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1 cloth weaver
Текстиль: ткач-суконщик -
2 cloth-weaver
[klɔmwi:və]nountkalec -
3 cloth weaver
Англо-русский словарь текстильной промышленности > cloth weaver
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4 cloth weaver
English-Russian dictionary on textile and sewing industry > cloth weaver
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5 figured cloth weaver
English-Russian dictionary on textile and sewing industry > figured cloth weaver
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6 weaver
ткач @cloth weaver ткач-суконщик @cotton weaver ткач, обслуживающий хлопкоткацкий станок @linen weaver ткач-льнянщик @pattern weaver 1. ткач, вырабатывающий образцы ткани; 2. ткач, обслуживающий пестротканый или жаккардовый станок @ -
7 weaver
ткач @cloth weaver ткач-суконщик @cotton weaver ткач, обслуживающий хлопкоткацкий станок @linen weaver ткач-льнянщик @pattern weaver 1. ткач, вырабатывающий образцы ткани; 2. ткач, обслуживающий пестротканый или жаккардовый станок @ -
8 ткач-суконщик
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9 tisseur
tisœʀ, øz (-euse)1. nm/f(= artisan, ouvrier) weaver2. nm(= entreprise) weaver* * *, tisseuse [tisɶr, øz] nom masculin, nom féminin1. [artisan] weaver2. [industriel] mill owner -
10 ткач-суконщик
Textile: cloth weaver -
11 पट्टः _paṭṭḥ _ट्टम् _ṭṭam
पट्टः ट्टम् 1 A slab, tablet (for writing upon), plate in general; शिलापट्टमधिशयाना Ś.3; so भालपट्ट &c.-2 A royal grant or edict; पटे वा ताम्रपट्टे वा स्वमुद्रोपरिचिह्नितम् । अभिलेख्यात्मनो वंश्यानात्मानं च महीपतिः ॥ Y.1.319.-3 A tiara, diadem; निर्वृत्तजाम्बूनदपट्टबन्धे न्यस्तं ललाटे तिलकं दधानः R.18.44; पट्टः शुभदो राज्ञां मध्ये$ष्टावङ्गुलानि विस्तीर्णः । सप्त नरेन्द्रमहिष्याः षड् युवराजस्य निर्दिष्टः ॥ चतुरङ्गुलविरुतारः पट्टः सेनापतेर्भवति मध्ये । द्वे च प्रसादपट्टः पञ्चैते कीर्तिताः पट्टाः ॥ Bṛi. S.-4 A strip; निर्मोकपट्टाः फणिभिर्विमुक्ताः R.16.17;-5 Silk; पट्टोपधानम्; K.17; Bh.3.74; so पट्टांशुकम्.-6 Fine or coloured cloth, cloth in general.-7 An upper garment; गलितमिव भुवो विलोक्य रामं धरणिधरस्तनशुक्लचीनपट्टम् Bk.1.61.-8 A fillet or cloth worn round the head, turban; especially, a coloured silk turban; भारः परं पट्टकिरीटजुष्ट- मप्युत्तमाङ्गं न नमेन्मुकुन्दम् Bhāg.2.3.21; त्रासार्ता ऋत्विजो$ धश्चपलगणहृतोष्णीषपट्टाः पतन्ति Ratn.1.4.-9 A throne.-1 A chair or stool.-11 A shield.-12 A grinding stone.-13 A place where four roads meet.-14 A city, town.-15 A bandage, ligature; बद्धेषु व्रणपट्टकेषु Ve. 5.1.-ट्टी 1 An ornament for the forehead.-2 A horse's girth.-Comp. -अंशुकः 1 a silk cloth.-2 an upper or outer garment.-अभिषेकः the consecration of the tiara.-अर्हा the principal queen.-उपाध्यायः a writer of royal grants and other documents.-कर्मकरः a weaver.-जम् a sort of cloth.-देवी, -महिषी, -राज्ञी the principal queen.-बन्धः, -बन्धनम् 1 wearing dress.-2 binding the head with a crown or turban.-रागः sandal.-वस्त्र, -वासस् a. attired in woven silk or coloured cloth; जीर्णा कन्था ततः किं सितममलवरं पट्टवस्त्रं ततः किम् Bh.3.74.-शाला a tent.-सूत्रकारः a silk-weaver. -
12 Radcliffe, William
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 1761 Mellor, Cheshire, Englandd. 1842 Mellor, Cheshire, England[br]English inventor of the sizing machine.[br]Radcliffe was brought up in the textile industry and learned carding and spinning as a child. When he was old enough, he became a weaver. It was a time when there were not enough weavers to work up all the yarn being spun on the recently invented spinning machines, so some yarn was exported. Radcliffe regarded this as a sin; meetings were held to prohibit the export, and Radcliffe promised to use his best endeavours to discover means to work up the yarn in England. He owned a mill at Mellor and by 1801 was employing over 1,000 hand-loom weavers. He wanted to improve their efficiency so they could compete against power looms, which were beginning to be introduced at that time.His first step was to divide up as much as possible the different weaving processes, not unlike the plan adopted by Arkwright in spinning. In order to strengthen the warp yarns made of cotton and to reduce their tendency to fray during weaving, it was customary to apply an adhesive substance such as starch paste. This was brushed on as the warp was unwound from the back beam during weaving, so only short lengths could be treated before being dried. Instead of dressing