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Перевод: worsted
[прилагательное] камвольный; [существительное] ткань из гребенной шерсти; камвольная ткань; камвольная шерсть; крученая шерсть; гарус
Тезаурус:
- And as luck would have it, I just happen to have a list of apparently germane truths which I have been maturing during the last month or so, after being worsted in various conversations.
- Bradford's Industrial Museum, in Moorside Road, occupies a multi-storey former worsted spinning mill, and appropriately enough is concerned chiefly with the local textile industry, demonstrating the conversion of raw wool into worsted material and showing the general history of the wool trade.
- Equally, employers in the wool and worsted industry, having failed to get wage reductions in 1929, forced the textile unions to accept a 9 per cent reduction in wage rates in June 1930, after a ten-week lock-out.
- At times the officers of the Crown were worsted by large and desperate bands of armed malefactors.
- a coarse worsted stuff with a smooth surface giving a silken finish, made in many shades of colour.
- The Yorkshire factory Times , Journal of the wool and worsted textile workers, confidently predicted that the:
- Nicholson's Annals of Kendal refer to hosiers taking worsted to the villages and collecting stockings.
- He used to think five was enough, but acquired an additional one after Raymond wisecracked, "If that's the charcoal grey worsted, it must be Tuesday."
- In many ways the stimulus for this came not from the miners but from the wool and worsted textile workers who fought against further wage reductions in 1925.
- It lasted just over three weeks and the immediate conflict was only resolved by the intervention of the Ministry of Labour and its Minister, Sir Arthur Steel-Maitland, who requested that the employers allow the existing wage rates to continue until a Court of Investigation, which was to be set up, reported upon the woollen and worsted textile trades.
- The only funeral emblem that he wore was a pair of black worsted stockings, which no doubt he had borrowed for the occasion
- Nicholson writes in 1861 in the Annals of Kendal of "hosiers attending Markets to collect stockings and give out worsted."
- Now it was felt that the General Council of the TUC had struck a blow to maintain minimum wages for all workers by its support of the woollen and worsted textile workers.
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