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61 военный
I прил.1) ( связанный с войной) war (attr); militaryвое́нное вре́мя — wartime, time of war
вое́нные де́йствия — military operations; hostilities
вое́нная промы́шленность — war industry
вое́нный заво́д — munitions factory
вое́нный престу́пник — war criminal
вое́нная нау́ка — science of war, military science
вое́нное иску́сство — art of war
вое́нная авантю́ра — military adventure
2) ( относящийся к армии) military; army (attr)вое́нная слу́жба — military service
вое́нное обуче́ние — military training
вое́нная акаде́мия — military academy
вое́нная доро́га — military road
вое́нный о́круг — military district
вое́нный комиссариа́т — см. военкомат
вое́нный суд — court martial
вое́нный кора́бль — warship, man-of-war (pl men-) уст.
вое́нный мини́стр — = министр оборо́ны (см. оборона)
••вое́нное положе́ние — martial law
II м. скл. как прил.вое́нный коммуни́зм ист. — war communism ( Soviet system of economic coercion in 1918-20)
soldier, military man, serviceman; мн. собир. the militaryон вое́нный — he is a soldier / serviceman, he is in the army
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62 военный
1.1. прил. к война2. (тж. гл. обр. о сухопутной армии) militaryвоенная наука — science of war, military science
военный коммунизм ист. — war communism
военное время — wartime, time of war
военные действия — military operations; hostilities
военный комиссариат см. военкомат
военный министр — Secretary of State for Defence ( в Англии); Secretary of Defence ( в США)
военный корабль — warship, man-of-war (pl. men-)
2. м. скл. как прил.военный округ — military district; Command ( в Англии)
soldier, military man*, serviceman*; мн. собир. the militaryон военный — he is a soldier / serviceman*, he is in the army, или in the services
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63 savaş
"1. war. 2. struggle, fight, striving. - açmak to start a war; to begin to fight. - bölgesi theater of war. - durumu state of war. - gereçleri munitions. - ilanı declaration of war. - suçları war crimes. - tutsağı prisoner of war. " -
64 боевая техника
1) General subject: equipment, ordnance, warfare, warlike stores, warlike equipment2) Military: arsenal, combat equipment, combat materiel, defense arsenal, fighting equipment, fighting materiel, materiel, metal, military equipment, military weaponry, munition, operational hardware, operational inventory, tactical equipment, war equipment, war materiel, war outfit, war paraphernalia, weapon, weaponry, weapons, operational technical armament3) Diplomatic term: war material4) Security: munitions -
65 Kriegsvorräte
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66 munition
1. n1) звич. pl військове майно, військові запаси; спорядження2) запасний фонд (особл. грошовий)3) заст. укріплення2. v1) забезпечувати спорядженням2) працювати на воєнному заводі3) рідк. меблювати (кімнату)* * *I n; plвійськове майно; спорядження (боєприпаси; тж. munition(s) of war)II v -
67 table
табель; штаты; таблица; стол; пульт; стенд; сводить в [составлять] таблицуembarkation (and tonnage) table — мор. план погрузки
— aircraft loading table— bombing table— launching table* * *• 1) составлять таблицы; 2) составленный таблицы; 3) представленный на рассмотрение• таблица -
68 center
центр; пункт; пост; узел; середина; научпо-иселсдовагсльскпй центр, НИЦ; выводить на середину; арт. корректировать; центрировать;air C3 center — центр руководства, управления и связи ВВС
general supply (commodity) center — центр [пункт] снабжения предметами общего предназначения
hard launch (operations) control center — ркт. центр [пункт] управления пуском, защищенный от (поражающих факторов) ЯВ
launch (operations) control center — ркт. пункт управления стартового комплекса [пуском ракет]
tactical fighter weapons (employment development) center — центр разработки способов боевого применения оружия истребителей ТА
— all-sources intelligence center— C center— combat control center— educational center— logistical operations center— logistics services center— operational center— secured communications center— skill development center -
69 Lobnitz, Frederick
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 7 September 1863 Renfrew, Scotlandd. 7 December 1932 Crookston, Renfrewshire, Scotland[br]Scottish shipbuilder, expert in dredge technology.