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1 aeroplane reference field length
The minimum field length required for take-off at maximum certificated take-off mass, sea level, standard atmospheric conditions, still air and zero runway slope, as shown in the appropriate aeroplane flight manual prescribed by the certificating authority or equivalent data from the aeroplane manufacturer. Field length means balanced field length for aeroplanes, if applicable, or take-off distance in other cases.Note.— Attachment A, Section 2 [Annex 14, Volume I] provides information on the concept of balanced field length and the Airworthiness Manual (Doc 9760) contains detailed guidance on matters related to take-off distance.(AN 14/I)Минимальная длина лётного поля, необходимая для взлёта при максимальной сертифицированной взлётной массе, на уровне моря, при стандартных атмосферных условиях, безветрии и нулевом уклоне ВПП, указанная в соответствующем руководстве по лётной эксплуатации самолёта, предписанном полномочным органом по сертификации, или в аналогичном документе, полученном от изготовителя самолёта. Длина лётного поля означает, в соответствующих случаях, сбалансированную длину лётного поля для самолётов или, в других случаях, - взлётную дистанцию.Примечание. В разделе 2 дополнения А приводится информация о понятии сбалансированной длины лётного поля, а в Техническом руководстве по лётной годности (Doc 9760) содержатся подробные инструктивные указания по вопросам, относящимся к взлётной дистанции.International Civil Aviation Vocabulary (English-Russian) > aeroplane reference field length
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2 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. -
3 aeroplane
A power-driven heavier-than-air aircraft, deriving its lift in flight chiefly from aerodynamic reactions on surfaces which remain fixed under given conditions of flight.(AN 1; AN 2; AN 6/I; AN 6/II; AN 7; AN 8; AN 16/I)Boздушнoe суднo тяжeлee вoздухa, привoдимoe в движeниe силoвoй устaнoвкoй, пoдъёмнaя силa кoтoрoгo в пoлётe сoздaётся в oснoвнoм зa счёт aэрoдинaмичeских рeaкций нa пoвeрхнoстях, oстaющихся нeпoдвижными в дaнных услoвиях пoлётa.International Civil Aviation Vocabulary (English-Russian) > aeroplane
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4 aeroplane; airplane
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5 extended range operation by twin-engined aeroplane
extended range operation; extended twin-engine operation; ETOPS; extended range operation by twin-engined aeroplaneAny flight by an aeroplane with two turbine power-units where the flight time at the one power-unit inoperative cruise speed (in ISA and still air conditions), from a point on the route to an adequate alternate aerodrome, is greater than the threshold time approved by the State of the Operator.(AN 3; AN 6/I)Official definition added to AN 3 by Amdt 70 (1/01/1996) and modified by Amdt 21 to AN 6/I (9/11/1995).полёт увеличенной дальности; полёт увеличенной дальности с двумя двигателями; ETOPSЛюбой полёт, выполняемый самолётом с двумя газотурбинными силовыми установками, при котором время полёта с крейсерской скоростью (в условиях MCA и в штилевых условиях) при одной неработающей силовой установке от какой-либо точки маршрута до соответствующего требованиям запасного аэродрома превышает пороговое время, установленное государством эксплуатанта.International Civil Aviation Vocabulary (English-Russian) > extended range operation by twin-engined aeroplane
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6 escape from an aeroplane in an emergency
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > escape from an aeroplane in an emergency
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7 remove an aeroplane from service
Макаров: снимать самолёт с эксплуатацииУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > remove an aeroplane from service
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8 withdraw an aeroplane from service
Макаров: снимать самолёт с эксплуатацииУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > withdraw an aeroplane from service
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9 jump
1. verb1) (to (cause to) go quickly off the ground with a springing movement: He jumped off the wall / across the puddle / over the fallen tree / into the swimming-pool; Don't jump the horse over that fence!) saltar2) (to rise; to move quickly (upwards): She jumped to her feet; He jumped into the car.) saltar3) (to make a startled movement: The noise made me jump.) saltar; sobresaltar(se)4) (to pass over (a gap etc) by bounding: He jumped the stream easily.) saltar
2. noun1) (an act of jumping: She crossed the stream in one jump.) salto2) (an obstacle to be jumped over: Her horse fell at the third jump.) valla, obstáculo3) (a jumping competition: the high jump.) salto4) (a startled movement: She gave a jump when the door suddenly banged shut.) salto, brinco5) (a sudden rise, eg in prices: There has been a jump in the price of potatoes.) salto, aumento•- jumpy- jump at
- jump for joy
- jump on
- jump the gun
- jump the queue
- jump to conclusions / jump to the conclusion that
- jump to it
jump vb1. saltar2. sobresaltarsetr[ʤʌmp]1 salto2 (in prices etc) salto, aumento importante, disparo3 (fence) valla, obstáculo1 saltar2 (rise sharply) dar un salto■ inflation jumped 2% last month la inflación dio un salto de un 2% el mes pasado1 saltar■ he tried to jump the wall, but it was too high intentó saltar el muro, pero era demasiado alto\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto give somebody a jump pegar un susto a alguiento jump down somebody's throat saltar a alguien, echársele encima a alguiento jump for joy saltar de alegríato jump out of one's skin pegarse un susto de muerteto jump rope SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL saltar a la combato jump the gun precipitarse, adelantarseto jump the lights saltarse el semáforo en rojoto jump the queue colarseto jump the rails descarrilarto jump to conclusions llegar a conclusiones precipitadasto keep one jump ahead of somebody ir un paso por delante de alguiento make somebody jump dar un susto a alguienjump leads cables nombre masculino plural de emergenciajump seat asiento plegablejump suit monojump ['ʤʌmp] vi1) leap: saltar, brincar2) start: levantarse de un salto, sobresaltarse3) move, shift: moverse, pasarto jump from job to job: pasar de un empleo a otro4) increase, rise: dar un salto, aumentarse de golpe, subir bruscamente5) bustle: animarse, ajetrearse6)to jump to conclusions : sacar conclusiones precipitadasjump vt1) : saltarto jump a fence: saltar una valla2) skip: saltarse3) attack: atacar, asaltar4)to jump the gun : precipitarsejump n1) leap: salto m2) start: sobresalto m, respingo m3) increase: subida f brusca, aumento m4) advantage: ventaja fwe got the jump on them: les llevamos la ventajan.• brinco s.m.• lanzamiento s.m.• salto s.m.v.• brincar v.• cabriolear v.• lanzarse v.• saltar v.
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1. dʒʌmp1)a) ( leap) saltarb) ( move quickly)jump in, I'll give you a lift — súbete que te llevo
to jump AT something: they'll jump at the chance no van a dejar pasar la oportunidad; to jump on somebody/something abalanzarse* sobre alguien/algo; to jump to one's feet ponerse* de pie or (AmL tb) pararse de un salto; to jump to attention ( Mil) cuadrarse, ponerse* firme; jump to it! — hazlo inmediatamente!
2)a) (change, skip) saltar, pasarb) (increase, advance suddenly) subir de un golpe3)a) ( jerk) saltarb) ( in alarm) sobresaltarse
2.
vt1) ( leap over) \<\<hurdle\>\> saltar, brincar* (Méx); \<\<counter/piece\>\> ( Games) comerseto jump rope — (AmE) saltar a la cuerda or (Esp tb) a la comba or (Chi) al cordel, brincar* la reata (Méx)
2)a) ( spring out of) \<\<railsacks\>\> salirse* deb) ( disregard) saltarseto jump the lights — pasar el semáforo en rojo, pasarse el alto (Méx)
to jump the line o (BrE) queue — colarse*
3) ( run away from) (colloq)to jump bail — huir* estando en libertad bajo fianza
4) (ambush, attack) (colloq) asaltar, atacar*5) ( catch) (AmE colloq) \<\<bus/plane\>\> agarrar (fam) or (esp Esp) coger*; ( without paying fare)
II
1)a) ( leap) salto mgo (and) take a running jump! — (colloq) vete a freír espárragos! (fam)
to be/stay one jump ahead: this way, you'll be one jump ahead of the competition de esta manera le llevarás la delantera a la competencia; she tried to stay one jump ahead of her pupils — trataba de mantenerse un paso adelante de sus alumnos
b) ( fence) valla f, obstáculo m2)a) ( sudden transition) salto mb) (increase, advance) aumento m[dʒʌmp]1. N1) (Sport, Parachuting) salto m; (=leap) salto m, brinco mwhat a great jump! — ¡qué gran salto!
running 4.in or at one jump — de un salto, de un brinco
2) (=start)3) (=fence, obstacle) obstáculo m4) (fig) (=step) salto min one jump he went from novice to master — de un salto or golpe pasó de novicio a maestro
Taiwan made the jump from poverty to wealth in a single generation — Taiwán pasó de golpe or dio el salto de la pobreza a la riqueza en una sola generación
- be one jump aheadtry to keep one jump ahead of the competition — intenta llevarle ventaja or la delantera a la competencia
- get a or the jump on sb5) (=increase) aumento m, subida fthere has been a jump in prices/unemployment — se ha producido un aumento or una subida de precios/del número de parados
2. VIhow far can you jump? — ¿hasta qué distancia puedes saltar?
how high can you jump? — ¿hasta qué altura puedes saltar?
did he jump or was he pushed? — (lit) ¿saltó o lo empujaron?, ¿se tiró o lo empujaron?; (fig) ¿se fue o lo echaron?
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to jump across a stream — cruzar un arroyo de un salto, saltar por encima de un arroyo•
he jumped back in horror — de un salto retrocedió horrorizado•
she jumped into the river — se tiró al ríothere were plenty of men ready to jump into bed with me — (fig) había muchos hombres dispuestos a acostarse conmigo
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to jump off a busain — bajar de un autobúsen de un salto•
to jump on a busain — subir a un autobúsen de un salto•
he jumped out of a third floor window — saltó or se tiró desde una ventana del tercer piso•
he jumped over the fence — saltó (por encima de) la valla•
he jumped to his feet — se puso de pie de un saltojump to it! * — ¡venga, muévete!, ¡rápido!, ¡apúrate! (LAm)
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to jump up — ponerse de pie de un salto2) (=start) sobresaltarse•
he jumped at the sound of her voice — se sobresaltó al oír su voz•
to make sb jump — dar un susto a algn, sobresaltar a algnskinyou made me jump! — ¡qué susto me diste!
