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specific+cost

  • 101 приспосабливаться

    Приспосабливаться под
     Both the ductwork and the heat exchanger have to be adaptive to the available space.
     The company program can be tailored to your specific requirements.
     In addition to a reduction in cost, the present design is more adaptable to the TETR maintenance and repair concept.
     The proteinases are adapted to attack only large molecules. (... приспособлены к разрушению...)

    Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > приспосабливаться

  • 102 промежуточная область

    Промежуточная область-- Between these extremes there is a gray area in which the competing factors - specific fuel consumption, capital cost, load variation - have an influence on an acceptable degree of complication in the bottoming plant.

    Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > промежуточная область

  • 103 литература

    лат. litteratura
    (Сочинения по данному предмету или вопросу.)

    Это ограничение часто описывают в литературе как требование, чтобы затраты на плановые покупки не превышали дохода потребителя. — Often, this constraint is described in the literature as requiring that the cost of planned purchases not exceed the consumer's income.

    При использовании в экономической литературе этого альтернативного понятия всегда предъявляется настойчивое требование, чтобы рационализирующее отношение предпочтения удовлетворяло некоторым дополнительным свойствам, естественным для изучаемого конкретного экономического контекста. — When this alternative notion is used in the economics literature, there is always an insistence that the rationalizing preference relation should satisfy some additional properties that are natural for the specific economic context being studied.

    Russian-English Dictionary "Microeconomics" > литература

  • 104 ISO 14000

    Gen Mgt
    a series of internationally recognized quality standards providing a framework that organizations can use to regulate the environmental impact of their activities. ISO 14000 is a management system standard rather than a performance standard and can be applied to organizations of all shapes and sizes, wherever they may be located. The standard does not identify specific goals but presents a framework for carrying out environmental management. ISO 14001 is the part of the standard that specifies the requirements that organizations must meet if they are to obtain certification. ISO 14001 gives a framework for identifying operations, processes, and products that impact the environment, for evaluating these impacts, for setting objectives and targets for reducing any negative impacts that have been identified, and for implementing activities to achieve targets. ISO 14000 provides a certified standard that can be seen as a reflection of an organization’s ethical achievements. It pays no attention, however, to cultural or human dimensions and disregards the fact that organizations will need to perceive bottom-line cost benefits if they are to implement the standard.

    The ultimate business dictionary > ISO 14000

  • 105 operating costing

    Ops
    a costing system that is applied to continuous operations in mass production or in the service industries. In the simplest form of operating costing, the costing period is set at a specific length of time, usually a calendar month or four weeks. The costs incurred over the period are related to the number of units produced, and the division of the first by the second gives the average unit cost for the period.

    The ultimate business dictionary > operating costing

  • 106 redeployment

    HR
    the movement of employees by their employer from one location or task to another. Redeployment is often used to minimize layoffs, ensure the fulfillment of a specific order, or ensure the most cost-effective use of employees.

    The ultimate business dictionary > redeployment

  • 107 Harwood, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Horology
    [br]
    b. 1893 Bolton, England
    d. 9 August 1964
    [br]
    English watchmaker, inventor and producer of the first commercial self-winding wrist watch.
    [br]
    John Harwood served an apprenticeship as a watch repairer in Bolton, and after service in the First World War he obtained a post with a firm of jewellers in Douglas, Isle of Man. He became interested in the self-winding wrist watch, not because of the convenience of not having to wind it, but because of its potential to keep the mainspring fully wound and to exclude dust and moisture from the watch movement. His experience at the bench had taught him that these were the most common factors to affect adversely the reliability of watches. Completely unaware of previous work in this area, in 1922 he started experimenting and two years later he had produced a serviceable model for which he was granted a patent in 1924. The watch operated on the pedometer principle, the mainspring being wound by a pivoted weight that oscillated in the watch case as a result of the motion of the arm. The hands of his watch were set by rotating the bezel surrounding the dial, dispensing with the usual winding/hand-setting stem which allowed dust and moisture to enter the watch case. He took the watch to Switzerland, but he was unable to persuade the watchmaking firms to produce it until he had secured independent finance to cover the cost of tooling. The Harwood Self-Winding Watch Company Ltd was set up in 1928 to market the watches, but although several thousand were produced the company became a victim of the slump and closed down in 1932. The first practical self-winding watch also operated on the pedometer principle and is attributed to Abraham-Louis Perrellet (1770). The method was refined by Breguet in France and by Recordon, who patented the device in England, but it proved troublesome and went out of fashion. There was a brief revival of interest in self-winding watches towards the end of the nineteenth century, but they never achieved great popularity until after the Second World War, when they used either self-winding mechanisms similar to that devised by Harwood or weights which rotated in the case.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    British Horological Institute Gold Medal 1957.
    Bibliography
    1 September 1924, Swiss patent no. 106,582.
    Further Reading
    A.Chapuis and E.Jaquet, 1956, The History of the Self-Winding Watch, London (provides general information).
    "How the automatic wrist watch was invented", 1957, Horological Journal 99:612–61 (for specific information).
    DV

