-
41 подрыв автомобиля
General subject: car bomb attack (теракт) -
42 последний приступ лихорадки сразил его
General subject: the final attack of fever felled himУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > последний приступ лихорадки сразил его
-
43 последний приступ лихорадки убил его
General subject: the final attack of fever felled himУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > последний приступ лихорадки убил его
-
44 предпринимать атаку
1) General subject: launch an attack2) Military: launch a charge, mount a charge, mount an assaultУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > предпринимать атаку
-
45 приостановить атаку
General subject: blunt an attackУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > приостановить атаку
-
46 произвести атаку
General subject: deliver an attack -
47 развернуть кампанию
General subject: launch an attack, open a campaign for (за что-л.), launch a drive, launch campaignУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > развернуть кампанию
-
48 решение о пуске в момент нападения
General subject: Launch on Attack AssessmentУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > решение о пуске в момент нападения
-
49 совершить внезапное нападение
General subject: launch surprise attackУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > совершить внезапное нападение
-
50 террористический акт с использованием радиоактивного материала
General subject: radiological terrorist attack (термин взят из сообщения для СМИ, подготовленного Международным агентством по атомной энергии (МАГАТЭ), г. Вена, 24 июня 20)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > террористический акт с использованием радиоактивного материала
-
51 убийственная критика (чьего-л.) романа
General subject: a lethal attack on (smb.'s) novelУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > убийственная критика (чьего-л.) романа
-
52 участок наступления
General subject: sector of attackУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > участок наступления
-
53 эшелон боевого порядка при наступлении
General subject: echelon of attackУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > эшелон боевого порядка при наступлении
-
54 подвергать злобным нападкам
General subject: (кого-л.) attack with great acrimonyУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > подвергать злобным нападкам
-
55 frostempfindlich
frostempfindlich frost-susceptible, subject to frost attackDeutsch-Englisch Fachwörterbuch Architektur und Bauwesen > frostempfindlich
-
56 oggetto
"subject;Betrifft;objet;objeto;objeto"* * *m object* * *oggetto s.m.1 object; thing, article: è un oggetto di cattivo gusto, it is a tasteless object; questo oggetto non mi serve, this thing is of no use to me; senza gli occhiali vedo tutti gli oggetti confusi, without my glasses everything looks blurred; oggetti in legno, in avorio, in corallo, wooden, ivory, coral articles (o objects); oggetti da viaggio, travelling-articles; oggetti di valore, valuables; oggetti personali, personal belongings // ufficio oggetti smarriti, lost property office // (inform.) codice oggetto, object code2 ( argomento) subject, subject matter: l'oggetto della nostra discussione sarà..., the subject of our debate will be...; qual è stato l'oggetto della vostra lunga conversazione?, what was the subject of your long conversation?; (dir.) l'oggetto di un contratto, di una causa, the subject matter of a contract, of an action // ( assicurazioni) oggetto assicurato, subject matter insured // (comm.): oggetto: pratica Bianchi, re: the Bianchi file; la questione in oggetto, the matter in hand3 ( motivo) object, subject: è oggetto di invidia da parte di molti, many people envy him; era diventato oggetto di scherno generale, he had become a laughingstock4 ( scopo) object, purpose: l'oggetto della mia lettera era molto chiaro, the purpose of my letter was very clear; l'oggetto della mia visita era di dirgli quello che pensavo, the object of my visit was to tell him what I thought5 (gramm.) object: l'oggetto e il soggetto, the object and the subject; oggetto diretto, indiretto, direct, indirect object* * *[od'dʒɛtto] 1.sostantivo maschile1) (cosa materiale) object, item, thing2) (di dibattito, pensiero) subjectessere oggetto di — to be the subject of [ ricerca]; to be the object of [brama, odio, amore]; to be singled out for [ inchiesta]
essere oggetto di scherno, di critiche da parte di qcn. — to be held up to scorn by sb., to come under attack from sb.
3) (scopo) purpose, object"oggetto: risposta alla vostra lettera del..." — (in una lettera) "re: your letter of..."
