Глоссарий





Новости переводов

19 апреля, 2024

Translations in furniture production

07 февраля, 2024

Ghostwriting vs. Copywriting

30 января, 2024

Preparing a scientific article for publication in an electronic (online) journal

20 декабря, 2023

Translation and editing of drawings in CAD systems

10 декабря, 2023

About automatic speech recognition

30 ноября, 2023

Translation services for tunneling shields and tunnel construction technologies

22 ноября, 2023

Proofreading of English text



Глоссарии и словари бюро переводов Фларус

Поиск в глоссариях:  

Broken

  1. 1. gaming theory term to refer to any rule, operator, or card that unbalances the game, or breaks the game. 2. anything that is too incredible to be true. example 1. a rule allowing a player to simultaneously play two xs in tic-tac-toe would be broken. 2. these courtside tickets for the lakers are completely broken.

  2. Г. бршен-хилл (шт. новый южный уэльс, австралия);

  3. Г. брокен-хилл см. kabwe

  4. Разорванный, с разрывами (об облаках) 122

  5. Разорванный, с разрывами (об облачности)

  6. Roto

  7. A ломаный (о языке, речи ); ~ english (french, portuguese) ломаный англий- ский (французский, португальский) язык language brugmann law

  8. An old army word, used for reduced; as, a broken lieutenant, &c. the word is also applied to troops in line when not dressed. the heart of a gale is said to be broken; parole is broken; also, leave, bulk, &c. (which see).


Broken, английский
    1. gaming theory term to refer to any rule, operator, or card that unbalances the game, or breaks the game. 2. anything that is too incredible to be true. example 1. a rule allowing a player to simultaneously play two xs in tic-tac-toe would be broken. 2. these courtside tickets for the lakers are completely broken.


Break, английский
  1. Гребень - специальный серфовый термин, означающий точку, где волна начинает разрушаться.

  2. The first shot of a pool game where the cue ball is hit from behind the head string (i.e., in the "kitchen") into the racked balls

  3. Fracture, rupture, shatter, smash, wreck, crash, demolish, atomize

  4. Перерыв; разрыв; ломать, разбивать, разрушать

  5. When a team quickly advances the ball down the field in an attempt to get its players near the opponent`s goal before the defenders have a chance to retreat; also called an advantage.

  6. Быстрое падение цены.

  7. A change in direction of a plane; usually in reference to a wall.

  8. The point at which a bone has broken  clean break a break in a bone which is not complicated and where the two parts will join again easily

  9. Ломка

  10. The sudden rise of a deck when not flush; when the aft, and sometimes the fore part, of a vessel`s deck is kept up to give more height below, and at the drifts.—break of the poop, where it ends at the foremost part.

  11. [1] to unfold and display a flag that was still brace 52 furled when previously-hoisted. [2] the point of discontinuity between two levels on the deck of a ship. one deck stops and a ladder leads to another at a lower level. [3] an improvement in the weather. [4] to reduce in rank or rate. [5] to fold over and form a breaker (said of a wave). [6] to part the surface (said of an ascending submarine).

  12. To unscrew, as rods, casing, drill pipe, etc.

  13. To separate core from where it is attached to rock at the bottom of a borehole by a tensional pull ap plied to the drill string.

  14. A fault, rupture, fracture, or discontinuity in rock formations.

  15. The act of training or gentling a horse

  16. (slopes) an abrupt change or inflection in a slope or profile (as in “a break in slope”). compare - knickpoint, shoulder, escarpment. (geomorphology) a marked variation of topography, or a tract of land distinct from adjacent land, or an irregular or rough piece of ground. compare - breaks. gg

  17. A rapid and sharp price decline. related: crash.

  18. The place where type is divided; may be the end of a line or paragraph, or as it reads best in display type.

  19. A general term used in mining geology for any discontinuity in the

  20. Внезапное падение цен

  21. Начальное давление открытия клапана


Bkn, английский
  1. Broken

  2. Broken 5-7 octas cloud cover (met)


Brkn, английский
    Broken




Incredible, английский

Simultaneously, английский
    Adv одновре- менно


Completely, английский
    Вполне; полностью; совершенно


Разорванный, русский

Portuguese, английский
    A gold coin, value ?1, 16_s., called also moiadobras.


Французский, русский

Португальский, русский

Lieutenant, английский
    [1] a deputy or substitute (latin locum tenens = in place of ). [2] a junior naval or military officer. [3] used in combination with another military title denotes an officer of the next lower rank (e.g., lieutenant-general). this is one of the oldest military titles, and in naval use can be traced back to the twelfth century when a sailing master had full command of the ship, while the captain was responsible for embarked soldiers, with a non-commissioned lieutenant as his military deputy. by about 1580 the captain had assumed command of the ship, with the master as a subordinate responsible for shiphandling and navigation. the lieutenant was expected to replace the captain in case of death or incapacitation, but was still non-commissioned, being appointed with no official rank. some 50 years later, naval lieutenants had evolved beyond their purely military role to become professional commissioned sea officers. in about 1677, shortly after his appointment as secretary of the admiralty, samuel pepys introduced formal examinations which had to be passed to qualify for a third lieutenant’s commission. thereafter advancement depended entirely on seniority. third and second lieutenants each had specific shipboard duties in addition to their prime responsibilities of standing watch and commanding a division of guns in battle (see separate entry for first lieutenant). in the days of rated warships, a first-rate normally carried seven to nine lieutenants (one first, one or two seconds, and five or six thirds). the complement diminished with the vessel’s rating (for example a third-rate had five lieutenants, while a sixth rate had only two). nowadays, a naval lieutenant is senior to lieutenant (jg) or sublieutenant, and junior to lieutenant commander. at its inception in 1775, the continental navy essentially adopted the then current royal navy rank structure, including that of lieutenant (see table 15). an army or marine lieutenant is senior to second lieutenant and junior to captain. pronunciation is loo-tenant in america. until world war ii all british commonwealth navies said let-enant, but the influx of temporary non-career officers overwhelmed that tradition and substituted the army’s lef-tenant, the former pronunciation being retained only by the canadian armed forces maritime command. lieutenant-at-arms: formerly, a warship’s most junior lieutenant, responsible for assisting the master- at-arms in training seamen to handle small arms.


Сломанный, русский

Приносить, приводить, привозить, доставлять, русский