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useful+power

  • 81 Knowledge

       It is indeed an opinion strangely prevailing amongst men, that houses, mountains, rivers, and, in a word, all sensible objects, have an existence, natural or real, distinct from their being perceived by the understanding. But, with how great an assurance and acquiescence soever this principle may be entertained in the world, yet whoever shall find in his heart to call it into question may, if I mistake not, perceive it to involve a manifest contradiction. For, what are the forementioned objects but things we perceive by sense? and what do we perceive besides our own ideas or sensations? and is it not plainly repugnant that any one of these, or any combination of them, should exist unperceived? (Berkeley, 1996, Pt. I, No. 4, p. 25)
       It seems to me that the only objects of the abstract sciences or of demonstration are quantity and number, and that all attempts to extend this more perfect species of knowledge beyond these bounds are mere sophistry and illusion. As the component parts of quantity and number are entirely similar, their relations become intricate and involved; and nothing can be more curious, as well as useful, than to trace, by a variety of mediums, their equality or inequality, through their different appearances.
       But as all other ideas are clearly distinct and different from each other, we can never advance farther, by our utmost scrutiny, than to observe this diversity, and, by an obvious reflection, pronounce one thing not to be another. Or if there be any difficulty in these decisions, it proceeds entirely from the undeterminate meaning of words, which is corrected by juster definitions. That the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the squares of the other two sides cannot be known, let the terms be ever so exactly defined, without a train of reasoning and enquiry. But to convince us of this proposition, that where there is no property, there can be no injustice, it is only necessary to define the terms, and explain injustice to be a violation of property. This proposition is, indeed, nothing but a more imperfect definition. It is the same case with all those pretended syllogistical reasonings, which may be found in every other branch of learning, except the sciences of quantity and number; and these may safely, I think, be pronounced the only proper objects of knowledge and demonstration. (Hume, 1975, Sec. 12, Pt. 3, pp. 163-165)
       Our knowledge springs from two fundamental sources of the mind; the first is the capacity of receiving representations (the ability to receive impressions), the second is the power to know an object through these representations (spontaneity in the production of concepts).
       Through the first, an object is given to us; through the second, the object is thought in relation to that representation.... Intuition and concepts constitute, therefore, the elements of all our knowledge, so that neither concepts without intuition in some way corresponding to them, nor intuition without concepts, can yield knowledge. Both may be either pure or empirical.... Pure intuitions or pure concepts are possible only a priori; empirical intuitions and empirical concepts only a posteriori. If the receptivity of our mind, its power of receiving representations in so far as it is in any way affected, is to be called "sensibility," then the mind's power of producing representations from itself, the spontaneity of knowledge, should be called "understanding." Our nature is so constituted that our intuitions can never be other than sensible; that is, it contains only the mode in which we are affected by objects. The faculty, on the other hand, which enables us to think the object of sensible intuition is the understanding.... Without sensibility, no object would be given to us; without understanding, no object would be thought. Thoughts without content are empty; intuitions without concepts are blind. It is therefore just as necessary to make our concepts sensible, that is, to add the object to them in intuition, as to make our intuitions intelligible, that is to bring them under concepts. These two powers or capacities cannot exchange their functions. The understanding can intuit nothing, the senses can think nothing. Only through their union can knowledge arise. (Kant, 1933, Sec. 1, Pt. 2, B74-75 [p. 92])
       Metaphysics, as a natural disposition of Reason is real, but it is also, in itself, dialectical and deceptive.... Hence to attempt to draw our principles from it, and in their employment to follow this natural but none the less fallacious illusion can never produce science, but only an empty dialectical art, in which one school may indeed outdo the other, but none can ever attain a justifiable and lasting success. In order that, as a science, it may lay claim not merely to deceptive persuasion, but to insight and conviction, a Critique of Reason must exhibit in a complete system the whole stock of conceptions a priori, arranged according to their different sources-the Sensibility, the understanding, and the Reason; it must present a complete table of these conceptions, together with their analysis and all that can be deduced from them, but more especially the possibility of synthetic knowledge a priori by means of their deduction, the principles of its use, and finally, its boundaries....
       This much is certain: he who has once tried criticism will be sickened for ever of all the dogmatic trash he was compelled to content himself with before, because his Reason, requiring something, could find nothing better for its occupation. Criticism stands to the ordinary school metaphysics exactly in the same relation as chemistry to alchemy, or as astron omy to fortune-telling astrology. I guarantee that no one who has comprehended and thought out the conclusions of criticism, even in these Prolegomena, will ever return to the old sophistical pseudo-science. He will rather look forward with a kind of pleasure to a metaphysics, certainly now within his power, which requires no more preparatory discoveries, and which alone can procure for reason permanent satisfaction. (Kant, 1891, pp. 115-116)
       Knowledge is only real and can only be set forth fully in the form of science, in the form of system. Further, a so-called fundamental proposition or first principle of philosophy, even if it is true, it is yet none the less false, just because and in so far as it is merely a fundamental proposition, merely a first principle. It is for that reason easily refuted. The refutation consists in bringing out its defective character; and it is defective because it is merely the universal, merely a principle, the beginning. If the refutation is complete and thorough, it is derived and developed from the nature of the principle itself, and not accomplished by bringing in from elsewhere other counter-assurances and chance fancies. It would be strictly the development of the principle, and thus the completion of its deficiency, were it not that it misunderstands its own purport by taking account solely of the negative aspect of what it seeks to do, and is not conscious of the positive character of its process and result. The really positive working out of the beginning is at the same time just as much the very reverse: it is a negative attitude towards the principle we start from. Negative, that is to say, in its one-sided form, which consists in being primarily immediate, a mere purpose. It may therefore be regarded as a refutation of what constitutes the basis of the system; but more correctly it should be looked at as a demonstration that the basis or principle of the system is in point of fact merely its beginning. (Hegel, 1910, pp. 21-22)
       Knowledge, action, and evaluation are essentially connected. The primary and pervasive significance of knowledge lies in its guidance of action: knowing is for the sake of doing. And action, obviously, is rooted in evaluation. For a being which did not assign comparative values, deliberate action would be pointless; and for one which did not know, it would be impossible. Conversely, only an active being could have knowledge, and only such a being could assign values to anything beyond his own feelings. A creature which did not enter into the process of reality to alter in some part the future content of it, could apprehend a world only in the sense of intuitive or esthetic contemplation; and such contemplation would not possess the significance of knowledge but only that of enjoying and suffering. (Lewis, 1946, p. 1)
       "Evolutionary epistemology" is a branch of scholarship that applies the evolutionary perspective to an understanding of how knowledge develops. Knowledge always involves getting information. The most primitive way of acquiring it is through the sense of touch: amoebas and other simple organisms know what happens around them only if they can feel it with their "skins." The knowledge such an organism can have is strictly about what is in its immediate vicinity. After a huge jump in evolution, organisms learned to find out what was going on at a distance from them, without having to actually feel the environment. This jump involved the development of sense organs for processing information that was farther away. For a long time, the most important sources of knowledge were the nose, the eyes, and the ears. The next big advance occurred when organisms developed memory. Now information no longer needed to be present at all, and the animal could recall events and outcomes that happened in the past. Each one of these steps in the evolution of knowledge added important survival advantages to the species that was equipped to use it.
       Then, with the appearance in evolution of humans, an entirely new way of acquiring information developed. Up to this point, the processing of information was entirely intrasomatic.... But when speech appeared (and even more powerfully with the invention of writing), information processing became extrasomatic. After that point knowledge did not have to be stored in the genes, or in the memory traces of the brain; it could be passed on from one person to another through words, or it could be written down and stored on a permanent substance like stone, paper, or silicon chips-in any case, outside the fragile and impermanent nervous system. (Csikszentmihalyi, 1993, pp. 56-57)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Knowledge

  • 82 полезная выходная мощность

    1) Engineering: load power
    2) Automobile industry: net power output

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > полезная выходная мощность

  • 83 استخدم

    اِسْتَخْدَمَ \ apply: to put sth. on or into use (force, rules, etc.): Apply as much force as is necessary. employ: to give work to: My firm employs 300 men, to use: She employed every trick that she knew in the hope of getting what she wanted. engage: to give a job to: The school has engaged two new teachers. exercise: to make active use of (one’s mind, a power or right): Exercise a little more patience, please. exploit: to develop; make full use of (things that nature provides: forests, oil, coal, etc.): We can make electricity by exploiting the force of the river. take: to use; follow: We took the train to London. You took the wrong road. Don’t go! You should take this chance of a new job. take on: to give employment to: My company has taken on three new clerks. use: to employ (sth.) for a purpose; do sth. with: We use cups for drinking. I had to use force to open the door. utilize: to make use of (sth. that one has): Coal, oil and gas are all utilized as means of power. \ See Also شغل (شَغَّلَ)، وظف (وَظَّفَ)، استثمر (اِسْتَثْمَر)‏ \ اِسْتَخْدَمَ بِبَرَاعة (أداة، سُلْطة، إلخ)‏ \ wield: old use to use or handle effectively (an axe, sword, power, etc.). \ اِسْتَخْدَمَ الآلة بدلاً من الإنسان \ mechanize: to supply with machines; use machines for (instead of using men, horses, etc.): mechanized farming. \ اِسْتَخْدَمَ علامات الفصل والوقف في الكتابة \ punctuate: to put the stops (?;. etc.) into writing. \ اِسْتَخْدَمَ كَـ \ act as: to be useful for; be used as: The fallen tree acted as a bridge across the river.

    Arabic-English dictionary > استخدم

  • 84 мощность на валу двигателя

    1) Engineering: motor shaft output
    2) Railway term: effective horse power (в л.с.)
    3) Automobile industry: effective horsepower (в л.с.), useful horsepower (в л.с.)
    4) Drilling: useful horsepower (в л. с.)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > мощность на валу двигателя

  • 85 эффективная производительность

    1) Accounting: effective power
    2) Metallurgy: useful effervescive
    3) Drilling: effective output
    4) Automation: useful work

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > эффективная производительность

