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  • 61 Lap

    The hackled piece of flax is held between the fingers and thumb of the left-hand back uppermost, and some of the fibres of the root end are lapped around it with the right-hand, forming a " lap," which keeps the pieces separate when they are built into a bunch, and enables each to be lifted without tossing the others. ———————— A wide sheet of carded or combed fibres wound on a roller ready for the next spinning process.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Lap

  • 62 Ropes

    NAUTICS - Ropes are made of hemp, flax, jute, cotton and numerous other fibres in different countries. The strands are twisted in a different direction from that of the original yarns. See following list. They are often measured by their circumference in inches and length in fathoms (6 feet). Bandura-wel. Pliable cord. Stem Pitcher plant, Ceylon. Cable. Heaviest ropes: over 10-in. circumference. Cable-laid ropes. Three ropes, three strands, twisted into one. Cablet. Ropes less than 10-in. circumference. Cant. The strand of the rope. Dori. Indian-made ropes used for tents. Dumb waiter rope. Untarred ropes of hemp. Fag end. Untwisted end of a rope. Fake. A single coil of rope. Fancy line. Braided cord used for sash windows on ships. Fathom. Standard length of rope measure - one F. is 6 feet. Hawser. Small cable twisted from three small ropes each of 20 strands. Heart. The core strand of a rope. Heart yarn. The centre of a core yarn. Kickling. Old rope round cables to keep them from chafing. Kink. To twist a rope. Knittles. The strands of two ropes twisted together. Lacs. Strong thin cords. Lay. The strand of a rope. Laying. The doubling process in rope making. Lizard. A rope with several rings spliced into it. Marling. Small tarred rope used to tie ropes. Mat. Made of old ropes, interwoven and beaten flat. Netting. Network made of cord. Parcelling. Wrapping of old canvas round ropes for protection. Patent cordage. Ropes or cords spun by natives. Paunch mat. Ships mat made from rope. Plain laid rope. Hemp or manila rope, made of three strands RH twist. Rattine. Small rope, measured by the fathom. Rombowline. Condemned canvas or rope. Rope yarn. Yarn made of RH twist, manila or hemp. Russia rope. Untarred cables and cords of hemp. Seizing. Binding two ropes together with marling. Seizing stuff. Rope of 4 to 12 strands used for seizing. Sel. Strong rope made of hemp fibres in India. Selvagee. Skein of rope with another rope wound around it. Sennit. Braid formed by plaiting strands of rope together. Shroud laid. Rope with core and four strands twisted around it. Shroud rope. Finer quality of rope of three plies; used for rigging. Spun yarn. Rope of long tow hemp, tarred and rubbed. Strap. Rope spliced to form a ring. Suti. Twisted cotton rope in India. Swab. Bunch or mop of soft rope. Tapered rope. Rope with strain bearing part thicker. Water laid. Heavy rope, three strands each with three plies, used for hawsers. White rope. Untarred cordage on ships. Worming. Filling divisions in rope between the lays with spun yarn. Wrack. Sea grass used for coarse ropes.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Ropes

