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1 авиамоделизм
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2 авиамоделизм
Авиация и космонавтика. Русско-английский словарь > авиамоделизм
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3 авиамоделизм
Engineering: model aeroplane flying -
4 avión
m.airplane, plane, aircraft, airliner.* * *1 (ave) martin\avión común house martinavión zapador sand martin————————1 aeroplane (US airplane), plane, aircraft\ir/viajar en avión to fly, go by planeavión a reacción jet (plane)* * *noun m.- avión de combate* * *SM1) (Aer) aeroplane, plane, aircraft, airplane (EEUU)por avión — (Correos) by airmail
ir en avión — to go by plane, go by air
avión de carga — freight plane, cargo plane
avión de caza — fighter, pursuit plane
avión de combate — fighter, pursuit plane
2) (Orn) martin3)hacer el avión a algn — * (=hacer daño) to do sb down, cause sb harm; esp And (=estafar) to cheat sb
4) CAm (=juego) hopscotch* * *1) (Aviac) plane, aircraft (frml), airplane (AmE), aeroplane (BrE)por avión — (Corresp) air mail
2) (Méx) (Jueg) hopscotch•* * *= aeroplane, airplane, aircraft, plane.Ex. In this way we could change aeroplanes to AIRPLANES, and at the same time change every subdivision of aeroplanes.Ex. In this way we could change AEROPLANES to airplanes, and at the same time change every subdivision of AEROPLANES.Ex. An example is a picture of an aircraft moving from right to left across a cloudless sky.Ex. Unmindful of the epic moves that made it what it is today, Elwood Bibeau fastened his seat belt as his plane approached the Wexler airport.----* accidente de avión = plane crash, air crash.* avión a chorro = jet.* avión a reacción = jet, jet aircraft.* avión de caza = military jet, fighter plane, fighter jet.* avión de combate = fighter plane, fighter jet.* avión de pasajeros = airliner.* avión de propulsión a chorro = prop jet.* avión reactor = jet aircraft.* avión siniestrado = wreck.* billete de avión = air ticket, airline ticket.* billete de avión de ida y vuelta = round-trip airfare.* coger el avión = jet off.* envío por avión = air freight [airfreight], air cargo.* gastos de avión = airfare [air fare].* pasajero de avión = airline passenger.* piloto de avión de caza = fighter pilot.* piloto de avión de combate = fighter pilot.* precio del billete de avión = airfare [air fare], airline fare.* reserva de billetes de avión = airline reservation.* tripulación del avión = aircrew.* viaje en avión = air travel, air transportation.* * *1) (Aviac) plane, aircraft (frml), airplane (AmE), aeroplane (BrE)por avión — (Corresp) air mail
2) (Méx) (Jueg) hopscotch•* * *= aeroplane, airplane, aircraft, plane.Ex: In this way we could change aeroplanes to AIRPLANES, and at the same time change every subdivision of aeroplanes.
Ex: In this way we could change AEROPLANES to airplanes, and at the same time change every subdivision of AEROPLANES.Ex: An example is a picture of an aircraft moving from right to left across a cloudless sky.Ex: Unmindful of the epic moves that made it what it is today, Elwood Bibeau fastened his seat belt as his plane approached the Wexler airport.* accidente de avión = plane crash, air crash.* avión a chorro = jet.* avión a reacción = jet, jet aircraft.* avión de caza = military jet, fighter plane, fighter jet.* avión de combate = fighter plane, fighter jet.* avión de pasajeros = airliner.* avión de propulsión a chorro = prop jet.* avión reactor = jet aircraft.* avión siniestrado = wreck.* billete de avión = air ticket, airline ticket.* billete de avión de ida y vuelta = round-trip airfare.* coger el avión = jet off.* envío por avión = air freight [airfreight], air cargo.* gastos de avión = airfare [air fare].* pasajero de avión = airline passenger.* piloto de avión de caza = fighter pilot.* piloto de avión de combate = fighter pilot.* precio del billete de avión = airfare [air fare], airline fare.* reserva de billetes de avión = airline reservation.* tripulación del avión = aircrew.* viaje en avión = air travel, air transportation.* * *no le gusta viajar en avión he doesn't like flying[ S ] por avión ( Corresp) air mailCompuestos:● avión a chorro or a reacciónjet plane, jetwater-bomber, tanker(para apagar incendios) water-bomber, tanker; (avión nodriza) tanker aircraftsupply planeattack aircraft● avión de ataque a tierra or al sueloground-attack aircraftfreight plane, cargo planefighter planevertical take-off aircraftwar planepropeller-driven aircraftpassenger planereconnaissance aircrafttransport planespy planemilitary planetanker aircraftunmanned aircraftspotter plane, spotter aircrafttowplane* * *
