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61 walk
سَارَ \ do: to go (at a certain speed, or for a certain distance): This car can do 80 miles an hour. We did 150 miles before breakfast. drive (drove, driven): (of any kind of power) to make a machine work: This engine is driven by electricity. follow: to go along (a road). go: (also go off) to take a certain course: All went (off) well at our meeting, work This clock goes by electricity. run: (of a vehicle or ship) to go: Trains run every hour from here to Glasgow. The car ran off the road. travel: to move; go: Light travels faster than sound. walk: to move along on one’s feet at a natural speed. \ See Also مشى (مَشَى) -
62 (приспособления и т . п.) ускоряют работу и делают @её более безопасной
Labor protection: make the work safer and fasterУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > (приспособления и т . п.) ускоряют работу и делают @её более безопасной
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63 Е-3
ТИШЕ ЕДЕШЬ - ДАЛЬШЕ БУДЕШЬ (saying) you will accomplish what you set out to do faster if you do not rush (said jokingly to justify one's slow pace, or as advice not to try to work too fast): = haste makes waste slow and steady wins the race the more haste the less (worse) speed more hurry, less speed make haste slowly. -
64 ускоряют работу и делают @её более безопасной
Labor protection: (приспособления и т. п.) make the work safer and fasterУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > ускоряют работу и делают @её более безопасной
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65 тише едешь - дальше будешь
[saying]=====⇒ you will accomplish what you set out to do faster if you do not rush (said jokingly to justify one's slow pace, or as advice not to try to work too fast):- ≈ haste makes waste;- more hurry, less speed;- make haste slowly.Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > тише едешь - дальше будешь
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66 anschlagen
(unreg., trennb., -ge-)I v/t (hat)1. hit, knock (an + Dat against); sich (Dat) den Ellbogen etc. (an etw.) anschlagen knock one’s elbow etc. on ( oder against) s.th.; angeschlagen2. (befestigen) (an + Dat) fasten (to), fix (onto), nail (to); (Zettel etc.) stick up (to), put up (on), post (on); die Öffnungszeiten sind am Tor angeschlagen the opening times are posted on the door3. (Tasten, Saiten) hit, strike, touch; (Glocke) sound, ring; (Stunden) strike; den Ton anschlagen give the note; fig. set the tone; den richtigen Ton anschlagen fig. strike the right note; einen frechen ( sarkastischen) Ton anschlagen fig. start to get cheeky (sarcastic)5. (schätzen) estimate8. (befestigen) NAUT. (Leine, Segel) bend ( oder bring to); BERGB. fasten ( oder secure) before hoisting9. geh. (einschätzen) estimate, assess11. (Maschen) cast onII v/i1. (ist): anschlagen an (+ Akk) hit ( Wellen: break) against; mit dem Kopf an die Wand anschlagen hit one’s head against the wall2. (hat) Hund: bark4. (hat) Arznei: take effect5. (hat) (das Gewicht erhöhen) make s.o. put on weight, be fattening; bei mir schlägt jedes Stück Kuchen an every little piece of cake tells with me* * *(Laut geben) to give tongue;(berühren) to touch; to hit; to strike;(plakatieren) to post* * *ạn|schla|gen sep1. vt1) (= befestigen) to fix on (an +acc to); (mit Nägeln) to nail on ( an +acc to); (= aushängen) Plakat to put up, to post ( an +acc on)eine schnellere Gangart anschlagen (fig) — to strike up a faster pace, to speed up
ein anderes Thema/einen anderen Ton anschlagen (fig) — to change the subject/one's tune
einen weinerlichen/frechen Ton anschlagen — to adopt a tearful tone/cheeky (Brit) or fresh (US) attitude
3) (= beschädigen, verletzen) Geschirr to chipSee:→ auch angeschlagenden Ball seitlich anschlagen — to chip the ball
5) (Aus = anzapfen) Fass to tap6) (= vormarkieren) Baum to mark (for felling)7) (= aufnehmen) Maschen to cast on8) (NAUT) to fasten; Segel, Tau to bend2. vi1) (Welle) to beat (an +acc against)anschlagen — to strike or knock sth against/on sth
2) (SPORT) (TENNIS ETC) to serve; (beim Schwimmen) to touch3) (Glocke) to ring4) (= Taste betätigen) to strike the keys6) (=wirken Arznei etc) to work, to take effect7) (inf = dick machen)bei jdm anschlagen — to make sb put on weight
* * *1) (in knitting, to make the first row of stitches.) cast on3) (to (make something) sound: He struck a note on the piano/violin; The clock struck twelve.) strike* * *an|schla·gen1I. vt Hilfsverb: habensich dat das Knie/den Kopf an der Wand \anschlagen to knock one's knee/head against [or on] the wall3. (anbringen, befestigen)etw [mit Reißnägeln/Pins] \anschlagen to pin up sth sep4. (niederdrücken)eine Taste \anschlagen to strike a keyeinen Akkord/eine Taste \anschlagen to strike a chord/keyeine Melodie/einen Ton \anschlagen to play a melody [or tune]/a note6. (durch Klang anzeigen)die Stunde/halbe Stunde/Viertelstunde \anschlagen to strike the hour/half hour/quarter hour7. (wechseln zu)ein anderes Thema/einen anderen Ton \anschlagen to change the subject/one's tuneeinen schnelleren Gang [o eine schnellere Gangart] \anschlagen to speed up8. (zielen)ein Waffe [auf jdn/etw] \anschlagen to aim [or level] a weapon [at sb/sth]ein Fass \anschlagen to tap a barrel10. TENNISeinen Ball \anschlagen to hit a ball; (seitlich) to chip a ball11. NAUTein Segel \anschlagen to fasten a sail12. FORSTeinen Baum \anschlagen to mark a tree for fellingII. vi▪ [an etw akk o dat] \anschlagen to knock [or bump] on [or against] sth; (heftiger) to strike on [or against] sth▪ mit etw dat [an etw akk o dat] \anschlagen (verletzen) to knock sth [against [or on] sth]; (beschädigen) to bump into sth with sthpass auf, dass du mit den Möbeln nicht am Türrahmen anschlägst make sure you don't bump into the doorframe with the furnituremit dem Kopf an die [o der] Wand \anschlagen to knock one's head against [or on] the wall[am Beckenrand] \anschlagen to touchan|schla·gen21. (wirken)▪ [bei jdm/etw] \anschlagen to have an effect [on sb/sth]bei jdm/etw gut/schlecht \anschlagen to have a good/bad effect on sb▪ bei jdm \anschlagen to make sb put on [weight]Sahnetorten schlagen bei mir sofort an cream cakes make me put weight on immediately* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (aushängen) put up, post <notice, announcement, message> (an + Akk. on)2) (beschädigen) chip2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb mit seinan etwas (Akk.) anschlagen — knock against something
3.mit dem Knie/Kopf an etwas (Akk.) anschlagen — knock one's knee/head on something
* * *anschlagen (irr, trennb, -ge-)A. v/t (hat)1. hit, knock (an +dat against);sich (dat)den Ellbogen etc2. (befestigen) (die Öffnungszeiten sind am Tor angeschlagen the opening times are posted on the doorden Ton anschlagen give the note; fig set the tone;den richtigen Ton anschlagen fig strike the right note;einen frechen (sarkastischen) Ton anschlagen fig start to get cheeky (sarcastic)4. (Gewehr)anschlagen auf (+akk) aim at5. (schätzen) estimate7.ein schnelleres Tempo anschlagen quicken one’s pace, speed up8. (befestigen) SCHIFF (Leine, Segel) bend ( oder bring to); BERGB fasten ( oder secure) before hoisting9. geh (einschätzen) estimate, assess11. (Maschen) cast onB. v/i1. (ist):mit dem Kopf an die Wand anschlagen hit one’s head against the wall2. (hat) Hund: bark3. (hat) Schwimmen: touch;am Beckenrand anschlagen touch the edge of the pool4. (hat) Arznei: take effectbei mir schlägt jedes Stück Kuchen an every little piece of cake tells with me* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (aushängen) put up, post <notice, announcement, message> (an + Akk. on)2) (beschädigen) chip2.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb mit seinan etwas (Akk.) anschlagen — knock against something
3.mit dem Knie/Kopf an etwas (Akk.) anschlagen — knock one's knee/head on something
sich (Dat.) das Knie usw. anschlagen — knock one's knee etc. (an + Dat. on)
* * *v.to bump v.to chip v.to hit v.(§ p.,p.p.: hit)to put up v. -
67 todavía
adv.still, nevertheless, yet, as yet.* * *► adverbio1 (a pesar de ello) still2 (tiempo) still, yet3 (para reforzar) even* * *adv.1) still, yet2) even* * *ADV1) [temporal] [en oraciones afirmativas] still; [en oraciones negativas] yet, still-¿has acabado? -todavía no — "have you finished" - "not yet"
todavía no se ha ido — she hasn't gone yet, she still hasn't gone
2) (=incluso, aun así) evenes todavía más inteligente que su hermano — he's even more intelligent than his brother, he's more intelligent still than his brother
3) * (=encima)TODAVÍA Todavía se traduce principalmente al inglés por still o yet. ► Se traduce por still cuando nos referimos a una situación o acción que comenzó en el pasado y que todavía continúa. Generalmente still se coloca detrás de los verbos auxiliares o modales y delante de los demás verbos: Todavía tienen hambre They are still hungry Todavía toco el piano I still play the piano ¿Puedes verlos todavía? Can you still see them? ► También se puede traducir todavía por still para expresar insatisfacción o sorpresa en oraciones negativas. En este caso, still se coloca detrás del sujeto: Todavía no sé cómo ayudarle I still don't know how to help him Después de veinte años todavía no puede olvidarlo After twenty years she still can't forget him ► Se traduce generalmente por yet en frases negativas e interrogativas cuando nos referimos a una situación o acción que no ha tenido lugar todavía y que esperamos que ocurra. Yet va al final de la frase, aunque a veces puede ponerse delante del verbo principal en frases negativas: El doctor no ha llegado todavía The doctor hasn't arrived yet o hasn't yet arrived ¿Todavía no han llamado? Haven't they phoned yet? En lenguaje formal, se puede traducir todavía por yet en frases afirmativas para expresar que algo no se ha realizado. Para ello utilizamos la estructura to have yet + ((infinitivo)) {con} to: Todavía tienen que comunicarnos los resultados They have yet to tell us the results ► En oraciones comparativas todavía se traduce por even: Su prima es todavía más alta que ella Her cousin is even taller than she is El adverbio aún sigue las mismas pautas que todavía: Aún no sé cómo decírselo I still don't know how to tell him ¿Aún no has hablado con ella? Haven't you talked to her yet? Aún está trabajando para esa compañía de seguros She's still working for that insurance company Este pastel está aún mejor que el de la semana pasada This cake is even better than last week'shas aprobado sin estudiar y todavía te quejas — you passed without doing any work and (yet) you're still complaining
* * *1)a) ( aún) still¿todavía estás aquí? — are you still here?
