-
1 depth
depƟ1) (the distance from the top downwards or from the surface inwards especially if great: Coal is mined at a depth of 1,000 m.) dybde2) (intensity or strength especially if great: The depth of colour was astonishing; The depth of his feeling prevented him from speaking.) styrke, intensitet, dybde•- depths- in-depth
- in depthsubst. \/depθ\/1) ( også overført) dyp2) dybde, dyphet3) bredde, tykkelse4) dypsindighet, dypsinnare you in your depth? er du med?depth of feeling ( overført) følelsesdybde, stemningsfyldedepths ( spesielt poetisk) dyp• how could you sink to such depths?in depth inngående, grundig, som går i dybdenin the depths of despair i dypeste fortvilelsein the depths of night i nattemørketin the depths of the forest i svarteste skogen, midt inne i skogenin the depth of winter midt på (svarteste) vinteren, midtvintersout of one's depth eller beyond one's depth være for langt ut på dypet ( overført) være (ute) på dypt vann, ha mistet fotfestet, ikke henge med lengersound the depths ( overført) gå i dybdensound the depths of ( overført) lodde dybden avtake the depths ( sjøfart) lodde dybdenunplumbed depths uutforskede dyp avgrunner
См. также в других словарях:
Skip distance — A skip distance is the distance a radio wave travels, usually including a hop in the ionosphere. A skip distance is a distance on the earth s surface between the two points where radio waves from a transmitter, refracted downwards by different… … Wikipedia
depth — [[t]de̱pθ[/t]] ♦♦♦ depths 1) N VAR: oft amount in N, with poss, N of amount The depth of something such as a river or hole is the distance downwards from its top surface, or between its upper and lower surfaces. The smaller lake ranges from five… … English dictionary
depth — /dɛpθ / (say depth) noun 1. measure or distance downwards, inwards, or backwards. 2. deepness, as of water, suited to or safe for a person or thing. 3. abstruseness, as of a subject. 4. gravity; seriousness. 5. emotional profundity: depth of woe …
Badminton — infobox sport name = Badminton imagesize = 200px caption = The Danish badminton player Peter Gade union = Badminton World Federation nickname = first = 18th century registered = clubs = contact = No team = Single or doubles mgender = category =… … Wikipedia
Aristotle the philosopher of nature — David Furley 1 THE TREATISES ON NATURE The subject matter of the present chapter is what Aristotle has to say about the natural world the subject that in classical Greek is most accurately rendered as ta physika. But of course this includes many… … History of philosophy
Muay Thai — For the drink with a similar sounding name, see Mai Tai. Muay Thai (มวยไทย) Fighters perform the Wai Khru Ram Muay before an amateur muay Thai match. Also known as Thai boxing, Thai kickboxing, Tharshanning Focus … Wikipedia
Sundial — A sundial is a device that measures time by the position of the Sun. In common designs such as the horizontal sundial, the sun casts a shadow from its style (a thin rod or a sharp, straight edge) onto a flat surface marked with lines indicating… … Wikipedia
Mechanical advantage — is a measure of the force amplification achieved by using a tool, mechanical device or machine system. Ideally, the device preserves the input power and simply trades off forces against movement to obtain a desired amplification in the output… … Wikipedia
Glossary of botanical terms — Many of the terms used in Wikipedia glossaries (often most) are already defined and explained within Wikipedia itself. However, lists like the following indicate where new articles need to be written and are also useful for looking up and… … Wikipedia
G-force — (also G force, g load) is a measurement of an object s acceleration expressed in g s. It is proportional to the reaction force that an object experiences as a result of this acceleration or, more correctly, as a result of the net effect of this… … Wikipedia
Theory of impetus — The theory of impetus was an antiquated auxiliary or secondary theory of Aristotelian dynamics, put forth initially to explain projectile motion against gravity. It was first introduced by Hipparchus in antiquity, and subsequently further… … Wikipedia