avión sustantivo masculino (Aviac) plane, aircraft (frml), airplane (AmE), aeroplane (BrE);
( on signs) por avión (Corresp) air mail;
avión a chorro or a reacción jet (plane);◊ avión de combate/de pasajeros fighter/passenger plane
avión 1 sustantivo masculino aeroplane, US airplane, plane, aircraft
enviar una carta por avión, to send a letter by airmail
ir en avión, to fly, go by plane
avión 2 m Orn martin
' avión' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amaraje
- carga
- cargamento
- cola
- derribar
- despegue
- en
- entrar
- envergadura
- escala
- escalerilla
- estela
- flete
- intranquilizar
- intranquilizarse
- mareo
- morro
- nodriza
- picada
- picado
- pilotar
- piloto
- planear
- plaza
- por
- radio
- reactor
- remontar
- remontarse
- repostar
- salir
- salida
- sobrecargo
- subir
- subirse
- tierra
- timón
- tocar
- transportar
- travesía
- velocidad
- volar
- vuelo
- abatir
- abordar
- aeronave
- ala
- anfibio
- aparato
- armazón
English:
aeroplane
- air
- airborne
- aircraft
- airmail
- airplane
- airsick
- board
- bundle
- cabin
- cargo
- catch
- clear
- climb
- connection
- conspiracy
- crash
- detection
- disembark
- dive
- do
- down
- fall away
- fighter
- flight
- fly
- flying
- frequent
- galley
- go
- hijack
- hop
- ice over
- ice up
- in
- jet
- leave
- level off
- level out
- man
- miss
- model
- open
- opposed
- outweigh
- overshoot
- plane
- preferable
- shoot down
- soar
* * *avión nm1. [aeronave] plane, Br aeroplane, US airplane;en avión by plane;por avión [en sobre] airmailavión de carga cargo plane;avión de caza fighter plane;avión cisterna tanker (plane);avión comercial commercial aircraft;avión de despegue vertical jump jet;avión espía spy plane;avión de espionaje spy plane;avión invisible stealth plane;avión militar military aircraft;avión nodriza refuelling plane;avión de papel paper aeroplane;avión de pasajeros passenger aircraft;avión a reacción jet;avión de reconocimiento reconnaissance o spotter plane;avión de transporte transport plane2. [pájaro] house martinavión purpúreo purple martin;avión zapador sand martin* * *m airplane, plane;ir en avión fly* * ** * *avión n plane / aeroplanefuimos en avión we went by plane / we flew -
5 Wright, Wilbur
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 16 April 1867 Millville, Indiana, USAd. 30 May 1912 Dayton, Ohio, USA[br]American co-inventor, with his brother Orville Wright (b. 19 August 1871 Dayton, Ohio, USA; d. 30 January 1948 Dayton, Ohio, USA), of the first powered aeroplane capable of sustained, controlled flight.[br]Wilbur and Orville designed and built bicycles in Dayton, Ohio. In the 1890s they developed an interest in flying which led them to study the experiments of gliding pioneers such as Otto Lilienthal in Germany, and their fellow American Octave Chanute. The Wrights were very methodical and tackled the many problems stage by stage. First, they developed a method of controlling a glider using movable control surfaces, instead of weight-shifting as used in the early hand-gliders. They built a wind tunnel to test their wing sections and by 1902 they had produced a controllable glider. Next they needed a petrol engine, and when they could not find one to suit their needs they designed and built one themselves.On 17 December 1903 their Flyer was ready and Orville made the first short flight of 12 seconds; Wilbur followed with a 59-second flight covering 853 ft (260 m). An improved design, Flyer II, followed in 1904 and made about eighty flights, including circuits and simple ma-noeuvres. In 1905 Flyer III made several long flights, including one of 38 minutes covering 24½ miles (39 km). Most of the Wrights' flying was carried out in secret to protect their patents, so their achievements received little publicity. For a period of two and a half years they did not fly, but they worked to improve their Flyer and to negotiate terms for the sale of their invention to various governments and commercial syndi-cates.In 1908 the Wright Model A appeared, and when Wilbur demonstrated it in France he astounded the European aviators by making several flights lasting more than one hour and one of 2 hours 20 minutes. Considerable numbers of the Model A were built, but the European designers rapidly caught up and overtook the Wrights. The Wright brothers became involved in several legal battles to protect their patents: one of these, with Glenn Curtiss, went on for many years. Wilbur died of typhoid fever in 1912. Orville sold his interest in the Wright Company in 1915, but retained an interest in aeronautical research and lived on to see an aeroplane fly faster than the speed of sound.