-
1 champion
champion, -ionne [∫ɑ̃pjɔ̃, jɔn]masculine noun, feminine noun* * *- ionne ʃɑ̃pjɔ̃, ɔn nom masculin, féminin2) (colloq) ( qui excelle)3) (colloq) ( leader)pays champion de la lutte contre la drogue — country which leads the field in the fight against drugs
4) (colloq) ( défenseur) champion* * *ʃɑ̃pjɔ̃, jɔn champion, -ne1. adj1) SPORT champion2) fig championPour les desserts, il n'y a pas à dire, tu es championne! — When it comes to desserts, there's no doubt about it - you're the champion!
2. nm/f1) (= tenant du titre) champion2) fig championC'est le champion de la tarte tatin. — He's a champion tarte tatin maker., ironique
* * *1 Sport, Jeux ( vainqueur) champion; ( sportif de haut niveau) leading player; champion d'Europe/du Monde d'escrime European/World fencing champion; champion olympique Olympic champion; le champion en titre the titleholder;2 ○( qui excelle) être champion [personne] to be in a class of one's own; quand il s'agit de faire des bêtises, tu es champion when it comes to doing stupid things, you're in a class of your own; champion de la gaffe prize fool; champion de l'imitation/du rire top impressionist/comedian;3 ○( leader) pays champion de la lutte contre la drogue country which leads the field in the fight against drugs; cette région est championne de la production de vin this region leads the field in wine production;4 ○( défenseur) champion; se poser en champion de la vertu to set oneself up as a champion of virtue; se faire le champion d'une cause to champion a cause., championne [ʃɑ̃pjɔ̃, ɔn] nom masculin, nom féminin2. [défenseur] champion————————( féminin championne) [ʃɑ̃pjɔ̃, ɔn] adjectifpour les bêtises, il est champion! he's a great one for getting up to stupid things! -
2 Champion
[‘t∫εmpiәn] m; -s, -s; SPORT champion(s Pl.); der Champion im Speerwerfen the javelin champion, the champion javelin-thrower* * *Cham|pi|on ['tʃɛmpiən]m -s, -schampion; (= Mannschaft) champions pl* * *Cham·pi·on<-s, -s>[ˈtʃɛmpi̯ən]* * *der; Champions, Champions (Sport) champion* * *der Champion im Speerwerfen the javelin champion, the champion javelin-thrower* * *der; Champions, Champions (Sport) champion -
3 champion
/'t∫empjon/ Ⅰ m pers. Sport champion Ⅱ m anim. prizewinner* * ** * *mppl. -i sport champion, winner.mapl. -y ( pies) champion, winner.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > champion
-
4 champion
مُبَرِّز \ champion: (often attrib) the best of all players or performers at a certain game, or sport; the animal that is judged to be the best of its class at a show: a champion racehorse; a swimming champion; a champion sheepdog. \ See Also بطل (بَطَل) -
5 champion
فائِق \ champion: (often attrib.) the best of all players or performers at a certain game, or sport; the animal that is judged to be the best of its class at a show: a champion racehorse; a swimming champion; a champion sheepdog. exquisite: very beautiful; very well-made: exquisite grace; exquisite fine silk. superb: splendid; grand; very fine: a superb performance; a superb hotel. \ See Also بطل (بَطَل) -
6 champion
بَطَل \ champion: (often attrib.) the best of all players or performers at a certain game, or sport; the animal that is judged to be the best of its class at a show: a champion racehorse; a swimming champion; a champion sheepdog. hero: sb. (esp. male) who is respected for some brave deed; sb. who is admired more than anyone else: a national hero; a schoolboy’s personal hero. -
7 champión
-
8 champion
[ˈtʃæmpɪən]1. noun1) in games, competitions etc, a competitor who has defeated all others:بَطَل( also adjective) a champion boxer.
2) a person who defends a cause:حامٍ، مُدافِع عَنa champion of human rights.
2. verbto defend or support:يُدافِعُ عَنHe championed the cause of human rights for many years.
