aspect$5287$ - перевод на греческий
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aspect$5287$ - перевод на греческий

GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY DENOTED BY A VERB
Aspect (linguistics); Verb aspect; Aspect (grammar); Verbal aspect; Aspect (verb); Aspectual verb; Viewpoint aspect; Experiential aspect

aspect      
n. άποψις, όψις, άποψη
double entry bookkeeping         
  • ''Della mercatura e del mercante perfetto'' by [[Benedetto Cotrugli]], cover of 1602 edition; originally written in 1458
SEAMLESS, CHRONOLOGICAL AND FACTUAL ORDERED RECORDING OF ALL BUSINESS PROCESSES IN A COMPANY BASED OF DOCUMENTED EVIDENCE
Double-Entry Booking; Double-entry bookeeping; Double entry bookkeeping; Double-entry bookkeeping system; Double entry; Double-entry accounting; Double-entry book-keeping; Double-entry accounting system; Double-entry system; Double-entry book-keeping system; Double entry bookkeeping system; Double entry book-keeping system; Double entry book-keeping; Double entry accounting system; Double entry accounting; Double entry system; Double-entry; Double book-keeping; Split transaction; Dual aspect; Cash book, Journal; Double-Entry Accounting; Double-entry Accounting; Double entry booking; Double entries; Double-entries; Double-entry bookkeeping systems; Double entry bookkeeping systems; Double entry book keeping system; Double-entry book keeping system; Double entry book keeping systems; Double entry book-keeping systems; Double-entry book keeping systems; Double-entry book-keeping systems; Double entry book keeping; Double-entry book keeping; Double entry book keeper; Double entry book keepers; Double entry book-keeper; Double entry book-keepers; Double entry bookkeeper; Double entry bookkeepers; Double-entry book keeper; Double-entry book-keeper; Double-entry bookkeeper; History of double-entry bookkeeping systems; History of double-entry bookkeeping; History of the double-entry bookkeeping system; Double book accounting; Double-book accounting
διπλογραφία
slave driver         
  • David Roberts]]' ''Egypt and Nubia'', issued between 1845 and 1849
  • caravan]] transporting black African slaves across the [[Sahara Desert]].
  • Workers being forced to haul rocks up a hill in a Gulag
  • Prisoners forced to work on the Buchenwald–Weimar rail line, 1943
  • Statue of Bussa]], who led the largest slave rebellion in Barbadian history.
  • A British captain witnessing the miseries of slaves in [[Ottoman Algeria]], 1815
  • coins]].
  • The work of the [[Mercedarians]] was in ransoming Christian slaves held in North Africa (1637).
  • Saint-Domingue [[slave revolt]] in 1791
  • [[Kisaeng]], women from outcast or slave families who were trained to provide entertainment, conversation, and sexual services to men of the upper class.
  • [[Adalbert of Prague]] pleads with [[Boleslaus II, Duke of Bohemia]] for the release of slaves
  • [[1804 Haiti massacre]], carried out by Haitian soldiers, mostly former slaves, against the remaining French population
  • Jacques Étienne Arago]], 1839.
  • ''Slave Market in Ancient Rome'', by [[Jean-Léon Gérôme]]
  • Public flogging of a slave in 19th-century [[Brazil]], by [[Johann Moritz Rugendas]]
  • [[Joseph Jenkins Roberts]], born in Virginia, was the first president of [[Liberia]], which was founded in 1822 for freed American slaves.
  • A model showing a cross-section of a typical 1700s European slave ship on the [[Middle Passage]], [[National Museum of American History]].
  • url=http://www.ibtimes.com/malis-other-crisis-slavery-still-plagues-mali-insurgency-could-make-it-worse-1017280}}</ref>
  • A world map showing countries by prevalence of female trafficking
  • Slave market in [[Algiers]], 1684
  • Corinthian black-figure terra-cotta votive tablet of slaves working in a mine, dated to the late seventh century BC
  • Modern incidence of slavery, as a percentage of the population, by country.
  • [[Olaudah Equiano]], His autobiography, published in 1789, helped in the creation of the Slave Trade Act 1807 which ended the African slave trade for Britain and its colonies.
  • Persian slave in the [[Khanate of Khiva]], 19th century
  • author-link=Brian Glyn Williams }}</ref>
  • Georgia]], U.S., 1860
  • Joseph]]'', by [[Schnorr von Carolsfeld]], 1860
  • Slaves on a Virginia plantation (''[[The Old Plantation]]'', c. 1790).
  • Staunton]], Virginia to Tennessee in 1850.
  • Slave branding, c. 1853
  • ''Flogging a slave fastened to the ground'', illustration in an 1853 anti-slavery pamphlet
  • date=July 27, 2004}}</ref>
  • Arab-Swahili]] slave traders and their captives on the [[Ruvuma River]] in East Africa, 19th century
  • Planting the sugar cane, [[British West Indies]], 1823
  • Spartacus]]''
  • Slavic]] and African slaves in Córdoba, illustration from [[Cantigas de Santa Maria]], 13th Century
  • Branding of a female slave
  • Sale and inspection of slaves
  • Dutch Suriname]]. 1840–1850.
  • Chinese Emperor [[Wang Mang]] abolished slavery in 17 CE but the ban was overturned after his assassination.
  • Portrait of an older woman in [[New Orleans]] with her enslaved servant girl in the mid-19th century
SYSTEM UNDER WHICH PEOPLE ARE TREATED AS PROPERTY TO BE BOUGHT AND SOLD, AND ARE FORCED TO WORK
Slaves; Slave labor; Disposable people; Financial motivations behind the American Civil War; Enslavement; Chattel slavery; Slave labour; Chattel slaves; Slave-traders; Slaveowner; Slave-auction; Coercive labor system; Right to be free from slavery; Slavery issue; Slave worker; Slavemaster; Slave master; Industrialization and growth of slavery; Slave; Charity slave auction; Slavedriver; Child servitude; Domestic slavery; Slave punishment; Slave religion; Life as a slave; Women slavery; Women Slaves; Enslaving; Slaving; Economics of slavery; Yoann beaudry; Slave driver; Instrumentum vocale; Slaves And Slavery; Chattel Slavery; Ethical Aspect of Slavery; Mahender Sabhnani; Slavery, Ethical Aspect of; Slave workers; Literate slave; Self-sale; Self sale; Slave laborer; Subjected; Subjection; Slaved; Slave-driver; Slave-holder; Subjugate; Slaveowners; Slavery in the Middle East; Enslaved person; Enslave; Enslaved people; Slave ownership; Slave-ownership; Human slavery; Slaveholders; Slave economy; Subjugated; Subjugation; Slavery industry; De facto slavery
σκληρός αρχιεργάτης, επιστάτης δούλων, σκληρός εργοδότης

