- to gain one's object
- см. achieve one's object
English-russian accounting dictionary. 2014.
English-russian accounting dictionary. 2014.
gain — gain1 gainable, adj. /gayn/, v.t. 1. to get (something desired), esp. as a result of one s efforts: to gain possession of an object; to gain permission to enter a country. 2. to acquire as an increase or addition: to gain weight; to gain speed. 3 … Universalium
Object Manager (Windows) — Object Manager in Windows, categorized hierarchically using namespaces Object Manager (internally called Ob) is a subsystem implemented as part of the Windows Executive which manages Windows resources. Each resource, which are surfaced as logical … Wikipedia
One Night Stand (2007) — Promotional poster featuring Bobby Lashley Tagline(s) Extreme Rules Theme song(s) F … Wikipedia
One Canada Square — A view of One Canada Square, the second tallest building in the United Kingdom. Record height Tallest in the United … Wikipedia
Object Windows Library — Developer(s) Originally Borland (now Codegear) Initial release 1991 Stable release OWLNext 6.30.9 / September 2, 2010; 14 months ago (2010 09 02) … Wikipedia
one — (wŭn) adj. 1. Being a single entity, unit, object, or living being: »I ate one peach. 2. Characterized by unity; undivided: »They spoke with one voice. 3. a) Of the same kind or quality: »two animals of one species … Word Histories
Object relations theory — Part of a series of articles on Psychoanalysis … Wikipedia
Object lifetime — In computer science, the object lifetime (or life cycle) of an object in object oriented programming is the time between an object s creation (also known as instantiation or construction) till the object is no longer used, and is destructed or… … Wikipedia
one — [[t]wʌ̱n[/t]] ♦ ones 1) NUM One is the number 1. They had three sons and one daughter. ...one thousand years ago... Scotland beat England one nil at Wembley. ...one of the children killed in the crash. 2) ADJ: det ADJ (emphasis) If you say that… … English dictionary
To find one's self — Find Find (f[imac]nd), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Found} (found); p. pr. & vb. n. {Finding}.] [AS. findan; akin to D. vinden, OS. & OHG. findan, G. finden, Dan. finde, icel. & Sw. finna, Goth. fin[thorn]an; and perh. to L. petere to seek, Gr. pi ptein… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
To gain a point — Point Point, n. [F. point, and probably also pointe, L. punctum, puncta, fr. pungere, punctum, to prick. See {Pungent}, and cf. {Puncto}, {Puncture}.] 1. That which pricks or pierces; the sharp end of anything, esp. the sharp end of a piercing… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English