canter$11084$ - translation to ελληνικό
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canter$11084$ - translation to ελληνικό

PSYCHOLOGIST
David Victor Canter; Canter, David

canter      
n. καλπασμός, ελαφρό κάλπασμα

Ορισμός

gallop
(gallops, galloping, galloped)
1.
When a horse gallops, it runs very fast so that all four legs are off the ground at the same time. If you gallop a horse, you make it gallop.
The horses galloped away...
Staff officers galloped fine horses down the road.
VERB: V adv/prep, V n prep/adv
2.
If you gallop, you ride a horse that is galloping.
Major Winston galloped into the distance.
VERB: V prep/adv
3.
A gallop is a ride on a horse that is galloping.
I was forced to attempt a gallop.
N-SING
4.
If something such as a process gallops, it develops very quickly and is often difficult to control.
In spite of the recession, profits have galloped ahead.
...galloping inflation.
VERB: V adv, V-ing
5.
If you gallop, you run somewhere very quickly.
They are galloping around the garden playing football.
VERB: V prep
6.
If you do something at a gallop, you do it very quickly.
I read the book at a gallop.
PHRASE: PHR after v

Βικιπαίδεια

David Canter

David Victor Canter (born 5 January 1944) is a psychologist. He began his career as an architectural psychologist studying the interactions between people and buildings, publishing and providing consultancy on the designs of offices, schools, prisons, housing and other building forms as well as exploring how people made sense of the large scale environment, notably cities. He set up the Journal of Environmental Psychology in 1980. His work in architecture led to studies of human reactions in fires and other emergencies. He wrote about investigative psychology in Britain. He helped police in 1985 on the Railway Rapist case. He was the professor of psychology at the University of Surrey for ten years, where he developed investigative psychology described in detail in Investigative Psychology: Offender Profiling and the Analysis of Criminal Action and a course curriculum. He set up and was director of the Centre For Investigative Psychology, which is based at the University of Liverpool. From 2009 he was at the University of Huddersfield, where he directed the International Research Centre in Investigative Psychology. He retired from there in 2018. He is emeritus professor at the University of Liverpool and continues to publish in environmental and crime/forensic psychology.