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1 ♦ pump
♦ pump (1) /pʌmp/n.1 (mecc.) pompa: water pump, pompa dell'acqua; hand pump, pompa a mano; foot pump, pompa a pedale; bicycle pump, pompa da bicicletta; double-acting pump, pompa a doppio effetto; pompa aspirante e premente; (autom.) fuel pump, pompa di alimentazione; pompa della benzina (o del gasolio); (autom.) oil pump, pompa dell'olio; air pump (o tyre pump) pompa ( da bicicletta); suction pump, pompa aspirante3 (elettron.) pompa; sorgente pompa4 (fam.) vigorosa stretta di mano● (autom.) pump attendant, benzinaio □ pump price, prezzo alla pompa ( della benzina, ecc.) □ pump priming, adescamento della pompa; (fig., econ.) provvedimenti per il rilancio dell'economia, investimenti pubblici per la ripresa economica □ pump room, ( in uno stabilimento termale) sala in cui si bevono le acque; (naut.) sala delle pompe □ All hands to the pumps!, (naut.) tutti alle pompe!; (fig.) dateci sotto tutti!pump (2) /pʌmp/n.3 (ingl.) scarpa di tela; scarpetta da tennis.(to) pump /pʌmp/A v. t.1 pompare: to pump air into a tyre, gonfiare un pneumatico; to pump petrol into the tank, pompare la benzina nel serbatoio2 (fig.) muovere (o azionare) energicamente su e giù: to pump a handle, azionare vigorosamente una manopola; to pump the pedals, pestare sui pedali; He pumped my hand up and down, mi strinse calorosamente la mano ( muovendola su e giù)4 (fam.) interrogare a fondo ( ottenendo notizie, informazioni, ecc.): I pumped him for details, mi feci raccontare da lui tutti i particolari; to pump sb. for information, farsi dare informazioni da q.5 (fig.) far restare senza fiato; spompare (fam.): He was quite pumped after the long run, dopo la lunga corsa, era proprio spompato6 (fam.) far entrare; ficcare: to pump a difficult theory into sb. 's head, far entrare in testa a q. una teoria difficileB v. i.1 pompare; azionare una pompa2 andare su e giù come un pistone; pompare; pulsare: His legs were pumping, le sue gambe andavano su e giù come pistoni; My heart was pumping wildly, il cuore mi batteva all'impazzata● to pump st. dry, prosciugare qc. con le pompe □ ( slang, sport) to pump iron, fare sollevamento pesi □ to pump full (of), riempire (di) □ (autom.) to pump on the brake, premere e rilasciare il freno ripetutamente; pompare (fam.) □ ( di un pneumatico) pumped hard, ben gonfio; duro □ (med.) to have one's stomach pumped, essere sottoposto a lavanda gastrica. -
2 pump
1. noun1) (a machine for making water etc rise from under the ground: Every village used to have a pump from which everyone drew their water.) bomba2) (a machine or device for forcing liquid or gas into, or out of, something: a bicycle pump (for forcing air into the tyres).) bomba
2. verb1) (to raise or force with a pump: Oil is being pumped out of the ground.) bombear2) (to get information from by asking questions: He tried to pump me about the exam.) sonsacar, sacar información de alguien•- pump uppump1 n1. bomba2. surtidorpump2 vb bombeartr[pʌmp]1 (machine) bomba2 (act) bombeo1 bombear1 (of heart) latir\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto pump iron hacer pesasto pump money into something invertir dinero en algoto pump somebody for information (tratar de) sonsacar información a alguiento pump somebody's hand darle un fuerte apretón de manos a alguien————————tr[pʌmp]1 (plimsoll) zapatilla de lona, playera; (for dancing) zapatilla de ballet2 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL (shoe) zapato de salónpump ['pʌmp] vt1) : bombearto pump water: bombear aguato pump (up) a tire: inflar una llanta2) : mover (una manivela, un pedal, etc.) de arriba abajoto pump someone's hand: darle un fuerte apretón de manos (a alguien)3)to pump out : sacar, vaciar (con una bomba)pump n1) : bomba fwater pump: bomba de agua2) shoe: zapato m de tacónn.• zapato de tacón bajo s.m.n.• bomba (Fluido) s.f.• escarpín s.m.• jervilla s.f.• pompa s.f.v.• bombear v.• elevar con bomba v.• llenar de aire con una bomba v.• sacar con bomba v.pʌmp
I
1) bomba f; ( gasoline o (BrE) petrol pump) surtidor m2) ( Clothing)a) ( court shoe) (AmE) zapato m (de) salónb) ( gym shoe) (BrE dated) zapatilla f
II
1.