  • 63 clean

    A n to give sth a clean nettoyer qch.
    B adj
    1 ( not dirty) [clothes, dishes, floor, window, habits] propre ; [air, water] pur ; [wound, syringe] désinfecté ; it is not very clean to do ce n'est pas très propre de faire ; she keeps her house clean elle tient sa maison propre ; my hands are clean lit, fig j'ai les mains propres ; clean and tidy impeccable de propreté ; a clean sheet of paper une feuille blanche ; to rinse/wash sth clean rincer/laver qch ; to lick one's plate clean [person] fig ne pas en laisser une miette ; [animal] nettoyer son assiette ; keep your shoes clean ne salis pas tes chaussures ;
    2 ( with no pollution) [bomb, environment, process] propre ;
    3 ( not obscene) [joke] anodin ; [comedian] jamais vulgaire ; keep it ou the conversation clean! restons décents! ;
    4 ( unsullied) [reputation] sans tache ; [record, driving licence] vierge ; I've checked him out, he's clean je me suis renseigné sur lui, il est réglo ;
    5 ( no longer addicted) désintoxiqué ;
    6 ( without illicit property) argot des policiers he's clean gen il n'a rien ; ( no gun) il n'a pas d'arme ; the car/room is clean on n'a rien trouvé dans la voiture/pièce ;
    7 Sport [match] sans débordements ; [tackle] sans faute ; [player] fair-play inv ; [serve, hit, throw] précis ; [jump] sans toucher l'obstacle ; keep it clean ( in match) pas de bavures ;
    8 (elegant, neat) [lines, profile] pur ; [edge] net/nette ; clean break Med fracture f simple ; to make a clean break with the past fig rompre définitivement avec le passé.
    C adv littéralement ; the bullet went clean through his shoulder la balle lui a littéralement traversé l'épaule ; to jump clean over the wall sauter par-dessus le mur sans le toucher ; we're clean out of bread on n'a plus une miette de pain.
    D vtr
    1 nettoyer [room, shoes, gun] ; to clean sth from ou off enlever qch de [hands, wall, car] ; to clean the blackboard effacer le tableau ; to have sth cleaned donner qch à nettoyer ; to clean one's teeth se brosser les dents ;
    2 Culin vider [chicken, fish] ; laver [vegetables].
    E vi
    1 ( do housework) [person] faire le ménage ; I've been cleaning all morning j'ai fait le ménage toute la matinée ;
    2 ( become cleansed) these handles clean easily ces poignées se nettoient facilement.
    F v refl to clean itself [animal] faire sa toilette.
    to clean up one's act [person] devenir plus sérieux ; to come clean about sth avouer qch ; I'll have to come clean il va falloir que je dise la vérité ; to make a clean sweep of sth gagner qch haut la main.
    clean [sth] down, clean down [sth] nettoyer [qch] à fond.
    clean off:
    clean off [stain] partir ; this mark won't clean off cette tache ne part pas ;
    clean [sth] off, clean off [sth] effacer [chalk mark] ; enlever [stain, graffiti] ; to clean sth off effacer qch de [blackboard] ; enlever qch de [car, wall].
    clean out:
    clean [sth] out, clean out [sth] ( cleanse thoroughly) nettoyer [qch] à fond [cupboard, stable, toilets] ; you should clean out your ears tu devrais te déboucher les oreilles ;
    clean [sb/sth] out, clean out [sb/sth] (leave empty, penniless) [thief] mettre [qch] à sac [house] ; [thief, shopping trip, holiday] mettre [qn] à sec [person] ; ‘another game?’-‘no, I'm cleaned out ‘encore une partie?’-‘non, je suis nettoyé ’ ;
    clean [sb] out of délester qn de [jewellery, money].
    clean up:
    1 ( remove dirt) tout nettoyer ;
    2 ( tidy) tout remettre en ordre (after sb derrière qn) ;
    3 ( wash oneself) se débarbouiller ;
    4 ( make profit) [dealer] faire son beurre (on avec) ; [gambler] rafler la mise ;
    clean [sb] up faire la toilette de [patient] ; come and let me clean you up ( to child) viens que je te fasse un brin de toilette ;
    clean [sth] up, clean up [sth]
    1 ( remove dirt) nettoyer [mess, rubbish, area, spillage] ; clean that rubbish up off ou from the floor débarrasse le sol de ces saletés ;
    2 fig ( remove crime) nettoyer [street, city] ; ( make less obscene) expurger [TV programme, comedy act].

    Big English-French dictionary > clean

  • 64 healing

    A n ( of person) guérison f ; (of cut, wound) cicatrisation f, guérison f.
    B adj [power, property] curatif/-ive ; [lotion, ointment] ( for wounds) cicatrisant ; to have a healing effect lit, fig avoir un effet salutaire ; the healing process lit, fig le rétablissement.

