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1 Judge of Probate
General subject: J Prob -
2 Magisterial District Judge or commissioner
General subject: MDJУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Magisterial District Judge or commissioner
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3 судья окружного суда
1) General subject: Circuit Court Judge (Великобритания), District Court Judge (США)2) Law: (выездного) circuiteer, circuiteer (выездного), (выездного) circuiter, district judge (англ. оборот взят из статьи, опубликованной в Houston Chronicle)3) Advertising: circuit judgeУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > судья окружного суда
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4 заместитель судьи
1) General subject: assistant, associable judge2) Law: assistant judge3) Business: associate judge -
5 давать оценку
1) General subject: esteem, evaluate, judge (чему-л.), value (в денежном выражении), estimate2) Law: affeer3) Economy: give an estimation, make evaluation5) Mass media: make estimate7) Makarov: assess (положения и т.п.), esteem (в статистике), judge (smth.) (чему-л.) -
6 назначить (кого-л.) судьёй
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > назначить (кого-л.) судьёй
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7 по одежке встречают-по уму провожают
General subject: first you judge 'how nice', then you judge 'how wise'Универсальный русско-английский словарь > по одежке встречают-по уму провожают
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8 selpai
Construction: se+pajni judgement subject Structure: x1 = pajni2 (judgement subject), x2 = pajni1 (judge) -
9 в лице судьи
General subject: presided by judge -
10 кто будет рассматривать (какой судья будет слушать) следующее дело?
General subject: who will judge the next case ?Универсальный русско-английский словарь > кто будет рассматривать (какой судья будет слушать) следующее дело?
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11 рассудить
2) Law: arbitrate (спорящих) -
12 судья суда графства
General subject: County Court Judge (Великобритания)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > судья суда графства
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13 судить лицу
General subject: (чьему-л.) judge face -
14 судить по виде
General subject: (чьему-л.) judge by appearance -
15 судить по поведению
General subject: (чьему-л.) judge from conductУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > судить по поведению
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16 ἄκριτος
A undistinguishable, confused,ἄκριτα πόλλ' ἀγορεύειν Od.8.505
; τύμβος ἄ. one common undistinguished grave, Il. 7.337; ἄ. πάγος confused mass, Hp.Septim.6, cf. Pl.Grg. 465d, Philostr. Gym.26;ἄ. ἔρις καὶ ταραχή D.18.18
;ἄ. καιροί Demad.34
.2 continual, unceasing,μῦθοι Il.2.796
;ἄχεα 3.412
: neut. as Adv.,πενθήμεναι ἄκριτον αἰεί Od.18.174
, 19.120;δηρὸν καὶ ἄ. h.Merc. 126
; ὄρος ἄ. continuous chain of mountains, AP6.225 (Nicaen.).II undecided, doubtful, νείκεα, ἄεθλος, Il.14.205, Hes.Sc. 311; ἄ. τελευταί which cannot be predicted, B.9.45; ἀκρίτων ὄντων while the issue is doubtful, Th.4.20; uncertain, of weather-signs, ; πυρετὸς ἄ. fever that will not come to a crisis, Hp.Acut.(Sp.) 17. Adv.- τως Id.Epid.1.3
; τὸ ἀκρίτως ξυνεχὲς τῆς ἁμίλλης without decisive issue, Th.7.71: neut.pl.as Adv.,ἄκριτα δηρινθέντες Euph.94.3
.2 unjudged, untried, of persons and things, ἀκρίτους κτείνειν, ἀποκτεῖναι without trial, Hdt.3.80, Th.2.67, cf.Lys.19.7, D.17.3;ἄ. ἀποθανεῖν Antipho 5.48
, cf. Th.8.48, etc.; πρᾶγμα ἄ. cause not yet tried, Isoc.19.2, cf. Pl.Ti. 51c:—also, subject to no judge, . Adv.ἀκρίτως, ἀποκτείνειν D.H.11.43
, cf. Conon 28.1, LXX 1 Ma. 2.37.III [voice] Act., not giving judgement, Hdt.8.124; not capable of judging, Parm.6.7, Plb.3.19.9, cf. Luc.Am.37; ἄκριτα μηχανώμενοι engaged in rash attempts, E.Andr. 549; κατ' ἄκριτον recklessly, Phld. Ir.p.69 W. Adv. - τως rashly, indiscreetly, Plb.2.7.2, Epict.Gnom. 65; indiscriminately,ἐκφέρειν Procl.in Prm.p.553S.
