m ma mb mc md me mf mg mh mi mk ml mm mn mo mp mr ms mt mu mv mw mx my mz

Перевод: metalworking speek metalworking


[прилагательное]
металлообрабатывающий;
[существительное]
металлообработка


Тезаурус:

  1. The second half of the third millennium BC saw the introduction of the first metalworking into Britain.
  2. Clearly one cannot hope to give a comprehensive survey of the history of metals and metalworking in a single chapter.
  3. He describes the case of Mutang'ang'i one of the leading informals who at that time made foreguards for bicycles, bicycle stands and cutting machines using a series of hand-built metalworking machines which he had designed and built himself.
  4. The great metalworking centres of the time were in Mesopotamia, Iran and Egypt.
  5. We all take the use of coins for granted, but they have not been made or used by all metalworking societies.
  6. New trade routes may be traced by the spread of metalworking skills and the import of rare and exotic materials such as gemstones and ivory for jewellery.
  7. Few craft activities of the early Anglo-Saxon period have left any archaeological traces except in their finished products, and metalworking is notable for its near absence.
  8. Metalworking remains at Sardis in Turkey suggest that this process, called "parting", was employed there in the sixth century BC to refine gold from the river Pactolus.
  9. Metalworking is indicated by crucibles found at Walton, Sarre, Portchester, (Hampshire) and Sutton Courtenay but these do not significantly improve our understanding of the organisation of such industry.
  10. To use yet another metaphor, moulding of form can be thought of as metalworking; patterning like painting.
  11. The sequence, by and large, went like this: first gathering of plants and small animals, second fishing, third hunting, fourth pottery, fifth pastoralism, sixth agriculture, seventh metalworking.
  12. It seems, then, that the average undertaker was little more than a speculative cabinet-maker and joiner who, either by direct contact with the metalworking trades, or via such funeral houses as Richard Green's, was able to buy in at wholesale all that was required for a funeral.
  13. The same is true, in addition, of some of the examples considered in the first part of this chapter: the cities of the Roman empire valued the important temples and buildings in their city rather more than, say, the sources of their agricultural wealth or their other important industries such as marble quarries, pottery or metalworking.

LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов

Copyright © Perevod-Translate.ru