    Big English-French dictionary > healing

  • 65 wash

    A n
    1 ¢ ( by person) to give [sth] a wash laver [window, floor] ; nettoyer [object] ; lessiver [paintwork, walls] ; se laver [hands, face] ; to give sb a wash débarbouiller [child] ; you need a good wash tu as besoin d'un bon débarbouillage ; to have a quick wash faire un brin de toilette ; these curtains/your feet need a wash ces rideaux/tes pieds ont besoin d'être lavés ;
    2 ( laundry process) lavage m ; weekly wash lessive f hebdomadaire ; after only two washes après deux lavages seulement ; in the wash ( about to be cleaned) au sale ; ( being cleaned) au lavage ;
    3 ( movement) (from boat, aircraft) remous m ;
    4 ( coating) gen couche f (de peinture) ; ( with whitewash) badigeon m ; Art lavis m ;
    5 Pharm lotion f ;
    6 ( swill) pâtée f.
    B modif frequent wash shampoo shampooing m pour lavages fréquents ; pen and wash drawing dessin m à la plume et au lavis.
    C, US wO ;S vtr
    1 ( clean) laver [person, clothes, floor] ; nettoyer [object, wound] ; lessiver [paintwork, surface] ; to get washed se laver ; to wash everything by hand/in the machine laver tout à la main/à la machine ; to wash one's hands/face se laver les mains/le visage ; to wash sth clean laver [hands, clothes, floor] ; lessiver [paintwork] ; nettoyer [cut] ; to wash the dishes faire la vaisselle ;
    2 ( carry along) [tide, current] entraîner [silt, debris] ; to be washed out to sea être entraîné vers le large ; to be washed along by the tide être entraîné par la marée ; to be washed downstream être entraîné en aval ; to wash sb/sth ashore rejeter qn/qch sur le rivage ; to wash sb/sth overboard emporter qn/qch par-dessus bord ;
    3 littér ( lap against) lécher [rock, shore] ;
    4 ( dig out) creuser ; the water had washed a hole in the bank les inondations avaient creusé un trou dans le talus ;
    5 ( coat) Art laver [drawing] ; gen, Constr passer une légère couche de peinture sur [wall] ; ( with whitewash) badigeonner [wall] ; to wash a wall in pink passer une légère couche de rose sur un mur ; to wash sth with gold dorer qch au trempé [metal, coin] ;
    6 Chem, Miner, Mining ( purify by separation) épurer [qch] par lavage [gas] ; laver [ore].
    D vi
    1 ( clean oneself) [person] se laver, faire sa toilette ; [animal] faire sa toilette ;
    2 ( clean clothes) faire la lessive ; I wash on Mondays je fais la lessive le lundi ; Whizzo washes whiter Advertg Whizzo lave plus blanc ;
    3 ( become clean) se laver ; to wash easily/well se laver facilement/bien ;
    4 ( be believed) his explanation won't wash with the electorate son explication ne satisfera pas l'électorat ; that excuse won't wash with me cette excuse ne me satisfait pas.
    E v refl to wash oneself [person] se laver ; [animal] se nettoyer.
    it will all come out in the wash ( be revealed) tout finira bien par se savoir ; ( be resolved) tout finira par s'arranger ; to wash one's hands of se laver les mains de [matter] ; se désintéresser de [person].
    wash away:
    wash [sth] away, wash away [sth]
    1 ( clean) faire partir [dirt] ; Relig laver [sins] ;
    2 ( carry off) [flood, tide, current] emporter [structure, debris] ; ( by erosion) [sea] éroder [cliff, bank] ;
    wash [sb] away [wave, tide] emporter [person].
    wash down:
    wash [sth] down, wash down [sth]
    1 ( clean) laver [qch] à grande eau [surface, vehicle] ; lessiver [paintwork] ;
    2 ( help to swallow) faire descendre [pill] ; faire passer [unpleasant food] ; arroser [food] ; a good steak washed down with a glass of claret un bon steak arrosé d'un verre de bordeaux.
    wash off:
    wash off [mark] partir au lavage ;
    wash [sth] off, wash off [sth]
    1 ( clean off) faire partir [qch] à l'eau [dirt, mark] ; to wash the mud off the car laver la voiture pour faire partir la boue ; go and wash that dirt off your face débarbouille-toi la figure ;
    2 ( carry off) drainer [topsoil].
    wash out:
    1 ( disappear by cleaning) [stain] partir au lavage ; [colour] passer ; stains that won't wash out Advertg taches rebelles ;
    2 US ( fail to reach standard for) she washed out of college elle s'est fait recaler aux examens d'entrée en fac ;
    wash [sth] out, wash out [sth]
    1 ( remove by cleaning) faire partir [qch] au lavage [stain] ; faire passer [colour] ;
    2 ( rinse inside) rincer [cup, inside] ;
    3 ( clean quickly) passer [qch] à l'eau [dishcloth, brush] ;
    4 ( rain off) ( gén au passif) the first day's play was washed out la première journée a été annulée à cause de la pluie ;
    5 Miner, gen extraire [precious metal] ; ( from mud) débourber [precious metal].
    wash over: [water] balayer [deck] ; everything I say just washes over him tout ce que je dis glisse sur lui ; a great feeling of relief washed over me un immense soulagement m'a envahi.
    wash [sth] through passer [qch] à l'eau.
    wash up:
    wash up
    1 GB ( do dishes) faire la vaisselle ;
    2 US ( clean oneself) [person] faire un brin de toilette ;
    wash [sth] up, wash up [sth]
    1 ( clean) laver [plate] ; nettoyer [pan] ;
    2 ( bring to shore) [tide] rejeter [body, debris].