2 not exercising judgement, undiscriminating, of fate, AP7.439 (Theodorid.), cf. 5.283 (Rufin.); ἄκριτε δαῖμον, of death, Epigr.Gr.204.3 (Cnid.).Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἄκριτος
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17 Bramah, Joseph
SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering, Domestic appliances and interiors, Land transport, Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering, Public utilities[br]b. 2 April 1749 Stainborough, Yorkshire, Englandd. 9 December 1814 Pimlico, London, England[br]English inventor of the second patented water-closet, the beer-engine, the Bramah lock and, most important, the hydraulic press.[br]Bramah was the son of a tenant farmer and was educated at the village school before being apprenticed to a local carpenter, Thomas Allot. He walked to London c.1773 and found work with a Mr Allen that included the repair of some of the comparatively rare water-closets of the period. He invented and patented one of his own, which was followed by a water cock in 1783. His next invention, a greatly improved lock, involved the devising of a number of special machine tools, for it was one of the first devices involving interchangeable components in its manufacture. In this he had the help of Henry Maudslay, then a young and unknown engineer, who became Bramah's foreman before setting up business on his own. In 1784 he moved his premises from Denmark Street, St Giles, to 124 Piccadilly, which was later used as a showroom when he set up a factory in Pimlico. He invented an engine for putting out fires in 1785 and 1793, in effect a reciprocating rotary-vane pump. He undertook the refurbishment and modernization of Norwich waterworks c.1793, but fell out with Robert Mylne, who was acting as Consultant to the Norwich Corporation and had produced a remarkably vague specification. This was Bramah's only venture into the field of civil engineering.In 1797 he acted as an expert witness for Hornblower \& Maberley in the patent infringement case brought against them by Boulton and Watt. Having been cut short by the judge, he published his proposed evidence in "Letter to the Rt Hon. Sir James Eyre, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas…etc". In 1795 he was granted his most important patent, based on Pascal's Hydrostatic Paradox, for the hydraulic press which also incorporated the concept of hydraulics for the transmission of both power and motion and was the foundation of the whole subsequent hydraulic industry. There is no truth in the oft-repeated assertion originating from Samuel Smiles's Industrial Biography (1863) that the hydraulic press could not be made to work until Henry Maudslay invented the self-sealing neck leather. Bramah used a single-acting upstroking ram, sealed only at its base with a U-leather. There was no need for a neck leather.He also used the concept of the weight-loaded, in this case as a public-house beer-engine. He devised machinery for carbonating soda water. The first banknote-numbering machine was of his design and was bought by the Bank of England. His development of a machine to cut twelve nibs from one goose quill started a patent specification which ended with the invention of the fountain pen, patented in 1809. His coach brakes were an innovation that was followed bv a form of hydropneumatic carriage suspension that was somewhat in advance of its time, as was his patent of 1812. This foresaw the introduction of hydraulic power mains in major cities and included the telescopic ram and the air-loaded accumulator.In all Joseph Bramah was granted eighteen patents. On 22 March 1813 he demonstrated a hydraulic machine for pulling up trees by the roots in Hyde Park before a large crowd headed by the Duke of York. Using the same machine in Alice Holt Forest in Hampshire to fell timber for ships for the Navy, he caught a chill and died soon after at his home in Pimlico.[br]Bibliography1778, British patent no. 1177 (water-closet). 1784, British patent no. 1430 (Bramah Lock). 1795, British patent no. 2045 (hydraulic press). 1809, British patent no. 3260 (fountain pen). 1812, British patent no. 3611.Further ReadingI.McNeil, 1968, Joseph Bramah, a Century of Invention.S.Smiles, 1863, Industrial Biography.H.W.Dickinson, 1942, "Joseph Bramah and his inventions", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 22:169–86.IMcN -
18 Grove, Sir William Robert
SUBJECT AREA: Electricity[br]b. 11 July 1811 Swansea, Walesd. 1 August 1896 London, England[br]Welsh chemist and physicist, inventor of the Grove electrochemical primary cell.[br]After education at Brasenose College, Oxford, Grove was called to the Bar in 1835. Instead of immediately practising, he became involved in electrical research, devising in 1839 the cell that bears his name. He became Professor of Experimental Philosophy at the London Institution from 1840 to 1845; it was during this period that he built up his high reputation among physicists. In 1846 he published On the Correlation of Physical Forces, which was based on a course of his lectures. He returned to the practice of law, becoming a judge in 1871, but retained his interest in scientific research during his sixteen-year occupancy of the Bench. He served as a member of the Council of the Royal Society in 1846 and 1847 and played a leading part in its reform. Contributing to the science of electrochemistry, he invented the Grove cell, which together with its modification by Bunsen became an important source of electrical energy during the middle of the nineteenth century, before mechanically driven generators became available. The Grove cell had a platinum electrode immersed in strong nitric acid, separated by a porous diaphragm from a zinc electrode in weak sulphuric acid. The hydrogen formed at the platinum electrode was immediately oxidized by the acid, turning it into water. This avoided the polarization which occurred in the early copper-zinc cells. It was a very powerful primary cell with a high voltage and a low internal resistance, but it produced objectionable fumes. Grove also invented his "gas battery", the earliest fuel cell, in which a current resulted from the chemical energy released from combining oxygen and hydrogen. This was developed by Rawcliffe and others, and found applications as a power source in manned spacecraft.