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1 Alpaca Wool
This is obtained from the domesticated alpaca, an animal resembling the angora goat, but smaller, and is variously white, reddish-brown, or black; fibre 6 to 8-in. long, with a uniform diameter, slightly wavy, smooth and fine. It is chiefly used for ladies' dress cloths and lounge jackets. Spun into counts 28's and heavier, also 2/40's and 2/36's from the finer wools. Hosiery yarns are also made from alpaca wool, mostly soft spun in natural shades. -
2 Alpaca (Extract Wool)
Alpaca "wool" weft is obtained by disintegrating fabrics made of mixture materials, and may contain animal and vegetable fibres. The term is also applied to a lustre fabric woven with a cotton warp and alpaca wool weft, plain weave. When dyed in solid colours it is cross-dyed, the cotton warp being dyed before weaving, and the piece is piece-dyed after leaving the loom. The warp is usually 2/80's Egyptian. The cloth wears well and not liable to gather dust, so is used for linings and men's summer coats. A typical cloth is woven 56-in., 72 X 70, 2/80/ 28's alpaca. The true alpaca is a long, white or coloured smooth hair obtained from the Auchenia paco of South America (see Alpaca Wool)Dictionary of the English textile terms > Alpaca (Extract Wool)
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3 Alpaca Yarns
These are spun from the raw material obtained from the Alpaca goat. The natural colours are white, reddish-brown and black. The fine yarns are 2/40's and 2/36's and medium yarns from 1/28's and heavier (see Alpaca Wool) -
4 alpaca
f.1 alpaca.2 German silver.* * *1 (animal, tela) alpaca————————1 (metal) nickel silver, German silver, alpaca* * *SF alpaca* * *1) (Zool, Tex) alpaca2) (Metal) nickel silver, German silver* * *= bale.Ex. They specialised in printing labels for marking bales of fabric exported from Britain to India 1860s-1890s.----* alpaca de paja = straw bale.* * *1) (Zool, Tex) alpaca2) (Metal) nickel silver, German silver* * *= bale.Ex: They specialised in printing labels for marking bales of fabric exported from Britain to India 1860s-1890s.
* alpaca de paja = straw bale.* * *A1 ( Zool) alpacalana de alpaca alpaca (wool)2 ( Tex) alpacaB ( Metal) nickel silver, German silver* * *
alpaca sustantivo femenino
1 (Zool, Tex) alpaca;
2 (Metal) nickel silver, German silver
alpaca sustantivo femenino alpaca
* * *alpaca nf1. [metal] alpaca, German o nickel silver2. [animal] alpaca3. [tela] alpaca* * ** * *alpaca nf: alpaca -
5 Alpaca Cloth
The name is derived from the Spanish term for the Vicuna. The wool is mixed with silk or cotton and the yarn woven into a thin durable cloth for both men's and women's wear. Sir Titus Salt introduced the wool into Yorkshire, and it is now used for the manufacture of alpacas, lustres, silk warp alpaca, alpaca mixtures, mohair linings and numerous other cloths. -
6 Alpaca
ALPACA (U.S.A.)A fabric is produced in U.S.A. under this name, which is just a plain weave cloth with viscose weft. It is made 34-in. loom state and finished "Scotch Finish", 64 X 50, 42/150 den., usually bleached or black. ———————— Hair yielded by a Peruvian goat. The quality varies from low to fine, and is from fair to very fine in staple, which is from 7 to 15-in. long. It is lustrous and very soft in handle, and obtained in white, brown, and black colours. The wool has two staples; the shorter, known as Kumbi, is 7-in. long; the other, Hanaska, is 15-in. long, and shipped from Arequipa. -
7 Guanaco Wool And Yarn
A wool obtained from a native sheep of South America it is of the same colour and nature as that of the Vienna, but shorter and coarser. Used in hat making and for umbrella cloth. The yam is similar to alpaca yarn and often confused with it.Dictionary of the English textile terms > Guanaco Wool And Yarn
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8 Paco Wool
Another name for Alpaca. -
9 lana
