-
1 rock carving
-
2 rock carving
subst. \/ˈrɒkˌkɑːvɪŋ\/helleristning -
3 rock carving
• kivipiirros -
4 rock carving
s.escultura rupestre. -
5 rock
I rok noun1) ((a large lump or mass of) the solid parts of the surface of the Earth: The ship struck a rock and sank; the rocks on the seashore; He built his house on solid rock.) roca2) (a large stone: The climber was killed by a falling rock.) roca; peñasco3) (a type of hard sweet made in sticks: a stick of Edinburgh rock.) pirulí•- rockery- rocky
- rockiness
- rock-bottom
- rock-garden
- rock-plant
- on the rocks
II rok verb1) (to (cause to) swing gently backwards and forwards or from side to side: The mother rocked the cradle; This cradle rocks.) balancear, mecer2) (to swing (a baby) gently in one's arms to comfort it or make it sleep.) acunar, mecer3) (to shake or move violently: The earthquake rocked the building.) sacudir•- rocker- rocky
- rockiness
- rocking-chair
- rocking-horse
- off one's rocker
III rok((also rock music) music or songs with a strong, heavy beat and usually a simple melody: She likes rock; (also adjective) a rock band.) rockrock1 n1. roca2. rockrock2 vb mecer / acunar
rock adjetivo invariable rock ( before n) ■ sustantivo masculino rock music; rock duro or (AmL) pesado hard rock ' rock' also found in these entries: Spanish: acunar - balancear - balancearse - cristal - disgregación - expeler - fondo - fuego - mecer - mecerse - metamórfica - metamórfico - peña - peñón - rey - roca - suelo - bambolearse - escalador - hamacar - paredón - piedra - rockero - rupestre English: appal - appall - autograph - boat - overdose - punk - rock - rock salt - rock-'n'-roll - rock-bottom - vertical - band - blast - climber - crack - embed - heavy - impervious - jagged - jam - layer - meteoric - molten - rift - rock'n'roll - solid - specimen - split - stick - wear - weathertr[rɒk]1 (gen) roca2 SMALLAMERICAN ENGLISH/SMALL piedra3 SMALLMUSIC/SMALL rock nombre masculino, música rock1 (chair) mecer2 (baby) acunar3 (upset) sacudir, convulsionar1 (chair) mecerse\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLon the rocks arruinado,-a 2 (drink) con hielorock solid sólido,-a como una rocarock bottom fondorock concert concierto de rockrock salt sal nombre femenino gemarock singer cantante nombre masulino o femenino de rockthe Rock of Gibraltar el Peñón nombre masculino de Gibraltarrock ['rɑk] vt1) : acunar (a un niño), mecer (una cuna)2) shake: sacudirrock visway: mecerse, balancearserock adj: de rockrock n1) rocking: balanceo m3) : roca f (substancia)4) stone: piedra fn.• roca s.m.adj.• de roca adj.n.• escollo s.m.• peña s.f.• peñasco s.m.• peñón s.m.• piedra s.f.• vigía s.f.v.• arrollar v.• arrullar v.• balancear v.• bascular v.• hamaquear v.• mecer v.• sacudir v.• tabalear v.rɑːk, rɒk
I
1) u ( substance) roca f2) ca) (crag, cliff) peñasco m, peñón mas solid as a rock — firme or sólido como una roca
b) ( in sea) roca f, escollo mon the rocks: Scotch on the rocks whisky con hielo; their marriage is on the rocks — su matrimonio anda muy mal
c) ( boulder) roca fd) ( stone) piedra fto get one's rocks off — (AmE sl) tirar (arg), coger* (Méx, RPl, Ven vulg), follar (Esp vulg)
to have rocks in one's head — (AmE sl)
he has rocks in his head — le falta un tornillo
3) c ( jewel) (sl) piedra f
II
1.
a) ( gently) \<\<cradle\>\> mecer*; \<\<child\>\> acunarb) ( violently) sacudir, estremecer*the scandal rocked New York — el escándalo convulsionó or conmocionó a Nueva York
2.
