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  • 61 R69.9

    рус Неизвестные и неуточненные причины заболевания
    eng Unknown and unspecified causes of morbidity. Illness NOS. Undiagnosed disease, not specified as to the site or system involved

    Classification of Diseases (English-Russian) > R69.9

  • 62 сбой

    СБОЙ
    a break / stoppage / a snag / a glitch / a blip заминка, препятствие a malfunction that causes a system to stop running

    Дополнение к русско-английским словарям > сбой

  • 63 alienitas

    ălĭēnĭtas, ātis, f. [alienus]. In medic. lang.,
    I.
    The causes or materials of disease in the human system, which are extraneous to it:

    auferre alienitatem,

    Cael. Aur. Tard. 5, 4:

    alienitatis obtrusio,

    id. ib. 5, 64:

    manens alienitas,

    id. Acut. 3, 20.—
    II.
    For alienatio (q. v. B.):

    mentis,

    Cael. Aur. Acut. 2, 39.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > alienitas

  • 64 Doubling (Dry And Wet)

    DOUBLING (Dry and Wet).
    Dry doubling is carried on for yarn that is required oozy after twisting, such as for hosiery, also if to be bleached or dyed. This system leaves the thread in an open condition. Wet doubling produces a smooth and clean yarn and the liquid used causes the fibres to adhere to the body of the thread, while the twisting process also binds them together to give a more solid structure and increases the strength. Water only is used for counts up to about 2/60's, but for the finer counts it is usual to add a soap or special solution.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Doubling (Dry And Wet)

  • 65 Jacquard Machine

    The jacquard machine is an essential addition to looms intended for weaving ornamental designs that are beyond the scope of stave -work. The machine is made in many forms and sizes for different branches of the weaving industry, but its characteristic feature is that it furnishes the means whereby every individual thread in a design may weave differently from all the others. This permits the delineation of all forms and shapes and the fineness of the detail is only limited by the texture, e.g., the number of ends and picks per inch. The action of the jacquard machine is communicated to the warp threads through a system of cords known variously as the harness mounting and jacquard harness. Actually, loom harness ante-dated the jacquard machine by many centuries, and many draw loom harnesses were much more complicated than modern jacquard harnesses. An essential feature of a jacquard is that each hook in the machine can be lifted at will independently of the others. The selection of which hooks shall lift and which shall be left down is made by the designer, by painting marks on squared paper to indicate the hooks that must be lifted on each pick. In cutting the pattern cards, a hole is cut for every mark or filled square on the design paper, and a blank is left for every empty square on the paper. Assuming that each pattern card represents one pick of weft, when the card is pressed against the needles of the jacquard, the blanks push the unwanted needles and hooks out of the path of the lifting griffe; the holes allow the needles to pass through and thus remain stationary, so that the corresponding hooks remain in the path of the lifting griffe and cause the corresponding warp threads to be lifted. Jacquard: Single-lift, single-cylinder - In this machine there is only one griffe which lifts on every pick, and only one pattern cylinder, which strikes every pick. This restricts the speed at which the loom can be operated. Jacquard: Double-lift, single-cylinder - This is the machine in most common use for ordinary jacquard work. There are two lifting griffes and twice as many hooks as in a single-lift machine, but only the same number of needles and one card cylinder. The shed formed is of the semi-open type, which causes less movement of the warp threads, as any threads which require to be up for two or more picks in succession are arrested in their fall and taken up again. Double-lift jacquards give a greatly increased loom production as compared with single-lift machines, as they permit the speed of the loom to be increased to about 180 picks per minute for narrow looms, as compared with 120 to 140 picks per minute for single-lift jacquards. Jacquard: Double-lift, double-cylinder - In this machine there are two sets of hooks and needles, two lifting griffes and two card cylinders, odd picks in one set of cards and even picks in the other set. This permits maximum loom speed, it prolongs the life of the pattern cards, but is open to the serious drawback that spoiled cloth is caused whenever the two card cylinders get out of correct rotation. Jacquard: Cross Border - Fabrics with borders, such as tablecloths, bed quilts, etc., are woven with jacquards with two griffes, two sets of hooks and two card cylinders. The cards for weaving the border are laced together and weave on one cylinder, while the centre cards are on the other cylinder. The loom weaves at the speed of a single-cylinder, single-lift machine, and the change from the border to the centre cards can be made by hand or automatically

