-
61 Devonshire
Devon(shire) noun Девон(шир) -
62 Devonian
devon ; devoni -
63 Devonian
Devon dönemi -
64 Devonshire Regiment
DEVON, Бр Devonshire RegimentEnglish-Russian dictionary of planing, cross-planing and slotting machines > Devonshire Regiment
-
65 devonian
devon dönemine ait -
66 Devonian
De·vo·nian[dɪˈvəʊniən, AM -ˈvoʊ-]I. n1. (of Devon) aus Devon[shire]2. GEOL devonisch\Devonian formation Devon nt* * *Devonian [deˈvəʊnjən; -nıən; dıˈv-]A adj1. devonisch (Devonshire betreffend)2. GEOL devonischB s1. Bewohner(in) von Devonshire -
67 Devonian
-
68 dowager
tr['daʊəʤəSMALLr/SMALL]1 (widow) viuda (de un noble)■ dowager countess/duchess condesa/duquesa viuda2 (rich old lady) vieja daman.• señora anciana s.f.• viuda s.f.'daʊədʒər, 'daʊədʒə(r)noun: viuda de un noble; (before n)['daʊǝdʒǝ(r)]1.N viuda f de un noble2.CPDdowager duchess N — duquesa f viuda
* * *['daʊədʒər, 'daʊədʒə(r)]noun: viuda de un noble; (before n) -
69 Devonian
-
70 Churchward, George Jackson
[br]b. 31 January 1857 Stoke Gabriel, Devon, Englandd. 19 December 1933 Swindon, Wiltshire, England[br]English mechanical engineer who developed for the Great Western Railway a range of steam locomotives of the most advanced design of its time.[br]Churchward was articled to the Locomotive Superintendent of the South Devon Railway in 1873, and when the South Devon was absorbed by the Great Western Railway in 1876 he moved to the latter's Swindon works. There he rose by successive promotions to become Works Manager in 1896, and in 1897 Chief Assistant to William Dean, who was Locomotive Carriage and Wagon Superintendent, in which capacity Churchward was allowed extensive freedom of action. Churchward eventually succeeded Dean in 1902: his title changed to Chief Mechanical Engineer in 1916.In locomotive design, Churchward adopted the flat-topped firebox invented by A.J.Belpaire of the Belgian State Railways and added a tapered barrel to improve circulation of water between the barrel and the firebox legs. He designed valves with a longer stroke and a greater lap than usual, to achieve full opening to exhaust. Passenger-train weights had been increasing rapidly, and Churchward produced his first 4–6– 0 express locomotive in 1902. However, he was still developing the details—he had a flair for selecting good engineering practices—and to aid his development work Churchward installed at Swindon in 1904 a stationary testing plant for locomotives. This was the first of its kind in Britain and was based on the work of Professor W.F.M.Goss, who had installed the first such plant at Purdue University, USA, in 1891. For comparison with his own locomotives Churchward obtained from France three 4–4–2 compound locomotives of the type developed by A. de Glehn and G. du Bousquet. He decided against compounding, but he did perpetuate many of the details of the French locomotives, notably the divided drive between the first and second pairs of driving wheels, when he introduced his four-cylinder 4–6–0 (the Star class) in 1907. He built a lone 4–6–2, the Great Bear, in 1908: the wheel arrangement enabled it to have a wide firebox, but the type was not perpetuated because Welsh coal suited narrow grates and 4–6–0 locomotives were adequate for the traffic. After Churchward retired in 1921 his successor, C.B.Collett, was to enlarge the Star class into the Castle class and then the King class, both 4–6–0s, which lasted almost as long as steam locomotives survived in service. In Church ward's time, however, the Great Western Railway was the first in Britain to adopt six-coupled locomotives on a large scale for passenger trains in place of four-coupled locomotives. The 4–6–0 classes, however, were but the most celebrated of a whole range of standard locomotives of advanced design for all types of traffic and shared between them many standardized components, particularly boilers, cylinders and valve gear.[br]Further ReadingH.C.B.Rogers, 1975, G.J.Churchward. A Locomotive Biography, London: George Allen \& Unwin (a full-length account of Churchward and his locomotives, and their influence on subsequent locomotive development).C.Hamilton Ellis, 1958, Twenty Locomotive Men, Shepperton: Ian Allan, Ch. 20 (a good brief account).Sir William Stanier, 1955, "George Jackson Churchward", Transactions of the NewcomenSociety 30 (a unique insight into Churchward and his work, from the informed viewpoint of his former subordinate who had risen to become Chief Mechanical Engineer of the London, Midland \& Scottish Railway).PJGRBiographical history of technology > Churchward, George Jackson
