-
41 price
1. noun1) (the amount of money for which a thing is or can be bought or sold; the cost: The price of the book was $10.) pris2) (what one must give up or suffer in order to gain something: Loss of freedom is often the price of success.) pris2. verb1) (to mark a price on: I haven't priced these articles yet.) prise, prismerke2) (to find out the price of: He went into the furniture shop to price the beds.) spørre om prisen•- pricey
- at a price
- beyond/without pricepris--------vurdereIsubst. \/praɪs\/1) pris (også overført)2) ( handel) kurs, notering3) odds4) ( gammeldags) verdi5) belønning, dusørabove\/beyond\/without price som ikke kan betales med penger, uvurderligask the price of spørre om prisen påat a price ha sin prisat any price for enhver pris, koste hva det koste vil ( overført) for alt i verdenat reduced prices til nedsatte prisercheap at the price pengene verdt, rimeligcurrent price gjeldende pris, dagspriscut the price ( handel) presse prisen ned (i konkurranseøyemed)enhance the price of forøke verdien av, fordyre, gjøre dyrereevery man has his price enhver har sin pris (dvs. kan bestikkes)flat price fast prisfreeze prices innføre prisstopp, 'fryse' prisenehave the price of something ha penger til noeincrease the price of fordyreinflated prices inflasjonspriserlong price høy prisone pearl of great price ( bibelsk) en kostelig perleprice floor laveste pris, bunnpris, minimumspristhe price is flat prisen er presset nedthe price of something prisen på noe, det noe koster• what is the price of...?hva er prisen på...?put a price on bestemme prisen påset\/put a price on a person's head sette en pris på noens hode (dvs. utlove en dusør til den som pågriper personen)starting prices odds umiddelbart før løpet begynnerwhat price? ( hverdagslig) forklaring: brukt til å spørre om hva det er blitt til med noe eller til å antyde at noe er blitt eller vil bli forgjeves• what price democracy now?forklaring: brukt til å komme med et forslag eller spørre om sannsynligheten av at det blir noe av• what price fine weather on our holiday?IIverb \/praɪs\/1) prise, prismerke, sette prislapp på2) fastsette prisen på3) vurdere i penger, vurdere verdien av4) ( handel) fakturerebe priced at stå i, ligge påprice oneself out of the market prise seg ut av markedet (dvs. miste kundene ved for høy prissetting) -
42 price
1. noun1) (the amount of money for which a thing is or can be bought or sold; the cost: The price of the book was $10.) preço2) (what one must give up or suffer in order to gain something: Loss of freedom is often the price of success.) preço2. verb1) (to mark a price on: I haven't priced these articles yet.) pôr preço2) (to find out the price of: He went into the furniture shop to price the beds.) apreçar•- pricey
- at a price
- beyond/without price* * *[prais] n 1 preço: a) custo. b) prêmio, recompensa. c) valor, valia. I do it at any price / vou fazê-lo a qualquer preço. 2 oportunidades, esperanças. • vt 1 apreçar: a) fixar o preço de. b) colocar o preço em. c) coll perguntar o preço de. 2 estimar, avaliar. at a high price por alto preço. at any price a qualquer preço, custe o que custar. cut price preço reduzido. retail price index índice de preços no varejo. to price oneself out of the market cobrar mais que o mercado. to set ou put a price on pôr um preço em. what is the price of this? quanto custa isto? -
43 price
[praɪs] 1. ncena f2. vtwhat is the price of…? — ile kosztuje +nom ?
to go up/rise in price — drożeć (zdrożeć perf)
to put a price on sth ( fig) — przeliczać (przeliczyć perf) coś na pieniądze
to price o.s. out of the market — nie utrzymać się ( perf) na rynku ze względu na zawyżone ceny
he regained his freedom, but at a price — odzyskał wolność, ale drogo za to zapłacił
* * *1. noun1) (the amount of money for which a thing is or can be bought or sold; the cost: The price of the book was $10.) cena2) (what one must give up or suffer in order to gain something: Loss of freedom is often the price of success.) cena2. verb1) (to mark a price on: I haven't priced these articles yet.) umieścić cenę na2) (to find out the price of: He went into the furniture shop to price the beds.) wycenić•- pricey
- at a price
- beyond/without price -
44 slave
sleɪv
1. сущ.
1) невольник, раб slave to smth.≈ раб чего-л. slave to a habit ≈ раб привычки slave to fashion ≈ раб моды to buy slaves ≈ покупать рабов to free, liberate a slave ≈ освобождать раба to sell slaves ≈ продавать рабов fugitive, runaway slave ≈ беглый раб Syn: bondmaid, bondman, serf, thrall
1.
