Перевод: с английского на все языки

со всех языков на английский

GOAT CLOTH

  • 1 Goat Cloth

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Goat Cloth

  • 2 Cashmere Cloth

    A large trade is done in cotton cashmeres, which are generally dyed black, although colours are sometimes shown. The following are standard makes: - 56-in. full, 90 yards, 52 X 140, 36's/28's, 43-lb.; 41-in. full, 90 yards, 80 X 104, 36's/40's; 221/2-in. full, 90 yards, 78 X 114, 32's/28's, 25-lb. The weave is 2 X 1 twill, and super weft is used. Another cashmere is made with a cotton warp, which is printed before weaving, and either cotton or wool weft. Used for dress purposes. About 68 X 132, 2/60's cotton, 56's botany. The name is obtained from the Cashmere goat, whose wool was first used to make cashmeres. This wool cashmere is still made in Yorkshire. Such as 56-in., 68 X 140, 54's/18's worsted. A cashmere made for China with a few ends of coloured worsted at each selvedge is known as " Worsted Border Cashmere." A standard quality is made 36-in., 120 yard, 54 X 104, 36's/28's, 12 ends worsted each side. The cloth is dyed and has a special lustrous finish. See also Coburg, Henrietta, Jockey Cloth, Paramatta, which are all cashmeres.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Cashmere Cloth

  • 3 Napier Cloth

    A dress fabric, double face, one side wool, the other vicuna, cashmere or goat hair.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Napier Cloth

  • 4 sackcloth (1. A coarse cloth of goat or camel's hair or of flax, hemp, or cotton; 2. A garment of sackcloth worn as a sign of mourning or penitence)

    Религия: власяница

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > sackcloth (1. A coarse cloth of goat or camel's hair or of flax, hemp, or cotton; 2. A garment of sackcloth worn as a sign of mourning or penitence)

  • 5 mohair

    ['məuheə]
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) mohair
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) mohair-
    * * *
    ['məuheə]
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) mohair
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) mohair-

    English-Danish dictionary > mohair

  • 6 Mohair

    The hair obtained from the Angora goat, and is grown chiefly in Turkey, South Africa, the U.S.A. and Australia. It is lustrous white, fine, wavy and long. The length varies from 4-in. to 10-in. and spins from 28's to 50's quality. It has no felting properties. That from the U.S.A. is much lower in quality than the others, having about 15 per cent more kempy fibre. Mohair is chiefly used in braids, felt hats, linings, plushes, etc., and the coarser kinds for carpets and low-grade woollen fabrics. ————————
    ANGORA, or "Mohair"
    The hair or wool of the goat of that name. More generally known as mohair. The animal originally had its home in Asia Minor. About 1858 it was introduced into Cape Colony, from which country we now get a large supply. The natives of Asia Minor made shawls from the wool, which resembled Cashmere shawls. In colour it is white, average length of hair is 6 to 8 inches, and- has a curly structure. It is a very useful fibre, and largely used by the manufacturers of Astrakhan, wool crepons, plushes and cashmeres; also used in many silk cloths. The French use the fibre in a cloth named "poil de chevre", which has a fine spun silk coloured warp and angora weft. Bradford -imitates this cloth with a fine cotton warp. It has more lustre than wool, but is not so warm. Sir Titus Salt, by introducing the manufacture of goods made from mohair into Saltaire, raised Saltaire into a town from a village.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Mohair

  • 7 Angora

    ANGORA, or "Mohair"
    The hair or wool of the goat of that name. More generally known as mohair. The animal originally had its home in Asia Minor. About 1858 it was introduced into Cape Colony, from which country we now get a large supply. The natives of Asia Minor made shawls from the wool, which resembled Cashmere shawls. In colour it is white, average length of hair is 6 to 8 inches, and- has a curly structure. It is a very useful fibre, and largely used by the manufacturers of Astrakhan, wool crepons, plushes and cashmeres; also used in many silk cloths. The French use the fibre in a cloth named "poil de chevre", which has a fine spun silk coloured warp and angora weft. Bradford -imitates this cloth with a fine cotton warp. It has more lustre than wool, but is not so warm. Sir Titus Salt, by introducing the manufacture of goods made from mohair into Saltaire, raised Saltaire into a town from a village.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Angora

  • 8 Baracan

    A heavy woollen fabric used for furniture covers and draping purposes, close set in reed with a hard twist warp of worsted, and a three or more fold hard twist worsted weft, in a warp rib weave. The cloth is moire finish. Also known as Percan. Also a cloth made with a silk warp and goat's hair weft with weft ribs is known under this name.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Baracan

  • 9 Camlet

    A fine, thin, plain-weave cloth, woven from camlet yarns, 30-in., 60 yards, usually dyed bright red. Camlet yarn is spun from lustrous wool, Lincoln or Leicester. The Dutch introduced the cloth, but they used camel hair or goat hair. Other qualities are made from hard twisted worsted yarns about 36 X 40 per inch, 2/30's 2/34's. In the 17th century a camlet of wool and silk was used for making gowns. It is mentioned in Pepys Diary, in 1664: " I put on my camelott suit, the best I ever wore in my life." In the latter part of the 17th century camelots of various colours were highly esteemed. First made in Montgomeryshire on the banks of the river Camlet. The true camlet is made in India of camel hair (see Patu Khudrang)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Camlet

  • 10 Camelott

    A fine, thin, plain-weave cloth, woven from camlet yarns, 30-in., 60 yards, usually dyed bright red. Camlet yarn is spun from lustrous wool, Lincoln or Leicester. The Dutch introduced the cloth, but they used camel hair or goat hair. Other qualities are made from hard twisted worsted yarns about 36 X 40 per inch, 2/30's 2/34's. In the 17th century a camlet of wool and silk was used for making gowns. It is mentioned in Pepys Diary, in 1664: " I put on my camelott suit, the best I ever wore in my life." In the latter part of the 17th century camelots of various colours were highly esteemed. First made in Montgomeryshire on the banks of the river Camlet. The true camlet is made in India of camel hair (see Patu Khudrang)

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Camelott

  • 11 Cilicium

    (1) A Roman word for a coarse cloth made of goat's hair in Cilicia. It was much used m the Army and Navy for tents, sails or clothing. (2) During the time of mourning, or when suffering under any calamity, the Jews put on a kind of Cilicium made of coarse canvas. (3) A cloth mattress stuffed with cow-hair or seaweed, which was placed outside the walls of besieged cities, to deaden the blows of the battering ram. (4) A hair-shirt or sleeveless jacket made with a material of horse-hair and coarse hemp. Worn by religious men to mortify the flesh.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Cilicium

  • 12 sackcloth

    ['sækklɒθ]
    2) Устаревшее слово: вретище
    3) Техника: рядно
    4) Религия: рубище, (1. A coarse cloth of goat or camel's hair or of flax, hemp, or cotton; 2. A garment of sackcloth worn as a sign of mourning or penitence) власяница
    5) Текстиль: мешочная ткань

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > sackcloth

  • 13 mohair

    'məuheə
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) mohair
    2) ((also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) de mohair

    mohair /mo'er/ sustantivo masculino mohair ' mohair' also found in these entries: English: mohair
    tr['məʊheəSMALLr/SMALL]
    mohair ['mo:.hær] n
    : mohair m
    n.
    chalí s.m.
    'məʊher, 'məʊheə(r)
    mass noun mohair m
    ['mǝʊhɛǝ(r)]
    N mohair m
    * * *
    ['məʊher, 'məʊheə(r)]
    mass noun mohair m

    English-spanish dictionary > mohair

  • 14 mohair

    'məuheə
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) mohair
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) mohair-
    subst. \/ˈməʊheə\/
    ( tekstilteknikk) mohair

    English-Norwegian dictionary > mohair

  • 15 mohair

    ['məuheə]
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) angóraull, móhár
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) angóraull

    English-Icelandic dictionary > mohair

  • 16 mohair

    angóragyapjú-szövet, mohair, moher
    * * *
    ['məuheə]
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) moher
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) moherszövet

    English-Hungarian dictionary > mohair

  • 17 mohair

    ['məuheə]
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) mohair
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) de mohair
    * * *
    mo.hair
    [m'ouhɛə] n 1 pêlo de cabra angorá. 2 tecido feito com esse material.

