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:  

Genoa or genny (both /?d??ni/)

Глоссарий морских терминов (рангоут, такелаж, устройство судна)
    A large jib, strongly overlapping the mainmast.




Overlapping, английский
  1. Recouvrement

  2. Совмещение; перекрытие; работа с перекрытием

  3. Extending processing ability and expanding experience by moving from one representational system to another.


Factory ship, английский
  1. A large ocean-going vessel with extensive on-board facilities for processing and freezing caught fish or whales. some also serve as mother ships (q.v.) for smaller fishing or whaling vessels. those used for processing fish are also known as fish processing vessels.

  2. A floating base for fisher or whaling fleets, fitted with equipment to prepare catch for the market—processing and canning for the former, flensing and barreling for the latter. see also processing a whale.


Windjammer, английский
  1. A large iron- or steel-hulled square-rigged sailing ship of the late 19th and early 20th centuries with three, four, or five masts , built mainly between the 1870s and 1900 to carry cargo on long voyages.

  2. [1] the word originally referred to a horn player or bugler. [2] by the 19th century it had come to mean a talkative person or windbag. [3] it was specifically applied to a large, usually squarerigged, sailing ship, with an iron or steel hull, copious cargo space, and three to five huge masts. introduced during the 1870s to compete with steam-powered vessels. [4] steamship sailors punned that old school sailors who kept bragging about the superiority of sail were “windjammers.” [5] in popular usage, the word came to mean any large sailing ship.