-
9 champion
-
10 champion
subst. champion -
11 Champion
Cham·pi·on <-s, -s> [ʼtʃɛmpi̭ən] m( Spitzensportler) champion;( Spitzenmannschaft) champions pl -
12 champion|ka
The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > champion|ka
-
13 champion
I.adj. 'A-1', fantastic. Pour ce qui est de la cuistance, il est champion: When it comes to cooking, no-one can beat him.II.interj. Super! — Great! -
14 Champion
Sports: CH -
15 champion
Sports: CH -
16 champion
-
17 champion, onne
-
18 Champion Cluster Cotton
A variety of late maturing cotton, the staple measuring about i-in. The yeild of lint being 30-31 per cent. Large bolls.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Champion Cluster Cotton
-
19 Champion, Nehemiah
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1678 probably Bristol, Englandd. 9 September 1747 probably Bristol, England[br]English merchant and brass manufacturer of Bristol.[br]Several members of Champion's Quaker family were actively engaged as merchants in Bristol during the late seventeenth and the eighteenth centuries. Port records show Nehemiah in receipt of Cornish copper ore at Bristol's Crews Hole smelting works by 1706, in association with the newly formed brassworks of the city. He later became a leading partner, managing the company some time after Abraham Darby left the Bristol works to pursue his interest at Coalbrookdale. Champion, probably in company with his father, became the largest customer for Darby's Coalbrookdale products and also acted as Agent, at least briefly, for Thomas Newcomen.A patent in 1723 related to two separate innovations introduced by the brass company.The first improved the output of brass by granulating the copper constituent and increasing its surface area. A greater proportion of zinc vapour could permeate the granules compared with the previous practice, resulting in the technique being adopted generally in the cementation process used at the time. The latter part of the same patent introduced a new type of coal-fired furnace which facilitated annealing in bulk so replacing the individual processing of pieces. The principle of batch annealing was generally adopted, although the type of furnace was later improved. A further patent, in 1739, in the name of Nehemiah, concerned overshot water-wheels possibly intended for use in conjunction with the Newcomen atmospheric pumping engine employed for recycling water by his son William.Champion's two sons, John and William, and their two sons, both named John, were all concerned with production of non-ferrous metals and responsible for patented innovations. Nehemiah, shortly before his death, is believed to have partnered William at the Warmley works to exploit his son's new patent for producing metallic zinc.[br]Bibliography1723, British patent no. 454 (granulated copper technique and coal-fired furnace). 1739, British patent no. 567 (overshot water-wheels).Further ReadingA.Raistrick, 1950, Quakers in Science and Industry, London: Bannisdale Press (for the Champion family generally).J.Day, 1973, Bristol Brass, a History of the Industry, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles (for the industrial activities of Nehemiah).JD -
20 Champion, William
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1710 Bristol, Englandd. 1789 England[br]English metallurgist, the first to produce metallic zinc in England on an industrial scale.[br]William, the youngest of the three sons of Nehemiah Champion, stemmed from a West Country Quaker family long associated with the metal trades. His grandfather, also called Nehemiah, had been one of Abraham Darby's close Quaker friends when the brassworks at Baptist Mills was being established in 1702 and 1703. Nehemiah II took over the management of these works soon after Darby went to Coalbrookdale, and in 1719, as one of a group of Bristol copper smelters, he negotiated an agreement with Lord Falmouth to develop copper mines in the Redruth area in Cornwall. In 1723 he was granted a patent for a cementation brass-making process using finely granulated copper rather than the broken fragments of massive copper hitherto employed.In 1730 he returned to Bristol after a tour of European metallurgical centres, and he began to develop an industrial process for the manufacture of pure zinc ingots in England. Metallic zinc or