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1 процветающая промышленность
Mass media: prosperous industry, thrift industry, thriving industryУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > процветающая промышленность
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2 florido
flourishing* * *florido agg. ( prospero) prosperous, thriving, flourishing, booming; ( prosperoso) buxom; ( colorito) glowing with health (pred.), ruddy: una industria florida, a thriving (o booming o flourishing) industry; una ragazza florida, a buxom girl; una florida regione, a thriving (o flourishing) region.* * *['flɔrido]* * *florido/'flɔrido/ -
3 Mond, Ludwig
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 7 March 1839 Cassel, Germanyd. 11 December 1909 London, England[br]German (naturalized English) industrial chemist.[br]Born into a prosperous Jewish merchant family, Mond studied at the Polytechnic in Cassel and then under the distinguished chemists Hermann Kolbe at Marburg and Bunsen at Heidelberg from 1856. In 1859 he began work as an industrial chemist in various works in Germany and Holland. At this time, Mond was pursuing his method for recovering sulphur from the alkali wastes in the Leblanc soda-making process. Mond came to England in 1862 and five years later settled permanently, in partnership with John Hutchinson \& Co. at Widnes, to perfect his process, although complete success eluded him. He became a naturalized British subject in 1880.In 1872 Mond became acquainted with Ernest Solvay, the Belgian chemist who developed the ammonia-soda process which finally supplanted the Leblanc process. Mond negotiated the English patent rights and set up the first ammoniasoda plant in England at Winnington in Cheshire, in partnership with John Brunner. After overcoming many difficulties by incessant hard work, the process became a financial success and in 1881 Brunner, Mond \& Co. was formed, for a time the largest alkali works in the world. In 1926 the company merged with others to form Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd (ICI). The firm was one of the first to adopt the eight-hour day and to provide model dwellings and playing fields for its employees.From 1879 Mond took up the production of ammonia and this led to the Mond producer-gas plant, patented in 1883. The process consisted of passing air and steam over coal and coke at a carefully regulated temperature. Ammonia was generated and, at the same time, so was a cheap and useful producer gas. Mond's major discovery followed the observation in 1889 that carbon monoxide could combine with nickel in its ore at around 60°C to form a gaseous compound, nickel carbonyl. This, on heating to a higher temperature, would then decompose to give pure nickel. Mond followed up this unusual way of producing and purifying a metal and by 1892 had succeeded in setting up a pilot plant to perfect a large-scale process and went on to form the Mond Nickel Company.Apart from being a successful industrialist, Mond was prominent in scientific circles and played a leading role in the setting up of the Society of Chemical Industry in 1881. The success of his operations earned him great wealth, much of which he donated for learned and charitable purposes. He formed a notable collection of pictures which he bequeathed to the National Gallery.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1891.Bibliography1885, "On the origin of the ammonia-soda process", Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry 4:527–9.1895. "The history of the process of nickel extraction", Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry 14:945–6.Further ReadingJ.M.Cohen, 1956, The Life of Ludwig Mond, London: Methuen. Obituary, 1918, Journal of the Chemical Society 113:318–34.F.C.Donnan, 1939, Ludwig Mond 1839–1909, London (a valuable lecture).LRD -
4 Betrieb