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsRoyal Aeronautical Society (London) Gold Medal (awarded to both Wilbur and Orville) May 1909. Medals from the Aero Club of America, Congress, Ohio State and the City of Dayton.Bibliography1951, Miracle at Kitty Hawk. The Letters of Wilbur \& Orville Wright, ed. F.C.Kelly, New York.1953, The Papers of Wilbur and Orville Wright, ed. Marvin W.McFarland, 2 vols, New York.Orville Wright, 1953, How We Invented the Aeroplane, ed. F.C.Kelly, New York.Further ReadingA.G.Renstrom, 1968, Wilbur \& Orville Wright. A Bibliography, Washington, DC (with 2,055 entries).C.H.Gibbs-Smith, 1963, The Wright Brothers, London (reprint) (a concise account).J.L.Pritchard, 1953, The Wright Brothers', Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society (December) (includes much documentary material).F.C.Kelly, 1943, The Wright Brothers, New York (reprint) (authorized by Orville Wright).H.B.Combs with M.Caidin, 1980, Kill Devil Hill, London (contains more technical information).T.D.Crouch, 1989, The Bishop's Boys: A Life of Wilbur \& Orville Wright, New York (perhaps the best of various subsequent biographies).JDS -
6 Langley, Samuel Pierpont
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 22 August 1834 Roxbury, Massachusetts, USAd. 27 February 1906 Aiken, South Carolina, USA[br]American scientist who built an unsuccessful aeroplane in 1903, just before the success of the Wright brothers.[br]Professor Langley was a distinguished mathematician and astronomer who became Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution (US National Museum) in 1887. He was also interested in aviation and embarked on a programme of experiments with a whirling arm to test wings and with a series of free-flying models. In 1896 one of his steam-powered models made a flight of 4,199 ft (1,280 m): this led to a grant from the Government to subsidize the construction of a manned aeroplane. Langley commissioned Stephen M. Balzer, an automobile engine designer, to build a lightweight aero-engine and appointed his assistant, Charles M.Manly, to oversee the project. After many variations, including rotary and radical designs, two versions of the Balzer-Manly engine were produced, one quarter size and one full size. In August 1903 the small engine powered a model which thus became the first petrol-engined aeroplane to fly. Langley designed his full-size aeroplane (which he called an Aerodrome) with tandem wings and a cruciform tail unit. The Balzer-Manly engine drove two pusher propellers. Manly was to be the pilot as Langley was now almost 70 years old. Most early aviators tested their machines by making tentative hops, but Langley decided to launch his Aerodrome by catapult from the roof of a houseboat on the Potomac river. Two attempts were made and on both occasions the Aerodrome crashed into the river: catapult problems and perhaps a structural weakness were to blame. The second crash occurred on 8 December 1903 and it is ironic that the Wright brothers, with limited funds and no Government support, successfully achieved a manned flight just nine days later. Langley was heartbroken. After his death there followed a strange affair in 1914 when Glenn Curtiss took Langley's Aerodrome, modified it, and tried to prove that but for the faulty catapult it would have flown before the Wrights' Flyer. A brief flight was made with floats instead of the catapult, and it flew rather better after more extensive modifications and a new engine.[br]Bibliography1897, Langley Memoir on Mechanical Flight, Part 1, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution; 1911, Part 2.Further ReadingJ.Gordon Vaeth, 1966, Langley: Man of Science and Flight, New York (biography).Charles H. Gibbs-Smith, 1985, Aviation, London (includes an analysis of Langley's work).Tom D.Crouch, 1981, A Dream of Wings, New York.Robert B.Meyer Jr (ed.), 1971, Langley's Aero Engine of 1903, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Annals of Flight, No. 6 (provides details about the engine).JDSBiographical history of technology > Langley, Samuel Pierpont
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7 Blériot, Louis