4) ling. filos. object2.aggettivo invariabiledonna oggetto, uomo oggetto — woman, man as an object
- i smarriti — (alla stazione) lost and found, lost property
* * *oggetto/od'dʒεtto/I sostantivo m.1 (cosa materiale) object, item, thing2 (di dibattito, pensiero) subject; essere oggetto di to be the subject of [ ricerca]; to be the object of [brama, odio, amore]; to be singled out for [ inchiesta]; essere oggetto di controversia to be controversial; essere oggetto di scherno, di critiche da parte di qcn. to be held up to scorn by sb., to come under attack from sb.; essere oggetto di conversazione to be a conversation piece3 (scopo) purpose, object; "oggetto: risposta alla vostra lettera del..." (in una lettera) "re: your letter of..."4 ling. filos. object; complemento oggetto direct objectdonna oggetto, uomo oggetto woman, man as an objectoggetto volante non identificato unidentified flying object; - i smarriti (alla stazione) lost and found, lost property. -
57 испытывать криптосистему методом экспертного криптоанализа
Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > испытывать криптосистему методом экспертного криптоанализа
-
58 Braun, Wernher Manfred von
[br]b. 23 March 1912 Wirsitz, Germanyd. 16 June 1977 Alexandria, Virginia, USA[br]German pioneer in rocket development.[br]Von Braun's mother was an amateur astronomer who introduced him to the futuristic books of Jules Verne and H.G.Wells and gave him an astronomical telescope. He was a rather slack and undisciplined schoolboy until he came across Herman Oberth's book By Rocket to Interplanetary Space. He discovered that he required a good deal of mathematics to follow this exhilarating subject and immediately became an enthusiastic student.The Head of the Ballistics and Armaments branch of the German Army, Professor Karl Becker, had asked the engineer Walter Dornberger to develop a solid-fuel rocket system for short-range attack, and one using liquid-fuel rockets to carry bigger loads of explosives beyond the range of any known gun. Von Braun joined the Verein für Raumschiffsfahrt (the German Space Society) as a young man and soon became a leading member. He was asked by Rudolf Nebel, VfR's chief, to persuade the army of the value of rockets as weapons. Von Braun wisely avoided all mention of the possibility of space flight and some financial backing was assured. Dornberger in 1932 built a small test stand for liquid-fuel rockets and von Braun built a small rocket to test it; the success of this trial won over Dornberger to space rocketry.Initially research was carried out at Kummersdorf, a suburb of Berlin, but it was decided that this was not a suitable site. Von Braun recalled holidays as a boy at a resort on the Baltic, Peenemünde, which was ideally suited to rocket testing. Work started there but was not completed until August 1939, when the group of eighty engineers and scientists moved in. A great fillip to rocket research was received when Hitler was shown a film and was persuaded of the efficacy of rockets as weapons of war. A factory was set up in excavated tunnels at Mittelwerk in the Harz mountains. Around 6,000 "vengeance" weapons were built, some 3,000 of which were fired on targets in Britain and 2,000 of which were still in storage at the end of the Second World War.Peenemünde was taken by the Russians on 5 May 1945, but by then von Braun was lodging with many of his colleagues at an inn, Haus Ingeburg, near Oberjoch. They gave themselves up to the Americans, and von Braun presented a "prospectus" to the Americans, pointing out how useful the German rocket team could be. In "Operation Paperclip" some 100 of the team were moved to the United States, together with tons of drawings and a number of rocket missiles. Von Braun worked from 1946 at the White Sands Proving Ground, New Mexico, and in 1950 moved to Redstone Arsenal, Huntsville, Alabama. In 1953 he produced the Redstone missile, in effect a V2 adapted to carry a nuclear warhead a distance of 320 km (199 miles). The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) was formed in 1958 and recruited von Braun and his team. He was responsible for the design of the Redstone launch vehicles which launched the first US satellite, Explorer 1, in 1958, and the Mercury capsules of the US manned spaceflight programme which carried Alan Shepard briefly into space in 1961 and John Glenn into earth orbit in 1962. He was also responsible for the Saturn series of large, staged launch vehicles, which culminated in the Saturn V rocket which launched the Apollo missions taking US astronauts for the first human landing on the moon in 1969. Von Braun announced his resignation from NASA in 1972 and died five years later.[br]Bibliography1981, with F.L.Ordway, History of Rocketry and Space TravelFurther ReadingP.Marsh, 1985, The Space Business, Penguin. J.Trux, 1985, The Space Race, New English Library. T.Osman, 1983, Space History, Michael Joseph.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Braun, Wernher Manfred von
