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1 Ends
A term used to denote the warp threads of a fabric, most often used in connection with the sett of the warp, e.g., 90 ends per inch. -
2 ENDS
Environmental Data Services Ltd — Коммерческая служба сбора данных об окружающей среде, Англия&pl.Environmental Data Services, Ltd. — коммерческая служба сбора данных об окружающей среде (1978, Англия) -
3 Ends Down
Threads of warp missing from the cloth. It is a fault often caused by the warp ends breaking during weaving, and more rarely by faulty warp preparation. -
4 Ends Segment
File extension: ENDS -
5 ends centre matched
Abbreviation: e.c.m.Универсальный русско-английский словарь > ends centre matched
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6 ends per inch
Polymers: EPI -
7 ends standard matched
Abbreviation: e.s.m.Универсальный русско-английский словарь > ends standard matched
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8 Double Ends
Two ends drawn through the same dent in the reed and same eye in the heald and weaving as one. Double ends and double picks are common in many matting cloths. Double ends often appear in a cloth where not intended, and this is a weaving fault, and known as "taped ends." -
9 Blind Ends
A term used by finishers denoting that a piece of cloth is in two or more parts instead of one. Sometimes grey pieces or lumps instead of being one continuous length, are folded up at the mill in two or more pieces which are " blind " ends. These are not discovered by the finisher until too late to catch them and serious damage may result. -
10 Broken Ends
A weaving fault caused by threads of warp breaking while in the loom. This is a serious defect when the cloth has a pattern or when coloured ends are used. -
11 Cracked Ends
Faults in woven fabrics caused by ends breaking in the piece; or which may have been broken during weaving or finishing. The fault is most common in cloths made from two or more warps under different tensions. It is very frequent in worsted goods which are stretched in length during finishing. -
12 odds and ends
زوائِد \ oddments: mixed different pieces or articles, usu. left over or remaining: oddments of cloth. odds and ends: small articles without much value that do not all belong to the same group: She left behind a packet of cigarettes, a pen and other odds and ends. -
13 odds and ends
فَضَلات \ oddments: mixed different pieces or articles, usu. left over or remaining: oddments of cloth. odds and ends: small articles without much value that do not all belong to the same group: She left behind a packet of cigarettes, a pen and other odds and ends. scrap: unwanted pieces in general. -
14 change ends
■ Rule by which, after half-time of a match, the two teams attack in the opposite direction from the first half.■ Wechseln der Spielfeldseiten beider Mannschaften nach einer Halbzeitpause. -
15 choice of ends
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16 Long Ends
LONG ELLS, LONG ENDSAn all-wool fabric of the four-end twill weave, usually 30-in. by 24 yards, bright red dyed, calender finish. A Yorkshire production, made with worsted warp and woollen weft, principally for export. -
17 Split Ends
A defect in woven fabric caused by some of the strands in doubled yarns breaking. It is also seen in rayon yarns when some of the filaments are fractured. -
18 Standard Ends
In leno weaving, the warp threads over which the whip threads cross. -
19 Taped Ends
Two warp threads running together as one. -
20 make (both) ends meet
not to get into debt:يُوازِن الدَّخْل مع الخارِجThe widow and her four children found it difficult to make ends meet.
См. также в других словарях:
ends — index confines Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
ends — 1. n. money. (Streets.) □ You got enough ends to get you through the week? □ We don’t have enough ends to pay the gas bill. 2. n. shoes. □ You even got holes in your ends. □ … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
ends — cal·ends; ends; week·ends; … English syllables
Ends — Infobox Book name = Ends title orig = translator = image caption = Cover of the first edition author = Gordon R. Dickson illustrator = cover artist = country = United States language = English series = genre = Science fiction short stories and… … Wikipedia
Ends — This name is of Anglo Saxon origin and is topographical for one resident at the end of a settlement of a street. The derivation is from the Old English pre 7th Century ende , (Middle High German ende , from the Old High German enti ). Early… … Surnames reference
ends — n pl American money. The term, probably originating in black street argot in the 1950s, was later adopted by college students. It may have begun as N s , referring to (bank)notes, or possibly derived from the cliche to make ends meet . It is also … Contemporary slang
ends — Jamaican Slang Glossary A place. Mi a go pon one ends still. (I am going to one place) … English dialects glossary
ends — n Money. I really would like to go to the shore this weekend but I just don t have the ends. 1990s … Historical dictionary of American slang
Ends — Money. I got no ends until Monday … Dictionary of american slang
Ends — Money. I got no ends until Monday … Dictionary of american slang
ENDS — comp. abbr. Ends Segment … United dictionary of abbreviations and acronyms