2) человек, выполняющий тяжелую работу;
работяга Syn: drudge
1., toiler
3) тех. ведомое устройство, подчиненный механизм Syn: slave device
2. прил.
1) рабский I hear you avowing that slave labor shall not come in competition with free labor. ≈ Я слышу вы открыто признаетесь, что рабский труд не сможет конкурировать со свободным трудом. slave market ≈
1) рынок рабов
2) амер.;
сл. биржа труда
2) тех. ведомый, подчиненный;
управляемый( об устройстве, механизме)
3. гл.
1) выполнять тяжелую работу;
работать как раб, надрываться I get so tired of slaving at this work day after day. ≈ Я так устал пахать на этой работе день за днем. By slaving away for two hours, I at last got the cooker clean. ≈ Два часа я мучился, и наконец отчистил кастрюлю. Syn: drudge
2., toil
2.
2) тех. подстраивать, синхронизировать( to - с каким-л. устройством, механизмом) раб, невольник - they were sold for *s они были проданы в рабство - trade in *s работорговля - * labour рабский труд - S. States (американизм) (историческое) рабовладельческие штаты жертва, раб ( идей, страстей, чужой воли) - a * of habit раб привычки - to be a * of fashion рабски следовать моде - to be a * to alcohol быть жертвой алкоголизма - to be a * to a formula слепо цепляться за какую-либо формулу робот( в фантастике) низкий угодник, раболепный прислужник( специальное) исполнительный механизм манипулятора (техническое) вспомогательное устройство;
ведомая станция ведомый, управляемый (техническое) копирующий, исполнительный( о механизме) работать до изнеможения, надрываться (тж. * away) - to * and toil to earn one's living работать до изнеможения ради куска хлеба - to * for one's master работать на хозяина;
работать подневольно (редкое) обращаться как с рабом;
помыкать( историческое) _ редк торговать рабами > to * one's life (out) надрываться, кишки надрывать slave вчт. ведомый ~ раб, невольник ~ работать как раб ~ attr. рабский;
slave labour подневольный труд ~ attr. рабский;
slave labour подневольный труд -
45 possible
'posəbl1) (able to happen or be done: It's possible that the train will be delayed; We'll come as soon as possible; I'll do everything possible; She did the only possible thing in the circumstances.) posible2) (satisfactory; acceptable: I've thought of a possible solution to the problem.) posible•- possibly
possible adj posibleI'm afraid that is not possible lo siento, pero eso no es posibletr['pɒsɪbəl]1 posible■ is it possible to book in advance? ¿se puede reservar con anticipación?1 posible candidato,-a\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLas far as possible en lo posible, dentro de lo posibleas much as possible todo lo posibleas soon as possible cuanto antes, lo antes posibleif (at all) possible si es posible, a ser posiblepossible ['pɑsəbəl] adj: posibleadj.• acontecedero, -a adj.• dable adj.• posible adj.
I 'pɑːsəbəl, 'pɒsəbəladjective posiblethe text must be checked for any possible mistakes — hay que revisar el texto por si hubiera algún error
it's just possible that he may have survived — existe una remota posibilidad de que haya sobrevivido
get here by eight if possible — llega antes de las ocho, si es posible or si puedes
II
a) c ( person) posible candidato, -ta m,fb) u ( what can be done)['pɒsǝbl]1. ADJ1) (=feasible) posiblewill it be possible for me to leave early? — ¿hay algún inconveniente en que me vaya antes de la hora?
•
as... as possible, try to make the lesson as interesting as possible — trata de que la lección sea lo más interesante posibleyou must practise as much as possible — debes practicar todo lo que puedas or todo lo posible
as soon as possible — cuanto antes, lo antes posible
•
we provide the best possible accommodation for our students — nuestros estudiantes disponen del mejor de los alojamientos•
if (at all) possible — si es posible, a ser posible•
to make sth possible, improvements made possible by new technology — mejoras fpl que la nueva tecnología ha hecho posiblethe new legislation would make it possible for alcohol to be sold on Sundays — la nueva legislación posibilitaría la venta de alcohol los domingos
•
I meant it in the nicest possible way — lo dije con la mejor de las intenciones•
we will help whenever possible — ayudaremos siempre y cuando sea posible, ayudaremos siempre que podamosworld 1., 1), as 3., far 1., 2)•
they have joined the job market at the worst possible time — se han incorporado al mercado de trabajo en el peor momento posible or en el peor de los momentos2) (=likely) posible3) (=conceivable) posiblewhat possible motive could she have? — ¿qué motivo puede tener?
