Перевод: со всех языков на английский

с английского на все языки

who+had+learned

  • 121 Radcliffe, William

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 1761 Mellor, Cheshire, England
    d. 1842 Mellor, Cheshire, England
    [br]
    English inventor of the sizing machine.
    [br]
    Radcliffe was brought up in the textile industry and learned carding and spinning as a child. When he was old enough, he became a weaver. It was a time when there were not enough weavers to work up all the yarn being spun on the recently invented spinning machines, so some yarn was exported. Radcliffe regarded this as a sin; meetings were held to prohibit the export, and Radcliffe promised to use his best endeavours to discover means to work up the yarn in England. He owned a mill at Mellor and by 1801 was employing over 1,000 hand-loom weavers. He wanted to improve their efficiency so they could compete against power looms, which were beginning to be introduced at that time.
    His first step was to divide up as much as possible the different weaving processes, not unlike the plan adopted by Arkwright in spinning. In order to strengthen the warp yarns made of cotton and to reduce their tendency to fray during weaving, it was customary to apply an adhesive substance such as starch paste. This was brushed on as the warp was unwound from the back beam during weaving, so only short lengths could be treated before being dried. Instead of dressing the warp in the loom as was hitherto done, Radcliffe had it dressed in a separate machine, relieving the weaver of the trouble and saving the time wasted by the method previously used. Radcliffe employed a young man names Thomas Johnson, who proved to be a clever mechanic. Radcliffe patented his inventions in Johnson's name to avoid other people, especially foreigners, finding out his ideas. He took out his first patent, for a dressing machine, in March 1803 and a second the following year. The combined result of the two patents was the introduction of a beaming machine and a dressing machine which, in addition to applying the paste to the yarns and then drying them, wound them onto a beam ready for the loom. These machines enabled the weaver to work a loom with fewer stoppages; however, Radcliffe did not anticipate that his method of sizing would soon be applied to power looms as well and lead to the commercial success of powered weaving. Other manufacturers quickly adopted Radcliffe's system, and Radcliffe himself soon had to introduce power looms in his own business.
    Radcliffe improved the hand looms themselves when, with the help of Johnson, he devised a cloth taking-up motion that wound the woven cloth onto a roller automatically as the weaver operated the loom. Radcliffe and Johnson also developed the "dandy loom", which was a more compact form of hand loom and was also later adapted for weaving by power. Radcliffe was among the witnesses before the Parliamentary Committee which in 1808 awarded Edmund Cartwright a grant for his invention of the power loom. Later Radcliffe was unsuccessfully to petition Parliament for a similar reward for his contributions to the introduction of power weaving. His business affairs ultimately failed partly through his own obstinacy and his continued opposition to the export of cotton yarn. He lived to be 81 years old and was buried in Mellor churchyard.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1811, Exportation of Cotton Yarn and Real Cause of the Distress that has Fallen upon the Cotton Trade for a Series of Years Past, Stockport.
    1828, Origin of the New System of Manufacture, Commonly Called "Power-Loom Weaving", Stockport (this should be read, even though it is mostly covers Radcliffe's political aims).
    Further Reading
    A.Barlow, 1870, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London (provides an outline of Radcliffe's life and work).
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a general background of his inventions). R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (a general background).
    D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution. The Diffusion of Textile Technologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (discusses the spread of the sizing machine in America).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Radcliffe, William

