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1 laid-up tonnage
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2 laid-up tonnage
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > laid-up tonnage
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3 laid-up tonnage
1) Экономика: суда, поставленные на прикол2) Деловая лексика: суда поставленные на прикол -
4 laid-up tonnage
Англо-русский словарь по экономике и финансам > laid-up tonnage
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5 tonnage
1) тоннаж, грузоподъёмность в тоннах2) тоннажный [корабельный] сбор3) суда -
6 length
1) длина; расстояние; протяжённость3) продолжительность, длительность4) прокатанная заготовка лесн. сортимент•length between perpendiculars — длина ( судна) между перпендикулярами;length over buffers — длина вагона по буферам;length over coupler pulling faces — длина вагона по осям сцепления автосцепок;length of bogie wheelbase — база тележкиlength of cut — 1. ширина среза 2. длина резания 3. мерная длина ( проката)length of easement curve — дорож. длина переходной кривойlength of heat — 1. продолжительность нагрева 2. продолжительность плавкиlength of lay — 1. шаг свивки (каната, кабеля) 2. шаг скрутки ( провода)length of life — время (длительность) жизниlength of prediction — метео срок действия прогнозаlength of reduced section — длина участка неравномерной деформации ( на образце)-
absorber collapsed length
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active fuel length
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actuation length
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aeroplane reference field length
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anchor chain length
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anchorage length
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antenna effective length
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apparent arc length
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approach block length
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arc length
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arm length
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attenuation length
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available runway length
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axial length
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backwater length
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barrel length
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base length
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basic runway length
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beam focal length
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bearing length
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block length
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body length
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boiling length
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bolt length
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bond length
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boom length
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braking length
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breaking length or paper
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burst length
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cable's length
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calming length
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campaign length
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carrier drift length
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chord airfoil length
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code length
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coil length
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collapsing length
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constraint length
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contact length
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correlation length
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coupled length
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coupling length
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crack length
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crest length
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critical buckling length
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cushion length
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cut length
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Debye length
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developed length
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diffusion length
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downstream length
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drift length
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effective focal length
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effective length
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electrical engagement length
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electrical length
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embedment length
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entire tree length
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entrance length
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equivalent length of conductor
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face length
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factory length
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field length
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fin length
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final gage length
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fixed design flame length
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flange focal length
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floodable length
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focal length
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foil-base length
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forecast length
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fracture path length
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free length
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gage length
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gap length
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gate length
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grid length
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grip length
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haul length
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inklength
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inside length
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installed length
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instruction length
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interaction length
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journey length
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knit garment length
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laid length
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lap length
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leg length
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load-line length
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log length
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loop length
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memory length
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merchantable length
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mesh length
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mixing length
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moderation length
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molded length
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nonboiling length
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normal arc length
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optical path length
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overall length
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overhanging length
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panel length
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part-program length
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path length
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ping length
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pipe length
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plasma length
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plate run length
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plateau length
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propagation length
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pulling length
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pull length
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pulse length
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radiation length
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rail length
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raise length
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record length
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register length
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registered length
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repeat length
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roll length
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run length
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runner length
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runway visual length
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scattering length
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screening length
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semifinished section length
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shielding length
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slowing-down length
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span length
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spray length
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spring length
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standardization length
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standard length
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stitch length
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stope length
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storage length
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strained length
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string length
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stroke length
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sweep length
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switch rail length
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test length
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tonnage length
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total heated length
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track circuit length
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transitional length
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transmission length
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transmission route length
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tree length
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unit length
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unsupported length
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upstream length
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waterline length
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wave length
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word length -
7 Siemens, Sir Charles William
[br]b. 4 April 1823 Lenthe, Germanyd. 19 November 1883 London, England[br]German/British metallurgist and inventory pioneer of the regenerative principle and open-hearth steelmaking.[br]Born Carl Wilhelm, he attended craft schools in Lübeck and Magdeburg, followed by an intensive course in natural science at Göttingen as a pupil of Weber. At the age of 19 Siemens travelled to England and sold an electroplating process developed by his brother Werner Siemens to Richard Elkington, who was already established in the plating business. From 1843 to 1844 he obtained practical experience in the Magdeburg works of Count Stolburg. He settled in England in 1844 and later assumed British nationality, but maintained close contact with his brother Werner, who in 1847 had co-founded the firm Siemens \& Halske in Berlin to manufacture telegraphic equipment. William began to develop his regenerative principle of waste-heat recovery and in 1856 his brother Frederick (1826–1904) took out a British patent for heat regeneration, by which hot waste gases were passed through a honeycomb of fire-bricks. When they became hot, the gases were switched to a second mass of fire-bricks and incoming air and fuel gas were led through the hot bricks. By alternating the two gas flows, high temperatures could be reached and considerable fuel economies achieved. By 1861 the two brothers had incorporated producer gas fuel, made by gasifying low-grade coal.Heat regeneration was first applied in ironmaking by Cowper in 1857 for heating the air blast in blast furnaces. The first regenerative furnace was set up in Birmingham in 1860 for glassmaking. The first such furnace for making steel was developed in France by Pierre Martin and his father, Emile, in 1863. Siemens found British steelmakers reluctant to adopt the principle so in 1866 he rented a small works in Birmingham to develop his open-hearth steelmaking furnace, which he patented the following year. The process gradually made headway; as well as achieving high temperatures and saving fuel, it was slower than Bessemer's process, permitting greater control over the content of the steel. By 1900 the tonnage of open-hearth steel exceeded that produced by the Bessemer process.In 1872 Siemens played a major part in founding the Society of Telegraph Engineers (from which the Institution of Electrical Engineers evolved), serving as its first President. He became President for the second time in 1878. He built a cable works at Charlton, London, where the cable could be loaded directly into the holds of ships moored on the Thames. In 1873, together with William Froude, a British shipbuilder, he designed the Faraday, the first specialized vessel for Atlantic cable laying. The successful laying of a cable from Europe to the United States was completed in 1875, and a further five transatlantic cables were laid by the Faraday over the following decade.The Siemens factory in Charlton also supplied equipment for some of the earliest electric-lighting installations in London, including the British Museum in 1879 and the Savoy Theatre in 1882, the first theatre in Britain to be fully illuminated by electricity. The pioneer electric-tramway system of 1883 at Portrush, Northern Ireland, was an opportunity for the Siemens company to demonstrate its equipment.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1883. FRS 1862. Institution of Civil Engineers Telford Medal 1853. President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1872. President, Society of Telegraph Engineers 1872 and 1878. President, British Association 1882.Bibliography27 May 1879, British patent no. 2,110 (electricarc furnace).1889, The Scientific Works of C.William Siemens, ed. E.F.Bamber, 3 vols, London.Further ReadingW.Poles, 1888, Life of Sir William Siemens, London; repub. 1986 (compiled from material supplied by the family).S.von Weiher, 1972–3, "The Siemens brothers. Pioneers of the electrical age in Europe", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 45:1–11 (a short, authoritative biography). S.von Weihr and H.Goetler, 1983, The Siemens Company. Its Historical Role in theProgress of Electrical Engineering 1847–1980, English edn, Berlin (a scholarly account with emphasis on technology).GWBiographical history of technology > Siemens, Sir Charles William
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