| floating |
a construction technique that isolates studio floors or walls by decoupling them from each other and/or adjacent walls, slabs or surfaces. For example, floors can be "floated" by mounting the joists on large springs or rubber isolators, thus reducing the transmission of sounds or vibrations from that floor to nearly walls, ceilings below or adjoining floor surfaces.
Ãâó: mixguides.com/studiodesign/basics/studio-design-gl...
|
|---|---|
| floater |
A serve which does not spin or rotate and therefore moves in an erratic path. This is similar to a "knuckle ball" pitch in baseball.
Ãâó: www.volleyball.com/learn_the_terms.shtml
|
| floating |
(diacritic, accent, mark). (See nonspacing mark.)
Ãâó: pipin.tmd.ns.ac.yu/unicode/www.unicode.org/glossar...
|
| floating |
a defect consisting of the preferential raising to the surface of one or more components during drying. In a pigmented coating where the final colour is based on a mixture of several pigments, it happens when one or more pigments float to the surface, originating a colour different from the expected one. It is caused by too great a difference in pigments' specific gravity and poor wetting of pigments.
Ãâó: www.tecnocolorsrl.it/dictionary.htm
|
| floating |
a converted or custom-built ship-shaped floater, employed to process oil and gas and for temporary storage of the oil prior to transhipment.
Ãâó: www.technip.com/english/html_top/glossaire.htm
|
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|