  • 122 Reynolds, Richard

    [br]
    b. 1 November 1735 Bristol, England
    d. 10 September 1816 Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England
    [br]
    English ironmaster who invented iron rails.
    [br]
    Reynolds was born into a Quaker family, his father being an iron merchant and a considerable customer for the products of the Darbys (see Abraham Darby) of Coalbrookdale in Shropshire. After education at a Quaker boarding school in Pickwick, Wiltshire, Reynolds was apprenticed to William Fry, a grocer of Bristol, from whom he would have learned business methods. The year before the expiry of his apprenticeship in 1757, Reynolds was being sent on business errands to Coalbrookdale. In that year he met and married Hannah Darby, the daughter of Abraham Darby II. At the same time, he acquired a half-share in the Ketley ironworks, established not long before, in 1755. There he supervised not only the furnaces at Ketley and Horsehay and the foundry, but also the extension of the railway, linking this site to Coalbrookdale itself.
    On the death of Abraham Darby II in 1763, Reynolds took charge of the whole works during the minority of Abraham Darby III. During this period, the most notable development was the introduction by the Cranage brothers of a new way of converting pig-iron to wrought iron, a process patented in 1766 that used coal in a reverberatory furnace. This, with other processes for the same purpose, remained in use until superseded by the puddling process patented by Henry Cort in 1783 and 1784. Reynolds's most important innovation was the introduction of cast-iron rails in 1767 on the railway around Coalbrookdale. A useful network had been in operation for some time with wooden rails, but these wore out quickly and were expensive to maintain. Reynolds's iron rails were an immediate improvement, and some 20 miles (32 km) were laid within a short time. In 1768 Abraham Darby III was able to assume control of the Coalbrookdale works, but Reynolds had been extending his own interest in other ironworks and various other concerns, earning himself considerable wealth. When Darby was oppressed with loan repayments, Reynolds bought the Manor of Madely, which made him Landlord of the Coalbrookdale Company; by 1780 he was virtually banker to the company.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    A.Raistrick, 1989, Dynasty of Iron Founders, 2nd edn, Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust (contains many details of Reynolds's life).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Reynolds, Richard

  • 123 Scheutz, George

    [br]
    b. 23 September 1785 Jonkoping, Sweden
    d. 27 May 1873 Stockholm, Sweden
    [br]
    Swedish lawyer, journalist and self-taught engineer who, with his son Edvard Raphael Scheutz (b. 13 September 1821 Stockholm, Sweden; d. 28 January 1881 Stockholm, Sweden) constructed a version of the Babbage Difference Engine.
    [br]
    After early education at the Jonkoping elementary school and the Weixo Gymnasium, George Scheutz entered the University of Lund, gaining a degree in law in 1805. Following five years' legal work, he moved to Stockholm in 1811 to work at the Supreme Court and, in 1814, as a military auditor. In 1816, he resigned, bought a printing business and became editor of a succession of industrial and technical journals, during which time he made inventions relating to the press. It was in 1830 that he learned from the Edinburgh Review of Babbage's ideas for a difference engine and started to make one from wood, pasteboard and wire. In 1837 his 15-yearold student son, Edvard Raphael Scheutz, offered to make it in metal, and by 1840 they had a working machine with two five-digit registers, which they increased the following year and then added a printer. Obtaining a government grant in 1851, by 1853 they had a fully working machine, now known as Swedish Difference Engine No. 1, which with an experienced operator could generate 120 lines of tables per hour and was used to calculate the logarithms of the numbers 1 to 10,000 in under eighty hours. This was exhibited in London and then at the Paris Great Exhibition, where it won the Gold Medal. It was subsequently sold to the Dudley Observatory in Albany, New York, for US$5,000 and is now in a Chicago museum.
    In England, the British Registrar-General, wishing to produce new tables for insurance companies, and supported by the Astronomer Royal, arranged for government finance for construction of a second machine (Swedish Difference Engine No. 2). Comprising over 1,000 working parts and weighing 1,000 lb (450 kg), this machine was used to calculate over 600 tables. It is now in the Science Museum.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Member of the Swedish Academy of Sciences, Paris Exhibition Medal of Honour (jointly with Edvard) 1856. Annual pension of 1,200 marks per annum awarded by King Carl XV 1860.
    Bibliography
    1825, "Kranpunpar. George Scheutz's patent of 14 Nov 1825", Journal for Manufacturer och Hushallning 8.
    ellemême, Stockholm.
    Further Reading
    R.C.Archibald, 1947, "P.G.Scheutz, publicist, author, scientific mechanic and Edvard Scheutz, engineer. Biography and Bibliography", MTAC 238.
    U.C.Merzbach, 1977, "George Scheutz and the first printing calculator", Smithsonian
    Studies in History and Technology 36:73.
    M.Lindgren, 1990, Glory and Failure (the Difference Engines of Johan Muller, Charles Babbage and George \& Edvard Scheutz), Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Scheutz, George