1)a) ( supply) bombearto pump something INTO something — \<\<water/oil\>\> bombear algo a algo
to pump air into a tire — inflar or (Esp tb) hinchar un neumático
they pumped him full of lead — (colloq) lo acribillaron a balazos
b) ( drain)to pump something OUT OF something — sacar* algo de algo con una bomba
to pump somebody's stomach out — hacerle* un lavado de estómago a alguien
c) ( ask) (colloq)2) \<\<handle/pedaleadle\>\> mover* de arriba abajoto pump iron — (colloq) hacer* pesas
2.
via) \<\<machine/heart\>\> bombearb) ( move vigorously) moverse* con fuerzaPhrasal Verbs:- pump up
I [pʌmp]1. N1) (for liquid, gas, air) bomba fbicycle 2., bilge 2., petrol 2., suction 2.foot/hand pump — bomba f de pie/de mano
2) (also: petrol pump) surtidor m de gasolina3) (=act of pumping)I gave the tyre a quick pump — le metí un poco de aire al neumático, inflé un poco el neumático
after a few pumps water came gushing forth — después de darle a la bomba un par de veces, empezó a salir agua a borbotones
2. VT1) (lit)a) (with a pump) bombear•
the tank was pumped full of water each day — el tanque se llenaba de agua todos los días•
oil is pumped into the house from a tank outside — el combustible se bombea a la casa desde un depósito que hay fuera•
they are pumping oil out of the wrecked tanker — están bombeando el petróleo del buque cisterna siniestrado•
the heart pumps blood round the body — el corazón hace circular la sangre por el cuerpo- pump sb dryb) (Naut)2) (fig)prime 3., 2)we can't go on pumping money into this project — no podemos seguir metiendo tanto dinero en or inyectándole tanto dinero a este proyecto
3) (=move up and down) [+ pedal] pisar repetidamente; [+ handle] darle repetidamente ahe pumped the accelerator — pisó repetidamente el pedal del acelerador, se puso a darle al pedal del acelerador
- pump iron4) * (=question)I pumped him discreetly about his past — le sonsaqué discretamente todo lo que pude acerca de su pasado, le tiré de la lengua discretamente acerca de su pasado *
•
to pump sb for information — sonsacar información a algn3. VI1) [person]a) (at pump)here's a bucket, get pumping! — aquí tienes un balde, ¡a trabajar la bomba!
b) (on lever)c) (on pedal)he was pumping away, trying to get the car to start — pisaba repetidamente el pedal, intentando arrancar el coche
2) [pump, machine]the machine is pumping (away) all the time — la máquina de bombeo está en funcionamiento constantemente
3) [heart] (=circulate blood) bombear la sangre; (=beat) latir; [blood, adrenaline] correr por las venas4) [liquid]•
the oil was pumping along the pipeline — el petróleo corría por el tubo•
blood pumped from the severed artery — la sangre salía a borbotones de la arteria cortada4.CPDpump attendant N — encargado(-a) m / f de la gasolinera
pump house N — sala f de bombas
pump price N — [of petrol] precio m de la gasolina
•
a rise in pump prices — una subida en los precios de la gasolina- pump in- pump out- pump up
II
[pʌmp]N (esp Brit) (=sports shoe) zapatilla f ; (esp US) (=dancing shoe) bailarina f ; (=slip-on shoe) zapato m de salón* * *[pʌmp]
I
1) bomba f; ( gasoline o (BrE) petrol pump) surtidor m2) ( Clothing)a) ( court shoe) (AmE) zapato m (de) salónb) ( gym shoe) (BrE dated) zapatilla f
II
1.
