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  • 81 flush

    1. noun
    1) (a flow of blood to the face, making it red: A slow flush covered her face.) roşeaţă
    2) ((the device that works) a rush of water which cleans a toilet: a flush toilet.) jet de apă
    2. verb
    1) (to become red in the face: She flushed with embarrassment.) a se înroşi
    2) (to clean by a rush of water: to flush a toilet.) a trage apa
    3) ((usually with out) to cause (an animal etc) to leave a hiding place: The police flushed out the criminal.) a scoate din ascunziş
    - in the first flush of
    - the first flush of

    English-Romanian dictionary > flush

  • 82 lead

    English-Spanish technical dictionary > lead

  • 83 flush

    1. noun
    1) (a flow of blood to the face, making it red: A slow flush covered her face.) αναψοκοκκίνισμα,ξάναμμα
    2) ((the device that works) a rush of water which cleans a toilet: a flush toilet.) χείμαρρος νερού
    2. verb
    1) (to become red in the face: She flushed with embarrassment.) αναψοκοκκινίζω
    2) (to clean by a rush of water: to flush a toilet.) ξεπλένω,τραβώ το καζανάκι
    3) ((usually with out) to cause (an animal etc) to leave a hiding place: The police flushed out the criminal.) αναγάζω να εγκαταλείψει την κρυψώνα του
    - in the first flush of
    - the first flush of

    English-Greek dictionary > flush

  • 84 flush

    [flaʃ]
    1. noun
    1) a flow of blood to the face, making it red:

    A slow flush covered her face.

    إحْمِرار، تَوَرُّد
    2) (the device that works) a rush of water which cleans a toilet:

    a flush toilet.

    تَدَفُّق المياه لغَسْل المِرْحاض
    2. verb
    1) to become red in the face:

    She flushed with embarrassment.

    يَحْمَر، يَتَوَرَّد
    2) to clean by a rush of water:

    to flush a toilet.

    يَغْسِل المِرْحاض، يَسْحَب السيفون
    3) ( usually with out ) to cause (an animal etc) to leave a hiding place:

    The police flushed out the criminal.

    يُجَفِّل الطَّير من مَخْبَئِهِ

    Arabic-English dictionary > flush

  • 85 flush

    1. noun
    1) (a flow of blood to the face, making it red: A slow flush covered her face.) rougeur
    2) ((the device that works) a rush of water which cleans a toilet: a flush toilet.) chasse (d'eau)
    2. verb
    1) (to become red in the face: She flushed with embarrassment.) rougir
    2) (to clean by a rush of water: to flush a toilet.) tirer la chasse (d'eau)
    3) ((usually with out) to cause (an animal etc) to leave a hiding place: The police flushed out the criminal.) débusquer
    - in the first flush of - the first flush of

    English-French dictionary > flush

  • 86 flush

    1. noun
    1) (a flow of blood to the face, making it red: A slow flush covered her face.) rubor
    2) ((the device that works) a rush of water which cleans a toilet: a flush toilet.) descarga
    2. verb
    1) (to become red in the face: She flushed with embarrassment.) corar
    2) (to clean by a rush of water: to flush a toilet.) dar descarga
    3) ((usually with out) to cause (an animal etc) to leave a hiding place: The police flushed out the criminal.) levantar
    - in the first flush of - the first flush of

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > flush

  • 87 κρίβανος

    κρίβᾰν-ος, , [dialect] Att. for [full] κλίβανος (which is called [dialect] Dor. in EM538.19, cf. Epich.143, and is the usu. form in Pap., PPetr.3p.328 (iii B. C.), etc.),
    A covered earthen vessel, wider at bottom than at top, wherein bread was baked by putting hot embers round it, Hdt.2.92 (in form κλιβ-), A.Fr. 309, Ar.Ach.86, V. 1153, al., Antiph.176.5;

    οὕτως εἰμὶ ὡς εἰς κρίβανον POxy. 1842.7

    (vi A. D.); potter's oven, PCair.Zen.271.9 (iii B. C., κλ-).
    2 funnel-shaped vessel, used for drawing water, Str.16.2.13 (κλ-).
    II underground channel or vaulted passage, in irrigation works, Sammelb. 7188.17 (ii B. C., κλ-).
    2 hollow, cavern in a rock, Ael.NA 2.22.

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > κρίβανος

  • 88 κόνις

    κόνις, - ιος, - εως (- εος)
    Grammatical information: f.
    Meaning: `dust, ashes' (Il.).
    Other forms: dat. , - ει
    Compounds: As 1. member in κονι-ορ-τός m. `cloud of dust' (IA.), from ὄρ-νυμι with το- (diff. Pisani Ist. Lomb. 77, 558), NGr. κορνιαχτός (Hatzidakis Glotta 3, 70ff.); in the compp. κονί̄-σαλος m. ( κονίσ-σαλος, cf. below) `cloud of dust' (Il.), `the dust with oil- and sweat of a wrestler' (Gal.), also name of a priapus-like demon (com., inscr.) and a lascivious dance (H.; cf. v. Wilamowitz Glaube 1, 161 a. 279); in the last meaning by Fick a. o. (s. Scheller Oxytonierung 50 n. 2) considered as an independent word; κονί̄-ποδες m. pl. `kind of shoes' (Ar. Ek. 848, Poll.), name of the slaves in Epid. (Plu.; French parallels in Niedermann KZ 45, 182).
    Derivatives: Denomin. verb κονί̄ω, - ίομαι, fut. κονί̄σω, hell. κονιοῦμαι, aor. κονῖσαι ( κονίσσαι), perf. midd. κεκόνι(σ)μαι, also with ἐν-, δια- a. o., `cover with dust, oneself with sand' (Il.; on the formation below); κόνιμα (Delphi IIIa), - ισμα (Cythera) `dust of the wrestlers place', κόνισις `make dust, training at the wrestlers place' (Arist.), ἐνκονιστάς m. `gymnasta' (Thebes; Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 174f.), κονίστρα (Arist.), κονιστήριον (Pergam. IIa) `wrestlers place', κονιστικός `welter in the dust' (Arist.). Enlarged form κονίζεσθαι κυλίεσθαι, φθείρεσθαι, κονιορτοῦσθαι H. (here also κονιοῦμαι?). Further derivv.: κόνιος `dusty' (Pi.), `creating dust' (Paus., surn. of Zeus), κονιώδης `like ashes' (Hp.). - κονία, ep. Ion. - ίη, metr. lengthened -ί̄η ( κόννα σποδός H. Aeol.?) `dust, ashes, sand' (Hom., Hes. Sc., A., E.), `alkaline fluid' (Ar., Pl., Thphr., medic.), `chalk, whitewash, gypsum' (LXX, hell.). κονιάω `smear with chalk ' (D., Arist.) with κονίαμα `id.' (Hp., D., hell.), κονίασις `whitewash' (hell. inscr.), κονιατήρ `whitewasher' (Epid. IVa), κονιατής `id.' (inscr., pap.; Redard Les noms grecs en - της 36); κονιατός `whitewashed' (X., Thphr., pap.; Ammann Μνήμης χάριν 1, 17), κονιατικά ( ἔργα) `stucco-works' (pap., inscr.). Also κονιάζομαι `be covered with ashes' (Gp.).
    Origin: IE [Indo-European] [559] * konis `ashes'
    Etymology: κόνις differs from Lat. cinis, - eris m. (f.) in the o-vocalism (e: o); the s-stem seen in ciner-is and cinis-culus can also be assumed for κονίσ-σαλος, κεκόνισ-μαι, κονί̄ω \< *κονισ-ι̯ω, κονί-α \< *κονισ-α (details in Scheller Oxytonierung 49f.). The word was perhaps originally an neutr. is-(i-?)stem; s. Benveniste Origines 34, Specht Ursprung 298. The basis may hace been a lost verb meaning `scratch, plane, scour'; one also compares - κναίω.
    Page in Frisk: 1,911-912

    Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κόνις

  • 89 litter

    litter ['lɪtə(r)]
    1 noun
    (a) (UNCOUNT) (rubbish) détritus mpl, ordures fpl; (dropped in street) papiers mpl (gras);
    no litter (sign) respectez la propreté des lieux
    (b) (clutter) fouillis m;
    his desk was covered in a litter of papers son bureau était envahi par les papiers
    (c) (of animal) portée f;
    five young at a litter or in one litter cinq petits d'une portée;
    figurative the pick of the litter le gratin, le dessus du panier
    (e) Agriculture (of straw, hay → to bed animals) litière f; (→ to protect plants) paille f, paillis m
    (f) (for cat) litière f
    (a) (make untidy → public place) laisser des détritus dans; (→ house, room) mettre du désordre dans; (→ desk) encombrer;
    don't litter the table (up) with your tools n'encombre pas la table avec tes outils
    (b) (usu passive) (cover, strew) joncher, couvrir; figurative parsemer;
    beer cans littered the dance floor la piste de danse était jonchée de cannettes de bière;
    his life is littered with failed love affairs sa vie est jalonnée d'échecs amoureux;
    her works are littered with allusions to the classics ses écrits sont encombrés d'allusions aux auteurs classiques;
    the pages of the book are littered with obscenities le livre est un tissu d'obscénités;
    figurative beaches littered with tourists des plages jonchées de touristes
    (c) (horse) faire la litière à; (plants) empailler;
    to litter (down) a stable étendre de la paille dans une écurie
    (a) Zoology mettre bas
    no littering (sign) respectez la propreté des lieux
    ►► litter basket (in street) poubelle f, boîte f à ordures;
    British litter bin poubelle f, boîte f à ordures;
    British familiar litter lout = personne qui jette des papiers ou des détritus par terre;
    litter tray caisse f (pour litière)

    Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > litter

  • 90 Cartwright, Revd Edmund

    [br]
    b. 24 April 1743 Marnham, Nottingham, England
    d. 30 October 1823 Hastings, Sussex, England
    [br]
    English inventor of the power loom, a combing machine and machines for making ropes, bread and bricks as well as agricultural improvements.
    [br]
    Edmund Cartwright, the fourth son of William Cartwright, was educated at Wakefield Grammar School, and went to University College, Oxford, at the age of 14. By special act of convocation in 1764, he was elected Fellow of Magdalen College. He married Alice Whitaker in 1772 and soon after was given the ecclesiastical living of Brampton in Derbyshire. In 1779 he was presented with the living of Goadby, Marwood, Leicestershire, where he wrote poems, reviewed new works, and began agricultural experiments. A visit to Matlock in the summer of 1784 introduced him to the inventions of Richard Arkwright and he asked why weaving could not be mechanized in a similar manner to spinning. This began a remarkable career of inventions.
    Cartwright returned home and built a loom which required two strong men to operate it. This was the first attempt in England to develop a power loom. It had a vertical warp, the reed fell with the weight of at least half a hundredweight and, to quote Gartwright's own words, "the springs which threw the shuttle were strong enough to throw a Congreive [sic] rocket" (Strickland 19.71:8—for background to the "rocket" comparison, see Congreve, Sir William). Nevertheless, it had the same three basics of weaving that still remain today in modern power looms: shedding or dividing the warp; picking or projecting the shuttle with the weft; and beating that pick of weft into place with a reed. This loom he proudly patented in 1785, and then he went to look at hand looms and was surprised to see how simply they operated. Further improvements to his own loom, covered by two more patents in 1786 and 1787, produced a machine with the more conventional horizontal layout that showed promise; however, the Manchester merchants whom he visited were not interested. He patented more improvements in 1788 as a result of the experience gained in 1786 through establishing a factory at Doncaster with power looms worked by a bull that were the ancestors of modern ones. Twenty-four looms driven by steam-power were installed in Manchester in 1791, but the mill was burned down and no one repeated the experiment. The Doncaster mill was sold in 1793, Cartwright having lost £30,000, However, in 1809 Parliament voted him £10,000 because his looms were then coming into general use.
    In 1789 he began working on a wool-combing machine which he patented in 1790, with further improvements in 1792. This seems to have been the earliest instance of mechanized combing. It used a circular revolving comb from which the long fibres or "top" were. carried off into a can, and a smaller cylinder-comb for teasing out short fibres or "noils", which were taken off by hand. Its output equalled that of twenty hand combers, but it was only relatively successful. It was employed in various Leicestershire and Yorkshire mills, but infringements were frequent and costly to resist. The patent was prolonged for fourteen years after 1801, but even then Cartwright did not make any profit. His 1792 patent also included a machine to make ropes with the outstanding and basic invention of the "cordelier" which he communicated to his friends, including Robert Fulton, but again it brought little financial benefit. As a result of these problems and the lack of remuneration for his inventions, Cartwright moved to London in 1796 and for a time lived in a house built with geometrical bricks of his own design.
    Other inventions followed fast, including a tread-wheel for cranes, metallic packing for pistons in steam-engines, and bread-making and brick-making machines, to mention but a few. He had already returned to agricultural improvements and he put forward suggestions in 1793 for a reaping machine. In 1801 he received a prize from the Board of Agriculture for an essay on husbandry, which was followed in 1803 by a silver medal for the invention of a three-furrow plough and in 1805 by a gold medal for his essay on manures. From 1801 to 1807 he ran an experimental farm on the Duke of Bedford's estates at Woburn.
    From 1786 until his death he was a prebendary of Lincoln. In about 1810 he bought a small farm at Hollanden near Sevenoaks, Kent, where he continued his inventions, both agricultural and general. Inventing to the last, he died at Hastings and was buried in Battle church.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Board of Agriculture Prize 1801 (for an essay on agriculture). Society of Arts, Silver Medal 1803 (for his three-furrow plough); Gold Medal 1805 (for an essay on agricultural improvements).
    Bibliography
    1785. British patent no. 1,270 (power loom).
    1786. British patent no. 1,565 (improved power loom). 1787. British patent no. 1,616 (improved power loom).
    1788. British patent no. 1,676 (improved power loom). 1790, British patent no. 1,747 (wool-combing machine).
    1790, British patent no. 1,787 (wool-combing machine).
    1792, British patent no. 1,876 (improved wool-combing machine and rope-making machine with cordelier).
    Further Reading
    M.Strickland, 1843, A Memoir of the Life, Writings and Mechanical Inventions of Edmund Cartwright, D.D., F.R.S., London (remains the fullest biography of Cartwright).
    Dictionary of National Biography (a good summary of Cartwright's life). For discussions of Cartwright's weaving inventions, see: A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London; R.L. Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester. F.Nasmith, 1925–6, "Fathers of machine cotton manufacture", Transactions of the
    Newcomen Society 6.
    H.W.Dickinson, 1942–3, "A condensed history of rope-making", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 23.
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (covers both his power loom and his wool -combing machine).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Cartwright, Revd Edmund

