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1 propeller vessel
Морской термин: винтовое судно -
2 propeller vessel
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3 aerial propeller vessel
Морской термин: судно с воздушными винтамиУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > aerial propeller vessel
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4 aerial propeller vessel
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5 tilting propeller
< aerospace> ■ Schwenkluftschraube f -
6 винтовое судно
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7 винтовой
Авиация и космонавтика. Русско-английский словарь > винтовой
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8 винтовое судно
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > винтовое судно
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9 судно с воздушными винтами
Русско-английский военно-политический словарь > судно с воздушными винтами
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10 винтовое судно
2) Engineering: screw-propelled vessel -
11 aerial
1. n антенна2. n спорт. разг. пас в сторону ворот соперника3. a воздушный, авиационный; связанный с воздухомaerial navigation — аэронавигация; воздухоплавание
4. a воздушный, газообразныйaerial currents — потоки воздуха; воздушные течения
5. a лёгкий, воздушный, эфирныйaerial reconnaissance — воздушная разведка; аэрофоторазведка
6. a нереальный; бесплотный; эфемерный7. a надземный, воздушныйaerial ropeway — воздушно-канатная дорога; фуникулёр
8. a устремлённый вверх, ввысь; высокий, парящийaerial mountains — горы, касающиеся облаков
Синонимический ряд:1. airy (adj.) airy; atmospheric; light; pneumatic; vaporous; vapory; weightless2. dreamy (adj.) dreamy; ethereal; fanciful; imaginary3. in the air (adj.) aeronautical; birdlike; flying; high-flying; in the air; in the sky; up above4. lofty (adj.) elevated; high; lofty; sky-high; skyscraping; soaring; spiring; tall; topless; towering; towery5. sheer (adj.) diaphanous; filmy; gauzy; gossamer; sheer; transparent -
12 судно с воздушными винтами
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > судно с воздушными винтами
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13 воздушный
1. aerial[lang name="Russian"]воздушная разведка; аэрофоторазведка — aerial reconnaissance
2. aerially3. air[lang name="Russian"]воздушный канал, воздуховод; вентиляционная труба — air duct
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14 propellfartøy
subst. propeller vessel -
15 судно с воздушными винтами
Русско-английский морской словарь > судно с воздушными винтами
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16 антенна в лопасти несущего винта
Авиация и космонавтика. Русско-английский словарь > антенна в лопасти несущего винта
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17 Smith, Sir Francis Pettit
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 9 February 1808 Copperhurst Farm, near Hythe, Kent, Englandd. 12 February 1874 South Kensington, London, England[br]English inventor of the screw propeller.[br]Smith was the only son of Charles Smith, Postmaster at Hythe, and his wife Sarah (née Pettit). After education at a private school in Ashford, Kent, he took to farming, first on Romney Marsh, then at Hendon, Middlesex. As a boy, he showed much skill in the construction of model boats, especially in devising their means of propulsion. He maintained this interest into adult life and in 1835 he made a model propelled by a screw driven by a spring. This worked so well that he became convinced that the screw propeller offered a better method of propulsion than the paddle wheels that were then in general use. This notion so fired his enthusiasm that he virtually gave up farming to devote himself to perfecting his invention. The following year he produced a better model, which he successfully demonstrated to friends on his farm at Hendon and afterwards to the public at the Adelaide Gallery in London. On 31 May 1836 Smith was granted a patent for the propulsion of vessels by means of a screw.The idea of screw propulsion was not new, however, for it had been mooted as early as the seventeenth century and since then several proposals had been advanced, but without successful practical application. Indeed, simultaneously but quite independently of Smith, the Swedish engineer John Ericsson had invented the ship's propeller and obtained a patent on 13 July 1836, just weeks after Smith. But Smith was completely unaware of this and pursued his own device in the belief that he was the sole inventor.With