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clock

 
Dictionary: clock1   (klŏk) pronunciation

n.
  1. An instrument other than a watch for measuring or indicating time, especially a mechanical or electronic device having a numbered dial and moving hands or a digital display.
  2. A time clock.
  3. A source of regularly occurring pulses used to measure the passage of time, as in a computer.
  4. Any of various devices that indicate measurement, such as a speedometer or a taximeter.
  5. A biological clock.
  6. Botany. The downy flower head of a dandelion that has gone to seed.

v., clocked, clock·ing, clocks.

v.tr.
  1. To time, as with a stopwatch: clock a runner.
  2. To register or record with a mechanical device: clocked the winds at 60 miles per hour.
v.intr.
To record working hours with a time clock: clocks in at 8 A.M. and out at 4 P.M.

idioms:

around (or round) the clock

  1. Throughout the entire 24 hours of the day; continuously.
clean (someone's) clock Slang.
  1. To beat or defeat decisively: "Immense linemen declared their intentions to clean the clocks of opposing players" (Russell Baker).
kill (or run out) the clock
  1. SportsTo preserve a lead by maintaining possession of the ball or puck until playing time expires. To preserve a lead by maintaining possession of the ball or puck until playing time expires.

[Middle English clokke, from Old North French cloque, bell, or from Middle Dutch clocke, bell, clock, both from Medieval Latin clocca, of imitative origin.]

clocker clock'er n.

clock2 (klŏk) pronunciation
n.
An embroidered or woven decoration on the side of a stocking or sock.

[Perhaps from CLOCK1, bell (obsolete), from its original bell-shaped appearance.]


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A classic pendulum clock. The power to run the clock comes from a slowly falling weight (other …
(click to enlarge)
A classic pendulum clock. The power to run the clock comes from a slowly falling weight (other … (credit: © Merriam-Webster Inc.)
Machine or electronic device that measures and records time. Both simple and elaborate clocks, as well as sundials, candle clocks, and sandglasses, were used for measuring time in ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome. The first mechanical clocks were weight-driven and perhaps were invented for use in monasteries, where the disciplined life required a strict rendering of time. The first European public clock that struck the hours was erected in Milan in 1335, and the oldest surviving clocks are in England (1386) and France (1389). The first domestic clocks appeared late in the 14th century. About 1500 Peter Henlein, a German locksmith, began to make the first portable timepieces, small clocks driven by a spring. Christiaan Huygens invented pendulum clocks in 1656. Big Ben, the great clock at Westminster in London, was installed in 1859 and is the standard for all accurate tower pendulum clocks. The most accurate mechanical timekeepers (within a few thousandths of a second per day) are clocks with short pendulums (about 39 in. [or 990 mm]). In 1929 the vibration of a quartz crystal was first applied to timekeeping; the maximum error of an observatory quartz-crystal clock is only a few ten-thousandths of a second per day. The first atomic clock went into operation in 1951. Atomic clocks, regulated by the natural periodic behaviour of a system of atoms (such as vibrations or emission of radiation), can have accuracies exceeding one billionth of a second per day, making them the most accurate clocks yet invented.

For more information on clock, visit Britannica.com.

A device for indicating the passage of time. Most clocks contain a means for producing a regularly recurring action. This article describes only mechanical clocks. See also Atomic clock; Quartz clock; Watch.

The recurring action of a mechanical clock depends on the swing of a pendulum, or the oscillation of a balance wheel and balance spring or hairspring, or the vibration of a tuning fork, mechanisms capable of repeating their cyclic movements with great regularity. A counting mechanism, consisting of a gear train with calibrated dial and indicating hands, sometimes with a striking mechanism, marks the number of oscillations that have occurred, although the graduations are in seconds, minutes, and hours. A weight or spring ordinarily supplies power to operate the oscillating and the counting mechanisms. However, temperature changes, accelerations, automatic windings, or electricity may provide the power.

Usually an escapement transmits power from the counting mechanism to the oscillating mechanism. The accuracy of a clock depends primarily on the escapement. The illustration depicts an anchor or recoil escapement. Anchor A is connected loosely to the pendulum and swings about C. At some time after midswing, a tooth of the wheel escapes from pallet P1 or P2, giving the pallet a push to maintain oscillation. The other pallet then checks another tooth, the curve of the pallet forcing the wheel slightly backward. The reaction helps to reverse the pendulum swing and to correct for circular error.

Anchor escapement, common in domestic pendulum clocks. This escapement tends to compensate for changes in amplitude of the swing because of irregularly cut gears and varying lubrication.
Anchor escapement, common in domestic pendulum clocks. This escapement tends to compensate for changes in amplitude of the swing because of irregularly cut gears and varying lubrication.


Thesaurus: clock
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verb

    To record the speed or duration of: time. See remember/forget, time.

Hacker Slang: clock
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n.,v.

1. [techspeak] The master oscillator that steps a CPU or other digital circuit through its paces. This has nothing to do with the time of day, although the software counter that keeps track of the latter may be derived from the former.

2. vt. To run a CPU or other digital circuit at a particular rate. “If you clock it at 1000MHz, it gets warm.”. See overclock.

3. vt. To force a digital circuit from one state to the next by applying a single clock pulse. “The data must be stable 10ns before you clock the latch.


English Folklore: clocks
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Until recently only found in wealthy homes, or on public buildings. Nevertheless they became the subject of several superstitions, from the 1820s onwards. The basic one is that a clock will stop at the very moment its owner dies; the first example given by Opie and Tatem is also one of the most dramatic, for it refers to a clock in the Houses of Parliament having stopped on 27 January 1820, ‘being nearly the hour at which HM King George the Third had expired’. A clock stopping inexplicably, or striking the wrong hour, could be omens of some death soon to occur. Parallel to these beliefs is the custom that as soon as someone dies any clock in the room (or, according to some, all the clocks in the house) must be deliberately stopped, to symbolize the fact that time has now ceased for that person.

If the church clock strikes the hour during a wedding, within a year the bride or groom will die, though if the timing is such that the bride hears the chime while still outside the church, that brings good luck. Similarly, if it strikes a while a hymn is sung at a Sunday service, this foretells death within a week for someone in the parish; a town clock striking while the church bells are ringing, foretells a fire. In Devon around 1900, it was even thought unlucky to speak while a clock is striking (Opie and Tatem, 1989: 84-6).

clocks (horologia; sing. Gk. hōrologion, Lat. hōrologium). In ordinary life the Greeks and Romans referred to the time of day in descriptive terms, ‘first light’, ‘midday’, etc. The hour, when used, was not a twenty-fourth part of the astronomical day but one-twelfth of the time from sunrise to sunset (or sunset to sunrise), and its length therefore varied with latitude and season. The clocks which were used to measure these hours in the ancient world were all variants of two basic kinds, the shadow-clock or sundial and the water-clock (clepsydra). This was a vessel with a small opening at the bottom through which water was allowed to trickle. It appears to have been in common use at Athens from the fifth century BC. The earliest preserved examples have been found in Egypt. The shadow-clock had disadvantages other than its dependence on sunshine: it required different scales according to latitude, and for dividing the period of daylight into equal parts it required, like the water-clock, seasonal correction. The first clocks brought to Rome in the third century BC were shadow-clocks in the form of sundials, sōlāria, erected in public view. The most famous was one captured in Sicily in 263 BC and set up on a column behind the Rostra, but it was unfortunately not adapted to the latitude of Rome. In 159 BC, P. Scipio Nasica erected a public clepsydra which told the hours of day and of night. A magnificent shadow-clock was erected by Augustus in the Campus Martius, its gnomon an Egyptian obelisk. Clocks were also kept by private individuals (see HEROPHILUS); Cicero sent one to Tiro. The Alexandrian inventor Ctesibius was said to have designed a water-clock in which dripping water turned wheels which gradually elevated a small statue whose pointing stick indicated the passing hours. Clepsydrae were used by the Romans in their military camps to measure the four watches into which the night was divided.

 
clock, instrument for measuring and indicating time. Predecessors of the clock were the sundial, the hourglass, and the clepsydra. See also watch.