3) (fig) (with prep, adv)•
to jump at sth — no dejar escapar algothey offered me a really good salary and thought I'd jump at it — me ofrecieron un sueldo buenísimo y creyeron que no lo dejaría escapar
he'd jump at the chance to get out of the office — si tuviera la oportunidad de irse de la oficina no la dejaría escapar
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then the film jumps forward 20 years — luego la película da un salto adelante de 20 años•
to jump from one subject to another — saltar de un tema a otrobandwagon, conclusion, throat•
he jumps on everything I say — le pone faltas a todo lo que digo4) (=increase) [sales, profits] subir, aumentar; [shares] subir3. VT1) (lit) (also: jump over) [+ ditch, fence] saltar (por encima de); (in draughts, chess) comerse2) [+ horse] (=cause to jump) hacer saltar; (=enter in competition) presentar; (=ride) montar3) (fig) (=skip) saltarsethe film jumped the first ten years of his life — la película se saltó los diez primeros años de su vida
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to jump the lights — (Aut) * saltarse el semáforo (en rojo)4) (=leave, escape)•
to jump bail — (Jur) fugarse estando bajo fianza•
to jump ship — (lit) desertar (de un buque); (fig) (=leave) marcharse; (=join rival organization) irse con la competencia5) (=anticipate)- jump the gun6) (=board)7) * (=attack) echarse encima de4.CPDjump jockey N — jockey m de carreras (de obstáculos)
jump leads NPL — (Brit) (Aut) cables mpl de arranque (de batería)
jump rope N — (US) comba f, cuerda f de saltar
jump seat N — (Aut, Aer) asiento m plegable
- jump in- jump off- jump out* * *
I
1. [dʒʌmp]1)a) ( leap) saltarb) ( move quickly)jump in, I'll give you a lift — súbete que te llevo
to jump AT something: they'll jump at the chance no van a dejar pasar la oportunidad; to jump on somebody/something abalanzarse* sobre alguien/algo; to jump to one's feet ponerse* de pie or (AmL tb) pararse de un salto; to jump to attention ( Mil) cuadrarse, ponerse* firme; jump to it! — hazlo inmediatamente!
2)a) (change, skip) saltar, pasarb) (increase, advance suddenly) subir de un golpe3)a) ( jerk) saltarb) ( in alarm) sobresaltarse
2.
vt1) ( leap over) \<\<hurdle\>\> saltar, brincar* (Méx); \<\<counter/piece\>\> ( Games) comerseto jump rope — (AmE) saltar a la cuerda or (Esp tb) a la comba or (Chi) al cordel, brincar* la reata (Méx)
2)a) ( spring out of) \<\<rails/tracks\>\> salirse* deb) ( disregard) saltarseto jump the lights — pasar el semáforo en rojo, pasarse el alto (Méx)
to jump the line o (BrE) queue — colarse*
3) ( run away from) (colloq)to jump bail — huir* estando en libertad bajo fianza
4) (ambush, attack) (colloq) asaltar, atacar*5) ( catch) (AmE colloq) \<\<bus/plane\>\> agarrar (fam) or (esp Esp) coger*; ( without paying fare)
II
1)a) ( leap) salto mgo (and) take a running jump! — (colloq) vete a freír espárragos! (fam)
to be/stay one jump ahead: this way, you'll be one jump ahead of the competition de esta manera le llevarás la delantera a la competencia; she tried to stay one jump ahead of her pupils — trataba de mantenerse un paso adelante de sus alumnos
b) ( fence) valla f, obstáculo m2)a) ( sudden transition) salto mb) (increase, advance) aumento m -
10 below
below [bɪˈləʊ]1. prepositiona. ( = under) sous ; ( = lower than) au-dessous de2. adverb• below, we could see the valley en bas, on apercevait la vallée• several thousand feet below (from mountain top) plusieurs milliers de mètres plus bas ; (from aeroplane) plusieurs milliers de mètres au-dessousb. ( = downstairs) en basd. ( = below zero) au-dessous• it will be extremely cold, with temperatures at zero or below il fera très froid, avec des températures tombant à zéro ou au-dessous* * *Note: When below is used as a preposition to talk about the physical position of something, it is most often translated by au-dessous de: the apartment below mine = l'appartement au-dessous du mien; below the knee = au-dessous du genouThe most notable exceptions are for the expressions below the ground and below the surface, when sous is used: sous le sol, sous la surfaceFor other prepositional uses of below and for adverbial uses see the entry below[bɪ'ləʊ] 1.1) ( under) en dessous dethe valley below them/you etc — la vallée en contrebas
2) ( less than) en dessous de, inférieur àbelow 10% — en dessous de or inférieur à 10%
3) ( in rank)those below the rank of Major — Military les militaires qui sont au-dessous du grade de major
4) ( south of) au sud de, au-dessous de; ( downstream from) en aval de5) ( unworthy of) beneath 1. 22.the people/cars (down) below — les gens/voitures en bas
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11 pressing
Adj1. अत्यावश्यकEmployment for all is the pressing need for hour.--------N1. दबाव डालकर वस्तु बनानाThe factory manufactures pressings from aeroplane bodies. -
12 авиаподкормка
Русско-английский сельскохозяйственный словарь > авиаподкормка
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13 самолет
airplane, plane* * *самолё́т м. ( в соответствии с определением ИКАО)
брит. aeroplane, амер. airplane (Примечание. Согласно ИКАО aircraft — лета́тельный аппара́т, вертолё́т, и др. не попадающие под термин самолё́т.)аттесто́вывать самолё́т по шу́му — certificate an aeroplane for noiseвводи́ть самолё́т в вира́ж — roll an aeroplane into a (banked) turnвести́ самолё́т ( о штурмане) — navigate [guide] an aeroplaneвы́весить самолё́т над землё́й — hold the aeroplane of the groundвыводи́ть самолё́т из стро́я — disable an aeroplane, put an aeroplane out of operation [out of service]выра́внивать самолё́т — ( переводить в горизонтальный полёт) level an aeroplane; ( при посадке) flare out an aeroplaneзаправля́ть самолё́т горю́чим — fuel an aeroplaneзару́ливать самолё́т на стоя́нку — taxi an aeroplane to the parking areaиспы́тывать самолё́т в во́здухе — test-fly [fly-test] an aeroplaneкача́ть самолё́т с крыла́ на крыло́ — rock an aeroplaneсамолё́т лё́гок в управле́нии — the aeroplane handles well [is responsive]самолё́т нахо́дится в во́здухе — the aeroplane is [becomes] airborneоблё́тывать но́вый самолё́т — fly out a new aeroplaneсамолё́т обору́дован, напр. автомати́ческим радиоко́мпасом — the aeroplane carries, e. g., an ADFопознава́ть (национа́льную принадле́жность) самолёт(а) — identify an aeroplaneоставля́ть самолё́т в авари́йной ситуа́ции — escape from an aeroplane in an emergencyсамолё́т отлета́ет, напр. в 13 ч 50 мин — the aeroplane departs at, e. g., 1350 hoursотправля́ть самолё́т на второ́й круг — send an aeroplane aroundсамолё́т отрыва́ется от земли́ ( при взлёте) — the aeroplane breaks groundотрыва́ть самолё́т от земли́ ( при взлёте) — lift [take] an aeroplane off the groundпереобору́довать самолё́т (напр. военный в гражданский) — convert an aeroplaneпилоти́ровать самолё́т — fly [handle] an aeroplaneпокида́ть самолё́т ( об экипаже) — abandon an aeroplaneсамолё́т прибыва́ет, напр. в 16 ч 15 мин — the aeroplane arrives at 1615 hoursсамолё́т разби́лся — the aeroplane crashedразвора́чивать самолё́т по ве́тру — turn an aeroplane downwindразвора́чивать самолё́т про́тив ве́тра — turn an aeroplane into the windсажа́ть самолё́т — land an aeroplaneсажа́ть самолё́т по ве́тру — land an aeroplane downwindсажа́ть самолё́т про́тив ве́тра — land an aeroplane into the windсажа́ть самолё́т с недолё́том или с перелё́том — land an aeroplane short or longсамолё́т сбаланси́рован в, напр. прямолине́йном полё́те — the aeroplane is in trim for, e. g., straight flightснима́ть самолё́т с эксплуата́ции — withdraw [remove] an aeroplane from serviceсамолё́т соверши́л авари́йную поса́дку — the aeroplane crash-landedста́вить самолё́т на коло́дки — chock an aeroplaneсамолё́т те́рпит бе́дствие — the aeroplane is in distressсамолё́т удовлетворя́ет всем тре́бованиям норм лё́тной го́дности — the aeroplane is fully airworthyустана́вливать что-л. на самолё́те — install smth. in an aeroplane [on board an aeroplane]швартова́ть самолё́т — tie down an aeroplaneаэрофотосъё́мочный самолё́т — photographic (survey) aeroplaneбеспило́тный самолё́т — droneсамолё́т вертика́льного взлё́та — vertical take-off [VTO] aeroplaneсамолё́т вертика́льного взлё́та и поса́дки [СВВП] — vertical take-off and landing [VTOL] aeroplaneвинтово́й самолё́т — propeller(-driven) aeroplaneвое́нный самолё́т — military aeroplaneвысо́тный самолё́т — high-altitude aeroplaneгиперзвуково́й самолё́т — hypersonic aeroplaneгражда́нский самолё́т — civil aeroplaneгрузово́й самолё́т — cargo(-type) aeroplaneдозвуково́й самолё́т — subsonic aeroplaneсамолё́т о́бщего назначе́ния — general-purpose aeroplaneпассажи́рский самолё́т — passenger aeroplaneпожа́рный самолё́т — fire aeroplaneпоршнево́й самолё́т — piston-engined aeroplaneреакти́вный самолё́т — jet aeroplaneсанита́рный самолё́т — air ambulanceсамолё́т с большо́й да́льностью полё́та — long-range aeroplaneсверхзвуково́й самолё́т — supersonic aeroplaneсамолё́т с высо́кими лё́тными характери́стиками — high-performance aeroplaneсамолё́т с двойны́м управле́нием — dual-control aeroplaneсельскохозя́йственный самолё́т — agricultural aeroplaneсери́йный самолё́т — production a aeroplaneсамолё́т с двумя́ дви́гателями — twin-engine aeroplaneсамолё́т с колё́сным шасси́ — wheeled aeroplaneсамолё́т с крыло́м изменя́емой геоме́трии — variable-geometry aeroplaneсамолё́т с лы́жным шасси́ — skiplaneсамолё́т со стрелови́дным крыло́м — swept-winged aeroplaneсамолё́т с поворо́тным крыло́м — tilt-wing aeroplaneсамолё́т с поплавко́вым шасси́ — float seaplaneспорти́вный самолё́т — sporting aeroplaneсамолё́т с треуго́льным крыло́м — delta-wing aeroplaneсамолё́т с укоро́ченными взлё́том и поса́дкой — short take-off and landing [STOL] aeroplaneсухопу́тный самолё́т — landplane, land(-based) aeroplaneсамолё́т с шасси́ на возду́шной поду́шке — ground-effect [air-cushion] take-off and landing aeroplaneсамолё́т ти́па «лета́ющее крыло́» — flying wingсамолё́т ти́па «у́тка» — canard, canard-type aeroplaneтра́нспортный самолё́т — transport (aeroplane)тра́нспортный, сверхзвуково́й самолё́т — supersonic transport, SSTтурбовинтово́й самолё́т — turbo-prop aeroplaneтурбореакти́вный самолё́т — turbo-jet aeroplaneуче́бно-трениро́вочный самолё́т — trainer (aeroplane)уче́бный самолё́т — school [basic trainer] aeroplaneцельнодеревя́нный самолё́т — all-wood aeroplaneцельнометалли́ческий самолё́т — all-metal aeroplane* * * -
14 avión
m.airplane, plane, aircraft, airliner.* * *1 (ave) martin\avión común house martinavión zapador sand martin————————1 aeroplane (US airplane), plane, aircraft\ir/viajar en avión to fly, go by planeavión a reacción jet (plane)* * *noun m.- avión de combate* * *SM1) (Aer) aeroplane, plane, aircraft, airplane (EEUU)por avión — (Correos) by airmail
ir en avión — to go by plane, go by air
avión de carga — freight plane, cargo plane
avión de caza — fighter, pursuit plane
avión de combate — fighter, pursuit plane
2) (Orn) martin3)hacer el avión a algn — * (=hacer daño) to do sb down, cause sb harm; esp And (=estafar) to cheat sb
4) CAm (=juego) hopscotch* * *1) (Aviac) plane, aircraft (frml), airplane (AmE), aeroplane (BrE)por avión — (Corresp) air mail
