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Перевод: excavator
[существительное] землекоп ; экскаватор
Тезаурус:
- That night and Monday morning, acts of sabotage were carried out by persons unknown on a shed, an excavator, tractor type machinery, a drilling rig and pipes.
- The ETR-254 rotary excavator, which can shift 1200 cubic metres an hour and dig a trench to take a pipe 1420 mm in diameter even in frozen ground, is one example.
- Wooden bows are rarely preserved, although one was described by the excavator as a "bow, about five feet in length, which could be distinctly traced by the dark line of decomposed wood" (Hillier 1856, p. 30).
- The large quantity of residual material from the thick make-up levels seemed to the excavator to support her contention that there were two different public buildings on the site, one replacing the other and although John Wacher corrects this, he in turn is persuaded by this evidence to suggest two periods, i.e. the work started about AD 145-;50, to be subsequently discontinued, and ultimately the building was completed in about AD 155 - 61 (Wacher 1974, 342).
- The excavator, David Neal, could not explain this as merely for domestic use and concluded that it must have had a public function.
- A portion of that most evocative of all pieces of the human skeleton, the skull had been removed by the excavator, as had the whole right arm.
- At Chilgrove 1, the coin series ends with Magnentius, and Alec Down, the excavator, suggests an amalgamation with Chilgrove 2 which could represent the kind of reorganization to be expected.
- Kathleen Kenyon, the excavator, recognized two deposits, but since there were coins of the House of Theodosius in each, it can be assumed that they accumulated over a fairly short period, perhaps as rubbish from the nearby forum.
- The excavator suggests that the positioning of the doors and the size of the buildings "does not seem to indicate an agricultural function" (Millett 1983, p. 247), preferring to see the stability of the layout as a reflection of social units, whether divided by "kinship, sex or status" (ibid.).
- Despite the extensive sampling during the excavation of the sixth and seventh century settlement at Cowdery's Down the results prompted the excavator to offer a warning about interpreting the results; it was concluded that "it is impossible to make any assertions about the economy or waste disposal systems associated with the site" (Green 1983, p. 261).
- In some situations of this sort digging out would call for an excavator, not a spade!
- Others include an excavator for working in marshland, and a catamaran for excavating river crossings.
- The West Wing contained chambers which Sinclair Hood (1971, p. 66) interprets as state apartments, although they might better be interpreted as sanctuaries; the chambers behind are admitted, by their excavator, Nicolas Platon (1971, p. 257), to be ritual in nature.
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