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combination garments

  • 1 combination garments

    Abbreviation: combs

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > combination garments

  • 2 комбинация

    2) Engineering: pattern (напр. символов), repertoire, repertory, set-up
    3) Mathematics: aggregate
    4) Cards: meld (в канасте, кункене), hand
    5) Economy: assembly
    7) Telecommunications: constellation, string (битов)
    9) Information technology: patn ( конкретный) (конкретная), pattern (конкретный) (конкретная), pattern (конкретный) (конкретная) (напр. символов)
    11) Geophysics: arrangement
    12) Patents: composition
    13) Polymers: blend
    14) Automation: mix, set
    16) Games: hand (в картах, в часности BlackJack), (чисел) column (В числовой игре.)
    17) Clothing: petticoat

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > комбинация

  • 3 combinación

    f.
    1 combination, combine, composite, mixture.
    2 mixing, conjugation, combination.
    3 petticoat, skirtlike feminine undergarment, underskirt, slip.
    4 combination, permutation.
    5 synthesis.
    6 ring.
    * * *
    1 combination
    2 (prenda) slip
    3 (cóctel) cocktail
    4 (lotería, quiniela) permutation, numbers plural
    5 figurado (artimaña) fiddle, wangle
    * * *
    noun f.
    * * *
    SF
    1) [de elementos, factores] combination
    2) [de números] combination
    3) (Quím) compound
    4) [de transportes] connection
    5) (=prenda) slip
    6) (Literat)

    combinación métrica — stanza form, rhyme scheme

    * * *
    1)
    a) (de colores, sabores) combination
    b) (Mat) permutation
    c) ( de caja fuerte) combination
    2) (Indum) slip
    3) (Transp) connection
    * * *
    1)
    a) (de colores, sabores) combination
    b) (Mat) permutation
    c) ( de caja fuerte) combination
    2) (Indum) slip
    3) (Transp) connection
    * * *
    combinación1

    Ex: But until these new pretty garments are ready, the boy will still have to put up with his girl cousins' left-off petticoats and pinnies.

    combinación2
    2 = bedfellow, blend, congeries, juxtaposition, mix, piecing together, concatenation, meshing, combination, interweaving, cocktail, ensemble, meld, coupling, conjoining.

    Ex: I would like to devote a couple of moments each to what may seem strange bedfellows at first: Sholom Aleichem, Melvil's Rib, the CIA, and La Jolla, California.

    Ex: Thus in index or catalogue or data base design the indexer must choose an appropriate blend of recall and precision for each individual application.
    Ex: To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.
    Ex: It achieves this aim principally through the juxtaposition of related subjects in a classified order.
    Ex: There are important employment opportunities available to people equipped with the right mix of skills and experience.
    Ex: Progress in research is dependent on the piecing together of items of information from many sources.
    Ex: Facilities are being developed to enable fast, effective communication over a concatenation of terrestrial and satellite networks.
    Ex: This paper describes the importance of team management to career development, as well as the meshing of organizational and individual needs, and views the career as a longitudinal concept.
    Ex: The software can search each field or a combination of fields.
    Ex: This paper illustrates the possible future interweaving of information retrieval and entertainment.
    Ex: He rightly characterizes his book as a ' cocktail of personal and public observations.
    Ex: DIANE is the name that has been given to the ensemble of available information services.
    Ex: The article is entitled 'Scholars and media: an unmixable mess of oil and water or a perfect meld of oil and vinegar?'.
    Ex: Will the coupling of libraries and museums mean unprecedented cooperation between these venerable institutions?.
    Ex: This sign is in effect a prototypical example of the conjoining of words and images.
    * combinación de colores = colour pattern, colour scheme.
    * combinación perfecta = perfect match.
    * en combinación con = in parallel to/with, in combination with.
    * orden de combinación de encabezamiento = citation order.
    * orden de combinación de encabezamientos = citation order.
    * realizar una combinación = perform + combination.
    * una combinación de = a mixture of, a mix of, a rollup of.

    combinación3
    3 = code, combination.

    Ex: The user can page forward through the file by entering the forward code (f) and page backward by entering the backward code (b).

    Ex: Combinations are to be given only to a minimum number of employees required to have access to the safe.
    * cerradura de combinación = combination lock.
    * combinación de la caja fuerte = safe code, safe combination.

