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Англо-русский Русско-английский биологический словарь - shore

 
 

Связанные словари

Перевод с английского языка shore на русский

shore
1) берег; побережье 2) шор (прибрежная полоса с галофильной растительностью, заливаемая только при высоких приливах)
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См. в других словарях

1.
  1. берег; побережье fading shore —- удаляющийся берег bold shore —- крутой берег clear shore —- безопасный берег shore service —- ам. береговая служба the shore of the sea —- берег моря on shore —- на берегу, на суше to come on shore —- сходить на берег, высаживаться in shore —- мор. у берега; ближе к берегу; к берегу off shore —- на некотором расстоянии от берега; вблизи берега; в открытом море to touch shore —- высаживаться 2. земля, страна, берег distant shore(s) —- далекие берега 3. прибойная полоса 4. редк. сходить на берег 5. редк. спускать на берег 6. редк. выгружать 7. редк. плыть вдоль берега (также shore along) 8. редк. окаймлять 9. тех. подпор(к)а; подкос; крепление; крепь; опора 10. (также shore up) подпирать, поддерживать, крепить to shore (up) a building —- подпирать здание 11. укреплять, крепить to shore up an economy weakened by war —- укрепить экономику, ослабленную войной to shore up national defences —- крепить оборону страны 12. шотл. предупреждать, угрожать 13. шотл. предлагать ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
2.
  I noun берег (моря, озера); on shore - на берегу; in shore - у берега; ближе к берегу Syn: bank, beach, coast, littoral, stand II  1. noun подпорка, опора; подкос; крепление  2. v.  1) подпирать, поддерживать; The house was so old that it had to be shored up with blocks of wood.  2) оказывать поддержку, укреплять (обыкн. shore up); The government has had to shore up the National Health Service. SHORE patrol amer. береговой дозор SHORE dinner обед из рыбных блюд ...
Англо-русский словарь
3.
  берег cast up on shore — выбрасывать на берег haul a seine to shore — вытягивать невод на берег Shore hardness number — твердость по Шору Shore hardness test — определение твердости по Шору shore vessel in dock — сажать судно на опоры дока - Shore hardness - shore bitumen - shore effect - shore line - shore spillway - shore whaling ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский научно-технический словарь
4.
  монтажная опорная стойка, временная подпорка; стойка опалубки; подкос горная крепь берег dead shore horizontal shore jack shore L shore multitiered shores outrigger shore pole shore post shore single post shore ...
Англо-русский строительный словарь
5.
  1) берег; побережье; береговая зона 2) крепление; крепь; подпорка; мор. подстава; подпора; упор крепить; подпирать to shore up — крепить; подпирать - back shore - bilge shore - breast shore - dagger shore - dead shore - dog shore - flying shore - inclined shore - jack shore - permanent shore - raking shore - ribband shore - side shore - skeg shore - trigger shore - trip shore - wale shore - weather shore ...
Большой Англо-русский Русско-английский политехнический словарь
6.
  1. n. 1 the land that adjoins the sea or a large body of water. 2 (usu. in pl.) a country; a sea-coast (often visits these shores; on a distant shore). 3 Law land between ordinary high and low water marks. Phrases and idioms in shore on the water near or nearer to the shore (cf. INSHORE). on shore ashore. shore-based operating from a base on shore. shore leave Naut. 1 permission to go ashore. 2 a period of time ashore. Derivatives shoreless adj. shoreward adj. & adv. shorewards adv. Etymology: ME f. MDu., MLG schore, perh. f. the root of SHEAR 2. v. & n. --v.tr. (often foll. by up) support with or as if with a shore or shores; hold up. --n. a prop or beam set obliquely against a ship, wall, tree, etc., as a support. Derivatives shoring n. Etymology: ME f. MDu., MLG schore prop, of unkn. orig. 3. see SHEAR. ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
7.
   I. noun  Usage: often attributive  Etymology: Middle English, from Old English *scor; akin to Middle Low German schor foreland and perhaps to Old English scieran to cut — more at shear  Date: 14th century  1. the land bordering a usually large body of water; specifically coast  2. a boundary (as of a country) or an area within a boundary — usually used in plural immigrated to these ~s  3. land as distinguished from the sea shipboard and ~ duty  II. noun  Etymology: Middle English; akin to Middle Dutch score prop, Middle Low German schore  Date: 14th century a prop for preventing sinking or sagging  III. transitive verb  (~d; shoring)  Date: 14th century  1. to support by a ~ ; prop  2. to give support to ; brace — usually used with up trying to ~ up his claim ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
8.
  (shores, shoring, shored) Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English. The shores or the shore of a sea, lake, or wide river is the land along the edge of it. Someone who is on shore is on the land rather than on a ship. They walked down to the shore. ...elephants living on the shores of Lake Kariba... I have spent less time on shore than most men... N-COUNT: also prep N ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
9.
  ~1 n 1 the land along the edge of a large area of water, such as an ocean or lake  (We could see a boat about a mile from shore. | the shores of the Mediterranean | on shore (=away from a ship))  (We had a couple of hours on shore.) 2 these shores/British shores/our shores etc especially literary a particular country that has a border on the sea  (Millions of immigrants flocked to these shores in the 19th century.)  (- see also ashore, offshore, onshore) ~2 v shore sth up phr v 1 to support a wall with large pieces of wood, metal etc to stop it from falling down  (The roof had been shored up with old timbers.) 2 to help or support something that is likely to fail or is not working well  (attempts to shore up the struggling economy)  ( USAGE NOTE: SHORE WORD CHOICE shore, bank, coast, seaside, beach The usual word for the land at the edge of a sea or lake is shore At night he would stand on the shore and gaze out to sea. | There was a little cabin on the opposite shore. The edges of a river are its banks. When you are talking about a country, or a large area of a country, you call the land next to the sea the coast the Atlantic coast of Spain | I could tell from his clothes that he was from the West Coast. In British English the seaside is the area by the sea considered as a place of enjoyment a holiday at the seaside. In American English you are more likely to use beach In summer, my mother used to take me to the beach. But you can also use beach in both British and American English for the flat land right at the edge of the sea, that is covered by water some of the time They walked hand in hand along the beach. ) ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

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