it is possible that he'll come — es posible que venga, puede (ser) que venga
•
it's just possible he may still be there — existe una pequeña posibilidad de que siga allí2. N2)• the possible — lo posible
* * *
I ['pɑːsəbəl, 'pɒsəbəl]adjective posiblethe text must be checked for any possible mistakes — hay que revisar el texto por si hubiera algún error
it's just possible that he may have survived — existe una remota posibilidad de que haya sobrevivido
get here by eight if possible — llega antes de las ocho, si es posible or si puedes
II
a) c ( person) posible candidato, -ta m,fb) u ( what can be done) -
46 shop
1. nounkeep a shop — einen Laden od. ein Geschäft haben
keep [the] shop for somebody — jemanden im Laden od. Geschäft vertreten
all over the shop — (fig. coll.) überall
2) (business)set up shop — ein Geschäft eröffnen; (as a lawyer, dentist, etc.) eine Praxis aufmachen
talk shop — fachsimpeln (ugs.)
3) (workshop) Werkstatt, die2. intransitive verb,- pp- einkaufen3. transitive verb,shop or go shopping for shoes — Schuhe kaufen gehen
- pp- (Brit. sl.) verpfeifenPhrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/91520/shop_around">shop around* * *[ʃop] 1. noun1) (a place where goods are sold: a baker's shop.) der Laden2) (a workshop, or a place where any kind of industry is carried on: a machine-shop.) der Berieb2. verb((often go shopping) to visit shops for the purpose of buying: We shop on Saturdays; She goes shopping once a week.) einkaufen- shopper- shopping
- shop assistant
- shop floor
- shopkeeper
- shoplifter
- shoplifting
- shopping centre
- shopping mall
- shop around* * *[ʃɒp, AM ʃɑ:p]I. nhis latest novel will be in the \shops by Christmas sein neuester Roman wird bis Weihnachten erscheinenbook \shop Buchladen mrecord \shop Schallplattengeschäft ntto go to the \shops einkaufen gehento set up \shop (open a shop) ein Geschäft eröffnen [o fam aufmachen]; (start out in business) ein Unternehmen eröffnen; lawyer eine Kanzlei eröffnento set up \shop as a baker eine Bäckerei eröffnento set up \shop on one's own sich akk selbstständig machenshe shut up \shop as a software consultant sie hörte auf, als Softwareberaterin zu arbeitenthe only lawyer in town shut up \shop der einzige Anwalt der Stadt schloss seine Kanzleito do the \shop einkaufen [gehen]to do the weekly \shop den Wocheneinkauf erledigenrepair \shop [Reparatur]werkstatt f4.▶ to talk \shop über die Arbeit redenII. vi<- pp->einkaufento \shop at the market auf dem Markt einkaufento \shop at Marks and Spencers bei Marks and Spencers einkaufen▪ to \shop for sth etw einkaufento \shop for bargains auf Schnäppchenjagd sein famIII. vt<- pp->2. (go shopping somewhere)* * *[ʃɒp]1. nI have to go to the shops —
to set up shop — ein Geschäft or einen Laden eröffnen
to shut up or close up shop — zumachen, schließen
you've come to the wrong shop (fig inf) — da sind Sie an der falschen Adresse
all over the shop ( Brit inf ) — in der ganzen Gegend herum (inf)
to talk shop — über die or von der Arbeit reden; (esp of professional people) fachsimpeln
no shop, please! — keine Fachsimpelei, bitte!
