-
41 right of way
• etuajo-oikeus• tienkäyttöoikeus• tieoikeus• läpikulkuoikeus* * *1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) läpikulkuoikeus2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) läpikulkutie3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) etuajo-oikeus -
42 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) veirett, hevd2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) veirett, hevd3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) forkjørsrett -
43 right of way
1) aut. diritto m. di precedenza, precedenza f.2) (over land) servitù f. di passaggio* * *1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) diritto di passaggio2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) diritto di passaggio3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) precedenza* * *n(across property) diritto di accesso, (Auto: precedence) precedenza* * *1) aut. diritto m. di precedenza, precedenza f.2) (over land) servitù f. di passaggio -
44 right of way
n ( AUT)pierwszeństwo nt przejazdu; ( on path etc) prawo przechodzenia przez teren prywatny* * *1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) prawo przejazdu2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) droga publiczna na prywatnym gruncie3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) pierszeństwo przejazdu -
45 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) (privātīpašuma) šķērsošanas tiesības2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) koplietojams ceļš (šķērsojot privātīpašumu)3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) labās puses kustības priekšrocība -
46 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) teisė naudotis privačia žeme einančiais keliais/takais2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) viešas kelias privačia žeme3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) pirmumo teisė -
47 right of way
förkörsrätt; rätt att passera, allemansrätt till väg* * *1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) allemansrätt, servitut2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) allmän väg3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) förkörsrätt -
48 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) právo průchodu2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) veřejná cesta3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) přednost v jízdě* * *• právo v jízdě• právo průjezdu• právo průchodu• přednost v jízdě -
49 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) drept de trecere2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) drept de trecere3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) prioritate -
50 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) δικαίωμα χρήσης ιδιωτικού δρόμου2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) κοινόχρηστος δρόμος3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) προτεραιότητα -
51 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) prejsť cez súkromný pozemok, dovolený prechod2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) verejná cesta3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) prednosť v jazde -
52 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) droit de passage2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) droit de passage3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) priorité -
53 right of way
1) (the right of the public to use a path that goes across private property.) direito de passagem2) ((right-of-way - plural rights-of-way) a road or path over private land, along which the public have a right to walk.) via pública3) (the right of one car etc to move first eg when crossing a cross-roads, or going round a roundabout: It was your fault that our cars crashed - I had right of way.) preferência -
54 new issue
Fin1. a new security, for example, a bond or share, being offered to the public for the first time.2. a rights issue, or any further issue of an existing security -
55 dispute
dɪsˈpju:t
1. сущ.
1) диспут, дискуссия, дебаты, полемика (about, over;
with) to stir up a dispute about ≈ вызывать споры о acrimonious dispute, bitter dispute ≈ язвительная полемика heated dispute, sharp dispute ≈ горячий спор public dispute ≈ общественная полемика beyond dispute, out of dispute, past dispute, without dispute ≈ вне сомнения, бесспорно Syn: controversy, debate
1.
2) спор, разногласия;
пререкания, ссора to arbitrate, resolve, settle a dispute ≈ разрешать спор Syn: controversy, quarrel
1.
2. гл.
