egg cutter - перевод на голландский
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egg cutter - перевод на голландский

TYPE OF WATERCRAFT DESIGNED FOR SPEED
Revenue cutter; Cutter (ship); Pilot cutter; Pilot Cutter; Cutter (vessel); Naval cutter; Revenue cutters; Waterman's cutter; Cutter rig; Cutter rigged; Revenue Cutter
  • Plans of a 25 or 26 foot cutter, dated 1896, with sketch plan of sailing rig. There is provision for 10 oars, double-banked
  • An 1880 sail plan for a 32 foot Royal Navy cutter.
  • Cutter race at [[Sunbury Amateur Regatta]]
  • The sails of a Bermuda cutter. <br />
'''A''' - mainsail<br />
'''B''' - foresail (forestaysail)<br />
'''C''' - bowsprit<br />
'''D''' - jib<br />
'''E''' - flying jib
  • genoa]] jib set
  • French 19th century cutter
  • Wooden pilot cutter ''Lizzie May'' under sail in [[Brest, France]]
  • A cutter secured to a boat boom, ready for use, alongside an anchored battleship during the First World War
  • USCGC ''Legare'']], an example of a US Coast Guard cutter

egg cutter      
eisnijder
goose egg         
  • White and brown eggs in an egg crate
  • French]] breed of [[chicken]]
  • A single egg with two yolks
  • [[Cuticula]]
}}
  • Laying hens in battery cages
  • [[Century egg]]
  • A raw chicken egg within its membrane, with the shell removed by soaking in [[vinegar]]
  • ''Hanácké kraslice'', Easter eggs from the [[Haná]] region, the [[Czech Republic]]
  • Egg cleaning on a farm in Norway
  • White, speckled (red), and brown chicken eggs
  • Collected chicken eggs and quail eggs in a wicker basket
  • sunny side up]]
  • Eggs for sale at a grocery store
  • A batch of [[tea egg]]s with shell intact soaking in a brew of spices and tea
  • tomb of Menna]], including a basket of eggs
  • Pickled egg, colored with beetroot juice
  • Soft-boiled [[quail eggs]] with potato [[galette]]s
  • Salted duck egg
  • Egg vendors in Samarkand, c. 1870
  • Quail eggs (upper left), chicken egg (lower left), and [[ostrich]] egg (right)
EDIBLE ANIMAL PRODUCT
Eggs; Egg food; Chicken egg; Goose egg; Eggs (food); Duck egg; Egg production; Egg (fowl); Egg proteins, dietary; Egg proteins; Shell egg; Poultry egg; Duck eggs; Frozen eggs; Chicken eggs; Burford Brown; Raw egg; Raw eggs; Uncooked egg; Uncooked eggs; Undercooked egg; Undercooked eggs; Undercooked Eggs; Hen’s eggs; Hen's eggs; Egg (food); 🥚; Eggs as food; Hen's egg; Chicken egg (food); Health effects of eggs
n. nul (stand)
egg yolk         
  • Diagram of a [[fish egg]]; the yolk is the area marked 'C'
  • A chicken egg frying with an extremely thick red yolk. A normal-coloured yolk can also be seen, having been accidentally burst during the frying process.
PART OF AN EGG WHICH FEEDS THE DEVELOPING CHICKEN EMBRYO
Egg yolks; Double-yolked egg; Double-yolker; Double yolker; Double egg yolk; Double yolked egg; Egg-yolk; Yolks; Double yolk; Vitellus; Double yolk egg; Double-yolk egg; Double yolked eggs; Double-yolked eggs; Double yolk eggs; Double-yolk eggs; Double-yolkers; Double-yolk; Double yolks; Double-yolks; Double yolked; Double-yolked; Yellow of the egg; Egg yolk; Egg yellow; Egg yoke
eigeel

Определение

cookie cutter
¦ noun N. Amer.
1. a device with sharp edges for cutting biscuit dough into a particular shape.
2. [as modifier] denoting something mass-produced or lacking any distinguishing characteristics.

Википедия

Cutter (boat)

A cutter is a name for various types of watercraft. It can apply to the rig (sail plan) of a sailing vessel (but with regional differences in definition), to a governmental enforcement agency vessel (such as a coast guard or border force cutter), to a type of ship's boat which can be used under sail or oars, or, historically, to a type of fast-sailing vessel introduced in the 18th century, some of which were used as small warships.

As a sailing rig, a cutter is a single-masted boat, with two or more headsails. On the eastern side of the Atlantic, the two headsails on a single mast is the fullest extent of the modern definition. In U.S. waters, a greater level of complexity applies, with the placement of the mast and the rigging details of the bowsprit taken into account – so a boat with two headsails may be classed as a sloop.

Government agencies use the term "cutter" for vessels employed in patrolling their territorial waters and other enforcement activities. This terminology is derived from the sailing cutters which had this sort of role from the 18th century to the end of the 19th century. (See below.) Whilst the details vary from country to country, generally these are small ships that can remain at sea for extended periods and in all usual weather conditions. Many, but not all, are armed. Uses include control of a country's borders and preventing smuggling.

Cutters as ship's boats came into use in the early 18th century (dating which roughly coincides with the decked sailing vessels described below). These were clinker-built open boats which were fitted for propulsion by both oar and sail. They were more optimised for sailing than the barges and pinnaces that were types of ship's boat used in the Royal Navy – one distinctive resulting feature of this was the washstrake added to increase the freeboard. It was pierced with rowlock cut-outs for the oars, so that the thwarts did not need to be set unusually high to achieve the right geometry for efficient use.: 33 

Cutters, as decked sailing vessels designed for speed, came into use in the early part of the 18th century. When first introduced, the term applied largely to the hull form, in the same way that clipper was used almost a hundred years later. Some of these 18th and 19th century examples were rigged as ketches or brigs. However, the typical rig, especially in Naval or revenue protection use, was a single masted rig setting a huge amount of sail. Square sails were set, as well as a full complement of fore and aft sails. In civilian use, cutter were mostly involved in smuggling. The navy and coastguard therefore also used cutters in an attempt to catch those operating illegally.: 119–112