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1 Green Card
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2 Green card
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3 Green Card
green card, Green Card -
4 Green card
green card, Green Card -
5 Green Linen
The trade term for linen fabrics manufactured from unbleached or " green " yam. -
6 Green Ramie
The ramie fibre is sometimes given this name to distinguished it from China grass (white ramie). The ramie plant has green on both sides of its leaves, whereas the China grass plant has white on one side of its leaves (see Ramie) -
7 green shoe
Finan option, offered by the company raising the capital for the issue of further shares to cover a shortfall in the event of overallocation. It gets its name from the Green Shoe Manufacturing Company which was the first to include the feature in a public offering. (slang) -
8 green
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9 Green Cotton
A name given to cotton picked in the unripe condition, and met with mostly at the commencement of a season. It contains a large amount of moisture. The spiral twists, characteristic of fully ripe fibres, have not developed, neither has the tubular structure of the fibre collapsed. -
10 Green Yarn
Trade term for undressed jute or unbleached linen yarns. -
11 green fk
green [golf] -
12 green
[griːn]1. adjective1) of the colour of growing grass or the leaves of most plants:أخْضَرa green hat.
2) not ripe:غَير ناضِج، فَجgreen bananas.
3) without experience:غَض، بِدون تَجْرِبَهOnly someone as green as you would believe a story like that.
4) looking as if one is about to be sick; very pale:حَسود، غَيور جداHe was green with envy (= very jealous).
2. noun1) the colour of grass or the leaves of plants:اللون الأخْضَرthe green of the trees in summer.
2) something (eg paint) green in colour:دهان أخْضَرI've used up all my green.
3) an area of grass:منطِقَه خَضْراءa village green.
4) an area of grass on a golf course with a small hole in the centre.مَخْضَرَه، منطقة خَضْراء في مَلعب الغولف5) concerned with the protection of the environment:مُتَعَلِّق بحماية البيئَهa green political party.
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13 Green, Charles
SUBJECT AREA: Aerospace[br]b. 31 January 1785 London, Englandd. 26 March 1870 London, England[br]English balloonist who introduced the use of coal gas for balloons.[br]Charles Green lived in London at a time when gas mains were being installed to supply coal gas for the recently introduced gas lighting. He was interested in the exploits of balloonists but lacked the finance needed to construct a balloon and fill it with expensive hydrogen. He decided to experiment with coal gas, which was very much cheaper, albeit a little heavier, than hydrogen: a larger balloon would be needed to lift the same weight. Green made his first ascent on 19 July 1821 to celebrate the coronation of King George. His large balloon was prepared in Green Park, London, and filled from the gas main in Piccadilly. He made a spectacular ascent to 11,000 ft (3,350 m), thus proving the suitability of coal gas, which was readily available and cheap. Like many balloonists, Green was also a showman. He made ascents on horseback or with fireworks to attract spectators. He did, however, try out some new ideas, such as cemented fabric joints (instead of stitching) for a huge new balloon, the Royal Vauxhall. On its first flight, in September 1836, this impressive balloon carried Green plus eight passengers. On 7 November 1836 Green and two friends ascended from Vauxhall Gardens, London, to make a long-distance flight. They landed safely in the Duchy of Nassau, Germany, having covered a record 480 miles (772 km) in eighteen hours. To help control the height of the balloon on this flight, Green fitted a long, heavy rope which trailed on the ground. If the balloon started to rise, then more of the "trail rope" was lifted off the ground, resulting in an increase in the weight to be lifted and a reduction in the rate of ascent. This idea had been suggested earlier by Thomas Baldwin in 1785, but Green developed it and in 1840 proposed to use if for a flight across the Atlantic: he later abandoned this plan.Charles Green made over five hundred ascents and died in bed at the age of 85, no small age for a balloonist.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsMember of the (Royal) Aeronautical Society, founded in 1866.Bibliography1836, Authentic Narrative of the Great Balloon Voyage and Descent in Germany, London (a pamphlet).Further ReadingL.T.C.Rolt, 1966, The Aeronauts, London (provides a full account of Green's achievements).J.E.Hodgson, 1924, the History of Aeronautics in Great Britain, London.T.Monck Mason, 1838, Aeronautica, London.JDS -
14 green
m.(Golf) Green.* * *1 green* * *[ɡrin]SM (pl greens) [ɡrin] (Golf) green* * */grin/green* * *[en golf] green -
15 green screen process
■ Technique of shooting foreground action against an evenly-lit monochromatic background for the purpose of removing the background from the scene and replacing it with a different image or scene.■ Verfahren in der Film- bzw. Fernsehtechnik, das es ermöglicht, Gegenstände oder Personen nachträglich vor einen beliebigen Hintergrund zu setzen. -
16 green
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17 Green Book
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18 Green salt
n <chem.nukl> (UF4) ■ uranium tetrafluoride; green salt -
19 Green'scher Abgasvorwärmer
m < verf> ■ Green's economizerGerman-english technical dictionary > Green'scher Abgasvorwärmer
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20 Green Card
f[Wohnsitznachweis für Ausländer in den USA]green card
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Green — (gr[=e]n), a. [Compar. {Greener} (gr[=e]n [ e]r); superl. {Greenest.}] [OE. grene, AS. gr[=e]ne; akin to D. groen, OS. gr[=o]ni, OHG. gruoni, G. gr[ u]n, Dan. & Sw. gr[ o]n, Icel. gr[ae]nn; fr. the root of E. grow. See {Grow.}] 1. Having the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Green brier — Green Green (gr[=e]n), a. [Compar. {Greener} (gr[=e]n [ e]r); superl. {Greenest.}] [OE. grene, AS. gr[=e]ne; akin to D. groen, OS. gr[=o]ni, OHG. gruoni, G. gr[ u]n, Dan. & Sw. gr[ o]n, Icel. gr[ae]nn; fr. the root of E. grow. See {Grow.}] 1.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English