  • 91 Dickson, J.T.

    [br]
    b. c.1920 Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish co-inventor of the polyester fibre, Terylene.
    [br]
    The introduction of one type of artificial fibre encouraged chemists to look for more. J.T.Dickson and J.R. Whinfield discovered one such fibre in 1941 when they derived polyester from terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol. Dickson, a 21-year-old Edinburgh graduate, was working under Whinfield at the Calico Printers' Association research laboratory at Broad Oak Print Works in Accrington. He was put onto fibre research: probably in April, but certainly by 5 July 1941, a murky-looking resin had been synthesized, out of which Dickson successfully drew a filament, which was named "Terylene" by its discoverers. Owing to restrictions imposed in Britain during the Second World War, this fibre was developed initially by the DuPont Company in the USA, where it was marketed under the name "Dacron". When Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) were able to manufacture it in Britain, it acquired the brand name "Terylene" and became very popular. Under the microscope, Terylene appears identical to nylon: longitudinally, it is completely devoid of any structure and the filaments appear as glass rods with a perfectly circular cross-section. The uses of Terylene are similar to those of nylon, but it has two advantages. First, it can be heat-set by exposing the fabric to a temperature about 30°C higher than is likely to be encountered in everyday use, and therefore can be the basis for "easy-care" clothing such as drip-dry shirts. It can be blended with other fibres such as wool, and when pressed at a high temperature the creases are remarkably durable. It is also remarkably resistant to chemicals, which makes it particularly suitable for industrial purposes under conditions where other textile materials would be degraded rapidly. Dickson later worked for ICI.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    For accounts of the discovery of Terylene, see: J.R.Whinfield, 1953, Textile Research Journal (May). R.Collins, 1991, "Terylene", Historian 30 (Spring).
    Accounts of the introduction of svnthetic fibres are covered in: D.S.Lyle, 1982, Modern Textiles, New York.
    S.R.Cockett, An Introduction to Man-Made Fibres.
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Dickson, J.T.

  • 92 Giffard, Baptiste Henry Jacques (Henri)

    [br]
    b. 8 February 1825 Paris, France
    d. 14 April 1882 Paris, France
    [br]
    French pioneer of airships and balloons, inventor of an injector for steam-boiler feedwater.
    [br]
    Giffard entered the works of the Western Railway of France at the age of 16 but became absorbed by the problem of steam-powered aerial navigation. He proposed a steam-powered helicopter in 1847, but he then turned his attention to an airship. He designed a lightweight coke-burning, single-cylinder steam engine and boiler which produced just over 3 hp (2.2 kW) and mounted it below a cigar-shaped gas bag 44 m (144 ft) in length. A triangular rudder was fitted at the rear to control the direction of flight. On 24 September 1852 Giffard took off from Paris and, at a steady 8 km/h (5 mph), he travelled 28 km (17 miles) to Trappes. This can be claimed to be the first steerable lighter-than-air craft, but with a top speed of only 8 km/h (5 mph) even a modest headwind would have reduced the forward speed to nil (or even negative). Giffard built a second airship, which crashed in 1855, slightly injuring Giffard and his companion; a third airship was planned with a very large gas bag in order to lift the inherently heavy steam engine and boiler, but this was never built. His airships were inflated by coal gas and refusal by the gas company to provide further supplies brought these promising experiments to a premature end.
    As a draughtsman Giffard had the opportunity to travel on locomotives and he observed the inadequacies of the feed pumps then used to supply boiler feedwater. To overcome these problems he invented the injector with its series of three cones: in the first cone (convergent), steam at or below boiler pressure becomes a high-velocity jet; in the second (also convergent), it combines with feedwater to condense and impart high velocity to it; and in the third (divergent), that velocity is converted into pressure sufficient to overcome the pressure of steam in the boiler. The injector, patented by Giffard, was quickly adopted by railways everywhere, and the royalties provided him with funds to finance further experiments in aviation. These took the form of tethered hydrogen-inflated balloons of successively larger size. At the Paris Exposition of 1878 one of these balloons carried fifty-two passengers on each tethered "flight". The height of the balloon was controlled by a cable attached to a huge steam-powered winch, and by the end of the fair 1,033 ascents had been made and 35,000 passengers had seen Paris from the air. This, and similar balloons, greatly widened the public's interest in aeronautics. Sadly, after becoming blind, Giffard committed suicide; however, he died a rich man and bequeathed large sums of money to the State for humanitarian an scientific purposes.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Croix de la Légion d'honneur 1863.
    Bibliography
    1860, Notice théorique et pratique sur l'injecteur automoteur.
    1870, Description du premier aérostat à vapeur.
    Further Reading
    Dictionnaire de biographie française.
    Gaston Tissandier, 1872, Les Ballons dirigeables, Paris.
    —1878, Le Grand ballon captif à vapeur de M. Henri Giffard, Paris.
    W.de Fonvielle, 1882, Les Ballons dirigeables à vapeur de H.Giffard, Paris. Giffard is covered in most books on balloons or airships, e.g.: Basil Clarke, 1961, The History of Airships, London. L.T.C.Rolt, 1966, The Aeronauts, London.
    Ian McNeill (ed.), 1990, An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology, London: Routledge, pp. 575 and 614.
    J.T.Hodgson and C.S.Lake, 1954, Locomotive Management, Tothill Press, p. 100.
    PJGR / JDS