    Big English-French dictionary > wash

  • 66 Fourdrinier, Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 11 February 1766 London, England
    d. 3 September 1854 Mavesyn Ridware, near Rugeley, Staffordshire, England
    [br]
    English pioneer of the papermaking machine.
    [br]
    Fourdrinier's father was a paper manufacturer and stationer of London, from a family of French Protestant origin. Henry took up the same trade and, with his brother Sealy (d. 1847), devoted many years to developing the papermaking machine. Their first patent was taken out in 1801, but success was still far off. A machine for making paper had been invented a few years previously by Nicolas Robert at the Didot's mill at Essonnes, south of Paris. Robert quarrelled with the Didots, who then contacted their brother-in-law in England, John Gamble, in an attempt to raise capital for a larger machine. Gamble and the Fourdriniers called in the engineer Bryan Donkin, and between them they patented a much improved machine in 1807. In the new machine, the paper pulp flowed on to a moving continuous woven wire screen and was then squeezed between rollers to remove much of the water. The paper thus formed was transferred to a felt blanket and passed through a second press to remove more water, before being wound while still wet on to a drum. For the first time, a continuous sheet of paper could be made. Other inventors soon made further improvements: in 1817 John Dickinson obtained a patent for sizing baths to improve the surface of the paper; while in 1820 Thomas Crompton patented a steam-heated drum round which the paper was passed to speed up the drying process. The development cost of £60,000 bankrupted the brothers. Although Parliament extended the patent for fourteen years, and the machine was widely adopted, they never reaped much profit from it. Tsar Alexander of Russia became interested in the papermaking machine while on a visit to England in 1814 and promised Henry Fourdrinier £700 per year for ten years for super-intending the erection of two machines in Russia; Henry carried out the work, but he received no payment. At the age of 72 he travelled to St Petersburg to seek recompense from the Tsar's successor Nicholas I, but to no avail. Eventually, on a motion in the House of Commons, the British Government awarded Fourdrinier a payment of £7,000. The paper trade, sensing the inadequacy of this sum, augmented it with a further sum which they subscribed so that an annuity could be purchased for Henry, then the only surviving brother, and his two daughters, to enable them to live in modest comfort. From its invention in ancient China (see Cai Lun), its appearance in the Middle Ages in Europe and through the first three and a half centuries of printing, every sheet of paper had to made by hand. The daily output of a hand-made paper mill was only 60–100 lb (27–45 kg), whereas the new machine increased that tenfold. Even higher speeds were achieved, with corresponding reductions in cost; the old mills could not possibly have kept pace with the new mechanical printing presses. The Fourdrinier machine was thus an essential element in the technological developments that brought about the revolution in the production of reading matter of all kinds during the nineteenth century. The high-speed, giant paper-making machines of the late twentieth century work on the same principle as the Fourdrinier of 1807.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    R.H.Clapperton, 1967, The Paper-making Machine, Oxford: Pergamon Press. D.Hunter, 1947, Papermaking. The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft, London.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Fourdrinier, Henry

  • 67 Hargreaves, James

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    b. c.1720–1 Oswaldtwistle, near Blackburn, England
    d. April 1778 Nottingham, England
    [br]
    English inventor of the first successful machine to spin more than a couple of yarns of cotton or wool at once.
    [br]
    James Hargreaves was first a carpenter and then a hand-loom weaver at Stanhill, Blackburn, probably making Blackburn Checks or Greys from linen warps and cotton weft. An invention ascribed to him doubled production in the preparatory carding process before spinning. Two or three cards were nailed to the same stock and the upper one was suspended from the ceiling by a cord and counterweight. Around 1762 Robert Peel (1750–1830) sought his assistance in constructing a carding engine with cylinders that may have originated with Daniel Bourn, but this was not successful. In 1764, inspired by seeing a spinning wheel that continued to revolve after it had been knocked over accidentally, Hargreaves invented his spinning jenny. The first jennies had horizontal wheels and could spin eight threads at once. To spin on this machine required a great deal of skill. A length of roving was passed through the clamp or clove. The left hand was used to close this and draw the roving away from the spindles which were rotated by the spinner turning the horizontal wheel with the right hand. The spindles twisted the fibres as they were being drawn out. At the end of the draw, the spindles continued to be rotated until sufficient twist had been put into the fibres to make the finished yarn. This was backed off from the tips of the spindles by reversing them and then, with the spindles turning in the spinning direction once more, the yarn was wound on by the right hand rotating the spindles, the left hand pushing the clove back towards them and one foot operating a pedal which guided the yarn onto the spindles by a faller wire. A piecer was needed to rejoin the yarns when they broke. At first Hargreaves's jenny was worked only by his family, but then he sold two or three of them, possibly to Peel. In 1768, local opposition and a riot in which his house was gutted forced him to flee to Nottingham. He entered into partnership there with Thomas James and established a cotton mill. In 1770 he followed Arkwright's example and sought to patent his machine and brought an action for infringement against some Lancashire manufacturers, who offered £3,000 in settlement. Hargreaves held out for £4,000, but he was unable to enforce his patent because he had sold jennies before leaving Lancashire. Arkwright's "water twist" was more suitable for the Nottingham hosiery industry trade than jenny yarn and in 1777 Hargreaves replaced his own machines with Arkwright's. When he died the following year, he is said to have left property valued at £7,000 and his widow received £400 for her share in the business. Once the jenny had been made public, it was quickly improved by other inventors and the number of spindles per machine increased. In 1784, there were reputed to be 20,000 jennies of 80 spindles each at work. The jenny greatly eased the shortage of cotton weft for weavers.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1770, British patent no. 962 (spinning jenny).
    Further Reading
    C.Aspin and S.D.Chapman, 1964, James Hargreaves and the Spinning Jenny, Helmshore Local History Society (the fullest account of Hargreaves's life and inventions).
    For descriptions of his invention, see W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London; R.L. Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester; and W.A.Hunter, 1951–3, "James Hargreaves and the invention of the spinning jenny", Transactions of
    the Newcomen Society 28.
    A.P.Wadsworth and J. de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, Manchester (a good background to the whole of this period).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Hargreaves, James

