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  • 1 ammunition, explosives, and other dangerous articles

    Military: AEDA

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > ammunition, explosives, and other dangerous articles

  • 2 أثاث

    أَثاث \ furnishings: articles of furniture and other articles in a house, such as a bath, curtains, etc. furniture, tables, beds, chairs and other movable but solid articles for a house.

    Arabic-English dictionary > أثاث

  • 3 رياش

    رِيَاش \ furnishings: articles of furniture and other articles in a house, such as a bath, curtains, etc.. furniture: tables, beds, chairs and other movable but solid articles for a house.

    Arabic-English dictionary > رياش

  • 4 furnishings

    أَثاث \ furnishings: articles of furniture and other articles in a house, such as a bath, curtains, etc. furniture, tables, beds, chairs and other movable but solid articles for a house.

    Arabic-English glossary > furnishings

  • 5 furnishings

    رِيَاش \ furnishings: articles of furniture and other articles in a house, such as a bath, curtains, etc.. furniture: tables, beds, chairs and other movable but solid articles for a house.

    Arabic-English glossary > furnishings

  • 6 furniture

    رِيَاش \ furnishings: articles of furniture and other articles in a house, such as a bath, curtains, etc.. furniture: tables, beds, chairs and other movable but solid articles for a house.

    Arabic-English glossary > furniture

  • 7 Haberdashery

    The smallwares necessary for the various department of the drapery trade, and the small articles used by ladies for personal adornment, such as tapes, braids, galloons, elastics, sewing threads, wool mendings, buttons, hooks and eyes, fasteners, hairnets, hairpins, safety pins, and numerous other articles.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Haberdashery

  • 8 Transparent Film Fibres

    The transparent cellulose paper used for wrapping food-stuffs and other articles is identical in constitution with viscose rayon, and is prepared in the same way up to the point of spinning in which it is extruded- through a wide and exceedingly fine slit and is coagulated in continuous sheet form. For textile uses the sheet is cut up into very narrow strips as small as 1/80-in. wide when used alone for effect threads or twisted with another thread, and as fine as 1/100-in. wide when reduced to. staple fibre form and mixed with other fibres prior to spinning.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Transparent Film Fibres

  • 9 Juwelier

    m; -s, -e jewel(l)er
    * * *
    der Juwelier
    jeweler; jeweller
    * * *
    Ju|we|lier [juve'liːɐ]
    1. m -s, -e,Ju|we|l|rin
    [-'liːrɪn]
    2. f -, -nen
    jeweller (Brit), jeweler (US); (= Geschäft) jewel(l)er's (shop)
    * * *
    (a person who makes, or deals in, ornaments and other articles made of precious stones and metals.) jeweller
    * * *
    Ju·we·lier(in)
    <-s, -e>
    [juveˈli:ɐ̯]
    1. (Besitzer eines Juweliergeschäftes) jeweller BRIT, jeweler AM
    2. (Juweliergeschäft) jeweller's BRIT, jeweler's AM
    * * *
    der; Juweliers jeweller; s. auch Bäcker
    * * *
    Juwelier m; -s, -e jewel(l)er
    * * *
    der; Juweliers jeweller; s. auch Bäcker
    * * *
    -e m.
    jeweler n.
    jeweller n.

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Juwelier

  • 10 Schreibwaren

    Pl. writing materials, stationery Sg.; „Schreibwaren“ Schild: ‚stationery’
    * * *
    die Schreibwaren
    stationery (Pl.)
    * * *
    Schreib|wa|ren
    pl
    stationery sing, writing materials pl
    * * *
    (paper, envelopes, pens and other articles used in writing etc.) stationery
    * * *
    Schreib·wa·ren
    pl stationery no pl
    * * *
    Plural stationery sing.; writing materials
    * * *
    Schreibwaren pl writing materials, stationery sg;
    „Schreibwaren“ Schild: ‘stationery’
    * * *
    Plural stationery sing.; writing materials

    Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch > Schreibwaren

  • 11 chapeta

    f.
    1 a small metal plate.
    2 red spot on the cheek.
    3 a stud for shirts or other articles.
    4 rosy cheek.
    * * *

    Spanish-English dictionary > chapeta

  • 12 ཆང་དོད་

    [chang dod]
    silver or other articles with which wine or beer is exchanged

    Tibetan-English dictionary > ཆང་དོད་

  • 13 སྲེག་རྫས་

    [sreg rdzas]
    clarified butter and other articles required to be thrown in the sacrificial fire

    Tibetan-English dictionary > སྲེག་རྫས་

  • 14 anulus

    1.
    ānŭlus (not ann-), i, m. [2. anus, like circulus from circum, not a dim.], a ring, esp. for the finger, a finger-ring; and for sealing, a seal-ring, signet-ring.
    I.
    Lit.:

    ille suum anulum opposuit,

    Plaut. Curc. 2, 3, 76:

    de digito anulum Detraho,

    Ter. Heaut. 4, 1, 37; id. Ad. 3, 2, 49; id. Hec. 5, 3, 31 et saep.; Lucr. 1, 312; 6, 1008; 6, 1014:

    (Gyges) anulum detraxit,

    Cic. Off. 3, 9, 38:

    gemmatus,

    Liv. 1, 11; Suet. Ner. 46; id. Caes. 33; id. Tib. 73 et saep.:

    anulo tabulas obsignare,

    Plaut. Curc. 2, 3, 67:

    sigilla anulo imprimere,

    Cic. Ac. 2, 26, 85; id. ad Q. Fr. 1, 1, 4; Plin. 33, 1, 5 sqq. et saep.—The right to wear a gold ring was possessed, in the time of the Republic, only by the knights (equites); hence, equestris, * Hor. S. 2, 7, 53:

    anulum invenit = eques factus est,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 3, 76.—So also jus anulorum = dignitas equestris, Suet. Caes. 33:

    donatus anulo aureo,

    id. ib. 39; so id. Galb. 10; 14; id. Vit. 12 al.; cf. Mayor ad Juv. 7, 89; Smith. Dict. Antiq.—
    II.
    Of other articles in the form of rings.
    A.
    A ring for curtains:

    velares anuli,

    Plin. 13, 9, 18, § 62. —
    B.
    A link of a chain, Plin. 34, 15, 43, § 150; cf. Mart. 2, 29.— Irons for the feet, fetters:

    anulus cruribus aptus,

    Mart. 14, 169.—
    C.
    A curled lock of hair, a ringlet:

    comarum anulus,

    Mart. 2, 66.—
    D.
    A round ornament upon the capitals of Doric columns:

    anuli columnarum,

    Vitr. 4, 3.—
    E.
    Anuli virgei, rings made of willow rods, Plin. 15, 29, 37, § 124.
    2.
    ānŭlus, i, m. dim. [1. anus], the posteriors, fundament, Cato, R. R. 159.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > anulus

  • 15 Frill

    FRILL (Jabot, French)
    An edging, which may be broad or narrow, composed of silk, lace, tulle, linen or cotton, gathered, plaited, fluted or piped, according to the use for which it has been designed or the fabric to which it is attached. Frills are attached to blinds, pillow cases, crib quilts, ladies' underclothing, lace ties, lace curtains, and many other articles. The essential feature of a frill is the fluted or uniformly gathered shape. A flounce and a frill are very similar except that the latter is of a finer material than that to which it is attached.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Frill

  • 16 Parfilage

    A French term for the process of picking a fabric apart in order to recover the gold or silver threads woven in it. The metal threads recovered were made up into hats and many other articles. In England it was known as " drizzling " and practised until 1820

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Parfilage

  • 17 Shetland Point Lace

    A needle-made lace, produced in Italy from fine Shetland wool for babies' shawls, scarves and other articles that require to be light, but warm. Either white or black yarn is used and the designs are formed of the simplest point lace stitches.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Shetland Point Lace

