Поиск в словарях
Искать во всех

Большой Англо-русский Русско-английский политехнический словарь - peak

 
 

Связанные словари

Перевод с английского языка peak на русский

peak
1) пик, высшая точка, (резкий) максимум; вершина

пиковый, максимальный 2) амплитуда

амплитудный 3) электрон. кратковременный выброс 4) осуществлять ВЧ-коррекцию (видеоусилителя) - annual peak - Auger peak - chromatographic peak - corrugation peak - Curie peak - daily insolation peak - daylight peak - difrraction peak - electric peak - flood peak - heat peak - hydrocarbon peak - profile peak - resonance peak - secondary peak - steam peak - stress peak - summer peak - winter peak

Рейтинг статьи:
Комментарии:

См. в других словарях

1.
  пик, максимум; вершина demand peak flood peak ...
Англо-русский строительный словарь
2.
  1) пик, максимум 2) амплитуда – peak of traffic – absorption peak – black peak – electric peak – resonance peak – transmission peak – white peak ...
Англо-русский Русско-английски словарь по телекоммуникациям
3.
  1) вершина 2) всплеск 3) выброс 4) высшая точка 5) горная вершина 6) козырек 7) максимальный 8) максимум 9) пик 10) пиковый carry peak load — покрывать пик нагрузки local peak set — множество локального пика peak of a crater — горка кратера peak output power — максимальная выходная мощность peak point voltage — напряжение пика peak programme meter — пиковый вольтметр peak pulse amplitude — амплитуда импульса smooth out the peak load — распределять пиковую нагрузку supply the peak load — покрывать пиковую нагрузку - clear peak - curve peak - diffraction peak - diffuse peak - double peak - flat-top peak - forward peak - ghost peak - load peak - peak amplitude - peak attenuation - peak current - peak limiter - peak load - peak of curve - peak point - peak power - peak pressure - peak set - peak signal - peak to peak - peak value - peak voltage - peak voltmeter - pressure peak - resolved peak - resonance peak - smearing of peak - suction peak ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский научно-технический словарь
4.
  1. сущ. 1) высшая точка, максимум 2) пик 3) максимум нагрузки - peak of activity - temporary peak 2. прил. высший - peak output - peak yield ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский экономический словарь
5.
  пик, максимум, высшая точка – absorption peak – adaptive peak – population peak – selective peak ...
Англо-русский Русско-английский биологический словарь
6.
  1. пик, остроконечная вершина; гора here the high peaks begin to rise from the plain a —- здесь уже кончается равнина и поднимаются высокие горы 2. высшая точка at the peak of glory —- на вершине славы the peak of the demand —- наивысший спрос at the peak of one's career —- в расцвете творческих сил 3. острие (крыши и т. п.) 4. гребень (волны) the wind blew the waves into great peaks —- ветер вздымал гребни волн 5. козырек (кепки, фуражки) 6. остроконечная часть головного убора (спускающаяся на лоб) 7. торчащий вихор, кок 8. острый конец, клинышек бороды 9. уст. мыс лифа и т. п. 10. спец. пик; высшая точка, максимум flood peak —- пик половодья sales have reached a new peak —- товарооборот достиг новой вершины 11. максимальный; рекордный; высший peak month (jear) —- месяц (год) наивысшего подъема (расцвета) (в экономике, торговле и т. п.) peak load —- максимальная нагрузка 12. достигнуть апогея (славы, власти и т. п.); достигнуть полного расцвета; подняться до высшей точки 13. повыситься до рекордного уровня (также peak out) sales have now peaked and we expect them to decrease soon —- товарооборот уже достаг максимума и ожидается, что он скоро начнет уменьшаться 14. обострять, акцентировать to heighten and peak contradictions —- усиливать и обострять противоречия 15. мор. отопить (рейс) 16. брать весла на...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
7.
  and pine чахнуть и томиться PEAK I noun  1) пик; остроконечная вершина; острие  2) высшая точка, максимум; вершина (кривой); кульминационный пункт  3) козырек (кепки, фуражки)  4) кончик (бороды)  5) гребень (волны)  6) naut. концевой отсек; задний нокбензельный угол (паруса)  7) tech. максимум (нагрузки) Syn: see summit II v.  1) мор отопить (рей)  2) брать на валек (весла)  3) поднимать хвост прямо вверх (о ките) III v. чахнуть, слабеть; - peak and pine ...
Англо-русский словарь
8.
  1. n. & v. --n. 1 a projecting usu. pointed part, esp.: a the pointed top of a mountain. b a mountain with a peak. c a stiff brim at the front of a cap. d a pointed beard. e the narrow part of a ship's hold at the bow or stern (forepeak; after-peak). f Naut. the upper outer corner of a sail extended by a gaff. 2 a the highest point in a curve (on the peak of the wave). b the time of greatest success (in a career etc.). c the highest point on a graph etc. --v.intr. reach the highest value, quality, etc. (output peaked in September). Phrases and idioms peak hour the time of the most intense traffic etc. peak-load the maximum of electric power demand etc. Derivatives peaked adj. peaky adj. peakiness n. Etymology: prob. back-form. f. peaked var. of dial. picked pointed (PICK(2)) 2. v.intr. 1 waste away. 2 (as peaked adj.) sharp-featured; pinched. Etymology: 16th c.: orig. unkn. ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