[br]Lobnitz was the son of Henry Christian Lobnitz. His father was born in Denmark in 1831, and had worked for some years in both England and Scotland before becoming a naturalized British subject. Ultimately Henry joined the Clyde shipyard of James Henderson \& Son and worked there until his death, by which time he was sole proprietor and the yard was called Lobnitz \& Co. By this time the shipyard was the acknowledged world leader in rock-cutting machinery.Frederick was given the opportunity to travel in Europe during the late 1870s and early 1880s. He studied at Bonn, Heidelberg and at the Zurich Polytechnic, and also served an apprenticeship at the Fairfield Shipyard of John Elder \& Co. of Glasgow. One of his first tasks was to supervise the construction and commissioning of a subaqueous rock excavator, and then he was asked to direct rock excavations at the Suez Canal.In 1888 Frederick Lobnitz was made a partner of the company by his father and was to remain with them until his death, at which time he was Chairman. By this time the shipyard was a private limited company and had continued to enhance its name in the specialized field of dredging. At that time the two greatest dredge builders in the world (and deadly rivals) were situated next to each other on the banks of the Clyde at Renfrew; in 1957 they merged as Simons-Lobnitz Ltd. In 1915 Lobnitz was appointed Deputy Director for Munitions in Scotland and one year later he became Director, a post he held until 1919. Having investigated the running of munitions factories in France, he released scarce labour for the war effort by staffing the plants under his control with female and unskilled labour.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1920. Officier de la Légion d'honneur.Further ReadingFred M.Walker, 1984, Song of the Clyde. A History of Clyde Shipbuilding Cambridge: PSL.Lobnitz \& Co., n.d., Romance of Dredging.FMW -
70 Y36.2
рус Военные операции, вызвавшие повреждения другими видами взрывов или осколкамиeng War operations involving other explosions and fragments. Accidental explosion of: munitions being used in war, own weapons. Antipersonnel bomb (fragments). Explosion (of): artillery shell, breech-block, cannon block, mortar bomb. Fragments from: artillery shell, bomb, grenade, guided missile, land-mine, rocket, shell, shrapnel. Mine NOS during war operations -
71 nuclear
1. a физ. ядерныйnuclear magnetic resonance — ядерный магнитный резонанс, ЯМР
2. a относящийся к ядерному оружиюnuclear fallout — радиоактивные осадки; выпадение радиоактивных продуктов ядерного взрыва
3. a обладающий ядерным оружием4. a биол. содержащий ядро, относящийся к ядруСинонимический ряд:1. cellular (adj.) cellular; organic2. concerning a nucleus (adj.) atomic; concerning a nucleus; endoplasmic -
72 Crompton, Rookes Evelyn Bell
[br]b. 31 May 1845 near Thirsk, Yorkshire, Englandd. 15 February 1940 Azerley Chase, Ripon, Yorkshire, England[br]English electrical and transport engineer.[br]Crompton was the youngest son of a widely travelled diplomat who had retired to the country and become a Whig MP after the Reform Act of 1832. During the Crimean War Crompton's father was in Gibraltar as a commander in the militia. Young Crompton enrolled as a cadet and sailed to Sebastopol, visiting an older brother, and, although only 11 years old, he qualified for the Crimean Medal. Returning to England, he was sent to Harrow, where he showed an aptitude for engineering. In the holidays he made a steam road engine on his father's estate. On leaving school he was commissioned into the Rifle Brigade and spent four years in India, where he worked on a system of steam road haulage to replace bullock trains. Leaving the Army in 1875, Crompton bought a share in an agricultural and general engineering business in Chelmsford, intending to develop his interests in transport. He became involved in the newly developing technology of electric arc lighting and began importing electric lighting equipment made by Gramme in Paris. Crompton soon decided that he could manufacture better equipment himself, and the Chemlsford business was transformed into Crompton \& Co., electrical engineers. After lighting a number of markets and railway stations, Crompton won contracts for lighting the new Law Courts in London, in 1882, and the Ring Theatre in Vienna in 1883. Crompton's interests then broadened to include domestic electrical appliances, especially heating and cooking apparatus, which provided a daytime load when lighting was not required. In 1899 he went to South Africa with the Electrical Engineers Volunteer Corps, providing telegraphs and searchlights in the Boer War. He was appointed Engineer to the new Road Board in 1910, and during the First World War worked for the Government on engineering problems associated with munitions and tanks. He believed strongly in the value of engineering standards, and in 1906 became the first Secretary of the International Electrotechnical Commission.[br]Bibliography1928, Reminiscences.Further ReadingB.Bowers, 1969, R.E.B.Crompton. Pioneer Electrical Engineer, London: Science Museum.BBBiographical history of technology > Crompton, Rookes Evelyn Bell
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73 Tizard, Sir Henry Thoms
