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roping+up

  • 61 сепарация пыли

    Русско-английский политехнический словарь > сепарация пыли

  • 62 lazado

    m.
    roping.
    past part.
    past participle of spanish verb: lazar.

    Spanish-English dictionary > lazado

  • 63 увязка

    ж.
    1) (багажа и т.п.) roping, tying up, baling
    ••

    в увя́зке (с тв.) — in association (with); coupled (with); linked (to)

    Новый большой русско-английский словарь > увязка

  • 64 увязка

    жен.
    1) (багажа и т.п.) roping, baling

    Русско-английский словарь по общей лексике > увязка

  • 65 California twist

        DARE: 1961. A roping technique during which the cowboy did not twirl his rope but cast it with a single overhand twist.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > California twist

  • 66 dally man

       Clark: 1930s. According to Blevins, a man who employs the dally technique for roping animals (as opposed to the "hard-and-fast" method). Also dally roper.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > dally man

  • 67 reata

    (Sp. model spelled same [reáta] < reatar 'to retie' < atar 'to tie' < Latin aptare 'to adapt; to subject')
       Bentley: 1838. A rope, made of braided rawhide or leather, according to Blevins (who cites Mora). Watts notes it occasionally referred to a grass rope. Some sources list it as a synonym for lariat, but Clark indicates that the reata is much shorter than the lariat and is used for many purposes, but not for catching cattle. However, neither Watts nor Blevins agrees with Clark. They observe that reatas are made from four to eight strands of leather or rawhide (four being the most suitable for everyday work) and generally measure forty to sixty feet in length, with a diameter three-eighths inch being the most common. These are and were used for roping cattle and other chores. Referenced in the DRAE as a cord, strap, or rope used for tying, or a rope used especially for tying horses or mules in single file. Santamaría glosses it as a rope in general, but especially a rope of twisted fiber, used by charros in their profession.
        Alternate forms: riata, rieta, rietta.
        Also called a string.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > reata

  • 68 rodeo

    (Sp. model spelled same [roðeo] < rodear 'to surround; to encircle' < rueda < Latin rotam 'wheel')
        OED: 1834. Originally, this term referred to a "round-up" or driving together of cattle with the purpose of inspecting, counting, separating, or branding them. Later, it came to have the meaning it does today, namely a contest in which competitors demonstrate their skill in riding, roping, and throwing cattle. The DRAE gives several related meanings for the term rodeo, including a place where cattle are gathered to rest or spend the night, or to be counted or sold. Rodeo also describes the process of gathering cattle for these purposes. The DRAE also notes that in some Latin American countries, the term also refers to a contest in which competitors ride wild horses and steers bareback and demonstrate their skill in throwing lassos.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > rodeo

  • 69 vuelta

    (Sp. model spelled same [bwélta] past participle of < volver 'to return' < Latin volvere 'to roll; wind; turn around')
       General Spanish term for 'turn,' also referenced by Carisle. In the Southwest, this term was generally used to refer to a turn of the rope around a saddlehorn or other object in the process of roping an animal. See also dally.

    Vocabulario Vaquero > vuelta

  • 70 направо и налево

    прост.
    1) ( без разбору) indiscriminately; right and left

    И чуть-чуть не попался Сторожев. В каком-то месте лопнул винтик, оборвалось что-то, и начала чека хватать друзей Сторожева направо и налево. (Н. Вирта, Одиночество) — Storozhev very nearly got caught. A tiny screw went loose somewhere, the chain burst and the Cheka started roping in Storozhev's friends, right and left.

    2) (безрассудно (швырять деньгами, тратить деньги и т. п.)) right and left (squander one's money, pay, etc.)

    У него на глазах сплавщики сотнями швыряли деньги направо и налево. (П. Проскурин, Тайга) — The timber workers used to squander their pay right and left under his very nose.

    Русско-английский фразеологический словарь > направо и налево

  • 71 прекращать работу

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > прекращать работу

  • 72 Coir Yarn

    Yarn spun on the Malabar coast from the coir fibre. There are eleven qualities which are placed roughly as follows in order of merit - Alapat - Pine hand twisted and is the finest in the world Anjengo, Aratory, Ashtamudy and Kuruva, or Curwa - All wheel twisted Vycome, Beach, Calicut, Beypore and Quilandi Weaving yarns hand twisted Cochin - Roping yarn All the above yarns are two ply.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Coir Yarn

  • 73 Milling Faults

    The more serious faults that occur during the milling of woollen cloths are roping - millrows, spots, and curling selvedges. These are described under the several headings.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Milling Faults

  • 74 Millrows

    " Roping " of pieces in the fulling mill is one of the greatest troubles in milling, resulting in " millrows or marks." With some goods, constant shaking-out and reversing the pieces to run the opposite way are necessary. The following are causes of " millrows ": - (1) Allowing the piece to run too long without changing. (2) Curling selvedges result in streaks along the edge of the piece. (3) Allowing the piece to run too dry, which results in too much friction; the same result follows from excessive pressure on the rollers. (4) Milling in the width without contracting the length sufficiently at the same time. Proportionate contraction in width and length should proceed simultaneously. (5) Setting the piece too wide in the loom, which entails prolonged milling and irregular streaks in the cloth. (6) Transverse marks at the end are caused by uneven seams. (7) A very heavy soap causes " millrows " through retarding the felting process.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Millrows