    Biographical history of technology > Giffard, Baptiste Henry Jacques (Henri)

  • 93 Holden, Sir Isaac

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. 7 May 1807 Hurlet, between Paisley and Glasgow, Scotland
    d. 13 August 1897
    [br]
    British developer of the wool-combing machine.
    [br]
    Isaac Holden's father, who had the same name, had been a farmer and lead miner at Alston in Cumbria before moving to work in a coal-mine near Glasgow. After a short period at Kilbarchan grammar school, the younger Isaac was engaged first as a drawboy to two weavers and then, after the family had moved to Johnstone, Scotland, worked in a cotton-spinning mill while attending night school to improve his education. He was able to learn Latin and bookkeeping, but when he was about 15 he was apprenticed to an uncle as a shawl-weaver. This proved to be too much for his strength so he returned to scholastic studies and became Assistant to an able teacher, John Kennedy, who lectured on physics, chemistry and history, which he also taught to his colleague. The elder Isaac died in 1826 and the younger had to provide for his mother and younger brother, but in 1828, at the age of 21, he moved to a teaching post in Leeds. He filled similar positions in Huddersfield and Reading, where in October 1829 he invented and demonstrated the lucifer match but did not seek to exploit it. In 1830 he returned because of ill health to his mother in Scotland, where he began to teach again. However, he was recommended as a bookkeeper to William Townend, member of the firm of Townend Brothers, Cullingworth, near Bingley, Yorkshire. Holden moved there in November 1830 and was soon involved in running the mill, eventually becoming a partner.
    In 1833 Holden urged Messrs Townend to introduce seven wool-combing machines of Collier's designs, but they were found to be very imperfect and brought only trouble and loss. In 1836 Holden began experimenting on the machines until they showed reasonable success. He decided to concentrate entirely on developing the combing machine and in 1846 moved to Bradford to form an alliance with Samuel Lister. A joint patent in 1847 covered improvements to the Collier combing machine. The "square motion" imitated the action of the hand-comber more closely and was patented in 1856. Five more patents followed in 1857 and others from 1858 to 1862. Holden recommended that the machines should be introduced into France, where they would be more valuable for the merino trade. This venture was begun in 1848 in the joint partnership of Lister \& Holden, with equal shares of profits. Holden established a mill at Saint-Denis, first with Donisthorpe machines and then with his own "square motion" type. Other mills were founded at Rheims and at Croix, near Roubaix. In 1858 Lister decided to retire from the French concerns and sold his share to Holden. Soon after this, Holden decided to remodel all their machinery for washing and carding the gill machines as well as perfecting the square comb. Four years of excessive application followed, during which time £20,000 was spent in experiments in a small mill at Bradford. The result fully justified the expenditure and the Alston Works was built in Bradford.
    Holden was a Liberal and from 1865 to 1868 he represented Knaresborough in Parliament. Later he became the Member of Parliament for the Northern Division of the Riding, Yorkshire, and then for the town of Keighley after the constituencies had been altered. He was liberal in his support of religious, charitable and political objectives. His house at Oakworth, near Keighley, must have been one of the earliest to have been lit by electricity.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Baronet 1893.
    Bibliography
    1847, with Samuel Lister, British patent no. 11,896 (improved Collier combing machine). 1856. British patent no. 1,058 ("square motion" combing machine).
    1857. British patent no. 278 1857, British patent no. 279 1857, British patent no. 280 1857, British patent no. 281 1857, British patent no. 3,177 1858, British patent no. 597 1859, British patent no. 52 1860, British patent no. 810 1862, British patent no. 1,890 1862, British patent no. 3,394
    Further Reading
    J.Hogg (ed.), c.1888, Fortunes Made in Business, London (provides an account of Holden's life).
    Obituary, 1897, Engineer 84.
    Obituary, 1897, Engineering 64.
    E.M.Sigsworth, 1973, "Sir Isaac Holden, Bt: the first comber in Europe", in N.B.Harte and K.G.Ponting (eds), Textile History and Economic History, Essays in Honour of
    Miss Julia de Lacy Mann, Manchester.
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (provides a good explanation of the square motion combing machine).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Holden, Sir Isaac