  • 86 wirtschaftlich

    wirtschaftlich I adj WIWI economic (Bezug: produzierende Wirtschaft, Volkswirtschaft, knappe Güter; nie: economical = sparsam); cost-effective, efficient (i. S. v. effizient, leistungsfähig, rationell, gut funktionierend) wirtschaftlich II adv WIWI economically wirtschaftlich angemessen darstellen RW present fairly (Rechnungsprüfung) wirtschaftlich gestalten GEN rationalize wirtschaftlich tragfähig MGT, WIWI economically viable wirtschaftlich unabhängig GEN self-supporting
    * * *
    adj 1. <Bank, Finanz> economic, efficient; 2. < Geschäft> economic, efficient, commercial; 3. <Verwalt, Vw> economic, efficient
    adv <Vw> economically ■ wirtschaftlich angemessen darstellen < Rechnung> Rechnungsprüfung present fairly ■ wirtschaftlich gestalten < Geschäft> rationalize ■ wirtschaftlich unabhängig < Geschäft> self-supporting
    * * *
    wirtschaftlich
    (Ertrag abwerfend) profitable, yielding a return, remunerative, paying, commercial, (gewerblich) industrial, (leistungsfähig) efficient, (sparsam) saving, economical, material, money-saving, thrifty, (volkswirtschaftlich) economic[al];
    wirtschaftlich bedrängt economically-beleaguered;
    wirtschaftlich rentabel economically viable;
    sein Geld wirtschaftlich anlegen to invest one’s money profitably;
    wirtschaftlich arbeiten (Maschine) to work economically;
    wirtschaftlich gestalten to rationalize;
    wirtschaftlich sein to be on a profitable basis;
    wirtschaftlich tätig sein to be in trade (business);
    wirtschaftlich mit etw. umgehen to be economical with s. th.;
    wirtschaftliche Abkühlung cyclical slowdown;
    wirtschaftliche Abkühlung herbeiführen to cool the economy;
    wirtschaftliche Angaben economic (business) data;
    wirtschaftliche Angliederung economic assimilation (attachment);
    wirtschaftliche Anpassung economic adjustment;
    wirtschaftliche Anspannung economic strain;
    wirtschaftliches Arbeiten economical operation;
    wirtschaftliche Auftragsgröße economic order quantity;
    wirtschaftliche Ausdehnung economic expansion;
    wirtschaftlicher Ausgleich economic adjustment;
    wirtschaftliche Aussichten business prospects;
    wirtschaftliche Autarkie economic self-sufficiency;
    wirtschaftliche Bedeutung commercial prominence;
    wirtschaftliche Bedingungen economic terms;
    wirtschaftliche Belange trade concerns, economic interests;
    wirtschaftliche Belastung economic handicap;
    wirtschaftlicher Berater economic adviser (consultant), industrial counsel(l)or;
    wirtschaftlicher Berufsverband trade association;
    wirtschaftliche Besprechungen trade conference (talks);
    wirtschaftlicher Betrieb economical operation, profitable enterprise;
    wirtschaftliche Beweggründe economic motives;
    wirtschaftliche Beziehungen economic relations;
    wirtschaftliche Bindungen business ties;
    wirtschaftliche Blüte business boom;
    wirtschaftlichen Druck ausüben to exercise economic pressure;
    wirtschaftliche Durchdringung economic penetration;
    wirtschaftliches Eigentum business ownership;
    wirtschaftliche Einheit economic whole (entity);
    wirtschaftliche Entwicklung economic (commercial) development, trade lead;
    wirtschaftlicher Erfolg commercial success;
    wirtschaftliche Erwägungen economic policy;
    sich von wirtschaftlichen Erwägungen leiten lassen to be guided by financial considerations;
    wirtschaftlicher Fachausdruck economic (trade) term;
    wirtschaftliche Festsetzung trade foothold;
    wirtschaftliche Flaute business depression;
    wirtschaftlicher Fortschritt economic progress;
    auf wirtschaftlichem Gebiet in the economic field, in economic matters;
    auf wirtschaftlichem und sozialem Gebiet in the economic and social fields;
    wirtschaftliche Gegebenheiten economical reality;
    wirtschaftliche Geldanlage profitable investment;
    wirtschaftliche Gesichtspunkte economic angles (aspects, factors);
    wirtschaftliches Grundgesetz economic principle;
    gesunde wirtschaftliche Grundlage sound economic basis;
    wirtschaftliche Haushaltsführung economical housekeeping;
    wirtschaftliche Herausforderung economic challenge;
    wirtschaftliche Hilfe commercial leg-up;
    wirtschaftliche Hilfsquellen economic resources;
    in wirtschaftlicher Hinsicht economically;
    wirtschaftlicher Hintergrund business background;
    wirtschaftliche Integration economic integration;
    wirtschaftliche Interessen commercial interests;
    wirtschaftliche Konkurrenz trade rivalry;
    wirtschaftliche Lage business situation, (Schuldner) financial position;
    wirtschaftliche Lebensdauer economic (useful) life;
    wirtschaftliche Leistungsfähigkeit economic vitality (performance, efficiency), industrial efficiency, profit-earning capacity;
    wirtschaftliche Losgröße economic batch size;
    wirtschaftliche Machtstellung economic power;
    wirtschaftliche Maßnahmen economic actions;
    wirtschaftliche Misere economic gloom;
    wirtschaftliches Motiv profit motive;
    wirtschaftlicher Niedergang economic downturn;
    wirtschaftliche Notlage economic distress, financial embarrassment;
    wirtschaftliche Nutzungsdauer economic (useful) life;
    wirtschaftliches Planziel economic target;
    vor großen wirtschaftlichen Problemen stehen to be faced with great financial problems;
    wirtschaftlicher Querschnitt industrial cross-section;
    wirtschaftlicher Reibungskoeffizient economic friction;
    wirtschaftliche Repressalien economic reprisals;
    wirtschaftlicher Rückschlag economic dip;
    wirtschaftlicher Ruin economic ruin;
    wirtschaftliche Sanierung reorganization;
    wirtschaftliches Sanierungsprogramm economic adjustment program(me);
    wirtschaftliche Sanktionen economic sanctions;
    wirtschaftliche Schlüsselstellung key industrial emporium;
    wirtschaftliche Stagnation economic stagnation;
    vom wirtschaftlichen Standpunkt economically speaking;
    wirtschaftliche Stellung trade (business) position;
    wirtschaftliche Tagesfragen bread-and-butter economic issues;
    wirtschaftliche Talfahrt economic slide;
    wirtschaftliche Tätigkeit business activity;
    wirtschaftlicher Tätigkeitsbericht survey of economic activities;
    wirtschaftliches Tief depression, low;
    wirtschaftliche Überhitzung overheating of the boom;
    wirtschaftliche Überlegenheit economic superiority;
    wirtschaftliche Überlegungen trade reasons;
    wirtschaftliche Übermacht economic supremacy;
    wirtschaftliche Umwälzung commercial revolution;
    wirtschaftliche Unabhängigkeit economic independence, (Land) [economic] autarchy;
    wirtschaftliche Unsicherheit economic uncertainty;
    wirtschaftliche Vereinigung commerce association;
    wirtschaftliche Verflechtung economic interdependence, web of business;
    wirtschaftlicher Wagen economy-sized car;
    wirtschaftlicher Wert economic issue (worth);
    wirtschaftlicher Wiederaufbau industrial rehabilitation;
    wirtschaftliche Wiederbelebung economic recovery;
    wirtschaftliche Wiedereingliederung industrial rehabilitation;
    wirtschaftliches Zentrum industrial centre (Br.) (center, US);
    wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit vertiefen to intensify economic cooperation;
    wirtschaftlicher Zusammenbruch business collapse;
    wirtschaftlicher Zusammenhang economic relationship[s];
    wirtschaftlicher Zusammenschluss economic fusion;
    wirtschaftliche Zwangsläufigkeiten economic determinism;
    wirtschaftlicher Zweck commercial purpose.
    Zurückgebliebener, wirtschaftlich
    economic laggard.

    Business german-english dictionary > wirtschaftlich

  • 87 funcionamiento

    m.
    operation, functioning.
    explicó el funcionamiento de la empresa he explained how the company works
    entrar/estar en funcionamiento to come into/be in operation; (sistema) to start/be (working o running) (máquina)
    * * *
    1 operation, working
    \
    poner en funcionamiento to put into operation
    * * *
    noun m.
    * * *
    SM

    lo lubrico cada 2.000 horas de funcionamiento — I lubricate it after every 2,000 hours of operation

    * * *
    b) (de sistema, organismo) running

    entrar/ponerse en funcionamiento — hospital/estación/fábrica to become operational; central nuclear to come into operation; autopista to open; mecanismo/máquina to start up; servicio/sistema to start

    poner en funcionamiento<central/fábrica> to bring into operation; <mecanismo/máquina> to start... up

    * * *
    = functioning, operation, working, performance.
    Ex. The proper education of the user of scientific information is essential to the efficient functioning of the whole system of information provision.
    Ex. An operating system usually comprises a suite of programs that manages the operation of the microcomputer.
    Ex. Notices may be useful in this context for the user who wishes to familiarise himself with the workings of the catalogue before approaching a terminal.
    Ex. When a library outgrows its second automated circulation system it sets stringent functional, performance and growth specifications and builds from scratch.
    ----
    * buen funcionamiento = smooth-running.
    * control de funcionamiento = benchmark.
    * controles de funcionamiento = benchmarking.
    * costes de funcionamiento = running costs.
    * de funcionamiento = operating, operational.
    * desde el punto de vista del funcionamiento = operationally.
    * en buen estado de funcionamiento = in good working condition.
    * en funcionamiento = in operation.
    * entrar en funcionamiento = go into + operation.
    * establecer normas de funcionamiento = establish + policy.
    * estar en funcionamiento = be up.
    * fondo para gastos de funcionamiento = operating funds.
    * funcionamiento conjunto = interworking.
    * funcionamiento coordinado = synergy.
    * funcionamiento defectuoso = malfunction.
    * gastos de funcionamiento = operating costs, operating expenditure, operational costs, operating expenses, recurrent expenditure.
    * horas de funcionamiento = operating hours.
    * interrumpir el funcionamiento = go down.
    * mal funcionamiento = malfunction, malfunctioning.
    * modelo de funcionamiento = business model.
    * no estar en funcionamiento = be down.
    * orden de funcionamiento del disco = disc operating command.
    * partida para gastos de funcionamiento = operating budget, operating funds.
    * poner en funcionamiento = activate, set in + action, set up, trip, put into + working order, put in + place, put in + place, put into + place, set in + motion.
    * poner en funcionamiento un programa = implement + program(me).
    * presupuesto para gastos de funcionamiento = operating budget, operating funds.
    * puesta en funcionamiento = activation, deployment, realisation [realization, -USA], setting up, operationalisation [operationalization, -USA], startup [start-up].
    * tener en funcionamiento = have + in effect.
    * velocidad de funcionamiento = speed of operation.
    * * *
    b) (de sistema, organismo) running

    entrar/ponerse en funcionamiento — hospital/estación/fábrica to become operational; central nuclear to come into operation; autopista to open; mecanismo/máquina to start up; servicio/sistema to start

    poner en funcionamiento<central/fábrica> to bring into operation; <mecanismo/máquina> to start... up

    * * *
    = functioning, operation, working, performance.

    Ex: The proper education of the user of scientific information is essential to the efficient functioning of the whole system of information provision.

    Ex: An operating system usually comprises a suite of programs that manages the operation of the microcomputer.
    Ex: Notices may be useful in this context for the user who wishes to familiarise himself with the workings of the catalogue before approaching a terminal.
    Ex: When a library outgrows its second automated circulation system it sets stringent functional, performance and growth specifications and builds from scratch.
    * buen funcionamiento = smooth-running.
    * control de funcionamiento = benchmark.
    * controles de funcionamiento = benchmarking.
    * costes de funcionamiento = running costs.
    * de funcionamiento = operating, operational.
    * desde el punto de vista del funcionamiento = operationally.
    * en buen estado de funcionamiento = in good working condition.
    * en funcionamiento = in operation.
    * entrar en funcionamiento = go into + operation.
    * establecer normas de funcionamiento = establish + policy.
    * estar en funcionamiento = be up.
    * fondo para gastos de funcionamiento = operating funds.
    * funcionamiento conjunto = interworking.
    * funcionamiento coordinado = synergy.
    * funcionamiento defectuoso = malfunction.
    * gastos de funcionamiento = operating costs, operating expenditure, operational costs, operating expenses, recurrent expenditure.
    * horas de funcionamiento = operating hours.
    * interrumpir el funcionamiento = go down.
    * mal funcionamiento = malfunction, malfunctioning.
    * modelo de funcionamiento = business model.
    * no estar en funcionamiento = be down.
    * orden de funcionamiento del disco = disc operating command.
    * partida para gastos de funcionamiento = operating budget, operating funds.
    * poner en funcionamiento = activate, set in + action, set up, trip, put into + working order, put in + place, put in + place, put into + place, set in + motion.
    * poner en funcionamiento un programa = implement + program(me).
    * presupuesto para gastos de funcionamiento = operating budget, operating funds.
    * puesta en funcionamiento = activation, deployment, realisation [realization, -USA], setting up, operationalisation [operationalization, -USA], startup [start-up].
    * tener en funcionamiento = have + in effect.
    * velocidad de funcionamiento = speed of operation.

    * * *
    para asegurar el buen funcionamiento del aparato to keep the equipment in good working order
    el nuevo servicio todavía no ha entrado en funcionamiento the new service is not yet in operation
    entra en funcionamiento automáticamente it comes on o operates automatically
    el buen funcionamiento de la escuela the smooth running of the school
    se puso en funcionamiento una operación de búsqueda a search was set in motion o launched
    * * *

     

    funcionamiento sustantivo masculino:
    me explicó su funcionamiento he explained (to me) how it works (o worked etc);

    para el buen funcionamiento de la escuela for the smooth running of the school;
    ponerse en funcionamiento [hospital/estación/fábrica] to become operational;

    [ central nuclear] to come into operation;
    [mecanismo/máquina] to start up;
    [servicio/sistema] to start;

    poner en funcionamiento ‹central/fábrica to bring into operation;

    mecanismo/máquinato start … up
    funcionamiento sustantivo masculino operation
    poner/entrar en funcionamiento, to put/come into operation
    ' funcionamiento' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    arreglar
    - marcha
    - mecánica
    - padecer
    - salud
    - simulador
    - simuladora
    - activar
    - asegurar
    - comprobar
    - correcto
    - demostrar
    - falla
    - servicio
    English:
    behavior
    - behaviour
    - malfunction
    - operation
    - operational
    - running
    - working
    - working order
    - action
    - come
    - functional
    - use
    - workings
    * * *
    operation, functioning;
    me explicó el funcionamiento de la empresa she explained to me how the company works;
    entrar/estar en funcionamiento to come into/be in operation;
    la máquina lleva ya dos horas en funcionamiento the machine has been running for two hours;
    poner algo en funcionamiento to start sth (working);
    la puesta en funcionamiento de una central nuclear the commissioning o bringing on-line of a nuclear power station
    * * *
    m working;
    en (perfecto) estado de funcionamiento in (perfect) working order
    * * *
    1) : functioning
    2)
    en funcionamiento : in operation
    * * *
    funcionamiento n working / operation

