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1 tissu
tissu [tisy]1. masculine nouna. ( = étoffe) materialb. ( = cellules) tissue• tissu sanguin/osseux blood/bone tissuec. (Sociology) le tissu social/urbain the social/urban fabric2. compounds► tissu-éponge masculine noun (plural tissus-éponge) towelling uncount (Brit) or toweling uncount (US)* * *tisynom masculin1) ( étoffe) material, fabric2) ( cellules)3) ( ensemble) ( d'intrigues) web; ( de mensonges) pack, tissue; (de calomnies, d'improbabilités, inepties) string; ( de contradictions) mass* * *tisy nm
I
1) (= matériau) fabric, cloth no pl2) ANATOMIE, BIOLOGIE tissue3) fig (social, industriel) fabric
II tissu, -e(= tissé)* * *tissu nm1 ( étoffe) material, fabric; acheter du tissu to buy some material ou fabric; un joli tissu imprimé a pretty printed material ou fabric; les tissus synthétiques synthetic materials ou fabrics; tissu de bonne qualité good quality material ou fabric ou cloth; revêtement mural/ceinture en tissu fabric wall-covering/belt; c'est du tissu? is it fabric?;2 Anat, Physiol, Bot tissue; le tissu osseux/organique/nerveux/musculaire/cellulaire bone/organic/nervous/muscle/cellular tissue;3 ( ensemble) (d'intrigues, de contradictions) web; (de calomnies, d'improbabilités, inepties) string; un tissu de mensonges a pack ou web ou tissue of lies; un tissu d'insinuations calomnieuses a web of slanderous insinuation ; tissu urbain/social Sociol urban/social fabric; tissu industriel industrial base.tissu d'ameublement upholstery fabric ou material.[tisy] nom masculindu tissu d'ameublement furnishing fabric ou material2. (figuré & soutenu) [enchevêtrement]————————de tissu locution adjectivale,en tissu locution adjectivale -
2 poncho
(Sp. model spelled same [ponfo], of uncertain origin, perhaps from the Spanish adjective poncho, a variant of pocho 'discolored')A cloak consisting of a blanket (or more recently a square piece of oiled cloth, rubber, or nylon) with a hole in the middle for the head to fit through. The DRAE describes it as a square or rectangular blanket made from sheep wool, alpaca, vicuña, or any other woven material, with an opening in the center for the head. The garment covers the shoulders and generally hangs to the waist or lower.Alternate form: ponchar. -
3 Epingle Brocade
A dress cloth made from white silk warp and dyed wool weft. The cloth has a jacquard figure made by floating the white warp over the coloured weft. The ground has fine cross-over ribs and, in addition, thick fancy cords are woven transversely, with the white warp predominantly covering groups of picks, hut allowing the colour to show through at selected points in decorative fashion. -
4 Etamines
The common type is a gauze or network cloth, loosely woven from coarse yarns, cotton and wool, cotton and linen, all linen, silk and wool, and many other mixtures. Used as an outer-garment over a shirt of some other colour or material. The term is the French name for bunting, or sifting cloth, and was originally applied to cloths used for sifting purposes. The real fabric is a voile type, but more wiry, and although many imitations are obtainable the real fabric is made from worsted yarns all through with end and end right and reverse twist warp yarns. A good quality is made 54-in. wide, 88 ends and 38 picks per inch, 30's T., 24's W., worsted yarns. Qualities vary greatly. -
5 weave
I 1. noun(Textiles) Bindung, die2. transitive verb,1) (intertwine) weben [[Baum]wolle, Garn, Fäden]weave flowers into wreaths — aus Blumen Kränze flechten
2) (make by weaving) weben [Textilien]; flechten [Girlande, Korb, Kranz]3) (fig.) einflechten [Nebenhandlung, Thema usw.] ( into in + Akk.)4) (fig.): (contrive) ausspinnen [Geschichte]3. intransitive verb,wove, woven (make fabric by weaving) webenII intransitive verb1) (move repeatedly from side to side) torkeln2) (take devious course) sich schlängeln* * *[wi:v]past tense - wove; verb1) (to make by crossing strands in a pattern: to weave cloth.) weben2) (to tell (an interesting story).) ersinnen3) ((past tense, past participle weaved) to move backwards and forwards or from side to side: The cyclist weaved in and out of the traffic.) sich schlängeln•- academic.ru/81545/weaver">weaver* * *[wi:v]I. vt1. (of cloth)▪ to \weave sth etw webenthis type of wool is woven into fabric diese Art Wolle wird zu Stoff verwoben▪ to \weave sth etw flechtenthe biography is woven from the many accounts which exist of things she did die Biografie setzt sich aus den vielen bereits existierenden Berichten über Dinge, die sie getan hat, zusammen▪ to \weave sth together etw zusammenflechten [o ineinanderflechten]to \weave a basket [from rushes] [aus Binsen] einen Korb flechtento \weave one's way through sth sich dat einen Weg durch etw akk bahnen; ( fig) sich dat durch etw akk durchschlängeln [o durchmogelnII. vi1. (produce cloth) weben3.III. n Webart fbasket \weave Leinenbindung fto have loose/tight \weave locker/fest gewebt seinstriped \weave Streifenmuster nt* * *[wiːv] vb: pret wove, ptp woven1. n(= patterns of threads) Webart f; (= loosely/tightly etc woven fabric) Gewebe ntyou need a tighter weave for a skirt — für einen Rock braucht man ein festeres Gewebe
2. vthe wove the threads together — er verwob die Fäden miteinander
2) (fig) plot, story ersinnen, erfinden; (= add into story etc) details, episode einflechten (into in +acc)he wove a romantic tale (a)round his experiences abroad — er spann seine Erlebnisse im Ausland zu einer romantischen Geschichte aus
3) pret also weaved(= wind)
to weave one's way through the traffic/to the front — sich durch den Verkehr fädeln or schlängeln/nach vorne (durch)schlängeln3. vi3) (inf)to get weaving — sich ranhalten (inf)
to get weaving with sth — sich hinter etw (acc) klemmen (inf)
* * *weave [wiːv]A v/t prät wove [wəʊv], ( besonders 7 und 10) weaved, pperf woven [ˈwəʊvən], ( besonders 7 und 10) weaved1. einen Teppich etc weben3. einen Korb, Kranz etc flechten:weave together zusammenflechten, -weben6. fig ersinnen:B v/i1. weben (auch Spinne)2. flechten3. a) im Zickzack laufenb) hin und her pendeln (auch Boxer)d) sich wiegen:C s1. Gewebe n2. Webart f* * *I 1. noun(Textiles) Bindung, die2. transitive verb,1) (intertwine) weben [[Baum]wolle, Garn, Fäden]2) (make by weaving) weben [Textilien]; flechten [Girlande, Korb, Kranz]3) (fig.) einflechten [Nebenhandlung, Thema usw.] ( into in + Akk.)4) (fig.): (contrive) ausspinnen [Geschichte]3. intransitive verb,wove, woven (make fabric by weaving) webenII intransitive verb1) (move repeatedly from side to side) torkeln2) (take devious course) sich schlängeln* * *(into) v.einflechten (in) v.flechten v.(§ p.,pp.: flocht, geflochten)zusammen weben v.zusammenweben (alt.Rechtschreibung) v. v.(§ p.,p.p.: wove, woven)or: weaved•) = erfinden v.ersinnen v.verflechten v.weben v.wirken v. n.Gewebe - n.Webart -en f. -
6 dicht
