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Англо-русский строительный словарь - attic

 
 

Связанные словари

Перевод с английского языка attic на русский

attic
чердак чердачный или мансардный этаж, мансарда, мансардное (чердачное) помещение аттик, фронтон blind attic false attic habitable attic storage attic uninhabitable attic usable attic
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См. в других словарях

1.
  1. чердак 2. мансарда; мезонин 3. (the attics) верхний этаж дома 4. архит. аттик 5. голова, "чердак" he has rats in the attic —- у него винтиков не хватает Attic 1. ист. житель Аттики; афинянин 2. ист. аттический диалект 3. ист. аттический; афинский 4. ист. классический Attic prose —- классическая проза Id: Attic salt (wit) —- аттическая соль, тонкая острота Id: Attic faith —- непоколебимая верность ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
2.
  I Attic adj.  1) аттический  2) классический (о стиле) attic salt - тонкое остроумие II noun  1) мансарда; чердак  2) (the attics) pl. верхний чердачный этаж  3) archit. фронтон  4) joc. голова, чердак to have rats in the attic sl. - винтиков не хватает ...
Англо-русский словарь
3.
  1) фронтон 2) мезонин; мансарда; - blind attic - false attic ...
Большой Англо-русский Русско-английский политехнический словарь
4.
  n. 1 the uppermost storey in a house, usu. under the roof. 2 a room in the attic area. Etymology: F attique, as ATTIC: orig. (Archit.) a small order above a taller one ATTIC adj. & n. --adj. of ancient Athens or Attica, or the form of Greek spoken there. --n. the form of Greek used by the ancient Athenians. Phrases and idioms Attic salt (or wit) refined wit. Etymology: L Atticus f. Gk Attikos ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
5.
   I. adjective  Etymology: Latin ~us of ~a, from Greek Attikos, from Attike ~a, Greece  Date: 1599  1. of, relating to, or having the characteristics of Athens or its ancient civilization  2. marked by simplicity, purity, and refinement an ~ prose style  II. noun  Date: circa 1771 a dialect of ancient Greek originally used in ~a and later the literary language of the Greek-speaking world ATTIC  noun  Etymology: French attique, from attique of Attica, from Latin Atticus  Date: circa 1696  1. a low story or wall above the main order of a facade in the classical styles  2. a room behind an ~  3. a room or a space immediately below the roof of a building ; garret  4. something resembling an ~ (as in being used for storage) ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
6.
  (attics) An attic is a room at the top of a house just below the roof. N-COUNT ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
7.
  ~ n a space or room under the roof of a house often used for storing things  (She went to college consigning her collection of cuddly toys to the attic.) ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
8.
  - 1599, "of or pertaining to Attica," from L. Atticus, from Gk. Attikos "of Attica," the region around Athens. Recorded 1696 as "low decorative facade above the main story of a building," later attic storey (1724), shortened to attic by 1855, from Fr. attique. The term Attic order in classical architecture meant a small, square decorative column often used in a low storey above a building's main facade, a feature associated with the region around Athens. ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

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