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101 deliver subsequently
Деловая лексика: подавать с задержкой -
102 here and subsequently throughout the paper in the sequel from now on
Математика: всюду нижеУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > here and subsequently throughout the paper in the sequel from now on
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103 hereinafter in this chapter referred to subsequently referred to in this chapter as
Математика: именуемый в дальнейшем в этой главе какУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > hereinafter in this chapter referred to subsequently referred to in this chapter as
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104 phenol antioxidants have been grafted into synthetic elastomers to form masterbatch concentrates which are subsequently blended with pure polymer
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > phenol antioxidants have been grafted into synthetic elastomers to form masterbatch concentrates which are subsequently blended with pure polymer
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105 ripen subsequently
Сельское хозяйство: последовательно вызревать -
106 selihoth (In Jewish liturgy, penitential prayers originally composed for Yom Kippur and for fast days but subsequently incorporated into other services)
Религия: слихотУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > selihoth (In Jewish liturgy, penitential prayers originally composed for Yom Kippur and for fast days but subsequently incorporated into other services)
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107 deliver subsequently
/vt/ подавать... с задержкой -
108 delivering subsequently
Англо-русский экономический словарь > delivering subsequently
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109 as subsequently amended
Англо-русский универсальный дополнительный практический переводческий словарь И. Мостицкого > as subsequently amended
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110 treat subsequently
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111 deliver subsequently
(ec) a livra suplimentarEnglish-Romanian technical dictionary > deliver subsequently
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112 ripen subsequently
Англо-русский сельскохозяйственный словарь > ripen subsequently
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113 a similar approach has been subsequently developed by ...
• подобный подход был позднее разработан...English-Russian dictionary of phrases and cliches for a specialist researcher > a similar approach has been subsequently developed by ...
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114 afterwards
впоследствии наречие: -
115 Eisler, Paul
[br]b. 1907 Vienna, Austria[br]Austrian engineer responsible for the invention of the printed circuit.[br]At the age of 23, Eisler obtained a Diploma in Engineering from the Technical University of Vienna. Because of the growing Nazi influence in Austria, he then accepted a post with the His Master's Voice (HMV) agents in Belgrade, where he worked on the problems of radio reception and sound transmission in railway trains. However, he soon returned to Vienna to found a weekly radio journal and file patents on graphical sound recording (for which he received a doctorate) and on a system of stereoscopic television based on lenticular vertical scanning.In 1936 he moved to England and sold the TV patent to Marconi for £250. Unable to find a job, he carried out experiments in his rooms in a Hampstead boarding-house; after making circuits using strip wires mounted on bakelite sheet, he filed his first printed-circuit patent that year. He then tried to find ways of printing the circuits, but without success. Obtaining a post with Odeon Theatres, he invented a sound-level control for films and devised a mirror-drum continuous-film projector, but with the outbreak of war in 1939, when the company was evacuated, he chose to stay in London and was interned for a while. Released in 1941, he began work with Henderson and Spalding, a firm of lithographic printers, to whom he unwittingly assigned all future patents for the paltry sum of £1. In due course he perfected a means of printing conducting circuits and on 3 February 1943 he filed three patents covering the process. The British Ministry of Defence rejected the idea, considering it of no use for military equipment, but after he had demonstrated the technique to American visitors it was enthusiastically taken up in the US for making proximity fuses, of which many millions were produced and used for the war effort. Subsequently the US Government ruled that all air-borne electronic circuits should be printed.In the late 1940s the Instrument Department of Henderson and Spalding was split off as Technograph Printed Circuits Ltd, with Eisler as Technical Director. In 1949 he filed a further patent covering a multilayer system; this was licensed to Pye and the Telegraph Condenser Company. A further refinement, patented in the 1950s, the use of the technique for telephone exchange equipment, but this was subsequently widely infringed and although he negotiated licences in the USA he found it difficult to license his ideas in Europe. In the UK he obtained finance from the National Research and Development Corporation, but they interfered and refused money for further development, and he eventually resigned from Technograph. Faced with litigation in the USA and open infringement in the UK, he found it difficult to establish his claims, but their validity was finally agreed by the Court of Appeal (1969) and the House of Lords (1971).As a freelance inventor he filed many other printed-circuit patents, including foil heating films and batteries. When his Patent Agents proved unwilling to fund the cost of filing and prosecuting Complete Specifications he set up his own company, Eisler Consultants Ltd, to promote food and space heating, including the use of heated cans and wallpaper! As Foil Heating Ltd he went into the production of heating films, the process subsequently being licensed to Thermal Technology Inc. in California.[br]Bibliography1953, "Printed circuits: some general principles and applications of the foil technique", Journal of the British Institution of Radio Engineers 13: 523.1959, The Technology of Printed Circuits: The Foil Technique in Electronic Production.1984–5, "Reflections of my life as an inventor", Circuit World 11:1–3 (a personal account of the development of the printed circuit).1989, My Life with the Printed Circuit, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania: Lehigh University Press.KF -
116 Vignoles, Charles Blacker
