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21 конец балки
Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > конец балки
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22 конец балки
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23 ножницы для резки фасонного проката
Русско-английский политехнический словарь > ножницы для резки фасонного проката
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24 ребристое перекрытие
Русско-английский политехнический словарь > ребристое перекрытие
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25 конец балки
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26 гнутые профили проката
Русско-английский словарь по строительству и новым строительным технологиям > гнутые профили проката
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27 конец балки
Русско-английский словарь по строительству и новым строительным технологиям > конец балки
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28 толстая доска
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29 балочное перекрытие
Russian-English dictionary of construction > балочное перекрытие
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30 балка
joist, beam, ( металлическая) girderбалка в своде алтаря, поддерживающая распятие (в средневековых церквах Запада) — rood, beam
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31 ножницы для резки фасонного проката
Русско-английский новый политехнический словарь > ножницы для резки фасонного проката
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32 толстая доска
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > толстая доска
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33 балка перекрытия
1) Engineering: binding joist, boarding joist, bridging joist, common joist, floor beam, floor bearer, floor joist, joist2) Construction: ceiling rafter, floor girder, tie beam, CAPPING BEAM, bottom chord, lower chord, top beam3) Makarov: joist (обычно второстепенная) -
34 балка перекрытия
floor beam, binding joist, boarding joist, bridging joist, common joist, floor joist, ( обычно второстепенная) joist* * *Русско-английский политехнический словарь > балка перекрытия
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35 лага
1) Engineering: boarding joist, bolster, bridging joist, common joist, ground joist, joist, ledger, ligger, sleeper2) Construction: floor batten, rail3) Makarov: floor beam -
36 лага
boarding joist, bridging joist, common joist, ground joist, joist, ledger, ligger, sleeper -
37 балка настила
1) Military: (моста) bridging joist2) Engineering: boarding joist, bridging joist, common joist3) Construction: floor girder -
38 деревянная балка перекрытия
1) Engineering: ribbon (по периметру помещения)2) Construction: bridging joist, common joist, timber joist, wooden joist3) Architecture: ribbon (идущая по периметру помещения)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > деревянная балка перекрытия
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39 перекладина
1) General subject: beam, cross-bar, crossbar, crossbeam, epistyle, girder, purlin, rail, rung, rung (стула), slat, spar, spoke, spoke (лестницы-стремянки), staff (стула), stave (приставной лестницы), trabecula, transom, traverse2) Naval: spoke (лестницы)3) Sports: H-bar, fixed bar, horizontal bar4) Engineering: bail, bar, bolster, brace, bridging joist, corbel piece, hammer brace, head treble, joist, rundle (лестницы), tie-beam, top beam (балка перекрытия)5) Chemistry: cross bar6) Construction: bridging joist (поперечная балка, напр. настила), capping, head tree, joist (поперечная балка, напр. настила), purline, rundle, summer, rider7) Railway term: cross bearer, cross girder8) Architecture: corbel carriage10) Forestry: bentwood spar, bridle, cross-piece, tie, trabecula (клетки древесины)11) Telecommunications: crosspiece12) Physics: couple13) Automation: bridge, cross beam, cross girth, cross head (портала), cross stay, tiepiece, top bridge14) Makarov: bar (гимнастическая), inner bar, summer-tree, trabecula (клетки, древесины), yoke -
40 обвязка проёма
Engineering: header joist (в перекрытии), trimmer (в перекрытии), trimmer joist (в перекрытии), trimming joist (в перекрытии)
См. также в других словарях:
Joist — (joist), n. [OE. giste, OF. giste, F. g[^i]te, fr. gesir to lie, F. g[ e]sir. See {Gist}.] (Arch.) A piece of timber laid horizontally, or nearly so, to which the planks of the floor, or the laths or furring strips of a ceiling, are nailed;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Joist — Joist, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Joisted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Joisting}.] To fit or furnish with joists. Johnson. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
joist — [joist] n. [ME giste < OFr, a bed, couch, beam < gesir, to lie < L jacere, to lie, throw: see JET1] any of the parallel planks or beams that hold up the planks of a floor or the laths of a ceiling: see FRAME vt. to provide with joists … English World dictionary
joist — [dʒɔıst] n [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: giste, from Latin jacere to lie ] one of the beams that support a floor or ceiling … Dictionary of contemporary English
joist — [ dʒɔıst ] noun count a long piece of wood or metal put below a floor or ceiling to support it … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
joist — (n.) early 14c. (late 13c. in Anglo Latin), from O.Fr. giste beam supporting a bridge (Mod.Fr. gîte), noun use of fem. pp. of gesir to lie, from L. iacere to lie, rest, related to iacere to throw (see JET (Cf. jet) (v.)). Notion is of wooden beam … Etymology dictionary
joist — ► NOUN ▪ a length of timber or steel supporting part of the structure of a building. DERIVATIVES joisted adjective. ORIGIN Old French giste beam supporting a bridge , from Latin jacere lie down … English terms dictionary
Joist — A roof made with a concrete slab with concrete joists A joist, in architecture and engineering, is one of the horizontal supporting members that run from wall to wall, wall to beam, or beam to beam to support a ceiling, roof, or floor. It may be… … Wikipedia
joist — 1. noun A piece of timber laid horizontally, or nearly so, to which the planks of the floor, or the laths or furring strips of a ceiling, are nailed; called, according to its position or use, binding joist, bridging joist, ceiling joist, trimming … Wiktionary
Joist — Recorded in England in a wide range of spellings including Jest, Jeste, Joce, Jose, Joist, Jost, Joust and Joost, this is a surname of Germanic, Dutch, Breton and Norman Franch origins. It is a cognate of the surname Joyce , itself deriving from… … Surnames reference
joist — [14] Etymologically, a joist is a wooden beam on which boards ‘lie’ down. The word’s ultimate ancestor is the Latin verb jacēre ‘lie down’ (from which English also gets adjacent). Its neuter past participle jacitum was taken into Old French as a… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins