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collieries

  • 41 colliery

    n. kolenmijn
    [ kolliərie] 〈meervoud: collieries〉 Brits-Engels

    English-Dutch dictionary > colliery

  • 42 colliery

    ['kɒlɪərɪ]
    nome miniera f. di carbone
    * * *
    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) miniera (di carbone)
    * * *
    colliery /ˈkɒlɪərɪ/
    n.
    miniera di carbone.
    * * *
    ['kɒlɪərɪ]
    nome miniera f. di carbone

    English-Italian dictionary > colliery

  • 43 colliery

    ['kɔlɪərɪ]
    n ( BRIT)
    kopalnia f węgla
    * * *
    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) kopalnia

    English-Polish dictionary > colliery

  • 44 colliery

    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) ogļraktuve
    * * *
    ogļraktuves

    English-Latvian dictionary > colliery

  • 45 colliery

    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) anglių kasykla

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > colliery

  • 46 colliery

    n. kolgruva
    * * *
    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) kolgruva

    English-Swedish dictionary > colliery

  • 47 colliery

    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) uhelný důl
    * * *
    • šachta

    English-Czech dictionary > colliery

  • 48 colliery

    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) uhoľná baňa
    * * *
    • uholná bana

    English-Slovak dictionary > colliery

  • 49 colliery

    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) mină (de cărbune)

    English-Romanian dictionary > colliery

  • 50 colliery

    ['koljëri] n. minierë qymyrguri (pl. collieries)

    English-Albanian dictionary > colliery

  • 51 colliery

    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) ανθρακωρυχείο

    English-Greek dictionary > colliery

  • 52 shut

    [ʃʌt] 1. гл.; прош. вр., прич. прош. вр. shut
    1)
    а) закрывать, запирать, затворять

    Shut the box to. — Закройте ящик.

    Make sure that you shut the door to as you leave. — Не забудь закрыть дверь, когда будешь уходить.

    He shut the lid down with a loud noise. — Он с грохотом захлопнул крышку.

    Syn:
    close 1.
    б) = shut up / in держать взаперти, под замком

    The confidential documents are kept shut up in a strongbox. — Секретные документы хранятся в сейфе.

    It isn't kind to shut the dog in all day while you're at work. — Нехорошо запирать собаку на целый день, пока вы на работе.

    That poor dog has been shut up in the house all day while the owners were out. — Эта бедная собака сидела целый день взаперти, пока её хозяев не было дома.

    The only way Father can get any peace is to shut himself up in his study. — Единственная возможность для папы хоть сколько-нибудь посидеть в покое - это закрыться в кабинете.

    The window won't shut. — Окно никак не закрывается.

    Syn:
    close 1.
    3) закрывать, складывать
    4) ( shut in) защемлять, прищемлять

    I shut my finger in the door. — Я прищемил дверью палец.

    5) = shut down
    а) = shut up закрыть ( предприятие)

    British Coal shuts collieries. — "Бритиш Коул" закрывает шахты.

    The post office shuts at five, doesn't it? — Почта закрывается в пять, не так ли?

    The factory may shut down if supplies cease. — Завод может остановиться, если прекратятся поставки.

    - shut down
    - shut in
    - shut off
    - shut out
    - shut up
    ••

    to shut one's ears to smth. — не слушать, пропускать мимо ушей

    to be / get shut of smth., to shut one's hands of smth. — освободиться, избавиться от чего-л.

    - shut one's eyes to smth.
    2. прил.
    закрытый, запертый

    through shut teeth — сквозь зубы, стиснув зубы

    Syn:
    3. сущ.
    1) уст. засов, щеколда, задвижка
    Syn:
    bolt I 1.
    2) диал. ставень ( на окне)
    Syn:
    3) тех. дверца, крышка ( для закрывания отверстия); клапан
    Syn:
    4) поэт. конец дня; сумерки
    5) тех. место сварки; спай

    Англо-русский современный словарь > shut

  • 53 colliery

    s.
    mina de carbón (coal mine) (plural collieries)

    Nuevo Diccionario Inglés-Español > colliery

  • 54 colliery

    plural ˈcollieries noun
    a coalmine.
    مَنْجَم فَحْم حَجَري

    Arabic-English dictionary > colliery

  • 55 colliery

    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) mine (de charbon)