I Adj.1. dense, thick; Verkehr: auch heavy; Hecke: auch close-set; Gewebe: dense, closely-woven; (gedrängt) tightly packed2. (undurchlässig); für Wasser: watertight, waterproof; für Luft: airtight; Vorhang: thick, heavy; nicht mehr dicht sein Gefäß etc.: leak, be leaky; dicht machen Gefäß: seal, stop the leak(s), make watertight; Dach: seal (the cracks); Fenster: seal; er ist nicht ganz dicht umg., fig. he’s got a screw loose3. fig. Stil: compact, dense; Atmosphäre: dense; Programm: tightly-packed, full; in dichter Folge in quick succession4. umg. (geschlossen, zu) closed, shut; Grenze: blocked; Eugen war gestern wieder total dicht umg. (betrunken) Eugen was pissed (Am. plastered) again last nightII Adv.1. densely, thickly; dicht behaart (very) hairy, hirsute geh.; ein dicht bepflanztes Beet a closely planted (flower)bed; dicht besiedelt oder bevölkert densely populated; dicht gedrängt tightly packed; eine dicht gepflanzte Hecke a close-set hedge; der Himmel ist dicht mit Wolken verhangen oder dicht bewölkt there is thick cloud cover2. (nahe) closely; dicht an oder bei close to; dicht an-, bei- oder nebeneinander close together; dicht daneben stehen: close by, right next to; schießen: right by; dicht gefolgt von closely followed by; dicht hinter jemandem her sein be hot on s.o.’s heels; auffahren 23. fig.: dicht bevorstehen be imminent; ich war dicht daran oder davor aufzugeben I was just about to give up ( oder on the verge of giving up); das Geschäft steht dicht vor dem Abschluss the deal is almost completed4. dicht schließen shut tight(ly); Tür: shut tight ( oder properly); nicht mehr dicht halten not close ( oder shut) properly any more* * *tight; compact; thick; serried; turbid; thickset; leakproof; concentrated; dense* * *dịcht [dɪçt]1. adj1) Gefieder, Haar, Hecke thick; Laub, Nebel thick, dense; Wald, (Menschen)menge, Gewühl dense; Verkehr heavy, dense; Gewebe close; Stoff closely-woven; (fig = konzentriert) Stil dense; Szene full, compactin dichter Folge — in rapid or quick succession
2) (= undurchlässig) Vorhänge thick, heavy; Rollladen heavy; (= wasserdicht) watertight; (= luftdicht) airtightdicht machen — to seal, to make watertight/airtight; Fenster to seal → auch dichtmachen
er ist nicht ganz dicht (inf) — he's crackers (Brit inf) or nuts (inf)
3) (inf = zu) shut, closed2. adv1) (= nahe) closelydicht halten — to be watertight
dicht bewachsen Baumstämme — grown over with moss and lichen; Ufer thickly covered with vegetation; Landstrich rich in vegetation
dicht belaubt — thick with leaves, densely foliated
dicht gedrängt — closely packed; Programm packed
4)dicht an/bei — close todicht dahinter/darüber/davor — right behind/above/in front
dicht hinter jdm her sein — to be right or hard or close behind sb
* * *1) (very closely together: The crowd was densely packed.) densely2) (thick and close: We made our way through dense forest; The fog was so dense that we could not see anything.) dense3) (made of many single units placed very close together; dense: a thick forest; thick hair.) thick4) (difficult to see through: thick fog.) thick5) (not allowing much time: We hope to finish this next week but the schedule's a bit tight.) tight6) ((also tightly) closely; with no extra room or space: The bags were packed tight / tightly packed.) tight* * *[ˈdɪçt]I. adjeine \dichte Atmosphäre PHYS a dense atmosphere\dichter Baumwollstoff closely woven cotton fabricin \dichter Folge in quick [or rapid] successionein \dichtes Gedränge a tight [or dense] crowd\dichtes Gewebe tight [or close] weave\dichtes Haar thick hair\dichter Verkehr heavy [or dense] trafficim \dichten Verkehr festsitzen to be stuck in a traffic jama \dichte Atmosphäre/Stimmung/Szene a dense atmosphere/mood/sceneein \dichter Dialog a dense dialogue\dichte Lyrik/Prosa dense poetry/proseein \dichtes soziales Netz a tight [or compact] social networkein \dichtes Programm a full programme [or AM program3. (undurchsichtig) thick, dense\dichter Nebel thick [or dense] fog\dichter Schneefall heavy snowfall\dichtes Schweigen (fig liter) complete silence4. (undurchlässig) tight; Vorhänge thick, heavy; Rollladen heavy; (luftdicht) airtight; (wasserdicht) watertight; (wasserabweisend) waterproofetw \dicht machen (versiegeln) to seal sth; (luftdicht machen) to make sth airtight; (wasserabweisend machen) to waterproof sth; (wasserdicht machen) to make sth watertightein Dach \dicht machen to repair [or seal] a leaking roofein Fenster \dicht machen to repair [or seal] a windowFugen \dicht machen to seal joints7.II. advwir standen \dicht gedrängt im Bus we stood squeezed together in the bus\dicht an [o bei] \dicht close together\dicht an [o bei] \dicht stehen to be [or stand] close together\dicht bebaut heavily built up\dicht behaart [very] hairyein \dicht behaarter Kopf a good head of hair\dicht behaart sein to have a lot of hairauf der Brust \dicht behaart sein to have a very hairy chest\dicht belaubt sein to be covered in dense foliage\dicht mit Rosen bepflanzt sein to be full of roses\dicht besetzt full, packed\dicht besiedelt [o bevölkert] densely [or heavily] populated\dicht bewaldet thickly wooded, densely forested\dicht bewölkt very cloudy, heavily overcast\dicht mit Efeu/Moos bewachsen overgrown with ivy/moss\dicht gepackt tightly packed\dicht gewebt tightly [or closely] woven\dicht gedrängt Zeitplan packed, full3. (undurchlässig) tightlydie Gardinen \dicht zuziehen to draw the curtains to, to close the curtains properly\dicht halten Schuhe, Verschluss to keep out [the] water, to be watertight\dicht schließen to close properlyBehälter \dicht geschlossen halten keep container tightly closed\dicht verhängt thickly draped; Fenster thickly curtained4. (nah) closely\dicht auffahren to tailgate, to drive too closely to the car in front\dicht beieinander/hintereinander close together\dicht gefolgt von jdm/etw followed closely by sb/sth▪ \dicht an etw/jdm close to sb/sth▪ \dicht hinter jdm/etw just [or right] behind sb/sth\dicht hinter jdm sein to be right behind sb▪ \dicht neben jdm/etw just [or right] beside sb/sth, just [or right] next to sb/sth▪ \dicht über/unter etw/jdm just above/under sth/sb▪ \dicht vor jdm/etw just [or right] in front of sb/sth5. (bald)\dicht bevorstehen to be coming up soon; Gefahr to be imminentWeihnachten steht \dicht bevor it's not long till Christmas, Christmas is just around the corner fam\dicht dran sein, etw zu tun (fam) to be just about to do sth, to be on the point of doing sth* * *1.1) thick <hair, fur, plumage, moss>; thick, dense <foliage, fog, cloud>; dense <forest, thicket, hedge, crowd>; heavy, dense < traffic>; densely ranked, close-ranked < rows of houses>; heavy <snowstorm, traffic>; (fig.) full, packed < programme>in dichter Folge — in rapid or quick succession
2) (undurchlässig) (für Luft) airtight; (für Wasser) watertight < shoes>; (für Licht) heavy <curtains, shutters>dicht machen — seal < crack>; seal the crack[s]/leak[s] in <roof, window, etc.>; waterproof < material, umbrella, etc.>
nicht ganz dicht sein — (salopp) have a screw loose (coll.)