  • 94 Savery, Thomas

    [br]
    b. c. 1650 probably Shilston, near Modbury, Devonshire, England
    d. c. 15 May 1715 London, England
    [br]
    English inventor of a partially successful steam-driven pump for raising water.
    [br]
    Little is known of the early years of Savery's life and no trace has been found that he served in the Army, so the title "Captain" is thought to refer to some mining appointment, probably in the West of England. He may have been involved in the Glorious Revolution of 1688, for later he was well known to William of Orange. From 1705 to 1714 he was Treasurer for Sick and Wounded Seamen, and in 1714 he was appointed Surveyor of the Water Works at Hampton Court, a post he held until his death the following year. He was interested in mechanical devices; amongst his early contrivances was a clock.
    He was the most prolific inventor of his day, applying for seven patents, including one in 1649, for polishing plate glass which may have been used. His idea for 1697 for propelling ships with paddle-wheels driven by a capstan was a failure, although regarded highly by the King, and was published in his first book, Navigation Improved (1698). He tried to patent a new type of floating mill in 1707, and an idea in 1710 for baking sea coal or other fuel in an oven to make it clean and pure.
    His most famous invention, however, was the one patented in 1698 "for raising water by the impellent force of fire" that Savery said would drain mines or low-lying land, raise water to supply towns or houses, and provide a source of water for turning mills through a water-wheel. Basically it consisted of a receiver which was first filled with steam and then cooled to create a vacuum by having water poured over the outside. The water to be pumped was drawn into the receiver from a lower sump, and then high-pressure steam was readmitted to force the water up a pipe to a higher level. It was demonstrated to the King and the Royal Society and achieved some success, for a few were installed in the London area and a manufactory set up at Salisbury Court in London. He published a book, The Miner's Friend, about his engine in 1702, but although he made considerable improvements, due to excessive fuel consumption and materials which could not withstand the steam pressures involved, no engines were installed in mines as Savery had hoped. His patent was extended in 1699 until 1733 so that it covered the atmospheric engine of Thomas Newcomen who was forced to join Savery and his other partners to construct this much more practical engine.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1706.
    Bibliography
    1698, Navigation Improved.
    1702, The Miner's Friend.
    Further Reading
    The entry in the Dictionary of National Biography (1897, Vol. L, London: Smith Elder \& Co.) has been partially superseded by more recent research. The Transactions of the Newcomen Society contain various papers; for example, Rhys Jenkins, 1922–3, "Savery, Newcomen and the early history of the steam engine", Vol. 3; A.Stowers, 1961–2, "Thomas Newcomen's first steam engine 250 years ago and the initial development of steam power", Vol. 34; A.Smith, 1977–8, "Steam and the city: the committee of proprietors of the invention for raising water by fire", 1715–1735, Vol. 49; and J.S.P.Buckland, 1977–8, "Thomas Savery, his steam engine workshop of 1702", Vol. 49. Brief accounts may be found in H.W. Dickinson, 1938, A Short History of the Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press, and R.L. Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press. There is another biography in T.I. Williams (ed.), 1969, A Biographical Dictionary of Scientists, London: A. \& C.Black.
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Savery, Thomas

  • 95 Song Yingxing (Sung Ying-Hsing)

    [br]
    b. 1600 China
    d. c. 1650
    [br]
    Chinese writer on technology and industry.
    [br]
    Song was an outstanding encyclopedist in the field of technology and industrial processes. He produced the Tian Gong Kai Wu (The Exploitation of the Works of Nature) of 1637, China's greatest technological classic, which dealt with agriculture and industry rather than engineering. It covered a wide range of subjects, including hydraulic devices and irrigation, silk and other textiles, salt and sugar technology, ceramics, pearls and jade, papermaking and ink, metallurgy of iron, bronze, silver, tin and lead, and transport. The work incorporated the finest Chinese illustrations on these subjects. Strangely, it fell into obscurity and it was a copy preserved in Japan that became the basis for later editions.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1637, Tian Gong Kai Wu.
    Further Reading
    J.Needham, Science and Civilisation in China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1965–86, Vols IV.2, pp. 171–2, 559; IV.3, many scattered references for it is an essential source of information about Chinese technology.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Song Yingxing (Sung Ying-Hsing)

  • 96 Tesla, Nikola

    SUBJECT AREA: Electricity
    [br]
    b. 9 July 1856 Smiljan, Croatia
    d. 7 January 1943 New York, USA
    [br]
    Serbian (naturalized American) engineer and inventor of polyphase electrical power systems.
    [br]
    While at the technical institute in Graz, Austria, Tesla's attention was drawn to the desirability of constructing a motor without a commutator. He considered the sparking between the commutator and brushes of the Gramme machine when run as a motor a serious defect. In 1881 he went to Budapest to work on the telegraph system and while there conceived the principle of the rotating magnetic field, upon which all polyphase induction motors are based. In 1882 Tesla moved to Paris and joined the Continental Edison Company. After building a prototype of his motor he emigrated to the United States in 1884, becoming an American citizen in 1889. He left Edison and founded an independent concern, the Tesla Electric Company, to develop his inventions.
    The importance of Tesla's first patents, granted in 1888 for alternating-current machines, cannot be over-emphasized. They covered a complete polyphase system including an alternator and induction motor. Other patents included the polyphase transformer, synchronous motor and the star connection of three-phase machines. These were to become the basis of the whole of the modern electric power industry. The Westinghouse company purchased the patents and marketed Tesla motors, obtaining in 1893 the contract for the Niagara Falls two-phase alternators driven by 5,000 hp (3,700 kW) water turbines.
    After a short period with Westinghouse, Tesla resigned to continue his research into high-frequency and high-voltage phenomena using the Tesla coil, an air-cored transformer. He lectured in America and Europe on his high-frequency devices, enjoying a considerable international reputation. The name "tesla" has been given to the SI unit of magnetic-flux density. The induction motor became one of the greatest advances in the industrial application of electricity. A claim for priority of invention of the induction motor was made by protagonists of Galileo Ferraris (1847–1897), whose discovery of rotating magnetic fields produced by alternating currents was made independently of Tesla's. Ferraris demonstrated the phenomenon but neglected its exploitation to produce a practical motor. Tesla himself failed to reap more than a small return on his work and later became more interested in scientific achievement than commercial success, with his patents being infringed on a wide scale.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    American Institute of Electrical Engineers Edison Medal 1917. Tesla received doctorates from fourteen universities.
    Bibliography
    1 May 1888, American patent no. 381,968 (initial patent for the three-phase induction motor).
    1956, Nikola Tesla, 1856–1943, Lectures, Patents, Articles, ed. L.I.Anderson, Belgrade (selected works, in English).
    1977, My Inventions, repub. Zagreb (autobiography).
    Further Reading
    M.Cheney, 1981, Tesla: Man Out of Time, New Jersey (a full biography). C.Mackechnie Jarvis, 1969, in IEE Electronics and Power 15:436–40 (a brief treatment).
    T.C.Martin, 1894, The Inventions, Researches and Writings of Nikola Tesla, New York (covers his early work on polyphase systems).
    GW