2) (= workshop) Werkstatt f; (= workers) Arbeiter pl, Arbeiterschaft f3) (Brit= shopping)
to do one's weekly shop — seinen wöchentlichen Einkauf erledigen2. vieinkaufen, Einkäufe machenwe spend Saturday mornings shopping —
3. vt (Brit inf)* * *A s1. a) (Kauf)Laden m, Geschäft n: these CDs are not available in any shops sind im Handel nicht erhältlich;set up shop ein Geschäft eröffnen;set up shop as a lawyer eine Anwaltspraxis eröffnen;come to the wrong shop umg an die falsche Adresse geraten;all over the shop Br umg in der ganzen Gegend (herum), überall verstreut; in alle Himmelsrichtungen;b) US Abteilung f (eines Kaufhauses etc)2. Werkstatt f:carpenter’s shop Schreinerwerkstatt f, Schreinerei f3. Betrieb m, Fabrik f, Werk n:4. besonders Br Einkauf mB v/i einkaufen, Einkäufe machen:go shopping einkaufen gehen;a) (vor dem Einkaufen) die Preise vergleichen,I was shopping for a pair of shoes, but … ich wollte mir ein Paar Schuhe kaufen, aber …C v/t besonders Br sl einen Komplizen etc verpfeifen* * *1. nounkeep a shop — einen Laden od. ein Geschäft haben
keep [the] shop for somebody — jemanden im Laden od. Geschäft vertreten
all over the shop — (fig. coll.) überall
2) (business)set up shop — ein Geschäft eröffnen; (as a lawyer, dentist, etc.) eine Praxis aufmachen
talk shop — fachsimpeln (ugs.)
3) (workshop) Werkstatt, die2. intransitive verb,- pp- einkaufen3. transitive verb,shop or go shopping for shoes — Schuhe kaufen gehen
- pp- (Brit. sl.) verpfeifenPhrasal Verbs:* * *n.Geschäft -e n.Laden ¨-- m. v.einkaufen v. -
47 corporate
corporatif(ive), d'entreprisecorporate advertising publicité f institutionnelle, publicité d'entreprise;corporate assets biens m pl sociaux;corporate banking banque f d'entreprise;corporate body personne f morale;corporate bond obligation f de société;corporate budget budget m de la société;corporate buy-out rachat m d'entreprise par les salariés;corporate card carte f de crédit professionnelle;corporate culture culture f d'entreprise;∎ their corporate culture emphasizes the need for continuous improvement in customer service leur culture d'entreprise insiste sur la nécessité d'améliorer constamment le service clientèle;corporate entertainment divertissement m fourni par la société;corporate environment environnement m institutionnel;corporate film film m d'entreprise ou institutionnel;corporate finance finance f d'entreprise;corporate finance manager financier(ère) m, f d'entreprise;corporate governance committee groupe m de travail interne au Conseil, comité m de gouvernement d'entreprise;corporate hospitality = réceptions, déjeuners, billets de spectacle etc offerts par une entreprise à ses clients;corporate identity, corporate image image f de marque;∎ the company cares about its corporate image la société se préoccupe de son image;corporate income revenu m de société;corporate income tax impôt m sur les bénéfices des sociétés;corporate institution personne morale;corporate law droit m des entreprises;corporate lawyer juriste m f spécialisé(e) en droit des entreprises;American corporate licensing cession f de licence de marque;corporate literature brochures f pl décrivant une société;corporate member (of association) société-membre f;corporate misery index = indice de mesure de l'évolution des marges bénéficiaires;corporate model modèle m d'entreprise;corporate name raison f sociale;corporate planning planification f de l'entreprise;corporate raider attaquant(e) m, f;corporate responsibility responsabilité f de l'entreprise;∎ the idea of corporate responsibility is now taken seriously by an increasing number of companies de plus en plus de sociétés prennent très au sérieux le concept de responsabilité de l'entreprise;corporate restructuring restructuration f;∎ two subsidiary companies will be sold off as part of the corporate restructuring plan deux des filiales seront vendues dans le cadre du plan de restructuration de la société;corporate sector secteur m des grandes entreprises;corporate sponsorship mécénat m d'entreprise, parrainage m d'entreprises, sponsoring m;corporate strategy stratégie f de l'entreprise;corporate structure structure f de l'entreprise;corporate tax impôt sur les sociétés;corporate video film d'entreprise ou institutionnel;American corporate welfare = aide financière apportée par l'État à des entreprises privéesAs if investors didn't have enough to worry about, a brokerage house has invented a new measure to show that the corporate profit recovery could take longer than the market and some analysts think. A key economic measure in the last decades of the 20th century was the "misery index," which combined inflation and unemployment to show how badly consumers were hurting. But the key gauge for the first decade of the new century could be something called the " corporate misery index."