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1872. FRS 1840. Fellow of the Chemistry Society 1841. Royal Society Royal Medal 1847.Bibliography1846, On the Correlation of Physical Forces, London; 1874, 6th edn, with reprints of many of Grove's papers (his only book, an early view on the conservation of energy).1839, "On a small voltaic battery of great energy", Philosophical Magazine 15:287–93 (his account of his cell).Further ReadingObituary, 1896, Electrician 37:483–4.K.R.Webb, 1961, "Sir William Robert Grove (1811–1896) and the origin of the fuel cell", Journal of the Royal Institute of Chemistry 85: 291–3 (for the present-day significance of Grove's experiments).C.C.Gillispie (ed.), 1972, Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Vol. V, New York, pp. 559–61.GWBiographical history of technology > Grove, Sir William Robert
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19 Morris, William Richard, Viscount Nuffield
[br]b. 10 October 1877 Worcester, Englandd. 22 August 1963 Nuffield Place, England[br]English industrialist, car manufacturer and philanthropist.[br]Morris was the son of Frederick Morris, then a draper. He was the eldest of a family of seven, all of whom, except for one sister, died in childhood. When he was 3 years old, his father moved to Cowley, near Oxford, where he attended the village school. After a short time with a local bicycle firm he set up on his own at the age of 16 with a capital of £4. He manufactured pedal cycles and by 1902 he had designed a motor cycle and was doing car-repair work. By 1912, at the Motor Show, he was able to announce his first car, the 8.9 hp, two-seater Morris Oxford with its characteristic "bull-nose". It could perform at up to 50 mph (80 km/h) and 50 mpg (5.65 1/100 km). It cost £165.Though untrained, Morris was a born engineer as well as a natural judge of character. This enabled him to build up a reliable team of assistants in his growing business, with an order for four hundred cars at the Motor Show in 1912. Much of his business was built up in the assembly of components manufactured by outside suppliers. In he moved out of his initial premises by New College in Longwall and bought land at Cowley, where he brought out his second model, the 11.9hp Morris Oxford. This was after the First World War, during which car production was reduced to allow the manufacture of tanks and munitions. He was awarded the OBE in 1917 for his war work. Morris Motors Ltd was incorporated in 1919, and within fifteen months sales of cars had reached over 3,000 a year. By 1923 he was producing 20,000 cars a year, and in 1926 50,000, equivalent to about one-third of Britain's output. With the slump, a substantial overdraft, and a large stock of unsold cars, Morris took the bold decision to cut the prices of cars in stock, which then sold out within three weeks. Other makers followed suit, but Morris was ahead of them.Morris was part-founder of the Pressed Steel Company, set up to produce car bodies at Cowley. A clever operation with the shareholding of the Morris Motors Company allowed Morris a substantial overall profit to provide expansion capital. By 1931 his "empire" comprised, in addition to Morris Motors, the MG Car Company, the Wolseley Company, the SU Carburettor Company and Morris Commercial Cars. In 1936, the value of Morris's financial interest in the business was put at some £16 million.William Morris was a frugal man and uncomplicated, having little use for all the money he made except to channel it to charitable purposes. It is said that in all he gave away some £30 million during his lifetime, much of it invested by the recipients to provide long-term benefits. He married Elizabeth Anstey in 1904 and lived for thirty years at Nuffield Place. He lived modestly, and even after retirement, when Honorary President of the British Motor Corporation, the result of a merger between Morris Motors and the Austin Motor Company, he drove himself to work in a modest 10 hp Wolseley. His generosity benefited many hospitals in London, Oxford, Birmingham and elsewhere. Oxford Colleges were another class of beneficiary from his largesse.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsViscount 1938; Baron (Lord Nuffield) 1934; Baronet 1929; OBE 1917; GBE 1941; CH 1958. FRS 1939. He was a doctor of seven universities and an honorary freeman of seven towns.Further ReadingR.Jackson, 1964, The Nuffield Story.P.W.S.Andrews and E.Brunner, The Life of Lord Nuffield.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Morris, William Richard, Viscount Nuffield
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20 requerir
