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121 well-educated
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122 professional
1. adjective1) (of profession) Berufs[ausbildung, -leben]; beruflich [Qualifikation, Laufbahn, Tätigkeit, Stolz, Ansehen]professional body — Berufsorganisation, die
professional standards — Leistungsniveau, das
2) (worthy of profession) (in technical expertise) fachmännisch; (in attitude) professionell; (in experience) routiniert3) (engaged in profession)the professional class[es] — die gehobenen Berufe
4) (by profession) gelernt; (not amateur) Berufs[musiker, -sportler, -soldat, -fotograf]; Profi[sportler]5) (paid) Profi[sport, -boxen, -fußball, -tennis]go or turn professional — Profi werden
2. nounbe in the professional theatre/on the professional stage — beruflich am Theater/als Schauspieler arbeiten
(trained person, lit. or fig.) Fachmann, der/Fachfrau, die; (non-amateur; also Sport, Theatre) Profi, der* * *[-ʃə-]1) (of a profession: professional skill.) Berufs-...2) (of a very high standard: a very professional performance.) professionell3) (earning money by performing, or giving instruction, in a sport or other activity that is a pastime for other people; not amateur: a professional musician/golfer.) Berufs-...* * *pro·fes·sion·al[prəˈfeʃənəl]I. adj1. (of a profession) beruflich, Berufs-are you meeting with me in a personal or \professional capacity? ist Ihr Treffen mit mir privater oder geschäftlicher Natur?he is a \professional troubleshooter er ist ein professioneller Krisenmanager\professional career berufliche Laufbahn [o Karriere]to be a \professional courtesy zu den beruflichen Gepflogenheiten gehören\professional dress Berufskleidung f\professional experience Berufserfahrung f\professional interest berufliches Interesse\professional jargon/journal/literature Fachjargon m/-zeitschrift f/-literatur f\professional misconduct standeswidriges Verhalten, Berufspflichtverletzung f\professional name Künstlername m\professional qualifications berufliche Qualifikationen\professional skill Fachkompetenz f, Sachkompetenz f\professional standard Berufsstandard m2. (not tradesman) freiberuflich, akademisch\professional man/woman Akademiker m/Akademikerin f\professional people Angehörige pl der freien [o akademischen] Berufe3. (expert) fachmännisch, fachlichis that your personal or \professional opinion? ist das Ihre private Meinung oder Ihre Meinung als Fachmann?\professional advice fachmännischer Ratto maintain \professional conduct professionell auftretento do a \professional job etw fachmännisch erledigen\professional manner professionelles Auftretenin a \professional manner fachmännischto look \professional professionell aussehen\professional career Profilaufbahn f, Profikarriere f\professional player Profispieler(in) m(f)in \professional sports im Profisportto be a \professional writer von Beruf Schriftsteller(in) m(f) sein\professional liar notorischer Lügner/notorische Lügnerin, Lügenbold m fam\professional matchmaker professioneller Ehestifter/professionelle EhestifterinII. n* * *[prə'feSənl]1. adj1) Berufs-, beruflich; opinion fachmännisch, fachlich; football, tennis professionellprofessional army/soldier — Berufsarmee m/-soldat(in) m(f)
our relationship is purely professional —
to be a professional singer/author etc —
"flat to let to quiet professional gentleman" — "Wohnung zu vermieten an ruhigen gut situierten Herrn"
the pub is used mainly by professional men — das Lokal wird hauptsächlich von Angehörigen der gehobenen Berufe besucht
the professional classes — die gehobenen Berufe, die höheren Berufsstände (dated)
to seek/take professional advice — fachmännischen Rat suchen/einholen
it's not our professional practice — es gehört nicht zu unseren geschäftlichen Gepflogenheiten
2) (= skilled, competent) piece of work etc fachmännisch, fachgemäß, fachgerecht; worker, person gewissenhaft; company, approach professionell; (= expert) performance kompetent, sachkundig, professionellhe didn't make a very professional job of that — er hat das nicht sehr fachmännisch erledigt
he handled the matter in a very professional manner — er hat die Angelegenheit in sehr kompetenter Weise gehandhabt
that's not a very professional attitude to your work —
a typed letter looks more professional — ein maschine(n)geschriebener Brief sieht professioneller aus