-
71 Newcomen, Thomas
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. January or February 1663 Dartmouth, Devon, Englandd. 5 August 1729 London, England[br]English inventor and builder of the world's first successful stationary steam-engine.[br]Newcomen was probably born at a house on the quay at Dartmouth, Devon, England, the son of Elias Newcomen and Sarah Trenhale. Nothing is known of his education, and there is only dubious evidence of his apprenticeship to an ironmonger in Exeter. He returned to Dartmouth and established himself there as an "ironmonger". The term "ironmonger" at that time meant more than a dealer in ironmongery: a skilled craftsman working in iron, nearer to today's "blacksmith". In this venture he had a partner, John Calley or Caley, who was a plumber and glazier. Besides running his business in Dartmouth, it is evident that Newcomen spent a good deal of time travelling round the mines of Devon and Cornwall in search of business.Eighteenth-century writers and others found it impossible to believe that a provincial ironmonger could have invented the steam-engine, the concept of which had occupied the best scientific brains in Europe, and postulated a connection between Newcomen and Savery or Papin, but scholars in recent years have failed to find any evidence of this. Certainly Savery was in Dartmouth at the same time as Newcomen but there is nothing to indicate that they met, although it is possible. The most recent biographer of Thomas Newcomen is of the opinion that he was aware of Savery and his work, that the two men had met by 1705 and that, although Newcomen could have taken out his own patent, he could not have operated his own engines without infringing Savery's patent. In the event, they came to an agreement by which Newcomen was enabled to sell his engines under Savery's patent.The first recorded Newcomen engine is dated 1712, although this may have been preceded by a good number of test engines built at Dartmouth, possibly following a number of models. Over one hundred engines were built to Newcomen's design during his lifetime, with the first engine being installed at the Griff Colliery near Dudley Castle in Staffordshire.On the death of Thomas Savery, on 15 May 1715, a new company, the Proprietors of the Engine Patent, was formed to carry on the business. The Company was represented by Edward Elliot, "who attended the Sword Blade Coffee House in Birchin Lane, London, between 3 and 5 o'clock to receive enquiries and to act as a contact for the committee". Newcomen was, of course, a member of the Proprietors.A staunch Baptist, Newcomen married Hannah Waymouth, who bore him two sons and a daughter. He died, it is said of a fever, in London on 5 August 1729 and was buried at Bunhill Fields.[br]Further ReadingL.T.C.Rolt and J.S.Allen, 1977, The Steam Engine of Thomas Newcomen, Hartington: Moorland Publishing Company (the definitive account of his life and work).IMcN -
72 farm
1. noun1) (an area of land, including buildings, used for growing crops, breeding and keeping cows, sheep, pigs etc: Much of England is good agricultural land and there are many farms.) granja2) (the farmer's house and the buildings near it in such a place: We visited the farm; (also adjective) a farm kitchen.) granja
2. verb(to cultivate (the land) in order to grow crops, breed and keep animals etc: He farms (5,000 acres) in the south.) cultivar- farmer- farming
- farmhouse
- farmyard
farm n granjatr[fɑːm]1 granja1 agrícola, de granja1 (use land) cultivar, labrar2 (breed animals) criar1 (grow crops) cultivar la tierrafarm ['fɑrm] vt1) : cultivar, labrar2) : criar (animales)farm vi: ser agricultorfarm n: granja f, hacienda f, finca f, estancia fn.• cortijo s.m.• criadero s.m.• finca s.f.• granja s.f.• hacienda s.f.• quintería s.f.v.• cultivar v.• labrar v.fɑːrm, fɑːm
I
noun ( small) granja f, chacra f (CS, Per); ( large) hacienda f, cortijo m (Esp), rancho m (Méx), estancia f (RPl), fundo m (Chi); (before n) <machinery, worker> agrícola
II
1.
