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Stoves

  • 1 péče

    Czech-English dictionary > péče

  • 2 sporáky

    Czech-English dictionary > sporáky

  • 3 Ofenheizung

    f stove heating, heating by means of stoves
    * * *
    Ofen|hei|zung
    f
    stove heating

    Zimmer mit Ófenheizung — room with stove (heater)

    * * *
    Ofen·hei·zung
    f stove heating no art, no pl, heating by stoves
    * * *
    die; o. Pl. heating no art. by stoves
    * * *
    Ofenheizung f stove heating, heating by means of stoves
    * * *
    die; o. Pl. heating no art. by stoves
    * * *
    f.
    heating by stove n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Ofenheizung

  • 4 jiko

    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [English Word] cooking-place
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Swahili Example] kazi ya kijungu jiko
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [Swahili Plural] meko
    [English Word] kitchen
    [English Plural] kitchens
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 5/6
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [Swahili Plural] meko
    [English Word] oven
    [English Plural] ovens
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 5/6
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [Swahili Plural] meko
    [English Word] stove
    [English Plural] stoves
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 5/6
    [Swahili Example] kazi ya kijungu jiko
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [Swahili Plural] majiko
    [English Word] stove
    [English Plural] stoves
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 5/6
    [Swahili Example] kazi ya kijungu jiko
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [Swahili Plural] meko
    [English Word] charcoal burner
    [English Plural] charcoal burners
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 5/6
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [Swahili Plural] meko
    [English Word] cooking place
    [English Plural] cooking places
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 5/6
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [Swahili Plural] meko
    [English Word] cooker
    [English Plural] cookers
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 5/6
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] jiko
    [Swahili Plural] meko
    [English Word] fireplace
    [English Plural] fireplaces
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 5/6
    [Swahili Example] akiambiwa kuweka moto jikoni yeye huchukuwa majani kutoka paa la jiko [Kez], alimaliza kazi za jikoni [Sul]
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    [Swahili Word] kazi ya kijungu jiko
    [English Word] subsistence labor
    [Part of Speech] noun
    [Class] 9
    ------------------------------------------------------------

    Swahili-english dictionary > jiko

  • 5 cocina a carbón

    Ex. Smoking and air pollution from coal-burning stoves were classed as independent risk factors of lung cancer.
    * * *

    Ex: Smoking and air pollution from coal-burning stoves were classed as independent risk factors of lung cancer.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cocina a carbón

  • 6 cocina de carbón

    Ex. Smoking and air pollution from coal-burning stoves were classed as independent risk factors of lung cancer.
    * * *

    Ex: Smoking and air pollution from coal-burning stoves were classed as independent risk factors of lung cancer.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cocina de carbón

  • 7 tobera

    f.
    1 air inlet.
    2 intake nozzle, nozzle, cowl, stovepipe.
    3 delivery spout, dust nozzle.
    4 jet tube.
    * * *
    1 (gen) nozzle
    2 (de alto horno) tuyère, twyer
    * * *
    * * *
    Ex. Stovepipes, like stoves, radiate heat and if they are installed close to combustible materials a fire can result.
    * * *

    Ex: Stovepipes, like stoves, radiate heat and if they are installed close to combustible materials a fire can result.

    * * *
    nozzle
    * * *

    tobera sustantivo femenino nozzle
    * * *
    tobera nf
    [de horno] air inlet; [de propulsor] nozzle

    Spanish-English dictionary > tobera

  • 8 tubo de la estufa

    (n.) = stovepipe
    Ex. Stovepipes, like stoves, radiate heat and if they are installed close to combustible materials a fire can result.
    * * *
    (n.) = stovepipe

    Ex: Stovepipes, like stoves, radiate heat and if they are installed close to combustible materials a fire can result.

