British Telecom - traducción al Inglés
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British Telecom - traducción al Inglés

BRITISH MULTINATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES COMPANY
British Telecommunications Group plc; British Telecommunications plc; BT (Telecom); British Telecom; BT plc; BT Consulting and Systems Integration; British Telecommunications; B.T; BT Group plc; BT Openworld; BT group; Bt.com; British telecom; Brightview Group; British Telecommunications Group; Btbroadband; Btbroadband.com; Btcentralplus; Btcentral; BT PLC; BT Conferencing; BT-Central-Plus; BTnet UK Regional network; Bt.net; Wlms-broadband.com; British Telecommunications Plc; Eircom uk; BT Yahoo!; BT.com; British Telecommunications PLC; BT.A
  • The [[Adastral Park]] campus at [[Martlesham Heath]] in Suffolk, the principal site of [[BT Research]].
  • The BT Centre was completed in 1985.
  • BT logo used from 2003–2019
  • Logo of the simplified BT logo, used since 2019 for non-corporate purposes
  • British Telecom logo used from 1980–1991
  • Former CEO [[Gavin Patterson]] at the 2016 [[Chatham House]] Corporate Leaders Series.

British Telecom         
Britse Telecom (brits communicatiebedrijf)
the British Museum         
  • Room 21 – [[Mausoleum at Halicarnassus]], one of the [[Seven Wonders of the Ancient World]], mid-4th century BC
  • left
  • Proposed British Museum Extension, 1906
  • Human Headed Winged Lions]] and reliefs from [[Nimrud]] with the [[Balawat Gates]], c. 860 BC
  • Room 9 – [[Assyrian palace reliefs]], [[Nineveh]], 701–681 BC
  • External view of the World Conservation and Exhibition Centre at the museum, 2015
  • Room 33a – [[Amaravati Sculptures]], southern India, 1st century BC and 3rd century AD
  • Gallery 50 – View down the Roman Britain gallery
  • Reading Room]].
  • Great Court]] roof, 2005
  • The museum's main entrance
  • Room 18 – [[Parthenon]] marbles from the [[Acropolis of Athens]], 447 BC
  • A few of the [[Elgin Marbles]] (also known as the Parthenon Marbles) from the East [[Pediment]] of the [[Parthenon]] in Athens.
  • King Edward VII's]] Galleries, 1914
  • Room 4 – [[Colossal red granite statue of Amenhotep III]], 1350 BC
  • Entrance ticket to the British Museum, London 3 March 1790
  • Room 17 – Reconstruction of the [[Nereid Monument]], c. 390 BC
  • Grenville]] Library, 1875
  • Room 52 – Ancient Iran with the [[Cyrus Cylinder]],  559–530 BC
  • Mausoleum of Halicarnassus]] Room, 1920s
  • Sir Robert Smirke]]'s west wing under construction, July 1828
  • Percival David collection]] of Chinese ceramics
  • Room 4 – The [[Rosetta Stone]], key to the decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs, 196 BC
  • The [[Rosetta Stone]] on display in the British Museum in 1874
  • [[Sir Hans Sloane]]
  • Wide view of the Great Court
  • Duveen]] Gallery, 1980
  • Montagu House]], c. 1715
  • Room 61 – The famous false fresco 'Pond in a Garden' from the [[Tomb of Nebamun]], c. 1350 BC
  • Room 24 – The [[Wellcome Trust]] Gallery of Living and Dying, with [[Hoa Hakananai'a]], a ''[[moai]]'', in the centre
  • Sir [[Leonard Woolley]] holding the excavated [[Sumer]]ian [[Queen's Lyre]], 1922
NATIONAL MUSEUM IN LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM
Brit. Mus; Brit. Mus.; British Museum London; The British Museum; British Museum Department of Libraries and Archives; British Museum Department of Africa, Oceania and the Americas; British Museum Department of Conservation, Documentation and Science; British Museum Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities; British Museum Department of Prehistory and Europe; British Museum Department of Prints and Drawings; British Museum Act 1955; British Museum Act 1924; British Museum Act 1839; British Museum Act 1962; British Museum Act 1946; British Museum Act 1930; British Museum Act 1878; British Museum Act 1932; British Museum Act 1938; London British Museum; British Museum Publications; British museum; British Museum, London; Sloane library; Sloane Library; Www.britishmuseum.org; The British Museum Press; British Museum Press; Sainsbury African Galleries; Sainsbury Exhibitions Gallery; British Museum Department of Greece and Rome; British Museum Department of Conservation and Scientific Research; British Museum Research Publications; Museum of Looting; British Museum Department of Britain, Europe and Prehistory; British Museum Catalogue; Britiſh Muſeum
het Britse Museum (het nationale museum in Londen met de grootste collectie van oudheden in de wereld)
British Aerospace PLC         
  • Sea Harrier FA2 hovering
  • Harrier GR5
  • buzz]] BAe 146–300
  • alt=Grey jet aircraft with black radome and large engine inlet hovering with undercarriage extended. It is obscuring another identical jet in the distance. Near the bottom of the photograph, taken out at sea, is the horizon
  • A vertically-launched Sea Wolf
  • A BAe built Eurofighter development aircraft
  • A [[German Air Force]] [[Tornado IDS]] in flight, 2007
  • An artist's depiction of HOTOL
  • BAe Nimrod MRA4
  • Skylark sounding rocket
  • A300]]
1977-1999 AEROSPACE AND DEFENSE COMPANY IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
BAe; British Aerospace Act 1980; British Aerospace plc; British Aerospace PLC; The Aircraft Group of British Aerospace PLC
British Aerospace, Brits bedrijf voor productie van vliegtuigen (onderdeel van Europees Consortium)