intransitive verb ser* agricultor (or ganadero)
2.
vt \<\<land\>\> cultivar, labrarPhrasal Verbs:- farm out[fɑːm]1.N granja f, chacra f (LAm); (=large) hacienda f, finca f, estancia f (LAm), rancho m (Mex); [of mink, oysters etc] criadero m ; (=buildings) alquería f, casa f de labranza, quinta f, ranchería f (Mex); dairy2.VT cultivar, labrar3.VI (as profession) ser granjero4.CPD agrícolafarm animal N — animal m de granja
farm labourer, farm laborer (US) N — jornalero(-a) m / f (del campo), obrero(-a) m / f agrícola
farm produce N — productos mpl agrícolas
farm tractor N — tractor m
farm worker N — = farm labourer
- farm out* * *[fɑːrm, fɑːm]
I
noun ( small) granja f, chacra f (CS, Per); ( large) hacienda f, cortijo m (Esp), rancho m (Méx), estancia f (RPl), fundo m (Chi); (before n) <machinery, worker> agrícola
II
1.
intransitive verb ser* agricultor (or ganadero)
2.
vt \<\<land\>\> cultivar, labrarPhrasal Verbs:- farm out -
73 report
rə'po:t
1. noun1) (a statement or description of what has been said, seen, done etc: a child's school report; a police report on the accident.) informe2) (rumour; general talk: According to report, the manager is going to resign.) rumor3) (a loud noise, especially of a gun being fired.) detonación, estampido
2. verb1) (to give a statement or description of what has been said, seen, done etc: A serious accident has just been reported; He reported on the results of the conference; Our spies report that troops are being moved to the border; His speech was reported in the newspaper.) relatar, informar, dar cuenta de/parte de2) (to make a complaint about; to give information about the misbehaviour etc of: The boy was reported to the headmaster for being rude to a teacher.) acusar, denunciar3) (to tell someone in authority about: He reported the theft to the police.) denunciar4) (to go (to a place or a person) and announce that one is there, ready for work etc: The boys were ordered to report to the police-station every Saturday afternoon; Report to me when you return; How many policemen reported for duty?) presentarse, personarse•- reporter- reported speech
- report back
report1 n1. informe2. reportaje3. boletín escolarreport2 vb1. informar / anunciar2. denunciar3. presentarsetr[rɪ'pɔːt]1 (informative document) informe nombre masculino■ the government commissioned a report on national security el gobierno encargó un informe sobre la seguridad nacional3 (piece of news) noticia■ reports are coming in of an earthquake in Tibet nos están llegando noticias de un terremoto en el Tibet4 (news story) reportaje nombre masculino■ and now a report on otter breeding in Devon y ahora un reportaje sobre la cría de nutrias en Devon5 (rumour) rumor nombre masculino6 (of gun) estampido1 (give information) informar (on, sobre)■ the committee will report on its progress each month el comité informará de sus progresos cada mes2 (go in person) presentarse, personarse1 (say, inform) decir■ her condition is reported to be serious según se informa, su condición es grave2 (to authority) informar de■ he reported the breakdown to the maintenance department dio parte de la avería al departamento de mantenimiento3 (to police - crime) denunciar; (- accident) dar parte de\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLreport card boletín nombre masculino de notasreport [ri'port] vt1) announce: relatar, anunciar2) : dar parte de, informar de, reportarhe reported an accident: dio parte de un accidenteto report a crime: denunciar un delito3) : informar acerca de (en un periódico, la televisión, etc.)report vi1) : hacer un informe, informar2)to report for duty : presentarse, reportarsereport n1) rumor: rumor m2) reputation: reputación fpeople of evil report: personas de mala fama3) account: informe m, reportaje m (en un periódico, etc.)4) bang: estallido m (de un arma de fuego)n.• acta s.f.• cuenta s.f.• detonación s.f.• estallido s.m.• estampida s.f.• estampido s.m.• información s.f.• informe s.m.• memoria s.f.• ponencia s.f.• relación s.f.• relato s.m.• reportaje s.m.• reporte s.m.• trueno s.m. (v.)• dar parte expr.v.• dictaminar v.• informar v.• notificar v.• presentarse v.• referir v.• relacionar v.• relatar v.• reportar v.rɪ'pɔːrt, rɪ'pɔːt
I
count noun1)a) ( account) informe m; ( piece of news) noticia f; ( in newspaper) reportaje m, crónica flatest reports indicate that... — las últimas informaciones indican que...
b) ( evaluation) informe m, reporte m (Méx)medical report — parte m médico
(school) report — boletín m de calificaciones or notas, libreta f de calificaciones (AmL), reporte m (Méx)
annual report — memoria f (anual)
official report — informe m oficial
c) ( school assignment) (AmE) redacción f2) ( sound) estallido m, detonación f (frml)
II
1.