2) (Méx) (Jueg) hopscotch•* * *= aeroplane, airplane, aircraft, plane.Ex. In this way we could change aeroplanes to AIRPLANES, and at the same time change every subdivision of aeroplanes.Ex. In this way we could change AEROPLANES to airplanes, and at the same time change every subdivision of AEROPLANES.Ex. An example is a picture of an aircraft moving from right to left across a cloudless sky.Ex. Unmindful of the epic moves that made it what it is today, Elwood Bibeau fastened his seat belt as his plane approached the Wexler airport.----* accidente de avión = plane crash, air crash.* avión a chorro = jet.* avión a reacción = jet, jet aircraft.* avión de caza = military jet, fighter plane, fighter jet.* avión de combate = fighter plane, fighter jet.* avión de pasajeros = airliner.* avión de propulsión a chorro = prop jet.* avión reactor = jet aircraft.* avión siniestrado = wreck.* billete de avión = air ticket, airline ticket.* billete de avión de ida y vuelta = round-trip airfare.* coger el avión = jet off.* envío por avión = air freight [airfreight], air cargo.* gastos de avión = airfare [air fare].* pasajero de avión = airline passenger.* piloto de avión de caza = fighter pilot.* piloto de avión de combate = fighter pilot.* precio del billete de avión = airfare [air fare], airline fare.* reserva de billetes de avión = airline reservation.* tripulación del avión = aircrew.* viaje en avión = air travel, air transportation.* * *1) (Aviac) plane, aircraft (frml), airplane (AmE), aeroplane (BrE)por avión — (Corresp) air mail
2) (Méx) (Jueg) hopscotch•* * *= aeroplane, airplane, aircraft, plane.Ex: In this way we could change aeroplanes to AIRPLANES, and at the same time change every subdivision of aeroplanes.
Ex: In this way we could change AEROPLANES to airplanes, and at the same time change every subdivision of AEROPLANES.Ex: An example is a picture of an aircraft moving from right to left across a cloudless sky.Ex: Unmindful of the epic moves that made it what it is today, Elwood Bibeau fastened his seat belt as his plane approached the Wexler airport.* accidente de avión = plane crash, air crash.* avión a chorro = jet.* avión a reacción = jet, jet aircraft.* avión de caza = military jet, fighter plane, fighter jet.* avión de combate = fighter plane, fighter jet.* avión de pasajeros = airliner.* avión de propulsión a chorro = prop jet.* avión reactor = jet aircraft.* avión siniestrado = wreck.* billete de avión = air ticket, airline ticket.* billete de avión de ida y vuelta = round-trip airfare.* coger el avión = jet off.* envío por avión = air freight [airfreight], air cargo.* gastos de avión = airfare [air fare].* pasajero de avión = airline passenger.* piloto de avión de caza = fighter pilot.* piloto de avión de combate = fighter pilot.* precio del billete de avión = airfare [air fare], airline fare.* reserva de billetes de avión = airline reservation.* tripulación del avión = aircrew.* viaje en avión = air travel, air transportation.* * *no le gusta viajar en avión he doesn't like flying[ S ] por avión ( Corresp) air mailCompuestos:● avión a chorro or a reacciónjet plane, jetwater-bomber, tanker(para apagar incendios) water-bomber, tanker; (avión nodriza) tanker aircraftsupply planeattack aircraft● avión de ataque a tierra or al sueloground-attack aircraftfreight plane, cargo planefighter planevertical take-off aircraftwar planepropeller-driven aircraftpassenger planereconnaissance aircrafttransport planespy planemilitary planetanker aircraftunmanned aircraftspotter plane, spotter aircrafttowplane* * *
avión sustantivo masculino (Aviac) plane, aircraft (frml), airplane (AmE), aeroplane (BrE);
( on signs) por avión (Corresp) air mail;
avión a chorro or a reacción jet (plane);◊ avión de combate/de pasajeros fighter/passenger plane
avión 1 sustantivo masculino aeroplane, US airplane, plane, aircraft
enviar una carta por avión, to send a letter by airmail
ir en avión, to fly, go by plane
avión 2 m Orn martin
' avión' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amaraje
- carga
- cargamento
- cola
- derribar
- despegue
- en
- entrar
- envergadura
- escala
- escalerilla
- estela
- flete
- intranquilizar
- intranquilizarse
- mareo
- morro
- nodriza
- picada
- picado
- pilotar
- piloto
- planear
- plaza
- por
- radio
- reactor
- remontar
- remontarse
- repostar
- salir
- salida
- sobrecargo
- subir
- subirse
- tierra
- timón
- tocar
- transportar
- travesía
- velocidad
- volar
- vuelo
- abatir
- abordar
- aeronave
- ala
- anfibio
- aparato
- armazón
English:
aeroplane
- air
- airborne
- aircraft
- airmail
- airplane
- airsick
- board
- bundle
- cabin
- cargo
- catch
- clear
- climb
- connection
- conspiracy
- crash
- detection
- disembark
- dive
- do
- down
- fall away
- fighter
- flight
- fly
- flying
- frequent
- galley
- go
- hijack
- hop
- ice over
- ice up
- in
- jet
- leave
- level off
- level out
- man
- miss
- model
- open
- opposed
- outweigh
- overshoot
- plane
- preferable
- shoot down
- soar
* * *avión nm1. [aeronave] plane, Br aeroplane, US airplane;en avión by plane;por avión [en sobre] airmailavión de carga cargo plane;avión de caza fighter plane;avión cisterna tanker (plane);avión comercial commercial aircraft;avión de despegue vertical jump jet;avión espía spy plane;avión de espionaje spy plane;avión invisible stealth plane;avión militar military aircraft;avión nodriza refuelling plane;avión de papel paper aeroplane;avión de pasajeros passenger aircraft;avión a reacción jet;avión de reconocimiento reconnaissance o spotter plane;avión de transporte transport plane2. [pájaro] house martinavión purpúreo purple martin;avión zapador sand martin* * *m airplane, plane;ir en avión fly* * ** * *avión n plane / aeroplanefuimos en avión we went by plane / we flew -
15 Cody, Colonel Samuel Franklin
