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41 exposure
[ɪks'pəuʒə(r)]n( publicity) nagłośnienie nt; ( of truth) ujawnienie nt; ( of person) zdemaskowanie nt; ( PHOT) ( amount of light) naświetlenie nt; ( shot) klatka fexposure to — (heat, radiation etc) wystawienie na +acc or na działanie +gen
* * *[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) wystawienie, ekspozycja2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) klatka -
42 exposure
[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) pakļaušana (saules, vēja u.tml.) iedarbībai; atmaskošana2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) (fotofilmas) kadrs* * *pakļaušana iedarbībai; klāsts, izstāde; izpaušana; atmaskošana, atklāšana; ekspozīcija -
43 exposure
[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) (iš)statymas, neapsaugojimas2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) kadras -
44 exposure
n. utsättande för, blottställande, utsättnade av; bild; läge, belägenhet* * *[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) utsättande, exponering2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) exponering, bild -
45 part
1) часть; доля || распадаться на части; разделять, разделяться2) деталь; часть ( изделия); элемент; компонент; сегмент || детализировать3) раздел (напр. программного обеспечения)•to build around an actual part — изготавливать (напр. приспособление) применительно к обрабатываемой детали
- 2D partto handle parts randomly — загружать детали, загружать обрабатываемые детали ( на станок) в произвольной последовательности
- 3D part
- accepted part
- accessible moving parts
- active gas parts
- active part of cutting tool
- active part
- actuated part
- address part
- aspheric part
- aspherical part
- assembled part
- assembly base part
- associated part
- axially symmetrical part
- baffled-off part
- bar part
- bar-coded part
- basic part
- blank part
- body part
- bottom-most part
- bought-out parts
- box-like part
- box-shaped part
- box-type part
- candidate part
- case-type part
- catapulting part
- ceramic-machined part
- ceramic-turned part
- certified part
- change part
- chuck part
- chucked part
- chucking part
- circular part
- clamped part
- close tolerance part
- common parts
- completed part
- complex geometry part
- complex part
- component part
- conductive part
- constituent part
- consumable part
- contoured part
- conveyorized part
- current part
- curved part
- cutting part
- defective part
- detail part
- die-cast part
- disoriented part
- duplicate part
- end part
- exceptional parts
- exposed rotating machine parts
- extension part
- fabricated part
- facing part
- facsimile part
- failed part
- family part
- family-related part
- fast-revolving part
- faulty part
- figurine part
- figurine-shaped part
- filler part
- finish turned part
- finished part
- finishing part
- first-off piece part
- first-run part
- fixed part of the machine
- flat bar part
- flat-pattern parts
- FMS rotational part
- fractional part
- functioning part
- green part
- half-done part
- half-machined part
- hand-fed part
- hard part
- HBM-type parts
- hemispherical part
- high value-added part
- high-load part
- high-precision part
- high-production parts
- high-volume parts
- incoming part
- injection-molded part
- in-process part
- integral part
- integral-rib part
- integrated part
- interchangeable part
- in-tolerance part
- labor-intensive part
- lathe-turned part
- live parts
- long-run parts
- loose part
- low value-added part
- low-mix parts
- low-volume parts
- machined part
- machinery parts
- main journal part
- male die part
- mass production parts
- master part
- master threaded part
- mating parts
- medium-run parts
- medium-volume parts
- microsized part
- mid-volume parts
- minor part
- moving part
- multiple parts
- multiple-diameter part
- multiple-operation part
- NC-machined part
- near-net-shape part
- necked part
- net shape part
- nonconforming parts
- non-FMS part
- nonproductive parts of the cycle
- nonrecurring parts
- nonrotational part
- nonservice part
- numerical part of identity
- odd parts
- odd-shaped part
- offending part
- off-gage part
- off-queue part
- off-the-shelf part
- one-of-a-kind parts
- one-off parts
- on-queue part
- open tolerance part
- operative parts
- option part
- out-of-spec part
- out-of-tolerance part