-
59 Ackermann, Rudolph
[br]b. 20 April 1764 Stolberg, Saxonyd. 30 March 1834 Finchley, London, England[br]German-born fine-art publisher and bookseller, noted for his arrangement of the steering of the front wheels of horse-drawn carriages, which is still used in automobiles today.[br]Ackermann's father was a coachbuilder and harness-maker who in 1775 moved to Schneeberg. Rudolph was educated there and later entered his father's workshop for a short time. He visited Dresden, among other towns in Germany, and was resident in Paris for a short time, but eventually settled in London. For the first ten years of his life there he was employed in making designs for many of the leading coach builders. His steering-gear consisted of an arrangement of the track arms on the stub axles and their connection by the track rod in such a way that the inner wheel moved through a greater angle than the outer one, so giving approximately true rolling of the wheels in cornering. A necessary condition for this is that, in the plan view, the point of intersection of the axes of all the wheels must be at a point which always lies on the projection of the rear axle. In addition, the front wheels are inclined to bring the line of contact of the front wheels under the line of the pivots, about which they turn when cornering. This mechanism was not entirely new, having been proposed for windmill carriages in 1714 by Du Quet, but it was brought into prominence by Ackermann and so has come to bear his name.In 1801 he patented a method of rendering paper, cloth and other materials waterproof and set up a factory in Chelsea for that purpose. He was one of the first private persons to light his business premises with gas. He also devoted some time to a patent for movable carriage axles between 1818 and 1820. In 1805 he was put in charge of the preparation of the funeral car for Lord Nelson.Most of his life and endeavours were devoted to fine-art printing and publishing. He was responsible for the introduction into England of lithography as a fine art: it had first been introduced as a mechanical process in 1801, but was mainly used for copying until Ackermann took it up in 1817, setting up a press and engaging the services of a number of prominent artists, including W.H.Pyne, W.Combe, Pugin and Thomas Rowlandson. In 1819 he published an English translation of J.A.Senefelder's A Complete Course of Lithography, illustrated with lithographic plates from his press. He was much involved in charitable works for widows, children and wounded soldiers after the war of 1814. In 1830 he suffered "an attack of paralysis" which left him unable to continue in business. He died four years later and was buried at St Clement Danes.[br]BibliographyHis fine-art publications are numerous and well known, and include the following:The Microcosm of London University of Oxford University of Cambridge The ThamesFurther ReadingAubrey F.Burstall, "A history of mechanical engineering", Dictionary of National Biography.IMcN -
60 By, Lieutenant-Colonel John
SUBJECT AREA: Canals[br]b. 7 (?) August 1779 Lambeth, London, Englandd. 1 February 1836 Frant, Sussex, England[br]English Engineer-in-Charge of the construction of the Rideau Canal, linking the St Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers in Canada.[br]Admitted in 1797 as a Gentleman Cadet in the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich, By was commissioned on 1 August 1799 as a second lieutenant in the Royal Artillery, but was soon transferred to the Royal Engineers. Posted to Plymouth upon the development of the fortifications, he was further posted to Canada, arriving there in August 1802.In 1803 By was engaged in canal work, assisting Captain Bruyères in the construction of a short canal (1,500 ft (460 m) long) at the Cascades on the Grand, now the Ottawa, River. In 1805 he was back at the Cascades repairing ice damage caused during the previous winter. He was promoted Captain in 1809. Meanwhile he worked on the fortifications of Quebec and in 1806–7 he built a scale model of the Citadel, which is now in the National War Museum of Canada. He returned to England in 