f.1 wool.de lana woolenlana de vidrio glass fiber2 money, capital, dough.m.dosh, dough (informal). (Andean Spanish (Bolivia, Chilean Spanish, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru), Mexican Spanish)* * *1 wool■ ¡córtate esas lanas! get your hair cut!\de lana woollen (US woolen)cardarle la lana a alguien familiar to tick somebody off, tell somebody offir por lana y salir trasquilado,-a familiar to go for wool and come home shorn* * *noun f.* * *ISF1) [gen] wool; (=vellón) fleece; (=tela) woollen cloth, woolen cloth (EEUU); [para labores] knitting woolde lana, hecho de lana — wool antes de s, woollen, woolen (EEUU)
5) CAm (=estafador) swindlerII* * *1) ( material) wool; (vellón, pelambre) fleeceuna bufanda de lana — a wool o woolen scarf
2) (AmL fam) ( dinero) dough (sl)tienen mucha lana — they're loaded (colloq)
* * *= wool, fleece.Ex. In this subject context the concept wool plays the role of Material.Ex. Most fleece is carded between two brushes to disentangle and align the fiber.----* cardar lana = card + wool.* ovillo de lana = ball of wool.* paño de lana = woollen [woolen, -USA].* productor de lana = wool producer.* pura lana = pure wool.* pura lana virgen = pure new wool.* tejido grueso de lana = duffel [duffle].* * *1) ( material) wool; (vellón, pelambre) fleeceuna bufanda de lana — a wool o woolen scarf
2) (AmL fam) ( dinero) dough (sl)tienen mucha lana — they're loaded (colloq)
* * *= wool, fleece.Ex: In this subject context the concept wool plays the role of Material.
Ex: Most fleece is carded between two brushes to disentangle and align the fiber.* cardar lana = card + wool.* ovillo de lana = ball of wool.* paño de lana = woollen [woolen, -USA].* productor de lana = wool producer.* pura lana = pure wool.* pura lana virgen = pure new wool.* tejido grueso de lana = duffel [duffle].* * *A (material) wool; (vellón, pelambre) fleecelana de alpaca alpaca wooluna madeja de lana a skein of woolusó tres lanas distintas she used three different wools o kinds of wooluna bufanda de lana a wool o woolen o ( colloq) wooly scarftela de lana woolen cloth, woolno son de nylon, son de lana they're not nylon, they're woolir (a) por lana y volver trasquilado to be hoist by one's own petardunos cardan la lana y otros cobran la fama some do all the work and others get all the creditCompuestos:steel woolfiberglass*● lana merino or merinaBotany woolnew woolpura lana virgen pure new wooltienen mucha lana they're loaded ( colloq)* * *
lana sustantivo femenino
1 ( material) wool;
(vellón, pelambre) fleece;
una bufanda de lana a wool o woolen scarf
2 (AmL fam) ( dinero) dough (sl);◊ tienen mucha lana they're loaded (colloq)
lana sustantivo femenino wool
pura lana virgen, pure new wool
' lana' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
calceta
- chaleco
- dar
- devanar
- ser
- estambre
- mechón
- paño
- prenda
- tonsurar
- alpaca
- apelmazarse
- cardar
- catalán
- cundir
- desenredar
- enmarañado
- enredado
- enredar
- esponjoso
- gordo
- guante
- hilar
- hueco
- jaspeado
- madeja
- mota
- peinar
- peludo
- picar
- tela
- terminar
English:
ball
- coat
- demand
- fleece
- scarf
- shear
- snarl up
- tangle
- wool
- woolen
- woollen
- woolly
- wooly
- cash
- Catalan
- cough
- dough
- loop
- loot
- ply
- steel
- woolens
* * *lana nf1. [de oveja] wool;de lana woollen;ir a por lana y volver trasquilado to be hoist with one's own petardlana mineral rock wool;lana de vidrio glass wool;lana virgen virgin woolser de lana to be rolling in it* * *f1wool;pura lana virgen pure new wool* * *lana nf1) : woollana de acero: steel wool* * *lana n wool -
10 Salt, Sir Titus