1)a) (relate, announce)many companies reported increased profits — muchas empresas anunciaron un incremento en sus beneficios
b) ( Journ) \<\<reporter/media\>\> informar sobre, reportear (Andes)2)a) ( notify) \<\<accident\>\> informar de, dar* parte de; \<\<crime\>\> denunciar, dar* parte de, reportar (AmL)to report something TO somebody — dar* parte de algo a alguien
to report something stolen/somebody missing — denunciar or (AmL tb) reportar el robo de algo/la desaparición de alguien
b) ( denounce)to report somebody (TO somebody) — denunciar or (AmL tb) reportar a alguien (a alguien)
2.
vi1) ( Journ) \<\<reporter\>\> informarAlice Jones reporting from Kabul — Alice Jones, desde Kabul
to report ON something — informar sobre algo, reportear algo (Andes)
2)a) ( present oneself) presentarse, reportarse (AmL)Private Wood reporting for duty, sir! — soldado Wood se presenta, mi teniente (or sargento etc)
to report sick — dar* parte de enfermo
b) ( be accountable) ( Busn)to report TO somebody — estar* bajo las órdenes de alguien
•Phrasal Verbs:[rɪ'pɔːt]1. N1) (=account) informe m ; (Press, Rad, TV) reportaje m, crónica f ; (=piece of news) noticia flaw, progress 4.to give or make or present a report (on sth) — presentar un informe (sobre algo)
to get a good/bad report — sacar buenas/malas notas
3) (=rumour) rumor m5) (=bang) estallido m ; (=shot) disparo m2. VT1) (=state, make known)it is reported from Berlin that... — comunican or se informa desde Berlín que...
2) (Press, TV, Rad) [+ event] informar acerca de, informar sobre3) (=allege)he is reported to have said that... — parece que dijo que...
4) (=notify) [+ crime] denunciar, dar parte de; [+ accident] dar parte deto report sb missing — denunciar la desaparición de algn, declarar a algn desaparecido
5) (=denounce) [+ person] denunciarhe reported her to the Inland Revenue for not paying her taxes — la denunció a Hacienda por no pagar impuestos
6)reported speech — estilo m indirecto
3. VI1) (=make report) presentar un informe2) (Press, TV, Rad) (gen) informar; (as reporter) ser reportero(-a)he reported for the Daily Echo for 40 years — durante 40 años fue reportero del "Daily Echo"
3) (=present oneself) presentarsewhen you arrive, report to the receptionist — cuando llegue, preséntese en recepción
he has to report to the police every five days — tiene que personarse or presentarse en la comisaría cada cinco días
to report for duty — (Mil) presentarse para el servicio
4)to report to sb — (=be responsible to) estar bajo las órdenes de algn
who do you report to? — ¿quién es tu superior or tu jefe?
4.CPDreport card N — (US) (Scol) boletín m or cartilla f de notas
report stage N (Brit) (Parl) —
the bill has reached or is at the report stage — se están debatiendo los informes de las comisiones sobre el proyecto de ley
* * *[rɪ'pɔːrt, rɪ'pɔːt]
I
count noun1)a) ( account) informe m; ( piece of news) noticia f; ( in newspaper) reportaje m, crónica flatest reports indicate that... — las últimas informaciones indican que...
b) ( evaluation) informe m, reporte m (Méx)medical report — parte m médico
(school) report — boletín m de calificaciones or notas, libreta f de calificaciones (AmL), reporte m (Méx)
annual report — memoria f (anual)
official report — informe m oficial
c) ( school assignment) (AmE) redacción f2) ( sound) estallido m, detonación f (frml)
II
1.
