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81 szövőszék
(DE) Webestuhl {r}; Webstuhl {r}; (EN) loom; weaving loom -
82 шовкоткацький
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83 Doppelwebstuhl
m < textil> ■ double-cloth weaving loom -
84 Drahtwebmaschine für Feingewebe
f < prod> ■ Fourdrinier wire weaving loomGerman-english technical dictionary > Drahtwebmaschine für Feingewebe
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85 Tuchwebstuhl
m < textil> ■ cloth weaving loom -
86 working width
<tech.gen> (e.g. paper machine, weaving loom, lawn mower, road sweeper) ■ Arbeitsbreite f -
87 станок
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88 sandung
stumble over, stumbled over, stumbled over, stumbling over* * *pedal of weaving loom -
89 weefstoel
n. weaving loom -
90 krosno bezczółenkowe
• shuttleless weaving loomSłownik polsko-angielski dla inżynierów > krosno bezczółenkowe
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91 станок
м.1) тех. lathe [leɪð]; ( металлорежущий) machine tool, machineтка́цкий стано́к — (weaving) loom
печа́тный стано́к — printing press
тока́рный стано́к — lathe
револьве́рный стано́к — turret lathe
фре́зерный стано́к — milling machine
строга́льный стано́к — planer
2) воен. ( оружия) mount(ing)прице́льный стано́к — aiming rest
стано́к лафе́та — body of gun carriage
пулемётный стано́к — machinegun mount
3) иск. easel ['iːzəl]4) разг. ( для бритья) safety razor -
92 θρίξ
θρίξ, τριχόςGrammatical information: f.Compounds: Compp., e. g. τριχό-φυλλος `with leaves like hair' (Thphr., of a pine-forest), οὑλό-θριξ `with krausem Haar' (Hdt. usw.).Derivatives: 1. θρίσσα, Att. θρίττα f. (\< *θρίχ-ι̯α) kind of anchovy, `Clupea alosa' (middl. Com., Arist., after the hairlike bones, Strömberg Fischnamen 47f.; also Thompson Fishes s. v.; from there Ital.-Lomb. trissa a. o.?; s. Pok. 276); dimin. θρισσίον (pap.); in the same meaning also τριχίς, - ίδος f. (Ar.), τριχίδιον (Alex.), τριχίας m. (Arist.). 2. Dimin. τρίχιον (Arist.). 3. τριχώδης `full of hair, hairlike' (Hp., Arist.). 4. τριχωτός `hairy' (Arist.; cf. τριχόομαι below). 5. τρίχῐνος `of hair' (Pl., X.). 6. τριχῖτις, - ιδος f. sort of alum (after the fibrous nature; Dsc., Plin.; Redard Les noms grecs en - της 62). 7. τριχία `knot' (pap.). 8. τριχισμός `hairfine split of a bone' (Paul. Aeg.), as if from *τριχίζω; cf. Chantraine Formation 143ff. Denomin. verbs. 1. τριχόομαι, - όω `be provided with hairs' (Arist.); from there τρίχωμα `hair(growth)' (Hdt., E., X.) with τριχωμάτιον (Arist.); τρίχωσις `hairgrowth' (Arist.); cf. also τριχωτός above. 2. τριχιάω `suffer from a hairdisease' (Hp., Arist.) with τριχίασις name of some hairdiseases (medic.). 3. *τριχίζω cf. τριχισμός above.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: As the designations of hair differ from language to language (s. Buck Synonyms 203f., Ernout-Meillet s. capillus), we do not expect a cognate in other languages. So the comparison with MIr. gairb-driuch `bristle' (from garb `raw' and * drigu- or * driku-, Fick 2, 156) can better be disregarded. On Lith. drikà `threads hanging from the weaving-loom' s. Fraenkel Lit. et. Wb. s. draĩkas `long-drawn'.Page in Frisk: 1,684Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θρίξ
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93 τριχός