vi1)a) ( gently) mecerse*, balancearseb) ( violently) \<\<building\>\> sacudirse, estremecerse*2) ( Mus) rocanrolear, bailar rock
I [rɒk]1. N1) (=substance) roca f; (=crag, rock face) peñasco m, peñón m; (=large stone, boulder) roca f; (US) (=small stone) piedra f; (in sea) escollo m, roca fporous/volcanic rock — roca porosa/volcánica
an outcrop of rock — un peñasco, un peñón
danger: falling rocks — desprendimiento de rocas
2) (in phrases)•
to be at rock bottom — [person, prices, morale, confidence] estar por los suelos, haber tocado fondoprices are at rock bottom — los precios están por los suelos or han tocado fondo
morale in the armed forces was at rock bottom — los ánimos en las fuerzas armadas habían tocado fondo or estaban por los suelos
to hit or reach rock bottom — [person, prices] tocar fondo
it dries rock hard in less than an hour — en menos de una hora se seca hasta quedarse duro como una piedra
•
he's like a rock, I totally depend on him — es mi pilar or puntal, dependo totalmente de él•
whisky on the rocks — whisky con hielo•
to run or go on(to) the rocks — (Naut) chocar contra los escollos, encallar en las rocas•
rock solid — (lit, fig) sólido como una rocarock-solidthe pound was rock solid against the mark — la libra permanecía sólida como una roca frente al marco
- be on the rockshis business went on the rocks last year — su negocio se fue a pique or se hundió el año pasado
- be between or be caught between a rock and a hard placehard, solid3) (Brit) (=sweet) palo m de caramelo•
a stick of rock — un palo de caramelo4) * (=diamond) diamante mrocks piedras fpl, joyas fpl5) * (=drug) crack m6) (esp US)rocks **- get one's rocks off2.CPDrock cake, rock bun N — bollito con frutos secos
rock candy N — (US) palo m de caramelo
rock carving N — escultura f rupestre
rock climber N — escalador(a) m / f (de rocas)
rock climbing N — (Sport) escalada f en rocas
rock crystal N — cristal m de roca
rock fall N — desprendimiento m de rocas
rock formation N — formación f rocosa
rock garden N — jardín m de roca or de rocalla
rock painting N — pintura f rupestre
rock plant N — planta f rupestre or de roca
rock salmon N — (Brit) cazón m
II [rɒk]1. VT1) (=swing to and fro) [+ child] acunar; [+ cradle] mecerto rock o.s. in a chair — mecerse en una silla
2) (=shake) (lit, fig) sacudirboathis death rocked the fashion business — su muerte sacudió or convulsionó al mundo de la moda
2. VI1) (gently) mecerse, balancearsethe ship rocked gently on the waves — el buque se mecía or se balanceaba suavemente en las olas
his body rocked from side to side with the train — su cuerpo se mecía or se balanceaba de un lado a otro con el movimiento del tren
he rocked back on his heels — apoyando los talones, se inclinó hacia atrás
2) (violently) [ground, vehicle, building] sacudirse3) (=dance) bailar rock3.N (Mus) (also: rock music) rock m, música f rockheavy/soft rock — rock m duro/blando
4.CPDrock and roll N — rocanrol m, rock and roll m
rock-and-rollto do the rock and roll — bailar el rocanrol or el rock and roll
rock chick * N — rockera f
rock concert N — concierto m de rock
rock festival N — festival m de rock
rock group N — grupo m de rock
rock music N — rock m, música f rock
rock musical N — musical m de rock
rock musician N — músico(-a) m / f de rock
rock opera N — ópera f rock
* * *[rɑːk, rɒk]
I
1) u ( substance) roca f2) ca) (crag, cliff) peñasco m, peñón mas solid as a rock — firme or sólido como una roca
b) ( in sea) roca f, escollo mon the rocks: Scotch on the rocks whisky con hielo; their marriage is on the rocks — su matrimonio anda muy mal
c) ( boulder) roca fd) ( stone) piedra fto get one's rocks off — (AmE sl) tirar (arg), coger* (Méx, RPl, Ven vulg), follar (Esp vulg)
to have rocks in one's head — (AmE sl)
he has rocks in his head — le falta un tornillo
3) c ( jewel) (sl) piedra f
II
1.
a) ( gently) \<\<cradle\>\> mecer*; \<\<child\>\> acunarb) ( violently) sacudir, estremecer*the scandal rocked New York — el escándalo convulsionó or conmocionó a Nueva York
2.
vi1)a) ( gently) mecerse*, balancearseb) ( violently) \<\<building\>\> sacudirse, estremecerse*2) ( Mus) rocanrolear, bailar rock -
6 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. -
7 chisel
ˈtʃɪzl
1. сущ.;
тех. долото, стамеска, зубило;
чекан, резец Syn: gouge, point-tool
2. гл.