The Evolution of Mechanical Clocks

The operation of a clock depends on a stable mechanical oscillator, such as a swinging pendulum or a mass connected to a spring, by means of which the energy stored in a raised weight or coiled spring advances a pointer or other indicating device at a controlled rate. It is not definitely known when the first mechanical clocks were invented. Some authorities attribute the first weight-driven clock to Pacificus, archdeacon of Verona in the 9th cent. Gerbert, a learned monk who became Pope Sylvester II, is often credited with the invention of a mechanical clock, c.996.

Mechanical figures that struck a bell on the hour were installed in St. Paul's Cathedral, London, in 1286; a dial was added to the clock in the 14th cent. Clocks were placed in a clock tower at Westminster Hall, London, in 1288 and in the cathedral at Canterbury in 1292. In France, Rouen was especially noted for the skill of its clockmakers and watchmakers. Probably the early clock closest to the modern ones was that constructed in the 14th cent. for the tower of the palace (later the Palais de Justice) of Charles V of France by the clockmaker Henry de Vick (Vic, Wieck, Wyck) of Württemburg. Until the 17th cent. few mechanical clocks were found outside cathedral towers, monasteries, abbeys, and public squares.

The early clocks driven by hanging weights were bulky and heavy. When the coiled spring came into use (c.1500), it made possible the construction of the smaller and lighter-weight types. By applying Galileo's law of the pendulum, the Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens invented (1656 or 1657) a pendulum clock, probably the first. Early clocks used in dwellings in the 17th cent. were variously known as lantern clocks, birdcage clocks, and sheep's-head clocks; they were of brass, sometimes ornate, with a gong bell at the top supported by a frame. Before the pendulum was introduced, they were spring-driven or weight-driven; those driven by weights had to be placed on a wall bracket to allow space for the falling weights. These clocks, probably obtained chiefly from England and Holland, were used in the Virginia and New England colonies.

Clocks with long cases to conceal the long pendulums and weights came into use after the mid-17th cent.; these were the forerunners of the grandfather clocks. With the development of the craft of cabinetmaking, more attention was concentrated on the clock case. In France the tall cabinet clocks, or grandfather clocks, were often of oak elaborately ornamented with brass and gilt. Those made in England were at first of oak and later of walnut and mahogany; simpler in style, their chief decoration was inlay work.

Electric and Other Clocks

Electric clocks were made in the second half of the 19th cent. but were not used extensively in homes until after c.1930. In an analog clock the hands of an electric clock are driven by a synchronous electric motor supplied with alternating current of a stable frequency. Digital clocks use LCDs (liquid crystal displays) or LEDs (light emitting diodes) to form the numbers indicating the time. The quartz clock, invented c.1929, uses the vibrations of a quartz crystal to drive a synchronous motor at a very precise rate. Some quartz clocks have an error of less than one thousandth of a second per day. The atomic clock, which is based upon the frequency of an atomic or molecular process, is even more precise; a state of the art atomic clock, such as the NIST-F1 (which is the U.S. time frequency standard clock), neither gains nor loses a second in 20 million years.

Some Famous Clocks

One of the most famous clocks is in the cathedral of Strasbourg; the clock was first placed in the cathedral in 1352, and in the 16th cent. it was reconstructed. In the 19th cent. a new astronomical clock (so called because it shows the current positions of the sun, moon, and other heavenly bodies in addition to the time of day) similar to the original clock was constructed; its elaborate mechanical devices include the Twelve Apostles, a crowing cock, a revolving celestial globe, and an automatic calendar dial. Among other well-known clocks of the world are the clock known as Big Ben in the tower next to Westminster Bridge in the British Houses of Parliament and the tower clock in the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company building, New York City.

Bibliography

See F. J. Britten, Old Clocks and Watches and Their Makers (1976); D. S. Landes, Revolution in Time: Clocks and the Making of the Modern World (1985); J. E. Barnett, Time's Pendulum: The Quest to Capture Time from Sundials to Atomic Clocks (1998); E. Bruton, Collector's Dictionary of Clocks and Watches (1999); J. Jesperson and J. Fitz-Randolph, From Sundials to Atomic Clocks: Understanding Time and Frequency (2d ed. 1999).


A square waveform used for synchronizing and timing of several circuits.


Essay: Early mechanical clocks
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In Antiquity people told time by the Sun and stars. A boy and girl might arrange to meet during the evening when Venus falls below the horizon. In the event of clouds, they could guess at the meeting time. Serious consequences if they guessed wrong seldom occurred.

Other methods of keeping time could be used as backups, however. Water clocks (clepsydras) had been known since ancient Egyptian times. These depended on the relatively constant lowering of the level of water in a vessel with a deliberately made leak. Clepsydras were not very accurate, not easy to read in a poor light, and needed frequent refilling to be of any use. Burning tapers and lamps might also show the passage of time, but time varied with the specific taper or lamp.

In the Middle Ages, however, members of religious orders were expected to pray at definite times. Failure to maintain godly habits because of cloudiness or variable flames was not acceptable. There was an answer, however. Sources from Antiquity (and probably rumors of Chinese inventions) referred to devices that could imitate the Sun and stars. Such devices were powered by water clocks, but the Chinese rumors may have told of a clever device, which we call an escapement, that could convert the smooth motion of water flowing into a series of short rotary motions. These motions could give a more accurate representation of the movement of astronomical bodies.

In duplicating this concept, an unknown European inventor recognized that with an escapement to slow the fall, a weight could be substituted for water. If the weight were lifted by hand at regular intervals, there would be no need to deal with the continual addition of water to operate the mechanism. The falling-weight idea, however, required something to make it more regular, since a weight accelerates, or falls faster, as it goes along. If the weight could be made to fall the same short distance over and over, the motion would be more regular. This was accomplished by adding a sort of dumbbell, called a foliot, to the escapement. The weights at the end of the foliot fall a short distance with each tick of the clock, each one balanced by the other one. The combined fall of the weight that powers the clock and the short stroke of the foliot gave the time off by only an hour or so each day. The earliest mechanisms of this type, around the end of the 13th and beginning of the 14th century, were used to power representations of the heavens. Thus, if the clock was out of whack when the weight was pulled up, it could be reset on any clear day or night by comparing the representation with the actual positions of heavenly bodies.

The monks and nuns were summoned to prayer by a bell. Soon someone realized that the elaborate astronomical model was not needed; a system of striking the hour with a series of rings of the bell was sufficient. Sometime after that, people added a dial to show the hours with a pointer (hand). A similar pointer for minutes was not needed until clocks greatly improved in accuracy. Although the first clocks were installed for use in religion, within a few years people began to keep time by the hours, since the ringing of the bell often could be heard or the dial seen all over a village.

