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61 Lever, William Hesketh
[br]b. 19 September 1851 Bolton, Lancashire, Englandd. 7 May 1925 Hampstead, London, England[br]English manufacturer of soap.[br]William Hesketh Lever was the son of the retail grocer James Lever, who built up the large wholesale firm of Lever \& Co. in the north-west of England. William entered the firm at the age of 19 as a commercial traveller, and in the course of his work studied the techniques of manufacture and the quality of commercial soaps available at the time. He decided that he would concentrate on the production of a soap that was not evil-smelling, would lather easily and be attractively packaged. In 1884 he produced Sunlight Soap, which became the trade mark for Lever \& Co. He had each tablet wrapped, partly to protect the soap from oxygenization and thus prevent it from becoming rancid, and partly to display his brand name as a form of advertising. In 1885 he raised a large capital sum, purchased the Soap Factory in Warrington of Winser \& Co., and began manufacture. His product contained oils from copra, palm and cotton blended with tallow and resin, and its quality was carefully monitored during production. In a short time it was in great demand and began to replace the previously available alternatives of home-made soap and poor-quality, unpleasant-smelling bars.It soon became necessary to expand the firm's premises, and in 1887 Lever purchased fifty-six acres of land upon which he set up a new centre of manufacture. This was in the Wirral in Cheshire, near the banks of the River Mersey. Production at the new factory, which was called Port Sunlight, began in January 1889. Lever introduced a number of technical improvements in the production process, including the heating systems and the recovery of glycerine (which could later be sold) from the boiling process.Like Sir Titus Salt of Saltaire before him, Lever believed it to be in the interest of the firm to house his workers in a high standard of building and comfort close to the factory.By the early twentieth century he had created Port Sunlight Village, one of the earliest and certainly the most impressive housing estates, for his employees. Architecturally the estate is highly successful, being built from a variety of natural materials and vernacular styles by a number of distinguished architects, so preventing an overall architectural monotony. The comprehensive estate comprises, in addition to the factory and houses, a church, an art gallery, schools, a cottage hospital, library, bank, fire station, post office and shops, as well as an inn and working men's institute, both of which were later additions. In 1894 Lever \& Co. went public and soon was amalgamated with other soap firms. It was at its most successful high point by 1910.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFirst Viscount Leverhulme of the Western Isles.Further Reading1985, Dictionary of Business Biography. Butterworth.Ian Campbell Bradley, 1987, Enlightened Entrepreneurs, London: Weidenfeld \& Nicolson.DY -
62 Riley, James
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1840 Halifax, Englandd. 15 July 1910 Harrogate, England[br]English steelmaker who promoted the manufacture of low-carbon bulk steel by the open-hearth process for tin plate and shipbuilding; pioneer of nickel steels.[br]After working as a millwright in Halifax, Riley found employment at the Ormesby Ironworks in Middlesbrough until, in 1869, he became manager of the Askam Ironworks in Cumberland. Three years later, in 1872, he was appointed Blast-furnace Manager at the pioneering Siemens Steel Company's works at Landore, near Swansea in South Wales. Using Spanish ore, he produced the manganese-rich iron (spiegeleisen) required as an additive to make satisfactory steel. Riley was promoted in 1874 to be General Manager at Landore, and he worked with William Siemens to develop the use of the latter's regenerative furnace for the production of open-hearth steel. He persuaded Welsh makers of tin plate to use sheets rolled from lowcarbon (mild) steel instead of from charcoal iron and, partly by publishing some test results, he was instrumental in influencing the Admiralty to build two naval vessels of mild steel, the Mercury and the Iris.In 1878 Riley moved north on his appointment as General Manager of the Steel Company of Scotland, a firm closely associated with Charles Tennant that was formed in 1872 to make steel by the Siemens process. Already by 1878, fourteen Siemens melting furnaces had been erected, and in that year 42,000 long tons of ingots were produced at the company's Hallside (Newton) Works, situated 8 km (5 miles) south-east of Glasgow. Under Riley's leadership, steelmaking in open-hearth furnaces was initiated at a second plant situated at Blochairn. Plates and sections for all aspects of shipbuilding, including boilers, formed the main products; the company also supplied the greater part of the steel for the Forth (Railway) Bridge. Riley was associated with technical modifications which improved the performance of steelmaking furnaces using Siemens's principles. He built a gasfired cupola for melting pig-iron, and constructed the first British "universal" plate mill using three-high rolls (Lauth mill).At the request of French interests, Riley investigated the properties of steels containing various proportions of nickel; the report that he read before the Iron and Steel Institute in 1889 successfully brought to the notice of potential users the greatly enhanced strength that nickel could impart and its ability to yield alloys possessing substantially lower corrodibility.The Steel Company of Scotland paid dividends in the years to 1890, but then came a lean period. In 1895, at the age of 54, Riley moved once more to another employer, becoming General Manager of the Glasgow Iron and Steel Company, which had just laid out a new steelmaking plant at Wishaw, 25 km (15 miles) south-east of Glasgow, where it already had blast furnaces. Still the technical innovator, in 1900 Riley presented an account of his experiences in introducing molten blast-furnace metal as feed for the open-hearth steel furnaces. In the early 1890s it was largely through Riley's efforts that a West of Scotland Board of Conciliation and Arbitration for the Manufactured Steel Trade came into being; he was its first Chairman and then its President.In 1899 James Riley resigned from his Scottish employment to move back to his native Yorkshire, where he became his own master by acquiring the small Richmond Ironworks situated at Stockton-on-Tees. Although Riley's 1900 account to the Iron and Steel Institute was the last of the many of which he was author, he continued to contribute to the discussion of papers written by others.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPresident, West of Scotland Iron and Steel Institute 1893–5. Vice-President, Iron and Steel Institute, 1893–1910. Iron and Steel Institute (London) Bessemer Gold Medal 1887.Bibliography1876, "On steel for shipbuilding as supplied to the Royal Navy", Transactions of the Institute of Naval Architects 17:135–55.1884, "On recent improvements in the method of manufacture of open-hearth steel", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 2:43–52 plus plates 27–31.1887, "Some investigations as to the effects of different methods of treatment of mild steel in the manufacture of plates", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 1:121–30 (plus sheets II and III and plates XI and XII).27 February 1888, "Improvements in basichearth steel making furnaces", British patent no. 2,896.27 February 1888, "Improvements in regenerative furnaces for steel-making and analogous operations", British patent no. 2,899.1889, "Alloys of nickel and steel", Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute 1:45–55.Further ReadingA.Slaven, 1986, "James Riley", in Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography 1860–1960, Volume 1: The Staple Industries (ed. A.Slaven and S. Checkland), Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press, 136–8."Men you know", The Bailie (Glasgow) 23 January 1884, series no. 588 (a brief biography, with portrait).J.C.Carr and W.Taplin, 1962, History of the British Steel Industry, Harvard University Press (contains an excellent summary of salient events).JKA -
63 elaborar
