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1 MILL
• Enter the mill and you come out floury - С кем поведешься, от того и наберешься (C)• God's mills grind slowly, but sure - От расплаты не уйдешь (O)• Mill cannot grind with the water that is passed (past) (A/The) - Битого, пролитого да прожитого не воротишь (Б), Что было, то прошло и быльем поросло a (4), Что минуло, то сгинуло a (4), Что с возу упало, то пропало a (4)• Mill grinds no corn with water that has passed (The) - Что было, то прошло и быльем поросло a (4)• Mills of God grind slowly (The) - От расплаты не уйдешь (O)• Mills of the gods grind slowly /, but they grind exceedingly fine (small)/ (The) - От расплаты не уйдешь (O)• Mills will not grind if we (you) give them no water - Не подмажешь - не поедешь (H)• Mill that is always going grinds coarse and fine (The) - Мельница мелет - мука будет, язык мелет - беда будет (M), Язык мой - враг мой (Я)• No mill, no meal - Кто не работает, тот не ест (K) -
2 mill
[mɪl]1. noun1) a machine, sometimes now electrical, for grinding coffee, pepper etc by crushing it between rough, hard surfaces:مَطْحَنَهa pepper-mill.
2) a building where grain is ground:مَطْحَنَهThe farmer took his corn to the mill.
3) a building where certain types of things are manufactured:مَعْمَلa steel-mill.
2. verb1) to grind or press:يَطْحَنThis flour was milled locally.
2) ( usually with about or around) (of crowds) to move about in a disorganized way:يَتَحَرَّك بِدون نِظامThere's a huge crowd of people milling around outside.
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3 mtyn zbożowy
• corn mill -
4 śrutownik do kukurydzy
• corn millSłownik polsko-angielski dla inżynierów > śrutownik do kukurydzy
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5 завод по переработке кукурузы в крупку
Русско-английский словарь по пищевой промышленности > завод по переработке кукурузы в крупку
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6 мелница за брашно
corn millcorn millsБългарски-Angleščina политехнически речник > мелница за брашно
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7 viljamylly
• corn mill• wheat mill -
8 валец
1. м. roll2. bending3. mill -
9 Evans, Oliver
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 13 September 1755 Newport, Delaware, USAd. 15 April 1819 New York, USA[br]American millwright and inventor of the first automatic corn mill.[br]He was the fifth child of Charles and Ann Stalcrop Evans, and by the age of 15 he had four sisters and seven brothers. Nothing is known of his schooling, but at the age of 17 he was apprenticed to a Newport wheelwright and wagon-maker. At 19 he was enrolled in a Delaware Militia Company in the Revolutionary War but did not see active service. About this time he invented a machine for bending and cutting off the wires in textile carding combs. In July 1782, with his younger brother, Joseph, he moved to Tuckahoe on the eastern shore of the Delaware River, where he had the basic idea of the automatic flour mill. In July 1782, with his elder brothers John and Theophilus, he bought part of his father's Newport farm, on Red Clay Creek, and planned to build a mill there. In 1793 he married Sarah Tomlinson, daughter of a Delaware farmer, and joined his brothers at Red Clay Creek. He worked there for some seven years on his automatic mill, from about 1783 to 1790.His system for the automatic flour mill consisted of bucket elevators to raise the grain, a horizontal screw conveyor, other conveying devices and a "hopper boy" to cool and dry the meal before gathering it into a hopper feeding the bolting cylinder. Together these components formed the automatic process, from incoming wheat to outgoing flour packed in barrels. At that time the idea of such automation had not been applied to any manufacturing process in America. The mill opened, on a non-automatic cycle, in 1785. In January 1786 Evans applied to the Delaware legislature for a twenty-five-year patent, which was granted on 30 January 1787 although there was much opposition from the Quaker millers of Wilmington and elsewhere. He also applied for patents in Pennsylvania, Maryland and New Hampshire. In May 1789 he went to see the mill of the four Ellicot brothers, near Baltimore, where he was impressed by the design of a horizontal screw conveyor by Jonathan Ellicot and exchanged the rights to his own elevator for those of this machine. After six years' work on his automatic mill, it was completed in 1790. In the autumn of that year a miller in Brandywine ordered a set of Evans's machinery, which set the trend toward its general adoption. A model of it was shown in the Market Street shop window of Robert Leslie, a watch-and clockmaker in Philadelphia, who also took it to England but was unsuccessful in selling the idea there.In 1790 the