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1 vol
I.vol1 [vɔl]1. masculine nouna. [d'oiseau, avion] flight• vol d'essai/de nuit test/night flight• vol régulier/charter scheduled/charter flight• il y a 8 heures de vol entre... it's an 8-hour flight between...• heures/conditions de vol flying hours/conditions• un pilote qui a plusieurs centaines d'heures de vol a pilot with several hundred hours' flying experience► au vol• attraper qch au vol [+ ballon, objet lancé] to catch sth in midairb. ( = oiseaux) flock2. compoundsII.vol2 [vɔl]masculine noun( = délit) theft• vol qualifié or aggravé aggravated theft• c'est du vol ! it's daylight robbery!* * *vɔl
1.
nom masculin1) ( d'oiseau) flightprendre son vol — to take wing, to fly off
2) ( groupe) (de canards, cigognes) flight; ( d'insectes) cloudde haut vol — fig [diplomate] high-flying; [cambrioleur] big-time; [prostituée] high-class
3) (d'avion, de fusée) flightavoir 1000 heures de vol à son actif — to have logged 1,000 flying hours
de vol — [conditions] flying; [plan, simulateur] flight
4) ( délit) theft; ( plus important) robbery
2.
au vol locution adverbialePhrasal Verbs:* * *vɔl nm1) (mode de locomotion) flyingau vol; attraper qch au vol — to catch sth as it flies past
2) (= trajet) flight3) (= groupe d'oiseaux) flight4) (= délit) theft, stealing, (= larcin) theft* * *A nm1 ( d'oiseau) flight (de of); prendre son vol to take wing, to fly off; à vol d'oiseau as the crow flies;2 ( groupe) un vol de a flight of [canards, cigognes]; a cloud of [insectes]; de haut vol lit [oiseau] high-flying ( épith); fig [diplomate] high-flying ( épith); [cambrioleur] big-time ( épith); [prostituée] high-class ( épith);3 (d'avion, de fusée) flight; le vol pour Paris the Paris flight; il y a 3 heures de vol entre it's a three-hour flight between; avoir 1000 heures de vol à son actif to have logged 1,000 flying hours; en (plein) vol in flight; de vol [conditions] flying; [plan, simulateur] flight;4 ( délit) theft (de of); ( plus important) robbery; commettre un vol to commit a theft ou robbery; c'est du vol (manifeste)! it's daylight robbery!; c'est du vol organisé! fig it's a racket!B au vol loc adv tirer un oiseau au vol to shoot a bird in flight; attraper une balle au vol to catch a ball in mid-air; saisir des bribes de conversations au vol to catch snatches of conversation.vol à l'arraché Jur bag snatching; vol avec effraction Jur burglary; vol à l'étalage shoplifting; vol habité manned flight; vol libre Sport hang gliding; faire du vol libre to go hang gliding; vol à main armée armed robbery; vol qualifié Jur aggravated theft GB, grand larceny US; vol à la roulotte○ theft from a parked vehicle; vol sec air travel; vol simple Jur theft; vol à la tire pickpocketing; vol à voile gliding; faire du vol à voile to go gliding.[vɔl] nom masculincommettre un vol to commit a theft, to stealvol simple/qualifié common/aggravated theftvol avec effraction breaking and entering, burglary2. [vente à un prix excessif]pratiquer le ou faire du vol libre to go hang-glidingpratiquer le ou faire du vol à voile to glide, to do glidingvol de perdreaux flock ou covey of partridgesà vol d'oiseau locution adverbialec'est loin, à vol d'oiseau? is it far, as the crow flies?————————au vol locution adverbiale1. [en passant]saisir au vol [ballon, clés] to catch in mid-airattraper ou prendre un bus au vol to jump on to a moving bussaisir une occasion au vol to jump at ou to seize an opportunity2. CHASSEtirer/tuer un oiseau au vol to shoot/to kill a bird on the wingde haut vol locution adjectivale[artiste, spécialiste] top (avant nom) -
2 Renard, Charles
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 23 November 1847 Damblain, Vosges, Franced. 13 April 1905 Chalais-Meudon, France[br]French pioneer of military aeronautics who, with A.C.Krebs, built an airship powered by an electric motor.[br]Charles Renard was a French army officer with an interest in aviation. In 1873 he constructed an unusual unmanned glider with ten wings and an automatic stabilizing device to control rolling. This operated by means of a pendulum device linked to moving control surfaces. The model was launched from a tower near Arras, but unfortunately it spiralled into the ground. The control surfaces could not cope with the basic instability of the design, but as an idea for automatic flight control it was ahead of its time.Following a Commission report on the military use of balloons, carrier pigeons and an optical telegraph, an aeronautical establishment was set up in 1877 at Chalais-Meudon, near Paris, under the direction of Charles Renard, who was assisted by his brother Paul. The following year Renard and a colleague, Arthur Krebs, began to plan an airship. They received financial help from Léon Gambetta, a prominent politician who had escaped from Paris by balloon in 1870 during the siege by the Prussians. Renard and Krebs studied earlier airship designs: they used the outside shape of Paul Haenlein's gas-engined airship of 1872 and included Meusnier's internal air-filled ballonnets. The gas-engine had not been a success so they decided on an electric motor. Renard developed lightweight pile batteries while Krebs designed a motor, although this was later replaced by a more powerful Gramme motor of 6.5 kW (9 hp). La France was constructed at Chalais-Meudon and, after a two-month wait for calm conditions, the airship finally ascended on 9 August 1884. The motor was switched on and the flight began. Renard and Krebs found their airship handled well and after twenty-three minutes they landed back at their base. La, France made several successful flights, but its speed of only 24 km/h (15 mph) meant that flights could be made only in calm weather. Parts of La, France, including the electric motor, are preserved in the Musée de l'Air in Paris.Renard remained in charge of the establishment at Chalais-Meudon until his death. Among other things, he developed the "Train Renard", a train of articulated road vehicles for military and civil use, of which a number were built between 1903 and 1911. Towards the end of his life Renard became interested in helicopters, and in 1904 he built a large twin-rotor model which, however, failed to take off.