    * * *
    A
    1 (de colores, sabores) combination
    la película es una combinación de amor, intriga y suspense the movie is a combination o mixture of love, mystery and suspense
    2 ( Quím) compound
    3 ( Mat) permutation
    4 (de una caja fuerte) combination
    B ( Indum) slip
    C ( Transp) connection
    hay que hacer combinación en Diagonal ( Arg); you have to change at Diagonal
    * * *

    combinación sustantivo femenino
    a) (de colores, sabores) combination


    c) (Mat) permutation

    d) (Indum) slip

    e) (Transp) connection

    combinación sustantivo femenino
    1 combination
    2 (prenda interior femenina) slip
    ' combinación' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    acertante
    - acierto
    - mezcla
    - síntesis
    English:
    brunch
    - combination
    - match
    - petticoat
    - scheme
    - slip
    - underskirt
    - blend
    - color
    * * *
    1. [unión, mezcla] combination;
    una combinación explosiva an explosive combination;
    la perfecta combinación entre juventud y experiencia the perfect combination o mix of youth and experience;
    no tomar en combinación con otros analgésicos [en etiqueta] not to be taken with other painkillers
    2. [de bebidas] cocktail
    3. [de caja fuerte] combination;
    la combinación ganadora fue… [en lotería] the winning numbers were…
    4. [prenda] slip
    5. [plan] scheme
    6. Mat permutation
    7. Quím compound
    8. [de medios de transporte] connections;
    no hay buena combinación para ir de aquí allí there's no easy way of getting there from here;
    hay muy buena combinación para llegar al aeropuerto there's a very good connection to the airport
    9. Dep [pases] pass;
    una perfecta combinación entre los dos jugadores acabó en gol the two players combined perfectly to score a goal
    * * *
    f
    1 combination;
    combinación numérica combination of numbers
    2 prenda slip
    3
    :
    * * *
    1) : combination
    2) : connection (in travel)
    * * *
    1. (en general) combination
    3. (prenda) slip

    Spanish-English dictionary > combinación

  • 4 Mischung

    f mixture (auch fig.); von Tabak, Tee etc.: blend; von Gebäck, Pralinen etc.: assortment; eine Mischung aus a mixture of
    * * *
    die Mischung
    assortment; cross; melange; intermixture; mixture; mix; blend
    * * *
    Mị|schung ['mɪʃʊŋ]
    f -, -en
    1) (= das Mischen) mixing; (von Tee-, Kaffee-, Tabaksorten) blending, mixing
    2) (lit, fig = Gemischtes) mixture; (von Tee etc) blend, mixture; (von Süßigkeiten etc) assortment, mixture; (fig) mixture, combination (aus of)
    3) (CHEM) mixture
    * * *
    die
    1) (a mixture.) blend
    2) (a mixture or variety: an assortment of garments.) assortment
    3) (the result of mixing things or people together: a mixture of eggs, flour and milk.) mixture
    4) (the result of mixing things or people together: London has an interesting racial mix.) mix
    5) (a collection of ingredients used to make something: (a) cake-mix.) mix
    * * *
    Mi·schung
    <-, -en>
    f
    1. kein pl (das Mischen) mixing no pl; (Kaffee, Tee, Tabak) blending no pl
    2. (Mixtur) mixture; (Kaffee, Tee, Tabak) blend; (Pralinen) assortment
    3. (Zusammenstellung) mixture, combination
    * * *
    die; Mischung, Mischungen (auch fig.) mixture; (TeeMischung, KaffeeMischung, TabakMischung) blend; (PralinenMischung) assortment
    * * *
    Mischung f mixture (auch fig); von Tabak, Tee etc: blend; von Gebäck, Pralinen etc: assortment;
    eine Mischung aus a mixture of
    * * *
    die; Mischung, Mischungen (auch fig.) mixture; (TeeMischung, KaffeeMischung, TabakMischung) blend; (PralinenMischung) assortment
    * * *
    -en f.
    compound n.
    intermixture n.
    melange n.
    mixture n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Mischung

  • 5 Suit

    A combination of two or more garments constituting a single article.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Suit

