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1 spinning factory
Техника: прядильная фабрика -
2 spinning factory
< textil> ■ Spinnerei f -
3 spinning factory
كارخانهنخريسي -
4 spinning factory
English-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > spinning factory
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5 spinning factory
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6 spinning-factory
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7 spinning factory
s.hilandería, fábrica de hilados. -
8 spinning
spinning ['spɪnɪŋ]1 noun(b) (in fishing) pêche f à la cuiller ou cuillère(rotating) tournant, qui tourne►► spinning factory filature f;spinning jenny jenny f;spinning mill filature f;spinning top toupie f;spinning wheel rouet m -
9 spinning
present participle; = spin* * *[spíniŋ]1.nounpredenje; preja; predivo; vrtenje (letala) okoli osi;2.adjectiveki prede; ki rotira, se vrti, krožispinning jenny technical stroj za fino predenjespinning frame technical predilna statva (stroj)spinning top — vrtavka, volkspinning wheel history kolovrat -
10 factory
nфабрика; завод
- aircraft factory
- branch factory
- central factory
- chemical factory
- fully-automatic factory
- heavy engineering factory
- knitting factory
- loss-making factory
- milk processing factory
- overhaul factory
- pilot factory
- poultry factory
- privately-owned factory
- producer factory
- spinning factory
- supplier's factory
- weaving factory
- ex factory
- ex vendor's factory
- close a factory
- modernize a factory
- run a factory
- shut down a factoryEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > factory
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11 прядильная фабрика
spinning-mill, spinning-factoryБольшой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > прядильная фабрика
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12 прядильный
прил. spinning прядильная фабрика ≈ spinning mill/factory прядильный станок ≈ spinning loomпрядильн|ый - spinning attr. ;
~ая машина spinning-machine, spinning-frame;
~ая фабрика spinning-mill, spinning-factory.Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > прядильный
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13 фабрика
жен. factory ;
mill пустить в ход фабрику ≈ to start (up) a factory, to put a factory into operation на фабрике ≈ in factory суконная фабрика ≈ cloth factory бумажная фабрика ≈ paper-mill красильная фабрика ≈ dye-house, dye-works прядильная фабрика ≈ spinning-mill, spinning-factory ткацкая фабрика ≈ weaving-mill консервная фабрика ≈ cannery парфюмерная фабрика ≈ perfumery ситценабивная фабрика ≈ print works, cotton-printing factory швейная фабрика ≈ clothes/garment factory шелкомотальная фабрика ≈ filature хлопкоочистительная фабрика ≈ ginneryфабри|ка - ж. factory, mill, plant;
бумажная ~ paper-mill;
обогатительная ~ concentrating mill;
ткацкая ~ weaving-mill. -
14 шерстопрядильный
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > шерстопрядильный
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15 хлопкопрядильная фабрика
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > хлопкопрядильная фабрика
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16 Owen, Robert
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 14 May 1771 Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Walesd. 17 November 1858 Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales[br]Welsh cotton spinner and social reformer.[br]Robert Owen's father was also called Robert and was a saddler, ironmonger and postmaster of Newtown in Montgomeryshire. Robert, the younger, injured his digestion as a child by drinking some scalding hot "flummery", which affected him for the rest of his life. He developed a passion for reading and through this visited London when he was 10 years old. He started work as a pedlar for someone in Stamford and then went to a haberdasher's shop on old London Bridge in London. Although he found the work there too hard, he stayed in the same type of employment when he moved to Manchester.In Manchester Owen soon set up a partnership for making bonnet frames, employing forty workers, but he sold the business and bought a spinning machine. This led him in 1790 into another partnership, with James M'Connel and John Kennedy in a spinning mill, but he moved once again to become Manager of Peter Drink-water's mill. These were all involved in fine spinning, and Drinkwater employed 500 people in one of the best mills in the city. In spite of his youth, Owen claims in his autobiography (1857) that he mastered the job within six weeks and soon improved the spinning. This mill was one of the first to use Sea Island cotton from the West Indies. To have managed such an enterprise so well Owen must have had both managerial and technical ability. Through his spinning connections Owen visited Glasgow, where he met both David Dale and his daughter Anne Caroline, whom he married in 1799. It was this connection which brought him to Dale's New Lanark mills, which he persuaded Dale to sell to a Manchester consortium for £60,000. Owen took over the management of the mills on 1 January 1800. Although he had tried to carry out social reforms in the manner of working at Manchester, it was at New Lanark that Owen acquired fame for the way in which he improved both working and living conditions for the 1,500-strong workforce. He started by seeing that adequate food and groceries were available in that