Aug 3, 2017 15:29
6 yrs ago
English term

which allowed to be effectively registered

English to Serbian Social Sciences History napredovanje klasnog organizovanja
It is neither possible nor necessary here to survey the full range of geographical, ideological, national, sectional or other variations, actual or potential, on the general theme of the formation of the working classes of 1870-1914 as conscious and organized social groups. It was plainly not yet taking place, to any significant extent, among that part of humanity whose skins were a different shade of colour, even when (as in India and, of course, Japan) industrial development was already undeniable. This advance of class organization was chronologically uneven. It accelerated rapidly in the course of two short periods. The first major leap forward occured between the end of the 1880s and in the early 1890s, years marked both by the reestablishment of a labour International (the 'Second', to distinguish it from Marx's International of 1864-72) and by that symbol of working-class hope and confidence, May Day. These were the years when socialists first appeared in significant numbers in the parliaments of several countries, while even in Germany, where their party was already strong, the force of the SPD more than doubled between 1887 and 1893 (from 10.1 to 23.3 per cent). The second period of major advance falls some time between the Russian Revolution of 1905, which greatly influenced it, especailly in central Europe, and 1914. The massive electoral advance of labour and socialist parties was now assisted by the spread of a democratized suffrage which allowed it to be effectively registered. At the same time waves of labour agitation produced a major advance in the strenght of organized trade unionism. While the details varied enormousley with national circumstances, these two waves of rapid labour advance are to be found, in one or another, almost everywhere.

Proposed translations

+1
18 hrs
English term (edited): which allowed it to be effectively registered
Selected

што је омогућило да се (тај масовни напредак) покаже [/ одрази] у стварности [/ у стварним изборима]

The massive electoral advance of labour and socialist parties was now assisted by the spread of a democratized suffrage which allowed it to be effectively registered

it = "The massive electoral advance of labour and socialist parties"

.... which allowed тhe massive electoral advance of labour and socialist parties to be effectively registered

=>

before the "democratized suffrage" [in practical terms, the enlargement of the electorate, i.e. the fraction of the population eligible to vote], many supporters of labour and socialist parties were not allowed to vote as they were not part of the electorate [the real "universal right to vote" is quite recent - there were initially many limitations as to who is eligible to vote - only males, only those rich enough to be above some census of owning properties or paying some minimum amount of tax etc etc - all restrictions affecting mainly supporters of labour and socialist parties]

After these restrictions were reduced [= "democratized suffrage"], those in favour of labour and socialist parties become eligible to register and vote, so the support for these parties become "effectively registered" [= registered in electoral roles thus become officially visible, unmissable, no longer just "potential" votes]

IOW initially, due to various restrictions on the right to vote, most of the supporters of labour and socialist parties were not eligible to vote, so all their [potential/hypothetical] "votes" simply didn't count at all, didn't "register" in any way - in the sense that for all practical purposes these votes simply didn't exist - you couldn't notice them - they didn't have any impact on the results of parliamentary elections.

HERE "to register" is not so much about any formal "registration", more about something becoming noticeable / having an impact.


register

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Related to register: shift register

reg•is•ter (rĕj′ĭ-stər)
n.
..
v. reg•is•tered, reg•is•ter•ing, reg•is•ters
v.tr.
..
v.intr.
..
5. To be indicated on an instrument or a scale.

6. To be shown or expressed, as on the face: The teacher's reprimand did not register on the students' faces.

7. To make an impression; be recorded in the mind: The warning failed to register.

...

[Middle English registre, from Old French, from Medieval Latin registrum, alteration of Late Latin regesta, from Latin, neuter pl. past participle of regerere, to record : re-, re- + gerere, to carry.]

reg′is•ter•er n.
reg′is•tra•ble (-ĭ-strə-bəl) adj.
register
(ˈrɛdʒɪstə)
n
..
vb
14. (tr)
to enter or cause someone to enter (an event, person's name, ownership, etc) on a register; formally record

15. to show or be shown on a scale or other measuring instrument: the current didn't register on the meter.

16. to show or be shown in a person's face, bearing, etc: his face registered surprise.

17. (intr)
to have an effect; make an impression: the news of her uncle's death just did not register.

..
[C14: from Medieval Latin registrum, from Latin regerere to transcribe, from re- + gerere to bear]
ˈregisterer n
reg•is•ter
(ˈrɛdʒ ə stər)

n....

v.t.
..

v.i.
..
22. to show: A smile registered on her face.

23. to have some effect; make some impression.

[1350–1400; registre < Middle French, Old French < Medieval Latin registrum alter. of Late Latin regesta catalog, list, n. use of neuter pl. of Latin regestus, past participle of regerere to carry back, pile up, collect =re- re- + gerere to bear, wear]
reg′is•tra•ble, reg′is•ter•a•ble, adj.
....
register

Past participle: registered
Gerund: registering

Imperative
register
register
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/register
Peer comment(s):

agree Marija Jankovic
2 hrs
Хвала!
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thank you very much!"
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