3) (ugs.): (geschlossen) shut; closed2.1) densely < populated>; tightly < packed>; thickly, densely < wooded>; heavily < built up>dicht besetzt — full; packed
dicht gedrängt — tightly or closely packed
dicht behaart — [very] hairy
dicht an dicht od. dicht gedrängt stehen/sitzen — stand/sit close together
2) (undurchlässig) tightly3) mit Präp. (nahe)dicht vor/hinter ihm — right or just in front of/behind him
die Polizei ist ihm dicht auf den Fersen — the police are hard or close on his heels
4) (zeitlich): (unmittelbar)ich war dicht daran, es zu tun — I was just about to do it
* * *A. adj1. dense, thick; Verkehr: auch heavy; Hecke: auch close-set; Gewebe: dense, closely-woven; (gedrängt) tightly packednicht mehr dicht sein Gefäß etc: leak, be leaky;dicht machen Gefäß: seal, stop the leak(s), make watertight; Dach: seal (the cracks); Fenster: seal;er ist nicht ganz dicht umg, fig he’s got a screw loosein dichter Folge in quick successionEugen war gestern wieder total dicht umg (betrunken) Eugen was pissed (US plastered) again last nightB. adv1. densely, thickly;dicht behaart (very) hairy, hirsute geh;ein dicht bepflanztes Beet a closely planted (flower)bed;bevölkert densely populated;dicht gedrängt tightly packed;eine dicht gepflanzte Hecke a close-set hedge;dicht bewölkt there is thick cloud cover2. (nahe) closely;bei close to;dicht an-, bei- odernebeneinander close together;dicht gefolgt von closely followed by;3. fig:dicht bevorstehen be imminent;davor aufzugeben I was just about to give up ( oder on the verge of giving up);das Geschäft steht dicht vor dem Abschluss the deal is almost completed4.nicht mehr dicht halten not close ( oder shut) properly any more* * *1.1) thick <hair, fur, plumage, moss>; thick, dense <foliage, fog, cloud>; dense <forest, thicket, hedge, crowd>; heavy, dense < traffic>; densely ranked, close-ranked < rows of houses>; heavy <snowstorm, traffic>; (fig.) full, packed < programme>in dichter Folge — in rapid or quick succession
2) (undurchlässig) (für Luft) airtight; (für Wasser) watertight < shoes>; (für Licht) heavy <curtains, shutters>dicht machen — seal < crack>; seal the crack[s]/leak[s] in <roof, window, etc.>; waterproof <material, umbrella, etc.>
nicht ganz dicht sein — (salopp) have a screw loose (coll.)
3) (ugs.): (geschlossen) shut; closed2.1) densely < populated>; tightly < packed>; thickly, densely < wooded>; heavily < built up>dicht besetzt — full; packed
dicht gedrängt — tightly or closely packed
dicht behaart — [very] hairy
dicht an dicht od. dicht gedrängt stehen/sitzen — stand/sit close together
2) (undurchlässig) tightly3) mit Präp. (nahe)dicht vor/hinter ihm — right or just in front of/behind him
die Polizei ist ihm dicht auf den Fersen — the police are hard or close on his heels
4) (zeitlich): (unmittelbar)ich war dicht daran, es zu tun — I was just about to do it
* * *(Mathematik) adj.dense adj. (an) adv.close by adv.close to adv. adj.consistent adj.dense adj.serried adj.thick adj.thickset adj.tight adj.waterproof adj. adv.closely adv.densely adv. -
7 girar
v.1 to turn (dar vueltas).girar la cabeza to turn one's headEl auto gira The car turns=veers.El aparato gira la rueda The machine turns the wheel.Las ruedas giran sobre el eje The wheels turn on the axis.2 to turn.el camino gira a la derecha the road turns to the right3 to remit payment (commerce).4 to draw (commerce).La tienda giró un cheque The store drew a check.5 to transfer (money).* * *1 (dar vueltas) to rotate, whirl, spin2 (torcer) to turn4 COMERCIO to have a turnover1 COMERCIO to issue2 (cambiar de sentido) to turn, turn around\girar en descubierto COMERCIO to overdraw* * *verb2) rotate3) swing around* * *1. VT1) (=dar vueltas a) [+ llave, manivela, volante] to turn; [+ peonza, hélice, ruleta] to spin2) (Com) [+ dinero, facturas] to send; [+ letra, cheque] [gen] to draw; [a una persona concreta] to issue2. VI1) (=dar vueltas) [noria, rueda] to go (a)round, turn, revolve; [disco] to revolve, go (a)round; [planeta] to rotate; [hélice] to go (a)round, rotate, turn; [peonza] to spingira a 1600rpm — it revolves o goes (a)round at 1600rpm
la tierra gira alrededor del sol — the earth revolves around o goes (a)round the sun
el satélite gira alrededor de la tierra — the satellite circles o goes (a)round the earth
2) (=cambiar de dirección) to turn (a)roundhacer girar — [+ llave] to turn; [+ sillón] to turn (a)round
3) (=torcer) [vehículo] to turn; [camino] to turn, bendgirar a la derecha/izquierda — to turn right/left
el camino gira a la derecha varios metros más allá — the path turns o bends to the right a few metres further on
el partido ha girado a la izquierda en los últimos años — the party has moved o shifted to the left in recent years
4)girar alrededor de o sobre o en torno a — [+ tema, ideas] to revolve around, centre around, center around (EEUU); [+ líder, centro de atención] to revolve around
la conversación giraba en torno a las elecciones — the conversation revolved o centred around the election
su última obra gira en torno al tema del amor cortés — his latest work revolves around the subject of courtly love
el número de asistentes giraba alrededor de 500 personas — there were about 500 people in the audience
5)girar en descubierto — (Com, Econ) to overdraw
6) (=negociar) to operate, do business3.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)b) ( darse la vuelta) to turnc)girar en torno a algo — conversación/debate to revolve o center* around something; discurso to center* o focus on something
2) (torcer, desviarse) to turn2.girar vt1) <manivela/volante> to turn2) (Com, Fin)a) <cheque/letra de cambio> to drawb) < dinero> to send; ( a través de un banco) to transfer3) (frml) < instrucciones> to give, to issue (frml)* * *= deflect, rotate, turn, whirl, twist, spin around, revolve, swing, swing back, wind, swivel, twirl, gyrate, spin.Ex. On deflecting one of these levers to the right he runs through the book before him, each page in turn being projected at a speed which just allows a recognizing glance at each.Ex. The computer creates a series of entries by rotating the component terms with which it has been provided.Ex. The brightness can be adjusted by turning the two knobs at the lower right of the screen.Ex. Visitors would laugh at the workman's jerking and whirling with the mould, but that was where the skill lay.Ex. The cheeks were braced from their tops to the ceiling, to prevent the press from twisting or shifting about in use.Ex. With considerable reluctance, he spun his chair around and was about to return to his papers when Preston Huish put his head into the room.Ex. This was the cylinder machine, which formed a web of paper not on an endless belt of woven wire but on a cylinder covered with wire mesh (looking like a large dandy roll) which revolved half-submerged in a vat of stuff.Ex. The article has the title 'The pendulum swings to the right: censorship in the eighties'.Ex. Matrix and mould were pivoted and were brought up to the nozzle of a metal pump for the moment of casting, and then swung back to eject the new-made letter.Ex. Bring the kite down by slowly winding the kite string around a kite spool.Ex. The light direction can be controlled by swivelling the reflector.Ex. A hula hoop is a toy hoop that is twirled around the waist, limbs, or neck.Ex. The women dance, stamping their feet, clapping and chanting while some of them gyrate their hips suggestively in the centre of the circle.Ex. In summary, the fluid in your ears still sloshing around causes you to feel dizzy when you stop spinning in one direction.----* argumento + girar en torno a = argument + revolve around.* cuestión + girar en torno a = question + revolve around.* discusión + girar en torno a = discussion + centre around.* girar 180 grados = move + 180 degrees.* girar al descubierto = overdraw.* girar alrededor de = spin about, orbit.* girar bruscamente = swerve.* girar en torno a = hinge on/upon, revolve around, circle around.* girar media vuelta = swing in + a half-circle.* girar sobre un pivote = pivot.* hacer girar = twiddle, twirl.* mundo + girar en torno a = enterprise + revolve on.* polémica + girar en torno a = controversy + revolve around.* problemas + girar en torno a = problems + turn on, problems + revolve around.* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)b) ( darse la vuelta) to turnc)girar en torno a algo — conversación/debate to revolve o center* around something; discurso to center* o focus on something
2) (torcer, desviarse) to turn2.girar vt1) <manivela/volante> to turn2) (Com, Fin)a) <cheque/letra de cambio> to drawb) < dinero> to send; ( a través de un banco) to transfer3) (frml) < instrucciones> to give, to issue (frml)* * *= deflect, rotate, turn, whirl, twist, spin around, revolve, swing, swing back, wind, swivel, twirl, gyrate, spin.Ex: On deflecting one of these levers to the right he runs through the book before him, each page in turn being projected at a speed which just allows a recognizing glance at each.
