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1 льготный тариф
1) General subject: reduced tariff, Q fare (discount fare)2) Aviation: discount rate, discounted rate, low fare, peanut fare3) Engineering: discount fare, discounted fare, promotional fare, rebate tariff, reducing tariff4) Economy: column rate (публикуемый в отдельной колонке как процент от классного тарифа), released rate (устанавливаемый при встречном снижении отправителем объявленной ценности груза)5) Telecommunications: cheap rate, off-peak rate6) Electronics: cheap rate (ночной), off-peak rate (ночной)7) Information technology: concession fare8) Advertising: favourable rate9) Business: preferential rate, preferential rates, reduced charge, reduced rate10) Solar energy: feed-in tariff11) EBRD: allowances, benefits, preferential tariff -
2 degressiv
degressiv
degressive, on a descending scale;
• degressive Abschreibung reducing balance depreciation;
• degressive Abschreibungsmethode reducing-fraction method of depreciation;
• degressive Besteuerung degressive taxation;
• degressive Steuer degressive tax;
• degressiver Tarif sliding-scale tariff. -
3 riduzione
"reduction;Rückgang;Abfall;Untersetzung;redução"* * *f reduction, cutriduzione del personale staff cutbacks* * *riduzione s.f.1 reduction, cut, cutback: riduzione dei prezzi, cut (o reduction) in prices; riduzione graduale dei prezzi, shading in prices; riduzione delle scorte, stock reduction; riduzione di pena, reduction of sentence // (econ.): riduzione delle spese, retrenchment of expenses; riduzione dei salari, cut in wages (o wage cut); riduzione del capitale sociale, reduction (o writing down) of capital stock; riduzione delle tariffe, tariff reduction // (trib.): riduzione d'imposta, tax abatement (o relief o cut); ottenere una riduzione sulle tasse, to be granted a rebate on taxes // ( assicurazioni) riduzione del premio a chi non provoca sinistri, no claims bonus // (banca): riduzione creditizia, credit rationing (o squeeze); riduzione del tasso di sconto, di interesse, reduction in the discount rate, in the interest rate // (inform.) riduzione dell'entità di un archivio, file compression2 ( sconto) discount, rebate, markdown; una riduzione di 5 sterline, a markdown of 5 pounds; fare una riduzione, to give (o to grant) a discount; ottenere una riduzione sul prezzo, to obtain (o to be granted) a discount3 ( adattamento) adaptation; ( di opera letteraria) abridgement: la riduzione televisiva di un romanzo, the television adaptation of a novel4 (mus.) arrangement5 (chim., mecc.) reduction6 (med.) reduction7 (astr.) reduction.* * *[ridut'tsjone]sostantivo femminile1) (sconto) discount, reductionriduzione del 5% — 5% reduction o discount
riduzione per studenti — concession o discount for students
2) (diminuzione) (di spese, sovvenzioni, produzione, organico, salario, costi) cut (di in); (di armamenti) reducing3) chim. med. mat. reduction4) cinem. teatr.riduzione cinematografica, televisiva, teatrale — dramatized version
•riduzione della pena — dir. remission
* * *riduzione/ridut'tsjone/sostantivo f.1 (sconto) discount, reduction; riduzione del 5% 5% reduction o discount; riduzione per studenti concession o discount for students2 (diminuzione) (di spese, sovvenzioni, produzione, organico, salario, costi) cut (di in); (di armamenti) reducing; riduzione delle imposte tax cut; riduzione dei consumi decrease in spending3 chim. med. mat. reduction4 cinem. teatr. riduzione cinematografica, televisiva, teatrale dramatized versionriduzione della pena dir. remission. -
4 Hopkinson, John
[br]b. 27 July 1849 Manchester, Englandd. 27 August 1898 Petite Dent de Veisivi, Switzerland[br]English mathematician and electrical engineer who laid the foundations of electrical machine design.[br]After attending Owens College, Manchester, Hopkinson was admitted to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1867 to read for the Mathematical Tripos. An appointment in 1872 with the lighthouse department of the Chance Optical Works in Birmingham directed his attention to electrical engineering. His most noteworthy contribution to lighthouse engineering was an optical system to produce flashing lights that distinguished between individual beacons. His extensive researches on the dielectric properties of glass were recognized when he was elected to a Fellowship of the Royal Society at the age of 29. Moving to London in 1877 he became established as a consulting engineer at a time when electricity supply was about to begin on a commercial scale. During the remainder of his life, Hopkinson's researches resulted in fundamental contributions to electrical engineering practice, dynamo design and alternating current machine theory. In making a critical study of the Edison dynamo he developed the principle of the magnetic circuit, a concept also arrived at by Gisbert Kapp around the same time. Hopkinson's improvement of the Edison dynamo by reducing the length of the field magnets almost doubled its output. In 1890, in addition to-his consulting practice, Hopkinson accepted a post as the first Professor of Electrical Engineering and Head of the Siemens laboratory recently established at King's College, London. Although he was not involved in lecturing, the position gave him the necessary facilities and staff and student assistance to continue his researches. Hopkinson was consulted on many proposals for electric traction and electricity supply, including schemes in London, Manchester, Liverpool and Leeds. He also advised Mather and Platt when they were acting as contractors for the locomotives and generating plant for the City and South London tube railway. As early as 1882 he considered that an ideal method of charging for the supply of electricity should be based on a two-part tariff, with a charge related to maximum demand together with a charge for energy supplied. Hopkinson was one the foremost expert witnesses of his day in patent actions and was himself the patentee of over forty inventions, of which the three-wire system of distribution and the series-parallel connection of traction motors were his most successful. Jointly with his brother Edward, John Hopkinson communicated the outcome of his investigations to the Royal Society in a paper entitled "Dynamo Electric Machinery" in 1886. In this he also described the later widely used "back to back" test for determining the characteristics of two identical machines. His interest in electrical machines led him to more fundamental research on magnetic materials, including the phenomenon of recalescence and the disappearance of magnetism at a well-defined temperature. For his work on the magnetic properties of iron, in 1890 he was awarded the Royal Society Royal Medal. He was a member of the Alpine Club and a pioneer of rock climbing in Britain; he died, together with three of his children, in a climbing accident.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1878. Royal Society Royal Medal 1890. President, Institution of Electrical Engineers 1890 and 1896.Bibliography7 July 1881, British patent no. 2,989 (series-parallel control of traction motors). 27 July 1882, British patent no. 3,576 (three-wire distribution).1901, Original Papers by the Late J.Hopkinson, with a Memoir, ed. B.Hopkinson, 2 vols, Cambridge.Further ReadingJ.Greig, 1970, John Hopkinson Electrical Engineer, London: Science Museum and HMSO (an authoritative account).—1950, "John Hopkinson 1849–1898", Engineering 169:34–7, 62–4.GW
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