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1 трубный подсвечник
1) Engineering: pipe racking board2) Oil: racking board3) Oil&Gas technology pipe-racking board4) Oilfield: pipe setback, setback areaУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > трубный подсвечник
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2 oppstillingsplass
subst. [ for borerør] drill pipe setback area -
3 røroppstillingsplass
subst. (petro) setback area -
4 подсвечник
1) General subject: candelabrum, candle holder, candlestick, sconce2) Chemistry: set back area3) Construction: chandelier4) Religion: candelabrum (A large, usually decorated, candlestick, usually with several branches or arms), lamp-stand, lampstand5) Oil: pipe setback (в буровой), setback (в буровой), setback (для бурильных груб), setback (для бурильных труб)6) Drilling: conduit support7) Oil&Gas technology racking board8) Christianity: candle stick -
5 borrasca
f.1 thunderstorm.2 storm, squall.* * *1 (ciclón) depression, low-presssure area2 (tormenta) storm3 (en un negocio etc) bad spell, bad patch* * *SF1) area of low pressure, depressionviene una borrasca por el Atlántico — there's low pressure o a low approaching from the Atlantic
2) (=tormenta) [en tierra] storm; [en el mar] squall3) (=peligro) peril, hazard; (=mala racha) setback4) * (=juerga) orgy, spree* * *a) ( área de bajas presiones) area of low pressureb) ( tormenta) squall* * *Ex. Tropical cyclones are intense low pressure systems that form over tropical oceans.* * *a) ( área de bajas presiones) area of low pressureb) ( tormenta) squall* * *Ex: Tropical cyclones are intense low pressure systems that form over tropical oceans.
* * *1 (área de bajas presiones) depression, area of low pressureuna fuerte borrasca a deep depression, an area of very low pressure2 (tormenta) squall3 (mala racha) bad spell4 (lío, jaleo) trouble* * *
borrasca sustantivo femenino
borrasca sustantivo femenino area of low pressure, depression, squall: se acerca una borrasca desde el Atlántico, a squall is approaching from the Atlantic
' borrasca' also found in these entries:
English:
low
- squall
* * *borrasca nf2. [tormenta] thunderstorm3. [riña] flaming row* * *f area of low pressure* * *borrasca n storm -
6 подсвечник
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7 Wirtschaftsrat
Wirtschaftsrat
council of economic advisers (US);
• Europäischer Wirtschaftsrat Organization for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC);
• Wirtschafts- und Sozialrat der Vereinten Nationen United Nations Economic and Social Council (UN-ECOSOC);
• Wirtschaftsraum trading (trade, marketing) area, market, economic domain (area, region), (Schiff) service space;
• einheitlicher Wirtschaftsraum (EU) single economic area;
• Wirtschaftsräume offices;
• Wirtschaftsrealismus economic realism;
• Wirtschaftsrecht commercial law;
• Wirtschaftsrechtler economist-lawyer;
• Wirtschaftsredakteur financial (economist, city, Br.) editor;
• Wirtschaftsreform economic reform;
• Wirtschaftsregion economic (planning) region;
• Wirtschaftsressort economics portfolio;
• Wirtschaftsrestriktionen restraint of trade;
• Wirtschaftsrevolution industrial revolution;
• Wirtschaftsrezession economic recession;
• Wirtschaftsrückgang trade backsliding, depression of trade;
• Wirtschaftsrückschlag economic setback;
• Wirtschaftssabotage industrial (economic) sabotage;
• Wirtschaftssachverständiger economic expert, industrial counsel(l)or;
• Wirtschaftssanierung revitalization of the economy;
• Wirtschaftssanktionen economic sanctions;
• gehobenere Wirtschaftsschichten higher industrial classes;
• Wirtschaftsschiedsrichter industry-unions arbiter;
• Wirtschaftsschlichter trade arbitrator;
• Wirtschaftsseite haben (Zeitung) to carry a financial page (Br.);
• Wirtschaftssektor sector of economy;
• Wirtschaftsseminar business seminar;
• Wirtschaftssituation state of the economy;
• Wirtschaftssparte line of commerce;
• Wirtschaftsspion industrial spy, keek (US sl.);
• Wirtschaftsspionage economic (industrial) espionage, business spying (espionage);
• Wirtschaftssprache language of economics, economic (economists’) terminology;
• Wirtschaftsstabilität economic stability;
• Wirtschaftsstatistik business (economic) statistics, census of business;
• Wirtschaftsstelle economic agency (board), (Bewirtschaftung) rationing board;
• Wirtschaftsstellung business (trade) position;
• Wirtschaftssteuerung durch Überredung jaw-boning (US sl.);
• Wirtschaftsstockung stagnation of business;
• Wirtschaftsstrategie economic strategy;
• Wirtschaftsstruktur business (economic) structure, economic setup (US), strucrure of business;
• Wirtschaftsstruktur eines Landes economic setup of a country (US);
• alle Wirtschaftsstufen all parts of the economy. -