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 1 July 1872 Cambrai, Franced. 2 August 1936 Paris, France[br]French aircraft manufacturer and pilot who in 1909 made the first flight across the English Channel in an aeroplane.[br]Having made a fortune with his patented automobile lamp, Blériot started experimenting with model aircraft in about 1900. He tried a flapping-wing layout which, surprisingly, did fly, but a full-size version was a failure. Blériot tried out a wide variety of designs: a biplane float-glider built with Gabriel Voisin; a powered float-plane with ellipsoidal biplane wings; a canard (tail-first) monoplane; a tandem monoplane; and in 1907 a monoplane of conventional layout. This last was not an immediate success, but it led to the Type XI in which Blériot made history by flying from France to England on 25 July 1909.Without a doubt, Blériot was an accomplished pilot and a successful manufacturer of aircraft, but he sometimes employed others as designers (a fact not made known at the time). It is now accepted that much of the credit for the design of the Type XI should go to Raymond Saulnier, who later made his name with the Morane-Saulnier Company.Blériot-Aéronautique became one of the leading manufacturers of aircraft and by the outbreak of war in 1914 some eight hundred aircraft had been produced. By 1918, aircraft were being built at the rate of eighteen per day. The Blériot company continued to produce aircraft until it was nationalized in 1937.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCommandeur de la Légion d'honneur. Daily Mail £1,000 prize for the first cross-Channel aeroplane flight.Further ReadingC.H.Gibbs-Smith, 1965, The Invention of the Aeroplane 1799–1909, London (contains a list of all Blériot's early aircraft).J.Stroud, 1966, European Transport Aircraft since 1920, London (for information about Blériot's later aircraft).For information relating to the cross-Channel flight, see: C.Fontaine, 1913, Comment Blériota traversé la, Manche, Paris.T.D.Crouch, 1982, Blériot XI, the Story of a Classic Aircraft, Washington, DC: National Air \& Space Museum.JDS -
8 Short, Hugh Oswald
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 16 January 1883 Derbyshire, Englandd. 4 December 1969 Haslemere, England[br]English co-founder, with his brothers Horace Short (1872–1917) and Eustace (1875–1932), of the first company to design and build aeroplanes in Britain.[br]Oswald Short trained as an engineer; he was largely self-taught but was assisted by his brothers Eustace and Horace. In 1898 Eustace and the young Oswald set up a balloon business, building their first balloon in 1901. Two years later they sold observation balloons to the Government of India, and further orders followed. Meanwhile, in 1906 Horace designed a high-altitude balloon with a spherical pressurized gondola, an idea later used by Auguste Piccard, in 1931. Horace, a strange genius with a dominating character, joined his younger brothers in 1908 to found Short Brothers. Their first design, based on the Wright Flyer, was a limited success, but No. 2 won a Daily Mail prize of £1,000. In the same year, 1909, the Wright brothers chose Shorts to build six of their new Model A biplanes. Still using the basic Wright layout, Horace designed the world's first twin-engined aeroplane to fly successfully: it had one engine forward of the pilot, and one aft. During the years before the First World War the Shorts turned to tractor biplanes and specialized in floatplanes for the Admiralty.Oswald established a seaplane factory at Rochester, Kent, during 1913–14, and an airship works at Cardington, Bedfordshire, in 1916. Short Brothers went on to build the rigid airship R 32, which was completed in 1919. Unfortunately, Horace died in 1917, which threw a greater responsibility onto Oswald, who became the main innovator. He introduced the use of aluminium alloys combined with a smooth "stressed-skin" construction (unlike Junkers, who used corrugated skins). His sleek biplane the Silver Streak flew in 1920, well ahead of its time, but official support was not forthcoming. Oswald Short struggled on, trying to introduce his all-metal construction, especially for flying boats. He eventually succeeded with the biplane Singapore, of 1926, which had an all-metal hull. The prototype was used by Sir Alan Cobham for his flight round Africa. Several successful all-metal flying boats followed, including the Empire flying boats (1936) and the ubiquitous Sunderland (1937). The Stirling bomber (1939) was derived from the Sunderland. The company was nationalized in 1942 and Oswald Short retired the following year.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsHonorary Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society. Freeman of the City of London. Oswald Short turned down an MBE in 1919 as he felt it did not reflect the achievements of the Short Brothers.Bibliography1966, "Aircraft with stressed skin metal construction", Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society (November) (an account of the problems with patents and officialdom).Further ReadingC.H.Barnes, 1967, Shorts Aircraft since 1900, London; reprinted 1989 (a detailed account of the work of the Short brothers).JDS -