Ex: The computer creates a series of entries by rotating the component terms with which it has been provided.Ex: The brightness can be adjusted by turning the two knobs at the lower right of the screen.Ex: Visitors would laugh at the workman's jerking and whirling with the mould, but that was where the skill lay.Ex: The cheeks were braced from their tops to the ceiling, to prevent the press from twisting or shifting about in use.Ex: With considerable reluctance, he spun his chair around and was about to return to his papers when Preston Huish put his head into the room.Ex: This was the cylinder machine, which formed a web of paper not on an endless belt of woven wire but on a cylinder covered with wire mesh (looking like a large dandy roll) which revolved half-submerged in a vat of stuff.Ex: The article has the title 'The pendulum swings to the right: censorship in the eighties'.Ex: Matrix and mould were pivoted and were brought up to the nozzle of a metal pump for the moment of casting, and then swung back to eject the new-made letter.Ex: Bring the kite down by slowly winding the kite string around a kite spool.Ex: The light direction can be controlled by swivelling the reflector.Ex: A hula hoop is a toy hoop that is twirled around the waist, limbs, or neck.Ex: The women dance, stamping their feet, clapping and chanting while some of them gyrate their hips suggestively in the centre of the circle.Ex: In summary, the fluid in your ears still sloshing around causes you to feel dizzy when you stop spinning in one direction.* argumento + girar en torno a = argument + revolve around.* cuestión + girar en torno a = question + revolve around.* discusión + girar en torno a = discussion + centre around.* girar 180 grados = move + 180 degrees.* girar al descubierto = overdraw.* girar alrededor de = spin about, orbit.* girar bruscamente = swerve.* girar en torno a = hinge on/upon, revolve around, circle around.* girar media vuelta = swing in + a half-circle.* girar sobre un pivote = pivot.* hacer girar = twiddle, twirl.* mundo + girar en torno a = enterprise + revolve on.* polémica + girar en torno a = controversy + revolve around.* problemas + girar en torno a = problems + turn on, problems + revolve around.* * *girar [A1 ]viA1 «rueda» to turn, revolve, go around o round; «disco» to revolve, go around; «trompo» to spinla tierra gira alrededor del sol the earth revolves around the sunhizo girar la llave en la cerradura he turned the key in the lock2 (darse la vuelta) to turngiré para mirarla I turned (around) to look at hergiró sobre sus talones he turned on his heella puerta giró lentamente sobre sus goznes the door swung slowly on its hinges3 girar EN TORNO A algo «conversación/debate» to revolve o center* AROUND sth; «discurso» to center* o focus ON sthB (torcer, desviarse) to turnen la próxima esquina gire a la derecha take the next right, take the next turn o ( BrE) turning on the rightlo acusan de haber girado hacia posiciones demasiado conservadoras he is accused of having moved o shifted o swung toward(s) too conservative a stance■ girarvtA ‹manivela/volante› to turngiró la cabeza para mirarme he turned to look at me, he turned his head toward(s) mela anda girando de taxista he's making a living as a taxi driver1 ‹cheque/letra de cambio› to drawgiró varios cheques en descubierto he issued several checks without sufficient funds in the account to cover them, he kited several checks ( AmE)2 ‹dinero› to send; (a través de un banco) to transfer* * *
girar ( conjugate girar) verbo intransitivo
1
[ disco] to revolve, go around;
[ trompo] to spin;
girar alrededor de algo/algn to revolve around sth/sb
2 (torcer, desviarse) to turn;
verbo transitivo
1 ‹manivela/volante› to turn
2 (Com, Fin) ‹cheque/letra de cambio› to draw
girar
I verbo intransitivo
1 (unas aspas, un trompo, etc) to spin
2 (torcer, cambiar de dirección) girar a la derecha/izquierda, to turn right/left
3 (tratar) to revolve: la conversación giró en torno al tiempo, the conversation revolved around the weather
II verbo transitivo
1 (la cabeza, llave) to turn
2 Fin (dinero) to send by giro
(una letra de cambio) to draw
' girar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
A
- doblar
- redonda
- redondo
- torcer
- virar
- volverse
- descubierto
- volver
English:
bear
- gyrate
- orbit
- pivot
- revolve
- rotate
- spin
- swing
- swivel
- turn
- turn round
- twirl
- twist
- twist round
- veer
- wheel
- whirl
- center
- draw
- hinge
- left
- pirouette
- right
- swirl
- twiddle
- wind
* * *♦ vi1. [doblar] to turn;el camino gira a la derecha the road turns to the right;el conductor giró a la izquierda the driver turned left o made a left turn2. [dar vueltas] to turn;[rápidamente] to spin;la Luna gira alrededor de la Tierra the Moon revolves o goes around the Earth;este coche gira muy bien this car has a tight turning circle3. [darse la vuelta] to turn (round);giré para verla mejor I turned round to see her betterel coloquio giró en torno a la pena de muerte the discussion dealt with the topic of the death penalty5. Com to remit payment;girar en descubierto to write a check without sufficient funds♦ vt1. [hacer dar vueltas a] to turn;giró la llave en la cerradura she turned the key in the lock;girar la cabeza to turn one's head2. Com to draw3. [dinero] to transfer, to remit* * *I v/igirar a la derecha/izquierda turn to the right/left; de coche, persona turn right/left, take a right/leftgirar en torno a algo fig revolve around sthII v/t COM transfer* * *girar vi1) : to turn around, to revolve2) : to swing around, to swivelgirar vt1) : to turn, to twist, to rotate2) : to draft (checks)3) : to transfer (funds)* * *girar vb1. (dar vueltas) to revolve / to go round2. (cambiar de dirección) to turn -
8 gotear
v.1 to drip.Esta vieja cafetera chorrea demasiado This old coffeepot drips too much.2 to spit, to drizzle.3 to be dripping, to be running.Me gotea la nariz My nose is running.* * *2 (Used in 3rd person only; it does not take a subject) (lluvia) to drizzle* * *verb1) to drip2) leak* * *VI1) [líquido, grifo, vela] to drip; [cañería, recipiente] to leak2) (Meteo) to rain lightly* * *1. 2.* * *= trickle, dribble, leak, drip, spring + a leak.Ex. Data buffers receive data from the computer and let it ' trickle through' to the printer at the appropriate speed, thus freeing the computer for the next task.Ex. Beaten stuff was dribbled steadily across the width of an endless belt of woven wire which carried it away from the vat in an even film = La pasta de papel goteaba constantemente sobrre una cinta sin fin hecha de tela metálica, o tamiz, que la transportaba desde la tina formando una capa uniforme.Ex. The article is entitled 'Sometimes the roof doesn't just leak, it caves in!'.Ex. The film seemed like a cross between theatrics and hippiedom, including the disembowelment of a bull, a unison hooting of brass bands, and the creation of paintings by dripping blood onto white surfaces.Ex. While the region grapples with fixing its sewer infrastructure, another set of underground pipes are springing leaks.----* que gotea = leaky [leakier -comp., leakiest -sup], leaking.* * *1. 2.* * *= trickle, dribble, leak, drip, spring + a leak.Ex: Data buffers receive data from the computer and let it ' trickle through' to the printer at the appropriate speed, thus freeing the computer for the next task.