SUBJECT AREA: Weapons and armour[br]b. 23 August 1885 Gillingham, Kent, Englandd. 9 October 1959 Fareham, Hampshire, England[br]English scientist and administrator who made many contributions to military technology.[br]Educated at Westminster College, in 1904 Tizard went to Magdalen College, Oxford, gaining Firsts in mathematics and chemistry. After a period of time in Berlin with Nernst, he joined the Royal Institution in 1909 to study the colour changes of indicators. From 1911 until 1914 he was a tutorial Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, but with the outbreak of the First World War he joined first the Royal Garrison Artillery, then, in 1915, the newly formed Royal Flying Corps, to work on the development of bomb-sights. Successively in charge of testing aircraft, a lieutenant-colonel in the Ministry of Munitions and Assistant Controller of Research and Experiments for the Royal Air Force, he returned to Oxford in 1919 and the following year became Reader in Chemical Thermodynamics; at this stage he developed the use of toluene as an air-craft-fuel additive.In 1922 he was appointed an assistant secretary at the government Department of Industrial and Scientific Research, becoming Principal Assistant Secretary in 1922 and its Permanent Director in 1927; during this time he was also a member of the Aeronautical Research Committee, being Chairman of the latter in 1933–43. From 1929 to 1942 he was Rector of Imperial College. In 1932 he was also appointed Chairman of a committee set up to investigate possible national air-defence systems, and it was largely due to his efforts that the radar proposals of Watson-Watt were taken up and an effective system made operational before the outbreak of the Second World War. He was also involved in various other government activities aimed at applying technology to the war effort, including the dam-buster and atomic bombs.President of Magdalen College in 1942–7, he then returned again to Whitehall, serving as Chairman of the Advisory Council on Scientific Policy and of the Defence Research Policy Committee. Finally, in 1952, he became Pro-Chan-cellor of Southampton University.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsAir Force Cross 1918. CB 1927. KCB 1937. GCB 1949. American Medal of Merit 1947. FRS 1926. Ten British and Commonwealth University honorary doctorates. Hon. Fellowship of the Royal Aeronautical Society. Royal Society of Arts Gold Medal. Franklin Institute Gold Medal. President, British Association 1948. Trustee of the British Museum 1937–59.Bibliography1911, The sensitiveness of indicators', British Association Report (describes Tizard's work on colour changes in indicators).Further Reading1961, Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society VII, London: Royal Society.KFBiographical history of technology > Tizard, Sir Henry Thoms
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74 nuclear
[ʹnju:klıə] a1. 1) физ. ядерныйnuclear fusion - синтез /слияние/ ядер
2) относящийся к ядерному оружиюnuclear device - а) устройство с ядерным зарядом; б) ядерное оружие
nuclear explosion - ядерный /атомный/ взрыв
nuclear fallout - радиоактивные осадки; выпадение радиоактивных продуктов ядерного взрыва
nuclear fire - применение ядерного /атомного/ оружия
nuclear slugging match - разг. атомная война
nuclear war /warfare/ - ядерная война
3) обладающий ядерным оружием2. биол. содержащий ядро, относящийся к ядруnuclear cell division - деление ядра клетки, кариокинез
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75 производство производств·о
1) (процесс) production, output; (изготовление) manufacture, making, makeнаращивать мощности по производству (чего-л.) — to build up / to enlarge the capacties
сдерживать / сокращать производство — to curb / to curtail / to cut down production
форсировать производство — to step up production, to go ahead with production
производство снизилось — production has fallen / dropped
военное производство — war / military production
вредное производство — dangerous trade / industry
крупносерийное производство — large-scale manufacture / serial production
массовое производство — large-scale / high volume / quantity production, production in bulk
мировое производство — world output / production
отечественное производство — domestic / home-produced production
товары отечественного производства — home-made / home-produced goods
поточное производство — flow / line production
сельскохозяйственное производство — agricultural / farm production / output
убыточное производство — unprofitable / wasteful production
энергоёмкие производства — energyintensive industrial facilities; power consuming industries
интенсификация производства — the intensifying / intensification of production
наращивание темпов производства — steady rise in the rate of production; stepping up the rate of production
объём производства — overall / total production
общий объём производства — overall / total output
свёртывание объёма производства — curtailment of / cutback in production
сокращение / ограничение (объёма) производства — production cutback
отходы производства — waste materials, industrial wastes
использовать отходы производства — to utilize waste materials / industrial wastes
производство на душу населения — per capita / per head production
производство, обеспечивающее работу военной промышленности — defence-supporting production
производство потребительских товаров — consumer goods production, output of consumer goods
производство продукции военного / оборонного назначения — defence production
производство продукции невоенного / гражданского назначения — civilian production
производство ядерного оружия — manufacture / production of nuclear weapons