  • 124 В-111

    на вид с (по) виду PrepP these forms only, adv or modif) the way (a person or thing) seems when perceived visually
    look (like)
    look to be AdjP -looking NP or AdjP) to look at to look at s.o. sth. from the looks of s.o. sth. in appearance give the appearance of... seemingly seem...to the eye look to the eye like... appear to the eye to be... on the outside.
    Только два человека, с виду похожие на мелких базарных торговцев, мирно пивши в углу кофе, не принимали никакого участия в этих сетованиях (Эренбург 2). Only two people, who looked like bazaar merchants, sitting quietly in their corner drinking coffee, took no part in any of these lamentations (2a).
    Они (посетители) вступили в комнату почти одновременно со старцем... В келье ещё раньше их дожидались выхода старца два скитские иеромонаха... Кроме того, ожидал, стоя в уголку (и всё время потом оставался стоя), молодой паренёк, лет двадцати двух на вид, в статском сюртуке... (Достоевский 1). They (the visitors) came into the room almost at the same moment as the elder....Two hieromonks of the hermitage were already in the cell awaiting the elder....Besides them, there stood in the corner (and remained standing there all the while) a young fellow who looked to be about twenty-two and was dressed in an ordinary frock coat... (1a).
    Слушая его щёлкающую речь и глядя на его аккуратные черты, трудно было представить себе внежизненный опыт этого здорового с виду, кругленького... человека... (Набоков 1)....When one listened to his sprightly speech and looked at his regular features, it was difficult to imagine the unearthly experiences of this healthy-looking, plump little man... (1a).
    Вероятно, я был в те времена очень жалким на вид - болезненный, бледный, маленький (Олеша 3). Probably I was at that time rather pitiful to look at: sickly, pale, small (3a).
    На вид Пастернаку можно было дать не более 47-48 лет (Ивинская 1). То look at him one would not have given Pasternak more than forty-seven or forty-eight (1a).
    ...Ведь вы молоды, вам на вид не дашь и шестнадцати (Соколов 1)....You're young, after all, from the looks of you you're not more than sixteen (1a).
    Пьер почти не изменился в своих внешних приемах. На вид он был точно таким же, каким он был прежде (Толстой 7). Outwardly Pierre had hardly changed at all. In appearance he was just the same as before (7a).
    И хотя с виду Лёва был спокоен и рассудителен, я видел, что он напряжён, как струна... (Рыбаков 1). Although Lyova gave the appearance of calm and common sense, I could tell he was under terrible strain... (1a).
    Вообще судя, странно было, что молодой человек, столь учёный, столь гордый и осторожный на вид, вдруг явился в такой безобразный дом... (Достоевский 1). Generally considered, it was strange that so learned, so proud, and seemingly so prudent a young man should suddenly appear in such a scandalous house... (1a).
    Пузыри газа лопались и подымались - гигантские, как целые планеты! И невесомые на вид (Обухова 1). Bubbles of gas burst and new up-enormous as planets, yet seeming weightless to the eye (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > В-111

  • 125 на вид

    НА ВИД; С <ПО> ВИДУ
    [PrepP; these forms only; adv or modif]
    =====
    the way (a person or thing) seems when perceived visually:
    - [AdjP]- looking;
    - [NP or AdjP] to look at;
    - to look at s.o. < sth.>;
    - from the looks of s.o. < sth.>;
    - give the appearance of...;
    - seem...to the eye;
    - look to the eye like...;
    - appear to the eye to be...;
    - on the outside.
         ♦ Только два человека, с виду похожие на мелких базарных торговцев, мирно пивши в углу кофе, не принимали никакого участия в этих сетованиях (Эренбург 2). Only two people, who looked like bazaar merchants, sitting quietly in their corner drinking coffee, took no part in any of these lamentations (2a).
         ♦ Они [посетители] вступили в комнату почти одновременно со старцем... В келье ещё раньше их дожидались выхода старца два скитские иеромонаха... Кроме того, ожидал, стоя в уголку (и всё время потом оставался стоя), молодой паренёк, лет двадцати двух на вид, в статском сюртуке... (Достоевский 1). They [the visitors] came into the room almost at the same moment as the elder....Two hieromonks of the hermitage were already in the cell awaiting the elder....Besides them, there stood in the comer (and remained standing there all the while) a young fellow who looked to be about twenty-two and was dressed in an ordinary frock coat... (1a).
         ♦...Слушая его щёлкающую речь и глядя на его аккуратные черты, трудно было представить себе внежизненный опыт этого здорового с виду, кругленького... человека... (Набоков 1)....When one listened to his sprightly speech and looked at his regular features, it was difficult to imagine the unearthly experiences of this healthy-looking, plump little man... (1a).
         ♦ Вероятно, я был в те времена очень жалким на вид - болезненный, бледный, маленький (Олеша 3). Probably I was at that time rather pitiful to look at: sickly, pale, small (3a).
         ♦ На вид Пастернаку можно было дать не более 47-48 лет( Ивинская 1). То look at him one would not have given Pasternak more than forty-seven or forty-eight (1a).
         ♦...Ведь вы молоды, вам на вид не дашь и шестнадцати (Соколов 1)....You're young, after all, from the looks of you you're not more than sixteen (1a).
         ♦ Пьер почти не изменился в своих внешних приемах. На вид он был точно таким же, каким он был прежде (Толстой 7). Outwardly Pierre had hardly changed at all. In appearance he was just the same as before (7a).
         ♦ И хотя с виду Лёва был спокоен и рассудителен, я видел, что он напряжён, как струна... (Рыбаков 1). Although Lyova gave the appearance of calm and common sense, I could tell he was under terrible strain... (1a).
         ♦ Вообще судя, странно было, что молодой человек, столь учёный, столь гордый и осторожный на вид, вдруг явился в такой безобразный дом... (Достоевский 1). Generally considered, it was strange that so learned, so proud, and seemingly so prudent a young man should suddenly appear in such a scandalous house... (1a).
         ♦ Пузыри газа лопались и подымались - гигантские, как целые планеты! И невесомые на вид (Обухова 1). Bubbles of gas burst and flew up-enormous as planets, yet seeming weightless to the eye (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > на вид