1) тех. работать зубилом, долотом, стамеской, чеканом;
высекать
2) разг. навязываться, пролезать, втираться (тж. chisel in) He became a member only by chiselling in. ≈ Он втерся в клуб благодаря своим приставаниям. The group did not welcome the manner in which he chiselled his way in. ≈ Людям не нравилось, как он все время гнет свое. Syn: intrude
3) разг. пользоваться ловкими, нечестными приемами при достижении своих целей;
надувать, обманывать (тж. chisel out) You mean the firm found a way to chisel you out of your overtime pay? There'll be trouble with the union now! ≈ Ты говоришь, что руководство нашло способ лишить тебя платы за сверхурочные? У него скоро будут проблемы с профсоюзом! Syn: beguile into, beguile out of, cozen, deceive, diddle
1), do out of, swindle
2. (техническое) стамеска;
зубило;
долото резец (граверный) ;
чекан (сельскохозяйственное) рыхлительная лапа, нарыльниковая лапа( культиватора) - * cultivator( сельскохозяйственное) чизель-культиватор, рыхлительный культиватор > full * (американизм) (сленг) во весь опор, во всю прыть ваять, высекать ( из мрамора) ;
вырезать( из дерева) - he *led that rock into the figure of a woman, he *led the figure of a woman out of that rock из этого камня он вырезал женскую фигуру нарезать, покрывать резьбой;
чеканить( техническое) работать зубилом, долотом, стамеской, резцом;
обрабатывать зубилом;
долбить отделывать (литературное произведение) ;
оттачивать (стиль) (разговорное) надувать, мошенничать( разговорное) добывать путем обмана, мошенничества - he *led me out of $5 он надул меня на 5 долларов (разговорное) брать в долг без отдачи - to * a cigarette стрельнуть сигарету отруби;
высевки( редкое) непросеянная мука carving ~ долбежная стамеска chisel ваять;
высекать (из мрамора и т. п.) ~ разг. надувать, обманывать;
chisel in разг. вмешиваться;
навязываться ~ отделывать (литературное произведение) ~ тех. работать зубилом, долотом, стамеской, чеканом ~ тех. резец;
долото, стамеска, зубило;
чекан;
full chisel амер. разг. во весь опор ~ разг. надувать, обманывать;
chisel in разг. вмешиваться;
навязываться cold ~ тех. слесарное или ручное зубило ~ тех. резец;
долото, стамеска, зубило;
чекан;
full chisel амер. разг. во весь опор -
8 Singer, Isaac Merritt
[br]b. 27 October 1811 Pittstown, New York, USAd. 23 July 1875 Torquay, Devonshire, England[br]American inventor of a sewing machine, and pioneer of mass production.[br]The son of a millwright, Singer was employed as an unskilled labourer at the age of 12, but later gained wide experience as a travelling machinist. He also found employment as an actor. On 16 May 1839, while living at Lockport, Illinois, he obtained his first patent for a rock-drilling machine, but he soon squandered the money he made. Then in 1849, while at Pittsburgh, he secured a patent for a wood-and metal-carving machine that he had begun five years previously; however, a boiler explosion in the factory destroyed his machine and left him penniless.Near the end of 1850 Singer was engaged to redesign the Lerow \& Blodgett sewing machine at the Boston shop of Orson C.Phelps, where the machine was being repaired. He built an improved version in eleven days that was sufficiently different for him to patent on 12 August 1851. He formed a partnership with Phelps and G.B. Zieber and they began to market the invention. Singer soon purchased Phelps's interest, although Phelps continued to manufacture the machines. Then Edward Clark acquired a one-third interest and with Singer bought out Zieber. These two, with dark's flair for promotion and marketing, began to create a company which eventually would become the largest manufacturer of sewing machines exported worldwide, with subsidiary factories in England.However, first Singer had to defend his patent, which was challenged by an earlier Boston inventor, Elias Howe. Although after a long lawsuit Singer had to pay royalties, it was the Singer machine which eventually captured the market because it could do continuous stitching. In 1856 the Great Sewing Machine Combination, the first important pooling arrangement in American history, was formed to share the various patents so that machines could be built without infringements and manufacture could be expanded without fear of litigation. Singer contributed his monopoly on the needle-bar cam with his 1851 patent. He secured twenty additional patents, so that his original straight-needle vertical design for lock-stitching eventually included such refinements as a continuous wheel-feed, yielding presser-foot, and improved cam for moving the needle-bar. A new model, introduced in 1856, was the first to be intended solely for use in the home.Initially Phelps made all the machines for Singer. Then a works was established in New York where the parts were assembled by skilled workers through filing and fitting. Each machine was therefore a "one-off" but Singer machines were always advertised as the best on the market and sold at correspondingly high prices. Gradually, more specialized machine tools were acquired, but it was not until long after Singer had retired to Europe in 1863 that Clark made the change to mass production. Sales of machines numbered 810 in 1853 and 21,000 ten years later.[br]Bibliography12 August 1851, US patent no. 8,294 (sewing machine)Further ReadingBiographies and obituaries have appeared in Appleton's Cyclopedia of America, Vol. V; Dictionary of American Biography, Vol XVII; New York Times 25 July 1875; Scientific American (1875) 33; and National Cyclopaedia of American Biography.D.A.Hounshell, 1984, From the American System to Mass Production 1800–1932. TheDevelopment of Manufacturing Technology in the United States, Baltimore (provides a thorough account of the development of the Singer sewing machine, the competition it faced from other manufacturers and production methods).RLH
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