The manufacture of clocks became a thriving industry in the 14th and 15th centuries. Every town soon had to have its own. Although the basic mechanism did not change during this period, the development of better ways to cut gears and to make other metal parts was an important precursor of the Industrial Revolution. No other artifact of this period required such careful workmanship.

Despite this, clocks were not nearly accurate enough to bother with minutes, much less seconds. When Galileo needed to time short intervals around the turn of the 17th century, he used his pulse because clocks were not sufficiently accurate.

Slang Dictionary: clock
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tv. to earn, score, or total up someone or something. (As if the person or thing gained were being metered or clocked.)  Sam clocked a date with Sally, and is he ever proud!

A cynical view of the world by Ambrose Bierce


n.

A machine of great moral value to man, allaying his concern for the future by reminding him what a lot of time remains to him.

    A busy man complained one day:
    "I get no time!"  "What's that you say?"
    Cried out his friend, a lazy quiz;
    "You have, sir, all the time there is.
    There's plenty, too, and don't you doubt it --
    We're never for an hour without it."
                                                          Purzil Crofe


Word Tutor: clock
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: An instrument that shows the time of day.

pronunciation My evening visitors, if they cannot see the clock, should find the time in my face. — Ralph Waldo Emerson, (1803-1882), American transcendentalist philosopher, essayist and lecturer.

Tutor's tip: She found a small clock (device to measure time) in the cloaca (internal cavity in birds and fish) of the fish, so she put it under her cloak (cape) to take it home.

Dream Symbol: Clock
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Clocks as symbols often reflect the dreamer's anxiety about not being on top of things, and thus behind schedule. A clock may also symbolize the biological clock that ticks away for people who want children, or those who feel that time is running out for them.


Wikipedia: Clock
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A clock is an instrument used to indicate, measure, keep, and co-ordinate time. The word clock is derived ultimately (via Dutch, Northern French, and Medieval Latin) from the Celtic words clagan and clocca meaning "bell". For horologists and other specialists the term clock continues to mean exclusively a device with a striking mechanism for announcing intervals of time acoustically, by ringing a bell, a set of chimes, or a gong.[dubious ] A silent instrument lacking such a mechanism has traditionally been known as a timepiece.[1] In general usage today a "clock" refers to any device for measuring and displaying the time. Watches and other timepieces that can be carried on one's person are often distinguished from clocks.[2]

Contents

History

Replica of an ancient Chinese incense clock

The clock is one of the oldest human inventions, meeting the need to consistently measure intervals of time shorter than the natural units, the day, the lunar month, and the year. Devices operating on several different physical processes have been used over the millennia, culminating in the clocks of today.

Sundials and other devices

The sundial, which measures the time of day by the direction of shadows cast by the sun, was widely used in ancient times. A well-designed sundial can measure local solar time with reasonable accuracy, and sundials continued to be used to monitor the performance of clocks until the modern era. However, its practical limitations - it requires the sun to shine and does not work at all during the night - encouraged the use of other techniques for measuring time.

Candle clocks, and sticks of incense that burn down at approximately predictable speeds have also been used to estimate the passing of time. In an hourglass, fine sand pours through a tiny hole at a constant rate and indicates a predetermined passage of an arbitrary period of time.

Water clocks

A scale model of Su Song's Astronomical Clock Tower, built in 11th century Kaifeng, China. It was driven by a large waterwheel, chain drive, and escapement mechanism.

Water clocks, also known as clepsydrae (sg: clepsydra), along with the sundials, are possibly the oldest time-measuring instruments, with the only exceptions being the vertical gnomon and the day-counting tally stick.[3] Given their great antiquity, where and when they first existed are not known and perhaps unknowable. The bowl-shaped outflow is the simplest form of a water clock and is known to have existed in Babylon and in Egypt around the 16th century BC. Other regions of the world, including India and China, also have early evidence of water clocks, but the earliest dates are less certain. Some authors, however, write about water clocks appearing as early as 4000 BC in these regions of the world.[4]

Greek astronomer, Andronicus of Cyrrhus, supervised the construction of the Tower of the Winds in Athens in the 1st century B.C.[5]

The Greek and Roman civilizations are credited for initially advancing water clock design to include complex gearing,[6] which was connected to fanciful automata and also resulted in improved accuracy. These advances were passed on through Byzantium and Islamic times, eventually making their way to Europe. Independently, the Chinese developed their own advanced water clocks, passing their ideas on to Korea and Japan.

Some water clock designs were developed independently and some knowledge was transferred through the spread of trade. Pre-modern societies do not have the same precise timekeeping requirements that exist in modern industrial societies, where every hour of work or rest is monitored, and work may start or finish at any time regardless of external conditions. Instead, water clocks in ancient societies were used mainly for astrological reasons. These early water clocks were calibrated with a sundial. While never reaching the level of accuracy of a modern timepiece, the water clock was the most accurate and commonly used timekeeping device for millennia, until it was replaced by the more accurate pendulum clock in 17th century Europe.

In 797 (or possibly 801), the Abbasid caliph of Baghdad, Harun al-Rashid, presented Charlemagne with an Asian Elephant named Abul-Abbas together with a "particularly elaborate example" of a water [7] clock.

An elephant clock in a manuscript by Al-Jazari (1206 AD) from The Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices.[8]

In the 13th century, Al-Jazari, an engineer who worked for Artuqid king of Diyar-Bakr, Nasir al-Din, made numerous clocks of all shapes and sizes. The book described 50 mechanical devices in 6 categories, including water clocks. The most reputed clocks included the Elephant, the Castle and Scribe clocks, all of which have been successfully reconstructed. As well as telling the time, these grand clocks were symbols of status, grandeur and wealth of the Urtuq State.[9]

Early mechanical clocks

None of the first clocks survived from 13th century Europe, but various mentions in church records reveal some of the early history of the clock.[10]

The word horologia (from the Greek ὡρα, hour, and λεγειν, to tell) was used to describe all these devices, but the use of this word (still used in several Romance languages) for all timekeepers conceals from us the true nature of the mechanisms. For example, there is a record that in 1176 Sens Cathedral installed a ‘horologe’ but the mechanism used is unknown. According to Jocelin of Brakelond, in 1198 during a fire at the abbey of St Edmundsbury (now Bury St Edmunds), the monks 'ran to the clock' to fetch water, indicating that their water clock had a reservoir large enough to help extinguish the occasional fire [11].

A new mechanism

The word clock (from the Latin word clocca, "bell"), which gradually supersedes "horologe", suggests that it was the sound of bells which also characterized the prototype mechanical clocks that appeared during the 13th century in Europe.

Outside of Europe, the escapement mechanism had been known and used in medieval China, as the Song Dynasty horologist and engineer Su Song (1020 - 1101) incorporated it into his astronomical clock-tower of Kaifeng in 1088[12]. However, his astronomical clock and rotating armillary sphere still relied on the use of flowing water (ie. hydraulics), while European clockworks of the following centuries shed this old habit for a more efficient driving power of weights, in addition to the escapement mechanism.

A mercury clock, described in the Libros del saber, a Spanish work from AD 1277 consisting of translations and paraphrases of Arabic works, is sometimes quoted as evidence for Muslim knowledge of a mechanical clock. However, the device was actually a compartmented cylindrical water clock, whose construction was credited by the Jewish author of the relevant section, Rabbi Isaac, to the Greek engineer Hero of Alexandria (1st century AD).[13]

Between 1280 and 1320, there is an increase in the number of references to clocks and horologes in church records, and this probably indicates that a new type of clock mechanism had been devised. Existing clock mechanisms that used water power were being adapted to take their driving power from falling weights. This power was controlled by some form of oscillating mechanism, probably derived from existing bell-ringing or alarm devices. This controlled release of power - the escapement - marks the beginning of the true mechanical clock.