    English-French dictionary > colliery

  • 56 colliery

    plural - collieries; noun (a coalmine.) mina de carvão

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > colliery

  • 57 colliery

    colliery ['kɒljərɪ] (pl collieries)
    British Mining houillère f, mine f (de charbon)

    Un panorama unique de l'anglais et du français > colliery

  • 58 ქვანახშირის მაღაროები

    n
    coalmines, collieries

    Georgian-English dictionary > ქვანახშირის მაღაროები

  • 59 Barber, John

    [br]
    baptized 22 October 1734 Greasley, Nottinghamshire, England
    d. 6 November 1801 Attleborough, Nuneaton, England
    [br]
    English inventor of the gas turbine and jet propulsion.
    [br]
    He was the son of Francis Barber, coalmaster of Greasley, and Elizabeth Fletcher. In his will of 1765. his uncle, John Fletcher, left the bulk of his property, including collieries and Stainsby House, Horsley Woodhouse, Derbyshire, to John Barber. Another uncle, Robert, bequeathed him property in the next village, Smalley. It is clear that at this time John Barber was a man of considerable means. On a tablet erected by John in 1767, he acknowledges his debt to his uncle John in the words "in remembrance of the man who trained him up from a youth". At this time John Barber was living at Stainsby House and had already been granted his first patent, in 1766. The contents of this patent, which included a reversible water turbine, and his subsequent patents, suggest that he was very familiar with mining equipment, including the Newcomen engine. It comes as rather a surprise that c.1784 he became bankrupt and had to leave Stainsby House, evidently moving to Attleborough. In a strange twist, a descendent of Mr Sitwell, the new owner, bought the prototype Akroyd Stuart oil engine from the Doncaster Show in 1891.
    The second and fifth (final) patents, in 1773 and 1792, were concerned with smelting and the third, in 1776, featured a boiler-mounted impulse steam turbine. The fourth and most important patent, in 1791, describes and engine that could be applied to the "grinding of corn, flints, etc.", "rolling, slitting, forging or battering iron and other metals", "turning of mills for spinning", "turning up coals and other minerals from mines", and "stamping of ores, raising water". Further, and importantly, the directing of the fluid stream into smelting furnaces or at the stern of ships to propel them is mentioned. The engine described comprised two retorts for heating coal or oil to produce an inflammable gas, one to operate while the other was cleansed and recharged. The resultant gas, together with the right amount of air, passed to a beam-operated pump and a water-cooled combustion chamber, and then to a water-cooled nozzle to an impulse gas turbine, which drove the pumps and provided the output. A clear description of the thermodynamic sequence known as the Joule Cycle (Brayton in the USA) is thus given. Further, the method of gas production predates Murdoch's lighting of the Soho foundry by gas.
    It seems unlikely that John Barber was able to get his engine to work; indeed, it was well over a hundred years before a continuous combustion chamber was achieved. However, the details of the specification, for example the use of cooling water jackets and injection, suggest that considerable experimentation had taken place.
    To be active in the taking out of patents over a period of 26 years is remarkable; that the best came after bankruptcy is more so. There is nothing to suggest that the cost of his experiments was the cause of his financial troubles.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    A.K.Bruce, 1944, "John Barber and the gas turbine", Engineer 29 December: 506–8; 8 March (1946):216, 217.
    C.Lyle Cummins, 1976, Internal Fire, Carnot Press.
    JB