the warp in the loom as was hitherto done, Radcliffe had it dressed in a separate machine, relieving the weaver of the trouble and saving the time wasted by the method previously used. Radcliffe employed a young man names Thomas Johnson, who proved to be a clever mechanic. Radcliffe patented his inventions in Johnson's name to avoid other people, especially foreigners, finding out his ideas. He took out his first patent, for a dressing machine, in March 1803 and a second the following year. The combined result of the two patents was the introduction of a beaming machine and a dressing machine which, in addition to applying the paste to the yarns and then drying them, wound them onto a beam ready for the loom. These machines enabled the weaver to work a loom with fewer stoppages; however, Radcliffe did not anticipate that his method of sizing would soon be applied to power looms as well and lead to the commercial success of powered weaving. Other manufacturers quickly adopted Radcliffe's system, and Radcliffe himself soon had to introduce power looms in his own business.Radcliffe improved the hand looms themselves when, with the help of Johnson, he devised a cloth taking-up motion that wound the woven cloth onto a roller automatically as the weaver operated the loom. Radcliffe and Johnson also developed the "dandy loom", which was a more compact form of hand loom and was also later adapted for weaving by power. Radcliffe was among the witnesses before the Parliamentary Committee which in 1808 awarded Edmund Cartwright a grant for his invention of the power loom. Later Radcliffe was unsuccessfully to petition Parliament for a similar reward for his contributions to the introduction of power weaving. His business affairs ultimately failed partly through his own obstinacy and his continued opposition to the export of cotton yarn. He lived to be 81 years old and was buried in Mellor churchyard.[br]Bibliography1811, Exportation of Cotton Yarn and Real Cause of the Distress that has Fallen upon the Cotton Trade for a Series of Years Past, Stockport.1828, Origin of the New System of Manufacture, Commonly Called "Power-Loom Weaving", Stockport (this should be read, even though it is mostly covers Radcliffe's political aims).Further ReadingA.Barlow, 1870, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London (provides an outline of Radcliffe's life and work).W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a general background of his inventions). R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (a general background).D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution. The Diffusion of Textile Technologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (discusses the spread of the sizing machine in America).RLH -
13 weave
I 1. noun(Textiles) Bindung, die2. transitive verb,1) (intertwine) weben [[Baum]wolle, Garn, Fäden]weave flowers into wreaths — aus Blumen Kränze flechten
2) (make by weaving) weben [Textilien]; flechten [Girlande, Korb, Kranz]3) (fig.) einflechten [Nebenhandlung, Thema usw.] ( into in + Akk.)4) (fig.): (contrive) ausspinnen [Geschichte]3. intransitive verb,wove, woven (make fabric by weaving) webenII intransitive verb1) (move repeatedly from side to side) torkeln2) (take devious course) sich schlängeln* * *[wi:v]past tense - wove; verb1) (to make by crossing strands in a pattern: to weave cloth.) weben2) (to tell (an interesting story).) ersinnen3) ((past tense, past participle weaved) to move backwards and forwards or from side to side: The cyclist weaved in and out of the traffic.) sich schlängeln•- academic.ru/81545/weaver">weaver* * *[wi:v]I. vt1. (of cloth)▪ to \weave sth etw webenthis type of wool is woven into fabric diese Art Wolle wird zu Stoff verwoben▪ to \weave sth etw flechtenthe biography is woven from the many accounts which exist of things she did die Biografie setzt sich aus den vielen bereits existierenden Berichten über Dinge, die sie getan hat, zusammen▪ to \weave sth together etw zusammenflechten [o ineinanderflechten]to \weave a basket [from rushes] [aus Binsen] einen Korb flechtento \weave one's way through sth sich dat einen Weg durch etw akk bahnen; ( fig) sich dat durch etw akk durchschlängeln [o durchmogelnII. vi1. (produce cloth) weben3.III. n Webart fbasket \weave Leinenbindung fto have loose/tight \weave locker/fest gewebt seinstriped \weave Streifenmuster nt* * *[wiːv] vb: pret wove, ptp woven1. n(= patterns of threads) Webart f; (= loosely/tightly etc woven fabric) Gewebe ntyou need a tighter weave for a skirt — für einen Rock braucht man ein festeres Gewebe