These mechanical clocks were intended for two main purposes: for signalling and notification (e.g. the timing of services and public events), and for modeling the solar system. The former purpose is administrative, the latter arises naturally given the scholarly interest in astronomy, science, astrology, and how these subjects integrated with the religious philosophy of the time. The astrolabe was used both by astronomers and astrologers, and it was natural to apply a clockwork drive to the rotating plate to produce a working model of the solar system.

Simple clocks intended mainly for notification were installed in towers, and did not always require faces or hands. They would have announced the canonical hours or intervals between set times of prayer. Canonical hours varied in length as the times of sunrise and sunset shifted. The more sophisticated astronomical clocks would have had moving dials or hands, and would have shown the time in various time systems, including Italian hours, canonical hours, and time as measured by astronomers at the time. Both styles of clock started acquiring extravagant features such as automata.

In 1283, a large clock was installed at Dunstable Priory; its location above the rood screen suggests that it was not a water clock[citation needed]. In 1292, Canterbury Cathedral installed a 'great horloge'. Over the next 30 years there are brief mentions of clocks at a number of ecclesiastical institutions in England, Italy, and France. In 1322, a new clock was installed in Norwich, an expensive replacement for an earlier clock installed in 1273. This had a large (2 metre) astronomical dial with automata and bells. The costs of the installation included the full-time employment of two clockkeepers for two years[citation needed].

Early astronomical clocks

Richard of Wallingford pointing to a clock, his gift to St Albans Abbey

Besides the Chinese astronomical clock of Su Song in 1088 mentioned above, in Europe there were the clocks constructed by Richard of Wallingford in St Albans by 1336, and by Giovanni de Dondi in Padua from 1348 to 1364. They no longer exist, but detailed descriptions of their design and construction survive,[citation needed] and modern reproductions have been made. They illustrate how quickly the theory of the mechanical clock had been translated into practical constructions, and also that one of the many impulses to their development had been the desire of astronomers to investigate celestial phenomena.

Wallingford's clock had a large astrolabe-type dial, showing the sun, the moon's age, phase, and node, a star map, and possibly the planets. In addition, it had a wheel of fortune and an indicator of the state of the tide at London Bridge. Bells rang every hour, the number of strokes indicating the time.

Dondi's clock was a seven-sided construction, 1 metre high, with dials showing the time of day, including minutes, the motions of all the known planets, an automatic calendar of fixed and movable feasts, and an eclipse prediction hand rotating once every 18 years.

It is not known how accurate or reliable these clocks would have been. They were probably adjusted manually every day to compensate for errors caused by wear and imprecise manufacture.

Water clocks are sometimes still used today, and can be examined in places such as ancient castles and museums.

The Salisbury Cathedral clock, built in 1386, is considered to be the world's oldest surviving mechanical clock that strikes the hours[14].

Later developments

Clockmakers developed their art in various ways. Building smaller clocks was a technical challenge, as was improving accuracy and reliability. Clocks could be impressive showpieces to demonstrate skilled craftsmanship, or less expensive, mass-produced items for domestic use. The escapement in particular was an important factor affecting the clock's accuracy, so many different mechanisms were tried.

Spring-driven clocks appeared during the 1400s,[15][16][17] although they are often erroneously credited to Nürnberg watchmaker Peter Henlein (or Henle, or Hele) around 1511.[18][19][20] The earliest existing spring driven clock is the chamber clock given to Peter the Good, Duke of Burgundy, around 1430, now in the Germanisches Nationalmuseum.[16] Spring power presented clockmakers with a new problem; how to keep the clock movement running at a constant rate as the spring ran down. This resulted in the invention of the stackfreed and the fusee in the 1400s, and many other innovations, down to the invention of the modern going barrel in 1760.

Early clock dials did not use minutes and seconds. A clock with a dial indicating minutes was illustrated in a 1475 manuscript by Paulus Almanus,[21] and some 15th-century clocks in Germany indicated minutes and seconds.[22] An early record of a second hand on a clock dates back to about 1560, on a clock now in the Fremersdorf collection.[citation needed] However, this clock could not have been accurate, and the second hand was probably for indicating that the clock was working.

During the 15th and 16th centuries, clockmaking flourished, particularly in the metalworking towns of Nuremberg and Augsburg, and in Blois, France. Some of the more basic table clocks have only one time-keeping hand, with the dial between the hour markers being divided into four equal parts making the clocks readable to the nearest 15 minutes. Other clocks were exhibitions of craftsmanship and skill, incorporating astronomical indicators and musical movements. The cross-beat escapement was invented in 1584 by Jost Bürgi, who also developed the remontoire. Bürgi's clocks were a great improvement in accuracy as they were correct to within a minute a day.[23] These clocks helped the 16th-century astronomer Tycho Brahe to observe astronomical events with much greater precision than before.

A mechanical weight-driven astronomical clock with a verge-and-foliot escapement, a striking train of gears, an alarm, and a representation of the moon's phases was described by the Ottoman engineer Taqi al-Din in his book, The Brightest Stars for the Construction of Mechanical Clocks (Al-Kawākib al-durriyya fī wadh' al-bankāmat al-dawriyya), published in 1556-1559.[24][25] Similarly to earlier 15th-century European alarm clocks,[26][27] it was capable of sounding at a specified time, achieved by placing a peg on the dial wheel. At the requested time, the peg activated a ringing device.[24] The clock had three dials which indicated hours, degrees and minutes.[24] He later made an observational clock for the Istanbul observatory of Taqi al-Din (1577-1580), describing it as "a mechanical clock with three dials which show the hours, the minutes, and the seconds." This was an important innovation in 16th-century practical astronomy, as at the start of the century clocks were not accurate enough to be used for astronomical purposes.[28]

French rococo bracket clocks, (Museum of Time, Besançon)

The next development in accuracy occurred after 1656 with the invention of the pendulum clock. Galileo had the idea to use a swinging bob to regulate the motion of a time telling device earlier in the 17th century. Christiaan Huygens, however, is usually credited as the inventor. He determined the mathematical formula that related pendulum length to time (99.38 cm or 39.13 inches for the one second movement) and had the first pendulum-driven clock made. In 1670, the English clockmaker William Clement created the anchor escapement,[citation needed] an improvement over Huygens' crown escapement[citation needed]. Within just one generation, minute hands and then second hands were added.

A major stimulus to improving the accuracy and reliability of clocks was the importance of precise time-keeping for navigation. The position of a ship at sea could be determined with reasonable accuracy if a navigator could refer to a clock that lost or gained less than about 10 seconds per day. This clock could not contain a pendulum, which would be virtually useless on a rocking ship. Many European governments offered a large prize for anyone that could determine longitude accurately; for example, Great Britain offered 20,000 pounds, equivalent to millions of dollars today. The reward was eventually claimed in 1761 by John Harrison, who dedicated his life to improving the accuracy of his clocks. His H5 clock was in error by less than 5 seconds over 10 weeks.[29]

The excitement over the pendulum clock had attracted the attention of designers resulting in a proliferation of clock forms. Notably, the longcase clock (also known as the grandfather clock) was created to house the pendulum and works. The English clockmaker William Clement is also credited with developing this form in 1670 or 1671. It was also at this time that clock cases began to be made of wood and clock faces to utilize enamel as well as hand-painted ceramics.