Federal Plant Laws were passed; Evans's patent was the third to come within the new legislation. A detailed description with a plate was published in a Philadelphia newspaper in January 1791, the first of a proposed series, but the paper closed and the series came to nothing. His brother Joseph went on a series of sales trips, with the result that some machinery of Evans's design was adopted. By 1792 over one hundred mills had been equipped with Evans's machinery, the millers paying a royalty of $40 for each pair of millstones in use. The series of articles that had been cut short formed the basis of Evans's The Young Millwright and Miller's Guide, published first in 1795 after Evans had moved to Philadelphia to set up a store selling milling supplies; it was 440 pages long and ran to fifteen editions between 1795 and 1860.Evans was fairly successful as a merchant. He patented a method of making millstones as well as a means of packing flour in barrels, the latter having a disc pressed down by a toggle-joint arrangement. In 1801 he started to build a steam carriage. He rejected the idea of a steam wheel and of a low-pressure or atmospheric engine. By 1803 his first engine was running at his store, driving a screw-mill working on plaster of Paris for making millstones. The engine had a 6 in. (15 cm) diameter cylinder with a stroke of 18 in. (45 cm) and also drove twelve saws mounted in a frame and cutting marble slabs at a rate of 100 ft (30 m) in twelve hours. He was granted a patent in the spring of 1804. He became involved in a number of lawsuits following the extension of his patent, particularly as he increased the licence fee, sometimes as much as sixfold. The case of Evans v. Samuel Robinson, which Evans won, became famous and was one of these. Patent Right Oppression Exposed, or Knavery Detected, a 200-page book with poems and prose included, was published soon after this case and was probably written by Oliver Evans. The steam engine patent was also extended for a further seven years, but in this case the licence fee was to remain at a fixed level. Evans anticipated Edison in his proposal for an "Experimental Company" or "Mechanical Bureau" with a capital of thirty shares of $100 each. It came to nothing, however, as there were no takers. His first wife, Sarah, died in 1816 and he remarried, to Hetty Ward, the daughter of a New York innkeeper. He was buried in the Bowery, on Lower Manhattan; the church was sold in 1854 and again in 1890, and when no relative claimed his body he was reburied in an unmarked grave in Trinity Cemetery, 57th Street, Broadway.[br]Further ReadingE.S.Ferguson, 1980, Oliver Evans: Inventive Genius of the American Industrial Revolution, Hagley Museum.G.Bathe and D.Bathe, 1935, Oliver Evans: Chronicle of Early American Engineering, Philadelphia, Pa.IMcN -
10 вальцы
1) General subject: roll2) Engineering: bending rolls, roll mill, roll mills, rolls3) Chemistry: corn mill, cracker mill, feed mill, glue spreader4) Oil: mill, roller, rolling mill5) Automation: rotating dies6) Plastics: roller press7) Makarov: mangle, mixing mill (для полимерных материалов)8) Cement: vertical rollers -
11 гранулятор
1) Geology: granulating machine2) Engineering: ball mill, grainer, granulator, nodulizer, pelleting machine (для получения окатышей), pelletizer (для получения окатышей)3) Chemistry: grain mill, granulating mill, pelletisers4) Mining: granulating plant5) Forestry: palletizing machine, pelleter6) Metallurgy: ball mill (для скатывани), pan nodulizer7) Silicates: corn mill8) Polymers: pelletizing machine, scrap grinder9) Chemical weapons: spray drier10) Makarov: bottom water screen, cuber, cubing machine, pellet mill, tableting machine11) Cement: granulating drum -
12 кукурузная мельница
1) American: corn mill2) Makarov: corn flour millУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > кукурузная мельница
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13 male
grind, paint, paint, purr* * *verb. [ fargelegge] paint, colour verb. [ et bilde] paint (f.eks.a house, a picture
); (nedsettende) daub verb. (nedsettende) [ med maling] daub verb. [ skrible] scribble, scrawl verb. [ med kvern] grind (f.eks.coffee, corn
); mill (f.eks. ) verb. [ til pulver] crush, pulverize verb. [ på mølle] mill verb. (treforedling) beat, refine verb. [om katt o.l.] purr verb. [klage, gnåle] go on (and on) verb. [ virvle rundt] churn; (om vann) churn, eddy (la seg male) have one's portrait painted -
14 дробильные вальцы
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15 промывные вальцы
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16 гранулятор
ball mill, corn mill сил., grainer, granulator, nodulizer, pelleting machine, pelletizer* * *грануля́тор м.1. granulator, granulating mill2. ( для получения окатышей) литейн. pelletizerгрануля́тор кормо́в — feeding stuff cuberтаре́льчатый грануля́тор — plate granulatorча́шечный грануля́тор — pan granulator* * * -
