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1 tiers
tiers [tjεʀ]1. masculine nouna. ( = fraction) third• j'ai lu le or un tiers du livre I have read a third of the bookb. ( = troisième personne) third party ; ( = étranger, inconnu) outsider2. compounds* * *
1.
tierce tjɛʀ, tjɛʀs adjectif thirdun pays tiers — gén another country; ( par rapport à un groupe) a non-member country
2.
nom masculin invariable1) Mathématique third•Phrasal Verbs:* * *tjɛʀ, tjɛʀs (tierce)1. adj2. nm1) DROIT third party2) (= fraction) thirdUn tiers de la classe était pour. — A third of the class were in favour.
* * *A adj third; un pays tiers gén another country; ( par rapport à un groupe) a non-member country; une tierce personne gén an outsider; Jur a third party; en main tierce Jur in the hands of a third party.B nm inv1 Math third (de of); il a fait le tiers du travail he's done one third of the work; j'ai rédigé les deux tiers de ma thèse I've written two thirds of my thesis; j'en suis aux deux tiers, je suis au dernier tiers I'm two thirds of the way through; réduire qch d'un tiers to reduce sth by one third; la ville a été détruite aux deux tiers two thirds of the town has been destroyed;2 ( personne) ( inconnu) outsider; Jur third party; agir pour le compte d'un tiers to act on behalf of a third party; avoir recours à un tiers to go through a third party;3 Assur, Aut une assurance au tiers third-party insurance; s'assurer au tiers to take out third-party insurance.C tierce nf1 Jeux three card run, tierce;2 Mus third; intervalle de tierce interval of a third;4 Imprim page proof.tierce majeure or à l'as three card run ace high, tierce major; le Tiers État Hist the Third Estate; tiers payant Prot Soc third-party payer (direct payment by insurance for medical care); tiers provisionnel tax payment equal to one third of annual tax.I1. [étranger à un groupe] third2. [dans l'Union européenne]pays tiers third ou non-EC country3. DROIT4. HISTOIREa tierce, a''' "a" triple dash6. RELIGION————————tierce nom féminintierce majeure/mineure major/minor thirdII[tjɛr] nom masculin1. [partie d'un tout divisé en trois] third2. (soutenu) [troisième personne] third personil se fiche ou se moque du tiers comme du quart he couldn't care less3. DROIT third party4. COMMERCEtiers porteur holder in due course, (second) endorser5. FINANCEtiers provisionnelthrice-yearly income tax payment based on estimated tax due for the previous year6. HISTOIRE7. [pour la Sécurité sociale]tiers payantsystem by which a proportion of the fee for medical treatment is paid directly to the hospital, doctor or pharmacist by the patient's insurer————————au tiers locution adjectivale -
2 Harris, Alanson
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 1816 Ingersoll, Ontario, Canadad. 1894 Canada[br]Canadian manufacturer of agricultural machinery and co-founder of the Massey Harris Company (later Massey Ferguson).[br]Alanson Harris was the first often children born to the wife of a circuit rider and preacher. His father's wanderings left Alanson at an early age in charge of the running of the family farm on the Grand River in Canada; also, his father's preference was for tinkering with machines rather than for farming. However, when he was 13 Alanson had to go out to work in order to bring badly needed cash to augment the family income. He worked at a sawmill in the small village of Boston, becoming Boss Sawyer and then Foreman after ten years. In 1839 the family moved to Mount Pleasant, and the following year Alanson married Mary Morgan, the daughter of a well-to-do pioneer Welsh farmer. He entered into a brief partnership with his father to build a sawmill at Whiteman's Creek, but within a few months his father returned to preaching and Alanson became the sole proprietor. After a successful early period Alanson recognized the signs of decline in the timber market, and in 1857 he sold the mill, moved to Beamsville, Niagara, and bought a small factory from which he produced the flop-over hay rake invented by his father. In 1863 he took his eldest son into partnership; the latter returned from a visit to the United States with the sole rights to produce the Kirby mower and reaper. The Crimean War created a market for corn, which gave a great boost to North American farming and, in its turn, to machinery production. This was reinforced by the tariff agreements between the United States and Canada. By the 1880s Harris and Massey between them accounted for two thirds of the harvesting machines sold in Canada, and they also supplied machines abroad. By the end of the decade the mutual benefits of joining forces were apparent and by 1891 an agreement was reached, with Alanson Harris and A.H.Massey on the first board.[br]Further ReadingG.Quick and W.Buchele, 1978, The Grain Harvesters, American Society of Agricultural Engineers (refers to Harris and Massey Harris Company in its account of the development of harvest machinery).M.Denison, 1949, Harvest Triumphant: The Story of Massey Harris, London (gives a more detailed account of Massey Harris Company).AP -
3 Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 26 August 1743 Paris, Franced. 8 May 1794 Paris, France[br]French founder of the modern science of chemistry.[br]As well as receiving a formal education in law and literature, Lavoisier studied science under some of the leading figures of the day. This proved to be an ideal formation of the man in whom "man of science" and "public servant" were so intimately combined. His early work towards the first geological map of France and on the water supply of Paris helped to win him election to the Royal Academy of Sciences in 1768 at the youthful age of 25. In the same year he used some of his private income to buy a part-share in the "tax farm", a private company which leased from the Government the right to collect certain indirect taxes.In 1772 Lavoisier began his researches into the related phenomena of combustion, respiration and the calcination or oxidation of metals. This culminated in the early 1780s in the overthrow of the prevailing theory, based on an imponderable combustion principle called "phlogiston", and the substitution of the modern explanation of these processes. At the same time, understanding of the nature of acids, bases and salts was placed on a sounder footing. More important, Lavoisier defined a chemical element in its modern sense and showed how it should be applied by drawing up the first modern list of the chemical elements. With the revolution in chemistry initiated by Lavoisier, chemists could begin to understand correctly the fundamental processes of their science. This understanding was the foundationo of the astonishing advance in scientific and industrial chemistry that has taken place since then. As an academician, Lavoisier was paid by the Government to carry out investigations into a wide variety of practical questions with a chemical bias, such as the manufacture of starch and the distillation of phosphorus. In 1775 Louis XVI ordered the setting up of the Gunpowder Commission to improve the supply and quality of gunpowder, deficiencies in which had hampered France's war efforts. Lavoisier was a member of the Commission and, as usual, took the leading part, drawing up its report and supervising its implementation. As a result, the industry became profitable, output increased so that France could even export powder, and the range of the powder increased by two-thirds. This was a material factor in France's war effort in the Revolution and the Napoleonic wars.As if his chemical researches and official duties were not enough, Lavoisier began to apply his scientific principles to agriculture when he purchased an estate at Frechines, near Blois. After ten years' work on his experimental farm there, Lavoisier was able to describe his results in the memoir "Results of some agricultural experiments and reflections on their relation to political economy" (Paris, 1788), which holds historic importance in agriculture and economics. In spite of his services to the nation and to humanity, his association with the tax farm was to have tragic consequences: during the reign of terror in 1794 the Revolutionaries consigned to the guillotine all the tax farmers, including Lavoisier.[br]Bibliography1862–93, Oeuvres de Lavoisier, Vols I–IV, ed. J.B.A.Dumas; Vols V–VI, ed. E.Grimaux, Paris (Lavoisier's collected works).Further ReadingD.I.Duveen and H.S.Klickstein, 1954, A Bibliography of the Works of Antoine Laurent Lavoisier 1743–1794, London: William Dawson (contains valuable biographical material).D.McKie, 1952, Antoine Lavoisier, Scientist, Economist, Social Reformer, London: Constable (the best modern, general biography).H.Guerlac, 1975, Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, Chemist and Revolutionary, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons (a more recent work).LRDBiographical history of technology > Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent
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