bedrock sangbastar (#) Fr.: socle Solid → rock present beneath any → soil, → sediment, or other surface cover. In some locations it may be exposed at earth's surface. Bedrock, from bed (O.E. bed, from P.Gmc. *badjam "sleeping place dug in the ground;" PIE *bhedh- "to dig, pierce") + → rock. Sangbastar, from sang "stone, rock," → stone, + bastar "bed" (Mid.Pers. vistarak, cognate with Mod.Pers. gostar "a bed; spreading; scatterer," Av. star-, starəta- "spread," from star- "to spread," Skt. strnâti). |
brecciated rock sang-e berešidé Fr.: roche bréchifiée A rock formed by the process of → brecciation. → brecciated; → rock. |
igneous rock sang-e âzarin (#) Fr.: roche ignée A → rock formed by the solidification of molten material that originated within the Earth (as → magma or → lava). Igneous, from L. igneus "of fire, fiery," from ignis "fire," from PIE *egni- (cf. Skt. agni- "fire, sacrificial fire," O.C.S. ogni, Lith. ugnis "fire"); → rock. Sang "stone, rock," → stone; âzarin "fiery," from âzar, variants âtaš, taš, from Mid.Pers. âtaxš, âtur "fire;" Av. ātar-, āθr- "fire," singular nominative ātarš-; O.Pers. ātar- "fire;" Av. āθaurvan- "fire priest;" Skt. átharvan- "fire priest;" cf. L. ater "black" ("blackened by fire"); Arm. airem "burns;" Serb. vatra "fire;" PIE base *āter- "fire" + -in adj. suffix. |
rock bard (#), sang (#) Fr.: roche 1) A large mass of → stone forming a hill, cliff,
promontory, or the like. M.E. rokk(e), from O.Fr. ro(c)que, roche (cf. Sp., Provençal roca, It. rocca, M.L. rocca, V.L. *rocca, of uncertain origin. Bard (Dehxodâ) "rock, stone," used in a large part of Western Iran, specifically in Lori and Kurd., related to Kurd. pal "rock, stone;" cf. Gk. poros "rock." Sang, → stone. |
rock crystal bolur-e sangi, bard-bolur Fr.: cristal de roche Pure natural crystalline form of → silica, SiO2, which is transparent and colorless. |
rocket roket Fr.: fusée A projectile driven by reaction propulsion that carries its own propellants.
→ missile = mušak ( From It. rocchetto "a rocket," literally "a bobbin," diminutive of rocca "a distaff," with reference to its shape. |
rocket astronomy axtaršenâsi bâ roket Fr.: astronomie par fusée The study of celestial bodies in the wavelengths that are almost completely absorbed by the atmosphere, by using a rocket to carry instruments above 250 km to measure the searched for phenomena. |
rocketry roket šenâsi, roketgari Fr.: fuséologie The science of rocket design, development, and flight. → rocket + -ry a noun suffix. Roket šenâsi, from roket, → rocket, + šenâsi, → -logy; roketgari with suffix -gari, from -gar, → -or. |
rockoon roklon Fr.: fusée-sonde lancée à partir d'un ballon A rocket launched from a balloon at a pre-determined height and fired by a ground-controlled radio relay when some particular event, e.g. a solar flare, occurs. From rocket + balloon. From roket + bâlon, → ballon astronomy. |
sedimentary rock sang-e nehešti Fr.: roche sédimentaire A rock composed of materials that were transported to their present position by wind or water. → Sandstone, → shale, and → limestone are sedimentary rocks. → sedimentary; → rock. |