- pallet-fixtured part
- palletized part
- partially completed part
- part-machined part
- passive part
- piece part
- pin journal part
- pliable part
- PM part
- powder metal part
- powder part
- precision part
- precision-machined part
- prismatic part
- processed part
- production part
- program part
- projected part
- proof part
- prototype part
- quality part
- quality-checked part
- randomly fabricating parts
- randomly sequenced parts
- rapidly wearing part
- raw part
- raw primary part
- reference part
- related parts
- removable parts
- repair part
- replacement part
- representative part
- revolving part
- rotary part
- routing part
- rubbing part
- sample part
- scored part
- semicompleted part
- semifinished part
- service parts
- shaft part
- shaped part
- shaping part
- short-run parts
- short-run time parts
- single-diameter part
- sizing part
- slender part
- small-envelope part
- snap-in part
- software part
- spare part
- stack-machined parts
- stack-routed parts
- stationary part
- stepped part
- stereolithography part
- stress-relieved part
- structural part
- substandard part
- tapered part
- test part
- threaded part
- tool cutting part
- top quality part
- transmission parts
- turned part
- ultra-high-precision part
- ultra-precision part
- unworked part
- wearing parts
- wire-frame CAD parts
- work part
- working part of cutting toolEnglish-Russian dictionary of mechanical engineering and automation > part
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46 exposure
[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) vystavování2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) snímek* * *• vystavení• odhalení• expozice -
47 exposure
[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) vystavovanie2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) snímka* * *• vystavenie• expozícia• osvit• ožiarenie• odhalenie -
48 exposure
[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) expunere2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) poziţie -
49 exposure
[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) έκθεση,αποκάλυψη2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) καρέ σε φιλμ, `στάση` -
50 roof
1) крыша, кровля; кровельное покрытие; кровельный ковёр3) перекрывать, настилать крышу, крыть, покрывать•roof in hollow tiles — кровля из желобчатой черепицы, кровля из итальянской черепицы
roof truss of hall — стропила для навеса, ангара
to roof in — крыть, настилать крышу
- aluminium roof - arched roof - asbestos roof - asbestoscement roof - asphaltic cardboard roof - asphalt mastic roof covering - bad roof - barrel roof - bench roof - bolted roof - bonded roof - breather roof - broach roof - built-in roof - built-up roof - butterfly roof - cantilever roof - cardboard roof - ceramic roof - clerestory roof - close-boarded roof - collar roof - compass roof - conical roof - copper roof - couple roof - curb roof - dead-level roof - deck roof - design of roof - dome roof - dome-shaped roof - doubly-bent shell roof - equilateral roof - exposed roof - fabric roof - false roof - fantail roof - fence roof - flat roof - flat suspended roof - flexible roof - flexible metal roof - flooding roof - framed roof - gable roof - gambrel roof - glass roof - glazed roof - gothic roof - hard roof - helm roof - high-pitched roof - high-rise roof - hip of roof - hip roof - hipped roof - hold-up hold-down roof - immediate roof - insulated roof - intersecting roof - inverted roof - king-bolt truss roof - king-post roof - lamella roof - lattice roof - lean-to roof - loose roof - low-pitched roof - mansard roof - mine roof - monitor roof - multi-span roof - nail roof - northern-light roof - ogee roof - open roof - pantiled roof - paper roof - pavillion roof - pent roof - penthouse roof - pitched roof - polygonal roof - poor roof - precast reinforced concrete roof - purlin roof - pyramidal roof - queen-post roof - rafter roof - railway roof - reed roof - ribbed roof - ridge roof - ruberoid roof - saddle roof - saddle-back roof - sawtooth roof - self-supporting roof - shed roof - shell roof - simple roof - slated roof - slate roof - sloped roof - sloping roof - soft roof - solar-electric roof - solid roof - span roof - split roof - steel roof - steel cable roof - steep roof - stepped roof - strutted roof - tank roof - tank floating roof - tent roof - terrace roof - thatched roof - thin-shell roof - thin-shell barrel roof - tie-beam roof - tile roof - trussed roof - unsound roof - vaulted roof - vel roof - wagon roof - wood roof - wood shingle roof - zinc roofto roof over — крыть, настилать крышу
