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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "German_language" retrieved in 0.001 sec with these stats:
- "german" found 1704 times in 928 documents
- "languag" found 359 times in 226 documents
... Scharnhorststr. 24. Ley was ideal for this position since he was familiar with several foreign languages including (some English), French, Italian, and Russian, besides having other useful attributes. ref 1
But ... 2),” pp. 62-63.
note 13 Pendray, “The German Rockets, “ p. 5.
note 14 Pendray, “The German Rockets, “ pp. 5-6. For details of Goddard's technical ...
... three months after he had emigrated to the U.S., “...a daring (German) editor wrote to me that the (German) press had been forbidden to even mention the word 'rocket,' no matter ... of Tsiolkovsky, as seen in his biographies and other studies, there was not only a language problem but Tsiolkovsky was not a scientist but an almost impoverished girl's schoolteacher residing ... were “not apolitical engineers” and that they “commonly cast their work as an assertion of German cultural and national interest” is likewise unfounded and misleading. Moreover, this characterization is particularly puzzling ...
... “as worthy of (financial) support by the Deutsches Notgemeinshaft” (the German Emergency Association), or Notgemeinshaft der Deustchen Wissenschaft (Emergency Association of German Science). In fact, there is evidence Ritter did follow this ... the spring of 1930. (Oberth was born in 1894 in the German enclave in the city of Sibiu, in German called Hermannstadt, in what was then Austria-Hungary but this area later ... ) of the VfR, in the Berlin suburb of Reinickendorf, ca. 1930.'''
At the time, English language newspapers such as the ''Chicago Daily Tribune'' for 2 November 1930 hailed it as “the ...
... the “Society for Space Travel,” or more rarely, “the German Interplanetary Society,” although afterward more popularly (but incorrectly called) the “German Rocket Society” in English-speaking countries. (It was ... 1903. However, this journal was almost unknown in the West; there was also a language problem. Consequently, Tsiolkovsky's contribution remained virtually hidden outside of his own country ...
... a direct descendant of the Anglo- Saxon word mona, and is related to the word Germans use, mond. For the Goths of ancient Europe, it was mena, providing the link to ... history that distinction has mostly been lost and lune and luna are found in modern languages referring to our companion. http://plateaupress.com.au/wfw/monthsof.htm (See CDROM)
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Answer provided ...
... ''' - 2000.53.13
'''Number of Pages''' - 10
Abstract
The authors present an overview of their language-detection research to date, along with considerations for further research. The research focuses on the ... , seeking to identify whether a given signal has features within it that display intelligence or language-like characteristics, and comparing this with current methods used in searches for extra-terrestrial intelligence ...
... : North-Holland Publishing Co., 224 pages, $6.00''
The author has tried to design a language for cosmic intercommunications to be called Lincos (Lingua Cosmica), which could be deciphered by mentally ...
... Zeitschrift des Reichsbundes Deutscher Technik E.V.'' (''Technology Advance Journal of the Reich Association of German Technology, Registered Society'') for 5 November 1933. On the front of this issue of the ... >
note 5 “Man-Carrying Rocket Planned,” ''Astronautics'', No. 25, December-January 1933, p. 7; “Germans Plan First Rocket Flight With Pilot; Magdeburg Sanctions Attempt in Spring,” ''New York Times'', 18 ...
... Raumschiffahrt by Frank H. Winter - Part 6 Chapter 6
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'''Footnotes'''
note 1 Pendray, “The German Rockets,” p. 6; Ley, ''Missiles, Rockets'', pp. 140-141, 154; Nebel, ''Die Narren'', pp. 103 ... '', p. 142; Jelnina and Rohrwild, pp. 41-44; Pendray, “The German Rockets,” pp. 5, 11.
note 4 Pendray, “The German Rockets,” p. 9; von Braun, “Reminiscences,” p. 129; Ley, ''Rockets ...
... , although Tsiolkovsky may have been the first to suggest (unmanned) satellites in geosynchronous orbits. The German science fiction author Kurd Lasswitz, mentioned above, had suggested a fictional Martian space station in ... -2 Missile,” University of Maryland, 2005, p. 38, available on line; G. Edward Pendray, “The German Rockets,” ''Bulletin, American Interplanetary Society'', No. 17, May 1931, p. 5; Rolf Engel, “Spaceflight-Projects ...
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