1810 and served in Portugal in 1811. Back in England at the end of the year, he was appointed Royal Engineer Officer in charge at the Waltham Abbey Gunpowder Works on 1 January 1812 and later planned the new Small Arms Factory at Enfield; both works were on the navigable River Lee.In the post-Napoleonic period Major By, as he then was, retired on half-pay but was promoted to Lieu tenant-Colonel on 2 December 1824. Eighteen months later, in March 1826, he returned to Canada on active duty to build the Rideau Canal. This was John By's greatest work. It was conceived after the American war of 1812–14 as a connection for vessels to reach Kingston and the Great Lakes from Montreal while avoiding possible attack from the United States forces. Ships would pass up the Ottawa River using the already-constructed locks and bypass channels and then travel via a new canal cut through virgin forest southwards to the St Lawrence at Kingston. By based his operational headquarters at the Ottawa River end of the new works and in a forest clearing he established a small settlement. Because of the regard in which By was held, this settlement became known as By town. In 1855, long after By's death, the settlement was designated by Queen Victoria as capital of United Canada (which was to become a self-governing Dominion in 1867) and renamed Ottawa; as a result of the presence of the national government, the growth of the town accelerated greatly.Between 1826–7 and 1832 the Rideau Canal was constructed. It included the massive engineering works of Jones Falls Dam (62 ft 6 in. (19 m) high) and 47 locks. By exercised an almost paternal care over those employed under his direction. The canal was completed in June 1832 at a cost of £800,000. By was summoned back to London to face virulent and unjust criticism from the Treasury. He was honoured in Canada but vilified by the British Government.[br]Further ReadingR.F.Leggett, 1982, John By, Historical Society of Canada.—1976, Canals of Canada, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.—1972, Rideau Waterway, Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Bernard Pothier, 1978, "The Quebec Model", Canadian War Museum Paper 9, Ottawa: National Museums of Canada.JHBBiographical history of technology > By, Lieutenant-Colonel John
См. также в других словарях:
Attack on Pearl Harbor — Part of the Pacific Theater of World War II … Wikipedia
attack — at·tack n: an attempt to prove something invalid or incorrect esp. through judicial procedures made an attack on the will as not properly witnessed; specif: an attempt to have the judgment of a court corrected or overruled collateral attack: an… … Law dictionary
Attack Poodles and Other Media Mutants — Attack Poodles and Other Media Mutants: The Looting of the News in a Time of Terror (2004) is a book by American media critic James Wolcott. Wolcott takes as his subject matter popular right wing pundits whom he dubs attack poodles . These… … Wikipedia
attack — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 violence against sb ADJECTIVE ▪ brutal, frenzied, horrific, savage, serious, vicious, violent ▪ unprovoked … Collocations dictionary
Attack from Atlantis — Infobox Book name = Attack From Atlantis title orig = translator = image caption = 1st Edition Dust Jacket author = Lester Del Rey illustrator = cover artist = Kenneth Fagg country = United States language = English series = subject = genre =… … Wikipedia
Ciphertext-only attack — In cryptography, a ciphertext only attack (COA) or known ciphertext attack is an attack model for cryptanalysis where the attacker is assumed to have access only to a set of ciphertexts. The attack is completely successful if the corresponding… … Wikipedia
October 22nd Scud missile attack — Part of the Yom Kippur War Scud launcher … Wikipedia
Shark attack — For the film, see Shark Attack (film). Shark attack Classification and external resources A sign warning about the presence of sharks off Salt Rock, South Africa … Wikipedia
2010 Chechen Parliament attack — Location Grozny (Chechnya, Russia) Date 19 October 2010 08:45 (04:45 UTC) Target Parliament of Chechnya, Grozny Attack type S … Wikipedia
Dog attack — Classification and external resources Dogs typically attack using their teeth[1] ICD 10 … Wikipedia
2007 Glasgow International Airport attack — Infobox civilian attack title=2007 Glasgow International Airport attack caption=Damage caused to the inside of the terminal building, after the foiled attack. target=Glasgow International Airport date=30 June 2007 time begin= time end= timezone=… … Wikipedia