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1 world economy
Econthe global marketplace that has grown up since the 1970s in which goods can be produced wherever production cost is cheapest -
2 World Association for Animal Production
Abbreviation: WAAPУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > World Association for Animal Production
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3 lean production
Opsa methodology aimed at reducing waste in the form of overproduction, excessive lead time, or product defects in order to make a business more effective and more competitive. Lean production originates in the production systems established by Toyota in Japan in the 1950s.In the early 1980s there was a significant increase in the application of lean production in Western companies. Lean production is characterized by lean operations with low inventories, quality management through prevention of errors, small batch runs, just-in-time production, high commitment human resource policies, team-based working, and close relations with suppliers. The term was popularized by researchers on the International Motor Vehicle Program of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in their book The Machine That Changed the World. Concepts that can help an organization move toward lean production include continuous improvement and world class manufacturing. -
4 Toyota production system
Opsa manufacturing system, developed by Toyota in Japan after World War II, which aims to increase production efficiency by the elimination of waste in all its forms. The Toyota production system was invented, and made to work, by Taiichi Ohno. Japan’s fledgling car-making industry was suffering from poor productivity, and Ohno was brought into Toyota with an initial assignment of catching up with the productivity levels of Ford’s car plants. In analyzing the problem, he decided that although Japanese workers must be working at the same rate as their American counterparts, waste and inefficiency were the main causes of their different productivity levels. Ohno identified waste in a number of forms, including overproduction, waiting time, transportation problems, inefficient processing, inventory, and defective products. The philosophy of TPS is to remove or minimize the influence of all these elements. In order to achieve this, TPS evolved to operate under lean production conditions. It is made up of soft, or cultural aspects, such as automation with the human touch— autonomation—and hard, or technical, aspects, which include just-in-time, kanban, and production smoothing. Each aspect is equally important and complementary. TPS has proven itself to be one of the most efficient manufacturing systems in the world but although leading companies have adopted it in one form or another, few have been able to replicate the success of Toyota.Abbr. TPS -
5 index-number of world industrial production
индекс промышленного производства мира.Показатель динамики продукции промышленности. Бюро статистики ООН исчисляет его как в целом по всему миру, так и по отдельным регионам. В целях сопоставимости понятие "промышленность" определяется как совокупность хозяйственных единиц, относимых в соответствии с Международной стандартной хозяйственной классификацией видов экономической деятельности (International Standard Industrial Classification of all Economic Activities) к горнорудной, обрабатывающей промышленности, электроэнергетике, производству газа и водоснабжению. Национальные индексы промышленного производства агрегируются по формуле средней арифметической взвешенной. В качестве весов используются показатели условно-чистой продукции, перечисленной из национальной валюты в доллары по официальному курсу. Система весов пересматривается раз в пять лет. Статистической основой для исчисления индексов явля- ются национальные данные о стоимости, добавленной обработкой, в оптовых ценах предприятия, включая субсидии и исключая косвенные налоги (см. indirect business tax and nontax liability).English-Russian explanatory dictionary of the external economic terms > index-number of world industrial production
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6 мировое производство
Русско-английский политический словарь > мировое производство
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7 verdensproduktion
world production. -
8 мировое производство
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9 мировое производство
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > мировое производство
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10 svjetska proizvodnja
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11 Welt
Welt f GEN world • in der ganzen Welt GEN all over the world* * ** * *Welt, arabisch-muslimische
Arab-Muslim world;
• die Dritte Welt the Third World, developing countries;
• gesamte Welt world at large, international community;
• vernetzte Welt interconnected world;
• Welt der Mode fashion world;
• der ganzen Welt zugänglich machen to be a window to the world;
• in der ganzen Welt tätig sein to operate world-wide;
• Weltabkommen universal convention;
• Weltagrarmarkt international agricultural market;
• Weltaktienindex world stock index;
• Weltarbeitsamt International Labo(u)r Office;
• Weltarbeitsrecht international labo(u)r code;
• Weltausstellung international (universal, world) exhibition, Great Exhibition, world fair;
• Weltbank International Bank of Reconstruction and Development;
• Weltbedarf world requirements (demands);
• Weltbeschäftigungskonferenz conference on world labo(u)r problems;
• Weltbürger cosmopolitan, cosmopolite;
• Weltenergieverbrauch world energy consumption;
• Welternährungsprogramm (WEP) World Food Program (WFP);
• Welterzeugung world production;
• Weltfirma firm of world-wide importance;
• Weltfrauenkonferenz World Conference on Women;
• Weltgeltung world reputation;
• Weltgesundheitsorganisation World Health Organization (WHO);
• Weltgewerkschaftsbund World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU);
• Welthandel world (international) trade, international commerce. -
12 arabisch-muslimische
Welt, arabisch-muslimische
Arab-Muslim world;
• die Dritte Welt the Third World, developing countries;
• gesamte Welt world at large, international community;
• vernetzte Welt interconnected world;
• Welt der Mode fashion world;
• der ganzen Welt zugänglich machen to be a window to the world;
• in der ganzen Welt tätig sein to operate world-wide;
• Weltabkommen universal convention;
• Weltagrarmarkt international agricultural market;
• Weltaktienindex world stock index;
• Weltarbeitsamt International Labo(u)r Office;
• Weltarbeitsrecht international labo(u)r code;
• Weltausstellung international (universal, world) exhibition, Great Exhibition, world fair;
• Weltbank International Bank of Reconstruction and Development;
• Weltbedarf world requirements (demands);
• Weltbeschäftigungskonferenz conference on world labo(u)r problems;
• Weltbürger cosmopolitan, cosmopolite;
• Weltenergieverbrauch world energy consumption;
• Welternährungsprogramm (WEP) World Food Program (WFP);
• Welterzeugung world production;
• Weltfirma firm of world-wide importance;
• Weltfrauenkonferenz World Conference on Women;
• Weltgeltung world reputation;
• Weltgesundheitsorganisation World Health Organization (WHO);
• Weltgewerkschaftsbund World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU);
• Welthandel world (international) trade, international commerce. -
13 Viscose
Viscose was discovered by two English chemists, Charles F. Cross and E. J. Be van, working in collaboration at Kew, near London, who found that when cellulose was treated with disulphide of carbon in the presence of caustic soda, it was converted into a golden yellow plastic compound which dissolved readily in water. A solution of the plastic was of such viscosity that it was named " viscose," a name that was destined to become world famous, seeing that round about 88 per cent of the world production of rayon is now made by the viscose process. In 1892 Cross and Bevan were granted a patent on the viscose process and it was applied to many purposes before the production of a textile thread was successfully accomplished. Fundamentally, the manufacture of viscose rayon is fairly simple. The raw material may be wood pulp, pulp from cotton linters, or a mixture of the two. The greater part of the world's viscose is made from wood pulp. Viscose rayon manufacture comprises seven distinct treatments as follows: - 1. Making and purifying the cotton or wood pulp which forms the cellulose base. 2. Caustic soda treatment of the cellulose base thereby forming alkali cellulose. 3. Treatment of alkali cellulose with carbon disulphide, forming cellulose xanthate. 4. Dissolving the cellulose xanthate in weak caustic soda to form cellulose solution or viscose. 5. Spinning viscose into yarn. 6. Bleaching, purification and finishing of the yarn. 7. Preparing the yarn for weaving and knitting. -
14 Weltproduktion
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15 мировое производство
1) General subject: global manufacturing2) Economy: world output, world potential, world production3) Mining: world's outputУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > мировое производство
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16 Weltöffentlichkeit
Weltöffentlichkeit
the world at large;
• Weltorganisation international (world-wide) organization;
• Weltorganisation für geistiges Eigentum World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO);
• Weltpatent universal patent;
• Weltpostverein International Postal Union;
• Weltpostvertrag Universal Postal Convention;
• Weltpreisindex für Stapelware Moody Index (US);
• Weltpreisniveau international price level;
• Weltproduktion world production (output). -
17 Zeiss, Carl
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]b. 11 September 1816 Weimar, Thuringia, Germanyd. 3 December 1888 Jena, Saxony, Germany[br]German lens manufacturer who introduced scientific method to the production of compound microscopes and made possible the production of the first anastigmatic photographic objectives.[br]After completing his early education in Weimar, Zeiss became an apprentice to the engineer Dr Frederick Koerner. As part of his training, Zeiss was required to travel widely and he visited Vienna, Berlin, Stuttgart and Darmstadt to study his trade. In 1846 he set up a business of his own, an optical workshop in Jena, where he began manufacturing magnifying glasses and microscopes. Much of his work was naturally for the university there and he had the co-operation of some of the University staff in the development of precision instruments. By 1858 he was seeking to make more expensive compound microscopes, but he found the current techniques primitive and laborious. He decided that it was necessary to introduce scientific method to the design of the optics, and in 1866 he sought the advice of a professor of physics at the University of Jena, Ernst Abbe (1840–1905). It took Zeiss until 1869 to persuade Abbe to join his company, and two difficult years were spent working on the calculations before success was achieved. Within a few more years the Zeiss microscope had earned a worldwide reputation for quality. Abbe became a full partner in the Zeiss business in 1875. In 1880 Abbe began an association with Friedrich Otte Schott that was to lead to the establishment of the famous Jena glass works in 1884. With the support of the German government, Jena was to become the centre of world production of new optical glasses for photographic objectives.In 1886 the distinguished mathematician and optician Paul Rudolph joined Zeiss at Jena. After Zeiss's death, Rudolph went on to use the characteristics of the new glass to calculate the first anastigmatic lenses. Immediately successful and widely imitated, the anastigmats were also the first of a long series of Zeiss photographic objectives that were to be at the forefront of lens design for years to come. Abbe took over the management of the company and developed it into an internationally famous organization.[br]Further ReadingL.W.Sipley, 1965, Photography's Great Inventors, Philadelphia (a brief biography). J.M.Eder, 1945, History of Photography, trans. E.Epstean, New York.K.J.Hume, 1980, A History of Engineering Metrology, London, 122–32 (includes a short account of Carl Zeiss and his company).JW / RTS -
18 мировая добыча
Mining: world production, world's output -
19 белая сборка
General subject: First-world production -
20 белая сборка
General subject: First-world production
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