9.
   I. noun  Etymology: perhaps alteration of pike  Date: 1530  1. a pointed or projecting part of a garment; especially the visor of a cap or hat  2. promontory  3. a sharp or pointed end  4.  a.  (1) the top of a hill or mountain ending in a point  (2) a prominent mountain usually having a well-defined summit  b. something resembling a mountain ~  5.  a. the upper aftermost corner of a fore-and-aft sail  b. the narrow part of a ship's bow or stern or the part of the hold in it  6.  a. the highest level or greatest degree  b. a high point in a course of development especially as represented on a graph  7. widow's ~  Synonyms: see summit  II. verb  Date: 1577  intransitive verb to reach a maximum (as of capacity, value, or activity) — often used with out  transitive verb to cause to come to a ~, point, or maximum  III. adjective  Date: 1903 being at or reaching the maximum ~ levels ~ output; also of, relating to, or being a period of maximum intensity or activity ~ business hours  IV. intransitive verb  Etymology: origin unknown  Date: 1605  1. to grow thin or sickly  2. to dwindle away  V. transitive verb  Etymology: from a~ held vertically  Date: 1626  1. to set (as a gaff) nearer the perpendicular  2. to hold (oars) with blades well raised ...
Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary
10.
  (peaks, peaking, peaked) Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English. 1. The peak of a process or an activity is the point at which it is at its strongest, most successful, or most fully developed. The party’s membership has fallen from a peak of fifty-thousand after the Second World War... The bomb went off in a concrete dustbin at the peak of the morning rush hour. ...a flourishing career that was at its peak at the time of his death... N-COUNT: usu sing, usu with supp 2. When something peaks, it reaches its highest value or its highest level. Temperatures have peaked at over thirty degrees Celsius... His career peaked during the 1970’s. VERB: V at n, V 3. The peak level or value of something is its highest level or value. Calls cost 36p (cheap rate) and 48p (peak rate) per minute... ADJ: ADJ n 4. Peak times are the times when there is most demand for something or most use of something. It’s always crowded at peak times... ? off-peak ADJ: ADJ n see also peak time 5. A peak is a mountain or the top of a mountain. ...the snow-covered peaks. N-COUNT 6. The peak of a cap is the part at the front that sticks out above your eyes. N-COUNT ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
11.
  ~1 n 1 »TIME« usually singular) the time when something or someone is strongest, most successful, or best  (Her career was at its peak. | Sales have reached a new peak. | be at your peak/reach your peak)  (Most athletes have reached their peak by the time they're 20.)  (- compare off­peak) 2 »MOUNTAIN« a) the sharply pointed top of a mountain  (peaks covered with snow all the year round)  (- compare summit (1)) b) a whole mountain with a pointed top  (K2 is the world's highest peak.) 3 »POINT« a part that curves to a point above a surface  (Whisk the egg whites until they form stiff peaks.) 4 »CAP« the flat curved part of a cap that sticks out in front above your eyes ~2 v to reach the highest point or level  (Sales peaked in August, then fell sharply.) + a  (Around 1950 Chicago's population peaked at about 3.6 million.) ~3 adj 1 peak level/rate/value the highest level etc of something  (The factory is running at peak productivity.) 2 BrE the peak time or period is when the greatest number of people are doing the same thing, using the same service etc  (the peak time for electricity consumption | Extra buses run at peak times.) ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
12.
  physiol. abbr. Patient Education Awareness Knowledge educ. abbr. Positive Effort For Adjustment And Knowledge educ. abbr. Purposeful Education For Adults And Kids educ. abbr. Power To Expand Academic Knowledge educ. abbr. Promoting Enrichment Activities For Kids educ. abbr. Princeton Explorers Acquiring Knowledge educ. abbr. Personal Empowerment And Knowledge sport abbr. Player Evaluation Analysis Kit gen. bus. abbr. People Energy Action And Knowledge ...
English abbreviation dictionary
13.
  - 1530, variant of pike (2). Meaning "top of a mountain" first recorded 1634, though pike was used in this sense c.1400. Figurative sense is 1784; the verb meaning "reach highest point" first recorded 1958. The Peak in Derbyshire is O.E. Peaclond, apparently a reference to elf-denizen Peac "Puck." ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

Вопрос-ответ:

Ссылка для сайта или блога:
Ссылка для форума (bb-код):