Ex: Beaten stuff was dribbled steadily across the width of an endless belt of woven wire which carried it away from the vat in an even film = La pasta de papel goteaba constantemente sobrre una cinta sin fin hecha de tela metálica, o tamiz, que la transportaba desde la tina formando una capa uniforme.Ex: The article is entitled 'Sometimes the roof doesn't just leak, it caves in!'.Ex: The film seemed like a cross between theatrics and hippiedom, including the disembowelment of a bull, a unison hooting of brass bands, and the creation of paintings by dripping blood onto white surfaces.Ex: While the region grapples with fixing its sewer infrastructure, another set of underground pipes are springing leaks.* que gotea = leaky [leakier -comp., leakiest -sup], leaking.* * *gotear [A1 ]vi«líquido» to drip; «grifo/vela» to drip; «cañería» to leak■(lloviznar) [ Vocabulary notes (Spanish) ] to spit, drizzle* * *
gotear ( conjugate gotear) verbo intransitivo [líquido/grifo/vela] to drip;
[ cañería] to leak
gotear v impers ( lloviznar) to spit, drizzle
gotear verbo intransitivo & impers to drip: el grifo gotea, the tap o faucet is dripping
' gotear' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
estilar
English:
dribble
- drip
- leak
* * *♦ vi[líquido] to drip; [techo, depósito] to leak; Fig to trickle through;el grifo gotea the tap is dripping♦ v impersonal[chispear] to spit, to drizzle* * *v/i drip; filtrarse leak* * *gotear v1) : to drip2) : to leakgotear v imperslloviznar: to drizzle* * *gotear vb2. (cañería) to leak -
9 Blanket
Plain or twill weave cotton cloths, 60-in. and upwards in width and 80-in, and upwards in length. Made from coarse yams. Very coarse reeds are used. A soft spun coarse weft from 1's to 8's count is usual; sometimes a " bump " yam weft. Special shuttles are required to take the large or " jumbo " cops. Coloured weft headings are put in at each end. The fabrics are raised on both sides by passing several times through the raising machine. ———————— Thomas Blanket, of Bristol, first produced these in the reign of Edward III. The most popular makes are: - Irish - Size 84-in. X 95-in. in a 5-lb. weight. Yorkshire - 80-in. X 100-in, in all weights, woven plain, and have a dense pile when finished. Witney - This term can only be applied to blankets made in Witney. They resemble Yorkshire blankets. Ayrshire - Woven 2 X 2 twill with a dark-blue border. Bath (or Cheviot) - Woven 2 X 2 twill with light-blue borders and heavily raised. These fabrics are all manufactured from wool yams with a soft weft, heavily milled. Each style may be bordered or all plain. The qualities are numerous and weights vary from about 2-lb. up to 7-lb. or 8-lb. per blanket. -
10 weave
A n tissage m ; open weave, loose weave tissage lâche ; close weave, fine weave tissage serré or fin.1 Tex tisser [thread, fabric, blanket, rug] ; to weave sth on a loom tisser qch sur un métier ; to weave silk into cloth, to weave cloth out of silk tisser de l'étoffe de soie ;2 (interlace, make by interlacing) tresser [cane, raffia, flowers, basket, garland, wreath] ; [spider] tisser [web] ; to weave sth out of sth tresser qch de qch ; to weave flowers into a garland tresser une guirlande de fleurs ;3 fig ( create) inventer [story, narrative, plot] ; to weave the plot around one's own experience inventer l'intrigue à partir de sa propre expérience ; to weave sth into sth introduire qch dans qch ; to weave together sth and sth mêler qch à qch ; to weave two things together mêler deux choses ; the writer weaves a spell l'écrivain nous tient sous le charme ;4 ( move) to weave one's way through/around sth se faufiler entre/autour de qch ; to weave a path/course through sth s'ouvrir un chemin/un passage à travers qch.C vi ( prét wove ou weaved ; pp woven ou weaved) to weave in and out se faufiler (of entre) ; he was weaving in and out of the traffic il se faufilait entre les voitures ; to weave between se faufiler entre ; to weave towards sth ( drunk) s'approcher en titubant de qch ; ( avoiding obstacles) se frayer un chemin vers qch ; he was weaving unsteadily il titubait.to get weaving on ou with sth se mettre à qch ; get weaving! remue-toi! -
11 Aeroplane Fabrics
Plain weave cloths, used for making wings of aeroplanes. The cloth must be well woven, and practically without faults. The widths vary from 36-in. to 56-in., and up to 160-ends X 160 picks per inch. A standard cotton fabric is woven 84 X 84 threads per inch of 2/80's warp and weft mercerised yam. A fair quantity has been woven 90/2 reed, 100 picks, from 3/120's warp and weft Sea Islands cotton. Linen yarns made from the best quality of flax have been used in great quantities for the manufacture of these fabrics. Often these cloths are boiled after being woven, which process removes impurities not required and give greater strength with a minimum weight. Finished cloths are afterwards put through a process known as "doping". These linens have a breaking strength very high in both warp and weft in 100's warp, 110's weft boiled yarns. -
12 percutio
per-cŭtĭo, cussi, cussum, 3 ( perf. contr. percusti for percussisti, Hor. S. 2, 3, 273), v. a. [quatio].I.(With the notion of the per predominating.) To strike through and through, to thrust or pierce through (syn.: percello, transfigo).A.Lit.:B.percussus cultello,
Varr. R. R. 1, 69, 2:gladio percussus,
Cic. Mil. 24, 65:Mamilio pectus percussum,
Liv. 2, 19, 8:coxam Aeneae,
Juv. 15, 66:vena percutitur,
a vein is opened, blood is let, Sen. Ep. 70, 13:fossam,
to cut through, dig a trench, Front. Strat. 3, 17; Plin. Ep. 10, 50, 4.—Transf., to slay, kill (class.; cf.:II.neco, perimo, ico, ferio): aliquem securi,
to behead, Cic. Pis. 34, 84; id. Fin. 1, 7, 23:collum percussa securi Victima,
Ov. Tr. 4, 2, 5; Liv. 39, 43:aliquem veneno,
App. M. 10, p. 252, 21:hostem,
Suet. Calig. 3; Ov. H. 4, 94.—Hence, percutere foedus, to make a league, conclude a treaty (because an animal was slaughtered on the occasion;only post-Aug. for ferio, ico), Auct. B. Alex. 44: cum Albanis foedus percussit,
Just. 42, 3, 4; 43, 5, 10; Vulg. 3 Reg. 5, 12.—(With the idea of the verb predominating.) To strike, beat, hit, smite, shoot, etc. (cf.: ico, pulso, ferio).A.Lit.1.In gen. (class.):2.ceu lapidem si Percutiat lapis aut ferrum,
Lucr. 6, 162:cum Cato percussus esset ab eo, qui arcam ferebat,
had been struck, Cic. de Or. 2, 69, 279:januam manu,
Tib. 1, 5, 68; 1, 6, 3:turres de caelo percussae,
struck with lightning, Cic. Cat. 3, 8, 19; cf.:hunc nec Juppiter fulmine percussit,
id. N. D. 3, 35, 84:percussus ab aspide calcatā,
stung, bitten, Plin. 23, 1, 27, § 56; cf.: PERCVSSVS A VIPERA, Inscr. Vermigl. Iscriz. Perug. p. 319; Plin. 28, 3, 6, § 30; 28, 4, 10, § 44:color percussus luce refulgit,
struck, Lucr. 2, 799; cf. Ov. M. 6, 63; Val. Fl. 1, 495:auriculae (voce) percussae,
Prop. 1, 16, 28:percussus vocibus circus,
Sil. 16, 398.— Neutr.:sol percussit super caput,
Vulg. Jonae, 4, 8.—In partic.a.To strike, stamp, coin money (post-Aug.):b. c.ut nummum argenteum notā sideris Capricorni percusserit,
Suet. Aug. 94; id. Ner. 25. —As t. t. in weaving, to throw the shuttle with the woof: (lacernae) male percussae textoris pectine Galli, badly or coarsely woven, Juv. 9, 30.—d.Haec meraclo se percussit flore Libyco (=vino Mareotico), to get drunk, Plaut. Cas. 3, 5, 16 (cf.: sauciare se flore Liberi, Enn. ap. Fulg. 562, 25).—B.Trop.1.To smite, strike, visit with calamity of any kind (class.):2.percussus calamitate,
Cic. Mur. 24, 49:percussus fortunae vulnere,
id. Ac. 1, 3, 11:ruina,
Vulg. Zach. 14, 18: anathemate. id. Mal. 4, 6:plaga,
id. 1 Macc. 1, 32:in stuporem,
id. Zach. 12, 4.—To strike, shock, make an impression upon, affect deeply, move, astound (class.):3.percussisti me de oratione prolatā,
Cic. Att. 3, 12, 3; id. Mil. 29, 79: audivi ex Gavio, Romae esse hominem, et fuisse assiduum: percussit animum, it struck me, made me suspicious, id. Att. 4, 8, b, 3:animos probabilitate,
