horse 1) asb (#); 2) asbak (#) Fr.: cheval 1) A large, solid-hoofed, herbivorous quadruped, Equus caballus,
domesticated since prehistoric times. Horse, O.E. hors, from P.Gmc. *khursa- (cf. M.Du. ors, Du. ros, O.H.G. hros, Ger. Roß "horse"), of unknown origin; → latitude. Asb "horse," from Mid.Pers. asp; O.Pers. asa- "horse;" Av. aspa- "horse," aspā- "mare," aspaiia- "pertaining to the horse;" cf. Skt. áśva- "horse, steed;" Gk. hippos; L. equus; O.Ir. ech; Goth. aihwa-; O.E. eoh "horse;" PIE base *ekwo- "horse." |
horse latitudes varunâhâ-ye asbi Fr.: calmes tropicaux, latitudes des chevaux The belts of latitude over the oceans, located around 30° north and south of the equator, characterized by predominantly calm or light winds and hot and dry weather. → horse; → latitude. |
Horsehead Nebula (NGC 2024) miq-e sar-e asb, ~ asbsar Fr.: nébuleuse de la Tête de Cheval A huge → dark cloud of → interstellar dust that is shaped like a horse's head. It is luminous at its edges because it is in front of the bright → emission nebula IC 434. Its height and width are about 5 and 2.5 → light-years respectively. It is located at a distance of about 1500 light-years in the constellation → Orion. Also known as Barnard 33. |
horsepower (hp) asb-e boxâr (#) Fr.: cheval-vapeur A unit that is used to measure the → power of engines and motors. Asb-e boxâr "vapor horse," translation of Fr. cheval-vapeur, from asb, → horse, + boxâr, → vapor. |
horseshoe mounting barnešând-e na'li Fr.: monture en fer de cheval An equatorial mounting in which the upper end of the polar axis frame is made into a horseshoe shape to accommodate the telescope tube. Horseshoe, from → horse + shoe, from O.E. scoh "shoe," from P.Gmc. *skokhaz (cf. Dan., Swed. sko, O.S. skoh, Du. schoen, O.H.G. scuoh, Ger. Schuh); → mounting. Barnešând, → mounting; na'l "horseshoe, shoe," loanword from Ar. |
horseshoe orbit madâr-e na'li Fr.: orbite en fer à cheval A periodic orbit which passes around the → Lagrangian points L4, L3, and L5, but neither of the two primaries. This orbit is shaped like a horseshoe when viewed in a reference frame rotating with the primaries. Such orbits occur in the solar system, for example in the case of the satellites → Janus and → Epimetheus, which share the same orbit around → Saturn. The smaller Epimetheus encompasses both the L4 and L5 points associated with the larger Janus and performs a horseshoe orbit relative to Saturn and Janus. The satellites experience a close approach every 4 years during which their orbits are exchanged. → tadpole orbit. → horseshoe mounting; → orbit. |