-
41 close
1. [kləuz] гл.1)а) закрыватьClose the door tightly. — Закрой плотно дверь.
б) закрыватьсяMany flowers open in the morning and close at night. — Многие цветы утром распускаются, а вечером закрываются.
I'm glad to see that the wound is closing (up) nicely. — Я очень рад, что рана так хорошо закрывается (затягивается).
Syn:2) = close up затыкать, заделывать; забивать, заполнятьThe handyman closed the hole in the wall with plaster. — Рабочий заделал дыру в стене штукатуркой.
We must close up the old well, it's dangerous. — Надо засыпать старый колодец, он небезопасен.
Syn:3) запирать; заключать (куда-л. / во что-л.)The stableboy closed the horse in the stall. — Помощник конюха запер лошадь в конюшне.
Syn:4) ( close on) прищемить, придавитьI closed the window on my finger and made it bleed. — Я прищемил палец оконной рамой, и из него пошла кровь.
5)а) = close up кончать, заканчиватьThe pianist closed the concert with a Gershwin medley. — Пианист завершил концерт исполнением попурри из произведений Гершвина.
The priest closed the meeting with a prayer. — Священник завершил собрание молитвой.
б) прекращаться, заканчиватьсяSchools closed for the Christmas holiday. — Школы закрылись на рождественские каникулы.
Syn:6) бирж. завершиться каким-л. курсом ( о торгах на бирже)7) принимать (деловое) предложение; заключать сделку; приходить к соглашениюAfter hours of talking about the price, the shopkeeper at last closed with the salesman's offer. — После нескольких часов переговоров хозяин магазина согласился с ценой продавца.
The two ministers didn't close with each other until near the end of the meeting. — Двое министров договорились только к концу заседания.
8) соединять, объединятьThe surgeon closed the two edges of the incision with surgical thread. — Хирург соединил края разреза хирургической нитью.
Syn:9) эл. замыкать ( цепь)Syn:fuse I 2.10) подходить близко; сближаться вплотнуюThe soldiers closed ranks. — Солдаты сомкнули ряды.
The men closed round him. — Люди столпились вокруг него.
11) = close down (close about / on) приближаться, надвигаться; постепенно окружатьNight closed on us among a labyrinth of hills and canyons. — Ночь настигла нас в лабиринте холмов и каньонов.
As darkness closed about them, they decided to return home. — Когда стало темнеть, они решили вернуться домой.
Darkness closed down on the city. — Над городом сгустилась тьма.
12) войти в ближний бой, схватиться в рукопашной; войти в соприкосновение ( с противником)•- close in
- close off
- close out
- close up••- be closed with smb.- close the door on smth. 2. [kləus] прил.1) закрытыйI've brought a close carriage for him. — Я достал ему закрытую коляску.
Syn:2) лингв. закрытый ( гласный)3) закрытый (для доступа широкой публики, для охоты)4) замкнутый; ограниченный, узкийThe space contained close alleys and open walks. — Там были и узкие аллеи, и открытые места для прогулок.
Syn:Captain is in close arrest. — Капитан находится под строгим арестом.
6) секретный, тайный; уединённый; скрытый от глазto keep a thing close — держать что-л. в секрете
to keep / lie close — прятаться
Syn:7) душный, удушливый, спёртыйThe air in this room is very close. — В этой комнате очень спёртый воздух.
Syn:8) скрытный, замкнутый; сдержанный, молчаливыйHe was too close to name his circumstances to me. — Он был слишком замкнутым человеком, чтобы рассказать мне о своём положении.
Syn:9) скупой, скаредныйHe's as close with his money as Scrooge. — Он скупой, как Скрудж.
Syn:10) тесный ( о помещении)Living in such close quarters makes privacy difficult. — Когда живёшь в такой тесноте, уединиться практически невозможно.
11) плотный; сжатый, убористый ( о почерке)The fabric was of a close weave. — Ткань была плотная.
Syn:12) близкий ( о времени и месте); близко расположенныйclose column — воен. сомкнутая колонна
The house is close to the park. — Дом расположен рядом с парком.