  • 6 Howe, Elias

    [br]
    b. 9 July 1819 Spencer, Massachusetts, USA
    d. 3 October 1867 Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA
    [br]
    American inventor of one of the earliest successful sewing machines.
    [br]
    Son of Elias Howe, a farmer, he acquired his mechanical knowledge in his father's mill. He left school at 12 years of age and was apprenticed for two years in a machine shop in Lowell, Massachusetts, and later to an instrument maker, Ari Davis in Boston, Massachusetts, where his master's services were much in demand by Harvard University. Fired by a desire to invent a sewing machine, he utilized the experience gained in Lowell to devise a shuttle carrying a lower thread and a needle carrying an upper thread to make lock-stitch in straight lines. His attempts were so rewarding that he left his job and was sustained first by his father and then by a partner. By 1845 he had built a machine that worked at 250 stitches per minute, and the following year he patented an improved machine. The invention of the sewing machine had an enormous impact on the textile industry, stimulating demand for cloth because making up garments became so much quicker. The sewing machine was one of the first mass-produced consumer durables and was essentially an American invention. William Thomas, a London manufacturer of shoes, umbrellas and corsets, secured the British rights and persuaded Howe to come to England to apply it to the making of shoes. This Howe did, but he quarrelled with Thomas after less than one year. He returned to America to face with his partner, G.W.Bliss, a bigger fight over his patent (see I.M. Singer), which was being widely infringed. Not until 1854 was the case settled in his favour. This litigation threatened the very existence of the new industry, but the Great Sewing Machine Combination, the first important patent-pooling arrangement in American history, changed all this. For a fee of $5 on every domestically-sold machine and $1 on every exported one, Howe contributed to the pool his patent of 1846 for a grooved eye-pointed needle used in conjunction with a lock-stitch-forming shuttle. Howe's patent was renewed in 1861; he organized and equipped a regiment during the Civil War with the royalties. When the war ended he founded the Howe Machine Company of Bridgeport, Connecticut.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1867, Engineer 24.
    Obituary, 1867, Practical Magazine 5.
    F.G.Harrison, 1892–3, Biographical Sketches of Pre-eminent Americans (provides a good account of Howe's life and achievements).
    N.Salmon, 1863, History of the Sewing Machine from the Year 1750, with a biography of Elias Howe, London (tells the history of sewing machines).
    F.B.Jewell, 1975, Veteran Sewing Machines, A Collector's Guide, Newton Abbot (a more modern account of the history of sewing machines).
    C.Singer (ed.), 1958, A History of Technology, Vol. V, Oxford: Clarendon Press (covers the mechanical developments).
    D.A.Hounshell, 1984, From the American System to Mass Production 1800–1932. The
    Development of Manufacturing Technology in the United States, Baltimore (examines the role of the American sewing machine companies in the development of mass-production techniques).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Howe, Elias

