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special+subject

  • 81 teemapäivä

    • drive
    • special subject day

    Suomi-Englanti sanakirja > teemapäivä

  • 82 szaktárgy

    (EN) major; special subject

    Magyar-német-angol szótár > szaktárgy

  • 83 специальность

    ж.
    speciality брит.; specialty амер.; ( профессия) profession; ( в вузе) chief / special subject; major амер.

    приобрести́ специа́льность — acquire a profession; learn a trade разг.

    Новый большой русско-английский словарь > специальность

  • 84 ἰδίωμα

    ἰδί-ωμα [ῐδῐ], ατος, τό, ([etym.] ἰδιόω)
    A peculiarity, specific property, unique feature, Epicur.Ep.1p.25U., Stoic.2.25, etc.; τὰ τῶν χρωμάτων ἰ. Epicur.Ep.2p.51U.;

    τῆς πολιτείας Plb.2.38.10

    ;

    τοῦ νόμου BGU12.18

    (ii A.D.);

    τὸ καθ' αὑτὸν ἰ. τηρεῖν Plb.2.59.2

    ; τὰ περὶ τὴν χώραν, περὶ αὐτοὺς ἰ., Id.2.14.3, 6.3.3; τὸ ἐξαίρετόν τινος ἰ. A.D.Synt.15.19; ἀγαθότητος ἰ. Procl.Inst. 133;

    ὕλης Id.Theol.Plat.5.35

    ; property, φαρμάκου Heras ap.Gal.13.785, cf. Dsc.1.71; of the properties of numbers, Theol.Ar.5,al.;

    τὸ ἰ. τοῦ ἑνός Dam.Pr.5

    : special subject,

    τῆς πραγματείας Sor.1.126

    .
    II peculiarity of style, D.H.Amm.2tit., al.
    2 idiom,

    ἰ. Ὁμηρικόν A.D.Synt.157.9

    .

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἰδίωμα

  • 85 Schwerpunktthema

    n
    main (discussion) topic
    n
    [in einer Prüfung]
    special subject

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > Schwerpunktthema

  • 86 Spezialgebiet

    n
    special subject
    n
    fig.
    métier

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > Spezialgebiet

  • 87 كلية

    كُلِّيَّةٌ \ college: a school for higher education or for a special subject; part of a university. \ بِالكُلِّيَّة \ entirely: completely: The work is not entirely finished.

    Arabic-English dictionary > كلية

  • 88 مدرسة

    مَدْرَسة \ school: a place where children are taught: My son used to go to that school. He left school at 16. My daughter is still at school (She has not left school completely) but she is on holiday today, so she is not in school, lessons in general School begins at 08.30, a place where people of any age are taught some special subject or skill a music school; a driving school. \ مَدْرَسة ثانَوِيّة \ secondary school: a school for older children (usu. aged about 12-18) who have left a primary school. \ مَدْرَسَة حضانة \ nursery school: building where children (who are too young for a proper school) can play together. \ مَدْرَسَة خاصّة (في بريطانيا)‏ \ public school: (in Britain) a privately owned school for boys or girls aged 13-19, usu. with lodgings; open to anyone on payment (compared with a state school, which is open only to local children but is free). \ مَدْرَسَة داخِليَّة \ boarding school: a school where children are also lodged and fed. \ مَدْرَسَة فِكْرِيَّة \ school: a group of people with the same ideas (in art, politics, etc.): Modern schools of thought do not accept old beliefs.

    Arabic-English dictionary > مدرسة

  • 89 booklet

    كُتَيِّب \ booklet: a small thin book usu. with a paper cover: Buy a booklet for visitors about local places of interest. handbook: a small book that gives useful facts and advice on a special subject: A handbook is supplied with every new car. pamphlet: a book with only a few pages, giving news or advice, often without cost: a political pamphlet.

    Arabic-English glossary > booklet

  • 90 handbook

    كُتَيِّب \ booklet: a small thin book usu. with a paper cover: Buy a booklet for visitors about local places of interest. handbook: a small book that gives useful facts and advice on a special subject: A handbook is supplied with every new car. pamphlet: a book with only a few pages, giving news or advice, often without cost: a political pamphlet.

    Arabic-English glossary > handbook

  • 91 pamphlet

    كُتَيِّب \ booklet: a small thin book usu. with a paper cover: Buy a booklet for visitors about local places of interest. handbook: a small book that gives useful facts and advice on a special subject: A handbook is supplied with every new car. pamphlet: a book with only a few pages, giving news or advice, often without cost: a political pamphlet.

    Arabic-English glossary > pamphlet

  • 92 guide

    كِتاب دليل \ guide: a book that describes a place, for visitors or travellers; a book of advice on a special subject: a guide to the old city; a guide to stamp-collecting. \ مُرْشِد \ guide: sb. who guides.

