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1 Saint-Étienne
Saint-Étienne ⇒ Les villes npr Saint-Étienne. -
2 Étienne
[etjɛn] nom propre -
3 Saint-Claire Deville, Henri Etienne
Biographical history of technology > Saint-Claire Deville, Henri Etienne
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4 Etienne Saint Amant
Religion: ESAУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Etienne Saint Amant
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5 Lenoir, Jean Joseph Etienne
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy, Railways and locomotives, Steam and internal combustion engines, Telecommunications[br]b. 1822 Mussey-la-Ville, Belgiumd. 1900 Verenna Saint-Hildar, France[br]Belgian (naturalized French in 1870) inventor of internal combustion engines, an electroplating process and railway telegraphy systems.[br]Leaving his native village for Paris at the age of 16, Lenoir became a metal enameller. Experiments with various electroplating processes provided a useful knowledge of electricity that showed in many of his later ideas. Electric ignition, although somewhat unreliable, was a feature of the Lenoir gas engine which appeared in 1860. Resembling the steam engine of the day, Lenoir engines used a non-compression cycle of operations, in which the gas-air mixture of about atmospheric pressure was being ignited at one-third of the induction stroke. The engines were double acting. About five hundred of Lenoir's engines were built, mostly in Paris by M.Hippolyte Marinoni and by Lefébvre; the Reading Ironworks in England built about one hundred. Many useful applications of the engine are recorded, but the explosive shock that occurred on ignition, together with the unreliable ignition systems, prevented large-scale acceptance of the engine in industry. However, Lenoir's effort and achievements stimulated much discussion, and N.A. Otto is reported to have carried out his first experiments on a Lenoir engine.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsAcadémie des Sciences Prix Montyon Prize 1870. Société d'Encouragement, Silver Prize of 12,000 francs. Légion d'honneur 1881 (for his work in telegraphy).Bibliography8 February 1860, British patent no. 335 (the first Lenoir engine).1861, British patent no. 107 (the Lenoir engine).Further ReadingDugald Clerk, 1895, The Gas and Oil Engine, 6th edn, London, pp. 13–15, 30, 118, 203.World Who's Who in Science, 1968 (for an account of Lenoir's involvement in technology).KABBiographical history of technology > Lenoir, Jean Joseph Etienne
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6 Сент-Этьен
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7 stéphanois
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8 Thimmonier, Barthélémy
[br]b. 1793 Saint-Etienne, France d. 1857[br]French inventor of the first sewing machine.[br]The sewing machine is probably the most universal and the most important machine in clothing manufacture, being used both industrially and domestically. It was also the first domestic consumer durable and was the first mass-produced machine to appear in the home. The first practical sewing machine was built during 1828 and 1829 by Barthélémy Thimmonier, a working tailor of Saint-Etienne in France. He came from a modest family and had never received any training as a mechanic, so his invention is all the more remarkable. He took out a patent in 1830 in his own name and that of Ferrand, a tutor of the Saint-Etienne School of Mines who had helped him financially. It was a chain-stitch machine made largely of wood and operated by a foot pedal with a large flywheel. The needle moved up and down through the cloth, which was placed on a platform below it. A second, hooked needle under the platform made a loop in the thread, which was caught when the first needle descended again.In 1841, Thimmonier was appointed to a senior position in a large Paris clothing factory engaged in the production of French army uniforms. He soon had eighty machines in use, but a mob of hand-sewers broke in, smashed the machines and nearly killed Thimmonier. In 1845, he had developed his machine so that it could make 200 stitches per minute and formed a partnership with Jean-Marie Magnin to build them commercially. However, the abdication of Louis Philippe on 21 February 1848 ended his hopes, even though patents were taken out in the UK and the USA in that year. The English patent was in Magnin's name, and Thimmonier died impoverished in 1857. His machine was perfected by many later inventors.[br]Bibliography1830, with Ferrand, (chain-stitch machine).Further ReadingA.Matagran, 1931, "Barthélémy Thimmonier (1793–1857), inventeur de la machine à coudre", Bull. Soc. Enc. Industr. nat. 130 (biography in French).J.Meyssin, 1914, Histoire de la machine à coudre: portrait et biographie de l'inventeur B.Thimmonier, 5th edn, Lyons (biography in French).M.Daumas, (ed.), 1968, Histoire générale des techniques, Vol. III: L'Expansion du machinisme, Paris (includes a description of Thimmonier's machine, with a picture).N.Salmon, 1863, History of the Sewing Machine from the Year 1750 (tells the history of the sewing machine).F.B.Jewell, 1975, Veteran Sewing Machines. A Collector's Guide, Newton Abbot (a more modern account).RLH -
9 incliner
incliner [ɛ̃kline]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = pencher) [+ appareil, bouteille, dossier de siège] to tilt2. intransitive verb• incliner à penser/croire que... to be inclined to think/believe that...3. reflexive verbb. ( = rendre hommage à) s'incliner devant la supériorité de qn to bow to sb's superiority• il est venu s'incliner devant la dépouille mortelle du président he came to pay his last respects at the coffin of the presidentc. ( = céder) s'incliner devant l'autorité/la volonté de qn to bow to sb's authority/wishesd. ( = s'avouer battu) Marseille s'est incliné devant Saint-Étienne (par) 2 buts à 3 Marseilles lost to Saint-Étienne by 2 goals to 3* * *ɛ̃kline
1.
