Glossary entry

French term or phrase:

pentes des rampes

English translation:

grades (or slopes) of the ramps

    The asker opted for community grading. The question was closed on 2020-05-01 08:54:50 based on peer agreement (or, if there were too few peer comments, asker preference.)
Apr 28, 2020 04:20
4 yrs ago
42 viewers *
French term

pentes des rampes

French to English Tech/Engineering Patents patent
** système de direction assistée

*** Les vitesses de déplacement V7, V4, V2, qui correspondront aux pentes des rampes de la ligne brisée, pourront être librement choisies et programmées, en fixant les repères temporels tl, t2, t3... délimitant les durées de déplacement en fonction des amplitudes de déplacement Xsup, Xinf.
Proposed translations (English)
3 +2 grades (or slopes) of the ramps
Change log

Apr 28, 2020 16:00: Daryo changed "Field (write-in)" from "scientific patent" to "patent"

Discussion

SafeTex May 1, 2020:
@ Daryo Hello Daryo

I think I fully understand your objection now but if you Google "Scientific Patents", there are simply too many hits to say that the term is wrong in some way

It is used to describe patents of a more highly scientific/technical nature.

So your point that you cannot patent a scientific theory is interesting but I don't think you should disagree with the use of the phrase "scientific patent" unless you really want to say that all the people/sites who use it are fundamentally wrong.

Regards
Daryo Apr 30, 2020:
It isn't directly related to this question but it definitely IS related to patents as a specialisation in translating.

This Asker keeps repeatedly calling patents he's working on "scientific patents", which makes no sense.

The making of an atomic bomb involves undeniably a lot of "science", still I can't remember anyone ever calling an atomic bomb "a scientific bomb".

Even a low-tech catapult requires some "science" in order to predict the trajectory of the projectile, still I never heard of a "scientific catapult".

In the same vein, however much "science" was applied in a patent, the patent itself is certainly not "scientific".

End of digression.
chris collister Apr 29, 2020:
A spirit of cooperation? The purpose of Kudoz (surely?) is to enable translators, some of whom are highly experienced, to pass on their wisdom in a helpful and constructive manner to other translators who might have less experience in that particular field. Long may it continue.
Mimita SWI (asker) Apr 29, 2020:
@Daryo:
thank you for your comment , however it's a patent for me.
besides I cannot understand why all these discussions. If you have an answer, please post it, otherwise Be more gentle with your remarks which I thik should be reviewed before posting. thank you
SafeTex Apr 29, 2020:
@ Daryo The guy is not trying to patent gradients of a slope but another invention entirely. Surely patents can make reference to mathematical/scientific concepts and formula even if the latter can't be patented?

I note too that there are lots of jobs for patent scientists.

I think you have completely lost it with your disagrees and moral lessons but this one takes the biscuit.
Daryo Apr 28, 2020:
@ imene souissi When are you going to take notice that there is no such thing as a "scientific" patent?
chris collister Apr 28, 2020:
Since this is related to the previous questions (servo-assisted steering), then these would be slopes of a curve, or set of, curves. Speed (or velocity) is given by the slope of a function whose ordinate is displacement and whose abscissa is time. If the function is multidimensional, then "gradient" might be more appropriate. In the absence of the graph in question, it seems to me that "rampe" is redundant.

Proposed translations

+2
11 mins
Selected

grades (or slopes) of the ramps

https://www.lememento.fr/calcul-pente

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Note added at 18 mins (2020-04-28 04:38:38 GMT)
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If this is a mathematical graph (see picture), the rampe is a mathematical "curve" in EN

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Note added at 4 hrs (2020-04-28 08:46:15 GMT)
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Grades or slopes or gradients; or curve. in a graph.
Peer comment(s):

agree Stephen McCann
3 hrs
Thank you Stephen
agree SafeTex : I like "gradients" best
1 day 8 hrs
Thank you Tex. On gradients, compare Chris Collister (discussion entry #1).
neutral Daryo : yes for grades / slopes or gradients, but "ramps" needs more checking / context - is it just a kind of virtual graphic in some electronic device or a palpable piece of hardware that is part of the steering mechanism? Could make a difference.
2 days 5 hrs
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."

Reference comments

11 hrs
Reference:

basics of patenting ...

What you can patent

You can use a patent to protect your invention. It gives you the right to take legal action against anyone who makes, uses, sells or imports it without your permission.

To be granted a patent, your invention must be all of the following:

-- something that can be made or used
-- new
-- inventive - not just a simple modification to something that already exists
Patents are expensive and difficult to get. Before you apply, check if a patent is right for your business.

What you can’t patent

You can’t patent certain types of invention, including:

-- literary, dramatic, musical or artistic works
-- a way of doing business, playing a game or thinking
-- a method of medical treatment or diagnosis
-- a discovery, scientific theory or mathematical method
-- the way information is presented
-- some computer programs or mobile apps
-- ‘essentially biological’ processes like crossing-breeding plants, and plant or animal varieties

https://www.gov.uk/patent-your-invention
Note from asker:
@mrrafe in fact the term was takn from a scientific patent, which I couldn't specify differently.
Peer comments on this reference comment:

neutral mrrafe : Agreed but another part of this ST appears in a prior question, and seems to be more of a patent for a steering mechanism which is OK. This part is just explanation of the mechanism. I think.
1 hr
a patent for a "steering mechanism"- i.e. for s.t. that can be made THAT can be patented OTOH whatever scientific knowledge was applied in elaborating the "thing" IS NOT what is or could be "patented" - that distinction seems too hard to grasp?
neutral SafeTex : the reference is fine but not the point that you are trying to make. Just because the question is scientific here does not mean that he is trying to patent a scientific theory. We all know the patent is for a steering mechanism of some sort!!!
20 hrs
this Asker keeps repeadly calling patents "scientific patents" - which makes no sense.
Something went wrong...
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