    Arabic-English glossary > guide

  • 93 manual

    كُتَيِّب إرشادات \ manual: a small book of advice on a special subject. \ يَدَويّ \ manual: done by hand: manual work.

    Arabic-English glossary > manual

  • 94 отраслевая библиотека

    1. subject (special) library

     

    отраслевая библиотека
    Библиотека, удовлетворяющая информационные потребности по определенной отрасли знания или практической деятельности (общественно-политическая, научно-техническая, медицинская, сельскохозяйственная и др.) на основе соответствующего фонда и информационно-поискового аппарата.
    [ГОСТ 7.0-99]

    Тематики

    EN

    FR

    Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > отраслевая библиотека

  • 95 Trueta, Joseph

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 28 October 1897 Barcelona, Spain
    d. 19 January 1977 Barcelona, Spain
    [br]
    Spanish surgeon who specialized in the treatment of trauma and invented the "Trueta" technique of wound management.
    [br]
    Trueta studied medicine at Barcelona University and graduated in 1921. He held successive surgical appointments until in 1929 he was appointed to the Caja de Provision y Socorro, an organization handling 40,000 cases of injury per year. In 1935, soon after becoming Chief Surgeon in Catalonia, he was confronted by the special problems presented by the casualties of the Spanish Civil War.
    With a Nationalist victory imminent in 1939, he moved to England where his special skills were recognized, and at the outbreak of the Second World War he was appointed to the Wing-field Hospital and the Radcliffe Infirmary at Oxford. After an interregnum at the end of the war, in 1949 he was appointed Nuffield Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Oxford, and held this post until his retirement in 1965, when he was able to return to Spain.
    His technique of wound management stressed the importance of wound cleansing, excision of non-viable tissue, drainage and immobilization, and was particularly timely in that the advent of penicillin permitted the practical pursuit of new concepts in the treatment not only of the soft tissues, but also of bone infection. He was engaged in many other research projects, in particular those concerned with "crush syndrome" and its renal implications.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1939, Treatment of Wounds and Fractures with special reference to the closed method, London.
    1943, The Principles and Practice of War Surgery with special reference to the Biological Method of Treatment of Wounds and Fractures, London.
    1980, Trueta: Surgeon in War and Peace, trans. M.Strubell and M.Strubell, London (autobiography).
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Trueta, Joseph

  • 96 Root, Elisha King

    [br]
    b. 10 May 1808 Ludlow, Massachusetts, USA
    d. 31 August 1865 Hartford, Connecticut, USA
    [br]
    American mechanical engineer and inventor.
    [br]
    After an elementary education, Elisha K.Root was apprenticed as a machinist and worked in that occupation at Ware and Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts. In 1832 he went to Collinsville, Connecticut, to join the Collins Company, manufacturers of axes. He started as a lathe hand but soon became Foreman and, in 1845, Superintendent. While with the company, he devised and patented special-purpose machinery for forming axes which transformed the establishment from a primitive workshop to a modern factory.
    In 1849 Root was offered positions by four different manufacturers and accepted the post of Superintendent of the armoury then being planned at Hartford, Connecticut, by Samuel Colt for the manufacture of his revolver pistol, which he had invented in 1835. Initial acceptance of the revolver was slow, but by the mid1840s Colt had received sufficient orders to justify the establishment of a new factory and Root was engaged to design and install the machinery. The principle of interchangeable manufacture was adopted, and Root devised special machines for boring, rifling, making cartridges, etc., and a system of jigs, fixtures, tools and gauges. One of these special machines was a drop hammer that he invented and patented in 1853 and which established the art of die-forging on a modern basis. He was also associated with F.A. Pratt in the design of the "Lincoln" milling machine in 1855.
    When Colt died in 1862, Root became President of the company and continued in that capacity until his own death. It was said that he was one of the ablest and most highly paid mechanics from New England and that he was largely responsible for the success of both the Collins and the Colt companies.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.W.Roe, 1916, English and American Tool Builders, New Haven; reprinted 1926, New York, and 1987, Bradley, Ill. (describes Root's work at the Colt Armory).
    Paul Uselding, 1974, "Elisha K.Root, Forging, and the “American System”", "Elisha K.Root, forging, and the “American System”", Technology and Culture 15:543–68 (provides further biographical details, his work with the Collins Company and a list of his patents).
    RTS

    Biographical history of technology > Root, Elisha King

  • 97 Pliny the Elder (Gaius Plinius Secundus)

