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61 þungavarnaðr
m. heavy goods. -
62 þungavarningr
m. heavy goods. -
63 tir, TIR
tir, TIR/tir/m.inv.(autoarticolato) heavy goods vehicle, articulated lorry BE, juggernaut BE, tractor-trailer AE, rig AE colloq. -
64 TIR
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65 TIR sigla m inv
[tir](= Transports Internationaux Routiers) International Heavy Goods Vehicle -
66 tráfico de mercancías pesadas
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67 vehículo
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68 ylimittainen ja raskas tavara
• long and heavy goods -
69 длинномер и тяжеловес
Русско-английский словарь по экономии > длинномер и тяжеловес
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70 упаковка для тяжелых грузов
Русско-английский словарь по экономии > упаковка для тяжелых грузов
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71 gros-cul
n. m.1. 'Baccy', shag, strong fine-cut tobacco foi pipe-smokers and those who roll their own.2. H.G.V., heavy goods vehicle. Il n'y avait rien que des gros-culs sur l'autoroute: The motorway was jam-packed with artics and big lorries. -
72 mastodonte
n. m.1. 'Hulk', hunky figure of a man.2. 'Whopper', large object.3. 'Artic', articulated heavy goods vehicle. -
73 semi
n. m. (abbr. semi-remorque): 'Artic', articulated heavy goods vehicle. -
74 trimbalage
n. m. 'Carting', 'humping about', carrying of (usually heavy) goods. -
75 artículos pesados
m.pl.heavy goods. -
76 TIR sigla
m inv [tir](= Transports Internationaux Routiers) International Heavy Goods Vehicle -
77 Hackworth, Timothy
[br]b. 22 December 1786 Wylam, Northumberland, Englandd. 7 July 1850 Shildon, Co. Durham, England[br]English engineer, pioneer in construction and operation of steam locomotives.[br]Hackworth trained under his father, who was Foreman Blacksmith at Wylam colliery, and succeeded him upon his death in 1807. Between 1812 and 1816 he helped to build and maintain the Wylam locomotives under William Hedley. He then moved to Walbottle colliery, but during 1824 he took temporary charge of Robert Stephenson \& Co.'s works while George Stephenson was surveying the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway and Robert Stephenson was away in South America. In May 1825 Hackworth was appointed to the Stockton \& Darlington Railway (S \& DR) "to have superintendence of the permanent (i.e. stationary) and locomotive engines". He established the workshops at Shildon, and when the railway opened in September he became in effect the first locomotive superintendent of a railway company. From experience of operating Robert Stephenson \& Co.'s locomotives he was able to make many detail improvements, notably spring safety valves. In 1827 he designed and built the locomotive Royal George, with six wheels coupled and inverted vertical cylinders driving the rear pair. From the pistons, drive was direct by way of piston rods and connecting rods to crankpins on the wheels, the first instance of the use of this layout on a locomotive. Royal George was the most powerful and satisfactory locomotive on the S \& DR to date and was the forerunner of Hackworth's type of heavy-goods locomotive, which was built until the mid-1840s.For the Rainhill Trials in 1829 Hackworth built and entered the locomotive Sans Pareil, which was subsequently used on the Bol ton \& Leigh Railway and is now in the Science Museum, London. A working replica was built for the 150th anniversary of the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway in 1980. In 1833 a further agreement with the S \& DR enabled Hackworth, while remaining in charge of their locomotives, to set up a locomotive and engineering works on his own account. Its products eventually included locomotives for the London, Brighton \& South Coast and York, Newcastle \& Berwick Railways, as well as some of the earliest locomotives exported to Russia and Canada. Hackworth's son, John Wesley Hackworth, was also an engineer and invented the radial valve gear for steam engines that bears his name.[br]Further ReadingR.Young, 1975, Timothy Hackworth and the Locomotive, Shildon: Shildon "Stockton \& Darlington Railway" Silver Jubilee Committee; orig. pub. 1923, London (tends to emphasize Hackworth's achievements at the expense of other contemporary engineers).L.T.C.Rolt, 1960, George and Robert Stephenson, London: Longmans (describes much of Hackworth's work and is more objective).E.L.Ahrons, 1927, The British Steam Railway Locomotive 1825–1925, London: The Locomotive Publishing Co.PJGR -
78 Lkw-Maut
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79 Lastkraftwagen
m1. commercial vehicle2. lorry Br.3. truck Am.pl1. lorries2. trucks Am.(Lkw, LKW)heavy goods vehicle (HGV) -
80 длинномер и тяжеловес
Бизнес, юриспруденция. Русско-английский словарь > длинномер и тяжеловес
См. также в других словарях:
heavy goods vehicle — UK US noun [countable] [singular heavy goods vehicle plural heavy goods vehicles] british an hgv Thesaurus: road vehicles other than carshyponym * * * nou … Useful english dictionary
heavy goods vehicle — ➔ vehicle * * * heavy goods vehicle UK US noun [C] UK TRANSPORT ► HGV(Cf. ↑HGV) … Financial and business terms
heavy goods vehicle — heavy goods .vehicle n an ↑HGV … Dictionary of contemporary English
heavy goods vehicle — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms heavy goods vehicle : singular heavy goods vehicle plural heavy goods vehicles British an HGV … English dictionary
heavy goods vehicle — (HGV) A British term expressing a vehicle capable of carrying heavy loads and requiring a special licence to drive HGV licence … Dictionary of automotive terms
heavy goods vehicle — noun A lorry, truck or other large vehicle used to transport cargo with a total weight of at least 3.5 tonnes. Syn: HGV … Wiktionary
heavy goods vehicle — noun (C) an hgv … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
goods vehicle — ➔ vehicle * * * goods vehicle UK US noun [C] TRANSPORT ► a truck that carries goods by road → See also HEAVY GOODS VEHICLE(Cf. ↑heavy goods vehicle), LARGE GOODS VEHICLE( … Financial and business terms
goods — See heavy goods vehicle … Dictionary of automotive terms
goods vehicle — See heavy goods vehicle … Dictionary of automotive terms
heavy industry — see under ↑industry • • • Main Entry: ↑heavy * * * noun [noncount] : the production of goods (such as coal or steel) that are used to make other goods compare ↑light industry * * * ˌheavy ˈindustry [heavy industry] … Useful english dictionary