1)a) ( supply) bombearto pump something INTO something — \<\<water/oil\>\> bombear algo a algo
to pump air into a tire — inflar or (Esp tb) hinchar un neumático
they pumped him full of lead — (colloq) lo acribillaron a balazos
b) ( drain)to pump something OUT OF something — sacar* algo de algo con una bomba
to pump somebody's stomach out — hacerle* un lavado de estómago a alguien
c) ( ask) (colloq)2) \<\<handle/pedal/treadle\>\> mover* de arriba abajoto pump iron — (colloq) hacer* pesas
2.
via) \<\<machine/heart\>\> bombearb) ( move vigorously) moverse* con fuerzaPhrasal Verbs:- pump up -
3 pump
1. noun 2. intransitive verb 3. transitive verb1) pumpenpump bullets into something — Kugeln in etwas (Akk.) jagen (ugs.)
2)pump somebody for information — Auskünfte aus jemandem herausholen
3)* * *1. noun1) (a machine for making water etc rise from under the ground: Every village used to have a pump from which everyone drew their water.) die Pumpe2) (a machine or device for forcing liquid or gas into, or out of, something: a bicycle pump (for forcing air into the tyres).) die Pumpe2. verb1) (to raise or force with a pump: Oil is being pumped out of the ground.) pumpen2) (to get information from by asking questions: He tried to pump me about the exam.) ausfragen•- academic.ru/90583/pump_up">pump up* * *pump1[pʌmp]n1. BRIT, AUS (for gymnastics) Gymnastikschuh m; (for dancing) Tanzschuh m; (for ballet) Ballettschuh mpump2[pʌmp]I. n Pumpe ffuel/petrol/water \pump Treibstoff-/Benzin-/Wasserpumpe fII. vt▪ to \pump sth etw pumpenblood is \pumped round the body das Blut wird durch den Körper gepumptto \pump the brakes mehrmals kurz auf das Bremspedal tretento \pump iron ( fam) Gewichte heben [o stemmen]to \pump one's fists mit den Fäusten [in die Luft] schlagento \pump sb for news jdn ausfragen [o fam ausquetschen]they tried to \pump the information out of him sie versuchten ihm die Informationen zu entlocken* * *I [pʌmp]1. nPumpe f2. vtpumpen; stomach auspumpen; pedal mehrmals tretento pump oil/water out of sth — Öl/Wasser aus etw (heraus)pumpen
to pump sth dry — etw leer pumpen
he pumped my arm up and down — er riss meinen Arm wie einen Pumpenschwengel auf und ab
to pump money into sth — Geld in etw (acc) hineinpumpen
3. vi1) pumpen; (water, blood) herausschießen2) (Brit music, rhythm) hämmern, stampfenIIshe likes to drive with the music pumping — sie dreht die Musik im Auto gern voll auf
n(= dancing shoe) Lackschuh m; (= ballet shoe) Ballettschuh m; (esp Brit = gym shoe) Turnschuh m; (US = court shoe) Pumps m* * *pump1 [pʌmp]A s1. a) Pumpe fb) (Tank-, Zapf) Säule f2. Pumpen(stoß) n(m)3. umg Pumpe f (Herz)B v/t1. pumpen:pump sb’s stomach MED jemandem den Magen auspumpen;pump dry auspumpen, leer pumpen;pump out auspumpen (a. fig erschöpfen);a) hochpumpen,b) einen Reifen etc aufpumpen;pump bullets into sb jemanden mit Blei vollpumpen sl;pump iron sl Bodybuilding machen;4. betätigen, besonders Pedale tretenC v/i1. pumpen (auch fig Herz etc)pump2 [pʌmp] s1. Pumps m (leichter Halbschuh)2. Br Turnschuh m (aus Segeltuch)* * *1. noun(machine; also fig.) Pumpe, die2. intransitive verb 3. transitive verb1) pumpenpump bullets into something — Kugeln in etwas (Akk.) jagen (ugs.)
