dry measure - перевод на немецкий
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dry measure - перевод на немецкий

UNIT OF VOLUME FOR THINGS WHICH ARE NOT FLUIDS
Struck measure; Heaped measure; Heaping measure; Corn measure; Dry volume; Strickle; Dry capacity; Dry pint

dry measure         
Trockenmaß
measure for measure         
  • Robert Smirke]] (n.d.)
  • The first page of Shakespeare's ''Measure for Measure'', printed in the [[First Folio]] of 1623
  • William Hamilton]] of Isabella appealing to Angelo
  • ''Mariana'' (1851) by [[John Everett Millais]]
  • Pompey Bum, as he was portrayed by nineteenth-century actor [[John Liston]]
  • ''Mariana'' (1888) by [[Valentine Cameron Prinsep]]
  • ''Isabella'' (1888) by [[Francis William Topham]]
  • ''Claudio and Isabella'' (1850) by [[William Holman Hunt]]
PLAY BY SHAKESPEARE
Measure for measure; Barnardine; Measure For Measure; Mistress Overdone; Abhorson; Overdone; Over done; Kate Keepdown; Keepdown; Keep down
ein Maß gegen ein Maß, jeder bekommt das seine
made to measure         
CUSTOM CLOTHING CUT AND SEWN USING A STANDARD-SIZED BASE PATTERN
Made-to-Measure; Made to measure
nach Maßschneiderung; nach Bestellung

Определение

dry measure
¦ noun a measure of volume for dry goods.

Википедия

Dry measure

Dry measures are units of volume to measure bulk commodities that are not fluids and that were typically shipped and sold in standardized containers such as barrels. They have largely been replaced by the units used for measuring volumes in the metric system and liquid volumes in the imperial system but are still used for some commodities in the US customary system. They were or are typically used in agriculture, agronomy, and commodity markets to measure grain, dried beans, dried and fresh produce, and some seafood. They were formerly used for many other foods, such as salt pork and salted fish, and for industrial commodities such as coal, cement, and lime.

The names are often the same as for the units used to measure liquids, despite representing different volumes. The larger volumes of the dry measures apparently arose because they were based on heaped rather than "struck" (leveled) containers.

Today, many units nominally of dry measure have become standardized as units of mass (see bushel); and many other units are commonly conflated or confused with units of mass.