    Spanish-English dictionary > funcionamiento

  • 88 indicador

    adj.
    indicating, indicative.
    m.
    1 indicator, pointer, arrow, gauge.
    2 indicator, marker, predictor.
    3 flag, tag.
    4 indicant.
    5 puntero.
    * * *
    1 (gen) which indicates, indicating
    1 (gen) indicator; (señal de tráfico) sign, traffic sign, road sign; (con aguja, escala) gauge
    \
    indicador económico economic indicator
    * * *
    noun m.
    * * *
    1.
    ADJ
    papel 1)
    2. SM
    1) (=señal) sign
    2) (Téc) (=aparato) gauge, gage (EEUU); (=aguja) pointer

    indicador de dirección — (Aut) indicator

    indicador del nivel de gasolina — (Aut) fuel gauge

    indicador del nivel del aceite — (Aut) oil gauge

    indicador de velocidad — (Aut) speedometer

    3) (Econ) indicator; (Bolsa) index
    4) (Inform) flag
    * * *
    I
    - dora adjetivo warning
    II
    1) (Auto)
    b) ( dispositivo) gauge

    indicador del aceite/de la gasolina — oil pressure/fuel gauge

    2) (Inf) flag
    * * *
    = guide card, indicator, measure, pointer, predictor, sign, tell-tale [telltale], tracing, marker, metric, indicant, tracer, bellwether.
    Ex. Guide cards help to break up the classified sequence and direct the user to the required class.
    Ex. To indicate from which field a given work was Cuttered, these second indicators could be further redefined = Para indicar de qué campo se le había asignado la marca de Cutter a una obra, se podían delimitar aún más estos segundos indicadores.
    Ex. One measure of a library's market is the number of reference questions dealt with at the reference desk or through electronic reference.
    Ex. Seven pointers follow which are useful for discriminating between documents to be abstracted and those not worth abstracting.
    Ex. If I'm not mistaken the military decided some time ago that IQ tests were a poor predictor of leadership qualities.
    Ex. Standard advertising mechanisms, such as spots on radio and television, signs in buses and on billboards, and widely disseminated leaflets are used if money is available.
    Ex. The tell-tale signs that mark a KWOC index include in a KWOC index all of the words that appear as headings have been extracted from titles.
    Ex. The word tracing is used to denote the identification within an authority entry of all variant and related headings from which references have been made to the authority heading itself.
    Ex. Extraction is carried out with the help of a dictionary of formal text characteristics ( markers, connectors, indicators).
    Ex. The author outlines quantitative metrics that measure information technology productivity from the perspective of the overall rate of return to the organization.
    Ex. Productivity, it is speculated, may be a good indicant of academic socialization.
    Ex. The article is entitled 'Drivers and tracers of business process changes'.
    Ex. Scientists have long suspected amphibians are good bellwethers for impending alterations in biodiversity during rapid climate change.
    ----
    * indicador bibliométrico = bibliometric indicator.
    * indicador cientométrico = scientometric indicator.
    * indicador cualitativo = qualitative indicator.
    * indicador cuantitativo = quantitative indicator.
    * indicador de campo = field indicator.
    * indicador de citas = citation indicator.
    * indicador de clasificación = classificatory indicator.
    * indicador de comienzo de subcampo = delimiter sign.
    * indicador de contenido = content designator.
    * indicador de dirección = signpost.
    * indicador de eficacia = performance indicator, effectiveness indicator.
    * indicador de estar listo = screen prompt.
    * indicador de faceta = facet indicator.
    * indicador de función = operator, role indicator.
    * indicador de impacto = impact indicator.
    * indicador de la eficiencia = efficiency indicator.
    * indicador del trabajo realizado = workload indicator.
    * indicador de producción = output indicator.
    * indicador de relación = relation indicator, relational operator, role operator.
    * indicador de rendimiento = benchmark, performance indicator, performance measure, output measure.
    * indicador de resultados = outcome indicator.
    * indicadores de eficacia = performance criteria.
    * indicadores de rendimiento = performance criteria, benchmark figures.
    * número indicador de materia = SIN, Subject Indicator Number.
    * señal indicadora = signpost.
    * * *
    I
    - dora adjetivo warning
    II
    1) (Auto)
    b) ( dispositivo) gauge

    indicador del aceite/de la gasolina — oil pressure/fuel gauge

    2) (Inf) flag
    * * *
    = guide card, indicator, measure, pointer, predictor, sign, tell-tale [telltale], tracing, marker, metric, indicant, tracer, bellwether.

    Ex: Guide cards help to break up the classified sequence and direct the user to the required class.

    Ex: To indicate from which field a given work was Cuttered, these second indicators could be further redefined = Para indicar de qué campo se le había asignado la marca de Cutter a una obra, se podían delimitar aún más estos segundos indicadores.
    Ex: One measure of a library's market is the number of reference questions dealt with at the reference desk or through electronic reference.
    Ex: Seven pointers follow which are useful for discriminating between documents to be abstracted and those not worth abstracting.
    Ex: If I'm not mistaken the military decided some time ago that IQ tests were a poor predictor of leadership qualities.
    Ex: Standard advertising mechanisms, such as spots on radio and television, signs in buses and on billboards, and widely disseminated leaflets are used if money is available.
    Ex: The tell-tale signs that mark a KWOC index include in a KWOC index all of the words that appear as headings have been extracted from titles.
    Ex: The word tracing is used to denote the identification within an authority entry of all variant and related headings from which references have been made to the authority heading itself.
    Ex: Extraction is carried out with the help of a dictionary of formal text characteristics ( markers, connectors, indicators).
    Ex: The author outlines quantitative metrics that measure information technology productivity from the perspective of the overall rate of return to the organization.
    Ex: Productivity, it is speculated, may be a good indicant of academic socialization.
    Ex: The article is entitled 'Drivers and tracers of business process changes'.
    Ex: Scientists have long suspected amphibians are good bellwethers for impending alterations in biodiversity during rapid climate change.
    * indicador bibliométrico = bibliometric indicator.
    * indicador cientométrico = scientometric indicator.
    * indicador cualitativo = qualitative indicator.
    * indicador cuantitativo = quantitative indicator.
    * indicador de campo = field indicator.
    * indicador de citas = citation indicator.
    * indicador de clasificación = classificatory indicator.
    * indicador de comienzo de subcampo = delimiter sign.
    * indicador de contenido = content designator.
    * indicador de dirección = signpost.
    * indicador de eficacia = performance indicator, effectiveness indicator.
    * indicador de estar listo = screen prompt.
    * indicador de faceta = facet indicator.
    * indicador de función = operator, role indicator.
    * indicador de impacto = impact indicator.
    * indicador de la eficiencia = efficiency indicator.
    * indicador del trabajo realizado = workload indicator.
    * indicador de producción = output indicator.
    * indicador de relación = relation indicator, relational operator, role operator.
    * indicador de rendimiento = benchmark, performance indicator, performance measure, output measure.
    * indicador de resultados = outcome indicator.
    * indicadores de eficacia = performance criteria.
    * indicadores de rendimiento = performance criteria, benchmark figures.
    * número indicador de materia = SIN, Subject Indicator Number.
    * señal indicadora = signpost.

    * * *
    warning
    señal indicadora de peligro danger o warning sign
    A ( Auto)
    indicador del aceite oil pressure gauge
    Compuestos:
    indicator
    speedometer
    B ( Econ) indicator
    C ( Inf) flag
    * * *

    indicador sustantivo masculino (Auto)
    a) tb



    c) (del aceite, la gasolina) gauge;


    indicador,-ora sustantivo masculino
    1 indicator
    2 Téc gauge, dial, meter
    Auto indicador del nivel de gasolina, petrol gauge
    Auto indicador de velocidad, speedometer
    ' indicador' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    indicadora
    English:
    gauge
    - indicator
    - oil gauge
    - read
    - reading
    - register
    - signpost
    - telltale
    - M
    - marker
    - pointer
    - speedometer
    * * *
    indicador, -ora
    adj
    indicating;
    siga las flechas indicadoras follow the arrows;
    encontrarás un cartel indicador you'll find a sign showing the way
    nm
    1. [signo] indicator;
    los principales indicadores bursátiles the main stock market indicators;
    ese fallo es un indicador de la poca calidad del producto that fault shows the poor quality of the product
    indicador económico economic indicator
    2.
    indicador (de dirección) [intermitente] Br indicator, US turn signal
    3. Tec gauge, meter
    indicador del nivel de aceite oil gauge;
    indicador de nivel de gasolina fuel gauge, Br petrol gauge;
    * * *
    m indicator
    * * *
    1) : gauge, dial, meter
    2) : indicator
    indicadores económicos: economic indicators
    * * *
    indicador n (indicio) indicator

    Spanish-English dictionary > indicador

  • 89 instalación

    f.
    1 installation, setting-up, foundation, settling.
    2 facility, complex.
    3 installation, factory, industrial plant, plant.
    * * *
    1 (de un aparato) installation
    ¿quién le hizo la instalación del gas? who did the gas installation?, who installed the gas?
    2 (de personas) settling in; (de empresas) establishment, setting up
    \
    instalación deportiva sports centre
    instalación eléctrica electrical system, electrics plural
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *
    SF
    1) (=conexión) [de equipo, luz] installation
    2) (=montaje) [de oficina, fábrica] setting up; [de tienda de campaña] pitching
    3) (=equipo) [de luz, gas] system

    instalación eléctrica — electricity system, wiring

    a) (=recinto) installations
    b) (=servicios) facilities

    instalaciones deportivas(=recinto) sports grounds; (=servicios) sports facilities

    instalaciones recreativas(=recinto) recreational areas; (=servicios) recreational facilities

    5) (Arte) installation
    * * *
    a) ( colocación) installation
    b) (equipo, dispositivo) system
    c) instalaciones femenino plural ( dependencias) installations (pl)
    * * *
    = facility, installation, set-up, bedding down, physical facility.
    Ex. Solutions include constructing compact shelving, on-site remote storage or building new library facilities.
    Ex. Bureaux can be useful for access to a specific desired software package, which would demand too much hardware for the library to contemplate its own installation.
    Ex. Areas of particular concern are: equipment set-up and use; helping develop search strategies, logon/logoff procedures; and emergency assistance when things go wrong.
    Ex. This article describes the needs addressed by GRAVITY, the bedding down of the system and its integration into the library's procedures.
    Ex. The physical facilities have been upgraded, the whole collection is being catalogued, and use of the Library of Congress Classification is under consideration = Se han mejorado las intalaciones, se está catalogando toda la colección y se está estudiando el uso de la Clasificación de la Biblioteca del Congreso.
    ----
    * cambiar la instalación eléctrica = rewire.
    * cambio de instalación eléctrica = rewiring.
    * facilidad de instalación = ease of installation.
    * instalación deportiva = sports facility, athletic facility.
    * instalaciones para dedicar el tiempo libre = leisure facilities.
    * instalación para el ejercicio físico = physical facility.
    * * *
    a) ( colocación) installation
    b) (equipo, dispositivo) system
    c) instalaciones femenino plural ( dependencias) installations (pl)
    * * *
    = facility, installation, set-up, bedding down, physical facility.

    Ex: Solutions include constructing compact shelving, on-site remote storage or building new library facilities.

    Ex: Bureaux can be useful for access to a specific desired software package, which would demand too much hardware for the library to contemplate its own installation.
    Ex: Areas of particular concern are: equipment set-up and use; helping develop search strategies, logon/logoff procedures; and emergency assistance when things go wrong.
    Ex: This article describes the needs addressed by GRAVITY, the bedding down of the system and its integration into the library's procedures.
    Ex: The physical facilities have been upgraded, the whole collection is being catalogued, and use of the Library of Congress Classification is under consideration = Se han mejorado las intalaciones, se está catalogando toda la colección y se está estudiando el uso de la Clasificación de la Biblioteca del Congreso.
    * cambiar la instalación eléctrica = rewire.
    * cambio de instalación eléctrica = rewiring.
    * facilidad de instalación = ease of installation.
    * instalación deportiva = sports facility, athletic facility.
    * instalaciones para dedicar el tiempo libre = leisure facilities.
    * instalación para el ejercicio físico = physical facility.

    * * *
    1 (colocación) installation
    2 (equipo, dispositivo) system
    la instalación eléctrica the electrical installation o system
    3 instalaciones fpl (dependencias) installations (pl)
    las instalaciones portuarias the port installations
    instalaciones deportivas sports facilities
    * * *

     

    instalación sustantivo femenino

    b) (equipo, dispositivo) system;


    c)

    instalaciones sustantivo femenino plural ( dependencias) installations (pl);

    instalaciones deportivas sports facilities
    instalación sustantivo femenino
    1 installation 2 instalaciones, (deportivas, etc) facilities
    ' instalación' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    cañería
    - salina
    - saneamiento
    - eléctrico
    - planta
    - revisar
    - revisión
    English:
    connection
    - installation
    - plumbing
    - rewire
    - wiring
    - fixture
    * * *
    1. [acción] installation;
    [de local, puesto] setting up;
    han anunciado la instalación de un hipermercado en las afueras de la ciudad they have announced that a hypermarket is to be built on the outskirts of town
    2. [aparatos] system
    instalación de aire acondicionado air-conditioning system;
    3. [lugar]
    el acto se celebró en las instalaciones de la empresa the ceremony took place on company premises;
    instalaciones deportivas sports facilities;
    instalaciones militares military installations;
    instalaciones portuarias port facilities o installations;
    instalaciones nucleares nuclear installations o plants
    * * *
    f acto installation
    * * *
    instalación nf, pl - ciones : installation
    * * *
    instalación n installation

    Spanish-English dictionary > instalación

  • 90 rendre

    rendre [ʀɑ̃dʀ]
    ➭ TABLE 41
    1. transitive verb
       a. ( = restituer) to give back ; [+ marchandises défectueuses, bouteille vide] to return ; [+ argent] to pay back ; (School) [+ copie] to hand in
       b. [+ jugement, arrêt] to render ; [+ verdict] to return
       c. ( = donner en retour) [+ invitation, salut, coup, baiser] to return
    il la déteste, et elle le lui rend bien he hates her and she feels exactly the same way about him
    il m'a donné 10 € et je lui en ai rendu 5 he gave me 10 euros and I gave him 5 euros change
    c'est à vous rendre fou ! it's enough to drive you mad!
       e. [+ mot, expression, atmosphère] to render
       f. [+ liquide] to give out ; [+ son] to produce
       g. ( = vomir) to bring up
       i. (locutions) rendre l'âme or le dernier soupir [personne] to breathe one's last
    ma voiture/mon frigo a rendu l'âme (inf) my car/my fridge has given up the ghost (inf)
    rendre gloire à [+ Dieu] to glorify ; [+ personne] to pay homage to
    2. intransitive verb
       a. ( = vomir) to be sick
    3. reflexive verb
       a. [soldat, criminel] to surrender
       b. ( = aller) se rendre à to go to
    il se rend à son travail à pied/en voiture he walks/drives to work
       c. (avec adjectif) se rendre utile/indispensable to make o.s. useful/indispensable
    * * *
    ʀɑ̃dʀ
    1.
    1) ( retourner) ( pour restituer) to give back, to return (à to); ( pour refuser) to return, to give back [cadeau] (à to); to return [article défectueux] (à to); ( pour s'acquitter) to repay, to pay back [somme] (à to); to return [salut, invitation] (à to)

    prête-moi 20 euros, je te les rendrai demain — lend me 20 euros, I'll pay you back tomorrow