    English-Portuguese dictionary > mohair

  • 18 mohair

    n. moher, tiftik
    * * *
    moher
    * * *
    ['məuheə]
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) tiftik
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) tiftikten yapılmış kumaş

    English-Turkish dictionary > mohair

  • 19 mohair

    ['məuheə]
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) moher
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) moher
    * * *
    [móuheə]
    noun
    volna angorske koze, blago mohair

    English-Slovenian dictionary > mohair

  • 20 mohair

    textile industry
    • mohair
    * * *
    'məuheə
    1) (the long silken hair of a type of goat.) mohair
    2) (( also adjective) (of) a type of cloth or wool made from it: a mohair jersey.) mohair-

    English-Finnish dictionary > mohair

См. также в других словарях:

  • Angora goat — noun a domestic breed of goat raised for its long silky hair which is the true mohair • Syn: ↑Angora • Hypernyms: ↑domestic goat, ↑Capra hircus * * * noun Usage: usually capitalized A : a breed or variety of the domestic goat reared for its long… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Shawl goat — Shawl Shawl, n. [Per. & Hind. sh[=a]l: cf. F. ch[^a]le.] A square or oblong cloth of wool, cotton, silk, or other textile or netted fabric, used, especially by women, as a loose covering for the neck and shoulders. [1913 Webster] {India shawl}, a …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Thibet cloth — Thib et cloth (a) A fabric made of coarse goat s hair; a kind of camlet. (b) A kind of fine woolen cloth, used for dresses, cloaks, etc. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Textile manufacturing terminology — The manufacture of textiles is one of the oldest of human technologies. In order to make textiles, the first requirement is a source of fibre from which a yarn can be made, primarily by spinning. (Both fibre and fiber are used in this article.)… …   Wikipedia

  • List of the animals in the Bible — See main article Animals in the Bible. The following is a list of animals whose name appears in the Bible. Whenever required for the identification, the Hebrew name will be indicated, as well as the specific term used by Zoologists. This list… …   Wikipedia

  • Animals in the Bible — • The sacred books were composed by and for a people almost exclusively given to husbandry and pastoral life, hence in constant communication with nature Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Animals in the Bible     Anima …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Glossary of textile manufacturing — For terms specifically related to sewing, see Glossary of sewing terms. For terms specifically related to dyeing, see Glossary of dyeing terms. The manufacture of textiles is one of the oldest of human technologies. To make textiles, the first… …   Wikipedia

  • Textile — For other uses, see Textile (disambiguation). Fabric redirects here. For other uses, see Fabric (disambiguation). Sunday textile market on the sidewalks of Karachi, Pakistan …   Wikipedia

  • List of English words of Persian origin — As Indo European languages, English and Persian have many words of common Proto Indo European origin, and many of these cognate words often have similar forms. Examples of these include: English (Mother) and Persian (Madar), English (Father) and… …   Wikipedia

  • Christmas worldwide — Christmas around the world redirects here. For other uses, see Christmas Around the World (Bradley Joseph album). The Christmas season is celebrated in different ways around the world, varying by country and region. Elements common to many areas… …   Wikipedia

  • Ta Oi people — ethnic group group=Ta Oi poptime=34,960 (1999 est.) popplace=Vietnam, Laos rels=Animism, Buddhism langs=Ta oih, Vietnamese, others related= The Tà Ôi is an ethnic group of Vietnam (34,960 in 1999). They speak a Mon Khmer language and concentrate… …   Wikipedia

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»