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1 зажигательное оружие
1) Military: incendiary device, incendiary weapon2) Makarov: incendiary weaponsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > зажигательное оружие
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2 нападение с применением зажигательного оружия
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > нападение с применением зажигательного оружия
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3 нападение с применением зажигательного оружия
Русско-английский военный словарь > нападение с применением зажигательного оружия
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4 ЗВ
1) Military: incendiary, incendiary agent, зажигательное вещество, сеть звукового вещания2) Chemical weapons: загрязняющие вещества -
5 Зв
1) Military: incendiary, incendiary agent, зажигательное вещество, сеть звукового вещания2) Chemical weapons: загрязняющие вещества -
6 petrolero
adj.oil, oil-bearing, mineral-oil, petroleum.m.oil tanker, tankship, tanker.* * *► adjetivo1 oil1 oil tanker————————1 oil tanker* * *noun m.* * *1.ADJ oil antes de s2. SM1) (Náut) oil tanker2) (Com) [gen] oil man; (=obrero) oil worker3) † (=incendiario) arsonist, incendiary* * *I- ra adjetivo oil (before n)IImasculino oil tanker* * *= petrol tanker, tanker, oil tanker.Ex. In any case the great petrol tankers cannot reach Antwerp, whence the need to lay oil pipelines from Rotterdam to improve the supplying of crude oil to the refineries.Ex. The author discusses identifies the information needs and problems of the maritime industry using its tanker chartering section as an example.Ex. Oil tankers passing through waterways threatened by pirates could soon carry weapons to ward off attacks.* * *I- ra adjetivo oil (before n)IImasculino oil tanker* * *= petrol tanker, tanker, oil tanker.Ex: In any case the great petrol tankers cannot reach Antwerp, whence the need to lay oil pipelines from Rotterdam to improve the supplying of crude oil to the refineries.
Ex: The author discusses identifies the information needs and problems of the maritime industry using its tanker chartering section as an example.Ex: Oil tankers passing through waterways threatened by pirates could soon carry weapons to ward off attacks.* * *oil ( before n)oil tanker* * *
petrolero 1◊ -ra adjetivo
oil ( before n)
petrolero 2 sustantivo masculino
oil tanker
petrolero,-a
I adjetivo oil
compañía petrolera, oil company
II sustantivo masculino oil tanker
' petrolero' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
petrolera
English:
oil tanker
- oil well
- tanker
- oil
* * *petrolero, -a♦ adjoil;compañía petrolera oil company♦ nmoil tanker* * *I adj oil atr ;compañía petrolera oil company;flota petrolera fleet of oil tankersII m MAR oil tanker* * *petrolero, -ra adj: oilindustria petrolera: oil industrypetrolero nm: oil tanker* * *petrolero n oil tanker -
7 зажигательные OB
Chemical weapons: incendiary agents -
8 зажигательные ОВ
Chemical weapons: incendiary agents -
9 ELDR
I)(-s, -ar), m. fire; taka eld, drepa (upp) eld, to strike fire: kveikja (upp) eld, to light a fire; bregða (koma, skjóta) eldi í e-t, láta (leggja) eld í e-t, to set fire to, to set on fire; e. varð lauss ok lék skjótt, a fire broke out and spread rapidly; e. hraut af sverðum þeirra, sparks of fire flew from their swords.pp. grown old, worn by age; kvazt e. vera mjök frá úfriði, said that he was too old for fighting.* * *m., gen. ellds, also spelt ellz, [a word that may be taken as a test of Scandin. races; Dan. ild; Swed. äld; for the Teut. nations use the word feuer, fire, which is wanting in Scandin., though used by old Icel. poets, who probably borrowed it from A. S.; on the other hand, Ulf. constantly renders πυρ by fon, Icel. funi, q. v.; in A. S. poetry and in Hel. äled = incendiary occurs a few times, and älan = Lat. urere (Grein and Schmeller); Rask suggests a Finn. origin]:—fire. In cold climates fire and life go together; hence the proverb, eldr er beztr með ýta sonum, ok sólar sýn, fire is best among the sons of men, and the sight of the sun, Hm. 67: in reference to the healing power of fire, eldr tekr við sóttum, fire consumes ( cures) fevers, 138; sá er eldrinn heitastr er á sjálfum brennr, Grett. 