- get to close quartersThe migration of the ducks southward showed that winter was close. — Утки летели на юг, это означало, что зима уже близко.
Syn:14) = close-fitting плотно облегающий; хорошо пригнанный ( об одежде)15) близкий, интимный; неразлучныйThe two brothers are very close. — Два брата очень близки.
Syn:16) близкий, схожий; почти равныйclose contest — состязание равных соперников; упорная борьба ( особенно на выборах)
The colour is close to what I want, but the style is wrong. — Цвет очень близок к тому, что я хочу, но фасон мне не нравится.
The resemblance is very close and very strange. — Сходство очень сильное и очень странное.
It was a close race. — Это были скачки с почти равными соперниками.
Syn:17) внимательный; тщательный; подробныйclose reading — внимательное, медленное чтение
close control — строгий надзор, тщательный контроль
Keep a close watch on the children. — Внимательно следите за детьми.
Syn:18) короткий; коротко постриженныйA straight razor gives a close shave. — Прямая бритва бреет очень гладко.
Syn:3. [kləus] нареч.1) близко, около; рядомCome close so I can see you. — Подойди поближе, чтобы я мог тебя увидеть.
We were close to when it happened. — Мы были рядом, когда это случилось.
Syn:2) ( close on) почти, приблизительноThere were close on a hundred people present. — Присутствовало почти сто человек.
He is close on sixty. — Ему около шестидесяти.
Syn:3) коротко (о стрижке волос, о подстриженной траве)4. [kləuz] сущ.1) завершение, заключение, конец, окончаниеThe day had reached its close. — День подошёл к концу.
The crowd began to leave before the close of the game. — Народ начал уходить до окончания игры.
Syn:3) брит. огороженное поле ( в центральных районах Англии)5) двор; замкнутая территория вокруг здания6) преим. брит. территория, прилегающая к собору7) преим. брит. проход, ведущий с улицы во двор к лестнице многоквартирного домаSyn:9) муз. каденция; каданс10) уст. столкновение; борьбаSyn: -
42 close on
Синонимический ряд:around (other) about; around; circa; close to; near; nearby; nigh; not far from; round -
43 Conimbriga
South of the present city of Coimbra, Conimbriga was a Roman settlement of some importance that is currently undergoing archaeological excavations and the restoration of the houses, streets, and walls of its ancient community. As of the early 1990s, between one-third and one-half of the excavations were complete and were being carried out by Portuguese archaeologists, a team of French archaeologists, and other international experts. A remarkable tourist site for extended visits and study tours, the nearby museum and Conimbriga offer unique insight into Roman life. For example, one can view the restored Roman plumbing, water systems, and even a kind of sauna system in several elegant villas, as well as extensive, beautiful mosaics. -
44 there
❢ There is generally translated by là after prepositions: near there = près de là etc and when emphasizing the location of an object/point etc visible to the speaker: put them there = mettez-les là. Remember that voilà is used to draw attention to a visible place/object/person: there's my watch = voilà ma montre, whereas il y a is used for generalizations: there's a village nearby = il y a un village tout près. there when unstressed with verbs such as aller and être is translated by y: we went there last year = nous y sommes allés l'année dernière, but not where emphasis is made: it was there that we went last year = c'est là que nous sommes allés l'année dernière. For examples of the above and further uses of there see the entry below.A pron ( as impersonal subject) il ; there seems ou appears to be il semble y avoir ; there is/are il y a ; there are many reasons il y a beaucoup de raisons ; there is some left il en reste ; once upon a time there was il était une fois ; there'll be a singsong later on va chanter plus tard ; there's no denying that personne ne peut nier que ; suddenly there appeared a fairy littér soudain est apparue une fée ; there arose cries from the audience littér des cris sont montés de la salle.B adv1 ( that place or point) là ; far from/near/two kilometres from there loin de/près de/à deux kilomètres de là ; up to there, down to there jusque là ; put it in there mettez-le là-dedans ; in there please ( ushering sb) par là s'il vous plaît ; we left there on Thursday nous sommes partis de là jeudi ;2 ( at or to that place) là ; stop there arrêtez-vous là ; sign there please veuillez signer là s'il vous plaît ; stand there mettez-vous là ; go over there va là-bas ; are you still there? ( on phone) est-ce que tu es toujours là? ; since we were last there depuis la dernière fois que nous y sommes allés ; it's there that gen c'est là que ; ( when indicating) c'est là où ; to go there and back in an hour faire l'aller et retour en une heure ; take the offer while it's there fig profite de l'occasion pendant que c'est possible ;3 ( to draw attention) (to person, activity etc) voilà ; ( to place) là ; what have you got there? qu'est-ce que tu as là? ; there they go les voilà qui s'en vont ; there goes the coach voilà le car qui s'en va ; there you go again fig ça y est c'est reparti ; there you are ( seeing sb arrive) vous voilà ; ( giving object) tenez, voilà ; ( that's done) et voilà ; there is a hammer/are some nails voilà un marteau/des clous ; there's a bus coming voilà un bus ; listen, there's my sister calling tiens, voilà ma sœur qui appelle ; that paragraph/sales assistant there ce paragraphe/vendeur ; my colleague there will show you mon collègue va vous montrer ; which one? this one or that one there? lequel? celui-ci ou celui-là? ; what does it say there? qu'est-ce qui est marqué là? ; there's why! ça explique tout! ;4 ( indicating arrival) là ; will she be there now? est-ce qu'elle y est maintenant? ; when do they get there? quand est-ce qu'ils arrivent là-bas? ; there I was at last j'étais enfin là-bas ; the train won't be there yet le train ne sera pas encore là ; we get off there c'est là qu'on descend ;5 ( indicating juncture) là ; there we must finish nous devons nous arrêter là ; I'd like to interrupt you there là je me permets de vous interrompre ; there was our chance c'était notre chance ; I think you're wrong there je crois que là tu te trompes ; so there we were in the same cell et comme ça on s'est retrouvés dans la même cellule ;6 ○ ( emphatic) that there contraption ce truc-là ○ ; hello there! salut! ; hey you there! eh toi là-bas!E excl there there! ( soothingly) allez! allez! ; there! ( triumphantly) voilà! ; there, I told you! voilà, je te l'avais bien dit! ; there, you've woken the baby! c'est malin, tu as réveillé le bébé! ; ⇒ so. -
45 Clerke, Sir Clement
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]d. 1693[br]English entrepreneur responsible, with others, for attempts to introduce coal-fired smelting of lead and, later, of copper.[br]Clerke, from Launde Abbey in Leicestershire, was involved in early experiments to smelt lead using coal fuel, which was believed to have been located on the Leicestershire-Derbyshire border. Concurrently, Lord Grandison was financing experiments at Bristol for similar purposes, causing the downfall of an earlier unsuccessful patented method before securing his own patent in 1678. In that same year Clerke took over management of the Bristol works, claiming the ability to secure financial return from Grandison's methods. Financial success proved elusive, although the technical problems of adapting the reverberatory furnace to coal fuel appear to have been solved when Clerke was found to have established another lead works nearby on his own account. He was forced to cease work on lead in 1684 in respect of Grandison's patent rights. Clerke then turned to investigations into the coal-fired smelting of other metals and started to smelt copper in coal-fired reverberatory furnaces. By 1688–9 small supplied of merchantable copper were offered for sale in London in order to pay his workers, possibly because of further financial troubles. The practical success of his smelting innovation is widely acknowledged to have been the responsibility of John Coster and, to a smaller extent, Gabriel Wayne, both of whom left Clerke and set up separate works elsewhere. Clerke's son Talbot took over administration of his father's works, which declined still further and closed c. 1693, at about the time of Sir Clement's death. Both Coster and Wayne continued to develop smelting techniques, establishing a new British industry in the smelting of copper with coal.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCreated baronet 1661.Further ReadingRhys Jenkins, 1934, "The reverberatory furnace with coal fuel", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 34:67–81.—1943–4, "Copper smelting in England: Revival at the end of the seventeenth century", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 24:78–80.J.Morton, 1985, The Rise of the Modern Copper and Brass Industry: 1690 to 1750, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Birmingham, 87–106.JD -
46 Lippershey, Hans (Johannes)
SUBJECT AREA: Photography, film and optics[br]fl. sixteenth/seventeenth centuries the Netherlands[br]Dutch probable inventor of the telescope.[br]Lippershey was a spectacle maker of Middelburg, a contender for the invention of the telescope. It is said that about 1600 two children were playing about his workshop and chanced to place a convex and a concave lens in a line, and noted a great magnification of the nearby church. Lippershey confirmed this and started manufacture of "instruments for seeing at a distance". In 1608 he petitioned the States General of the Netherlands for a patent for thirty years. A committee appointed to look into the matter declared that the device was likely to be of use to the State and suggested the improvement of a binocular arrangement. Other Dutch glass-workers, however, put forward claims to have constructed similar instruments, and, in the confusion, the States General turned down Lippershey's plea and he received no financial reward or patent protection.[br]Further ReadingD.J.Boorstin, 1984, The Discoverers, London: J.M.Dent.IMcNBiographical history of technology > Lippershey, Hans (Johannes)