  • 68 Johnson, Percival Norton

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 29 September 1792 London, England
    d. 1 June 1866 Stoke Fleming, Devon, England
    [br]
    English chemist, assayer, mining engineer and founder of the firm Johnson Matthey.
    [br]
    He was the son of John Johnson, then sole Commercial Assayer in London, from whom he inherited his aptitude for chemistry and metallurgy. At the age of 14 he was apprenticed to his father by the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths. Ore samples then being analysed in Johnson's office introduced him to the new metal platinum, and resulted in a paper to Philosophical Magazine in 1812. Johnson established himself as a "practical mineralogist" in Maiden Lane, London, in 1818 and in Hatton Garden after 1822. He was greatly assisted by a fellow metallurgist, Thomas Cock (1787–1842), who developed the platinum fabrication and pigment sides of die business. In 1827 Johnson was consulted by the Russian government about the exploitation of the rich platinum deposits that had been discovered in the Urals in 1819. Between 1829 and 1832 Johnson became the first in England to manufacture nickel, extracted from nickel-bearing material imported from Germany at his plant at Bow Common on the Regent's Canal. In 1832 he began to réfine gold imported from the Imperial Brazilian Association by a process which separated without loss the metals silver, platinum, palladium, rhodium and iridium. This profitable activity continued until the Brazilian company was wound up in 1852. Since 1824, Johnson had been named "assay master" by a number of mining companies. From 1843 until the mid-1850s he had a considerable mining interest in the West Country. Meanwhile, the Hatton Garden establishment continued to prosper. In 1839 he was joined by George Matthey, who particularly fostered the Russian platinum business, and in 1851 he was taken unto partnership and the firm became the celebrated Johnson Matthey. In the following year the firm was officially recognized as one of the four Assayers to the Bank of England appointed to handle the flood of gold dust then arriving in England from the Australian gold fields. Soon after, however, ill health compelled him to retire to his Devon country house.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1846.
    Bibliography
    1812, "Experiments which prove platina, when combined with gold and silver, to be soluble in nitric acid", Philosophical Magazine (1st series) 40(171):3–4.
    Further Reading
    D.McDonald, 1951, Percival Norton Johnson, London: Johnson Matthey (includes lists of his publications and his honours and awards).
    ——1964, The Johnsons of Morden Lane, London: Martins.
    ——1960, A History of Platinum, London: Johnson Matthey.
    ASD

    Biographical history of technology > Johnson, Percival Norton

  • 69 Martin, C.

    SUBJECT AREA: Textiles
    [br]
    fl. c. 1861 Belgium
    [br]
    Belgian maker of one of the most popular types of tape condensers.
    [br]
    The object of condensing, the last process in carding, is to obtain a roving, or slightly twisted yarn which is the same thickness and weight throughout its length. In a tape condenser, the web of fibres from the last swift of the carder is divided into the requisite number of ribbons, which are supported on tapes before being rubbed into round rovings and wound onto bobbins ready for spinning.
    It was Martin who introduced in 1861 what became the most common type of condenser on the European continent. It divided the web by a combined tearing and cutting action between leather tapes and a pair of rigid rollers. As its division of the web was more minute than with earlier machines, its product was more suitable for fine yarns, so it was accepted rapidly in Belgium and France but much more slowly in England and the United States.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. V, Oxford: Clarendon Press (includes an account of this invention).
    L.J.Mills (ed.), 1928, The Textile Educator, Vol. III, London; and W.E.Morton, 1937, An Introduction to the Study of Spinning, London (both provide an explanation of the condenser system).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Martin, C.

  • 70 Skinner, Halcyon

    [br]
    b. 6 March 1824 Mantua, Ohio, USA
    d. 28 November 1900 USA
    [br]
    American inventor of a machine for making Royal Axminster and other carpets.
    [br]
    Halcyon was the son of Joseph and Susan Skinner. When he was 8 years old, his parents moved to Stockbridge in Massachusetts, where he obtained education locally and worked on farms. In 1838 his father moved to West Farms, New York, where Halcyon helped his father make violins and guitars for seven years. He then worked as a general carpenter for eight years until he was hired in 1849 by Alexander Smith, a carpet manufacturer. Skinner designed and constructed a hand loom that could weave figured instead of striped carpets, and by 1851 Smith had one hundred of these at work. Skinner was retained by Smith for forty years as a mechanical expert and adviser.
    Weaving carpets by power started in the 1850s on enormous and complex machines. Axminster carpets had traditionally been produced in a similar way to those made by hand in Persia, with the tufts of woollen yarn being knotted around vertical warp threads. To mechanize this process proved very difficult, but Skinner patented a loom in 1856 to weave Axminster carpets although, it was not working successfully until 1860. Then in 1864 he developed a loom for weaving ingrain carpets, and c. 1870 he altered some imported English looms for weaving tapestry carpets to double their output.
    His most important invention was conceived in 1876 and patented on 16 January 1877. This was the Moquette or Royal Axminster loom, which marked yet another important step forward and enabled the use of an unlimited number of colours in carpet designs. This type of loom became known as the Spool Axminster because of the endless chain of spools carrying lengths of coloured yarns, wound in a predetermined order, from which short pieces could be cut and inserted as the tufts. It put Smith's company, Alexander Smith \& Sons, Yonkers, New York, in the lead among American carpet manufacturers. This type of loom was introduced to Britain in 1878 by Tomkinson \& Adam and spread rapidly. Skinner virtually retired in 1889 but continued to live in Yonkers.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Biography, American Machinist 23.
    Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. XVII.
    G.Robinson, 1966, Carpets, London (for the history and techniques of carpet weaving).
    A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London (includes a section on pile weaving which covers some types of carpets).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Skinner, Halcyon

