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81 буря
1) General subject: blizzard (снежная), gale, stiff (hard) gale, storm, storm (чего-л.), stress of weather, tempest, tornado (аплодисментов и т.п.), williwaw, windstorm3) Engineering: hurricane4) Construction: weather5) Jargon: thunder-boomer6) Makarov: eddy (страстей и т.п.), hard gale, rough weather, stiff gale, tempest (потрясение), vehement wind, war of the elements -
82 element
noun1) (component part) Element, dasan element of chance/danger in something — eine gewisse Zufälligkeit/Gefahr bei etwas
2) (Chem.) Element, das; Grundstoff, der4)be in one's element — (fig.) in seinem Element sein
5) (Electr.) Heizelement, das* * *['eləmənt]1) (an essential part of anything: Sound teaching of grammar is one of the elements of a good education.) der Grundbestandteil2) (a substance that cannot be split by chemical means into simpler substances: Hydrogen, chlorine, iron and uranium are elements.) das Element3) (surroundings necessary for life: Water is a fish's natural element.) das (Lebens-)Element4) (a slight amount: an element of doubt.) das Fünkchen5) (the heating part in an electric kettle etc.) das Heizelement•- academic.ru/23753/elementary">elementary- elements
- in one's element* * *el·ement[ˈelɪmənt]n4. (rough weather)▪ the \elements pl die Elemente [o Naturgewalten]to battle against the \elements gegen die Naturgewalten ankämpfen* * *['elɪmənt]n(all senses) Element ntthe elements of mathematics — die Grundbegriffe pl or Anfangsgründe pl (geh) der Mathematik
an element of truth — eine Spur or ein Element nt von Wahrheit
a hooligan/criminal element — ein paar Rowdys/Kriminelle
to be in one's element — in seinem Element sein
to be out of one's element (with group of people) — sich fehl am Platze fühlen; (with subject) sich nicht auskennen
* * *element [ˈelımənt] s1. Element n:a) PHIL Urstoff m:the four elements die vier Elementeb) Grundbestandteil m, wesentlicher Bestandteilc) CHEM Grundstoff md) TECH Bauteil ne) Ursprung m, Grundlage f2. pl Anfangsgründe pl, Anfänge pl, Grundlage(n) f(pl):3. Grundtatsache f, grundlegender Umstand, wesentlicher Faktor:element of uncertainty Unsicherheitsfaktor;element of surprise Überraschungsmoment n4. JUR Tatbestandsmerkmal n5. fig Körnchen n, Fünkchen n:there is an element of risk in it, it involves an element of risk es ist ein gewisses Risiko damit verbunden;there is an element of luck in research bei der Forschung spielt ein gewisses Maß an Glück mit6. (Bevölkerungs)Teil m, (kriminelle etc) Elemente pl:7. (Lebens-)Element n, Sphäre f, gewohnte Umgebung:be in one’s element in seinem Element sein;be out of one’s element nicht in seinem Element sein, sich unbehaglich oder fehl am Platz fühlen9. MATHa) Element n (einer Menge etc)b) Erzeugende f (einer Kurve etc)10. ASTRON Element n, Bestimmungsstück n11. ELEKa) Element n, Zelle fb) Elektrode f (einer Elektronenröhre)12. PHYS Element n (eines Elementenpaars)13. MIL Element n, Truppenkörper m, (Teil)Einheit f14. FLUG Rotte f15. pl REL Brot n und Wein m (beim Abendmahl)elem. abk1. elementary* * *noun1) (component part) Element, dasan element of chance/danger in something — eine gewisse Zufälligkeit/Gefahr bei etwas
2) (Chem.) Element, das; Grundstoff, der4)be in one's element — (fig.) in seinem Element sein
5) (Electr.) Heizelement, das* * *(chemistry) n.Urstoff -e m. n.Element -e n. -
83 undeterred
не останавливающийся (перед чем-либо) ;
не напуганный( чем-либо) - * by rough weather невзирая на плохую погодуБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > undeterred
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84 undeterred
[͵ʌndıʹtɜ:d] a (by)не останавливающийся (перед чем-л.); не напуганный (чем-л.)he continued his research undeterred by his previous failure - он продолжал свои исследования, не бросив их после первой неудачи
he was undeterred by the wiser counsels of his friends - даже благоразумные советы друзей не остановили /не удержали/ его
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85 невзирая на плохую погоду
General subject: undeterred by rough weatherУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > невзирая на плохую погоду
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86 rusk
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87 garvet
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88 undeterred
a(by) що не зупиняється (перед чим-н.); не наляканий (чим-н.); undeterred by rough weather не дивлячись на погану погоду -
89 undeterred
a(by) що не зупиняється (перед чим-н.); не наляканий (чим-н.); undeterred by rough weather не дивлячись на погану погоду -
90 дрча
gale, rough weather -
91 hryðja
u, f. [hroði and hrjóða II], rough weather, sleet, tempest; mörg er hryðja mótlætis um aldr, Stef. Ól.: medic. fits of coughing with excretion, of a sick person: metaph. an outrage, foul deed, hryðju-verk, n. a foul, brutal deed, Fas. iii. 445. -
92 rót
* * *n. insensibility (from a blow); slá e-n í r., to stun, render senseless by a blow; liggja í roti, to lie stunned.* * *1.f. [different from the preceding, perh. akin to hrót, q. v.; Ivar Aasen rot]:—the inner part of the roof of a house, where meat, fish, and stores are hung up; mær nökkur átti erendi at fara í rót upp, þá sá hún liggja á hurðásnum sjau fiska skarpa, Bs. i. 209.2.n. the tossing, pitching, of an unruly sea; kemr ró eptir hvíldarlaust rót, calm after rough weather, Sks. 235; haf-rót, a violent rolling of the sea. -
