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:  

Forecast center

Словарь терминов и сокращений в авиации
    (метеорологический) центр прогнозов




Cent, английский
  1. I center

  2. Centrifugal


Cent, английский

Cent re-type machine, английский
    Центровой станок; станок для обработки в центрах


Cent sign, английский
    The -? character.


Cent(e)ring, английский

Cent., c., английский

Centa, английский
    Centro nacional de tecnologia agropecuaria (el salvador)


Cental, английский

Centar grada, сербский

Centaur, английский
    Civil engineering technologies for automatic roadmaking (dsnp)


Centaurea cyanus (cornflower) extract, английский

Centaurea cyanus distillate, английский

Centaurus, латинский

Centaurus, i, m, латинский

Centcon, английский
    Centralized control facility


Centelleo, испанский

Centena decies millia [orum, npl], латинский

Centenarian, английский
  1. Человек ста (и более) лет

  2. A person who is 100 years or older. there were 2,300 centenarians identified in the 1980 u.s. census.


Centenary, английский

Centennial, английский
    An exhibition in philadelphia in 1876 that celebrated america’s 100th birthday.


Centeno, испанский

Метеорологический, русский

Fuel cell, английский
  1. Топливный бак; отсек топливного бака; топливный элемент 239

  2. British scientist sir william grove invented this device in 1839. noting that water could be split into hydrogen and oxygen by electrolysis, he reversed the procedure, creating an electrochemical device that combined hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity with water and heat as by-products. no other energy generation technology offers the same combination of benefits. the process is clean, quiet, highly efficient, and will generate power for as long as fuel is supplied, but the technology remained experimental until the late 20th century. currently (2008) the cruise industry is interested in the possibility of improving passenger comfort with a silent, non-polluting power source that produces no detectable exhaust heat, while most of the world’s navies have active fuel cell programs, especially for submersibles. the hellenic navy class 214 submarine has a fuel cell-generated power supply that allows it to cruise under water for up to three weeks without resurfacing. by contrast, conventional dieselelectric submarines typically deplete their batteries after a few days cruising. in addition, the fuel cell makes the submarine virtually undetectable. the u.s. and other navies are also looking into fuel cell propulsion for surface warships. in addition to the foregoing advantages are reduced fuel consumption and the potential to have a number of separate units to provide redundancy in case of combat damage.

  3. An electrical cell that converts the intrinsic chemical free energy of a fuel into direct-current electrical energy in a continuous catalytic process. fuel cells extract the chemical energy bound in fuel and, in combination with air as an oxidant, transform it into electricity. researchers are hoping to develop fuel cells that could take the place of combustion engines, thereby reducing the world dependence on fossil fuels.

  4. A fuel cell generates electricity in a direct and continuous way from the controlled electrochemical reaction of hydrogen or another fuel and oxygen. with hydrogen as fuel it emits only water and heat (no co) and the heat can be utilized (see cogeneration).


Foot-candle, английский
  1. Фут-свеча f/c forecast прогноз (погоды)

  2. Now little used. unit of illumination equal to luminous flux density of 1 lumen