[br]b. 20 September 1803 Morley, Yorkshire, Englandd. 29 December 1876 Saltaire, Yorkshire, England[br]English industrialist, social reformer and entrepreneur who made his fortune by overcoming the problems of utilizing alpaca wool in the production of worsted, and established the early model town at Saltaire.[br]Titus Salt arrived in Bradford with his father, who was a wool merchant in the town, in 1822. He soon set up his own company and it was there that he experimented with the textile worsted. Alpaca wool comes from an animal of the camel family that resembles the llama, and flocks of domesticated breeds of the animal had been raised in the high Andes since the days of the Incas. The wool was introduced into Europe via Spain and, later, Germany and France. The first attempts to spin and weave the yarn in England were made in 1808, but despite experimentation over the years the material was difficult to work. It was in 1836 that Salt evolved his method of utilizing a cotton warp with part alpaca weft. The method proved a great success and Bradford gained a reputation as a manufacturing centre for alpaca wool, exporting both yarn and cloth in quantity, especially to the USA. By 1850 Salt, who owned six mills, was Bradford's biggest employer and was certainly its richest citizen. He decided to move out of the city and built a new mill works, the architects of which were Lockwood and Mawson, on the banks of the River Aire a few miles from the city. Around the works, between 1851 and 1871, he built houses, a hospital, library, church, institute and almshouses for his workers. The buildings were solid, good-standard structures of local stone and the houses were pleasantly situated, with their amenities making them seem palaces compared to the slums in which other Bradford textile workers lived at the time. The collection of buildings was the first example in Britain of a "model new town", and was, indeed still is, a remarkable prototype of its kind. Apart from being a philanthropist and social reformer, Salt was also concerned with taking advantage of the technical developments of his time. His mill works, which eventually covered ten acres of land, was of fashionably Italianate architectural style (its chimney even a copy of the campanile of the Church of Santa Maria Gloriosa in Venice), although its structure was of iron framing. The weaving shed held 1,200 looms and had capacity for 3,000 workers, who produced 30,000 yards of cloth per day. Water from the river was used to produce steam to power the matchinery used in the manufacturing processes of scouring, dyeing and finishing. For the export of goods, the nearby Leeds-Liverpool Canal linked the works to Britain's chief ports, and the Midland Railway (an extension of the LeedsBradford line which opened in 1846) was of great use for the same purpose.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCreated Baronet 1869.Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography.Visitors Guide to Salt aire, Bradford City Council.DY -
11 Alpaka
n; -s, -s ZOOL. alpaca* * *Al|pạ|ka [al'paka]nt -s, -s1) (= Lamaart) alpaca2) no pl alpaca (wool)3) no pl (= Neusilber) German or nickel silver* * *Al·pa·ka<-s, -s>[alˈpaka]nt alpaca* * *das; Alpakas, Alpakas alpaca* * ** * *das; Alpakas, Alpakas alpaca -
12 Alpakawolle
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13 alpakowy
The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > alpakowy
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14 alpakka
subst. (pattedyr) (Lama pacos) alpaca subst. (alpakkaull) alpaca wool subst. alpaca, paco, plated German silver subst. [ vevd stoff] lustre cloth, Sicilian subst. [ nysølv] German silver (du store alpakka) Good heavens, Good gracious -
15 textil
adj.textile.* * *► adjetivo1 textile1 textile\industria textil textile industryobrero textil textile worker* * *noun m. adj.* * *1. ADJ1) [industria] textile2) [playa] non-nudist2.pl textilesSMPL (=tejidos) textiles3.* * *Iadjetivo textile (before n)IImasculino textile* * *= textile.Ex. The inclusion of much of West Yorkshire in the non-quota textile programme is claimed to be at least partly attributable to this persistence.----* propietario de una fábrica textil = wool-factor.* * *Iadjetivo textile (before n)IImasculino textile* * *= textile.Ex: The inclusion of much of West Yorkshire in the non-quota textile programme is claimed to be at least partly attributable to this persistence.
