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1 главным образом
•The attachment consists essentially (or chiefly, or mainly, or in the main) of a cable drum and...
•The shield has been designed for the most part from common materials.
•The greater (or major) part of our work was carried out indoors.
•The foam consists predominantly of closed cells.
•This element is composed principally (or chiefly, or mainly, or primarily) of Zircaloy-2.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > главным образом
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2 главным образом
•The attachment consists essentially (or chiefly, or mainly, or in the main) of a cable drum and...
•The shield has been designed for the most part from common materials.
•The greater (or major) part of our work was carried out indoors.
•The foam consists predominantly of closed cells.
•This element is composed principally (or chiefly, or mainly, or primarily) of Zircaloy-2.
* * *Главным образом -- chiefly, largely, mainly, primarily, predominantlyUnder the conditions stated above, the wear rates were largely independent of the applied force.Most of these correlations are primarily based on experimental data for gases with Prandtl numbers of approximately 0.1.Therefore, equations (...) and (...) were used predominantly.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > главным образом
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3 состоять из
•In each year, there are about 31,557,000 seconds.
•Pink ruby is comprised of A12O3 doped with 0.005% Cr2O3.
•The rest of the plant involves (or consists of) typical mass transfer equipment.
•Production of aluminum metal involves two steps.
•Carbohydrate analysis involves separation of the carbohydrate mixture, identification of the individual carbohydrates, and estimation of their quantities.
•The measuring system is built up from a number of standard units.
•The element is composed (or is made up, or consists) of equal numbers of protons and neutrons.
•Most of the common gaseous elements are constituted by diatomic molecules.
•The rock is made up of the calcite shells of microorganisms.
•The machine is made up of two subassemblies - a drive unit and...
•This class is made up almost entirely of metals.
•The machine is comprised of three automatic drill units, two lead-screw tapping units, and a rotary-indexing turntable.
•The stress tensor comprises the mechanical part and the viscous part.
•The attachment incorporates a microscope and a protractor.
•The hologram comprises (or consists of) 16 subholograms.
II•These graphs fall into two groups.
•The satellite's atmosphere is 90 percent methane.
Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > состоять из
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4 compound
I 1. adjective1) (of several ingredients) zusammengesetzt2) (of several parts) kombinierta compound word — ein zusammengesetztes Wort; eine Zusammensetzung
3) (Zool.)compound eye — Facettenauge, das
4) (Med.)2. noun1) (Ling.) Kompositum, das; Zusammensetzung, die2) (Chem.) Verbindung, die3. transitive verb(increase, complicate) verschlimmern [Schwierigkeiten, Verletzung usw.]II noun(enclosed space) umzäuntes Gebiet od. Geländeprison compound — Gefängnishof, der
* * *I 1. adjective(composed of a number of parts: a compound substance.) zusammengesetzt2. noun(a substance, word etc formed from two or more elements: The word racetrack is a compound; chemical compounds.) die ZusammensetzungII noun(a fenced or walled-in area, eg round a factory, school etc.) umzäuntes Grundstück* * *com·pound1I. vt▪ to \compound sth1. (make worse) etw verschlimmernto \compound a problem ein Problem verstärken [o vergrößern2. (mix) materials, substances etw mischen4. ECON, FIN▪ to \compound sth etw durch Vergleich erledigen, einen Vergleich schließenII. vi[kəmˈpaʊnd, AM kɑ:mˈ-]to \compound with one's creditors mit seinen Gläubigern einen Vergleich schließenIII. n[ˈkɒmpaʊnd, AM ˈkɑ:m-]nitrogen \compound Stickstoffverbindung f\compound logical element zusammengesetztes logisches Element\compound statement zusammengesetzte Anweisung fcom·pound2[ˈkɒmpaʊnd, AM ˈkɑ:m-]embassy \compound Botschaftsgelände ntfamily \compound Familiensitz mprison \compound Gefängnishof m* * *I ['kɒmpaʊnd]1. n (CHEM)Verbindung f; (GRAM) Kompositum nt, zusammengesetztes Wort2. adj1) (CHEM)2) (GRAM) tense, word zusammengesetzt3. vt[kəm'paʊnd]1) (rare: combine) verbinden; (CHEM) mischento be compounded of... (liter) — sich zusammensetzen aus...
