-
1 gach
m (N pl gachy) pejor. fancy man pot., pejor.* * *ma1. pog. (= kochanek) secret lover; przest. gallant.2. myśl. (= samiec zająca) buck hare.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > gach
-
2 gach
-
3 gach
adj each, every -
4 gach
-
5 gach
each, every -
6 gach rud
all, everything -
7 gach uile
adj every -
8 buidhe
I IInow buidheachas, thanks, Irish buidhe, Old Irish buide (Welsh boddaw, please, bodd, will?), *budo-, Indo-European bhudh, bheudh; Greek $$G peúqomai, learn by inquiry; Anglo-Saxon béodan, command, English for- bid.IIIglad to, had to, Old Irish buithi, participle of necessity, from the verb bí, be: "Is amlid is buithi do chách" - Thus ought it to be with every one (9th Cent. glosses); Gaelic "Is buidhe do gach neach". -
9 càch
-
10 Pötsch, Friedrich Hermann
SUBJECT AREA: Mining and extraction technology[br]b. 12 December 1842 Biendorf, near Köthen, Germanyd. 9 June 1902 Dresden, Germany[br]German mine surveyor, inventor of the freezing process for sinking shafts.[br]Pötsch was the son of a forest officer and could not easily attend school, with the consequences that it took him a long time to obtain the scholarly education needed to enable him to begin work on a higher level with the mining administration in the duchy of Anhalt in 1868. Seven years later, he was licensed as a Prussian mining surveyor and in this capacity he worked with the mining inspectorate of Aschersleben. During that time he frequently came across shafts for brown-coal mines which had been sunk down to watery strata but then had to be abandoned. His solution to the problem was to freeze the quicksand with a solution of chloride; this was better than the previous attempts in England to instal cooling coils at the bottom of the shaft. Pötsch's conception implied the construction of ice walls with the means of boreholes and refrigerators. By his method a set of boreholes was driven through the watery strata, the smaller pipes contained within the main bore pipes, providing a channel through which calcium chloride was pumped, returning through the longer pipe until the ground was frozen solid. He obtained a patent in 1883 and many leading international journals reported on the method the same year.In 1884 he established the Internationale Gesselschaft für Schacht-, Brucken-und Tunnelbau in Magdeburg and he also became Director of the Poetsch-Sooy-Smith Freezing Company in New Jersey, which constructed the first freezing shaft in America in 1888.However, Pötsch was successful only for a short period of time and, being a clumsy entrepreneur, he had to dissolve his company in 1894. Unfortunately, his decision to carry out the complete shaft-sinking business did not allow him to concentrate on solving upcoming technical problems of his new process. It was Louis Gebhardt (1861–1924), his former engineer, who took care of development, especially in co-operation with French mining engineers, and thus provided the basis for the freezing process becoming widely used for shaft-sinking in complicated strata ever since.[br]Bibliography1886, Das Gefrierverfahren. Methode für schnelles, sicheres und lotrechtes Abteufen von Schächten im Schwimmsande und uberhaupt im wasserreichen Gebirge; für Herstellung tiefgehender Bruckenpfeiler und für TunnelBauten in rolligem und schwimmendem Gebirge, Freiberg.1889, Geschichtliches über die Entstehung und Herausbildung des Gefrierverfahrens, Magdeburg.1895, Das Gefrierverfahren und das kombinierte Schachtabbohr-und Gefrierverfahren (Patent Pötsch), Freiberg.Further ReadingD.Hoffmann, 1962, AchtJahrzehnte Gefrierverfahren nach Putsch, Essen: Glückauf (the most substantial biography; also covers technological aspects).G.Gach, 1986, In Schacht und Strecke, Essen: Glückauf, pp. 31–53 (provides information on the development of specialized mining companies in Germany originating in the freezing process).WKBiographical history of technology > Pötsch, Friedrich Hermann
См. также в других словарях:
Gach — ist ein strategisches Brettspiel mit Schach ähnlichen Regeln, das auf einem Go Brett und mit Go Steinen gespielt wird. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Geschichte 2 Spielregeln 2.1 Spielziel … Deutsch Wikipedia
Gach — Gách, S. Jäh … Grammatisch-kritisches Wörterbuch der Hochdeutschen Mundart
gach — Adj jäh … Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache
gach — {{/stl 13}}{{stl 8}}rz. mos IIIc a. IIb, lm M. y {{/stl 8}}{{stl 7}} pogardliwe określenie kochanka, zwłaszcza kochanka mężatki {{/stl 7}} … Langenscheidt Polski wyjaśnień
Gach — 1. Sey nicht zu gach1, gib etwas nach. – Henisch, 1380. 1) »Gäch, hitzig, geschwind, eilfertig, vnbehutsam, vnvorsichtig, vnbesonnen, vermessen.« (Henisch, 1330.) 2. Zu gäch sein macht rew. – Henisch, 1401. [Zusätze und Ergänzungen] 3. Wer zuuil… … Deutsches Sprichwörter-Lexikon
gach — bo·gach; mal·gach; … English syllables
gach — ∙gạch <Adj.> [mhd. gāch (Adj. u. Adv.); ahd. gāho (Adv.), zu mhd. gæhe, ahd. gāhi, ↑jäh]: heftig, ungestüm: Wie g. nun wieder, junger Mann (Lessing, Nathan V, 8) … Universal-Lexikon
Gach — Übernamen zu mhd. gach »schnell, jäh, ungestüm« … Wörterbuch der deutschen familiennamen
Gäch — Übernamen zu mhd. gach »schnell, jäh, ungestüm« … Wörterbuch der deutschen familiennamen
gach — A sticky or unusual situation or someone who is rude. From the Spanish word gacho, sez JS. (Pronounced goch as in Gocha! ) {Also the Georgia Alliance for Community Hospitals.} After having been short changed at the ticket office, he exclaimed:… … Dictionary of american slang
gach — A sticky or unusual situation or someone who is rude. From the Spanish word gacho, sez JS. (Pronounced goch as in Gocha! ) {Also the Georgia Alliance for Community Hospitals.} After having been short changed at the ticket office, he exclaimed:… … Dictionary of american slang