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1 dud
m bot mulberry; (stablo) m,-tree; (plod) m. (fruit) I -ovi (porodica) Moraceae; bijeli dud white m.; crni dud black m.; crveni dud red m.* * *• mulberry -
2 dud
باطِل \ dud: infml. sth. useless because it is badly or dishonestly made; sth. that doesn’t work: We bought a dud washing-machine. This coin is a dud. False: wrong; incorrect: a false idea. invalid: not correct; no longer useable or suitable for use: an invalid passport. wrong: not right; unjust; against custom; against the law: It is wrong to tell lies or to steal. \ See Also عَديم القيمَة، خطأ (خَطَأ) -
3 dud
شَيْءٌ عديم القيمة \ dud: sth. useless because it is badly or dishonestly made; sth. that doesn’t work: We bought a dud washing-machine. This coin is a dud. -
4 dud
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5 dud
[dad]1. nounsomething which is useless, does not work etc:بِلا قيمَه، لا فائِده مِنْهThis light-bulb is a dud.
2. adjectiveuseless or not working:لا يَعْمَل، لا فائِدَه مِنْهa dud battery.
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6 dud
worm [?] Per dud, Swa dudu borrowed from Ar -
7 dud
1. (Persian) smoke, fumes. dud sol to fumigate, to burn s.t. to drive away insects 2. ono.tooting noise -
8 dud|y
plt (G dud) Muz. bagpipe zw. plThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > dud|y
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9 dùd
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10 dud
• mulberry -
11 dud|ek
m Zool. hoopoe■ wystrychnąć kogoś na dudka to make a fool of somebody, to deceive sbThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > dud|ek
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12 dud|ka
Ⅰ f 1. Muz. pipe 2. (część pióra) quill Ⅱ dudki plt Kulin. lights■ dąć a. grać w czyjąś dudkę to play sb’s tuneThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > dud|ka
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13 dud
a small lump (M`A.); See tudan. -
14 DuD
v. mix -
15 Dud Disposer
Abbreviation: D2 -
16 bijeli dud
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17 crni dud
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18 měch dud
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19 zvuk dud
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20 Dudley, Dud
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 1599d. 25 October 1684 Worcester, England[br]English ironmaster who drew attention to the need to change from charcoal to coal as a fuel for iron smelting.[br]Dudley was the fourth natural son of Edward Sutton, fifth Baron Dudley. In 1619 he was summoned from Balliol College, Oxford, to superintend his father's ironworks at Pensnet in Worcestershire. There had long been concern at the destruction of the forests in order to make charcoal for the smelting of iron ore, and unsuccessful attempts had been made to substitute coal as a fuel. Finding that charcoal was in short supply and coal plentiful near Pensnet, Dudley was stimulated by these attempts to try the process for himself. He claimed to have made good, marketable iron and in 1621 his father obtained a patent from the King to protect his process for thirty-one years. After a serious flood, Dudley moved to Staffordshire and continued his efforts there. In 1639 he was granted a further patent for making iron with coal. Although he probably made some samples of good iron, more by luck than judgement, it is hardly possible that he achieved consistent success. He blamed this on the machinations of other ironmasters. The day that King Charles II landed in England to assume his throne', Dudley petitioned him to renew his patents, but he was refused and he ceased to promote his invention. In 1665, however, he published his celebrated book Metallum Martis, Iron Made with Pit-Coaky Sea-Coale…. In this he described his efforts in general terms, but neither there nor in his patents does he give any technical details of his methods. He implied the use of slack or small coal from the Staffordshire Thick or Ten Yard coal, but this has a sulphur content that would have rendered the iron unusable; in addition, this coal would not have been suitable for converting to coke in order to remove the sulphur. Nevertheless, Dudley recognized the need to change from charcoal to coal as a fuel for iron smelting and drew attention to it, even though he himself achieved little success.[br]Further ReadingH.R.Schubert, 1957, History of the British Iron and Steel Industry AD 430 to AD 1775, London: Routledge \& Kegan Paul.W.K.V.Gale, 1967, The British Iron and Steel Industry: A Technical History, London (provides brief details of Dudley's life in relation to the history of ironmaking).LRD
См. также в других словарях:
dud — [dʌd] noun [countable] informal something that is useless or of bad quality, especially because it does not work correctly: • The new system turned out to be a market dud. dud adjective : • dud results from biotech companies * * * Ⅰ. dud … Financial and business terms
dud — DUD, duzi, s.m. Numele a două specii de arbori cu frunzele lobate asimetric, cu fructe mici, cărnoase, albe (Morus alba) sau negre roşietice (Morus nigra), cu un gust dulce fad, ale căror frunze constituie hrana viermilor de mătase; agud. – Din… … Dicționar Român
Düdəngə — Municipality … Wikipedia
dud — dȕd m <G dùda, N mn dùdovi> DEFINICIJA bot. 1. a. listopadno stablo (Morus) s lišćem kojim se hrani dudov svilac [bijeli dud (M. alba); crni dud (M. nigra)]; murva b. plod toga stabla, jestiva, slatkasta bobica; dudinja, dudinjka, murva 2.… … Hrvatski jezični portal
DuD — Datenschutz und Datensicherheit ist eine deutschsprachige Fachzeitschrift, die sich mit Themen des Datenschutzes und der Datensicherheit auseinandersetzt. Sie erscheint seit 1977 im Vieweg Verlag (bis 1983 unter dem Namen Datenschutz und… … Deutsch Wikipedia
dud — [dʌd] n 1.) something that is useless, especially because it does not work correctly ▪ Several of the fireworks were duds. 2.) duds [plural] informal clothes >dud adj ▪ a dud light bulb … Dictionary of contemporary English
DUD — steht für: Flughafen Dunedin in Neuseeland (IATA Code) Landkreis Duderstadt, ehemaliges deutsches Kraftfahrzeugkennzeichen Delap Uliga Darrit, die verstädterte Region des Atolls Majuro DuD steht für: Datenschutz und Datensicherheit,… … Deutsch Wikipedia
dud — /dud/, n. 1. a device, person, or enterprise that proves to be a failure. 2. a shell or missile that fails to explode after being fired. [1815 25; special use of dud, sing. of DUDS] Syn. 1. fiasco, debacle, fizzle, miscarriage. * * * … Universalium
Dud — m English: short form of DUDLEY (SEE Dudley), in fairly common use (although not normally as an independent name) in spite of its coincidence in form with the modern slang term dud meaning ‘useless’ … First names dictionary
dud — [dud] n. [prob. < Du dood, dead] Informal 1. a bomb or shell that fails to explode 2. a person or thing that fails or is ineffectual adj. Informal worthless … English World dictionary
dud|dy — or dud|die «DUHD ee», adjective. Scottish. ragged … Useful english dictionary