  • 71 işlemek

    "1. /ı/ to process, treat, work up. 2. /ı/ to do fine work on, embroider. 3. /a/ to penetrate; to soak into. 4. to function, operate, perform, do work. 5. (for a business) to be doing a good business, be doing well. 6. (for a road) to carry traffic. 7. (for a vehicle, ship) to ply, make regular trips. 8. /ı/ to cultivate, work (land). 9. /ı/ to treat, discuss (a subject). 10. (for a law) to be effective, be enforced. 11. (for a boil, sore, or wound) to fester. 12. slang to commit theft; /ı/ to steal. 13. /ı/ slang to investigate, look into. 14. slang to pull the wool over someone´s eyes (as a joke). İşleyen demir pas tutmaz/paslanmaz/ışıldar. proverb An active, industrious person is a healthy, productive person."

    Saja Türkçe - İngilizce Sözlük > işlemek

  • 72 ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

    1. Durchführung mit Papierisolation verklebt mit Harz

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, склеенной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-bonded paper bushing
    RBP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from resin-coated paper
    NOTE 1 During the winding process, each paper layer is bonded to the previous layer by its resin coating and the bonding achieved by curing the resin.
    NOTE 2 A resin-bonded paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier enduit de résine
    RBP (resin-bonded paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier enduit de résine
    NOTE 1 Lors de l'enroulement, chaque couche de papier est liée à la précédente par l'enduit de résine et la cohésion obtenue par le durcissement de la résine.
    NOTE 2 Une traversée en papier enduit de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Русско-немецкий словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

  • 73 RBP

    1. ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, склеенной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-bonded paper bushing
    RBP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from resin-coated paper
    NOTE 1 During the winding process, each paper layer is bonded to the previous layer by its resin coating and the bonding achieved by curing the resin.
    NOTE 2 A resin-bonded paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier enduit de résine
    RBP (resin-bonded paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier enduit de résine
    NOTE 1 Lors de l'enroulement, chaque couche de papier est liée à la précédente par l'enduit de résine et la cohésion obtenue par le durcissement de la résine.
    NOTE 2 Une traversée en papier enduit de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > RBP

  • 74 traversée en papier enduit de résine

    1. ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, склеенной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-bonded paper bushing
    RBP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from resin-coated paper
    NOTE 1 During the winding process, each paper layer is bonded to the previous layer by its resin coating and the bonding achieved by curing the resin.
    NOTE 2 A resin-bonded paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier enduit de résine
    RBP (resin-bonded paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier enduit de résine
    NOTE 1 Lors de l'enroulement, chaque couche de papier est liée à la précédente par l'enduit de résine et la cohésion obtenue par le durcissement de la résine.
    NOTE 2 Une traversée en papier enduit de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > traversée en papier enduit de résine

  • 75 Durchführung mit Papierisolation verklebt mit Harz

    1. ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, склеенной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-bonded paper bushing
    RBP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from resin-coated paper
    NOTE 1 During the winding process, each paper layer is bonded to the previous layer by its resin coating and the bonding achieved by curing the resin.
    NOTE 2 A resin-bonded paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier enduit de résine
    RBP (resin-bonded paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier enduit de résine
    NOTE 1 Lors de l'enroulement, chaque couche de papier est liée à la précédente par l'enduit de résine et la cohésion obtenue par le durcissement de la résine.
    NOTE 2 Une traversée en papier enduit de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Немецко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > Durchführung mit Papierisolation verklebt mit Harz

  • 76 ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

    1. resin bonded paper bushing
    2. RBP

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, склеенной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-bonded paper bushing
    RBP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from resin-coated paper
    NOTE 1 During the winding process, each paper layer is bonded to the previous layer by its resin coating and the bonding achieved by curing the resin.
    NOTE 2 A resin-bonded paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier enduit de résine
    RBP (resin-bonded paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier enduit de résine
    NOTE 1 Lors de l'enroulement, chaque couche de papier est liée à la précédente par l'enduit de résine et la cohésion obtenue par le durcissement de la résine.
    NOTE 2 Une traversée en papier enduit de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

