-
1 hoist
hoist [hɔɪst]2. nouna. ( = equipment) appareil m de levage ; ( = winch) treuil m ; ( = crane) grue f ; (for goods) monte-charge m inv ; (made of rope) palan m* * *[hɔɪst] 1.noun palan m2.transitive verb hisser [flag, sail, heavy object] -
2 hoist
to be hoist with one's own petard être pris à son propre piège. -
3 hoist
hoist [hɔɪst](sails, flag) hisser; (load, person) lever, hisser;∎ figurative to be hoist with one's own petard être pris à son propre piège;∎ she hoisted herself on to the wall elle s'est hissée sur le mur2 noun(b) (upward push, pull) -
4 hoist
[hoist] 1. verb1) (to lift (something heavy): he hoisted the sack on to his back; He hoisted the child up on to his shoulders.) hisser2) (to raise or lift by means of some apparatus, a rope etc: The cargo was hoisted on to the ship: They hoisted the flag.) hisser2. noun1) (an apparatus for lifting usually heavy objects: a luggage hoist.) treuil2) (a lift or push up: Give me a hoist over this wall, will you!) poussée -
5 hoist
appareil de levage m, élévateur m, montecharge m, palan m, treuil mDictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > hoist
-
6 hoist cable
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > hoist cable
-
7 hoist of concrete form
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > hoist of concrete form
-
8 hoist tower
sapine fDictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > hoist tower
-
9 air hoist
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > air hoist
-
10 builder’s hoist
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > builder’s hoist
-
11 chain hoist
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > chain hoist
-
12 differential hoist
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > differential hoist
-
13 material hoist
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > material hoist
-
14 personnel and material hoist
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > personnel and material hoist
-
15 platform hoist
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > platform hoist
-
16 service hoist
UKDictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > service hoist
-
17 two-drum hoist
Dictionary of Engineering, architecture and construction > two-drum hoist
-
18 ceiling hoist
English-French architecture and construction dictionary > ceiling hoist
-
19 elevator
-
20 run up
1) (to hoist (a flag).) hisser2) (to make quickly or roughly: I can run up a dress in a couple of hours.) confectionner3) (to collect up, accumulate (debts): He ran up an enormous bill.) laisser accumuler
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Hoist — may refer to: *Hoist (device), a machine for lifting loads *hoist controller, a machine for raising and lowering goods or personnel by means of a cable *Hydraulic hooklift hoist, another machine *Hoist (flag), the half of a flag nearer to the… … Wikipedia
hoist — [hɔɪst] verb [transitive] to increase something quickly or suddenly: • The state is getting ready to hoist its sales tax next week. hoist noun [countable] : • High Street banks raised their lending rates by 2% following the Government s initial… … Financial and business terms
hoist´er — hoist «hoyst», verb, noun. –v.t. to raise on high; lift up, often with ropes and pulleys: »to hoist a flag, to hoist sails, to hoist blocks of stone in building. –n. 1. the act of hoisting; lift; boost: »He gave me a hoist up the wall. 2 … Useful english dictionary
hoist — ► VERB 1) raise by means of ropes and pulleys. 2) haul or lift up. ► NOUN 1) an act of hoisting. 2) an apparatus for hoisting. 3) the part of a flag nearest the staff. 4) a group of flags raised as a signal … English terms dictionary
Hoist — Hoist, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Hoisted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Hoisting}.] [OE. hoise, hyse, OD. hyssen, D. hijshen; akin to LG. hissen, Dan. hisse, Sw. hissa.] To raise; to lift; to elevate; esp., to raise or lift to a desired elevation, by means of… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hoist — (v.) 1540s, to raise, earlier hoise (c.1500), probably originally past tense of M.E. hysse (late 15c.), which is probably from M.Du. hyssen (Du. hijsen) to hoist, related to Low Ger. hissen and O.N. hissa upp raise. A nautical word found in most… … Etymology dictionary
Hoist — Hoist, p. p. Hoisted. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] T is the sport to have the enginer Hoist with his own petar. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Hoist — Hoist, n. 1. That by which anything is hoisted; the apparatus for lifting goods. [1913 Webster] 2. The act of hoisting; a lift. [Colloq.] [1913 Webster] 3. (Naut.) (a) The perpendicular height of a flag, as opposed to the fly, or horizontal… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
hoist — hoist; hoist·er; hoist·man; … English syllables
hoist — meaning ‘to raise or haul up’, has past and past participle forms hoisted. Historically hoist is a participial form of an earlier verb hoise (with the same meaning), and it survives in this form in the expression hoist with one s own petard,… … Modern English usage
hoist — [hoist] vt. [< HOISE + unhistoric t (< ? the pp.)] to raise aloft; lift or pull up, esp. by means of a cable, pulley, crane, etc. n. 1. an act of hoisting 2. an apparatus for raising heavy things; elevator; tackle 3. Naut. a) the… … English World dictionary