    2) ( redonner)

    rendre la santé/vue à quelqu'un — to restore somebody's health/sight

    4) ( remettre) [élève, étudiant] to hand in, to give in [copie, devoir] (à to)
    5) ( produire) [terre, champ] to yield [récolte, quantité]
    6) (exprimer, traduire) [auteur, mots] to convey [pensée, atmosphère]; to convey, to render [nuance]; [traduction, tableau] to convey [atmosphère, style]

    rendre l'expression d'un visage[peintre, photographe] to capture the expression on a face

    ça ne rendra rien en couleurs — it won't come out in colour [BrE]

    7) (colloq) ( vomir) to bring up [aliment, bile]
    8) ( prononcer) to pronounce [jugement, sentence, arrêt]; to return [verdict]; to pronounce [oracle]
    9) ( émettre) [instrument, objet creux] to give off [son]
    10) ( exsuder)
    11) Sport [concurrent]

    rendre 10 mètres à quelqu'un — to give somebody a 10-metre [BrE] handicap


    2.
    verbe intransitif
    1) ( produire)

    rendre (bien)[terre] to be productive; [plante] to produce a good crop; [activité, commerce] to be profitable

    2) (colloq) ( vomir) to be sick, to throw up (colloq)

    3.
    se rendre verbe pronominal
    1) ( aller) to go

    se rendre à Rome/en Chine — to go to Rome/to China

    2) ( devenir)
    3) ( capituler) [criminel] to give oneself up (à to); [armée, ville] to surrender (à to)

    se rendre à quelque choseto bow to [argument, avis]; to yield to [prières, supplique]; to answer [appel]

    ••

    rendre l'âme or l'esprit — to pass away

    * * *
    ʀɑ̃dʀ vt
    1) (= restituer) [livre, argent] to give back, to return, [otages] to free

    J'ai rendu ses disques à Christine. — I've given Christine her records back.

    J'ai rendu mes livres à la bibliothèque. — I've taken my books back to the library.

    2) (= faire devenir)
    3) [visite] to return

    rendre la politesse à qn fig — to repay sb, to return the favour Grande-Bretagne to return the favor USA

    4) DROIT, [jugement] to pronounce, to render, [verdict] to return
    5) [honneurs] to pay
    6) [sang, aliments] to bring up
    7) [sons] [instrument] to produce, to make
    8) (= exprimer, traduire) to render

    Elle a su rendre ce texte en français avec une grande sensibilité. — She managed to render this text in French with great sensitivity.

    * * *
    rendre verb table: rendre
    A vtr
    1 ( retourner) ( pour restituer) to give back, to return [objet emprunté] (à to); to take back [objet consigné] (à to); to return [otage, territoire annexé] (à to); ( pour refuser) to return, to give back [cadeau] (à to); to return [article défectueux] (à to); ( pour s'acquitter) to repay, to pay back [emprunt, somme, dette] (à to); to return [salut, invitation] (à to); elle m'a rendu mon livre she gave me back my book; je dois rendre la voiture à mon père/à l'agence de location I have to give the car back to my father/take the car back to the car hire GB ou rental US agency; ils ont rendu les tableaux volés au musée they returned the stolen paintings to the museum; l'enfant sera rendu contre rançon the child will be returned for a ransom; prête-moi 100 euros, je te les rendrai demain lend me 100 euros, I'll pay you back tomorrow; elle m'a rendu mon baiser she kissed me back; elle ne m'a pas rendu la monnaie she didn't give me my change; rendre la pareille à qn to pay sb back; il la déteste mais elle le lui rend bien he hates her and she feels the same about him; ⇒ César, monnaie;
    2 ( redonner) rendre la santé/vue à qn to restore sb's health/sight; rendre l'espoir à qn to give sb hope again; rendre le sourire à qn to put the smile back on sb's face; rendre son indépendance à un pays to restore a country's independence; rendre des locaux à leur utilisation première to return premises to their original use; une nouvelle méthode de relaxation qui vous rendra le sommeil a new relaxation method that will help you sleep;
    3 ( faire devenir) to make; rendre qn heureux/célèbre to make sb happy/famous; rendre qch possible/difficile/obligatoire to make sth possible/difficult/compulsory; l'éclairage rend la chambre lugubre the lighting makes the room look gloomy; rendre qn fou to drive sb mad; ce bruit rend fou that noise is enough to drive you mad ou crazy;
    4 ( remettre) [élève, étudiant] to hand in, to give in [copie, devoir] (à to); ne rends pas tes devoirs en retard don't hand ou give your homework in late; il a rendu (une) copie blanche à son examen he handed ou gave in a blank paper at the end of his exam;
    5 ( produire) [terre, champ] to yield [récolte, quantité]; ferme qui rend 50 000 euros par an farm which brings in 50,000 euros a year; rendre peu not to produce much;
    6 (exprimer, traduire) [auteur, mots] to convey [pensée, sentiment, atmosphère]; [traducteur] to translate, to render [texte, terme]; to convey, to render [nuance]; [peintre] to depict [lumière, relief, scène]; [traduction, tableau] to convey [atmosphère, style]; résumé/traduction qui ne rend pas la subtilité/le rythme de l'original summary/translation that fails to catch the subtlety/the rhythm of the original; savoir rendre une émotion/un personnage [acteur] to be good at putting across ou over an emotion/a character; rendre l'expression d'un visage [peintre, photographe] to capture the expression on a face; un poème chinois merveilleusement rendu en anglais a Chinese poem beautifully translated into English, a marvellousGB translation into English of a Chinese poem; rendre un mot par une périphrase to paraphrase a word; ça rend mieux/ne rendra rien en couleurs it comes out better/won't come out in colourGB;
    7 ( vomir) to bring up [aliment, déjeuner, bile];
    8 ( prononcer) to pronounce [jugement, sentence, arrêt, décision, décret]; to return [verdict]; to pronounce [oracle];
    9 ( émettre) [instrument, objet creux] to give off [son];
    10 ( exsuder) les tomates rendent de l'eau (à la cuisson) tomatoes give out water when cooked; rendre du jus to be juicy; saler les concombres pour leur faire rendre l'eau salt the cucumbers to draw out the water;
    11 Sport [concurrent] rendre du poids to have a weight handicap (à compared with); rendre de la distance à qn to give sb a (distance) handicap; rendre 3 kilos to carry 3 kilos ou a 3 kilo-handicap; rendre 10 mètres à qn to give sb a 10-metreGB handicap; il vous rendrait des points he's more than a match for you.
    B vi
    1 ( produire) rendre (bien) [terre] to be productive; [plante] to produce a good crop, to be productive; [culture, céréale] to do well; [activité, commerce] to be profitable;
    2 ( vomir) to be sick, to throw up; le médicament m'a fait rendre the medicine made me sick; avoir envie de rendre to feel sick GB ou nauseous.
    C se rendre vpr
    1 ( aller) to go; se rendre à Rome/en Chine/en ville to go to Rome/to China/to town; se rendre à Vienne en voiture/avion to go to Vienna by car/plane, to drive/fly to Vienna; se rendre chez des amis to go to see friends; en me rendant à Lima on my way to Lima; ⇒ bagage;
    2 ( devenir) to make oneself; se rendre indispensable/malade to make oneself indispensable/ill; se rendre ridicule to make a fool of oneself;
    3 ( capituler) [criminel] to give oneself up (à to); [troupe, armée, ville] to surrender (à to); rendez-vous, vous êtes cernés! give yourselves up, you're surrounded!;
    4 ( se soumettre) se rendre à qch to bow to [argument, avis]; to yield to [prières, supplique]; to answer [appel]; il ne se rend jamais ( dans une discussion) he never gives in.
    rendre l'âme or l'esprit to pass away; rendre le dernier soupir or souffle to breathe one's last; le bon Dieu te le rendra au centuple your reward will be great in Heaven.
    [rɑ̃dr] verbe transitif
    1. [restituer - objet prêté ou donné] to give back (separable), to return ; [ - objet volé] to give back (separable), to return ; [ - objet défectueux] to take back (separable), to return ; [ - somme] to pay back (separable) ; [ - réponse] to give
    donne-moi trente euros, je te les rendrai demain give me thirty euros, I'll pay you back ou I'll give it back to you tomorrow
    a. [élève] to hand ou to give in a piece of work
    b. [professeur] to hand ou to give back a piece of work
    rendre un otage to return ou to hand over a hostage
    2. [donner en retour] to return
    rendre le bien pour le mal/coup pour coup to return good for evil/blow for blow
    elle me méprise, mais je le lui rends bien she despises me, but the feeling's mutual
    3. (suivi d'un adjectif) [faire devenir] to make
    a. (sens propre) to make somebody (go) blind, to blind somebody
    rendre quelqu'un fou to drive ou to make somebody mad
    4. [faire recouvrer]
    rendre l'ouïe/la santé/la vue à quelqu'un to restore somebody's hearing/health/sight, to give somebody back his hearing/health/sight
    l'opération ne lui a pas rendu l'usage de la parole/de son bras the operation did not give him back the power of speech/the use of his arm
    5. [exprimer - personnalité] to portray, to capture ; [ - nuances, pensée] to convey, to render (soutenu), to express
    6. [produire]
    ça ne rend rien ou pas grand-chose [décor, couleurs] it doesn't look much
    7. CUISINE to give out (separable)
    8. [vomir - repas] to vomit, to bring up (separable)
    9. [prononcer - jugement, arrêt] to pronounce ; [ - verdict] to deliver, to return
    rendre une sentence to pass ou to pronounce sentence
    10. AGRICULTURE & HORTICULTURE [produire] to yield, to have a yield of
    ————————
    [rɑ̃dr] verbe intransitif
    1. AGRICULTURE & HORTICULTURE to be productive
    2. [ressortir] to be effective
    ce tapis rend très bien/ne rend pas très bien avec les rideaux this carpet looks really good/doesn't look much with the curtains
    3. [vomir] to vomit, to be sick
    ————————
    se rendre verbe pronominal intransitif
    [ville] to surrender
    rendez-vous! give yourself up!, surrender!
    3. [aller] to go
    je me rends à l'école à pied/à vélo/en voiture I walk/ride (my bike)/drive to school, I go to school on foot/by bike/by car
    il s'y rend en train he goes ou gets ou travels there by train
    ————————
    se rendre à verbe pronominal plus préposition
    [accepter] to yield to
    a. [être lucide] to face facts
    b. [reconnaître les faits] to acknowledge ou to recognize the facts

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > rendre

  • 91 действителна мощност

    real output
    real outputs
    real power
    real powers
    useful efficiency
    useful efficiencys

    Български-Angleščina политехнически речник > действителна мощност

  • 92 полезный

    1) ( способный приносить пользу) useful ['juːs-], helpful; ( для здоровья) healthy; good; wholesome

    поле́зная кри́тика — helpful criticism

    э́то оказа́лось для него́ поле́зным — it was useful for him; it did him a lot of good

    обще́ственно поле́зный — of social utility (после сущ.)

    поле́зная жила́я пло́щадь — actual living space

    поле́зные ископа́емые — minerals

    поле́зная нагру́зка тех.payload

    поле́зная мо́щность тех. — effective output / power

    поле́зный сигна́л — valid signal

    ••

    чем могу́ быть поле́зен? — (how) can I help you?, what can I do for you?

