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1 Naval Law Review
Law: Naval L.Rev. -
2 Naval Communications Improvement Review Board
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Naval Communications Improvement Review Board
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3 Employees Appeals Review Board, Navy NAVWPNLAB, Naval Weapons Laboratory
Military: EARB-NУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Employees Appeals Review Board, Navy NAVWPNLAB, Naval Weapons Laboratory
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4 משט
naval review -
5 военно-морской парад
Русско-английский политический словарь > военно-морской парад
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6 flåderevy
naval review. -
7 Flottenparade
f naval review* * *Flọt|ten|pa|ra|defnaval reviewdie Flottenparade abnehmen — to review the fleet
* * *Flottenparade f naval review -
8 Flottenparade
f1. fleet review [naval]2. naval review -
9 парад
parade; review воен.принимать парад — to inspect / to review a parade / the troops
воздушный парад — air display, flypast
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10 парад
ч1) parade; військ. тж. review; ceremonial get-upприймати парад — to review ( to inspect) the troops
2) (парадний одяг, вигляд) gala, show3) -
11 desfile
m.1 parade, march past (military).2 procession.desfile de modelos fashion showpres.subj.1st person singular (yo) Present Subjunctive of Spanish verb: desfilar.* * *1 (gen) parade, procession2 MILITAR parade3 (moda) fashion show* * *noun m.1) parade2) procession* * *SM1) (Mil) paradedesfile aéreo — flypast, flyover (EEUU)
2) [de carrozas] procession3)desfile de modas, desfile de modelos — fashion show, fashion parade
* * *masculino ( de carrozas) parade, procession; (Mil) parade, march past* * *= pageant, procession, parade.Ex. The reader is like her: he sits watching the diverse pageant of human thought and human feeling passing across the gleaming mirror of literature.Ex. That passage contains an alliterative procession of half-rhymed words and too many commas.Ex. These include: matching characters with nursery rhymes; quizzes; colouring and cutting out; treasure hunts; fancy dress parades; making words of jumbled letters; and a pets' parade.----* desfile de caballos = cavalcade.* desfile de modas = fashion show, catwalk show.* desfile de modelos = designer ramp show, fashion show, catwalk show.* desfile militar = military tattoo, military parade.* desfile motorizado = cavalcade.* plaza de desfiles = parade ground.* relativo al desfile militar = marching.* * *masculino ( de carrozas) parade, procession; (Mil) parade, march past* * *= pageant, procession, parade.Ex: The reader is like her: he sits watching the diverse pageant of human thought and human feeling passing across the gleaming mirror of literature.
Ex: That passage contains an alliterative procession of half-rhymed words and too many commas.Ex: These include: matching characters with nursery rhymes; quizzes; colouring and cutting out; treasure hunts; fancy dress parades; making words of jumbled letters; and a pets' parade.* desfile de caballos = cavalcade.* desfile de modas = fashion show, catwalk show.* desfile de modelos = designer ramp show, fashion show, catwalk show.* desfile militar = military tattoo, military parade.* desfile motorizado = cavalcade.* plaza de desfiles = parade ground.* relativo al desfile militar = marching.* * *(de carrozas) parade, procession; ( Mil) parade, march-pastcontemplaba el desfile de gente por el paseo he watched the passers-by walking down the boulevardCompuesto:desfile de modas or modelosfashion show, fashion parade ( BrE)* * *
Del verbo desfilar: ( conjugate desfilar)
desfilé es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
desfile es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
desfilar
desfile
desfilar ( conjugate desfilar) verbo intransitivo
desfile sustantivo masculino ( de carrozas) parade, procession;
(Mil) parade, march past;
desfilar verbo intransitivo
1 to march in single file
2 Mil to march past, parade
3 (pasar por un lugar un grupo) to pass [ante, in front of] [por, through]
4 (salir ordenadamente) to file out
desfile m Mil parade, march-past
desfile de modas, fashion show
' desfile' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
carroza
- pasarela
- abrir
- alzar
- cabalgata
- colorido
- deslucido
- modelo
- parada
English:
fashion parade
- float
- flyover
- parade
- procession
- show
- by
- fashion
* * *desfile nm1. [de soldados] parade, march pastdesfile militar military parade2. [de personas]hubo un desfile constante de personas ante la tumba there was a constant stream of people filing past the tomb3. [de carrozas] processiondesfile de Carnaval carnival processiondesfile de modelos fashion show o parade* * *m parade* * *desfile nm: parade, procession* * *desfile n parade -
12 vlootschouw
vlootschouw, vlootrevue -
13 парад
м.1. parade; воен. reviewпринимать парад — inspect / take* a parade
2. разг. ( парадность) ceremonial get-upбыть в полном параде — be in full dress; be all tricked out, be in one's best bib and tucker
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14 парад
м.1) ( торжественное шествие) parade; воен. тж. reviewфизкульту́рный пара́д — sports parade
морско́й пара́д — naval review
возду́шный пара́д — air display
принима́ть пара́д — inspect / take a parade
2) разг. ( парадность) ceremonial get-upбыть в по́лном пара́де — be in full dress; be all tricked out, be in one's best bib and tucker
что э́то у вас за пара́д? — what's the big show?
