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1 Clothing Wool
Wools of short fibre, not suitable for combing, and used in the manufacture of woollens. It possesses the property of felting readily. Usually of the merino type. Formerly these wools were only used for woollens, but now they can be converted into worsted yarns by processing them on the Continental system. -
2 швейное производство
Русско-английский технический словарь > швейное производство
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3 швейное поизводство
Русско-английский политехнический словарь > швейное поизводство
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4 швейное производство
Русско-английский текстильный словарь > швейное производство
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5 швейное производство
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь Масловского > швейное производство
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6 производство
1. production; manufacture; make(добив) output(нещо произведено) produceпроизводство на средства за производство production of means of productionстоково производство (production of) marketable goods; commodity productionмасово производство mass/serial production, large-scale-production/manufactureръчно производство manual productionмашинно производство mechanical/mechanized production/manufactureпоточно производство flow-productionсерийно производство series/commercial productionнаше собствено производство our own make/productionпроизводство на обувки manufacture of shoesпроизводство на зеленчуци vegetable-growingпроизводство на въглища coal outputвлизам в производството go to work at/in a factoryбез откъсване от производството without interrupting o.'s work2. воен. (повишение в чин) promotionсъдебно производство legal procedure/proceedings* * *произво̀дство,ср., само ед.1. production; manufacture; make; ( добив) output; ( нещо произведено) produce; без откъсване от \производството without interrupting o.’s work; влизам в \производството go to work at/in a factory; дребно серийно \производство short-run/small-scale/small-lot production; единично \производство job production; масово \производство wholesale manufacture; mass/serial production, large-scale production/manufacture; машинно \производство mechanical/mechanized production/manufacture; недостатъчно \производство underproduction; поточно \производство flow-production; \производство на въглища coal output; \производство на зеленчуци vegetable-growing; \производство на кожи leather manufacture; \производство на обувки shoemaking; ръчно \производство manual production; серийно \производство serial/commercial production; стоково \производство commodity production; структуроопределящо \производство basic production; шивашко \производство clothing manufacture;* * *manufacture (машинно): manual производство - ръчно производство; make; mass production (серийно); yield{yi;ld}; legal procedure (съдебно производство)* * *1. (добив) output 2. (нещо произведено) produce 3. production;manufacture;make 4. ПРОИЗВОДСТВО на въглища coal output 5. ПРОИЗВОДСТВО на зеленчуци vegetable-growing 6. ПРОИЗВОДСТВО на обувки manufacture of shoes 7. ПРОИЗВОДСТВО на средства за ПРОИЗВОДСТВО production of means of production 8. без откъсване отПРОИЗВОДСТВОто without interrupting o.'s work 9. влизам в ПРОИЗВОДСТВОто go to work at/in a factory 10. воен.. (повишение в чин) promotion 11. ма-сово ПРОИЗВОДСТВО mass/serial production, large-scale-production/manufacture 12. машинно ПРОИЗВОДСТВО mechanical/mechanized production/manufacture 13. наше собствено ПРОИЗВОДСТВО our own make/ production 14. поточно ПРОИЗВОДСТВО flow-production 15. ръчно ПРОИЗВОДСТВО manual production 16. серийно ПРОИЗВОДСТВО series/commercial production 17. стоково ПРОИЗВОДСТВО (production of) marketable goods;commodity production 18. съдебно ПРОИЗВОДСТВО legal procedure/proceedings -
7 вспомогательное производство
1. auxiliary process2. auxiliary departmentпроизводство газа — gas production; gas generation
кузнечно-штамповочное производство — press forging; die forging
листопрокатное производство — plate rolling; sheet rolling
сварочное производство — welding fabrication; welding engineering
серийное производство — quantity production; batch production
Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > вспомогательное производство
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8 швейное производство
Advertising: clothing manufacture, garment manufactureУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > швейное производство
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9 Thimmonier, Barthélémy