9 Phillips, Horatio Frederick
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 2 February 1845 London, Englandd. 15 July 1926 Hampshire, England[br]English aerodynamicist whose cambered two-surface wing sections provided the foundations for aerofoil design.[br]At the age of 19, Phillips developed an interest in flight and constructed models with lightweight engines. He spent a large amount of time and money over many years, carrying out practical research into the science of aerodynamics. In the early 1880s he built a wind tunnel with a working section of 15 in. by 10 in. (38 cm by 25 cm). Air was sucked through the working section by an adaptation of the steam injector used in boilers and invented by Henry Giffard, the airship pioneer. Phillips tested aerofoils based on the cross-section of bird's wings, with a greater curvature on the upper surface than the lower. He measured the lift and drag and showed that the major component of lift came from suction on the upper surface, rather than pressure on the lower. He took out patents for his aerofoil sections in 1884 and 1891. In addition to his wind-tunnel test, Phillips tested his wing sections on a whirling arm, as used earlier by Cayley, Wenham and Lilienthal. After a series of tests using an arm of 15 ft (4.57 m) radius, Phillips built a massive whirling arm driven by a steam engine. His test pieces were mounted on the end of the arm, which had a radius of 50 ft (15.24 m), giving them a linear speed of 70 mph (113 km/h). By 1893 Phillips was ready to put his theories to a more practical test, so he built a large model aircraft driven by a steam engine and tethered to run round a circular track. It had a wing span of 19 ft (5.79 m), but it had fifty wings, one above the other. These wings were only 10 in. (25 cm) wide and mounted in a frame, so it looked rather like a Venetian blind. At 40 mph (64 km/h) it lifted off the track. In 1904 Phillips built a full-size multi-wing aeroplane with twenty wings which just lifted off the ground but did not fly. He built another multi-wing machine in 1907, this time with four Venetian blind' frames in tandem, giving it two hundred wings! Phillips made a short flight of almost 500 ft (152 m) which could be claimed to be the first powered aeroplane flight in England by an Englishman. He retired from flying at the age of 62.[br]Bibliography1900, "Mechanical flight and matters relating thereto", Engineering (reprint).1891–3, "On the sustentation of weight by mechanical flight", Aeronautical Society of Great Britain 23rd Report.Further ReadingJ.Laurence Pritchard, 1957, "The dawn of aerodynamics", Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society (March) (good descriptions of Phillips's early work and his wind tunnel).J.E.Hodgson, 1924, The History of Aeronautics in Great Britain, London.F.W.Brearey, 1891–3, "Remarks on experiments made by Horatio Phillips", Aeronautical Society of Great Britain 23rd Report.JDSBiographical history of technology > Phillips, Horatio Frederick
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10 neu
I Adj.1. new; (neuartig) novel; (kürzlich geschehen) recent; (im Entstehen begriffen) rising; ganz neu brand-new; das ist mir neu! that’s new(s) to me; das ist mir nicht neu that’s nothing new to me; sie ist neu in der Stadt / in diesem Beruf she is new in town / at this job; noch wie neu as good as new; er ist nicht mehr ganz neu umg. he’s not as young as he was; eine neue Seite beginnen start a new page; eine neue Flasche öffnen open another bottle2. (neuzeitlich) modern; neuere Literatur modern literature; neuere Sprachen modern languages; neueren Datums recent...; in neuerer Zeit in recent times, of late; neueste Nachrichten latest news Sg.; die neueste Mode the latest fashion(s Pl.)3. (erneut, wieder) renewed; neuer Anfang fresh start; ein neues Leben beginnen make a fresh start (in life); neue Hoffnung renewed hope; neue Schwierigkeiten more ( oder renewed) difficulties5. (sauber) Hemd etc.: cleanII substantivisch: von neuem afresh, anew; von neuem anfangen start anew ( oder afresh); seit neuestem of late, since very recently; seit neuestem kann man... the latest thing is you can...; siehe auch Neue1, Neue2III