1)a) (relate, announce)many companies reported increased profits — muchas empresas anunciaron un incremento en sus beneficios
b) ( Journ) \<\<reporter/media\>\> informar sobre, reportear (Andes)2)a) ( notify) \<\<accident\>\> informar de, dar* parte de; \<\<crime\>\> denunciar, dar* parte de, reportar (AmL)to report something TO somebody — dar* parte de algo a alguien
to report something stolen/somebody missing — denunciar or (AmL tb) reportar el robo de algo/la desaparición de alguien
b) ( denounce)to report somebody (TO somebody) — denunciar or (AmL tb) reportar a alguien (a alguien)
2.
vi1) ( Journ) \<\<reporter\>\> informarAlice Jones reporting from Kabul — Alice Jones, desde Kabul
to report ON something — informar sobre algo, reportear algo (Andes)
2)a) ( present oneself) presentarse, reportarse (AmL)Private Wood reporting for duty, sir! — soldado Wood se presenta, mi teniente (or sargento etc)
to report sick — dar* parte de enfermo
b) ( be accountable) ( Busn)to report TO somebody — estar* bajo las órdenes de alguien
•Phrasal Verbs: -
74 rusticate
verb \/ˈrʌstɪkeɪt\/1) flytte til landet, bo på landet, oppholde seg på landet2) bli\/gjøre landlig, bli\/gjøre bondsk, rustifisere3) (universitet, midlertidig) avstenge, utvise4) ( bygg) forsyne med forsenkede fuger5) ( bygg) lage rustikamur, forsyne med rustikkrusticate oneself trekke seg tilbake til landet -
75 cottage
-
76 West Country
the West Country — el West Country (el sudoeste de Inglaterra, esp los condados de Cornualles, Devon y Somerset)
* * *the West Country — el West Country (el sudoeste de Inglaterra, esp los condados de Cornualles, Devon y Somerset)
-
77 ♦ estate
♦ estate /ɪˈsteɪt/n.1 proprietà (terriera) ( con casa padronale); tenuta; possedimento: He has bought a large estate in Devon, ha comprato una grossa proprietà nel Devon2 (GB) area edificata; complesso; zona; quartiere: housing estate, complesso abitativo; industrial estate, zona industriale; council estate, quartiere di edilizia popolare4 (leg.) beni e diritti; situazione patrimoniale; asse patrimoniale; asse ereditario; eredità: a bankrupt's estate, la situazione patrimoniale d'un fallito; a disputed estate, un'eredità contesa6 (form. o stor.) stato; classe sociale; ceto: all estates of society, tutte le classi sociali; the Three Estates (o the estates of the realm) i tre stati ( clero, nobiltà, borghesia); the Third Estate, il Terzo Stato● estate agency, agenzia immobiliare □ estate agent, agente immobiliare; ( anche) amministratore ( di tenuta), sovrintendente ( di azienda agricola) □ (leg.) estate and property, asse patrimoniale □ ( di vino) estate-bottled, imbottigliato all'origine □ (autom., GB) estate car, station wagon; familiare; DIALOGO → - Car problems 3- I left an old, red, two-litre estate car with you this morning, stamattina ho lasciato qui da voi una vecchia due litri rossa station wagon □ (fisc., stor.: fino al 1975) estate duty, imposta di successione □ (leg.) estate in land, diritto immobiliare □ (fisc., USA) estate tax, imposta di successione ( su beni immobili). -
78 ♦ property
