gas screen - определение. Что такое gas screen
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Что (кто) такое gas screen - определение

COVER FOR THE OPENING OF A WINDOW
Fly screen; Retractable screen; Roll Screen; Disappearing screen; Screen window; Bug screen; Mosquito screen; Insect screen; Bugscreen; Window-screen; Fly-screen; Wire screen; Flywire (screen); Flywire screen
  • right
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Screen (sports)         
  • Isaiah Hicks screens [[Jarell Martin]] and [[Marcus Lee]] for Chris Walker at the [[2013 McDonald's All-American Boys Game]].
BLOCKING MOVE BY AN OFFENSIVE PLAYER IN TEAM SPORTS
Screen (basketball); Pick (basketball); Set a screen; Screen-setter; Moving screen; Illegal screen
A screen is a blocking move by an offensive player in which they stand beside or behind a defender in order to free a teammate to either shoot a pass or drive in to score. In basketball and field lacrosse, it is also known as a pick.
rood loft         
  • Usual location of a rood screen
  • St Albans Abbey]]
  • Rood and beam of 1275, but no screen, at [[Öja Church]] on the island of [[Gotland]] in Sweden, where many exceptional roods have survived.
  • alt=
  • St. Helen's church, Ranworth]], Norfolk
  • Crucifixion atop Rood Screen, Anglo-Catholic [[Church of the Good Shepherd (Rosemont, Pennsylvania)]]
  • ambo]]s, left and right.
  • alt=
PARTITION BETWEEN THE CHANCEL AND NAVE FOUND IN MEDIEVAL CHURCH ARCHITECTURE
Altar-screen; Rood loft; Rood Screen; Screen, Altar; Chancel screen; Choir screen; Choir Screen; Rood beam; Choir-screen; Roodscreen; Rood-beam; Jubé; Rood-screen; Rude screen; Painted rood screen; Rood-loft; Chancel-screen
¦ noun a gallery on top of a rood screen.
rood screen         
  • Usual location of a rood screen
  • St Albans Abbey]]
  • Rood and beam of 1275, but no screen, at [[Öja Church]] on the island of [[Gotland]] in Sweden, where many exceptional roods have survived.
  • alt=
  • St. Helen's church, Ranworth]], Norfolk
  • Crucifixion atop Rood Screen, Anglo-Catholic [[Church of the Good Shepherd (Rosemont, Pennsylvania)]]
  • ambo]]s, left and right.
  • alt=
PARTITION BETWEEN THE CHANCEL AND NAVE FOUND IN MEDIEVAL CHURCH ARCHITECTURE
Altar-screen; Rood loft; Rood Screen; Screen, Altar; Chancel screen; Choir screen; Choir Screen; Rood beam; Choir-screen; Roodscreen; Rood-beam; Jubé; Rood-screen; Rude screen; Painted rood screen; Rood-loft; Chancel-screen
¦ noun a screen of wood or stone separating the nave from the chancel of a church.
Projection screen         
  • [[Inflatable movie screen]]
  • An [[overhead projector]] projecting onto a pull-down screen
WHITE SCREEN FOR PROJECTING
Projection Screen; Screen gain; Gain (screen); Projector screen; Screened; Projection screens; Movie screen; Screen mirroring; Screen Mirroring
A projection screen is an installation consisting of a surface and a support structure used for displaying a projected image for the view of an audience. Projection screens may be permanently installed, as in a movie theater; painted on the wall;Acrylic paint used to make a movie screen on the wall (see screen goo) or portable with tripod or floor rising models as in a conference room or other non-dedicated viewing space.
Rood screen         
  • Usual location of a rood screen
  • St Albans Abbey]]
  • Rood and beam of 1275, but no screen, at [[Öja Church]] on the island of [[Gotland]] in Sweden, where many exceptional roods have survived.
  • alt=
  • St. Helen's church, Ranworth]], Norfolk
  • Crucifixion atop Rood Screen, Anglo-Catholic [[Church of the Good Shepherd (Rosemont, Pennsylvania)]]
  • ambo]]s, left and right.
  • alt=
PARTITION BETWEEN THE CHANCEL AND NAVE FOUND IN MEDIEVAL CHURCH ARCHITECTURE
Altar-screen; Rood loft; Rood Screen; Screen, Altar; Chancel screen; Choir screen; Choir Screen; Rood beam; Choir-screen; Roodscreen; Rood-beam; Jubé; Rood-screen; Rude screen; Painted rood screen; Rood-loft; Chancel-screen
The rood screen (also choir screen, chancel screen, or jubé) is a common feature in late medieval church architecture. It is typically an ornate partition between the chancel and nave, of more or less open tracery constructed of wood, stone, or wrought iron.
Screened         
  • [[Inflatable movie screen]]
  • An [[overhead projector]] projecting onto a pull-down screen
WHITE SCREEN FOR PROJECTING
Projection Screen; Screen gain; Gain (screen); Projector screen; Screened; Projection screens; Movie screen; Screen mirroring; Screen Mirroring
·Impf & ·p.p. of Screen.
Gamemaster's screen         
  • A gamesmaster (left) behind a screen
EQUIPMENT OF TABLETOP ROLE-PLAYING GAME
DM screen; GM screen; GM's screen
A gamemaster's screen, also called a GM's screen, is a gaming accessory, usually made out of either cardboard or card stock, and is used by the gamemaster to hide all the relevant data related to a tabletop role-playing game session from the players in order to not spoil the plot of the story. It also hides any dice rolls made by the gamemaster that he or she does not want players to see.
gas range         
  • A gas stove in a San Francisco apartment, 1975.
  • blue]] [[flame]] colour, meaning complete combustion, as with other gas appliances.
  • Early gas stoves produced by Windsor. From ''[[Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management]]'', 1904.
  • Electric ignition spark
  • A built-in Japanese three burner gas stove with a fish grill. Note the thermistor buttons protruding from the gas burners, which cut off the flame if the temperature exceeds 250{{nbsp}}°C.
STOVE THAT IS FUELED BY COMBUSTIBLE GAS
Gas oven; Gas stoves; Gas range; Gas cooker; Cook with Gas; Cook with gas; Cook Gas; Gas hob; Natural gas stove
n. to light, turn on a gas range
Gas stove         
  • A gas stove in a San Francisco apartment, 1975.
  • blue]] [[flame]] colour, meaning complete combustion, as with other gas appliances.
  • Early gas stoves produced by Windsor. From ''[[Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management]]'', 1904.
  • Electric ignition spark
  • A built-in Japanese three burner gas stove with a fish grill. Note the thermistor buttons protruding from the gas burners, which cut off the flame if the temperature exceeds 250{{nbsp}}°C.
STOVE THAT IS FUELED BY COMBUSTIBLE GAS
Gas oven; Gas stoves; Gas range; Gas cooker; Cook with Gas; Cook with gas; Cook Gas; Gas hob; Natural gas stove
A gas stove is a stove that is fuelled by combustible gas such as syngas, natural gas, propane, butane, liquefied petroleum gas or other flammable gas. Before the advent of gas, cooking stoves relied on solid fuels such as coal or wood.
the silver screen         
PROJECTION SCREEN
The silver screen
the cinema industry.