b) ( en frases negativas) yet¿todavía no has terminado? — haven't you finished yet?
todavía no — - not yet
2) ( en comparaciones) even, stillsus primos son todavía más ricos — her cousins are even richer o still richer
3) (fam) (encima, aun así) still* * *1)a) ( aún) still¿todavía estás aquí? — are you still here?
b) ( en frases negativas) yet¿todavía no has terminado? — haven't you finished yet?
todavía no — - not yet
2) ( en comparaciones) even, stillsus primos son todavía más ricos — her cousins are even richer o still richer
3) (fam) (encima, aun así) still* * *todavía1= yet.Ex: This will make it yet more difficult for the information worker and the end user to keep up to date with the full range of data bases.
* haber todavía más = there + be + more to it than that.* ir todavía más lejos = go + a/one step further.* más todavía = all the more so.* todavía más + Adjetivo = all the more + Adjetivo.todavía2= as yet, still, yet.Ex: A second objective of union catalogues -- to make library resources available when and where they are needed -- has not then as yet been fully achieved.
Ex: Comment published so far is favourable, but the code still awaits widespread adoption.Ex: The article suggests that this technique is the most transparent and equitable system yet devised.* no está claro todavía = the jury is still out (on).* no haber llegado todavía = be yet to come.* no se sabe todavía = the jury is still out (on).* sin asignar todavía = unassigned.* todavía no = not yet.* todavía no ha pasado lo mejor = the best is yet to come.* todavía + poderse + escuchar los ecos de = echo + still resound from.* todavía por + Verbo = yet to be + Verbo.* tradición que (aún = lasting legacy.* * *A1 still¿todavía estás en la cama? are you still in bed?todavía la quiero I still love hertodavía nos falta mucho para terminar we still have a lot to do2(en frases negativas): ¿todavía no terminaste or no has terminado? haven't you finished yet?¿ya terminó la película? — todavía no has the movie finished? — not yettodavía no está lista she isn't ready yetson las siete ya y todavía no está lista it's already seven o'clock and she still isn't readyB (en comparaciones) even, stillsus primos son todavía más ricos her cousins are even richer o still richer o richer stillquiere más todavía he wants even o still moreC ( fam) (encima, aun así) still¡le pagan hasta el alquiler y todavía se queja! they even pay his rent and he still complains!¿te engañó y todavía lo defiendes? he deceived you and yet you're defending him? o and you still defend him?y todavía tuvo la desfachatez de echarnos la culpa and not only that, she had the nerve to blame us!, and she even had the nerve to blame us!¡a ver si todavía nos rebajan el sueldo! ( RPl); if we're not careful they'll end up cutting our salaries!* * *
todavía adverbio
1
◊ ¿todavía estás aquí? are you still here?
2 ( en comparaciones) even, still;◊ sus primos son todavía más ricos her cousins are even richer o richer still
3 (fam) ( encima) still;◊ ¡y todavía se queja! and he still complains!
todavía adverbio
1 (en afirmativas e interrogativas) still: todavía viven en Francia, they're still living in France
todavía puedes ganar, you can still win
¿todavía me quieres? do you still love me?
(en negativas) yet: todavía no he acabado, I haven't finished yet
2 (en comparaciones) todavía más/menos, even more/less: es todavía más tonto que su novia, he's still o even sillier than his girlfriend
3 (a pesar de eso) ... y todavía se queja,... and still he complains ➣ Ver nota en still y yet
' todavía' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
aterrizar
- cojera
- contrapartida
- curiosamente
- deber
- designar
- entendimiento
- enterrar
- escrutinio
- flete
- grogui
- guardar
- llamear
- sangrar
- subsistir
- tiniebla
- viva
- vivo
- amoldar
- aún
- camino
- cobrar
- comida
- dormir
- estar
- estrenar
- fase
- hacer
- hora
- jorobado
- quedar
- rato
- seguro
- siempre
- ver
English:
account for
- accustom
- adjust
- air
- alive
- all
- as
- crack
- dizziness
- even
- finish
- go
- log in
- log on
- minor
- nearly
- shall
- should
- sink in
- still
- thaw
- yet
- anywhere
- attraction
- be
- catch
- feel
- from
- hang
- in
- on
- plow
- short
- trickle
- unborn
- up
- weigh
- word
* * *todavía adv1. [con afirmación] still;[con negación] yet, still;están todavía aquí they are still here;¿pero vive todavía? but is she still alive?;todavía no not yet;todavía no lo he recibido I still haven't got it, I haven't got it yet;¿todavía no ha llegado? hasn't she arrived yet?, has she still not arrived?2. [con más énfasis] still;he hecho todo lo que me ha pedido y todavía no está contento I've done everything he asked and he still isn't happy3. [incluso] even;todavía más even more;¡todavía querrá más! I hope he's not going to ask for more!* * *adv still, yet;todavía no ha llegado he still hasn’t come, he hasn’t come yet;todavía no not yet* * *todavía adv1) aún: still, yettodavía puedes verlo: you can still see it2) : eventodavía más rápido: even faster3)todavía no : not yet* * *todavía adv2. (en frases negativas) yet3. (en comparaciones) even -
68 aucun
aucun, e [okœ̃, yn]1. adjectiveb. (interrogatif, positif) any2. pronoun• combien de réponses avez-vous eues ? -- aucune how many answers did you get? -- noneb. (interrogatif, positif) any• il aime ses chiens plus qu'aucun de ses enfants he is fonder of his dogs than of any of his children* * *
1.
aucune okœ̃, yn adjectif1) ( dans une phrase négative) no, not anyelle l'a fait sans aucune hésitation or sans hésitation aucune — she did it without any hesitation
2) ( quelque) liter any
2.
1) ( dans une phrase négative)‘tu as reçu beaucoup de lettres?’ - ‘aucune!’ — ‘did you receive many letters?’ - ‘not one!’
2) ( quiconque) liter* * *okœ̃, yn aucun, -e1. dét1) (négatif) noIl n'y a aucun livre dans le tiroir. — There isn't a book in the drawer., There are no books in the drawer.
Il n'a aucun ami. — He has no friends., He doesn't have any friends.
aucun homme, dans une telle situation,... — no man, in such a situation,...
