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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / Power belongs to the one in whom the mass believes

Winged words, phraseological units. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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Power belongs to the one in whom the masses believe

Ernst Raupach
Ernst Raupach

Phraseologism: The power belongs to the one in whom the masses believe.

Meaning: Formal powers of authority by no means guarantee real influence on society; they are used only by those whom people trust, who enjoy their authority. Accordingly, he has real power.

Origin: From the play "The Death of Frederick II" by the German playwright Ernst Raupach (1784-1852).

Random phraseology:

Ah, Andryusha, shall we be sad?

Meaning:

It is used as a playful call to cheer up, to look at things from a brighter, more joyful side.

Origin:

From the popular in the 1930s. songs written by the composer I. Zhak to the verses of the poet Grigory Borisovich Gridov (1899-1941).

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Random news from the Archive

DNA of things 28.11.2019

Researchers from Switzerland and Israel are developing a way to store large amounts of information in almost any facility. So, they created glass nanoballs - "DNA molecules" - with "instructions" for printing an object on a 3D printer, and "sewn" them into the object itself.

This development was preceded by two discoveries of the last few years. One is Robert Grass's method for labeling foods with a DNA barcode embedded in tiny glass beads. Such nanoballs are used, for example, as indicators for geological tests or as markers by which a high-quality food product can be distinguished from a counterfeit one. A barcode is a 100-bit code (a combination of "0" and "1" in one hundred characters).

At the same time, it became possible to store huge amounts of data in DNA. Grass' colleague Yaniv Erlich, an Israeli scientist, has developed a method that could theoretically store 215 terabytes of data in one gram of DNA molecules. And Grass was able to store an entire music album in DNA, which is 000 megabytes of data.

Now scientists, having combined their inventions, are creating a new way of storing data - the "DNA of things". As an example, the researchers 3D printed a plastic figurine of a rabbit, which contains instructions (about 100 kilobytes of data) for printing an object. The researchers achieved this by adding tiny glass beads to the plastic containing information about how and what the object is made of.

And just like in biology, this new technological method preserves information for several generations. By extracting the "instruction" from a small part of the figurine and using it to print a new piece, the scientists were able to repeat the printing five times, creating a "great-great-great-grandson" of the original rabbit.

The technology can be used to label drugs or building materials such as adhesives or paints. Scientists explain that quality information can be stored directly in the preparation or material itself. This means that health authorities can read product quality control test results directly from the product. And workers who renovate a building can find out which manufacturer's products were used in the building's original structure.

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