Перевод: с польского на английский

с английского на польский

hatch (opening)

См. также в других словарях:

  • Hatch — Hatch, n. [OE. hacche, AS. h[ae]c, cf. haca the bar of a door, D. hek gate, Sw. h[ a]ck coop, rack, Dan. hekke manger, rack. Prob. akin to E. hook, and first used of something made of pieces fastened together. Cf. {Heck}, {Hack} a frame.] 1. A… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • hatch|way — «HACH WAY», noun. 1. an opening in the deck of a ship to the hold or lower deck; hatch. 2. a similar opening in a floor, roof, or wall of a building …   Useful english dictionary

  • hatch — Ⅰ. hatch [1] ► NOUN 1) a small opening in a floor, wall, or roof allowing access from one area to another. 2) a door in an aircraft, spacecraft, or submarine. ● down the hatch Cf. ↑down the hatch ORIGIN Old …   English terms dictionary

  • opening — [n1] gap, hole aperture, breach, break, cavity, chink, cleft, crack, cranny, crevice, cut, discontinuity, door, fissure, hatch, interstice, mouth, orifice, outlet, perforation, recess, rent, rift, rupture, scuttle, slit, slot, space, split, spout …   New thesaurus

  • hatch — hatch1 hatchable, adj. hatchability, n. hatcher, n. /hach/, v.t. 1. to bring forth (young) from the egg. 2. to cause young to emerge from (the egg) as by brooding or incubating. 3. to bring forth or produce; devise; create …   Universalium

  • hatch — I [[t]hætʃ[/t]] v. t. 1) dvl to cause young to emerge from (the egg), as by brooding or incubating 2) to bring forth or produce; devise; plot 3) dvl to be hatched 4) to brood 5) dvl the act of hatching 6) something that is hatched, as a brood •… …   From formal English to slang

  • hatch — [[t]hæ̱tʃ[/t]] hatches, hatching, hatched 1) V ERG When a baby bird, insect, or other animal hatches, or when it is hatched, it comes out of its egg by breaking the shell. As soon as the two chicks hatch, they leave the nest burrow... [be V ed]… …   English dictionary

  • hatch — I. /hætʃ / (say hach) verb (t) 1. to bring forth (young) from the egg. 2. to cause young to emerge from (the egg). 3. to contrive; devise; concoct: to hatch a plot. –verb (i) 4. to be hatched. –noun 5. the act of hatching. 6. that which is… …  

  • hatch — {{11}}hatch (n.) opening, O.E. hæc (gen. hæcce) fence, grating, gate, from P.Gmc. *hak (Cf. M.H.G. heck, Du. hek fence, gate ). This apparently is the source of many of the Hatcher surnames; one who lives near a gate. Sense of plank opening in… …   Etymology dictionary

  • Hatch End — infobox UK place country = England map type = Greater London region= London population= official name= Hatch End latitude= 51.6010 longitude= 0.3743 constituency westminster= Harrow West post town= PINNER postcode area= HA postcode district= HA5… …   Wikipedia

  • hatch — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ closed, open ▪ Leave the hatch open. ▪ access, escape ▪ serving (esp. BrE) …   Collocations dictionary

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