v.1 to make, to manufacture (producto).2 to elaborate, to brew, to manufacture, to fabricate.La fábrica elabora candelas The factory elaborates candles.Elsa elabora planes para la oficina Elsa elaborates plans for the office.3 to write out, to make out.Ricardo elabora textos técnicos Richard writes out technical texts.4 to draft, to do up.Ellos elaboran un plan de contrucción They draft a construction plan.* * *1 (producto) to make, manufacture, produce2 (madera, metal, etc) to work3 (idea) to work out, develop* * *verb1) to produce2) make3) prepare* * *1. VT1) (=fabricar) [+ producto] to produce, make; [+ metal, madera] to workelaboramos todos nuestros productos con ingredientes naturales — we make all our products from natural ingredients
2) (=preparar) [+ proyecto, plan] to draw up, prepare; [+ estrategia] to devise; [+ presupuesto, lista, candidatura] to draw upcómo elaborar un plan de emergencia — how to draw up o prepare an emergency plan
3) [+ documento, código] to write, prepare2.See:* * *verbo transitivo1)a) <producto/vino> to produce, make; < pan> to bake, makeb) <metal/madera> to work2) <plan/teoría> to devise, draw up; <informe/estudio> to prepare, write3) <hormona/savia> to produce* * *= construct, draft, draw, draw out, draw up, brew.Ex. The objective in executing these three stages is to construct a document profile which reflects its subject = El propósito de llevar a cabo estas tres etapas es elaborar un perfil documental que refleje su materia.Ex. Document descriptions may be drafted for a wide variety of different kinds of library material, but some common principles can be established.Ex. For example, when setting up the format for records in a data base, the user can draw a form on the screen, complete with headings for each field, and then, the data is entered into the form.Ex. One way of drawing out such a statement is to request the completion of a profile search form.Ex. At the IFLA General Council the two Sections drew up the terms of reference and proposed as members some ten representatives of national libraries.Ex. The goddess owned a potent magick cauldron in which she planned to brew a special liquid for her ugly son.----* bar que elabora su propia cerveza = brew pub.* elaborar cerveza = brew + beer.* elaborar información = digest + information.* elaborar objetivos = draw up + objectives.* elaborar un acuerdo = draw up + agreement.* elaborar una definición = hammer out + definition.* elaborar una estrategia = formulate + strategy.* elaborar una tabla = draft + table.* elaborar un índice = produce + index.* elaborar un plan = formulate + plan, draw up + plan, think out + a plan, devise + a plan.* elaborar un plan de trabajo = develop + agenda.* elaborar un programa = draw up + program(me).* * *verbo transitivo1)a) <producto/vino> to produce, make; < pan> to bake, makeb) <metal/madera> to work2) <plan/teoría> to devise, draw up; <informe/estudio> to prepare, write3) <hormona/savia> to produce* * *= construct, draft, draw, draw out, draw up, brew.Ex: The objective in executing these three stages is to construct a document profile which reflects its subject = El propósito de llevar a cabo estas tres etapas es elaborar un perfil documental que refleje su materia.
Ex: Document descriptions may be drafted for a wide variety of different kinds of library material, but some common principles can be established.Ex: For example, when setting up the format for records in a data base, the user can draw a form on the screen, complete with headings for each field, and then, the data is entered into the form.Ex: One way of drawing out such a statement is to request the completion of a profile search form.Ex: At the IFLA General Council the two Sections drew up the terms of reference and proposed as members some ten representatives of national libraries.Ex: The goddess owned a potent magick cauldron in which she planned to brew a special liquid for her ugly son.* bar que elabora su propia cerveza = brew pub.* elaborar cerveza = brew + beer.* elaborar información = digest + information.* elaborar objetivos = draw up + objectives.* elaborar un acuerdo = draw up + agreement.* elaborar una definición = hammer out + definition.* elaborar una estrategia = formulate + strategy.* elaborar una tabla = draft + table.* elaborar un índice = produce + index.* elaborar un plan = formulate + plan, draw up + plan, think out + a plan, devise + a plan.* elaborar un plan de trabajo = develop + agenda.* elaborar un programa = draw up + program(me).* * *elaborar [A1 ]vtA1 ‹producto/vino› to produce, make; ‹pan› to bake, makeun plato elaborado con los mejores ingredientes a dish prepared using the finest ingredients2 ‹metal/madera› to workB1 ‹plan/teoría› to devise, draw up, work out2 ‹informe/estudio› to prepare, writeC ‹hormona/savia› to produce* * *
elaborar ( conjugate elaborar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹producto/vino› to produce, make;
‹ pan› to bake, make
2 ‹plan/teoría› to devise, draw up;
‹informe/estudio› to prepare, write
elaborar verbo transitivo
1 (fabricar) to manufacture, produce
2 (un proyecto, una teoría) to develop
' elaborar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
compilación
- consistente
- fabricar
English:
brew
- compile
- develop
- elaborate
- hammer out
- process
- think out
- work out
- frame
- manufacture
- work
* * *elaborar vt1. [producto] to make, to manufacture;[plato, alimento] to prepare; [bebida] to make, to produce; [sustancia orgánica, hormona] to produce2. [idea, teoría] to work out, to develop;[plan, proyecto] to draw up; [estudio, informe] to prepare* * ** * *elaborar vt1) : to make, to produce2) : to devise, to draw up* * *elaborar vb1. (producto) to produce / to make2. (cerveza) to brew -
64 перерабатывать
1) General subject: convert, manufacture, manufacture (сырье), overdrive, overtire, overwork, process, recast, remake, remanufacture, revise, rewrite, work, work over, overtire oneself, reingeneer, work long hours2) Geology: retreat (подвергать повторной обработке)3) Engineering: clear (почтовые отправления), digest, process (подвергать обработке), recover, redesign (проект или конструкцию), reprocess (подвергать повторной обработке), retreat, revise (напр. статью), treat (подвергать обработке), work over (подвергать обработке), work overtime (работать сверх нормы), overhaul10) TV: produce (сценарий, программу ( в том числе адаптировать))12) Jargon: rip off (недобросовестно; произведение), (недобросовестно) rip off (произведение)13) Information technology: crunch16) Polymers: work17) Automation: redevelop (конструкцию)18) leg.N.P. redraft, revise (a draft, such as draft resolution, draft convention, or draft statute)19) Makarov: clear (груз, почтовые отправления), process (подвергать обработке, напр. сырье в полуфабрикат или готовую продукцию), refine (напр. нефть), revise (переделывать, напр. книгу статью), rewrite (о тексте), work (подвергать обработке, напр. сырье в полуфабрикат или готовую продукцию), work overtune (работать сверх нормы), convert into -
65 производство производств·о
1) (процесс) production, output; (изготовление) manufacture, making, makeнаращивать мощности по производству (чего-л.) — to build up / to enlarge the capacties
сдерживать / сокращать производство — to curb / to curtail / to cut down production
форсировать производство — to step up production, to go ahead with production
производство снизилось — production has fallen / dropped
военное производство — war / military production
вредное производство — dangerous trade / industry
крупносерийное производство — large-scale manufacture / serial production
массовое производство — large-scale / high volume / quantity production, production in bulk
мировое производство — world output / production
отечественное производство — domestic / home-produced production
товары отечественного производства — home-made / home-produced goods
поточное производство — flow / line production
сельскохозяйственное производство — agricultural / farm production / output
убыточное производство — unprofitable / wasteful production
энергоёмкие производства — energyintensive industrial facilities; power consuming industries
интенсификация производства — the intensifying / intensification of production
наращивание темпов производства — steady rise in the rate of production; stepping up the rate of production
объём производства — overall / total production
общий объём производства — overall / total output
свёртывание объёма производства — curtailment of / cutback in production
сокращение / ограничение (объёма) производства — production cutback
отходы производства — waste materials, industrial wastes
использовать отходы производства — to utilize waste materials / industrial wastes
производство на душу населения — per capita / per head production
