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1 тёплый климат
Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > тёплый климат
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2 тёплый
прл1) содержащий тепло warm; нагретый warmed, heatedтёплый кли́мат — warm climate
тёплая оде́жда — warm clothes pl
2) приветливый warm, cordialоказа́ть кому-л тёплый приём — to give sb a hearty/warm/cordial welcome
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3 тёплый климат
Geology: warm climate -
4 экваториальный климат
1) General subject: humid tropical climate (\<b\>A\</b\> type of climate - \<b\>humid equatorial climate\</b\> (warm or hot year-round): \<b\>Af\</b\> - tropical wet (no dry season), \<b\>Am\</b\> - tropical monsoon (short dry season and)2) Meteorology: equatorial climateУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > экваториальный климат
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5 циркуляция морской воды
циркуляция морской воды
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[ http://www.eionet.europa.eu/gemet/alphabetic?langcode=en]EN
sea circulation
Large-scale horizontal water motion within an ocean. The way energy from the sun, stored in the sea, is transported around the world. The currents explain, for example, why the UK has ice-free ports in winter, while St. Petersburg, at the same latitude as the Shetland Islands, needs ice breakers. Evidence is growing that the world's ocean circulation was very different during the last ice age and has changed several times in the distant past, with dramatic effects on climate. The oceans are vital as storehouses, as they absorb more than half the sun's heat reaching the earth. This heat, which is primarily absorbed near the equator is carried around the world and released elsewhere, creating currents which last up to 1.000 years. As the Earth rotates and the wind acts upon the surface, currents carry warm tropical water to the cooler parts of the world. The strength and direction of the currents are affected by landmasses, bottlenecks through narrow straits, and even the shape of the sea-bed. When the warm water reaches polar regions its heat evaporates into the atmosphere, reducing its temperature and increasing its density. When sea-water freezes it leaves salt behind in the unfrozen water and this cold water sinks into the ocean and begins to flow back to the tropics. Eventually it is heated and begins the cycle all over again. (Source: MGH / WRIGHT)
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Русско-английский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > циркуляция морской воды
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6 банька
a bath-hut"Warm the bath-hut, my love, set it steaming,
I will lash myself glowing red,
On a shelf somewhere near the ceiling
I will squash all my doubts – kill them dead."
(из перевода "Баньки по-белому" В.Высоцкого, выполненного Kathryn Hamilton)
(интересное примечание к переводу:)
"A lengthy treatise would be needed to really explain the role of the bath-hut in the Russian way of life – or what used to be the way of life in peasant Russia. It was, and in some areas still is, an institution – much like the ancient Roman baths, the Turkish baths, the Japanese baths, or the Finnish saunas, the difference being that Russian bath-huts are family affairs, not public institutions, each farmstead having a bath-hut (endearingly referred to as ban'ka, not the formal banya) of its own. < … > With Russia's severe climate, warming oneself in the steam of the bath-hut, accompanied by ritual self-flagellation with a birch-twig besom, rolling naked in the snow or dipping in an ice-hole in a lake or river to cool off, is a real delight. Steaming oneself in the bath-hut was also a necessary prelude to a religious or any other kind of feast, a remedy for nearly all types of illnesses, and sometimes an act of preparation for death.– The hero of this song is apparently a Siberian peasant branded kulak during forced collectivisation who resisted arrest and was deported from his native village. Peasants from European Russia were taken to Siberia, while those in Siberia could naturally be taken merely to another part of Siberia (this explains verse seven). Many peasants had faith in Stalin even in the camps, they believed he knew nothing of his hirelings' atrocities; hence the widespread custom of tattooing his profile on the breast, described in the song – and the anguished soul-searching on finding out that Stalin hadn't been all that blameless, after all. Touching as it does on the raw nerves of society, this is probably the most important, and characteristic, of all of Vysotsky's poem-songs.– Tr."Дополнительный универсальный русско-английский словарь > банька
См. также в других словарях:
Warm — Warm, a. [Compar. {Warmer}; superl. {Warmest}.] [AS. wearm; akin to OS., OFries., D., & G. warm, Icel. varmr, Sw. & Dan. varm, Goth. warmjan to warm; probably akin to Lith. virti to cook, boil; or perhaps to Skr. gharma heat, OL. formus warm. ??? … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
climate — /kluy mit/, n. 1. the composite or generally prevailing weather conditions of a region, as temperature, air pressure, humidity, precipitation, sunshine, cloudiness, and winds, throughout the year, averaged over a series of years. 2. a region or… … Universalium
Climate of Colombia — A not so common Hailstorm in Bogotá on March 3, 2006 product of a combination of altitude (low temperature at 2600 meters over sea level) and precipitation … Wikipedia
Climate of Houston — Houston Climate chart (explanation) J F M A M J J A S O … Wikipedia
climate — noun 1 weather conditions of a particular region ADJECTIVE ▪ hot, warm ▪ cold, cool ▪ mild ▪ extreme, harsh … Collocations dictionary
warm — warmer, n. warmish, adj. warmly, adv. warmness, n. /wawrm/, adj., warmer, warmest, v., n. adj. 1. having or giving out a moderate degree of heat, as perceived by the senses: a warm bath … Universalium
warm — [[t]wɔrm[/t]] adj. 1) having or giving out a moderate degree of heat, as perceived by the senses: a warm bath[/ex] 2) characterized by a moderately or comparatively high temperature: a warm oven; a warm climate[/ex] 3) having a sensation of… … From formal English to slang
warm — /wɔm / (say wawm) adjective 1. having or communicating a moderate degree of heat, as perceptible to the senses. 2. of or at a moderately high temperature; characterised by comparatively high temperature: a warm climate. 3. having a sensation of… …
climate */*/ — UK [ˈklaɪmət] / US noun Word forms climate : singular climate plural climates 1) a) [uncountable] the type of weather that a country or region has a hot/cold/mild/warm climate: Mexico is renowned for its hot climate and spicy food. b) [countable] … English dictionary
climate — cli|mate [ klaımət ] noun ** 1. ) uncount the climate of a country or region is the type of weather it has: a hot/cold/mild/warm climate: Mexico is renowned for its hot climate and spicy food. a ) count an area that has a particular type of… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
climate — cli•mate [[t]ˈklaɪ mɪt[/t]] n. 1) mer the composite or generally prevailing weather conditions of a region, as temperature, air pressure, humidity, precipitation, cloudiness, and winds, throughout the year, averaged over a series of years 2) mer… … From formal English to slang