  • 77 ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

    1. traversée en papier enduit de résine
    2. RBP

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, склеенной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-bonded paper bushing
    RBP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from resin-coated paper
    NOTE 1 During the winding process, each paper layer is bonded to the previous layer by its resin coating and the bonding achieved by curing the resin.
    NOTE 2 A resin-bonded paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier enduit de résine
    RBP (resin-bonded paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier enduit de résine
    NOTE 1 Lors de l'enroulement, chaque couche de papier est liée à la précédente par l'enduit de résine et la cohésion obtenue par le durcissement de la résine.
    NOTE 2 Une traversée en papier enduit de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Русско-французский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

  • 78 RIP

    1. РИП
    2. растровый процессор
    3. процессор растровых изображений
    4. процессор для обработки растровых изображений
    5. процесс извлечения урана из пульпы с помощью ионообменной смолы
    6. протокол обмена маршрутной информацией
    7. протокол маршрутной информации
    8. протокол информации о маршрутизации
    9. приведённое внутреннее давление
    10. план проведения приёмочного контроля
    11. внутриреакторный насос
    12. ввод с бумажной изоляцией, пропитанной смолой

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, пропитанной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, пропитанной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-impregnated paper bushing
    RIP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from untreated paper and subsequently impregnated with a curable resin
    NOTE A resin-impregnated paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier imprégné de résine
    RIP (resin-impregnated paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier non traité et ensuite imprégné de résine durcissable
    NOTE Une traversée en papier imprégné de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

     

    внутриреакторный насос
    внутрикорпусной насос ядерного реактора


    [А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]

    Тематики

    Синонимы

    EN

     

    план проведения приёмочного контроля

    [А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    приведённое внутреннее давление

    [А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    протокол информации о маршрутизации
    Протокол из класса IGP (Interior Gateway Protocol, протокол внешнего шлюза), предназначенного для обмена информацией о маршрутизации в пределах автономной системы. Типичными примерами используемых в Интернете протоколов типа IGP являются IGRP, OSPF и RIP. В частности, протокол RIP использует в качестве метрики маршрутизации счетчик проходимых пакетом сегментов (hop counter).
    [ http://www.iks-media.ru/glossary/index.html?glossid=2400324]

    Тематики

    • электросвязь, основные понятия

    EN

     

    протокол маршрутной информации
    Самый простой протокол динамической внутренней маршрутизации (IGP) для локальных сетей.
    Первая версия RIP, описанная в RFC 1058, не поддерживает маску сети в маршрутах и применяет стандартную маску для нужного адресного диапазона (класса сети). RIP v2 избавлен от этого недостатка и наделён дополнительными возможностями, такими как простейшая аутентификация. RIP v1 использует широковещательные рассылки, а v2 — многоадресные; оба работают через порт 520/udp, но несовместимы между собой.
    [ http://www.morepc.ru/dict/]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    протокол обмена маршрутной информацией
    (МСЭ-Т Н.610).
    [ http://www.iks-media.ru/glossary/index.html?glossid=2400324]

    Тематики

    • электросвязь, основные понятия

    EN

     

    процесс извлечения урана из пульпы с помощью ионообменной смолы

    [А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    процессор для обработки растровых изображений

    [Е.С.Алексеев, А.А.Мячев. Англо-русский толковый словарь по системотехнике ЭВМ. Москва 1993]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    процессор растровых изображений
    Преобразует изображение, хранимое в виде битовой карты, в видеоизображение для последующего отображения на экране дисплея или растрового графопостроителя.
    [Л.М. Невдяев. Телекоммуникационные технологии. Англо-русский толковый словарь-справочник. Под редакцией Ю.М. Горностаева. Москва, 2002]

    Тематики

    • электросвязь, основные понятия

    EN

     

    РИП
    (от англ. Raster Image Processor)
    РИП - часть печатающих устройств, отвечающее за преобразование изображений в пригодный для печати формат. Задача RIP преобразовать входное изображение, описанное, например, языком PostScript, в формат печатающего устройства, так называемый растр. Сам процесс называется растрирование. При этом может производится масштабирование до нужного разрешение, сглаживание и т.д. Изначально RIP представлял собой аппаратное устройство, которое получало описание печатаемой страницы через какой-нибудь интерфейс (например, RS232 и генерировала изображение необходимого формата) и передавала это изображение непосредственно на печатное устройство, например, на фотонабор. RIP может быть реализован как часть операционной системы, или аппаратно, например, в виде микропрограммы, выполняемый процессором принтера. Примерами программных RIP'ов являются, например, Ghostscript и GhostPCL. Примером аппартного RIP может служить любой PostScript принтер, например Canon iRC 4080i.
    [ http://ofyug.ru/useful/abc/757]

    Тематики

    EN

     

    растровый процессор
    1. Программное или аппаратное средство, предназначенное для преобразования векторной графики и текста в растровое изображение, пригодное для печати на принтере или вывода на фото-пленки. [2]
    2. Устройство цифровой печати, выполняющее функции интерпретации программного языка описания страниц и формирования матриц растрового изображения в терминах точек, засвечиваемых лазером (растеризация).
    [ http://www.morepc.ru/dict/]