    Biographical history of technology > Harwood, John

  • 108 диэлектрическая постоянная

    Русско-английский научный словарь > диэлектрическая постоянная

  • 109 комитет

    комитет сущ
    Board
    Аэронавигационный комитет
    Air Navigation Committee
    аэропортовый комитет по разработке и утверждению расписания
    airport scheduling committee
    Комитет гражданской авиации
    Civil Aeronautics Board
    Комитет по авиационному шуму
    Committee on Aircraft Noise
    Комитет по безопасности полетов
    Safety Investigation Board
    Комитет по воздушным перевозкам
    1. Air Transport Committee
    2. Air Transportation Board Комитет по исследованиям звуковых ударов
    Sonic Boom Committee
    Комитет по координации частот
    Frequency Coordinating Body
    Комитет по незаконному вмешательству
    Committee on Unlawful Interference
    Комитет по охране окружающей среды от воздействия авиации
    Committee on Aviation Environmental Protection
    Комитет по поощрительным тарифам
    Creative Fares Board
    Комитет по рассмотрению авиационных вопросов
    Aviation Review Committee
    Комитет по расходам
    Cost Committee
    Комитет по специальным грузовым тарифам
    Specific Commodity Rates Board
    Комитет совместного финансирования
    Committee on Joint Support
    Консультативный комитет по управлению воздушным движением
    Air Traffic Control Advisory Committee
    Консультативный комитет по упрощению формальностей
    Facilitation Advisory Committee
    Международный комитет регистрации частот
    International Frequency Registration Board
    Постоянный комитет по летно-техническим характеристикам
    Standing Committee of Performance
    Совместный комитет по специальным грузовым тарифам
    Joint service Commodity Rates Board

    Русско-английский авиационный словарь > комитет

См. также в других словарях:

  • specific cost — noun : direct cost …   Useful english dictionary

  • Cost of Living Allowance — (COLA) is a United States military entitlement given to military servicemen and women living in high cost areas or stationed overseas. It is intended to compensate servicemembers for the high cost of living at certain duty stations.How It… …   Wikipedia

  • Cost of Living Allowance (U.S. Military) — Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) is a United States military entitlement given to military servicemen and women living in high cost areas or stationed overseas. It is intended to compensate servicemembers for the high cost of living at certain… …   Wikipedia

  • Specific Identification — is a method of finding out ending inventory cost. It requires a very detailed physical count, so that the company knows exactly how many of each goods brought on specfic dates remained at year end inventory. When this information is found, the… …   Wikipedia

  • Cost escalation — is defined as changes in the cost or price of specific goods or services in a given economy over a period of time. This is a similar to the concepts of inflation and deflation except that escalation is specific to an item or class of items (not… …   Wikipedia

  • Cost–utility analysis — (CUA) is a form of financial analysis used to guide procurement decisions. The most common and well known application of this analysis is in pharmacoeconomics, especially health technology assessment (HTA). Contents 1 CUA in health economics 1.1… …   Wikipedia

  • Cost-benefit analysis — is a term that refers both to:* a formal discipline used to help appraise, or assess, the case for a project or proposal, which itself is a process known as project appraisal; and * an informal approach to making decisions of any kind. Under both …   Wikipedia

  • Cost of conflict — is a tool which attempts to calculate the price of conflict to the human race. The idea is to examine this cost, not only in terms of the deaths and casualties and the economic costs borne by the people involved, but also the social,… …   Wikipedia

  • Cost Accounting Standards — (popularly known as CAS) are a set of 19 standards and rules promulgated by the United States Government for use in determining costs on negotiated procurements. CAS differs from the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) in that FAR applies to… …   Wikipedia

  • cost of living — cost of living, adj. the average cost of food, clothing, and other necessary or usual goods and services paid by a person, family, etc., or considered as a standard by the members of a group. [1895 1900] * * * Monetary cost of maintaining a… …   Universalium

  • Cost basis reporting — is a term used in the financial services industry that refers to identifying the actual cost of a security for income tax purposes. Cost basis reporting became mandatory on January 1, 2011. The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 –… …   Wikipedia

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