3) (inf) worrier, moaner notorisch, gewohnheitsmäßig2. nProfi m* * *professional [prəˈfeʃənl]A adj (adv professionally)1. Berufs…, beruflich, Amts…, Standes…:professional association Berufsgenossenschaft f;professional hono(u)r Berufsehre f;professional jealousy Brot-, Konkurrenzneid m;professional life Berufsleben n;professional name Künstlername m;professional pride Standesdünkel m;2. Fach…, Berufs…, fachlich:professional competence Fachkompetenz f;professional school Fach-, Berufsschule f;in a professional way berufsmäßig, professionell;professional boxing Berufsboxen n;professional career Profikarriere f;commit a professional foul die Notbremse ziehen;professional offer Profiangebot n;professional player Profi m;professional record Kampfrekord m (eines Berufsboxers);professional team Profimannschaft f4. freiberuflich, akademisch:the professional classes die höheren Berufsstände5. fachlich ausgebildet, gelernt:he’s a professional gardener6. unentwegt, pej Berufs…:7. a) (very) professional (ausgesprochen) gekonntb) pej routiniert:B s1. SPORTturn professional ins Profilager überwechseln;his first year as a professional sein erstes Profijahrb) (Golf-, Tennis- etc) Lehrer(in)2. Fachmann m, -frau f3. Angehörige(r) m/f(m) eines freien Berufes, Akademiker(in)* * *1. adjective1) (of profession) Berufs[ausbildung, -leben]; beruflich [Qualifikation, Laufbahn, Tätigkeit, Stolz, Ansehen]professional body — Berufsorganisation, die
professional standards — Leistungsniveau, das
2) (worthy of profession) (in technical expertise) fachmännisch; (in attitude) professionell; (in experience) routiniert‘apartment to let to professional woman’ — "Wohnung an berufstätige Dame zu vermieten"
the professional class[es] — die gehobenen Berufe
4) (by profession) gelernt; (not amateur) Berufs[musiker, -sportler, -soldat, -fotograf]; Profi[sportler]5) (paid) Profi[sport, -boxen, -fußball, -tennis]go or turn professional — Profi werden
2. nounbe in the professional theatre/on the professional stage — beruflich am Theater/als Schauspieler arbeiten
(trained person, lit. or fig.) Fachmann, der/Fachfrau, die; (non-amateur; also Sport, Theatre) Profi, der* * *adj.fachgerecht adj.professionell adj. n.Profi -s m.fachgemäß adj. -
123 instruction
1. n обучение, преподавание2. n инструктаж, инструктирование3. n амер. наказ4. n полит. императивный мандат; директива голосовать за кандидата или мероприятие5. n образование, образованность, знания6. n обыкн. инструкции, указания, директивы; приказания, распоряжения7. n юр. наказ присяжным8. n тех. руководство; техническая инструкция9. n вчт. команда, инструкция, программаСинонимический ряд:1. education (noun) education; erudition; knowledge; learning; scholarship; science2. illumination (noun) edification; enlightenment; illumination3. order (noun) behest; bidding; charge; command; commandment; dictate; direction; directive; injunction; mandate; order; word4. teaching (noun) coaching; drill; exercise; indoctrination; pedagogy; schooling; teaching; training; tuition; tutelage; tutoring -
124 perfection
1. n совершенствование, усовершенствование2. n завершение3. n совершенство, безупречность4. n высшая ступень, верх5. n законченность, завершённость6. v редк. совершенствоватьСинонимический ряд:1. completion (noun) achievement; capping; completion; consummation; crowning; culmination; fulfillment; fulfilment; maturation; purification; realisation; realization2. education (noun) education; preparation; teaching; training3. exactness (noun) absoluteness; accuracy; correctness; exactitude; exactness; justness; preciseness; precision; rightness4. excellence (noun) arete; beauty; distinction; excellence; excellency; extraordinariness; faultlessness; flawlessness; goodness; holiness; ideality; impeccability; incomparability; merit; purity; quality; superiority; supremacy; transcendence; virtue5. integrity (noun) completeness; entireness; integrity; wholeness6. paragon (noun) crown; ideal; idealisation; idealization; model; paragon; quintessence; standard; summit; ultimateАнтонимический ряд:average; impurity; inaccuracy; mediocrity -
125 Albert, Prince Consort
[br]b. 26 August 1819 The Rosenau, near Coburg, Germanyd. 14 December 1861 Windsor Castle, England[br]German/British polymath and Prince Consort to Queen Victoria.[br]Albert received a sound education in the arts and sciences, carefully designed to fit him for a role as consort to the future Queen Victoria. After their marriage in 1840, Albert threw himself into the task of establishing his position as, eventually, Prince Consort and uncrowned king of England. By his undoubted intellectual gifts, unrelenting hard work and moral rectitude, Albert moulded the British constitutional monarchy into the form it retains to this day. The purchase in 1845 of the Osborne estate in the Isle of Wight provided not only the growing royal family with a comfortable retreat from London and public life, but Albert with full scope for his abilities as architect and planner. With Thomas Cubitt, the eminent engineer and contractor, Albert erected at Osborne one of the most remarkable buildings of the nineteenth century. He went on to design the house and estate at Balmoral in Scotland, another notable creation.Albert applied his abilities as architect and planner in the promotion of such public works as the London sewer system and, in practical form, the design of cottages for workers, such as those in south London, as well as those on the royal estates. Albert's other main contribution to technology was as educationist in a broad sense. In 1847, he was elected Chancellor of Cambridge University. He was appalled at the low standards and narrow curriculum prevailing there and at Oxford. He was no mere figurehead, but took a close and active interest in the University's affairs. With his powerful influence behind them, the reforming fellows were able to force measures to raise standards and widen the curriculum to take account, in particular, of the rapid progress in the natural sciences. Albert was instrumental in ending the lethargy of centuries and laying the foundations of the modern British university system.In 1847 the Prince became Secretary of the Royal Society of Arts. With Henry Cole, the noted administrator who shared Albert's concern for the arts, he promoted a series of exhibitions under the auspices of the Society. From these grew the idea of a great exhibition of the products of the decorative and industrial arts. It was Albert who decided that its scope should be international. As Chairman of the organizing committee, by sheer hard work he drove the project through to a triumphant conclusion. The success of the Exhibition earned it a handsome profit for which Albert had found a use even before it closed. The proceeds went towards the purchase of a site in South Kensington, for which he drew up a grand scheme for a complex of museums and colleges for the education of the people in the sciences and the arts. This largely came to fruition and South Kensington today is a fitting memorial to the Prince Consort's wisdom and concern for the public good.[br]Further ReadingSir Theodore Martin, 1875–80, The Life of His Royal Highness, the Prince Consort, 5 vols, London; German edn 1876; French edn 1883 (the classic life of the Prince).R.R.James, 1983, Albert, Prince Consort: A Biography, London: Hamish Hamilton (the standard modern biography).L.R.Day, 1989, "Resources for the study of the history of technology in the Science Museum Library", IATUL Quarterly 3:122–39 (provides a short account of the rise of South Kensington and its institutions).LRD -
126 Goldmark, Peter Carl
[br]b. 2 December 1906 Budapest, Hungaryd. 7 December 1977 Westchester Co., New York, USA[br]Austro-Hungarian engineer who developed the first commercial colour television system and the long-playing record.[br]After education in Hungary and a period as an assistant at the Technische Hochschule, Berlin, Goldmark moved to England, where he joined Pye of Cambridge and worked on an experimental thirty-line television system using a cathode ray tube (CRT) for the display. In 1936 he moved to the USA to work at Columbia Broadcasting Laboratories. There, with monochrome television based on the CRT virtually a practical proposition, he devoted his efforts to finding a way of producing colour TV images: in 1940 he gave his first demonstration of a working system. There then followed a series of experimental field-sequential colour TV systems based on segmented red, green and blue colour wheels and drums, where the problem was to find an acceptable compromise between bandwidth, resolution, colour flicker and colour-image breakup. Eventually he arrived at a system using a colour wheel in combination with a CRT containing a panchromatic phosphor screen, with a scanned raster of 405 lines and a primary colour rate of 144 fields per second. Despite the fact that the receivers were bulky, gave relatively poor, dim pictures and used standards totally incompatible with the existing 525-line, sixty fields per second interlaced monochrome (black and white) system, in 1950 the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), anxious to encourage postwar revival of the industry, authorized the system for public broadcasting. Within eighteen months, however, bowing to pressure from the remainder of the industry, which had formed its own National Television Systems Committee (NTSC) to develop a much more satisfactory, fully compatible system based on the RCA three-gun shadowmask CRT, the FCC withdrew its approval.While all this was going on, Goldmark had also been working on ideas for overcoming the poor reproduction, noise quality, short playing-time (about four minutes) and limited robustness and life of the long-established 78 rpm 12 in. (30 cm) diameter shellac gramophone record. The recent availability of a new, more robust, plastic material, vinyl, which had a lower surface noise, enabled him in 1948 to reduce the groove width some three times to 0.003 in. (0.0762 mm), use a more lightly loaded synthetic sapphire stylus and crystal transducer with improved performance, and reduce the turntable speed to 33 1/3 rpm, to give thirty minutes of high-quality music per side. This successful development soon led to the availability of stereophonic recordings, based on the ideas of Alan Blumlein at EMI in the 1930s.In 1950 Goldmark became a vice-president of CBS, but he still found time to develop a scan conversion system for relaying television pictures to Earth from the Lunar Orbiter spacecraft. He also almost brought to the market a domestic electronic video recorder (EVR) system based on the thermal distortion of plastic film by separate luminance and coded colour signals, but this was overtaken by the video cassette recorder (VCR) system, which uses magnetic tape.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Morris N.Liebmann Award 1945. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Vladimir K. Zworykin Award 1961.Bibliography1951, with J.W.Christensen and J.J.Reeves, "Colour television. USA Standard", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 39: 1,288 (describes the development and standards for the short-lived field-sequential colour TV standard).1949, with R.Snepvangers and W.S.Bachman, "The Columbia long-playing microgroove recording system", Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers 37:923 (outlines the invention of the long-playing record).Further ReadingE.W.Herold, 1976, "A history of colour television displays", Proceedings of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 64:1,331.See also: Baird, John LogieKF -
127 Taylor, William
[br]b. 11 June 1865 London, Englandd. 28 February 1937 Laughton, Leicestershire, England[br]English mechanical engineer and metrologist, originator of standard screw threads for lens mountings and inventor of "Dimple" golf balls.[br]William Taylor served an apprenticeship from 1880 to 1885 in London with Paterson and Cooper, electrical engineers and instrument makers. He studied at the Finsbury Technical College under Professors W.E.Ayrton (1847–1908) and John Perry (1850–1920). He remained with Paterson and Cooper until 1887, when he joined his elder brother, who had set up in Leicester as a manufacturer of optical instruments. The firm was then styled T.S. \& W.Taylor and a few months later, when H.W.Hobson joined them as a partner, it became Taylor, Taylor and Hobson, as it was known for many years.William Taylor was mainly responsible for technical developments in the firm and he designed the special machine tools required for making lenses and their mountings. However, his most notable work was in originating methods of measuring and gauging screw threads. He proposed a standard screw-thread for lens mountings that was adopted by the Royal Photographic Society, and he served on screw thread committees of the British Standards Institution and the British Association. His interest in golf led him to study the flight of the golf ball, and he designed and patented the "Dimple" golf ball and a mechanical driving machine for testing golf balls.He was an active member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, being elected Associate Member in 1894, Member in 1901 and Honorary Life Member in 1936. He served on the Council from 1918 and was President in 1932. He took a keen interest in engineering education and advocated the scientific study of materials, processes and machine tools, and of management. His death occurred suddenly while he was helping to rescue his son's car from a snowdrift.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsOBE 1918. FRS 1934. President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1932.Further ReadingK.J.Hume, 1980, A History of Engineering Metrology, London, 110–21 (a short account of William Taylor and of Taylor, Taylor and Hobson).RTS -
128 Whitworth, Sir Joseph
[br]b. 21 December 1803 Stockport, Cheshire, Englandd. 22 January 1887 Monte Carlo, Monaco[br]English mechanical engineer and pioneer of precision measurement.[br]Joseph Whitworth received his early education in a school kept by his father, but from the age of 12 he attended a school near Leeds. At 14 he joined his uncle's mill near Ambergate, Derbyshire, to learn the business of cotton spinning. In the four years he spent there he realized that he was more interested in the machinery than in managing a cotton mill. In 1821 he obtained employment as a mechanic with Crighton \& Co., Manchester. In 1825 he moved to London and worked for Henry Maudslay and later for the Holtzapffels and Joseph Clement. After these years spent gaining experience, he returned to Manchester in 1833 and set up in a small workshop under a sign "Joseph Whitworth, Tool Maker, from London".The business expanded steadily and the firm made machine tools of all types and other engineering products including steam engines. From 1834 Whitworth obtained many patents in the fields of machine tools, textile and knitting machinery and road-sweeping machines. By 1851 the company was generally regarded as the leading manufacturer of machine tools in the country. Whitworth was a pioneer of precise measurement and demonstrated the fundamental mode of producing a true plane by making surface plates in sets of three. He advocated the use of the decimal system and made use of limit gauges, and he established a standard screw thread which was adopted as the national standard. In 1853 Whitworth visited America as a member of a Royal Commission and reported on American industry. At the time of the Crimean War in 1854 he was asked to provide machinery for manufacturing rifles and this led him to design an improved rifle of his own. Although tests in 1857 showed this to be much superior to all others, it was not adopted by the War Office. Whitworth's experiments with small arms led on to the construction of big guns and projectiles. To improve the quality of the steel used for these guns, he subjected the molten metal to pressure during its solidification, this fluid-compressed steel being then known as "Whitworth steel".In 1868 Whitworth established thirty annual scholarships for engineering students. After his death his executors permanently endowed the Whitworth Scholarships and distributed his estate of nearly half a million pounds to various educational and charitable institutions. Whitworth was elected an Associate of the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1841 and a Member in 1848 and served on its Council for many years. He was elected a Member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1847, the year of its foundation.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsBaronet 1869. FRS 1857. President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1856, 1857 and 1866. Hon. LLD Trinity College, Dublin, 1863. Hon. DCL Oxford University 1868. Member of the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers 1864. Légion d'honneur 1868. Society of Arts Albert Medal 1868.Bibliography1858, Miscellaneous Papers on Mechanical Subjects, London; 1873, Miscellaneous Papers on Practical Subjects: Guns and Steel, London (both are collections of his papers to technical societies).1854, with G.Wallis, The Industry of the United States in Machinery, Manufactures, andUseful and Ornamental Arts, London.Further ReadingF.C.Lea, 1946, A Pioneer of Mechanical Engineering: Sir Joseph Whitworth, London (a short biographical account).A.E.Musson, 1963, "Joseph Whitworth: toolmaker and manufacturer", Engineering Heritage, Vol. 1, London, 124–9 (a short biography).D.J.Jeremy (ed.), 1984–6, Dictionary of Business Biography, Vol. 5, London, 797–802 (a short biography).W.Steeds, 1969, A History of Machine Tools 1700–1910, Oxford (describes Whitworth's machine tools).RTS
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