    Новый большой русско-английский словарь > полезный

  • 93 Ma Jun (Ma Chun)

    [br]
    fl. 220–265 China
    [br]
    Chinese engineer and inventor.
    [br]
    Ma Jun was active at the court of Emperor Ming Ti and achieved several useful inventions in a number of fields. First, he made improvements in the silk-weaving loom by simplifying the heddles and treadles, thereby enabling a greater variety of patterns to be woven. Second, he constructed a "south pointing carriage", which was a two-wheeled cart with a train of gears arranged so that whichever direction the vehicle turned, the figure mounted on top of it would always point south. This may seem trivial, but the carriage may have had useful applications, possibly in surveying. During the period 227 to 239, Ma Jun also made a square-pallet chain pump, usually attributed to Bi Lan (186 AD), Loyang, that was used to irrigate parks and gardens. Other inventions included rotary ballistae and mechanical toys that were worked by water power, such as puppets operated by horizontal jack wheels.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Needham, Science and Civilisation in China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1965, Vol. IV, 2, pp. 39–42, 286–8, 295, 303, 346, 350, 524, 532–3.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Ma Jun (Ma Chun)

  • 94 آلة

    آلة \ engine: a machine that produces power: A steam engine; a petrol engine; a powerful engine. implement: a tool, esp. one used for farming. instrument: a tool or device with which sth. is done (esp. by doctors, engineers, skilled men, etc.): A knife is a sharp instrument. Electrical and scientific instruments are made there. machine: a device whose parts work together to perform some useful action: Is that your sewing machine? That motorbicycle is a powerful machine. \ See Also محرك (مُحَرِّك)، أداة (أَدَاة)، مَاكِنَة \ آلة تَسْجِيل \ tape recorder: a machine for recording sounds on tape; it can also produce the sounds again. \ آلة تَصْوِير \ camera: an instrument for taking photographs. \ آلة جديدة أو غريبة \ contraption: any strange or new device or machine. \ See Also بدعة (بِدْعَة)‏ \ آلة حاسِبة (في مَتْجَر)‏ \ cash register: a machine in shops that adds amounts of money, and prints a bill. \ آلة الخِراطة \ lathe: a machine that turns a piece of wood or metal while it is being shaped. \ آلة الخِياطَة \ sewing-machine: a machine for sewing. \ آلة زِرَاعَة \ cultivator: a person or machine that cultivates. \ آلة صغيرة \ gadget: a small device or instrument: A tin-opener is a useful gadget. \ آلة قَصّ العُشْب \ mower: a machine that mows. \ آلة القِطَار \ engine: the vehicle that pulls a railway train. \ آلة كاتبة أو طابعة \ typewriter: a machine for writing letters, etc.. \ آلة الكَمَان أو الكَمَنْجَة \ fiddle: a violin. \ آلة لِقَصّ العُشْب \ lawnmower: a machine for cutting the grass on lawns. \ آلة مُوسِيقِيّة \ instrument: a device for making music (drum, horn, violin, etc.). \ آلة نَسْخ \ duplicator: a machine for making copies of things. \ آلة نَفْخ مُوسِيقِيَّة \ wind instrument: any musical instrument that is blown, usu. like a hunting horn or a whistle in appearance.

    Arabic-English dictionary > آلة

  • 95 теплота сгорания

    1) Engineering: calorific power, combustion heat, combustion value (топлива), energy value (топлива), heat value (топлива), heating value (топлива), useful heat
    2) Construction: thermal value
    4) Oil: (топлива; oil combustion value is 43, 7-46,2 MJ/kg combustion heat (10 400-11 000 KCal/kg), (топлива; oil combustion value is 43, 7-46,2 MJ/kg combustion value (10 400-11 000 KCal/kg), (топлива; oil combustion value is 43, 7-46,2 MJ/kg energy value (10 400-11 000 KCal/kg), heat of combustion, heat output, (топлива; oil combustion value is 43, 7-46,2 MJ/kg heat(ing) value (10 400-11 000 KCal/kg), thermal power
    5) Mechanic engineering: calorific capacity
    6) Drilling: calorific value
    7) Makarov: calorific value of a combustible (топлива), heat of combustion (топлива), heat value of a combustible (топлива)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > теплота сгорания

  • 96 यावत् _yāvat

    यावत् a. (
    -ती f.) (As a correlative of तावत्)
    1 As much as, as many as, (यावत् standing for 'as' and तावत् for 'as much' or 'as many'); पुरे तावन्तमेवास्य तनोति रविरातपम् । दीर्घिकाकमलोन्मेषो यावन्मात्रेण साध्यते Ku.2.33; ते तु यावन्त एवाजौ तावांश्च ददृशे स तैः R.12.45;17.17.
    -2 As great, as large, how great or large; यावानर्थ उदपाने सर्वतः संप्लुतोदके । तावन् सर्वेषु वेदेषु ब्राह्मणस्य विजानतः ॥ Bg.2.46;18.55.
    -3 All, whole (where the two together have the sense of totality or साकल्य); यावद् दत्तं तावद् भुक्तम् G. M. -ind.
    1 Used by itself यावत् has the following senses:-- (a) as far as, up to, till; (with acc.); स्तन्यत्यागं यावत् पुत्रयोरवेक्षस्व U.7; कियन्तमवधिं यावदस्म- च्चरितं चित्रकारेणालिखितम् U.1; सर्पकोटरं यावत् Pt.1. (b) just, then, in the meantime (denoting an action intend- ed to be done immediately); तद् यावत् गृहिणीमाहूय संगीतक- मनुतिष्ठामि Ś.1; यावदिमां छायामाश्रित्य प्रतिपालयामि Ś.3. (c) As much as. (d) That, in order that (e) Even, just.
    -2 Used correlatively यावत् and तावत् have these senses:-- (a) as long as, so long as; यावद् वित्तोपार्जनशक्तस्ताव- न्निजपरिवारो रक्तः Moha M.8. (b) as soon as, scarcely- when, no sooner-than; एकस्य दुःखस्य न यावदन्तं गच्छामि... तावद् द्वितीयं समुपस्थितं मे H.1.177; Me.17; Ku.3.72. (c) while, by the time; आश्रमवासिनो यावदेवक्ष्याहमुपावर्ते तावदार्द्रपृष्ठाः क्रियन्तां वाजिनः Ś1; often with न when यावन्न is translated by 'before'; यावदेते सरसो नोत्पतन्ति तावदेतेभ्यः प्रवृत्तिरवगमयितव्या V.4. (d) when, as (= यदा); यावदुत्थाय निरीक्षते तावद् हंसो$वलोकितः H.3.
    -Comp. -अध्ययनम् ind. during the recitation; अनुव्रज्या च शुश्रूषा यावदध्ययनं गुरोः Ms.2.241.
    -अन्तम्, -अन्ताय ind. upto the end, to the last.
    -अन्त्य a. life-long.
    -अभीक्षम् ind. for a moment's duration.
    -अर्थ a. corresponding to require- ment, as many as may be required to convey the meaning (said of words); न प्रीतियुक्ता यावदर्थाश्च लोके Bhāg. 5.5.3; यावदर्थपदां वाचमेवमादाय माधवः विरराम Śi.2.13. (
    -र्थम्) ind.
    1 as much as useful.
    -2 in all senses; वयमपि च गिरामीश्महे यावदर्थम् Bh.3.3. v. l.
    -इष्टम्, -ईप्सितम् ind. as much as is desired.
    -इत्थम् ind. as much as is necessary.
    -कालम् ind. as long as.
    -गमम् ind. as fast as one can go; यावद्गमं रुद्रभयाद् यथा कः Bhāg.1.7.18.
    -जन्म, -जीवम्, -जीवने ind. for life, throughout life, for the rest of one's life; यावज्जीवं त्रयो वन्द्या वेदान्तो गुरुरीश्वरः Subhāṣ; यावज्जीवं सुखं जीवेत् Subhāṣ.
    -प्रमाण a. as great or big.
    -बलम् ind. to the best of one's power.
    -भाषित or
    उक्त a. asmuch as said.
    -मात्र a.
    1 as large, extending as far, of which size or extent; दीर्घिकाकमलोन्मेषो यावन्मात्रेण साध्यते Ku.2.33.
    -2 insignifi- cant, trifling, little.
    -शक्यम्, -शक्ति ind. as far as possible, to the best of one's power; so यावत्सत्त्वम्.
    -संपातम् ind. as long as possible.

    Sanskrit-English dictionary > यावत् _yāvat

  • 97 varmeeffekt

    subst. thermal power, heating effect, heat power (luftbehandling) (nyttig varmeeffekt) useful heat output

    Norsk-engelsk ordbok > varmeeffekt

  • 98 hyötyantoteho

    • effective output power
    • useful output power

    Suomi-Englanti sanakirja > hyötyantoteho

  • 99 in

    1.
    in (old forms endŏ and indŭ, freq. in ante-class. poets; cf. Enn. ap. Gell. 12, 4; id. ap. Macr. S. 6, 2; Lucil. ap. Lact. 5, 9, 20; Lucr. 2, 1096; 5, 102; 6, 890 et saep.), prep. with abl. and acc. [kindr. with Sanscr. an; Greek en, en-tha, en-then, eis, i. e. en-s, ana; Goth. ana; Germ. in], denotes either rest or motion within or into a place or thing; opp. to ex; in, within, on, upon, among, at; into, to, towards.
    I.
    With abl.
    A.
    In space.
    1.
    Lit., in (with abl. of the place or thing in which):

    aliorum fructus in terra est, aliorum et extra,

    Plin. 19, 4, 22, § 61:

    alii in corde, alii in cerebro dixerunt animi esse sedem et locum,

    Cic. Tusc. 1, 9, 19:

    eo in rostris sedente suasit Serviliam legem Crassus,

    id. Brut. 43, 161:

    qui sunt cives in eadem re publica,

    id. Rep. 1, 32 fin.:

    facillimam in ea re publica esse concordiam, in qua idem conducat omnibus,

    id. ib.:

    T. Labienus ex loco superiore, quae res in nostris castris gererentur, conspicatus,

    Caes. B. G. 2, 26, 4:

    quod si in scaena, id est in contione verum valet, etc.,

    Cic. Lael. 26, 97:

    in foro palam Syracusis,

    id. Verr. 2, 2, 33, § 81:

    plures in eo loco sine vulnere quam in proelio aut fuga intereunt,

    Caes. B. C. 2, 35:

    tulit de caede, quae in Appia via facta esset,

    Cic. Mil. 6, 15:

    in via fornicata,

    Liv. 22, 36:

    vigebat in illa domo mos patrius et disciplina,

    Cic. de Sen. 11, 37:

    in domo furtum factum ab eo qui domi fuit,

    Quint. 5, 10, 16:

    nupta in domo,

    Liv. 6, 34, 9:

    copias in castris continent,

    in, within, Caes. B. C. 1, 66:

    cum in angusto quodam pulpito stans diceret,

    Quint. 11, 3, 130:

    se ac suos in vehiculo conspici,

    Liv. 5, 40, 10:

    malo in illa tua sedecula sedere, quam in istorum sella curuli,

    Cic. Att. 4, 10:

    sedere in solio,

    id. Fin. 2, 21, 66:

    Albae constiterant, in urbe opportuna,

    id. Phil. 4, 2, 6. —

    Sometimes, also, with names of places: omnes se ultro sectari in Epheso memorat mulieres,

    Plaut. Mil. 3, 1, 182:

    heri aliquot adolescentuli coiimus in Piraeo,

    Ter. Eun. 3, 4, 1:

    navis et in Cajeta est parata nobis et Brundisii,

    Cic. Att. 8, 3, 6:

    complures (naves) in Hispali faciendas curavit,

    Caes. B. C. 2, 18:

    caesos in Marathone ac Salamine,

    Quint. 12, 10, 24:

    in Berenice urbe Troglodytarum,

    Plin. 2, 73, 75, § 183.—
    2.
    In indicating a multitude or number, of, in, or among which a person or thing is, in, among (= gen. part.):

    in his poeta hic nomen profitetur suum,

    Ter. Eun. prol. 3:

    Thales, qui sapientissimus in septem fuit,

    Cic. Leg. 2, 11, 26:

    peto ut eum complectare, diligas, in tuis habeas,

    id. Fam. 13, 78, 2; cf.:

    in perditis et desperatis,

    id. ib. 13, 56, 1:

    omnia quae secundum naturam fiunt, sunt habenda in bonis,

    id. de Sen. 19, 71:

    dolor in maximis malis ducitur,

    id. Leg. 1, 11, 31:

    justissimus unus in Teucris,

    Verg. A. 2, 426:

    cecidere in pugna ad duo milia... in his quatuor Romani centuriones,

    Liv. 27, 12, 16:

    in diis et feminae sunt,

    Lact. 1, 16, 17.—
    3.
    Of analogous relations of place or position:

    sedere in equo,

    on horseback, id. Verr. 2, 5, 10:

    quid legati in equis,

    id. Pis. 25, 60:

    sedere in leone,

    Plin. 35, 10, 36, § 109:

    in eo flumine pons erat,

    on, over, Caes. B. G. 2, 5:

    in herboso Apidano,

    on the banks of, Prop. 1, 3, 6:

    in digitis,

    on tiptoe, Val. Fl. 4, 267:

    castra in limite locat,

    on the rampart, Tac. A. 1, 50:

    ipse coronam habebat unam in capite, alteram in collo,

    on, Cic. Verr. 2, 5, 11, § 27:

    oleae in arbore,

    Cels. 2, 24:

    Caesaris in barbaris erat nomen obscurius,

    among, Caes. B. C. 1, 61:

    in ceteris nationibus, Cels. praef. 1: qui in Brutiis praeerat,

    Liv. 25, 16, 7:

    in juvenibus,

    Quint. 11, 1, 32:

    nutus in mutis pro sermone est,

    id. 11, 3, 66.—Of dress, like cum, q. v.:

    in veste candida,

    Liv. 45, 20, 5; 34, 7, 3:

    in calceis,

    id. 24, 38, 2:

    in insignibus,

    id. 5, 41, 2:

    in tunicis albis,

    Plin. Ep. 7, 27, 13:

    in Persico et vulgari habitu,

    Curt. 3, 3, 4:

    in lugubri veste,

    id. 10, 5, 17:

    in Tyriis,

    Ov. A. A. 2, 297:

    in Cois,

    id. ib. v. 298; cf.:

    homines in catenis Romam mittere,

    Liv. 29, 21, 12; 32, 1, 8: quis multa te in rosa urget, etc., Hor C. 1, 5, 1; so, in viola aut in rosa, Cic. Tusc. [p. 912] 5, 26, 73.—So of arms:

    duas legiones in armis,

    Caes. B. G. 7, 11, 6; cf. Verg. A. 3, 395:

    in armis hostis,

    under arms, Ov. M. 12,65:

    quae in ore atque in oculis provinciae gesta sunt (= coram),

    Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 33, § 81; so,

    in oculis provinciae,

    id. Q. Fr. 1, 1, 2:

    in oculis omnium,

    id. ib. 1, 3, 7:

    divitiae, decus, gloria in oculis sita sunt,

    Sall. C. 20, 14; Curt. 4, 13, 1; Liv. 22, 12, 6:

