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1 closure
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2 closure
'kləuʒə(an act of closing: the closure of a factory.) cierreclosure n cierretr['kləʊʒəSMALLr/SMALL]closure ['klo:ʒər] n1) closing, end: cierre m, clausura f, fin m2) fastener: cierre mn.• cierre s.m.• clausura s.f.• conclusión s.f.• fin s.m.'kləʊʒər, 'kləʊʒə(r)mass & count noun (of factory, hospital, road) cierre m['klǝʊʒǝ(r)]N1) (=close-down) cierre m2) (=end) fin m, conclusión f3) (Parl) clausura f* * *['kləʊʒər, 'kləʊʒə(r)]mass & count noun (of factory, hospital, road) cierre m -
3 closure
nC&G of bottles tapa f -
4 closure
1) pieza de cierre m2) cabezal mEnglish-Spanish architecture and construction dictionary > closure
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5 closure
s.1 cierre (de empresa, negocio, tienda)2 cleisis. -
6 closure production line
nPACK cadena de producción de cierres fEnglish-Spanish technical dictionary > closure production line
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7 closure rail
nRAIL carril de unión m -
8 closure current
s.corriente de cierre. -
9 closure of a set
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10 eye-closure reflex
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11 flask closure
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12 king closure
English-Spanish architecture and construction dictionary > king closure
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13 queen closure
English-Spanish architecture and construction dictionary > queen closure
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14 binding closure
nPACK cierre por pegado m -
15 bottle closure
nPACK cierre de la botella m -
16 child-resistant closure
nPACK, SAFE cierre a prueba de niños mEnglish-Spanish technical dictionary > child-resistant closure
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17 continuous-thread closure
nPACK cierre de rosca sin fin mEnglish-Spanish technical dictionary > continuous-thread closure
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18 crimp-on closure
nPACK cierre mediante rizado m -
19 crown closure
nPACK chapa f, tapón corona m -
20 embossing closure
nPACK cierre mediante gofrado m
См. также в других словарях:
Closure — may refer to: Closure (container) used to seal a bottle, jug, jar, can, or other container Closure (wine bottle), a stopper Closure (business), the process by which an organization ceases operations Closure (philosophy), a principle in… … Wikipedia
closure — closure, social closure Identified in the writings of Max Weber , and more recently resurrected by the British sociologist Frank Parkin, the concept emerged as an alternative to Marxist theories of inequality and of how the latter is generated,… … Dictionary of sociology
closure — clo‧sure [ˈkləʊʒə ǁ ˈkloʊʒər] noun [countable] the act of closing a factory, store, organization etc permanently: • The factory faces closure if no more money can be found. • The company s 50 high street stores are currently threatened with… … Financial and business terms
Closure — Видеоаль … Википедия
Closure — Clo sure (kl[=o] zh[ u]r; 135), n. [Of. closure, L. clausura, fr. clauedere to shut. See {Close}, v. t.] 1. The act of shutting; a closing; as, the closure of a chink. [1913 Webster] 2. That which closes or shuts; that by which separate parts are … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Closure EP — Closure Compilation album by Everclear Released November 2, 2004 … Wikipedia
closure — late 14c., a barrier, a fence, from O.Fr. closure enclosure; that which encloses, fastening, hedge, wall, fence, also closture barrier, division; enclosure, hedge, fence, wall (12c., Mod.Fr. clôture), from L. clausura lock, fortress, a closing… … Etymology dictionary
closure — [n1] conclusion cease, cessation, close, closing, desistance, end, ending, finish, stop, stoppage, termination; concept 119 Ant. beginning, introduction, opening, start closure [n2] plug, seal blockade, bolt, bung, cap, cork, fastener, latch, lid … New thesaurus
closure — index cessation (termination), close (conclusion), cloture, conclusion (outcome), denouement, end … Law dictionary
closure — ► NOUN 1) an act or process of closing. 2) a device that closes or seals. 3) (in a legislative assembly) a procedure for ending a debate and taking a vote. ORIGIN Latin clausura, from claudere to close … English terms dictionary
closure — [klō′zhər] n. [OFr < L clausura, a closing < pp. of claudere, to CLOSE2] 1. a closing or being closed 2. a finish; end; conclusion 3. the feeling that one s prolonged state of emotional distress over some traumatic experience or situation… … English World dictionary