[br]Bibliography1886, Le Ballon dirigeable La France, Paris (a description of the airship).Further ReadingDescriptions of Renard and Kreb's airship are given in most books on the history of lighter-than-air flight, e.g.L.T.C.Rolt, 1966, The Aeronauts, London; pub. in paperback 1985.C.Bailleux, c. 1988, Association pour l'Histoire de l'Electricité en France, (a detailed account of the conception and operations of La France).1977, Centenaire de la recherche aéronautique à Chalais-Meudon, Paris (an official memoir on the work of Chalais-Meudon with a chapter on Renard).JDS -
3 Kette
f; -, -n1. chain (auch CHEM., WIRTS.); auch fig. Ketten (Fesseln) chains, fetters; in Ketten legen (Gefangenen) put in chains; an die Kette legen (Hund) put on the chain, chain up; fig. (jemanden) keep on a tight rein ( oder short leash); SPORT (genau decken) mark very closely ( stärker: out of the game)3. eines Kettenfahrzeugs: track5. von Bergen etc.: chain, range; von Seen: series, string; von Autos: line; fig. von Ereignissen etc.: chain, series, der Beweisführung, von Gedanken etc.: chain; (Absperrung) cordon; eine Kette bilden form a cordon; zum Weiterreichen, auch Demonstration: form a human chain* * *die Kettetrack chain; necklace; catena; daisy chain; chain; string; series; range* * *Kẹt|te ['kɛtə]f -, -n1) chain; (von Kettenfahrzeug) chain trackeinen Hund an die Kette legen — to put a dog on the chain, to chain up a dog
jdn in Ketten legen or schlagen (liter) — to put sb in chains
jdn an die Kette legen (fig) — to keep sb on a tight leash or rein
in Ketten liegen (fig geh) — to be in chains or bondage
seine Ketten zerreißen or sprengen (fig geh) — to throw off one's chains or shackles or fetters
2) (fig) (= ununterbrochene Reihe) chain; (von Menschen) line, chain; (von Fahrzeugen) line, string; (von Unfällen, Erfahrungen etc) series, stringeine Kette von Ereignissen — a chain of events
5) (AVIAT, MIL) flight6) (COMM von Läden etc) chain* * *die1) (a series of (especially metal) links or rings passing through one another: The dog was fastened by a chain; She wore a silver chain round her neck.) chain2) (a series: a chain of events.) chain* * *Ket·te<-, -n>[ˈkɛtə]f1. (Gliederkette) chaineinen Hund an die \Kette legen to chain up a dog sep, to put a dog on a chainjdn in \Ketten legen to put sb in chains, to clap sb in ironsin \Ketten liegen (geh) to be in chainsseine \Ketten zerreißen [o sprengen] (fig geh) to throw off [or break] one's chains [or shackles] [or fetters]; (Fahrradkette) [bicycle] chain; (Schmuckkette) necklace2. (ununterbrochene Reihe) lineviele tausende Demonstranten hatten eine \Kette gebildet several thousand demonstrators had formed a human chain; (Reihe von Gleichartigem) Blumen row; Bergen chaineine \Kette von Beweisen/Indizien a body of evidenceeine \Kette von Ereignissen a chain of eventseine \Kette von Unglücksfällen a series [or chapter] of accidents\Kette rauchen to chain-smoke3. ÖKON chaindieses Restaurant gehört zu einer \Kette this restaurant is part of a chain4. (in Längsrichtung verlaufende Fäden) warp* * *die; Kette, Ketten1) chain; (von Kettenfahrzeugen) trackdie Kette [an der Tür] vorlegen — put the chain across [the door]
an der Kette liegen — < dog> be chained up
die Ketten abwerfen/zerreißen — (fig. geh.) cast off or throw off/break one's chains or shackles
jemanden an die Kette legen — (fig.) keep somebody on a [tight or short] leash
2) (Halsschmuck) necklace; (eines Bürgermeisters usw.) chainKette rauchen — (ugs.) chain-smoke
4) (Weberei) warp* * *auch figin Ketten legen (Gefangenen) put in chains;an die Kette legen (Hund) put on the chain, chain up; fig (jemanden) keep on a tight rein ( oder short leash); SPORT (genau decken) mark very closely ( stärker: out of the game)3. eines Kettenfahrzeugs: track4. Weberei: warp;Kette und Schuss warp and woof5. von Bergen etc: chain, range; von Seen: series, string; von Autos: line; fig von Ereignissen etc: chain, series, der Beweisführung, von Gedanken etc: chain; (Absperrung) cordon;eine Kette bilden form a cordon; zum Weiterreichen, auch Demonstration: form a human chain* * *die; Kette, Ketten1) chain; (von Kettenfahrzeugen) trackdie Kette [an der Tür] vorlegen — put the chain across [the door]
an der Kette liegen — < dog> be chained up
die Ketten abwerfen/zerreißen — (fig. geh.) cast off or throw off/break one's chains or shackles
jemanden an die Kette legen — (fig.) keep somebody on a [tight or short] leash
2) (Halsschmuck) necklace; (eines Bürgermeisters usw.) chainKette rauchen — (ugs.) chain-smoke
4) (Weberei) warp* * *-n (Rebhühner) f.covey of pigeons n. -n f.chain n.necklace n.series n.string n.warp n. -
4 dueflokk
subst. flight el. flock of pigeons
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