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to+deal+with+a+subject

  • 21 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) bir konuya ilk kez eğilmek

    English-Turkish dictionary > break new ground

  • 22 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) orati ledino

    English-Slovenian dictionary > break new ground

  • 23 break new ground

    • raivata maata
    * * *
    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) aukoa uusia uria

    English-Finnish dictionary > break new ground

  • 24 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) gjøre en banebrytende innsats

    English-Norwegian dictionary > break new ground

  • 25 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) essere un pioniere

    English-Italian dictionary > break new ground

  • 26 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) neue Gebiete erschließen

    English-german dictionary > break new ground

  • 27 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) być w czymś pionierem

    English-Polish dictionary > break new ground

  • 28 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) sākt strādāt pie kaut kā jauna

    English-Latvian dictionary > break new ground

  • 29 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) praskinti naujus kelius

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > break new ground

  • 30 break new ground

    vara banbrytande, bryta nya vägar (ny mark)
    * * *
    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) bryta ny mark, vara banbrytande

    English-Swedish dictionary > break new ground

  • 31 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) a inova

    English-Romanian dictionary > break new ground

  • 32 treat

    •• treat, treatment

    •• Treat 1. to act or behave toward (a person or thing) in a certain way. 2. to consider or regard in a certain way.... 7. to deal with a subject in speech or writing (The Random House Dictionary).
    •• Эти слова легко воспринимаются – интуитивно их значение понятно, но часто с трудом переводятся, особенно в устном переводе.
    •• 1. Возьмем, например, такой заголовок из газеты Los Angeles Times: Jiang Will Get the 7-City Treatment During His Visit to US. Здесь слово treatment означает особое отношение, даже почет. В переводе можно было бы сказать: Во время визита в США Цзян Цземиню устроят турне по семи городам США. Как видим, от слов типа отношение или обращение (первый и наиболее широкий «словарный эквивалент») в переводе надо отойти. Такая рекомендация достаточно часто оказывается полезной, когда мы встречаемся со словами широкой семантики;
    •• 2. Аналогичный пример: Eisenhower implied that... [calculations of national interest] ran counter to the American value system, in which all nations and peoples are treated equally (Henry Kissinger). Здесь возможен такой перевод:...противоречит американской системе ценностей, для которой все нации и народы равны между собой;
    •• 3. Еще один пример: Mr. Weld suggested that his arbitrary treatment at the hands of the chairman... was unfair (Washington Post). Здесь arbitrary treatment – произвол;
    •• 4. А вот предложение, в котором слово treatment ближе по значению к русскому оценка: Your treatment of Elvis Presley was shabby in the extreme (из письма читателя в Time). – Ваша оценка Элвиса Пресли была до обидного несправедливой.
    •• Слово to treat характерно и для письменной, литературной, и для устной речи. Вот пример его употребления из дословной записи высказывания бывшего юрисконсульта Белого дома (речь идет о возможности вызова президента Клинтона в суд): A President is not above the law, but he’s treated differently in that system because if a prosecutor could use the power of the judicial branch to sanction a president to get his testimony, to imprison a president, then one branch could utterly disable... the executive branch, and we can’t have that (Associated Press). Запись хорошо передает устный характер речи, ее «колебательный контур». Обратим также внимание на слово sanction – здесь оно означает принудить (вытекает из второго значения слова санкция – принудительная мера). А как быть переводчику со словом treated? Здесь можно прибегнуть к так называемому «смысловому развитию» – заменить следствие причиной: Президент не должен стоять выше закона, но он занимает в системе особое положение... и т.д. Аналогичное употребление слова treatment (из статьи на ту же тему в Financial Times): Mr. Starr should agree to a compromise whereby Mr. Clinton gives videotaped evidence from the White House. It may smack of special treatment, but Mr. Clinton is – in this constitutional sense – a special person. И тот же прием в переводе: ...Может показаться, что это ставит Клинтона в особое (привилегированное) положение, но в данном – конституционном – контексте Клинтон и находится в таком положении (обладает определенными привилегиями).
    •• Итак, в предложениях со словами treat, treatment надо стремиться отвлечься от «словарных значений». Однако надо иметь в виду, что это слово часто имеет терминологические значения, которые нужно просто знать. Например, общеизвестный most favored nation treatment – режим наибольшего благоприятствования в торговле; tax treatment of foreign investment – налоговый режим иностранных инвестиций; treatment of offenders – обращение с правонарушителями; treatment - в кинотерминологии нечто вроде предварительной сценарной разработки и т.п.