    Biographical history of technology > Tesla, Nikola

  • 97 Villard de Honnecourt

    [br]
    b. c. 1200 Honnecourt-sur-Escaut, near Cambrai, France
    d. mid-13th century (?) France
    [br]
    French architect-engineer.
    [br]
    Villard was one of the thirteenth-century architect-engineers who were responsible for the design and construction of the great Gothic cathedrals and other churches of the time. Their responsibilities covered all aspects of the work, including (in the spirit of the Roman architect Vitruvius) the invention and construction of mechanical devices. In their time, these men were highly esteemed and richly rewarded, although few of the inscriptions paying tribute to their achievements have survived. Villard stands out among them because a substantial part of his sketchbook has survived, in the form of thirty-three parchment sheets of drawings and notes, now kept in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris. Villard's professional career lasted roughly from 1225 to 1250. As a boy, he went to work on the building of the Cistercian monastery at Vaucelles, not far from Honnecourt, and afterwards he was apprenticed to the masons' lodge at Cambrai Cathedral, where he began copying the drawings and layouts on the tracing-house floor. All his drawings are, therefore, of the plans, elevations and sections of cathedrals. These buildings have long since been destroyed, but his drawings, perhaps among his earliest, bear witness to their architecture. He travelled widely in France and recorded features of the great works at Reims, Laon and Chartres. These include the complex system of passageways built into the fabric of a great cathedral; Villard comments that one of their purposes was "to allow circulation in case of fire".
    Villard was invited to Hungary and reached there c. 1235. He may have been responsible for the edifice dedicated to St Elizabeth of Hungary, canonized in 1235, at Kassa (now Košice, Slovakia). Villard probably returned to France c. 1240, at least before the Tartar invasion of Hungary in 1241.
    His sketchbook, which dates to c. 1235, stands as a memorial to Villard's skill as a draughtsman, a student of perspective and a mechanical engineer. He took his sketchbook with him on his travels, and used ideas from it in his work abroad. It contains architectural designs, geometrical constructions for use in building, surveying exercises and drawings for various kinds of mechanical devices, for civil or military use. He was transmitting details from the highly developed French Gothic masons to the relatively underdeveloped eastern countries. The notebooks were annotated for the use of pupils and other master masons, and the notes on geometry were obviously intended for pupils. The prize examples are the pages in the book, clearly Villard's own work, related to mechanical devices. Whilst he, like many others of the period and after, played with designs for perpetual-motion machines, he concentrated on useful devices. These included the first Western representation of a perpetualmotion machine, which at least displays a concern to derive a source of energy: this was a water-powered sawmill, with automatic feed of the timber into the mill. This has been described as the first industrial automatic power-machine to involve two motions, for it not only converts the rotary motion of the water-wheel to the reciprocating motion of the saw, but incorporates a means of keeping the log pressed against the saw. His other designs included water-wheels, watermills, the Archimedean screw and other curious devices.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    Of several facsimile reprints with notes there are Album de Villard de Honnecourt, 1858, ed. J.B.Lassus, Paris (repr. 1968, Paris: Laget), and The Sketchbook of Villard de Honnecourt, 1959, ed. T.Bowie, Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
    Further Reading
    J.Gimpel, 1977, "Villard de Honnecourt: architect and engineer", The Medieval Machine, London: Victor Gollancz, ch. 6, pp. 114–46.
    ——1988, The Medieval Machine, the Industrial Revolution of the Middle Ages, London.
    R.Pernord, J.Gimpel and R.Delatouche, 1986, Le Moyen age pour quoi fayre, Paris.
    KM / LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Villard de Honnecourt

