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Deutsch Englisch Übersetzung
Definition
Synonym
Glasspinnfaden
Deutsch Englisch Übersetzung
Glasspinnfaden
m
Glasspinnfäden
pl
strand of textile glass
strands of textile glass
Glasspinnfaden
m
Glasspinnfäden
pl
strand of textile glass
strands of textile glass
Glasspinnfaden
m
Glasspinnfäden
pl
strand of textile glass
strands of textile glass
Deutsche
Glasspinnfaden Synonyme
Englische
strand of textile glass Synonyme
strand
animal fiber
artificial fiber
bank
beach
berm
capillament
cast away
cilium
cirrus
coast
coastland
coastline
cobweb
denier
embankment
fiber
fibrilla
filament
filamentule
flagellum
foreshore
gossamer
ground
hair
hank
ironbound coast
lido
littoral
pile up
plage
playa
riverside
riviera
rockbound coast
run aground
sands
sea margin
seabank
seabeach
seaboard
seacliff
seacoast
seashore
seaside
shingle
shipwreck
shore
shoreline
skein
submerged coast
suture
take the ground
tendril
thread
threadlet
tidewater
waterfront
waterside
web
wreck
strand
ed
aground
anchored
beached
castaway
caught
chained
fast
fastened
fixed
foundered
grounded
held
high and dry
impacted
inextricable
jammed
marooned
moored
on the rocks
packed
run aground
set fast
shipwrecked
stuck
stuck fast
swamped
tethered
tied
transfixed
wedged
wrecked
Glasspinnfaden Definition
Claude
Lorraine
glass
(
)
A
slightly
convex
mirror,
commonly
of
black
glass,
used
as
a
toy
for
viewing
the
reflected
landscape.
Egg-glass
(
n.
)
A
small
sandglass,
running
about
three
minutes,
for
marking
time
in
boiling
eggs
Flint
glass
(
)
A
soft,
heavy,
brilliant
glass,
consisting
essentially
of
a
silicate
of
lead
and
potassium.
It
is
used
for
tableware,
and
for
optical
instruments,
as
prisms,
its
density
giving
a
high
degree
of
dispersive
power
Glass
(
v.
t.)
A
hard,
brittle,
translucent,
and
commonly
transparent
substance,
white
or
colored,
having
a
conchoidal
fracture,
and
made
by
fusing
together
sand
or
silica
with
lime,
potash,
soda,
or
lead
oxide.
It
is
used
for
window
panes
and
mirrors,
for
articles
of
table
and
culinary
use,
for
lenses,
and
various
articles
of
ornament.
Glass
(
v.
t.)
Any
substance
having
a
peculiar
glassy
appearance,
and
a
conchoidal
fracture,
and
usually
produced
by
fusion.
Glass
(
v.
t.)
Anything
made
of
glass.
Glass
(
v.
t.)
A
looking-glass
Glass
(
v.
t.)
A
vessel
filled
with
running
sand
for
measuring
time
Glass
(
v.
t.)
A
drinking
vessel
Glass
(
v.
t.)
An
optical
glass
Glass
(
v.
t.)
A
weatherglass
Glass
(
v.
t.)
To
reflect,
as
in
a
mirror
Glass
(
v.
t.)
To
case
in
glass.
Glass
(
v.
t.)
To
cover
or
furnish
with
glass
Glass
(
v.
t.)
To
smooth
or
polish
anything,
as
leater,
by
rubbing
it
with
a
glass
burnisher.
Glass-crab
(
n.
)
The
larval
state
(Phyllosoma)
of
the
genus
Palinurus
and
allied
genera.
It
is
remarkable
for
its
strange
outlines,
thinness,
and
transparency.
See
Phyllosoma.
Glass-faced
(
a.
)
Mirror-faced
Glass-gazing
(
a.
)
Given
to
viewing
one's
self
in
a
glass
or
mirror
Glass
maker
(
n.
)
Alt.
of
Glassmaker
Glass-rope
(
n.
)
A
remarkable
vitreous
sponge,
of
the
genus
Hyalonema,
first
brought
from
Japan.
