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101 rövid
(DE) epigrammatisch; kurz; kurze; (EN) brief; compendious; concise; curt; cutty; ejaculatory; epigrammatic; flying; short; small; succinct -
102 sámli
(DE) Fußraste {e}; Hutsche {e}; Stockerl {s}; (EN) cricket; cutty-stool -
103 szégyenpad
(EN) cutty-stool; dunce's seat -
104 zsámoly
(DE) Hocker {r}; Schemel {r}; (EN) cricket; cutty-stool; foot-stool; footstool; stool -
105 tea-clipper
['tiː,klɪpə]ча́йный кли́пер (быстроходный парусный корабль, доставлявший чай в Великобританию в 19 в.; см. тж. Cutty Sark I)English-Russian Great Britain dictionary (Великобритания. Лингвострановедческий словарь) > tea-clipper
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106 куцця
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107 комовая глина
ball clay, cutty clay, lumpy clay -
108 taburete bajo
m.cutty stool. -
109 женщина
жен.1) woman; lady ( как вежливое обращение к женщинам); dona сленг; female пренебр.привлекательная женщина — attractive, beautiful, pretty woman
замужняя женщина — married woman; matron ( мать семейства); feme covert юр.
светская женщина — woman of the world, woman of fashion
скандальная женщина — fishwife разг.
безнравственная женщина — cutty разг.
ветреная женщина — fizgig, light-o'-love
деловая женщина — business woman, businesswoman
2) мн. ч. женщины; коллект. womankind, womenfolk -
110 cutach
adj. short, stumpy, bob-tailed, docked (L.Sc. cutty) -
111 cutach
bobtailed, so Irish, Early Irish do-chotta, they cut short, Welsh cwta. The relationship, if any, existing between cut, cutach, and English cut, is one of borrowing; the history of English cut is obscure, and the Celtic words mean "short, shorten", not "to cut" with a knife. Besides, the Early Irish appears a century and a half earler than the English (1139 v. 1275). Stokes has suggested a borrowing from French couteau (= cultellus, knife) for the Early Irish form. Rhys says Welsh is English cutty, borrowed. -
112 skirt
1. n юбкаa skirt girt with a scarf — юбка, подпоясанная шарфом
pleated skirt — юбка в складку; плиссированная юбка
2. n обыкн. l3. n пола4. n подол5. n обыкн. край, граница; окраина6. n берег7. n опушка8. n подножие9. n полоса10. n сл. «юбка», молодая женщина, девушкаhooped skirt — юбка с кринолином, юбка-кринолин
11. n оборка12. n диафрагма, грудобрюшная преграда13. n кул. говяжья пашинка14. n эл. юбка изолятора15. v быть расположенным, идти по границе, по краю, вдоль рубежа; окружать, окаймлять16. v огибать; обходить, идти вдоль края17. v проходить, обходить сторонойto skirt a hostile town — обойти стороной город, занятый неприятелем
18. v едва избежать, быть на волосок19. v уклоняться20. v редк. рыскать, искать на окраинах, в окрестностяхСинонимический ряд:1. border (noun) border; brim; brink; edge; fringe; hem; margin; perimeter; periphery; rim; selvage; verge2. dress (noun) crinoline; dirndl; dress; frock; gown; jumper; kilt; petticoat; pinafore; robe; sarong; tutu3. avoid (verb) avoid; dodge; evade; sidestep4. border (verb) border; bound; define; edge; hem; lie along; margin; outline; rest; rim; side; surround; verge5. circle (verb) circle; flank; fringe6. hedge (verb) burke; bypass; by-pass; circumnavigate; circumvent; detour; get around; go around; hedge; side-stepАнтонимический ряд: -
113 stool
1. n табурет2. n скамеечка3. n стульчак, судно4. n тумбочка для ночного горшка5. n мед. стул, действие кишечника6. n мед. обыкн. испражнения, стул7. n мед. корень или пень, пускающий побеги8. n мед. растение, с которого взяты черенки или отводки9. n мед. с. -х. отводок, отросток10. n мед. амер. подоконник11. v испражняться12. v пускать побеги13. v амер. приманивать14. v амер. идти на приманку15. v амер. амер. сл. быть осведомителем, доносчиком, «стучать»Синонимический ряд:1. chair (noun) bench; chair; pew; saddle; settee; throne2. informer (noun) betrayer; informer; snitch; squawker; squealer; stool pigeon; stoolie; talebearer; tattler; tattletale; tipster3. seat (noun) barstool; footrest; footstool; hassock; milking stool; ottoman; seat; stepstool; toilet -
114 piston skirt
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115 skirt
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116 slotted skirt
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117 табуретка
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118 ἀνάκωλος
ἀνάκωλος, ον,Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἀνάκωλος
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119 Roe, Sir Edwin Alliott Verdon