id. Tusc. 5, 11, 33:percussus atrocissimis litteris,
id. Fam. 9, 25, 3:fragor aurem percutit,
Juv. 11, 98.—To cheat, deceive, impose upon one (class.):4.aliquem probe,
Plaut. Ps. 2, 2, 9:hominem eruditum,
Cic. Fl. 20, 46:hominem strategemate,
id. Att. 5, 2, 2:aliquem palpo,
to flatter, Plaut. Am. 1, 3, 28.— -
13 Seersucker
CRINKLE, or SEERSUCKEROriginally a silk fabric with flat and puckered stripes alternating across the fabric. Now applied to cotton dress fabrics of the better quality crimp styles, woven 32-in. wide in many weights. Two beams are required, one for the crimp stripes and one for the ordinary. One cloth has 72 ends and 72 picks per inch, 2/60's and 30's warps, 32's weft, super Egyptian yarns (see Seersucker) ————————SEERSUCKER (See Crinkle)This term is common in the U.S.A., and given to a plain and crimped stripe fabric either bleached or dyed, and used for drapery and furnishings as well as dress purposes. A common quality is made 40-in. wide 64 ends and 64 picks per inch, 26's warp, 20's weft. Woven from two beams in stripes of plain weave and crimp which is also plain weave. The plain ground ends are firmly weighted and the crimping ends are lightly weighted. Fancy designs are obtained by using colour or rayon in the warps. Another class of seersucker is made from a plain cotton cloth that is printed in stripes with a preparation that will resist the action of caustic soda. The cloth is passed through a concentrated solution of caustic soda and the imprinted part shrinks. The effect is that of crimped stripes. -
14 Jacquard Machine
The jacquard machine is an essential addition to looms intended for weaving ornamental designs that are beyond the scope of stave -work. The machine is made in many forms and sizes for different branches of the weaving industry, but its characteristic feature is that it furnishes the means whereby every individual thread in a design may weave differently from all the others. This permits the delineation of all forms and shapes and the fineness of the detail is only limited by the texture, e.g., the number of ends and picks per inch. The action of the jacquard machine is communicated to the warp threads through a system of cords known variously as the harness mounting and jacquard harness. Actually, loom harness ante-dated the jacquard machine by many centuries, and many draw loom harnesses were much more complicated than modern jacquard harnesses. An essential feature of a jacquard is that each hook in the machine can be lifted at will independently of the others. The selection of which hooks shall lift and which shall be left down is made by the designer, by painting marks on squared paper to indicate the hooks that must be lifted on each pick. In cutting the pattern cards, a hole is cut for every mark or filled square on the design paper, and a blank is left for every empty square on the paper. Assuming that each pattern card represents one pick of weft, when the card is pressed against the needles of the jacquard, the blanks push the unwanted needles and hooks out of the path of the lifting griffe; the holes allow the needles to pass through and thus remain stationary, so that the corresponding hooks remain in the path of the lifting griffe and cause the corresponding warp threads to be lifted. Jacquard: Single-lift, single-cylinder - In this machine there is only one griffe which lifts on every pick, and only one pattern cylinder, which strikes every pick. This restricts the speed at which the loom can be operated. Jacquard: Double-lift, single-cylinder - This is the machine in most common use for ordinary jacquard work. There are two lifting griffes and twice as many hooks as in a single-lift machine, but only the same number of needles and one card cylinder. The shed formed is of the semi-open type, which causes less movement of the warp threads, as any threads which require to be up for two or more picks in succession are arrested in their fall and taken up again. Double-lift jacquards give a greatly increased loom production as compared with single-lift machines, as they permit the speed of the loom to be increased to about 180 picks per minute for narrow looms, as compared with 120 to 140 picks per minute for single-lift jacquards. Jacquard: Double-lift, double-cylinder - In this machine there are two sets of hooks and needles, two lifting griffes and two card cylinders, odd picks in one set of cards and even picks in the other set. This permits maximum loom speed, it prolongs the life of the pattern cards, but is open to the serious drawback that spoiled cloth is caused whenever the two card cylinders get out of correct rotation. Jacquard: Cross Border - Fabrics with borders, such as tablecloths, bed quilts, etc., are woven with jacquards with two griffes, two sets of hooks and two card cylinders. The cards for weaving the border are laced together and weave on one cylinder, while the centre cards are on the other cylinder. The loom weaves at the speed of a single-cylinder, single-lift machine, and the change from the border to the centre cards can be made by hand or automatically -
15 Fourdrinier, Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing[br]b. 11 February 1766 London, Englandd. 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 ReadingR.H.Clapperton, 1967, The Paper-making Machine, Oxford: Pergamon Press. D.Hunter, 1947, Papermaking. The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft, London.LRD -
16 Dyer, John
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]fl. c.1833 England[br]English inventor of an improved milling machine for woollen cloth.[br]After being woven, woollen cloth needed to be cleaned and compacted to thicken it and take out the signs of weaving. The traditional way of doing this was to place the length of cloth in fulling stocks, where hammers pounded it in a solution of fuller's earth, but in 1833 John Dyer, a Trowbridge engineer, took out a patent for the first alternative way with real possibilities. He sold the patent the following year but must have reserved the right to make his machine himself, incorporating various additions and improvements into it, because many of the machines used in Trowbridge after 1850 came from him. Milling machines were often used in conjunction with fulling stocks. The cloth was made up into a continuous length and milled by rollers forcing it through a hole or spout, from where it dropped into the fulling liquid to be soaked before being pulled out and pushed through the hole again. Dyer had three pairs of rollers, with one pair set at right angles to the others so that the cloth was squeezed in two directions. These machines do not seem to have come into general use until the 1850s. His machine closely resembled those still in use.[br]Bibliography1833, British patent no. 6,460 (milling machine).Further ReadingJ.de L.Mann, 1971, The Cloth Industry in the West of England from 1660 to 1880, Oxford (provides a brief account of the introduction of the milling machine).K.G.Ponting, 1971, The Woollen Industry of South-West England, Bath (a general account of the textile industry in the West Country).RLH -
17 Double Scale Harness
This is a harness in which the couplings are attached to the neck cords in pairs. These couplings are provided with mails and the couplings are knotted about 8-in. or 9-in. above the mails. Thin, flat metal staves are inserted through each row of couplings in the knotted loops, and the staves are operated by separate hooks at the sides of the machine. By this means, a pattern of twice the width can be woven. Thus a pattern on 800 ends can be woven by a 400's machine. The cards are cut only for figure, the ground being operated by side hooks and staves.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Double Scale Harness
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18 edge
edʒ
1. сущ.