Aucun enfant ne pourrait le faire. — No child could do that.
2) (valeur positive) any2. pron1) (valeur négative) none, (avec verbe négatif) anyje n'en vois aucun qui — I can't see any which, I can see none which
Aucune de mes amies n'aime le football. — None of my female friends like football.
Tu aimes ses films? - Je n'en ai vu aucun. — Do you like his films? - I haven't seen any of them.
Aucun d'entre eux n'est venu. — None of them came.
2) (valeur positive) any, anyoneplus qu'aucun de ceux qui... — more than any of those who...
3)* * *A adj1 ( dans une phrase négative) no, not any; elle n'a aucun défaut she has no faults, she hasn't got any faults; il n'a aucun talent he has no talent, he hasn't got any talent; il n'y aura aucunes représailles there won't be any reprisals; elle n'aura aucune difficulté à s'adapter she won't have any trouble adapting; il n'y a plus aucun espoir there's no hope left; ils n'ont aucune raison de refuser they have no reason ou haven't got any reason to refuse; je n'ai aucune nouvelle de lui I haven't heard from him; je n'ai eu aucun mal à le convaincre I had no trouble persuading him, I didn't have any trouble persuading him; il parle français sans aucun accent he speaks French without any accent; elle l'a fait sans aucune hésitation or sans hésitation aucune she did it without any hesitation; sans aucune aide du gouvernement without any aid from the government; en aucune façon in no way;2 liter ( quelque) je l'aime plus qu'aucune autre I love her more than anybody; je doute qu'aucun employé accepte tes conditions I doubt that any employee would accept your conditions.B pron1 ( dans une phrase négative) il a trois voitures, aucune n'est en état de marche he has three cars, none of them work; je ne connais aucun de ses amis I don't know any of his friends; je n'ai lu aucun de vos livres I haven't read any of your books; aucun de ses arguments n'est convaincant none of his arguments are convincing; aucun des soldats n'est revenu vivant none of the soldiers came back alive; ‘tu as reçu beaucoup de lettres?’-‘aucune!’ ‘did you receive many letters?’-‘not one!’;2 liter ( quiconque) il est plus compétent qu'aucun d'entre nous he's more competent than any of us; je doute qu'aucun d'entre eux réussisse I doubt that any of them will succeed; d'aucuns some; d'aucuns ont suggéré que it has been suggested by some that.( féminin aucune) [okœ̃, yn] adjectif indéfini1. [avec une valeur négative]sans aucun doute undoubtedly, without any doubt2. [avec une valeur positive] any————————( féminin aucune) [okœ̃, yn] pronom indéfini1. [avec une valeur négative] noneje sais qu'aucun n'a menti I know that none ou not one of them lied2. [servant de réponse négative] none3. [avec une valeur positive] any -
69 peu
peu [pø]━━━━━━━━━1. adverb━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━1. <━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━a. ( = pas beaucoup) not muchb. ( = pas très) not veryc. ( = pas longtemps) shortlyd. ( = rarement) ils se voient peu they don't see each other very oftene. (locutions)• pour peu qu'il soit sorti sans sa clé... if he should have come out without his key...2. <3. <( = petite quantité) little━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━► un peu se traduit souvent par l'expression a bit, qui est plus familière que a little ; de même, on peut dire a bit of au lieu de a little pour traduire un peu de.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━• c'est un peu fort ! that's a bit much! (inf)• un peu de silence, s'il vous plaît ! can we have a bit of quiet please!► pour un peu• pour un peu, il m'aurait accusé he all but accused me* * *Note: Les emplois de peu avec avant, d'ici, depuis, sous sont traités respectivement sous chacun de ces motsIl sera également utile de se reporter à la note d'usage sur les quantitéspø
1.
1) ( modifiant un verbe) not muchil est aussi borné que son père et ce n'est pas peu dire! — (colloq) he's as narrow-minded as his father and that's saying a lot!
très peu pour moi! — (colloq) fig no thanks! (colloq)
2) ( modifiant un adjectif) not veryils se sentent très peu concernés par... — they feel quite unconcerned about...
2.
pronom indéfinipeu leur font confiance — few ou not many people trust them
3.
peu de déterminant indéfini1) ( avec un nom dénombrable)
4.
nom masculin1) ( petite quantité)le peu de — the little [confiance, liberté]; the few [livres, amis]
il a voulu montrer le peu d'importance qu'il attachait à l'affaire — he wanted to show how unimportant the matter was to him
2) ( manque)
5.
un peu locution adverbiale1) ( dans une mesure faible) a little, a bit‘elle aime le fromage?’ - ‘oui, pas qu'un peu (colloq)!’ — ‘does she like cheese?’ - ‘does she ever (colloq)!’
2) ( modifiant un adverbe) a little, a bitun peu moins de — slightly less [pluie]; slightly fewer [gens]
amène tes amis, un peu plus un peu moins... — bring your friends, another two or three people won't make much difference
‘il avait l'air un peu contrarié’ - ‘un peu beaucoup même (colloq)’ — ‘he looked a bit annoyed’ - ‘more than a bit’
3) ( emploi stylistique) justrépète un peu pour voir! — (colloq) you just try saying that again!
je vous demande un peu! — (colloq) I ask you!
il sait un peu (colloq) de quoi il parle — he does know what he's talking about
4) ( emploi par antiphrase) a little5) (colloq) ( pour renforcer une affirmation)il est un peu bien ton copain! — your boyfriend is a bit of all right (colloq) GB ou a good-looker! (colloq)
‘tu le ferais toi?’ - ‘un peu (que je le ferais)!’ — ‘would you do it?’ - ‘I sure would (colloq)!’
6.
peu à peu locution adverbiale gradually, little by little
7.
pour un peu locution adverbiale
8.
pour peu que locution conjonctive ifpour peu qu'il ait bu, il va nous raconter sa vie — if he's had anything at all to drink, he'll tell us his life story
* * *pø1. adv1) (modifiant un verbe) not muchIl boit peu. — He doesn't drink much.
Il voyage peu. — He doesn't travel much.
J'ai peu mangé à midi. — I didn't eat much for lunch.
2) (modifiant un adjectif) not veryIl est peu bavard. — He's not very talkative.
peu de (avec nom pluriel) — not many, few, (avec nom singulier) not a lot of, not much
peu de gens — not many people, few people
peu d'arbres — not many trees, few trees
Il y a peu de bons films au cinéma. — There aren't many good films on at the cinema.
Elle a peu d'amis. — She hasn't got many friends.
Il reste peu de lait. — There isn't much milk left., There isn't a lot of milk left.
Il a peu d'espoir. — He hasn't got much hope., He has little hope.
Il a peu d'espoir de réussir. — He doesn't have much hope of succeeding.
Il lui reste peu d'argent. — He hasn't got much money left.
c'est peu de chose — it's nothing, it's not much
à peu près — just about, more or less
J'ai à peu près fini. — I've just about finished., I've more or less finished.
à peu près 10 kg — about 10 kg, around 10 kg
à peu près deux heures — about two hours, around two hours
Le voyage prend à peu près deux heures. — The journey takes about two hours., The journey takes around two hours.
pour peu qu'il fasse — if he should do, if by any chance he does
depuis peu (au présent) — for a short while, for a little while
Je suis parisien depuis peu. — I've only been living in Paris for a short while., (au passé) a short while ago, a little while ago
Il est rentré depuis peu. — He came back a short while ago.
Chantal a manqué son train de peu. — Chantal only just missed her train.
Il est de peu mon cadet. — He's just a bit younger than me.
2. nm1)le peu de sable qui — what little sand, the little sand which
2)J'en voudrais un peu. — I'd like a little., (emploi adverbial, avec adjectif) a little, a bit
Elle est un peu timide. — She's a bit shy., She's a little shy.
un peu de — a little, a bit of
un peu de lait — a little milk, a bit of milk
un peu d'espoir — a little hope, a bit of hope
un peu plus de [vent, sucre, personnes, voitures] — slightly more
un peu moins de [vent, sucre] — slightly less, [personnes, voitures] slightly fewer
pour un peu il...; un peu plus et il... — he very nearly..., he all but...