  • 126 по виду

    НА ВИД; С <ПО> ВИДУ
    [PrepP; these forms only; adv or modif]
    =====
    the way (a person or thing) seems when perceived visually:
    - [AdjP]- looking;
    - [NP or AdjP] to look at;
    - to look at s.o. < sth.>;
    - from the looks of s.o. < sth.>;
    - give the appearance of...;
    - seem...to the eye;
    - look to the eye like...;
    - appear to the eye to be...;
    - on the outside.
         ♦ Только два человека, с виду похожие на мелких базарных торговцев, мирно пивши в углу кофе, не принимали никакого участия в этих сетованиях (Эренбург 2). Only two people, who looked like bazaar merchants, sitting quietly in their corner drinking coffee, took no part in any of these lamentations (2a).
         ♦ Они [посетители] вступили в комнату почти одновременно со старцем... В келье ещё раньше их дожидались выхода старца два скитские иеромонаха... Кроме того, ожидал, стоя в уголку (и всё время потом оставался стоя), молодой паренёк, лет двадцати двух на вид, в статском сюртуке... (Достоевский 1). They [the visitors] came into the room almost at the same moment as the elder....Two hieromonks of the hermitage were already in the cell awaiting the elder....Besides them, there stood in the comer (and remained standing there all the while) a young fellow who looked to be about twenty-two and was dressed in an ordinary frock coat... (1a).
         ♦...Слушая его щёлкающую речь и глядя на его аккуратные черты, трудно было представить себе внежизненный опыт этого здорового с виду, кругленького... человека... (Набоков 1)....When one listened to his sprightly speech and looked at his regular features, it was difficult to imagine the unearthly experiences of this healthy-looking, plump little man... (1a).
         ♦ Вероятно, я был в те времена очень жалким на вид - болезненный, бледный, маленький (Олеша 3). Probably I was at that time rather pitiful to look at: sickly, pale, small (3a).
         ♦ На вид Пастернаку можно было дать не более 47-48 лет( Ивинская 1). То look at him one would not have given Pasternak more than forty-seven or forty-eight (1a).
         ♦...Ведь вы молоды, вам на вид не дашь и шестнадцати (Соколов 1)....You're young, after all, from the looks of you you're not more than sixteen (1a).
         ♦ Пьер почти не изменился в своих внешних приемах. На вид он был точно таким же, каким он был прежде (Толстой 7). Outwardly Pierre had hardly changed at all. In appearance he was just the same as before (7a).
         ♦ И хотя с виду Лёва был спокоен и рассудителен, я видел, что он напряжён, как струна... (Рыбаков 1). Although Lyova gave the appearance of calm and common sense, I could tell he was under terrible strain... (1a).
         ♦ Вообще судя, странно было, что молодой человек, столь учёный, столь гордый и осторожный на вид, вдруг явился в такой безобразный дом... (Достоевский 1). Generally considered, it was strange that so learned, so proud, and seemingly so prudent a young man should suddenly appear in such a scandalous house... (1a).
         ♦ Пузыри газа лопались и подымались - гигантские, как целые планеты! И невесомые на вид (Обухова 1). Bubbles of gas burst and flew up-enormous as planets, yet seeming weightless to the eye (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > по виду