[br]b. 1793 Saint-Etienne, France d. 1857[br]French inventor of the first sewing machine.[br]The sewing machine is probably the most universal and the most important machine in clothing manufacture, being used both industrially and domestically. It was also the first domestic consumer durable and was the first mass-produced machine to appear in the home. The first practical sewing machine was built during 1828 and 1829 by Barthélémy Thimmonier, a working tailor of Saint-Etienne in France. He came from a modest family and had never received any training as a mechanic, so his invention is all the more remarkable. He took out a patent in 1830 in his own name and that of Ferrand, a tutor of the Saint-Etienne School of Mines who had helped him financially. It was a chain-stitch machine made largely of wood and operated by a foot pedal with a large flywheel. The needle moved up and down through the cloth, which was placed on a platform below it. A second, hooked needle under the platform made a loop in the thread, which was caught when the first needle descended again.In 1841, Thimmonier was appointed to a senior position in a large Paris clothing factory engaged in the production of French army uniforms. He soon had eighty machines in use, but a mob of hand-sewers broke in, smashed the machines and nearly killed Thimmonier. In 1845, he had developed his machine so that it could make 200 stitches per minute and formed a partnership with Jean-Marie Magnin to build them commercially. However, the abdication of Louis Philippe on 21 February 1848 ended his hopes, even though patents were taken out in the UK and the USA in that year. The English patent was in Magnin's name, and Thimmonier died impoverished in 1857. His machine was perfected by many later inventors.[br]Bibliography1830, with Ferrand, (chain-stitch machine).Further ReadingA.Matagran, 1931, "Barthélémy Thimmonier (1793–1857), inventeur de la machine à coudre", Bull. Soc. Enc. Industr. nat. 130 (biography in French).J.Meyssin, 1914, Histoire de la machine à coudre: portrait et biographie de l'inventeur B.Thimmonier, 5th edn, Lyons (biography in French).M.Daumas, (ed.), 1968, Histoire générale des techniques, Vol. III: L'Expansion du machinisme, Paris (includes a description of Thimmonier's machine, with a picture).N.Salmon, 1863, History of the Sewing Machine from the Year 1750 (tells the history of the sewing machine).F.B.Jewell, 1975, Veteran Sewing Machines. A Collector's Guide, Newton Abbot (a more modern account).RLH -
10 Serging
A term used in the U.S.A. clothing manufacture for the process of overcasting the raw edges of a material before seaming. -
11 Konfektion
f; -, -en1. nur Sg. (factory) clothing production, manufacture of ready-to-wear clothing2. Kleidung: ready-to-wear clothing* * *Kon|fek|ti|on [kɔnfɛk'tsioːn]f -, -en(= Herstellung) manufacture of off-the-peg (Brit) or ready-made or ready-to-wear clothing; (= Industrie) clothing industry, rag trade (inf); (= Bekleidung) off-the-peg (Brit) or ready-made or ready-to-wear clothes pl or clothing* * *Kon·fek·ti·on<-, -en>[kɔnfɛkˈtsi̯o:n]f pl selten ready-made clothing no pl* * *die; Konfektion, Konfektionen ready-made or off-the-peg (Brit.) or (Amer.) off-the-rack clothes pl. or garments pl* * *1. nur sg (factory) clothing production, manufacture of ready-to-wear clothing2. Kleidung: ready-to-wear clothing* * *die; Konfektion, Konfektionen ready-made or off-the-peg (Brit.) or (Amer.) off-the-rack clothes pl. or garments pl -
12 confección
f.1 confection, handicraft, manufacture, making.2 make-up of clothes.3 concoction.* * *2 (realización) making, making up* * *noun f.1) preparation2) dressmaking* * *SF1) (=preparación) making-up, preparation2) (Cos) dressmaking3) (Farm) concoction, preparation* * *a) ( de trajes) tailoring; ( de vestidos) dressmakingde confección — ready-to-wear, off-the-peg
b) ( de artefactos) makingc) (de folleto, periódico) production; ( de lista) drawing-upd) ( de medicina) preparation* * *= assignment, authoring, build-up [buildup], drafting.Ex. Similar principles may be applied in the formulation and assignment of headings irrespective of the physical form of the document.Ex. This article presents a detailed discussion of the use of Hypermedia for authoring, organisation and presentation of information.Ex. No problem usually with terminals and micros but there could be an undesirable temperature build-up in confined areas.Ex. The preliminary work began immediately with the drafting of a questionnaire designed to collect pertinent data on the distribution of authority files.----* compañía de confección de ropa = clothing company.* confección del catálogo = catalogue production.* confección de leyes = law-making [lawmaking/law making].* confección de libros = bookmaking [book making].* confección del presupuesto = budgeting.* confección de papel = paper-making [papermaking].* confección de políticas = policy making [policy-making/policymaking].* confección de prendas de vestir = dressmaking.* confección de tejidos = weaving.* experto en la confección de documentos web = text mark-up expert.* industria de la confección = clothing industry.* industria de la confección, la = garment industry, the.* * *a) ( de trajes) tailoring; ( de vestidos) dressmakingde confección — ready-to-wear, off-the-peg
b) ( de artefactos) makingc) (de folleto, periódico) production; ( de lista) drawing-upd) ( de medicina) preparation* * *= assignment, authoring, build-up [buildup], drafting.Ex: Similar principles may be applied in the formulation and assignment of headings irrespective of the physical form of the document.