Betrieb m 1. COMP mode; 2. GEN concern, business, workplace, operation (Firma); 3. IND factory, works (Fabrik); operation (von Maschine); 4. PERS place of work, establishment, workplace (Arbeitsstelle) • außer Betrieb GEN out of order, out of action • außer Betrieb sein WIWI be down • außer Betrieb setzen GEN put out of action • Betrieb gründen GEN set up a business, start a (new) business, set up a new business, (infrml) set up shop • im Betrieb IND, PERS on the shop floor • im Betrieb sein GEN be at work • in Betrieb COMP, IND busy (Maschine) • in Betrieb gehen IND go into operation, come on stream • in Betrieb nehmen IND start up • in Betrieb sein IND be on stream, be in operation • in Betrieb setzen IND activate • viel Betrieb haben GEN be very busy* * *m 1. < Comp> mode; 2. < Geschäft> Firma concern, business, workplace, operation; 3. < Ind> Fabrik factory, works, von Maschine operation; 4. < Person> Arbeitsstelle place of work, establishment, workplace ■ außer Betrieb < Geschäft> out of order, out of action ■ außer Betrieb sein <Vw> be down ■ im Betrieb <Ind, Person> on the shop floor ■ im Betrieb sein < Geschäft> be at work ■ in Betrieb <Comp, Ind> Maschine busy ■ in Betrieb gehen < Ind> go into operation, come on stream ■ in Betrieb nehmen < Ind> start up ■ in Betrieb sein < Ind> be on stream, be in operation ■ in Betrieb setzen < Ind> activate* * *Betrieb
(Arbeitsgang) service, (Betreiben) working, running, operating, operation (US), (Betriebsanlage) factory, [manufacturing] plant, works, mill (Br.), (Geschäftsführung) management, (Herstellungsgang) manufacture, (Transport) service, (Unternehmen) firm, business [enterprise], commercial undertaking (establishment), [industrial] concern, company, corporation, (Werkstatt) workshop, shop (Br.);
• außer Betrieb standing idle, out [of commission], (Bahn) out of service (action), (el.) off, (Fahrstuhl) not working, out of order, (Hotel) not opening, (Maschine) out of blast (gear), idle, not operating, (nicht in Ordnung) out of order, disabled, not working, defunct;
• für mehrere Betriebe arbeitend consolidated (US);
• im Betrieb on the shop-floor;
• nicht im Betrieb inoperative, non-operating, (Fabrik) standing;
• im Betrieb stehen gelassen (Gewinn) retained in business;
• in Betrieb operating, operative, in operation, in blast, at work, working, going, running;
• in vollem Betrieb in full working order, in operation (action), going at full blast;
• arbeitender Betrieb going business (concern), operating property (US);
• billig arbeitender Betrieb low-cost plant;
• kostendeckend arbeitender Betrieb break-even company;
• für den Staat arbeitender Betrieb government client;
• bestreikter Betrieb struck shop;
• dezentralisierter Betrieb departmentalized business (factory) (US);
• durcharbeitender Betrieb all-night service, (ganze Woche) seven-day operation;
• durchgehender Betrieb continuous process, continuity of operations;
• Ein-Mann-Betrieb one-man business;
• einschichtiger Betrieb single-shift operation;
• einträglicher Betrieb profitable enterprise;
• an der Baustelle errichteter Betrieb on-site factory;
• erstklassiger Betrieb top plant;
• fahrplanmäßiger Betrieb scheduled operation (US);
• familienfreundlicher Betrieb family-friendly company;
• Fisch verarbeitender Betrieb fish-processing plant;
• forstwirtschaftlicher Betrieb forestry industry (company);
• an Preisabsprachen nicht gebundener Betrieb outsider;
• gefährlicher Betrieb dangerous premises;
• wissenschaftlich geführter Betrieb scientific management;
• gut gehender Betrieb prosperous enterprise;
• gemeinnütziger Betrieb non-profit enterprise, public service company (Br.) (corporation, US);
• gemeinsamer Betrieb joint working;
• genossenschaftlicher Betrieb cooperative enterprise;
• auf Gewinn gerichteter Betrieb profit-seeking enterprise;
• gesundheitsschädlicher Betrieb offensive trade;
• gewerbepolizeipflichtiger Betrieb trade subject to licence;
• gewerblicher Betrieb industrial enterprise, manufacturing establishment;
• gewerkschaftspflichtiger Betrieb closed (union) shop, agency shop (Br.);
• staatlich genehmigter gewerkschaftspflichtiger Betrieb approved closed shop (Br.);
• grafischer Betrieb commercial art company, printing establishment;
• halbautomatischer Betrieb semi-automatic working;
• handwerklicher Betrieb handicraft;
• industrieller Betrieb industrial enterprise;
• kapitalintensiver Betrieb high-cost plant;
• kriegswichtiger Betrieb essential industry;
• landwirtschaftlicher Betrieb agricultural enterprise (undertaking), ranch, farm;
• nicht landwirtschaftlicher Betrieb non-agricultural enterprise (establishment);
• laufender Betrieb going concern, current operation;
• auf Hochturen laufender Betrieb drive;
• reibungslos laufender Betrieb smooth-running entity;
• lebenswichtige Betrieb key industries, (Versorgung) public utilities;
• lebhafter Betrieb brisk state of trade;