  • 98 contract

    [̘. ̈n.ˈkɔntrækt]
    accessory contract юр. акцессорный договор accessory contract акцессорный договор adhesion contract договор присоединения adhesion contract контракт присоединения adhesion contract согласительный контракт advertising contract контракт на рекламу agency contract агентский договор aleatory contract юр. алеаторный договор aleatory contract алеаторный (рисковый) договор aleatory contract юр. рисковый договор ancillary contract дополнительный контракт annuity contract договор страхования ренты annul a contract аннулировать контракт antenuptial contract сем.право добрачный договор apprenticeship contract договор об ученичестве (связывающий лицо, желающее приобрести профессиональные навыки, и лицо, предоставляющее такое обучение на предприятии) apprenticeship contract контракт на обучение back contract фьючерсный контракт с наибольшим сроком break a contract разрывать контракт building contract контракт на строительство building loan contract контракт на получение ссуды на строительство call-off contract рамочный контракт cancel a contract расторгать контракт cargo contract договор о перевозке груза collateral contract дополнительный контракт collective bargaining contract коллективный договор collective labour contract коллективное трудовое соглашение commercial contract торговый договор commission contract комиссионный контракт commutative contract юр. двусторонняя сделка commutative contract юр. синаллагматическая сделка conclude a contract заключать договор conditional sale contract контракт об условной продаже consensual contract консенсуальный договор, договор, основанный на устном соглашении сторон construction contract строительный подряд consultant's contract договор о консультировании continuing contract действующий контракт continuous purchase contract непрерывно действующий договор купли-продажи contract брачный договор; помолвка, обручение contract брачный контракт contract вступать (в брак, в союз) contract тех. давать усадку; спекаться contract делать (долги) contract договор contract единица торговли на срочных биржах contract заводить (дружбу); завязать (знакомство) contract заключать договор, соглашение; принимать на себя обязательство contract заключать договор contract заключать контракт, договор contract заключать контракт contract заключать сделку contract заключать соглашение contract контракт, договор; соглашение contract контракт, договор contract контракт contract определение на службу contract подряд contract разг. предприятие (особ. строительное) contract принимать (обязанности) contract принимать на себя обязательства contract приобретать (привычку); получать, подхватывать; to contract a disease заболеть contract сжимать(ся); сокращать(ся); to contract expenses сокращать расходы; to contract efforts уменьшать усилия; to contract muscles сокращать мышцы contract снижаться contract сокращать contract сокращаться contract лингв. стягивать contract хмурить; морщить; to contract the brow (или the forehead) морщить лоб contract приобретать (привычку); получать, подхватывать; to contract a disease заболеть contract attr. договорный; contract price договорная цена; contract law юр. договорное право contract сжимать(ся); сокращать(ся); to contract expenses сокращать расходы; to contract efforts уменьшать усилия; to contract muscles сокращать мышцы contract сжимать(ся); сокращать(ся); to contract expenses сокращать расходы; to contract efforts уменьшать усилия; to contract muscles сокращать мышцы contract for carriage of passengers контракт на перевозку пассажиров contract in restraint of trade договор об ограничении конкуренции contract in writing договор в письменном виде contract attr. договорный; contract price договорная цена; contract law юр. договорное право law: contract contract договорное право contract сжимать(ся); сокращать(ся); to contract expenses сокращать расходы; to contract efforts уменьшать усилия; to contract muscles сокращать мышцы contract of adhesion договор на основе типовых условий contract of adhesion договор присоединения contract of affreightment договор о морской перевозке contract of apprenticeship договор на обучение contract of carriage контракт на перевозку contract of carriage контракт на транспортировку contract of delivery контракт на поставку contract of employment контракт о работе по найму contract of employment трудовое соглашение contract of guarantee договор о поручительстве contract of hire договор о найме contract of hire контракт о прокате contract of limited duration договор с ограниченным сроком действия contract of mutual insurance договор о взаимном страховании contract of partnership договор о партнерстве contract of purchase договор купли-продажи contract of record договор, облеченный в публичный акт contract of sale договор купли-продажи contract of service договор о сроках и условиях работы служащего contract of service контракт на обслуживание contract of trade торговый договор contract out of освобождаться от обязательств contract attr. договорный; contract price договорная цена; contract law юр. договорное право price: contract contract договорная цена contract contract сумма подряда contract хмурить; морщить; to contract the brow (или the forehead) морщить лоб contract to deliver goods контракт на поставку товаров contract to pay by instalments принимать на себя обязательство платить в рассрочку contract to sell соглашение о продаже cost-plus-incentive-fee contract контракт с оплатой издержек плюс поощрительное вознаграждение cost-sharing contract контракт с разделением затрат covered forward contract бирж. защищенная срочная сделка currency contract валютный контракт currency stipulated by contract валюта, оговоренная контрактом currency used in a contract валюта, используемая согласно контракту deferred annuity contract договор об отсроченной ренте delivery contract договор на поставку delivery contract контракт на поставку determine a contract прекращать действие договора determine a contract расторгнуть договор development contract договор на разработку development contract контракт на строительство employee working under contract работник, работающий по контракту employment contract контракт личного найма employment training contract контракт на производственное обучение endowment contract договор о материальном обеспечении enforceable contract контракт, обеспеченный правовой санкцией enter into contract заключать договор entering into a contract заключение контракта estate contract контракт на владение имуществом exclusive contract эксклюзивный контракт executed contract договор, исполняемый в момент заключения executory contract контракт, подлежащий исполнению в будущем export contract контракт на экспорт продукции fictitious contract фиктивный контракт fiduciary contract фидуциарный договор fixed forward contract бирж. форвардный контракт с фиксированной ценой fixed price contract контракт с фиксированной ценой fixed-term contract срочный контракт; контракт заключенный на определенный срок fixed-term: fixed-term contract контракт на определенный срок; срочный договор formal contract оформленный договор formal contract формальный договор forward contract бирж. срочный контракт forward contract бирж. форвардный контракт forward cover contract контракт на куплю-продажу ценных бумаг на срок freight contract контракт на перевозку грузов full payout contract договор о полной выплате futures contract бирж. сделка на срок futures contract бирж. срочный контракт futures contract бирж. фьючерсный контракт gaming contract договор пари general contract генеральный контракт general service contract договор на общее обслуживание government contract правительственный контракт hire contract договор о найме hire purchase contract юр. контракт о продаже в рассрочку homeownership savings contract банк. договор о хранении сбережений от домовладения illegal contract противоправный договор immoral contract договор, нарушающий нравственность import contract контракт на импорт incidental contract побочный контракт incompetent to contract не имеющий права вступать в сделки index-linked contract индексированный контракт individual trade contract идивидуальный торговый договор insurance contract договор страхования insurance contract страховой контракт interest rate contract договор о ставке процента investment contract договор об инвестировании joint development contract совместный контракт на научные исследования joint venture contract контракт о совместном предприятии labour contract трудовое соглашение labour contract трудовой договор labour: contract contract трудовой договор land contract договор о землевладении lease contract договор о найме lease contract договор об аренде leasing contract договор об аренде licence contract лицензионный договор loan contract договор о ссуде loan contract контракт на получение кредита loan contract кредитное соглашение long contract долгосрочный контракт long contract фьючерсный контракт long-term contract долгосрочный контракт long-term contract фьючерсный контракт luggage carriage contract контракт на перевозку багажа lump sum contract контракт с твердой ценой main contract основной договор maintenance contract вчт. контракт на обслуживание maintenance contract контракт на техническое обслуживание marine insurance contract договор морского страхования marriage contract брачный контракт mining contract контракт на разработку месторождений полезных ископаемых model contract типовой договор nearby contract бирж. фьючерсный контракт с истекающим сроком nonfull payout contract контракт с неполной выплатой nonfull payout contract контракт с частичной выплатой notifiable contract контракт, подлежащий регистрации open contract бирж. открытый контракт open contract бирж. срочный контракт с неистекшим сроком open-end contract контракт, допускающий внесение изменений open-end contract контракт без оговоренного срока действия open-end contract открытый контракт option contract бирж. опционный контракт package job contract контракт на проведение всего комплекса работ parol contract договор не за печатью parol contract простой договор pension contract договор о пенсионном обеспечении perform a contract выполнять договор piece-work contract контракт на сдельную работу postnuptial contract имущественный договор между супругами, заключенный после вступления в брак pre-emption contract контракт о преимущественном праве покупки preliminary contract предварительный договор previously concluded contract ранее заключенный контракт prime contract контракт на строительство "под ключ" prime contract контракт с генеральным подрядчиком prime contract контракт с головным подрядчиком prime contract основной контракт procurement contract контракт на поставку (оборудования и т.п.) provisional contract предварительный договор publisher's contract контракт с издателем publishing contract издательский контракт ratify a contract ратифицировать договор ratify a contract утверждать договор real contract реальный договор reciprocal contract двусторонний договор reciprocal contract двусторонняя сделка reinsurance contract договор о перестраховании renew a contract возобновлять контракт renew a contract продлевать договор rental contract договор о сдаче в наем rental contract договор об аренде repudiate a contract расторгать договор rescind a contract аннулировать контракт running contract действующий договор sale contract договор продажи sales contract договор купли-продажи sales contract контракт на продажу seasonal employment contract контракт на временную работу по найму secured contract гарантированный контракт service contract договор на обслуживание sham contract фиктивный контракт share index contract договор о фондовом индексе shared cost contract контракт с распределенными затратами simple contract договор, не скрепленный печатью simple contract неформальный договор simple contract простой договор social contract общественный договор solidarity contract контракт (договор) солидарности specialty contract договор за печатью spot contract кассовая сделка spot contract контракт за наличный расчет standard building contract типовая форма строительного контракта standard contract типовой контракт standing contract постоянно действующий контракт subsidiary contract дополнительный контракт subtenancy contract договор субаренды supply contract контракт на поставку surplus reinsurance contract договор эксцедентного перестрахования synallagmatic contract двусторонняя сделка synallagmatic contract синаллагматическая сделка syndicated contract соглашение между участниками синдиката tentative contract предварительный договор terminate a contract прекращать действие контракта terminate a contract расторгать контракт training-employment contract договор о профподготовке на работе transportation contract договор о перевозках turnkey contract контракт на строительство "под ключ" turnkey contract контракт с головным подрядчиком uncovered option contract бирж. непокрытый опционный контракт unenforceable contract контракт, претензии по которому не могут быть заявлены в суде unilateral contract односторонний контракт unperformed contract невыполненный контракт unsecured forward contract бирж. необеспеченный форвардный контракт violate a contract нарушать договор violate a contract нарушать контракт void contract недействительный договор voidable contract контракт, который может быть аннулирован в силу определенных причин wagering contract договор-пари work contract договор на выполнение работ work contract подряд work-training contract договор о профессиональном обучении work-training contract договор об обучении на рабочем месте works contract подрядный договор yellow-dog contract амер. обязательство рабочего о невступлении в профсоюз