1) ( pencher) to tilt [parasol]; to tip up [flacon]2) ( inciter) fml
2.
3.
s'incliner verbe pronominal1) ( se pencher en avant) to lean forward; ( par politesse) to bow2) ( ne pas contester)s'incliner devant quelque chose — to bow to something, to accept something
3) ( s'avouer vaincu) to give in (colloq) ( devant to)4) ( témoigner du respect)5) ( se pencher sur le côté) [moto] to lean over* * *ɛ̃kline1. vt1) [bouteille] to tilt2) [tête] to incline, to tilt3) fig (= inciter)2. vi(= avoir tendance)incliner à penser que... — to be inclined to think that...
* * *incliner verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( pencher) to tilt [parasol]; to tip up [flacon]; incliner le buste to lean forward; incliner la tête to move one's head; incliner la tête sur le côté to put one's head on one side; saluer qn en inclinant la tête to greet sb with a nod;2 fml ( inciter) cela m'incline à la confiance this inclines me to be trusting; ceci m'incline à penser que this leads me to think that.B vi fml to be inclined (à faire to do); incliner à penser que to be inclined to think that; incliner à la prudence or à être prudent to be inclined to be cautious.C s'incliner vpr1 ( se pencher) to lean forward; (par politesse, respect) to bow; s'incliner devant qn/très bas to bow to sb/very low;2 ( ne pas contester) s'incliner devant qch to bow to sth, to accept sth; s'incliner devant les décisions de qn/les faits to accept sb's decisions/the facts; s'incliner devant le règlement to obey the rules; je m'incline I have to agree;3 ( s'avouer vaincu) to give in○ (devant to); le gouvernement va devoir s'incliner the government will have to give in○ ou to concede defeat; s'incliner devant une armée plus nombreuse to give in○ to an army of superior strength, concede defeat in the face of an army of superior strength; en finale, X s'incline devant Y Sport in the final, X lost to Y;4 ( témoigner du respect) s'incliner devant l'érudition/le courage de qn to admire sb's learning/courage;5 ( devenir oblique) [moto] to lean over.[ɛ̃kline] verbe transitif1. [courber] to bendincliner la tête ou le frontb. [pour acquiescer ou saluer] to nod (one's head)b. [pour saluer] to bow[pencher - dossier, siège] to tilt2. (soutenu) [inciter]incliner quelqu'un à faire to encourage ou to prompt somebody to docette information m'incline à revoir mon point de vue this news leads me ou makes me inclined to reconsider my position————————incliner à verbe plus prépositionj'incline à penser qu'elle a tort I tend ou I'm inclined to think she's wrong————————s'incliner verbe pronominal intransitif1. [être penché - mur] to lean (over) ; [ - toit, route] to slope ; [ - avion] to tilt, to bank ; [ - navire] to list ; [ - siège] to tilt[se courber - personne] to bend forward ; [ - personne qui salue] to bow ; [ - cime d'arbre] to bend (over)2. (figuré) [se soumettre]s'incliner devant les faits to submit to ou to accept the factsle Racing s'est incliné devant Toulon par 15 à 12 SPORT Racing Club lost ou went down to Toulon 15 to 123. [se recueillir] -
10 Seguin, Marc
[br]b. 20 April 1786 Annonay, Ardèche, Franced. 24 February 1875 Annonay, Ardèche, France[br]French engineer, inventor of multi-tubular firetube boiler.[br]Seguin trained under Joseph Montgolfier, one of the inventors of the hot-air balloon, and became a pioneer of suspension bridges. In 1825 he was involved in an attempt to introduce steam navigation to the River Rhône using a tug fitted with a winding drum to wind itself upstream along a cable attached to a point on the bank, with a separate boat to transfer the cable from point to point. The attempt proved unsuccessful and was short-lived, but in 1825 Seguin had decided also to seek a government concession for a railway from Saint-Etienne to Lyons as a feeder of traffic to the river. He inspected the Stockton \& Darlington Railway and met George Stephenson; the concession