θρίξ, τριχόςGrammatical information: f.Compounds: Compp., e. g. τριχό-φυλλος `with leaves like hair' (Thphr., of a pine-forest), οὑλό-θριξ `with krausem Haar' (Hdt. usw.).Derivatives: 1. θρίσσα, Att. θρίττα f. (\< *θρίχ-ι̯α) kind of anchovy, `Clupea alosa' (middl. Com., Arist., after the hairlike bones, Strömberg Fischnamen 47f.; also Thompson Fishes s. v.; from there Ital.-Lomb. trissa a. o.?; s. Pok. 276); dimin. θρισσίον (pap.); in the same meaning also τριχίς, - ίδος f. (Ar.), τριχίδιον (Alex.), τριχίας m. (Arist.). 2. Dimin. τρίχιον (Arist.). 3. τριχώδης `full of hair, hairlike' (Hp., Arist.). 4. τριχωτός `hairy' (Arist.; cf. τριχόομαι below). 5. τρίχῐνος `of hair' (Pl., X.). 6. τριχῖτις, - ιδος f. sort of alum (after the fibrous nature; Dsc., Plin.; Redard Les noms grecs en - της 62). 7. τριχία `knot' (pap.). 8. τριχισμός `hairfine split of a bone' (Paul. Aeg.), as if from *τριχίζω; cf. Chantraine Formation 143ff. Denomin. verbs. 1. τριχόομαι, - όω `be provided with hairs' (Arist.); from there τρίχωμα `hair(growth)' (Hdt., E., X.) with τριχωμάτιον (Arist.); τρίχωσις `hairgrowth' (Arist.); cf. also τριχωτός above. 2. τριχιάω `suffer from a hairdisease' (Hp., Arist.) with τριχίασις name of some hairdiseases (medic.). 3. *τριχίζω cf. τριχισμός above.Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: As the designations of hair differ from language to language (s. Buck Synonyms 203f., Ernout-Meillet s. capillus), we do not expect a cognate in other languages. So the comparison with MIr. gairb-driuch `bristle' (from garb `raw' and * drigu- or * driku-, Fick 2, 156) can better be disregarded. On Lith. drikà `threads hanging from the weaving-loom' s. Fraenkel Lit. et. Wb. s. draĩkas `long-drawn'.Page in Frisk: 1,684Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > τριχός
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94 dəzgah
machine (-tool)toxucu dəzgahı – weaving loomdülgər dəzgahı – joiner's bench -
95 shuttle
shuttle ['ʃʌtəl]1 noun(a) (vehicle, service) navette f;∎ there is a shuttle bus service from the station to the stadium il y a une navette d'autobus entre la gare et le stade;∎ the 8 o'clock shuttle to Glasgow la navette de 8 heures pour Glasgow(b) (on weaving loom, sewing machine) navette f(c) (shuttlecock) volant m (au badminton)faire la navette;∎ he shuttles between New York and Chicago il fait la navette entre New York et Chicago∎ a helicopter shuttled the injured to hospital un hélicoptère a fait la navette pour transporter les blessés à l'hôpital;∎ passengers are shuttled to the airport by bus les passagers sont transportés en bus à l'aéroport►► shuttle diplomacy navette f diplomatique -
96 Ma Jun (Ma Chun)
[br]fl. 220–265 China[br]Chinese engineer and inventor.[br]Ma Jun was active at the court of Emperor Ming Ti and achieved several useful inventions in a number of fields. First, he made improvements in the silk-weaving loom by simplifying the heddles and treadles, thereby enabling a greater variety of patterns to be woven. Second, he constructed a "south pointing carriage", which was a two-wheeled cart with a train of gears arranged so that whichever direction the vehicle turned, the figure mounted on top of it would always point south. This may seem trivial, but the carriage may have had useful applications, possibly in surveying. During the period 227 to 239, Ma Jun also made a square-pallet chain pump, usually attributed to Bi Lan (186 AD), Loyang, that was used to irrigate parks and gardens. Other inventions included rotary ballistae and mechanical toys that were worked by water power, such as puppets operated by horizontal jack wheels.[br]Further ReadingJ.Needham, Science and Civilisation in China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1965, Vol. IV, 2, pp. 39–42, 286–8, 295, 303, 346, 350, 524, 532–3.LRD -
97 Webstuhl
mweaving loom -
98 karap
shuttlecomb on a weaving loom. -
99 sandung
pedal of weaving loom. sandung-an stumbling block. -
100 suri
1. shuttle comb on a weaving loom. 2 see IBU.
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