расширение / рост производства — expansion of production
сокращение производства — curtailnent of production, cutback in production
товары отечественного производства — home-made / -produced goods
увеличение темпов производства — step-up / increase in the rate of production
2) (отрасль промышленности) industry3) (завод, фабрика) factory, plant; worksсудебное производство — procedure, proceedings
начать судебное производство — to take / to institute legal proceedings (against)
гражданское судебное производство — civil procedure, proceedings in civil causes
суммарное / упрощённое производство — summary jurisdiction / proceedings
в порядке суммарного производства — on summary jurisdiction / proceeding
производство, совершаемое административными властями — proceedings instituted by administrative authorities
Russian-english dctionary of diplomacy > производство производств·о
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76 Herbert, Sir Alfred Edward
SUBJECT AREA: Mechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic engineering[br]b. 5 September 1866 Leicester, Englandd. 26 May 1957 Kings Somborne, Hampshire, England[br]English mechanical engineer and machine-tool manufacturer.[br]Alfred Herbert was educated at Stoneygate School, Leicester, and served an apprenticeship with Joseph Jessop \& Sons, also of Leicester, from 1881 to 1886. In 1887 he was engaged as Manager of a small engineering firm in Coventry, and before the end of that year he purchased the business in partnership with William Hubbard. They commenced the manufacture of machine-tools especially for the cycle industry. Hubbard withdrew from the partnership in 1890 and Herbert continued on his own account, the firm being established as a limited liability company, Alfred Herbert Ltd, in 1894. A steady expansion of the business continued, especially after the introduction of their capstan lathe, and by 1914 it was the largest manufacturer of machine-tools in Britain. In addition to making machine-tools of all types for the home and export market, the firm acted as an agent for the import of specialist machine-tools from abroad. During the First World War Alfred Herbert was in 1915 appointed head of machine-tool production at the War Office and when the Ministry of Munitions was set up he was transferred to that Ministry as Controller of Machine Tools. He was President of the Machine Tools Trades Association from 1919 to 1934. He was elected a member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1892 and in 1921 was a founder member of the Institution of Production Engineers. Almost to the end of his long life he continued to take an active part in the direction of his company. He expressed his views on current events affecting industry in the technical press and in his firm's house journal.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKBE 1917. Officier de la Légion d'honneur 1917. Order of St Stanislas of Russia 1918. Order of Leopold of Belgium 1918. Freeman of the City of Coventry 1933. President, Institution of Production Engineers 1927–9. Honorary Member, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1941.Bibliography1948, Shots at the Truth, Coventry (a selection of his speeches and writings).Further ReadingD.J.Jeremy (ed.), 1984–6, Dictionary of Business Biography, Vol. 3, London, pp. 174–7 (a useful account).Obituary, 1957, Engineering, 183:680.RTSBiographical history of technology > Herbert, Sir Alfred Edward
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77 Kennedy, Sir Alexander Blackie William
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 17 March 1847 Stepney, London, England d. 1928[br]English marine engineer and educator.[br]Sir Alexander Kennedy was trained as a marine engineer. The son of a Congregational minister, he was educated at the City of London School and the School of Mines, Jermyn Street. He was then apprenticed to J. \& W.Dudgeon of Millwall, marine engineers, and went on to become a draughtsman to Sir Charles Marsh Palmer of Jarrow (with whom he took part in the development of the compound steam-engine for marine use) and T.M.Tennant \& Co. of Leith. In 1874 he was appointed Professor of Engineering at University College, London. He built up an influential School of Engineering, being the first in England to integrate laboratory work as a regular feature of instruction. The engineering laboratory that he established in 1878 has been described as "the first of its kind in England" (Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers). He and his students conducted important experiments on the strength and elasticity of materials, boiler testing and related subjects. He followed the teaching of Franz Reuleaux, whose Kinematics of Machinery he translated from the German.While thus breaking new educational ground at University College, Kennedy concurrently established a very thriving private practice as a consulting engineer in partnership with Bernard Maxwell Jenkin (the son of Fleeming Jenkin), to pursue which he relinquished his academic posts in 1889. He planned and installed the whole electricity