  • 7 πρεσβύτερος

    πρεσβύτερος, α, ον (Hom.+; comp. of πρέσβυς)
    pert. to being relatively advanced in age, older, old
    of an individual person older of two ὁ υἱὸς ὁ πρ. (cp. Aelian, VH 9, 42; TestJob 15:2 τῷ ἀδελφῷ τῷ πρεσβυτέρῳ; JosAs; Just., A II, 6, 1) Lk 15:25; of Manasseh (w. Ephraim) B 13:5. In contrast to the younger generation οἱ πρεσβύτεροι the older ones J 8:9. Opp. οἱ νεανίσκοι Ac 2:17 (Jo 3:1). Opp. νεώτεροι (s. νεός 3aβ) 1 Ti 5:1 (similar advice, containing a contrast betw. πρ. and νεώτ., from ins and lit. in MDibelius, Hdb. ad loc.); 1 Pt 5:5 (though here the πρεσβύτεροι are not only the older people, but at the same time, the ‘elders’; s. 2bβ). The same double mng. is found for πρεσβύτεροι in 1 Cl 1:3 beside νέοι, while in 3:3; 21:6, beside the same word, the concept of being old is the dominant one (as Jos., C. Ap. 2, 206). On the disputed pass. Hv 3, 1, 8 (οἱ νεανίσκοι … οἱ πρεσβύτεροι) cp. MDibelius, Hdb. ad loc.—Fem. πρεσβυτέρα old(er) woman (opp. νεωτέρα, as Gen 19:31) 1 Ti 5:2.—With no ref. to younger persons, w. complete disappearance of the comparative aspect: πρεσβύτερος an old man (Jos., Ant. 13, 226; 292 [as a witness of events in the past, as Ps.-Pla., Virt. 3, 377b; 4, 377c]) Hv 3, 12, 2; cp. 3, 11, 3. The personified church is called λίαν πρεσβυτέρα very old 3, 10, 3; cp. 3, 11, 2. She appears as ἡ πρ. the elderly woman 2, 1, 3; 3, 1, 2; 3, 10, 6; 9 and has τὰς τρίχας πρεσβυτέρας the hair of an old woman 3, 10, 4; 5; 3, 12, 1.
    of a period of time (Petosiris, Fgm. 3 and 4 mention οἱ πρεσβύτεροι and οἱ νεώτεροι. In both instances the context shows that the reference is to astrologers from earlier and more recent times) οἱ πρεσβύτεροι the men of old, our ancestors Hb 11:2. ἡ παράδοσις τῶν πρεσβυτέρων the tradition of the ancients (cp. Iambl., Vi. Pyth. 35, 253 τῶν π. συγγράμματα) Mt 15:2; Mk 7:3, 5 (ELohse, D. Ordination im Spätjudentum u. NT, ’51, 50–56: scholars).
    an official (cp. Lat. senator), elder, presbyter
    among the Jews (the congregation of a synagogue in Jerusalem used πρεσβύτεροι to denote its officers before 70 A.D.: SEG VIII, 170, 9; cp. Dssm., LO 378–80 [LAE 439–41]).
    α. for members of local councils in individual cities (cp. Josh 20:4; Ruth 4:2; 2 Esdr 10:14; Jdth 8:10; 10:6) Lk 7:3; 1 Cl 55:4.—Schürer II, 185.
    β. for members of a group in the Sanhedrin (Schürer II, 206–8; JJeremias, Jerusalem z. Zt. Jesu II B 1: Die gesellschaftl. Oberschicht 1929, 88ff). They are mentioned together w. (the) other groups: ἀρχιερεῖς (Ac 4:5 has ἄρχοντες for this), γραμματεῖς, πρεσβύτεροι (the order is not always the same) Mt 16:21; 26:3 v.l.; 27:41; Mk 8:31; 11:27; 14:43, 53; 15:1; Lk 9:22; 20:1.—Only ἀρχιερεῖς (Ac 4:8 has for this ἄρχοντες τοῦ λαοῦ) and πρεσβύτεροι (τοῦ λαοῦ: cp. Ex 19:7; Num 11:16b, 24; 1 Macc 7:33; 12:35; Just., D. 40, 4 al.) Mt 21:23; 26:3, 47, 59 v.l.; 27:1, 3, 12, 20; 28:(11), 12; Lk 22:52 (here, as an exception, οἱ στρατηγοὶ τοῦ ἱεροῦ); Ac 4:23; 23:14; 25:15; cp. 24:1. Also οἱ πρεσβύτεροι καὶ οἱ ἱερεῖς GPt 7:25 (for this combination cp. Jos., Ant. 11, 83; 12, 406).—Only πρεσβύτεροι and γραμματεῖς Mt 26:57; Ac 6:12.—The use of πρεσβύτερος as a title among the Jews of the Diaspora appears quite late, except for the allusions in the LXX (cp. Schürer III/1, 102; MAMA III [Cilicia], 344; 448 [cp. ZNW 31, ’32, 313f]. Whether πρεσβύτερος is to be understood in the older Roman inscriptions [CIJ 378] as a title [so CIJ p. lxxxvi], remains doubtful).
    among the Christians (for their use of the word as a title one must bear in mind not only the Jewish custom, but also its use as a t.t. among the ἔθνη, in connection w. associations of the ‘old ones’ [FPoland, Geschichte des griech. Vereinswesens 1909, 98ff] and to designate civic as well as religious officials [Dssm., B 153ff=BS 154–57, NB 60ff=BS 233–35, also LO 315, 5; HHausschildt, ZNW 4, 1903, 235ff; MStrack, ibid. 213ff; HLietzmann, ZWT 55, 1914, 116–32 [=Kl. Schr. I ’58, 156–69]; MDibelius, exc. on 1 Ti 5:17ff; RAlastair-Campbell, The Elders, Seniority within Earliest Christianity ’94.].—BGU 16, 6 [159 A.D.] πρεσβύτεροι ἱερεῖς θεοῦ Σοκνοπαίου; 347, 6; PVindBosw 1, 31 [87 A.D.].—As honorary title: Iren. 4, 26, 5 [Harv. II 238, 3]. The Engl. word ‘priest’ comes fr. πρεσβύτερος via Lat. presbyter; later Christian usage is largely, if not entirely, responsible for this development; s. OED s.v. ‘priest’ B).