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. probably 6 March 1861 Texas, USAd. 7 August 1913 Farnborough, England[br]American (naturalised British) aviation pioneer who made the first sustained aeroplane flight in Britain.[br]"Colonel" Cody was one of the most colourful and controversial characters in aviation history. He dressed as a cowboy, frequently rode a horse, and appeared on the music-hall stage as a sharpshooter. Cody lived in England from 1896 and became a British subject in 1909. He wrote a melodrama, The Klondyke Nugget, which was first performed in 1898, with Cody as the villain and his wife as the heroine. It was a great success and Cody made enough money to indulge in his hobby of flying large kites. Several man-lifting kites were being developed in the mid-1890s, primarily for military observation purposes. Captain B.S.F. Baden-Powell built multiple hexagonal kites in England, while Lawrence Hargrave, in Australia, developed a very successful boxkite. Cody's man-lifting kites were so good that the British Government engaged him to supply kites, and act as an instructor with the Royal Engineers at the Balloon Factory, Farnborough. Cody's kites were rather like a box-kite with wings and, indeed, some were virtually tethered gliders. In 1905 a Royal Engineer reached a record height of 2,600 ft (790 m) in one of Cody's kites. While at Farnborough, Cody assisted with the construction of the experimental airship "British Army Dirigible No. 1", later known as Nulli Secundus. Cody was on board for the first flight in 1907. In the same year, Cody fitted an engine to one of his kites and it flew with no one on board; he also built a free-flying glider version. He went on to build a powered aeroplane with an Antoinette engine and on 16 October 1908 made a flight of 1,390 ft (424 m) at Farnborough; this was the first real flight in Britain. During the following years, Cody's large "Flying Cathedral" became a popular sight at aviation meetings, and in 1911 his "Cathedral" was the only British aeroplane to complete the course in the Circuit of Britain Contest. In 1912 Cody won the first British Military Aeroplane competition (a similar aeroplane is preserved by the Science Museum, London). Unfortunately, Cody and a passenger were killed when his latest aeroplane crashed at Farnborough in 1913; because Cody was such a popular figure at Farnborough, the tree to which he sometimes tethered his aeroplane was preserved as a memorial.Later, there was a great controversy over who the first person to make an aeroplane flight in Britain was, as A.V. Roe, Horatio Phillips and Cody had all made hops before October 1908; most historians, however, now accept that it was Cody. Cody's title of'Colonel' was unofficial, although it was used by King George V on one of several visits to see Cody's work.[br]BibliographyCody gave a lecture to the (Royal) Aeronautical Society which was published in theirAeronautical Journal, London, January 1909.Further ReadingP.B.Walker, 1971, Early Aviation at Farnborough, 2 vols, London (an authoritative source).A.Gould Lee, 1965, The Flying Cathedral, London (biography). G.A.Broomfield, 1953, Pioneer of the Air, Aldershot (a less-reliable biography).JDSBiographical history of technology > Cody, Colonel Samuel Franklin
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16 طائرة
طَائِرَة \ aeroplane; airplane: a flying machine with wings and at least one engine. aircraft: aeroplane or other flying machine. plane: shortened from of aeroplane[b]. \ طَائِرة أَطْفَال \ [b]kite: a light frame (covered with paper or cloth) that is made to fly in the wind on the end of a long string. \ طَائِرة بَحْرِيّة \ seaplane: an aeroplane that lands on water (with floating legs) instead of on airfields. \ طَائِرةُ رُكّاب عُمُومِيّة \ airliner: a large aeroplane for public service. \ طَائِرة شِراعِيَّة \ glider: an aeroplane that has no engine. \ طَائِرة عمودية \ helicopter: an aircraft whose engine turns big blades above it and that can rise straight up, stay still in the air or go forward. \ طَائِرَة قاذِفة قنابِل \ bomber: an aeroplane that drops bombs. \ طَائِرة مُقاتلة \ fighter: a small fast aeroplane, used for defence. \ طَائِرة نَفَّاثة \ jet: a jet-propelled aircraft. \ طَائِرة وَرَقِيَّة \ kite: a light frame (covered with paper or cloth) that is made to fly in the wind on the end of a long string. -
17 Santos-Dumont, Alberto
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 20 July 1873 Cabangu, Rocha Dias, Brazild. 23 July 1932 d. Santos, Sâo Paulo, Brazil[br]Brazilian pioneer in airship and aeroplane flights.[br]Alberto Santos-Dumont, the son of a wealthy Brazilian coffee planter, was sent to Paris to study engineering but developed a passion for flying. After several balloon flights he turned his attention to powered airships. His first small airship, powered by a motorcycle engine, flew in 1898. A series of airships followed and his flights over Paris—and his narrow escapes—generated much public interest. A large cash prize had been offered for the first person to fly from Saint-Cloud around the Eiffel Tower and back inside thirty minutes. Santos-Dumont made two attempts in his airship No. 5, but engine failures caused him to crash, once in a tree and once on a hotel roof. Undismayed, he prepared airship No. 6 and on 19 October 1901 he set out and rounded the Tower, only to suffer yet another engine failure. This time he managed to restart the engine and claim the prize. This flight created a sensation in Paris and beyond. Santos-Dumont continued to create news with a series of airship exploits, and by 1906 he had built a total of