производство, обеспечивающее работу военной промышленности — defence-supporting production
производство потребительских товаров — consumer goods production, output of consumer goods
производство продукции военного / оборонного назначения — defence production
производство продукции невоенного / гражданского назначения — civilian production
производство ядерного оружия — manufacture / production of nuclear weapons
расширение / рост производства — expansion of production
сокращение производства — curtailnent of production, cutback in production
товары отечественного производства — home-made / -produced goods
увеличение темпов производства — step-up / increase in the rate of production
2) (отрасль промышленности) industry3) (завод, фабрика) factory, plant; worksсудебное производство — procedure, proceedings
начать судебное производство — to take / to institute legal proceedings (against)
гражданское судебное производство — civil procedure, proceedings in civil causes
суммарное / упрощённое производство — summary jurisdiction / proceedings
в порядке суммарного производства — on summary jurisdiction / proceeding
производство, совершаемое административными властями — proceedings instituted by administrative authorities
Russian-english dctionary of diplomacy > производство производств·о
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66 серийное производство
1) General subject: batch production, manufacturing, mass production, produce on the line, repetition work, manufacturing production, production chain, serial production2) Military: batch series line production, large-scale production (напр. оружия)3) Engineering: full production, full-scale production, lot production, quantity production, routine fabrication, serial publication, series fabrication4) Construction: line production, series manufacture5) Railway term: commercialize, production in lot6) Economy: duplicate production, production in lot sizes, production manufacturing, repetitive manufacturing, serial operation, serial work, series manufacturing7) Accounting: production in lots8) Information technology: serial manufacture9) Food industry: batch process10) Mechanics: batch repetition work, batch work, batch-oriented production11) Advertising: batch series production12) Business: batch manufacturing, large output, large quantity manufacture, large-scale manufacture, large-scale manufacturing, large-scale production, mass manufacturing, production run, series production13) Production: volume production14) Industrial economy: serial manufacturing (англ. термин взят из United States Patent No. 5229948)15) Automation: batch( - lot) manufacturing, batch mode, batch processing, batch production work, batchwork, discrete batch manufacturing, mixed operation, mixed production16) Quality control: building in series18) Chemical weapons: batch production/serial production19) Makarov: batch production (партиями), full-scale production (в противовес экспериментальному или опытному), quantity production (в противовес экспериментальному или опытному), series production (партиями)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > серийное производство
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67 lavorazione
"working;Verarbeitung;Bearbeitung;usinagem"* * *f di materia prima processingdi legno carving* * *lavorazione s.f.1 (il lavorare un materiale) working, manufacturing, processing, making; (fattura) workmanship: lavorazione a caldo, hot working; lavorazione a catena, line production; lavorazione a mano, handwork; lavorazione a macchina, machining; lavorazione a pieno ritmo, full-scale processing; lavorazione dei metalli, metalworking; lavorazione del cotone, cotton manufacture; lavorazione del tabacco, tobacco manufacture; lavorazione del vetro, glass making; lavorazione della carta, paper making; lavorazione per lotti, batch process; lavorazione su commessa, per conto terzi, jobbing; lavorazione perfetta, finished (o faultless) manufacture (o workmanship); ciclo di lavorazione, production (o manufacturing) cycle; impianti per la lavorazione, processing (o manufacturing) equipment; essere in lavorazione, to be in progress (o in the course of manufacture); entrare in lavorazione, to enter the production cycle2 (complesso delle operazioni per la realizzazione di un'opera) production, making: iniziare, sospendere la lavorazione di un film, to start, to stop the production of a film3 (agr.) tilling, cultivation.* * *[lavorat'tsjone]sostantivo femminile1) making, manufacturing, processinglavorazione a macchina — machine work, machining
2) agr. tillage, cultivation* * *lavorazione/lavorat'tsjone/sostantivo f.1 making, manufacturing, processing; lavorazione delle carni meat processing; lavorazione a macchina machine work, machining; ciclo di lavorazione operation schedule; metodo di lavorazione processing techinque; essere in lavorazione to be in progress2 agr. tillage, cultivation. -
68 verarbeiten
v/t1. process; (zu etw. machen) make (zu into); (behandeln) treat; die Seide wird zu Teppichen verarbeitet carpets are made from the silk, the silk is used to make carpets2. (geistig verarbeiten) digest; (nutzbar machen) put to use, use; in einer Abhandlung etc.: auch take into consideration; seine Erlebnisse zu einem Roman verarbeiten turn one’s experiences into a novel; Märchenmotive verarbeiten use ( oder employ) fairytale motifs; Kinder können das nicht ( so schnell) verarbeiten children can’t assimilate it (so quickly); das muss ich erst mal verarbeiten I’ll have to digest it first* * *to process* * *ver|ạr|bei|ten ptp vera\#rbeitetvtto use (zu etw to make sth); (TECH, BIOL ETC) to process; Gold etc to work; (= verbrauchen) to consume; (= verdauen) to digest; (fig) to use (zu for); Stoff to treat; Daten to process; Erlebnis etc to assimilate, to digest; (= bewältigen) to overcome* * *ver·ar·bei·ten *vt▪ etw \verarbeiten to use sthFleisch \verarbeiten to process meat\verarbeitendes Gewerbe manufacturing sector\verarbeitende Industrie processing [or manufacturing] industry▪ etw \verarbeiten to use sth [up]der Mörtel muss rasch verarbeitet werden, bevor er fest wird the plaster must be applied [or used] immediately before it hardens▪ etw \verarbeiten to assimilate stheine Enttäuschung/Scheidung/jds Tod \verarbeiten to come to terms with a disappointment/divorce/sb's death* * *transitives Verb1) useetwas zu etwas verarbeiten — make something into something; use something to make something
2) (verdauen) digest < food>3) (geistig bewältigen) digest, assimilate <film, experience, impressions>; come to terms with < disappointment>* * *verarbeiten v/t1. process; (zu etwas machen) make (zu into); (behandeln) treat;die Seide wird zu Teppichen verarbeitet carpets are made from the silk, the silk is used to make carpets2. (geistig verarbeiten) digest; (nutzbar machen) put to use, use; in einer Abhandlung etc: auch take into consideration;seine Erlebnisse zu einem Roman verarbeiten turn one’s experiences into a novel;Märchenmotive verarbeiten use ( oder employ) fairytale motifs;Kinder können das nicht (so schnell) verarbeiten children can’t assimilate it (so quickly);das muss ich erst mal verarbeiten I’ll have to digest it first* * *transitives Verb1) useetwas zu etwas verarbeiten — make something into something; use something to make something
2) (verdauen) digest < food>3) (geistig bewältigen) digest, assimilate <film, experience, impressions>; come to terms with < disappointment>* * *(zu) v.to manufacture (into) v. v.to handle v.to process v.to work up v. -
69 opération
opération [ɔpeʀasjɔ̃]feminine nouna. operation• tu as fini tes opérations ? have you done your sums?b. ( = tractation) transaction• notre équipe a réalisé une bonne opération (en affaires) our team got a good deal ; (en sport) our team did a really good job* * *ɔpeʀasjɔ̃1) Médecineopération (chirurgicale) — operation, surgery [U]
faire des opérations — ( pour calculer) to do calculations; École to do sums
3) ( étape d'un processus) operation4) ( fonctionnement) process5) Finance ( transaction) transaction6) ( suite d'actions concrètes) gén, Armée operationopération ‘non à la misère’ — anti-poverty campaign
•Phrasal Verbs:* * *ɔpeʀasjɔ̃ nf1) MÉDECINE operationsalle d'opération — operating theatre Grande-Bretagne operating room USA