spelter was then imported at great expense from the Far East, largely for the manufacture of copper alloys of golden colour used for cheap jewellery. The process William developed, after six years of experimentation, reduced zinc oxide with charcoal at temperatures well above the boiling point of zinc. The zinc vapour obtained was condensed rapidly to prevent reoxidation and finally collected under water. This process, patented in 1738, was operated in secret until 1766 when Watson described it in his Chemical Essays. After encountering much opposition from the Bristol merchants and zinc importers, William decided to establish his own integrated brassworks at Warmley, five meals east of Bristol. The Warmley plant began to produce in 1748 and expanded rapidly. By 1767, when Warmley employed about 2,000 men, women and children, more capital was needed, requiring a Royal Charter of Incorporation. A consortium of Champion's competitors opposed this and secured its refusal. After this defeat William lost the confidence of his fellow directors, who dismissed him. He was declared bankrupt in 1769 and his works were sold to the British Brass Company, which never operated Warmley at full capacity, although it produced zinc on that site until 1784.[br]Bibliography1723, British patent no. 454 (cementation brass-making process).1738, British patent no. 564 (zinc ingot production process).1767, British patent no. 867 (brass manufacture wing zinc blende).Further ReadingJ.Day, 1973, Bristol Brass: The History of the Industry, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.A.Raistrick, 1970, Dynasty of Ironfounders: The Darbys and Coalbrookdale, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.J.R.Harris, 1964, The Copper King, Liverpool University Press.ASD
См. также в других словарях:
Champion — Champion … Deutsch Wörterbuch
champion — champion, ionne [ ʃɑ̃pjɔ̃, jɔn ] n. • 1080 campium; bas lat. °campio, ou germ. °kampjo; de campus « champ de bataille »; germ. kamp 1 ♦ N. m. Celui qui combattait en champ clos pour soutenir une cause. Choisir un champion. Champions lançant les… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Champion — bezeichnet den Sieger eines Kampfes oder Wettkampfes, siehe Champion (Kämpfer) eine deutsche Automarke, siehe Champion (Automarke) eine deutsche Motorradmarke der 1930er Jahre, siehe Champion (Motorrad) eine französische Supermarktkette der… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Champion Ch-2 — Champion Bild nicht vorhanden Ch 2 Hersteller: Hermann Holbein Fahrzeugbau Produktionszeitraum: 1949–1950 Klasse: Kleinstwagen … Deutsch Wikipedia
Champion Ch-1 — Champion Bild nicht vorhanden Ch 1 Hersteller: Hermann Holbein Fahrzeugbau Produktionszeitraum: 1949 Klasse: Kleinstwagen … Deutsch Wikipedia
CHAMPION — Champion, Gene Autry’s sorrel colored horse, was the only cowboy star’s horse to have his own television series after his movie days were over: The Adventures of Champion (CBS: 1955–1956). Melody Trail (1935) was Champion’s first film, but… … Westerns in Cinema
Champion — Cham pi*on (ch[a^]m p[i^]*[u^]n), n. [F. champion, fr. LL.campio, of German origin; cf. OHG. chempho, chemphio, fighter, champf, G. kampf, contest; perh. influenced by L. campus field, taken in the sense of field of battle. ] 1. One who engages… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
champion — CHAMPION. s. m. Celui qui combattoit en champ clos pour sa querelle, ou pour la querelle d autrui. Brave, vaillant champion. Ceux qui ne pouvoient pas combattre de leurs personnes, comme les vieillards, les estropiés, les Ecclésiastiques, les… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798
Champion — Sm Meister einer Sportart erw. fach. (18. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus ne. champion, eigentlich (Einzel )Kämpfer , aus afrz. champion. Dieses zu l. campus in der Bedeutung Kampfplatz . Ebenso nndl. kampioen, nfrz. champion, nschw. champion,… … Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache
Champion EP — EP by Brother Ali Released May 11, 2004 … Wikipedia
Champion — Nom très fréquent dans toute la France. On le trouve notamment dans la Sarthe et la Drôme. Le mot champion désignait au Moyen Âge celui qui combattait en champ clos, notamment dans les duels judiciaires (signalons que le sens actuel de champion… … Noms de famille