2)3)* * *n.Luftpumpe f.Pumpe -n f. v.aufpumpen v.pumpen v. -
4 Priestman, William Dent
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. 23 August 1847 Sutton, Hull, Englandd. 7 September 1936 Hull, England[br]English oil engine pioneer.[br]William was the second son and one of eleven children of Samuel Priestman, who had moved to Hull after retiring as a corn miller in Kirkstall, Leeds, and who in retirement had become a director of the North Eastern Railway Company. The family were strict Quakers, so William was sent to the Quaker School in Bootham, York. He left school at the age of 17 to start an engineering apprenticeship at the Humber Iron Works, but this company failed so the apprenticeship was continued with the North Eastern Railway, Gateshead. In 1869 he joined the hydraulics department of Sir William Armstrong \& Company, Newcastle upon Tyne, but after a year there his father financed him in business at a small, run down works, the Holderness Foundry, Hull. He was soon joined by his brother, Samuel, their main business being the manufacture of dredging equipment (grabs), cranes and winches. In the late 1870s William became interested in internal combustion engines. He took a sublicence to manufacture petrol engines to the patents of Eugène Etève of Paris from the British licensees, Moll and Dando. These engines operated in a similar manner to the non-compression gas engines of Lenoir. Failure to make the two-stroke version of this engine work satisfactorily forced him to pay royalties to Crossley Bros, the British licensees of the Otto four-stroke patents.Fear of the dangers of petrol as a fuel, reflected by the associated very high insurance premiums, led William to experiment with the use of lamp oil as an engine fuel. His first of many patents was for a vaporizer. This was in 1885, well before Ackroyd Stuart. What distinguished the Priestman engine was the provision of an air pump which pressurized the fuel tank, outlets at the top and bottom of which led to a fuel atomizer injecting continuously into a vaporizing chamber heated by the exhaust gases. A spring-loaded inlet valve connected the chamber to the atmosphere, with the inlet valve proper between the chamber and the working cylinder being camoperated. A plug valve in the fuel line and a butterfly valve at the inlet to the chamber were operated, via a linkage, by the speed governor; this is believed to be the first use of this method of control. It was found that vaporization was only partly achieved, the higher fractions of the fuel condensing on the cylinder walls. A virtue was made of this as it provided vital lubrication. A starting system had to be provided, this comprising a lamp for preheating the vaporizing chamber and a hand pump for pressurizing the fuel tank.Engines of 2–10 hp (1.5–7.5 kW) were exhibited to the press in 1886; of these, a vertical engine was installed in a tram car and one of the horizontals in a motor dray. In 1888, engines were shown publicly at the Royal Agricultural Show, while in 1890 two-cylinder vertical marine engines were introduced in sizes from 2 to 10 hp (1.5–7.5 kW), and later double-acting ones up to some 60 hp (45 kW). First, clutch and gearbox reversing was used, but reversing propellers were fitted later (Priestman patent of 1892). In the same year a factory was established in Philadelphia, USA, where engines in the range 5–20 hp (3.7–15 kW) were made. Construction was radically different from that of the previous ones, the bosses of the twin flywheels acting as crank discs with the main bearings on the outside.On independent test in 1892, a Priestman engine achieved a full-load brake thermal efficiency of