* * *крыша, покрытие ( здания)- all-over roof
- arched roof
- arch roof
- arched barrel roof
- barrel shell roof
- barrel roof
- barrel-vault roof
- beam roof
- Belfast roof
- bell-shaped roof
- bell roof
- bonded gravel roof
- bowstring roof
- butterfly roof
- cable-suspended roof
- cable roof
- cantilever roof
- clipped gable roof
- cloth roof
- collar beam roof
- collar roof
- column-supported tank roof
- compass roof
- concrete shell roof
- corrugated shell roof
- cottage roof
- couple roof
- couple-close roof
- curb roof
- cut roof
- dome roof
- double-deck floating roof
- double-frame roof
- double-pitched roof
- double-pitch roof
- equal duo-pitched roof
- equilateral roof
- fabric roof
- factory-type roof
- felt-and-gravel roof
- flat roof
- flat-deck roof
- floating roof
- flooded roof
- folded-plate concrete roof
- gable roof
- gambrel roof
- glass roof
- gravel roof
- high-pitched roof
- hip-and-valley roof
- hipped roof
- hipped-gable roof
- italian roof
- jerking-head roof
- knee roof
- lamella roof
- lean-to roof
- low pitched roof
- low-profile roof
- M roof
- mansard roof
- monitor roof
- monopitch roof
- multigabled roof
- mushroom roof
- north-light shell roof
- north-light roof
- open roof
- pan floating roof
- pavilion roof
- pent roof
- pitched roof
- pontoon floating roof
- post-tensioned roof
- rainbow roof
- reed roof
- retractable roof
- rope-suspended roof
- rope roof
- saddle roof
- sawtooth roof
- self-supporting tank roof
- shed roof
- sickle-shaped roof
- single roof
- single-pitch roof
- skirt roof
- solar-electric roof
- sprayed roof
- spray-pond roof
- steel cable roof
- steel deck roof
- steel folded plate roof
- steel prismatic shell roof
- steel rope roof
- steep roof
- sun roof
- suspended roof
- suspended cloth roof
- tank roof
- tank dome roof
- terrace roof
- trussed roof
- umbrella roof
- unequal duo-pitched roof
- valley roof
- water-filled roof
- waved shell roof -
51 machina
māchĭna, ae, f. = mêchanê, a machine, i. e. any artificial contrivance for performing work, an engine, fabric, frame, scaffolding, staging, easel, warlike engine, military machine, etc.I.Lit.A.In gen.:B.moles et machina mundi,
Lucr. 5, 96:omnes illae columnae machinā appositā dejectae sunt,
Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 55, § 145:torquet nunc lapidem, nunc ingens machina tignum,
Hor. Ep. 2, 2, 73:trahuntque siccas machinae carinas,
id. C. 1, 4, 2:frumentaria,
Dig. 33, 7, 12.—Esp.,1.A platform on which slaves were exposed for sale:2.amicam de machinis emere,
Q. Cic. Petit. Cons. 2, 8.—A painter's easel, Plin. 35, 10, 37, § 120.—3.A scaffold for building:4.de machinā cadere,
Dig. 13, 6, 5; Plin. 19, 2, 8, § 30.—A military machine, warlike engine:II.machinis omnium generum expugnare oppidum,
Sall. J. 21:aut haec in nostros fabricata est machina muros,
Verg. A. 2, 46:murales,
Plin. 7, 56, 57, § 202:arietaria,
Vitr. 10, 19.—Trop., a device, plan, contrivance; esp. a trick, artifice, stratagem:at nunc disturba quas statuisti machinas,
i. e. abandon your schemes, Plaut. Ps. 1, 5, 137:totam hanc legem ad illius opes evertendas tamquam machinam comparari,
Cic. Agr. 2, 18, 50: omnes ad amplificandam orationem quasi machinae, * Quint. 11, 1, 44: dolum aut machinam commoliar, Caecil. ap. Cic. N. D. 3, 29, 73:quantas moveo machinas!
Plaut. Mil. 3, 2, 1:aliquam machinabor machinam, Unde aurum efficiam,
id. Bacch. 2, 2, 54. -
52 монтаж
1. м. assembly, mounting2. м. erectionпроцесс монтажа; монтажные работы — erection procedure
3. м. installation, mounting4. м. wiringмонтаж голым проводом; струнный монтаж — piano wiring
5. м. кфт. montage; editingнавесной монтаж — point-to-point wiring; discrete components
объёмный монтаж — space-wired interconnections; dense-packed point-to-point wiring
печатный монтаж — printed wiring; printed circuitry
изготавливать печатный монтаж вакуумным напылением — manufacture the printed wiring by vacuum evaporation
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53 exposure
[-ʒə] noun1) (an) act of exposing or state of being exposed:تَعَرُّض ، تَعْريضProlonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.
