salt junk - vertaling naar italiaans
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  • etymologie

salt junk - vertaling naar italiaans

BATTENED LUGSAIL FROM ASIA
Junk Rig; Junk-rigged; Junk sail
  • A bronze mirror of Thang, Wu Tai, or Sung date, shows a ship with a square sail. Shaanxi Provincial Museum, Xi'an.
  • ''Keying'']] was a Chinese ship that employed a junk sailing rig''.''
  • The Colvin rig: a modified schooner which combines a fore-and-aft jib sail with junk-rigged main and fore sails using minimal standing rigging. It is sometimes asserted that this foresail design can improve the rig's ability to sail to windward.<ref>http://www.thomasecolvin.com/ Thomas Colvin naval architect</ref>
  • The modern junk sail assembled: showing the 4 corners and the 4 sides necessary to understand [[sail trim]].
  • spars]], [[standing rigging]], and [[sailcloth]].
  • boom]].
  • Tagalog]] [[outrigger ship]] with junk sails from [[Manila]], 19th century
  • A Southeast Asian ship with battened sails, Cambodia, 12–13th century CE.
  • The points of sail: A. In Irons (head to wind); B. Close Hauled (against the wind); C. Reaching (across the wind); D. Broad reaching (downwind); E. Running (with the wind).

salt junk      
carne di maiale o manzo salata (slang nautico)
common salt         
  • Golmud salt evaporation pans at [[Golmud]], August 1993
  • Bolivian rose salt from Andes
  • Bamyan]], [[Afghanistan]]
  • Comparison of table salt with [[kitchen salt]]. Shows a typical salt shaker and salt bowl with salt spread before each on a black background.
  • [[Halite]] (rock salt) from the [[Wieliczka salt mine]], Małopolskie, Poland
  • [[Himalayan salt]] is [[halite]] with a distinct pink color.
  • evaporation pond]] in [[Walvis Bay]], [[Namibia]]; [[halophile]] organisms give it a red colour.
  • [[Bread and salt]] at a Russian wedding ceremony
  • pre-Inca times]]
  • Salt production in [[Halle, Saxony-Anhalt]] (1670)
  • Irregular crystals of [[sea salt]]
  • Sea salt [[evaporation pond]] at [[Walvis Bay]]. [[Halophile]] organisms impart a red colour.
  • SEM]] image of a grain of table salt
MINERAL USED AS FOOD INGREDIENT, COMPOSED PRIMARILY OF SODIUM CHLORIDE
Common salt; Table salt; Salt production; Table Salt; Normal salt; Salt (food); Salt crystals; Salt crystal; Edible salt; Refined salt; Saltmaking; Dietary salt; Salt refining; Refining salt; Manufacture of salt; Salt industry; Salt making; The salt industry; Culinary salt
sale da cucina
salt cellar         
  • Open salt dish, pressed glass; [[Boston and Sandwich Glass Company]], 1830–1835.
  • Formal place setting for a 12 course dinner; individual salt cellar at top of place setting.
  • A pair of George IV Irish silver Chinoiserie salt cellars,  by William Nowlan, Dublin, 1825.
  • Salt Cellar]], made for [[Francis I of France]], 1540–1543. Gold, partly enameled, with an ebony base. Depicts Earth and Sea personified.
LOW, WIDE TABLE SALT CONTAINER POPULAR BEFORE SALT SHAKERS
Saltcellar; Salt-Cellar; Salt-box; Salt Cellar; Standing salt; Salt bowl; Salt cellars; Salt-cellar
saliera

Definitie

salt
A tiny bit of near-random data inserted where too much regularity would be undesirable; a data frob (sense 1). For example, the Unix crypt(3) manual page mentions that "the salt string is used to perturb the DES algorithm in one of 4096 different ways."

Wikipedia

Junk rig

The junk rig, also known as the Chinese lugsail, Chinese balanced lug sail, or sampan rig, is a type of sail rig in which rigid members, called battens, span the full width of the sail and extend the sail forward of the mast.

While relatively uncommon in use among modern production sailboats, the rig's advantages of easier use and lower maintenance for blue-water cruisers have been explored by individuals such as trans-Atlantic racer Herbert "Blondie" Hasler and author Annie Hill.

The term "junk rig" or sometimes simply "junk" is the name recorded by Europeans when they first encountered the ships in use by the Chinese.