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1 учебный снаряд
1) Naval: drill shell, practical shell, practice shot2) Military: blank shell, drill; training shell, dummy shell, practice shell, training projectile3) Engineering: dummy projectile4) Arms production: target-practice projectile5) Chemical weapons: training round -
2 parto
m.1 birth.estar de parto to be in laborparto natural natural childbirthparto prematuro premature birth2 childbirth, labor, accouchement, delivery.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: partir.* * *\estar de parto to be in labour (US labor)dolores de parto labour (US labor) painsparto múltiple multiple birthparto sin dolor painless birth* * *noun m.birth, delivery, labor* * *SM1) (Med) [gen] birth, delivery; (=contracciones) labour, labor (EEUU); (Zool) parturition2) (=creación) product, creationparto de los montes — anticlimax, bathos
* * *masculino (Med) labor*murió en el or de parto — she died in childbirth
* * *= childbirth, parturition, farrowing, delivery.Ex. Reading literature allows us to experience all kinds of human possibilities, from murder to childbirth, without suffering the consequences of undergoing the experiences in real life.Ex. The book contains the following chapters: practical horse nutrition; equine genetics; stallions; mares; parturition; care of mare and foal; and identification, selection, and marketing horses.Ex. Colostrum samples were taken from all sows at farrowing.Ex. Blood samples were collected from all subjects at delivery: 180 normal vaginal deliveries, 58 Caesarean sections, and 2 forceps-assisted deliveries.----* después del parto = postpartum.* dolores de parto = birth pangs.* parto con fórceps = forceps-assisted delivery, forceps delivery.* parto normal = vaginal delivery.* parto por cesárea = caesarean section.* * *masculino (Med) labor*murió en el or de parto — she died in childbirth
* * *= childbirth, parturition, farrowing, delivery.Ex: Reading literature allows us to experience all kinds of human possibilities, from murder to childbirth, without suffering the consequences of undergoing the experiences in real life.
Ex: The book contains the following chapters: practical horse nutrition; equine genetics; stallions; mares; parturition; care of mare and foal; and identification, selection, and marketing horses.Ex: Colostrum samples were taken from all sows at farrowing.Ex: Blood samples were collected from all subjects at delivery: 180 normal vaginal deliveries, 58 Caesarean sections, and 2 forceps-assisted deliveries.* después del parto = postpartum.* dolores de parto = birth pangs.* parto con fórceps = forceps-assisted delivery, forceps delivery.* parto normal = vaginal delivery.* parto por cesárea = caesarean section.* * *1 ( Med) labor*estar de parto to be in labortuvo un parto larguísimo she was in labor for a very long timefue un parto difícil it was a difficult birthprovocar el parto to induce labortuvieron que provocarle el parto she had to be inducedmurió en el or de parto she died during childbirthle teme al parto she's afraid of giving birthasistir en un parto to deliver a babyfue un parto prematuro she gave birth prematurely2(tarea difícil): al final lo terminó, pero aquello fue un parto he finally finished it, but it was like one of the labors of HerculesCompuestos:water birthmultiple birthnatural birthpain-free labor** * *
Del verbo partir: ( conjugate partir)
parto es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
Multiple Entries:
partir
parto
partir ( conjugate partir) verbo transitivo
‹nuez/avellana› to crack;
‹rama/palo› to break
‹ cabeza› to split open
verbo intransitivo
1
2a) parto DE algo ‹de una premisa/un supuesto› to start from sthb)◊ a partir de from;
a parto de ahora/ese momento from now on/that moment on;
a parto de hoy (as o starting) from today
partirse verbo pronominal
‹ diente› to break, chip
parto sustantivo masculino (Med) labor( conjugate labor);
fue un parto difícil it was a difficult birth;
provocar el parto to induce labor;
parto sin dolor pain-free labor( conjugate labor)
partir
I verbo transitivo
1 (romper, quebrar) to break: me parte el corazón verte tan desalentada, it's heartbreaking to see you so depressed
partir una nuez, to shell a walnut
2 (dividir) to split, divide
(con un cuchillo) to cut
II vi (irse) to leave, set out o off
♦ Locuciones: a partir de aquí/ahora, from here on/now on
a partir de entonces no volvimos a hablarnos, we didn't speak to each other from then on
parto sustantivo masculino childbirth, labour, US labor
' parto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alumbramiento
- provocar
English:
birth
- childbirth
- confinement
- deliver
- delivery
- induce
- induction
- labour
- labour pains
- natural childbirth
