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1 откровенно (specifically analytical , specifically sad)
General subject: specificallyУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > откровенно (specifically analytical , specifically sad)
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2 specifically
[spɪ'sɪfɪk(ə)lɪ]1) Общая лексика: а именно, в особенности, в частности, конкретно, на этот раз, характерно, откровенно ( specifically analytical, specifically sad), сугубо, особым образом, более определённо, более того, в связи с этим, главным образом, дело в том, что, например, так, точнее говоря, особенно2) Компьютерная техника: специфически4) Юридический термин: в натуре, определенно, положительным образом, прямо, ясно, реально (об исполнении договора), при этом5) Экономика: как правило6) Нефть: специально -
3 откровенно
1) General subject: broadly, candidly, confessedly, frankly, in all honesty (Напр.: I got to tell you, in all honesty, this is the best summary of a breakfast meeting I've ever read.), in plain English, in so many words, mealy-mouthed, on the level, open heartedly, open-heartedly, openly, outspeak, outspokenly, plain, roundly, straight from the shoulder, straightforwardly, straightly, without reserve, unreservedly, (specifically analytical, specifically sad) specifically, blatantly, notoriously2) Jargon: up front -
4 ensayar
v.1 to test.María ensaya los proyectos Mary tests the projects.2 to rehearse (Teatro).Ella ensaya por la tarde She rehearses in the afternoon.3 to attempt.María ensayó una mentira Mary attempted a lie.* * *1 TEATRO to rehearse2 MÚSICA to practise (US practice)3 (probar) to try out, test* * *1. VT1) (=probar) to test, try (out)2) [+ metal] to assay3) (Mús, Teat) to rehearse2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <obra/baile> to rehearseb) < método> to test, try outc) < metales> to assay2.ensayar vi to rehearse* * *= rehearse, practise [practice, -USA].Ex. However, it seems worth rehearsing some of the arguments again here in this particular context and identifying specifically how these problems are negotiated in a data base using natural language indexing.Ex. Analytical cataloguing is practised to varying extents in libraries.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) <obra/baile> to rehearseb) < método> to test, try outc) < metales> to assay2.ensayar vi to rehearse* * *= rehearse, practise [practice, -USA].Ex: However, it seems worth rehearsing some of the arguments again here in this particular context and identifying specifically how these problems are negotiated in a data base using natural language indexing.
Ex: Analytical cataloguing is practised to varying extents in libraries.* * *ensayar [A1 ]vt1 ‹obra/baile/concierto› to rehearse2 ‹método/sistema› to test, try out3 ‹metales› to assay■ ensayarvito rehearse* * *
ensayar ( conjugate ensayar) verbo transitivo
verbo intransitivo
to rehearse
ensayar
I verbo transitivo
1 Teat (un papel, una obra) to rehearse
Mús (una pieza) to practise
2 (un método, una técnica) to test, try out
II vi Teat (los actores) to rehearse
Mús (los músicos) to practise
' ensayar' also found in these entries:
English:
attempt
- practice
- practise
- rehearse
- run over
- run through
- try
- run
* * *♦ vt1. [experimentar] to test2. [obra de teatro, concierto, baile] to rehearse3. [metales preciosos] to assay♦ vi1. [en teatro] to rehearse2. [en rugby] to convert a try* * *v/t1 test, try (out)2 TEA rehearse* * *ensayar vi: to rehearseensayar vt1) : to try out, to test2) : to assay* * *ensayar vb1. (teatro) to rehearse2. (música) to practise -
5 в частности
•The amount of work needed to achieve that temperature is determined, among other factors, by...
•Volcanic activity, glaciation, and sedimentation, among other processes, have varied greatly throughout geologic history.
•In particular, loge = ln .
•Among other things the system gave us a measure of the degree of homogeneity of the pressure within the sample.
•This is due in part (or in particular) to...
•This task is complicated by many things, among them the difficulty of...
•This theory is peculiar to the analytical flame, and to the experimental configuration in Fig. 3 in particular.
•Secular changes in the orbits, specifically of the semimajor axis, are well known.
•Specifically, the atmosphere of Titan has carbon, nitrogen, and hydrogen.
* * *В частности -- in particular, particularly, specificallyIn particular, internal wall temperature uniformity must be controlled to better than ±0.1°C.All of the pressure dam bearings exhibited similar characteristics. Particularly, resonances were always seen at approximately 1600 rpm, 3300 rpm and 4600 rpm.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > в частности
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6 в частности
•The amount of work needed to achieve that temperature is determined, among other factors, by...
•Volcanic activity, glaciation, and sedimentation, among other processes, have varied greatly throughout geologic history.
•In particular, loge = ln .
•Among other things the system gave us a measure of the degree of homogeneity of the pressure within the sample.
•This is due in part (or in particular) to...
•This task is complicated by many things, among them the difficulty of...
•This theory is peculiar to the analytical flame, and to the experimental configuration in Fig. 3 in particular.
•Secular changes in the orbits, specifically of the semimajor axis, are well known.
•Specifically, the atmosphere of Titan has carbon, nitrogen, and hydrogen.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > в частности
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7 превращаться в
•The anhydrous solid turns (in)to a pool of solution.
•All eigenfunctions for... transform according to...
•As quarts decreases in abundance, dacite passes into andesite.
•Already existing minerals may be altered to new ones.
•Mass spectrometers quickly evolved (in)to systems specifically designed for the analytical laboratory.
•The larvae metamorphose into pupae near the surface.
•Hydrogen is turned to helium.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > превращаться в
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8 Lovelock, James Ephraim
SUBJECT AREA: Domestic appliances and interiors, Electricity, Electronics and information technology[br]b. 26 July 1919 Brixton, London, England[br]English biologist and philosopher, inventor of the microwave oven and electron capture detector.[br]Lovelock was brought up in Brixton in modest circumstances. At the age of 4 he was given a toy electrical set, which first turned his attention towards the study of science. From the Strand School, Brixton, he went on to the universities of Manchester and London, and after graduating in science, in 1941 he joined the National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill, as a staff scientist, remaining there for twenty years. During the early 1950s, he and his colleagues were engaged in research into freezing live animals and bringing them back to life by heating: Lovelock was struck by the intense pain this process caused the animals, and he sought a more humane method. He tried diathermy or internal heating through the effect of a continuous wave magnetron borrowed from the Navy. He found that the animals were brought back to life painlessly, and impressed with his success he tried baking a potato for his lunch in the apparatus and found that it cooked amazingly quickly compared with the one hour normally needed in an ordinary oven. Lovelock had invented the microwave oven, but its commercial possibilities were not at first realized.In the late 1950s he invented the electron capture detector, which proved to be more sensitive than any other analytical equipment in detecting and measuring toxic substances. The apparatus therefore had obvious uses in testing the quality of the environment and so offered a tremendous boost to the "green" movement. In 1961 he was invited to joint the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to employ the apparatus in an attempt to detect life in space.In the early 1970s Lovelock relinquished his biological work in order to devote his attention to philosophical matters, specifically to develop his theory of the Universe, now widely celebrated as the "Gaia theory". In this controversial theory, Lovelock regards our planet and all its living beings, including humans, as a single living organism.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCBE 1990. FRS 1974. Many academic awards and honorary degrees. Visiting Professor, University of Reading 1967–90.Bibliography1979, Gaia.1983, The Great Extinction.1988, The Ages of Gaia.1991, Gaia: The Practical Science of Planetary Medicine.LRDBiographical history of technology > Lovelock, James Ephraim
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