    Julianus in ore ejus (Vitellii) jugulatur,

    Tac. H. 3, 77; Sen. Ben. 7, 19, 7.—Of a passage in any writing (but when the author is named, by meton., for his works, apud is used, Krebs, Antibarb. p. 561):

    in populorum institutis aut legibus,

    Cic. Leg. 1, 15, 42:

    in illis libris qui sunt de natura deorum,

    id. Fat. 1, 1:

    in Timaeo dicit,

    id. N. D. 1, 12, 30:

    epistula, in qua omnia perscripta erant,

    Nep. Pelop. 3, 2:

    perscribit in litteris, hostes ab se discessisse,

    Caes. B. G. 5, 49; but in is also used with an author's name when, not a place in his book, but a feature of his style, etc., is referred to:

    in Thucydide orbem modo orationis desidero,

    Cic. Or. 71, 234:

    in Herodoto omnia leniter fluunt,

    Quint. 9, 4, 18.—Of books:

    libri oratorii diu in manibus fuerunt,

    Cic. Att. 4, 13, 2; id. Lael. 25, 96; but more freq. trop.: in manibus habere, tenere, etc., to be engaged, occupied with, to have under control or within reach:

    philosophi quamcunque rem habent in manibus,

    id. Tusc. 5, 7, 18:

    quam spem nunc habeat in manibus, exponam,

    id. Verr. 1, 6, 16:

    rem habere in manibus,

    id. Att. 6, 3, 1; cf.:

    neque mihi in manu fuit Jugurtha qualis foret,

    in my power, Sall. J. 14, 4:

    postquam nihil esse in manu sua respondebatur,

    Liv. 32, 24, 2:

    quod ipsorum in manu sit,... bellum an pacem malint,

    Tac. A. 2, 46; but, cum tantum belli in manibus esset, was in hand, busied (cf.:

    inter manus),

    Liv. 4, 57, 1; so,

    quorum epistulas in manu teneo,

    Cic. Phil. 12, 4, 9; cf. id. Att. 2, 2, 2:

    in manu poculum tenens,

    id. Tusc. 1, 29, 71:

    coronati et lauream in manu tenentes,

    Liv. 40, 37, 3; Suet. Claud. 15 fin. —Of that which is thought of as existing in the mind, memory, character, etc.:

    in animo esse,

    Cic. Fam. 14, 11:

    in animo habere,

    id. Rosc. Am. 18, 52:

    lex est ratio insita in natura,

    id. Leg. 1, 6, 18:

    in memoria sedere,

    id. de Or. 2, 28, 122; cf.:

    tacito mutos volvunt in pectore questus,

    Luc. 1, 247:

    quanta auctoritas fuit in C. Metello!

    Cic. de Sen. 17, 61. —So freq. of a person's qualities of mind or character:

    erat in eo summa eloquentia, summa fides,

    Cic. Mur. 28, 58; cf.:

    in omni animante est summum aliquid atque optimum, ut in equis,

    id. Fin. 4, 41, 37:

    si quid artis in medicis est,

    Curt. 3, 5, 13; cf.:

    nibil esse in morte timendum,

    Lucr. 3, 866.— Esp., in eo loco, in that state or condition:

    in eo enim loco res sunt nostrae, ut, etc.,

    Liv. 7, 35, 7: si vos in eo loco essetis, quid aliud fecissetis? Cat. ap. Quint. 9, 2, 21; so,

    quo in loco, etc.: cum ex equitum et calonum fuga, quo in loco res essent, cognovissent,

    Caes. B. G. 2, 26:

    videtis, quo in loco res haec siet, Ter Phorm. 2, 4, 6: quod ipse, si in eodem loco esset, facturus fuerit,

    Liv. 37, 14, 5.—Hence, without loco, in eo esse ut, etc., to be in such a condition, etc.:

    non in eo esse Carthaginiensium res, ut Galliam armis obtineant,

    Liv. 30, 19, 3:

    cum res non in eo esset, ut Cyprum tentaret,

    id. 33, 41, 9; 8, 27, 3; 2, 17, 5; Nep. Mil. 7, 3; id. Paus. 5, 1 (cf. I. C. 1. infra).—
    B.
    In time, indicating its duration, in, during, in the course of:

    feci ego istaec itidem in adulescentia,

    in my youth, when I was young, Plaut. Bacch. 3, 3, 6:

    in tempore hoc,

    Ter. And. 4, 5, 24:

    in hoc tempore,

    Tac. A. 13, 47:

    in tali tempore,

    Sall. C. 48, 5; Liv. 22, 35; 24, 28 al.:

    in diebus paucis,

    Ter. And. 1, 1, 77:

    in brevi spatio,

    id. Heaut. 5, 2, 2; Suet. Vesp. 4:

    in qua aetate,

    Cic. Brut. 43 fin.:

    in ea aetate,

    Liv. 1, 57:

    in omni aetate,

    Cic. de Sen. 3, 9:

    in aetate, qua jam Alexander orbem terrarum subegisset,

    Suet. Caes. 7:

    qua (sc. Iphigenia) nihil erat in eo quidem anno natum pulchrius,

    in the course of, during the year, Cic. Off. 3, 25, 95 (al. eo quidem anno):

    nihil in vita se simile fecisse,

    id. Verr. 2, 3, 91: nihil in vita vidit calamitatis A. Cluentius. id. Clu. 6, 18:

    in tota vita inconstans,

    id. Tusc. 4, 13, 29.—
    b.
    In tempore, at the right or proper time, in time (Cic. uses only tempore; v. tempus): eccum ipsum video in tempore huc se recipere, Ter. Phorm. 2, 4, 24:

    ni pedites equitesque in tempore subvenissent,

    Liv. 33, 5:

    spreta in tempore gloria interdum cumulatior redit,

    id. 2, 47:

    rebellaturi,

    Tac. A. 12, 50:

    atque adeo in ipso tempore eccum ipsum obviam,

    Ter. And. 3, 2, 52: in tempore, opportune. Nos sine praepositione dicimus tempore et tempori, Don. ad Ter. And. 4, 4, 19.—
    c.
    In praesentia and in praesenti, at present, now, at this moment, under these circumstances:

    sic enim mihi in praesentia occurrit,

    Cic. Tusc. 1, 8, 14:

    vestrae quidem cenae non solum in praesentia, sed etiam postero die jucundae sunt,

    id. ib. 5, 35, 100:

    id quod unum maxime in praesentia desiderabatur,

    Liv. 21, 37:

    haec ad te in praesenti scripsi, ut, etc.,

    for the present, Cic. Fam. 2, 10, 4.—
    d.
    With gerunds and fut. pass. participles, to indicate duration of time, in:

    fit, ut distrahatur in deliberando animus,

    Cic. Off. 1, 3, 9; id. Fam. 2, 6, 2:

    vitiosum esse in dividendo partem in genere numerare,

    id. Fin. 2, 9, 26:

    quod in litteris dandis praeter consuetudinem proxima nocte vigilarat,

    id. Cat. 3, 3, 6:

    ne in quaerendis suis pugnandi tempus dimitteret,

    Caes. B. G. 2, 21:

    in agris vastandis incendiisque faciendis hostibus,

    in laying waste, id. ib. 5, 19:

    in excidenda Numantia,

    Cic. Off. 1, 22, 76:

    cum in immolanda Iphigenia tristis Calchas esset,

    id. Or. 21, 74.—
    C.
    In other relations, where a person or thing is thought of as in a certain condition, situation, or relation, in:

    qui magno in aere alieno majores etiam possessiones habent,

    Cic. Cat. 2, 8, 18:

    se in insperatis repentinisque pecuniis jactare,

    id. Cat. 2, 9, 20:

    Larinum in summo timore omnium cum armatis advolavit,

    id. Clu. 8, 25.—

    So freq., of qualities or states of mind: summa in sollicitudine ac timore Parthici belli,

    Caes. B. C. 3, 31:

    torpescentne dextrae in amentia illa?

    Liv. 23, 9, 7:

    hunc diem perpetuum in laetitia degere,

    Ter. Ad. 4, 1, 5; Cic. Cat. 4, 1, 2:

    in metu,

    Tac. A. 14, 43:

    in voluptate,

    Cic. Fin. 1, 19, 62:

    alicui in amore esse,

    beloved, id. Verr. 2, 4, 1, § 3:

    alicui in amoribus esse,

    id. Att. 6, 1, 12:

    res in invidia erat,

    Sall. J. 25, 5; Liv. 29, 37, 17: sum in expectatione omnium rerum, Planc. ap. Cic. Fam. 10, 4, 10:

    num... Diogenem Stoicum coegit in suis studiis obmutescere senectus?

    in his studies, Cic. de Sen. 7, 21:

    mirificam cepi voluptatem ex tua diligentia: quod in summis tuis occupationibus mihi tamen rei publicae statum per te notum esse voluisti,

    even in, notwithstanding your great occupations, id. Fam. 3, 11, 4.—

    So freq., of business, employment, occupations, etc.: in aliqua re versari,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 47, § 105:

    similia iis, quae in consilio dixerat,

    Curt. 5, 5, 23:

    in certamine armorum atque in omni palaestra quid satis recte cavetur,

    Quint. 9, 4, 8:

    agi in judiciis,

    id. 11, 1, 78:

    tum vos mihi essetis in consilio,

    Cic. Rep. 3, 18, 28:

    in actione... dicere,

    Quint. 8, 2, 2.—Of an office, magistracy:

    in quo tum magistratu forte Brutus erat,

    Liv. 1, 59, 7; 4, 17, 1:

    in eo magistratu pari diligentia se praebuit,

    Nep. Han. 7, 5 (cf. B. 1. supra):

    in ea ipsa causa fuit eloquentissimus,

    Cic. Brut, 43, 160:

    qui non defendit nec obsistit, si potest, injuriae, tam est in vitio, quam, etc.,

    is in the wrong, acts wrongly, id. Off. 1, 7, 23:

    etsi hoc quidem est in vitio, dissolutionem naturae tam valde perhorrescere,

    is wrong, id. Fin. 5, 11, 31:

    non sunt in eo genere tantae commoditates corporis,

    id. ib. 4, 12, 29; cf.:

    an omnino nulla sit in eo genere distinctio,

    id. Or. 61, 205:

    Drusus erat de praevaricatione absolutus in summa quatuor sententiis,

    on the whole, Cic. Q. Fr. 2, 16; cf.:

    et in omni summa, ut mones, valde me ad otium pacemque converto,

    id. ib. 3, 5, 5;

    but, in summa, sic maxime judex credit, etc.,

    in a word, in fine, Quint. 9, 2, 72; Auct. B. Alex. 71; Just. 37, 1, 8:

    horum (juvenum) inductio in parte simulacrum decurrentis exercitus erat: ex parte elegantioris exercitii quam militaris artis,

    in part, Liv. 44, 9, 5; cf.:

    quod mihi in parte verum videtur,

    Quint. 2, 8, 6:

    patronorum in parte expeditior, in parte difficilior interrogatio est,

    id. 5, 7, 22:

    hoc facere in eo homine consueverunt,

    in the case of, Caes. B. G. 7, 21:

    in furibus aerarii,

    Sall. C. 52, 12:

    Achilles talis in hoste fuit,

    Verg. A. 2, 540:

    in hoc homine saepe a me quaeris, etc.,

    in the case of, Cic. Verr. 2, 3, 3, § 6: in nominibus impiis, Sall. C. 51, 15:

    suspectus et in morte matris fuit,

    Suet. Vit. 14:

    qui praesentes metuunt, in absentia hostes erunt, = absentes,

    Curt. 6, 3, 8 (cf. I. B. c. supra).—Of the meaning of words, etc.:

    non solum in eodem sensu, sed etiam in diverso, eadem verba contra,

    Quint. 9, 3, 36:

    aliter voces aut eaedem in diversa significatione ponuntur,

    id. 9, 3, 69:

    Sallustius in significatione ista non superesse sed superare dicit,

    Gell. 1, 22, 15:

    stips non dicitur in significatione trunci,

    Charis. 1, 18, 39:

    semper in significatione ea hortus,

    Plin. 19, 4, 19, § 50. —
    2.
    In with abl. of adjj. is used with the verbs esse and habere to express quality:

    cum exitus haud in facili essent, i. e. haud faciles,

    Liv. 3, 8, 9:

    adeo moderatio tuendae libertatis in difficili est,

    id. 3, 8, 11; 3, 65, 11; but mostly with adjj. of the first and second declension:

    in obscuro esse, Liv. praef. § 3: in dubio esse,

    id. 2, 3, 1; 3, 19, 8; Ov. H. 19, 174:

    dum in dubiost animus,

    Ter. And. 1, 5, 31; 2, 2, 10:

    in integro esse,

    Cic. Fam. 15, 16, 3; id. Att. 11, 15, 4:

    in incerto esse,

    Liv. 5, 28, 5:

    in obvio esse,

    id. 37, 23, 1:

    in tuto esse,

    id. 38, 4, 10; cf.:

    videre te in tuto,

    Cat. 30, 6:

    in aequo esse,

    Liv. 39, 37, 14; Tac. A. 2, 44:

    in expedito esse,

    Curt. 4, 2, 22:

    in proximo esse,

    Quint. 1, 3, 4:

    in aperto esse,

    Sall. C. 5, 3:

    in promisco esse,

    Liv. 7, 17, 7:

    in augusto esse,

    Cels. 5, 27, 2:

    in incerto haberi,

    Sall. J. 46, 8; Tac. A. 15, 17:

    in levi habitum,

    id. H. 2, 21; cf.:

    in incerto relinquere,

    Liv. 5, 28, 5; Tac. H. 2, 83.
    II.
    With acc.
    A.
    In space, with verbs of motion, into or to a place or thing (rarely with names of towns and small islands;

    v. Zumpt, Gram. § 398): influxit non tenuis quidam e Graecia rivulus in hanc urbem,