  • 127 с виду

    НА ВИД; С <ПО> ВИДУ
    [PrepP; these forms only; adv or modif]
    =====
    the way (a person or thing) seems when perceived visually:
    - [AdjP]- looking;
    - [NP or AdjP] to look at;
    - to look at s.o. < sth.>;
    - from the looks of s.o. < sth.>;
    - give the appearance of...;
    - seem...to the eye;
    - look to the eye like...;
    - appear to the eye to be...;
    - on the outside.
         ♦ Только два человека, с виду похожие на мелких базарных торговцев, мирно пивши в углу кофе, не принимали никакого участия в этих сетованиях (Эренбург 2). Only two people, who looked like bazaar merchants, sitting quietly in their corner drinking coffee, took no part in any of these lamentations (2a).
         ♦ Они [посетители] вступили в комнату почти одновременно со старцем... В келье ещё раньше их дожидались выхода старца два скитские иеромонаха... Кроме того, ожидал, стоя в уголку (и всё время потом оставался стоя), молодой паренёк, лет двадцати двух на вид, в статском сюртуке... (Достоевский 1). They [the visitors] came into the room almost at the same moment as the elder....Two hieromonks of the hermitage were already in the cell awaiting the elder....Besides them, there stood in the comer (and remained standing there all the while) a young fellow who looked to be about twenty-two and was dressed in an ordinary frock coat... (1a).
         ♦...Слушая его щёлкающую речь и глядя на его аккуратные черты, трудно было представить себе внежизненный опыт этого здорового с виду, кругленького... человека... (Набоков 1)....When one listened to his sprightly speech and looked at his regular features, it was difficult to imagine the unearthly experiences of this healthy-looking, plump little man... (1a).
         ♦ Вероятно, я был в те времена очень жалким на вид - болезненный, бледный, маленький (Олеша 3). Probably I was at that time rather pitiful to look at: sickly, pale, small (3a).
         ♦ На вид Пастернаку можно было дать не более 47-48 лет( Ивинская 1). То look at him one would not have given Pasternak more than forty-seven or forty-eight (1a).
         ♦...Ведь вы молоды, вам на вид не дашь и шестнадцати (Соколов 1)....You're young, after all, from the looks of you you're not more than sixteen (1a).
         ♦ Пьер почти не изменился в своих внешних приемах. На вид он был точно таким же, каким он был прежде (Толстой 7). Outwardly Pierre had hardly changed at all. In appearance he was just the same as before (7a).
         ♦ И хотя с виду Лёва был спокоен и рассудителен, я видел, что он напряжён, как струна... (Рыбаков 1). Although Lyova gave the appearance of calm and common sense, I could tell he was under terrible strain... (1a).
         ♦ Вообще судя, странно было, что молодой человек, столь учёный, столь гордый и осторожный на вид, вдруг явился в такой безобразный дом... (Достоевский 1). Generally considered, it was strange that so learned, so proud, and seemingly so prudent a young man should suddenly appear in such a scandalous house... (1a).
         ♦ Пузыри газа лопались и подымались - гигантские, как целые планеты! И невесомые на вид (Обухова 1). Bubbles of gas burst and flew up-enormous as planets, yet seeming weightless to the eye (1a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > с виду

