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republished

  • 1 Republished Statutes of the Yukon

    Canadian: RSY

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Republished Statutes of the Yukon

  • 2 ponovno izdan

    • republished

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > ponovno izdan

  • 3 reizdan

    • republished

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > reizdan

  • 4 veröffentlichte neu

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > veröffentlichte neu

  • 5 перевиданий

    Українсько-англійський словник > перевиданий

  • 6 reparaître

    reparaître° [ʀ(ə)paʀεtʀ]
    ➭ TABLE 57 intransitive verb
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
    reparaître can be conjugated with avoir or être.
    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ to reappear ; [roman, texte] to be republished ; [journal, magazine] to be back in print
    * * *
    ʀ(ə)paʀɛtʀ
    verbe intransitif
    2) ( être publié à nouveau) [journal] to be back in print; [œuvre, texte] to be republished
    * * *
    ʀ(ə)paʀɛtʀ vi
    * * *
    reparaître verb table: connaître vi
    2 ( être publié à nouveau) [journal, hebdomadaire] to be back in print; [œuvre, texte] to be republished.
    [rəparɛtr] verbe intransitif
    2. → link=réapparaître réapparaître

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > reparaître

  • 7 terbitkan lagi

    republish, republished, republished, republishing

    Indonesia-Inggris kamus > terbitkan lagi

  • 8 повторно опубликованный

    General subject: republished

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > повторно опубликованный

  • 9 повторно опубликованный знак

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > повторно опубликованный знак

  • 10 wieder erscheinen

    wieder 2
    * * *
    to reappear
    * * *
    wie|der|er|schei|nen sep irreg aux sein irreg aux sein
    vi
    to reappear; (Buch etc) to be republished
    * * *
    (to appear again: The boy disappeared behind the wall, and reappeared a few yards away.) reappear
    * * *
    v.
    to reappear v.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > wieder erscheinen

  • 11 Wiedererscheinen

    wie|der|er|schei|nen sep irreg aux sein irreg aux sein
    vi
    to reappear; (Buch etc) to be republished
    * * *

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Wiedererscheinen

  • 12 rééditer

    rééditer [ʀeedite]
    ➭ TABLE 1 transitive verb
    [+ livre] to republish
    * * *
    ʀeedite
    verbe transitif to reissue [livre]
    * * *
    ʀeedite vt
    2) [exploit] to repeat
    * * *
    rééditer verb table: aimer vtr
    1 Édition to reissue, to reprint [livre];
    2 ( refaire) to repeat [action, exploit].
    [reedite] verbe transitif
    2. (familier) [refaire] to repeat

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > rééditer

  • 13 hereditie

    n. republication, act of publishing again; item that has been republished

    Holandés-inglés dicionario > hereditie

  • 14 riedito

    riedito agg. republished, reissued; reprinted.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > riedito

  • 15 pretiskan

    adj reprinted; republished

    Hrvatski-Engleski rječnik > pretiskan

  • 16 Boole, George

    [br]
    b. 2 November 1815 Lincoln, England
    d. 8 December 1864 Ballintemple, Coounty Cork, Ireland
    [br]
    English mathematician whose development of symbolic logic laid the foundations for the operating principles of modern computers.
    [br]
    Boole was the son of a tradesman, from whom he learned the principles of mathematics and optical-component manufacturing. From the early age of 16 he taught in a number of schools in West Yorkshire, and when only 20 he opened his own school in Lincoln. There, at the Mechanical Institute, he avidly read mathematical journals and the works of great mathematicians such as Lagrange, Laplace and Newton and began to tackle a variety of algebraic problems. This led to the publication of a constant stream of original papers in the newly launched Cambridge Mathematical Journal on topics in the fields of algebra and calculus, for which in 1844 he received the Royal Society Medal.
    In 1847 he wrote The Mathematical Analysis of Logic, which applied algebraic symbolism to logical forms, whereby the presence or absence of properties could be represented by binary states and combined, just like normal algebraic equations, to derive logical statements about a series of operations. This laid the foundations for the binary logic used in modern computers, which, being based on binary on-off devices, greatly depend on the use of such operations as "and", "nand" ("not and"), "or" and "nor" ("not or"), etc. Although he lacked any formal degree, this revolutionary work led to his appointment in 1849 to the Chair of Mathematics at Queen's College, Cork, where he continued his work on logic and also produce treatises on differential equations and the calculus of finite differences.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Royal Society Medal 1844. FRS 1857.
    Bibliography
    Boole's major contributions to logic available in republished form include George Boole: Investigation of the Laws of Thought, Dover Publications; George Boole: Laws of Thought, Open Court, and George Boole: Studies in Logic \& Probability, Open Court.
    1872, A Treatise on Differential Equations.
    Further Reading
    W.Kneale, 1948, "Boole and the revival of logic", Mind 57:149.
    G.C.Smith (ed.), 1982, George Boole \& Augustus de Morgan. Correspondence 1842– 1864, Oxford University Press.
    —, 1985, George Boole: His Life and Work, McHale.
    E.T.Bell, 1937, Men of Mathematics, London: Victor Gollancz.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Boole, George