    Cic. Rep. 2, 19:

    in Ephesum advenit,

    Plaut. Mil. 2, 1, 35:

    in Epirum venire,

    Cic. Att. 13, 25, 3:

    ibo in Piraeeum, visamque, ecquae advenerit in portum ex Epheso navis mercatoria,

    Plaut. Bacch. 2, 3, 2: venio ad Piraeea, in quo magis reprehendendus sum, quod... Piraeea scripserim, non Piraeeum, quam in quod addiderim;

    non enim hoc ut oppido praeposui, sed ut loco,

    Cic. Att. 7, 3, 10:

    se contulisse Tarquinios, in urbem Etruriae florentissimam,

    id. Rep. 2, 19:

    remigrare in domum veterem e nova,

    id. Ac. 1, 4, 13:

    cum in sua rura venerunt,

    id. Tusc. 5, 35, 102:

    a te ipso missi in ultimas gentes,

    id. Fam. 15, 9:

    in Ubios legatos mittere,

    Caes. B. G. 4, 11:

    dein Thalam pervenit, in oppidum magnum et opulentum,

    Sall. J. 75, 1:

    Regillum antiquam in patriam se contulerat,

    Liv. 3, 58, 1:

    abire in exercitum,

    Plaut. Am. prol. 102.— With nuntio:

    cum id Zmyrnam in contionem nuntiatum est,

    Tac. A. 4, 56:

    nuntiatur in castra,

    Lact. Most. Pers. 46; cf.:

    allatis in castra nuntiis,

    Tac. H. 4, 32: in manus sumere, tradere, etc., into one's hands:

    iste unumquodque vas in manus sumere,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 4, 27, § 63:

    Falerios se in manus Romanis tradidisse,

    Liv. 5, 27, 3.—Rarely with the verbs ponere, collocare, etc. (pregn., i. e. to bring into... and place there):

    in crimen populo ponere,

    Plaut. Trin. 3, 3, 10:

    ut liberos, uxores suaque omnia in silvas deponerent,

    Caes. B. G. 4, 19:

    duplam pecuniam in thesauros reponi,

    Liv. 29, 19, 7:

    prius me collocavi in arborem,

    Plaut. Aul. 4, 8, 6:

    sororem et propinquas suas nuptum in alias civitates collocasse,

    Caes. B. G. 1, 18.— Motion in any direction, up to, to, into, down to:

    in caelum ascendere,

    Cic. Lael. 23 fin.:

    filium ipse paene in umeros suos extulisset,

    id. de Or. 1, 53, 228:

    tamquam in aram confugitis ad deum,

    up to the altar, id. Tusc. 3, 10, 25:

    Saturno tenebrosa in Tartara misso,

    Ov. M. 1, 113:

    in flumen deicere,

    Cic. Rosc. Am. 25, 70; Nep. Chab. 4, 3.—
    2.
    Denoting mere direction towards a place or thing, and hence sometimes joined with versus, towards:

    quid nunc supina sursum in caelum conspicis,

    Plaut. Cist. 2, 3, 78:

    si in latus aut dextrum aut sinistrum, ut ipsi in usu est, cubat,

    Cels. 2, 3:

    Belgae spectant in septentriones et orientem solem,

    Caes. B. G. 1, 1:

    in orientem Germaniae, in occidentem Hispaniae obtenditur, Gallis in meridiem etiam inspicitur,

    Tac. Agr. 10:

    in laevum prona nixus sedet Inachus urna,

    Stat. Th. 2, 218.—With versus:

    castra ex Biturigibus movet in Arvernos versus,

    towards, Caes. B. G. 7, 8 fin.:

    in Galliam versus movere,

    Sall. C. 56, 4: in [p. 913] ltaliam versus, Front. Strat. 1, 4, 11:

    si in urbem versus venturi erant,

    Plin. Ep. 10, 82. —
    3.
    So of that which is thought of as entering into the mind, memory, etc. (cf. I. A. 2. fin.):

    in memoriam reducere,

    Cic. Inv 1, 52, 98:

    in animum inducere,

    Liv. 27, 9:

    in mentem venire,

    Cic. Fam. 7, 3:

    frequens imitatio transit in mores,

    Quint. 1, 11, 3. —

    Or into a writing or speech: in illam Metellinam orationem addidi quaedam,

    Cic. Att. 1, 13, 5.—
    B.
    In time, into, till, for:

    dormiet in lucem,

    into the daylight, till broad day, Hor. Ep. 1, 18, 34:

    statim e somno, quem plerumque in diem extrahunt, lavantur,

    Tac. G. 22: sermonem in multam noctem produximus, deep into the night, Cic. Rep. Fragm. ap. Arus. Mess. p. 239 Lindem.:

    in multam noctem luxit,

    Suet. Tib. 74:

    si febris in noctem augetur,

    Cels. 7, 27:

    dixit in noctem atque etiam nocte illatis lucernis,

    Plin. Ep. 4, 9, 14:

    indutias in triginta annos impetraverunt,

    for thirty years, Liv. 9, 37, 12; 7, 20, 8:

    nisi id verbum in omne tempus perdidissem,

    forever, Cic. Fam. 5, 15, 1:

    ad cenam hominem in hortos invitavit in posterum diem,

    for the following day, id. Off. 3, 14, 58:

    audistis auctionem constitutam in mensem Januarium,

    id. Agr. 1, 2, 4:

    subito reliquit annum suum seque in annum proximum transtulit,

    id. Mil. 9, 24:

    solis defectiones itemque lunae praedicuntur in multos annos,

    for many years, id. Div. 2, 6, 17:

    postero die Romani ab sole orto in multum diei stetere in acie,

    Liv. 27, 2:

    qui ab matutino tempore duraverunt in occasum,

    Plin. 2, 31, 31, § 99:

    seritur (semen lini) a Kalendis Octobribus in ortum aquilae,

    Col. 2, 10, 17.—With usque:

    neque illi didicerunt haec usque in senectutem,

    Quint. 12, 11, 20:

    in illum usque diem servati,

    id. 8, 3, 68:

    in serum usque patente cubiculo,

    Suet. Oth. 11:

    regnum trahat usque in tempora fati,

    Sil. 11, 392: in posterum (posteritatem) or in futurum, in future, for the future: in praesens, for the present: in perpetuum or in aeternum, forever:

    sancit in posterum, ne quis, etc.,

    Cic. Cat. 4, 5, 10:

    res dilata est in posterum,

    id. Fam. 10, 12, 3:

    video quanta tempestas invidiae nobis, si minus in praesens, at in posteritatem impendeat,

    id. Cat. 1, 9, 22:

    id aegre et in praesentia hi passi et in futurum etiam metum ceperunt,

    Liv. 34, 27, 10; cf.:

    ingenti omnium et in praesens laetitia et in futurum spe,

    id. 30, 17, 1:

    effugis in futurum,

    Tac. H. 1, 71:

    quod eum tibi quaestoris in loco constitueras, idcirco tibi amicum in perpetuum fore putasti?

    Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 30; cf.:

    oppidum omni periculo in perpetuum liberavit,

    id. Fam. 13, 4, 2:

    quae (leges) non in tempus aliquod, sed perpetuae utilitatis causa in aeternum latae sunt,

    Liv. 34, 6, 4: in tempus, for a while, for a short time, for the occasion (postAug.):

    sensit miles in tempus conficta,

    Tac. A. 1, 37:

    ne urbs sine imperio esset, in tempus deligebatur, qui jus redderet,

    id. ib. 6, 11:

    scaena in tempus structa,

    id. ib. 14, 20. —So in diem, for the day, to meet the day's want:

    nihil ex raptis in diem commeatibus superabat,

    Liv. 22, 40, 8:

    rapto in diem frumento,

    id. 4, 10, 1;

    but, cum illa fundum emisset in diem,

    i. e. a fixed day of payment, Nep. Att. 9, 5: in singulos dies, or simply in dies, with comparatives and verbs denoting increase, from day to day, daily:

    vitium in dies crescit,

    Vell. 2, 5, 2:

    in dies singulos breviores litteras ad te mitto,

    Cic. Att. 5, 7:

    qui senescat in dies,

    Liv. 22, 39, 15: in diem, daily:

    nos in diem vivimus,

    Cic. Tusc. 5, 11, 33:

    in diem et horam,

    Hor. S. 2, 6, 47;

    and in horas,

    hourly, id. C. 2, 13, 14; id. S. 2, 7, 10.—
    C.
    In other relations, in which an aiming at, an inclining or striving towards a thing, is conceivable, on, about, respecting; towards, against; for, as; in, to; into:

    id, quod apud Platonem est in philosophos dictum,

    about the philosophers, Cic. Off. 1, 9, 28:

    Callimachi epigramma in Ambraciotam Cleombrotum est,

    id. Tusc. 1, 34, 84; cf.:

    cum cenaret Simonides apud Scopam cecinissetque id car men, quod in eum scripsisset, etc.,

    id. de Or. 2, 86, 352:

    quo amore tandem inflammati esse debemus in ejus modi patriam,

    towards, id. ib. 1, 44, 196:

    in liberos nostros indulgentia,

    id. ib. 2, 40, 168:

    de suis meritis in rem publicam aggressus est dicere,

    id. Or. 38, 133: ita ad impietatem in deos, in homines adjunxit injuriam, against, id. N. D. 3, 34 fin.:

    in dominum quaeri,

    to be examined as a witness against, id. Mil. 22, 60:

    in eos impetum facere,

    id. Att. 2, 22, 1:

    invehi in Thebanos,

    Nep. Epam. 6, 1; id. Tim. 5, 3:

    quaecumque est hominis definitio, una in omnes valet,

    id. Leg. 1, 10, 29:

    num etiam in deos immortales inauspicatam legem valuisse?

    Liv. 7, 6, 11:

    vereor coram in os te laudare amplius,

    to your face, Ter. Ad. 2, 4, 5:

    si in me exerciturus (pugnos), quaeso, in parietem ut primum domes,

    Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 168:

    in puppim rediere rates,

    Luc. 3, 545 Burm. (cf.:

    sic equi dicuntur in frena redire, pulsi in terga recedere, Sulp. ad loc.): Cumis eam vidi: venerat enim in funus: cui funeri ego quoque operam dedi,

    to the funeral, to take charge of the funeral, Cic. Att. 15, 1, B:

    se quisque eum optabat, quem fortuna in id certamen legeret,

    Liv. 21, 42, 2:

    quodsi in nullius mercedem negotia eant, pauciora fore,

    Tac. A. 11, 6:

    haec civitas mulieri redimiculum praebeat, haec in collum, haec in crines,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 3, 33:

    Rhegium quondam in praesidium missa legio,

    Liv. 28, 28; so,

    datae in praesidium cohortes,

    Tac. H. 4, 35: hoc idem significat Graecus ille in eam sententiam versus, to this effect or purport, Cic. Div. 2, 10, 25; cf. id. Fam. 9, 15, 4:

    haec et in eam sententiam cum multa dixisset,

    id. Att. 2, 22:

    qui omnia sic exaequaverunt, ut in utramque partem ita paria redderent, uti nulla selectione uterentur,

    id. Fin. 3, 4, 12:

    in utramque partem disputat,

    on both sides, for and against, id. Off. 3, 23, 89: te rogo, me tibi in omnes partes defendendum putes, Vatin. ap. Cic. Fam. 5, 10 fin.:

    facillime et in optimam partem cognoscuntur adulescentes, qui se ad claros et sapientes viros contulerunt,

    id. Off. 2, 13, 46:

    cives Romani servilem in modum cruciati et necati,

    in the manner of slaves, Cic. Verr. 1, 5, 13; cf.:

    miserandum in modum milites populi Romani capti, necati sunt,

    id. Prov. Cons. 3, 5:

    senior quidam Veiens vaticinantis in modum cecinit,

    Liv. 5, 15, 4;

    also: domus et villae in urbium modum aedificatae,

    Sall. C. 12, 3:

    perinde ac si in hanc formulam omnia judicia legitima sint,

    Cic. Rosc. Com. 5, 15:

    judicium quin acciperet in ea ipsa verba quae Naevius edebat, non recusasse,

    id. Quint. 20, 63; cf.:

    senatusconsultum in haec verba factum,

    Liv. 30, 43, 9:

    pax data Philippo in has leges est,

    id. 33, 30:

    Gallia omnis divisa est in partes tres,

    Caes. B. G. 1, 1; cf.:

    quae quidem in confirmationem et reprehensionem dividuntur,

    Cic. Part. Or. 9, 33: describebat censores binos in singulas civitates, i. e. for or over each state, id. Verr. 2, 2, 53; cf. id. ib. 2, 4, 26:

    itaque Titurium Tolosae quaternos denarios in singulas vini amphoras portorii nomine exegisse,

    id. Font. 5, 9:

    extulit eum plebs sextantibus collatis in capita,

    a head, for each person, Liv. 2, 33 fin.:

    Macedonibus treceni nummi in capita statutum est pretium,

    id. 32, 17, 2; cf.:

    Thracia in Rhoemetalcen filium... inque liberos Cotyis dividitur (i. e. inter),

    Tac. A. 2, 67.—
    2.
    Of the object or end in view, regarded also as the motive of action or effect:

    non te in me illiberalem, sed me in se neglegentem putabit,

    Cic. Fam. 13, 1, 16:

    neglegentior in patrem,

    Just. 32, 3, 1:

    in quem omnes intenderat curas,

    Curt. 3, 1, 21:

    quos ardere in proelia vidi,

    Verg. A. 2, 347:

    in bellum ardentes,

    Manil. 4, 220:

    nutante in fugam exercitu,

    Flor. 3, 10, 4:

    in hanc tam opimam mercedem agite ( = ut eam vobis paretis, Weissenb. ad loc.),

    Liv. 21, 43, 7:

    certa praemia, in quorum spem pugnarent,

    id. 21, 45, 4:

    in id sors dejecta,

    id. 21, 42, 2:

    in id fide accepta,

    id. 28, 17, 9:

    in spem pacis solutis animis,

    id. 6, 11, 5 et saep.:

    ingrata misero vita ducenda est in hoc, ut, etc.,

    Hor. Epod. 17, 63:

    nec in hoc adhibetur, ut, etc.,

    Sen. Ep. 16, 3:

    alius non in hoc, ut offenderet, facit, id. de Ira, 2, 26, 3: in quod tum missi?