-
48 product
nпродукт, продукция, изделие
- advanced products
- agricultural products
- aircraft products
- all-season product
- ancillary products
- animal products
- animal and plant products
- annual product
- auxiliary product
- aviation products
- banking product
- basic products
- bespoke banking product
- branded products
- bulky product
- capital-intensive product
- capitalized product
- captive product
- certified product
- characteristic product
- chemical products
- commercial product
- commodity product
- comparable products
- comparative products
- competitive products
- complete product
- conforming product
- consumer product
- consumption product
- custom-made product
- dairy products
- defensive products
- delivered products
- different products
- differentiated products
- diversified products
- domestic products
- dumped products
- end product
- engineering products
- excess product
- expensive products
- export products
- exported products
- factory products
- factory-made products
- farm products
- final product
- finished product
- first-class product
- first-rate product
- flexible products
- fodder products
- food products
- foreign products
- foreign-made products
- forest products
- fresh products
- frozen products
- genetically modified products
- good quality product
- gross product
- gross domestic product
- gross national product
- half-finished product
- hard-to-move product
- hard-to-sell product
- health care products
- high-grade product
- highly effective products
- highly efficient products
- highly technical product
- high-priced products
- high-quality products
- high-reliability product
- high-technology products
- home product
- home-made product
- home-used product
- hottest-selling products
- imported products
- industrial products
- industrialized products
- inedible products
- inland product
- insurance product
- intermediate product
- joint products
- labour-intensive product
- licensed product
- listed products
- livestock products
- low-priced products
- made-to-order product
- main product
- manufactured products
- marginal product
- marginal revenue product
- marginal value product
- marketable product
- merchantable sales product
- multi-use product
- national product
- net product
- net domestic product
- net material product
- net national product
- newly designed product
- noncapitalized product
- nonpatentable product
- nonstandard product
- nonstorable product
- obsolescent product
- off-standard product
- patentable product
- patented product
- perishable product
- piggyback product
- pioneer product
- potential gross national product
- primary product
- prime product
- prime quality product
- private label product
- processed product
- promising product
- promoted product
- proprietary product
- proven product
- purchased product
- qualified product
- quality product
- questionable product
- ready-made product
- real net national product
- rejected product
- related products
- respective products
- returned product
- revised product
- rival product
- saleable products
- science-intensive products
- secondary product
- semifinished product
- semimanufactured product
- semiprocessed product
- semistandard product
- serial products
- sideline products
- similar products
- single-use product
- slow-moving product
- social product
- sold products
- sophisticated products
- special products
- spoiled products
- standard products
- standardized product
- substandard product
- substitution product
- superior product
- surplus product
- tangible product
- timber and paper products
- top quality product
- total product
- tying products
- unidentified product
- unfinished products
- unified product
- unmarketable products
- unpatented product
- unsaleable product
- useless product
- various products
- waste products
- product of industry
- product of labour
- products of superior quality
- products of vegetable and animal origin
- product superior in quality
- advertise a product
- assess a product
- deal in products
- demonstrate a product
- develop new products
- evaluate a product
- exchange products
- exhibit products
- feature products
- freeze products
- guarantee a product
- introduce a product into the market
- label a product
- launch a product
- list products
- manufacture products
- process products
- sell products
- show products
- store products
- turn out productsEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > product
-
49 bargain
I ['baːgɪn] n1) сделка, договор, договорённость, соглашениеHe had a bargain with his wife to buy a car. — Он договорился/условился с женой купить машину.
That's a bargain! — По рукам! /Договорились!
The bargain hasn't yet been definitely settled. — Сделка еще окончательно не заключена.
- good bargain- losing bargain
- Dutch bargain
- bargain money
- bargain with smb
- make a bargain
- make a number of bargains
- make a bargain with smb
- have a bargain with smb
- have a bargain with smb to do smth
- get the best of the bargain
- drive a hard bargain with smb
- strike a hard bargain with smb
- close a bargain
- bind the bargain
- declare a bargain off
- cry off a bargain
- pick up a bargain
- stand by one's bargain
- be sold over a bargain
- jump at a bargain
- be off with one's bargain
- make the best of a bad bargain
- bargain stands2) дешёвая покупка, удачная покупкаThese good shoes at such a low price are a real bargain. — Такие хорошие ботинки по этой небольшой цене - просто удача.
You've got a bad bargain here. — Вы здесь здорово переплатили.
He charged a lot and cheated me into the bargain. — Он заломил цену и к тому же обсчитал меня.
Your secretary is a real bargain. — Ваш секретарь - просто клад.
She is very good at making good bargain. — Она умеет хорошо торговаться.
A bargain is a bargain. — ◊ Уговор дороже денег
- real bargain- bargain sale
- bargain prices
- bargain item
- bargain counter
- bargain hunter
- at a bargain
- into the bargain
- one of one's best bargains
- buy smth at a bargain price
- offer goods at a bargain
- be on the look out for bargains
- try to make a better bargain II ['baːgɪn] vдоговариваться (о чём-либо), торговаться, добиватьсяThe locals got used to bargaining with each other, so it was difficult for me to get a good price. — Местные жители так привыкли друг с другом торговаться, что мне было не легко получить хорошую цену.
