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1 лесхоз
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2 горски
1. wood (attr.), woodland (attr.), forest (attr.)горски бекас woodcockгорски пазач woodman, forester, forest-guard, forest-rangerгорски пейзаж woodland scenery/landscapeгорски пожар a forest fireгорски работник woodsman, foresterгорски разсадник a forest-tree nurseryгорска местност wooded countryгорска нимфа wood-nymphгорска поляна glade, clearingгорска пътека a forest/woodland pathгорско богатство timber resourcesгорско стопанство a forestry enterprise2. същ. forest-guard, ranger* * *го̀рски,прил., -а, -о, -и 1. прил. wood (attr.), woodland (attr.), forest (attr.); forestal, foresteal; поет. sylvan; \горскиа местност wooded country; \горскиа нимфа wood-nymph; \горскиа поляна glade, clearing; \горскиа пътека forest/woodland path; \горскии бекас зоол. woodcock; \горскии пазач woodman, forester, forest-guard, forest ranger; \горскии пейзаж woodland scenery/landscape; \горскии пожар forest fire; \горскии работник woodsman, forester; \горскии разсадник forest-tree nursery; \горскио богатство timber resources; \горскио стопанство forestry enterprise;* * *forest; forestal; greenwood; wood{wud}; forest-guard (професия)* * *1. wood (attr.), woodland (attr.), forest (attr.) 2. ГОРСКИ бекас woodcock 3. ГОРСКИ пазач woodman, forester, forest-guard, forest-ranger 4. ГОРСКИ пейзаж woodland scenery/landscape 5. ГОРСКИ пожар a forest fire 6. ГОРСКИ работник woodsman, forester 7. ГОРСКИ разсадник a forest-tree nursery 8. горска местност wooded country 9. горска нимфа wood-nymph 10. горска поляна glade, clearing 11. горска пътека a forest/woodland path 12. горско богатство timber resources 13. горско стопанство a forestry enterprise 14. същ. forest-guard, ranger -
3 aus (im)
Eisen, aus
made of iron;
• Eisenabfall scrap iron;
• Eisenarbeit ironwork.
Holz, aus
wooden;
• abgelagertes Holz well-seasoned wood;
• nicht abgelagertes Holz green wood;
• zum Verkauf hergerichtetes Holz dimension timber;
• stehendes Holz stumpage;
• Holz auf dem Stamm kaufen to buy timber on the stump;
• Holzanteil estover;
• Holzberechtigung timber claim;
• Holzbestand stand;
• Holzeinschlag rate of felling;
• Holzentnahmegerechtigkeit plough-bote;
• Holzentnahmerecht für Hausreparaturen housebote;
• Holzfäller woodcutter;
• Holzfaser wood fibre (Br.) (fiber, US);
• Holzfass wooden barrel;
• Holzgerechtigkeit right to estovers;
• Holzgewinnung logging;
• Holzhammermethode hard sell;
• Holzhandel timber (lumber, US) trade;
• Holzhändler timber merchant, lumberman (US, Canada);
• Holzindustrie wood-based industry, woodwork and timber industry;
• Holzlagerplatz woodyard, timberyard;
• Holzlieferant timber contractor;
• nutzbare Holzmenge (Forstwirtschaft) merchantable length;
• Holztransportschiff lumber carrier;
• Holzverarbeitung wood processing;
• Holzverfärbung stain;
• Holzwirtschaft lumber (timber) industry;
• Holzzellstoff chemical woodpulp.
Termingründen, aus
owing to previous engagements;
• Terminguthaben term (time, US) deposits, (Börse) time balance;
• Terminhandel option [business], forward operations, [trading in] futures (US);
• Terminhandel in Devisen forward exchange dealings (transaction) (Br.), forward operations, forwarded exchange deals (Br.);
• Terminhandel in Wertpapieren forward transactions in securities;
• Terminhändler option writer (trader).
Prinzip, aus (im)
on (in) principle;
• ökonomisches Prinzip economic principle;
• Prinzip der periodischen Abgrenzung von Aufwand und Ertrag matching concept;
• Prinzip der gegenseitigen Anerkennung (Europäischer Gerichtshof) principle of mutual recognition;
• Prinzip gleitender Arbeitszeit flexible working-hours scheme;
• Prinzip der Fortdauer von Verträgen principle of continuity of contracts;
• Prinzip der Gegenseitigkeit bilateralism;
• Prinzip der Kostenminimierung cost-minimizing rule;
• Prinzip der freien Marktwirtschaft free-enterprise principle (system);
• Prinzip der Preisunterschiedslosigkeit law of indifference. -
4 леспромхоз
1) General subject: timber procurement establishment (an industrial plant dealing with loading and dispatching of felled trees), timber industry enterprise, лесное промышленное хозяйство, лесопромышленное хозяйство2) Engineering: integrated logging-lumbering enterprise3) Forestry: lespromkhoz, logging company4) Makarov: logging enterprize, logging operation -
5 леспромхоз
сокр. от лесное промышленное хозяйство
(State) timber industry enterprise* * * -
6 лесозаготовительное предприятие
1) General subject: timber procurement enterprise2) Engineering: logging camp, logging enterprise, lumber camp3) Forestry: forest harvesting operations, harvesting operations, logging operations4) Makarov: forest harvesting operation, harvesting operation, logging operationУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > лесозаготовительное предприятие
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7 леспромхоз
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8 Paxton, Sir Joseph
[br]b. 3 August 1801 Milton Bryant, Bedfordshire, Englandd. 8 June 1865 Sydenham, London, England[br]English designer of the Crystal Palace, the first large-scale prefabricated ferrovitreous structure.[br]The son of a farmer, he had worked in gardens since boyhood and at the age of 21 was employed as Undergardener at the Horticultural Society Gardens in Chiswick, from where he went on to become Head Gardener for the Duke of Devonshire at Chatsworth. It was there that he developed his methods of glasshouse construction, culminating in the Great Conservatory of 1836–40, an immense structure some 277 ft (84.4 m) long, 123 ft (37.5 m) wide and 67 ft (20.4 m) high. Its framework was of iron and its roof of glass, with wood to contain the glass panels; it is now demolished. Paxton went on to landscape garden design, fountain and waterway engineering, the laying out of the model village of Edensor, and to play a part in railway and country house projects.The structure that made Paxton a household name was erected in Hyde Park, London, to house the Great Exhibition of 1851 and was aptly dubbed, by Punch, the Crystal Palace. The idea of holding an international exhibition for industry had been mooted in 1849 and was backed by Prince Albert and Henry Cole. The money for this was to be raised by public subscription and 245 designs were entered into a competition held in 1850; however, most of the concepts, received from many notable architects and engineers, were very costly and unsuitable, and none were accepted. That same year, Paxton published his scheme in the Illustrated London News and it was approved after it received over-whelming public support.Paxton's Crystal Palace, designed and erected in association with the engineers Fox and Henderson, was a prefabricated glasshouse of vast dimensions: it was 1,848 ft (563.3 m) long, 408 ft (124.4 m) wide and over 100 ft (30.5 m) high. It contained 3,300 iron columns, 2,150 girders. 24 miles (39 km) of guttering, 600,000 ft3 (17,000 m3) of timber and 900,000 ft2 (84,000 m) of sheet glass made by Chance Bros, of Birmingham. One of the chief reasons why it was accepted by the Royal Commission Committee was that it fulfilled the competition proviso that it should be capable of being erected quickly and subsequently dismantled and re-erected elsewhere. The Crystal Palace was to be erected at a cost of £79,800, much less than the other designs. Building began on 30 July 1850, with a labour force of some 2,000, and was completed on 31 March 1851. It was a landmark in construction at the time, for its size, speed of construction and its non-eclectic design, and, most of all, as the first great prefabricated building: parts were standardized and made in quantity, and were assembled on site. The exhibition was opened by Queen Victoria on 1 May 1851 and had received six million visitors when it closed on 11 October. The building was dismantled in 1852 and reassembled, with variations in design, at Sydenham in south London, where it remained until its spectacular conflagration in 1936.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1851. MP for Coventry 1854–65. Fellow Linnaean Society 1853; Horticultural Society 1826. Order of St Vladimir, Russia, 1844.Further ReadingP.Beaver, 1986, The Crystal Palace: A Portrait of Victorian Enterprise, Phillimore. George F.Chadwick, 1961, Works of Sir Joseph Paxton 1803–1865, Architectural Press.DY -
9 Stevenson, Robert
[br]b. 8 June 1772 Glasgow, Scotlandd. 12 July 1850 Edinburgh, Scotland[br]Scottish lighthouse designer and builder.[br]After his father's death when he was only 2 years old, Robert Stevenson was educated at a school for children from families in reduced circumstances. However, c. 1788 his mother married again, to Thomas Smith, Engineer to the Northern Lighthouse Board. Stevenson then served an apprenticeship under his new stepfather. The Board, which is still an active force in the 1990s, was founded in 1786 to oversee the lights and buoyage in some of the wildest waters in Western Europe, the seas around the coasts of Scotland and the Isle of Man.After studies at Andersen's College (now the University of Strathclyde) and later at Edinburgh University, Stevenson assumed responsibility in the field for much of the construction work sanctioned by the Board. After some years he succeeded Smith as Engineer to the Board and thereby the long connection between the Northern Lights and the Stevenson family commenced.Stevenson became Engineer to the Board when he was about 30 years old, remaining in that office for the best part of half a century. During these years he improved catoptric lighting, adopted the central lamp refracting system and invented the intermittent flashing light. While these developments were sufficient to form a just memorial to the man, he was involved in greater endeavours in the construction of around twenty lighthouses, most of which had ingenious forms of construction. The finest piece was the Bell Rock Lighthouse, built on a reef off the Scottish East Coast. This enterprise took five years to complete and can be regarded as the most important construction of his life.His interests fitted in with those of the other great men living in and around Edinburgh at the time, and included oceanography, astronomy, architecture and antiquarian studies. He designed several notable bridges, proposed a design for the rails for railways and also made a notable study of marine timber borers. He contributed to Encyclopaedia Britannica and to many journals.His grandson, born in the year of his death, was the famous author Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–94).[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS Edinburgh.Further ReadingSir Walter Scott, 1982, Northern Lights, Hawick.FMW
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