It
has
a
long
stem,
consisting
of
a
bundle
of
long
and
large,
glassy,
siliceous
fibers,
twisted
together.
Glass-snail
(
n.
)
A
small,
transparent,
land
snail,
of
the
genus
Vitrina.
Glass-snake
(
n.
)
A
long,
footless
lizard
(Ophiosaurus
ventralis),
of
the
Southern
United
States
Glass-sponge
(
n.
)
A
siliceous
sponge,
of
the
genus
Hyalonema,
and
allied
genera
Lady's
looking-glass
(
)
See
Venus's
looking-glass,
under
Venus.
Looking-glass
(
n.
)
A
mirror
made
of
glass
on
which
has
been
placed
a
backing
of
some
reflecting
substance,
as
quicksilver.
Millefiore
glass
(
)
Slender
rods
or
tubes
of
colored
glass
fused
together
and
embedded
in
clear
glass
Muscovy
glass
(
)
Mica
Strand
(
n.
)
One
of
the
twists,
or
strings,
as
of
fibers,
wires,
etc.,
of
which
a
rope
is
composed.
Strand
(
v.
t.)
To
break
a
strand
of
(a
rope).
Strand
(
n.
)
The
shore,
especially
the
beach
of
a
sea,
ocean,
or
large
lake
Strand
(
v.
t.)
To
drive
on
a
strand
Strand
(
v.
i.)
To
drift,
or
be
driven,
on
shore
to
run
aground
Textile
(
a.
)
Pertaining
to
weaving
or
to
woven
fabrics
Textile
(
n.
)
That
which
is,
or
may
be,
woven
Water
glass
(
)
See
Soluble
glass,
under
Glass.
strand of textile glass / strands of textile glass Bedeutung
glass
lizard
glass
snake
joint
snake
snakelike
lizard
of
Europe
and
Asia
and
North
America
with
vestigial
hind
limbs
and
the
ability
to
regenerate
its
long
fragile
tail
glass
sponge
a
siliceous
sponge
(with
glassy
spicules)
of
the
class
Hyalospongiae
brown
hyena
strand
wolf
Hyaena
brunnea
of
southern
Africa
alcohol
thermometer
alcohol-in-glass
thermometer
thermometer
consisting
of
a
glass
capillary
tube
marked
with
degrees
Celsius
or
Fahrenheit
and
containing
alcohol
which
rises
or
falls
as
it
expands
or
contracts
with
changes
in
temperature
beer
glass
a
relatively
large
glass
for
serving
beer
bell
jar
bell
glass
a
bell-shaped
glass
cover
used
to
protect
and
display
delicate
objects
or
to
cover
scientific
apparatus
or
to
contain
gases
chain
string
strand
a
necklace
made
by
a
stringing
objects
together,
a
string
of
beads,
a
strand
of
pearls,
cheval
glass
a
full
length
mirror
mounted
in
a
frame
in
which
it
can
be
tilted
clinical
thermometer
mercury-in-glass
clinical
thermometer
a
mercury
thermometer
designed
to
measure
the
temperature
of
the
human
body,
graduated
to
cover
a
range
a
few
degrees
on
either
side
of
the
normal
body
temperature
cover
glass
cover
slip
a
small
and
very
thin
piece
of
glass
used
to
cover
the
specimen
on
a
microscope
slide
crystal
watch
crystal
watch
glass
a
protective
cover
that
protects
the
face
of
a
watch
cut
glass
glass
decorated
by
cutting
or
grinding
facets
fabric
cloth
material
textile
artifact
made
by
weaving
or
felting
or
knitting
or
crocheting
natural
or
synthetic
fibers,
the
fabric
in
the
curtains
was
light
and
semitransparent,
woven
cloth
originated
in
Mesopotamia
around
BC,
she
measured
off
enough
material
for
a
dress
field
glass
glass
spyglass
a
small
refracting
telescope
flute
flute
glass
champagne
flute
a
tall
narrow
wineglass
glass
drinking
glass
a
container
for
holding
liquids
while
drinking
glass
glassware
collectively,
She
collected
old
glass
glass
cutter
a
tool
for
cutting
glass
glass
eye
prosthesis
consisting
of
an
artificial
eye
made
of
glass
hand
glass
simple
microscope
magnifying
glass
light