Adv.1. (gerade erst) ich habe die Stelle neu angetreten I have just started the job; neu hinzukommen be new; was ist neu hinzugekommen? what’s new?; dies ist neu hinzugekommen this has just been added; dieses Modell ist neu eingetroffen this model has just come in; neu entdeckt newly discovered; neu eröffnet newly opened; neu erschienene Bücher recently published books, books that have just come out; neu geschaffen newly created; neu gebackener Ehemann umg., hum. newlywed husband2. (nochmals, wieder) neu anfangen start anew ( oder afresh); neu auflegen Buch etc: reprint; neu beleben revive; neu beziehen (Polstermöbel) recover; neu einrichten refurnish; neu schreiben rewrite; neu tapezieren repaper; neu bearbeitet new(ly revised); neu eröffnet reopened; sich neu einkleiden get a new set of clothes; sich neu eindecken get in fresh supplies* * *new; recent; modern; incoming; fresh; coltish; novel* * *[nɔy]1. adjnew; Seite, Kräfte, Hoffnung, Truppen auch fresh; (= kürzlich entstanden auch) recent; (= frisch gewaschen) Hemd, Socken clean; Wein youngjdm zum néúen Jahr Glück wünschen — to wish sb (a) Happy New Year
ein néúer Anfang — a fresh or new start
néúe Hoffnung schöpfen — to take new or fresh hope
eine néúe Mode — a new fashion
ein néúer Tanz — a new dance
die néú(e)ste Mode — the latest fashion
der néú(e)ste Tanz — the latest dance
die néúesten Nachrichten — the latest news
die néúeren Sprachen — modern languages
ein ganz néúer Wagen — a brand-new car
das ist mir néú! — that's new(s) to me
mir ist die Sache néú — this is all new to me
schlechte Laune ist mir néú an ihm — it's something new for me to see him in a bad mood
sich wie ein néúer Mensch fühlen — to feel like a new person
Geschichte der néúeren Zeit — recent or modern history
in néúerer Zeit — in modern times
erst in néúerer Zeit — only recently
viele alte Leute finden sich in der néúen Zeit nicht mehr zurecht — a lot of old people can't get on in the modern world
seit Neu(e)stem gibt es... — since recently there has been...
aufs Neue (geh) — afresh, anew
auf ein Neues! (als Toast) — (here's) to the New Year!; (Aufmunterung) let's try again
der/die Neue — the newcomer, the new man/boy/woman/girl etc
die Neuen — the newcomers, the new people
das Neu(e)ste in der Mode/auf dem Gebiet der Weltraumforschung — the latest in fashion/in the field of space research
was gibts Neues? (inf) — what's the latest?, what's new?
das Neu(e)ste vom Tage — the latest news, up-to-the-minute news
See:→ Besen2. adv1)néú beginnen — to make a fresh start, to start again from scratch
néú starten Computer — to restart, to reboot
néú entwickelt — newly developed
sich/jdn néú einkleiden — to buy oneself/sb a new set of clothes
etw néú anschaffen — to buy sth new
néú bauen — to build a new house
néú geschaffen — newly created
2)(= zusätzlich)
néú hinzukommen zu etw — to join sthMitarbeiter néú einstellen — to hire new employees
Tierarten néú entdecken — to discover new species of animals
néú entdeckt — newly or recently discovered
3)(= erneut)
etw néú auflegen — to publish a new edition of sthnéú drucken — to reprint
néú bearbeiten — to revise
néú bearbeitet — revised
ein Zimmer néú einrichten — to refurnish a room
frei werdende Stellen werden nicht néú besetzt — vacant positions will not be filled
ich hatte das Buch verloren und musste es néú kaufen — I lost the book and had to buy another copy
néú ordnen — to reorganize
sich néú verschulden — to borrow money again, to take out another loan
die Rollen néú besetzen — to recast the roles
die Akten néú ordnen — to reorganize the files
4)néú gebacken — fresh-baked, newly-baked → auch neugebacken
das Buch ist néú erschienen — the book is a recent publication or has just come out
er ist néú hinzugekommen — he's joined (him/them) recently
néú gewählt — newly elected
hier ist ein Supermarkt néú entstanden/gebaut worden — a supermarket has just been opened/built here
néú eröffnet — newly-opened
wir sind néú hierhergezogen — we have just moved here
der Schüler ist ganz néú in unserer Klasse — the pupil is new in our class, the pupil has just joined our class
dieser Artikel ist néú eingetroffen/néú im Sortiment — this article has just come in/has just been added to the range
néú vermählt — newly married or wed