2) (commerciale, militaire) operation3) COMMERCE transaction* * *opération nf1 Méd opération (chirurgicale) operation, surgery ¢; c'était une petite/grosse opération it was a minor/major operation; elle a dû avoir une grosse opération she had to undergo major surgery ou have a major operation;2 Math ( type de calcul) operation; ( calcul) calculation; les quatre opérations the four basic operations; le résultat d'une opération the result of a calculation; faire des opérations ( pour calculer) to do calculations; Scol to do sums;3 ( étape d'un processus) operation, process; les diverses opérations dans la production de la soie the various operations ou processes involved in silk manufacture;4 ( fonctionnement) process; l'opération de l'esprit/de la digestion the thought/digestive process;7 ( suite d'actions concrètes) gén, Mil operation; Pub campaign; opération de police police operation; opération ‘non à la misère’ anti-poverty campaign; opération de prestige prestige venture.opération à la baisse bear transaction; opération à cœur ouvert open-heart surgery ¢; opération au comptant gén cash transaction; ( en bourse) spot transaction; opération escargot strike strategy whereby truck drivers drive deliberately slowly to obstruct traffic; opération à la hausse bull transaction; opération à terme ( Bourse des valeurs) forward transaction; ( Bourse des matières premières) futures transaction; opérations de couverture hedging ¢.[ɔperasjɔ̃] nom fémininpratiquer une opération to carry out surgery ou an operationsubir une grave/petite opération to undergo major/minor surgery, to have a major/minor operationune opération (chirurgicale) surgery, a surgical operationopération à chaud/froid emergency/interval surgeryopération à la baisse/hausse bull/bear transactionopération boursière ou de Bourse stock exchange transaction ou dealingopération bancaire ou de banque bank transactionopération au comptant spot ou cash dealopération à prime option dealings ou bargains4. [manœuvre] operationnous faisons appel à lui pour des opérations ponctuelles we call upon his services, when we need a specific job carried out‘opération prix cassés’ ‘price-slashing drive’opération de commando/sauvetage commando/rescue operationopération coup de poing: la police a effectué une opération coup de poing dans le quartier the police swooped on the area‘opération coup de poing sur les chaînes hi-fi’ ‘hi-fi prices slashed’une opération escargot a perturbé la circulation hier a go-slow (UK) ou slowdown (US) by drivers disrupted traffic yesterday5. [démarche] process6. RELIGION -
70 Bessemer, Sir Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 19 January 1813 Charlton (near Hitchin), Hertfordshire, Englandd. 15 January 1898 Denmark Hill, London, England[br]English inventor of the Bessemer steelmaking process.[br]The most valuable part of Bessemer's education took place in the workshop of his inventor father. At the age of only 17 he went to London to seek his fortune and set himself up in the trade of casting art works in white metal. He went on to the embossing of metals and other materials and this led to his first major invention, whereby a date was incorporated in the die for embossing seals, thus preventing the wholesale forgeries that had previously been committed. For this, a grateful Government promised Bessemer a paid position, a promise that was never kept; recognition came only in 1879 with a belated knighthood. Bessemer turned to other inventions, mainly in metalworking, including a process for making bronze powder and gold paint. After he had overcome technical problems, the process became highly profitable, earning him a considerable income during the forty years it was in use.The Crimean War presented inventors such as Bessemer with a challenge when weaknesses in the iron used to make the cannon became apparent. In 1856, at his Baxter House premises in St Paneras, London, he tried fusing cast iron with steel. Noticing the effect of an air current on the molten mixture, he constructed a reaction vessel or converter in which air was blown through molten cast iron. There was a vigorous reaction which nearly burned the house down, and Bessemer found the iron to be almost completely decarburized, without the slag threads always present in wrought iron. Bessemer had in fact invented not only a new process but a new material, mild steel. His paper "On the manufacture of malleable iron and steel without fuel" at the British Association meeting in Cheltenham later that year created a stir. Bessemer was courted by ironmasters to license the process. However, success was short-lived, for they found that phosphorus in the original iron ore passed into the metal and rendered it useless. By chance, Bessemer had used in his trials pig-iron, derived from haematite, a phosphorus-free ore. Bessemer tried hard to overcome the problem, but lacking chemical knowledge he resigned himself to limiting his process to this kind of pig-iron. This limitation was removed in 1879 by Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, who substituted a chemically basic lining in the converter in place of the acid lining used by Bessemer. This reacted with the phosphorus to form a substance that could be tapped off with the slag, leaving the steel free from this harmful element. Even so, the new material had begun to be applied in engineering, especially for railways. The open-hearth process developed by Siemens and the Martin brothers complemented rather than competed with Bessemer steel. The widespread use of the two processes had a revolutionary effect on mechanical and structural engineering and earned Bessemer around £1 million in royalties before the patents expired.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1879. FRS 1879. Royal Society of Arts Albert Gold Medal 1872.Bibliography1905, Sir Henry Bessemer FRS: An Autobiography, London.LRD -
71 Bau
m; -s, -ten1. nur Sg.; Vorgang: construction, building; von Musikinstrumenten: building; Klavier: manufacture; im oder in Bau under construction, being built; sich im oder in Bau befinden be under ( oder in the process of) construction; mit dem Bau beginnen start building, begin construction4. nur Sg.; (Baugewerbe) building; er ist beim Bau he’s in building, he’s in the building ( oder construction) business; er ist vom Bau umg., fig. he knows the score5. nur Sg.; (Baustelle) (building- oder construction-)site; er arbeitet auf dem Bau he’s a building worker—m; -(e)s, -e; Jägerspr., von Dachs: sett; von Fuchs: earth, hole; von Kaninchen: burrow, hole; von Biber: lodge; zu Bau gehen go to earth* * *der Bau(Aufbau) structure;(Bautätigkeit) construction;(Gebäude) building;(Tierwohnung) den; lair; burrow; hole* * *[bau]m1) -(e)s, no pl (= das Bauen) building, constructionim or in Báú — under construction
sich im Báú befinden — to be under construction
das im Báú befindliche Kraftwerk — the power station which is under construction
der Báú des Hauses dauerte ein Jahr — it took a year to build the house
mit dem Báú beginnen, an den Báú gehen — to begin building or construction
den Báú beenden, mit dem Báú fertig sein — to finish building, to complete construction
2) -(e)s, no pl (= Aufbau) structure; (von Satz, Maschine, Apparat auch) construction; (= Körperbau)von kräftigem/schwächlichem Báú sein — to be powerfully/slenderly built, to have a powerful/slender build or physique
3) -s, no pl (= Baustelle) building siteauf dem Báú arbeiten, beim Báú sein — to be a building worker, to work on a building site
vom Báú sein (fig inf) — to know the ropes (inf)
4) -(e)s, -ten [-tn](= Gebäude) building; (= Bauwerk) constructionim Báú sein — to be down the pit or mine
4 Tage Báú — 4 days in the guardhouse
8)* * *der1) (a burrow or hole of an animal, especially of a fox.) earth2) (a hole dug for shelter: a rabbit burrow.) burrow3) ((a way of) constructing or putting together: The bridge is still under construction.) construction* * *Bau1<-[e]s, -ten>[bau, pl ˈbautn̩]mim \Bau befindlich under constructionmit dem \Bau beginnen to start buildingim [o in] \Bau sein to be under constructionauf dem \Bau arbeiten to work on a building site, to be a construction workerBau2<-[e]s, -e>[bau]m1. (Erdhöhle) burrow, hole; (Biberbau) [beaver] lodge; (Dachsbau) sett; (Fuchsbau) earth, den; (Wolfsbau) lairnicht aus dem \Bau kommen to not stick one's nose out[side] the door* * *Ider; Bau[e]s, Bauten1) o. Pl. building; constructionmit dem Bau [von etwas] beginnen — start construction [of something]; start building [something]
2) (Gebäude) building3) o. Pl. (Baustelle) building siteauf dem Bau arbeiten — (Bauarbeiter sein) be in the building trade
4) o. Pl. (Struktur) structure5) o. Pl. (KörperBau) buildIIvon schmalem Bau sein — be slenderly built; have a slender physique
der; Bau[e]s, Baue (KaninchenBau) burrow; hole; (FuchsBau) earth; (WolfsBau) lair; (DachsBau) sett; earthnicht aus dem Bau gehen/kommen — (fig. ugs.) not stick or put one's nose outside the door (coll.)
* * *Bau1 m; -s, -tenim oderin Bau under construction, being built;in Bau befinden be under ( oder in the process of) construction;mit dem Bau beginnen start building, begin construction2. Gebäude: building;er ist beim Bau he’s in building, he’s in the building ( oder construction) business;er ist vom Bau umg, fig he knows the scoreer arbeitet auf dem Bau he’s a building worker6. MIL sl guardhouse;fünf Tage Bau five days detention ( oder confined to barracks)Bau2 m; -(e)s, -e; JAGD, von Dachs: sett; von Fuchs: earth, hole; von Kaninchen: burrow, hole; von Biber: lodge;zu Bau gehen go to earth* * *Ider; Bau[e]s, Bauten1) o. Pl. building; constructionmit dem Bau [von etwas] beginnen — start construction [of something]; start building [something]
2) (Gebäude) building3) o. Pl. (Baustelle) building siteauf dem Bau arbeiten — (Bauarbeiter sein) be in the building trade
4) o. Pl. (Struktur) structure5) o. Pl. (KörperBau) buildIIvon schmalem Bau sein — be slenderly built; have a slender physique
der; Bau[e]s, Baue (KaninchenBau) burrow; hole; (FuchsBau) earth; (WolfsBau) lair; (DachsBau) sett; earthnicht aus dem Bau gehen/kommen — (fig. ugs.) not stick or put one's nose outside the door (coll.)
* * *-ten m.badger set n.building n.construction n.fox hole n.rabbit hole n. -
72 conflictivo
adj.conflictive, conflicting, adversarial, divisive.* * *► adjetivo1 (situación) difficult; (tema) controversial* * *(f. - conflictiva)adj.2) troubled* * *ADJ [sociedad] troubled; [asunto] controversial; [sistema] unstable; [situación] tense, troubledzona conflictiva — troubled region, trouble spot
* * *- va adjetivoa) ( problemático) < situación> difficult; < época> troubledb) ( polémico) <tema/persona> controversialc) (AmL) ( atormentado) < persona> troubled* * *= controversial, disputed, troubled, problematic, problematical, troublesome.Ex. The last 3 years while grants were available saw a rise in loans, readers and outreach services, a controversial stock revision and scrapping were carried out and a PC was taken in use.Ex. Disputed and even fraudulent works of history can make their way onto library shelves.Ex. These thoughts and many more like them flitted to and fro ceaselessly over the troubled surface of his mind.Ex. This attitude is based on the waste bin decision process widely used in political and educational organisations, which tend to have open-ended goals, problematic preferences, hazy technology, and poor feeback.Ex. The manufacture of these high-density chips is problematical.Ex. Measures to prevent such incidents include fitting burglar alarms in libraries and taking quick and decisive action against troublesome users.* * *- va adjetivoa) ( problemático) < situación> difficult; < época> troubledb) ( polémico) <tema/persona> controversialc) (AmL) ( atormentado) < persona> troubled* * *= controversial, disputed, troubled, problematic, problematical, troublesome.Ex: The last 3 years while grants were available saw a rise in loans, readers and outreach services, a controversial stock revision and scrapping were carried out and a PC was taken in use.
Ex: Disputed and even fraudulent works of history can make their way onto library shelves.Ex: These thoughts and many more like them flitted to and fro ceaselessly over the troubled surface of his mind.Ex: This attitude is based on the waste bin decision process widely used in political and educational organisations, which tend to have open-ended goals, problematic preferences, hazy technology, and poor feeback.Ex: The manufacture of these high-density chips is problematical.Ex: Measures to prevent such incidents include fitting burglar alarms in libraries and taking quick and decisive action against troublesome users.* * *conflictivo -va1 (problemático) ‹situación› difficult; ‹época› troubledla zona más conflictiva del país the area of the country with the most problems2(bélico): se considera zona conflictiva it is considered an area of conflict o a conflict zone3 (polémico) ‹tema/persona› controversial4( AmL) (atormentado): es una persona muy conflictiva he's a very troubled person, he's a person with many inner conflicts* * *
conflictivo◊ -va adjetivo
‹ época› troubled;
conflictivo,-a adjetivo
1 (problemático) era un niño conflictivo, he was a problem child
2 (polémico) controversial
3 (turbulento) unsettled
' conflictivo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
conflictiva
English:
discrepant
- hot
- trouble
* * *conflictivo, -a adj1. [polémico] controversial2. [época, país] troubled;una zona conflictiva de Europa a trouble spot o an area of conflict in Europe3. [persona] difficult* * *adj2 persona troublemaking* * *conflictivo, -va adj1) : troubled2) : controversial -
73 desde entonces
adv.ever since, from that time on, ever after, from that time.* * *since then* * ** * *= ever since, henceforth, in the interim, since, since that time, since then, henceforward, ever since then, ever since then, thenceforth, in the intervening years, ever after, in the intervening period, since that dayEx. By the 1820s good white paper was regularly produced with the aid of chlorine bleaches, and the process has been used in the manufacture of virtually all white paper ever since.Ex. Henceforth the inventory function was no longer to be a part of the functions of the library's catalog.Ex. In the interim there has been considerable activity in developing guidelines for catalogue headings and in compiling authority lists.Ex. It has since been echoed repeatedly in the discussion of cataloging despite the persuasive and decisive refutation of it by Panizzi before the Royal Commission.Ex. This practice has been adopted by a number of national cataloguing codes promulgated since that time.Ex. Since then library planning has developed along lines best suited to British practise and needs.Ex. Originally the advent of on-line interactive searches was hailed by some as a boon to users who could henceforward conduct their own searches.Ex. Ever since then, numerous materials have been tried for producing types, including baked mud, wood engraving, copper, tin, and lead.Ex. Ever since then, numerous materials have been tried for producing types, including baked mud, wood engraving, copper, tin, and lead.Ex. From 1751 to 1766 he copied out the details of all the various processes in two books, which were thenceforth kept in the factory's archives.Ex. In the intervening years reference collections and reference services have changed greatly with the introduction of electronic media.Ex. The author focuses on debunking the Cinderella Myth -- that relates the tale of Cinderella who is abused and exploited until she finds Prince Charming and lives happily ever after.Ex. The present survey involved contacting the same libraries and institutions in order to see what changes had taken place in the intervening period.Ex. A lot has been written about the plunge in consumer confidence since that day.* * *= ever since, henceforth, in the interim, since, since that time, since then, henceforward, ever since then, ever since then, thenceforth, in the intervening years, ever after, in the intervening period, since that dayEx: By the 1820s good white paper was regularly produced with the aid of chlorine bleaches, and the process has been used in the manufacture of virtually all white paper ever since.
Ex: Henceforth the inventory function was no longer to be a part of the functions of the library's catalog.Ex: In the interim there has been considerable activity in developing guidelines for catalogue headings and in compiling authority lists.Ex: It has since been echoed repeatedly in the discussion of cataloging despite the persuasive and decisive refutation of it by Panizzi before the Royal Commission.Ex: This practice has been adopted by a number of national cataloguing codes promulgated since that time.Ex: Since then library planning has developed along lines best suited to British practise and needs.Ex: Originally the advent of on-line interactive searches was hailed by some as a boon to users who could henceforward conduct their own searches.Ex: Ever since then, numerous materials have been tried for producing types, including baked mud, wood engraving, copper, tin, and lead.Ex: Ever since then, numerous materials have been tried for producing types, including baked mud, wood engraving, copper, tin, and lead.Ex: From 1751 to 1766 he copied out the details of all the various processes in two books, which were thenceforth kept in the factory's archives.Ex: In the intervening years reference collections and reference services have changed greatly with the introduction of electronic media.Ex: The author focuses on debunking the Cinderella Myth -- that relates the tale of Cinderella who is abused and exploited until she finds Prince Charming and lives happily ever after.Ex: The present survey involved contacting the same libraries and institutions in order to see what changes had taken place in the intervening period.Ex: A lot has been written about the plunge in consumer confidence since that day. -
74 lejía de cloro
(n.) = chlorine bleachEx. By the 1820s good white paper was regularly produced with the aid of chlorine bleaches, and the process has been used in the manufacture of virtually all white paper ever since.* * *(n.) = chlorine bleachEx: By the 1820s good white paper was regularly produced with the aid of chlorine bleaches, and the process has been used in the manufacture of virtually all white paper ever since.
-
75 lucha
f.1 fight.la lucha contra el cáncer the fight against cancerlucha de clases class struggle o warlucha libre all-in wrestling2 tug-of-war.pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: luchar.* * *1 (gen) fight, struggle2 DEPORTE wrestling\lucha de clases class strugglelucha libre free-style wrestling* * *noun f.1) fight2) struggle3) wrestling* * *SF [forma familiar] de Luz, Lucía* * *1) (combate, pelea) fight; ( para conseguir algo) struggle2) (Dep) wrestling•* * *= combat, contention, scramble, fight, struggle, fray, crusade, strife, contest, fighting, tug of war, battle.Ex. It is not without significance perhaps that some writers on the reference interview use the term 'encounter', which the Concise Oxford Dictionary defines as 'meet as adversary', 'meeting in combat'.Ex. Among the trends are: more focus on user needs, a contention between optical products and on-line access; and a focus in the USA on formulation of major information policies.Ex. Mergers and acquisitions are playing an increasing important part in corporate strategies, stimulated by the scramble for market position in the new Europe.Ex. The proud mother, as a result, had been a leader in the fight to establish a program for the 'gifted and talented' in the public school system.Ex. The struggle to make the library an integral part of the educational process is a long-standing one which has yet to be resolved.Ex. The academic librarian, by remaining neutral, can stay above the fray and does not need to take sides in order to provide scholars with access to the truth.Ex. The Thatcher government's crusade for privatisation is also hitting British libraries.Ex. If performance evaluation is viewed as a tool of second or third-level by supervisors it loses its clout and encourages strife.Ex. Anyway, experience had taught him that a subordinate who attempts to subdue a superordinate is almost always lost; the superordinate has too many advantages in such a contest.Ex. The children were involved in manual labour, guard duty, front-line fighting, bomb manufacture, setting sea/land mines & radio & communication.Ex. Library administrators might be able to predict their fortunes in the academic tug of war for funds if they understood more clearly the attitudes of institutional administrators towards libraries.Ex. Encounters between indigenous and colonizing peoples are described as MASSACRES when the indigenous people won and battles when the colonists won.----* emprender una lucha contra = launch + attack on.* en la lucha contra = in the battle against.* enzarzarse en la lucha = engage in + combat.* enzarzarse en una lucha a muerte = get into + a fight to the death.* lucha a muerte = fight to death.* lucha armada = armed struggle.* lucha contra las drogas = war on drugs.* lucha contra los insectos = pest control.* lucha de clases = class warfare.* lucha de ingenio = battle of wits.* lucha de poderes = power struggle, battle of wills.* lucha de resistencia = battle of wills.* lucha diaria = daily grind.* luchador de lucha libre = wrestler.* lucha enconada = bitter struggle.* lucha entre tres = three-horse race.* lucha hasta la muerte = fight to death.* lucha intelectual = battle of wits.* lucha libre = professional wrestling, wrestling.* lucha por el poder = power struggle.* lucha por el título = title race.* luchas internas = infighting [in-fighting].* lucha territorial = turf war.* * *1) (combate, pelea) fight; ( para conseguir algo) struggle2) (Dep) wrestling•* * *= combat, contention, scramble, fight, struggle, fray, crusade, strife, contest, fighting, tug of war, battle.Ex: It is not without significance perhaps that some writers on the reference interview use the term 'encounter', which the Concise Oxford Dictionary defines as 'meet as adversary', 'meeting in combat'.