    Spanish-English dictionary > tubo de la estufa

  • 9 ofn-stofa

    u, f. an ‘oven-closet,’ close stove, bath-room, Fms. vi. 440, where it is stated that king Olave the Quiet (1066–1093) was the first who introduced ovens or stoves (ofn-stofa) into the hall instead of the old open fires, see eldr (II); these stoves served for bathing and for heating the rooms; hann lét ok fyrst göra ofnstofur ok steingólf vetr sem sumar. The account of the death of the Berserkers in Eb. ch. 28, referring to the 10th century, may therefore be an anachronism and not an historical fact, for it is reported as extraordinary for Iceland that a bishop of Hólar (a Norseman) in the year 1316 built a ‘stone-oven’ ( brick-oven) in his house, Laur. S. l. c.

    Íslensk-ensk orðabók > ofn-stofa

  • 10 калорифер

    arr-heating radiator
    arr-heating radiators
    air heater
    air heaters
    air oven
    air stove
    air stoves
    heater
    heating unit
    heating units
    hot-air heater
    hot-air heaters
    hot-air stove
    hot-air stoves
    warm-air furnace
    warm-air furnaces

    Български-Angleščina политехнически речник > калорифер

  • 11 Cowper, Edward Alfred

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy
    [br]
    b. 10 December 1819 London, England
    d. 9 May 1893 Weybridge, Surrey, England
    [br]
    English inventor of the hot-blast stove used in ironmaking.
    [br]
    Cowper was apprenticed in 1834 to John Braithwaite of London and in 1846 obtained employment at the engineers Fox \& Henderson in Birmingham. In 1851 he was engaged in the contract drawings for the Crystal Palace housing the Great Exhibition, and in the same year he set up in London as a consulting engineer. Cowper designed the 211 ft (64.3 m) span roof of Birmingham railway station, the first large-span station roof to be constructed. Cowper had an inventive turn of mind. While still an apprentice, he devised the well-known railway fog-signal and, at Fox \& Henderson, he invented an improved method of casting railway chairs. Other inventions included a compound steam-engine with receiver, patented in 1857; a bicycle wheel with steel spokes and rubber tyre (1868); and an electric writing telegraph (1879). Cowper's most important invention by far was the hot-blast stove, the first application of C.W. Siemens's regenerative principle to ironmaking, patented in 1857. Waste gases from the blast furnace were burnt in an iron chamber lined with a honeycomb of firebricks. When they were hot, the gas was directed to a second similar chamber while the incoming air blast for the blast furnace was heated by passing it through the first chamber. The stoves alternatively received and gave up heat and the heated blast, introduced by J.B. Neilson, led to considerable fuel economies in blast-furnace operation; the system is still in use. Cowper played an active part in the engineering institutions of his time, becoming President of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1880–1. He was commissioned by the Science and Art Department to catalogue the collections of machinery and inventions at the South Kensington Museum, whose science collections now form the Science Museum, London.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1880–1.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1893, Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute: 172–3, London.
    W.K.V.Gale, 1969, Iron and Steel, London: Longmans, pp. 42, 75 (describes his hot-blast stoves).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Cowper, Edward Alfred

