wrist$92610$ - translation to german
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wrist$92610$ - translation to german

TYPE OF COMPASS COMMONLY USED IN ORIENTEERING
Wrist compass

wrist      
n. Handgelenk
wrist watch         
  • A Russian mechanical watch movement with [[exhibition case back]], showing its movement.
  • A watch drawn in ''[[Acta Eruditorum]]'', 1737
  • electroluminescent]] backlight switched on (top) and switched off (bottom)
  • A so-called "[[Boule de Genève]]" (Geneva ball), c. 1890, 21.5k yellow [[gold]]. A type of pendant watch intended to be used as an accessory for women. They usually came with a matching brooch or chain.
  • Breguet]] squelette watch 2933 with [[tourbillon]]
  •  [[Mappin & Webb]]'s wristwatch, advertised as having been in production since 1898
  • Old [[Casio]] watch with touchscreen
  • Casio AE12 LCA (liquid-crystal-analog) watch
  • First quartz wristwatch BETA 1 developed by CEH, Switzerland, 1967
  • A Casio DBA-800 databank watch with phone dialling capabilities, c. 1987
  • [[Timex Datalink]] USB Dress edition from 2003 with a dot matrix display; the ''Invasion'' video game is on the screen.
  • access-date= 1 May 2017 }}</ref>
  • A pomander watch from 1530, which once belonged to [[Philip Melanchthon]] and is now in the [[Walters Art Museum]], [[Baltimore]]
  • A [[Grand Seiko]] Automatic watch
  • [[Automatic watch]]: An eccentric weight, called a rotor, swings with the movement of the wearer's body and winds the spring.
  • access-date=7 April 2018}}</ref> c. 1890. The movement is fitted with a cylinder escapement.
  • The [[Omega Speedmaster]], selected by [[NASA]] for use on space missions in the 1960s
  • [[Perpetual calendar]] wristwatch by [[Patek Philippe]]
  • [[Poljot]] [[chronograph]]
  • The [[Rolex Submariner]], an officially certified [[chronometer]]
  • Astron]], 1969 (Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Inv. 2010-006)
  • Seiko 7002–7020 Diver's 200&nbsp;m on a 4-ring NATO style strap
  • An illuminated watch face, using a luminous compound
  • Timex Ironman Triathlon Datalink]] model 78401 during [[STS 88]].
  • Digital LCD wristwatch [[Timex Ironman]] with electroluminescent backlighting
  • Different kinds of movements move the hands differently as shown in this 2-second exposure. The left watch has a [[24-hour analog dial]] with a mechanical 1/6 s movement, while the right one has a more common 12-hour dial and a "1 s" quartz movement.
  • Waltham]] with a metal guard over the crystal, worn by soldiers in World War I ([[German Clock Museum]])
PERSONAL TIMEPIECE
Watches; Wristwatch; Wristwatches; Digital watch; Wrist Watch; Horophile; Wrist watch; Wrist-watch; Digital watches; Watchbands; Pilot watches; Watch crystal; Pilot watch; ⌚; Watch dial; 18k Gold Watch; Time piece (personal); Talking watch; Luxury watch; Digital wristwatch; Wrist watches; Tactile watch; Military watches; Crown (watch)
n. Armbanduhr, um das handgelenk getragene Uhr
digital watch         
  • A Russian mechanical watch movement with [[exhibition case back]], showing its movement.
  • A watch drawn in ''[[Acta Eruditorum]]'', 1737
  • electroluminescent]] backlight switched on (top) and switched off (bottom)
  • A so-called "[[Boule de Genève]]" (Geneva ball), c. 1890, 21.5k yellow [[gold]]. A type of pendant watch intended to be used as an accessory for women. They usually came with a matching brooch or chain.
  • Breguet]] squelette watch 2933 with [[tourbillon]]
  •  [[Mappin & Webb]]'s wristwatch, advertised as having been in production since 1898
  • Old [[Casio]] watch with touchscreen
  • Casio AE12 LCA (liquid-crystal-analog) watch
  • First quartz wristwatch BETA 1 developed by CEH, Switzerland, 1967
  • A Casio DBA-800 databank watch with phone dialling capabilities, c. 1987
  • [[Timex Datalink]] USB Dress edition from 2003 with a dot matrix display; the ''Invasion'' video game is on the screen.
  • access-date= 1 May 2017 }}</ref>
  • A pomander watch from 1530, which once belonged to [[Philip Melanchthon]] and is now in the [[Walters Art Museum]], [[Baltimore]]
  • A [[Grand Seiko]] Automatic watch
  • [[Automatic watch]]: An eccentric weight, called a rotor, swings with the movement of the wearer's body and winds the spring.
  • access-date=7 April 2018}}</ref> c. 1890. The movement is fitted with a cylinder escapement.
  • The [[Omega Speedmaster]], selected by [[NASA]] for use on space missions in the 1960s
  • [[Perpetual calendar]] wristwatch by [[Patek Philippe]]
  • [[Poljot]] [[chronograph]]
  • The [[Rolex Submariner]], an officially certified [[chronometer]]
  • Astron]], 1969 (Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Inv. 2010-006)
  • Seiko 7002–7020 Diver's 200&nbsp;m on a 4-ring NATO style strap
  • An illuminated watch face, using a luminous compound
  • Timex Ironman Triathlon Datalink]] model 78401 during [[STS 88]].
  • Digital LCD wristwatch [[Timex Ironman]] with electroluminescent backlighting
  • Different kinds of movements move the hands differently as shown in this 2-second exposure. The left watch has a [[24-hour analog dial]] with a mechanical 1/6 s movement, while the right one has a more common 12-hour dial and a "1 s" quartz movement.
  • Waltham]] with a metal guard over the crystal, worn by soldiers in World War I ([[German Clock Museum]])
PERSONAL TIMEPIECE
Watches; Wristwatch; Wristwatches; Digital watch; Wrist Watch; Horophile; Wrist watch; Wrist-watch; Digital watches; Watchbands; Pilot watches; Watch crystal; Pilot watch; ⌚; Watch dial; 18k Gold Watch; Time piece (personal); Talking watch; Luxury watch; Digital wristwatch; Wrist watches; Tactile watch; Military watches; Crown (watch)
Digitalarmbanduhr

Definition

wrist
n.
(Anat.) Carpus.

Wikipedia

Thumb compass

A thumb compass is a type of compass commonly used in orienteering, a sport in which map reading and terrain association are paramount. In cases of homogeneous terrain with few distinct features, a bearing between 2 known points on the map may be used. Consequently, most thumb compasses have minimal or no degree markings at all, and are normally used only to take bearings directly from a map, and to orient a map to magnetic north. Thumb compasses are also often transparent so that an orienteer can hold a map in the hand with the compass and see the map through the compass.

Thumb compasses attach to one's thumb using a small elastic band.

The first commercially successful orienteering thumb compass was the Norcompass, introduced by Suunto in 1983.

Placing an even greater emphasis on speed over accuracy, the wrist compass lacks even a baseplate, consisting solely of a needle capsule strapped to the carpometacarpal joint at the base of the thumb; the thumb serves the function of a baseplate when taking and sighting bearings. It is often used for city and park race orienteering.