-
21 strainer
noun (a sieve or other utensil for separating solids from liquids: a coffee-/tea-strainer.) sitko, cedidlo* * *• filter• cedidlo -
22 strainer
noun (a sieve or other utensil for separating solids from liquids: a coffee-/tea-strainer.) strecurătoare -
23 bailer
-
24 bean
nPETROL solids from liquids estrangulador m -
25 circulation
-
26 flotation method
nPETROL solids from liquids método de flotación m -
27 lateral yielding
nNUCL solids from liquids cesión lateral f, deformación lateral f -
28 level meter
nCINEMAT, NUCL solids from liquids medidor de nivel m -
29 sight
1 nINSTR visor m, vista f, goniómetro mWATER TRANSP observación astronómica f2 vtPHOTO solids from liquids apuntar -
30 strainer
noun (a sieve or other utensil for separating solids from liquids: a coffee-/tea-strainer.) σουρωτήρι -
31 strainer
nouna sieve or other utensil for separating solids from liquids:مِصْفاهa coffee-/tea-strainer.
-
32 strainer
noun (a sieve or other utensil for separating solids from liquids: a coffee-/tea-strainer.) passoire -
33 strainer
noun (a sieve or other utensil for separating solids from liquids: a coffee-/tea-strainer.) coador -
34 sieve
N1. छलनीSieves are used for separating solids or large pieces from liquids.--------V1. छाननाSieve the soup first and then drink. -
35 sieve
siv
1. noun(a container with a bottom full of very small holes, used to separate liquids from solids or small, fine pieces from larger ones etc: He poured the soup through a sieve to remove all the lumps.) colador, tamiz, criba
2. verb(to pass (something) through a sieve.) colar, tamizarsieve n tamiztr[sɪv]\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto have a memory like a sieve tener muy mala memoriasieve ['sɪv] n: tamiz m, cedazo m, criba f (en minerología)n.• cedazo s.m.• coladera s.f.• criba s.f.• garbillo s.m.• harnero s.m.• tambor s.m.• tamiz s.m.• zaranda s.f.v.• cerner v.• cribar v.• pasar por el tamiz v.• tamizar v.
I sɪvnoun ( Culin) ( for flour etc) tamiz m, cedazo m, cernidor m; ( for liquids) colador m; (Hort, Min) criba f, harnero m; memory 1) a)
II
transitive verb \<\<flour\>\> (BrE) tamizar*, cernir*, cerner*; \<\<earth\>\> cribar, harnear (Andes, Méx)[sɪv]1.2.VT [+ liquid] colar; [+ flour, soil] cribar, tamizar* * *
I [sɪv]noun ( Culin) ( for flour etc) tamiz m, cedazo m, cernidor m; ( for liquids) colador m; (Hort, Min) criba f, harnero m; memory 1) a)
II
transitive verb \<\<flour\>\> (BrE) tamizar*, cernir*, cerner*; \<\<earth\>\> cribar, harnear (Andes, Méx) -
36 Nahrung
f2. fig.: geistige Nahrung food for the mind; Nahrung geben (+ Dat) fuel; ( neue) Nahrung erhalten oder finden be fuel(l)ed, receive fresh impetus* * *die Nahrungnourishment; nutriment; pabulum; food; nutrition; sustenance* * *Nah|rung ['naːrʊŋ]f -, no plfoodflüssige Náhrung — liquids pl
feste Náhrung — solids pl
geistige Náhrung — intellectual stimulation
sie verweigerten jegliche Náhrung — they refused all nourishment
(neue) Náhrung geben — to help to nourish or feed sth
dadurch fand or erhielt or bekam die ganze Sache neue Náhrung —
* * *die1) (something that nourishes; food: Plants draw nourishment from the earth.) nourishment2) (nourishment; food.) nutriment* * *Nah·rung<->[ˈna:rʊŋ]f kein pl foodflüssige/feste \Nahrung liquids/solids pl* * *die; Nahrung: fooddem Verdacht/den Gerüchten usw. Nahrung geben od. bieten — (fig.) help to nurture or foster the suspicion/the rumours etc
* * *Nahrung f1. food;flüssige Nahrung liquids;2. fig:geistige Nahrung food for the mind;Nahrung geben (+dat) fuel;finden be fuel(l)ed, receive fresh impetus* * *die; Nahrung: fooddem Verdacht/den Gerüchten usw. Nahrung geben od. bieten — (fig.) help to nurture or foster the suspicion/the rumours etc
* * *-en f.fare n.food n.nourishment n.nutriment n. -
37 solid
'solid