  • 75 περισχοινισμός

    Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > περισχοινισμός

  • 76 აბამს

    v
    harnesses, harnessing, ropes, roping, stringing, strings, tethering, tethers

    Georgian-English dictionary > აბამს

  • 77 Davis, Robert Henry

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 6 June 1870 London, England
    d. 29 March 1965 Epsom, Surrey, England
    [br]
    English inventor of breathing, diving and escape apparatus.
    [br]
    Davis was the son of a detective with the City of London police. At the age of 11 he entered the employment of Siebe, Gorman \& Co., manufacturers of diving and other safety equipment since 1819, at their Lambeth works. By good fortune, his neat handwriting attracted the notice of Mr Gorman and he was transferred to work in the office. He studied hard after working hours and rose steadily in the firm. In his twenties he was promoted to Assistant Manager, then General Manager, Managing Director and finally Governing Director. He retired in 1960, having been made Life President the previous year, and continued to attend the office regularly until May 1964.
    Davis's entire career was devoted to research and development in the firm's special field. In 1906 he perfected the first practicable oxygen-breathing apparatus for use in mine rescue; it was widely adopted and with modifications was still in use in the 1990s. With Professor Leonard Hill he designed a deep-sea diving-bell incorporating a decompression chamber. He also invented an oxygen-breathing apparatus and heated apparel for airmen flying at high altitudes.
    Immediately after the first German gas attacks on the Western Front in April 1915, Davis devised a respirator, known as the stocking skene or veil mask. He quickly organized the mass manufacture of this device, roping in members of his family and placing the work in the homes of Lambeth: within 48 hours the first consignment was being sent off to France.
    He was a member of the Admiralty Deep Sea Diving Committee, which in 1933 completed tables for the safe ascent of divers with oxygen from a depth of 300 ft (91 m). They were compiled by Davis in conjunction with Professors J.B.S.Haldane and Leonard Hill and Captain G.C.Damant, the Royal Navy's leading diving expert. With revisions these tables have been used by the Navy ever since. Davis's best-known invention was first used in 1929: the Davis Submarine Escape Apparatus. It became standard equipment on submarines until it was replaced by the Built-in Breathing System, which the firm began manufacturing in 1951.
    The firm's works were bombed during the Second World War and were re-established at Chessington, Surrey. The extensive research facilities there were placed at the disposal of the Royal Navy and the Admiralty Experimental Diving Unit. Davis worked with Haldane and Hill on problems of the underwater physiology of working divers. A number of inventions issued from Chessington, such as the human torpedo, midget submarine and human minesweeper. In the early 1950s the firm helped to pioneer the use of underwater television to investigate the sinking of the submarine Affray and the crashed Comet jet airliners.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1932.
    Bibliography
    Davis was the author of several manuals on diving including Deep Sea Diving and Submarine Operations and Breathing in Irrespirable Atmospheres. He also wrote Resuscitation: A Brief Personal History of Siebe, Gorman \& Co. 1819–1957.
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1965, The Times, 31 March, p. 16.
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Davis, Robert Henry

  • 78 kadaraŋo

    (n) thing for blocking movement for roping. A ye kadaraŋo ke faloo siŋo to. The put the "kadaraŋo" on the donkey's feet.

    Mandinka-English dictionary > kadaraŋo

  • 79 kutiŋo

    (n) entangling, roping. I be faamaatoo kutiŋo la. They are entangling the lunatic.

    Mandinka-English dictionary > kutiŋo

См. также в других словарях:

  • Roping — Rope Rope, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Roped}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Roping}.] To be formed into rope; to draw out or extend into a filament or thread, as by means of any glutinous or adhesive quality. [1913 Webster] Let us not hang like ropingicicles Upon… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • roping-down — roping downˈ noun (informal) Abseiling • • • Main Entry: ↑rope …   Useful english dictionary

  • roping — rəʊp n. strong cord made from strong braided fibers (such as hemp) v. tie, fasten with a rope, bind with a rope …   English contemporary dictionary

  • roping — poring …   Anagrams dictionary

  • roping — rop·ing …   English syllables

  • roping — n. a set or arrangement of ropes …   Useful english dictionary

  • roping pole — /ˈroʊpɪŋ poʊl/ (say rohping pohl) noun → catching pole …  

  • roping-in award — /roʊpɪŋ ˈɪn əwɔd/ (say rohping in uhwawd) noun an industrial award made for the purpose of extending the provisions of an existing award to respondent employers to ensure that they do not remain award free …  

  • roping needle — noun : a sailmaker s large needle …   Useful english dictionary

  • Calf roping — in modern competition Calf roping, also known as tie down roping, is a rodeo event that features a calf and a rider mounted on a horse. The goal of this timed event is for the rider to catch the calf by throwing a loop of rope from a lariat… …   Wikipedia

  • Top roping — Top rope climbing (or Top roping) is a style in climbing in which a rope, used for the climber s safety, runs from a belayer at the foot of a route through one or more carabiners connected to an anchor system at the top of the route and back down …   Wikipedia

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