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pulp press water

  • 1 жомопрессовая вода

    Русско-английский словарь по химии > жомопрессовая вода

  • 2 жомопрессовая вода

    Русско-английский словарь по пищевой промышленности > жомопрессовая вода

  • 3 жомопрессовая вода

    Русско-английский научный словарь > жомопрессовая вода

  • 4 жомопрессовая вода

    Русско-английский политехнический словарь > жомопрессовая вода

  • 5 жомопрессовая вода

    2) Food industry: pulp-press water, pressed pulps water (тех. процесс производства сахара)
    3) Sakhalin energy glossary: beet pulp-press water

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > жомопрессовая вода

  • 6 moler

    v.
    1 to grind.
    2 to beat.
    lo molieron a palos he was beaten to a pulp
    estas zapatillas me están moliendo los pies these shoes are killing my feet
    3 to wear out (informal) (cansar).
    * * *
    Conjugation model [ MOVER], like link=mover mover
    1 (gen) to grind, mill; (machacar) to pound
    2 (cansar) to wear out
    \
    moler a palos to beat up
    * * *
    verb
    * * *
    VT
    1) [+ café] to grind; [+ trigo] to mill; (=machacar) to crush; (=pulverizar) to pound
    2) (=fastidiar) to annoy; (=aburrir) to bore
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo <especias/café> to grind; < trigo> to grind, mill; < aceitunas> to crush; < carne> to grind (AmE), to mince (BrE); < plátano> (Chi, Méx) to mash

    moler a alguien a golpes or a palos — to beat somebody to a pulp

    2.
    moler vi (Col fam) to work
    * * *
    = mill.
    Ex. Millet was cleaned, steeped in water, washed, spiced and milled to produce a slurry.
    * * *
    1.
    verbo transitivo <especias/café> to grind; < trigo> to grind, mill; < aceitunas> to crush; < carne> to grind (AmE), to mince (BrE); < plátano> (Chi, Méx) to mash

    moler a alguien a golpes or a palos — to beat somebody to a pulp

    2.
    moler vi (Col fam) to work
    * * *
    = mill.

    Ex: Millet was cleaned, steeped in water, washed, spiced and milled to produce a slurry.

    * * *
    moler [E9 ]
    vt
    ‹especias/café› to grind; ‹trigo› to grind, mill; ‹aceitunas› to crush; ‹carne› to grind ( AmE), to mince ( BrE); ‹plátano› (Chi, Méx) to mash
    café molido ground coffee
    moler a algn a golpes or a palos to beat sb to a pulp
    ■ moler
    vi
    A
    ( Méx fam) (molestar): deja de moler con que quieres una moto stop going on about wanting a motorbike
    está muele y muele con eso he keeps going on about it
    B ( Col fam) to work
    * * *

    moler ( conjugate moler) verbo transitivoespecias/café to grind;
    trigo to grind, mill;
    aceitunas to crush;
    carne› to grind (AmE), to mince (BrE);
    plátano› (Chi, Méx) to mash;

    moler verbo transitivo
    1 (reducir a polvo) to grind
    2 (hacer daño) esta silla me está moliendo la espalda, this chair is ruining my back
    moler a alguien a palos, to beat sb to pulp

    ' moler' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    palo
    English:
    grind
    - mill
    - mince
    - mash
    * * *
    moler vt
    1. [pulverizar] to grind;
    [aceitunas] to press; [trigo] to mill
    2. [destrozar] to beat;
    lo molieron a palos he was beaten to a pulp;
    estas zapatillas me están moliendo los pies these shoes are killing my feet
    3. Fam [cansar] to wear out
    * * *
    v/t
    1 grind;
    carne molida ground meat, Br mince
    2 fruta mash;
    moler a alguien a palos fig beat s.o. to a pulp
    * * *
    moler {47} vt
    1) : to grind, to crush
    2) cansar: to exhaust, to wear out
    * * *
    moler vb
    1. (triturar) to grind [pt. & pp. ground]
    2. (cansar) to wear out [pt. wore; pp. worn]

    Spanish-English dictionary > moler

  • 7 Cai Lun (Tsai Lun)

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. c.57 AD China
    d. c.121 AD China
    [br]
    Chinese Director of Imperial Workshops who is usually credited with the invention of paper.
    [br]
    He was a confidential secretary to the Emperor. He became Director of the Imperial Workshops and he is said to have invented, or sponsored the invention of, paper around the year 105 AD. Recent studies, however, suggest that paper was already known in China two centuries earlier. The method of making it has hardly varied in principle since that time. The raw materials, then usually old fishing nets and clothing rags, were boiled with water, to which alkali in the form of wood ash was sometimes added. The resulting pulp was then beaten in a stone mortar with a stone or a wooden mallet. The pulp was then mixed and stirred with a large amount of water, and a sieve or mould (formed on a wooden frame carrying a mat of thin reeds sewn together) was dipped into it and was shaken to help the fibres in the layer of pulp to interlock and thus form a sheet of paper. The rest of the process consisted, then as now, of getting rid of the water: the sheets of paper were dried and bleached by leaving them to lie in the sun.
    Some of China's many inventions were achieved independently in Western Europe, but it seems that Europe's knowledge of papermaking stems from the Chinese. It was not until the eighth century that it passed into the Islamic world and so, first by contact with the Moors in Spain in the twelfth century, into Western Europe.
    Cai Lun was later made a marquis. Further promotion followed when he was regarded as the god of papermaking.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    J.Needham, 1985, Science and Civilisation in China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Vol. V (1): Clerks and Craftsmen in China and the West, 1970.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Cai Lun (Tsai Lun)