1. adjective1) (not easily changing shape; not in the form of liquid or gas: Water becomes solid when it freezes; solid substances.) sólido2) (not hollow: The tyres of the earliest cars were solid.) macizo3) (firm and strongly made (and therefore sound and reliable): That's a solid piece of furniture; His argument is based on good solid facts/reasoning.) sólido4) (completely made of one substance: This bracelet is made of solid gold; We dug till we reached solid rock.) macizo5) (without breaks, gaps or flaws: The policemen formed themselves into a solid line; They are solid in their determination to strike.) de una sola pieza6) (having height, breadth and width: A cube is a solid figure.) sólido7) (consecutive; without a pause: I've been working for six solid hours.) seguido, ininterrumpido
2. adverb(without interruption; continuously: She was working for six hours solid.) ininterrumpidamente
3. noun1) (a substance that is solid: Butter is a solid but milk is a liquid.) sólido2) (a shape that has length, breadth and height.) sólido•- solidify
- solidification
- solidity
- solidness
- solidly
- solid fuel
solid adj1. sólido2. macizotr['sɒlɪd]1 (not liquid or gas) sólido,-a2 (not hollow) macizo,-a3 (dense, compact) compacto,-a4 (unmixed) puro,-a, macizo,-a5 (strong) sólido,-a, fuerte6 (reliable) sólido,-a, de confianza, de fiar7 (unanimous) unánime8 (continuous) seguido,-a, entero,-a; (unbroken) continuo,-a9 SMALLTECHNICAL/SMALL (three-dimensional) tridimensional1 (substance) sólido■ solids, liquids and gasses sólidos, líquidos y gases\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLas solid as a rock firme como una rocato become solid solidificarsesolid figure cuerpo sólidosolid geometry geometría del espaciosolid ['sɑləd] adj1) : macizoa solid rubber ball: una bola maciza de caucho2) cubic: tridimensional3) compact: compacto, denso4) sturdy: sólido5) continuous: seguido, continuotwo solid hours: dos horas seguidasa solid line: una línea continua6) unanimous: unánime7) dependable: serio, fiable8) pure: macizo, purosolid gold: oro macizosolid n: sólido madj.• compacto, -a adj.• consistente adj.• denso, -a adj.• duro, -a adj.• enterizo, -a adj.• fijo, -a adj.• firme adj.• macizo, -a adj.• sólido, -a adj.• unánime adj.n.• macizo s.m.• sólido s.m.
I 'sɑːləd, 'sɒlɪd1)a) ( not liquid or gaseous) sólidosolid food — alimentos mpl sólidos
to become solid — solidificarse*
b) ( not hollow) <rubber ball/tire> macizoc) ( Math) tridimensional2)a) ( unbroken) <line/row> continuo, ininterrumpidob) ( continuous) (colloq) <month/year> seguido3)a) ( physically sturdy) <furniture/house> sólido; < meal> consistenteb) (substantial, valuable) <knowledge/reason> sólidoc) (firm, definite) < offer> en firme4)b) ( unanimous) <support/agreement> unánime
II
1)a) (Chem, Phys) sólido mb) ( Math) sólido m2) solids pla) (in, from liquid) sólidos mpl, sustancias fpl sólidasb) ( food) alimentos mpl sólidos
III
adverb (colloq)['sɒlɪd]to be packed/jammed solid — estar* lleno hasta el tope or hasta los topes
1. ADJ1) (=not liquid) sólido•
to become solid — solidificarse•
to freeze solid — congelarse por completo•
to be frozen solid — estar completamente congelado•
to go solid — solidificarse2) (=firm) [masonry, building, understanding, basis] sólido; [argument] sólido, bien fundamentado; [relationship] sólido, firme•
get a good solid grip on the handle — agarra bien el mangoto have solid grounds for thinking that... — tener bases sólidas para creer que...
3) (=not hollow) [rock] sólido; [wood, steel] macizo, puro; [tyre, ball, block] macizo4) (=compact, dense) [layer, crowd] compacto•
flights to Israel are booked solid — los vuelos a Israel están completamente llenos•
a solid mass of colour — una masa sólida de color•
the streets were packed solid with people — las calles estaban abarrotadas de gente•
the bolts have rusted solid — los tornillos están tan oxidados que es imposible girarlos•
the traffic was solid going into town — había una caravana tremenda en dirección a la ciudad *5) (=continuous) [line, rain] ininterrumpidoI've been working on this for eight hours solid — he estado trabajando sobre esto durante ocho horas ininterrumpidas, llevo trabajando sobre esto ocho horas sin parar
6) (=reliable) [person, relationship] serio; [evidence, reason, values] sólido; [information] fiable; [work] concienzudo; [citizen] responsable; [advice] útil7) (=substantial)8) (=unanimous)9) (Geom) [figure] tridimensional2. N1) (Phys, Chem) sólido m2) (Geom) sólido mis he on solids yet? — ¿come ya alimentos sólidos?