8 Gilbert, Joseph Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Agricultural and food technology[br]b. 1 August 1817 Hull, Englandd. 23 December 1901 England[br]English chemist who co-established the reputation of Rothampsted Experimental Station as at the forefront of agricultural research.[br]Joseph Gilbert was the son of a congregational minister. His schooling was interrupted by the loss of an eye as the result of a shooting accident, but despite this setback he entered Glasgow University to study analytical chemistry, and then went to University College, London, where he was a fellow student of John Bennet Lawes. During his studies he visited Giessen, Germany, and worked in the laboratory of Justus von Liebig. In 1843, at the age of 26, he was hired as an assistant by Lawes, who was 29 at that time; an unbroken friendship and collaboration existed between the two until Lawes died in 1900. They began a series of experiments on grain production and grew plots under different applications of nitrogen, with control plots that received none at all. Much of the work at Rothampsted was on the nitrogen requirements of plants and how this element became available to them. The grain grown in these experiments was analyzed to determine whether nitrogen input affected grain quality. Gilbert was a methodical worker who by the time of his death had collected together some 50,000 carefully stored and recorded samples.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1893. FRS 1860. Fellow of the Chemistry Society 1841, President 1882–3. President, Chemical Section of the British Association 1880. Sibthorpian Professor of Rural Economy, Oxford University, 1884. Honorary Professor of the Royal Agricultural College, Cirencester. Honorary member of the Royal Agricultural Society of England 1883. Royal Society Royal Medal 1867 (jointly with Lawes). Society of Arts Albert Gold Medal 1894 (jointly with Lawes). Liebig Foundation of the Royal Bavarian Academy of Science Silver Medal 1893 (jointly with Lawes).AP -
9 Holland, John Philip
SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping[br]b. 29 February 1840 Liscanor, Co. Clare, Irelandd. 12 August 1915 Newark, New Jersey, USA[br]Irish/American inventor of the successful modern submarine[br]Holland was educated first in his native town and later in Limerick, a seaport bustling with coastal trade ships. His first job was that of schoolteacher, and as such he worked in various parts of Ireland until he was about 32 years old. A combination of his burning patriotic zeal for Ireland and his interest in undersea technology (then in its infancy) made him consider designs for underwater warships for use against the British Royal Navy in the fight for Irish independence. He studied all known works on the subject and commenced drawing plans, but he was unable to make real headway owing to a lack of finance.In 1873 he travelled to the United States, ultimately settling in New Jersey and continuing in the profession of teaching. His work on submarine design continued, but in 1875 he suffered a grave setback when the United States Navy turned down his designs. Help came from an unexpected source, the Irish Republican Brotherhood, or Fenian Society, which had been founded in Dublin and New York in 1858. Financial help enabled Holland to build a 4 m (13 ft) one-person craft, which was tested in 1878, and then a larger boat of 19 tonnes' displacement that was tested with a crew of three to depths of 20 m (65 ft) in New York's harbour in 1883. Known as the Fenian Ram, it embodied most of the principles of modern submarines, including weight compensation. The Fenians commandeered this boat, but they were unable to operate it satisfactorily and it was relegated to history.Holland continued work, at times independently and sometimes with others, and continuously advocated submarines to the United States Navy. In 1895 he was successful in winning a contract for US$150,000 to build the US Submarine Plunger at Baltimore. With too much outside interference, this proved an unsatisfactory venture. However, with only US$5,000 of his capital left, Holland started again and in 1898 he launched the Holland at Elizabeth, New Jersey. This 16 m (52 ft) vessel was successful, and in 1900 it was purchased by the United States Government.Six more boats were ordered by the Americans, and then some by the Russians and the Japanese. The British Royal Navy ordered five, which were built by Vickers Son and Maxim (now VSEL) at Barrow-in-Furness in the years up to 1903, commencing their long run of submarine building. They were licensed by another well-known name, the Electric Boat Company, which had formerly been the J.P.Holland Torpedo Boat Company.Holland now had some wealth and was well known. He continued to work, trying his hand at aeronautical research, and in 1904 he invented a respirator for use in submarine rescue work. It is pleasing to record that one of his ships can be seen to this day at the Royal Navy Submarine Museum, Gosport: HM Submarine Holland No. 1, which was lost under tow in 1913 but salvaged and restored in the 1980s.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsOrder of the Rising Sun, Japan, 1910.Bibliography1900, "The submarine boat and its future", North American Review (December). Holland wrote several other articles of a similar nature.Further ReadingR.K.Morris, 1966 John P.Holland 1841–1914, Inventor of the Modern Submarine, Annapolis, MD: US Naval Institute.F.W.Lipscomb, 1975, The British Submarine, London: Conway Maritime Press. A.N.Harrison, 1979, The Development of HM Submarines from Holland No. 1 (1901) toPorpoise (1930), Bath: MoD Ships Department (internal publication).FMW
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