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1 binoculars
[bi'nokjuləz](an instrument for making distant objects look nearer, with separate eyepieces for each eye: He looked at the ship on the horizon through his binoculars.) binoclu -
2 binoculars
(fiz) binoclu -
3 opera glasses
(binoculars for use in a theatre.) binoclu de teatru -
4 field-glasses
noun plural (binoculars.) -
5 focus
['foukəs] 1. plurals - focuses, foci; noun1) (the point at which rays of light meet after passing through a lens.) focar2) (a point to which light, a look, attention etc is directed: She was the focus of everyone's attention.) focar, centru2. verb1) (to adjust (a camera, binoculars etc) in order to get a clear picture: Remember to focus the camera / the picture before taking the photograph.) a focaliza2) (to direct (attention etc) to one point: The accident focussed public attention on the danger.) a se concentra; a atrage atenţia•- focal- in
- out of focus -
6 magnification
[-fi-]1) (the act of magnifying (something).) mărire2) (the power of magnifying: the magnification of a pair of binoculars.) mărire, grosisment3) (the extent to which something (eg a photograph) has been magnified: The magnification is ten times (10 ×).) grosisment -
7 sling
1. [sliŋ] noun1) (a type of bandage hanging from the neck or shoulders to support an injured arm: He had his broken arm in a sling.) eşarfă2) (a band of cloth etc worn over the shoulder for supporting a rifle etc on the back.) bandulieră3) (a looped arrangement of ropes, chains etc for supporting, hoisting, carrying and lowering heavy objects.) parâmă; funie2. verb1) (to throw violently: The boy slung a stone at the dog.) a azvârli2) (to support, hang or swing by means of a strap, sling etc: He had a camera and binoculars slung round his neck.) a atârna•
См. также в других словарях:
binoculars — 1866; see BINOCULAR (Cf. binocular). Earlier binocle (1690s) … Etymology dictionary
Binoculars — Binocular telescopes, or binoculars (also known as field glasses), are two identical or mirror symmetrical telescopes mounted side by side and aligned to point accurately in the same direction, allowing the viewer to use both eyes (binocular… … Wikipedia
binoculars — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ high powered, powerful … OF BINOCULARS ▪ pair VERB + BINOCULARS ▪ use ▪ look through … Collocations dictionary
binoculars — n. 1) to adjust, focus; train binoculars on 2) high powered, powerful binoculars 3) a pair of binoculars * * * focus powerful binoculars train binoculars on a pair of binoculars high powered to adjust … Combinatory dictionary
binoculars — Optical instrument for providing a magnified view of distant objects, consisting of two similar telescopes, one for each eye, mounted on a single frame. In most binoculars, each telescope has two prisms, which reinvert the inverted image provided … Universalium
binoculars — [[t]bɪnɒ̱kjʊlə(r)z[/t]] N PLURAL: also a pair of N Binoculars consist of two small telescopes joined together side by side, which you look through in order to look at things that are a long way away … English dictionary
binoculars — binoklis statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. binoculars vok. Binokel, n; Doppelfernrohr, n rus. бинокль, m pranc. binocle, m … Fizikos terminų žodynas
Binoculars Building — Alternative names Chiat/Day Building General information Type … Wikipedia
binoculars — noun /ˈbɪnˌɒk.jʊ.lə(ɹ)z,ˈbənˌɒk.jə.lə(ɹ)z/ A hand held device consisting of a series of lenses and prisms, used to magnify objects so that they can be better seen from a distance, and looked at through both eyes. Syn: binocs, field glasses,… … Wiktionary
binoculars — (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) n. field glasses, magnification, magnifying lenses … English dictionary for students
binoculars — bi|noc|u|lars [bıˈnɔkjuləz, baı US ˈna:kjulərz] n [plural] [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: binocular using both eyes (18 21 centuries), from Latin bini ( BINARY) + oculus eye ] a pair of special glasses, that you hold up to your eyes to look at objects … Dictionary of contemporary English