2. vthe wove the threads together — er verwob die Fäden miteinander
2) (fig) plot, story ersinnen, erfinden; (= add into story etc) details, episode einflechten (into in +acc)he wove a romantic tale (a)round his experiences abroad — er spann seine Erlebnisse im Ausland zu einer romantischen Geschichte aus
3) pret also weaved(= wind)
to weave one's way through the traffic/to the front — sich durch den Verkehr fädeln or schlängeln/nach vorne (durch)schlängeln3. vi3) (inf)to get weaving — sich ranhalten (inf)
to get weaving with sth — sich hinter etw (acc) klemmen (inf)
* * *weave [wiːv]A v/t prät wove [wəʊv], ( besonders 7 und 10) weaved, pperf woven [ˈwəʊvən], ( besonders 7 und 10) weaved1. einen Teppich etc weben3. einen Korb, Kranz etc flechten:weave together zusammenflechten, -weben6. fig ersinnen:B v/i1. weben (auch Spinne)2. flechten3. a) im Zickzack laufenb) hin und her pendeln (auch Boxer)d) sich wiegen:C s1. Gewebe n2. Webart f* * *I 1. noun(Textiles) Bindung, die2. transitive verb,1) (intertwine) weben [[Baum]wolle, Garn, Fäden]2) (make by weaving) weben [Textilien]; flechten [Girlande, Korb, Kranz]3) (fig.) einflechten [Nebenhandlung, Thema usw.] ( into in + Akk.)4) (fig.): (contrive) ausspinnen [Geschichte]3. intransitive verb,wove, woven (make fabric by weaving) webenII intransitive verb1) (move repeatedly from side to side) torkeln2) (take devious course) sich schlängeln* * *(into) v.einflechten (in) v.flechten v.(§ p.,pp.: flocht, geflochten)zusammen weben v.zusammenweben (alt.Rechtschreibung) v. v.(§ p.,p.p.: wove, woven)or: weaved•) = erfinden v.ersinnen v.verflechten v.weben v.wirken v. n.Gewebe - n.Webart -en f. -
14 Warping
General term for processes after winding concerned in preparing weaver's and knitter's warps. Methods of warping vary according to (1) the yarns employed (2) whether they are sized or not, and (3) at what state sizing takes place. There are at least seven methods of warp preparation, e.g., beam warping, direct warping, mill warping on vertical mills, section warping on horizontal mills and in cheeses on section blocks, Scotch dresser sizing, Scotch warp dressing, and Yorkshire warp dressing. Beam Warping is the system in general use for making grey cotton goods. The beam warper comprises a creel for the supply ends, which may be on double-flanged bobbins, cones or cheeses, and a beaming head which comprises mechanism for mounting and rotating a warper's beam and means for winding the yarn from the creel supply on to the beam under suitable tension. The number of ends and length of warp on a back or warper's beam is related to what is required in the weaver's beam. Assuming the weaver's beams were required to have 2928 ends, 24's warp, and 8 cuts of 96 yards each, the back beams for a set might have 2928: 6 = 488 ends, and 2 X 6 X 8 X 96 = 9216 yards. On the slasher sizing machine six back beams would be run together, thereby producing 12 weaver's beams each containing 2928 ends 768 yards long. Warp Beaming Speeds - With the old type of warp beaming machine taking supply from unrolling double-flanged bobbins, the warping speed would be about 70 yards per minute. In modern beam warpers taking supply overend from cones, the warping speed is up to 250 yards per minute. With beam barrels of 41/2-in. dia., and up to 500 yards per minute with barrels of 10-in. dia. Warp and Weft Knitted Fabrics - Warp knitted fabrics in which extra yarn is introduced in the form of weft threads which are laid in between the warp threads and their needles for the purpose of adding extra weight and for patterning purposes. Warp Loom Tapes - Narrow knitted fabrics usually less than one inch wide used for trimming garments. They are knitted on circular latch needle machines, but the tapes are flat. Direct Warping - A method used in making warps for towels, fustians, and other fabrics in which the total number of ends can be accommodated in one creel, say not more than 1,000 ends. The threads are run from the creel direct to the weaver's beam on a machine similar to that used in section beam warping. Mill Warping - There are two distinctly different methods of mill warping. On the vertical mill, which may be anything up to 20 yards