French decimal clock from the time of the French Revolution

On November 17, 1797, Eli Terry received his first patent for a clock. Terry is known as the founder of the American clock-making industry.

Alexander Bain, Scottish clockmaker, patented the electric clock in 1840. The electric clock's mainspring is wound either with an electric motor or with an electro-magnet and armature. In 1841, he first patented the electromagnetic pendulum.

The development of electronics in the twentieth century led to clocks with no clockwork parts at all. Time in these cases is measured in several ways, such as by the vibration of a tuning fork, the behaviour of quartz crystals, or the quantum vibrations of atoms. Even mechanical clocks have since come to be largely powered by batteries, removing the need for winding.

How clocks work

The invention of the mechanical clock in the 13th century initiated a change in timekeeping methods from continuous processes, such as the motion of the gnomon's shadow on a sundial or the flow of liquid in a water clock, to repetitive oscillatory processes, like the swing of a pendulum or the vibration of a quartz crystal, which were more accurate.[30] All modern clocks use oscillation.

Although the methods they use vary, all oscillating clocks, mechanical and digital and atomic, work similarly and can be divided into analogous parts.[31][32][33] They consist of an object that repeats the same motion over and over again, an oscillator, with a precisely constant time interval between each repetition, or 'beat'. Attached to the oscillator is a controller device, which sustains the oscillator's motion by replacing the energy it loses to friction, and converts its oscillations into a series of pulses. The pulses are then added up in a chain of some type of counters to express the time in convenient units, usually seconds, minutes, hours, etc. Then finally some kind of indicator displays the result in a human-readable form.

Power source

This provides power to keep the clock going.

Since clocks must run continuously, there is often a small secondary power source to keep the clock going temporarily during interruptions in the main power. In old mechanical clocks, a maintaining power spring provided force to turn the clock's wheels while the mainspring was being wound up.[34] In quartz clocks a backup battery or capacitor is often included to keep the clock going if the power cord is unplugged.

Oscillator

The timekeeping element in every modern clock is a harmonic oscillator, a physical object (resonator) that vibrates or oscillates repetitively at a precisely constant frequency.[35]

The advantage of a harmonic oscillator over other forms of oscillator is that it employs resonance to vibrate at a precise natural resonant frequency or 'beat' dependent only on its physical characteristics, and resists vibrating at other rates. The possible precision achievable by a harmonic oscillator is measured by a parameter called its Q,[37][38] or quality factor, which increases (other things being equal) with its resonant frequency.[39] This is why there has been a long term trend toward higher frequency oscillators in clocks. Balance wheels and pendulums always include a means of adjusting the rate of the timepiece. Quartz timepieces sometimes include a rate screw that adjusts a capacitor for that purpose. Atomic clocks are primary standards, and their rate cannot be adjusted.

Synchronized or slave clocks

Some clocks rely for their accuracy on an external oscillator; that is, they are automatically synchronized to a more accurate clock:

  • Slave clocks, used in large institutions and schools from the 1860s to the 1970s, kept time with a pendulum, but were wired to a master clock in the building, and periodically received a signal to synchronize them with the master, often on the hour.[40] Later versions without pendulums were triggered by a pulse from the master clock and certain sequences used to force rapid synchronization following a power failure.
  • Synchronous electric clocks don't have an internal oscillator, but rely on the 50 or 60 Hz oscillation of the AC power line, which is synchronized by the utility to a precision oscillator. This drives a synchronous motor in the clock which rotates once for every cycle of the line voltage, and drives the gear train.
  • Computer real time clocks keep time with a quartz crystal, but are periodically (usually weekly) synchronized over the internet to atomic clocks (UTC), using a system called Network Time Protocol.
  • Radio clocks keep time with a quartz crystal, but are periodically (often daily) synchronized to atomic clocks (UTC) with time signals from government radio stations like WWV, WWVB, CHU, DCF77 and the GPS system.

Controller

This has the dual function of keeping the oscillator running by giving it 'pushes' to replace the energy lost to friction, and converting its vibrations into a series of pulses that serve to measure the time.

  • In mechanical clocks, this is the escapement, which gives precise pushes to the swinging pendulum or balance wheel, and releases one gear tooth of the escape wheel at each swing, allowing all the clock's wheels to move forward a fixed amount with each swing.
  • In electronic clocks this is an electronic oscillator circuit that gives the vibrating quartz crystal or tuning fork tiny 'pushes', and generates a series of electrical pulses, one for each vibration of the crystal, which is called the clock signal.
  • In atomic clocks the controller is an evacuated microwave cavity attached to a microwave oscillator controlled by a microprocessor. A thin gas of cesium atoms is released into the cavity where they are exposed to microwaves. A laser measures how many atoms have absorbed the microwaves, and an electronic feedback control system called a phase locked loop tunes the microwave oscillator until it is at the exact frequency that causes the atoms to vibrate and absorb the microwaves. Then the microwave signal is divided by digital counters to become the clock signal.[41]

In mechanical clocks, the low Q of the balance wheel or pendulum oscillator made them very sensitive to the disturbing effect of the impulses of the escapement, so the escapement had a great effect on the accuracy of the clock, and many escapement designs were tried. The higher Q of resonators in electronic clocks makes them relatively insensitive to the disturbing effects of the drive power, so the driving oscillator circuit is a much less critical component.[35]

Counter chain

This counts the pulses and adds them up to get traditional time units of seconds, minutes, hours, etc. It usually has a provision for setting the clock by manually entering the correct time into the counter.

  • In mechanical clocks this is done mechanically by a gear train, known as the wheel train. The gear train also has a second function; to transmit mechanical power from the power source to run the oscillator. There is a friction coupling called the 'cannon pinion' between the gears driving the hands and the rest of the clock, allowing the hands to be turned by a knob on the back to set the time.[42]
  • In digital clocks a series of integrated circuit counters or dividers add the pulses up digitally, using binary logic. Often pushbuttons on the case allow the hour and minute counters to be incremented and decremented to set the time.

Indicator

This displays the count of seconds, minutes, hours, etc. in a human readable form.

  • The earliest mechanical clocks in the 13th century didn't have a visual indicator and signalled the time audibly by striking bells. Many clocks to this day are striking clocks which chime the hours.
  • Analog clocks, including almost all mechanical and some electronic clocks, have a traditional dial or clock face, that displays the time in analog form with moving hour and minute hand. In quartz clocks with analog faces, a 1 Hz signal from the counters actuates a stepper motor which moves the second hand forward at each pulse, and the minute and hour hands are moved by gears from the shaft of the second hand.
  • Digital clocks display the time in periodically changing digits on a digital display.
  • Talking clocks and the speaking clock services provided by telephone companies speak the time audibly, using either recorded or digitally synthesized voices.

Types

Clocks can be classified by the type of time display, as well as by the method of timekeeping.

Time display methods

Analog clocks

A linear clock at London's Piccadilly Circus tube station. The 24 hour band moves across the static map, keeping pace with the apparent movement of the sun above ground, and a pointer fixed on London points to the current time

Analog clocks usually indicate time using angles. The most common clock face uses a fixed numbered dial or dials and moving hand or hands. It usually has a circular scale of 12 hours, which can also serve as a scale of 60 minutes, and 60 seconds if the clock has a second hand. Many other styles and designs have been used throughout the years, including dials divided into 6, 8, 10, and 24 hours. The only other widely used clock face today is the 24 hour analog dial, because of the use of 24 hour time in military organizations and timetables. The 10-hour clock was briefly popular during the French Revolution, when the metric system was applied to time measurement, and an Italian 6 hour clock was developed in the 18th century, presumably to save power (a clock or watch chiming 24 times uses more power).