    English-Russian nonsystematic dictionary > treat

  • 33 treatment

    •• treat, treatment

    •• Treat 1. to act or behave toward (a person or thing) in a certain way. 2. to consider or regard in a certain way.... 7. to deal with a subject in speech or writing (The Random House Dictionary).
    •• Эти слова легко воспринимаются – интуитивно их значение понятно, но часто с трудом переводятся, особенно в устном переводе.
    •• 1. Возьмем, например, такой заголовок из газеты Los Angeles Times: Jiang Will Get the 7-City Treatment During His Visit to US. Здесь слово treatment означает особое отношение, даже почет. В переводе можно было бы сказать: Во время визита в США Цзян Цземиню устроят турне по семи городам США. Как видим, от слов типа отношение или обращение (первый и наиболее широкий «словарный эквивалент») в переводе надо отойти. Такая рекомендация достаточно часто оказывается полезной, когда мы встречаемся со словами широкой семантики;
    •• 2. Аналогичный пример: Eisenhower implied that... [calculations of national interest] ran counter to the American value system, in which all nations and peoples are treated equally (Henry Kissinger). Здесь возможен такой перевод:...противоречит американской системе ценностей, для которой все нации и народы равны между собой;
    •• 3. Еще один пример: Mr. Weld suggested that his arbitrary treatment at the hands of the chairman... was unfair (Washington Post). Здесь arbitrary treatment – произвол;
    •• 4. А вот предложение, в котором слово treatment ближе по значению к русскому оценка: Your treatment of Elvis Presley was shabby in the extreme (из письма читателя в Time). – Ваша оценка Элвиса Пресли была до обидного несправедливой.
    •• Слово to treat характерно и для письменной, литературной, и для устной речи. Вот пример его употребления из дословной записи высказывания бывшего юрисконсульта Белого дома (речь идет о возможности вызова президента Клинтона в суд): A President is not above the law, but he’s treated differently in that system because if a prosecutor could use the power of the judicial branch to sanction a president to get his testimony, to imprison a president, then one branch could utterly disable... the executive branch, and we can’t have that (Associated Press). Запись хорошо передает устный характер речи, ее «колебательный контур». Обратим также внимание на слово sanction – здесь оно означает принудить (вытекает из второго значения слова санкция – принудительная мера). А как быть переводчику со словом treated? Здесь можно прибегнуть к так называемому «смысловому развитию» – заменить следствие причиной: Президент не должен стоять выше закона, но он занимает в системе особое положение... и т.д. Аналогичное употребление слова treatment (из статьи на ту же тему в Financial Times): Mr. Starr should agree to a compromise whereby Mr. Clinton gives videotaped evidence from the White House. It may smack of special treatment, but Mr. Clinton is – in this constitutional sense – a special person. И тот же прием в переводе: ...Может показаться, что это ставит Клинтона в особое (привилегированное) положение, но в данном – конституционном – контексте Клинтон и находится в таком положении (обладает определенными привилегиями).
    •• Итак, в предложениях со словами treat, treatment надо стремиться отвлечься от «словарных значений». Однако надо иметь в виду, что это слово часто имеет терминологические значения, которые нужно просто знать. Например, общеизвестный most favored nation treatment – режим наибольшего благоприятствования в торговле; tax treatment of foreign investment – налоговый режим иностранных инвестиций; treatment of offenders – обращение с правонарушителями; treatment - в кинотерминологии нечто вроде предварительной сценарной разработки и т.п.

    English-Russian nonsystematic dictionary > treatment

  • 34 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) καινοτομώ

    English-Greek dictionary > break new ground

  • 35 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) vkročit na neobdělanou půdu

    English-Czech dictionary > break new ground

  • 36 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) urobiť prvé kroky

    English-Slovak dictionary > break new ground

  • 37 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) innover

    English-French dictionary > break new ground

  • 38 break new ground

    (to deal with a subject for the first time.) inovar

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > break new ground

  • 39 Neri, Antonio Ludovico

    [br]
    b. 29 February 1576 Florence, Italy
    d. 1614 Florence, Italy
    [br]
    Italian glassmaker.
    [br]
    Neri entered the Church and by 1601 was a priest in the household of Alamanno Bertolini in Florence. There he met the Portuguese Sir Emanuel Ximenes, with whom he shared an interest in chemistry. The two later corresponded and the twenty-seven letters extant from Ximenes, who was living in Antwerp, are the main source of information about Neri's life. At the same time, Neri was working as a craftsman in the Medici glasshouse in Florence and then in their works at Pisa. These glasshouses had been flourishing since the fifteenth century with the help of Muranese glassmakers imported from Venice. Ximenes persuaded Neri to spend some time with the glassmakers in Antwerp, probably from 1603/4, for the correspondence breaks off at that point. A final letter in March 1611 refers to Neri's recent return to Florence. In the following year, Neri published the work by which he is known, the L'arte vetraria, the first general treatise on glassmaking. Neri's plan for a further book describing his chemical and medical experiments was thwarted by his early death. L'arte belongs to the medieval tradition of manuscript recipe books. It is divided into seven books, the first being the most interesting, dealing with the materials of glassmaking and their mixing and melting to form crystal and other colourless glasses. Other sections deal with coloured glasses and the making of enamels for goldsmiths' use. Although it was noted by Galileo Galilei (1564–1642), the book made little impression for half a century, the second edition not appearing until 1661. The first Venice edition came out two years later, with a second in 1678. Due to a decline in scientific activity in Italy at this time, L'arte had more influence elsewhere in Europe, especially England, Holland and France. It began to make a real impact with the appearance in 1662 of the English translation by Christopher Merrett (1614–95), physician, naturalist and founder member of the Royal Society. This edition included Merrett's annotations, descriptions of the tools used by English glassmakers and a translation of Agricola's short account of glassmaking in his De re metallica of 1556. Later translations were based on the Merrett translation rather than the Italian original. Ravenscroft probably used Neri's account of lead glass as a starting point for his own researches in the 1670s.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1612, L'arte vetraria, 7 vols; reprinted 1980, ed. R.Barovier, Milan: Edizioni Polifilo (the introd., in Italian, England and French, contains the most detailed account of Neri's life and work).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Neri, Antonio Ludovico