Определение

aspect-oriented programming
<programming> (AOP) A style of programming that attempts to abstract out features common to many parts of the code beyond simple functional modules and thereby improve the quality of software. Mechanisms for defining and composing abstractions are essential elements of programming languages. The design style supported by the abstraction mechanisms of most current languages is one of breaking a system down into parameterised components that can be called upon to perform a function. But many systems have properties that don't necessarily align with the system's functional components, such as failure handling, persistence, communication, replication, coordination, memory management, or real-time constraints, and tend to cut across groups of functional components. While they can be thought about and analysed relatively separately from the basic functionality, programming them using current component-oriented languages tends to result in these aspects being spread throughout the code. The source code becomes a tangled mess of instructions for different purposes. This "tangling" phenomenon is at the heart of much needless complexity in existing software systems. A number of researchers have begun working on approaches to this problem that allow programmers to express each of a system's aspects of concern in a separate and natural form, and then automatically combine those separate descriptions into a final executable form. These approaches have been called aspect-oriented programming. {Xerox AOP homepage (http://parc.xerox.com/csl/projects/aop/)}. AspectJ (http://AspectJ.org/). {ECOOPP'99 AOP workshop (http://wwwtrese.cs.utwente.nl/aop-ecoop99/)}. (1999-11-21)

Википедия

Grammatical aspect

In linguistics, aspect is a grammatical category that expresses how an action, event, or state, as denoted by a verb, extends over time. Perfective aspect is used in referring to an event conceived as bounded and unitary, without reference to any flow of time during ("I helped him"). Imperfective aspect is used for situations conceived as existing continuously or repetitively as time flows ("I was helping him"; "I used to help people").

Further distinctions can be made, for example, to distinguish states and ongoing actions (continuous and progressive aspects) from repetitive actions (habitual aspect).

Certain aspectual distinctions express a relation between the time of the event and the time of reference. This is the case with the perfect aspect, which indicates that an event occurred prior to (but has continuing relevance at) the time of reference: "I have eaten"; "I had eaten"; "I will have eaten".

Different languages make different grammatical aspectual distinctions; some (such as Standard German; see below) do not make any. The marking of aspect is often conflated with the marking of tense and mood (see tense–aspect–mood). Aspectual distinctions may be restricted to certain tenses: in Latin and the Romance languages, for example, the perfective–imperfective distinction is marked in the past tense, by the division between preterites and imperfects. Explicit consideration of aspect as a category first arose out of study of the Slavic languages; here verbs often occur in pairs, with two related verbs being used respectively for imperfective and perfective meanings.

The concept of grammatical aspect should not be confused with perfect and imperfect verb forms; the meanings of the latter terms are somewhat different, and in some languages, the common names used for verb forms may not follow the actual aspects precisely.