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1 carve
1. transitive verb1) (cut up) tranchieren [Fleisch]2. intransitive verbcarve something out of wood/stone — etwas aus Holz schnitzen/aus Stein meißeln
1) tranchieren2)carve in wood/stone — in Holz schnitzen/in Stein meißeln
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/85129/carve_out">carve out- carve up* * *1) (to make designs, shapes etc by cutting a piece of wood etc: A figure carved out of wood.) schnitzen•- carving- carve out* * *[kɑ:v, AM kɑ:rv]I. vt▪ to \carve sthto be \carved from stone aus Stein gemeißelt sein▪ to \carve sth out etw herausschneidento \carve out a tunnel in a rock einen Tunnel in den Fels treiben [o schlagenII. vi tranchieren* * *[kAːv]1. vtcarved in( to) the wood — in das Holz geschnitzt
carved in( to) the stone — in den Stein gehauen or gemeißelt
to carve one's initials on a tree — seine Initialen in einen Baum einritzen or schnitzen
a frieze carved with flowers — ein geschnitzter or (in stone) gemeißelter Blumenfries
the sculptor was still carving the face — der Bildhauer schnitzte or (in stone) meißelte noch das Gesicht
2) (COOK) aufschneiden, zerteilen, tranchieren3) (fig)to carve a niche for oneself ( as), to carve oneself a niche (as) — sich (dat) seine Sporen verdienen (als)
2. vi (COOK)tranchieren* * *carve [kɑː(r)v]A v/the carved the wood into a garden gnome er schnitzte aus dem Holz einen Gartenzwerg;2. ausschnitzen, -meißeln:3. einschneiden, -meißeln:carve one’s initials on a tree trunk seine Initialen in einen Baumstamm (ein)ritzen4. (mit Schnitzereien) verzieren:carve a stone with figures einen Stein mit gemeißelten Figuren verzieren5. a) Fleisch etc zerlegen, vorschneiden, tranchierencarve out a fortune ein Vermögen machen;carve out a career for o.s. sich eine Karriere aufbauen, Karriere machenB v/i1. schnitzen, meißeln2. (bei Tisch) vorschneiden, tranchieren* * *1. transitive verb1) (cut up) tranchieren [Fleisch]2) (from wood) schnitzen; (from stone) meißeln2. intransitive verbcarve something out of wood/stone — etwas aus Holz schnitzen/aus Stein meißeln
1) tranchieren2)carve in wood/stone — in Holz schnitzen/in Stein meißeln
Phrasal Verbs:- carve up* * *(into) v.einritzen v.einschneiden (in) v.schnitzen v.zerschneiden v. v.zerlegen v. -
2 cone
<el> ■ Rotor m<mech.eng> (e.g. on shafts, friction clutches) ■ Konus m<mech.eng> (only taper roller bearing, without cup) ■ Kegelrollenlager n< metal> ■ Trichter m< petr> (rotating cutter in a rock cutting bit) ■ Kegelrolle f ; Rolle f ; Schneidrolle f ; Konus m -
3 kneel
kneel [down] to do something — niederknien od. sich [hin]knien, um etwas zu tun
kneel to somebody — vor jemandem [nieder]knien
* * *[ni:l]past tense, past participle - knelt; verb((often with down) to be in, or move into, a position in which both the foot and the knee of one or both legs are on the ground: She knelt (down) to fasten the child's shoes; She was kneeling on the floor cutting out a dress pattern.) knien* * *[ni:l]vi knien▪ to \kneel before sb vor jdm niederknien* * *[niːl] pret, ptp knelt or kneeledvi(before vor +dat) knien; (also kneel down) niederknien, (sich) hinknien* * *2. a) knien, auf den Knien liegen ( beide:before vor dat)* * *kneel [down] to do something — niederknien od. sich [hin]knien, um etwas zu tun
kneel to somebody — vor jemandem [nieder]knien
* * *v.(§ p.,p.p.: kneeled)= hinknien v.knien v. -
4 wastage
noun1) (loss by wear etc.) Schwund, der2)[natural] wastage — (Admin.) ≈ natürliche Fluktuation
* * *[-ti‹]noun (loss by wasting; the amount wasted: Of the total amount, roughly 20% was wastage.) der Verlust* * *wast·age[ˈweɪstɪʤ]n no plthere is a lot of \wastage of material using this pattern man hat ziemlich viel Verschnitt, wenn man dieses Schnittmuster verwendet* * *['weIstɪdZ]nSchwund m; (= action) Verschwendung f; (= amount also) Materialverlust m; (from container also) Verlust m; (unusable products etc also) Abfall ma wastage rate of 10% — eine Verlustquote von 10%
See:→ natural wastage* * *wastage [ˈweıstıdʒ] s1. Schwund m:natural wastage WIRTSCH natürliche Fluktuation2. Verschwendung f, -geudung f:wastage of energy Energieverschwendung* * *noun1) (loss by wear etc.) Schwund, der2)[natural] wastage — (Admin.) ≈ natürliche Fluktuation
* * *n.Abnutzung f.Verbrauch m.Verlust -¨e m. -
5 wastage
wast·age [ʼweɪstɪʤ] nthere is a lot of \wastage of material using this pattern man hat ziemlich viel Verschnitt, wenn man dieses Schnittmuster verwendet
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