some 14 per cent, a very creditable figure for a compression ratio limited to under 3:1 by detonation problems. However, efficiency at low loads fell off seriously owing to the throttle governing, and the engines were heavy, complex and expensive compared with the competition.Decline in sales of dredging equipment and bad debts forced the firm into insolvency in 1895 and receivers took over. A new company was formed, the brothers being excluded. However, they were able to attend board meetings, but to exert no influence. Engine activities ceased in about 1904 after over 1,000 engines had been made. It is probable that the Quaker ethics of the brothers were out of place in a business that was becoming increasingly cut-throat. William spent the rest of his long life serving others.[br]Further ReadingC.Lyle Cummins, 1976, Internal Fire, Carnot Press.C.Lyle Cummins and J.D.Priestman, 1985, "William Dent Priestman, oil engine pioneer and inventor: his engine patents 1885–1901", Proceedings of the Institution ofMechanical Engineers 199:133.Anthony Harcombe, 1977, "Priestman's oil engine", Stationary Engine Magazine 42 (August).JBBiographical history of technology > Priestman, William Dent
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5 feed
I [fiːd]nome BE1) (meal) (for animal) pasto m.; (for baby) (breast) poppata f.; (bottle) pasto m., biberon m.II 1. [fiːd]to have a good feed — colloq. farsi una bella mangiata
verbo transitivo (pass., p.pass. fed)1) (supply with food) dare da mangiare a, nutrire [person, animal] (on con); nutrire [ plant]; vettovagliare [ army]to feed a baby — (on breast) allattare o dare il latte a un bambino; (on bottle) dare il biberon a un bambino
2) (supply) alimentare [lake, machine]; inserire, mettere monete in [ meter]; fornire [ information] (to a)to feed sth. into — inserire o mettere qcs. in [slot machine, hole, computer]
3) fig. alimentare [ambition, prejudice]5) teatr. dare la battuta, suggerire a [ comedian]2.verbo intransitivo (pass., p.pass. fed)1) (eat) mangiareto feed on — nutrirsi o cibarsi di, mangiare; fig. alimentarsi o nutrirsi di
2) (enter)3.to feed into — [paper, tape] entrare o inserirsi in [ machine]
verbo riflessivo (pass., p.pass. fed)to feed oneself — [child, invalid] mangiare, alimentarsi; (unassisted) mangiare da solo
- feed up* * *[fi:d] 1. past tense, past participle - fed; verb1) (to give food to: He fed the child with a spoon.) dar da mangiare, nutrire2) ((with on) to eat: Cows feed on grass.) nutrirsi2. noun(food especially for a baby or animals: Have you given the baby his feed?; cattle feed.) pasto; pascolo; foraggio- fed up* * *feed (1) /fi:d/n.3 [u] foraggio; mangime; alimento: hen feed, mangime per i polli; feed for the horses, foraggio per i cavalli5 [u] (mecc.) (dispositivo di) avanzamento, rifornimento, alimentazione: (autom.) petrol feed, (sistema di) alimentazione della benzina; (di stampante, ecc.) paper feed, (meccanismo di) alimentazione della carta; feed pump, pompa di alimentazione8 (teatr.) chi dà la battuta; spalla10 (comput., Internet) feed ( descrizione o riassunto di contenuto aggiornato di frequente): feed aggregator, aggregatore di feed● (mecc.) feed dog, trasportatore ( di una macchina da cucire) □ (agric.) feed grains, cereali foraggieri (o per la zootecnia) □ (mecc.) feed pipe, tubo di mandata □ (mecc.) feed screw, vite d'alimentazione □ (tecn.) feed table, alimentatore □ (ferr.) feed tank (o feed trough), serbatoio di rifornimento ( d'acqua, per locomotive) □ (fam.) to be off one's feed, non aver voglia di mangiare; essere inappetente.feed (2) /fi:d/pass. e p. p. di to fee.