-
1 Buckram
A strong linen cloth, plain weave, stiffened with a flour paste, china clay and glue. A very low open texture cotton cloth used for hat linings, and is very heavily finished. It is made by pasting two cotton cloths together, one a low open fabric made about 14 X 14 per inch, 8's warp, 12's weft, and the other a much finer cloth, such as 56 X 60, 40's/50's. Each fabric is first stiffened. The fabric known as buckram in the 14th century was used in conjunction with stuffs of fine and precious quality so it is not certain that the cloths are the same. The old fabric was also known as Bougran and Bouquerant. It was stiffened with gum and originally came from Bokhara. -
2 buckram
buckram [ˊbʌkrəm]1. n1) клеёнка; клеёный холст2) уст. чо́порность2. a уст. чо́порный -
3 buckram
-
4 buckram
-
5 Buckram
-
6 buckram
-
7 buckram
-
8 buckram
buckram краб с кожистым панцирем (после линьки)English-Russian dictionary of biology and biotechnology > buckram
-
9 buckram
-
10 buckram
-
11 buckram
1. n клеёнка; клеёный холст2. n чопорностьa fine unaffected lad, no pride or buckram — славный, простой парень, ни спеси, ни чопорности
3. n бортовка4. n бортовой волос5. n уст. тонкое полотно6. a клеёнчатый7. a чопорный8. v наклеивать на холст, на клеёнку9. v делать чопорным, придавать чопорный видСинонимический ряд:stiff (adj.) cardboard; muscle-bound; stiff; stilted; wooden -
12 buckram
1. клеёный холст; клеёное полотно2. жёсткий переплёт -
13 buckram
[ˈbʌkrəm]buckram клеенка; клееный холст buckram чопорность buckram чопорный -
14 buckram
ˈbʌkrəm
1. сущ.
1) клеенка
2) клееный холст;
бортовка
3) церемонность, чопорность Syn: primness, stiffness
4) уст. тонкое полотно
2. прил.
1) из клеенки, клеенчатый buckram apron ≈ клеенчатый фартук
2) церемонный, натянутый, чопорный Syn: stiff, prim клеенка;
клееный холст чопорность (тж. * style) - a fine unaffected lad, no pride or * славный, простой парень, ни спеси, ни чопорности бортовка;
бортовой волос( устаревшее) тонкое полотно клеенчатый чопорный наклеивать на холст, на клеенку делать чопорным, придавать чопорный вид - later he *ed his manners позже он приобрел чопорные манеры buckram клеенка;
клееный холст ~ чопорность ~ чопорный -
15 buckram
1. [ʹbʌkrəm] n1. клеёнка; клеёный холст2. чопорность (тж. buckram style)a fine unaffected lad, no pride or buckram - славный, простой парень, ни спеси, ни чопорности
3. 1) бортовка2) бортовой волос4. уст. тонкое полотно2. [ʹbʌkrəm] a1. клеёнчатый2. чопорный3. [ʹbʌkrəm] v1. наклеивать на холст, на клеёнку2. делать чопорным, придавать чопорный вид -
16 buckram
{'bʌkrəm}
1. текст, груб лен/платно (за подплата, подвързия на книги и пр.)
2. прен. скованост, педантизъм* * *{'b^krъm} n 1. текст, груб лен/платно (за подплата, подвьрзия* * *1 n мушама прен. скованост;2 a скован;buckram; n 1. текст, груб лен/платно (за подплата, подвьрзия на книги и пр.); 2. прен.* * *1. прен. скованост, педантизъм 2. текст, груб лен/платно (за подплата, подвързия на книги и пр.)* * * -
17 buckram
I [bʌkrəm]adjectiveplatnen; figuratively tog, prisiljen, spakljivbuckram men — ljudje, ki jih niII [bʌkrəm]nounškrobljeno platno; figuratively prisiljena držamen in buckram — ljudje, ki jih ni -
18 buckram
-
19 buckram
['bʌkrəm]nome tela f. rigida* * *buckram /ˈbʌkrəm/A n. [u]B a. attr.di tela rigida: buckram cover, copertina.* * *['bʌkrəm]nome tela f. rigida -
20 buckram
Англо-русский словарь по полиграфии и издательскому делу > buckram
См. также в других словарях:
Buckram — is a stiff cloth, made of cotton, and still occasionally linen, which is used to cover and protect books. Buckram can also be used to stiffen clothes. Modern buckrams have been stiffened by soaking in a substance, usually now pyroxylin, to fill… … Wikipedia
Buckram — Buck ram, a. 1. Made of buckram; as, a buckram suit. [1913 Webster] 2. Stiff; precise. Buckram dames. Brooke. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
buckram — [buk′rəm] n. [ME bokeram < OFr bouquerant; prob. after Bukhara, city in Uzbekistan] 1. a coarse cotton or linen cloth stiffened with glue or other size, for use in bookbinding, for lining or stiffening clothes, etc. 2. Archaic stiffness or… … English World dictionary
Buckram — Buck ram, v. t. To strengthen with buckram; to make stiff. Cowper. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Buckram — Buck ram, n. [OE. bokeram, bougeren, OF. boqueran, F. bougran, MHG. buckeram, LL. buchiranus, boquerannus, fr. MHG. boc, G. bock, goat (as being made of goat s hair), or fr. F. bouracan, by transposing the letter r. See {Buck}, {Barracan}.] 1. A… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
buckram — early 13c., from O.Fr. boquerant fine oriental cloth (12c.), probably from Bukhara, city in central Asia from which it was imported to Europe. Originally a name of a delicate, costly fabric, it later came to mean coarse linen used for lining. The … Etymology dictionary
buckram — ► NOUN ▪ coarse linen or other cloth stiffened with paste, used as interfacing and in bookbinding. ORIGIN Old French boquerant … English terms dictionary
buckram — I. noun Etymology: Middle English bukeram, from Anglo French bokeram, from Old French bougherant, probably ultimately from Bokhara (Bukhara, Uzbekistan) Date: 15th century 1. a stiff finished heavily sized fabric of cotton or linen used for… … New Collegiate Dictionary
Buckram — Bụck|ram 〈m. 1; unz.; Textilw.〉 Bucheinbandstoff aus gepresstem, grobem Leinen od. Baumwollgewebe mit dichter u. glatter Oberfläche [<engl. buckram, nach der Stadt Buchara in Usbekistan] * * * Bụck|ram, der; s [engl. buckram, über das Roman.… … Universal-Lexikon
buckram — [14] Etymologically, buckram ‘stiffened cloth’ is cloth from Bokhara, a city in central Asia (now the Uzbek city of Bukhara), from where in the Middle Ages cloth was exported to Europe. And not just any cloth: originally buckram denoted a high… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
buckram — [14] Etymologically, buckram ‘stiffened cloth’ is cloth from Bokhara, a city in central Asia (now the Uzbek city of Bukhara), from where in the Middle Ages cloth was exported to Europe. And not just any cloth: originally buckram denoted a high… … Word origins