Zeppelin - traducción al italiano
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Zeppelin - traducción al italiano

RIGID AIRSHIP TYPE
Rigid dirigible airship; Zeppelins; Zepplin; Zeplin; Zeplen; Zeppelin-esque; Zeppelin Raids; Super Zeppelin; Zeppellin; Zepellin
  • A damaged Zeppelin gondola with a collapsable boat lying nearby. September 1916
  • The ''Bodensee'' 1919
  • ''Graf Zeppelin'']] under construction
  • Ferdinand von Zeppelin
  • The first flight of LZ 1 over Lake Constance (the ''Bodensee'') in 1900
  • Zeppelin NT
  • German zeppelin bombs Liège WWI
  • National Physical Laboratory]]
  • US Air Mail 1930 picturing the ''Graf Zeppelin''
  • The ''Hindenburg'': note swastikas on tail fins.
  • The ''Hindenburg'' on fire in 1937
  • observation car]] preserved at the [[Imperial War Museum]]
  • British First World War poster of a Zeppelin above London at night
  • L32 Great Burstead Memorial
  • The ''Nordstern'' 1920
  • Wreckage of LZ 4
  • LZ 7 ''Deutschland''
  • LZ 18 (L 2)
  • 1917 watercolour by [[Felix Schwormstädt]] – translated title: "In the rear engine gondola of a Zeppelin airship during the flight through enemy airspace after a successful attack on England"
  • 6}}
  • British propaganda postcard, entitled "The End of the 'Baby-Killer'"
  • A monument near [[Bad Iburg]] commemorating the 1910 LZ 7 crash
  • USS ''Los Angeles'']], a [[United States Navy]] airship built in Germany by the [[Luftschiffbau Zeppelin]] (Zeppelin Airship Company)
  • Zeppelin bomb, on display at the [[National Museum of Flight]] near Edinburgh
  • ZR-3 USS ''Los Angeles'']] over southern Manhattan
  • The pink ovals depict [[hydrogen]] cells inside the LZ 127, the magenta elements are ''[[Blaugas]]'' cells. The full-resolution picture labels more internals.
  • Crater of a Zeppelin bomb in Paris, 1916
  • The ''Graf Zeppelin''
  • Zeppelin LZ 4 with its multiple stabilizers, 1908
  • A commemorative plaque at 61 [[Farringdon Road]], London
  • Zeppelin memorial flagstone, [[Edinburgh]]
  • Camberwell Old Cemetery]], London, to 21 civilians killed by Zeppelin bombings in 1917

Zeppelin         
n. Zeppelin, Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin (1838-1917), German army officer, developer of the first rigid airship in 1900; dirigible airship of German design
Ferdinand von Zeppelin         
GERMAN GENERAL AND AIRSHIP PIONEER (1838–1917)
Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin; Ferdinand Zeppelin; Ferdinand Adolf August Heinrich, Count von Zeppelin; Ferdinand, Graf von Zeppelin; Count Zeppelin; Ferdinand von zeppelin; F Zeppelin; Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin; Graf von Zeppelin; Count von Zeppelin; Ferdinand Adolf Heinrich August Graf von Zeppelin; Ferdinand Von Zeppelin
n. Ferdinand von Zeppelin, (1838-1917) ufficiale dell"esercito tedesco che sviluppò la prima aeronave nel 1900
Led Zeppelin         
  • Led Zeppelin were honoured by US President [[Barack Obama]] at the 2012 [[Kennedy Center Honors]].
  • alt=A colour photograph of a stone cottage on a hill
  • A 1937 photograph of the burning [[LZ 129 Hindenburg]] taken by news photographer Sam Shere, used on the cover of the band's debut album and extensively on later merchandise
  • alt=A colour photograph of Jason Bonham playing drums
  • alt=A colour photograph of Jimmy Page performing on stage with a double-necked guitar
  • alt=A black and white photograph of Jimmy Page playing a double-necked guitar
  • alt=A colour photograph of Robert Plant with microphone and Jimmy Page with a double necked guitar performing on stage.
  • alt=A red tinged photograph of John Paul Jones playing a bass guitar
  • alt=A black and white photograph of John Bonham wearing a headband and behind the cymbals of a drum kit
  • alt=A black and white photograph of John Bonham playing drums
  • alt=A colour photograph of the four members of Led Zeppelin performing onstage, with some other figures visible in the background.
  • alt=A colour photograph of John Paul Jones, Robert Plant and Jimmy Page performing on stage, with Jason Bonham partially visible on drums in the background
  • alt=A black and white photograph of Robert Plant with a tambourine and Jimmy Page with an acoustic guitar seated and performing.
  • Celebration Day]]'' at the [[Hammersmith Apollo]] in London, October 2012
  • alt=The name Led Zeppelin in irregular capitals in black and white
  • Page, Plant, and Jones performing at Live Aid in Philadelphia
  • alt=A black and white photograph showing a headshot of Robert Plant with a microphone in hand
  • alt=a colour photograph of a large domed stadium
ENGLISH ROCK BAND
Led Zepplin; Led zeppelin; Led zep; Led Zeppelin Biography; Led Zeppellin; Led Zepelin; Led zepellin; Led Zepellin; Led Zep; Lead zeppelin; New Yardbirds; Zep head; Zephead; Led zeplin; The New Yardbirds; Zeppelin, Led; Led Zeppelin Radio; Ledzep; Lead zepplin; Led Zepp; Led-Zeppelin; Led Zeppelin (band); Led Zeppelin (Band); Zeppelin (band); Lead Zeppelin; Led Zeplin; LED Zeppelin
Led Zeppelin (nome di noto complesso rock degli anni settanta)

Definición

Zeppelin
·add. ·noun A dirigible balloon of the rigid type, consisting of a cylindrical trussed and covered frame supported by internal gas cells, and provided with means of propulsion and control. It was first successfully used by Ferdinand Count von Zeppelin.

Wikipedia

Zeppelin

A Zeppelin is a type of rigid airship named after the German inventor Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin (German pronunciation: [ˈt͡sɛpəliːn]) who pioneered rigid airship development at the beginning of the 20th century. Zeppelin's notions were first formulated in 1874 and developed in detail in 1893. They were patented in Germany in 1895 and in the United States in 1899. After the outstanding success of the Zeppelin design, the word zeppelin came to be commonly used to refer to all rigid airships. Zeppelins were first flown commercially in 1910 by Deutsche Luftschiffahrts-AG (DELAG), the world's first airline in revenue service. By mid-1914, DELAG had carried over 10,000 fare-paying passengers on over 1,500 flights. During World War I, the German military made extensive use of Zeppelins as bombers and as scouts, resulting in over 500 deaths in bombing raids in Britain.

The defeat of Germany in 1918 temporarily slowed the airship business. Although DELAG established a scheduled daily service between Berlin, Munich, and Friedrichshafen in 1919, the airships built for this service eventually had to be surrendered under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, which also prohibited Germany from building large airships. An exception was made allowing the construction of one airship for the United States Navy, which saved the company from extinction. In 1926, the restrictions on airship construction were lifted, and with the aid of donations from the public, work began on the construction of LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin. This revived the company's fortunes, and during the 1930s, the airships Graf Zeppelin, and the larger LZ 129 Hindenburg operated regular transatlantic flights from Germany to North America and Brazil. The Art Deco spire of the Empire State Building was originally designed to serve as a mooring mast for Zeppelins and other airships, although it was found that high winds made this impossible and the plan was abandoned. The Hindenburg disaster in 1937, along with political and economic issues, hastened the demise of Zeppelins.