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1 glass-maker
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2 glass maker
мастер-стеклодув; стекловар -
3 glass maker
Техника: мастер-стеклодув, стекловар -
4 glass-maker
s.vidriero, el que hace el vidrio. -
5 glass maker's bench
Англо-русский словарь технических терминов > glass maker's bench
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6 glass maker's bench
Техника: верстак стеклодува -
7 glass maker's tool
Силикатное производство: инструмент мастера-стеклодува -
8 your daddy wasn't a glass maker!
Просторечие: ты не прозрачный! (при требовании подвинуться), у тебя папа не стекольщик! (при требовании подвинуться)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > your daddy wasn't a glass maker!
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9 maker
изготовитель; завод-изготовитель; фирма-изготовитель; поставщик-
acid maker
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bag maker
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bushel maker
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butter maker
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cabinet maker
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coffee maker
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contact maker
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control maker
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decision maker
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die maker
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foam maker
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glass maker
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ice maker
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ink maker
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makers of cutting tools
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master maker
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pattern maker
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pot maker
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soft ice maker
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stencil maker
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television program maker
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tool maker
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vacuum coffee maker
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wave maker -
10 мастер-стеклодув
glass makerБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > мастер-стеклодув
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11 мастер-стеклодув
Англо-русский словарь технических терминов > мастер-стеклодув
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12 стекловар
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > стекловар
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13 стекловар
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14 верстак стеклодува
glass maker's benchБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > верстак стеклодува
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15 верстак стеклодува
Англо-русский словарь технических терминов > верстак стеклодува
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16 bench
1) верстак; станок2) берма; терраса; рабочая площадка уступа ( на открытых горных работах)3) стенд•-
automatic-feed circular saw bench
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band assembly bench
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bar bench
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battery bench
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carpenter's bench
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clamp service bench
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clean bench with light canopy
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clean bench
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cleaning bench
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climatic test bench
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closed bench
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coke bench
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collimating bench
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coremarker's bench
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cross flow bench
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drawing bench
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editing bench
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exhaust bench
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finish-polishing bench
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frames assembly bench
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glass cutting bench
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glass maker's bench
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horizontal flow bench
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hot bench
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laminar flow bench
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layer assembly bench
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lower bench
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measuring bench
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middle bench
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molder's bench
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multidraw bench
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multiple nonslip wire-drawing bench
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multirip bench
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open bench
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optical bench
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panel's assembly bench
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photometer bench
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planing bench
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push bench
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push pointer bench
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rebuilt bench
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rotary bench
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safety bench
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saw bench
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single-chain-type bench
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sleeper saw bench
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spoil bench
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test bench
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tilting arbor saw bench
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track-bed bench
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tube push bench
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tube-drawing bench
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upper bench
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vertical flow bench
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wire-drawing bench
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wood-chopping bench
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work bench -
17 glassmaking
['glɑːsˌmeɪkɪŋ] [AE 'glæs-]nome fabbricazione f. del vetro* * *glassmaking, glass-making /ˈglɑ:smeɪkɪŋ/n. [u]1 (ind.) fabbricazione del vetro; industria vetrariaglassmaker, glass-makern.vetraio.* * *['glɑːsˌmeɪkɪŋ] [AE 'glæs-]nome fabbricazione f. del vetro -
18 holding
FINANCE (shares in company) participation f;∎ he has holdings in several companies il est actionnaire de plusieurs sociétésholding company (société f en) holding m, société à portefeuille;holding costs coûts m pl de détentionThe treasury announced that Paolo Scaroni, the Italy-born chief executive of UK glass maker Pilkington, is to take over from Franco Tato as chief executive of state-run electricity giant Enel. Piero Gnudi, chairman of Italian state holding company Iri, is to become Enel's chairman.
