battering ram - определение. Что такое battering ram
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Что (кто) такое battering ram - определение

SIEGE ENGINE ORIGINATING IN ANCIENT TIMES
Battering rams; Battering Ram; Battering-Ram; Battering-ram; Capped Ram; Siege Ram; Battle ram; Battering ramming; Ram (siege weapon)
  • 865–860 BC}}
  • Replica battering ram at [[Baba Vida]], [[Vidin]], [[Bulgaria]]
  • Replica battering ram at [[Château des Baux]], France
  • Medieval battering ram in Italy
  • A modern battering ram
Найдено результатов: 652
battering ram         
also battering-ram (battering rams)
A battering ram is a long heavy piece of wood that is used to knock down the locked doors of buildings.
They got a battering ram to smash down the door.
N-COUNT
Battering ram         
A battering ram is a siege engine that originated in ancient times and was designed to break open the masonry walls of fortifications or splinter their wooden gates. In its simplest form, a battering ram is just a large, heavy log carried by several people and propelled with force against an obstacle; the ram would be sufficient to damage the target if the log were massive enough and/or it were moved quickly enough (that is, if it had enough momentum).
Battering-ram         
·noun A blacksmith's hammer, suspended, and worked horizontally.
II. Battering-ram ·noun An engine used in ancient times to beat down the walls of besieged places.
battering-ram         
battering ram         
¦ noun a heavy object swung or rammed against a door to break it down.
?historical a heavy beam, originally with an end in the form of a carved ram's head, used in breaching fortifications.
ram-raid         
TYPE OF BURGLARY IN WHICH A VEHICLE IS DRIVEN INTO A BUILDING
Ramraiding; Ram raid; Ram raiding; Ram-raid; Ramraid; Ram raids
(ram-raids, ram-raiding, ram-raided)
1.
A ram-raid is the crime of using a car to drive into and break a shop window in order to steal things from the shop. (BRIT)
A shop in Station Road was the target of a ram-raid early yesterday.
N-COUNT
2.
If people ram-raid, they use a car to drive into and break a shop window in order to steal things from the shop. (BRIT)
The kids who are joyriding and ram-raiding are unemployed.
VERB: V, also V n
ram-raider (ram-raiders)
Ram-raiders smashed their way into a high-class store.
N-COUNT
battering         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Battering (disambiguation)
noun criticize severely or defeat heavily.
ram raid         
TYPE OF BURGLARY IN WHICH A VEHICLE IS DRIVEN INTO A BUILDING
Ramraiding; Ram raid; Ram raiding; Ram-raid; Ramraid; Ram raids
¦ noun Brit. a robbery in which a shop window is rammed with a vehicle and looted.
Derivatives
ram-raider noun
ram-raiding noun
Amiga Chip RAM         
COMMONLY USED TERM FOR THE INTEGRATED RAM USED IN COMMODORE'S LINE OF AMIGA COMPUTERS
CHIP RAM; Fast RAM; Chip RAM
Chip RAM is a commonly used term for the integrated RAM used in Commodore's line of Amiga computers. Chip RAM is shared between the central processing unit (CPU) and the Amiga's dedicated chipset (hence the name).
RAM disk         
RAM USED TO EMULATE SECONDARY STORAGE
Ram disk; Ramdisk; RAM Disk; RAMdisk; Ramdrive; Ram drive; Dynamic RAMDisk; RAMDisk; RAM Discs; VDISK.SYS; RAMDRIVE.SYS; RAM disk; Memory drive; Virtual RAM drive; Software RAM drive; VDISK; RAM floppy; RAMDISK
<operating system, storage> A memory-resident program which mimics a hard disk drive. It uses part of computer's RAM to store data which can be accessed as files. Unlike a real disk drive, this drive forgets all stored data when the computer is turned off. (1995-03-14)

Википедия

Battering ram

A battering ram is a siege engine that originated in ancient times and was designed to break open the masonry walls of fortifications or splinter their wooden gates. In its simplest form, a battering ram is just a large, heavy log carried by several people and propelled with force against an obstacle; the ram would be sufficient to damage the target if the log were massive enough and/or it were moved quickly enough (that is, if it had enough momentum). Later rams encased the log in an arrow-proof, fire-resistant canopy mounted on wheels. Inside the canopy, the log was swung from suspensory chains or ropes.

Rams proved effective weapons of war because at the time wall-building materials such as stone and brick were weak in tension, and therefore prone to cracking when impacted with force. With repeated blows, the cracks would grow steadily until a hole was created. Eventually, a breach would appear in the fabric of the wall, enabling armed attackers to force their way through the gap and engage the inhabitants of the citadel.

The introduction in the later Middle Ages of siege cannons, which harnessed the explosive power of gunpowder to propel weighty stone or iron balls against fortified obstacles, spelled the end of battering rams and other traditional siege weapons. Smaller, hand-held versions of battering rams are still used today by law enforcement officers and military personnel to break open locked doors.

A capped ram is a battering ram that has an accessory at the head (usually made of iron or steel and sometimes punningly shaped into the head and horns of an ovine ram) to do more damage to a building. It was much more effective at destroying enemy walls and buildings than an uncapped ram but was heavier to carry.