• Milch verarbeitender Betrieb milk-processing enterprise;
• mittelgroßer (mittlerer) Betrieb medium-sized enterprise (business, US), small business (US);
• öffentlicher Betrieb public enterprise;
• ökologischer Betrieb organic farm;
• produzierender Betrieb production unit;
• rentabler (rentierlicher) Betrieb profitable enterprise (business), economic operation;
• sparsamer Betrieb economical operation;
• staatlicher (staatseigener) Betrieb state-owned enterprise (US);
• staatlich subventionierter Betrieb taxeater;
• im Gemeineigentum stehender Betrieb publicly-owned enterprise;
• stillgelegter Betrieb non-factory, mill out of work (Br.), nonoperating property (factory) (US);
• störungsfreier Betrieb uninterrupted operation;
• volkseigener Betrieb nationalized (Br.) (socialized) enterprise;
• rationell wirtschaftender Betrieb efficiently-run enterprise;
• wirtschaftlicher Betrieb economic operation;
• Betrieb mit Akkordsystem contract shop (US);
• Betrieb eines Berkwerkes exploitation of a mine;
• Betrieb einer Eisenbahnlinie operation of a railway (railroad, US) line;
• Betrieb mit übertariflicher Gehaltsskala high-paying outsider;
• Betrieb eines Geschäftes operation of a business;
• Betrieb an der Grenze der Rentabilität marginal producer (firm);
• Betrieb der öffentlichen Hand government (state) enterprise;
• Betrieb mit begrenzter Kapazität limited-capacity plant;
• Betrieb eines Ladengeschäfts shopkeeping;
• Betrieb mit geringem Lohnniveau low-wage unit;
• Betrieb mit betriebseigenen Programmierern (Computer) open shop;
• Betrieb eines Schiffes operation of a ship;
• Betrieb mit Staatsaufträgen government contractor;
• Betrieb eines Unternehmens working of a business;
• staatlicher Betrieb von Wirtschaftsunternehmen operation of business;
• Betrieb aufnehmen to begin working, to start running, (Geschäft) to open;
• Betrieb wieder aufnehmen to resume work (one’s activity);
• Betrieb ausdehnen to expand operations;
• Betrieb neu ausstatten to equip a shop with new tools;
• Betrieb zum Erfolg bringen to work up a business;
• ganzen Betrieb kostenmäßig durchforsten to cut costs throughout a company;
• Betrieb einstellen to stop a factory (business), to cease (suspend) operations (working), to shut down, (Bahn) to close a line;
• Betrieb vorübergehend einstellen to close down temporarily;
• Betrieb eröffnen to commence business;
• Betrieb eingestellt haben to have ceased running;
• in Betrieb halten to keep running (working);
• Betrieb aus den roten Zahlen herausbringen to administer a company from red to black (US coll.);
• Betrieb installieren to equip a shop with tools;
• Betrieb anlaufen lassen to put in (go into) operation, to begin working;
• Betrieb Fett ansetzen lassen to beef up a plant (sl.);
• Fabrik in Betrieb setzen lassen to give orders for the work to be started;
• Betrieb leiten to manage a business, (Werk) to run a plant;
• in Betrieb nehmen to set going, to set (put) into operation, to operate;
• automatisch in Betrieb nehmen (el.) to press the button;
• Bus in Betrieb nehmen to put a bus on the road;
• Betrieb schließen to close down;
• Betrieb infolge von Sparsamkeitsmaßnahmen schließen to close its doors for reasons of economy;
• Betrieb vorübergehend schließen to close temporarily;
• außer Betrieb sein (Fabrik) to be out of operation, (Maschine) to run idle, (Rundfunkstation) to be off the air;
• billig im Betrieb sein (Auto) to be run at small cost;
• in Betrieb sein (Bahnlinie) to be in operation (running), (Fabrik) to work, to be in operation, (Maschine) to run, to be operating, to be worked, (Bus) to be on the road, (Rundfunkstation) to be on the air;
• durchgehend in Betrieb sein to run full time;
• das ganze Jahr in Betrieb sein (Auto) to be in commission all the year round;
• nicht in Betrieb sein to be out of work (at a standstill);
• ständig in Betrieb sein to run full time;
• in vollem Betrieb sein to be going at full blast;
• wieder in Betrieb sein (Hotel) to be running (working) again;
• aus dem Betrieb gezogen sein (Auto) to be of service;
• Anlage außer Betrieb setzen to discard an asset;
• Bahnlinie außer Betrieb setzen to close a line;
• in Betrieb setzen to put (set) into operation (action), to start [running (working)], to set to work, to prime;
• wieder in Betrieb setzen to reopen, to restart;
• Eisenbahnstrecke in Betrieb setzen to open a railway line;