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19 Ravenscroft, George
[br]b. 1632 Alconbury, Huntingdonshire, Englandd. 7 June 1683 Barnet, Hertfordshire, England[br]English inventor of lead-crystal glass.[br]George's father James was a successful lawyer and merchant, engaging in overseas trade.A devout but necessarily circumspect Catholic, James sent his sons to the English College at Douai, now in northern France. Leaving there in 1651, George began to learn his father's business and spent some fifteen years in Venice. He took an increasingly important part in it, doubtless dealing in Venice's leading products of lace and glass. By 1666 he was back in England and, perhaps because the supply of Venetian glass was beginning to decline, he started to manufacture glass himself. In 1673 he set up a glassworks in the Savoy in London and succeeded so well that in the following year he petitioned the King for the grant of a patent to make glassware. This was granted on 16 May 1674, stimulating the Glass Sellers' Company to enter into an agreement with Ravenscroft to buy the glassware he produced. Later in 1674 the company allowed Ravenscroft to establish a second glasshouse at Henley-onThames. At first his ware was beset with "crizzling", i.e. numerous fine surface cracks. The Glass Sellers probably urged Ravenscroft to cure this defect, and this he achieved in 1675 by replacing crushed flint with increasing amounts of lead oxide, rising finally to a content of 30 per cent. He thereby obtained a relatively soft, heavy glass with high refractive index and dispersive power. This made it amenable to deep cutting, to produce the brilliant prismatic effects of cut glass. At about the same time, the Duke of Buckingham, a considerable promoter of the glass industry, agreed that Ravenscroft should manage his works at Vauxhall for the making of plate glass for mirrors. Ravenscroft terminated his agreement with the Glass Sellers in 1678, the date of the last evidence of his activities as a maker of crystal glass, and the patent expired in 1681. His new glass had immediately rivalled the best Venetian crystal glass and has been a valued product ever since.[br]Further ReadingR.F.Moody, 1988, The life of George Ravenscroft', Glass Technology 29 (1):198–210;Glass Technology 30(5):191–2 (additional notes on his life).LRD -
20 Ramsden, Jesse
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]b. 6 October 1735 (?) Halifax, Yorkshire, Englandd. 5 November 1800 Brighton, Sussex, England[br]English instrument-maker who developed machines for accurately measuring angular and linear scales.[br]Jesse Ramsden was the son of an innkeeper but received a good general education: after attending the free school at Halifax, he was sent at the age of 12 to his uncle for further study, particularly in mathematics. At the age of 16 he was apprenticed to a cloth-worker in Halifax and on completion of the apprenticeship in 1755 he moved to London to work as a clerk in a cloth warehouse. In 1758 he became an apprentice in the workshop of a London mathematical instrument-maker named Burton. He quickly gained the skill, particularly in engraving, and by 1762 he was able to set up on his own account. He married in 1765 or 1766 the youngest daughter of the optician John Dollond FRS (1706– 61) and received a share of Dollond's patent for making achromatic lenses.Ramsden's experience and reputation increased rapidly and he was generally regarded as the leading instrument-maker of his time. He opened a shop in the Haymarket and transferred to Piccadilly in 1775. His staff increased to about sixty workers and apprentices, and by 1789 he had constructed nearly 1,000 sextants as well as theodolites, micrometers, balances, barometers, quadrants and other instruments.One of Ramsden's most important contributions to precision measurement was his development of machines for obtaining accurate division of angular and linear scales. For this work he received a premium from the Commissioners of the Board of Longitude, who published his descriptions of the machines. For the trigonometrical survey of Great Britain, initiated by General William Roy FRS (1726–90) and continued by the Board of Ordnance, Ramsden supplied a 3 ft (91 cm) theodolite and steel measuring chains, and was also engaged to check the glass tubes used to measure the fundamental base line.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1786; Royal Society Copley Medal 1795. Member, Imperial Academy of St Petersburg 1794. Member, Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers 1793.Bibliography1774, Description of a New Universal Equatorial Instrument, London; repub. 1791. 1777, Description of an Engine for Dividing Mathematical Instruments, London. 1779, Description of an Engine for Dividing Straight Lines on MathematicalInstruments, London.1779, "Description of two new micrometers", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 69:419–31.1782, "A new construction of eyeglasses for such telescopes as may be applied to mathematical instruments", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 73:94–99.Further ReadingR.S.Woodbury, 1961, History of the Lathe to 1850, Cleveland, Ohio; W.Steeds, 1969, A History of Machine Tools 1700–1910, Oxford (both provide a brief description of Ramsden's dividing machines).RTS
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