in circumference, the number of ends in the complete warp is obtained by repeating the runs the required number of times, e.g., with 200 bobbins in the creel, 4 runs would give a warp of 800 ends. The length of the warp is determined by the number of revolutions made by the mill for each run. The horizontal mill is much used in Yorkshire for making woollen and worsted warps It is used to a small extent for cotton warps and is largely used for making silk and rayon warps. The mill or swift is usually about 5 yards in circumference. Its distinctive feature is the making of warps in sections which are wound on the mill in overlapping manner. The creel capacity varies from 250 to 600 ends, and with 500 ends in the creel a warp of 5,000 ends would require ten sections. Section Warping for Coloured Goods - This is a system of making coloured striped warps from hank-dyed and bleached yarns. The bobbins are creeled to pattern, one or more complete patterns to each section. Each section is the full length of the warp and is run on a small section block keywayed to fit a key on the shaft of the subsequent beaming machine where the sections are placed side by side and run on the weaver's beam. Scotch Dresser Sizing - There are two systems of warp preparation known as Scotch dressing. 1. Dresser sizing used for sizing warps for linen damasks, etc. Back beams are first made and placed in two beam creels, one on each side of the headstock. The threads from several back beams are collected in one sheet of yarn, sized by passage through a size-box, brushed by a revolving brush, dried by hot air, and passed vertically upwards where both sheets of warp threads are united and pass on to the weaver's beam in a single sheet. Scotch Warp Dressing - The other method of Scotch dressing is used in the preparation of coloured striped warps, usually from warp-dyed and bleached yarn. It consists in splitting off from ball warps previously dyed or bleached and sized, the number of ends of each colour required in the finished warp. Each group is then wound on separate flanged warpers' beams. These beams are placed in a creel and the ends drawn through a reed according to pattern, and wound finally on to the weavers' beams. Yorkshire Warp Dressing - This is a system used mostly in the preparation of coloured striped warps. It is also invaluable in preparing warps dyed and sized in warp form to prevent shadiness in the cloth. Four warps with the same number of ends in each are dyed the same colour, and in sleying, one end from each warp is put in each dent of the reed. Any tendency to shadiness arising from irregularity in dyeing is thereby effectively eliminated. In striped work the required ends are split off if necessary from a larger ball warp, sleyed to pattern in the reed, and then run under controlled tension on to the weaver's beam. The dresser uses a brush as long as the width of the warp to brush out entangled places where the threads have adhered together with size. Yorkshire dressing provides perfect warps with every thread in its proper place on the weaver's beam, no crossed or missing threads, and a minimum of knots. -
15 Johnson, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]fl. 1800s Englandd. after 1846[br]English developer of the sizing and beaming machine, and improver of the hand loom.[br]Thomas Johnson was an assistant to William Radcliffe c.1802 in his developments of the sizing machine and hand looms. Johnson is described by Edward Baines (1835) as "an ingenious but dissipated young man to whom he [Radcliffe] explained what he wanted, and whose fertile invention suggested a great variety of expedients, so that he obtained the name of the “conjuror” among his fellow-workmen". Johnson's genius, and Radcliffe's judgement and perseverance, at length produced the dressing-machine that was soon applied to power looms and made their use economic. Cotton warps had to be dressed with a starch paste to prevent them from fraying as they were being woven. Up to this time, the paste had had to be applied as the warp was unwound from the back of the loom, which meant that only short lengths could be treated and then left to dry, holding up the weaver. Radcliffe carried out the dressing and beaming in a separate machine so that weaving could proceed without interruption. Work on the dressing-machine was carried out in 1802 and patents were taken out