See:→ auch neugebacken* * *1) (another; different; not already used, begun, worn, heard etc: a fresh piece of paper; fresh news.) fresh2) (having only just happened, been built, made, bought etc: She is wearing a new dress; We are building a new house.) new3) (only just discovered, experienced etc: Flying in an aeroplane was a new experience for her.) new4) (changed: He is a new man.) new5) (just arrived etc: The schoolchildren teased the new boy.) new6) (freshly: new-laid eggs.) new* * *[ˈnɔy]I. adj1. (ungebraucht) new\neu für alt new for old[wie] \neu aussehen to look [like] new [or as good as new]ganz \neu brand newjd ist nicht mehr ganz \neu (fig sl) sb is not as young as he/she used to beetw auf \neu herrichten (fam) to make sth look new, to give sth a faceliftwie \neu as good as new2. attr, inv Kartoffeln, Wein new3. (seit kurzem) newdas N\neue daran ist,... what's new about it is...die \neue Literatur/Technik modern literature/technologyein \neuer Mensch sein/werden to be/become a new man/womandie \neue/ \neueste Mode the new/latest fashionein \neueres System a more up-to-date system▪ \neu sein to be newdiese Mode ist ganz \neu this is the latest fashiondas N\neueste vom N \neuen (fam) the very latest4. (unerfahren) newich bin hier \neu I'm new herein einem Beruf/Ort \neu sein to be new to a profession/place5. (unbekannt) newdas ist mir \neu I didn't know that, that's news to me famweißt du schon das N\neueste? have you heard the latest?was gibt's N\neues? any news?\neue/die \neuesten Nachrichten fresh/the latest newsnicht mehr \neu [für jdn] sein to be nothing new [to sb]6. (gegenwärtig)\neueren Datums sein to be of [a] more recent dateseit \neuestem:seit \neuestem kann man hier bargeldlos bezahlen just recently they've started to accept cashless paymentsdie \neuen [o \neueren] Sprachen modern languagesin \neuer Zeit recentlyin \neuerer/ \neuester Zeit quite/just [or very] recently8. (weiter)sie holte ein \neues Glas she fetched another glasssie ist die \neue Garbo she's the new Garboeinen \neuen Anfang machen to make a fresh starteinen \neuen Anlauf nehmen to have another goauf ein N\neues! here's to a fresh start!; (Neujahr) here's to the New Year!eine \neue Seite beginnen to start a new [or fresh] pageeinen \neuen Versuch machen to have another tryvon \neuem all over again, from the beginning, from scratch; (noch einmal) [once] again9.II. advwir müssen das Filter \neu anfertigen/anschaffen we'll have to make/buy a new filter2. (vor kurzem)das Buch ist [ganz] \neu erschienen the book has [only] just come out\neu bekehrt sein to be a new convert\neu entwickelt/eröffnet/geschaffen newly developed/opened/created\neu gebacken freshly-bakedein \neu geprägtes Wort a new coinage3. (ersetzend)die Ware ist \neu eingetroffen the new goods have arrived4. (wieder)\neu anfangen to start all over again\neu bearbeitet revised\neu beginnen to make a fresh start, to start again from scratchetw \neu einrichten to refurbish sth\neu eröffnet re-openedetw \neu gestalten to redesign sthder \neu gestaltete Marktplatz the newly laid-out market square5. (zusätzlich)die Firma will 33 Mitarbeiter \neu einstellen the firm wants to take on 33 new employees* * *1.1) newdie neuesten Nachrichten/Ereignisse — the latest news/most recent events
viel Glück im neuen Jahr — best wishes for the New Year; Happy New Year
das Neue daran ist... — what's new about it is...
das Neueste auf dem Markt — the latest thing on the market
der/die Neue — the new man/woman/boy/girl
weißt du schon das Neueste? — (ugs.) have you heard the latest?
aufs Neue — anew; afresh; again
seit neuestem werden dort keine Kreditkarten mehr akzeptiert — just recently they've started refusing to accept credit cards
in neuerer/neuester Zeit — quite/just or very recently
die neuen od. neueren Sprachen — modern languages
2) nicht präd. (kürzlich geerntet) new <wine, potatoes>2.1)neu tapeziert/gespritzt/gestrichen/möbliert — repapered/resprayed/repainted/refurnished
neu eröffnet — newly opened; (wieder eröffnet) reopened
2) (gerade erst)diese Ware ist neu eingetroffen — this item has just come in or arrived
neu erschienene Bücher — newly published books; books that have just come out or appeared
3 000 Wörter sind neu hinzugekommen — 3,000 new words have been added
neu vermählt — (geh.) newly wed or married