93 STÖRR
(stœri or stœrri, stœrstr), a.1) big, great, of size (stórr fiskr, stórt dýr);stór veðr, rough weather, great gales;stór sær, high sea;gørði þá stórt á firðinum, the sea rose high;2) great, potent (at hann skyldi varast at gøra Ólaf eigi of stóran);3) great, important (tillagagóðr hinna stœrri mála);4) proud (fann hann þat brátt á Sigríði, at hón var heldr stór).* * *f., mod. stör, gen. starar, old dat. starru, bent-grass, Lat. carex; á starru eða strái, N. G. L. i. 383, 392; star-engi, star-gresi, q. v. -
94 element
el·ement [ʼelɪmənt] n4) ( rough weather)the \elements pl die Elemente [o Naturgewalten];to battle against the \elements gegen die Naturgewalten ankämpfen; -
95 tabac
n. m.1. (abbr. bureau de tabac): Tobacconist's. (In France the licence to sell tobacco nearly always goes with that of selling alcoholic drinks, and the Café-Tabac with its distinctive red diamond-shaped sign is part of the typical French scenery.)2. Fumer du tabac de Chine (joc. & iron.): To smoke 'o.p.'s', to cadge 'smokes' from other people. (The jocularity of the expression stems from the pun on Chine with the meaning of 'cadging', not 'China'.)3. Un mauvais tabac. A 'bad business', a bad state of affairs. C'est un mauvais tabac d'être à court de fric le 20 du mois! It's a sorry thing to have run out of housekeeping money after only three weeks!4. 'Rocket', 'roasting', telling-off. Passer un tabac à quelqu'un: To tear a strip off someone.5. Faire tout un tabac: To 'make a song- and-dance about something', to kick up a fuss.6. Passer quelqu'un à tabac: To give someone 'the third degree', to beat someone up. (The passage à tabac is always associated with alleged police brutality.)7. Coup de tabac (Naval slang): 'Spot of rough weather', storm.8. Se donner un tabac terrible: To give oneself no end of trouble, to spare oneself no effort.9. Faire un tabac terrible (th.): To have a rip-roaring success in a stage production.10. C'est du même tabac! It's six of one, half a dozen of the other! — It's much of a muchness! — It's the same thing! -
96 high spot
сущ.2) "гвоздь программы"; главный момент, кульминацияRough weather would have denied us a landing on the island, for me the high spot of the entire cruise. — Штормовая погода не позволила бы нам высадиться на остров, что было для меня самым главным во всём плавании.
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97 rotach
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98 undeterred
a не останавливающийся; не напуганный -
99 Allen, John F.
SUBJECT AREA: Steam and internal combustion engines[br]b. 1829 Englandd. 2 October 1900 New York (?), USA[br]English inventor of the Allen valve used on his pioneering high-speed engines.[br]Allen was taken to the United States from England when he was 12 years old. He became an engineer on the Curlew, a freight boat running between New York and Providence. A defect which caused the engine to race in rough weather led Allen to invent a new valve gear, but he found it could not be fitted to the Corliss engine. In 1856 he patented an improved form of valve and operating gear to reduce back-pressure in the cylinder, which was in fact the reverse of what happened in his later engines. In 1860 he repaired the engines of a New York felt-hat manufacturer, Henry Burr, and that winter he was introduced to Charles Porter. Porter realized the potential of Allen's valves for his idea of a high-speed engine, and the Porter-Allen engine became the pioneer of high-speed designs.Porter persuaded Allen to patent his new valves and two patents were obtained in 1862. These valves could be driven positively and yet the travel of the inlet could be varied to give the maximum expansion at different cut-offs. Also, the valves allowed an exceptionally good flow of steam. While Porter went to England and tried to interest manufacturers there, Allen remained in America and continued work on the engine. Within a few years he invented an inclined watertube boiler, but he seemed incapable of furthering his inventions once they had been placed on the market. Although he mortgaged his own house in order to help finance the factory for building the steam engine, in the early 1870s he left Porter and built a workshop of his own at Mott Haven. There he invented important systems for riveting by pneumatic machines through both percussion and pressure which led into the production of air compressors and riveting machines.[br]Further ReadingObituaries appeared in engineering journals at the time of his death.Dictionary of American Biography, 1928, Vol. I, New York: C.Scribner's Sons. C.T.Porter, 1908, Engineering Reminiscences, New York: J.Wiley \& Sons, reprint 1985, Bradley, Ill.: Lindsay Publications (provides details of Allen's valve design).R.L.Hills, 1989, Power from Steam. A History of the Stationary Steam Engine, Cambridge University Press (covers the development of the Porter-Allen engine).RLH -
100 roughen
rough·en [ʼrʌfən] vt
См. также в других словарях:
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