mustard - significado y definición. Qué es mustard
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Qué (quién) es mustard - definición

RE-USABLE SPACE LAUNCH SYSTEM
Multi Unit Space Transport And Recovery Device; MUSTARD

mustard         
(mustards)
1.
Mustard is a yellow or brown paste usually eaten with meat. It tastes hot and spicy.
...a pot of mustard...
N-MASS
2.
Mustard is used to describe things that are brownish yellow in colour.
...a mustard coloured jumper.
COLOUR
3.
If someone does not cut the mustard, their work or their performance is not as good as it should be or as good as it is expected to be. (INFORMAL)
PHRASE: V inflects, usu with neg
Mustard         
·noun The name of several cruciferous plants of the genus Brassica (formerly Sinapis), as white mustard (B. alba), black mustard (B. Nigra), wild mustard or charlock (B. Sinapistrum).
II. Mustard ·noun A powder or a paste made from the seeds of black or white mustard, used as a condiment and a rubefacient. Taken internally it is stimulant and diuretic, and in large doses is emetic.
mustard         
¦ noun
1. a hot-tasting yellow or brown paste made from the crushed seeds of certain plants, eaten with meat or used as a cooking ingredient.
2. a plant of the cabbage family whose seeds are used to make mustard. [Brassica nigra (black mustard), Sinapis alba (white mustard, eaten as a seedling with cress), and other species.]
3. a brownish yellow colour.
Derivatives
mustardy adjective
Origin
ME: from OFr. moustarde, from L. mustum 'must' (the condiment being orig. prepared with grape must).

Wikipedia

BAC Mustard

The Multi-Unit Space Transport And Recovery Device or MUSTARD, usually written as Mustard, was a reusable launch system concept that was explored by the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC) during the mid-1960s.

Mustard was intended to operate as a multistage rocket, the individual stages comprising near-identical spaceplane modules. These planes, or stages, were hypersonic vehicles, capable of flying at speeds in excess of five times the speed of sound. Following a vertically standing launch, each stage was to progressively separate during the ascent, after which they would individually fly back towards a suitable landing strip. The final spaceplane was to be capable of attaining such an altitude that it would be able to achieve a sub-orbital trajectory before also performing a controlled return. Following a conventional landing, all of the stages were intended to be reused multiple times. It was projected that Mustard was suitable for launching payloads weighing as much as 2,300 kg (5,000 lb) into orbit.

The concept originated from studies performed by British manufacturing conglomerate English Electric, who had drawn inspiration from an American proposal, the Douglas Astro, which was proposed in 1962. Throughout the 1960s, the Mustard project was refined and prepared for programme launch. However, financing for the initiative was not forthcoming from the British government and the concept ultimately languished following the completion of the last major design study in early 1967. According to BAC's successor company BAE Systems, the projected cost of completing Mustard's development had been estimated as being between 20 and 30 times cheaper than the conventional expendable launch system used for the American Apollo program. The knowledge and expertise from Mustard was applied in various other avenues, the most prominent being the HOTOL spaceplane programme during the 1980s.

Ejemplos de uso de mustard
1. We did things like putting mustard powder in their cigarettes.
2. Can UK‘s No1 cut the mustard with Santa Monica surfers?
3. Dijon mustard?" "I don‘t think we have Dijon mustard," says Louderman, who is 15 and would have voted for Bush if he could have.
4. "Dijon mustard," Louderman says as the woman drives away.
5. Judged purely as heckling, though, it hardly cuts the mustard.