was granted in 1826 to Seguin Frères \& Ed. Biot and two steam locomotives were built to their order by Robert Stephenson \& Co. The locomotives were shipped to France in the spring of 1828 for evaluation prior to construction of others there; each had two vertical cylinders, one each side between front and rear wheels, and a boiler with a single large-diameter furnace tube, with a watertube grate. Meanwhile, in 1827 Seguin, who was still attempting to produce a steamboat powerful enough to navigate the fast-flowing Rhône, had conceived the idea of increasing the heating surface of a boiler by causing the hot gases from combustion to pass through a series of tubes immersed in the water. He was soon considering application of this type of boiler to a locomotive. He applied for a patent for a multi-tubular boiler on 12 December 1827 and carried out numerous experiments with various means of producing a forced draught to overcome the perceived obstruction caused by the small tubes. By May 1829 the steam-navigation venture had collapsed, but Seguin had a locomotive under construction in the workshops of the Lyons-Sain t- Etienne Railway: he retained the cylinder layout of its Stephenson locomotives, but incorporated a boiler of his own design. The fire was beneath the barrel, surrounded by a water-jacket: a single large flue ran towards the front of the boiler, whence hot gases returned via many small tubes through the boiler barrel to a chimney above the firedoor. Draught was provided by axle-driven fans on the tender.Seguin was not aware of the contemporary construction of Rocket, with a multi-tubular boiler, by Robert Stephenson; Rocket had its first trial run on 5 September 1829, but the precise date on which Seguin's locomotive first ran appears to be unknown, although by 20 October many experiments had been carried out upon it. Seguin's concept of a multi-tubular locomotive boiler therefore considerably antedated that of Henry Booth, and his first locomotive was completed about the same date as Rocket. It was from Rocket's boiler, however, rather than from that of Seguin's locomotive, that the conventional locomotive boiler was descended.[br]BibliographyFebruary 1828, French patent no. 3,744 (multi-tubular boiler).1839, De l'Influence des chemins de fer et de l'art de les tracer et de les construire, Paris.Further ReadingF.Achard and L.Seguin, 1928, "Marc Seguin and the invention of the tubular boiler", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 7 (traces the chronology of Seguin's boilers).——1928, "British railways of 1825 as seen by Marc Seguin", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 7.J.B.Snell, 1964, Early Railways, London: Weidenfeld \& Nicolson.J.-M.Combe and B.Escudié, 1991, Vapeurs sur le Rhône, Lyons: Presses Universitaires de Lyon.PJGR -
11 (г.) Сент-Этьен
Geography: Saint-Etienne (Франция) -
12 Сент-Этьен
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13 vert
vert, verte [vεʀ, vεʀt]1. adjectivea. ( = couleur) greenb. ( = pas mûr) [fruit] unripe ; ( = frais) [bois] greenc. ( = alerte) [vieillard] sprightlyd. [propos, histoire] spicye. ( = à la campagne) tourisme vert country holidaysf. ( = écologique) green2. masculine nouna. ( = couleur) green• se mettre au vert ( = à la campagne) to take a refreshing break in the country• passer au vert [voiture] to go when the lights are greenb. ( = écologistes) les Verts the Greens━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► When vert is combined with another word, such as pomme, to indicate a shade, there is no agreement with the noun: une chemise verte but une chemise vert pomme.* * *
1.
verte vɛʀ, vɛʀt adjectif1) gén green; [région, pays] green, verdant littér2) ( non arrivé à maturité) [fruit, légume] green, unripe; [bois] green; [vin] immature3) ( vigoureux) [vieillard] sprightly4) (before n) [semonce, réprimande] sharp, stiff
2.