    α. Ac 11:30; 14:23; 15:2, 4, 6, 22f; 16:4 (in all the places in Ac 15 and 16 mention is made of οἱ ἀπόστολοι καὶ οἱ πρεσβύτεροι in the Jerusalem church); 20:17; 21:18; 1 Ti 5:17, 19 (Nicol. Dam.: 90 Fgm. 103a Jac. νεωτέρῳ πρεσβυτέρου καταμαρτυρεῖν οὐκ ἔξεστι); Tit 1:5; Js 5:14; 1 Pt 5:1, 5 (s. 1a above); 1 Cl 44:5; 47:6; 54:2; 57:1. WWrede, Untersuchungen zum 1 Cl 1891, 8ff.—Acc. to 2 Cl 17:3, 5 exhortation and preaching in the church services were among their duties.—In Ign. the πρεσβύτεροι come after the bishop, to whom they are subordinate IMg 2; 3:1; 6:1, or betw. the bishop and the deacons IPhld inscr.; 10:2; IPol 6:1, or the higher rank of the bishop in comparison to them is made plain in some other way ITr 3:1; 12:2 (s. πρεσβυτέριον b; cp. Hippol., Ref. 9, 12, 22).—Polycarp—an ἐπίσκοπος, accord. to the title of the Ep. bearing his name—groups himself w. πρεσβύτεροι in Pol inscr., and further takes the presence of presbyters in Philippi for granted (beside deacons, though no ἐπίσκοπος is mentioned; cp. Hdb. on Pol inscr.) Pol 5:3.
    β. Just how we are to understand the words ὁ πρεσβύτερος, applied to himself by the author of the two smallest Johannine letters 2J 1; 3J 1, remains in doubt. But in any case it is meant to indicate a position of great dignity the elder.—HWindisch, exc. on 3J, end; ESchwartz, Über den Tod der Söhne Zebedaei 1904, 47; 51; HWendt, ZNW 23, 1924, 19; EKäsemann, ZTK 48, ’51, 292–311; DWatson, NTS 35, ’89, 104–30, rhetorical analysis of 2J.—ὁ πρ. and οἱ πρ. are mentioned by Papias in these much-discussed passages: 2:3, 4, 5, 7, 14, 15. For some of the lit. s. the note on JKleist’s transl. ’48, p. 207 n. 18.
    γ. In Rv there are 24 elders sitting on thrones about the throne of God; they form a heavenly council of elders (cp. Is 24:23) 4:4, 10; 5:5–14; 7:11, 13; 11:16; 14:3; 19:4. The elders have been understood as glorified human beings of some kind or astral deities (or angels) (for the var. views s. RCharles, ICC Rv I 128–33; JMichl, D. 24 Ältesten in d. Apk. d. hl. J. ’38); the number 24 has been referred to the following: the 24 priestly classes of the Jews (1 Ch 24:7–18; Jos., Ant. 7, 365–67) whose heads were called ‘elders’ (Yoma 1, 5; Tamid 1, 1; Middoth 1, 8); the 24 stars which, according to Babylonian belief, stood half on the north and half on the south of the zodiac (Diod S 2, 31, 4; POsl 4, 19: HGunkel, Z. religionsgesch. Verständnis des NT 1903, 42f; Boll 35f); the 24 hours of the day, represented as old men w. shining garments and w. crowns (acc. to the Test. of Adam [ed. CBezold, TNöldeke Festschr. 1906, 893–912]: JWellhausen, Analyse der Offb. Joh. 1907, p. 9, 1; NMorosof, Offb. Joh. 1912, 32); the 24 Yazatas in the state of the gods in heaven, acc. to Persian thought (Bousset). It is certainly an open question whether, or how far, the writer of Rv had any of these things in mind.—On the presbyters, and esp. on the question how ἐπίσκοπος and πρεσβύτερος were originally related to each other (a question which is raised particularly in the pastorals; cp. MDibelius, Hdb. exc. after 1 Ti 3:7 section 2 [w. lit.] and before 5:17), s. the lit. s.v. ἐπίσκοπος.—BEaston, Pastoral Epistles ’47, 188–97; WMichaelis, Das Ältestenamt ’53; GBornkamm, πρεσβύτερος; RCampbell, The Elders ’94.—B. 1472. DELG s.v. πρέσβυς. M-M. EDNT. TW.

    Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά παλαιοχριστιανική Λογοτεχνία > πρεσβύτερος

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