some financial and technical backing, Smith was able to construct a 10 ton boat driven by a screw and powered by a steam engine of about 6 hp (4.5 kW). After showing it off to the public, Smith tried it out at sea, from Ramsgate round to Dover and Hythe, returning in stormy weather. The screw performed well in both calm and rough water. The engineering world seemed opposed to the new method of propulsion, but the Admiralty gave cautious encouragement in 1839 by ordering that the 237 ton Archimedes be equipped with a screw. It showed itself superior to the Vulcan, one of the fastest paddle-driven ships in the Navy. The ship was put through its paces in several ports, including Bristol, where Isambard Kingdom Brunel was constructing his Great Britain, the first large iron ocean-going vessel. Brunel was so impressed that he adapted his ship for screw propulsion.Meanwhile, in spite of favourable reports, the Admiralty were dragging their feet and ordered further trials, fitting Smith's four-bladed propeller to the Rattler, then under construction and completed in 1844. The trials were a complete success and propelled their lordships of the Admiralty to a decision to equip twenty ships with screw propulsion, under Smith's supervision.At last the superiority of screw propulsion was generally accepted and virtually universally adopted. Yet Smith gained little financial reward for his invention and in 1850 he retired to Guernsey to resume his farming life. In 1860 financial pressures compelled him to accept the position of Curator of Patent Models at the Patent Museum in South Kensington, London, a post he held until his death. Belated recognition by the Government, then headed by Lord Palmerston, came in 1855 with the grant of an annual pension of £200. Two years later Smith received unofficial recognition when he was presented with a national testimonial, consisting of a service of plate and nearly £3,000 in cash subscribed largely by the shipbuilding and engineering community. Finally, in 1871 Smith was honoured with a knighthood.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1871.Further ReadingObituary, 1874, Illustrated London News (7 February).1856, On the Invention and Progress of the Screw Propeller, London (provides biographical details).Smith and his invention are referred to in papers in Transactions of the Newcomen Society, 14 (1934): 9; 19 (1939): 145–8, 155–7, 161–4, 237–9.LRDBiographical history of technology > Smith, Sir Francis Pettit
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18 foul
A n Sport faute f (by de ; on sur) ; sent off for a foul éliminé pour faute ; cries of foul fig des cris de protestation.B adj1 ( putrid) [place, slum, conditions] répugnant ; [air, breath, smell] fétide ; [water, stream] putride ; [taste] infect ;2 ( grim) [weather, day, atmosphere] épouvantable ; to be in a foul humour ou mood être d'une humeur massacrante ○ ; to have a foul temper avoir un sale caractère ; it's a foul job! c'est une sale corvée! ; in fair weather or foul qu'il pleuve ou qu'il vente ;3 ( evil) [person, act, crime, deed, treachery, creature] odieux/-ieuse ; ‘murder most foul’ ‘horrible assassinat’ ;5 Sport ( unsporting) déloyal.D vtr2 ( become tangled) [weeds, nets, ropes] s'emmêler dans [engine, propeller] ; the propeller was fouled by nets des filets de pêche étaient emmêlés dans l'hélice ;E vi1 Sport commettre des fautes ;to fall ou run foul of sb ( fall out with) se brouiller avec qn ; ( lose favour) s'attirer le mécontentement de qn ; to fall foul of the law tomber sous le coup de la loi.■ foul out ( in baseball) être exclu (pour fautes personnelles).■ foul up ○ faire des erreurs or des bourdes ○ ;▶ foul up [sth], foul [sth] up1 ( bungle) ruiner [plan, opportunity] ; abîmer [system] ; he always manages to foul things up il trouve toujours le moyen de tout louper ○ ;2 ( pollute) polluer [air, soil]. -
19 Ericsson, John
[br]b. 31 July 1803 Farnebo, Swedend. 8 March 1899 New York, USA[br]Swedish (naturalized American 1848) engineer and inventor.[br]The son of a mine owner and inspector, Ericsson's first education was private and haphazard. War with Russia disrupted the mines and the father secured a position on the Gotha Canal, then under construction. He enrolled John, then aged 13, and another son as cadets in a corps of military engineers engaged on the canal. There John was given a sound education and training in the physical sciences and engineering. At the age of 17 he decided to enlist in the Army, and on receiving a commission he was drafted to cartographic survey duties. After some years he decided that a career outside the Army offered him the best opportunities, and in 1826 he moved to London to pursue a career of mechanical invention.Ericsson first developed a heat (external combustion) engine, which proved unsuccessful. Three years later he designed and constructed the steam locomotive Novelty, which he entered in the Rainhill locomotive trials on the new Liverpool \& Manchester Railway. The engine began by performing promisingly, but it later broke down and failed to complete the test runs. Later he devised a self-regulating lead (1835) and then, more important and successful, he invented the screw propeller, patented in 1835 and installed in his first screw-propelled ship of 1839. This work was carried out independently of Sir Francis Pettit Smith, who contemporaneously developed a four-bladed propeller that was adopted by the British Admiralty. Ericsson saw that with screw propulsion the engine could be below the waterline, a distinct advantage in warships. He crossed the Atlantic to interest the American government in his ideas and became a naturalized citizen in 1848. He pioneered the gun turret for mounting heavy guns on board ship. Ericsson came into his own during the American Civil War, with the construction of the epoch-making warship Monitor, a screw-propelled ironclad with gun turret. This vessel demonstrated its powers in a signal victory at Hampton Roads on 9 March 1862.Ericsson continued to design warships and torpedoes, pointing out to President Lincoln that success in war would now depend on technological rather than numerical superiority. Meanwhile he continued to pursue his interest in heat engines, and from 1870 to 1888 he spent much of his time and resources in pursuing research into alternative energy sources, such as solar power, gravitation and tidal forces.[br]Further ReadingW.C.Church, 1891, Life of John Ericsson, 2 vols, London.LRD -
20 pitch
1. n смола; вар; дёготь; пекsoft-wood tar pitch — хвойный пек; пек хвойного дегтя
soft pitch — мягкий пек; мягкий битум; мягкий асфальт
2. n битум3. v смолить4. n подача, бросок5. n бросаемый, подаваемый предмет6. n место удара мяча о землюthe pitch of hay on the prong — навильник, количество сена, которое можно подцепить вилами
7. n партия товара, выброшенного на рынок8. n мор. килевая качка9. n высотаpitch modulation — модуляция высоты звука; вибрато
10. n частота камертона11. n уровень; степень; сила; интенсивность; напряжениеto fall to a low pitch — упасть, опуститься, понизиться
12. n верх; вершина; высота13. n постоянное место; обычное место выступленияa high pitch — торговля с автомобиля, повозки, лотка
a low pitch — торговля, при которой товары разложены на земле
14. n спорт. часть крикетного поля между линиями подающих, отбивающего и боулера15. n спорт. поле, площадкаhockey pitch — хоккейная уклон, скат, наклон; покатость; угол наклона
to pitch a field — выбрать поле сражения; расположить войска для боя
16. n спорт. спец. тангаж17. n спорт. короткий и очень крутой участок восхождения18. n спорт. геол. падение19. n спорт. тех. шаг; модуль, питчpitch chain — калиброванная цепь, цепь с калиброванным шагом
20. n амер. разг. шутки, прибаутки21. n амер. разг. болтовняto have a pitch — поговорить, поболтать
22. n амер. разг. похвала; речь в защиту; восхваление23. n амер. разг. рекламирование; расхваливание на все лады24. n амер. разг. рекламное объявление, реклама25. n амер. разг. довод26. n амер. разг. предложение27. n амер. разг. план действий; линия; подходto tackle a problem again using a new pitch — подойти к решению проблемы по-новому, применить новый подход к решению проблемы
28. n амер. разг. амер. разг. намерение, цель, задачаI think I get the pitch — мне кажется, я понимаю, в чём задача
29. n амер. разг. привал; стоянка; лагерь; бивуак30. n амер. разг. выбор места для лагеря, стоянки, привала31. n амер. разг. амер. сл. положение дел; расклад32. n амер. разг. карточная игра33. n амер. разг. объявление козыря34. v врывать, вбивать в землю; сооружать, устанавливать; ставить35. v располагаться; быть расположеннымa village pitched on a hill — деревня, расположенная на холме
pitch circle tapping — нарезание резьбы в отверстиях, центры которых расположены на одной оси
36. v бросать, кидать, швырять; подбрасывать37. v спорт. бросать, подавать, посылать мяч38. v закручивать, гнать мяч39. v подавать мяч игроку с битой40. v играть за или вместо подающего41. v выставлять на продажуa large consignment of goods was pitched yesterday — вчера была выставлена на продажу большая партия товара
42. v амер. разг. продавать, торговать; продавать с лоткаhe pitches kitchen gadgets and household items — он продаёт всякие кухонные и хозяйственные приспособления
43. v мор. испытывать килевую качкуour boat pitched heavily — нашу лодку бросало то вверх, то вниз
44. v падать; ударяться45. v зарываться; погружатьсяthe skier lost his balance and pitched into a snowdrift — лыжник потерял равновесие и влетел в сугроб
he apologized for pitching into me yesterday — он извинился, что вчера так резко выступил против меня
46. v муз. иметь, задавать или придавать определённую высоту, тон; настраивать; давать основной тон47. v устанавливать на определённом уровне, намечать; оценивать48. v иметь наклон, уклон; понижатьсястравливать ; противопоставлять
49. v амер. разг. рассказывать басни, преувеличивать, привирать50. v амер. разг. хвастаться, «привирать»51. v амер. разг. разг. прикорнуть, подремать52. v карт. объявлять козырь53. v карт. заходить с козыря54. v карт. мостить брусчаткой55. v карт. обтёсывать56. v карт. сооружать каменное основание57. v карт. облицовывать58. v карт. тех. зацеплять; соединять59. v карт. театр. проф. отправиться на гастроли или в поездку60. v карт. амер. разг. устроить вечеринку61. v карт. амер. разг. ухаживать, кадритьсяto pitch a tale, to pitch a fork — рассказывать басни, привирать, заливать
Синонимический ряд:1. decline (noun) decline; descent; grade2. fall (noun) dive; fall; plunge; spill; sprawl; tumble3. fury (noun) ferocity; fierceness; fury; intensity; severity; vehemence; violence4. slope (noun) inclination; incline; slant; slope5. sound (noun) sound; tone6. spiel (noun) song and dance; spiel7. throw (noun) cast; fling; heave; hurl; throw; toss8. drop (verb) drop; fall; go down; keel over; slump; spill; sprawl; topple; tumble9. plunge (verb) burst; dive; drive; forge; lunge; plunge10. raise (verb) erect; put up; raise; set up11. seesaw (verb) cant; lurch; rock; roll; seesaw; swag; tilt; tilter; yaw12. throw (verb) buck off; cast; fire; fling; heave; hurl; launch; lob; shy; sling; throw; toss; unhorse; unseat
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См. также в других словарях:
Propeller walk — is the term for a propeller s tendency to rotate a boat as well as accelerating it forwards or backwards.A right handed propeller (which rotates clockwise [as viewed from the stern] when in forward gear) will tend to push the aft of the boat to… … Wikipedia
Propeller — Pro*pel ler, n. [1913 Webster] 1. One who, or that which, propels. [1913 Webster] 2. A contrivance for propelling a steam vessel, usually consisting of a screw placed in the stern under water, and made to revolve by an engine; a propeller wheel.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Propeller wheel — Propeller Pro*pel ler, n. [1913 Webster] 1. One who, or that which, propels. [1913 Webster] 2. A contrivance for propelling a steam vessel, usually consisting of a screw placed in the stern under water, and made to revolve by an engine; a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Propeller — A propeller is essentially a type of fan which transmits power by converting rotational motion into thrust for propulsion of a vehicle such as an aircraft, ship, or submarine through a mass such as water or air, by rotating two or more twisted… … Wikipedia
Controllable pitch propeller — A controllable pitch propeller (CPP) or variable pitch propeller is a type of propeller with blades that can be rotated around their long axis to change their pitch. If the pitch can be set to negative values, the reversible propeller can also… … Wikipedia
Steam propeller — Steam Steam (st[=e]m), n. [OE. stem, steem, vapor, flame, AS. ste[ a]m vapor, smoke, odor; akin to D. stoom steam, perhaps originally, a pillar, or something rising like a pillar; cf. Gr. sty ein to erect, sty^los a pillar, and E. stand.] 1. The… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Steam vessel — Steam Steam (st[=e]m), n. [OE. stem, steem, vapor, flame, AS. ste[ a]m vapor, smoke, odor; akin to D. stoom steam, perhaps originally, a pillar, or something rising like a pillar; cf. Gr. sty ein to erect, sty^los a pillar, and E. stand.] 1. The… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Screw propeller — Screw Screw (skr[udd]), n. [OE. scrue, OF. escroue, escroe, female screw, F. [ e]crou, L. scrobis a ditch, trench, in LL., the hole made by swine in rooting; cf. D. schroef a screw, G. schraube, Icel. skr[=u]fa.] 1. A cylinder, or a cylindrical… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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