-
47 Salt, Sir Titus
[br]b. 20 September 1803 Morley, Yorkshire, Englandd. 29 December 1876 Saltaire, Yorkshire, England[br]English industrialist, social reformer and entrepreneur who made his fortune by overcoming the problems of utilizing alpaca wool in the production of worsted, and established the early model town at Saltaire.[br]Titus Salt arrived in Bradford with his father, who was a wool merchant in the town, in 1822. He soon set up his own company and it was there that he experimented with the textile worsted. Alpaca wool comes from an animal of the camel family that resembles the llama, and flocks of domesticated breeds of the animal had been raised in the high Andes since the days of the Incas. The wool was introduced into Europe via Spain and, later, Germany and France. The first attempts to spin and weave the yarn in England were made in 1808, but despite experimentation over the years the material was difficult to work. It was in 1836 that Salt evolved his method of utilizing a cotton warp with part alpaca weft. The method proved a great success and Bradford gained a reputation as a manufacturing centre for alpaca wool, exporting both yarn and cloth in quantity, especially to the USA. By 1850 Salt, who owned six mills, was Bradford's biggest employer and was certainly its richest citizen. He decided to move out of the city and built a new mill works, the architects of which were Lockwood and Mawson, on the banks of the River Aire a few miles from the city. Around the works, between 1851 and 1871, he built houses, a hospital, library, church, institute and almshouses for his workers. The buildings were solid, good-standard structures of local stone and the houses were pleasantly situated, with their amenities making them seem palaces compared to the slums in which other Bradford textile workers lived at the time. The collection of buildings was the first example in Britain of a "model new town", and was, indeed still is, a remarkable prototype of its kind. Apart from being a philanthropist and social reformer, Salt was also concerned with taking advantage of the technical developments of his time. His mill works, which eventually covered ten acres of land, was of fashionably Italianate architectural style (its chimney even a copy of the campanile of the Church of Santa Maria Gloriosa in Venice), although its structure was of iron framing. The weaving shed held 1,200 looms and had capacity for 3,000 workers, who produced 30,000 yards of cloth per day. Water from the river was used to produce steam to power the matchinery used in the manufacturing processes of scouring, dyeing and finishing. For the export of goods, the nearby Leeds-Liverpool Canal linked the works to Britain's chief ports, and the Midland Railway (an extension of the LeedsBradford line which opened in 1846) was of great use for the same purpose.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCreated Baronet 1869.Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography.Visitors Guide to Salt aire, Bradford City Council.DY -
48 Train, George Francis
[br]b. 24 March 1829 Boston, Massachusetts, USA d. 1904[br]American entrepreneur who introduced tramways to the streets of London.[br]He was the son of a merchant, Oliver Train, who had settled in New Orleans, Louisiana. His mother and sister died in a yellow fever epidemic and he was sent to live on his grandmother's farm at Waltham, Massachusetts, where he went to the district school. He left in 1843 and was apprenticed in a grocery store in nearby Cambridge, where, one day, a relative named Enoch Train called to see him. George Train left and went to join his relative's shipping office across the river in Boston; Enoch Train, among other enterprises, ran a packet line to Liverpool and, in 1850, sent George to England to manage his Liverpool office. Three years later, George Train went to Melbourne, Australia, and established his own shipping firm; he is said to have earned £95,000 in his first year there. In 1855 he left Australia to travel in Europe and the Levant where he made many contacts. In the late 1850s and early 1860s he was in England seeking capital for American railroads and promoting the construction of street railways or trams in Liverpool, London and Staffordshire. In 1862 he was back in Boston, where he was put in jail for disturbing a public meeting; in 1870, he achieved momentary fame for travelling around the world in eighty days.[br]Further ReadingD.Malone (ed.), 1932–3, Dictionary of American Biography, Vol. 5, New York: Charles Scribner.IMcN -
49 safe distance
безопасное расстояние
Минимальное расстояние от опасной зоны, на котором должна быть расположена защитная конструкция.