Ex: This article presents a detailed discussion of the use of Hypermedia for authoring, organisation and presentation of information.Ex: No problem usually with terminals and micros but there could be an undesirable temperature build-up in confined areas.Ex: The preliminary work began immediately with the drafting of a questionnaire designed to collect pertinent data on the distribution of authority files.* compañía de confección de ropa = clothing company.* confección del catálogo = catalogue production.* confección de leyes = law-making [lawmaking/law making].* confección de libros = bookmaking [book making].* confección del presupuesto = budgeting.* confección de papel = paper-making [papermaking].* confección de políticas = policy making [policy-making/policymaking].* confección de prendas de vestir = dressmaking.* confección de tejidos = weaving.* experto en la confección de documentos web = text mark-up expert.* industria de la confección = clothing industry.* industria de la confección, la = garment industry, the.* * *1 (de trajes) tailoring; (de vestidos) dressmakingindustria de la confección clothing industry, garment industry, rag trade ( colloq)de confección ready-to-wear, off-the-peg[ S ] confecciones fashions2 (de artefactos) making4 (de una medicina) preparation, making up* * *
confección sustantivo femenino
( de vestidos) dressmaking;
de confección ready-to-wear, off-the-peg
confección sustantivo femenino
1 Cost dressmaking, tailoring
la industria de la confección, familiar the rag trade
2 (realización) making, making up
' confección' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
corte
- hechura
- raja
English:
making
- rag trade
- ready
- bunting
- dry
- manufacture
- off
* * *confección nf1. [de ropa] tailoring, dressmaking;2. [de comida] preparation, making;[de lista] drawing up; [de estadística] production, preparation;productos de confección artesanal handicrafts;la confección de las listas electorales the drawing up of the parties' lists of candidates* * *f1 de aparatos making* * *confección nf, pl - ciones1) : preparation2) : tailoring, dressmaking* * *1. (ropa) clothing2. (elaboración) making -
13 Dyer, Joseph Chessborough
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 15 November 1780 Stonnington Point, Connecticut, USAd. 2 May 1871 Manchester, England[br]American inventor of a popular type of roving frame for cotton manufacture.[br]As a youth, Dyer constructed an unsinkable life-boat but did not immediately pursue his mechanical bent, for at 16 he entered the counting-house of a French refugee named Nancrède and succeeded to part of the business. He first went to England in 1801 and finally settled in 1811 when he married Ellen Jones (d. 1842) of Gower Street, London. Dyer was already linked with American inventors and brought to England Perkins's plan for steel engraving in 1809, shearing and nail-making machines in 1811, and also received plans and specifications for Fulton's steamboats. He seems to have acted as a sort of British patent agent for American inventors, and in 1811 took out a patent for carding engines and a card clothing machine. In 1813 there was a patent for spinning long-fibred substances such as hemp, flax or grasses, and in 1825 there was a further patent for card making machinery. Joshua Field, on his tour through Britain in 1821, saw a wire drawing machine and a leather splitting machine at Dyer's works as well as the card-making machines. At first Dyer lived in Camden Town, London, but he had a card clothing business in Birmingham. He moved to Manchester c.1816, where he developed an extensive engineering works under the name "Joseph C.Dyer, patent card manufacturers, 8 Stanley Street, Dale Street". In 1832 he founded another works at Gamaches, Somme, France, but this enterprise was closed in 1848 with heavy losses through the mismanagement of an agent. In 1825 Dyer improved on Danforth's roving frame and started to manufacture it. While it was still a comparatively crude machine when com-pared with later versions, it had the merit of turning out a large quantity of work and was very popular, realizing a large sum of money. He patented the machine that year and must have continued his interest in these machines as further patents followed in 1830 and 1835. In 1821 Dyer had been involved in the foundation of the Manchester Guardian (now The Guardian) and he was linked with the construction of the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway. He was not so successful with the ill-fated Bank of Manchester, of which he was a director and in which he lost £98,000. Dyer played an active role in the community and presented many papers to the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society. He helped to establish the Royal Institution in London and the Mechanics Institution in Manchester. In 1830 he was a member of the delegation to Paris to take contributions from the town of Manchester for the relief of those wounded in the July revolution and to congratulate Louis-Philippe on his accession. He called for the reform of Parliament and helped to form the Anti-Corn Law League. He hated slavery and wrote several articles on the subject, both prior to and during the American Civil War.