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Jacquard Machine

  • 66 βρί

    βρί ( βρῖ)
    Grammatical information: ?
    Dialectal forms: The interpretation of Myc. piritawo is uncertain.
    Compounds: In e.g. βρι-ήπυος `loud crying' of Ares (Ν 521), with ἠπύω, Βριάρεως s. below, βριηρόν μεγάλως κεχαρισμένον H. (cf. Sommer Nominalkomp. 139, to ἦρα?; against Hoffmann Glotta 28, 23f.). Βρίακχος `Bacchante' (S.) with ἰάχω, Ἴακχος.
    Derivatives: Adj. βριαρός `strong' (Il.) (cf. χαλαρός beside χαλί-φρων). Verb βριάω `be or make strong, mighty' (Hes.; cf. χαλάω) backformation from βριαρός? s. Schwyzer 682f., Bechtel a. a. O; also βριερός. For Βριάρεως, a giant with hundred arms (Il.), in Hes. Ο᾽βριάρεως, the interpretation `who causes much damage (ἀρή)' (Bechtel, Lex.) is most uncertain; much more probably it is a Pre-Gr. name, Fur. 168 n. 103. - With θ: βρί̄θω, (βέβρῑθα, βρῖσαι) `be laden with, full of' (Il); βρῑθύς `heavy(?)' (Il.), βρῖθος n. `weight' (Hp.), βριθοσύνη `id.' (Il.) - Here also βρινδεῖν θυμοῦσθαι, ἐρεθίζειν H. with prenasalization of βριθ-? (for the meaning cf. βριμάομαι). Further βρίμη, βριμάομαι. S. also βρίζω and ὕβρις.
    Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]
    Etymology: The idea of an `ablaut' ī\/ia must be given up; such cases have appeared to continue -ih₂-\/-ih₂-e. So βριαρός could be * gʷrih₂-eros. (There can be no derivational system i\/ro in these words; nor is a form *βριαρ probable, as Benveniste supposed, Origines 15.) The connection with βαρύς has also become very doubtful: βαρύς continues * gʷrH-u-, and * gʷrH-iH- would have given *βαρῑ-; possible would be * gʷr-iH-, from a root without laryngeal, but the only evidence for such a root would be Skt. grī-ṣmá- m. `Hochsommer', if *`die Zeit des heftigen, starken Sommers' (Wackernagel KZ 61, 197f., with sámā `(half)year', Av. ham- `summer' - but these derive from * smH-, which would make difficulty), but this analysis is quite uncertain (a meaning `heavy; does not seem appropriate). - (That Lat. (Osc.-Umbr.) brūtus = Latv. grũts `heavy' is a parallel ū-enlargement is even more doubtful.) - The - θ- can be the enlargement indicating a state (Benveniste, Origines 190).- As Fur. (168 n. 104, 174 n. 122, 246f) remarks the words refer more to `big, strong, χαλεπός' than to 'heavy'. The connection to βριμός (s. βρίμη) therefore seems evident. As βρῑμ- is very probable related to ὄβριμος (cf. ὀβριάρεως), we have to do with a Pre-Greek word (Fur. index). S. φριμάσσομαι.
    Page in Frisk: 1,267-268

    Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βρί

  • 67 βρῖ

    βρί ( βρῖ)
    Grammatical information: ?
    Dialectal forms: The interpretation of Myc. piritawo is uncertain.
    Compounds: In e.g. βρι-ήπυος `loud crying' of Ares (Ν 521), with ἠπύω, Βριάρεως s. below, βριηρόν μεγάλως κεχαρισμένον H. (cf. Sommer Nominalkomp. 139, to ἦρα?; against Hoffmann Glotta 28, 23f.). Βρίακχος `Bacchante' (S.) with ἰάχω, Ἴακχος.
    Derivatives: Adj. βριαρός `strong' (Il.) (cf. χαλαρός beside χαλί-φρων). Verb βριάω `be or make strong, mighty' (Hes.; cf. χαλάω) backformation from βριαρός? s. Schwyzer 682f., Bechtel a. a. O; also βριερός. For Βριάρεως, a giant with hundred arms (Il.), in Hes. Ο᾽βριάρεως, the interpretation `who causes much damage (ἀρή)' (Bechtel, Lex.) is most uncertain; much more probably it is a Pre-Gr. name, Fur. 168 n. 103. - With θ: βρί̄θω, (βέβρῑθα, βρῖσαι) `be laden with, full of' (Il); βρῑθύς `heavy(?)' (Il.), βρῖθος n. `weight' (Hp.), βριθοσύνη `id.' (Il.) - Here also βρινδεῖν θυμοῦσθαι, ἐρεθίζειν H. with prenasalization of βριθ-? (for the meaning cf. βριμάομαι). Further βρίμη, βριμάομαι. S. also βρίζω and ὕβρις.
    Origin: PG [a word of Pre-Greek origin]
    Etymology: The idea of an `ablaut' ī\/ia must be given up; such cases have appeared to continue -ih₂-\/-ih₂-e. So βριαρός could be * gʷrih₂-eros. (There can be no derivational system i\/ro in these words; nor is a form *βριαρ probable, as Benveniste supposed, Origines 15.) The connection with βαρύς has also become very doubtful: βαρύς continues * gʷrH-u-, and * gʷrH-iH- would have given *βαρῑ-; possible would be * gʷr-iH-, from a root without laryngeal, but the only evidence for such a root would be Skt. grī-ṣmá- m. `Hochsommer', if *`die Zeit des heftigen, starken Sommers' (Wackernagel KZ 61, 197f., with sámā `(half)year', Av. ham- `summer' - but these derive from * smH-, which would make difficulty), but this analysis is quite uncertain (a meaning `heavy; does not seem appropriate). - (That Lat. (Osc.-Umbr.) brūtus = Latv. grũts `heavy' is a parallel ū-enlargement is even more doubtful.) - The - θ- can be the enlargement indicating a state (Benveniste, Origines 190).- As Fur. (168 n. 104, 174 n. 122, 246f) remarks the words refer more to `big, strong, χαλεπός' than to 'heavy'. The connection to βριμός (s. βρίμη) therefore seems evident. As βρῑμ- is very probable related to ὄβριμος (cf. ὀβριάρεως), we have to do with a Pre-Greek word (Fur. index). S. φριμάσσομαι.
    Page in Frisk: 1,267-268

    Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > βρῖ

  • 68 πίμπρημι

    Grammatical information: v.
    Meaning: `to blow (on), to blow up, to stoke up, to kindle, to burn' (Il.).
    Other forms: Inf. - άναι (IA.), also - άω (X., Plb.), ipf. ἐν-έπρηθον (I 589), fut. πρήσω, aor. πρῆσαι (Il.), pass. aor. πρησθῆναι, perf. πέπρησμαι, - ημαι (IA., also Epid.), perf. act. πέπρηκα (Hp.).
    Compounds: Often w. prefix, esp. ἐν-.
    Derivatives: 1. πρηστήρ, - ῆρος m. `heavy gale, hurricane, sparking bolt, lightning' (Hes.), also `bellows, jugular' and name of a snake that causes inflammation (Arist., Ds.; Fraenkel IF 32, 108 f. a. 120) with πρηστηριάζω `to burn by lightning' (Hdn. Epim.); ἐμπρηστής m. `incendiary' (Aq., Ptol.). 2. πρῆσις (mostly ἔμ-πίμπρημι) f. `blowing up, ignation, inflammation' (IA., Aret.); 3. ἐμπρησμός m. `ignation, inflammation' (hell.); 4. πρῆσμα n., - μονή f. `id.' (Gal., Hippiatr.); παραπρή(σ)ματα n. pl. `inflammations on the legs of horses' (pap.). 5. πρηστικός `blowing up' (Hp. ap. Gal.). Also 6. πρηδών, - όνος f. `inflammatory swelling' (Nic., Aret.; Chantraine Form. 361) and, with μ-suffix, πρημαίνω `blowing intensively' (Ar. Nu. 336 [lyr.], Herod.), πρημονάω about `to snore, to roar' (Herod.), as from *πρῆ-μα, *πρη-μονή. -- As 2. member in βού-πρηστις, - ιδος. - εως f. "inflammatress of cows" name of a poisonous insect (Hp.); on the formation cf. βού-βρωστις. On the simplex πρῆστις, which a.o. is attested as fishname beside πρίστις, s. Strömberg Fischn. 44 w. lit., also Thompson Fishes s. v.
    Origin: IE [Indo-European] [809?] * pr- `sprinkle'?
    Etymology: The series πίμπρημι: πιμπράναι: πρήσω: πρῆσαι: πρησθῆναι: πρήθω agrees exactly to that of πίμπλημι: πιμπλάναι etc.; s.v. and Schwyzer 688f., 703 a. 761 w. further details. How the individual forms are to be evaluated and how the system was formed, cannot be reconstructed as there are no agreeing forms outside Greek. For comparison many words with pr- have been adduced, e.g. Skt. próthati `cough, sneeze', pruṣṇóti `sprinkle', Germ., e.g. OWNo. frūsa, frysa, Swed. frusta `sneeze', Hitt. parāi- ( prāi-?) `breathe, blow, stir up'. Orig. onomatop. as still (with retained pr-) LG. prusten. -- Several further forms w. lit. in Bq s. v., WP. 2, 27 f., Pok. 809.
    Page in Frisk: 2,538-539

    Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > πίμπρημι

  • 69 UIF

    abbr. (S. Africa) Fin
    Unemployment Insurance Fund: a system administered through payroll deductions that insures employees against loss of earnings through being made unemployed by such causes as retrenchment, illness, or maternity

    The ultimate business dictionary > UIF

  • 70 Gonin, Jules

    SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology
    [br]
    b. 10 August 1870 Vaud, Switzerland
    d. 11 June 1935 Lausanne, Switzerland
    [br]
    Swiss ophthalmic surgeon, originator of the therapy of retinal detachment with cautery.
    [br]
    After graduating form the University of Berne in 1894, Gonin was appointed Assistant to Marc Dufour, Professor of Ophthalmology at the Hôpital de l'Asile des Aveugles, Lausanne. At the International Congress of Ophthalmology at Lucerne in 1904, the general opinion was expressed that the condition of retinal detachment was untreatable. Gonin spent the following decade studying the condition, and by 1920 he was able to inform the French Ophthalmological Society that he had been able to cure a number of cases by the use of localized cautery. In the same year Gonin succeeded to the chair in Lausanne, which became a centre for the treatment of retinal detachment; despite initial scepticism, by 1929 a convincing series of cases led to international acceptance and the further development of the technique with the use of diathermy. On his death he left a substantial bequest to the blind of Lausanne whom he had not been able to cure. The Gonin Medal is awarded quadrennially to the outstanding international figure in ophthalmology.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Marcel Benoist Prize 1928. Mackenzie Medal 1933. Von Graefe Medal 1936.
    Bibliography
    1918, The Anatomical Causes of Detachment of the Retina.
    1929, "Detachment of the retina", Proceedings of the International Congress of- Ophthalmology, Amsterdam.
    Further Reading
    S.Duke-Elder, 1960–70, System of Ophthalmology, London.
    MG

    Biographical history of technology > Gonin, Jules

  • 71 Intentionality

       Mental states are both caused by the operations of the brain and realized in the structure of the brain (and the rest of the central nervous system). Once the possibility of mental and physical phenomena standing in both these relations is understood we have removed at least one major obstacle to seeing how mental states which are caused by brain states can also cause further brain states and mental states.
       But this model of "caused by" and "realized in" only raises the next question, how can Intentionality function causally? Granted that Intentional states can themselves be caused by and realized in the structure of the brain, how can Intentionality itself have any causal efficacy? When I raise my arm my intention in action causes my arm to go up. This is a case of a mental event causing a physical event. But, one might ask, how could such a thing occur? My arm going up is caused entirely by a series of neuron firings. We do not know where in the brain these firings originate, but they go at some point through the motor cortex and control a series of arm muscles which contract when the appropriate neurons fire. Now what has any mental event got to do with all of this? As with our previous questions, I want to answer this one by appealing to different levels of description of a substance, where the phenomena at each of the different levels function causally. (Searle, 1983, pp. 265, 268)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Intentionality

  • 72 вытесняющий поток (воздуха)

    1. displacement flow

     

    вытесняющий поток (воздуха)
    -
    [Интент]

    5.3.2 Принцип вытесняющего потока
    Вытесняющий поток воздуха должен быть направлен из более чистого в менее чистое помещение и иметь скорость не менее 0,2 м/с в местах разделения помещений.
    ==================
    7.7 Скорость вытесняющего потока воздуха
    Скорость вытесняющего потока характеризуется скоростью потока в щели под закрытой дверью и должна быть не менее 0,2 м/с.
    Поток воздуха должен быть направлен из более чистого в менее чистое помещение. В помещениях группы 5 потоки воздуха должны быть направлены из воздушных шлюзов в помещения.

    [ ГОСТ Р 52539-2006]

    Параллельные тексты EN-RU

    The supply air is discharged into a mixing chamber through nozzles. This induces secondary room air through the induction grille and through the heat exchanger into the mixing chamber. The subsequent mixed air flow is then discharged into the room as a displacement or quasi displacement flow system.
    [TROX TECHNIK]

    Обработанный воздух подается в смесительную камеру доводчика через сопла. Вследствие возникающей эжекции вторичный воздух засасывается через воздухозаборную решетку в теплообменник и попадает в смесительную камеру. Здесь он смешивается с обработанным воздухом и подается в помещение в виде вытесняющего или квази-вытесняющего потока.
    [Перевод Интент]

     

    4838
    Рис. TROX TECHNIK

    Displacement flow
    The cooled supply air discharges horizontally into the room through a grille at low velocity (< 0.5 m/s). In the process, the air velocity decreases. A ”pool of supply air” characterised by low velocities and high air quality forms at low level in the room. The convection from people and other heat sources causes air from the supply air pool to rise and create comfortable conditions in the occupied zone.

    [TROX TECHNIK]

    Вытесняющий поток
    Охлажденный приточный воздух подается горизонтально, с низкой скоростью (менее 0,5 м/сек), через решетку. В помещении скорость воздуха падает и над полом формируется слой воздуха, имеющего низкую скорость и высокое качество. Этот воздух, достигнув рабочей зоны, замещает воздух, поднимающийся вследствие нагрева от людей и других источников. В результате в рабочей зоне создается комфортный микроклимат.

    [Перевод Интент]


    Тематики

    EN

    Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > вытесняющий поток (воздуха)

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