remote site and then built both the school and the New Institution for the Formation of Character, which opened in January 1816. To the pauper children from the Glasgow and Edinburgh slums he gave a good education, while he tried to help the rest of the workforce through activities at the Institution. The "silent monitors" hanging on the textile machines, showing the performance of their operatives, are famous, and many came to see his social experiments. Owen was soon to buy out his original partners for £84,000.Among his social reforms were his efforts to limit child labour in mills, resulting in the Factory Act of 1819. He attempted to establish an ideal community in the USA, to which he sailed in 1824. He was to return to his village of "Harmony" twice more, but broke his connection in 1828. The following year he finally withdrew from New Lanark, where some of his social reforms had been abandoned.[br]Bibliography1857, The Life of Robert Owen, Written by Himself, London.Further ReadingG.D.H.Cole, 1965, Life of Robert Owen (biography).J.Butt (ed.), 1971, Robert Owen, Prince of Cotton Spinners, Newton Abbot; S.Pollard and J.Salt (eds), 1971, Robert Owen, Prophet of the Poor. Essays in Honour of theTwo-Hundredth Anniversary of His Birth, London (both describe Owen's work at New Lanark).RLH -
17 Kennedy, John
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 4 July 1769 Knocknalling, Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotlandd. 30 October 1855 Ardwick Hall, Manchester, England[br]Scottish cotton spinner and textile machine maker.[br]Kennedy was the third son of his father, Robert, and went to the village school in Dalry. On his father's death, he was sent at the age of 14 to Chowbent, Lancashire, where he was apprenticed to William Cannan, a maker of textile machines such as carding frames, Hargreaves's jennies and Arkwright's waterframes. On completion of his apprenticeship in 1791, he moved to Manchester and entered into partnership with Benjamin and William Sandford and James M'Connel, textile machine makers and mule spinners. In 1795 this partnership was terminated and one was made with James M'Connel to form the firm M'Connel \& Kennedy, cotton spinners.Kennedy introduced improvements for spinning fine yarns and the firm of M'Connel \& Kennedy became famous for the quality of these products, which were in great demand. He made the spindles turn faster during the second part of the mule carriage's outward draw, and from 1793 onwards he experimented with driving mules by steam engines. Like William Kelly at New Lanark, he succeeded in making the spinning sequences power-operated by 1800, although the spinner had to take over the winding on. This made the mule into a factory machine, but it still required skilled operators. He was also involved with Henry Houldsworth, Junior, in the improvement of the roving frame. In 1803 Kennedy joined the Manchester Literary \& Philosophical Society, to which he presented several papers, including one in 1830 on "A memoir of Samuel Crompton". He retired from the spinning business in 1826, but continued his technical and mechanical pursuits. He was consulted about whether the Liverpool \& Manchester Railway should have moving or stationary steam engines and was an umpire at the Rainhill Trials in 1829.[br]Further ReadingDictionary of National Biography.W.Fairbairn, obituary, Manchester Memoirs, Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society.C.H.Lee, 1972, A Cotton Enterprise 1795–1840. A History of M'Connel \& Kennedy, FineCotton Spinners, Manchester (an account of Kennedy's spinning business). R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (provides details of Kennedy's inventions on the mule).RLH -
18 mill
mil
1. noun1) (a machine, sometimes now electrical, for grinding coffee, pepper etc by crushing it between rough, hard surfaces: a coffee-mill; a pepper-mill.) molinillo2) (a building where grain is ground: The farmer took his corn to the mill.) molino3) (a building where certain types of things are manufactured: A woollen-mill; a steel-mill.) fábrica
2. verb1) (to grind or press: This flour was milled locally.) moler2) ((usually with about or around) (of crowds) to move about in a disorganized way: There's a huge crowd of people milling around outside.) arremolinarse, apiñarse•- miller- millstone
- millwheel
mill n1. molino2. fábrica3. molinillotr[mɪl]1 (machinery) molino2 (for coffee, pepper, etc) molinillo3 (factory) fábrica4 (for metals) fresadora1 (crush, grind) moler2 (shape metal) fresar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto go through the mill pasarlas moradasto put somebody through the mill hacérselas pasar moradas a alguien, hacerle sudar la gota gorda a alguienmill ['mɪl] vt: moler (granos), fresar (metales), acordonar (monedas)mill vito mill about : arremolinarsemill n1) : molino m (para moler granos)2) factory: fábrica ftextile mill: fábrica textil3) grinder: molinillo mn.• milésimo s.m.n.• aserradero s.m.• fábrica s.f.• hilandería s.f.• molienda s.f.• molino s.m.• taller s.m.v.• fresar v.• moler v.mɪl
I
1)a) (building, machine) molino mto go through the mill — \<\<person\>\> vérselas* negras (fam), pasarlas duras
b) ( for pepper etc) molinillo m2) ( cotton mill) fábrica f de tejidos de algodón; ( paper mill) fábrica f de papel, papelera f; ( saw mill) aserradero m, aserrío m (Col, Ec)3) ( in US) ( Fin) milésima f de dólar ( unidad usada en el cálculo de impuestos)
II
1.