Definición

British Telecom
<company> (BT) The largest telecommunications provider in the UK. Due to regulatory issues, BT had to sell off its interest in McCaw Cellular. BT sold it to AT&T for something like 4B$. BT then invested that in MCI. As a part of the deal, MCI was given BT North America, which was the old Tymnet. MCI laid off about 40% of the Tymnet staff. http://intervid.co.uk/. (1995-05-09)

Wikipedia

BT Group

BT Group plc (trading as BT and formerly British Telecom) is a British multinational telecommunications holding company headquartered in London, England. It has operations in around 180 countries and is the largest provider of fixed-line, broadband and mobile services in the UK, and also provides subscription television and IT services.

BT's origins date back to the founding in 1846 of the Electric Telegraph Company, the world's first public telegraph company, which developed a nationwide communications network. BT Group as it came to be started in 1912, when the General Post Office, a government department, took over the system of the National Telephone Company becoming the monopoly telecoms supplier in the United Kingdom. The Post Office Act of 1969 led to the GPO becoming a public corporation. The British Telecom brand was introduced in 1980, and became independent of the Post Office in 1981, officially trading under the name. British Telecommunications was privatised in 1984, becoming British Telecommunications plc, with some 50 percent of its shares sold to investors. The Government sold its remaining stake in further share sales in 1991 and 1993. BT holds a royal warrant and has a primary listing on the London Stock Exchange, and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.

BT controls a number of large subsidiaries. BT Global Services division supplies telecoms services to corporate and government customers worldwide, and its BT Consumer division supplies telephony, broadband, and subscription television services in the United Kingdom to around 18 million customers.

Ejemplos de uso de British Telecom
1. Richard van Wageningen, CEO, British Telecom Russia & CIS: British Telecom values a healthy work–life balance and our Russian operation is not an exception.
2. Perhaps, the most famous global telco is British Telecom.
3. British Telecom shut down all telephone lines to the town.
4. British Telecom said there was no conclusive scientific evidence to show that DECTs were unsafe.
5. In early 2003, Telfort was spun off from British telecom firm mmO2.