draft card - translation to ελληνικό
Diclib.com
Λεξικό ChatGPT
Εισάγετε μια λέξη ή φράση σε οποιαδήποτε γλώσσα 👆
Γλώσσα:

Μετάφραση και ανάλυση λέξεων από την τεχνητή νοημοσύνη ChatGPT

Σε αυτήν τη σελίδα μπορείτε να λάβετε μια λεπτομερή ανάλυση μιας λέξης ή μιας φράσης, η οποία δημιουργήθηκε χρησιμοποιώντας το ChatGPT, την καλύτερη τεχνολογία τεχνητής νοημοσύνης μέχρι σήμερα:

  • πώς χρησιμοποιείται η λέξη
  • συχνότητα χρήσης
  • χρησιμοποιείται πιο συχνά στον προφορικό ή γραπτό λόγο
  • επιλογές μετάφρασης λέξεων
  • παραδείγματα χρήσης (πολλές φράσεις με μετάφραση)
  • ετυμολογία

draft card - translation to ελληνικό

COMPULSORY ENLISTMENT INTO NATIONAL OR MILITARY SERVICE
Conscripts; Military draft; Conscript; Mandatory military service; Mandatory army service; The Draft; Conscripted; Mandatory conscription; The draft; Draft card; Compulsory military service; Forced conscription; Compulsory Military Training; Levy system; Feudal levy; Compulsory military training; Military conscription; Conscript Troops; Conscript system; Draft law; Anti-conscription; Military slavery; Military Slavery; Military conscript; Military Draft; Universal military service; Conscription option; Compulsory draft; Ilkum; Drafting soldiers; Feudal levies; Draft (conscription); World War II draft; General conscription; Draft registration; Register for the draft; Registering for the draft; Slave-soldier; Conscript army; Called up for military service; Arguments against conscription; Military draught; Slave soldier; Slave military; Military slave; Military slavery in the Ottoman Empire; Slave soldiers; Conscription in Bulgaria; Conscription of women; Draftee; Draftee Army
  • Ottoman [[janissaries]]
  • Conscription of Poles to the Russian Army in 1863 (by [[Aleksander Sochaczewski]])
  • [[Evzones]] of the Presidential Guard in front of the [[Greek Parliament]] armed with M1 Garands
  • [[Conscription in Iran]]
  • Royal Life Guards]] in Copenhagen
  • Female Israeli soldiers
  • USSR conscripts, Moscow, 1941
  • Painting depicting a battle during the Ōnin War
  • terracotta]] soldier with his horse, China, 210–209 BC
  • website=www.globalsecurity.org}}</ref>
  • Finnish conscripts swearing their [[military oath]] at the end of their basic training period
  • Swedish conscripts in 2008
  • Young men registering for conscription during [[World War I]], New York City, June 5, 1917