3. pron* * *❢ Les emplois de peu avec avant, d'ici, depuis, sous sont traités respectivement sous chacun de ces mots. Il sera également utile de se reporter à la note d'usage sur les quantités ⇒ Les quantités.A adv1 ( modifiant un verbe) not much; il travaille/dort/parle peu he doesn't work/sleep/talk much; elle gagne assez peu she doesn't earn very much; elle gagne très/trop peu she earns very/too little; le radiateur chauffe peu the radiator doesn't give out much heat; je sors assez/très peu I don't go out very much/very much at all; je sais me contenter de peu I'm satisfied with very little; 40 euros/un demi-litre/1,50 m, c'est (bien) peu 40 euros/half a litreGB/1,50 m, that's not (very) much; 20 personnes, c'est peu 20 people, that's not many; dix minutes/deux mois ça fait peu ten minutes/two months, that's not long; deux semaines c'est trop peu two weeks isn't long enough; si peu que ce soit however little, no matter how little; tu ne vas pas t'en faire pour si peu you're not going to worry about such a little thing; je ne vais pas me casser la tête pour si peu I'm not going to rack my brains over such a little thing; il leur en faut peu pour pleurer/paniquer it doesn't take much to make them cry/panic; la catastrophe a été évitée de peu disaster was only just avoided; tu les as ratés de peu you've just missed them; il est mon aîné de peu he's slightly older than me; j'aime peu sa façon de dévisager les gens I don't much care for the way he stares at people; ça compte or importe peu it doesn't really matter; la cuisine n'est pas très bonne, et c'est peu dire the food isn't very good to say the least; il est aussi borné que son père et ce n'est pas peu dire○! he's as narrow-minded as his father and that's saying a lot!; un homme comme on en voit or fait○ peu the kind of man you don't often come across; très peu pour moi○! fig no thanks○!;2 ( modifiant un adjectif) not very; peu soigneux/ambitieux/fier not very tidy/ambitious/proud; il est très peu jaloux he's not at all jealous; c'est un endroit assez peu connu it's a relatively little-known spot; cet endroit trop peu connu des touristes this spot which is sadly little known to tourists; pour les personnes trop peu qualifiées for people who haven't got enough qualifications; ils se sentent très ou fort peu concernés par… they feel quite unconcerned about…; nous étions peu nombreux there weren't many of us; nous étions très/trop peu nombreux there were very/too few of us; un individu peu recommandable a disreputable character; elle n'est pas peu fière she's more than a little proud.B pron indéf peu lui font confiance few ou not many people trust him/her; il a écrit beaucoup de livres, peu lui survivront he has written many books, few will outlive him.C peu de dét indéf1 ( avec un nom dénombrable) peu de mots/d'occasions few words/opportunities;2 ( avec un nom non dénombrable) peu de temps/d'espoir little time/hope; en peu de temps in next to no time; j'ai peu de temps pour le faire I haven't got much time to do it; il y a peu de changement there's little change; il y a peu de bruit there's not much noise; il est tombé peu de neige/pluie cet hiver there hasn't been much snow/rain this winter; il a peu de patience he's not very patient; c'est peu de chose it's not much; cela représente peu de chose it stands for little; avec peu de chose elle a fait un repas délicieux with very little she made a delicious meal; on est bien peu de chose! we're so insignificant!; il y a peu de visiteurs/divergences there are few ou not many visitors/differences; très peu de personnes sont atteintes very few people are affected; en peu de mots/jours in a few words/days; je sais peu de choses sur lui I don't know much about him; il y a peu de chances qu'il accepte he's unlikely to accept; la proposition a peu de chances d'aboutir the proposal has little chance of getting through.D nm1 ( petite quantité) le peu de the little [importance, confiance, pluie, liberté]; the few [livres, souvenirs, amis]; il a oublié le peu d'anglais qu'il savait he's forgotten the ou what little English he knew; elle s'est fait voler le peu d'objets qu'il lui restait she was robbed of the few things she had left; je vais dépenser le peu d'argent qu'il me reste I'm going to spend the ou what little money I've got left; il a voulu montrer le peu d'importance qu'il attachait à l'affaire he wanted to show how unimportant the matter was to him; je leur ai dit le peu que je savais I told them the ou what little I knew; il a dépensé le peu qu'il lui restait he spent what little he had left;2 ( manque) le peu de the lack of; malgré le peu d'intérêt manifesté despite the lack of interest; j'ai remarqué ton peu d'enthousiasme I've noticed your lack of enthusiasm; ton peu d'appétit m'inquiète your lack of appetite is worrying me.E un peu loc adv1 ( dans une mesure faible) a little, a bit; mange un peu eat a little; cela m'inquiète/m'énerve/m'ennuie un peu it worries me/annoys me/bothers me a little ou a bit; ça m'agace plus qu'un peu○ it annoys me to say the least; le rôti est un peu brûlé the roast is a bit ou slightly burned; elle est un peu médium/poète○ she's a bit of a ou something of a medium/poet; tu ne serais pas un peu casse-cou? you're a bit of a daredevil, aren't you?; dors/attends/reste encore un peu sleep/wait/stay a little longer; ‘il a plu?’-‘pas qu'un peu○!’ ‘did it rain?’-‘did it ever○!’; ‘elle aime le fromage?’-‘oui, pas qu'un peu!’ ‘does she like cheese?’-‘does she ever○!’;2 ( modifiant un adverbe) a little, a bit; mange un peu plus/moins eat a bit more/less; parle un peu plus fort speak a little ou a bit louder; parle un peu moins fort keep your voice down; va un peu moins/plus vite go a bit slower/faster; il fait un peu moins froid qu'hier it's a little less cold than yesterday; il fait un peu plus froid qu'hier it's slightly ou a little colder than yesterday; un peu au-dessous/au-dessus de la moyenne slightly below/above average; elle se maquille un peu trop she wears a bit too much make-up; un peu plus de bruit/vent a bit more noise/wind; un peu plus de gens/problèmes a few more people/problems; un peu moins de slightly less [pluie, humour]; slightly fewer [gens, tableaux]; peux-tu me donner un tout petit peu plus de carottes can you give me just a few more carrots; amène tes amis, un peu plus un peu moins tu sais… bring your friends, another two or three people won't make much difference; donne-moi ton linge à laver, un peu plus un peu moins… give me your laundry, a bit more won't make any difference; ‘il avait l'air un peu contrarié’-‘un peu beaucoup même○’ ‘he looked a bit annoyed’-‘more than a bit’;3 ( emploi stylistique) just; arrête un peu de faire l'idiot! just stop behaving like an idiot!; répète un peu pour voir○! you just try saying that again!; vise un peu la perruque○! just look at the wig!; réfléchis un peu just think; je vous demande un peu○! I ask you!; il sait un peu de quoi il parle○ he does know what he's talking about;4 ( emploi par antiphrase) a little; tu ne serais pas un peu jaloux toi? aren't you just a little jealous?; ton histoire est un peu tirée par les cheveux your story is a little far-fetched to say the least; c'est un peu tard! it's a bit late!; tu exagères ou pousses○ un peu! you're pushing it a bit○!;5 ○( pour renforcer une affirmation) il est un peu bien ton copain! your boyfriend is a bit of all right○!; ‘tu le ferais toi?’-‘un peu (que je le ferais)!’ ‘would you do it?’-‘I sure would○!’; comme organisateur il se pose un peu là! as an organizer he's great!F peu à peu loc adv gradually, little by little; les nuages se dissiperont peu à peu the clouds will gradually clear.G pour un peu loc adv very nearly; pour un peu ils se seraient battus they very nearly had a fight; pour un peu il m'aurait insulté! he very nearly insulted me!H pour peu que loc conj if; pour peu qu'il ait bu, il va nous raconter sa vie if he's had anything at all to drink, he'll tell us his life story.[pø] adverbeA.[EMPLOYÉ SEUL]il mange/parle peu he doesn't eat/talk muchil vient très peu he comes very rarely, he very seldom comes2. [modifiant un adjectif, un adverbe etc] not verypeu après soon after, shortly ou not long afterB.[EMPLOI NOMINAL]1. (avec déterminant) [indiquant la faible quantité]il a raté son examen de peu (familier) he just failed his exam, he failed his exam by a hair's breadthc'est peu (que) de le dire, encore faut-il le faire! that's easier said than done!c'est peu dire that's an understatement, that's putting it mildly2. [dans le temps]ils sont partis il y a peu they left a short while ago, they haven't long leftd'ici peu very soon, before longje travaille ici depuis peu I've only been working here for a while, I haven't been working here long3. [quelques personnes] a few (people)C.[PRÉCÉDÉ DE 'UN']1. [modifiant un verbe]un peu a little, a bitje le connais un peu I know him a little ou a bitpose-lui un peu la question, et tu verras! just ask him, and you'll see!fais voir un peu... let me have a look...un peu que je vais lui dire ce que je pense! (familier) I'll give him a piece of my mind, don't you worry (about that)!2. [modifiant un adjectif, un adverbe etc]un peu a little, a bitun peu partout just about ou pretty much everywhereun peu plus a little ou bit morea. [suivi d'un nom comptable] a few moreb. [suivi d'un nom non comptable] a little (bit) moreun peu moins a little ou bit lessa. [suivi d'un nom comptable] slightly fewer, not so manyb. [suivi d'un nom non comptable] a little (bit) lessun peu trop a little ou bit too (much)un peu plus et on se serait cru au bord de la mer you could almost imagine that you were at the seasideun peu plus, et je partais I was just about to leavepeu à peu locution adverbialeon s'habitue, peu à peu you get used to things, bit by bit ou gradually————————peu de locution déterminantepeu de temps avant/après not long before/afterj'ai peu d'amis I have few friends, I don't have many friends2. [avec un déterminant]a. [suivi d'un nom comptable] the ou what fewb. [suivi d'un nom non comptable] the ou what littlele peu de connaissances que j'ai the ou what few acquaintances I havele peu de fois où je l'ai vu on the few ou rare occasions when I've seen himavec ce peu de matériel/d'idées with such limited material/ideaspeu ou prou locution adverbiale————————pour peu que locution conjonctivepour peu qu'il le veuille, il réussira if he wants to, he'll succeedpour un peu locution adverbialepour un peu, j'oubliais mes clés I nearly forgot my keys————————quelque peu locution adverbiale1. [modifiant un verbe] just a littleil était quelque peu éméché he was somewhat ou rather tipsy————————quelque peu de locution déterminante————————si peu que locution conjonctivesi peu que j'y aille, j'apprécie toujours beaucoup l'opéra although I don't go very often, I always like the opera very much————————si peu... que locution conjonctive————————sous peu locution adverbialevous recevrez sous peu les résultats de vos analyses you will receive the results of your tests in a short while————————un peu de locution déterminanteprends un peu de gâteau have a little ou some cakeavec un peu de chance... with a little luck...allons, un peu de patience! come on, let's be patient!avec un (tout) petit peu de bonne volonté... with (just) a little willingness...tu l'as quitté par dépit? — il y a un petit peu de ça so you left him in a fit of pique? — that was partly it ou that was part of the reason -
70 значительный
1. intense2. smart3. substantialсущественные, значительные издержки — substantial costs
4. useful5. wideварьирусь в значительной степени — vary widely (refl.)