إطار فيلم التَّصويرI have two exposures left.
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54 exposure
[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) exposition2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) pose -
55 exposure
[-ʒə]1) ((an) act of exposing or state of being exposed: Prolonged exposure of the skin to hot sun can be harmful.) exposição2) (one frame of a photographic film etc: I have two exposures left.) chapa -
56 Evans, Oliver
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 13 September 1755 Newport, Delaware, USAd. 15 April 1819 New York, USA[br]American millwright and inventor of the first automatic corn mill.[br]He was the fifth child of Charles and Ann Stalcrop Evans, and by the age of 15 he had four sisters and seven brothers. Nothing is known of his schooling, but at the age of 17 he was apprenticed to a Newport wheelwright and wagon-maker. At 19 he was enrolled in a Delaware Militia Company in the Revolutionary War but did not see active service. About this time he invented a machine for bending and cutting off the wires in textile carding combs. In July 1782, with his younger brother, Joseph, he moved to Tuckahoe on the eastern shore of the Delaware River, where he had the basic idea of the automatic flour mill. In July 1782, with his elder brothers John and Theophilus, he bought part of his father's Newport farm, on Red Clay Creek, and planned to build a mill there. In 1793 he married Sarah Tomlinson, daughter of a Delaware farmer, and joined his brothers at Red Clay Creek. He worked there for some seven years on his automatic mill, from about 1783 to 1790.His system for the automatic flour mill consisted of bucket elevators to raise the grain, a horizontal screw conveyor, other conveying devices and a "hopper boy" to cool and dry the meal before gathering it into a hopper feeding the bolting cylinder. Together these components formed the automatic process, from incoming wheat to outgoing flour packed in barrels. At that time the idea of such automation had not been applied to any manufacturing process in America. The mill opened, on a non-automatic cycle, in 1785. In January 1786 Evans applied to the Delaware legislature for a twenty-five-year patent, which was granted on 30 January 1787 although there was much opposition from the Quaker millers of Wilmington and elsewhere. He also applied for patents in Pennsylvania, Maryland and New Hampshire. In May 1789 he went to see the mill of the four Ellicot brothers, near Baltimore, where he was impressed by the design of a horizontal screw conveyor by Jonathan Ellicot and exchanged the rights to his own elevator for those of this machine. After six years' work on his automatic mill, it was completed in 1790. In the autumn of that year a miller in Brandywine ordered a set of Evans's machinery, which set the trend toward its general adoption. A model of it was shown in the Market Street shop window of Robert Leslie, a watch-and clockmaker in Philadelphia, who also took it to England but was unsuccessful in selling the idea there.In 1790 the Federal Plant Laws were passed; Evans's patent was the third to come within the new legislation. A detailed description with a plate was published in a Philadelphia newspaper in January 1791, the first of a proposed series, but the paper closed and the series came to nothing. His brother Joseph went on a series of sales trips, with the result that some machinery of Evans's design was adopted. By 1792 over one hundred mills had been equipped with Evans's machinery, the millers paying a royalty of $40 for each pair of millstones in use. The series of articles that had been cut short formed the basis of Evans's The Young Millwright and Miller's Guide, published first in 1795 after Evans had moved to Philadelphia to set up a store selling milling supplies; it was 440 pages long and ran to fifteen editions between 1795 and 1860.Evans was fairly successful as a merchant. He patented a method of making millstones as well as a means of packing flour in barrels, the latter having a disc pressed down by a toggle-joint arrangement. In 1801 he started to build a steam carriage. He rejected the idea of a steam wheel and of a low-pressure or atmospheric engine. By 1803 his first engine was running at his store, driving a screw-mill working on plaster of Paris for making millstones. The engine had a 6 in. (15 cm) diameter cylinder with a stroke of 18 in. (45 cm) and also drove twelve saws mounted in a frame and cutting marble slabs at a rate of 100 ft (30 m) in twelve hours. He was granted a patent in the spring of 1804. He became involved in a number of lawsuits following the extension of his patent, particularly as he increased the licence fee, sometimes as much as sixfold. The case of Evans