I hate bargaining. — Терпеть не могу торговаться.
They prefer to bargain with individual clients. — Они предпочитают заключать сделки с отдельными клиентами.
- bargain over the price- bargain for meat
- bargain for better conditions
- bargain with smb
- bargain with smb for smth
- bargain about the priceCHOICE OF WORDS:(1.) Русскому торговаться соответствуют в английском языке глаголы to bargain и to haggle with smb over/about smth Глагол to haggle используется в ситуации купли/продажи, главным образом, на рынке и в условиях уличной торговли. To haggle with smb over smth относится к отдельному продавцу по поводу конкретного предмета торговли: if you go to a street market you have to be prepared to haggle если вы идете на рынок, вы должны быть готовы торговаться; the driver was haggling bitterly over the fare шофер отчаянно торговался с пассажиром; I had to haggle with the taxi-driver about the fare мне пришлось здорово поторговаться с таксистом по поводу платы. (2.) Глагол to bargain, в отличие от to haggle, не ограничен ситуациями купли/продажи и используется с широким кругом вопросов, по поводу которых стороны пытаются договориться или найти общий язык -
50 quota
Fin [m1]1. the maximum sum to be contributed by each party in a joint venture or joint business undertaking2. the maximum number of investments that may be purchased and sold in a given situation or market, for example, at U.S. Treasury auctions, bidders may not apply for more than a certain percentage of the securities being offered3. the maximum amount of a particular commodity, product, or service that can be imported into or exported out of a country -
51 Arnold, John
SUBJECT AREA: Horology[br]b. 1735/6 Bodmin (?), Cornwall, Englandd. 25 August 1799 Eltham, London, England[br]English clock, watch, and chronometer maker who invented the isochronous helical balance spring and an improved form of detached detent escapement.[br]John Arnold was apprenticed to his father, a watchmaker, and then worked as an itinerant journeyman in the Low Countries and, later, in England. He settled in London in 1762 and rapidly established his reputation at Court by presenting George III with a miniature repeating watch mounted in a ring. He later abandoned the security of the Court for a more precarious living developing his chronometers, with some financial assistance from the Board of Longitude. Symbolically, in 1771 he moved from the vicinity of the Court at St James's to John Adam Street, which was close to the premises of the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures \& Commerce.By the time Arnold became interested in chronometry, Harrison had already demonstrated that longitude could be determined by means of a timekeeper, and the need was for a simpler instrument that could be sold at an affordable price for universal use at sea. Le Roy had shown that it was possible to dispense with a remontoire by using a detached escapement with an isochronous balance; Arnold was obviously thinking along the same lines, although he may not have been aware of Le Roy's work. By 1772 Arnold had developed his detached escapement, a pivoted detent which was quite different from that used on the European continent, and three years later he took out a patent for a compensation balance and a helical balance spring (Arnold used the spring in torsion and not in tension as Harrison had done). His compensation balance was similar in principle to that described by Le Roy and used riveted bimetallic strips to alter the radius of gyration of the balance by moving small weights radially. Although the helical balance spring was not completely isochronous it was a great improvement on the spiral spring, and in a later patent (1782) he showed how it could be made more truly isochronous by shaping the ends. In this form it was used universally in marine chronometers.Although Arnold's chronometers performed well, their long-term stability was less satisfactory because of the deterioration of the oil on the pivot of the detent. In his patent of 1782 he eliminated this defect by replacing the pivot with a spring, producing the spring detent escapement. This was also done independendy at about the same time by Berthoud and Earnshaw, although Earnshaw claimed vehemently that Arnold had plagiarized his work. Ironically it was Earnshaw's design that was finally adopted, although he had merely replaced Arnold's pivoted detent with a spring, while Arnold had completely redesigned the escapement. Earnshaw also improved the compensation balance by fusing the steel to the brass to form the bimetallic element, and it was in this form that it began to be used universally for chronometers and high-grade watches.As a result of the efforts of Arnold and Earnshaw, the marine chronometer emerged in what was essentially its final form by the end of the eighteenth century. The standardization of the design in England enabled it to be produced economically; whereas Larcum Kendall was paid £500 to copy Harrison's fourth timekeeper, Arnold was able to sell his chronometers for less than one-fifth of that amount. This combination of price and quality led to Britain's domination of the chronometer market during the nineteenth century.[br]Bibliography30 December 1775, "Timekeepers", British patent no. 1,113.2 May 1782, "A new escapement, and also a balance to compensate the effects arising from heat and cold in pocket chronometers, and for incurving the ends of the helical spring…", British patent no. 1,382.Further ReadingR.T.Gould, 1923, The Marine Chronometer: Its History and Development, London; reprinted 1960, Holland Press (provides an overview).V.Mercer, 1972, John Arnold \& Son Chronometer Makers 1726–1843, London.See also: Phillips, EdouardDV -