варьировась в значительной степени — vary widely (refl.)
варьирующ в значительной степени — varying widely (refl.)
варьировавш в значительной степени — varying widely (refl.)
6. important7. greatlyв большой мере, в значительной степени — to a great extent
8. large9. notable10. pretty11. substantially12. well13. meaningful14. amain15. appreciably16. apreciably17. by farзначительно; несомненно — by far
18. considerably19. far20. far and awayгораздо, намного, значительно — out and away
21. materially22. muchочень, в значительной степени; почти — pretty much
23. sensible24. significantly25. sizable26. sizably27. sizeable28. tremendously29. vastly30. considerable; large; important; significant; suggestive31. goodlyмного, значительное количество — a good deal
32. significant33. tidyСинонимический ряд:важно (проч.) важно; значимо; немаловажно; судьбоносно; существенно; эпохально -
71 run
[ran] present participle ˈrunning: past tense ran [ræn]: past participle run1. verb1) (of a person or animal) to move quickly, faster than walking:يَرْكُضHe ran down the road.
2) to move smoothly:يَسيرُTrains run on rails.
يَنْسابُ، يَتَدَفَّقThe tap is running.
4) (of a machine etc) to work or operate:يُشَغِّلHe ran the motor to see if it was working.
5) to organize or manage:يُديرHe runs the business very efficiently.
6) to race:يُسابِق، يَشْتَرِك في سِباقIs your horse running this afternoon?
7) (of buses, trains etc) to travel regularly:يَسيرُThe train is running late.
8) to last or continue; to go on:يَمْتَد، يَسْتَمِرThe play ran for six weeks.
9) to own and use, especially of cars:يَمْلُك ويَسْتَعْمِلHe runs a Rolls Royce.
10) (of colour) to spread:يَنْتَشِرWhen I washed my new dress the colour ran.
11) to drive (someone); to give (someone) a lift:يأخُذُ أو يوصِلُ بالسَّيّارَهHe ran me to the station.
12) to move (something):يُحَرِّكHe ran his eyes over the letter.
13) (in certain phrases) to be or become:يُصْبِحMy blood ran cold (= I was afraid).
2. noun1) the act of running:رَكْضHe went for a run before breakfast.
2) a trip or drive:رِحْلَه، شَوْطWe went for a run in the country.
3) a length of time (for which something continues):فَتْرَهHe's had a run of bad luck.
سُلَّمI've got a run in my tights.
5) the free use (of a place):إسْتِعْمال مَجّانيHe gave me the run of his house.
6) in cricket, a batsman's act of running from one end of the wicket to the other, representing a single score:رَكْضَه في الكريكيت وتُساوي نُقْطَةHe scored/made 50 runs for his team.
7) an enclosure or pen:بَيْت القَلَمa chicken-run.
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72 быстрый
прил.Русское прилагательное быстрый употребляется во многих ситуациях и характеризует как само движение, так и период времени, затрачиваемый для чего-либо, и характер самого действия. В английском языке все эти аспекты различаются и передаются разными словами.1. quick — быстрый, скорый, незамедлительный (характеризует не столько темп движения или действия, сколько их безотлагательность и кратковременность; нередко подразумевает готовность к действию): a quick mind — живой ум; a quick eye (ear) — острый глаз (слух); а quick answer — быстрый ответ; a quick look (step) — быстрый взгляд (шаг); quick service — быстрое обслуживание/немедленное обслуживание; quick hands — проворные руки; quick in one's movements — быстрый в движениях; with a quick movement — быстрым движением; to be quick in actions — быть проворным/быть шустрым; to be quick in gripping/the idea — быстро схватывать идею; to be quick to find it out — быстро выяснить что-то; to be quick to do smth — быстро сделать что-либо/немедля сделать что-либо; to be quick to learn (to understand) — быстро схватывать (понимать) The medicine has a quick effect. — Лекарство быстро действует/Лекарство быстро помогает. You are too quick for me. — Вы говорите слишком быстро, и я не успеваю за вами. Be quick! — Поторапливайся!/Скорее!/Не медли! She is quick at languages. — Она быстро усваивает языки. Не is quick at games. — Он быстр в игре. She is quick in answering. — Она находчива в ответах./Она сообразительна в ответах. Boys are quick at such things. — Мальчики обычно сообразительны в таких вопросах. The boys were quick with their fists. — Мальчики быстро пустили в ход кулаки./Мальчики не медля пустили в ход кулаки. Не was quick with an emphatic refusal. — Он тотчас же категорически отказал. Не wanted to catch me, but 1 was too quick for him. — Он хотел меня поймать, но я оказался проворнее его. Не is quick for his weight (his age). — Он подвижен несмотря на свой вес (на свой возраст). Не is quick to take alarm. — Он легко поддается панике. Не is quick to take offence. — Он легко обижается./Он обидчив. Не was quick lo take the opportunity. — Он не медля воспользовался такой возможиостью./Он сейчас же воспользовался такой возможностью./Он не замедлил воспользоваться такой возможностью. Be slow to promise, but quick to perform. — He давши слова крепись, а давши — держись.2. fast — быстрый, скорый (прилагательное fast чаще сочетается с существительными, обозначающими движущиеся объекты): а fast train — скорый поезд; a fast boat — скоростной катер; a fast car — скоростная машина; a fast horse — быстрый конь, а fast tank — быстроходный танк Не is a fast worker (reader). — Он быстро работает (читает). Не is a fast runner. — Он быстро бегает. Go faster! — Иди быстрее. The watch is 10 minutes fast. — Часы спешат на десять минут.3. rapid — быстрый, скорый (в отличие от fast прилагательное rapid характеризует само действие; rapid нередко предполагает завершение действия в очень небольшой период времени или неожиданно быстрый темп развития действия): rapid movement — быстрое движение; rapid growth — быстрый рост; rapid progress — быстрое продвижение вперед/быстрый прогресс/быстрoe развитие; rapid recovery — быстрое выздоровление; rapid thinking — быстрая сообразительность/быстрый ум; rapid gait — торопливая походка/быстрые шаги; rapid thinker — быстро соображающий человек; rapid stream — бурный поток; rapid river — быстрая река/бурная река; rapid events — быстрая смена событий; rapid analysis — экспресс-анализ; rapid heart — учащенное сердцебиение/тахикардия; to take a rapid glance — бросить беглый взгляд/взглянуть мельком It was a rapid journey. — Это было короткое путешествие./Это путешествие быстро закончилось. Не is a rapid worker. — Он быстро работает./Он проворный работник. They asked questions in a rapid succession. — Они задавали один вопрос за другим. The school promises a rapid result in learning languages. — Обещают, что в этой школе ученики быстро овладеют языками.4. swift — быстрый, скорый ( прилагательное характеризует само движение): swift glance — быстрый взгляд; swift car — скоростной автомобиль; а swift running river — быстротекущая река; swift in his movements — быстрый в движениях; swift of foot — быстроногий; as swift as an arrow — быстрый как стрела/с быстротой молнии/молниеносно She is a swift runner. — Она быстро бегает. Не gave them a swift reply. — Он им быстро ответил./Он ответил им не задумываясь. She made a swift movement and was gone. — Она сделала быстрое движение и убежала.5. speedy — быстрый, скорый, проворный, прыткий, незамедлительный, безотлагательный ( происходящий за очень небольшой период времени): a speedy growth — быстрый рост; speedy hands — проворные руки; speedy gallop — быстрый галоп; speedy reply — быстрый ответ; speedy progress — быстрое развитие We all wish you a speedy recovery. — Мы все желаем вам побыстрее поправиться./Мы все желаем вам скорейшего выздоровления. That was a speedy work. — Эта быстро сделанная работа./На эту работу ушло немного времени. Не is a speedy worker. — Он проворный работник./Он все делает быстро./Он все делает в темпе. They provide the speediest service in town. — Они обеспечивают в городе самое быстрое обслуживание,6. prompt —быстрый, проворный, немедленный, незамедлительный (то, что не занимает большого времени, делается не откладывая): prompt actions — немедленные действия; prompt decisions — быстрые решения; prompt cash — расчет немедленно наличными; prompt payment — немедленный платеж/своевременная уплата; to be prompt to carry (out) an order— быстро выполнить приказание; to be prompt in action/to act — действовать быстро/действовать без промедления; to give a prompt answer — ответить немедленно The service here is very prompt. — Здесь быстро обслуживают. We would appreciate a prompt reply. — Мы будем благодарны, если вы незамедлительно ответите. Не wrote a prompt answer to my letter. — Он не замедлил с ответом на мое письмо. Prompt payment of bills helps to make a good credit history. — Своевременная оплата счетов способствует созданию хорошей кредитной истории ( в банке). This worker is always prompt in his duties. — Этот работник всегда быстро -
73 Bain, Alexander