3.CPDsolid angle N — (Geom) ángulo m sólido
solid compound N — (Ling) compuesto que se escribe como una sola palabra
solid fuel N — combustible m sólido
solid geometry N — geometría f de los cuerpos sólidos
* * *
I ['sɑːləd, 'sɒlɪd]1)a) ( not liquid or gaseous) sólidosolid food — alimentos mpl sólidos
to become solid — solidificarse*
b) ( not hollow) <rubber ball/tire> macizoc) ( Math) tridimensional2)a) ( unbroken) <line/row> continuo, ininterrumpidob) ( continuous) (colloq) <month/year> seguido3)a) ( physically sturdy) <furniture/house> sólido; < meal> consistenteb) (substantial, valuable) <knowledge/reason> sólidoc) (firm, definite) < offer> en firme4)b) ( unanimous) <support/agreement> unánime
II
1)a) (Chem, Phys) sólido mb) ( Math) sólido m2) solids pla) (in, from liquid) sólidos mpl, sustancias fpl sólidasb) ( food) alimentos mpl sólidos
III
adverb (colloq)to be packed/jammed solid — estar* lleno hasta el tope or hasta los topes
-
38 sieve
[siv] 1. noun(a container with a bottom full of very small holes, used to separate liquids from solids or small, fine pieces from larger ones etc: He poured the soup through a sieve to remove all the lumps.) si2. verb(to pass (something) through a sieve.) si* * *[siv] 1. noun(a container with a bottom full of very small holes, used to separate liquids from solids or small, fine pieces from larger ones etc: He poured the soup through a sieve to remove all the lumps.) si2. verb(to pass (something) through a sieve.) si -
39 matter
['mætə] 1. noun1) (solids, liquids and/or gases in any form, from which everything physical is made: The entire universe is made up of different kinds of matter.) materie2) (a subject or topic (of discussion etc): a private matter; money matters.) sag; -sag; anliggende; -anliggende3) (pus: The wound was infected and full of matter.) materie2. verb(to be important: That car matters a great deal to him; It doesn't matter.) betyde noget- be the matter
- a matter of course
- a matter of opinion
- no matter
- no matter who
- what
- where* * *['mætə] 1. noun1) (solids, liquids and/or gases in any form, from which everything physical is made: The entire universe is made up of different kinds of matter.) materie2) (a subject or topic (of discussion etc): a private matter; money matters.) sag; -sag; anliggende; -anliggende3) (pus: The wound was infected and full of matter.) materie2. verb(to be important: That car matters a great deal to him; It doesn't matter.) betyde noget- be the matter
- a matter of course
- a matter of opinion
- no matter
- no matter who
- what
- where -
40 Randall, Sir John Turton
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 23 March 1905 Newton-le-Willows, Lancashire, Englandd. 16 June 1984 Edinburgh, Scotland[br]English physicist and biophysicist, primarily known for the development, with Boot of the cavity magnetron.[br]Following secondary education at Ashton-inMakerfield Grammar School, Randall entered Manchester University to read physics, gaining a first class BSc in 1925 and his MSc in 1926. From 1926 to 1937 he was a research physicist at the General Electric Company (GEC) laboratories, where he worked on luminescent powders, following which he became Warren Research Fellow of the Royal Society at Birmingham University, studying electronic processes in luminescent solids. With the outbreak of the Second World War he became an honorary member of the university staff and transferred to a group working on the development of centrimetric radar. With Boot he was responsible for the development of the cavity magnetron, which had a major impact on the development of radar.When Birmingham resumed its atomic research programme in 1943, Randall became a temporary lecturer at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge. The following year he was appointed Professor of Natural Philosophy at the University of St Andrews, but in 1946 he moved again to the Wheatstone Chair of Physics at King's College, London. There his developing interest in biophysical research led to the setting up of a multi-disciplinary group in 1951 to study connective tissues and other biological components, and in 1950– 5 he was joint Editor of Progress in Biophysics. From 1961 until his retirement in 1970 he was Professor of Biophysics at King's College and for most of that time he was also Chairman of the School of Biological Sciences. In addition, for many years he was honorary Director of the Medical Research Council Biophysics Research Unit.After he retired he returned to Edinburgh and continued to study biological problems in the university zoology laboratory.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1962. FRS 1946. FRS Edinburgh 1972. DSc Manchester 1938. Royal Society of Arts Thomas Gray Memorial Prize 1943. Royal Society Hughes Medal 1946. Franklin Institute John Price Wetherill Medal 1958. City of Pennsylvania John Scott Award 1959. (All jointly with Boot for the cavity magnetron.)Bibliography1934, Diffraction of X-Rays by Amorphous Solids, Liquids \& Gases (describes his early work).1953, editor, Nature \& Structure of Collagen.1976, with H.Boot, "Historical notes on the cavity magnetron", Transactions of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers ED-23: 724 (gives an account of the cavity-magnetron development at Birmingham).Further ReadingM.H.F.Wilkins, "John Turton Randall"—Bio-graphical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, London: Royal Society.KFBiographical history of technology > Randall, Sir John Turton
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