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1 торговый прокат
Русско-английский новый политехнический словарь > торговый прокат
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2 фасонный прокат
Русско-английский новый политехнический словарь > фасонный прокат
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3 торговый сортовой прокат
Metallurgy: merchant bar, merchant shapeУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > торговый сортовой прокат
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4 संस्था
saṉ-sthāĀ. - tishṭhate
( Pāṇ. 1-3, 22 ep. andᅠ m. c. alsoᅠ P. - tishṭhati;
Ved. inf. - sthātos ĀpṠr.), to stand together, hold together (pf. p. du. - tasthāné, said of heaven andᅠ earth) RV. ;
to come orᅠ stay near (loc.) ib. VS. ṠBr. ;
to meet (as enemies), come into conflict RV. ;
to stand still, remain, stay, abide (lit. andᅠ fig.;
with vākye, to obey) MBh. R. etc.;
to be accomplished orᅠ completed (esp. applied to rites) Br. ṠrS. Mn. MBh. BhP. ;
to prosper, succeed, get on well MBh. ;
to come to an end, perish, be lost, die MBh. Kāv. BhP. ;
to become, be turned into orᅠ assume the form of (acc.) Lalit.:
Caus. - sthāpayati (subj. aor. tishṭipaḥ ṠBr.), to cause to stand up orᅠ firm, raise on their legs again (fallen horses) MBh. ;
to raise up, restore (dethroned kings) ib. ;
to confirm, encourage, comfort ( ātmānam, orᅠ hṛidayam, one's self, i.e. « take heart again») Kāv. Pañcat. ;
to fix orᅠ place upon orᅠ in (loc.) Kauṡ. MBh. etc.;
to put orᅠ add to ( uparī) Yājñ. ;
to build (a town) Hariv. ;
to heap, store up (goods) VarBṛS. ;
to found, establish, fix, settle, introduce, set a foot MBh. R. Rājat. ;
to cause to stand still, stop, restrain, suppress (breath, semen etc.) AitBr. ;
to accomplish, conclude, complete (esp. a rite) Br. Kauṡ. MBh. ;
to put to death, kill ṠBr. MBh. ;
to perform the last office for i.e. to burn, cremate (a dead body) ṠāṇkhBr. ;
to put to subjection, subject MW.:
Desid. of Caus. - sthāpayishati, to wish to finish orᅠ conclude ṠāṇkhBr. ;
saṉ-sthā́f. (ifc. f. ā) staying orᅠ abiding with (comp.) MBh. ;
shape, form, manifestation, appearance (ifc. « appearing as») Up. MBh. etc.;
established order, standard, rule, direction (acc. with kṛi orᅠ Caus. of sthā, to establish orᅠ fix a rule orᅠ obligation for one's self;
with vyati-kram orᅠ paribhid, « to transgress orᅠ break an established rule orᅠ obligation») MBh. R. etc.;
quality, property, nature Kāv. Pur. ;
conclusion, termination, completion TS. ṠBr. etc.;
end, death Pur. ;
destruction of the world (= pralaya, said to be of four kinds, viz. naimittika, prākṛitika, nitya, ātyantika) ib. ;
a complete liturgical course, the basis orᅠ essential form of a sacrifice (the Jyotiḥ-shṭoma, Havir-yajña, andᅠ Pāka-yaiña consist of seven such forms) ṠrS. ;
killing ( paṡu-s-, « killing of the sacrificial animal») BhP. ;
cremation (of a body;
alsoᅠ prêta-s-) ib. ;
(prob.) = ṡrāddha MārkP. ;
a spy orᅠ secret emissary in a king's own country
(= cara m. prob. a group of five spies consisting of a
vaṇij, « merchant»,
bhikshu, « mendicant»,
chāttra, « pupil»,
lingin, « one who falsely wears the mark of a twice-born»,
andᅠ kṛishīvala, « husbandman»
cf. pañca-varga, andᅠ Mn. VII, 154 Kull.) Kām. ;
continuation in the right way L. ;
occupation, business, profession W. ;
an assembly ib. ;
a royal ordinance ib. ;
- kṛita mfn. settled, determined Hariv. ;
- gāra (-thâ̱g-) m. n. a meeting-house Lalit. ;
- japa m. a closing prayer ĀṡvṠr. ;
- tva n. the being a form orᅠ shape BhP. ;
- paddhati f. N. of wk.;
- vayava-vat (-thâ̱v-) mfn. having a shape andᅠ limbs BhP.
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5 стан для простых профилей
Русско-английский новый политехнический словарь > стан для простых профилей
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6 стан прокатки периодических профилей
Русско-английский новый политехнический словарь > стан прокатки периодических профилей
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7 профильная сталь
1) Naval: figured iron, section steel2) Engineering: sectional steel3) Construction: profiled iron, section iron, shape steel, steel shapes4) Metallurgy: merchant steel5) Mechanic engineering: rolled steel6) Automation: fashioned iron, fashioned steel7) Makarov: figured steel -
8 сортовой стан
1) Engineering: mill for rolling section, mill for rolling sections, section mill, shape mill2) Railway term: bar mill, merchant mill4) Makarov: section rolling mill -
9 SKIP
* * *n. ship (of any kind).* * *n. [Ulf. skip = πλοιον; a word common to all Teut. languages, ancient and modern]:—a ship; it is the generic name, including ships of every size and shape; lang-skip, a long ship, a war ship (including dreki, skeið, snekkja); kaup-skip, a merchant ship (including knörr, buzza, kuggr); even of ferry-boats on lakes, rivers, channels, hafa skip á á ( river), Grág. ii. 267; haf-skip, a sea-going ship; segl-skip, róðrar-skip, N. G. L. i. 335, Ld. 300, Hkr. i. 152, Fms. i. 38; ríða til skips, Nj. 4, and in countless instances: of a ship-formed candlestick, járn stika með skipi, Dipl. v. 18. For the heathen rite of burying a man in a ship, see Landn. 81, Ld. 16, Gísl., cp. also Yngl. S. ch. 27; Skjöld. S., of king Ring in Arngrim’s Suppliments (MSS.)II. COMPDS:1. with gen. plur.: skipa-afli, a, m. a naval force, Sturl. iii. 65, Fms. vii. 248. skipa-búnaðr (-búningr, Fms. x. 119), m. the fitting out of ships, making ready for sea, Fms. viii. 380, ix. 215. skipa-farir, f. pl. = skipa-ferð, Orkn. 428, Fms. iv. 50, Þiðr. 249. skipa-fé, n. a ship-tax, Rétt. 1. 5, H. E. i. 414, Jb. 459. skipa-ferð, f. = skip-ferð, Gullþ. 67, Fms. vi. 321. skipa-fjöldi, a, m. a multitude of ships, Magn. 450. skipa-floti, a, m. a fleet of ships, Fs. 16, Nj. 8. skipa-gangr, m. = skipaferð, Fms. vi. 238, 321, Bs. ii. 131. skipa-görð, f. ship-building, Fms. ii. 107, viii. 105, Rétt. 42. skipa-herr, m. a naval force. Eg. 13, 31, Fms. iii. 74. skipa-kaup, n. the trading with a ship in harbour, Grág. ii. 406. skipa-kostr, m. = skipaafli, Eg. 117, 527, Fms. i. 20, Orkn. 380. skipa-lauss, adj. without ships, Fms. xi. 180. skipa-leið, f. the ‘ship-road,’ way by sea, Fms. x. 92. skipa-leiðangr, m. a levy in ships, Rétt. 81. skipa-leiði, n. = skipaleið. Fms. x. 85. skipa-leiga, u, f. the hire of a ship, H. E. i. 394. skipa-lið, n. a naval force, Eg. 7, Fms. i. 147, vi. 225. skipa-lýðr, m. shipmen, seamen, Fb. i. 122. skipa-lægi, n. a berth, Landn. 54, Fms. vii. 122. skipa-maðr, m. a shipman. mariner, pl. a crew, Grág. i. 451, Nj. 133, Rd. 227, Fms. x. 244. skipa-meðferð, f. shipping business, Grág. ii. 394. skipa-orrosta, u, f. a sea-fight, Sks. 395. skipa-reiði, a, m. a ship’s rigging, Skálda 194. skipa-saumr, m. [Dan. skibs-stöm], ship-nails, Fms. ix. 377. skipa-smiðr, m. a ship-wright, Eg. 135. skipa-smíð, f. sbip-building, Stj. 570. skipa-stóll, m. a supply of ships, fleet, Fms. vii. 292, viii. 163, 177, x. 414, Stj. 346. skipa-tollr, m. a ship-tax, Rétt. 42. skipa-uppsát, n. the right of laying a ship ashore, Grág. ii. 401. skipa-viða, u, f. ship-timber, Fr. skipa-vöxtr, m. the size of ships, Fms. ii. 299.2. with gen. sing.; skips-bátr, m. a ship’s boat, Fbr. 103. skips-borð, n. a ship’s board, gunwale, Vkv. 31, Skálda 192, Fms. xi. 140. skips-brot, n. = skipbrot, Grág. ii. 389, Gþl. 482, Fms. ii. 80, Edda 131. skips-bryggja, u, f. a ship’s bridge, gangway. skips-dráttr, m. ship-launching, Grág. ii. 401, Gþl. 371, Fms. ix. 402, Fs. 157. skips-dróttinn, m. a ship’s master, skipper, 655 x. 2. skips-flak, n. a wreck, Fms. ii. 246, Hkr. i. 303. skips-görð, f. = skipgörð, N. G. L. skips-háski, a, m. danger at sea, Jb. 402. skips-höfn, f. a ship’s crew, Fms. ii. 246, vii. 298, Landn. 56, Ld. 118, passim: a harbour, berth; kirkja á s. í Herdísar-vík, Vm. 14. skips-lengd, f. a ship’s length, Grág. i. 209, ii. 399. skips-prestr, m. a ship’s priest, Sturl. i. 117. skips-reiði, a, m. a ship’s tackling, Greg. 76. skips-sátr and skips-uppsát, n. a berth, Gþl. 98, 113. skips-verð, n. a ship’s worth, N. G. L. i. 198.B. PROP.COMPDS: skipbatr, skipborð, skipbót, skipbrot, skipbrotsmaðr, skipbuza, skipbúinn, skipbúnaðr, skipdráttr, skipdróttinn, skiperfð, skipfarmr, skipferð, skipfjöl, skipflak, skipfærr, skipför, skipgengr, skipgörð, skipherra, skiphlutr, skiphræ, skiphræddr, skipkaup, skipkostr, skipkváma, skipkænn, skiplauss, skipleggja, skipleiga, skiplesting, skipleysi, skipmaðr, skiprestr, skippund, skippundari, skipreiða, skipreiði, skipreiðumenn, skipreiðuþing, skipreiki, skiprúm, skipsala, skipsaumr, skipsátr, skipskeggja, skipskrokkr, skipsleði, skipsmiðr, skipsmíð, skipsókn, skipstafn, skipstjóri, skipstjórn, skipstjórnarmaðr, skipsveinn, skipsýsla, skipsögn, skiptaka, skiptapi, skiptjón, skiptollr, skiptöturr, skipuppsátr, skipverð, skipveri, skipverjar, skipviðr, skipvist. -
10 стан
( трикотажного изделия) body panel* * *стан м.:волочи́льный стан — drawbenchстан горя́чей прока́тки — hot(-rolling) millстан для стыково́й сва́рки труб — butt-weld pipe millпрока́тный стан — (rolling) millпрока́тный, ба́лочный стан — beam millпрока́тный, банда́жный стан — tyre millпрока́тный, двухвалко́вый стан — duo [two-high] (rolling) millпрока́тный, двухклетево́й стан — two-stand millпрока́тный, двухни́точный стан — double-strand millпрока́тный стан для прока́тки листо́в паке́том — pack millпрока́тный стан для сортовы́х фасо́нных про́филей — shape millпрока́тный, дрессиро́вочный стан — skin(-rolling) millпрока́тный ду́о-стан — duo [two-high] millпрока́тный, загото́вочный стан — billet millпрока́тный, калибро́вочный стан — sizing millпрока́тный, крупносо́ртный стан — heavy merchant millпрока́тный, мелкосо́ртный стан — small-section millпрока́тный, многоклетево́й стан — multistand millпрока́тный, многони́точный стан — multistrand millпрока́тный, непреры́вный стан — continuous (rolling) millпрока́тный, нереверси́вный стан — non-reversing millпрока́тный, обжимно́й стан — blooming [cogging] millпрока́тный, отде́лочный стан — finisher, finishing millпрока́тный, петлево́й стан — looping millпрока́тный, пилигри́мовый стан — Pilger (rolling) millпрока́тный, полосово́й стан — strip millпрока́тный, прутко́вый стан — (wire-)rod millпрока́тный, редукцио́нный стан — sinking millпрока́тный, рельсоба́лочный стан — rail-and-structural steel millпрока́тный, ре́льсовый стан — rail(-rolling) millпрока́тный, сортово́й стан — section millпрока́тный стан с прово́дками — guide (rolling) millпрока́тный, суту́ночно-заготови́тельный стан — sheet-bar and billet millпрока́тный, суту́ночный стан — sheet-bar millпрока́тный, толстолистово́й стан — plate millпрока́тный, тонколистово́й стан — sheet millпрока́тный, универса́льный стан — universal millпрока́тный, чистово́й стан — finishing millпрока́тный, штри́псовый стан — skelp millпрофилиро́вочный стан — shaping millрешё́тный стан с.-х. — sieve [shoe] boot, riddle caseтру́бный стан — tubular millтру́бный стан автома́т — plug(-type) millтру́бный стан для бесшо́вных труб — seamless-tube millтру́бный стан косо́й прока́тки — skew-roll piercing millтру́бный, раскатно́й стан — reeling millтрубопрока́тный стан — tube [pipe] millтрубопрока́тный, калибро́вочный стан — sizing rolling mill, sizerтрубопрока́тный, обкатно́й стан — reeling millтрубопрока́тный, прошивно́й стан — piercing rolling millтрубопрока́тный, редукцио́нный стан — tube-reducing rolling millтрубосва́рочный стан — tube-welding millтрубоформо́вочный стан — tube-forming millшаропрока́тный стан — ball-rolling mill -
11 до нитки
разг.1) (абсолютно всё, до последней вещи (забрать, отдать, проиграть и т. п.)) absolutely all of smb.'s belongings; down to the last scrap- Всё штобы было отдано, - заканчивал Чапаев, когда волненье улеглось, - до последней нитки отдать, што взято. (Д. Фурманов, Чапаев) — 'See to it that everything is turned over,' Chapayev finished, when the excitement had calmed down a little. 'Turn over everything you've taken down to the last scrap.'
- В Вешках один купец, когда первое отступление было, всё на подводы сложил, всё имущество забрал до нитки, и вот уж красные близко подходют, а он всё не выезжает со двора. (М. Шолохов, Тихий Дон) — 'In Vyeshenskaya there was a merchant who piled everything he had on wagons when the first retreat took place. He carried off all his property down to the last reel of thread. And the Reds got quite close, but there he was, still not ready to drive out of his yard.'
2) тж. до ниточки (подробно, основательно, до мелочей (знать, рассказать, разобраться и т. п.)) fully, thoroughly, in the minutest details; inside out- Почему же это? - поинтересовался Давыдов. - Зараз расскажу всё до нитки. (М. Шолохов, Поднятая целина) — 'How so?' Davidov asked. 'Well, I'll tell you all about it.'
- Мне шестьдесят третий год, я в деревне сорок лет живу и каждого человека знаю до ниточки. (В. Липатов, Деревенский детектив) — 'I'm sixty-two, I've lived in this village these past forty years, and I know everyone inside out.'
3) тж. до последней нитки, до ниточки (насквозь, совсем (промокнуть, вымокнуть и т. п.)) be (get) drenched (soaked, wet) to the skin (to the bone, to the marrow, to the marrow of one's bone, to the last thread, through); have not a dry thread on oneself; be soaking wetБоязливо озираясь, мальчик нетерпеливо подпрыгивал. Промокший до последней нитки, он зябко ёжился от холода и испуга. (Н. Островский, Рождённые бурей) — Looking around in apprehension, the boy pranced about impatiently. Drenched to the last thread, chilled through and through, he shivered with cold and terror.