[br]b. October 1810 Watten, Scotlandd. 2 January 1877 Kirkintilloch, Scotland[br]Scottish inventor and entrepreneur who laid the foundations of electrical horology and designed an electromagnetic means of transmitting images (facsimile).[br]Alexander Bain was born into a crofting family in a remote part of Scotland. He was apprenticed to a watchmaker in Wick and during that time he was strongly influenced by a lecture on "Heat, sound and electricity" that he heard in nearby Thurso. This lecture induced him to take up a position in Clerkenwell in London, working as a journeyman clockmaker, where he was able to further his knowledge of electricity by attending lectures at the Adelaide Gallery and the Polytechnic Institution. His thoughts naturally turned to the application of electricity to clockmaking, and despite a bitter dispute with Charles Wheatstone over priority he was granted the first British patent for an electric clock. This patent, taken out on 11 January 1841, described a mechanism for an electric clock, in which an oscillating component of the clock operated a mechanical switch that initiated an electromagnetic pulse to maintain the regular, periodic motion. This principle was used in his master clock, produced in 1845. On 12 December of the same year, he patented a means of using electricity to control the operation of steam railway engines via a steam-valve. His earliest patent was particularly far-sighted and anticipated most of the developments in electrical horology that occurred during the nineteenth century. He proposed the use of electricity not only to drive clocks but also to distribute time over a distance by correcting the hands of mechanical clocks, synchronizing pendulums and using slave dials (here he was anticipated by Steinheil). However, he was less successful in putting these ideas into practice, and his electric clocks proved to be unreliable. Early electric clocks had two weaknesses: the battery; and the switching mechanism that fed the current to the electromagnets. Bain's earth battery, patented in 1843, overcame the first defect by providing a reasonably constant current to drive his clocks, but unlike Hipp he failed to produce a reliable switch.The application of Bain's numerous patents for electric telegraphy was more successful, and he derived most of his income from these. They included a patent of 12 December 1843 for a form of fax machine, a chemical telegraph that could be used for the transmission of text and of images (facsimile). At the receiver, signals were passed through a moving band of paper impregnated with a solution of ammonium nitrate and potassium ferrocyanide. For text, Morse code signals were used, and because the system could respond to signals faster than those generated by hand, perforated paper tape was used to transmit the messages; in a trial between Paris and Lille, 282 words were transmitted in less than one minute. In 1865 the Abbé Caselli, a French engineer, introduced a commercial fax service between Paris and Lyons, based on Bain's device. Bain also used the idea of perforated tape to operate musical wind instruments automatically. Bain squandered a great deal of money on litigation, initially with Wheatstone and then with Morse in the USA. Although his inventions were acknowledged, Bain appears to have received no honours, but when towards the end of his life he fell upon hard times, influential persons in 1873 secured for him a Civil List Pension of £80 per annum and the Royal Society gave him £150.[br]Bibliography1841, British patent no. 8,783; 1843, British patent no. 9,745; 1845, British patent no.10,838; 1847, British patent no. 11,584; 1852, British patent no. 14,146 (all for electric clocks).1852, A Short History of the Electric Clocks with Explanation of Their Principles andMechanism and Instruction for Their Management and Regulation, London; reprinted 1973, introd. W.Hackmann, London: Turner \& Devereux (as the title implies, this pamphlet was probably intended for the purchasers of his clocks).Further ReadingThe best account of Bain's life and work is in papers by C.A.Aked in Antiquarian Horology: "Electricity, magnetism and clocks" (1971) 7: 398–415; "Alexander Bain, the father of electrical horology" (1974) 9:51–63; "An early electric turret clock" (1975) 7:428–42. These papers were reprinted together (1976) in A Conspectus of Electrical Timekeeping, Monograph No. 12, Antiquarian Horological Society: Tilehurst.J.Finlaison, 1834, An Account of Some Remarkable Applications of the Electric Fluid to the Useful Arts by Alexander Bain, London (a contemporary account between Wheatstone and Bain over the invention of the electric clock).J.Munro, 1891, Heroes of the Telegraph, Religious Tract Society.J.Malster \& M.J.Bowden, 1976, "Facsimile. A Review", Radio \&Electronic Engineer 46:55.D.J.Weaver, 1982, Electrical Clocks and Watches, Newnes.T.Hunkin, 1993, "Just give me the fax", New Scientist (13 February):33–7 (provides details of Bain's and later fax devices).See also: Bakewell, Frederick C.DV / KF -
74 Hamilton, Harold Lee (Hal)
[br]b. 14 June 1890 Little Shasta, California, USAd. 3 May 1969 California, USA[br]American pioneer of diesel rail traction.[br]Orphaned as a child, Hamilton went to work for Southern Pacific Railroad in his teens, and then worked for several other companies. In his spare time he learned mathematics and physics from a retired professor. In 1911 he joined the White Motor Company, makers of road motor vehicles in Denver, Colorado, where he had gone to recuperate from malaria. He remained there until 1922, apart from an eighteenth-month break for war service.Upon his return from war service, Hamilton found White selling petrol-engined railbuses with mechanical transmission, based on road vehicles, to railways. He noted that they were not robust enough and that the success of petrol railcars with electric transmission, built by General Electric since 1906, was limited as they were complex to drive and maintain. In 1922 Hamilton formed, and became President of, the Electro- Motive Engineering Corporation (later Electro-Motive Corporation) to design and produce petrol-electric rail cars. Needing an engine larger than those used in road vehicles, yet lighter and faster than marine engines, he approached the Win ton Engine Company to develop a suitable engine; in addition, General Electric provided electric transmission with a simplified control system. Using these components, Hamilton arranged for his petrol-electric railcars to be built by the St Louis Car Company, with the first being completed in 1924. It was the beginning of a highly successful series. Fuel costs were lower than for steam trains and initial costs were kept down by using standardized vehicles instead of designing for individual railways. Maintenance costs were minimized because Electro-Motive kept stocks of spare parts and supplied replacement units when necessary. As more powerful, 800 hp (600 kW) railcars were produced, railways tended to use them to haul trailer vehicles, although that practice reduced the fuel saving. By the end of the decade Electro-Motive needed engines more powerful still and therefore had to use cheap fuel. Diesel engines of the period, such as those that Winton had made for some years, were too heavy in relation to their power, and too slow and sluggish for rail use. Their fuel-injection system was erratic and insufficiently robust and Hamilton concluded that a separate injector was needed for each cylinder.In 1930 Electro-Motive Corporation and Winton were acquired by General Motors in pursuance of their aim to develop a diesel engine suitable for rail traction, with the use of unit fuel injectors; Hamilton retained his position as President. At this time, industrial depression had combined with road and air competition to undermine railway-passenger business, and Ralph Budd, President of the Chicago, Burlington \& Quincy Railroad, thought that traffic could be recovered by way of high-speed, luxury motor trains; hence the Pioneer Zephyr was built for the Burlington. This comprised a 600 hp (450 kW), lightweight, two-stroke, diesel engine developed by General Motors (model 201 A), with electric transmission, that powered a streamlined train of three articulated coaches. This train demonstrated its powers on 26 May 1934 by running non-stop from Denver to Chicago, a distance of 1,015 miles (1,635 km), in 13 hours and 6 minutes, when the fastest steam schedule was 26 hours. Hamilton and Budd were among those on board the train, and it ushered in an era of high-speed diesel trains in the USA. By then Hamilton, with General Motors backing, was planning to use the lightweight engine to power diesel-electric locomotives. Their layout was derived not from steam locomotives, but from the standard American boxcar. The power plant was mounted within the body and powered the bogies, and driver's cabs were at each end. Two 900 hp (670 kW) engines were mounted in a single car to become an 1,800 hp (l,340 kW) locomotive, which could be operated in multiple by a single driver to form a 3,600 hp (2,680 kW) locomotive. To keep costs down, standard locomotives could be mass-produced rather than needing individual designs for each railway, as with steam locomotives. Two units of this type were completed in 1935 and sent on trial throughout much of the USA. They were able to match steam locomotive performance, with considerable economies: fuel costs alone were halved and there was much less wear on the track. In the same year, Electro-Motive began manufacturing diesel-electrie locomotives at La Grange, Illinois, with design modifications: the driver was placed high up above a projecting nose, which improved visibility and provided protection in the event of collision on unguarded level crossings; six-wheeled bogies were introduced, to reduce axle loading and improve stability. The first production passenger locomotives emerged from La Grange in 1937, and by early 1939 seventy units were in service. Meanwhile, improved engines had been developed and were being made at La Grange, and late in 1939 a prototype, four-unit, 5,400 hp (4,000 kW) diesel-electric locomotive for freight trains was produced and sent out on test from coast to coast; production versions appeared late in 1940. After an interval from 1941 to 1943, when Electro-Motive produced diesel engines for military and naval use, locomotive production resumed in quantity in 1944, and within a few years diesel power replaced steam on most railways in the USA.Hal Hamilton remained President of Electro-Motive Corporation until 1942, when it became a division of General Motors, of which he became Vice-President.[br]Further ReadingP.M.Reck, 1948, On Time: The History of the Electro-Motive Division of General Motors Corporation, La Grange, Ill.: General Motors (describes Hamilton's career).PJGRBiographical history of technology > Hamilton, Harold Lee (Hal)
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75 Maxim, Sir Hiram Stevens
[br]b. 5 February 1840 Brockway's Mills, Maine, USAd. 24 November 1916 Streatham, London, England[br]American (naturalized British) inventor; designer of the first fully automatic machine gun and of an experimental steam-powered aircraft.[br]Maxim was born the son of a pioneer farmer who later became a wood turner. Young Maxim was first apprenticed to a carriage maker and then embarked on a succession of jobs before joining his uncle in his engineering firm in Massachusetts in 1864. As a young man he gained a reputation as a boxer, but it was his uncle who first identified and encouraged Hiram's latent talent for invention.It was not, however, until 1878, when Maxim joined the first electric-light company to be established in the USA, as its Chief Engineer, that he began to make a name for himself. He developed an improved light filament and his electric pressure regulator not only won a prize at the first International Electrical Exhibition, held in Paris in 1881, but also resulted in his being made a Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur. While in Europe he was advised that weapons development was a more lucrative field than electricity; consequently, he moved to England and established a small laboratory at Hatton Garden, London. He began by investigating improvements to the Gatling gun in order to produce a weapon with a faster rate of fire and which was more accurate. In 1883, by adapting a Winchester carbine, he successfully produced a semi-automatic weapon, which used the recoil to cock the gun automatically after firing. The following year he took this concept a stage further and produced a fully automatic belt-fed weapon. The recoil drove barrel and breechblock to the vent. The barrel then halted, while the breechblock, now unlocked from the former, continued rearwards, extracting the spent case and recocking the firing mechanism. The return spring, which it had been compressing, then drove the breechblock forward again, chambering the next round, which had been fed from the belt, as it did so. Keeping the trigger pressed enabled the gun to continue firing until the belt was expended. The Maxim gun, as it became known, was adopted by almost every army within the decade, and was to remain in service for nearly fifty years. Maxim himself joined forces with the large British armaments firm of Vickers, and the Vickers machine gun, which served the British Army during two world wars, was merely a refined version of the Maxim gun.Maxim's interests continued to occupy several fields of technology, including flight. In 1891 he took out a patent for a steam-powered aeroplane fitted with a pendulous gyroscopic stabilizer which would maintain the pitch of the aeroplane at any desired inclination (basically, a simple autopilot). Maxim decided to test the relationship between power, thrust and lift before moving on to stability and control. He designed a lightweight steam-engine which developed 180 hp (135 kW) and drove a propeller measuring 17 ft 10 in. (5.44 m) in diameter. He fitted two of these engines into his huge flying machine testrig, which needed a wing span of 104 ft (31.7 m) to generate enough lift to overcome a total weight of 4 tons. The machine was not designed for free flight, but ran on one set of rails with a second set to prevent it rising more than about 2 ft (61 cm). At Baldwyn's Park in Kent on 31 July 1894 the huge machine, carrying Maxim and his crew, reached a speed of 42 mph (67.6 km/h) and lifted off its rails. Unfortunately, one of the restraining axles broke and the machine was extensively damaged. Although it was subsequently repaired and further trials carried out, these experiments were very expensive. Maxim eventually abandoned the flying machine and did not develop his idea for a stabilizer, turning instead to other projects. At the age of almost 70 he returned to the problems of flight and designed a biplane with a petrol engine: it was built in 1910 but never left the ground.In all, Maxim registered 122 US and 149 British patents on objects ranging from mousetraps to automatic spindles. Included among them was a 1901 patent for a foot-operated suction cleaner. In 1900 he became a British subject and he was knighted the following year. He remained a larger-than-life figure, both physically and in character, until the end of his life.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsChevalier de la Légion d'Honneur 1881. Knighted 1901.Bibliography1908, Natural and Artificial Flight, London. 1915, My Life, London: Methuen (autobiography).Further ReadingObituary, 1916, Engineer (1 December).Obituary, 1916, Engineering (1 December).P.F.Mottelay, 1920, The Life and Work of Sir Hiram Maxim, London and New York: John Lane.Dictionary of National Biography, 1912–1921, 1927, Oxford: Oxford University Press.See also: Pilcher, Percy SinclairCM / JDSBiographical history of technology > Maxim, Sir Hiram Stevens
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76 Porter, Charles Talbot
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. 18 January 1826 Auburn, New York, USAd. 1910 USA[br]American inventor of a stone dressing machine, an improved centrifugal governor and a high-speed steam engine.[br]Porter graduated from Hamilton College, New York, in 1845, read law in his father's office, and in the autumn of 1847 was admitted to the Bar. He practised for six or seven years in Rochester, New York, and then in New York City. He was drawn into engineering when aged about 30, first through a client who claimed to have invented a revolutionary type of engine and offered Porter the rights to it as payment of a debt. Having lent more money, Porter saw neither the man nor the engine again. Porter followed this with a similar experience over a patent for a stone dressing machine, except this time the machine was built. It proved to be a failure, but Porter set about redesigning it and found that it was vastly improved when it ran faster. His improved machine went into production. It was while trying to get the steam engine that drove the stone dressing machine to run more smoothly that he made a discovery that formed the basis for his subsequent work.Porter took the ordinary Watt centrifugal governor and increased the speed by a factor of about ten; although he had to reduce the size of the weights, he gained a motion that was powerful. To make the device sufficiently responsive at the right speed, he balanced the centrifugal forces by a counterweight. This prevented the weights flying outwards until the optimum speed was reached, so that the steam valves remained fully open until that point and then the weights reacted more quickly to variations in speed. He took out a patent in 1858, and its importance was quickly recognized. At first he manufactured and sold the governors himself in a specially equipped factory, because this was the only way he felt he could get sufficient accuracy to ensure a perfect action. For marine use, the counterweight was replaced by a spring.Higher speed had brought the advantage of smoother running and so he thought that the same principles could be applied to the steam engine itself, but it was to take extensive design modifications over several years before his