tooth crest - translation to russian
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

tooth crest - translation to russian

MOUNTAIN IN UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Moose's Tooth; Mooses Tooth; The Mooses Tooth; Moose’s Tooth
  • Mooses Tooth from summit of [[Mount Barrille]]
  • The Moose's Tooth aerial

tooth crest      

нефтегазовая промышленность

фаска при вершине зуба

neural crest         
  • Migration of neural crest cells during development. Grey arrows indicate the direction of the paths crest cells migrate. (R=Rostral, C=Caudal)
  • Delamination of neural crest cells during development. Downregulation of CAMs and tight junction proteins is followed by secretion of MMPs and subsequent delamination.
EMBYRONIC GROUP OF CELLS GIVING RISE TO DIVERSE CELL LINEAGES
Neural Crest; Ganglion ridge; Neural crest cell; Neural crest cells; Neural-crest; Neural Crest Cells; Neural crest cell migration; Neural crests

общая лексика

нервный валик

ганглионарная пластинка

wave trough         
FEATURE OF A LONGITUDINAL WAVE
Crest (Physics); Trough (physics); Wave crest; Wave trough; Crest (physics)
1) подошва волны
2) ложбина волны

Definition

tooth and nail
(Colloquial expression used adverbially.)
1.
Biting and scratching, using every means of attack and defence.
2.
Strenuously, vigorously, earnestly, resolutely, energetically, with all one's might, with might and main, through thick and thin, through fire and water, hammer and tongs, pugnis et calcibus.

Wikipedia

The Moose's Tooth

The Moose's Tooth (or simply Moose's Tooth, Mooses Tooth) is a rock peak on the east side of the Ruth Gorge in the Central Alaska Range, 15 miles (24 km) southeast of Denali. Despite its relatively low elevation, it is a difficult climb. It is notable for its many large rock faces and its long ice couloirs, which are famous in mountaineering circles, and have seen a number of highly technical ascents.

The peak was originally called Mount Hubbard after General Thomas Hamlin Hubbard — the president of the Peary Arctic Club — by Belmore Browne and Herschel Parker. This name was revoked by the United States Geological Survey, which named the peak "The Mooses Tooth," a translation of the Athabascan name for the peak. The official USGS name does lack the grammatically correct apostrophe.

The Moose's Tooth is located just to the east of the northern end of the Ruth Gorge, across from Mount Barille and Mount Dickey. It is the chief in a complex of rock peaks with names such as "Eye Tooth", "Sugar Tooth", and "Broken Tooth."

On the east side of this complex lies the head of the Buckskin Glacier, which provides access to climbs on the particularly large and difficult east face of The Moose's Tooth. Other access is from the Root Canal, a glacial landing strip on the south side.

The name of the peak comes from its structure: its summit ridge is a long, low angled ridge running roughly east–west for about a mile, with steep drops to the north and south. This gives the mountain a vague resemblance to a moose's tooth. It also makes climbing to the true (east) summit from the west ridge (the least technical route) very difficult. The summit is more normally reached by steep couloirs on the southwestern side of the peak.

The first ascent of The Moose's Tooth was in June, 1964, by four Germans (Walter Welsch, Klaus Bierl, Arnold Hasenkopf and Alfons Reichegger), via the Northwest Ridge. In June 1974, Gary Bocarde, Michael Clark, Charles Porter, and John Svenson climbed the lower Southwest Summit via the Southwest Face, for the second ascent of the massif, though not of the main summit. They found a great quantity of rotten rock.

In July 1975, Jon Krakauer, Thomas Davies, and Nate Zinsser made the second ascent of the main summit, via a couloir on the south face which they called the "Ham and Eggs Route." This is the most popular route on the mountain today.

What is the Russian for tooth crest? Translation of &#39tooth crest&#39 to Russian