  • 8 Dickinson, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 29 March 1782
    d. 11 January 1869 London, England
    [br]
    English papermaker and inventor of a papermaking machine.
    [br]
    After education at a private school, Dickinson was apprenticed to a London stationer. In 1806 he started in business as a stationer, in partnership with George Longman; they transferred to 65 Old Bailey, where the firm remained until their premises were destroyed during the Second World War. In order to secure the supply of paper and be less dependent on the papermakers, Dickinson turned to making paper on his own account. In 1809 he acquired Apsley Mill, near Hemel Hempstead on the river Gade in Hertfordshire. There, he produced a new kind of paper for cannon cartridges which, unlike the paper then in use, did not smoulder, thus reducing the risk of undesired explosions. The new paper proved very useful during the Napoleonic War.
    Dickinson developed a continuous papermaking machine about the same time as the Fourdrinier brothers, but his worked on a different principle. Instead of a continuous flat wire screen, Dickinson used a wire-covered cylinder which dipped into the dilute pulp as it revolved. A felt-covered roller removed the layer of wet pulp, which was then subjected to drying, as in the Fourdrinier machine. The latter was first in use at Frogmore, just upstream from Apsley Mill on the river Gade. Dickinson patented his machine in 1809 and claimed that it was superior for some kinds of paper. In feet, both types of machine have survived, in much enlarged and modified form: the Fourdrinier for general papermaking, the Dickinson cylinder for the making of board. In 1810 Dickinson acquired the nearby Nash Mill, and over the years he extended the scope of his papermaking business, introducing many technical improvements. Among his inventions was a machine to paste together continuous webs of paper to form cardboard. Another, patented in 1829, was a process for incorporating threads of cotton, flax or silk into the body of the paper to make forgery more difficult. He became increasingly prosperous, overcoming labour disputes with unemployed hand-papermakers. and lawsuits against a canal company which threatened the water supply to his mills. Dickinson was the first to use percolation gauges to predict river flow, and his work on water supply brought him election to a Fellowship of the Royal Society in 1845.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1845.
    Further Reading
    R.H.Clapperton, 1967, The Paper-making Machine, Oxford: Pergamon Press, pp. 331–5 (provides a biography and full details of Dickinson's inventions).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Dickinson, John

  • 9 עקל

    עֵקֶל(or עִקָּל) m. (preced.) 1) a bale of loose texture containing the olive pulp to be pressed. Maasr. I, 7; Tosef. ib. I, 7 (Var. עוקל). Toh. X, 8; Y.Ab. Zar. V, end, 45b הע׳ של נצרים, v. infra. Sabb.144b מוחל היוצא מע׳ בית הבד Ar. (ed. מעיקול) the watery fluid which oozes out of the bale made up for the press; (Tosef.Toh.X, 3 מעיקת; R. S. to Toh. IX, 1 מן שוקת, corr. acc.). Tosef. l. c. כינסו ועשאו עיקל (R. S. l. c. שוקת) if he collected the fluid and put it back into the bale. Snh.26a יכול לומר לע׳ בית הבדוכ׳ he (who trims vines in the Sabbatical year) may say, I need the twigs to make a bale for the press, Ib. (proverbial expression) הלב יודע אם לע׳ אם לעקלקלות the heart knows whether it is done for ʿekel (a legitimate purpose) or out of ‘ăḳalḳaloth (perverseness); Y.Shebi.IV, 35a; Lam. R. to I, 5; a. e.Pl. עֲקָלִים, עֲקָלִין (or עִקָּ׳). Y. Shebi. l. c. (in Chald. dict.) לע׳ אנא בעי I need the twigs for, v. supra. Ab. Zar.75a; Tosef. ib. VIII (IX), 3 הע׳ של נצריןוכ׳ bales made of wicker or hemp ; Tosef.Toh. XI, 16 הע׳ של נוצרין. Ex. R. s. 15 ע׳ של זיתים olive pulp. 2) (from its shape) a mass of iron used for ballast. Tosef.Kel.B. Mets. I, 1. Makhsh. V, 7 המים העולים … ובע׳וכ׳ (ed. Dehr. ובעיקל) water that comes up (and settles) in the hull, on the ballast or on the rudders; (Maim.: in the cavity in the hull made for the reception of drippings from the deck; cmp. עוּקָה).