  • 12 Concepts

       From a psychological perspective, concepts are mental representations of classes (e.g., one's beliefs about the class of dogs or tables), and their most salient function is to promote cognitive economy.... By partitioning the world into classes, we decrease the amount of information we must perceive, learn, remember, communicate, and reason about. Thus, if we had no concepts, we would have to refer to each individual entity by its own name; every different table, for example, would be denoted by a different word. The mental lexicon required would be so enormous that communication as we know it might be impossible. Other mental functions might collapse under the sheer number of entities we would have to keep track of.
       Another important function of concepts is that they enable us to go beyond the information given.... When we come across an object, say a wolf, we have direct knowledge only of its appearance. It is essential that we go beyond appearances and bring to bear other knowledge that we have, such as our belief that wolves can bite and inflict severe injury. Concepts are our means of linking perceptual and nonperceptual information. We use a perceptual description of the creature in front of us to access the concept wolf and then use our nonperceptual beliefs to direct our behavior, that is, run. Concepts, then, are recognition devices; they serve as entry points into our knowledge stores and provide us with expectations that we can use to guide our actions.
       A third important function of concepts is that they can be combined to form complex concepts and thoughts. Stoves and burn are two simple concepts; Stoves can burn is a full-fledged thought. Presumably our understanding of this thought, and of complex concepts in general, is based on our understanding of the constituent concepts. (Smith, 1988, pp. 19-20)
       The concept may be a butterfly. It may be a person he has known. It may be an animal, a city, a type of action, or a quality. Each concept calls for a name. These names are wanted for what may be a noun or a verb, an adjective or an adverb. Concepts of this type have been formed gradually over the years from childhood on. Each time a thing is seen or heard or experienced, the individual has a perception of it. A part of that perception comes from his own concomitant interpretation. Each successive perception forms and probably alters the permanent concept. And words are acquired gradually, also, and deposited somehow in the treasure-house of word memory.... Words are often acquired simultaneously with the concepts.... A little boy may first see a butterfly fluttering from flower to flower in a meadow. Later he sees them on the wing or in pictures, many times. On each occasion he adds to his conception of butterfly.
       It becomes a generalization from many particulars. He builds up a concept of a butterfly which he can remember and summon at will, although when he comes to manhood, perhaps, he can recollect none of the particular butterflies of past experience.
       The same is true of the sequence of sound that makes up a melody. He remembers it after he has forgotten each of the many times he heard or perhaps sang or played it. The same is true of colours. He acquires, quite quickly, the concept of lavender, although all the objects of which he saw the colour have faded beyond the frontier of voluntary recall. The same is true of the generalization he forms of an acquaintance. Later on he can summon his concept of the individual without recalling their many meetings. (Penfield, 1959, pp. 228-229)

    Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Concepts

  • 13 перекидывать воздухонагреватель

    Русско-английский технический словарь > перекидывать воздухонагреватель

  • 14 Best available control measure

    Oil: BACM (A term used in the Clean Air Acts Amendments of 1990, Section 169 referring to control of small or dispersed sources of particulate matter such as roadway dust, wood stoves and open-burning)

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Best available control measure

  • 15 перекидывать воздухонагреватели

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > перекидывать воздухонагреватели

  • 16 соединённые воздухонагреватели

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > соединённые воздухонагреватели

  • 17 воздухонагреватель

    * * *
    воздухонагрева́тель м.
    1. air (pre)heater
    переки́дывать воздухонагрева́тели — change the stoves
    вентиля́торный воздухонагрева́тель — heat blower
    воздухонагрева́тель с боково́й ка́мерой горе́ния — side-combustion stove
    воздухонагрева́тель систе́мы Ка́упера — Cowper stove
    воздухонагрева́тель с центра́льной ка́мерой горе́ния — central-combustion stove
    электри́ческий воздухонагрева́тель — electric air heater
    * * *

    Русско-английский политехнический словарь > воздухонагреватель

  • 18 К-180

    КАТИСЬ КОЛБАСОЙ (КОЛБАСКОЙ)! sub-stand, rude VP,mpcr usu. indep. sent fixed WO
    go away, leave
    beat it!
    scram! get (the hell) out (of here)! clear out!
    (Мышлаевский:) А чем же, старик, печи топить? (Максим:) Дровами, батюшка, дровами. (Мышлаевский:) А где у тебя дрова? (Максим:) У нас дров нету. (Мышлаевский:) Ну, катись отсюда... колбасой к чёртовой матери! (Булгаков 4). (Myshl.:) And what are we supposed to put in the stoves, old man? (Ma.:) Firewood, sir, firewood. (Myshl..J And where is your firewood? (Ma.:) We don't have any firewood (Myshl.) Well then get the bloody hell out of here... (4a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > К-180

  • 19 катись колбаской!

    КАТИСЬ КОЛБАСОЙ < КОЛБАСКОЙ>! substand, rude
    [VPimper; usu. indep. sent; fixed WO] go away, leave: beat it!; scram!; get (the hell) out (of here)!; clear out!
    =====
         ♦ [Мышлаевский:] А чем же, старик, печи топить? [Максим:] Дровами, батюшка, дровами. [Мышлаевский:] А где у тебя дрова? [Максим:] У нас дров нету. [Мышлаевский:] Ну, катись отсюда... колбасой к чёртовой матери! (Булгаков 4). [Myshl.:] And what are we supposed to put in the stoves, old man? [Ma.:] Firewood, sir, firewood. [Myshl..] And where is your firewood? IMa.:] We don't have any firewood [Myshl.] Well then get the bloody hell out of here... (4a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > катись колбаской!

  • 20 катись колбасой!

    КАТИСЬ КОЛБАСОЙ < КОЛБАСКОЙ>! substand, rude
    [VPimper; usu. indep. sent; fixed WO] go away, leave: beat it!; scram!; get (the hell) out (of here)!; clear out!
    =====
         ♦ [Мышлаевский:] А чем же, старик, печи топить? [Максим:] Дровами, батюшка, дровами. [Мышлаевский:] А где у тебя дрова? [Максим:] У нас дров нету. [Мышлаевский:] Ну, катись отсюда... колбасой к чёртовой матери! (Булгаков 4). [Myshl.:] And what are we supposed to put in the stoves, old man? [Ma.:] Firewood, sir, firewood. [Myshl..] And where is your firewood? IMa.:] We don't have any firewood [Myshl.] Well then get the bloody hell out of here... (4a).

    Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > катись колбасой!

См. также в других словарях:

  • Stoves — Recorded in the spellings of Stave, Stove, and Stoves, this is an English surname. Of pre 7th century origins, it is usually topographical and describes either a person who lived or worked by a staef , an early pier or breakwater, or in a wood… …   Surnames reference

  • stoves — Metal braziers used by the wealthy, such as the one in the court of the high priest, by which Peter warmed himself(Mark 14:54) …   Dictionary of the Bible

  • stoves — stəʊv n. apparatus which provides heat for cooking or warmth and is powered by electricity or fuel …   English contemporary dictionary

  • stoves — plural of stove present third singular of stove …   Useful english dictionary

  • Corn stoves — Corn stoves,(also spelt as Corn Stoves , Corn Fireplaces ), is a home heater or a small business heater that uses local renewable whole kernel shelled corn as fuel. Local renewable whole kernel shelled corn is supplied by two million local… …   Wikipedia

  • Portable stove — A Portable stove is a stove specially designed to be portable and lightweight, as for camping.The division of portable stoves into several broad categories is based on the type of fuel used in the stove: stoves that use solid or liquid fuel that… …   Wikipedia

  • Cook stove — Stove manufacture in Senegal. In cooking, a cook stove is a very basic stove heated by burning wood, charcoal, animal dung or crop residue. Cook stoves are the most common way of cooking and heating food in developing countries. Developing… …   Wikipedia

  • Kitchen stove — Stove Top redirects here. For the brand of stuffing, see Stove Top stuffing. Cooker redirects here. For the apple, see Cooking apple. A wood burning iron stove …   Wikipedia

  • Wood fuel — is wood used as fuel. The burning of wood is currently the largest use of energy derived from a solid fuel biomass. Wood fuel can be used for cooking and heating, and occasionally for fueling steam engines and steam turbines that generate… …   Wikipedia

  • Stove — A stove is an enclosed heated space. The term is commonly taken to mean an enclosed space in which fuel is burned to provide heating, either to heat the space in which the stove is situated or to heat the stove itself, and items placed on it, for …   Wikipedia

  • Pellet stove — A wood pellet stove A pellet stove is a stove that burns compressed wood or biomass pellets to create a source of heat for residential and sometimes industrial spaces. By slowly feeding fuel from a storage container (hopper) into a burn pot area …   Wikipedia

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