  • 17 Caproni, Giovanni Battista (Gianni), Conte di Taliedo

    SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace
    [br]
    b. 3 June 1886 Massone, Italy
    d. 29 October 1957 Rome, Italy
    [br]
    Italian aircraft designer and manufacturer, well known for his early large-aircraft designs.
    [br]
    Gianni Caproni studied civil and electrical engineering in Munich and Liège before moving on to Paris, where he developed an interest in aeronautics. He built his first aircraft in 1910, a biplane with a tricycle undercarriage (which has been claimed as the world's first tricycle undercarriage). Caproni and his brother, Dr Fred Caproni, set up a factory at Malpensa in northern Italy and produced a series of monoplanes and biplanes. In 1913 Caproni astounded the aviation world with his Ca 30 three-engined biplane bomber. There followed many variations, of which the most significant were the Ca 32 of 1915, the first large bomber to enter service in significant numbers, and the Ca 42 triplane of 1917 with a wing span of almost 30 metres.
    After the First World War, Caproni designed an even larger aircraft with three pairs of triplane wings (i.e. nine wings each of 30 metres span) and eight engines. This Ca 60 flying boat was designed to carry 100 passengers. In 1921 it made one short flight lightly loaded; however, with a load of sandbags representing sixty passengers, it crashed soon after take-off. The project was abandoned but Caproni's company prospered and expanded to become one of the largest groups of companies in Italy. In the 1930s Caproni aircraft twice broke the world altitude record. Several Caproni types were in service when Italy entered the Second World War, and an unusual research aircraft was under development. The Caproni-Campini No. 1 (CC2) was a jet, but it did not have a gas-turbine engine. Dr Campini's engine used a piston engine to drive a compressor which forced air out through a nozzle, and by burning fuel in this airstream a jet was produced. It flew with limited success in August 1940, amid much publicity: the first German jet (1939) and the first British jet (1941) were both flown in secret. Caproni retained many of his early aircraft for his private museum, including some salvaged parts from his monstrous flying boat.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Created Conte di Taliedo 1940.
    Further Reading
    Dizionario biografico degli Italiani, 1976, Vol. XIX.
    The Caproni Museum has published two books on the Caproni aeroplanes: Gli Aeroplani Caproni -1909–1935 and Gli Aeroplani Caproni dal 1935 in poi. See also Jane's
    fighting Aircraft of World War 1; 1919, republished 1990.
    JDS

    Biographical history of technology > Caproni, Giovanni Battista (Gianni), Conte di Taliedo

  • 18 Clerk, Sir Dugald

    [br]
    b. 31 March 1854 Glasgow, Scotland
    d. 12 November 1932 Ewhurst, Surrey, England
    [br]
    Scottish mechanical engineer, inventor of the two-stroke internal combustion engine.
    [br]
    Clerk began his engineering training at about the age of 15 in the drawing office of H.O.Robinson \& Company, Glasgow, and in his father's works. Meanwhile, he studied at the West of Scotland Technical College and then, from 1871 to 1876, at Anderson's College, Glasgow, and at the Yorkshire College of Science, Leeds. Here he worked under and then became assistant to the distinguished chemist T.E.Thorpe, who set him to work on the fractional distillation of petroleum, which was to be useful to him in his later work. At that time he had intended to become a chemical engineer, but seeing a Lenoir gas engine at work, after his return to Glasgow, turned his main interest to gas and other internal combustion engines. He pursued his investigations first at Thomson, Sterne \& Company (1877–85) and then at Tangyes of Birmingham (1886–88. In 1888 he began a lifelong partnership in Marks and Clerk, consulting engineers and patent agents, in London.
    Beginning his work on gas engines in 1876, he achieved two patents in the two following years. In 1878 he made his principal invention, patented in 1881, of an engine working on the two-stroke cycle, in which the piston is powered during each revolution of the crankshaft, instead of alternate revolutions as in the Otto four-stroke cycle. In this engine, Clerk introduced supercharging, or increasing the pressure of the air intake. Many engines of the Clerk type were made but their popularity waned after the patent for the Otto engine expired in 1890. Interest was later revived, particularly for application to large gas engines, but Clerk's engine eventually came into its own where simple, low-power motors are needed, such as in motor cycles or motor mowers.
    Clerk's work on the theory and design of gas engines bore fruit in the book The Gas Engine (1886), republished with an extended text in 1909 as The Gas, Petrol and Oil Engine; these and a number of papers in scientific journals won him international renown. During and after the First World War, Clerk widened the scope of his interests and served, often as chairman, on many bodies in the field of science and industry.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1917; FRS 1908; Royal Society Royal Medal 1924; Royal Society of Arts Alber Medal 1922.
    Further Reading
    Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society, no. 2, 1933.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Clerk, Sir Dugald

  • 19 wieder erscheinen

    1. to be republished
    2. to reappear

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > wieder erscheinen

См. также в других словарях:

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  • republished — re·pub·lish || ‚rɪː pÊŒblɪʃ v. reproduce and redistribute printed material; publicize again, readvertise …   English contemporary dictionary

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