- smash
- stillbirth
- labor
- painless
* * *parto nm1. [de bebé] birth;los días anteriores al parto the days preceding the birth;estar de parto to be in labour;asistir en un parto to deliver a babyparto sin dolor painless childbirth;parto inducido induced labour;parto múltiple multiple birth;parto de nalgas breech delivery o birth;parto natural natural childbirth;parto prematuro premature birtheste proyecto ha tenido un parto muy difícil it was very difficult getting this project off the ground* * *m1 birth;sala de partos delivery room;estar de parto be in labor o Br labour* * *parto nm1) : childbirth, delivery, laborestar de parto: to be in labor2) : product, creation, brainchild* * *parto n birth -
3 по возможности ближе
По возможности ближеThermocouples were mounted inside wear pins, the bead being as close as possible to the wear face.Each connection to a tank inside of buildings shall be provided with an external valve located as close as practical to the shell of the tank.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > по возможности ближе
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4 практические соображения
Практические соображенияWhile a continuous thin shell of D-shaped conductors could lead to a minimum of required structure, practical considerations of design and construction must now be taken into account.More computer analysis could be performed for a wider range of screw geometries, but practicalities rule this out.Русско-английский научно-технический словарь переводчика > практические соображения
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5 человек
муж.1) person, man, human being, individual; oneтвердый духом человек — a steadfast/unflinching man
люди особого склада — people of a particular stamp/quality/mentality, people of a special mould
такого сорта люди разг. — that kind of people
беспокойный человек — fidget; worrier; амер.; разг. hellion
шумливый человек — разг. bounder
человек в футляре перен. — person who keeps himself in cotton wool, man in a cocoon/shell
деловой человек — business man; business-like/practical person (дельный, практичный)
малодушный человек — faint-heart, turnback
настойчивый человек, упорный человек — sticker; persistent person
обыкновенный человек — ordinary/average man
одаренный человек — prodigy, natural
пожилой человек — greybeard, old-timer, senior, разг. oldster
раздражительный человек, вспыльчивый человек — spitfire, splenetic; hot-temper person
семейный человек — family man, man of family амер.
- беззастенчивый человекстаромодный человек — antediluvian, old-timer, square-toes
- безответный человек
- безразличный человек
- бережливый человек
- беспринципный человек
- бессовестный человек
- бесхарактерный человек
- близорукий человек
- болезненный человек
- ветреный человек
- видный человек
- властный человек
- гениальный человек
- грамотный человек
- двуличный человек
- добродетельный человек
- здравомыслящий человек
- знаменитый человек
- идейный человек
- известный человек
- изворотливый человек
- ископаемый человек
- консервативный человек
- кроманьонский человек
- легкомысленный человек
- лицемерный человек
- мягкотелый человек
- навязчивый человек
- назойливый человек
- невоспитанный человек
- неинтересный человек
- ненадежный человек
- обезьяноподобный человек
- опытный человек
- первобытный человек
- пещерный человек
- поверхностный человек
- принципиальный человек
- прогрессивный человек
- продажный человек
- равнодушный человек
- разумный человек
- религиозный человек
- светский человек
- сентиментальный человек
- слабый человек
- снежный человек
- справедливый человек
- трезвый человек
- тупоголовый человек
- тупоумный человек
- тщедушный человек
- узкомыслящий человек
- ученый человек
- флегматичный человек
- хладнокровный человек
- храбрый человек
- цепкий человек
- человек настроения
- человек разумный
- человек с тактом
- человек с улицы
- человек с характером
- человек слова
- человек со средствами
- человек чести
- честный человек
- чувствительный человек
- эксцентричный человек2) устар. servant, man; waiter -
6 Osborne, Adam
SUBJECT AREA: Electronics and information technology[br]b. 6 February 1939 Bangkok, Thailand[br]British computer pioneer, producer of the first practical portable microcomputer.[br]Born of British parents, Osborne spent some time in India before moving to the UK. He obtained a BSc in chemical engineering at Birmingham University in 1961, then worked for a number of companies in the USA before obtaining a PhD at the University of Delaware. He was then employed by the Shell Oil Company, near San Francisco, California, but he resigned in 1971 to write and to study computing. In 1975 he published a book on microcomputers that sold 20,000 copies in less than a year. He then set up a publishing firm, Osborne and Associates, which he sold to McGraw-Hill in 1979. Subsequently, he formed the Osborne Computer Company and in March 1981 he introduced the Osborne I, the first portable microcomputer. Features of this innovative machine, which sold for under US$2,000, were a full-size keyboard, a CRT (cathode ray tube) display, dual floppy-disk drives, a CP/M operating system, Wordstar word-processing, SuperCalc (a financial-analysis package) and interpretive and compiled BASIC. By late 1982 the company had over 1,000 employees and sales had reached US$70 million, but within a year the company was bankrupt, a débâcle that Osborne later described in a book. Following this he returned to publishing with the formation of Paperback Software International.[br]Bibliography1975, An Introduction to Microcomputers: Adam Osborne \& Associates. 1984, Hypergrowth: The Rise and Fall of the Osborne Computer Co.KF -
7 Rosenhain, Walter
SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy[br]b. 24 August 1875 Berlin, Germanyd. 17 March 1934 Kingston Hill, Surrey, England[br]German metallurgist, first Superintendent of the Department of Metallurgy and Metallurgical Chemistry at the National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, Middlesex.[br]His family emigrated to Australia when he was 5 years old. He was educated at Wesley College, Melbourne, and attended Queen's College, University of Melbourne, graduating in physics and engineering in 1897. As an 1851 Exhibitioner he then spent three years at St John's College, Cambridge, under Sir Alfred Ewing, where he studied the microstructure of deformed metal crystals and abandoned his original intention of becoming a civil engineer. Rosenhain was the first to observe the slip-bands in metal crystals, and in the Bakerian Lecture delivered jointly by Ewing and Rosenhain to the Royal Society in 1899 it was shown that metals deformed plastically by a mechanism involving shear slip along individual crystal planes. From this conception modern ideas on the plasticity and recrystallization of metals rapidly developed. On leaving Cambridge, Rosenhain joined the Birmingham firm of Chance Brothers, where he worked for six years on optical glass and lighthouse-lens systems. A book, Glass Manufacture, written in 1908, derives from this period, during which he continued his metallurgical researches in the evenings in his home laboratory and published several papers on his work.In 1906 Rosenhain was appointed Head of the Metallurgical Department of the National Physical Laboratory (NPL), and in 1908 he became the first Superintendent of the new Department of Metallurgy and Metallurgical Chemistry. Many of the techniques he introduced at Teddington were described in his Introduction to Physical Metallurgy, published in 1914. At the outbreak of the First World War, Rosenhain was asked to undertake work in his department on the manufacture of optical glass. This soon made it possible to manufacture optical glass of high quality on an industrial scale in Britain. Much valuable work on refractory materials stemmed from this venture. Rosenhain's early years at the NPL were, however, inseparably linked with his work on light alloys, which between 1912 and the end of the war involved virtually all of the metallurgical staff of the laboratory. The most important end product was the well-known "Y" Alloy (4% copper, 2% nickel and 1.5% magnesium) extensively used for the pistons and cylinder heads of aircraft engines. It was the prototype of the RR series of alloys jointly developed by Rolls Royce and High Duty Alloys. An improved zinc-based die-casting alloy devised by Rosenhain was also used during the war on a large scale for the production of shell fuses.After the First World War, much attention was devoted to beryllium, which because of its strength, lightness, and stiffness would, it was hoped, become the airframe material of the future. It remained, however, too brittle for practical use. Other investigations dealt with impurities in copper, gases in aluminium alloys, dental alloys, and the constitution of alloys. During this period, Rosenhain's laboratory became internationally known as a centre of excellence for the determination of accurate equilibrium diagrams.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1913. President, Institute of Metals 1828–30. Iron and Steel Institute Bessemer Medal, Carnegie Medal.Bibliography1908, Glass Manufacture.1914, An Introduction to the Study of Physical Metallurgy, London: Constable. Rosenhain published over 100 research papers.Further ReadingJ.L.Haughton, 1934, "The work of Walter Rosenhain", Journal of the Institute of Metals 55(2):17–32.ASD
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