1) а) кромка, край;
грань, граница cutting edge ≈ острый край jagged, ragged edge ≈ зазубренный край at, on an edge ≈ на краю edge of a wood be over the edge Syn: border, brim, brink, margin, rim, verge Ant: centre, interior б) лезвие, острие;
заточенность;
поэт. любое холодное оружие;
перен. о языке, речи, характере острота, резкость Put an edge on this knife. ≈ Надо поточить этот нож. No tricking here, to blunt the edge of law. ≈ Никаких тут хитростей, один тупой закон. Yet knows to put an edge upon his speech. ≈ Но знает, как уколоть. the edge of the sword give smb. the rough edge of one's tongue be on edge Syn: blade;
whetting в) бородка ключа г) горный кряж, хребет (часто в названиях хребтов) ;
обрыв на краю плато edge of a mountain д) опасный перевал в горах
2) а) обрез книги (три стороны книги, не закрытые обложкой) uncut edges б) бордюр в) геом. ребро
3) переносно о ситуациях а) критическое положение Each Greek stands on the sharpest edge of death or life. ≈ Каждый грек балансирует на грани между жизнью и смертью. б) разг. преимущество have an edge on smb. Syn: advantage в) опьянение We'll drink to Fred Sloane, who has a fine, distinguished edge. ≈ Давайте выпьем за Фреда Слоана, он всегда так изысканно пьян.
4) оторочка, другие виды отделки краев одежды
5) предел, грань Cheating again! My word, Nicky, you are the absolute edge! ≈ Опять мухлюешь! Ник, ты доиграешься, ты переходишь всякие границы. ∙ be on the edge of doing smth.( all) on edge ≈ нетерпеливый;
раздраженный to take the edge off an argument ≈ ослабить силу довода to set smb.'s nerves on edge ≈ раздражать кого-л. to set the teeth on edge ≈ действовать на нервы;
резать слух;
вызывать отвращение у кого-л.
2. гл.
1) а) редк. точить б) перен. заострять Fame fired their courage, freedom edged their swords. ≈ Слава распаляла их мужество, свобода заостряла их мечи.
2) усиливать, добавлять изюминку The piercing cold of the night-wind edged with sea-salt. ≈ Пронизывающий холод ночного ветра, сдобренный морской солью.
3) а) обрезать края б) подравнивать, сглаживать, обтесывать;
подстригать траву в) оторачивать, окаймлять, обрамлять The tablecloth was edged with a hand-woven pattern. ≈ По краю скатерти была вышивка. Syn: border г) являться границей, окаймлять Except where it is edged by the border lands of China and Thibet, Burmah is surrounded by British territory. ≈ В тех местах, где с Бирмой не граничат Тибет и Китай, с ней граничат территории, подконтрольные Великобритании. Syn: enclose
4) а) пододвигать незаметно или постепенно The admiral edged away with his squadron. ≈ Адмирал начал незаметно отодвигать свою эскадру. б) продвигаться незаметно, протираться, проползать, пролезать An opportunity of edging himself into the paper. ≈ Это была возможность пролезть в газету.
5) спорт отразить мяч ребром клюшки, биты ∙ edge away edge off edge in edge into edge on edge out острие, лезвие;
режущая кромка (инструмента) - a sword with two *s обоюдоострый меч острый край, острота - the knife has no * нож затупился - to put an * on a knife наточить нож - the razor has a keen * бритва остро наточена острие, острота (замечания, чувства и т. п.) - the * of sarcasm острие сарказма - the remark has a biting * это очень обидное замечание - the keen * of his sorrow grew more blunt острота его горя притупилась - to take the * off smth. ослабить /смягчить/ что-л. - to take the * off one's appetite заморить червячка - to give an * to smth. обострять /усиливать,стимулировать/ что-л. - to give an * to one's appetite раздразнить аппетит край, кромка - from * to * от края до края - * of a wood опушка леса - waters' * урез воды - on the * of winter на пороге зимы - to sit on the * of a chair сидеть на краешке стула - he is on the * of death он на пороге смерти обрез (книги) поле( страницы) бордюр - * stone бордюрный камень кряж, хребет;
гребень( горы) бровка( уступа, канавы) грань;
фаска;
ребро опорная призма( маятника, коромысла весов) критическое положение, критический момент - the * of battle разгар битвы (разговорное) преимущество, перевес - to have a slight * (on/over/) (спортивное) иметь небольшой перевес (над) - to win an * in the elections победить с незначительным перевесом на выборах дуга (фигурное катание) ребро (конька) - inside * внутреннее ребро конька кант (лыжи) > on * нетерпеливый > to be (all) on * быть раздраженным /в большом нетерпении/;
нервничать, волноваться > to set the teeth on * набивать оскомину > to give smb. the * of one's tongue резко поговорить с кем-л. > not to put too fine an * on it говорить без обиняков > to have an * on (сленг) быть пьяным, нализаться точить, оттачивать;
заострять (with) окаймлять, обрамлять - to * a handkerchief with lace обшить носовой платок кружевами - the road was * d with grass по обеим сторонам дороги росла трава (медленно) продвигаться;
(постепенно) приближаться - to * one's way through a crowd пробираться сквозь толпу - the climbers *d warily along the narrow shelf альпинисты осторожно двигались по уз - he *d away он отошел бочком;
он тихонько улизнул - to * away from one's responsibilities увиливать от своих обязанностей - they *d off они стали потихоньку отходить;
они постепенно ретировались (into) проскользнуть, пробраться - to * into a room проскользнуть в комнату - to * into a job пролезть на должность - to * oneself into a conversation постепенно присоединиться к разговору, влезть в разговор (out of) выскользнуть выбраться( out of) столкнуть, спихнуть - to * smb. out of a position of influence спихнуть кого-л. с важного поста (техническое) кантовать( спортивное) кантовать, вдавливать лыжи кантами в снег (диалектизм) раздрожать to be on the ~ of doing( smth.) решиться( на что-л.) character ~ вчт. контур символа competitive ~ конкурентоспособность edge бородка (ключа) ;
(all) on edge нетерпеливый;
раздраженный ~ грань ~ край, кромка;
