tweezer beak - traduction vers arabe
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tweezer beak - traduction vers arabe

TOOLS USED FOR PICKING UP OBJECTS TOO SMALL TO BE EASILY HANDLED WITH THE HUMAN HANDS
Tweezer
  • Ceramic-tipped tweezers. Heat resistant and non-magnetic
  • A pair of modern-day round-tipped tweezers
  • 2900–1050 B.C.}}
  • Cross-locking tweezers
  • Tweezers in use in a laboratory
  • Gold tweezers recovered from the [[Royal Cemetery of Ur]], Iraq 2550-2450 B.C.
  • Two types of modern-day conventional metal tweezers with pointed tips

tweezer beak      
‎ مِنْقارُ المِلْقَط‎
beak         
  • This [[Arctic tern]] chick still has its egg tooth, the small white projection near the tip of its upper mandible.
  • Comparison of bird beaks, displaying different shapes adapted to different feeding methods. Not to scale.
  • alt=an owl's skull with the beak attached
  • A [[gull]]'s upper mandible can flex upwards because it is supported by small bones which can move slightly backwards and forwards.
  • The gape flange on this juvenile [[house sparrow]] is the yellowish region at the base of the beak.
  • The beaks of the now-extinct [[Huia]] (female upper, male lower) show marked sexual dimorphism
  • The nail is the black tip of this [[mute swan]]'s beak.
  • A bird's culmen is measured in a straight line from the tip of the beak to a set point — here, where the feathering starts on the bird's forehead.<ref name="Pyle"/>
  • The sawtooth serrations on a [[common merganser]]'s bill help it to hold tight to its fish prey.
  • When billing, [[northern gannet]]s raise their beaks high and clatter them against each other.
  • Position of [[vomer]] (shaded red) in neognathae (left) and paleognathae (right)
  •  The [[rock dove]]'s operculum is a mass at the base of the bill.
  • The [[platypus]] uses its bill to navigate underwater, detect food, and dig. The bill contains receptors that help detect prey.
  • alt=Head of a black and white bird with a large dark eye. Its hooked beak is gray with a black tip and its round nostril has a small lump in the center.
  • The gapes of juvenile altricial birds are often brightly coloured, as in this [[common starling]].
  • Kiwi]]s have a probing bill that allows them to detect motion
  • Three [[barn owl]]s threatening an intruder. Barn owl threat displays usually include hissing and bill-snapping, as here
EXTERNAL ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE FOUND IN BIRDS, NON-AVIAN DINOSAURS AND SOME MAMMALS
Cere; Beaks; Rhamphotheca; Gape; Billing (birds); Culmen (bird); Culmen ridge; Rictal bristle; Bird's beak; Gape flange; Gonys; Tomia; Rhinotheca; Gnathotheca; Operculum (bird); Gonydeal expansion; Gonydeal angle; Gonydeal spot; Nail (beak); Bill tip organ; Bird's mouth; Beaked; Culmen (beak)
مِنْقار
BEAKED         
  • This [[Arctic tern]] chick still has its egg tooth, the small white projection near the tip of its upper mandible.
  • Comparison of bird beaks, displaying different shapes adapted to different feeding methods. Not to scale.
  • alt=an owl's skull with the beak attached
  • A [[gull]]'s upper mandible can flex upwards because it is supported by small bones which can move slightly backwards and forwards.
  • The gape flange on this juvenile [[house sparrow]] is the yellowish region at the base of the beak.
  • The beaks of the now-extinct [[Huia]] (female upper, male lower) show marked sexual dimorphism
  • The nail is the black tip of this [[mute swan]]'s beak.
  • A bird's culmen is measured in a straight line from the tip of the beak to a set point — here, where the feathering starts on the bird's forehead.<ref name="Pyle"/>
  • The sawtooth serrations on a [[common merganser]]'s bill help it to hold tight to its fish prey.
  • When billing, [[northern gannet]]s raise their beaks high and clatter them against each other.
  • Position of [[vomer]] (shaded red) in neognathae (left) and paleognathae (right)
  •  The [[rock dove]]'s operculum is a mass at the base of the bill.
  • The [[platypus]] uses its bill to navigate underwater, detect food, and dig. The bill contains receptors that help detect prey.
  • alt=Head of a black and white bird with a large dark eye. Its hooked beak is gray with a black tip and its round nostril has a small lump in the center.
  • The gapes of juvenile altricial birds are often brightly coloured, as in this [[common starling]].
  • Kiwi]]s have a probing bill that allows them to detect motion
  • Three [[barn owl]]s threatening an intruder. Barn owl threat displays usually include hissing and bill-snapping, as here
EXTERNAL ANATOMICAL STRUCTURE FOUND IN BIRDS, NON-AVIAN DINOSAURS AND SOME MAMMALS
Cere; Beaks; Rhamphotheca; Gape; Billing (birds); Culmen (bird); Culmen ridge; Rictal bristle; Bird's beak; Gape flange; Gonys; Tomia; Rhinotheca; Gnathotheca; Operculum (bird); Gonydeal expansion; Gonydeal angle; Gonydeal spot; Nail (beak); Bill tip organ; Bird's mouth; Beaked; Culmen (beak)

الصفة

أَعْقَف

Définition

Rhinotheca
·noun The sheath of the upper mandible of a bird.

Wikipédia

Tweezers

Tweezers are small hand tools used for grasping objects too small to be easily handled with the human fingers. Tweezers are thumb-driven forceps most likely derived from tongs used to grab or hold hot objects since the dawn of recorded history. In a scientific or medical context, they are normally referred to as just "forceps", a name that is used together with other grasping surgical instruments that resemble pliers, pincers and scissors-like clamps.

Tweezers make use of two third-class levers connected at one fixed end (the fulcrum point of each lever), with the pincers at the others. When used, they are commonly held with one hand in a pen grip between the thumb and index finger (sometimes also the middle finger), with the top end resting on the first dorsal interosseous muscle at the webspace between the thumb and index finger. Spring tension holds the grasping ends apart until finger pressure is applied. This provides an extended pinch and allows the user to easily grasp, manipulate and quickly release small or delicate objects with readily variable pressure.

People commonly use tweezers for such tasks as plucking hair from the face or eyebrows, often using the term eyebrow tweezers. Other common uses for tweezers are as a tool to manipulate small objects, including for example small, particularly surface-mount, electronic parts, and small mechanical parts for models and precision mechanisms. Stamp collectors use tweezers (stamp tongs) to handle postage stamps which, while large enough to pick up by hand, could be damaged by handling; the jaws of stamp tongs are smooth. Another example of a specialized use is picking out the flakes of gold in gold panning. Tweezers are also used in kitchens for food presentation to remove bones from fillets of fish in a process known as pin boning, and are as tongs used to serve pieces of cake to restaurant patrons.