Он от плаванья от дальнего / Весь до ниточки промок - / Самый первый из корабликов, / Папиросный коробок. (С. Михалков, Кораблики) — But the foremost of the sailboats, / Once a box of cigarettes, / Is no longer looking ship-shape, / Slippery and soaking wet.
Зайку бросила хозяйка, - / Под дождём остался зайка. / Со скамейки слезть не мог, / Весь до ниточки промок. (А. Барто, Игрушки) — Poor little hare, forgotten again / On a garden chair, in the pouring rain - / He didn't dare jump down and run in, / So now the poor hare is soaked to the skin.
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12 τορνόομαι
A mark off with the τόρνος, make round, τορνώσαντο σῆμα they rounded off the barrow, Il.23.255; ὅσσον τίς τ' ἔδαφος νηὸς τορνώσεται large as the bottom of a ship which a man shall round off, with allusion to the round shape of a merchant vessel (cf. γαῦλος), opp. to a ship of war, Od.5.249, cf. D.P.1170, Tryph.64.—[voice] Act. τορνῶσαι· περιγράψαι, κυκλῶσαι, Hsch., who also has [voice] Pass. τορνοῦμαι δὲ πρὸς μέτρον· ἀντὶ τοῦ περιγράφομαι (perh. a Trag. fragment).Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > τορνόομαι
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13 McAdam, John Loudon
[br]b. 21 September 1756 Ayr, Ayrshire, Scotlandd. 26 November 1836 Moffat, Dumfriesshire, Scotland[br]Scottish road builder, inventor of the macadam road surface.[br]McAdam was the son of one of the founder of the first bank in Ayr. As an infant, he nearly died in a fire which destroyed the family's house of Laywyne, in Carsphairn parish; the family then moved to Blairquhan, near Straiton. Thence he went to the parish school in Maybole, where he is said to have made a model section of a local road. In 1770, when his father died, he was sent to America where he was brought up by an uncle who was a merchant in New York. He stayed in America until the close of the revolution, becoming an agent for the sale of prizes and managing to amass a considerable fortune. He returned to Scotland where he settled at Sauchrie in Ayrshire. There he was a magistrate, Deputy-Lieutenant of the county and a road trustee, spending thirteen years there. In 1798 he moved to Falmouth in Devon, England, on his appointment as agent for revictualling of the Royal Navy in western ports.He continued the series of experiments started in Ayrshire on the construction of roads. From these he concluded that a road should be built on a raised foundation with drains formed on either side, and should be composed of a number of layers of hard stone broken into angular fragments of roughly cubical shape; the bottom layer would be larger rocks, with layers of progressively smaller rocks above, all bound together with fine gravel. This would become compacted and almost impermeable to water by the action of the traffic passing over it. In 1815 he was appointed Surveyor-General of Bristol's roads and put his theories to the test.In 1823 a Committee of the House of Commons was appointed to consider the use of "macadamized" roads in larger towns; McAdam gave evidence to this committee, and it voted to give him £10,000 for his past work. In 1827 he was appointed Surveyor-General of Roads and moved to Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire. From there he made yearly visits to Scotland and it was while returning from one of these that he died, at Moffat in the Scottish Borders. He had married twice, both times to American women; his first wife was the mother of all seven of his children.McAdam's method of road construction was much cheaper than that of Thomas Telford, and did much to ease travel and communications; it was therefore adopted by the majority of Turnpike Trusts in Britain, and the macadamization process quickly spread to other countries.[br]Bibliography1819. A Practical Essay on the Scientific Repair and Preservation of Roads.1820. Present State of Road-Making.Further ReadingR.Devereux, 1936, John Loudon McAdam: A Chapter from the History of Highways, London: Oxford University Press.IMcN -
14 профиль сталь
1. merchant steel2. steel shapeРусско-английский новый политехнический словарь > профиль сталь
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