Значение слова "DEGRADATION" найдено в 65 источниках

DEGRADATION

найдено в "Англо-русском большом универсальном переводческом словаре"
[ˏdegrə`deɪʃ(ə)n]
понижение в чине, разжалование, лишение священника сана, привилегий
уменьшение стоимости, важности, цены
уменьшение масштаба
ослабление интенсивности тона
упадок, деградация; ухудшение
переход на более низкую ступень развития
вырождение; деградация, дегенерация; превращение того или иного органа в рудимент
деградация
старение материала, ухудшения качества поверхности
размывание, эрозия
выветривание


найдено в "Catholic encyclopedia"
Degradation: translation

Degradation
A canonical penalty by which an ecclesiastic is entirely and perpetually deprived of all office, benefice, dignity, and power conferred on him by ordination; and by a special ceremony is reduced to the state of a layman, losing the privileges of the clerical state and being given over to the secular arm

Catholic Encyclopedia..2006.

Degradation
    Degradation
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Degradation
    (Lat. degradatio).
    A canonical penalty by which an ecclesiastic is entirely and perpetually deprived of all office, benefice, dignity, and power conferred on him by ordination; and by a special ceremony is reduced to the state of a layman, losing the privileges of the clerical state and being given over to the secular arm. Degradation, however, cannot deprive an ecclesiastic of the character conferred in ordination, nor does it dispense him from the law of celibacy and the recitation of the Breviary. Degradation is twofold: verbal, i.e. the mere sentence of degradation; and real or actual, i.e.the execution of that sentence. They are not two distinct penalties, but parts of the same canonical punishment. Degradation is a perpetual punishment, and the clergyman so punished has never any right to release from it. It differs from deposition in so far as it deprives, and always totally, of all power of orders and jurisdiction and also of the privileges of the ecclesiastical state, thus in all things subjecting the delinquent to civil authority. While a bishop, even before his consecration can inflict deposition or pronounce a sentence of verbal degradation and can reinstate those so punished, it is only a consecrated bishop who can inflict actual degradation, and only the Holy See which can reinstate ecclesiastics actually degraded.
    Solemn degradation owes its origin to the military practice of thus expelling soldiers from the army; the Church adopted this institution in order to remove grievously delinquent clerics from the ecclesiastical order. The first mention of clerical degradation is found in the eighty-third Novel of Justinian; subsequently it was adopted with its external solemnities by early medieval councils as a repressive measure against heretics. It did not originally differ from deposition, and degraded ecclesiastics were still privileged and remained exclusively subject to ecclesiastical jurisdiction. The laity, however, complained that churchmen, even when degraded, secured in this way impunity for their crimes. Hence, Innocent III (c. viii, Decrim. falsi, X, v, 20) made it a permanent rule that clerical offenders, after degradation, should be handed over to the secular power, to be punished according to the law of the land. Degradation cannot be inflicted except for crimes clearly designated in the law, or for any other enormous crime when deposition and excommunication have been applied in vain, and the culprit has proved incorrigible. According to the Council of Trent (Sess. XIII,c.iv, De ref.), a bishop, when inflicting degradation on a priest, must have with him six mitred abbots as associate judges, and three such prelates for the degradation of a deacon ( see Deacons ) or subdeacon. If abbots cannot be had, a like number of church dignitaries of mature age, and skilled in canon law, may take their place. All these must give their vote, which is decisive, and must be unanimous for the imposition of so grave a penalty.
    The ceremony of actual degradation consists chiefly in bringing before the ecclesiastical superior the culprit vested in the robes corresponding to his order; in gradually divesting him of his sacred vestments, beginning with the last he received at his ordination; finally, in surrendering him to the lay judge (who must always be present) with a plea for lenient treatment and avoidance of bloodshed. The words pronounced by the ecclesiastical superior during the ceremony, also other rubrical details, are laid down by Boniface VIII (c. Degradatio, ii, de poenis, in VI) and by the Roman Pontifical (pt. III, c.vii). Degradation is now rarely, if ever, inflicted; dismissal, with perpetual deprivation, takes its place.
    For bibliography see Deposition.
    S. LUZIO
    Transcribed by Marjorie P. Godfrey

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company..1910.