52 Massey, Daniel
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 1798 Vermont, USAd. 1856 Canada[br]American agricultural machinery manufacturer and co-founder of the Massey Harris Company (now Massey Ferguson).[br]In about 1800 Daniel Massey's family moved to Upper Canada. At the age of 6 he was sent back to stay with his grandparents in Waterton, USA, where he attended school for three years. He returned to his parents in 1807, and for the next twelve years he remained on his father's farm.At the age of 19 he forfeited his rights to his inheritance and rented land further west, which he began to clear. By the age of 21 he owned 200 acres, and during the next twelve years he bought, cleared and sold a further 1,200 acres. In 1820 he married Lucina Bradley from Water-town and returned with her to Canada.In 1830 he decided to settle down to farming and brought one of the first US threshing machines into Canada. From frequent visits to his family in the US he would return with new farm equipment, and in 1844 he handed his farm over to his eldest son so that he could concentrate on the development of his farm workshop. In 1845 he formed a brief partnership with R.F.Vaughan, who owned a small factory in Durham County near Lake Ontario. He began the production of ploughs, harrows, scufflers and rollers at a time when the Canadian Government was imposing heavy import duties on agricultural equipment being brought in from the USA. His business flourished and within six months he bought out his partner.In 1848 he bought another foundry in Newcastle, together with 50 acres of land, and in 1851 his son Hart joined him in the business. The following year Hart returned from the USA with the sole rights to manufacture the Ketchum mower and the Burrell reaper.The advent of the railway four years later opened up wider markets, and from these beginnings the Massey Company was to represent Canada at the Paris Exhibition of 1867. The European market was secured by the successes of the Massey reaper in the "World" trials held in France in 1889. Two years later the company merged with the Harris Company of Canada, to become the Massey Harris Company. Daniel Massey retired from the company four years after his son joined it, and he died the following year.[br]Further ReadingGraeme Quick and Wesley Buchele, 1978, The Grain Harvesters, American Society of Agricultural Engineers (gives an account of harvest machinery development, in which Massey Harris played a vital role).Merrill Denison, 1949, Harvest Triumphant: The Story of Massey Harris, London.AP -
53 Sholes, Christopher Latham
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 14 February 1819 Mooresburg, Pennsylvania, USAd. 17 February 1890 USA[br]American inventor of the first commercially successful typewriter.[br]Sholes was born on his parents' farm, of a family that had originally come from England. After leaving school at 14, he was apprenticed for four years to the local newspaper, the Danville Intelligencer. He moved with his parents to Wisconsin, where he followed his trade as journalist and printer, within a year becoming State Printer and taking charge of the House journal of the State Legislature. When he was 20 he left home and joined his brother in Madison, Wisconsin, on the staff of the Wisconsin Enquirer. After marrying, he took the editorship of the Southport Telegraph, until he became Postmaster of Southport. His experiences as journalist and postmaster drew him into politics and, in spite of the delicate nature of his health and personality, he served with credit as State Senator and in the State Assembly. In 1860 he moved to Milwaukee, where he became Editor of the local paper until President Lincoln offered him the post of Collector of Customs at Milwaukee.That position at last gave Sholes time to develop his undoubted inventive talents. With a machinist friend, Samuel W.Soule, he obtained a patent for a paging machine and another two years later for a machine for numbering the blank pages of a book serially. At the small machine shop where they worked, there was a third inventor, Carlos Glidden. It was Glidden who suggested to Sholes that, in view of his numbering machine, he would be well equipped to develop a letter printing machine. Glidden drew Sholes's attention to an account of a writing machine that had recently been invented in London by John Pratt, and Sholes was so seized with the idea that he devoted the rest of his life to perfecting the machine. With Glidden and Soule, he took out a patent for a typewriter on June 1868 followed by two further patents for improvements. Sholes struggled unsuccessfully for five years to exploit his invention; his two partners gave up their rights in it and finally, on 1 March 1873, Sholes himself sold his rights to the Remington Arms Company for $12,000. With their mechanical skills and equipment, Remingtons were able to perfect the Sholes typewriter and put it on the