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1 cable
['keibl] 1. noun1) ((a) strong rope or chain for hauling or tying anything, especially a ship.) cabo2) ((a set of) wires for carrying electric current or signals: They are laying (a) new cable.) cabo3) ((a rope made of) strands of metal wound together for supporting a bridge etc.) cabo4) ((also cablegram) a telegram sent by cable.) cabograma5) (cable television.)2. verb(to telegraph by cable: I cabled news of my mother's death to our relations in Canada.) telegrafar- cable television
- cable TV* * *ca.ble[k'eibəl] n 1 cabo, corda. 2 Naut amarra. 3 cabo submarino, elétrico ou telefônico. 4 Tech condutor de fios múltiplos. 5 Amer cabograma. • vt+vi 1 ligar por um cabo, amarrar, segurar com amarra ou cabo. 2 cabografar, expedir cabograma. cable length or cable’s length unidade de medida marítima correspondente a 231 m. -
2 cable
['keibl] 1. noun1) ((a) strong rope or chain for hauling or tying anything, especially a ship.) cabo2) ((a set of) wires for carrying electric current or signals: They are laying (a) new cable.) cabo3) ((a rope made of) strands of metal wound together for supporting a bridge etc.) cabo4) ((also cablegram) a telegram sent by cable.) cabograma5) (cable television.) televisão a cabo2. verb(to telegraph by cable: I cabled news of my mother's death to our relations in Canada.) telegrafar- cable television - cable TV -
3 tow
[təu] 1. verb(to pull (a ship, barge, car, trailer etc) by a rope, chain or cable: The tugboat towed the ship out of the harbour; The car broke down and had to be towed to the garage.) rebocar2. noun((an) act of towing or process of being towed: Give us a tow!) rebocada* * *[tou] n 1 reboque: a) ato ou efeito de rebocar. the car is on tow / o carro está sendo rebocado. b) o que é rebocado. he arrived early with his children in tow / ele chegou cedo com as crianças na rabeira. c) cabo, corrente usada para puxar ou rebocar. 2 sirga, estopa, fibra bruta de cânhamo ou de linho. • vt rebocar, sirgar. • adj feito de estopa, de linho ou de cânhamo. to take someone in tow influenciar, dominar alguém. -
4 tow
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5 Moor
I [muə] noun(a large stretch of open, unfarmed land with poor soil often covered with heather, coarse grass etc.) charneca- moorlandII [muə] verb(to fasten (a ship etc) by a rope, cable or anchor: We moored (the yacht) in the bay.) amarrar- mooring- moorings* * *Moor3[muə] n mouro, sarraceno. -
6 cord
[ko:d]1) ((a piece of) thin rope or thick string: The burglars tied up the nightwatchman with thick cord.) corda2) (a string-like part of the body: the spinal cord; the vocal cords.) corda3) (a length of electric cable or flex attached to an electrical appliance: the cord of his electric razor.) fio4) (a kind of velvet fabric with a ribbed appearance; (in plural) trousers made of this: a pair of cords.) veludo cotelé* * *[kɔ:d] n 1 corda, cordão, cordel. 2 cords fig laços. 3 Electr fio elétrico. 4 Anat (também chord) estrutura anatômica em forma de corda ou cordão (p ex: tendão, medula espinhal). 5 listra saliente em tecido. 6 medida de madeira cortada (igual a 128 pés cúbicos). • vt 1 encordoar, amarrar, ligar com corda. 2 empilhar madeira. spinal cord medula espinhal. vocal cords cordas vocais. -
7 hawser
['ho:zə](a thick rope or a steel cable for towing ships or tying them to a dock etc.) amarra* * *haws.er[h'ɔ:zə] n Naut espia: cabo grosso para diversos fins. -
8 moor
I [muə] noun(a large stretch of open, unfarmed land with poor soil often covered with heather, coarse grass etc.) charneca- moorlandII [muə] verb(to fasten (a ship etc) by a rope, cable or anchor: We moored (the yacht) in the bay.) amarrar- mooring- moorings* * *moor1[muə] vt+vi ancorar, atracar.————————moor2[muə] n pântano, charco, paul, brejo. -
9 cord
[ko:d]1) ((a piece of) thin rope or thick string: The burglars tied up the nightwatchman with thick cord.) cordão2) (a string-like part of the body: the spinal cord; the vocal cords.) corda3) (a length of electric cable or flex attached to an electrical appliance: the cord of his electric razor.) fio4) (a kind of velvet fabric with a ribbed appearance; (in plural) trousers made of this: a pair of cords.) veludo cotelê -
10 hawser
['ho:zə](a thick rope or a steel cable for towing ships or tying them to a dock etc.) cabo de reboque -
11 moor
См. также в других словарях:
cable rope — noun : cable 1 … Useful english dictionary
cable — [kā′bəl] n. [ME & OFr < LL capulum, a cable, rope < L capere, to take hold: see HAVE] 1. a thick, heavy rope, now often of wire strands 2. the strong, heavy chain attached to a ship s anchor: anchor cables were formerly of rope 3. CABLE… … English World dictionary
rope — lynas statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. cable; rope; wire vok. Seil, n; Tau, n; Trosse, f rus. канат, m; трос, m pranc. câble, m; corde, f; filin, m … Automatikos terminų žodynas
cable — lynas statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. cable; rope; wire vok. Seil, n; Tau, n; Trosse, f rus. канат, m; трос, m pranc. câble, m; corde, f; filin, m … Automatikos terminų žodynas
câble — lynas statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. cable; rope; wire vok. Seil, n; Tau, n; Trosse, f rus. канат, m; трос, m pranc. câble, m; corde, f; filin, m … Automatikos terminų žodynas
Cable — Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor, and… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
cable molding — Cable Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Cable road — Cable Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Cable tier — Cable Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Cable's length — Cable Ca ble (k[=a] b l), n. [F. c[^a]ble, LL. capulum, caplum, a rope, fr. L. capere to take; cf. D., Dan., & G. kabel, from the French. See {Capable}.] 1. A large, strong rope or chain, of considerable length, used to retain a vessel at anchor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Cable Street — (pronEng|ˈkeɪbəl striːt) is a mile long road in the East End of London, with several historic landmarks nearby, made famous by the Battle of Cable Street of 1936.LocationCable Street runs between the edge of The City and Limehouse: parallel to,… … Wikipedia