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 26 April 1877 Manchester, Englandd. 4 January 1958 London, England[br]English designer of one of the most successful biplanes of all time, the Avro 504.[br]A.V.Roe served an apprenticeship at a railway works, studied marine engineering at Kings College London, served at sea as an engineer, and then took a job in the motor-car industry. His hobby was flying: after studying bird-flight, he built several flying models and in 1907 one of these won a prize offered by the Daily Mail. With the prize money he built a full-size aeroplane loosely based on the Flyer of the Wright brothers, with whom he had corresponded. In September, Roe took his biplane to the motorracing circuit at Brooklands, in Surrey, but it made only a few hops and his activities were not welcomed. Roe then moved to Essex, where he assembled his new aeroplane under the arch of a railway bridge. This was a triplane design with the engine at the front (a "tractor"), and during 1909 it made several flights (this triplane is preserved by the Science Museum in London).In 1910 Roe and his brother Humphrey founded A.V.Roe \& Co. in Manchester, they described it the "Aviator's Storehouse". During the next three years Roe designed and built aeroplanes in Manchester, then transported them to Brooklands to fly (the authorities now made him more welcome). One of the most significant of these was his Type D tractor biplane of 1911, which led to the Avro 504 two-seater trainer of 1913. This was one of the most successful trainers of all time, as around 10,000 were built. In November 1914 a flight of Avro 504s carried out the first-ever bombing raid when they attacked German airship sheds as Friedrichshafen. A.V.Roe produced the first aeroplanes with enclosed cabins during 1912: the Type F monoplane and Type G biplane. After the war, his Avian was used for several record-breaking flights. In 1928 he sold his interest in the company bearing his name and joined forces with Saunders Ltd of Cowes, on the Isle of Wight, to found Saunders-Roe Ltd. "Saro" produced a series of flying boats, from the four-seat Cutty Sark of 1929 to the large, and ill-fated, Princess of 1952.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1929 (in 1933 he incorporated his mother's name to become Sir Alliott VerdonRoe). Honorary Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society 1948.Bibliography1939, The World of Wings and Things, London.Further ReadingL.J.Ludovic, 1956, the Challenging Sky.A.J.Jackson, 1908, Avro Aircraft since 1908, London (a detailed account).JDSBiographical history of technology > Roe, Sir Edwin Alliott Verdon
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120 Waymouth, Bernard
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. unknownd. 25 November 1890 London, England[br]English naval architect, ship surveyor and designer of the clipper ship Thermopylae.[br]Waymouth had initial training in shipbuilding at one of the Royal Dockyards before going on to work at a privately owned shipyard. With this all-round experience he was accepted in 1854 by Lloyd's Register of Shipping as a surveyor, and was to serve the Society well during a period of great change in ship design. In 1864 he was charged with the task of framing the Rules for the Construction of Composite Built Vessels, i.e. ships with main structural members such as keel, frames and deck beams of iron and with the hull sheathing or planking of timber. Although long superseded, these rules were of considerable consequence at the time and they were accompanied by beautiful drawings executed by Harry J.Cornish, who became Chief Ship Surveyor of Lloyd's from 1900 until 1909. In 1870 revolutionary proposals were made for iron ships that led to the adoption of a new form of rules where the scantlings or size of individual parts were related to the overall dimensions of the vessel. The symbol 100A1 was then adopted for the first time.Waymouth was more than a theoretical naval architect: in the late 1860s he was commissioned by the shipbuilders Walter Hood to design the famous Aberdeen Clipper Thermopylae. This was one of the fastest sailing ships of the nineteenth century and, along with its Clyde-built counterpart Cutty Sark, proved the efficacy of composite construction for these specialist vessels.Waymouth was appointed Principal Surveyor of Lloyd's in 1870 and was Secretary of the Society from 1872 until his death at work in 1890. He was a member of the Royal Commission on Tonnage and of the Enquiry into the loss of HMS Atlanta, and at the time of his death was Vice-President of the Institution of Naval Architects.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsVice-President, Institution of Naval Architects.Further ReadingAnnals of Lloyd's Register, 1934, London.FMW
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