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1 в'ючне сідло
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2 pelana untuk angkutan
pack saddle -
3 вьючное седло
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4 вьючный
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5 вьючный
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6 pillean
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7 bağırçak
Pack-saddle for asses -
8 sırmak
Pack-saddle cloth for asses -
9 bağırçak
Pack-saddle for asses -
10 sırmak
Pack-saddle cloth for asses -
11 Packsattel
m pack saddle* * *der Packsattelpacksaddle* * *Pạck|sat|telmpack-saddle* * *Pack·sat·telm packsaddle* * ** * *m.packsaddle n. -
12 σάττω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `to stuff, to compress, to pack, to load, to equip' (IA., Cret.).Other forms: Ion. σάσσω (Hp.), Cret. (Gortyn) συνεσσάδδῃ, aor. σάξαι, pass. σαχθῆναι, perf. midd. σέσαγμαι.Compounds: Also w. prefix, e. g. ἐπι-.Derivatives: 1. σαγή or σάγη f. (acc. after Hdn. 1, 309) `pack, equipment' (since A.), also `pack saddle' (pap., Babr. a. o.); 2. σάγμα ( ἐπί- σάττω) n. `coat, cloak' (E., Ar.), `pack saddle' (LXX, Str., pap; usw.), dimin. - άτιον n. (Arr.); - ατᾶς m. `saddler' (pap.). 3. σάκτας m. `bag, pouch' (Ar. Pl. 681, Poll.), prop. "stuffer" (Björck Alpha impurum. 68), also = ἰατρός (Boeot., Stratt.), prob. as nickname (cf. Bechtel Dial. 1, 310); diff. Pisani Ist. Lomb. 73: 2, 26 (to Skt bhiṣáj- `doctor'; by Mayrhofer s. v. rejected); 4. σακτήρ = θύλακος H.; 5. σάκτωρ, - ορος m. `crammer' (A. Pers. 924; anap.); 6. σάκτρα f. = φορμός Phot. 7. σάξις ( ἐπί- σάττω) f. `cramming' (Arist., Thphr.); 8. σακτός `crammed' (Antiph., pap.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: The forms σάττω, σάξαι, σέσαγμαι including the nominal derivv., of which σαγή and σάγμα with analog. - γ- (reversed Bechtel Dial. 2, 745: γ original as in Crot. σάδδῃ; but σάττω analog. after σάξαι), form a regular nivellated system, of which the starting point cannot be reconstructed by lack of an etym. A possible connection gives the nasalised Toch. AB twāṅk- `force in' (IE *tu̯a-n-k-; v. Windekens Orbis 11, 180; 12, 188); but Skt. tvanakti (Lex.) `draw together' is unreliable (s. Mayrhofer s. v.). Further superseded comparisons w. lit. in Bq and WP. 1, 746 f. (Pok. 1098). Cf. also σηκός and σωκός; also συχνός.Page in Frisk: 2,681Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σάττω
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13 corona
(carona [karóna], evolved along with the ancient locative adverb a la carona 'in direct contact with the skin of an animal or person' from an earlier, probably pre-Roman, term, * carón or a similar form)Southwest (west Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona): 1892. A saddle pad placed between the saddle and the animal's back. Watts notes that it was often form-fitted to the saddle and left open on top to allow ventilation. The DARE indicates that it was sometimes highly decorated and may have been made of "pigskin, embroidered broadcloth, brightly-colored Navajo blankets, woven horsehair," or other materials. Southwestern sources, including Watts, Adams, Blevins, Smith, Carlisle, and the DARE say that this term derives from Spanish corona, meaning 'crown.' This is inaccurate. Actually, the term derives from carona, a Spanish term that the DRAE defines as a piece of thick, padded fabric that fits between the saddle blanket and the (pack)saddle and serves as a protection for the horse. It may also refer to the interior part of a packsaddle or, according to both the DRAE and Islas, the part of the horse's back on which the carona sits. Islas glosses it as a thick saddle blanket or sudadero that fits between the saddle and the horse's back. It may also refer to a piece of canvas under a saddle or saddle blanket. Cobos indicates that a "saddle blanket used on donkeys and mules" is known as a carola in New Mexico and southern Colorado. He suggests that the term derives from Spanish escarola 'ruffled collar,' but it is more likely a variant form of carona.Alternate form: caronie. -
14 седло
ср.1) saddleдамское седло — pillion, side-saddle, ladies saddle
мягкое седло — pad-saddle, pad
садиться в седло — back, saddle
2) геол. ( седловина) col, saddle, saddleback, anticline3) анат.4) ( туши) saddle5) матем. ( кривой) saddle -
15 léna
* * *1.u, f. to grant, Vígl. 31.2.u, f. [cp. Germ. lehne; Engl. to lean]:— the pad or cushion laid under the pack-saddle; hann tók tvá hesta ok lagði á lénur (mod. reiðing), Nj. 74; kómu þeir til hesta sinna, ok er þeir vildu lénur á þá leggja, Bs. i. 389; vóru lagðir út vöru-sekkar nokkurir á hlaðit, ok þar lénur með, Ísl. ii. 204.3.að, to saddle; Bileam lénaði ösnu sína, Stj. 334. -
16 bât
bât [bα]masculine noun[de mule, âne] packsaddle* * *bɑnom masculin pack-saddle••* * *bɒ nm* * *bât nm pack-saddle.c'est là que le bât blesse that's where the shoe pinches.[ba] nom masculinc'est là que ou où le bât blesse that's where the shoe pinches -
17 klyf-beri
a, m., proncd. klybberi, and spelt thus, Grág. (Kb.) ii. 109, l. 21:—a pack-saddle, K. Þ. K. 86, Sturl. iii. 114. klyfbera-band, n. and klyfbera-gjörð, f. a pack-saddle girth, Lv. 91. -
18 clītellārius
clītellārius adj. [clitellae], bearing a packsaddle: mulus, C., L., H., Ph.* * *clitellaria, clitellarium ADJused for carrying a pack-saddle; of/pertaining to/bearing a pack-saddle (L+S) -
19 zalea
(Sp. model spelled same [saléa] < Vulgar Arabic saltha 'undressed sheepskin' < sálah 'to skin')Watts: 1890. An undressed sheepskin used as a blanket, protective garment, or as a layer on a pack that fits between an animal's back and a saddle blanket or between the animal's back and the pack saddle. The DRAE references it as a sheepskin with the hair left on. It is used as a protection against cold or damp weather. Santamaría and Islas concur. Cobos notes that it may also refer to a goatskin. -
20 sumag
См. также в других словарях:
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