* propietario de una fábrica textil = wool-factor.* * *textile ( before n)textile(CS)textile mill* * *
textil adjetivo
textile ( before n)
textil adjetivo & sustantivo masculino textile
' textil' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
borla
- fábrica
English:
textile
* * *♦ adjtextile♦ nmtextile♦ nfRP textile millTEXTILES INDÍGENASIn Latin America, many indigenous people still manufacture their traditional textiles by hand, as they did in pre-Columbian times. Made almost exclusively by women, these textiles include “molas” (embroidery from Guatemala and Panama), “huipiles” (shawls from southern Mexico and Guatemala) and “aguayos” (alpaca wool shawls from Bolivia and Peru). “Molas” are cloth panels made of brightly coloured pieces of fabric sewn together to depict animals or a landscape. They can then be used to decorate colourful traditional blouses. “Huipiles” and “aguayos” are woven on looms with a narrow geometrical border and sometimes show ritual animals and objects, or even entire stories. In pre-Columbian times such textiles were worn as ceremonial costumes, given as gifts, offered up to the gods and buried with the dead. Today they are used in everyday accessories, such as blankets, trimmings, handbags and shoes, and “huipiles” and “aguayos” are used for carrying loads (and babies).* * *I adj textile atrII mpl:textiles textiles* * *textil adj & nm: textile* * *textil adj textile -
16 шерсть альпака
General subject: alpaca, alpaca wool -
17 Alpakawolle
f < textil> ■ alpaca wool; alpaca -
18 шерсть ламы
2) Engineering: alpaca wool, llama wool -
19 alpakkaull
subst. alpaca wool -
20 Cumbri
A cloth made of alpaca wool in Peru and Bolivia for native dress wear. It is very carefully woven and of good quality.
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См. также в других словарях:
Alpaca fiber — Alpaca fleece is the natural fiber harvested from an Alpaca. It is a light weight, soft, durable, luxurious Quiggle, Charlotte. Alpaca: An Ancient Luxury. Interweave Knits Fall 2000: 74 76.] and silky natural fiber. While similar to sheep’s wool… … Wikipedia
Wool (disambiguation) — Wool is the fibre commonly produced from sheepWool (the fiber) refers to one of the following: *Alpaca wool, derived from fur of alpacas *Angora wool, derived from fur of rabbits *Cashmere wool, derived from fur of goats *Cotton wool, derived… … Wikipedia
Alpaca — Taxobox name = Alpaca status = DOM image width = 250px image caption = An unshorn Alpaca grazing regnum = Animalia phylum = Chordata classis = Mammalia ordo = Artiodactyla familia = Camelidae genus = Vicugna species = V. pacos binomial = Vicugna… … Wikipedia
alpaca — /al pak euh/, n. 1. a domesticated South American hoofed mammal, Lama pacos, having long, soft, silky fleece, related to the llama and believed to be a variety of the guanaco. 2. the fleece of this animal. 3. a fabric or yarn made of it. 4. a… … Universalium
alpaca — [[t]ælpæ̱kə[/t]] alpacas 1) N UNCOUNT: oft N n Alpaca is a type of soft wool. He was wearing a light grey alpaca suit. 2) N COUNT Alpacas are South American animals similar to llamas. Their hair is the source of alpaca wool … English dictionary
alpaca — al•pac•a [[t]ælˈpæk ə[/t]] n. pl. pac•as 1) mam a domesticated South American hoofed mammal, Lama pacos, having long, soft, silky fleece, related to the llama and believed to be a variety of the guanaco 2) the fleece of this animal 3) tex a yarn… … From formal English to slang
alpaca — [al pak′ə] n. pl. alpacas or alpaca [Sp < Aymara allpaca] 1. a domesticated South American llama (Lama glama pacos) with valuable, long, silky, brown or black wool 2. its wool 3. a thin cloth woven from this wool, often mixed with other fibers … English World dictionary
Wool — is the fiber derived from the specialized skin cells, called follicles, [Australian Wool Corporation, Australian Wool Classing, Raw Wool Services, 1990] of animals in the Caprinae family, principally sheep, but the hair of certain species of… … Wikipedia
Alpaca — Al*pac a, n. [Sp. alpaca, fr. the original Peruvian name of the animal. Cf. {Paco}.] 1. (Zo[ o]l.) An animal of Peru ({Lama paco}), having long, fine, wooly hair, supposed by some to be a domesticated variety of the llama. [1913 Webster] 2. Wool… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
alpaca — ► NOUN (pl. same or alpacas) 1) a long haired domesticated South American mammal related to the llama. 2) the wool of the alpaca. ORIGIN Spanish, from an American Indian word … English terms dictionary
wool — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. fleece; down, hair; worsted, yarn. adj. woolen; knitted; woolly, hairy, fleecy, downy, fluffy, flocculent. See covering, softness, materials. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Fleecy fiber, especially of sheep]… … English dictionary for students