fourteen airships. In 1904 Santos-Dumont visited the United States and met Octave Chanute, who described to him the achievements of the Wright brothers. On his return to Paris he set about designing an aeroplane which was unlike any other aeroplane of the period. It had box-kite-like wings and tail, and flew tail-first (a canard) powered by an Antoinette engine at the rear. It was built for him by Gabriel Voisin and was known as the "14 bis" because it was air-tested suspended beneath airship No. 14. It made its first free take-off on 13 September 1906, and then a series of short hops, including one of 220 m (720 ft) which won Santos-Dumont an Aero-Club prize and recognition for the first aeroplane flight in Europe; indeed, it was the first officially witnessed aeroplane flight in the world. Santos-Dumont's most successful aeroplane was his No. 20 of 1909, known as the Demoiselle: a tiny machine popular with sporting pilots. About this time, however, Santos-Dumont became ill and had to abandon his aeronautical activities. Although he had not made any great technical breakthroughs, Santos-Dumont had played a major role in arousing public interest in flying.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsAéro Club de France Grand Prix de l'Aéronautique 1901. Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur 1904.Bibliography1904, Dans l'air, Paris; 1904, pub. as My Airships (repub. 1973, New York: Dover).Further ReadingPeter Wykeham, 1962, Santos-Dumont, A Study in Obsession, London.F.H.da Costa, c. 1971, Alberto Santos-Dumont, O Pai da Aviaçāo; pub. in English asAlberto Santos Dumont, Father of Aviation, Rio de Janeiro.JDS -
18 Langley, Samuel Pierpont
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 22 August 1834 Roxbury, Massachusetts, USAd. 27 February 1906 Aiken, South Carolina, USA[br]American scientist who built an unsuccessful aeroplane in 1903, just before the success of the Wright brothers.[br]Professor Langley was a distinguished mathematician and astronomer who became Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution (US National Museum) in 1887. He was also interested in aviation and embarked on a programme of experiments with a whirling arm to test wings and with a series of free-flying models. In 1896 one of his steam-powered models made a flight of 4,199 ft (1,280 m): this led to a grant from the Government to subsidize the construction of a manned aeroplane. Langley commissioned Stephen M. Balzer, an automobile engine designer, to build a lightweight aero-engine and appointed his assistant, Charles M.Manly, to oversee the project. After many variations, including rotary and radical designs, two versions of the Balzer-Manly engine were produced, one quarter size and one full size. In August 1903 the small engine powered a model which thus became the first petrol-engined aeroplane to fly. Langley designed his full-size aeroplane (which he called an Aerodrome) with tandem wings and a cruciform tail unit. The Balzer-Manly engine drove two pusher propellers. Manly was to be the pilot as Langley was now almost 70 years old. Most early aviators tested their machines by making tentative hops, but Langley decided to launch his Aerodrome by catapult from the roof of a houseboat on the Potomac river. Two attempts were made and on both occasions the Aerodrome crashed into the river: catapult problems and perhaps a structural weakness were to blame. The second crash occurred on 8 December 1903 and it is ironic that the Wright brothers, with limited funds and no Government support, successfully achieved a manned flight just nine days later. Langley was heartbroken. After his death there followed a strange affair in 1914 when Glenn Curtiss took Langley's Aerodrome, modified it, and tried to prove that but for the faulty catapult it would have flown before the Wrights' Flyer. A brief flight was made with floats instead of the catapult, and it flew rather better after more extensive modifications and a new engine.[br]Bibliography1897, Langley Memoir on Mechanical Flight, Part 1, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution; 1911, Part 2.Further ReadingJ.Gordon Vaeth, 1966, Langley: Man of Science and Flight, New York (biography).Charles H. Gibbs-Smith, 1985, Aviation, London (includes an analysis of Langley's work).Tom D.Crouch, 1981, A Dream of Wings, New York.Robert B.Meyer Jr (ed.), 1971, Langley's Aero Engine of 1903, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Annals of Flight, No. 6 (provides details about the engine).JDSBiographical history of technology > Langley, Samuel Pierpont
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19 model
'modl
1. noun1) (a copy or representation of something usually on a much smaller scale: a model of the Taj Mahal; (also adjective) a model aeroplane.) modelo, maqueta2) (a particular type or design of something, eg a car, that is manufactured in large numbers: Our car is a 1999 model.) modelo3) (a person who wears clothes etc so that possible buyers can see them being worn: He has a job as a male fashion model.) modelo, maniquí4) (a person who is painted, sculpted, photographed etc by an artist, photographer etc: I work as an artist's model.) modelo5) (something that can be used to copy from.) modelo, patrón6) (a person or thing which is an excellent example: She is a model of politeness; (also adjective) model behaviour.) modelo