system for the Westminster Electric Supply Corporation, and other electricity companies. He was also heavily involved in the development of electrically powered transport systems. During the First World War he served on a panel of the Munitions Invention Department, and after the war he undertook to record photographically the scenes of desolation in his book From Ypres to Verdun (1921). Towards the end of his life, he pursued his interest in archaeology with the exploration of Petra, recorded in a monograph: Petra. Its History and Monuments (1925). He also joined the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in 1879, becoming the President of that body in 1894, and he joined the Institution of Electrical Engineers in 1890. Kennedy was thus something of an engineering polymath, as well as being an outstanding engineering educationalist.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1887. Knighted 1905. Member, Institution of Civil Engineers 1879; President, 1906. President, Institution of Mechanical Engineers 1894.Bibliography1921, From Ypresto Verdum.1925, Petra. Its History and Monuments.Further ReadingDNB supplement.1928–9, Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers 221:269–75.ABBiographical history of technology > Kennedy, Sir Alexander Blackie William
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78 Morris, William Richard, Viscount Nuffield
[br]b. 10 October 1877 Worcester, Englandd. 22 August 1963 Nuffield Place, England[br]English industrialist, car manufacturer and philanthropist.[br]Morris was the son of Frederick Morris, then a draper. He was the eldest of a family of seven, all of whom, except for one sister, died in childhood. When he was 3 years old, his father moved to Cowley, near Oxford, where he attended the village school. After a short time with a local bicycle firm he set up on his own at the age of 16 with a capital of £4. He manufactured pedal cycles and by 1902 he had designed a motor cycle and was doing car-repair work. By 1912, at the Motor Show, he was able to announce his first car, the 8.9 hp, two-seater Morris Oxford with its characteristic "bull-nose". It could perform at up to 50 mph (80 km/h) and 50 mpg (5.65 1/100 km). It cost £165.Though untrained, Morris was a born engineer as well as a natural judge of character. This enabled him to build up a reliable team of assistants in his growing business, with an order for four hundred cars at the Motor Show in 1912. Much of his business was built up in the assembly of components manufactured by outside suppliers. In he moved out of his initial premises by New College in Longwall and bought land at Cowley, where he brought out his second model, the 11.9hp Morris Oxford. This was after the First World War, during which car production was reduced to allow the manufacture of tanks and munitions. He was awarded the OBE in 1917 for his war work. Morris Motors Ltd was incorporated in 1919, and within fifteen months sales of cars had reached over 3,000 a year. By 1923 he was producing 20,000 cars a year, and in 1926 50,000, equivalent to about one-third of Britain's output. With the slump, a substantial overdraft, and a large stock of unsold cars, Morris took the bold decision to cut the prices of cars in stock, which then sold out within three weeks. Other makers followed suit, but Morris was ahead of them.Morris was part-founder of the Pressed Steel Company, set up to produce car bodies at Cowley. A clever operation with the shareholding of the Morris Motors Company allowed Morris a substantial overall profit to provide expansion capital. By 1931 his "empire" comprised, in addition to Morris Motors, the MG Car Company, the Wolseley Company, the SU Carburettor Company and Morris Commercial Cars. In 1936, the value of Morris's financial interest in the business was put at some £16 million.William Morris was a frugal man and uncomplicated, having little use for all the money he made except to channel it to charitable purposes. It is said that in all he gave away some £30 million during his lifetime, much of it invested by the recipients to provide long-term benefits. He married Elizabeth Anstey in 1904 and lived for thirty years at Nuffield Place. He lived modestly, and even after retirement, when Honorary President of the British Motor Corporation, the result of a merger between Morris Motors and the Austin Motor Company, he drove himself to work in a modest 10 hp Wolseley. His generosity benefited many hospitals in London, Oxford, Birmingham and elsewhere. Oxford Colleges were another class of beneficiary from his largesse.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsViscount 1938; Baron (Lord Nuffield) 1934; Baronet 1929; OBE 1917; GBE 1941; CH 1958. FRS 1939. He was a doctor of seven universities and an honorary freeman of seven towns.Further ReadingR.Jackson, 1964, The Nuffield Story.P.W.S.Andrews and E.Brunner, The Life of Lord Nuffield.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Morris, William Richard, Viscount Nuffield
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79 nuclear
ˈnju:klɪə прил.
