Parkinson
91Parkinson disease facies (sign) — Par·kin·son disease, facies (sign) (pahrґkin sən) [James Parkinson, English physician, 1755–1824] see under disease and facies, and see also parkinsonism …
92Parkinson'sche Gesetze — 1. Erstes P. G.: Die mit einem hintergründigen Humor aufgrund von Statistiken in eine ironisierende „mathematische Formel“ gefasste Erfahrung, die der englische Geschichtsforscher und Soziologe C. Northcote Parkinson während des Krieges als… …
93Parkinson’s disease — is the traditional name, but increasingly the nonpossessive Parkinson disease is displacing it, particularly in medical texts …
94Parkinson’s Law — Work expands to fill the time available for its completion. Stated by C. Northcote Parkinson (1909–1993), British writer …
95Parkinson (maladie de) — maladie dégénérative ♦ James Parkinson médecin anglais qui a décrit cette maladie …
96Parkinson's law — work expands to fill the time available for its completion; number of subordinates increases at a fixed rate regardless of the amount of work produced (laws developed by 20th century British scholar C. N. Parkinson) …
97Parkinson's disease — noun a progressive disease of the brain and nervous system marked by tremor, muscular rigidity, and slow, imprecise movement. Derivatives Parkinsonian adjective Parkinsonism noun Origin C19: named after the English surgeon James Parkinson …
98Parkinson's law — noun the notion that work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion. Origin 1950s: named after the English writer Cyril Northcote Parkinson …
99Parkinson's law — the idea that the work you have to do will increase to fill all of the time you have to do it in. If you tell him you want the work done by tomorrow, he ll get it done this afternoon, if you tell him next Thursday, he ll spend a week on it. It s… …
100Parkinson's disease — also Parkinson s noun (U) a serious illness in which your muscles become very weak and your arms and legs shake …