nom masculin greenle feu est passé au vert — the light went ou turned green
3.
verts nom masculin pluriel Politiqueles verts — the environmentalists, the ecologists GB
••en dire de vertes — to tell spicy ou risqué stories
avoir la main verte — to have green fingers GB ou a green thumb US
se mettre au vert — (colloq) to take a break in the country
* * *vɛʀ, vɛʀt vert, -e1. adj1) (couleur) green2) POLITIQUE (= écologiste) Green3) AUTOMOBILESIl s'est assuré que le feu était vert avant de s'engager. — He made sure the light was green before moving off.
donner son feu vert à qch — to give sth the go-ahead, to give sth the green light
recevoir le feu vert de qn — to get the go-ahead from sb, to get the green light from sb
5) (= cru) (langage) forthright, strong6) (= vigoureux) sprightlyêtre encore vert [vieillard] — to be still sprightly
2. nm1) (= couleur) green2) POLITIQUEles Verts (= parti) — the Greens, the Green party
* * *A ⇒ Les couleurs adj1 gén green; [région, pays] green, verdant littér; vert foncé/clair dark/light green; une banlieue verte a leafy suburb; être vert de peur to be white with fear, to look green around the gills○; ⇒ mûr;3 ( vigoureux) [vieillard] sprightly; elles sont loin mes vertes années! the years of my youth are long past!;4 ( sévère) (before n) [semonce, réprimande] sharp, stiff.B ⇒ Les couleurs nm green; une robe d'un vert hideux a dress of a hideous green (colourGB); je suis passé au (feu) vert I went through when the light was green; le feu est passé au vert the light went ou turned green.C verts nmpl Pol les verts the environmentalists, the ecologists GB; les Verts the French Green party.vert amande almond (green); vert bouteille bottle green; vert d'eau sea-green; vert émeraude emerald green; vert galant old charmer; vert olive olive green; vert pistache pistachio green; vert pomme apple green; vert tilleul sage green.en dire de vertes to tell spicy ou risqué stories; avoir les doigts verts, avoir la main verte to have green fingers GB ou a green thumb US; se mettre au vert○ to take a break in the country.1. [couleur] green(figuré) [débutant, apprenti] inexperienced3. [bois] green4. [à préparer]5. [vigoureux] sprightly7. [écologiste] greenen dire/en avoir entendu des vertes et des pas mûres to tell/to have heard some pretty raunchy jokes9. (avant le nom) [violent]————————nom masculin1. [couleur] green3. (locution)————————Verts nom masculin pluriel -
14 Кур-Сент-Этьен
( Бельгия) Court-Saint-Étienne -
15 Platini, Michel
Footballer, captain of the French national team from 1979 to 1987, and team manager from 1988 to 1992. Platini played for the French first division clubs of Nancy and Saint-Etienne, before moving on to an international career at Juventus. He is currently (2008) chairman of UEFA.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Platini, Michel
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16 Loire, La
the longest river in France, and the longest surviving "natural" river in western Europe. Length 1020 km. Rising at over 1300 metres in the Cévennes mountains in the department of Ardèche, the Loire flows north as far as Orleans, then westwards to its mouth at Saint Nazaire, on the Atlantic coast just south of Brittany. The Loire is considered a "natural" river, on account of the few human-built restrictions to its natural flow, which varies considerably from season to season. For much of its lower reaches, the Loire is bordered by stone and earth levées, built in the 17th century, and imitated later on the other side of the Atlantic in Louisiana, beside the great Mississippi. Salmon once thrived in this river and its tributary the Allier; they are currently being reintroduced. Once a major waterway, the Loire is only properly navigable today as far as the city of Angers. "La Loire" is also the name of a French department, number 42, capital St. Etienne.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Loire, La
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Saint Etienne — Saint Étienne Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Pour les articles homonymes, voir Étienne et Saint Étienne (homonymie). Saint Étienne fait référence à de nombreux saints ou bienheureux… … Wikipédia en Français
Saint étienne — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Pour les articles homonymes, voir Étienne et Saint Étienne (homonymie). Saint Étienne fait référence à de nombreux saints ou bienheureux chrétiens. Le… … Wikipédia en Français