vision was realized. In the winter of 1860–1, J.F. Allen met Porter and sketched out his idea of a new type of steam inlet valve. Porter saw the potential of this for his high-speed engine and Allen took out patents for it in 1862. The valves were driven by a new valve gear designed by Pius Fink. Porter decided to display his engine at the International Exhibition in London in 1862, but it had to be assembled on site because the parts were finished in America only just in time to be shipped to meet the deadline. Running at 150 rpm, the engine caused a sensation, but as it was non-condensing there were few orders. Porter added condensing apparatus and, after the failure of Ormerod Grierson \& Co., entered into an agreement with Joseph Whitworth to build the engines. Four were exhibited at the 1867 Paris Exposition Universelle, but Whitworth and Porter fell out and in 1868 Porter returned to America.Porter established another factory to build his engine in America, but he ran into all sorts of difficulties, both mechanical and financial. Some engines were built, and serious production was started c. 1874, but again there were further problems and Porter had to leave his firm. High-speed engines based on his designs continued to be made until after 1907 by the Southwark Foundry and Machine Company, Philadelphia, so Porter's ideas were proved viable and led to many other high-speed designs.[br]Bibliography1908, Engineering Reminiscences, New York: J. Wiley \& Sons; reprinted 1985, Bradley, Ill.: Lindsay (autobiography; the main source of information about his life).Further ReadingR.L.Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (examines his governor and steam engine).O.Mayr, 1974, "Yankee practice and engineering theory; Charles T.Porter and the dynamics of the high-speed engine", Technology and Culture 16 (4) (examines his governor and steam engine).RLH -
77 Wolseley, Frederick York
[br]b. 1837 Co. Dublin, Irelandd. 1899 England[br]Irish inventor who developed the first practical sheep shears and was also involved in the development of the car which bore his name.[br]The credit for the first design of sheep shears lies with James Higham, who patented the idea in 1868. However, its practical and commercial success lay in the work of a number of people, to each of whom Frederick Wolseley provides the connecting link.One of three brothers, he emigrated to Australia in 1854 and worked in New South Wales for five years. In 1867 he produced a working model of mechanical sheep shears, but it took a further five years before he actually produced a machine, whilst working as Manager of a sheep station in Victoria. In the intervening period it is possible that he visited America and Britain. On returning to Australia in 1872 he and Robert Savage produced another working model in a workshop in Melbourne. Four years later, by which time Wolseley had acquired the "Euroka" sheep station at Walgett, they tested the model and in 1877 acquired joint patent rights. The machine was not successful, and in 1884 another joint patent, this time with Robert Pickup, was taken out on a cog-gear universal joint. Development was to take several more years, during which a highly skilled blacksmith by the name of George Gray joined the team. It is likely that he was the first person to remove a fleece from a sheep mechanically. Finally, the last to be involved in the development of the shears was another Englishman, John Howard, who emigrated to Australia in 1883 with the intention of developing a shearing machine based on his knowledge of existing horse clippers. Wolseley purchased Howard's patent rights and gave him a job. The first public demonstration of the shears was held at the wool stores of Goldsborough \& Co. of Melbourne. Although the hand shearers were faster, when the three sheep that had been clipped by them were re-shorn using the mechanical machine, a further 2 lb (900 g) of wool was removed.Wolseley placed the first manufacturing order with A.P.Parks, who employed a young Englishman by the name of Herbert Austin. A number of improvements to the design were suggested by Austin, who acquired patents and assigned them to Wolseley in 1895 in return for shares in the company. Austin returned to England to run the Wolseley factory in Birmingham. He also built there the first car to carry the Wolseley name, and subsequently opened a car factory carrying his own name.Wolseley resigned as Managing Director of the company in 1894 and died five years later.[br]Further ReadingF.Wheelhouse, 1966, Digging Stock to Rotary Hoe: Men and Machines in Rural Australia (provides a detailed account of Wolseley's developments).APBiographical history of technology > Wolseley, Frederick York
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78 حاول
حَاوَلَ \ attempt: try: He attempted to escape but was caught. endeavour: to try hard. try: to attempt; make an effort: I don’t think I can lift it, but I’ll try (to do so), (with and not in past tenses) try to: Try and work a little faster. \ حَاوَلَ الإقناع بالحُجَّة والمنْطِق \ reason with: to try to persuade (sb.) by fair argument: I reasoned with him, but he still refused to pay the bill. \ حَاوَلَ أن يثني عن \ discourage: to try to stop sth. that one does not like: I discouraged my son from buying that old car. I discouraged his plans. \ حَاوَلَ القَبْضَ على أو الإمساك بِـ \ clutch at: to try to seize: He clutched wildly at the rope. \ حَاوَلَ مَعْرِفَةَ... \ see: to find out: See if you can reach it. Go and see what he wants. -
79 عدا
عَدَا \ dash: to rush: He dashed to the bus stop. tear: to rush excitedly: The children tore home to tell me the news. They were in a tearing hurry. \ See Also انْدَفَعَ، عَمِل بسُرْعة \ عَدَا (عَن) \ besides: in any case, also: I don’t need a drink; besides, I’ve no money with me; as well as: I have two brothers besides John. except: leaving out; not including: I work every day except Sunday (or except on Sundays). \ عَدَا (رَكَضَ) \ run: (of people and animals) to move fast, with quick steps: She ran to catch the train. \ عَدَا بأقصى سرعة (لمسافة قصيرة) \ sprint: to run as fast as possible for a short distance. \ عَدَا خَبَبًا \ trot: (of a horse) to go faster than a walk (but not as fast as a canter or gallop); (of any animal or child) to run with short steps. \ عَدَا على مهل \ canter: (of a horse) to run or gallop slowly. \ عَدَا مُسْرِعًا \ scurry: to move quickly or nervously. -
80 عدد
عَدَد \ figure: the sign for a number (1, 2, 3, etc.); any number: a low figure. number: a quantity: a large number of people. \ الأَعْدَاد الزَّوْجيَّة \ even numbers: those numbers that can be divided by two: 2, 4, 6, 8 etc.. \ أَعْدَادٌ كبيرة \ hundreds: a very large number: He has hundreds of friends. thousands: a great many: thousands of people. \ أَعْدَاد كبيرة مِن \ plague: a very large number of creatures (esp. flies, rats, locusts, etc.) that cause great trouble: The crops were destroyed by a plague of locusts. \ See Also أَسْرَاب مُؤذِيَة مِن... \ عَدَد \ intake: a quatity that is taken in: This year’s intake of students was 70 girls and 50 boys. \ See Also كَمِّيّة مُدْخَلَة \ عَدَد أقلّ \ less: a smaller amount of; not so much; not so many (but fewer is better than less in regard to plural nouns): You should eat less sugar and fewer sweets. less: a smaller amount: It lasted for less than five minutes. He wants $5 and he won’t accept less. \ عَدَد صَحيح \ a whole number: a number such as 2 (not a fraction like 2/3 or a decimal like 1.7). \ عَدَد غفير \ multitude: a great number; a crowd. \ عَدَد قَديم (من صَحيفَة أو مَجَلَّة) \ back number: (of a newspaper, etc) a copy which is not the latest on sale. \ See Also نُسْخَة قَديمَة \ عَدَد قَليل \ few: (with a) some, but not a large number: I waited for a few days. I need a few more books. handful: a few: Only a handful of people came to watch the match. \ العَدَد الكامِل \ strength: the full quantity of a group of persons who form an effective force: The nurses are not up to strength. (There are not enough nurses) They are 30 below strength. (The hospital usu. employs 30 more than it has now). \ عَدَد كبير \ many: a large number (of): He has (very) many friends. Many (of them) are at school with him. Many hands make light work (a job is done faster if we help each other). many a: used with a singular noun, equal in sense to a plural noun: I’ve been there many a time (many times). score: modern use (mostly pl.) a large number: I’ve been there scores of times. \ عَدَد كبير \ heaps of: a lot of: He has heaps of relations. \ See Also كَمية كبيرة مِن \ عَدَد كبير جدًّا \ a good many, a great many: very many: a good many people. \ عَدَد كَبير مِن \ dozen: a lot: I have dozens of relations. \ عَدَد مِن صَحِيفة \ issue: an official supply; (of newspapers) a particular supply: an issue of new coins; yesterday’s issue of the local paper. \ عَدَد هائِل \ a cloud: a mass of everything in the air (flying insects, smoke, dust, etc.).
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