Ex: Among the trends are: more focus on user needs, a contention between optical products and on-line access; and a focus in the USA on formulation of major information policies.Ex: Mergers and acquisitions are playing an increasing important part in corporate strategies, stimulated by the scramble for market position in the new Europe.Ex: The proud mother, as a result, had been a leader in the fight to establish a program for the 'gifted and talented' in the public school system.Ex: The struggle to make the library an integral part of the educational process is a long-standing one which has yet to be resolved.Ex: The academic librarian, by remaining neutral, can stay above the fray and does not need to take sides in order to provide scholars with access to the truth.Ex: The Thatcher government's crusade for privatisation is also hitting British libraries.Ex: If performance evaluation is viewed as a tool of second or third-level by supervisors it loses its clout and encourages strife.Ex: Anyway, experience had taught him that a subordinate who attempts to subdue a superordinate is almost always lost; the superordinate has too many advantages in such a contest.Ex: The children were involved in manual labour, guard duty, front-line fighting, bomb manufacture, setting sea/land mines & radio & communication.Ex: Library administrators might be able to predict their fortunes in the academic tug of war for funds if they understood more clearly the attitudes of institutional administrators towards libraries.Ex: Encounters between indigenous and colonizing peoples are described as MASSACRES when the indigenous people won and battles when the colonists won.* emprender una lucha contra = launch + attack on.* en la lucha contra = in the battle against.* enzarzarse en la lucha = engage in + combat.* enzarzarse en una lucha a muerte = get into + a fight to the death.* lucha a muerte = fight to death.* lucha armada = armed struggle.* lucha contra las drogas = war on drugs.* lucha contra los insectos = pest control.* lucha de clases = class warfare.* lucha de ingenio = battle of wits.* lucha de poderes = power struggle, battle of wills.* lucha de resistencia = battle of wills.* lucha diaria = daily grind.* luchador de lucha libre = wrestler.* lucha enconada = bitter struggle.* lucha entre tres = three-horse race.* lucha hasta la muerte = fight to death.* lucha intelectual = battle of wits.* lucha libre = professional wrestling, wrestling.* lucha por el poder = power struggle.* lucha por el título = title race.* luchas internas = infighting [in-fighting].* lucha territorial = turf war.* * *A1 (combate, pelea) fight2 (para conseguir algo, superar un problema) struggledecidieron abandonar la lucha they decided to give up the strugglela eterna lucha entre el bien y el mal the eternal struggle between good and evillas luchas internas están debilitando el partido infighting o internal conflict is weakening the partyuna campaña de lucha contra el hambre a campaign to combat faminela lucha por la supervivencia the fight o struggle for survivalla lucha contra el cáncer the fight against cancerCompuestos:armed struggle o conflictclass struggleB ( Dep) wrestlingCompuestos:cage fightingall-in wrestling, freestyle wrestlingtag wrestling* * *
Del verbo luchar: ( conjugate luchar)
lucha es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
lucha
luchar
lucha sustantivo femenino
( para conseguir algo) struggle;
la lucha contra el cáncer the fight against cancerb) (Dep) wrestling;
luchar ( conjugate luchar) verbo intransitivo
lucha por la paz to fight for peace
d) (Dep) to wrestle
lucha sustantivo femenino
1 (combate) fight
lucha libre, wrestling
2 (trabajo, esfuerzo) struggle: hubo una lucha interna para cambiar a los dirigentes del partido, there was internal turmoil regarding replacing party heads
lucha de clases, class struggle
luchar verbo transitivo to fight wrestle
♦ Locuciones: luchar con uñas y dientes, to fight nail and tooth
' lucha' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
antiterrorista
- cuartel
- duelo
- pelea
- abandonar
- armado
- continuo
- cooperar
- desigual
- equilibrado
- guerrilla
- implacable
- llave
- pugna
- sostener
English:
all-in wrestling
- battle
- charity
- class struggle
- contest
- desperate
- fight
- grim
- struggle
- throw
- tug-of-war
- tussle
- war
- wrestling
- warden
* * *lucha nf1. [combate físico] fightla lucha armada the armed struggle2. [enfrentamiento] fight;la lucha contra el cáncer/el desempleo the fight against cancer/unemployment;hubo una lucha muy dura por el liderato the leadership was bitterly contested;fracasó en su lucha por cambiar la ley she failed in her struggle o fight to change the law;las luchas internas del partido the in-fighting within the partylucha de clases class struggle3. [esfuerzo] struggle;es una lucha conseguir que se coman todo it's a struggle to get them to eat it all up4. [deporte] wrestlinglucha grecorromana Graeco-Roman wrestling;lucha libre freestyle o all-in wrestling5. [en baloncesto] jump ballLUCHA LIBRELucha libre, or freestyle wrestling, is a very popular spectator sport in Mexico and features comical masked wrestlers who often become larger-than-life figures. In any fight there will be a goodie (“técnico”) and a baddie (“rudo”) and the action consists of spectacularly acrobatic leaps and throws, and pantomime violence. These wrestlers are so popular that they often feature in special wrestling magazines, as well as on television and radio. The most famous of all was “el Santo” (The Saint), who always wore a distinctive silver mask. He appeared in dozens of films and is still remembered with affection despite his death in 1984.* * *f1 fight, struggle2 DEP wrestling3 en baloncesto jump ball* * *lucha nf1) : struggle, fight2) : wrestling* * *lucha n fight / struggle -
76 problemático
adj.problematical, troublesome, problem, problematic.* * *► adjetivo1 (cuestión) problematic; (joven) difficult* * *(f. - problemática)adj.* * *ADJ problematic* * *- ca adjetivo problematic, difficult* * *= dodgy [dodgier -comp., dodgiest -sup.], sticky [stickier -comp., stickiest -sup.], troublesome, problem, problematic, problematical, problem-ridden, fractious, bumpy, dicey [dicier -comp., diciest -sup.], afoul.Ex. The statistical procedures from Czchekoslovakia and Romania have been pretty dodgy and unsatisfactory.Ex. The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.Ex. Measures to prevent such incidents include fitting burglar alarms in libraries and taking quick and decisive action against troublesome users.Ex. Problem patrons include, but are not limited to, illiterates simply seeking shelter, alcoholics, the homeless, the mentally disturbed, aggressive young people, and those with offensive odours.Ex. This attitude is based on the waste bin decision process widely used in political and educational organisations, which tend to have open-ended goals, problematic preferences, hazy technology, and poor feeback.Ex. The manufacture of these high-density chips is problematical.Ex. The negative aspects of adding such a problem-ridden medium to the library are far outweighed by the potential benefits video offers.Ex. Thus was Christianity codified into a Bible that still today is the central element in the faith of the two billion adherents of the largest, if most fractious, of the world's religions.Ex. The article is entitled 'The big bumpy shift: digital music via the Internet'.Ex. Predicting the future is dicey.Ex. Dan, who had known from the start that things were afoul, demanded that officer show him their IDs.----* cuestión problemática = sticky issue.* en una situación muy problemática = in deep water.* niño problemático = problem child.* persona problemática = troublemaker.* problemática que afecta a = issues + surrounding.* * *- ca adjetivo problematic, difficult* * *= dodgy [dodgier -comp., dodgiest -sup.], sticky [stickier -comp., stickiest -sup.], troublesome, problem, problematic, problematical, problem-ridden, fractious, bumpy, dicey [dicier -comp., diciest -sup.], afoul.Ex: The statistical procedures from Czchekoslovakia and Romania have been pretty dodgy and unsatisfactory.
Ex: The inclusion of vendors and publishers allows everyone to address sticky business relationships head-on.Ex: Measures to prevent such incidents include fitting burglar alarms in libraries and taking quick and decisive action against troublesome users.Ex: Problem patrons include, but are not limited to, illiterates simply seeking shelter, alcoholics, the homeless, the mentally disturbed, aggressive young people, and those with offensive odours.Ex: This attitude is based on the waste bin decision process widely used in political and educational organisations, which tend to have open-ended goals, problematic preferences, hazy technology, and poor feeback.Ex: The manufacture of these high-density chips is problematical.Ex: The negative aspects of adding such a problem-ridden medium to the library are far outweighed by the potential benefits video offers.Ex: Thus was Christianity codified into a Bible that still today is the central element in the faith of the two billion adherents of the largest, if most fractious, of the world's religions.Ex: The article is entitled 'The big bumpy shift: digital music via the Internet'.Ex: Predicting the future is dicey.Ex: Dan, who had known from the start that things were afoul, demanded that officer show him their IDs.* cuestión problemática = sticky issue.* en una situación muy problemática = in deep water.* niño problemático = problem child.* persona problemática = troublemaker.* problemática que afecta a = issues + surrounding.* * *problemático -ca‹asunto/situación› problematic, difficulteso puede resultar problemático that could be difficult o problematic o problematical* * *
problemático◊ -ca adjetivo
problematic, difficult
problemático,-a adjetivo problematic
' problemático' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
conflictiva
- conflictivo
- problemática
English:
disputable
- problematic
- problematical
- troublesome
* * *problemático, -a adjproblematic;es un niño muy problemático he's a very difficult child* * *adj problematic* * *problemático, -ca adj: problematic -
77 vanguardia
f.1 vanguard (military).2 avant-garde, vanguard (cultural).* * *1 (corriente) avant-garde, vanguard2 (parte de ejército) vanguard, van\ir a la vanguardia de to be at the forefront of* * *noun f.* * *SF(Mil) (tb fig) vanguardde vanguardia — (Arte) avant-garde; (Pol) vanguard [antes de s]
ir a la o en vanguardia — (lit) to be in the vanguard; (fig) to be at the forefront
* * *femenino (Mil) vanguard; (Art, Lit) avant-gardeir or estar a la vanguardia (de algo) — to be in the vanguard (of something)
* * *= cutting edge, vanguard, front-line.Ex. The article ' Cutting edge' describes current developments in microcomputer hardware which are likely to become commonplace adjuncts to library microcomputers in the next decade.Ex. In the process of achieving this goal, the deaf and other handicapped individuals could become the vanguard of computer technology.Ex. The children were involved in manual labour, guard duty, front-line fighting, bomb manufacture, setting sea/land mines & radio & communication.----* a la vanguardia = on the cutting edge, on the leading edge, in the fast lane, on the fast track, at the leading edge, on the bleeding edge.* a la vanguardia de = in the vanguard of, at the forefront of, in the forefront of/in, at the vanguard of.* en la vanguardia = on the cutting edge, on the leading edge, on the bleeding edge.* vanguardia, la = avant-garde, the, leading edge, the.* * *femenino (Mil) vanguard; (Art, Lit) avant-gardeir or estar a la vanguardia (de algo) — to be in the vanguard (of something)
* * *la vanguardia(n.) = avant-garde, the, leading edge, theEx: My point is that all literature, every example we can think of, depends for its existence on the tradition out of which it springs -- even the most avant of the avant-garde.