v. Samuel Robinson, which Evans won, became famous and was one of these. Patent Right Oppression Exposed, or Knavery Detected, a 200-page book with poems and prose included, was published soon after this case and was probably written by Oliver Evans. The steam engine patent was also extended for a further seven years, but in this case the licence fee was to remain at a fixed level. Evans anticipated Edison in his proposal for an "Experimental Company" or "Mechanical Bureau" with a capital of thirty shares of $100 each. It came to nothing, however, as there were no takers. His first wife, Sarah, died in 1816 and he remarried, to Hetty Ward, the daughter of a New York innkeeper. He was buried in the Bowery, on Lower Manhattan; the church was sold in 1854 and again in 1890, and when no relative claimed his body he was reburied in an unmarked grave in Trinity Cemetery, 57th Street, Broadway.[br]Further ReadingE.S.Ferguson, 1980, Oliver Evans: Inventive Genius of the American Industrial Revolution, Hagley Museum.G.Bathe and D.Bathe, 1935, Oliver Evans: Chronicle of Early American Engineering, Philadelphia, Pa.IMcN -
57 Perret, Auguste
[br]b. 12 February 1874 Ixelles, near Brussels, Belgiumd. 26 February 1954 Le Havre (?), France[br]French architect who pioneered and established building design in reinforced concrete in a style suited to the modern movement.[br]Auguste Perret belonged to the family contracting firm of A. \& G.Perret, which early specialized in the use of reinforced concrete. His eight-storey building at 25 bis Rue Franklin in Paris, built in 1902–3, was the first example of frame construction in this material and established its viability for structural design. Both ground plan and façade are uncompromisingly modern, the simplicity of the latter being relieved by unobtrusive faience decoration. The two upper floors, which are set back, and the open terrace roof garden set a pattern for future schemes. All of Perret's buildings had reinforced-concrete structures and this was clearly delineated on the façade designs. The concept was uncommon in Europe at the time, when eclecticism still largely ruled, but was derived from the late nineteenth-century skyscraper façades built by Louis Sullivan in America. In 1905–6 came Perret's Garage Ponthieu in Paris; a striking example of exposed concrete, it had a central façade window glazed in modern design in rich colours. By the 1920s ferroconcrete was in more common use, but Perret still led the field in France with his imaginative, bold use of the material. His most original structure is the Church of Notre Dame at Le Raincy on the outskirts of Paris (1922–3). The imposing exterior with its tall tower in diminishing stages is finely designed, but the interior has magnificence. It is a wide, light church, the segmented vaulted roof supported on slender columns. The whole structure is in concrete apart from the glass window panels, which extend the full height of the walls all around the church. They provide a symphony of colour culminating in deep blue behind the altar. Because of the slenderness of the columns and the richness of the glass, this church possesses a spiritual atmosphere and unimpeded sight and sound of and from the altar for everyone. It became the prototype for churches all over Europe for decades, from Moser in prewar Switzerland to Spence's postwar Coventry Cathedral.In a long working life Perret designed buildings for a wide range of purposes, adhering to his preference for ferroconcrete and adapting its use according to each building's needs. In the 1940s he was responsible for the railway station at Amiens, the Atomic Centre at Saclay and, one of his last important works, the redevelopment after wartime damage of the town centre of Le Havre. For the latter, he laid out large open squares enclosed by prefabricated units, which display a certain monotony, despite the imposing town hall and Church of St Joseph in the Place de L'Hôtel de Ville.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsPresident des Réunions Internationales des Architectes. American Society of the French Legion of Honour Gold Medal 1950. Elected after the Second World War to the Institut de France. First President of the International Union of Architects on its creation in 1948. RIBA Royal Gold Medal 1948.Further ReadingP.Blater, 1939, "Work of the architect A.Perret", Architektura SSSR (Moscow) 7:57 (illustrated article).1848 "Auguste Perret: a pioneer in reinforced concrete", Civil Engineers' Review, pp.296–300.Peter Collins, 1959, Concrete: The Vision of a New Architecture: A Study of Auguste Perret and his Precursors, Faber \& Faber.Marcel Zahar, 1959, D'Une Doctrine d'Architecture: Auguste Perret, Paris: Vincent Fréal.DY
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