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121 courant
n. m.2. Courant d'air: 'Leak', leaked information. Il y a pas mal de courants d'air au Ministère: There are quite a few moles at the Ministry!3. Se déguiser en courant d'air (joc.): To 'make oneself scarce', to vanish into thin air.4. Se taper des courants d'air. To 'live on next to nothing', to go hungry.5. Faire courant d'air avec les chiottes: To have foul breath. -
122 électraque
n.f. L'électraque: 'Juice', electricity. Mettre l'électraque: To switch the light on. -
123 fée
n. f.1. La fée électricité (joc.): 'Juice', electricity. (This expression became popular between the wars as the result of a publicity campaign. Today it merely retains humorous connotations.)2. La fée blanche: 'Snow', cocaine. -
124 jus
n. m.1. Water.a Rain (also: jus de parapluie). Qu'est-ce qu'il tombé comme jus! It ain't half raining!b 'The drink', 'the soup' (the sea, a lake, a river). Tomber au jus: To fall overboard. Tout le monde au jus! Let's all have a swim!2. Coffee. Siroter un jus: To sip a quiet cup of coffee. Jus de chaussette: Bitter and nasty coffee. Jus de chapeau: Watery coffee.3. 'Juice', 'gas', petrol. Donner du jus: To 'step on it', to open the throttle. Aller plein jus: To 'belt along', to bomb along.5. 'Spunk', sperm. Lächer le jus: To 'juice off', to ejaculate.6. Avoir du jus de navet dans les veines: To be 'spunkless', 'spineless', to be weak-willed.7. Laisser mijoter (also: mariner) quelqu'un dans son jus: To 'let someone stew in his own juice', to let someone sweat it out (of the mess he got himself into).8. Y mettre du jus: To put some vim (and zest) into it, to 'pull out all the stops', to try one's darnedest.9. Lengthy 'blurb', verbose text. Se noyer dans le jus (sch.): To waffle on and on.10. Long-winded speech, lengthy allocution. Dévider un jus: To spout at length.11. Valoir le jus: To be worth-while. Ça vaut le jus, je t'assure! I can tell you it's well worth it!12. C'est le même jus: It's six of one and half a dozen of the other—It's the same thing.13. Jeter du jus: To 'look swell', to look great. Qu'est-ce qu'elle en jette! She's a sight for sore eyes!14. C'est du peu au jus! (mil.): Demob day is just around the corner!15. Etre dans son jus (of an antique): To be in its original (untampered-with) state. -
125 transfo
n. m. (abbr. transformateur): Electricity transformer. -
126 Régimes spéciaux, les
Special privileged terms of retirement and pension rights for certain groups of employees, notably in the state sector. The most well-known and talked-about of the régimes spéciaux arre the pension terms for employees of the former state electricity company EDF, and of the French railways SNCF, where many employees have acquired the rite to retire at 50 with a full pension. Furthermore, pensions in these régimes spéciaux are index-linked to wages in the company, not to inflation, and pensions are generally calculated on the basis of the final salary. In the private sector, pensions are calculated on the basis of average salary over the best 25 years..The régimes spéciaux, considered as acquis sociaux, have been achieved in the course of the years as a result of the strength of trade unions in these sectors. There is now consensus in France that they need to be reformed, and reform is currently underway in 2008.Dictionnaire Français-Anglais. Agriculture Biologique > Régimes spéciaux, les
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127 physiothérapie
Utilisation thérapeutique d'agents naturels tels que l'eau douce ou salée, la boue, certaines huiles, la chaleur ou l'électricité.Restoration of movement by physical means, such as massage, exercise, heat or electricity.Syn. physical therapyDictionnaire Français-Anglais (UEFA Football) > physiothérapie
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128 groupe thermo-électrique
агрегат тепловой электростанции
агрегат ТЭС
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[Я.Н.Лугинский, М.С.Фези-Жилинская, Ю.С.Кабиров. Англо-русский словарь по электротехнике и электроэнергетике, Москва]EN
thermal generating set
a generating set consisting of a thermal prime mover mechanically connected to one or more generators of electricity
[IEV ref 602-02-20]FR
groupe thermo-électrique
groupe générateur constitué par un moteur thermique accouplé mécaniquement à un ou plusieurs générateurs d'énergie électrique
[IEV ref 602-02-20]Тематики
Синонимы
EN
DE
- thermischer Maschinensatz, m
FR
Франко-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > groupe thermo-électrique
См. также в других словарях:
Electricity — (from the Greek word ήλεκτρον, (elektron), meaning amber, and finally from New Latin ēlectricus , amber like ) is a general term that encompasses a variety of phenomena resulting from the presence and flow of electric charge. These include many… … Wikipedia
Electricity — E lec*tric i*ty ([=e] l[e^]k*tr[i^]s [i^]*t[y^]), n.; pl. {Electricities} ([=e] l[e^]k*tr[i^]s [i^]*t[i^]z). [Cf. F. [ e]lectricit[ e]. See {Electric}.] 1. (Physics) a property of certain of the fundamental particles of which matter is composed,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
electricity — [ē΄lek tris′i tē; ē lek΄tris′i′tē, ilek΄tris′i tē] n. [see ELECTRIC] 1. a property of certain fundamental particles of all matter, as electrons (negative charges) and protons or positrons (positive charges) that have a force field associated with … English World dictionary
electricity — 1640s (Browne), from ELECTRIC (Cf. electric) + ITY (Cf. ity). Originally in reference to friction … Etymology dictionary
electricity — [n] energized matter, power AC, current, DC, electromagneticism, electron, galvanism, heat, hot stuff*, ignition, juice*, light, magneticism, service, spark, tension, utilities, voltage; concept 520 … New thesaurus
electricity — ► NOUN 1) a form of energy resulting from the existence of charged particles (such as electrons or protons), either statically as an accumulation of charge or dynamically as a current. 2) the supply of electric current to a building for heating,… … English terms dictionary
electricity — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ high voltage, low voltage ▪ mains (BrE) ▪ static ▪ cheap, low cost ▪ … Collocations dictionary
electricity — /i lek tris i tee, ee lek /, n. 1. See electric charge. 2. See electric current. 3. the science dealing with electric charges and currents. 4. a state or feeling of excitement, anticipation, tension, etc. [1640 50; ELECTRIC + ITY] * * *… … Universalium
electricity — n. 1) to generate; induce electricity 2) to conduct electricity 3) static electricity 4) electricity flows * * * [ɪˌlek trɪsɪtɪ] induce electricity static electricity to conduct electricity to generate electricity flows … Combinatory dictionary
electricity — e|lec|tric|i|ty [ ı,lek trısəti, ,ilek trısəti ] noun uncount *** a form of energy that can produce light, heat, and power for machines, computers, televisions, etc.: The machines run on electricity. a supply of electricity Switch off the… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
electricity */*/*/ — UK [ɪˌlekˈtrɪsətɪ] / US / US [ˌɪlekˈtrɪsətɪ] noun [uncountable] a form of energy that can produce light, heat, and power for machines, computers, televisions etc The machines run on electricity. an electricity supply Switch off the electricity… … English dictionary