  • 40 Fowler, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering
    [br]
    b. 11 July 1826 Melksham, Wiltshire, England
    d. 4 December 1864 Ackworth, Yorkshire, England
    [br]
    English engineer and inventor who developed a steam-powered system of mole land drainage, and a two-engined system of land cultivation, founding the Steam Plough Works in Leeds.
    [br]
    The son of a Quaker merchant, John Fowler entered the business of a county corn merchant on leaving school, but he found this dull and left as soon as he came of age, joining the Middlesbrough company of Gilkes, Wilson \& Hopkins, railway locomotive manufacturers. In 1849, at the age of 23, Fowler visited Ireland and was so distressed by the state of Irish agriculture that he determined to develop a system to deal with the drainage of land. He designed an implement which he patented in 1850 after a period of experimentation. It was able to lay wooden pipes to a depth of two feet, and was awarded the Silver Medal at the 1850 Royal Agriculture Show. By 1854, using a steam engine made by Clayton \& Shuttleworth, he had applied steam power to his invention and gained another award that year at the Royal Show. The following year he turned his attention to steam ploughing. He first developed a single-engined system that used a double windlass with which to haul a plough backwards and forwards across fields. In 1856 he patented his balance plough, and the following year he read a paper to the Institution of Mechanical Engineers at their Birmingham premises, describing the system. In 1858 he won the Royal Agricultural Society award with a plough built for him by Ransomes. Fowler founded the Steam Plough Works in Leeds and in 1862 production began in partnership with William Watson Hewitson. Within two years they were producing the first of a series of engines which were to make the name Fowler known worldwide. John Fowler saw little of his success because he died in 1864 at his Yorkshire home as a result of tetanus contracted after a riding accident.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    M.Lane, 1980, The Story of the Steam Plough Works, Northgate Publishing (provides biographical details of John Fowler, but is mostly concerned with the company that he founded).
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Fowler, John

См. также в других словарях:

  • deal with — I (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To deal with a person] Syn. handle, manage, have to do with, cope with; see communicate 2 , treat 1 . 2. [To deal with a subject] Syn. review, discuss, approach; see concern 1 , consider 3 , treat 2 . II (Roget s Thesaurus… …   English dictionary for students

  • deal with — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms deal with : present tense I/you/we/they deal with he/she/it deals with present participle dealing with past tense dealt with past participle dealt with 1) a) deal with something to take action to do something …   English dictionary

  • deal with — [verb] 1. handle, attend to, cope with, get to grips with, manage, see to, take care of, treat 2. be concerned with, consider * * * deal with [phrasal verb] deal with (someone or something) 1 : to be about (something) : to have (something) as a… …   Useful english dictionary

  • deal with — 1) PHRASAL VERB When you deal with something or someone that needs attention, you give your attention to them, and often solve a problem or make a decision concerning them. [V P n] ...the way that building societies deal with complaints... [V P… …   English dictionary

  • deal with sb/sth — Ⅰ. UK US deal with sb/sth Phrasal Verb with deal({{}}/diːl/ verb (past tense and past participle dealt) ► to do business with a person or company: »I prefer to deal with the same salesperson each time. Ⅱ. UK US deal with sth …   Financial and business terms

  • deal with sth — Ⅰ. UK US deal with sb/sth Phrasal Verb with deal({{}}/diːl/ verb (past tense and past participle dealt) ► to do business with a person or company: »I prefer to deal with the same salesperson each time. Ⅱ. UK US deal with sth …   Financial and business terms

  • deal with — phr verb Deal with is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑article, ↑chapter, ↑document, ↑film, ↑paper, ↑report, ↑review, ↑staff, ↑study, ↑survey, ↑talk, ↑ …   Collocations dictionary

  • Deal with the Devil — Written Deal A deal with the Devil, pact with the Devil, or Faustian bargain is a cultural motif widespread in the West, best exemplified by the legend of Faust and the figure of Mephistopheles, but elemental to many Christian folktales. In the… …   Wikipedia

  • deal with — verb a) To handle verbally or in some form of artistic expression; to address or discuss as a subject. This book deals with incest. b) To take action with respect to (someone or something). The teacher knew how to deal with these lazy students.… …   Wiktionary

  • ˈdeal with sth — phrasal verb 1) to take action to solve a problem The government must now deal with the problem of high unemployment.[/ex] 2) to be about a subject Chapter 5 deals with employment law.[/ex] …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • deal — Ⅰ. deal [1] ► VERB (past and past part. dealt) 1) distribute (cards) to players for a game or round. 2) (deal out) distribute or apportion. 3) take part in commercial trading of a commodity. 4) informal buy and sell illegal drugs …   English terms dictionary

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