[ГОСТ ЕН 1070-2003]
безопасное расстояние
Наименьшее расстояние между человеком и источником опасного и вредного производственного фактора, при котором человек находится вне опасной зоны
[ ГОСТ 12.0.002-80]
безопасное расстояние (защитное разделение проводников)
Минимальное расстояние между двумя проводящими элементами вне или внутри защищаемого объекта, при котором между ними не может произойти опасного искрения.
[РД 91.020.00-КТН-276-07]Параллельные тексты EN-RU
When installing a circuit breaker, safety clearances must be kept between the breaker and panels, bars and other protection devices installed nearby.
[LS Industrial Systems]При монтаже автоматического выключателя необходимо соблюдать безопасные расстояния до панелей, шин и других установленных рядом аппаратов защиты.
[Перевод Интент]
А- Минимальное расстояние до верхней металлической панели
A- Minimum distance to metallic top panel
Рис. LS Industrial Systems
Тематики
- НКУ (шкафы, пульты,...)
- безопасность машин и труда в целом
EN
DE
FR
безопасное расстояние
Минимальное расстояние между магнитным компасом и какой-либо частью магнитного или электрического оборудования или индуктивных цепей, которое необходимо для устранения или максимального уменьшения помех при работе компаса.
[ ГОСТ Р 52682-2006]Тематики
- средства навигации, наблюдения, управления
EN
DE
FR
D. Sicherheitsabstand
E. Safe distance
F. Distance de sécurité
Наименьшее расстояние между человеком и источником опасного и вредного производственного фактора, при котором человек находится вне опасной зоны
Источник: ГОСТ 12.0.002-80: Система стандартов безопасности труда. Термины и определения оригинал документа
Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > safe distance
-
50 safety clearance
безопасное расстояние
Минимальное расстояние от опасной зоны, на котором должна быть расположена защитная конструкция.
[ГОСТ ЕН 1070-2003]
безопасное расстояние
Наименьшее расстояние между человеком и источником опасного и вредного производственного фактора, при котором человек находится вне опасной зоны
[ ГОСТ 12.0.002-80]
безопасное расстояние (защитное разделение проводников)
Минимальное расстояние между двумя проводящими элементами вне или внутри защищаемого объекта, при котором между ними не может произойти опасного искрения.
[РД 91.020.00-КТН-276-07]Параллельные тексты EN-RU
When installing a circuit breaker, safety clearances must be kept between the breaker and panels, bars and other protection devices installed nearby.
[LS Industrial Systems]При монтаже автоматического выключателя необходимо соблюдать безопасные расстояния до панелей, шин и других установленных рядом аппаратов защиты.
[Перевод Интент]
А- Минимальное расстояние до верхней металлической панели
A- Minimum distance to metallic top panel
Рис. LS Industrial Systems
Тематики
- НКУ (шкафы, пульты,...)
- безопасность машин и труда в целом
EN
DE
FR
зазор безопасности
Пространство между двумя динамическими габаритами или между динамическим габаритом и кромкой проезжей части дороги, необходимое для обеспечения безопасности проезда
[Терминологический словарь по строительству на 12 языках (ВНИИИС Госстроя СССР)]Тематики
EN
DE
FR
Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > safety clearance
-
51 safety distance
безопасное расстояние
Минимальное расстояние от опасной зоны, на котором должна быть расположена защитная конструкция.
[ГОСТ ЕН 1070-2003]
безопасное расстояние
Наименьшее расстояние между человеком и источником опасного и вредного производственного фактора, при котором человек находится вне опасной зоны
[ ГОСТ 12.0.002-80]
безопасное расстояние (защитное разделение проводников)
Минимальное расстояние между двумя проводящими элементами вне или внутри защищаемого объекта, при котором между ними не может произойти опасного искрения.
[РД 91.020.00-КТН-276-07]Параллельные тексты EN-RU
When installing a circuit breaker, safety clearances must be kept between the breaker and panels, bars and other protection devices installed nearby.
[LS Industrial Systems]При монтаже автоматического выключателя необходимо соблюдать безопасные расстояния до панелей, шин и других установленных рядом аппаратов защиты.
[Перевод Интент]
А- Минимальное расстояние до верхней металлической панели
A- Minimum distance to metallic top panel
Рис. LS Industrial Systems
Тематики
- НКУ (шкафы, пульты,...)
- безопасность машин и труда в целом
EN
DE
FR
Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > safety distance
См. также в других словарях:
Other Losses — Other Losses: An Investigation into the Mass Deaths of German Prisoners at the Hands of the French and Americans after World War II Author(s) … Wikipedia
Other primary schools in the Metropolitan Borough of Dudley — There are many minor primary schools in the Netherton, Halesowen, Brierley Hill, Gornal, Wrens Nest Estate, Kates Hill estate, Russells Hall Estate, Kingswinford, Dudley and Sedgley districts of the Metropolitan Borough of Dudley. While their… … Wikipedia
Other World Kingdom — For the mandal in Andhra Pradesh, India, see Owk. The Other World Kingdom Micronation Flag … Wikipedia
Other Characters in TUGS — This article is based on a section of fictional characters from the 1988 children s series: TUGS from the producers of Thomas the Tank Engine and FriendsGarbage CorporationThe owner of the Garbage Corporation yard. Organises the Municipal Garbage … Wikipedia
Other secondary schools in Sandwell — There are many minor secondary schools in the West Bromwich, Tipton, Rowley Regis and Oldbury districts of the Metropolitan Borough of Sandwell. While their individual histories and roles in society are only minor they have as a whole, like all… … Wikipedia
Metroid: Other M — Metroid: Other M … Wikipedia
On the Other Hand, Death — Written by Gillian Horvath Ron McGee Richard Stevenson Directed by Ron Oliver Starring Chad Allen Sebastian Spence Margot Kidder Daryl Shuttleworth … Wikipedia
Starscream (other incarnations) — As the Transformers franchise has grown, more continuities separate from the original series and its subsidiaries have come into existence, with some continuities featuring a unique version of Starscream. Beast Wars II Transformers character name … Wikipedia
Research Consortium on Nearby Stars — The Research Consortium on Nearby Stars (RECONS) is a project to investigate the stars nearest to the Solar System those within 10 parsecs (32.6 light years). In part the project hopes a more accurate survey of local star systems will give a… … Wikipedia
The Other — This|the 1972 film from Tom Tryon s novel|Other (disambiguation)Infobox Film name = The Other caption = director = Robert Mulligan producer = Tom Tryon, Robert Mulligan writer = Tom Tryon (also novel) starring = Uta Hagen, Diana Muldaur, Chris… … Wikipedia
Ultra Magnus (other incarnations) — As the Transformers franchise has grown, more continuities separate from the original series and its subsidiaries have come into existence, with some continuities featuring a unique version of the Autobot Ultra Magnus.Transformers: Robots in… … Wikipedia