    Jewish literature > עקל

  • 10 עֵקֶל

    עֵקֶל(or עִקָּל) m. (preced.) 1) a bale of loose texture containing the olive pulp to be pressed. Maasr. I, 7; Tosef. ib. I, 7 (Var. עוקל). Toh. X, 8; Y.Ab. Zar. V, end, 45b הע׳ של נצרים, v. infra. Sabb.144b מוחל היוצא מע׳ בית הבד Ar. (ed. מעיקול) the watery fluid which oozes out of the bale made up for the press; (Tosef.Toh.X, 3 מעיקת; R. S. to Toh. IX, 1 מן שוקת, corr. acc.). Tosef. l. c. כינסו ועשאו עיקל (R. S. l. c. שוקת) if he collected the fluid and put it back into the bale. Snh.26a יכול לומר לע׳ בית הבדוכ׳ he (who trims vines in the Sabbatical year) may say, I need the twigs to make a bale for the press, Ib. (proverbial expression) הלב יודע אם לע׳ אם לעקלקלות the heart knows whether it is done for ʿekel (a legitimate purpose) or out of ‘ăḳalḳaloth (perverseness); Y.Shebi.IV, 35a; Lam. R. to I, 5; a. e.Pl. עֲקָלִים, עֲקָלִין (or עִקָּ׳). Y. Shebi. l. c. (in Chald. dict.) לע׳ אנא בעי I need the twigs for, v. supra. Ab. Zar.75a; Tosef. ib. VIII (IX), 3 הע׳ של נצריןוכ׳ bales made of wicker or hemp ; Tosef.Toh. XI, 16 הע׳ של נוצרין. Ex. R. s. 15 ע׳ של זיתים olive pulp. 2) (from its shape) a mass of iron used for ballast. Tosef.Kel.B. Mets. I, 1. Makhsh. V, 7 המים העולים … ובע׳וכ׳ (ed. Dehr. ובעיקל) water that comes up (and settles) in the hull, on the ballast or on the rudders; (Maim.: in the cavity in the hull made for the reception of drippings from the deck; cmp. עוּקָה).

    Jewish literature > עֵקֶל

  • 11 Fourdrinier, Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 11 February 1766 London, England
    d. 3 September 1854 Mavesyn Ridware, near Rugeley, Staffordshire, England
    [br]
    English pioneer of the papermaking machine.
    [br]
    Fourdrinier's father was a paper manufacturer and stationer of London, from a family of French Protestant origin. Henry took up the same trade and, with his brother Sealy (d. 1847), devoted many years to developing the papermaking machine. Their first patent was taken out in 1801, but success was still far off. A machine for making paper had been invented a few years previously by Nicolas Robert at the Didot's mill at Essonnes, south of Paris. Robert quarrelled with the Didots, who then contacted their brother-in-law in England, John Gamble, in an attempt to raise capital for a larger machine. Gamble and the Fourdriniers called in the engineer Bryan Donkin, and between them they patented a much improved machine in 1807. In the new machine, the paper pulp flowed on to a moving continuous woven wire screen and was then squeezed between rollers to remove much of the water. The paper thus formed was transferred to a felt blanket and passed through a second press to remove more water, before being wound while still wet on to a drum. For the first time, a continuous sheet of paper could be made. Other inventors soon made further improvements: in 1817 John Dickinson obtained a patent for sizing baths to improve the surface of the paper; while in 1820 Thomas Crompton patented a steam-heated drum round which the paper was passed to speed up the drying process. The development cost of £60,000 bankrupted the brothers. Although Parliament extended the patent for fourteen years, and the machine was widely adopted, they never reaped much profit from it. Tsar Alexander of Russia became interested in the papermaking machine while on a visit to England in 1814 and promised Henry Fourdrinier £700 per year for ten years for super-intending the erection of two machines in Russia; Henry carried out the work, but he received no payment. At the age of 72 he travelled to St Petersburg to seek recompense from the Tsar's successor Nicholas I, but to no avail. Eventually, on a motion in the House of Commons, the British Government awarded Fourdrinier a payment of £7,000. The paper trade, sensing the inadequacy of this sum, augmented it with a further sum which they subscribed so that an annuity could be purchased for Henry, then the only surviving brother, and his two daughters, to enable them to live in modest comfort. From its invention in ancient China (see Cai Lun), its appearance in the Middle Ages in Europe and through the first three and a half centuries of printing, every sheet of paper had to made by hand. The daily output of a hand-made paper mill was only 60–100 lb (27–45 kg), whereas the new machine increased that tenfold. Even higher speeds were achieved, with corresponding reductions in cost; the old mills could not possibly have kept pace with the new mechanical printing presses. The Fourdrinier machine was thus an essential element in the technological developments that brought about the revolution in the production of reading matter of all kinds during the nineteenth century. The high-speed, giant paper-making machines of the late twentieth century work on the same principle as the Fourdrinier of 1807.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    R.H.Clapperton, 1967, The Paper-making Machine, Oxford: Pergamon Press. D.Hunter, 1947, Papermaking. The History and Technique of an Ancient Craft, London.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Fourdrinier, Henry

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