    Biographical history of technology > Barber, John

  • 60 Bell, Sir Isaac Lowthian

    [br]
    b. 15 February 1816 Newcastle upon Tyne, England
    d. 20 December 1904 Rounton Grange, Northallerton, Yorkshire, England
    [br]
    English ironworks proprietor, chemical manufacturer and railway director, widely renowned for his scientific pronouncements.
    [br]
    Following an extensive education, in 1835 Bell entered the Tyneside chemical and iron business where his father was a partner; for about five years from 1845 he controlled the ironworks. In 1844, he and his two brothers leased an iron blast-furnace at Wylam on Tyne. In 1850, with partners, he started chemical works at Washington, near Gateshead. A few years later, with his two brothers, he set up the Clarence Ironworks on Teesside. In the 1880s, salt extraction and soda-making were added there; at that time the Bell Brothers' enterprises, including collieries, employed 6,000 people.
    Lowthian Bell was a pioneer in applying thermochemistry to blast-furnace working. Besides his commercial interests, scientific experimentation and international travel, he found time to take a leading part in the promotion of British technical organizations; upon his death he left evidence of a prodigious level of personal activity.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Created baronet 1885. FRS 1875. Légion d'honneur 1878. MP, Hartlepool, 1875–80. President: British Iron Trade Association; Iron and Steel Institute; Institution of Mechanical Engineers; North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers; Institution of Mining Engineers; Society of the Chemical Industry. Iron and Steel Institute Bessemer Gold Medal 1874 (the first recipient). Society of Arts Albert Medal 1895.
    Bibliography
    The first of several books, Bell's Chemical Phenomena of Iron Smelting… (1872), was soon translated into German, French and Swedish. He was the author of more than forty technical articles.
    Further Reading
    1900–1910, Dictionary of National Biography.
    C.Wilson, 1984, article in Dictionary of Business Biography, Vol. I, ed. J.Jeremy, Butterworth (a more discursive account).
    D.Burn, 1940, The Economic History of Steelmaking, 1867–1939: A Study in Competition, Cambridge (2nd edn 1961).
    JKA

    Biographical history of technology > Bell, Sir Isaac Lowthian

См. также в других словарях:

  • Collieries — Colliery Col lier*y, n.; pl. {Collieries}. [Cf. {Coalery}, {Collier}.] 1. The place where coal is dug; a coal mine, and the buildings, etc., belonging to it. [1913 Webster] 2. The coal trade. [Obs.] Johnson. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • collieries — ➡ coal mining * * * …   Universalium

  • collieries — col·lier·y || kÉ’ljÉ™rɪ n. coal mine …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Manchester Collieries — was a coal mining company formed in 1929 from a group of independent companies operating on the Manchester Coalfield. The Mining Industry Act of 1926 attempted to stem the post war decline in coal mining and encourage independent companies to… …   Wikipedia

  • Atherton Collieries F.C. — Football club infobox clubname = Atherton Collieries fullname = Atherton Collieries Football Club nickname = Colls, The Miners founded = 1916 ground = Alder Street Atherton capacity = 2,500 chairman = flagicon|England Ian Williams manager =… …   Wikipedia

  • Birley Collieries — The Birley Collieries were a group of coal mines set in the Shirebrook Valley in south east Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. They were connected to the railway system by a branch line from the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway at …   Wikipedia

  • Dalton Main Collieries Ltd. — The Dalton Main Collieries Limited became a public company which appeared on the London Stock Exchange in December 1899. The company was set up by John Brown and Company with the aim of purchasing Roundwood Colliery at Parkgate and to purchase… …   Wikipedia

  • Rother Vale Collieries — were a group of coal producing pits originally in the Rother Valley parishes of Treeton, Woodhouse and Orgreave, nowadays on the south east Sheffield / Rotherham boundary, in South Yorkshire, England. In the early 20th century a new colliery at… …   Wikipedia

  • List of collieries in Yorkshire 1984-present with dates of closure — AfDM|page=List of collieries in Yorkshire 1984 present with dates of closure|date=2008 October 7|substed=yes In 1984, the English county of Yorkshire had a total of 56 collieries. As of|2008 there are only three: Kellingley, Maltby and Hatfield.… …   Wikipedia

  • Pontefract Collieries F.C. — Infobox Football club clubname = Pontefract Collieries | fullname = Pontefract Collieries Football Club nickname = Colls founded = 1958 ground = Skinner Lane Stadium, Pontefract capacity =1200 ( 300 seats ) chairman = Trevor Waddington manager =… …   Wikipedia

  • Tinsley Park Collieries — were a group of coal mines situated in the Tinsley / Darnall area to the east of the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. History Earl Fitzwilliam s Estates were responsible for the sinking of a colliery at Tinsley in 1819, the same year… …   Wikipedia

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