• Betrieb stilllegen to close down;
• Betrieb völlig umkrempeln to turn around a company;
• auf elektrischen Betrieb umstellen (Bahn) to electrify;
• Betrieb völlig auf Produkte für den Wohnungs- und Straßenbau umstellen to aim a company at totally environmental products;
• seinen Betrieb vergrößern to enlarge one’s business;
• Betrieb verlagern (verlegen) to move a plant to another locality, to relocate a plant;
• Betrieb in Vorstadtgebiete verlagern to go suburban;
• Betrieb in stark verkleinertem Umfang weiterführen to operate on a drastically reduced scale;
• in Betrieb genommen werden to go into operation, (Bahnlinie, Straße) to be opened to traffic;
• aus dem Betrieb ziehen to take out of service;
• Flugzeug aus dem Betrieb ziehen to ground a plane;
• Bus aus dem Betrieb ziehen to take a bus off the road.
durchforsten, Betrieb
to weed the garden;
• Regierungsstelle zwecks Einsparungen gründlich durchforsten to comb out a government department. -
5 Cotchett, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]fl. 1700s[br]English engineer who set up the first water-powered textile mill in Britain at Derby.[br]At the beginning of the eighteenth century, silk weaving was one of the most prosperous trades in Britain, but it depended upon raw silk worked up on hand twisting or throwing machines. In 1702 Thomas Cotchett set up a mill for twisting silk by water-power at the northern end of an island in the river Derwent at Derby; this would probably have been to produce organzine, the hard twisted thread used for the warp when weaving silk fabrics. Such mills had been established in Italy beginning with the earliest in Bologna in 1272, but it would appear that Cotchett used Dutch silk-throwing machinery that was driven by a water wheel that was 13½ ft (4.1 m) in diameter and built by the local engineer, George Sorocold. The enterprise soon failed, but it was quickly revived and extended by Thomas and John Lombe with machinery based on that being used successfully in Italy.[br]Further ReadingD.M.Smith, 1965, Industrial Archaeology of the East Midlands, Newton Abbot (provides an account of Cotchett's mill).W.H.Chaloner, 1963, "Sir Thomas Lombe (1685–1739) and the British silk industry", History Today (Nov.).R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (a brief coverage of the development of early silk throwing mills).D.Kuhn, 1988, Science and Civilisation in China, Vol. V: Chemistry and ChemicalTechnology, Part 9, Textile Technology: spinning and reeling, Cambridge (covers the diffusion of the techniques of the mechanization of the silk-throwing industry from China to the West).RLH -
6 Lombe, John
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. c. 1693 probably Norwich, Englandd. 20 November 1722 Derby, England[br]English creator of the first successful powered textile mill in Britain.[br]John Lombe's father, Henry Lombe, was a worsted weaver who married twice. John was the second son of the second marriage and was still a baby when his father died in 1695. John, a native of the Eastern Counties, was apprenticed to a trade and employed by Thomas Cotchett in the erection of Cotchett's silk mill at Derby, which soon failed however. Lombe went to Italy, or was sent there by his elder half-brother, Thomas, to discover the secrets of their throwing machinery while employed in a silk mill in Piedmont. He returned to England in 1716 or 1717, bringing with him two expert Italian workmen.Thomas Lombe was a prosperous London merchant who financed the construction of a new water-powered silk mill at Derby which is said to have cost over £30,000. John arranged with the town Corporation for the lease of the island in the River Derwent, where Cotchett had erected his mill. During the four years of its construction, John first set up the throwing machines in other parts of the town. The machines were driven manually there, and their product helped to defray the costs of the mill. The silk-throwing machine was very complex. The water wheel powered a horizontal shaft that was under the floor and on which were placed gearwheels to drive vertical shafts upwards through the different floors. The throwing machines were circular, with the vertical shafts running through the middle. The doubled silk threads had previously been wound on bobbins which were placed on spindles with wire flyers at intervals around