2. verb1) (to wear (clothes etc) to show them to possible buyers: They model (underwear) for a living.) modelar2) (to work or pose as a model for an artist, photographer etc: She models at the local art school.) hacer de modelo, posar3) (to make models (of things or people): to model (the heads of famous people) in clay.) modelar4) (to form (something) into a (particular) shape: She modelled the clay into the shape of a penguin; She models herself on her older sister.) modelar•model1 adj en miniatura / a escalamodel2 n1. modelo / maqueta2. modelotr['mɒdəl]1 (small representation) modelo, maqueta2 (design) modelo, patrón nombre masculino3 (type of car etc) modelo4 (perfect example) modelo, pauta5 (fashion model) modelo nombre masulino o femenino, maniquí nombre masulino o femenino; (artist's model) modelo nombre masulino o femenino1 (miniature) en miniatura, a escala; (toy) de juguete2 (exemplary) ejemplar; (ideal) modelo1 modelar2 presentar, vestir, modelar1 modelar2 trabajar de modelo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto model oneself on somebody seguir el ejemplo de alguien| modeling))1 modelar2 presentar, vestir, modelar1 modelar2 trabajar de modelo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto model oneself upon somebody seguir el ejemplo de alguienshape: modelarmodel vi: trabajar de modelomodel adj1) exemplary: modelo, ejemplara model student: un estudiante modelo2) miniature: en miniaturamodel n1) pattern: modelo m2) miniature: modelo m, miniatura f3) example: modelo m, ejemplo m4) mannequin: modelo mf5) design: modelo mthe '97 model: el modelo '97adj.• modelo, -a adj.n.• boceto s.m.• dechado s.m.• ejemplar s.m.• espejo s.m.• horma s.f.• maqueta s.f.• marco s.m.• modelo s.m.• molde s.m.• muestra s.f.• padrón s.m.• pauta s.f.• plantilla s.f.v.• modelar v.
I 'mɑːdḷ, 'mɒdḷ1) ( reproduction) maqueta f, modelo m2) (paragon, example) modelo m3) ( design) modelo m4) ( person) modelo mf
II
1.
1) \<\<clay/shape\>\> modelar2) ( base)their education system was modeled on that of France — su sistema educativo se inspiró en el francés
3) \<\<garment\>\>
2.
vi1) ( make shapes) modelar
III
adjective (before n, no comp)1) ( miniature) <railway/village> en miniatura, a escala['mɒdl]1. N1) (=small-scale representation) modelo m a escala, maqueta f2) (=example) modelo mto hold sth/sb up as a model — presentar algo/a algn como modelo (a seguir)
a tribunal is to be set up on the model of Nuremberg — se constituirá un tribunal según el modelo de or a la manera del de Nuremberg
3) (=paragon) modelo mhe is a model of good behaviour/patience — es un modelo de buen comportamiento/paciencia
4) (=person) (Art) modelo mf ; (Fashion) modelo mf, maniquí mf5) (Comm) (=design) modelo m2. ADJ1) (=miniature) [railway, village] en miniatura, a escala2) (=prototype) [home] piloto3) (=perfect) modelo inva model husband/wife — un marido/una esposa modelo
3. VT1)to model sth on sth: their new socialist state is modelled on that of China — su nuevo estado socialista toma como modelo el de China
to model o.s. on sb — tomar a algn como modelo
children usually model themselves on their parents — los niños normalmente toman como modelo a sus padres
he models himself on James Dean — imita a James Dean, su modelo a imitar es James Dean
2) (Art) modelar3) (Fashion)4. VI1) (Art) (=make models) modelar2) (Phot, Art) posar; (Fashion) ser modelo, trabajar de modelo* * *
I ['mɑːdḷ, 'mɒdḷ]1) ( reproduction) maqueta f, modelo m2) (paragon, example) modelo m3) ( design) modelo m4) ( person) modelo mf
II
1.
1) \<\<clay/shape\>\> modelar2) ( base)their education system was modeled on that of France — su sistema educativo se inspiró en el francés
3) \<\<garment\>\>
2.
vi1) ( make shapes) modelar
III
adjective (before n, no comp)1) ( miniature) <railway/village> en miniatura, a escala -
20 Fabre, Henri
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 29 November 1882 Marseilles, Franced. June 1984 France[br]French engineer, designer of the first seaplane, in which he made the first flight from water.[br]After obtaining a degree in engineering, Fabre specialized in hydrodynamics. Around 1904 he developed an interest in flying and followed the progress of early French aviators such as Archdeacon, Voisin and Blériot who were experimenting with float-gliders. Fabre carried out many experiments during the following years, including airflow tests on various surfaces and hydrodynamic tests on different designs for floats. He also built a propeller-driven motor car to develop the most efficient design for a propeller. In 1909 he built his first "hydro-aeroplane", but it failed to fly. By March 1910 he built a new float plane which was very different from contemporary French aeroplanes. It was a tail-first (canard) monoplane and had unusual Warren girder spars exposed to the airstream. The engine was a conventional Gnome rotary mounted at the rear of the machine. On 28 March 1910 Fabre, who had no previous experience of flying, decided he was ready to test his hydro-aeroplane. First he made several straight runs to test the planing properties of his three floats, then he made several short hops. In the afternoon Fabre took off from the harbour at La Mède near Marseille before official witnesses: he was able to claim the first flight by a powered seaplane. His hydro-aeroplane is preserved in the Musée de l'Air et de l'Espace in Paris.Despite several accidents, Fabre continued to improve his design and in October of 1910 Glenn Curtiss, the American designer, visited Fabre to compare notes. A year later Curtiss built the first of his many successful seaplanes. Fabre did not continue as an aircraft designer, but he went on to design and manufacture floats for other people.[br]Bibliography1980, J'ai vu naître l'aviation, Grenoble (autobiography).JDS
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