edge of a wood опушка леса ~ критическое положение ~ кряж, хребет;
edge of a mountain гребень горы ~ незначительно изменяться ~ обрез (книги) ;
бордюр;
uncut edges неразрезанные страницы ~ обрезать края;
сравнивать, сглаживать, обтесывать углы ~ окаймлять, обрамлять ~ опорная призма( маятника, коромысла весов) ~ острие, лезвие;
острота;
the knife has no edge нож затупился ~ пододвигать незаметно или постепенно;
продвигаться незаметно или медленно;
пробираться, пролезать ~ подстригать (траву) ~ разг. преимущество;
to have an edge (on smb.) иметь преимущество (перед кем-л.) ~ преимущество ~ точить;
заострять ~ away отходить осторожно, бочком to ~ oneself into the conversation вмешаться в (чужой) разговор;
edge off = edge away;
edge on подстрекать ~ into втискивать(ся) ~ кряж, хребет;
edge of a mountain гребень горы ~ край, кромка;
edge of a wood опушка леса to ~ oneself into the conversation вмешаться в (чужой) разговор;
edge off = edge away;
edge on подстрекать to ~ oneself into the conversation вмешаться в (чужой) разговор;
edge off = edge away;
edge on подстрекать to ~ oneself into the conversation вмешаться в (чужой) разговор;
edge off = edge away;
edge on подстрекать ~ out вытеснять ~ out осторожно выбираться front ~ передняя кромка листа to give an ~ to one's appetite раздразнить аппетит to give the ~ of one's tongue (to smb.) резко (с кем-л.) говорить ~ разг. преимущество;
to have an edge (on smb.) иметь преимущество (перед кем-л.) to have an ~ on sl. быть навеселе ~ острие, лезвие;
острота;
the knife has no edge нож затупился leading ~ главное преимущество в конкурентной борьбе edge бородка (ключа) ;
(all) on edge нетерпеливый;
раздраженный to set (smb.'s) nerves on ~ раздражать (кого-л.) to set the teeth on ~ действовать на нервы;
резать слух;
вызывать отвращение( у кого-л.) stroke ~ вчт. граница штриха to take the ~ off an argument ослабить силу довода to take the ~ off one's appetite заморить червячка ~ обрез (книги) ;
бордюр;
uncut edges неразрезанные страницы -
19 ποικίλος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `varicoloured, wrought in many colours (stitched, knitted, woven), manifold, versatile, cunning' (Il.).Dialectal forms: Myc. pokironuka n. pl. `with many coloured onukes'.Compounds: Many compp., e.g. ποικιλό-θρονος (s. θρόνα and Bolling AmJPh 79, 275ff.), πολυ-ποίκιλος `much variegated' (E.; cf. below).Derivatives: 1. ποικιλ-ία f. `variegation, diversity, embroidering' (IA.); 2. - ίας m. fishname (Paus.; Strömberg Fischn. 25, Thompson Fishes s. v.), - ίς f. name of a bird that eats the lark's eggs (Arist.; Thompson Birds s. v.); 3. - εύς m. `broiderer, stitcher' (Alex. Com.). 4. Denominat.: a. - ίλλω, also w. δια-, κατα- a.o., `to make varicoloured, to work artfully etc.' with - ιλμα n. `varicoloured work, stitching, weave' (Il.; Wace AmJArch 1948, 51 f., 452; Porzig Satzinhalte 188), - ιλμός m. `elaboration, decoration' (Epicur., Plu.), - ιλσις f. `id.' (Pl.); - ιλτής m. `broiderer, stitcher' (Aeschin., Arist.), f. - ίλτρια (Str.), - ιλτικός `belonging to stitching' (LXX etc.); b. - ιλόω `to stitch' (A. Fr. 304 = 609 Mette); c. - ιλεύομαι `to be artful, versatile' (Vett. Val.).Origin: IE [Indo-European] [794] *peiḱ- `stitch, paint'Etymology: Formation like κό-ϊλος (: κόοι), ναυτ-ίλος (: ναύτης), ὀργ-ίλος (: ὀργή) etc.; like the two lastmentioned with secondary paroxytonesis (Schwyzer 379 a. 484f.); so from a noun of unknown stem (cf. Schwyzer 484 n. 5, also Specht Ursprung 121). To a basic word *ποῖκος agree several words of other languages: Skt. péśa- m. `ornament' (with peśalá- `ornamented, beautiful': ποικίλος), Av. paēsa- m. `leprosy', also `ornament' in zaranyō-paēsa-'with golden ornament' a.o., Lith. paĩšas m. `smut, dustspot'. With this formally identical a Germ. adj. for `motley', e.g. OHG OS fēh, Goth. filu-faihs `πολυποίκιλος'; prob. through secondary adjectivising like Av. paēsa- which also means `leprous'. The morphological identity of Goth. filu-faihs and Skt. puru-péśa- is accidental; the supposition (Porzig Gliederung 136), πολυ-ποίκιλος would be a cross of ποικίλος and *πολύ-ποικος (= puru-péśa-), is to be rejected, as the relatively late Gr. word may have been built after πολυ-δαίδαλος, which, orig. prob. a bahuvrihi, was reinterpreted as `very artfull' (s. δαίδαλος). -- IE *póiḱos m. belongs as nomen actionis to a verb `cut, stitch, scratch in, paint etc.' in Skt. piṃśáti `carve, cut, ornament', Slav., e.g. OCS pьsati `write' a. o.; IE *piḱ-; besides with final voiced cons. a.o. Lat. pingō `stitch with a needle, paint'. An old r-deriv. of the same verb is πικρός prop. `cutting in, stitching' (s. v.). Quite uncertain is the H.-gloss πεικόν πικρόν, πευκεδανόν; if correct, in formation comparable with λευκός. -- Further forms w. lit. in Bq (esp. on the meaning), WP. 2, 9f., Pok. 794f., W.-Hofmann s. pingō (very rich), Fraenkel s. paĩšas and piẽšti, Vasmer s. pisátь, Mayrhofer s. péśaḥ. -- (Quite uncertain πίγγαλος.)Page in Frisk: 2,572-573Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ποικίλος
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20 Cranky Checks
This is one of the oldest cloths made for West Africa, and still finds a sale. It is a blue and white check, with designs about 2-in. square, coarse yarns all through. The style of checking is draughtboard type with the squares filled with blue and white lines on the hairline principle. The fabric is usually 36-in. finished, 20 yards, and headed at each end with a three green, one red, heading. The finish is the usual stiff finish, and a good quality is 37-in. soft, 20 yards, 89/3 of 16's grey and 16's indigo twist, with 24 picks per inch of 16's indigo and 18's cop weft. Made in Radcliffe-and Rochdale. When woven with double ends and picks it is termed a Zanzibar shirting.
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