найдено в "Universal-Lexicon"
Degradation: übersetzung

Herabsetzung; Degradierung

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De|gra|da|ti|on 〈f. 20
1. 〈Mil.〉 = Degradierung
2. 〈Landw.〉 Verschlechterung des Bodens durch Entzug wertvoller Nährstoffe
3. \Degradation der Energie 〈Phys.〉 Zerstreuung der Energie, Aufspaltung in andere, weniger nutzbare Energiearten
[<frz. dégradation „Degradierung, Herabsetzung, Herabwürdigung“]

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De|gra|da|ti|on [frz. dégradation = Degradierung, Herabsetzung]: svw. Abbau.

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De|gra|da|ti|on, die; -, -en [kirchenlat. degradatio = Herabsetzung]:
1. Degradierung.
2. Bestrafung eines katholischen Geistlichen durch Ausstoßung aus dem geistlichen Stand.
3. (Landwirtsch.) meist mit einer Verminderung der Fruchtbarkeit verbundene Abwandlung der Merkmale eines Bodens durch Auswaschung, Kahlschlag, durch Änderung des Klimas u. a.

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I
Degradation
 
[engl.], Signalabfall, Leistungsabfall.
II
Degradation
 
[zu mittellateinisch degradare »herabsetzen«] die, -/-en,  
 1) Bodenkunde: Degradierung, Bodendegradierung.
 
 
Hier finden Sie in Überblicksartikeln weiterführende Informationen:
 
 
Monokultur: Ökologische und wirtschaftliche Risiken
 
 
 2) katholisches Kirchenrecht: nach dem alten CIC von 1917 der dauernde Entzug der Amtsvollmachten und die Zurückversetzung in den Laienstand als schwerste Strafe für den Kleriker.In der Neufassung des CIC von 1983 als strafweise Entlassung (Dimissio) neu geregelt (Laisierung).
 
 3) öffentliches Dienstrecht: Degradierung, Dienstgradherabsetzung um einen oder mehrere Dienstgrade bei Offizieren oder Soldaten (§ 57 Wehrdisziplinarordnung), Versetzung in ein Amt derselben Laufbahn mit geringerem Endgrundgehalt bei Beamten (§ 10 Bundesdisziplinarordnung oder entsprechende Landesvorschriften) als gerichtliche Disziplinarmaßnahme bei Dienstpflichtverletzungen. Durch die Degradation gehen alle Rechte aus dem bisherigen Dienstgrad beziehungsweise Amt verloren.
 

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De|gra|da|ti|on, die; -, -en [kirchenlat. degradatio = Herabsetzung]: 1. Degradierung. 2. Bestrafung eines katholischen Geistlichen durch Ausstoßung aus dem geistlichen Stand. 3. (Landw.) meist mit einer Verminderung der Fruchtbarkeit verbundene Abwandlung der Merkmale eines Bodens durch Auswaschung, Kahlschlag, durch Änderung des Klimas u. a.


найдено в "Англо-русском словаре нефтегазовой промышленности"
1. деградация
2. ухудшение характеристик
3. постепенное ухудшение свойств (из делил) ; ухудшение качества
4. снижение эффективности (функционирования систе мы)
— degradation of structure
— fault-induced degradation
— graceful degradation
— initial degradation
— linear degradation
— mechanical degradation
— nonlinear degradation
— normal degradation
— off-line degradation
— parameter degradation
— part degradation
— partial degradation
— performance degradation
— reliability degradation
— storage degradation
— strain-induced degradation
— surface degradation
— uniform degradation

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деградация (общее сокращение поверхности суши, вызванное эрозией)

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1) деградация
2) ухудшение характеристик
3) постепенное ухудшение свойств (изделия); ухудшение качества
4) снижение эффективности (функционирования системы)
- degradation of structure
- degradation of surfactants in reservoir
- bacterial degradation
- cement strength degradation
- environmental degradation
- fault-induced degradation
- graceful degradation
- initial degradation
- linear degradation
- mechanical degradation
- nonlinear degradation
- normal degradation
- off-line degradation
- parameter degradation
- part degradation
- partial degradation
- performance degradation
- reliability degradation
- storage degradation
- strain-induced degradation
- surface degradation
- uniform degradation
* * *
постепенное ухудшение свойств
реакция, ведущая к уменьшению величины молекулы
ухудшение качества
ухудшение характеристик


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