[br]Bibliography1811, British patent no. 3,498 (carding engines and card clothing machine). 1813, British patent no. 3,743 (spinning long-fibred substances).1825, British patent no. 5,309 (card making machinery).1825, British patent no. 5,217 (roving frame). 1830, British patent no. 5,909 (roving frame).1835, British patent no. 6,863 (roving frame).Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography.J.W.Hall, 1932–3, "Joshua Field's diary of a tour in 1821 through the Midlands", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 6.Evan Leigh, 1875, The Science of Modern Cotton Spinning, Vol. II, Manchester (provides an account of Dyer's roving frame).D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution: The Diffusion of TextileTechnologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (describes Dyer's links with America).See also: Arnold, AzaRLHBiographical history of technology > Dyer, Joseph Chessborough
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14 производство
fabrication, generation, manufacture, making, manufacturing, production, trade* * *произво́дство с.1. productionсвё́ртывать произво́дство ( обычно постепенно) — phase out [phase back] productionсня́тый с произво́дства — out of production2. ( добыча) production3. ( изготовление) manufacture; ( из полуфабрикатов) fabricationпроизво́дство по за́мкнутому ци́клу — captive manufacture4. ( отрасль) industryпроизво́дство без вы́хода на ры́нок — captive productionбонда́рное произво́дство — cooperageбума́жное произво́дство — papermakingпроизво́дство в о́пытных масшта́бах — pilot productionпроизво́дство в промы́шленных масшта́бах — production in quantity, commercial productionвспомога́тельное произво́дство1. auxiliary process(es)2. ( подразделение завода) auxiliary departmentпроизво́дство га́за — (особ. природного) gas production; (особ. искусственного) gas generationдо́менное произво́дство — blast-furnace processедини́чное произво́дство — individual [single-unit, piece-work] productionкни́жное произво́дство — book productionпроизво́дство ко́жи — leather manufactureкоксохими́ческое произво́дство — cake and by-product processконве́ртерное произво́дство — converter process(es)крупносери́йное произво́дство — large-lot [large-scale] productionкузне́чно-пре́ссовое произво́дство — press forgingкузне́чно-штампо́вочное произво́дство — press forging; ( объёмная штамповка) die forgingлесохими́ческое произво́дство — wood chemical industryлистопрока́тное произво́дство — ( толстого листа) plate rolling; ( тонкого листа) sheet rollingлите́йное произво́дство — foundryмарте́новское произво́дство — open-hearth processма́ссовое произво́дство — mass productionмелкосери́йное произво́дство — small-lot [small-scale] productionмоде́льное произво́дство — pattern-makingнепреры́вное произво́дство — continuous processпроизво́дство о́буви — shoe makingо́пытное произво́дство — pilot(-scale) productionполузаводско́е произво́дство хим. — pilot-scale processпото́чное произво́дство — flow(-line) [in-line] productionпрока́тное произво́дство — rollingсва́рочное произво́дство — welding fabrication; ( раздел техники) welding engineeringсери́йное произво́дство — ( в противовес экспериментальному или опытному) quantity [full-scale] production; ( партиями) batch [series] productionпроизво́дство ста́ли — steelmakingтексти́льное произво́дство — textile manufactureпроизво́дство тепла́ — heat generation, heat productionтруболите́йное произво́дство — pipe castingтрубопрока́тное произво́дство — pipe rollingтрубосва́рочное произво́дство — pipe weldingфабри́чное произво́дство — manufacturing, manufactureпроизво́дство фо́сфорной кислоты́ экстракцио́нным спо́собом — production of phosphoric acid by the wet processхлопчатобума́жное произво́дство — cotton manufactureпроизво́дство чугуна́ — iron makingшве́йное произво́дство — clothing [garment] manufactureшо́рно-седе́льное произво́дство — saddleryшту́чное произво́дство — individual productionпроизво́дство электри́ческой эне́ргии — generation of electrical energy, electricity production -
15 Budding, Edwin Beard