[br]b. 31 May 1793 Woodbrook, Co. Wexford, Irelandd. 17 November 1875 Hythe, Hampshire, England[br]English surveyor and civil engineer, pioneer of railways.[br]Vignoles, who was of Huguenot descent, was orphaned in infancy and brought up in the family of his grandfather, Dr Charles Hutton FRS, Professor of Mathematics at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. After service in the Army he travelled to America, arriving in South Carolina in 1817. He was appointed Assistant to the state's Civil Engineer and surveyed much of South Carolina and subsequently Florida. After his return to England in 1823 he established himself as a civil engineer in London, and obtained work from the brothers George and John Rennie.In 1825 the promoters of the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway (L \& MR) lost their application for an Act of Parliament, discharged their engineer George Stephenson and appointed the Rennie brothers in his place. They in turn employed Vignoles to resurvey the railway, taking a route that would minimize objections. With Vignoles's route, the company obtained its Act in 1826 and appointed Vignoles to supervise the start of construction. After Stephenson was reappointed Chief Engineer, however, he and Vignoles proved incompatible, with the result that Vignoles left the L \& MR early in 1827.Nevertheless, Vignoles did not sever all connection with the L \& MR. He supported John Braithwaite and John Ericsson in the construction of the locomotive Novelty and was present when it competed in the Rainhill Trials in 1829. He attended the opening of the L \& MR in 1830 and was appointed Engineer to two railways which connected with it, the St Helens \& Runcorn Gap and the Wigan Branch (later extended to Preston as the North Union); he supervised the construction of these.After the death of the Engineer to the Dublin \& Kingstown Railway, Vignoles supervised construction: the railway, the first in Ireland, was opened in 1834. He was subsequently employed in surveying and constructing many railways in the British Isles and on the European continent; these included the Eastern Counties, the Midland Counties, the Sheffield, Ashton-under-Lyme \& Manchester (which proved for him a financial disaster from which he took many years to recover), and the Waterford \& Limerick. He probably discussed rail of flat-bottom section with R.L. Stevens during the winter of 1830–1 and brought it into use in the UK for the first time in 1836 on the London \& Croydon Railway: subsequently rail of this section became known as "Vignoles rail". He considered that a broader gauge than 4 ft 8½ in. (1.44 m) was desirable for railways, although most of those he built were to this gauge so that they might connect with others. He supported the atmospheric system of propulsion during the 1840s and was instrumental in its early installation on the Dublin \& Kingstown Railway's Dalkey extension. Between 1847 and 1853 he designed and built the noted multi-span suspension bridge at Kiev, Russia, over the River Dnieper, which is more than half a mile (800 m) wide at that point.Between 1857 and 1863 he surveyed and then supervised the construction of the 155- mile (250 km) Tudela \& Bilbao Railway, which crosses the Cantabrian Pyrenees at an altitude of 2,163 ft (659 m) above sea level. Vignoles outlived his most famous contemporaries to become the grand old man of his profession.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFellow of the Royal Astronomical Society 1829. FRS 1855. President, Institution of Civil Engineers 1869–70.Bibliography1830, jointly with John Ericsson, British patent no. 5,995 (a device to increase the capability of steam locomotives on grades, in which rollers gripped a third rail).1823, Observations upon the Floridas, New York: Bliss \& White.1870, Address on His Election as President of the Institution of Civil Engineers.Further ReadingK.H.Vignoles, 1982, Charles Blacker Vignoles: Romantic Engineer, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (good modern biography by his great-grandson).See also: Samuda, Joseph d'AguilarPJGRBiographical history of technology > Vignoles, Charles Blacker
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117 впоследствии
нареч. afterward(s), later, later on, subsequentlyнареч. later;
(с гл. в прош. вр. тж.) subsequently.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > впоследствии
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118 subsequent
(following or coming after: His misbehaviour and subsequent dismissal from the firm were reported in the newspaper.) efterfølgende- subsequent to* * *(following or coming after: His misbehaviour and subsequent dismissal from the firm were reported in the newspaper.) efterfølgende- subsequent to -
119 posteriormente
posteriormente adverbio subsequently, later ' posteriormente' also found in these entries: English: later - subsequently -
120 subsequent
(following or coming after: His misbehaviour and subsequent dismissal from the firm were reported in the newspaper.) poznejši- subsequent to* * *[sʌbsikwent]adjective ( subsequently adverb)poznejši, kasnejši, naknaden, naslednji, sledečsubsequent to — (pozneje) po, zasubsequent payment — naknadno plačilo, doplačilo
См. также в других словарях:
Subsequently — Sub se*quent*ly, adv. At a later time; afterwards. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
subsequently — index thereafter Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
subsequently — [adv] afterward after, afterwards, after while, at a later date, behind, by and by, consequently, finally, infra, in the aftermath, in the end, later, latterly, next; concepts 585,820 Ant. earlier, former, prior … New thesaurus
subsequently — sub|se|quent|ly W3 [ˈsʌbsıkwəntli] adv formal after an event in the past ▪ The book was subsequently translated into 15 languages. ▪ Subsequently, the company filed for bankruptcy … Dictionary of contemporary English
subsequently — adv. Subsequently is used with these verbs: ↑disappear, ↑discover, ↑emerge, ↑return, ↑withdraw … Collocations dictionary
subsequently — sub|se|quent|ly [ sʌbsıkwəntli ] adverb ** after something else happened: The disease subsequently spread to the rest of the country … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
subsequently — adverb formal after an event in the past: The book was subsequently translated into 15 languages … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
subsequently */*/ — UK [ˈsʌbsɪkwəntlɪ] / US adverb after something else happened The disease subsequently spread to the rest of the country … English dictionary
subsequently — [ˈsʌbsɪkwəntli] adv after something else happened The disease subsequently spread to the rest of the country.[/ex] … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
subsequently — subsequent ► ADJECTIVE ▪ coming after something in time. DERIVATIVES subsequently adverb. ORIGIN from Latin subsequi follow after … English terms dictionary
subsequently — adverb happening at a time subsequent to a reference time (Freq. 4) he apologized subsequently he s going to the store but he ll be back here later it didn t happen until afterward two hours after that • Syn: ↑later, ↑afterwards, ↑ … Useful english dictionary