  • 128 Appert, Nicolas

    [br]
    b. 1749 Châlons-sur-Marne, France d. 1841
    [br]
    French confectioner who invented canning as a method of food preservation.
    [br]
    As the son of an inn keeper, Nicolas Appert would have learned about pickling and brewing, but he chose to become a chef and confectioner, establishing himself in the rue des Lombards in Paris in 1780. He prospered there until about 1795, and in that year he began experimenting in ways to preserve foodstuffs, succeeding with soups, vegetables, juices, dairy products, jellies, jams and syrups. His method was to place food in glass jars, seal the jars with cork and sealing wax, then sterilize them by immersion in boiling water for a predetermined time.
    In 1810 the French Government offered a 12,000 franc award to anyone succeeding in preserving high-quality foodstuffs for its army and navy. Appert won the award and in 1812 used the money to open the world's first food-bottling factory, La Maison Appert, in the town of Massey, near Paris. He established agents in all the major sea ports, recognizing the marine market as his most likely customer, and supplied products to Napoleon's troops in the field. By 1820 Appert's method was in use all over the United States, in spite of the simultaneous development of other containers of tin or other metals by an English merchant, Peter Durand, and the production of canned food products by the Bermondsey firm of Donkin \& Hall, London. The latter had opened the first canning factory in England in 1811.
    Initially Appert used glass jars and bottles, but in 1822 he changed to tin-plated metal cans. To heat the cans he used an autoclave, which heated the water to a temperature higher than its boiling point. A hammer and chisel were needed to open cans until the invention of a can opener by an Englishman named Yates in 1855. Despite Appert's successes, he received little financial reward and died in poverty; he was buried in a common grave.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1810, L'Art de conserver pendant plusieurs années toutes les sustenances animales et végétales (the Société d'Encouragement pour l'Industrie Nationale produced a report in its annual bulletin in 1809).
    Further Reading
    English historians have tended to concentrate on Bryan Donkin, who established tin cans as the primary container for long-term food preservation.
    J.Potin, 1891, Biographie de Nicolas Appert.
    1960, Canning and Packing 2–5.
    AP

    Biographical history of technology > Appert, Nicolas

См. также в других словарях:

  • Learned helplessness — is a psychological condition in which a human being or an animal has learned to act or behave helpless in a particular situation, even when it has the power to change its unpleasant or even harmful circumstance. Learned helplessness theory is the …   Wikipedia

  • learned — learned, scholarly, erudite are comparable when they mean possessing or manifesting unusually wide and deep knowledge. Learned implies the possession of knowledge gained by study and research; it usually implies wider and deeper knowledge than do …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Who Wants to Be a Superhero? (Season 1) — Who Wants to Be a Superhero? is a reality show hosted by Stan Lee. Contestants dress up as comic book superheroes of their own invention. Each week, Lee challenges the contestants to represent what superheroes are all about . One or more of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Learned Hand — Infobox Judge name = Learned Hand imagesize = caption = office = Judge of United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit termstart = 1924 termend = 1961 nominator = Calvin Coolidge appointer = predecessor = Julius Marshuetz Mayer birthdate …   Wikipedia

  • Who's the Boss? — Infobox Television show name = Who s The Boss caption = format = Sitcom camera = Multi camera runtime = 23 minutes creator = Martin Cohan Blake Hunter company = Hunter Cohan Productions Embassy Television (1984 1988) ELP Communications/Columbia… …   Wikipedia

  • Who Made Huckabee? — From left to right: Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert, and Conan O Brien mock pose for a beer bottle smashing bit during an all out brawl over Who Made Mike Huckabee? on Late Night with Conan O Brien. Who Made Huckabee?, also known as The Colbert/O… …   Wikipedia

  • who is who — phrasal or who s who or who was who : the identity of or the noteworthy facts about each of a number of persons lived in this town long enough to know who s who before I had learned who was wh …   Useful english dictionary

  • SOCIETIES, LEARNED — Learned societies among Jews, whose prototypes existed in the talmudic period, flourished in the late Middle Ages and were particularly widespread in Eastern Europe even into the 20th century. They were conceived on a broad basis. Unlike… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Learned, Mississippi — Infobox Settlement official name = Learned, Mississippi settlement type = Town nickname = motto = imagesize = image caption = image imagesize = image caption = image mapsize = 250px map caption = Location of Learned, Mississippi mapsize1 = map… …   Wikipedia

  • Who Killed Tom King? — On the 25 December 2006 Emmerdale presented the interactive storyline, featuring the death of Tom King.Tom King was a fictional character, in the television soap opera Emmerdale . He was a businessman with many enemies throughout the village.His… …   Wikipedia

  • Learned — Learn Learn (l[ e]rn), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Learned} (l[ e]rnd), or {Learnt} (l[ e]rnt); p. pr. & vb. n. {Learning}.] [OE. lernen, leornen, AS. leornian; akin to OS. lin[=o]n, for lirn[=o]n, OHG. lirn[=e]n, lern[=e]n, G. lernen, fr. the root of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»