••пара́д плане́т астр. — syzigy ['sɪzɪʤɪ]
кома́ндовать пара́дом (быть главным) — call the shots / tune; be in charge
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15 военно-морской парад
Politics: naval reviewУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > военно-морской парад
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16 морской парад
Diplomatic term: naval review -
17 flåtemønstring
subst. naval review -
18 Flottenschau
f.naval review n. -
19 defila|da
f (wojsk, sportowców) parade (przed kimś before sb)- defilada lotnicza a fly-past- defilada czołgów a tank parade- defilada piechoty a march past of infantry- defilada okrętów a naval review- przyjmować defiladę to take the saluteThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > defila|da
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20 Parsons, Sir Charles Algernon
[br]b. 13 June 1854 London, Englandd. 11 February 1931 on board Duchess of Richmond, Kingston, Jamaica[br]English eingineer, inventor of the steam turbine and developer of the high-speed electric generator.[br]The youngest son of the Earl of Rosse, he came from a family well known in scientific circles, the six boys growing up in an intellectual atmosphere at Birr Castle, the ancestral home in Ireland, where a forge and large workshop were available to them. Charles, like his brothers, did not go to school but was educated by private tutors of the character of Sir Robert Ball, this type of education being interspersed with overseas holiday trips to France, Holland, Belgium and Spain in the family yacht. In 1871, at the age of 17, he went to Trinity College, Dublin, and after two years he went on to St John's College, Cambridge. This was before the Engineering School had opened, and Parsons studied mechanics and mathematics.In 1877 he was apprenticed to W.G.Armstrong \& Co. of Elswick, where he stayed for four years, developing an epicycloidal engine that he had designed while at Cambridge. He then moved to Kitson \& Co. of Leeds, where he went half shares in a small experimental shop working on rocket propulsion for torpedoes.In 1887 he married Katherine Bethell, who contracted rheumatic fever from early-morning outdoor vigils with her husband to watch his torpedo experiments while on their honeymoon! He then moved to a partnership in Clarke, Chapman \& Co. at Gateshead. There he joined the electrical department, initially working on the development of a small, steam-driven marine lighting set. This involved the development of either a low-speed dynamo, for direct coupling to a reciprocating engine, or a high-speed engine, and it was this requirement that started Parsons on the track of the steam turbine. This entailed many problems such as the running of shafts at speeds of up to 40,000 rpm and the design of a DC generator for 18,000 rpm. He took out patents for both the turbine and the generator on 23 April 1884. In 1888 he dissolved his partnership with Clarke, Chapman \& Co. to set up his own firm in Newcastle, leaving his patents with the company's owners. This denied him the use of the axial-flow turbine, so Parsons then designed a radial-flow layout; he later bought back his patents from Clarke, Chapman \& Co. His original patent had included the use of the steam turbine as a means of marine propulsion, and Parsons now set about realizing this possibility. He experimented with 2 ft (61 cm) and 6 ft (183 cm) long models, towed with a fishing line or, later, driven by a twisted rubber cord, through a single-reduction set of spiral gearing.The first trials of the Turbinia took place in 1894 but were disappointing due to cavitation, a little-understood phenomenon at the time. He used an axial-flow turbine of 2,000 shp running at 2,000 rpm. His work resulted in a far greater understanding of the phenomenon of cavitation than had hitherto existed. Land turbines of up to 350 kW (470 hp) had meanwhile been built. Experiments with the Turbinia culminated in a demonstration which took place at the great Naval Review of 1897 at Spithead, held to celebrate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee. Here, the little Turbinia darted in and out of the lines of heavy warships and destroyers, attaining the unheard of speed of 34.5 knots. The following year the Admiralty placed their first order for a turbine-driven ship, and passenger vessels started operation soon after, the first in 1901. By 1906 the Admiralty had moved over to use turbines exclusively. These early turbines had almost all been direct-coupled to the ship's propeller shaft. For optimum performance of both turbine and propeller, Parsons realized that some form of reduction gearing was necessary, which would have to be extremely accurate because of the speeds involved. Parsons's Creep Mechanism of 1912 ensured that any errors in the master wheel would be distributed evenly around the wheel being cut.Parsons was also involved in optical work and had a controlling interest in the firm of Ross Ltd of London and, later, in Sir Howard Grubb \& Sons. He he was an enlightened employer, originating share schemes and other benefits for his employees.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted. Order of Merit 1927.Further ReadingA.T.Bowden, 1966, "Charles Parsons: Purveyor of power", in E.G.Semler (ed.), The Great Masters. Engineering Heritage, Vol. II, London: Institution of Mechanical Engineers/Heinemann.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Parsons, Sir Charles Algernon
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