Another type of analog clock is the sundial, which tracks the sun continuously, registering the time by the shadow position of its gnomon. Sundials use some or part of the 24 hour analog dial. There also exist clocks which use a digital display despite having an analog mechanism—these are commonly referred to as flip clocks.

Alternative systems have been proposed. For example, the Twelve o'clock indicates the current hour using one of twelve colors, and indicates the minute by showing a proportion of a circular disk, similar to a moon phase.

Digital clocks

Digital clock outside Kanazawa Station displaying the time by controlling valves on a fountain

Digital clocks display a numeric representation of time. Two numeric display formats are commonly used on digital clocks:

  • the 24-hour notation with hours ranging 00–23;
  • the 12-hour notation with AM/PM indicator, with hours indicated as 12AM, followed by 1AM–11AM, followed by 12PM, followed by 1PM–11PM (a notation mostly used in the United States).

Most digital clocks use an LCD, LED, or VFD display; many other display technologies are used as well (cathode ray tubes, nixie tubes, etc.). After a reset, battery change or power failure, digital clocks without a backup battery or capacitor either start counting from 00:00, or stay at 00:00, often with blinking digits indicating that time needs to be set. Some newer clocks will actually reset themselves based on radio or Internet time servers that are tuned to national atomic clocks. Since the release of digital clocks in the mainstream, the use of analogue clocks has dropped dramatically.

Basic digital clock radio

Auditory clocks

For convenience, distance, telephony or blindness, auditory clocks present the time as sounds. The sound is either spoken natural language, (e.g. "The time is twelve thirty-five"), or as auditory codes (e.g. number of sequential bell rings on the hour represents the number of the hour like the bell Big Ben). Most telecommunication companies also provide a Speaking clock service as well.

Purposes

A typical Deutsche Bahn Train station clock

Clocks are in homes, offices and many other places; smaller ones (watches) are carried on the wrist; larger ones are in public places, e.g. a train station or church. A small clock is often shown in a corner of computer displays, mobile phones and many MP3 players.

The purpose of a clock is not always to display the time. It may also be used to control a device according to time, e.g. an alarm clock, a VCR, or a time bomb (see: counter). However, in this context, it is more appropriate to refer to it as a timer or trigger mechanism rather than strictly as a clock.

Computers depend on an accurate internal clock signal to allow synchronized processing. (A few research projects are developing CPUs based on asynchronous circuits.) Some computers also maintain time and date for all manner of operations whether these be for alarms, event initiation, or just to display the time of day. The internal computer clock is generally kept running by a small battery. Many computers will still function even if the internal clock battery is dead, but the computer clock will need to be reset each time the computer is restarted, since once power is lost, time is also lost.

Ideal clocks

An ideal clock is a scientific principle that measures the ratio of the duration of natural processes, and thus will give the time measure for use in physical theories.[citation needed] Therefore, to define an ideal clock in terms of any physical theory would be circular. An ideal clock is more appropriately defined in relationship to the set of all physical processes.

This leads to the following definitions:

  • A clock is a recurrent process and a counter.
  • A good clock is one which, when used to measure other recurrent processes, finds many of them to be periodic.
  • An ideal clock is a clock (i.e., recurrent process) that makes the most other recurrent processes periodic.

The recurrent, periodic process (e.g. a metronome) is an oscillator and typically generates a clock signal. Sometimes that signal alone is (confusingly) called "the clock", but sometimes "the clock" includes the counter, its indicator, and everything else supporting it.

This definition can be further improved by the consideration of successive levels of smaller and smaller error tolerances. While not all physical processes can be surveyed, the definition should be based on the set of physical processes which includes all individual physical processes which are proposed for consideration. Since atoms are so numerous and since, within current measurement tolerances they all beat in a manner such that if one is chosen as periodic then the others are all deemed to be periodic also, it follows that atomic clocks represent ideal clocks to within present measurement tolerances and in relation to all presently known physical processes. However, they are not so designated by fiat. Rather, they are designated as the current ideal clock because they are currently the best instantiation of the definition.

John Harrison's Chronometer H5

Navigation

Navigation by ships and planes depends on the ability to measure latitude and longitude. Latitude is fairly easy to determine through celestial navigation, but the measurement of longitude requires accurate measurement of time. This need was a major motivation for the development of accurate mechanical clocks. John Harrison created the first highly accurate marine chronometer in the mid-18th century. The Noon gun in Cape Town still fires an accurate signal to allow ships to check their chronometers.

Use of an atomic clock in radio signal producing satellites is fundamental to the operation of GPS (Global Positioning System) navigation devices.

Seismology

In determining the location of an earthquake, the arrival time of several types of seismic wave at a minimum of four dispersed observers is dependent upon each observer recording wave arrival times according to a common clock.

Specific types of clocks

by Mechanism: by Function: by Style:

See also

Newsgroup

Notes

  1. ^ see Baillie et al., p. 307; Palmer, p. 19; Zea & Cheney, p. 172
  2. ^ "Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary". http://dictionary.cambridge.org/define.asp?key=14263&dict=CALD. Retrieved 2009-09-16. "a device for measuring and showing time, which is usually found in or on a building and is not worn by a person" 
  3. ^ Turner 1984, p. 1
  4. ^ Cowan 1958, p. 58
  5. ^ Tower of the Winds - Athens
  6. ^ The History of Clocks
  7. ^ James, Peter (1995). Ancient Inventions. New York, NY: Ballantine Books. p. 126. ISBN 0-345-40102-6. 
  8. ^ Ibn al-Razzaz Al-Jazari (ed. 1974), The Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices. Translated and annotated by Donald Routledge Hill, Dordrecht/D. Reidel.
  9. ^ al-Hassani, Woodcok and Saoud (2007), 'Muslim Heritage in Our World', FSTC publishing pp.14-17
  10. ^ Clocks
  11. ^ The Chronicle of Jocelin of Brakelond, Monk of St. Edmundsbury: A Picture of Monastic and Social Life on the XIIth Century. London: Chatto and Windus. Translated and edited by L. C. Jane. 1910. 
  12. ^ History of Song 宋史, Vol. 340
  13. ^ Silvio A. Bedini: “The Compartmented Cylindrical Clepsydra”, Technology and Culture, Vol. 3, No. 2 (1962), pp. 115-141 (116-118)
  14. ^ Singer, Charles, et al. Oxford History of Technology: volume II, from the Renaissance to the Industrial Revolution (OUP 1957)pg 650-1
  15. ^ Usher, Abbot Payson (1988). A History of Mechanical Inventions. Courier Dover. ISBN 048625593X. http://books.google.com/books?id=xuDDqqa8FlwC&pg=PA305&sig=_SRpwfz0YBAjt2aGxXhmRkZ16GQ. , p.305
  16. ^ a b White, Lynn Jr. (1966). Medieval Technology and Social Change. New York: Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 0195002660. , p.126-127
  17. ^ Dohrn-van Rossum, Gerhard (1997). History of the Hour: Clocks and Modern Temporal Orders. Univ. of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-15510-2. http://books.google.com/books?id=53K32RiEigMC&pg=PA121&sig=5huN81ukYRbSlxq4MsToTDIXYDY.  p.121
  18. ^ Milham, Willis I. (1945). Time and Timekeepers. New York: MacMillan. ISBN 0780800087. , p.121
  19. ^ "Clock". The New Encyclopaedia Britannica. 4. Univ. of Chicago. 1974. p. 747. ISBN 0852292902. http://books.google.com/books?as_brr=0&id=Eb0qAAAAMAAJ&dq=Peter+Henlein+mainspring&q=peter+Henlein&pgis=1#search. 
  20. ^ Anzovin, Steve; Podell, Janet (2000). Famous First Facts: A record of first happenings, discoveries, and inventions in world history. H.W. Wilson. ISBN 0824209583. , p.440
  21. ^ p. 529, "Time and timekeeping instruments", History of astronomy: an encyclopedia, John Lankford, Taylor & Francis, 1997, ISBN 081530322X.
  22. ^ p. 209, A history of mechanical inventions, Abbott Payson Usher, Courier Dover Publications, 1988, ISBN 048625593X.
  23. ^ p. 116, Biographical dictionary of the history of technology, Lance Day and Ian McNeil, eds., Routledge, 1996, ISBN 0-415-06042-7.
  24. ^ a b c Salim Al-Hassani (19 June 2008). "The Astronomical Clock of Taqi Al-Din: Virtual Reconstruction". FSTC. http://muslimheritage.com/topics/default.cfm?ArticleID=947. Retrieved 2008-07-02. 
  25. ^ Ahmad Y al-Hassan & Donald R. Hill: “Islamic Technology”, Cambridge 1986, ISBN 0-521-422396, p. 59
  26. ^ p. 249, The Grove encyclopedia of decorative arts, Gordon Campbell, vol. 1, Oxford University Press, 2006, ISBN 0195189485.
  27. ^ "Monastic Alarm Clocks, Italian", entry, Clock Dictionary.
  28. ^ Tekeli, Sevim (1997). "Taqi al-Din". Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 0792340663. http://www.springer.com/philosophy/philosophy+of+sciences/book/978-1-4020-4425-0. 
  29. ^ Gould, Rupert T. (1923). The Marine Chronometer. Its History and Development. London: J. D. Potter. pp. 66. ISBN 0-907462-05-7. 
  30. ^ Cipolla, Carlo M. (2004). Clocks and Culture, 1300 to 1700. W.W. Norton & Co.. ISBN 0393324435. http://books.google.com/books?id=YSf9MVxa2JEC&pg=PA31&dq=verge+escapement+technology&sig=6ZbQh-an59yCcesR1mjn1p8w-H4. , p.31
  31. ^ Jespersen, James; Fitz-Randolph, Jane; Robb, John (1999). From Sundials to Atomic Clocks: Understanding Time and Frequency. New York: Courier Dover. ISBN 0486409139. http://books.google.com/books?id=Z7chuo4ebUAC&pg=PA42&dq=clock+resonance+pendulum&lr=&sig=iBunChocEtJoeKS5p5IgJ1oyl4U.  p.39
  32. ^ "How clocks work". InDepthInfo. W. J. Rayment. 2007. http://www.indepthinfo.com/clocks/index.shtml. Retrieved 2008-06-04. 
  33. ^ Milham, Willis I. (1945). Time and Timekeepers. New York: MacMillan. ISBN 0780800087.  p.74
  34. ^ Milham, Willis I. (1945). Time and Timekeepers. New York: MacMillan. ISBN 0780800087.  p.174-175
  35. ^ a b Marrison, Warren (1948). "The Evolution of the Quartz Crystal Clock". Bell System Technical Journal (American Telephone and Telegraph Co.) 27: 510–588. http://www.ieee-uffc.org/fcmain.asp?page=marrison. Retrieved 2008-06-04. 
  36. ^ Milham, 1945, p.85
  37. ^ "Quality factor, Q". Glossary. Time and Frequency Division, NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology). 2008. http://tf.nist.gov/general/enc-q.htm. Retrieved 2008-06-04. 
  38. ^ Jespersen 1999, p.47-50
  39. ^ Riehle, Fritz (2004). Frequency Standards: Basics and Applications. Germany: Wiley VCH Verlag & Co.. ISBN 3527402306. http://books.google.com/books?id=WZ34pQV-DXMC&pg=PA9&dq=Q+linewidth+%22split+the+line%22&lr=&as_brr=3&sig=dUBX3lf0vjScZANZAJzNc8C7uoc.  p.9
  40. ^ Milham, 1945, p.325-328
  41. ^ Jespersen 1999, p.52-62
  42. ^ Milham, 1945, p.113

References

  • Baillie, G.H., O. Clutton, & C.A. Ilbert. Britten’s Old Clocks and Watches and Their Makers (7th ed.). Bonanza Books (1956).
  • Bolter, David J. Turing's Man: Western Culture in the Computer Age. The University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, N.C. (1984). ISBN 0-8078-4108-0 pbk. Very good, readable summary of the role of "the clock" in its setting the direction of philosophic movement for the "Western World". Cf. picture on p. 25 showing the verge and foliot. Bolton derived the picture from Macey, p. 20.
  • Bruton, Eric. The History of Clocks and Watches. London: Black Cat (1993).
  • Dohrn-van Rossum, Gerhard (1996). History of the Hour: Clocks and Modern Temporal Orders. Trans. Thomas Dunlap. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226155102. 
  • Edey, Winthrop. French Clocks. New York: Walker & Co. (1967).
  • Kak, Subhash, Ph.D. Babylonian and Indian Astronomy: Early Connections. February 17, 2003.
  • Kumar, Narendra "Science in Ancient India" (2004). ISBN 8126120568.
  • Landes, David S. Revolution in Time: Clocks and the Making of the Modern World. Cambridge: Harvard University Press (1983).
  • Landes, David S. Clocks & the Wealth of Nations, Daedalus journal, Spring 2003.
  • Lloyd, Alan H. “Mechanical Timekeepers”, A History of Technology, Vol. III. Edited by Charles Joseph Singer et al. Oxford: Clarendon Press (1957), pp. 648–675.
  • Macey, Samuel L., Clocks and the Cosmos: Time in Western Life and Thought, Archon Books, Hamden, Conn. (1980).
  • Needham, Joseph (2000) [1965]. Science & Civilisation in China, Vol. 4, Part 2: Mechanical Engineering. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521058031. 
  • North, John. God's Clockmaker: Richard of Wallingford and the Invention of Time. London: Hambledon and London (2005).
  • Palmer, Brooks. The Book of American Clocks, The Macmillan Co. (1979).
  • Robinson, Tom. The Longcase Clock. Suffolk, England: Antique Collector’s Club (1981).
  • Smith, Alan. The International Dictionary of Clocks. London: Chancellor Press (1996).
  • Tardy. French Clocks the World Over. Part I and II. Translated with the assistance of Alexander Ballantyne. Paris: Tardy (1981).
  • Yoder, Joella Gerstmeyer. Unrolling Time: Christiaan Huygens and the Mathematization of Nature. New York: Cambridge University Press (1988).
  • Zea, Philip, & Robert Cheney. Clock Making in New England – 1725-1825. Old Sturbridge Village (1992).