    English-Russian short dictionary > contract

  • 99 duman

    "1. smoke; fumes. 2. fog, mist, haze. 3. opacity (in the eye). 4. slang bad, hopeless (state, condition). 5. slang hashish. 6. slang useless; uselessly. 7. slang timid, easily frightened. 8. slang gullible. - almak 1. /ı/ (for a place) to be covered with mist or fog. 2. /dan/ to drag on, take a puff or pull of (a cigarette). - altı olmak to get potted from the smoke of hashish (in a closed place). - attırmak /a/ slang 1. to intimidate. 2. to be much better than. -ı doğru çıksın. colloq. As long as it works properly don´t worry about how it looks. - etmek /ı/ slang 1. to break (something) up, spoil. 2. to defeat. - olmak slang 1. /işi or durumu/ (for one´s work or a situation) to hit rock bottom, become very bad. 2. to disappear, get lost. -ı üstünde colloq. 1. with the bloom still on it, very fresh. 2. brand-new, fresh. - yapmak slang to win a lot at gambling with a small stake, make a killing."

    Saja Türkçe - İngilizce Sözlük > duman

См. также в других словарях:

  • Covered — Cov ered (k?v ?rd), a. Under cover; screened; sheltered; not exposed; hidden. [1913 Webster] {Covered way} (Fort.), a corridor or banquette along the top of the counterscarp and covered by an embankment whose slope forms the glacis. It gives the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Covered way — Covered Cov ered (k?v ?rd), a. Under cover; screened; sheltered; not exposed; hidden. [1913 Webster] {Covered way} (Fort.), a corridor or banquette along the top of the counterscarp and covered by an embankment whose slope forms the glacis. It… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Works inspired by J. R. R. Tolkien — After Tolkien Reception of Adaptations of Works inspired by The works of J. R. R. Tolkien have served as the inspiration to painters, musicians, film makers and writers, to such an extent that Tolkien is sometimes seen as the father of the entire …   Wikipedia

  • environmental works — ▪ civil engineering Introduction       infrastructure that provides cities and towns with water supply, waste disposal, and pollution control services. They include extensive networks of reservoirs, pipelines, treatment systems, pumping stations …   Universalium

  • Zuiderzee Works — The 32 km Afsluitdijk separates the IJsselmeer (right) from the Wadden Sea (left), protecting thousands of km² of land. The Zuiderzee Works (Dutch: Zuiderzeewerken) are a manmade system of dams, land reclamation and water drainage works, the… …   Wikipedia

  • Metropolitan Board of Works — The Metropolitan Board of Works headquarters in Spring Gardens near Trafalgar Square were designed by Frederick Marrable in 1858. The Metropolitan Board of Works (MBW) was the principal instrument of London wide government from 1855 until the… …   Wikipedia

  • harbours and sea works — Introduction harbour also spelled  harbor        any part of a body of water and the manmade structures surrounding it that sufficiently shelters a vessel from wind, waves, and currents, enabling safe anchorage or the discharge and loading of… …   Universalium

  • The Mystery at the Moss-Covered Mansion —   …   Wikipedia

  • Sonestown Covered Bridge — Coordinates: 41°20′47″N 76°33′18″W / 41.34639°N 76.555°W / 41.34639; 76.555 …   Wikipedia

  • Gruber Wagon Works — Infobox nrhp | name =Gruber Wagon Works nrhp type =nhl caption = Gruber Wagon Works in 1973 nearest city= Red Covered Bridge Road, vicinity of Reading, Pennsylvania locmapin = Pennsylvania area = built =1882 architect= Franklin P. Gruber… …   Wikipedia

  • Kymulga Mill & Covered Bridge — Infobox nrhp | name = Kymulga Mill nrhp type = caption = Kymulga Mill near Childersburg, Alabama. nearest city = Childersburg, AL lat degrees = 33 | lat minutes = 20 | lat seconds = 2.38 | lat direction = N long degrees = 86 | long minutes = 17 | …   Wikipedia

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