17 Ewart, Peter
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 14 May 1767 Traquair, near Peebles, Scotlandd. September 1842 London, England[br]Scottish pioneer in the mechanization of the textile industry.[br]Peter Ewart, the youngest of six sons, was born at Traquair manse, where his father was a clergyman in the Church of Scotland. He was educated at the Free School, Dumfries, and in 1782 spent a year at Edinburgh University. He followed this with an apprenticeship under John Rennie at Musselburgh before moving south in 1785 to help Rennie erect the Albion corn mill in London. This brought him into contact with Boulton \& Watt, and in 1788 he went to Birmingham to erect a waterwheel and other machinery in the Soho Manufactory. In 1789 he was sent to Manchester to install a steam engine for Peter Drinkwater and thus his long connection with the city began. In 1790 Ewart took up residence in Manchester as Boulton \& Watt's representative. Amongst other engines, he installed one for Samuel Oldknow at Stockport. In 1792 he became a partner with Oldknow in his cotton-spinning business, but because of financial difficulties he moved back to Birmingham in 1795 to help erect the machines in the new Soho Foundry. He was soon back in Manchester in partnership with Samuel Greg at Quarry Bank Mill, Styal, where he was responsible for developing the water power, installing a steam engine, and being concerned with the spinning machinery and, later, gas lighting at Greg's other mills.In 1798, Ewart devised an automatic expansion-gear for steam engines, but steam pressures at the time were too low for such a device to be effective. His grasp of the theory of steam power is shown by his paper to the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society in 1808, On the Measure of Moving Force. In 1813 he patented a power loom to be worked by the pressure of steam or compressed air. In 1824 Charles Babbage consulted him about automatic looms. His interest in textiles continued until at least 1833, when he obtained a patent for a self-acting spinning mule, which was, however, outclassed by the more successful one invented by Richard Roberts. Ewart gave much help and advice to others. The development of the machine tools at Boulton \& Watt's Soho Foundry has been mentioned already. He also helped James Watt with his machine for copying sculptures. While he continued to run his own textile mill, Ewart was also in partnership with Charles Macintosh, the pioneer of rubber-coated cloth. He was involved with William Fairbairn concerning steam engines for the boats that Fairbairn was building in Manchester, and it was through Ewart that Eaton Hodgkinson was introduced to Fairbairn and so made the tests and calculations for the tubes for the Britannia Railway Bridge across the Menai Straits. Ewart was involved with the launching of the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway as he was a director of the Manchester Chamber of Commerce at the time.In 1835 he uprooted himself from Manchester and became the first Chief Engineer for the Royal Navy, assuming responsibility for the steamboats, which by 1837 numbered 227 in service. He set up repair facilities and planned workshops for overhauling engines at Woolwich Dockyard, the first establishment of its type. It was here that he was killed in an accident when a chain broke while he was supervising the lifting of a large boiler. Engineering was Ewart's life, and it is possible to give only a brief account of his varied interests and connections here.[br]Further ReadingObituary, 1843, "Institution of Civil Engineers", Annual General Meeting, January. Obituary, 1843, Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society Memoirs (NS) 7. R.L.Hills, 1987–8, "Peter Ewart, 1767–1843", Manchester Literary and PhilosophicalSociety Memoirs 127.M.B.Rose, 1986, The Gregs of Quarry Bank Mill The Rise and Decline of a Family Firm, 1750–1914, Cambridge (covers E wart's involvement with Samuel Greg).R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester; R.L.Hills, 1989, Powerfrom Steam, Cambridge (both look at Ewart's involvement with textiles and steam engines).RLH -
18 кукурузодробилка
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19 зернильные вальцы
Oil: corn mill, grain mill, grainer, granulating mill -
20 pīstrīnum
pīstrīnum ī, n [pistor], a corn-mill, poundingmill, mill: te in pistrinum dedam usque ad necem, T.: in iudicia, tamquam in aliquod pistrinum, detrudi: tibi mecum in eodem est pistrino vivendum, must bear the same burden.* * *mill/bakery; (as a place of punishment of slaves or of drudgery)
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