♦ property /ˈprɒpətɪ/n.1 [uc] proprietà; possesso; possedimento; patrimonio; tenuta; avere; beni (immobili): This book is his property, questo libro è di sua proprietà; I have a large property in Devon, ho una grossa proprietà nel Devon; private property, proprietà privata; personal property, beni mobili; real property, beni immobili; proprietà immobiliare2 proprietà; qualità peculiare; caratteristica: the chemical properties of copper, le proprietà chimiche del rame3 (pl.) (teatr.) costumi; materiale scenico4 [u] (leg.) proprietà; diritto di proprietà5 (comput.) proprietà● (leg.) property abroad, beni all'estero □ (fin.) property company, società immobiliare □ (leg.) property damage, danno patrimoniale □ property development, sviluppo edilizio □ property developer, imprenditore edile □ (fin.) property funds, fondi immobiliari □ (fisc.) property-increment tax, imposta sull'incremento di valore degli immobili (in Italia, INVIM) □ property insurance, assicurazione d'immobili □ ( banca) property loan, mutuo immobiliare □ property maintenance, manutenzione d'immobili □ (cinem., teatr.) property man, attrezzista; trovarobe □ property management, amministrazione di immobili □ (fin.) property market, mercato immobiliare □ (cinem., TV) property master ( anche property mistress, se donna), attrezzista; trovarobe □ (leg.) property right, diritto di proprietà □ (fisc.) property tax, imposta sul patrimonio (o patrimoniale); imposta fondiaria (in GB, dal 1964 è applicata soltanto dagli enti locali) □ ( d'un segreto, ecc.) to become common property, divenire di dominio pubblico □ ( slang) hot property, cosa (o persona) di gran successo; uomo del giorno □ (leg.) intellectual property, proprietà intellettuale □ lost property, oggetti smarriti □ a man of property, un possidente. -
79 turn up
1) (arrive, show up) comparire, farsi vivo2) (be found)don't worry - it will turn up — non ti preoccupare, salterà fuori
3) (present itself) [opportunity, job] presentarsi, capitare4) (point up) [corner, edge] sporgere in fuori; turn up [sth.], turn [sth.] up5) (increase, intensify) aumentare [ gas]; aumentare, alzare [heating, volume]; alzare (il volume di) [TV, radio, music]6) (point up) alzare [ collar]7) (discover) portare alla luce [ buried object]; [ person] trovare [ information]* * *1) (to appear or arrive: He turned up at our house.) presentarsi, arrivare2) (to be found: Don't worry - it'll turn up again.) (essere trovato)3) (to increase (the level of noise, light etc) produced by (something): Turn up (the volume on) the radio.) aumentare, alzare* * *1. vi + adv1) (lost object) saltar fuori, (person) arrivare, presentarsithe painting turned up in an old house in Devon — il dipinto è saltato fuori in una vecchia casa nel Devon
2) (point towards) essere rivolto (-a) all'insù2. vt + adv1) (collar, sleeve, hem) alzare, tirare su2) (heat, gas, radio) alzare3) (find) scoprire* * *1) (arrive, show up) comparire, farsi vivo2) (be found)don't worry - it will turn up — non ti preoccupare, salterà fuori
3) (present itself) [opportunity, job] presentarsi, capitare4) (point up) [corner, edge] sporgere in fuori; turn up [sth.], turn [sth.] up5) (increase, intensify) aumentare [ gas]; aumentare, alzare [heating, volume]; alzare (il volume di) [TV, radio, music]6) (point up) alzare [ collar]7) (discover) portare alla luce [ buried object]; [ person] trovare [ information] -
80 lower
I transitive verb1) (let down) herab-/hinablassen; einholen [Flagge, Segel]lower oneself into — hinuntersteigen in (+ Akk.) [Kanalschacht, Keller]
lower oneself into a chair — sich in einen Sessel sinken lassen
2) (reduce in height) senken [Blick]; niederschlagen [Augen]; absenken [Zimmerdecke]; auslassen [Saum]3) (lessen) senken [Preis, Miete, Zins usw.]4) (degrade) herabsetzenlower oneself to do something — sich so weit erniedrigen, etwas zu tun
5) (weaken) schwächen; dämpfen [Licht, Stimme, Lärm]II 1. comparative adjectivelower one's voice — leiser sprechen; die Stimme senken (geh.)