♦ (to) feed /fi:d/(pass. e p. p. fed)A v. t.1 dare da mangiare a; nutrire; provvedere al cibo di; cibare; (rif. a neonato) allattare: They have a large family to feed, hanno molti figli da nutrire; We feed our cat on tinned food, al nostro gatto diamo da mangiare roba in scatola5 – to feed oneself, mangiare da sé, da solo: The baby can already feed itself, il bambino sa già mangiare da solo7 (fig., anche mecc.) alimentare: The pond is fed by a stream, il laghetto è alimentato da un ruscello; to feed a fire [a machine], alimentare un fuoco [una macchina]; to feed fears, alimentare timori; The news fed his anger, la notizia ha alimentato la sua ira8 – to feed into, inserire in, introdurre in: I fed my card into the slot of the cash dispenser, inserii la carta di credito nella fessura del Bancomat; to feed data into a computer, inserire dati in un computer9 – to feed through, far scorrere ( una corda, ecc.) attraverso (qc.): I fed the string through the hole, feci scorrere lo spago attraverso il foro10 fornire, passare ( informazioni, ecc., a q.): For years he fed them false information, per anni ha passato loro informazioni false; to feed sb. with lies, riempire q. di bugie12 (teatr.) dare (la battuta a q.); suggerire a: I had to keep feeding Tom his lines, dovevo continuamente dare a Tom la battutaB v. i.1 (spec. d'animale) mangiare; nutrirsi; cibarsi; ( di neonato) poppare: Koalas feed on eucalyptus leaves, i koala mangiano (o si nutrono) di foglie d'eucalipto; In winter walruses feed off their own fat, d'inverno i trichechi consumano il grasso accumulato; The colt was feeding off its mother, il puledrino poppava dalla madre3 (mecc.) – to feed into, entrare ( in una fessura, un vano, ecc.); inserirsi: The bullets feed into here, i proiettili si inseriscono qui● (fam. med.) to feed a cold ( and starve a fever), mangiare quando si ha il raffreddore (e digiunare quando si ha la febbre) □ ( slang USA) to feed one's face, mangiare; rimpinzarsi □ to feed the fishes, dar da mangiare ai pesci; (fig. scherz.) finire in pasto ai pesci □ (fig.) to feed on itself, autoalimentarsi.* * *I [fiːd]nome BE1) (meal) (for animal) pasto m.; (for baby) (breast) poppata f.; (bottle) pasto m., biberon m.II 1. [fiːd]to have a good feed — colloq. farsi una bella mangiata
verbo transitivo (pass., p.pass. fed)1) (supply with food) dare da mangiare a, nutrire [person, animal] (on con); nutrire [ plant]; vettovagliare [ army]to feed a baby — (on breast) allattare o dare il latte a un bambino; (on bottle) dare il biberon a un bambino
2) (supply) alimentare [lake, machine]; inserire, mettere monete in [ meter]; fornire [ information] (to a)to feed sth. into — inserire o mettere qcs. in [slot machine, hole, computer]
3) fig. alimentare [ambition, prejudice]5) teatr. dare la battuta, suggerire a [ comedian]2.verbo intransitivo (pass., p.pass. fed)1) (eat) mangiareto feed on — nutrirsi o cibarsi di, mangiare; fig. alimentarsi o nutrirsi di
2) (enter)3.to feed into — [paper, tape] entrare o inserirsi in [ machine]
verbo riflessivo (pass., p.pass. fed)to feed oneself — [child, invalid] mangiare, alimentarsi; (unassisted) mangiare da solo
- feed up -
6 benzin
gasoline, Brit. petrol. - deposu 1. gas tank. 2. filling station, gas station. - göstergesi fuel gauge. - memesi carburetor jet. - motoru gasoline engine. - otomatiği/pompası pump that feeds gasoline into the carburetor.
См. также в других словарях:
pump — I n. 1) to prime; work a pump 2) a gasoline (AE), petrol (BE) pump 3) a centrifugal; heat; stomach; suction; sump pump II v. 1) (d; tr.) to pump into (to pump investments into a company; to pump water into a tank) 2) (D; tr.) to pump out of (to… … Combinatory dictionary
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