aufto have \equal reason to do sth gleichermaßen Grund haben, etw zu tun3. (equal in status) gleich[berechtigt]all men are created \equal alle Menschen sind gleichon \equal footing gleichgestellt\equal status for men and women Gleichstellung f von Mann und Frau\equal treatment Gleichbehandlung fto be \equal to a task einer Aufgabe gerecht werden [o gewachsen sein]5.▶ all things being \equal (if other factors are the same) unter ansonsten gleichen Bedingungen; (if all goes well) wenn nichts dazwischenkommthe does not consider his brother to be his intellectual \equal er glaubt, sein Bruder sei ihm geistig unterlegenshe was the \equal of any opera singer sie konnte sich mit jeder Opernsängerin messenthis author is without \equal dieser Autor sucht seinesgleichen gehto have no \equal unübertroffen seinIII. vt1. MATH▪ to \equal sth etw ergeben [o sein]three plus four \equals seven drei plus vier ist gleich [o fam macht] sieben2. (match)we raised $500 for charity last year and we're hoping to \equal that this year wir haben letztes Jahr 500 Dollar für wohltätige Zwecke gesammelt und hoffen, dass uns das in diesem Jahr wieder gelingt3. SPORTto \equal a world record einen Weltrekord erreichen* * *['iːkwəl]1. adj1) (= identical) parts, number, value, importance etc gleichequal numbers of men and women —
to be equal in size (to) —
an amount equal to the purchase price — eine dem Kaufpreis entsprechende Summe
other things being equal —
education is a good thing, other things being equal — Bildung an sich ist etwas Gutes
2) (= without discrimination) opportunities, rights, pay, access gleichequal opportunities ( for men and women) — Chancengleichheit f (für Männer und Frauen)
equal rights for women — die Gleichberechtigung der Frau
on equal terms or an equal footing (meet, compete) — als Gleichgestellte
to be on equal terms (with sb) — (mit jdm) gleichgestellt sein
the relationship should be put on a more equal footing —
all men are equal, but some are more equal than others (hum) — alle Menschen sind gleich, nur einige sind gleicher (hum)
3)(= capable)
to be equal to the situation/task — der Situation/Aufgabe gewachsen seinto feel equal to sth — sich zu etw imstande or im Stande or in der Lage fühlen
2. n1) (in rank) Gleichgestellte(r) mf2) pl (US: pay) Bezahlung f, Entlohnung f3. vilet x equal 3 — wenn x gleich 3 ist, x sei (gleich) 3
4. vt1) (= match, rival) gleichkommen (+dat)he equalled (Brit) or equaled (US) his brother in generosity — er kam seinem Bruder an Großzügigkeit gleich
or equaled (US) — unvergleichlich
this show is not to be equalled (Brit) or equaled (US) by any other — diese Show hat nicht ihresgleichen
there is nothing to equal it — nichts kommt dem gleich
2) (MATH)x is equal to or greater/less than 10 — x ist größer/kleiner (oder) gleich zehn
* * *equal [ˈiːkwəl]1. (an Größe, Rang etc) gleich:be equal to gleichen, gleich sein (dat)( → A 3, A 4, A 5);twice three is equal to six zweimal drei ist gleich sechs;equal to new wie neu;not equal to geringer als;equal in size, of equal size (von) gleicher Größe, gleich groß;equal time USa)( RADIO, TV) gleich lange Sendezeit (für eine gegnerische politische Partei etc),b) fig die gleiche Chance (zur Entgegnung auf eine Beschuldigung etc);of equal value gleichwertig2. obs gleichmütig, gelassen:equal mind Gleichmut m3. angemessen, entsprechend, gemäß ( alle:to dat):equal to your merit Ihrem Verdienst entsprechend;be equal to sth einer Sache entsprechen oder gleichkommen4. imstande, fähig ( beide:to zu):(not) be equal to a task einer Aufgabe (nicht) gewachsen sein5. aufgelegt (to zu):be equal to a glass of wine einem Glas Wein nicht abgeneigt sein6. eben, plan (Fläche)8. BOT symmetrisch, auf beiden Seiten gleich9. gleichmäßig, -förmig10. ebenbürtig (to dat), gleichwertig:equal in strength gleich stark;on equal terms unter gleichen Bedingungen;a) auf gleicher Stufe stehen (mit),b) gleichberechtigt sein (dat)B s Gleichgestellte(r) m/f(m), -berechtigte(r) m/f(m):among equals unter Gleichgestellten;your equals deinesgleichen;equals in age Altersgenossen;he has no equal, he is without equal er hat nicht oder er sucht seinesgleichen;be sb’s equal jemandem ebenbürtig sein, besonders SPORT auch ein gleichwertiger Gegner für jemanden sein;C v/t prät und pperf -qualed, besonders Br -qualled1. jemandem, einer Sache gleichen, entsprechen, gleich sein, gleichkommen, es aufnehmen mit (in an dat):not be equal(l)ed nicht seinesgleichen haben, seinesgleichen suchen;two plus two equals four ist gleich viereq. abk1. equal2. equalizer3. equalizing4. equation5. equivalent* * *1. adjective1) gleichequal in or of equal height/weight/size/importance — etc. gleich hoch/schwer/groß/wichtig usw.