Ex: The leading edge is on the digital battlefield, where an entire new concept in military medicine is evolving.= cutting edge, vanguard, front-line.Ex: The article ' Cutting edge' describes current developments in microcomputer hardware which are likely to become commonplace adjuncts to library microcomputers in the next decade.
Ex: In the process of achieving this goal, the deaf and other handicapped individuals could become the vanguard of computer technology.Ex: The children were involved in manual labour, guard duty, front-line fighting, bomb manufacture, setting sea/land mines & radio & communication.* a la vanguardia = on the cutting edge, on the leading edge, in the fast lane, on the fast track, at the leading edge, on the bleeding edge.* a la vanguardia de = in the vanguard of, at the forefront of, in the forefront of/in, at the vanguard of.* en la vanguardia = on the cutting edge, on the leading edge, on the bleeding edge.* vanguardia, la = avant-garde, the, leading edge, the.* * *La Vanguardia (↑ vanguardia a1)1 ( Mil) vanguardpintura/teatro de vanguardia avant-garde art/theaterir or estar a la vanguardia to be in the vanguardun músico a la vanguardia de su época one of the most innovative musicians of his day* * *
vanguardia sustantivo femenino (Mil) vanguard;
(Art, Lit) avant-garde;
ir or estar a la vanguardia (de algo) to be in the vanguard (of sth)
vanguardia sustantivo femenino
1 Arte Lit, etc vanguard, avant-garde
2 Mil vanguard
♦ Locuciones: a la vanguardia/en vanguardia, at the forefront of: su estilo está a la vanguardia de la poesía inglesa, his style is in the vanguard of English poetry
' vanguardia' also found in these entries:
English:
avant-garde
- forefront
- ground
- state-of-the-art
- vanguard
* * *vanguardia nf1. Mil vanguard2. [cultural] avant-garde, vanguard;la literatura/música de vanguardia avant-garde literature/music;las vanguardias del siglo XX the avant-gardes of the 20th century;van a la vanguardia de los avances tecnológicos they are at the forefront of o at the cutting edge of technological progress* * *f1 MIL vanguard2 cultural avant-garde;de vanguardia avant-garde* * *vanguardia nf1) : vanguard2) : avante-garde3)a la vanguardia : at the forefront -
78 Viscose
Viscose was discovered by two English chemists, Charles F. Cross and E. J. Be van, working in collaboration at Kew, near London, who found that when cellulose was treated with disulphide of carbon in the presence of caustic soda, it was converted into a golden yellow plastic compound which dissolved readily in water. A solution of the plastic was of such viscosity that it was named " viscose," a name that was destined to become world famous, seeing that round about 88 per cent of the world production of rayon is now made by the viscose process. In 1892 Cross and Bevan were granted a patent on the viscose process and it was applied to many purposes before the production of a textile thread was successfully accomplished. Fundamentally, the manufacture of viscose rayon is fairly simple. The raw material may be wood pulp, pulp from cotton linters, or a mixture of the two. The greater part of the world's viscose is made from wood pulp. Viscose rayon manufacture comprises seven distinct treatments as follows: - 1. Making and purifying the cotton or wood pulp which forms the cellulose base. 2. Caustic soda treatment of the cellulose base thereby forming alkali cellulose. 3. Treatment of alkali cellulose with carbon disulphide, forming cellulose xanthate. 4. Dissolving the cellulose xanthate in weak caustic soda to form cellulose solution or viscose. 5. Spinning viscose into yarn. 6. Bleaching, purification and finishing of the yarn. 7. Preparing the yarn for weaving and knitting. -
79 Messel, Rudolf
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 14 January 1848 Darmstadt, Germanyd. 18 April 1920 London, England[br]German industrial chemist.[br]Messel served three years as an apprentice to the chemical manufacturers E.Lucius of Frankfurt before studying chemistry at Zürich, Heidelberg and Tübingen. In 1870 he travelled to England to assist the distinguished chemist Sir Henry Roscoe, but was soon recalled to Germany on the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War. After hostilities ceased, Messel returned to London to join the firm of manufacturers of sulphuric acid Dunn, Squire \& Company of Stratford, London. The firm amalgamated with Spencer Chapman, and after Messel became its Managing Director in 1878 it was known as Spencer, Chapman \& Messel Ltd.Messel's principal contribution to chemical technology was the invention of the contact process for the manufacture of sulphuric acid. Earlier processes for making this essential product, now needed in ever-increasing quantities by the new processes for making dyestuffs, fertilizers and explosives, were based on the oxidation of sulphur dioxide by oxides of nitrogen, developed by Joshua Ward and John Roebuck. Attempts to oxidize the dioxide to the trioxide with the oxygen in the air in the presence of a suitable catalyst had so far failed because the catalyst had become "poisoned" and ineffective; Messel avoided this by using highly purified gases. The contact process produced a concentrated form of sulphuric acid called oleum. Until the outbreak of the First World War, Messel's firm was the principal manufacturer, but then the demand rose sharply, so that other firms had to engage in its manufacture. Production thereby increased from 20,000 to 450,000 tons per year.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1912. President, Society of Chemical Industry 1911–12, 1914.Further Reading1931, Special jubilee issue, Journal of the Society of the Chemical Industry (July). G.T.Morgan and D.D.Pratt, 1938, The British Chemical Industry, London.LRD -
80 verarbeiten
verarbeiten v 1. COMP process (Daten); 2. IND process (Produktion)* * ** * *verarbeiten
to process, to convert, (aufarbeiten) to work up, (fabrizieren) to manufacture, to turn into fabric, to fabricate;
• Baumwolle zu Tuch verarbeiten to work cotton into cloth;
• maschinell verarbeiten to machine;
• geliefertes Material verarbeiten to work up, to finish, to process.
См. также в других словарях:
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