136 new Ed.: allit., e. né járn, fire nor iron, Edda 82; hvárki egg né eld, 162; eldr ( sparks of fire) hraut or sverðum þeirra, Flóv. 29; e. þótti af hrjóta er vápnin kómu saman, Sturl. iii. 187, vide Fms. i. 292, vi. 153, vii. 338 (MS. ell), viii. 74, 202, x. 29. Nj. 74, Eluc. 19, 625. 178.β. the eruption of a volcano, Bs. i. 803, 804; jarð-eldr, ‘earth-fire,’ subterranean fire.COMPDS: eldsbruni, eldsdaunn, eldsgangr, eldsglór, eldsgneisti, eldsgólf, eldsgögn, eldshiti, eldskveykja, eldslitr, eldslíki, eldsljós, eldslogi, eldsmatr, eldsneyti, eldsstólpi, eldsuppkváma, eldsvélar, eldsvimr, eldsvirki.II. esp. in plur. a fire on the hearth; the proverbs, við eld skal öl drekka, by the fireside shalt thou drink ale, Hm. 82; allir eldar brenna út um síðir, all fires (beacons) burn out at last (of the death of an aged man): allit., eldr á arni (vide arinn). In the old halls in Scandinavia an oblong hearth was built in the middle of the hall, and the fires kindled were called langeldar, long fires, with an opening in the thatch called ljóri for a chimney; the benches in the hall were ranged on both sides of the langeldar, vide Edda 82 (the hall of king Adils); hence the phrase, bera öl um eld, to hand the ale round the fire, viz. to one’s cup fellow on the opposite bench, Fagrsk. ch. 219, Grett. ch. 10, new Ed. p. 23; elda-skálar vóru stórir á bæjuni, sátu menn við langelda á öptnum, þá voru borð sett fyrir menn fyrir (innan MS. Holm.), sváfu menn upp (út MS. Holm.) frá eldunum, Kristni S. ch. 2; þá vóru görvir eldar stórir eptir endilöngum skálanum, sem í þann tíma var títt, at drekka öl við eld, Bs. i. 42; cp. Orkn., eldar vóru á gólfinu, on the floor, ch. 18, where the fire seems to have been made in a pit (vide eldgróf) in the middle of the floor, cp. also kipti honum upp at pallinum, vide bakeldr: again, at the evening and morning meals people gathered round the ‘meal-fires’ (mál-eldar), hence the phrases, sitja við elda, to sit at the fire; vóru görfir máleldar hvert kveld í elda-skála sem siðr var til, sátu menn löngum við eldana áðr menn gengu til matar, Eb. ch. 52: máleldr, the ‘meal-fire’ or the small fire, is distinguished from langeldr, the great fire, 276; þat var í þann tíma er þeir Snorri sátu við málelda (yfir málborði, v. 1.), ch. 26; höfðu menn orðit vátir ok vóru görvir máleldar (langeldar, v. 1.), Nj. ch. 8; ok er skálabúinn var mettr sat hann við eld, Fs. 6; snýr at dyrum, er menn sátu við langelda ( in the evening), Korm. ch. 15; um kveldit er menn sátu við elda, Orkn. 448: the phrase, sitja milli elda, to sit between two fires, to be in a strait, vide Gm.COMPDS: eldahús, eldaskáli, eldaskára, eldsgörð.III. a beacon, bale-fire, Gs. 18.IV. in old poetry the fire of wounds or of Odin = weapons, the fire of the sea = gold; hauga-eldar, magical fire in old cairns; maur-ildi, a glow-worm; hrævar-eldr, a Will o’ the wisp, ignis fatuus.V. as a prefix to pr. names, Eld-grímr, Eld-járn, Eld-ríð, etc.: in names of places it denotes volcanic ground, Eld-borg, eld-fjall, eld-gjá, etc. -
10 Zeng Gonglian (Tseng Kung-Liang)
[br]fl. 11th century China[br]Chinese writer on chemical subjects.[br]In his treatise Wu Jing Zong Yao, compiled with an assistant c. 1040, he wrote down the first formula for gunpowder to be printed and published in any civilization, although the essentials of the mixture had been known in China for just over a century. The text describes several military applications of gunpowder, with an incendiary or, in one case, a toxic chemical rather than an explosive effect; the saltpetre content was too low for the latter, but it was steadily increased over the years.[br]Bibliographyc. 1040, Wu Jing Zong Yao.Further ReadingJ.Needham, Science and Civilisation in China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986, Vol. V. 7, pp. 117ff.LRDBiographical history of technology > Zeng Gonglian (Tseng Kung-Liang)
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11 превосходство в боеприпасах
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > превосходство в боеприпасах
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