1) \<\<flour\>\> moler*2) \<\<lumber\>\> aserrar*, serrar*; \<\<cloth\>\> abatanar, batanar
2.
vi ( circulate) \<\<crowd\>\> dar* vueltas, pulular, arremolinarsePhrasal Verbs:[mɪl]1. N1) (=textile factory) fábrica f (de tejidos); (=sugar mill) ingenio m de azúcar; (=spinning mill) hilandería f ; (=steel mill) acería f2) (=machine) molino m ; (for coffee, pepper) molinillo m ; (Tech) fresadora fto put sb through the mill —
2.VT moler; [+ metal] pulir; (coin) acordonar3.CPDmill worker N — (in textile mill) obrero(-a) m / f de fábrica de tejidos
* * *[mɪl]
I
1)a) (building, machine) molino mto go through the mill — \<\<person\>\> vérselas* negras (fam), pasarlas duras
b) ( for pepper etc) molinillo m2) ( cotton mill) fábrica f de tejidos de algodón; ( paper mill) fábrica f de papel, papelera f; ( saw mill) aserradero m, aserrío m (Col, Ec)3) ( in US) ( Fin) milésima f de dólar ( unidad usada en el cálculo de impuestos)
II
1.
1) \<\<flour\>\> moler*2) \<\<lumber\>\> aserrar*, serrar*; \<\<cloth\>\> abatanar, batanar
2.
vi ( circulate) \<\<crowd\>\> dar* vueltas, pulular, arremolinarsePhrasal Verbs: -
19 Need, Samuel
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 1718d. 14 April 1781 Bread Street, Cheapside, London, England[br]English manufacturer of hosiery who helped to finance Arkwright's spinning machine and early cotton mills.[br]Samuel Need was apprenticed as a framework knitter and entered the hosiery trade c. 1742. He was a Dissenter and later became an Independent Congregationalist. He married Elizabeth Gibson of Hacking, Middlesex, who survived him and died in 1781. He had a warehouse in Nottingham, where he was made a burgess in 1739–40. In 1747 he bought a mill there and had a house adjoining it, but in 1777 he bought an estate at Arnold, outside the city. From about 1759 he supported Jedediah Strutt and William Woollat in their development of Strutt's invention of the rib attachment to the knitting machine. Need became a partner with Strutt in 1762 over the patent and then they shared a joint hosiery business. When Arkwright sought financial assistance from Ichabod and John Wright, the Nottingham bankers, to develop his spinning mill in that town, the Wrights turned him over to Samuel Need. Need, having profited so much from the successful patent with Strutt, was ready to exploit another; on 19 January 1770 Need and Strutt, on payment of £500, became co-partners with Arkwright, Smalley and Thornley for the remainder of Arkwright's patent. In Need, Arkwright had secured the patronage of the leading hosier in Nottingham. Need was leader of the Hosiers' Federation in 1779 when the framework knitters petitioned Parliament to better their conditions. He gave evidence against the workers' demands and, when their bill failed, the Nottingham workers attacked first his Nottingham house and then the one at Arnold.Need was to remain a partner with Arkwright until his death in 1781. He was involved in die mill at Cromford and also with some later ones, such as the Birkacre mill near Chorley, Lancashire, in 1777. He made a fortune and died at his home in London.[br]Further ReadingM.L.Walker, 1963, A History of the Family of Need of Arnold, Nottinghamshire, London (a good biography).R.S.Fitton, 1989, The Arkwrights, Spinners of Fortune, Manchester (covers Need's relationship with Arkwright).R.S.Fitton and A.P.Wadsworth, 1958, The Strutts and the Arkwrights, 1758–1830, Manchester.S.D.Chapman, 1967, The Early Factory Masters, Newton Abbot (describes his wider contacts with the Midlands hosiery industry).RLH -
20 mill
1. n мельница; дробилка2. n фабрика3. n завод4. n прядильная фабрика5. n лесопильный завод6. n метал. прокатный стан7. n отжимный пресс8. n тех. фреза9. n тех. фрезерный станок10. n жарг. состязание по боксу11. n жарг. кулачный бой12. n сл. тюрьма13. n сл. воен. гауптвахта, «губа»14. n сл. воен. жарг. двигатель самолёта15. v молоть16. v молоться17. v рушить18. v дробить, измельчать19. v прокатывать20. v обрабатывать на станке; фрезеровать21. v гуртить22. v выделывать23. v валять24. v пилить лес25. v двигаться кругом, кружить; толочься26. v сбивать до пены27. v сл. бить, тузить; колошматить28. n амер. тысячная часть доллара29. v сл. грабить, крастьСинонимический ряд:1. factory (noun) coffee mill; factory; flour mill; forge; grain manufactory; manufactory; millhouse; plant; sawmill; shop; works2. powder (verb) crush; granulate; grind; powder; pulverise
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