1) а) спорить, дискутировать( with, against - с;
on, about, over - о) The government and the farmers are disputing about/over the land for the airport. ≈ Правительство и фермеры спорят о том, какую землю отвести под аэропорт. How long will the two parties go on disputing whether luxury be a virtue or a crime? ≈ Как долго две стороны будут спорить, является ли роскошь достоинством или преступление? Syn: argue, debate
2. б) ссориться
2) ставить под сомнение, подвергать сомнению Nobody disputed that Davey was clever. ≈ Никто не подвергал сомнению тот факт, что Деви умен. Her honesty was never disputed. ≈ Ее честность никогда не подвергалась сомнению. Ant: maintain, defend
3) выступать против, бороться, сопротивляться Syn: strive, resist
4) оспаривать (первенство в состязании и т. п.) Russia and Ukraine have been disputing the ownership of the fleet. ≈ Россия и Украина спорили, кому должен принадлежать флот. Fishermen from Bristol disputed fishing rights with the Danes. ≈ Рыбаки из Бристоля спорили о правах на ловлю рыбы с датчанами. диспут, дискуссия, дебаты - heated * горячая /оживленная/ дискуссия - bitter * острая /резкая/ полемика спор;
пререкания, ссора - border * пограничный спор - labour * трудовой конфликт /спор/;
конфликт между рабочими и предпринимателями - * at law (юридическое) тяжба - matter in * предмет спора - beyond /out of, past, without/ * вне всяких сомнений, бесспорно - to settle a * разрешить спор спорный вопрос - the three hour sit-down resolved none of the substantive *s between them трехчасовая встреча не разрешила ни одного из существенных вопросов, по которым они расходятся обсуждать, дискутировать;
принимать участие в диспуте - to * a question обсуждать вопрос спорить, пререкаться - to * about /on, upon/ smth. спорить о чем-л. - to * with /against/ smb. спорить с кем-л., прекословить кому-л. - to * with smb. about the education of children спорить с кем-л. о воспитании детей - some husbands and wives are always disputing в иных семьях мужья и жены вечно пререкаются ставить под сомнение, оспаривать;
сомневаться( в чем-л.) - to * a statement ставить под сомнение заявление - to * an election оспаривать результаты выборов - that he didn't * этого он не оспаривал, против этого он не возражал - but it has happened - and there is no disputing its logic но это произошло, и нет сомнений в том, что это было не случайно выступать против, сопротивляться с оружием в руках - to * the enemy's advance сдерживать наступление противника бороться за, добиваться - to * a victory добиваться победы - to * in arms every inch of ground отстаивать с оружием в руках каждую пядь земли ~ диспут;
дебаты, полемика;
beyond (или past, without) dispute вне сомнения;
бесспорно;
the matter is in dispute дело находится в стадии обсуждения boundary ~ пограничный спор demarcation ~ пограничный спор demarcation ~ спор о демаркационной линии dispute дебаты ~ дискуссия ~ дискутировать ~ диспут;
дебаты, полемика;
beyond (или past, without) dispute вне сомнения;
бесспорно;
the matter is in dispute дело находится в стадии обсуждения ~ диспут ~ обсуждать ~ обсуждение ~ оспаривать (первенство в состязании и т. п.) ~ оспаривать, подвергать сомнению (право на что-л., достоверность чего-л. и т. п.) ~ оспаривать ~ прения ~ пререкаться, ссориться ~ противиться;
препятствовать;
оказывать сопротивление;
отстаивать ~ сомневаться ~ спор, разногласия;
пререкания;
labour( или industrial, trade) dispute трудовой конфликт ~ спор ~ спорить, оспаривать ~ спорить, дискутировать (with, against - с;
on, about - о) ~ спорить ~ спорный вопрос ~ ставить под сомнение to ~ in arms every inch of ground отстаивать с оружием в руках каждую пядь земли to ~ the enemy's advance сдерживать наступление, продвижение противника fishing ~ конфликт в области рыболовства in ~ спорный industrial ~ производственный конфликт industrial ~ производственный спор industrial ~ трудовой спор (на предприятии между профсоюзом и работодателем) interunion ~ спор между различными профсоюзами (например, из-за того, кто должен вести коллективные переговоры) jurisdictional ~ юридический спор ~ спор, разногласия;
пререкания;
labour (или industrial, trade) dispute трудовой конфликт labour ~ трудовой конфликт labour ~ трудовой спор (особенно коллективный) labour: ~ dispute трудовой конфликт labour market ~ конфликт на рынке труда legal ~ правовой спор legal ~ юридические разногласия ~ диспут;
дебаты, полемика;
beyond (или past, without) dispute вне сомнения;
бесспорно;
the matter is in dispute дело находится в стадии обсуждения property ~ спор о праве собственности recognition ~ спор за признание( например, между различнами пофсоюзами за право ведения коллективных переговоров) trade ~ трудовой конфликт wage ~ конфликт из-за оплаты труда wage ~ спор по поводу заработной платы wage ~ трудовой конфликт -
56 ensure
забезпечувати, гарантувати, (по)ручатися; страхуватиensure the security of the parties — = ensure the security of the parties concerned гарантувати безпеку сторін
