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1 shore
[ʃo:](land bordering on the sea or on any large area of water: a walk along the shore; When the ship reached Gibraltar the passengers were allowed on shore.) coastă, ţărm, litoral -
2 shore
(drum) pop ptr. armarea galeriilor; (geog, hidr, nav) coastă maritimă, mal, ţărm, uscat // a sprijini,, a contravântui, a propti -
3 shore up
(th) a sprijini, a propti, a rezema -
4 Shore hardness
(mec) duritate Shore -
5 Shore sleroscope
(met) scleroscop Shore -
6 Shore's dynamic indentation test
(mec) încercare dinamică la duritate conform ShoreEnglish-Romanian technical dictionary > Shore's dynamic indentation test
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7 inshore
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8 dynamic ball-indentation hardness
(metr) duritate Shore / scleroscopicăEnglish-Romanian technical dictionary > dynamic ball-indentation hardness
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9 dynamic ball-indentation test
(metr) încercare de duritate Shore / scleroscopicăEnglish-Romanian technical dictionary > dynamic ball-indentation test
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10 impact hardness
(mec, metr) duritate scleroscopică / Shore -
11 rebound hardness
(met) duritate Shore -
12 scleroscope / scleroscopic hardness
(met) duritate Shore / scleroscopicăEnglish-Romanian technical dictionary > scleroscope / scleroscopic hardness
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13 scleroscope-hardness test
(met) încercare de duritate Shore / scleroscopicăEnglish-Romanian technical dictionary > scleroscope-hardness test
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14 anchor
['æŋkə] 1. noun1) (something, usually a heavy piece of metal with points which dig into the sea-bed, used to hold a boat in one position.) ancoră2) (something that holds someone or something steady.) salvare, sprijin2. verb(to hold (a boat etc) steady (with an anchor): They have anchored (the boat) near the shore; He used a stone to anchor his papers.) a ancora- at anchor -
15 ashore
[ə'ʃo:](on or on to the shore: The sailor went ashore.) pe uscat -
16 beach
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17 driftwood
noun (wood floating on or cast up on the shore by the sea: We made a fire with driftwood.) lemn plutitor -
18 for all one is worth
(using all one's efforts, strength etc: He swam for all he was worth towards the shore.) din toate puterile -
19 high and dry
1) ((of boats) on the shore; out of the water: The boat was left high and dry of the beach.) pe mal; eşuat2) (in difficulties: Her husband has left her high and dry without any money.) de izbelişte -
20 high tide
(the time when the tide is farthest up the shore: High tide today is at 15.46; They set sail at high tide.) cotă maximă a fluxului
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См. также в других словарях:
Shore — steht für den Werkstoffkennwert Shore Härte, siehe Härte#Härteprüfung nach Shore die Droge Heroin Shore oder Schore ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Allan N. Schore (* 1943), US amerikanischer Psychologe Daryl Shore (* 1970), US… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Shore — Shore, n. [OE. schore, AS. score, probably fr. scieran, and so meaning properly, that which is shorn off, edge; akin to OD. schoore, schoor. See {Shear}, v. t.] The coast or land adjacent to a large body of water, as an ocean, lake, or large… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
shore — n Shore, coast, beach, strand, bank, littoral, foreshore are comparable when they mean land bordering a body or stream of water. Shore is the general word for the land immediately bordering on the sea, a lake, or a large stream. Coast denotes the … New Dictionary of Synonyms
shore — Ⅰ. shore [1] ► NOUN 1) the land along the edge of a sea, lake, etc. 2) (also shores) literary a country or other geographic area bounded by a coast: distant shores. ● in shore Cf. ↑in shore ● … English terms dictionary
Shore — Shore, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Shored}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Shoring}.] [OE. schoren. See {Shore} a prop.] To support by a shore or shores; to prop; usually with up; as, to shore up a building. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Shore — Shore, v. t. To set on shore. [Obs.] Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
shore — [ʆɔː ǁ ʆɔːr] verb shore something → up phrasal verb [transitive] to help a system or organization that is likely to fail or is not working well: • The company was shored up by an emergency infusion of cash from its main bank … Financial and business terms
shore up — (something) to make something stronger by supporting it. Part of the roof collapsed, and emergency workers had to shore up walls to prevent further damage. Central banks try to shore the economy up by lowering interest rates … New idioms dictionary
shore — shore1 [shôr] n. [ME schore < OE * score (akin to MLowG schore) < or akin to scorian, to jut out < IE base * (s)ker , to cut > HARVEST] 1. land at or near the edge of a body of water, esp. along an ocean, large lake, etc. 2. land as… … English World dictionary
Shore — Shore, n. A sewer. [Obs. or Prov. Eng.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Shore — Shore, n. [OE. schore; akin to LG. schore, D. schoor, OD. schoore, Icel. skor?a, and perhaps to E. shear, as being a piece cut off.] A prop, as a timber, placed as a brace or support against the side of a building or other structure; a prop… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English