  • 18 jeweller

    (American) ˈjeweler noun
    a person who makes, or deals in, ornaments and other articles made of precious stones and metals.
    صائِغ، جَوْهَرْجي

    Arabic-English dictionary > jeweller

  • 19 stationery

    noun
    paper, envelopes, pens and other articles used in writing etc.
    قِرطاسِيَّه، أدوات مَكْتَبِيَّه

    Arabic-English dictionary > stationery

  • 20 Angola

    (and Enclave of Cabinda)
       From 1575 to 1975, Angola was a colony of Portugal. Located in west-central Africa, this colony has been one of the largest, most strategically located, and richest in mineral and agricultural resources in the continent. At first, Portugal's colonial impact was largely coastal, but after 1700 it became more active in the interior. By international treaties signed between 1885 and 1906, Angola's frontiers with what are now Zaire and Zambia were established. The colony's area was 1,246,700 square kilometers (481,000 square miles), Portugal's largest colonial territory after the independence of Brazil. In Portugal's third empire, Angola was the colony with the greatest potential.
       The Atlantic slave trade had a massive impact on the history, society, economy, and demography of Angola. For centuries, Angola's population played a subordinate role in the economy of Portugal's Brazil-centered empire. Angola's population losses to the slave trade were among the highest in Africa, and its economy became, to a large extent, hostage to the Brazilian plantation-based economic system. Even after Brazil's independence in 1822, Brazilian economic interests and capitalists were influential in Angola; it was only after Brazil banned the slave trade in 1850 that the heavy slave traffic to former Portuguese America began to wind down. Although slavery in Angola was abolished, in theory, in the 1870s, it continued in various forms, and it was not until the early 1960s that its offspring, forced labor, was finally ended.
       Portugal's economic exploitation of Angola went through different stages. During the era of the Atlantic slave trade (ca. 1575-1850), when many of Angola's slaves were shipped to Brazil, Angola's economy was subordinated to Brazil's and to Portugal's. Ambitious Lisbon-inspired projects followed when Portugal attempted to replace the illegal slave trade, long the principal income source for the government of Angola, with legitimate trade, mining, and agriculture. The main exports were dyes, copper, rubber, coffee, cotton, and sisal. In the 1940s and 1950s, petroleum emerged as an export with real potential. Due to the demand of the World War II belligerents for Angola's raw materials, the economy experienced an impetus, and soon other articles such as diamonds, iron ore, and manganese found new customers. Angola's economy, on an unprecedented scale, showed significant development, which was encouraged by Lisbon. Portugal's colonization schemes, sending white settlers to farm in Angola, began in earnest after 1945, although such plans had been nearly a century in the making. Angola's white population grew from about 40,000 in 1940 to nearly 330,000 settlers in 1974, when the military coup occurred in Portugal.
       In the early months of 1961, a war of African insurgency broke out in northern Angola. Portugal dispatched armed forces to suppress resistance, and the African insurgents were confined to areas on the borders of northern and eastern Angola at least until the 1966-67 period. The 13-year colonial war had a telling impact on both Angola and Portugal. When the Armed Forces Movement overthrew the Estado Novo on 25 April 1974, the war in Angola had reached a stalemate and the major African nationalist parties (MPLA, FNLA, and UNITA) had made only modest inroads in the northern fringes and in central and eastern Angola, while there was no armed activity in the main cities and towns.
       After a truce was called between Portugal and the three African parties, negotiations began to organize the decolonizat ion process. Despite difficult maneuvering among the parties, Portugal, the MPLA, FNLA, and UNITA signed the Alvor Agreement of January 1975, whereby Portugal would oversee a transition government, create an all-Angola army, and supervise national elections to be held in November 1975. With the outbreak of a bloody civil war among the three African parties and their armies, the Alvor Agreement could not be put into effect. Fighting raged between March and November 1975. Unable to prevent the civil war or to insist that free elections be held, Portugal's officials and armed forces withdrew on 11 November 1975. Rather than handing over power to one party, they transmitted sovereignty to the people of Angola. Angola's civil war continued into the 21st century.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Angola

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