- ensure a rightensure the security of the parties concerned — = ensure the security of the parties
- ensure collective security
- ensure compliance
- ensure consumers' rights
- ensure enforcement of orders
- ensure equal security for all
- ensure fairness in debate
- ensure full employment
- ensure freedom of the seas
- ensure impartiality
- ensure independence
- ensure order
- ensure political stability
- ensure road safety
- ensure safety
- ensure security
- ensure secrecy
- ensure stability
- ensure the president's safety
- ensure the safety of products -
57 Brown, Charles Eugene Lancelot
[br]b. 17 June 1863 Winterthur, Switzerlandd. 2 May 1924 Montagnola, Italy[br]English engineer who developed polyphase electrical generation and transmission plant.[br]After attending the Technical College in Winterthur, Brown served with Emile Burgin in Basle before entering the Oerlikon engineering works near Zurich. Two years later he became Director of the electrical department of Oerlikon and from that time was involved in the development of electrical equipment for the generation and distribution of power. The Lauffen-Frankfurt 110-mile (177 km) transmission line of 1891 demonstrated the commercial feasibility of transmitting electrical power over great distances with three-phase alternating current. For this he designed a generator and early examples of oil-cooled transformers, and the scheme gave an impetus to the development of electric-power transmission throughout Europe. In 1891, in association with Walter Boveri, Brown founded the works of Brown Boveri \& Co. at Baden, Switzerland, and until his retirement in 1911 he devoted his energies to the design of polyphase alternating-current machinery. Important installations included the Frankfurt electricity works (1894), the Paderno-Milan transmission line, and the Lugano tramway of 1894, the first system in Europe to use three-phase traction motors. This tramway was followed by many other polyphase and mountain railways. The acquisition by Brown Boveri \& Co. in 1900 of the manufacturing rights of the Parsons steam turbine directed Brown's attention to problems associated with high-speed machines. Recognizing the high centrifugal stress involved, he began to employ solid cylindrical generator rotors with slots for the excitation winding, a method that has come to be universally adopted in large alternators.[br]Bibliography3 December 1901, British patent no. 24,632 (slotted rotor for alternators).Further ReadingObituary, 1924, The Engineer 137:543.Ake T.Vrenthem, 1980, Jonas Wenstrom and the Three Phase System, Stockholm, pp. 26–8 (obituary).75 Years of Brown Boveri, 1966, Baden, Switzerland (for a company history).GWBiographical history of technology > Brown, Charles Eugene Lancelot
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58 Carlson, Chester Floyd
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 8 July 1906 Seattle, Washington, USAd. 19 September 1968 New York, USA[br][br]Carlson studied physics at the California Institute of Technology and in 1930 he took a research position at Bell Telephone Laboratories, but soon transferred to their patent department. To equip himself in this field, Carlson studied law, and in 1934 he became a patent attorney at P.R.Mallory \& Co., makers of electrical apparatus. He was struck by the difficulty in obtaining copies of documents and drawings; indeed, while still at school, he had encountered printing problems in trying to produce a newsletter for amateur chemists. He began experimenting with various light-sensitive substances, and by 1937 he had conceived the basic principles of xerography ("dry writing"), using the property of certain substances of losing an electrostatic charge when light impinges on them. His work for Mallory brought him into contact with the Battelle Memorial Institute, the world's largest non-profit research organization; their subsidiary, set up to develop promising ideas, took up Carlson's invention. Carlson received his first US patent for the process in 1940, with two more in 1942, and he assigned to Battelle exclusive patent rights in return for a share of any future proceeds. It was at Battelle that selenium was substituted as the light-sensitive material.In 1946 the Haloid Company of Rochester, manufacturers of photographic materials and photocopying equipment, heard of the Xerox copier and, seeing it as a possible addition to their products, took out a licence to develop it commercially. The first Xerox Copier was tested during 1949 and put on the market the following year. The process soon began to displace older methods, such as Photostat, but its full impact on the public came in 1959 with the advent of the Xerox 914 Copier. It is fair to apply the overworked word "revolution" to the change in copying methods initiated by Carlson. He became a multimillionaire from his royalties and stock holding, and in his last years he was able to indulge in philanthropic activities.[br]Further ReadingObituary, 1968, New York Times, 20 September.R.M.Schaffert, 1954, "Developments in xerography", Penrose Annual.J.Jewkes, 1969, The Sources of Invention, 2nd edn, London: Macmillan, pp. 405–8.LRD -