3) (= make worse) verschlimmern; problem verstärken, vergrößernthis only compounds our difficulties — das erschwert unsere Lage or Situation noch zusätzlich
4. vi[kəm'paʊnd] einen Vergleich schließen; (with creditors) sich vergleichenII ['kɒmpaʊnd]to compound with sb for sth — sich mit jdm auf etw (acc) einigen
n(= enclosed area) Lager nt; (in prison) Gefängnishof m; (= living quarters) Siedlung f; (in zoo) Gehege nt* * *compound1 [ˈkɒmpaʊnd; US ˈkɑm-] s1. (Fabrik- etc) Gelände n2. (Gefängnis- etc) Hof mcompound2 [kəmˈpaʊnd; US auch kɑm-]A v/t1. zusammensetzen, (ver)mischen2. zusammensetzen, zusammenstellen3. herstellen, bilden4. a) einen Streit beilegen5. WIRTSCH, JURa) Schulden durch Vergleich tilgenb) laufende Verpflichtungen durch einmalige Zahlung ablösenc) Gläubiger befriedigend) Zinseszinsen zahlenB v/i1. sich vergleichen, sich einigen ( beide:with mit;for über akk)C adj [ˈkɒmpaʊnd; US ˈkɑm-; a. kɑmˈpaʊnd]1. allg zusammengesetzt2. ELEK, TECH Verbund…D s [ˈkɒmpaʊnd; US ˈkɑm-]1. Zusammensetzung f, Mischung f2. Mischung f, Masse f:cleaning compound Reinigungsmasse3. CHEM Verbindung f, Präparat n4. LING Kompositum n, zusammengesetztes Wort* * *I 1. adjective1) (of several ingredients) zusammengesetzt2) (of several parts) kombinierta compound word — ein zusammengesetztes Wort; eine Zusammensetzung
3) (Zool.)compound eye — Facettenauge, das
4) (Med.)2. noun1) (Ling.) Kompositum, das; Zusammensetzung, die2) (Chem.) Verbindung, die3. transitive verb(increase, complicate) verschlimmern [Schwierigkeiten, Verletzung usw.]II noun(enclosed space) umzäuntes Gebiet od. Geländeprison compound — Gefängnishof, der
* * *adj.zusammengesetzt adj. n.Mischung -en f.Präparat -e n.Verbindung f.Verbund -¨e m. v.verbinden v.zusammen setzen v.zusammensetzen (alt.Rechtschreibung) v. -
5 a'
I.II.an, a'the, Irish an, Old Irish in (mas. and fem.), a n- (neut.); a t- appears before vowels in the nom. masc. ( an t-athair), and it is part of the article stem; a Celtic sendo-s (m.), sendâ (f.), san (n.). Sendo-s is composed of two pronominal roots, dividing into sen-do-; sen, judging by the neuter san, is a fixed neuter nom. or acc. from the Celtic root se (Indo-European sjo, beside so-, allied to Anglo-Saxon se, the, seó, now she. The - do- of sendo-s has been referred by Thurneysen and Brugmann to the pron. root to-( English tha-t, Greek $$Gtó); it is suggested that to- may have degenerated into do- before it was stuck to the fixed form sen. Sen-to- could not, on any principle otherwise, whether of accentuation or what not, produce the historical forms. It is best to revert to the older etymology, and refer do- to the pronominal root appearing in the Latin fixed cases (enclitic) - dam, - dem, (qui- dam, i-dem, etc.), the Greek $$G dé, $$G-de (as in $$Go$$`/-de, this), Church Slavonic da, he. The difference, then, between Greek $$Go$$`/-de and Gaelic sen-do-s is this: the Greek inflects the first element ( $$Go$$`= so) and keeps the $$G de fixed, whereas Gaelic reverses the matter by fixing the sen and inflecting the do-; otherwise the roots are the same ultimatley, and used for almost similar purposes. -
6 an
I.Iin, Irish a n- (eclipsing), Old Irish i, i n-, Welsh yn, Breton en; Latin in; Greek $$Ge$$'n; English in, etc. Generally it appears in the longer form ann, or even as ann an; See ann.IIinterrogative particle, Irish an, Old Irish in; Latin an; Gothic an.II.an, a'the, Irish an, Old Irish in (mas. and fem.), a n- (neut.); a t- appears before vowels in the nom. masc. ( an t-athair), and it is part of the article stem; a Celtic sendo-s (m.), sendâ (f.), san (n.). Sendo-s is composed of two pronominal roots, dividing into sen-do-; sen, judging by the neuter san, is a fixed neuter nom. or acc. from the Celtic root se (Indo-European sjo, beside so-, allied to Anglo-Saxon se, the, seó, now she. The - do- of sendo-s has been referred by Thurneysen and Brugmann to the pron. root to-( English tha-t, Greek $$Gtó); it is suggested that to- may have degenerated into do- before it was stuck to the fixed form sen. Sen-to- could not, on any principle otherwise, whether of accentuation or what not, produce the historical forms. It is best to revert to the older etymology, and refer do- to the pronominal root appearing in the Latin fixed cases (enclitic) - dam, - dem, (qui- dam, i-dem, etc.), the Greek $$G dé, $$G-de (as in $$Go$$`/-de, this), Church Slavonic da, he. The difference, then, between Greek $$Go$$`/-de and Gaelic sen-do-s is this: the Greek inflects the first element ( $$Go$$`= so) and keeps the $$G de fixed, whereas Gaelic reverses the matter by fixing the sen and inflecting the do-; otherwise the roots are the same ultimatley, and used for almost similar purposes.
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