the outer circumference of the machine. The bobbins were free to rotate on the spindles while the spindles and flyers were driven by the periphery of a horizontal wheel fixed to the vertical shaft. Another horizontal wheel set a little above the first turned the starwheels, to which were attached reels for winding the silk off the bobbins below. Three or four sets of these spindles and reels were placed above each other on the same driving shaft. The machine was very complicated for the time and must have been expensive to build and maintain.John lived just long enough to see the mill in operation, for he died in 1722 after a painful illness said to have been the result of poison administered by an Italian woman in revenge for his having stolen the invention and for the injury he was causing the Italian trade. The funeral was said to have been the most superb ever known in Derby.[br]Further ReadingSamuel Smiles, 1890, Men of Invention and Industry, London (probably the only biography of John Lombe).Rhys Jenkins, 1933–4, "Historical notes on some Derbyshire industries", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 14 (provides an acount of John Lombe and his part in the enterprise at Derby).R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (briefly covers the development of early silk-throwing mills).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (includes a chapter on "Lombe's Silk Machine").P.Barlow, 1836, Treatise of Manufactures and Machinery of Great Britain, London (describes Lombe's mill and machinery, but it is not known how accurate the account may be).RLH -
7 богатый
1) General subject: abundant (чем-либо), affluent, ample, better to do, better-off, better-to-do, copious (о словаре, стиле), daedal, dedal, exuberant (о растительности), fat, flush of money (деньгами), full, high, high-grade (о руде), long on (чем-л.), lousy (чем-л.), lousy with money, luxuriant, monied, opulent, pinguid (о почве), plenteous (чем-л.), plentiful (чем-либо), pregnant (о воображении и т. п.), profuse, profuse in (smth.) (чем-л.), pursy, replete (чем-л.), rich, silk stocking, superb, teeming, wealthy, well fixed, well heeled, well-heeled, moneyed, favourably endowed with (чем-л.), abound with, generous, bounteous, palatial2) Colloquial: warm3) American: brownstone, silk-stocking4) Poetical language: foodful5) Jocular: filthy (чем-л.)6) Rare: pecunious7) Construction: florid8) Mathematics: high in, high-grade9) Religion: Byzantine11) Economy: ample (напр. о ресурсах), heavy (напр. об урожае)13) Mining: prolific (о нефтяном месторождении, участке, скважине)14) Diplomatic term: fat (чем-л.)15) Psychology: abundant in16) Physics: fertile17) Jargon: holding, in the chips, loaded, oofy, plummy, sitting pretty, swank, tinny, scratch (He's got scratch. Он стал богатым.), flash, heavy (чем-либо), heeled, ritzy18) Oil: prolific (о месторождении)19) Business: better off, prosperous20) Makarov: abounding (изобилующий), flush (чем-л.), heavy with chips, rich (о почве, видовом составе), rich (in, with) (чем-л.), splendid21) Taboo: wadded -
8 попутный
1) General subject: associated, fair, favorable, following (о ветре, течении), incidental, large (о ветре), passing, prosperous (о ветре)2) Naval: favourable (ветер), free (о ветре), underway3) Engineering: by-product group4) Mathematics: incidental (to)5) Automobile industry: moving in the same direction (автомобиль) -
9 попутный ветер
1) General subject: fair wind, favorable wind, tail-on wind, tail-wind2) Aviation: back wind, favorite wind, following wind, quartering tail wind, rear wind, helping wind3) Naval: a slant of wind, leading wind, slant of wind, soldier's wind, wind aft, wind astern, wind right aft5) Automobile industry: favouring wind, six-o'clock wind, tail wind6) Fishery: following, stern wind, wind right astern7) Makarov: friendly wind, prevailing wind, prosperous wind, tail wind (в полёте), tailwind, wind right off -
10 blühend
I Part. Präs. blühenII Adj. fig. Aussehen: healthy; Gesundheit: glowing, radiant; Fantasie: vivid; blühender Unsinn complete ( oder utter oder arrant) nonsense; einen blühenden Handel treiben do a roaring trade ( mit in); wie das blühende Leben aussehen be the picture of health; im blühenden Alter in his oder her prime; im blühenden Alter von at the early age of* * *prosperous; abloom; blooming; flourishing; flowering; florid* * *blü|hendadjBaum blossoming; Blume, Pflanze auch blooming; Garten, Wiese, Feld full of flowers; (fig ) Aussehen radiant; Geschäft, Handel, Industrie, Kultur, Stadt flourishing, thriving; Fantasie vivid, lively; Unsinn absolute; Zukunft glowingblǘhende Landschaften — green pastures
ein wirtschaftlich blǘhendes Land — a country with a thriving economy
wie das blǘhende Leben aussehen, blǘhend aussehen — to look the very picture of health
* * *1) blossoming2) (successful: a flourishing business.) flourishing3) (successful: a thriving industry.) thriving* * *blü·hend1. (in Blüte sein) blossoming2. (strahlend) glowing, radiantsie sieht wirklich \blühend aus she looks really radiant3. (prosperierend) flourishing, thriving4. (fam) excessiveeine \blühende Fantasie haben to have a fertile [or vivid] imagination\blühender Unsinn sein to be utter nonsense* * *sie starb im blühenden Alter von 20 Jahren — she died at 20, in the full bloom of youth
2) (übertrieben) vivid, lively < imagination>* * *einen blühenden Handel treiben do a roaring trade (mit in);wie das blühende Leben aussehen be the picture of health;im blühenden Alter in his oder her prime;im blühenden Alter von at the early age of* * *sie starb im blühenden Alter von 20 Jahren — she died at 20, in the full bloom of youth
2) (übertrieben) vivid, lively < imagination>* * *adj.abloom adj.flourishing adj. -
11 florido agg
['flɔrido] florido (-a)(industria) flourishing, thriving, prosperous, (aspetto) healthy, glowing with health, (salute) excellent -
12 tuottava
finance, business, economy• wealthyfinance, business, economy• prosperousfinance, business, economy• remuneratingfinance, business, economy• remunerativefinance, business, economy• remuneratyivefinance, business, economy• richfinance, business, economy• profit-makingfinance, business, economy• thrivingfinance, business, economy• well-offfinance, business, economy• well-to-dofinance, business, economy• cost-effectivefinance, business, economy• successfulweapon industry• productive• lucrative• increasingfinance, business, economy• generativefinance, business, economy• gainfulfinance, business, economy• fortunatefinance, business, economy• economicalfinance, business, economy• flourishingfinance, business, economy• boomingfinance, business, economy• bloomingfinance, business, economy• affluentfinance, business, economy• profitable -
13 prac|ować
impf vi 1. (trudnić się) to work; (ciężko) to labour, to toil; (być zajętym) to be busy- pracować fizycznie/umysłowo to do physical/intellectual work- pracować zawodowo/zarobkowo to have a career/a paid job- pracować społecznie to do voluntary work- pracuję zawodowo od dwudziestu lat I’ve been working for twenty years- pracować sezonowo/dorywczo to do seasonal work/odd jobs- pracować jako tymczasowo zatrudniony to temp, to work as a temp- nie mógł znaleźć stałej pracy, więc pracował dorywczo he couldn’t find a permanent job, so he was temping a. doing odd jobs- pracować bez wytchnienia/ze wszystkich sił/od świtu do nocy to work without respite/as hard as one can/from dawn to dusk- pracował w pocie czoła, aby wyżywić liczną rodzinę he worked his fingers to the bone to provide for his large family- pracować jak wół to work like a Trojan- pracować w godzinach nadliczbowych to work overtime- pracować na akord/na dniówkę to be on piecework/be paid on a daily basis- pracować na czyjeś utrzymanie a. na kogoś to work to support sb- pracuję na samochód/nowe mieszkanie I’m working to get enough money to buy a car/a new flat- bogate kraje długo pracowały na swój dobrobyt it took rich countries many years of hard work to become prosperous- pracować dla kogoś/czegoś to work for sb/sth- pracuję od lat dla ich firmy I’ve been working for their company for years- pracować nad kimś to work on sb- dużo pracował nad sobą, żeby wyćwiczyć pamięć he had to work hard to train his memory- pracować nad czymś to work at a. on sth- pisarz pracował nad nową książką the author was working on a new book- komisja sejmowa pracuje nad ustawą budżetową/o ubezpieczeniach społecznych a parliamentary committee is working on the budget bill/the social insurance bill- musisz pracować nad backhandem you must practise your backhand2. (zarobkować) to work- pracować jako nauczyciel/listonosz to work as a teacher/a postman- pracować w fabryce/w szpitalu to work at a factory/hospital- pracować w