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. c. 23 AD Como, Italy
    d. 25 August 79 AD near Pompeii, Italy
    [br]
    Roman encyclopedic writer on the natural world.
    [br]
    Pliny was well educated in Rome, and for ten years or so followed a military career with which he was able to combine literary work, writing especially on historical subjects. He completed his duties c. 57 AD and concentrated on writing until he resumed his official career in 69 AD with administrative duties. During this last phase he began work on his only extant work, the thirty-seven "books" of his Historia Naturalis (Natural History), each dealing with a broad subject such as astronomy, geography, mineralogy, etc. His last post was the command of the fleet based at Misenum, which came to an end when he sailed too near Vesuvius during the eruption that engulfed Pompeii and he was overcome by the fumes.
    Pliny developed an insatiable curiosity about the natural world. Unlike the Greeks, the Romans made few original contributions to scientific thought and observation, but some made careful compilations of the learning and observations of Greek scholars. The most notable and influential of these was the Historia Naturalis. To the ideas about the natural world gleaned from earlier Greek authors, he added information about natural history, mineral resources, crafts and some technological processes, such as the extraction of metals from their ores, reported to him from the corners of the Empire. He added a few observations of his own, noted during travels on his official duties. Not all the reports were reliable, and the work often presents a tangled web of fact and fable. Gibbon described it as an immense register in which the author has "deposited the discoveries, the arts, and the errors of mankind". Pliny was indefatigable in his relentless note-taking, even dictating to his secretary while dining.
    During the Dark Ages and early Middle Ages in Western Europe, Pliny's Historia Naturalis was the largest known collection of facts about the natural world and was drawn upon freely by a succession of later writers. Its influence survived the influx into Western Europe, from the twelfth century, of translations of the works of Greek and Arab scholars. After the invention of printing in the middle of the fifteenth century, Pliny was the first work on a scientific subject to be printed, in 1469. Many editions followed and it may still be consulted with profit for its insights into technical knowledge and practice in the ancient world.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    The standard Latin text with English translation is that edited by H.Rackham et al.(1942– 63, Loeb Classical Library, London: Heinemann, 10 vols). The French version is by A.
    Ernout et al. (1947–, Belles Lettres, Paris).
    Further Reading
    The editions mentioned above include useful biographical and other details. For special aspects of Pliny, see K.C.Bailey, 1929–32, The Elder Pliny's Chapters on Chemical Subjects, London, 2 vols.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Pliny the Elder (Gaius Plinius Secundus)

  • 98 Demenÿ, Georges

    [br]
    b. 1850 Douai, France d. 1917
    [br]
    French chronophotographer.
    [br]
    As a young man Georges Demenÿ was a pioneer of physical education in France, and this led him to contact the physiologist Professor Marey in 1880. Marey had made a special study of animal movement, and Demenÿ hoped to work with him on research into physiological problems related to gymnastics. He joined Marey the following year, and when in 1882 the Physiological Station was set up near Paris to develop sequence photography for the study of movement. Demenÿ was made Head of the laboratory. He worked with the multiple-image fixed-plate cameras, and was chiefly responsible for the analysis of the records, having considerable mathematical and graphical ability. He also appeared as the subject in a number of the sequences. When in 1888 Marey began the development of a film camera, Demenÿ was involved in its design and operation. He became interested in the possibility of using animated sequence photographs as an aid to teaching of the deaf. He made close-up records of himself speaking short phrases, "Je vous aime" and "Vive la France" for example, which were published in such journals as Paris Photographe and La Nature in 1891 and 1892. To present these in motion, he devised the Phonoscope, which he patented on 3 March 1892. The series of photographs were mounted around the circumference of a disc and viewed through a counter-rotating slotted disc. The moving images could be viewed directly, or projected onto a screen. La Nature reported tests he had made in which deaf lip readers could interpret accurately what was being said. On 20 December 1892 Demenÿ formed a company, Société Générale du Phonoscope, to exploit his invention, hoping that "speaking portraits" might replace family-album pictures. This commercial activity led to a rift between Marey and Demenÿ in July 1893. Deprived of access to the film cameras, Demenÿ developed designs of his own, patenting new camera models in France on 10 October 1893 and 27 July 1894. The design covered by the latter had been included in English and German patents filed in December 1893, and was to be of some significance in the early development of cinematography. It was for an intermittent movement of the film, which used an eccentrically mounted blade or roller that, as it rotated, bore on the film, pulling down the length of one frame. As the blade moved away, the film loop so formed was taken up by the rotation of the take-up reel. This "beater" movement was employed extensively in the early years of cinematography, being effective yet inexpensive. It was first employed in the Chronophotographe apparatus marketed by Gaumont, to whom Demenÿ had licensed the patent rights, from the autumn of 1896. Demenÿ's work provided a link between the scientific purposes of sequence photography— chronophotography—and the introduction of commercial cinematography.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Deslandes, 1966, Histoire comparée du cinéma, Vol. I, Paris. B.Coe, 1992, Muybridge and the Chronophotographers, London.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Demenÿ, Georges