SUBJECT AREA: Domestic appliances and interiors[br]b. c.1796 Bisley (?), Gloucestershire, Englandd. 1846 Dursley, Gloucestershire, England[br]English inventor of the lawn mower.[br]Budding was an engineer who described himself as a mechanic on his first patent papers and as a manager in later applications.A rotary machine had been developed at Brimscombe Mill in Stroud for cutting the pile on certain clothes and Budding saw the potential of this principle for a machine for cutting grass on lawns. It is not clear whether Budding worked for the Lewis family, who owned the mill, or whether he saw the machines during their manufacture at the Phoenix Foundry. At the age of 35 Budding entered into partnership with John Ferrabee, who had taken out a lease on Thrupp Mill. They reached an agreement in which Ferrabee would pay to obtain letter patent on the mower and would cover all the development costs, after which they would have an equal share in the profits. The agreement also allowed Ferrabee to license the manufacture of the machine and in 1832 he negotiated with the agricultural manufacturer Ransomes, allowing them to manufacture the mower.Budding invented a screw-shifting spanner at a time when he might have been working as a mechanic at Thrupp Mill. He later rented a workshop in which he produced Pepperbox pistols. In the late 1830s he moved to Dursley, where he became Manager for Mr G.Lister, who made clothing machinery. Together they patented an improved method of making cylinders for carding engines, but Budding required police protection from those who saw their jobs threatened by the device. He made no fortune from his inventions and died at the age of 50.[br]Further ReadingH.A.Randall, 1965–6 "Some mid-Gloucestershire engineers and inventors", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 38:89–96 (looks at the careers of both Budding and Ferrabee).AP -
16 Hancock, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Chemical technology[br]b. 8 May 1786 Marlborough, Wiltshire, Englandd. 26 March 1865 Stoke Newington, London, England[br]English founder of the British rubber industry.[br]After education at a private school in Marlborough, Hancock spent some time in "mechanical pursuits". He went to London to better himself and c.1819 his interest was aroused in the uses of rubber, which until then had been limited. His first patent, dated 29 April 1820, was for the application of rubber in clothing where some elasticity was useful, such as braces or slip-on boots. He noticed that freshly cut pieces of rubber could be made to adhere by pressure to form larger pieces. To cut up his imported and waste rubber into small pieces, Hancock developed his "masticator". This device consisted of a spiked roller revolving in a hollow cylinder. However, when rubber was fed in to the machine, the product was not the expected shredded rubber, but a homogeneous cylindrical mass of solid rubber, formed by the heat generated by the process and pressure against the outer cylinder. This rubber could then be compacted into blocks or rolled into sheets at his factory in Goswell Road, London; the blocks and sheets could be used to make a variety of useful articles. Meanwhile Hancock entered into partnership with Charles Macintosh in Manchester to manufacture rubberized, waterproof fabrics. Despite these developments, rubber remained an unsatisfactory material, becoming sticky when warmed and losing its elasticity when cold. In 1842 Hancock encountered specimens of vulcanized rubber prepared by Charles Goodyear in America. Hancock worked out for himself that it was made by heating rubber and sulphur, and obtained a patent for the manufacture of the material on 21 November 1843. This patent also included details of a new form of rubber, hardened by heating to a higher temperature, that was later called vulcanite, or ebonite. In 1846 he began making solid rubber tyres for road vehicles. Overall Hancock took out sixteen patents, covering all aspects of the rubber industry; they were a leading factor in the development of the industry from 1820 until their expiry in 1858.[br]Bibliography1857, Personal Narrative of the Origin and Progress of the Caoutchouc or Indiarubber Manufacture in England, London.Further ReadingH.Schurer, 1953, "The macintosh: the paternity of an invention", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 28:77–87.LRD -
17 Macintosh, Charles
[br]b. 29 December 1766 Glasgow, Scotlandd. 25 July 1843 Dunchattan, near Glasgow, Scotland[br]Scottish inventor of rubberized waterproof clothing.