market. This, the first commercially successful typewriter, led to a revolution not only in office work, but also in work for women, although progress was slow at first. When the New York Young Women's Christian Association bought six Remingtons in 1881 to begin classes for young women, eight turned up for the first les-son; and five years later it was estimated that there were 60,000 female typists in the USA. Sholes said, "I feel that I have done something for the women who have always had to work so hard. This will more easily enable them to earn a living."Sholes continued his work on the typewriter, giving Remingtons the benefit of his results. His last patent was granted in 1878. Never very strong, Sholes became consumptive and spent much of his remaining nine years in the vain pursuit of health.[br]Bibliography23 June 1868, US patent no. 79,265 (the first typewriter patent).Further ReadingM.H.Adler, 1973, The Writing Machine, London: Allen \& Unwin.LRDBiographical history of technology > Sholes, Christopher Latham
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54 Sperry, Elmer Ambrose
[br]b. 21 October 1860 Cincinnatus, Cortland County, New York, USAd. 16 June 1930 Brooklyn, New York, USA[br]American entrepreneur who invented the gyrocompass.[br]Sperry was born into a farming community in Cortland County. He received a rudimentary education at the local school, but an interest in mechanical devices was aroused by the agricultural machinery he saw around him. His attendance at the Normal School in Cortland provided a useful theoretical background to his practical knowledge. He emerged in 1880 with an urge to pursue invention in electrical engineering, then a new and growing branch of technology. Within two years he was able to patent and demonstrate his arc lighting system, complete with its own generator, incorporating new methods of regulating its output. The Sperry Electric Light, Motor and Car Brake Company was set up to make and market the system, but it was difficult to keep pace with electric-lighting developments such as the incandescent lamp and alternating current, and the company ceased in 1887 and was replaced by the Sperry Electric Company, which itself was taken over by the General Electric Company.In the 1890s Sperry made useful inventions in electric mining machinery and then in electric street-or tramcars, with his patent electric brake and control system. The patents for the brake were important enough to be bought by General Electric. From 1894 to 1900 he was manufacturing electric motor cars of his own design, and in 1900 he set up a laboratory in Washington, where he pursued various electrochemical processes.In 1896 he began to work on the practical application of the principle of the gyroscope, where Sperry achieved his most notable inventions, the first of which was the gyrostabilizer for ships. The relatively narrow-hulled steamship rolled badly in heavy seas and in 1904 Ernst Otto Schuck, a German naval engineer, and Louis Brennan in England began experiments to correct this; their work stimulated Sperry to develop his own device. In 1908 he patented the active gyrostabilizer, which acted to correct a ship's roll as soon as it started. Three years later the US Navy agreed to try it on a destroyer, the USS Worden. The successful trials of the following year led to widespread adoption. Meanwhile, in 1910, Sperry set up the Sperry Gyroscope Company to extend the application to commercial shipping.At the same time, Sperry was working to apply the gyroscope principle to the ship's compass. The magnetic compass had worked well in wooden ships, but iron hulls and electrical machinery confused it. The great powers' race to build up their navies instigated an urgent search for a solution. In Germany, Anschütz-Kämpfe (1872–1931) in 1903 tested a form of gyrocompass and was encouraged by the authorities to demonstrate the device on the German flagship, the Deutschland. Its success led Sperry to develop his own version: fortunately for him, the US Navy preferred a home-grown product to a German one and gave Sperry all the backing he needed. A successful trial on a destroyer led to widespread acceptance in the US Navy, and Sperry was soon receiving orders from the British Admiralty and the Russian Navy.In the rapidly developing field of aeronautics, automatic stabilization was becoming an urgent need. In 1912 Sperry began work on a gyrostabilizer for aircraft. Two years later he was able to stage a spectacular demonstration of such a device at an air show near Paris.Sperry continued research, development and promotion in military and aviation technology almost to the last. In 1926 he sold the Sperry Gyroscope Company to enable him to devote more time to invention.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsJohn Fritz Medal 1927. President, American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1928.BibliographySperry filed over 400 patents, of which two can be singled out: 1908. US patent no. 434,048 (ship gyroscope); 1909. US patent no. 519,533 (ship gyrocompass set).Further ReadingT.P.Hughes, 1971, Elmer Sperry, Inventor and Engineer, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press (a full and well-documented biography, with lists of his patents and published writings).LRD
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