1) биол., астрон. ядерный nuclear membrane ≈ ядерная мембрана
2) линг., фон. ядерный nuclear predication ≈ ядерная предикация nuclear stress ≈ ядерное ударение
3) ядерный;
относящийся к атомному ядру;
относящийся к ядерной энергии;
относящийся к ядерному оружию nuclear fission ≈ ядерное деление nuclear reactor ≈ ядерный реактор nuclear diplomacy ≈ ядерная дипломатия nuclear disarmament ≈ отказ от применения ядерного оружия nuclear energy ≈ ядерная, атомная энергия, внутриядерная энергия nuclear fallout ≈ радиоактивные осадки nuclear fusion ≈ синтез, слияние ядер nuclear fuel ≈ ядерное горючее, ядерное топливо nuclear physics ≈ ядерная физика, физика атомного ядра nuclear power ≈ атомная энергия, ядерная энергия nuclear state ≈ государство, обладающее ядерным оружием nuclear test ≈ испытание ядерного оружия nuclear weapon ≈ ядерное оружие
4) содержащий ядро, ядерный ( физическое) ядерный - * fusion cинтез ядер - * energy ядерная энергия - * fission ядерное деление - * mass масса ядра - * physics ядерная физика - * reactor атомный реактор - * turbo-jet ядерный турбореактивный двигатель - * chain reaction ядерная цепная реакция относящийся к ядерному оружию - * weapon ядерное оружие - * tests испытания ядерного оружия - * attack воздушное нападение с применением ядерного оружия - * component ядерный боевой заряд - * device устройство с ядерным зарядом;
ядерное оружие - * disarmament ядерное разоружение - * exchange применение ядерного оружия обеими воюющими сторонами - * explosion ядерный взрыв - * fallout радиоактивные осадки;
выпадение радиоактивных продуктов ядерного взрыва - * fire применение ядерного оружия - * fusion bomb термоядерная бомба - * missile war ракетно-ядерная война - * munitions ядерные боеприпасы - * slugging match( разговорное) атомная война - * warhead ядерная боеголовка - to destroy * stockpiles уничтожить запасы ядерного оружия обладающий ядерным оружием (биология) содержащий ядро, относящийся к ядру - * membrane оболочка ядра клетки - * cell division деление ядра клетки, кариокинез nuclear содержащий ядро ~ ядерный;
nuclear energy ядерная, атомная энергия, внутриядерная энергия;
nuclear fallout радиоактивные осадки nucleate: nucleate = nuclear ~ diplomacy ядерная дипломатия;
nuclear disarmament отказ от применения ядерного оружия ~ diplomacy ядерная дипломатия;
nuclear disarmament отказ от применения ядерного оружия ~ ядерный;
nuclear energy ядерная, атомная энергия, внутриядерная энергия;
nuclear fallout радиоактивные осадки ~ ядерный;
nuclear energy ядерная, атомная энергия, внутриядерная энергия;
nuclear fallout радиоактивные осадки ~ fission ядерное деление;
nuclear fusion синтез, слияние ядер ~ fission ядерное деление;
nuclear fusion синтез, слияние ядер ~ fuel ядерное горючее, ядерное топливо;
nuclear physics ядерная физика, физика атомного ядра ~ reactor ядерный реактор;
nuclear state (или power) государство, обладающее ядерным оружием ~ reactor ядерный реактор;
nuclear state( или power) государство, обладающее ядерным оружием ~ test испытание ядерного оружия;
nuclear weapon ядерное оружие ~ test испытание ядерного оружия;
nuclear weapon ядерное оружие weapon: nuclear ~ атомное оружие -
80 боеприпасы
1) General subject: am, amm, ammunition (а не амуниция), armament, munition, munitions, powder and shot2) Military: ammo, ammunition supplies, cannon fodder, ordnance, rounds, service ammunition, (основные) service ammunition (системы оружия), store, weapons3) Diplomatic term: hardware4) Abbreviation: a.m.5) Makarov: war stores
См. также в других словарях:
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