v.1 to require.Ellos requieren un auto They require a car.Ella requiere amor She demands love.La necesidad demanda proceder Need requires proceeding.2 to demand.3 to order (law).4 to summon.El juez requirió al demandado The judge summoned the defendant.5 to require to, to need to.Ella requiere firmar She requires to sign.6 to take.Requiere tiempo It requires time to things correctly.7 to page, to call out for, to call.Ellos requieren a María They page Mary.8 to want.9 to call to.This situation calls to act rapidly Esta situación requiere actuar rápido.* * *1 (necesitar) to require, need2 (decir con autoridad) to demand, call for3 (solicitar) to request4 (persuadir) to persuade5 DERECHO to summon\requerir de amores literal to court, woo* * *1. VT1) (=necesitar) to need, require"se requiere dominio del inglés" — "fluent English required", "good command of English required"
2) (=solicitar) to request, askrequerir a algn que haga algo — to request o ask sb to do sth
3) (=llamar) to send for, summon frm2.VIrequerir de — esp LAm to need, require
* * *verbo transitivo1) ( necesitar) to requirerequiere paciencia — it requires o demands patience
* * *= have + calls for, call for, call on/upon, cry for, demand, involve, make + demand, require, elicit, requisition.Ex. For some while there have been calls for an abbreviated version of AACR, for small libraries and for non-cataloguers.Ex. The main rules call for entry of societies under name and institutions under place.Ex. The difference is only that an indexer is not usually called upon to appreciate the subtleties of the subject to the same extent as an abstractor.Ex. However, this work still cries for expansion, and it must also become more systematic.Ex. The other part of the picture reveals title indexes to be only crude subject indexes, which for effective use demand imagination and searching skills on the part of the user.Ex. Generating author indexes or catalogues involves creating headings from author's names, that is the names of persons or organisations.Ex. Also, informative abstracts make greater demands upon appreciation of subject content than indicative abstracts.Ex. The condition approach should require less enumeration of rules for different types of materials, and therefore should require fewer rules.Ex. This article looks at ways in which librarians in leadership roles can elicit the motivation, commitment, and personal investment of members of the organisation.Ex. More specialised titles are requisitioned through interlending.----* requerir atención = require + consideration, require + attention.* requerir más destreza = be more of an art.* * *verbo transitivo1) ( necesitar) to requirerequiere paciencia — it requires o demands patience
* * *= have + calls for, call for, call on/upon, cry for, demand, involve, make + demand, require, elicit, requisition.Ex: For some while there have been calls for an abbreviated version of AACR, for small libraries and for non-cataloguers.
Ex: The main rules call for entry of societies under name and institutions under place.Ex: The difference is only that an indexer is not usually called upon to appreciate the subtleties of the subject to the same extent as an abstractor.Ex: However, this work still cries for expansion, and it must also become more systematic.Ex: The other part of the picture reveals title indexes to be only crude subject indexes, which for effective use demand imagination and searching skills on the part of the user.Ex: Generating author indexes or catalogues involves creating headings from author's names, that is the names of persons or organisations.Ex: Also, informative abstracts make greater demands upon appreciation of subject content than indicative abstracts.Ex: The condition approach should require less enumeration of rules for different types of materials, and therefore should require fewer rules.Ex: This article looks at ways in which librarians in leadership roles can elicit the motivation, commitment, and personal investment of members of the organisation.Ex: More specialised titles are requisitioned through interlending.* requerir atención = require + consideration, require + attention.* requerir más destreza = be more of an art.* * *vtA (necesitar) to requireéstos son los precios de los productos que requieren these are the prices of the products you requirerequiere mucha paciencia it calls for o requires o demands o needs a great deal of patienceuna enfermedad que requirió su hospitalización an illness which necessitated o required her hospitalization[ S ] se requiere buena presencia good appearance essentialB ‹documento› to require; ‹persona› to summonel juez requirió su presencia como testigo the judge summoned him to appear as a witnessfue requerido de pago he was ordered to pay* * *
requerir ( conjugate requerir) verbo transitivo
‹ persona› to summon
requerir verbo transitivo
1 Jur (la presencia de alguien) to summon: el juez requirió la presencia del principal acusado, the judge required the primary defendant to appear in court
2 (necesitar) to require: esta planta requiere muchos cuidados, this plant needs a lot of care
3 (pedir) to request
4 (exigir) to demand
' requerir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
pedir
- reclamar
- demandar
- exigir
- llevar
English:
demand
- need
- require
- call
* * *requerir vt1. [necesitar] to require;es un asunto que requiere mucha diplomacia it is a matter which requires a great deal of tact;se requieren conocimientos de francés a knowledge of French is essential3. Der to order;el juez requirió la extradición del terrorista the judge ordered the extradition of the terrorist* * *v/t1 ( necesitar) require2 JUR summons* * *requerir {76} vt1) : to require, to call for2) : to summon, to send for* * *requerir vb to require
См. также в других словарях:
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