Википедия

Window screen

A window screen (also known as insect screen, bug screen, fly screen, flywire, wire mesh, or window net) is designed to cover the opening of a window. It is usually a mesh made of metal, fibreglass, plastic wire, or other pieces of plastic and stretched in a frame of wood or metal. It serves to keep leaves, debris, bugs, birds, and other animals from entering a building or a screened structure such as a porch, without blocking fresh air-flow.

Most houses in Australia, the United States and Canada and other parts of the world have screens on windows to prevent entry of flying insects such as mosquitoes, flies and wasps. In some regions such as the northern United States and Canada, screens were required to be replaced by glass storm windows in the winter, but now combination storm and screen windows are available, which allow glass and screen panels to slide up and down.

For screens installed on aluminium frames, the material is cut slightly larger than the frame, then laid over it, and a flexible vinyl cord, called a spline, is pressed over the screen into a groove (spline channel) in the frame. The excess screen is then trimmed close to the spline with a sharp utility knife. Common spline sizes range from 3.6 mm (0.140 in) to 4.8 mm (0.190 in), in increments of 0.25 mm (0.010 in).

The spline is often manufactured with parallel ridges running along the length of the spline to provide a better grip and compression when it is pressed into the spline channel. A spline roller — a special tool that consists of a metal (or plastic) wheel on a handle — is used to press the spline into the frame. The wheel edge is concave, to help it hold the spline and not slip off to the side. Some spline rollers are double-ended and have both convex and concave rollers; the convex roller can be used to seat the spline deeper into the channel without risk of cutting the screen. Driving the spline into the channel tends to tension the screen on the frame, so the installer must avoid pre-tensioning the screen excessively to prevent the frame from becoming warped.