microscope
consisting
of
a
single
convex
lens
that
is
used
to
produce
an
enlarged
image,
the
magnifying
glass
was
invented
by
Roger
Bacon
in
hand
glass
hand
mirror
a
mirror
intended
to
be
held
in
the
hand
highball
glass
a
tall
glass
for
serving
highballs
jeweler's
glass
an
optical
instrument
used
by
jewelers,
has
one
or
more
lenses
and
is
used
to
view
features
not
readily
seen
liqueur
glass
a
small
glass
for
serving
a
small
amount
of
liqueur
(typically
after
dinner)
looking
glass
glass
a
mirror,
usually
a
ladies'
dressing
mirror
mercury
thermometer
mercury-in-glass
thermometer
thermometer
consisting
of
mercury
contained
in
a
bulb
at
the
bottom
of
a
graduated
sealed
glass
capillary
tube
marked
in
degrees
Celsius
or
Fahrenheit,
mercury
expands
with
a
rise
in
temperature
causing
a
thin
thread
of
mercury
to
rise
in
the
tube
c
methamphetamine
methamphetamine
hydrochloride
Methedrine
meth
deoxyephedrine
chalk
chicken
feed
crank
glass
ice
shabu
trash
an
amphetamine
derivative
(trade
name
Methedrine)
used
in
the
form
of
a
crystalline
hydrochloride,
used
as
a
stimulant
to
the
nervous
system
and
as
an
appetite
suppressant
objective
objective
lens
object
lens
object
glass
the
lens
or
system
of
lenses
in
a
telescope
or
microscope
that
is
nearest
the
object
being
viewed
optical
fiber
glass
fiber
optical
fibre
glass
fibre
a
very
thin
fiber
made
of
glass
that
functions
as
a
waveguide
for
light,
used
in
bundles
to
transmit
images
pane
pane
of
glass
window
glass
sheet
glass
cut
in
shapes
for
windows
or
doors
parfait
glass
a
tall
slender
glass
with
a
short
stem
in
which
parfait
is
served
pier
glass
pier
mirror
a
large
mirror
between
two
windows
plate
glass
sheet
glass
glass
formed
into
large
thin
sheets
shot
glass
jigger
pony
a
small
glass
adequate
to
hold
a
single
swallow
of
whiskey
snifter
brandy
snifter
brandy
glass
a
globular
glass
with
a
small
top,
used
for
serving
brandy
stained-glass
window
a
window
made
of
stained
glass
strand
line
consisting
of
a
complex
of
fibers
or
filaments
that
are
twisted
together
to
form
a
thread
or
a
rope
or
a
cable
textile
machine
a
machine
for
making
textiles
textile
mill
a
factory
for
making
textiles
Venetian
glass
fine
glassware
made
near
Venice
watch
glass
laboratory
glassware,
a
shallow
glass
dish
used
as
an
evaporating
surface
or
to
cover
a
beaker
water
clock
clepsydra
water
glass
clock
that
measures
time
by
the
escape
of
water
water
gauge
water
gage
water
glass
gauge
for
indicating
the
level
of
water
in
e.g.
a
tank
or
boiler
or
reservoir
water
glass
a
glass
for
drinking
water
strand
a
pattern
forming
a
unity
within
a
larger
structural
whole,
he
tried
to
pick
up
the
strands
of
his
former
life,
I
could
hear
several
melodic
strands
simultaneously
glass
ceiling
a
ceiling
based
on
attitudinal
or
organizational
bias
in
the
work
force
that
prevents
minorities
and
women
from
advancing
to
leadership
positions
pheasant
under
glass
a
dish
of
roast
pheasant
served
in
a
manner
characteristic
of
expensive
restaurants
Strand
a
street
in
west
central
London
famous
for
its
theaters
and
hotels
strand
a
poetic
term
for
a
shore
(as
the
area
periodically
covered
and
uncovered
by
the
tides)
glass
cutter
glassutter
glassworker
glazier
glazer
someone
who
cuts
flat
glass
to
size
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