[br]As the son of the well-known and inventive dyer George Macintosh, Charles had an early interest in chemistry. At the age of 19 he gave up his work as a clerk with a Glasgow merchant to manufacture sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride) and developed new processes in dyeing. In 1797 he started the first Scottish alum works, finding the alum in waste shale from coal mines. His first works was at Hurlet, Renfrewshire, and was followed later by others. He then formed a partnership with Charles Tennant, the proprietor of a chemical works at St Rollox, near Glasgow, and sold "lime bleaching liquor" made with chlorine and milk of lime from their bleach works at Darnley. A year later the use of dry lime to make bleaching powder, a process worked out by Macintosh, was patented. Macintosh remained associated with Tennant's St Rollox chemical works until 1814. During this time, in 1809, he had set up a yeast factory, but it failed because of opposition from the London brewers.There was a steady demand for the ammonia that gas works produced, but the tar was often looked upon as an inconvenient waste product. Macintosh bought all the ammonia and tar that the Glasgow works produced, using the ammonia in his establishment to produce cudbear, a dyestuff extracted from various lichens. Cudbear could be used with appropriate mordants to make shades from pink to blue. The tar could be distilled to produce naphtha, which was used as a flare. Macintosh also became interested in ironmaking. In 1825 he took out a patent for converting malleable iron into steel by taking it to white heat in a current of gas with a carbon content, such as coal gas. However, the process was not commercially successful because of the difficulty keeping the furnace gas-tight. In 1828 he assisted J.B. Neilson in bringing hot blast into use in blast furnaces; Neilson assigned Macintosh a share in the patent, which was of dubious benefit as it involved him in the tortuous litigation that surrounded the patent until 1843.In June 1823, as a result of experiments into the possible uses of naphtha obtained as a by-product of the distillation of coal tar, Macintosh patented his process for waterproofing fabric. This comprised dissolving rubber in naphtha and applying the solution to two pieces of cloth which were afterwards pressed together to form an impermeable compound fabric. After an experimental period in Glasgow, Macintosh commenced manufacture in Manchester, where he formed a partnership with H.H.Birley, B.Kirk and R.W.Barton. Birley was a cotton spinner and weaver and was looking for ways to extend the output of his cloth. He was amongst the first to light his mills with gas, so he shared a common interest with Macintosh.New buildings were erected for the production of waterproof cloth in 1824–5, but there were considerable teething troubles with the process, particularly in the spreading of the rubber solution onto the cloth. Peter Ewart helped to install the machinery, including a steam engine supplied by Boulton \& Watt, and the naphtha was supplied from Macintosh's works in Glasgow. It seems that the process was still giving difficulties when Thomas Hancock, the foremost rubber technologist of that time, became involved in 1830 and was made a partner in 1834. By 1836 the waterproof coat was being called a "mackintosh" [sic] and was gaining such popularity that the Manchester business was expanded with additional premises. Macintosh's business was gradually enlarged to include many other kinds of indiarubber products, such as rubber shoes and cushions.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1823.Further ReadingG.Macintosh, 1847, Memoir of Charles Macintosh, London (the fullest account of Charles Macintosh's life).T.Hancock, 1957, Narrative of the Indiarubber Manufacture, London.H.Schurer, 1953, "The macintosh: the paternity of an invention", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 28:77–87 (an account of the invention of the mackintosh).RLH / LRD -
18 konfektionieren
v/t manufacture, produce in series* * *kon|fek|ti|o|nie|ren [kɔnfɛktsio'niːrən] ptp konfektioniertvtKleidung to make* * *kon·fek·ti·o·nie·ren *[kɔnfɛktsi̯oˈni:rən]vt HANDELKleidung \konfektionieren to make [ready-to-wear] clothing* * *konfektionieren v/t manufacture, produce in series -
19 konfekcj|a
f sgt 1. Handl. (odzież) (ready-to-wear) clothing; (produkcja odzieży) garment manufacture- konfekcja damska/męska women’s/men’s wear- konfekcja bielizny undergarment manufacture2. przen., pejor. mind candy pot.- konfekcja hollywoodzka Hollywood-style glitz pot., pejor.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > konfekcj|a
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20 Konfektionsabteilung
Konfektionsabteilung
(Warenhaus) ready-made department;
• Konfektionsanfertigung slopmaking;
• Konfektionsarbeiter slopworker;
• Konfektionsartikel ready-made clothes, confection, slopwork, slops;
• Konfektionsbetrieb clothing factory;
• Konfektionsgeschäft ready-made shop;
• Konfektions größe standard size;
• Konfektionshändler slopseller;
• Konfektionsindustrie apparel manufacture, making-up industry (Br.);
• Konfektionskleidung ready-made (made-up) clothes, reach- (hand-, US) me-downs, slopwork;
• billiger Konfektionsladen slopshop;
• Konfektionsware ready-to-wear (made-up) clothes, slopwork, slops;
• Konfektionswarenabteilung ready-to-wear department.
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