draft card         
κάρτα στρατεύσεως
punch card         
  • [[Aperture card]]
  • An 80-column punched card with the extended character set introduced with [[EBCDIC]] in 1964.
  • A U.S. Census Bureau clerk (left) prepares punch cards using a pantograph similar to that developed by Herman Hollerith for the 1890 Census, while a second clerk (right) uses a 1930s key punch to perform the same task more quickly.
  • Carpet loom with Jacquard apparatus by Carl Engel, around 1860. Chain feed is on the left.
  • A wall-sized display sample of a punch card for the 1954 U.S. Census of Agriculture
  • Punched card from a [[Fortran]] program: Z(1) = Y + W(1), plus sorting information in the last 8 columns.
  • HP Educational Basic optical mark-reader card.
  • Hollerith card as shown in the ''[[Railroad Gazette]]'' in 1895, with 12 rows and 24 columns.<ref name="Railroad_1895"/>
  • Binary]] punched card.
  • United States National Archives Records Service]] facility in 1959. Each carton could hold 2,000 cards.
  • Invalid "lace cards" such as this pose mechanical problems for card readers.
  • Clerk creating punch cards containing data from the [[1950 United States census]].
  • A 5081 card from a non-IBM manufacturer.
  • A punched card printing plate.
  • A deck of punched cards comprising a computer program. The red diagonal line is a visual aid to keep the deck sorted.<ref name="Miami"/>
  • A blank [[Remington Rand]] [[UNIVAC]] format card. Card courtesy of [[MIT Museum]].
  • A punched Remington Rand card with an IBM card for comparison
  • IBM 96-column punched card
  • Woman operating the card puncher, c.1940
  • A $75 U.S. Savings Bond, Series EE issued as a punched card. Eight of the holes record the bond serial number.
  • Institutions, such as universities, often had their general purpose cards printed with a logo. A wide variety of forms and documents were printed on punched cards, including checks. Such printing did not interfere with the operation of the machinery.
  • A 12-row/80-column [[IBM]] punched card from the mid-twentieth century
PAPER-BASED RECORDING MEDIUM
Punched cards; Punchcard; Punch cards; Punch Card; Hollerith card; Hollerith cards; IBM card; Hollerith Card; Tabulating card; Computer punch card; Punched-card; Input deck; Punchcards; Punch-card; Punch card; Overpunch; Hollerith encoding; Hollerith code; Port-a-punch; IBM Port-A-Punch; Punched card code; IBM 96-column punched card format; IBM 80-column card; Card deck (computing); Punched-card systems
n. δελτίο διάρτησης
phone card         
  • Phonecards from [[Olneyville]], Rhode Island - 2008
  • Optical phonecards from Austria. The balance is shown by the vertical marks on the white bar.
SMALL CARD, USUALLY RESEMBLING A CREDIT CARD, USED TO PAY FOR TELEPHONE SERVICES
Telephone prepaid calling card; Phone-card collecting; Telephone billing cards; Telephone billing card; Phone card; Fusilately; Phonecard; Phone cards; Telecard; Prepaid calling cards; Telegery; Telephone cards; International phone card; Telephone calling card
τηλεφωνική κάρτα

Βικιπαίδεια

Conscription

Conscription (also called the draft in the United States) is the state-mandated enlistment of people in a national service, mainly a military service. Conscription dates back to antiquity and it continues in some countries to the present day under various names. The modern system of near-universal national conscription for young men dates to the French Revolution in the 1790s, where it became the basis of a very large and powerful military. Most European nations later copied the system in peacetime, so that men at a certain age would serve 1–8 years on active duty and then transfer to the reserve force.

Conscription is controversial for a range of reasons, including conscientious objection to military engagements on religious or philosophical grounds; political objection, for example to service for a disliked government or unpopular war; sexism, in that historically men have been subject to the draft in the most cases; and ideological objection, for example, to a perceived violation of individual rights. Those conscripted may evade service, sometimes by leaving the country, and seeking asylum in another country. Some selection systems accommodate these attitudes by providing alternative service outside combat-operations roles or even outside the military, such as Siviilipalvelus (alternative civil service) in Finland, Zivildienst (compulsory community service) in Austria, Germany and Switzerland. Several countries conscript male soldiers not only for armed forces, but also for paramilitary agencies, which are dedicated to police-like domestic only service like internal troops, border guards or non-combat rescue duties like civil defence.

As of 2023, many states no longer conscript soldiers, relying instead upon professional militaries with volunteers. The ability to rely on such an arrangement, however, presupposes some degree of predictability with regard to both war-fighting requirements and the scope of hostilities. Many states that have abolished conscription still, therefore, reserve the power to resume conscription during wartime or times of crisis. States involved in wars or interstate rivalries are most likely to implement conscription, and democracies are less likely than autocracies to implement conscription. With a few exceptions, such as Singapore and Egypt, former British colonies are less likely to have conscription, as they are influenced by British anti-conscription norms that can be traced back to the English Civil War; the United Kingdom abolished conscription in 1960.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για draft card
1. As he tells it, he protested the Vietnam War as a college student, burning his draft card at a UCLA rally in 1'67.
2. According to a news account early in his career, one grizzled cop mistook the young prosecutor for a "draft–card burner" because of his longish hair and mod attire –– the officer changed his opinion after Margolis helped disarm a robbery suspect.
3. Mailer wrote his sprawling masterpiece "The Armies of the Night" about the march, beginning with his drunken rant in the Ambassador Theater on 18th Street NW, his hung–over participation in a draft card protest at the Justice Department, and his arrest for crossing a police line at the Pentagon.