    Тематики

    EN

    Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > RIP

  • 79 RBP

    1. защита здания [помещения] ядерного реактора
    2. ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, склеенной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-bonded paper bushing
    RBP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from resin-coated paper
    NOTE 1 During the winding process, each paper layer is bonded to the previous layer by its resin coating and the bonding achieved by curing the resin.
    NOTE 2 A resin-bonded paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier enduit de résine
    RBP (resin-bonded paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier enduit de résine
    NOTE 1 Lors de l'enroulement, chaque couche de papier est liée à la précédente par l'enduit de résine et la cohésion obtenue par le durcissement de la résine.
    NOTE 2 Une traversée en papier enduit de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

     

    защита здания [помещения] ядерного реактора

    [А.С.Гольдберг. Англо-русский энергетический словарь. 2006 г.]

    Тематики

    EN

    Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > RBP

  • 80 resin bonded paper bushing

    1. ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой

     

    ввод с бумажной изоляцией, склеенной смолой
    Ввод, в котором основная изоляция состоит из бумаги, склеенной смолой.
    [ ГОСТ 27744-88]

    EN

    resin-bonded paper bushing
    RBP

    bushing in which the major insulation consists of a core wound from resin-coated paper
    NOTE 1 During the winding process, each paper layer is bonded to the previous layer by its resin coating and the bonding achieved by curing the resin.
    NOTE 2 A resin-bonded paper bushing can be provided with an insulating envelope, in which case the intervening space can be filled with an insulating liquid or another insulating medium.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    FR

    traversée en papier enduit de résine
    RBP (resin-bonded paper)

    traversée dont l'isolation principale est assurée par un corps enroulé en papier enduit de résine
    NOTE 1 Lors de l'enroulement, chaque couche de papier est liée à la précédente par l'enduit de résine et la cohésion obtenue par le durcissement de la résine.
    NOTE 2 Une traversée en papier enduit de résine peut comporter une enveloppe isolante. Dans ce cas, l'espace intermédiaire peut être rempli d'un isolant liquide ou d'un autre milieu isolant.
    [IEC 60137, ed. 6.0 (2008-07)]

    Тематики

    EN

    DE

    FR

    Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > resin bonded paper bushing

См. также в других словарях:

  • Wound, ostomy, and continence nursing — Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nursing is a nursing specialty involved with the treatment of patients with acute and chronic wounds with evidence based practice as well as ostomy patients, who have had some kind of bowel or bladder diversion. The… …   Wikipedia

  • wound — n Wound, trauma, traumatism, lesion, bruise, contusion are comparable when they mean an injury to one of the organs or parts of the body. Wound generally denotes an injury that is inflicted by a hard or sharp instrument (as a knife, a bullet, or… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • wound-up — The process by which a company dies. Under Part IV of the Insolvency Act 1986, there are three separate procedures a members voluntary winding up where a company is solvent, a creditors voluntary winding up for insolvent companies and a… …   Law dictionary

  • Wound healing — Hand abrasion …   Wikipedia

  • wound — wound1 woundedly, adv. woundingly, adv. /woohnd/; Older Use and Literary /wownd/, n. 1. an injury, usually involving division of tissue or rupture of the integument or mucous membrane, due to external violence or some mechanical agency rather… …   Universalium

  • Wound — This article is about wounds in humans and animals. For wounds in plants, see Plant pathology. For other uses, see Wound (disambiguation). Wound Classification and external resources Wounded man …   Wikipedia

  • process — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ gradual, lengthy, long, slow, time consuming ▪ constant, continuous, ongoing ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

  • History of wound care — The history of wound care spans from prehistory to modern medicine. As wounds naturally heal by themselves, regardless of whether recovery from the scar or recovery from lost body tissue was a possibility, hunter gatherers would have noticed… …   Wikipedia

  • Nurse With Wound — ist eine 1978 vom britischen Musiker Steven Stapleton gegründete Avantgarde Band. Steven Stapleton, der zuvor als Roadie bei verschiedenen Krautrock Bands, unter anderem Guru Guru und Kraan, arbeitete, gründete Nurse With Wound, als er ein… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Nurse with Wound — ist eine 1978 vom britischen Musiker Steven Stapleton gegründete Avantgarde Band. Steven Stapleton, der zuvor als Roadie bei verschiedenen Krautrock Bands, unter anderem Guru Guru und Kraan, arbeitete, gründete Nurse with Wound, als er ein… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Death wound — Death Death (d[e^]th), n. [OE. deth, dea[eth], AS. de[ a][eth]; akin to OS. d[=o][eth], D. dood, G. tod, Icel. dau[eth]i, Sw. & Dan. d[ o]d, Goth. dau[thorn]us; from a verb meaning to die. See {Die}, v. i., and cf. {Dead}.] 1. The cessation of… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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