* * *A. adjganz neu brand-new;das ist mir neu! that’s new(s) to me;das ist mir nicht neu that’s nothing new to me;sie ist neu in der Stadt/in diesem Beruf she is new in town/at this job;noch wie neu as good as new;eine neue Seite beginnen start a new page;eine neue Flasche öffnen open another bottle2. (neuzeitlich) modern;neuere Literatur modern literature;neuere Sprachen modern languages;neueren Datums recent …;in neuerer Zeit in recent times, of late;neueste Nachrichten latest news sg;die neueste Mode the latest fashion(s pl)3. (erneut, wieder) renewed;neuer Anfang fresh start;ein neues Leben beginnen make a fresh start (in life);neue Hoffnung renewed hope;neue Schwierigkeiten more ( oder renewed) difficulties4. (kürzlich geerntet) Kartoffeln etc: new;neuer Wein new wine5. (sauber) Hemd etc: cleanB. substantivisch:von Neuem afresh, anew;von Neuem anfangen start anew ( oder afresh);seit Neuestem of late, since very recently;seit Neuestem kann man … the latest thing is you can …; → auch Neue1, Neue2C. adv1. (gerade erst)ich habe die Stelle neu angetreten I have just started the job;neu hinzukommen be new;was ist neu hinzugekommen? what’s new?;dies ist neu hinzugekommen this has just been added;dieses Modell ist neu eingetroffen this model has just come in;neu entdeckt newly discovered;neu eröffnet newly opened;neu erschienene Bücher recently published books, books that have just come out;neu geschaffen newly created;neu anfangen start anew ( oder afresh);neu beleben revive;neu beziehen (Polstermöbel) recover;neu einrichten refurnish;neu schreiben rewrite;neu starten COMPUT restart;neu tapezieren repaper;neu bearbeitet new(ly revised);neu eröffnet reopened;sich neu einkleiden get a new set of clothes;sich neu eindecken get in fresh supplies* * *1.1) newdie neuesten Nachrichten/Ereignisse — the latest news/most recent events
viel Glück im neuen Jahr — best wishes for the New Year; Happy New Year
das Neue daran ist... — what's new about it is...
der/die Neue — the new man/woman/boy/girl
weißt du schon das Neueste? — (ugs.) have you heard the latest?
aufs Neue — anew; afresh; again
von neuem — all over again; (noch einmal) [once] again
seit neuestem werden dort keine Kreditkarten mehr akzeptiert — just recently they've started refusing to accept credit cards
in neuerer/neuester Zeit — quite/just or very recently
die neuen od. neueren Sprachen — modern languages
2) nicht präd. (kürzlich geerntet) new <wine, potatoes>3) (sauber) clean <shirt, socks, underwear, etc.>2.1)neu tapeziert/gespritzt/gestrichen/möbliert — repapered/resprayed/repainted/refurnished
neu eröffnet — newly opened; (wieder eröffnet) reopened
neu erschienene Bücher — newly published books; books that have just come out or appeared
3 000 Wörter sind neu hinzugekommen — 3,000 new words have been added
neu vermählt — (geh.) newly wed or married
* * *adj.coltish adj.innovative adj.new adj.recent adj. adv.afresh adv. -
11 Ellehammer, Jacob Christian Hansen
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 14 June 1871 South Zealand, Denmarkd. b. 20 May 1946 Copenhagen, Denmark[br]Danish inventor who took out some four hundred patents for his inventions, including aircraft.[br]Flying kites as a boy aroused Ellehammer's interest in aeronautics, and he developed a kite that could lift him off the ground. After completing an apprenticeship, he started his own manufacturing business, whose products included motor cycles. He experimented with model aircraft as a sideline and used his mo tor-cycle experience to build an aero engine during 1903–4. It had three cylinders radiating from the crankshaft, making it, in all probability, the world's first air-cooled radial engine. Ellehammer built his first full-size aircraft in 1905 and tested it in January 1906. It ran round a circular track, was tethered to a central mast and was unmanned. A more powerful engine was needed, and by September Ellehammer had improved his engine so that it was capable of lifting him for a tethered flight. In 1907 Ellehammer produced a new five-cylinder radial engine and installed it in the first manned tri-plane, which made a number of free-flight hops. Various wing designs were tested and during 1908–9 Ellehammer developed yet another radial engine, which had six cylinders arranged in two rows of three. Ellehammer's engines had a very good power-to-weight ratio, but his aircraft designs lacked an understanding of control; consequently, he never progressed beyond short hops in a straight line. In 1912 he built a helicopter with contra-rotating rotors that was a limited success. Ellehammer turned his attention to his other interests, but if he had concentrated on his excellent engines he might have become a major aero engine manufacturer.[br]Bibliography1931, Jeg fløj [I Flew], Copenhagen (Ellehammer's memoirs).Further ReadingC.H.Gibbs-Smith, 1965, The Invention of the Aeroplane 1799–1909, London (contains concise information on Ellehammer's aircraft and their performance).J.H.Parkin, 1964, Bell and Baldwin, Toronto (provides more detailed descriptions).JDSBiographical history of technology > Ellehammer, Jacob Christian Hansen
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