  • 99 Lippman, Gabriel

    [br]
    b. 16 August 1845 Hallerick, Luxembourg
    d. 14 July 1921 at sea, in the North Atlantic
    [br]
    French physicist who developed interference colour photography.
    [br]
    Born of French parents, Lippman's work began with a distinguished career in classics, philosophy, mathematics and physics at the Ecole Normale in Luxembourg. After further studies in physics at Heidelberg University, he returned to France and the Sorbonne, where he was in 1886 appointed Director of Physics. He was a leading pioneer in France of research into electricity, optics, heat and other branches of physics.
    In 1886 he conceived the idea of recording the existence of standing waves in light when it is reflected back on itself, by photographing the colours so produced. This required the production of a photographic emulsion that was effectively grainless: the individual silver halide crystals had to be smaller than the shortest wavelength of light to be recorded. Lippman succeeded in this and in 1891 demonstrated his process. A glass plate was coated with a grainless emulsion and held in a special plate-holder, glass towards the lens. The back of the holder was filled with mercury, which provided a perfect reflector when in contact with the emulsion. The standing waves produced during the exposure formed laminae in the emulsion, with the number of laminae being determined by the wavelength of the incoming light at each point on the image. When the processed plate was viewed under the correct lighting conditions, a theoretically exact reproduction of the colours of the original subject could be seen. However, the Lippman process remained a beautiful scientific demonstration only, since the ultra-fine-grain emulsion was very slow, requiring exposure times of over 10,000 times that of conventional negative material. Any method of increasing the speed of the emulsion also increased the grain size and destroyed the conditions required for the process to work.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Royal Photographic Society Progress Medal 1897. Nobel Prize (for his work in interference colour photography) 1908.
    Further Reading
    J.S.Friedman, 1944, History of Colour Photography, Boston.
    Brian Coe, 1978, Colour Photography: The First Hundred Years, London. Gert Koshofer, 1981, Farbfotografie, Vol. I, Munich.
    BC

    Biographical history of technology > Lippman, Gabriel

  • 100 Pattinson, Hugh Lee

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 25 December 1796 Alston, Cumberland, England
    d. 11 November 1858 Scot's House, Gateshead, England
    [br]
    English inventor of a silver-extraction process.
    [br]
    Born into a Quaker family, he was educated at private schools; his studies included electricity and chemistry, with a bias towards metallurgy. Around 1821 Pattinson became Clerk and Assistant to Anthony Clapham, a soap-boiler of Newcastle upon Tyne. In 1825 he secured appointment as Assay Master to the lords of the manor of Alston. There he was able to pursue the subject of special interest to him, and in January 1829 he devised a method of separating silver from lead ore; however, he was prevented from developing it because of a lack of funds.
    Two years later he was appointed Manager of Wentworth Beaumont's lead-works. There he was able to continue his researches, which culminated in the patent of 1833 enshrining the invention by which he is best known: a new process for extracting silver from lead by skimming crystals of pure lead with a perforated ladle from the surface of the molten silver-bearing lead, contained in a succession of cast-iron pots. The molten metal was stirred as it cooled until one pot provided a metal containing 300 oz. of silver to the ton (8,370 g to the tonne). Until that time, it was unprofitable to extract silver from lead ores containing less than 8 oz. per ton (223 g per tonne), but the Pattinson process reduced that to 2–3 oz. (56–84 g per tonne), and it therefore won wide acceptance. Pattinson resigned his post and went into partnership to establish a chemical works near Gateshead. He was able to devise two further processes of importance, one an improved method of obtaining white lead and the other a new process for manufacturing magnesia alba, or basic carbonate of magnesium. Both processes were patented in 1841.
    Pattinson retired in 1858 and devoted himself to the study of astronomy, aided by a 7½ in. (19 cm) equatorial telescope that he had erected at his home at Scot's House.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Vice-President, British Association Chemical Section 1838. Fellow of the Geological Society, Royal Astronomical Society and Royal Society 1852.
    Bibliography
    Pattinson wrote eight scientific papers, mainly on mining, listed in Royal Society Catalogue of Scientific Papers, most of which appeared in the Philosophical
    Magazine.
    Further Reading
    J.Percy, Metallurgy (volume on lead): 121–44 (fully describes Pattinson's desilvering process).
    Lonsdale, 1873, Worthies of Cumberland, pp. 273–320 (contains details of his life). T.K.Derry and T.I.Williams, 1960, A Short History ofTechnology, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Pattinson, Hugh Lee

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