59 Elkington, George Richard
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 17 October 1801 Birmingham Englandd. 22 September 1865 Pool Park, Denbighshire, England[br]English pioneer in electroplating.[br]He was apprenticed to his uncles, makers of metalware, in 1815 and showed such aptitude for business that he was taken into partnership. On their deaths, Elkington assumed sole ownership of the business. In conjunction with his cousin Henry (1810–52), by unrelenting enterprise, he established an industry for electroplating and electrogilding. Up until c.1840, silver-plated goods were produced by rolling or soldering thin sheets of silver to a base metal, such as copper. Back in 1801, the English chemist William Wollaston had deposited one metal upon another by means of an electric current generated from a voltaic pile or battery. In the 1830s, certain inventors, such as Bessemer used this result to produce plated articles and these efforts in turn induced the Elkingtons to apply the method in their trade. In 1836 and 1837 they took out patents for "mercurial gilding", and one patent of 1838 refers to a separate electric current. In 1840 they bought from John Wright, a Birmingham surgeon, his discovery of what proved to be the best electroplating solution: namely, solutions of cyanides of gold and silver in potassium cyanide. They also purchased rights to use the electric machine invented by J.S. Woolrich. Armed with these techniques, the Elkingtons produced in their large new works in Newhall Street a wide range of gold-and silver-plated decorative and artistic ware. Henry was particularly active on the artistic side of the business, as was their employee Alexander Parkes. For some twenty-five years, Britain enjoyed a virtual monopoly of this kind of ware, due largely to the enterprise of the Elkingtons, although by the end of the century rising tariffs had closed many foreign markets and the lead had passed to Germany. George spent all his working life in Birmingham, taking some part in the public life of the city. He was a governor of King Edward's Grammar School and a borough magistrate. He was also a caring employer, setting up houses and schools for his workers.[br]Bibliography1864, Journal of the Royal Society for Arts (29 January).LRDBiographical history of technology > Elkington, George Richard
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60 Morrison, William Murray
[br]b. 7 October 1873 Birchwood, Inverness-shire, Scotlandd. 21 May 1948 London, England[br]Scottish pioneer in the development of the British aluminium industry and Highlands hydroelectric energy.[br]After studying at the West of Scotland Technical College in Glasgow, in January 1895 Morrison was appointed Engineer to the newly formed British Aluminium Company Limited (BAC); it was with this organization that he spent his entire career. The company secured the patent rights to the Héroult and Bayer processes. It constructed a 200 tonne per year electrolytic plant at Foyers on the shore of Loch Ness, together with an adjacent 5000 kW hydroelectric scheme, and it built an alumina factory at Larne Harbour in north-eastern Ireland. Morrison was soon Manager at Foyers, and he became the company's Joint Technical Adviser. In 1910 he was made General Manager, and later he was appointed Managing Director. Morrison successfully brought about improvements in all parts of the production process; between 1915 and 1930 he increased the size of individual electrolytic cells by a factor of five, from 8,000 to 40,000 amperes. Soon after 1901, BAC built a second works for electrolytic reduction, at Kinlochleven in Argyllshire, where the primary design originated from Morrison. In the 1920s a third plant was erected at Fort William, in the lee of Ben Nevis, with hydroelectric generators providing some 75 MW. Alumina factories were constructed at Burntisland on the Firth of Forth and, in the 1930s, at Newport in Monmouthshire. Rolling mills were developed at Milton in Staffordshire, Warrington, and Falkirk in Stirlingshire, this last coming into use in the 1940s, by which time the company had a primary-metal output of more than 30,000 tonnes a year. Morrison was closely involved in all of these developments. He retired in 1946 as Deputy Chairman of BAC.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCommander of the Order of St Olav of Norway 1933 (BAC had manufacturing interests in Norway). Knighted 1943. Vice-Chairman, British Non-Ferrous Metals Research Association, Faraday Society, Institute of Metals. Institute of Metals Platinum Medal 1942.Bibliography1939, "Aluminium and highland water power", Journal of the Institute of Metals 65:17– 36 (seventeenth autumn lecture),See also: Hall, Charles MartinJKABiographical history of technology > Morrison, William Murray
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