1) unter... [Nil, Themse usw., Atmosphäre]; Unter[jura, -devon usw., -arm, -lippe usw.]; Nieder[rhein, -kalifornien]2) (in rank) unter...lower mammals/plants — niedere Säugetiere/Pflanzen
2. comparative adverbthe lower orders/classes — die Unterschichten/die unteren Klassen
tiefer [sinken, hängen usw.]* * *1) (to make or become less high: She lowered her voice.) senken2) (to let down: He lowered the blinds.) herunterlassen* * *low·er1[ˈləʊəʳ, AM ˈloʊɚ]in the \lower back im unteren Rücken\lower floor untere Etage\lower jaw Unterkiefer m\lower lip Unterlippe fthe \lower reaches of the ocean die tieferen Regionen des Ozeansthe L\lower Rhine GEOG der NiederrheinII. vt1. (move downward)▪ to \lower sth etw herunterlassen▪ to \lower oneself:she \lowered herself into a chair sie ließ sich auf einem Stuhl niederthe miners \lowered themselves into the tunnel die Bergleute ließen sich in den Stollen hinunterto \lower one's arm/hands den Arm/die Hände senkento \lower one's eyes die Augen niederschlagen, den Blick senkento \lower one's head den Kopf senkento \lower a flag/the sails eine Fahne/die Segel einholento \lower the hem den Saum herauslassento \lower the landing gear das Fahrgestell ausfahrento \lower a lifeboat NAUT ein Rettungsboot zu Wasser lassen [o aussetzen]to \lower the periscope das Periskop einfahren2. (decrease)▪ to \lower sth etw verringern [o senken]his crude jokes \lowered the tone of the evening seine derben Witze drückten das Niveau des Abendsto \lower one's expectations/sights seine Erwartungen/Ansprüche zurückschraubento \lower one's guard seine Deckung vernachlässigento \lower the heat die Temperatur zurückdrehento \lower interest rates die Zinssätze senkento \lower prices/taxes die Preise/Steuern senkento \lower the quality die Qualität mindernto \lower one's voice seine Stimme senkento \lower one's standards seine Anforderungen zurückschrauben3. (demean)I wouldn't \lower myself to respond to his insults ich würde mich nicht auf sein Niveau begeben und auf seine Beleidigungen antwortenI'd never have expected him to \lower himself by stealing ich hätte nie gedacht, dass er so tief sinken könnte und stehlen würdelow·er2[laʊəʳ, AM laʊr]▪ to \lower at sb jdn finster ansehen* * *I ['ləʊə(r)]1. adj1) (in height) niedriger; part, half, limb, storey, latitude untere(r, s); note tiefer; (GEOG) Nieder-lower leg/arm — Unterschenkel m/-arm m
lower jaw/lip — Unterkiefer m/-lippe
hemlines are lower this year — die Röcke sind dieses Jahr länger
the lower deck (of bus) — das untere Deck; (of ship) das Unterdeck
a lower middle-class family — eine Familie aus der unteren Mittelschicht
the lower school — die unteren Klassen, die Unter- und Mittelstufe
See:→ lower sixth (form)2. advtiefer, leiser3. vt1) (= let down) boat, injured man, load herunterlassen; eyes, gun senken; mast umlegen; sail, flag einholen; bicycle saddle niedriger machen"lower the lifeboats!" —
"lower away!" — " holt ein!"
2) (= reduce) pressure, risk verringern; price, interest rates, cost, tone, temperature senken; morale, resistance schwächen; standard herabsetzenthat is no excuse for lowering the standards of service — das ist keine Entschuldigung dafür, den Service zu verschlechtern
to lower oneself — sich hinunterlassen; (socially) sich unter sein Niveau begeben
to lower oneself to do sth — sich herablassen, etw zu tun
4. visinken, fallen II ['laʊə(r)]viSee:= academic.ru/43910/lour">lour* * *lower1 [ˈlaʊə(r)] v/i1. finster oder drohend blicken:lower at sb jemanden finster oder drohend ansehenb) sich mit schwarzen Wolken überziehen (Himmel)lower2 [ˈləʊə(r)]A v/t1. eine Mauer etc niedriger machen2. die Augen, den Gewehrlauf etc, auch die Stimme, den Preis, die Temperatur etc senken, das Wahlalter etc auch herabsetzen3. fig erniedrigen:lower o.s.a) sich demütigen,b) sich herablassen4. abschwächen, mäßigen:lower one’s hopes seine Hoffnungen herabschrauben5. herunter-, herab-, niederlassen, FLUG das Fahrgestell ausfahren, eine Fahne, ein Segel niederholen, streichen; → flag1 A 1B v/i1. niedriger werden (auch fig)2. fig sinken, heruntergehen, fallenlower3 [ˈləʊə(r)]A komp von low1 AB adj1. niedriger (auch fig):a lower estimate eine niedrigere Schätzung2. unter(er, e, es), Unter…:3. GEOG Unter…, Nieder…:Lower Austria Niederösterreich n4. neuer, jünger (Datum):of a lower date jüngeren Datums5. BIOL nieder (Pflanzen etc)* * *I transitive verb1) (let down) herab-/hinablassen; einholen [Flagge, Segel]lower oneself into — hinuntersteigen in (+ Akk.) [Kanalschacht, Keller]
2) (reduce in height) senken [Blick]; niederschlagen [Augen]; absenken [Zimmerdecke]; auslassen [Saum]3) (lessen) senken [Preis, Miete, Zins usw.]4) (degrade) herabsetzenlower oneself to do something — sich so weit erniedrigen, etwas zu tun
5) (weaken) schwächen; dämpfen [Licht, Stimme, Lärm]II 1. comparative adjectivelower one's voice — leiser sprechen; die Stimme senken (geh.)
1) unter... [Nil, Themse usw., Atmosphäre]; Unter[jura, -devon usw., -arm, -lippe usw.]; Nieder[rhein, -kalifornien]2) (in rank) unter...lower mammals/plants — niedere Säugetiere/Pflanzen
2. comparative adverbthe lower orders/classes — die Unterschichten/die unteren Klassen
tiefer [sinken, hängen usw.]* * *adj.ausfahren (Fahrgestell) adj.klein adj.unterer adj. v.absenken (Grundwasserspiegel) v.niederlassen v.
См. также в других словарях:
devon — devon … Dictionnaire des rimes
Devon — bezeichnet: Devon (Geologie), eine geologische Formation bzw. ein Zeitalter Devon (Vorname), einen männlichen Vornamen Devon ist der Name folgender geographischer Objekte: Devon (England), eine englische Grafschaft Devon (Nova Scotia), Kanada… … Deutsch Wikipedia
devon — [ devɔ̃ ] n. m. • 1907; mot angl., du comté de Devonshire ♦ Pêche Appât articulé ayant l aspect d un poisson, d un insecte, etc., et qui est muni de plusieurs hameçons. On écrirait mieux dévon. ● devon nom masculin (de Devon, nom propre) Leurre… … Encyclopédie Universelle
devon — DEVÓN, devoni, s.m. Peştişor artificial de metal prevăzut cu cârlige, care serveşte ca momeală la prinderea peştilor răpitori. – Din fr. devon. Trimis de IoanSoleriu, 17.07.2004. Sursa: DEX 98 devón s. m. Trimis de siveco, 10.08.2004. Sursa:… … Dicționar Român
Devon 30 — Administration Pays Canada Province … Wikipédia en Français
Devon — Berwyn, PA U.S. Census Designated Place in Pennsylvania Population (2000): 5067 Housing Units (2000): 2035 Land area (2000): 2.498379 sq. miles (6.470772 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 2.498379… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Devon, PA — Devon Berwyn, PA U.S. Census Designated Place in Pennsylvania Population (2000): 5067 Housing Units (2000): 2035 Land area (2000): 2.498379 sq. miles (6.470772 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000):… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Devon — De von, n. One of a breed of hardy cattle originating in the country of Devon, England. Those of pure blood have a deep red color. The small, longhorned variety, called North Devons, is distinguished by the superiority of its working oxen. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Devon [1] — Devon (Dewwʼn), engl. Grafschaft am Kanale mit 580000 E. auf 122 QM.; sie ist gebirgig, hat Bergbau auf Silber, Kupfer, Zinn, Eisen, Blei, Granit, Kalk und Schiefer, liefert Wollentuch und Spitzen, Eisenwaaren, hat Schiffsbau und Fischerei. Von… … Herders Conversations-Lexikon
Devon — Devon1 [dev′ən] n. any of a breed of medium sized, red beef cattle, originally raised in the area of Devon, England Devon2 [dev′ən] 1. island of the Arctic Archipelago, north of Baffin region of Nunavut, Canada: 20,861 sq mi (54,030 sq km) 2.… … English World dictionary
Devon — (spr. Dewwen), 1) (Devonshire, spr. Dewwenschirr), Grafschaft auf der südwestlichen Landzunge von England, 122,17 QM.; grenzt an den Bristol Kanal (Atlantischer Ocean), an die Grafschaft Cornwall, an den Kanal (la Manche), an die Grafschaften… … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon