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Перевод: cipher speek cipher


[существительное]
нуль ; ничтожество; ноль ; шифр ; арабская цифра; монограмма ;
[глагол]
вычислять; высчитывать; шифровать; зашифровывать


Тезаурус:

  1. Originally written in cipher in a collection of paper and exercise books, the code was broken in 1958 by Leslie Linder; this is his first unabridged edition with a splendid new foreword by Judy Taylor.
  2. A genuine but mundane antiquity can have its value increased enormously by the addition of a unique feature, or of a historical association such as a royal cipher.
  3. Mr Kaifu has turned out to be more of a winner than a cipher.
  4. GCHQ began in 1919 as the Government Code and Cipher School (GCCS), picking up the few remaining members of the army and naval teams of codebreakers who had operated in Britain during World War I. A very small team was formed, working on a tiny annual budget in MI6's offices at 56 Broadway, in London.
  5. But perhaps the best tag for him is "hippy", in so far as that term has become, for post-punk critic and consumer alike, a cipher for pretension, over-inflation and over-reach.
  6. The first would be to protect Britain's own secrets by developing the necessary cipher machines, codes and operating procedures.
  7. "I even discovered a German Imperial Dragoon tunic which had Queen Victoria's cipher on the epaulettes.
  8. Progress against German cipher traffic was less successful because Britain ignored developments in machine cryptography so that by 1939 GCCS was unable to read the German Enigma cryptograph.
  9. Some of the more important include George Blake, who worked for MI6 (see Chapter 2); John Cairncross, who betrayed Ultra secrets from the Government Code Cipher School (GCCS) at Bletchley Park during the war to the Russians; John Vassall, a sad homosexual who gave away naval secrets while working at the Admiralty; Frank Bossard, who gave the Russians details of British and American guided weapons systems (which must have amused them greatly as the Russians were far ahead of the West at the time); and William Marshall, who had worked as a cipher clerk at the British Embassy in Moscow.
  10. The principal cipher clerk in the Vatican was on the Hanoverian pay-roll, as was a senior clerk in the French Foreign Office, and the latter, in February 1744, supplied details of the French invasion plans, which were sufficiently convincing for George II, on 15 February 1744, to send a warning message to Parliament.
  11. Sack Kylie - she is but a cipher, a simpering, unthreatening man-pleaser.
  12. The Jacobites used a simple cipher in private correspondence - a reference to Frederick being attached to Patricia, for example, meant that Mar was still loyal to James - but this presented little difficulty to the British code-breakers, as one Jacobite warned another:
  13. GCCS made particularly good progress breaking the Japanese naval attach cipher traffic, both in London and elsewhere in Europe, since many foreign cable companies routed their signals through repeater stations in places like Malta where GCCS could acquire all interesting traffic without having to go through the charade of obtaining a warrant.

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