in 1803 and 1804. These were made out in Johnson's name because Radcliffe was afraid that if his own name were used other people, particularly foreigners, would discover his secrets. Two more patents were taken out for improvements to hand looms. The first of these was a take-up motion for the woven cloth that automatically wound the cloth onto a roller as the weaver operated the loom. This was later incorporated by H.Horrocks into his own power loom design.Radcliffe and Johnson also developed the "dandy-loom", which was a more compact form of hand loom and later became adapted for weaving by power. Johnson was the inventor of the first circular or revolving temples, which kept the woven cloth at the right width. In the patent specifications there is a patent in 1805 by Thomas Johnson and James Kay for an improved power loom and another in 1807 for a vertical type of power loom. Johnson could have been involved with further patents in the 1830s and 1840s for vertical power looms and dressing-machines, which would put his death after 1846.[br]Bibliography1802, British patent no. 2,684 (dressing-machine).1803, British patent no. 2,771 (dressing-machine).1805, with James Kay, British patent no. 2,876 (power-loom). 1807, British patent no. 6,570 (vertical powerloom).Further ReadingThere is no general account of Johnson's life, but references to his work with Radcliffe may be found in A.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London; and in E.Baines, 1835, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, London.D.J.Jeremy, 1981, Transatlantic Industrial Revolution. The Diffusion of Textile Technologies Between Britain and America, 1790–1830s, Oxford (for the impact of the dressing-machine in America).RLH -
16 weave
wi:vpast tense - wove; verb1) (to make by crossing strands in a pattern: to weave cloth.) tejer; trenzar2) (to tell (an interesting story).) tramar, crear, inventar3) ((past tense, past participle weaved) to move backwards and forwards or from side to side: The cyclist weaved in and out of the traffic.) zigzaguear, serpentear•- weaverweave vb tejertr[wiːv]1 tejido1 (cloth) tejer2 (fence, basket, nest, etc) trenzar, entretejer, tejer3 (one's way) serpentear, zigzaguear4 figurative use (plot, story) tramar, urdir, tejer1 (cloth) tejer2 (zig-zag about) serpentear, zigzaguear\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto weave in and out (dance) trenzar1) : tejer (tela)2) interlace: entretejer, entrelazar3)to weave one's way through : abrirse camino porweave vi1) : tejer2) wind: serpentear, zigzaguearweave n: tejido m, trama fv.(§ p.,p.p.: wove, woven) or: weaved•) = tejer v.• tramar v.• trenzar v.n.• tejido s.m.
I
1. wiːva) \<\<cloth/mat\>\> tejer ( en telar); \<\<basket/web\>\> tejer; \<\<story/plot\>\> tejerb) ( thread together) \<\<threads\>\> entretejer, entrelazar*; \<\<branches/straw\>\> entretejershe weaves these anecdotes into her lectures — entreteje or intercala estas anécdotas en sus conferencias
2.
vito get weaving — (BrE colloq) poner* manos a la obra
2)a) (past wove or weaved; past p woven or weaved) \<\<road\>\> serpentear, zigzaguear; \<\<person\>\> zigzaguearthe cyclist was weaving in and out of the traffic — el ciclista iba zigzagueando por entre el tráfico
II
mass & count noun trama f, tejido m[wiːv] (vb: pt wove) (pp woven)1.N tejido m2. VT1) (lit) [+ fabric, basket] tejer2) (fig) [+ story] urdirhe wove these details into the story — entretejó or intercaló estos detalles en el cuento
3) (pt weaved or wove)(pp weaved or woven) (=zigzag)he weaved or wove his way to the bathroom — fue hasta el baño haciendo eses
3. VI1) (lit) tejer2) (pt, pp weaved) (fig) (=move in and out) zigzaguearhe weaves from side to side, trying to dodge his opponent — va zigzagueando or se mueve de lado a lado intentando esquivar a su rival
the motorbike was weaving in and out of the traffic — la motocicleta zigzagueaba or se abría paso entre los coches
the road weaves about a lot — el camino tiene muchas curvas, el camino serpentea mucho liter
- get weavinglet's get weaving! — ¡pongamos manos a la obra!
* * *
I
1. [wiːv]a) \<\<cloth/mat\>\> tejer ( en telar); \<\<basket/web\>\> tejer; \<\<story/plot\>\> tejerb) ( thread together) \<\<threads\>\> entretejer, entrelazar*; \<\<branches/straw\>\> entretejershe weaves these anecdotes into her lectures — entreteje or intercala estas anécdotas en sus conferencias
2.
vito get weaving — (BrE colloq) poner* manos a la obra
2)a) (past wove or weaved; past p woven or weaved) \<\<road\>\> serpentear, zigzaguear; \<\<person\>\> zigzaguearthe cyclist was weaving in and out of the traffic — el ciclista iba zigzagueando por entre el tráfico
II
mass & count noun trama f, tejido m -
17 weave
[wi:v]past tense - wove; verb1) (to make by crossing strands in a pattern: to weave cloth.) væve2) (to tell (an interesting story).) fortælle3) ((past tense, past participle weaved) to move backwards and forwards or from side to side: The cyclist weaved in and out of the traffic.) sno sig•- weaver* * *[wi:v]past tense - wove; verb1) (to make by crossing strands in a pattern: to weave cloth.) væve2) (to tell (an interesting story).) fortælle3) ((past tense, past participle weaved) to move backwards and forwards or from side to side: The cyclist weaved in and out of the traffic.) sno sig•- weaver -
18 Namunah
A dress fabric made on hand looms in Bengal, from cotton and tussah silk. The weaver produces about 150 yards of cloth per month. The warp is 40 per cent silk, arranged in coloured stripes on a cotton ground, the yarn being dyed by the weaver. The weft is all cotton. Made 35-in., 20 yards. Similar to the Duriyas cloth, but differently striped. -
19 Diggle, Squire
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]fl. c.1845 England[br]English inventor of a mechanized drop box for shuttles on power looms.[br]Robert Kay improved his father John's flying shuttle by inventing the drop box, in which up to four shuttles could be stored one below the other. The weaver's left hand controlled levers and catches to raise or lower the drop box in order to bring the appropriate shuttle into line with the shuttle race on the slay. The shuttle could then be driven across the loom, leaving its particular type or colour of weft. On the earliest power looms of Edmund Cartwright in 1785, and for many years later, it was possible to use only one shuttle. In 1845 Squire Diggle of Bury, Lancashire, took out a patent for mechanizing the drop box so that different types or colours of weft could be woven without the weaver attending to the shuttles. He used an endless chain on which plates of different heights could be fixed to raise the boxes to the required height; later this would be operated by either the dobby or Jacquard pattern-selecting mechanisms. He took out further patents for improvements to looms. One, in 1854, was for taking up the cloth with a positive motion. Two more, in 1858, improved his drop box mechanism: the first was for actually operating the drop box, while the second was for tappet chains which operated the timing for raising the boxes.[br]Bibliography1845, British patent no. 10,462 (mechanized drop box). 1854, British patent no. 1,100 (positive uptake of cloth) 1858, British patent no. 2,297 (improved drop-box operation). 1858, British patent no. 2,704 (tappet chains).Further ReadingA.Barlow, 1878, The History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power, London (provides drawings of Diggle's invention).C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. IV, Oxford: Clarendon Press.See also: Kay, JohnRLH -
20 पटः _paṭḥ _टम् _ṭam
पटः टम् [पट् वेष्टने करणे घञर्थे कः]1 A garment, rai- ment, cloth, a piece of cloth; अयं पटः सूत्रदरिद्रतां गतो ह्ययं पटश्छिद्रशतैरलंकृतः &c. Mk.2.9; मेघाः स्रवन्ति बलदेवपटप्रकाशाः 5.45.-2 Fine cloth.-3 A veil, screen.-4 A tablet, plate or piece of cloth for writing or painting upon.-टः Anything well made or polished.-टम् A thatch, roof.-Comp. -अञ्चलः the hem of a garment.-उटजम् 1 a tent.-2 a mushroom; L. D. B.-उत्तरीयम् an upper garment.-कर्मन् n. weaving, business of the loom.-कारः 1 a weaver.-2 a painter.-कुटी f.,-छिदा a shred of cloth; पटच्छिदाकालिकपुष्पजाः स्रजः N.15.14;-मण्डपः, -वापः, वेश्मन् n. a tent; प्रभोर्निवासाः पटवेश्मभिर्बभुः Śi.12.63. Hch. Uttarabhāga; उल्लोचैः काण्डपटकैः अनेकैः पट मण्डपैः Śiva B.22.61; नवैरुत्तम्भितस्तम्भैर्मण्डितं पटमण्डपैः Śiva B.17.68.-गत a. painted.-भासः the interstices in a lattice-window; पटभाससूक्ष्मच्छिद्रालक्षिता Dk.2.-वासः 1 a tent.-2 a petticoat.-3 perfumed powder; Ratn.1; परागैः पुष्पाणां प्रकटपटवासव्यतिकरः Nāg.3.7.-4 a cover (पिधान); निजरजः पटवासमिवाकिरत् Śi.6.37.-वाद्यम् a kind of cymbal.-वासकः perfumed powder.
См. также в других словарях:
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