External links


Translations: Clock
Top

Dansk (Danish)
1.
n. - ur, klokke, måler, taxameter, kontrolur, speedometer, [sl] ansigt
v. tr. - tage tid på, få noteret en tid på, svikle
v. intr. - stemple ind, tidsstemple, [sl] slå

idioms:

  • clock in    stemple ind
  • clock off    stemple ud
  • clock on    stemple ind
  • clock out    stemple ud
  • clock rate    clockfrekvens; på computere
  • clock speed    clockhastighed; på computere
  • clock tower    klokketårn
  • clock up    vinde meget, opnå meget

2.
n. - pil, svikkel på strømpe

Nederlands (Dutch)
klok, meter/teller, ponem, pluisbol van paardebloem, klokken, (laten) noteren, in de gaten houden dag en nacht

Français (French)
1.
n. - horloge, pendule, (Aut) compteur, (Comput) horloge (interne), (Bot) akène (d'un pissenlit)
v. tr. - chronométrer
v. intr. - chronométrer, (Ind) pointer (à l'entrée, à la sortie)

idioms:

  • clock in    (GB) pointer
  • clock off    pointer (à la sortie)
  • clock on    (GB) pointer
  • clock out    pointer (à la sortie)
  • clock rate    taux horaire
  • clock speed    vitesse (à l'heure)
  • clock tower    beffroi
  • clock up    faire (kilométrage), travailler (nombre d'heures), faire (un kilométrage de), atteindre, parvenir à (un total), travailler (un nombre d'heures)

2.
n. - motif/design (sur un bas)

Deutsch (German)
1.
n. - Uhr, Kilometerzähler
v. - stoppen, die Zeit nehmen

idioms:

  • clock in    (bei Arbeitsantritt) stechen
  • clock off    (bei Arbeitsschluß) stechen
  • clock on    (bei Arbeitsantritt) stechen
  • clock out    (bei Arbeitsschluß) stechen
  • clock rate    Interne Taktfrequenz, die die Rechnerverarbeitungsgeschwindigkeit bestimmt
  • clock speed    clock rate
  • clock tower    Uhrturm
  • clock up    zu verzeichnen haben, erreichen

2.
n. - eingewebte oder eingestickte Verzierung an der Seite eines Strumpfes

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - ρολόι (τραπεζιού ή τοίχου), κοντέρ ή όργανο ένδειξης ή μέτρησης μεγεθών ή τιμών (π.χ. ταξίμετρο), (καθομ.) μάπα
v. - χρονομετρώ, χτυπώ κάρτα, (καθομ.) χτυπώ, κιαλάρω

idioms:

  • clock in    χτυπώ κάρτα κατά την προσέλευση στην εργασία, αρχίζω δουλειά
  • clock off    χτυπώ κάρτα κατά την αποχώρηση από την εργασία, σταματώ τη δουλειά
  • clock on    χτυπώ κάρτα κατά την προσέλευση στην εργασία, αρχίζω δουλειά
  • clock out    χτυπώ κάρτα κατά την αποχώρηση από την εργασία, σταματώ τη δουλειά
  • clock rate    συχνότητα ρολογιού
  • clock speed    ταχύτητα ρολογιού
  • clock tower    πύργος με ρολόι
  • clock up    καταγράφω, σημειώνω ένδειξη

Italiano (Italian)
cronometrare, orologio, contachilometri

idioms:

  • alarm clock    sveglia
  • around/ round the clock    ventiquattr'ore al giorno
  • beat the clock    arrivare all'ultimo momento, farcela, migliorare i tempi
  • clock in/on    timbrarsi entrante
  • clock off    timbrarsi uscente
  • clock out    timbrarsi uscente
  • clock up    registrare
  • turn the clock back    portare indietro l'orologio

Português (Portuguese)
n. - relógio (m) de parede, medidor (m), taxímetro (m) (coloq.), rosto (m) (gír.)
v. - cronometrar, surrar (gír.)

idioms:

  • alarm clock    despertador (m)
  • around/round the clock    o tempo todo
  • beat the clock    terminar uma tarefa antes do prazo
  • clock in/on    bater ponto na entrada e saída
  • clock off    marcar cartão de ponto
  • clock out    marcar cartão de ponto
  • clock tower    torre (f) de relógio
  • clock up    cronometrar
  • time clock    relógio (m) de ponto
  • turn the clock back    voltar ao passado

Русский (Russian)
засекать время, замерять, часы, таксометр

idioms:

  • alarm clock    будильник
  • around/round the clock    круглые сутки
  • beat the clock    успеть вовремя
  • clock in/on    отбивать карточку приходя на работу
  • clock off    отбивать карточку уходя с работы
  • clock out    отбивать карточку уходя с работы
  • clock tower    часовня
  • clock up    наездить, отработать
  • time clock    табельные часы
  • turn the clock back    повернуть время вспять

Español (Spanish)
1.
n. - reloj, cuentakilómetros, taxímetro, velocímetro
v. tr. - cronometrar, registrar, tomar el tiempo
v. intr. - cronometrar, registrar, tomar el tiempo

idioms:

  • clock in    fichar, picar, llegar al trabajo
  • clock off    marcar/picar/fichar la salida
  • clock on    fichar, picar, llegar al trabajo
  • clock out    marcar/picar/fichar la salida
  • clock rate    (comp) velocidad de reloj
  • clock speed    (comp) velocidad de reloj
  • clock tower    torre del reloj
  • clock up    apuntarse (la victoria)

2.
n. - adorno cuadrado en el talón de las medias

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - klocka, ur, mätare, taxameter, kontrollur, broderi, nylle (sl.)
v. - ta tid på, klippa till, kolla in (sl.)

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
1. 速度计, 里程计, 为...计时, 记录, 测时间, 打, 打卡

idioms:

  • clock in    时钟输入
  • clock off    打卡下班
  • clock on    打卡上班
  • clock out    时钟输出
  • clock rate    时钟率
  • clock speed    时钟速度
  • clock tower    钟塔
  • clock up    记录...的时间

2. 时钟

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
1.
n. - 速度計, 里程計
v. tr. - 為...計時, 記錄, 測時間, 打
v. intr. - 打卡

idioms:

  • clock in    時鐘輸入
  • clock off    打卡下班
  • clock on    打卡上班
  • clock out    時鐘輸出
  • clock rate    時鐘率
  • clock speed    時鐘速度
  • clock tower    鐘塔
  • clock up    記錄...的時間

2.
n. - 時鐘

한국어 (Korean)
1.
n. - 자명식 회중시계, 사람의 얼굴
v. tr. - 시간을 재다, 기록을 내다, 때리다
v. intr. - 기록하다

idioms:

  • clock in    출근시간을 기록하다, 정각에 출근하다
  • clock off    퇴근시간을 기록하다, 정각에 퇴근하다
  • clock on    출근시간을 기록하다, 정각에 출근하다
  • clock out    퇴근시간을 기록하다, 정각에 퇴근하다
  • clock up    기록을 내다, 쌓다

2.
n. - 양말의 가두리 장식

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 時計, ストップウォッチ, クロック, 綿毛のような頭, 時計座, 靴下の縫取り飾り, 置き時計
v. - 縫取り飾りを付ける, 時間を計る

idioms:

  • around/round the clock    24時間ぶっ通しで
  • clock in/on    出勤時間を記録する, 仕事を始める
  • clock off    退出する
  • clock out    退出時間を記録する, 仕事を終える
  • clock tower    時計塔, 時計台
  • clock up    記録する

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) ساعه كبيرة (فعل) سجل وقت, وقت‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮שעון, פרצוף, אורלוגין‬
v. tr. - ‮קבע זמן, מדד זמן‬
v. intr. - ‮מדד זמן‬
n. - ‮קישוט-גרב‬


 
 
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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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