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1 Gait
A term used in the woollen trade to denote a full repeat of the draft in heald weaving, or one complete row of jacquard harness, usually 8 or 16 -
2 gait
طَرِيقَة السَّيْر \ gait: a way of walking or running along: The steady gait of the long-distance walker. -
3 gait
مِشْيَة \ gait: a way of walking or running along: The steady gait of the long-distance walker. walk: way of walking: You can recognize a sailor by his walk. -
4 gait
[geɪt] noun( plural rare) the way in which a person or animal walks:مِشْيَه بَطيئَهthe old man's shuffling gait.
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5 gait
meng-gait pull, book, pluck k.r(fruit, etc. with a pole). 2 wheedle money, etc. from s.o.). 3 swipe, steal, purloin. -
6 gait
pull, hook, pluck, wheedle, swipe, steal, purloin* * *pull, hook, pluck (fruit, etc. with a pole); wheedle (money, etc. from someone); swipe, steal, purloin -
7 Gait
Come now! -
8 gait
all -
9 gait
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10 Gait-Over
A mill term for the complete repeat of a pattern as, for instance, a dobby design on 16-ends has 16-ends to its gait-over. -
11 Gait, gait!
Come now! -
12 Gait training
Physiology: GT -
13 Gait es nit!
It doesn't work! -
14 Gait es nit
It doesn't work! -
15 Azoy gait es!
That's how it goes! -
16 Es gait nit!
It doesn't work! It isn't running smoothly! -
17 Gelt gait tzu gelt
Money goes to money. -
18 Mein cheies gait oys!
I'm dying for it! -
19 Vi gait dos gesheft?
How's business? -
20 Vi gait es eich?
How goes it with you? How are you? How are you doing?
См. также в других словарях:
Gait — Gait, n. [See {Gate} a way.] 1. A going; a walk; a march; a way. [1913 Webster] Good gentleman, go your gait, and let poor folks pass. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. Manner of walking or stepping; bearing or carriage while moving. [1913 Webster] T is… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
gait — [gāt] n. [ME gate, a going, gait, orig., path < ON gata, path between hedges, street, akin to Ger gasse, lane] 1. manner of moving on foot; way of walking or running 2. any of the various foot movements of a horse, as a trot, pace, canter, or… … English World dictionary
gait — [geıt] n [singular] [Date: 1400 1500; Origin: gate way (13 21 centuries), from Old Norse gata road ] the way someone walks ▪ a slow shuffling gait … Dictionary of contemporary English
gait — [ geıt ] noun singular the way that someone walks: his distinctive rolling gait … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
gait — gait·ed; gait; … English syllables
gait|ed — «GAY tihd», adjective. trained when to use different gaits; having a certain gait: »a gaited horse, heavy gaited oxen … Useful english dictionary
gait — index step Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
gait — (n.) c.1300, gate a going or walking, departure, journey, earlier way, road, path (c.1200), from a Scandinavian source (Cf. O.N. gata way, road, path ), cognate with O.H.G. gazza street, Ger. Gasse, Goth. gatwo. Meaning manner of walking is from… … Etymology dictionary
gait — [n] way an animal or person moves, walks amble, bearing, canter, carriage, clip, gallop, get along, lick, march, motion, movement, pace, run, speed, step, stride, tread, trot, walk; concept 149 … New thesaurus
gait — ► NOUN 1) a person s manner of walking. 2) the paces of a horse or dog. ORIGIN Old Norse … English terms dictionary
Gait — A gait is a particular way or manner of moving on foot, e.g., *human gait *horse gait *dog gait.The word may also refer to one of the following. *GAIT (wireless), a standard to enable cross operation of wireless telephone technologies. * GAIT… … Wikipedia