    Just. 38, 3, 4.—So, like ad, with words expressing affections or inclination of the mind:

    in obsequium plus aequo pronus,

    Hor. Ep. 1, 18, 10:

    paratus in res novas,

    Tac. H. 4, 32:

    in utrumque paratus,

    Verg. A. 2, 61.—
    3.
    Of the result of an act or effort:

    denique in familiae luctum atque in privignorum funus nupsit,

    Cic. Clu. 66, 188:

    paratusque miles, ut ordo agminis in aciem adsisteret,

    Tac. A. 2, 16: excisum Euboicae latus ingens rupis in antrum, Verg. A. 6, 42:

    portus ab Euroo fluctu curvatus in arcum,

    id. ib. 3, 533:

    populum in obsequia principum formavit,

    Just. 3, 2, 9:

    omnium partium decus in mercedem conruptum erat,

    Sall. H. 1, 13 Dietsch:

    commutari ex veris in falsa,

    Cic. Fat. 9, 17; 9, 18:

    in sollicitudinem versa fiducia est,

    Curt. 3, 8, 20.—
    4.
    Esp. in the phrase: in gratiam or in honorem, alicujus, in kindness, to show favor, out of good feeling, to show honor, etc., to any one (first in Liv.; cf. Weissenb. ad Liv. 28, 21, 4;

    Krebs, Antibarb. p. 562): in gratiam levium sociorum injuriam facere,

    Liv. 39, 26, 12:

    pugnaturi in gratiam ducis,

    id. 28, 21, 4:

    quorum in gratiam Saguntum deleverat Hannibal,

    id. 28, 39, 13; cf. id. 35, 2, 6; 26, 6, 16:

    oratio habita in sexus honorem,

    Quint. 1, 1, 6:

    convivium in honorem victoriae,

    id. 11, 2, 12:

    in honorem Quadratillae,

    Plin. Ep. 7, 24, 7:

    in honorem tuum,

    Sen. Ep. 20, 7; 79, 2; 92, 1; Vell. 2, 41 al.—
    5.
    In the phrase, in rem esse, to be useful, to avail (cf.: e re esse;

    opp.: contra rem esse): ut aequom est, quod in rem esse utrique arbitremur,

    Plaut. Aul. 2, 1, 10:

    si in rem est Bacchidis,

    Ter. Hec. 1, 2, 27; 2, 2, 7:

    hortatur, imperat, quae in rem sunt,

    Liv. 26, 44, 7:

    cetera, quae cognosse in rem erat,

    id. 22, 3, 2; 44, 19, 3:

    in rem fore credens universos adpellare,

    Sall. C. 20, 1; cf.:

    in duas res magnas id usui fore,

    Liv. 37, 15, 7:

    in hos usus,

    Verg. A. 4, 647.—
    6.
    To form adverbial expressions:

    non nominatim, qui Capuae, sed in universum qui usquam coissent, etc.,

    in general, Liv. 9, 26, 8; cf.:

    terra etsi aliquanto specie differt, in universum tamen aut silvis horrida aut paludibus foeda,

    Tac. G. 5:

    in universum aestimanti, etc.,

    id. ib. 6:

    aestate in totum, si fieri potest, abstinendum est (Venere),

    wholly, entirely, Cels. 1, 3 fin.; cf. Col. 2, 1, 2:

    in plenum dici potest, etc.,

    fully, Plin. 16, 40, 79, § 217:

    Marii virtutem in majus celebrare,

    beyond due bounds, Sall. J. 73, 5:

    aliter se corpus habere atque consuevit, neque in pejus tantum, sed etiam in melius,

    for the worse, for the better, Cels. 2, 2:

    in deterius,

    Tac. A. 14, 43:

    in mollius,

    id. ib. 14, 39:

    quid enim est iracundia in supervacuum tumultuante frigidius? Sen. de Ira, 2, 11: civitas saepta muris neque in barbarum corrupta (v. barbarus),

    Tac. A. 6, 42; cf.:

    aucto in barbarum cognomento,

    id. H. 5, 2:

    priusquam id sors cerneret, in incertum, ne quid gratia momenti faceret, in utramque provinciam decerni,

    while the matter was uncertain, Liv. 43, 12, 2:

    nec puer Iliaca quisquam de gente Latinos In tantum spe tollet avos,

    so much, Verg. A. 6, 876:

    in tantum suam felicitatem virtutemque enituisse,

    Liv. 22, 27, 4; cf.:

    quaedam (aquae) fervent in tantum, ut non possint esse usui,

    Sen. Q. N. 3, 24:

    viri in tantum boni, in quantum humana simplicitas intellegi potest,

    Vell. 2, 43, 4:

    quippe pedum digitos, in quantum quaeque secuta est, Traxit,

    Ov. M. 11, 71:

    meliore in omnia ingenio animoque quam fortuna usus,

    in all respects, Vell. 2, 13:

    ut simul in omnia paremur,

    Quint. 11, 3, 25:

    in antecessum dare,

    beforehand, Sen. Ep. 118.—
    7.
    Sometimes with esse, habere, etc., in is followed by the acc. (constr. pregn.), to indicate a direction, aim, purpose, etc. (but v. Madvig. Gram. § 230, obs. 2, note, who regards these accusatives as originating in errors of pronunciation); so, esse in potestatem alicujus, to come into and remain in one ' s power: esse in mentem alicui, to come into and be in one ' s mind: esse in conspectum, to appear to and be in sight: esse in usum, to come into use, be used, etc.:

    quod, qui illam partem urbis tenerent, in eorum potestatem portum futurum intellegebant,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 5, 38:

    ut portus in potestatem Locrensium esset,

    Liv. 24, 1, 13; 2, 14, 4:

    eam optimam rem publicam esse duco, quae sit in potestatem optimorum,

    Cic. Leg. 3, 17:

    neque enim sunt motus in nostram potestatem,

    Quint. 6, 2, 29:

    numero mihi in mentem fuit,

    Plaut. Am. 1, 1, 25; cf.:

    ecquid in mentem est tibi?

    id. Bacch. 1, 2, 53:

    nec prius surrexisse ac militibus in conspectum fuisse, quam, etc.,

    Suet. Aug. 16:

    quod satis in usum fuit, sublato, ceterum omne incensum est,

    Liv. 22, 20, 6: ab hospitibus clientibusque suis, ab exteris nationibus, quae in amicitiam populi Romani dicionemque essent, injurias propulsare, Cic. Div. ap. Caecil. 20, 66: adesse in senatum [p. 914] jussit a. d. XIII. Kal. Octobr., id. Phil. 5, 7, 19.—Less freq. with habere: facito in memoriam habeas tuam majorem filiam mihi te despondisse, call or bring to mind, Plaut. Poen. 5, 4, 108:

    M. Minucium magistrum equitum, ne quid rei bellicae gereret, prope in custodiam habitum,

    put in prison, kept in prison, Liv. 22, 25, 6:

    reliquos in custodiam habitos,

    Tac. H. 1, 87.—So rarely with other verbs:

    pollicetur se provinciam Galliam retenturum in senatus populique Romani potestatem,

    Cic. Phil. 3, 4, 8. —
    III.
    In composition, n regularly becomes assimilated to a foll. l, m, or r, and is changed before the labials into m: illabor, immitto, irrumpo, imbibo, impello.—As to its meaning, according as it is connected with a verb of rest or motion, it conveys the idea of existence in a place or thing, or of motion, direction, or inclination into or to a place or thing: inesse; inhibere, inferre, impellere, etc. See Hand, Turs. III. pp. 243- 356.
    2.
    in (before b and p, im; before l, m, and r, the n assimilates itself to these consonants), an inseparable particle [kindred with Sanscr. a-, an-; Gr. a-, an; Goth. and Germ. un-], which negatives the meaning of the noun or participle with which it is connected; Engl. un-, in-, not: impar, unequal: intolerabilis, unbearable, intolerable: immitis, not mild, rude, etc.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > in

  • 100 Cousteau, Jacques-Yves

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 11 June 1910 Saint-André-de-Cubzac, France
    [br]
    French marine explorer who invented the aqualung.
    [br]
    He was the son of a country lawyer who became legal advisor and travelling companion to certain rich Americans. At an early age Cousteau acquired a love of travel, of the sea and of cinematography: he made his first film at the age of 13. After an interrupted education he nevertheless passed the difficult entrance examination to the Ecole Navale in Brest, but his naval career was cut short in 1936 by injuries received in a serious motor accident. For his long recuperation he was drafted to Toulon. There he met Philippe Tailliez, a fellow naval officer, and Frédéric Dumas, a champion spearfisher, with whom he formed a long association and began to develop his underwater swimming and photography. He apparently took little part in the Second World War, but under cover he applied his photographic skills to espionage, for which he was awarded the Légion d'honneur after the war.
    Cousteau sought greater freedom of movement underwater and, with Emile Gagnan, who worked in the laboratory of Air Liquide, he began experimenting to improve portable underwater breathing apparatus. As a result, in 1943 they invented the aqualung. Its simple design and robust construction provided a reliable and low-cost unit and revolutionized scientific and recreational diving. Gagnan shunned publicity, but Cousteau revelled in the new freedom to explore and photograph underwater and exploited the publicity potential to the full.
    The Undersea Research Group was set up by the French Navy in 1944 and, based in Toulon, it provided Cousteau with the Opportunity to develop underwater exploration and filming techniques and equipment. Its first aims were minesweeping and exploration, but in 1948 Cousteau pioneered an extension to marine archaeology. In 1950 he raised the funds to acquire a surplus US-built minesweeper, which he fitted out to further his quest for exploration and adventure and named Calypso. Cousteau also sought and achieved public acclaim with the publication in 1953 of The Silent World, an account of his submarine observations, illustrated by his own brilliant photography. The book was an immediate success and was translated into twenty-two languages. In 1955 Calypso sailed through the Red Sea and the western Indian Ocean, and the outcome was a film bearing the same title as the book: it won an Oscar and the Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival. This was his favoured medium for the expression of his ideas and observations, and a stream of films on the same theme kept his name before the public.
    Cousteau's fame earned him appointment by Prince Rainier as Director of the Oceanographie Institute in Monaco in 1957, a post he held until 1988. With its museum and research centre, it offered Cousteau a useful base for his worldwide activities.
    In the 1980s Cousteau turned again to technological development. Like others before him, he was concerned to reduce ships' fuel consumption by harnessing wind power. True to form, he raised grants from various sources to fund research and enlisted technical help, namely Lucien Malavard, Professor of Aerodynamics at the Sorbonne. Malavard designed a 44 ft (13.4 m) high non-rotating cylinder, which was fitted onto a catamaran hull, christened Moulin à vent. It was intended that its maiden Atlantic crossing in 1983 should herald a new age in ship propulsion, with large royalties to Cousteau. Unfortunately the vessel was damaged in a storm and limped to the USA under diesel power. A more robust vessel, the Alcyone, was fitted with two "Turbosails" in 1985 and proved successful, with a 40 per cent reduction in fuel consumption. However, oil prices fell, removing the incentive to fit the new device; the lucrative sales did not materialize and Alcyone remained the only vessel with Turbosails, sharing with Calypso Cousteau's voyages of adventure and exploration. In September 1995, Cousteau was among the critics of the decision by the French President Jacques Chirac to resume testing of nuclear explosive devices under the Mururoa atoll in the South Pacific.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Légion d'honneur. Croix de Guerre with Palm. Officier du Mérite Maritime and numerous scientific and artistic awards listed in such directories as Who's Who.
    Bibliography
    Further Reading
    R.Munson, 1991, Cousteau, the Captain and His World, London: Robert Hale (published in the USA 1989).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Cousteau, Jacques-Yves

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