divide a cake into equal parts/portions — einen Kuchen in gleich große Stücke/Portionen aufteilen
Michael came equal third or third equal with Richard in the class exams — bei den Klassenprüfungen kam Michael zusammen mit Richard auf den dritten Platz
be on equal terms [with somebody] — [mit jemandem] gleichgestellt sein
all/other things being equal — wenn nichts dazwischen kommt
equal rights — gleiche Rechte; Gleichberechtigung, die
2)be equal to something/somebody — (strong, clever, etc. enough) einer Sache/jemandem gewachsen sein
be equal to doing something — imstande sein, etwas zu tun
3)4) (evenly balanced) ausgeglichen2. nounGleichgestellte, der/diebe somebody's/something's equal — jemandem ebenbürtig sein/einer Sache (Dat.) gleichkommen
3. transitive verb,he/she/it has no or is without equal — er/sie/es hat nicht seines-/ihresgleichen
(Brit.) - ll-equal somebody/something [in something] — jemandem/einer Sache [in etwas (Dat.)] entsprechen
three times four equals twelve — drei mal vier ist [gleich] zwölf
2) (do something equal to)* * *adj.gleich (Mathematik) adj.gleich adj.paritätisch adj. v.angleichen v.gleichkommen v. -
93 jackpot
'‹ækpot(in playing cards, some competitions etc, a fund of prize-money that goes on increasing until it is won.) pott, (stor)gevinstsubst. \/ˈdʒækpɒt\/( spill) jackpot, storgevinsthit the jackpot ( hverdagslig) ha kjempeflaks, gjøre det helt store -
94 stakes
1 (prize money) premio m sing1 (horse race) carrera f sing de caballos -
95 décima
décima sustantivo femenino (de segundo, grado) tenth;◊ tiene 39 y tres décimas his temperature is 39.3 (degrees)
décimo,-a
I adjetivo & sustantivo masculino y femenino tenth: me corresponde la décima parte del premio, my share amounts to a tenth of the prize money
II sustantivo masculino
1 (fracción) tenth
2 (de lotería) tenth part of a lottery ticket
décima sustantivo femenino tenth Locuciones: tener unas décimas, to have a slight temperature ' décima' also found in these entries: Spanish: décimo English: tenth -
96 décimo
décimo 1
◊ -ma adjetivo/pronombretenth; para ejemplos ver quinto; la décima parte a tenth
décimo 2 sustantivo masculino
décimo,-a
I adjetivo & sustantivo masculino y femenino tenth: me corresponde la décima parte del premio, my share amounts to a tenth of the prize money
II sustantivo masculino
1 (fracción) tenth
2 (de lotería) tenth part of a lottery ticket ' décimo' also found in these entries: Spanish: décima - participación English: storey - tenth - ticket -
97 engordar
engordar ( conjugate engordar) verbo transitivo verbo intransitivo [ animales] to fatten
engordar
I verbo intransitivo
1 to put on weight, get fat: deberías engordar tres kilos, you should put on three kilos
2 (causar gordura) to be fattening: las hamburguesas engordan mucho, hamburgers are very fattening
II verbo transitivo
1 to fatten (up), make fat: engordan a las gallinas con productos químicos, they feed the chickens on chemical products
2 (aumentar) to swell: la concesión del premio engordó su cuenta, the prize money swelled her bank account ' engordar' also found in these entries: English: fat - fatten - feed up - put on - weight - put -
98 jackpot
['‹ækpot](in playing cards, some competitions etc, a fund of prize-money that goes on increasing until it is won.) (vinnings)pottur -
99 jackpot
['‹ækpot](in playing cards, some competitions etc, a fund of prize-money that goes on increasing until it is won.) főnyeremény -
100 discrepancy
N1. भिन्नताThere is a lot of discrepency in the prize money for men's and women's tennis.
См. также в других словарях:
Prize money — Prize Prize (pr[imac]z), n. [F. prise a seizing, hold, grasp, fr. pris, p. p. of prendre to take, L. prendere, prehendere; in some senses, as 2 (b), either from, or influenced by, F. prix price. See {Prison}, {Prehensile}, and cf. {Pry}, and also … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
prize money — n. [< PRIZE2] money made by taking a prize; specif., profit from the sale of an enemy ship and its cargo captured in war … English World dictionary
Prize money — Generally, prize money or purse is a monetary prize awarded for winning or coming a place in a competition. Prize money also has a distinct meaning in naval warfare; it was a monetary reward paid out to the crew of a ship for capturing an enemy… … Wikipedia
prize money — noun any money given as a prize (Freq. 1) • Hypernyms: ↑prize, ↑award * * * noun 1. a. : a part of the proceeds of a captured ship or other property taken as a prize that was formerly divided among the officers and men of the ship making the… … Useful english dictionary
prize money — n. money won or given as a prize; money obtained through the sale of plunder … English contemporary dictionary
prize money — prize′ mon ey n. 1) money offered, won, or received in prizes 2) a portion of the money realized from the sale of a prize, esp. an enemy s vessel, divided among the captors • Etymology: 1740–50 … From formal English to slang
prize money — A sum of money offered by way of a reward to the winner of a contest or as the stake in a lottery. The purse or stake in a prize fight. The proceeds of the sale of a vessel or goods taken as prize of war. Under the federal prize statutes the net… … Ballentine's law dictionary
prize money — /ˈpraɪz mʌni/ (say pruyz munee) noun 1. money won as a prize in a competition. 2. British History a portion of the money from the sale of a prize (prize2 def. 1), especially an enemy s vessel, divided among the captors …
prize money — 1. money offered, won, or received in prizes. 2. a portion of the money realized from the sale of a prize, esp. an enemy s vessel, divided among the captors. [1740 50] * * * … Universalium
prize money — noun Date: 1726 1. a part of the proceeds of a captured ship formerly divided among the officers and men making the capture 2. money offered in prizes … New Collegiate Dictionary
prize-money — … Useful english dictionary