przemyśle/reklamie/ubezpieczeniach to work in industry/advertising/insurance- pracować na budowie to work as a builder a. on a building site- pracować etatowo/na pół etatu to have a full-time/part-time job- pracować w systemie zmianowym to work shifts- pracować na dziennej/nocnej zmianie to work days/nights- pracować przy sortowaniu listów to have a job sorting letters- pracować na komputerze/tokarce to work at the computer/lathe- pracować zawodowo przy domowym terminalu to telecommute- pracować głową to do intellectual work- pracować piórem to live by the pen- pracować łopatą to be a labourer- kobieta pracująca a working woman- pracujące matki working mothers3. (współpracować) to work, to cooperate (z kimś/czymś with sb/sth)- dobrze mi się z nim pracuje I like working with him- komisja pracuje z zespołem doradców the commission cooperates with a team of advisers- pracować z młodzieżą to work with young people4. (funkcjonować) [serce, płuca, nerki] to work; [biuro, sklep] to work; [maszyna, silnik] to work, to operate, to run- serce pracuje prawidłowo the heart is functioning normally- podczas pływania pracują wszystkie mięśnie when you swim, all your muscles work- jego umysł pracował sprawnie he was of sound mind- poczta dzisiaj nie pracuje the post office is closed today- sądy pracują opieszale the courts are slow in dealing with the business in hand- szpitale pracują bez przerwy hospitals work non-stop- sklepy pracują do dwudziestej shops stay open till 8 p.m.- wytwórnia pracuje na eksport/na rynek wewnętrzny the plant manufactures for export/for the home market- maszyna pracuje bez zarzutu the machine is running smoothly- tylko dwa z czterech silników pracują only two of the four engines work a. are working- pracować na zwolnionych obrotach to work a. be working at a slow pace- pracować za dwóch a. trzech to work like nobody’s business pot., to do the work of two a. three (men) pot.- czas pracuje dla niego a. na jego korzyść/przeciw niemu a. na jego niekorzyść time is on his side/against him- kto nie pracuje, ten nie je przysł. if you don’t work you shan’t eat przysł.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > prac|ować
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14 florido
agg ['flɔrido] florido (-a)(industria) flourishing, thriving, prosperous, (aspetto) healthy, glowing with health, (salute) excellent -
15 Deville, Henri Etienne Sainte-Claire
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 11 March 1818 St Thomas, Virgin Islandsd. 1 July 1881 Boulogne-sur-Seine, France[br]French chemist and metallurgist, pioneer in the large-scale production of aluminium and other light metals.[br]Deville was the son of a prosperous shipowner with diplomatic duties in the Virgin Islands. With his elder brother Charles, who later became a distinguished physicist, he was sent to Paris to be educated. He took his degree in medicine in 1843, but before that he had shown an interest in chemistry, due particularly to the lectures of Thenard. Two years later, with Thenard's influence, he was appointed Professor of Chemistry at Besançon. In 1851 he was able to return to Paris as Professor at the Ecole Normale Supérieure. He remained there for the rest of his working life, greatly improving the standard of teaching, and his laboratory became one of the great research centres of Europe. His first chemical work had been in organic chemistry, but he then turned to inorganic chemistry, specifically to improve methods of producing the new and little-known metal aluminium. Essentially, the process consisted of forming sodium aluminium trichloride and reducing it with sodium to metallic aluminium. He obtained sodium in sufficient quantity by reducing sodium carbonate with carbon. In 1855 he exhibited specimens of the metal at the Paris Exhibition, and the same year Napoleon III asked to see them, with a view to using it for breastplates for the Army and for spoons and forks for State banquets. With the resulting government support, he set up a pilot plant at Jarvel to develop the process, and then set up a small company, the Société d'Aluminium at Nan terre. This raised the output of this attractive and useful metal, so it could be used more widely than for the jewellery to which it had hitherto been restricted. Large-scale applications, however, had to await the electrolytic process that began to supersede Deville's in the 1890s. Deville extended his sodium reduction method to produce silicon, boron and the light metals magnesium and titanium. His investigations into the metallurgy of platinum revolutionized the industry and led in 1872 to his being asked to make the platinum-iridium (90–10) alloy for the standard kilogram and metre. Deville later carried out important work in high-temperature chemistry. He grieved much at the death of his brother Charles in 1876, and his retirement was forced by declining health in 1880; he did not survive for long.[br]BibliographyDeville published influential books on aluminium and platinum; these and all his publications are listed in the bibliography in the standard biography by J.Gray, 1889, Henri Sainte-Claire Deville: sa vie et ses travaux, Paris.Further ReadingM.Daumas, 1949, "Henri Sainte-Claire Deville et les débuts de l'industrie de l'aluminium", Rev.Hist.Sci 2:352–7.J.C.Chaston, 1981, "Henri Sainte-Claire Deville: his outstanding contributions to the chemistry of the platinum metals", Platinum Metals Review 25:121–8.LRDBiographical history of technology > Deville, Henri Etienne Sainte-Claire
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16 Whitney, Eli
[br]b. 8 December 1765 Westborough, Massachusetts, USAd. 8 January 1825 New Haven, Connecticut, USA[br]American inventor of the cotton gin and manufacturer of firearms.[br]The son of a prosperous farmer, Eli Whitney as a teenager showed more interest in mechanics than school work. At the age of 15 he began an enterprise business manufacturing nails in his father's workshop, even having to hire help to fulfil his orders. He later determined to acquire a university education and, his father having declined to provide funds, he taught at local schools to obtain the means to attend Leicester Academy, Massachusetts, in preparation for his entry to Yale in 1789. He graduated in 1792 and then decided to study law. He accepted a position in Georgia as a tutor that would have given him time for study; this post did not materialize, but on his journey south he met General Nathanael Greene's widow and the manager of her plantations, Phineas Miller (1764–1803). A feature of agriculture in the southern states was that the land was unsuitable for long-staple cotton but could yield large crops of green-seed cotton. Green-seed cotton was difficult to separate from its seed, and when Whitney learned of the problem in 1793 he quickly devised a machine known as the cotton gin, which provided an effective solution. He formed a partnership with Miller to manufacture the gin and in 1794 obtained a patent. This invention made possible the extraordinary growth of the cotton industry in the United States, but the patent was widely infringed and it was not until 1807, after amendment of the patent laws, that Whitney was able to obtain a favourable decision in the courts and some financial return.In 1798 Whitney was in financial difficulties following the failure of the initial legal action against infringement of the cotton gin patent, but in that year he obtained a government contract to supply 10,000 muskets within two years with generous advance payments. He built a factory at New Haven, Connecticut, and proposed to use a new method of manufacture, perhaps the first application of the system of interchangeable parts. He failed to supply the firearms in the specified time, and in fact the first 500 guns were not delivered until 1801 and the full contract was not completed until 1809.In 1812 Whitney made application for a renewal of his cotton gin patent, but this was refused. In the same year, however, he obtained a second contract from the Government for 15,000 firearms and a similar one from New York State which ensured the success of his business.[br]Further ReadingJ.Mirsky and A.Nevins, 1952, The World of Eli Whitney, New York (a good biography). P.J.Federico, 1960, "Records of Eli Whitney's cotton gin patent", Technology and Culture 1: 168–76 (for details of the cotton gin patent).R.S.Woodbury, 1960, The legend of Eli Whitney and interchangeable parts', Technology and Culture 1:235–53 (challenges the traditional view of Eli Whitney as the sole originator of the "American" system of manufacture).See also Technology and Culture 14(1973):592–8; 18(1977):146–8; 19(1978):609–11.RTS
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