(Askeri) HAVAN: Yivli veya yivsiz bir namlusu bulunan, ağızdan dolma silah. Menzili normal olarak obüsünkinden kısa, atış açısı daha büyüktür. Namlu uzunluğu çapın 10 ile 20 katı arasındadır. Ayrıca bakınız: "gun; howitzer"
(Askeri) (HOWTAR) (4.2") 107 MM. LİK (4.2") HAVAN (HOWTAR): 75 mm. lik dağ obüs kundağına monte edilmiş 4.2 inçlik havan namlusunun Deniz piyade sınıfı tarafından tadil edilmiş kaidesi
(Askeri) HAVAN TAŞIMA ARACI: Bir havanın monte edildiği veya bir havanı taşıyan araç. Bir yanı tırtıllı kariyer üzerine monte edilmiş olan havan genel olarak, araç üzerinden ateş eder
(Askeri) HAVAN YAN DÜZELTME LEVHASI: Rüzgar, sürüklenme vesaire için yapılacak düzeltmeleri ve bir havan istikamet açısına uygulanacak ayarlamayı bulmak için faydalanılan kontrol aleti
(Askeri) HAVAN ÇUKURU: Havanı yerleştirmek için hazırlanan amplasman. Bu çukur; genel olarak, örtü, gizlenme ve silahın ateş edebileceği sağlam bir kaide temin etmek için hazırlanır
A muzzle-loading, indirect fire weapon with either a rifled or smooth bore. It usually has a shorter range than a howitzer, employs a higher angle of fire, and has a tube with a length of 10 to 20 calibers. See also gun; howitzer. JP-1-02
The material which fills the gaps between the stones or bricks in a masonry wall and binds them together Its principal ingredients are usually aggregate (eg gritty sand) and a binder (eg lime putty) in the ratio of three to one, with small proportions of other additives (eg brick dust) as required
bricks and mortar: see brick. Short-range artillery piece with a short barrel and low muzzle velocity that fires an explosive projectile in a high-arched trajectory. Large mortars were used against fortifications and in siege operations from medieval times through World War I. Since 1915, small portable models have been standard infantry weapons, especially for mountain or trench warfare. Medium mortars, with a caliber of about 3-4 in. (70-90 mm), a range of up to about 2.5 mi (4 km), and a bomb weight of up to 11 lbs (5 kg), are now widely used. Material used in building construction to bond brick, stone, tile, or concrete blocks into a structure. The ancient Romans are credited with its invention. Mortar consists of sand mixed with cement and water. The resulting substance must be sufficiently flexible to flow slightly but not collapse under the weight of the masonry units. Before the 19th-century invention of portland cement, masons used thin joints of lime mortar, which required greater precision than the thicker joints of portland-cement mortar and were not as strong. For tilework, a very thin mortar called grout is used. Pointing is the process of finishing a masonry joint
a short cannon used to fire projectiles with low muzzle velocities at high angles The trench mortar is an infantry weapon, the larger mortars are used by both infantry and field artillery
a mixture of cementing material with fine aggregate and water Mortar is used to bed and bind quarried stones, bricks, or other solid materials together or to produce a plastic coating on such constructions This coating is also termed floated or surface face, mortar coat, mortar finish, or parapet
A mixture of cement paste and fine aggregate; in fresh concrete, the material occupying the interstices among particles of coarse aggregate; in masonry construction, mortar may contain masonry cement, or may contain hydraulic cement with lime (and possibly other admixtures) to afford greater plasticity and workability than are attainable with standard hydraulic cement mortar
Mortar is a mixture of sand, water, and cement or lime which is put between bricks to hold them together
Military A muzzle-loading, indirect fire weapon with either a rifled or smooth bore. It usually has a shorter range than a howitzer, employs a higher angle of fire, and has a tube with a length of 10 to 20 calibers. See also gun; howitzer. JP-1-02
The material that binds together courses of masonry It is composed of cement, sand, water, and usually, lime
A building material made by mixing lime, cement, or plaster of Paris, with sand, water, and sometimes other materials; used in masonry for joining stones, bricks, etc
A mixture of cementitious materials, fine aggregate, and water, used to bond masonry units together
a muzzle-loading high-angle gun with a short barrel that fires shells at high elevations for a short range a bowl-shaped vessel in which substances can be ground and mixed with a pestle used as a bond in masonry or for covering a wall plaster with mortar; "mortar the wall
A stone or wooden bowl-like artifact in which seeds, berries, meat, and other products are ground or pulverized with a pestle Mortars occur in bedrock outcrops or as portable items (Moratto 1984: 592)
Mortier à la chaux A mixture of sand, water, and lime used to bind stones together permanently The lime mortar retained its flexibility and so resisted the shocks of battering
A mixture of sand, water, and lime used to bind stones together; as opposed to drylaid masonry
A mortar is a bowl in which you can crush things such as herbs, spices, or grain using a rod called a pestle
{i} cement; grinding vessel; cannon-like device which fires bombs at a high trajectory
A mixture of cementitious materials, fine aggregate and water Mortar is used to bond bricks or blocks
A plastic mixture of cementitious materials, fine aggregate and water See ASTM Specifications C270, C476 Fat Mortar Mortar containing a high percentage of cementitious components High-Bond Mortar Mortar which develops higher bond strengths with masonry units than normally developed with conventional mortar Lean Mortar Mortar which is deficient in cementitious components
a muzzle-loading high-angle gun with a short barrel that fires shells at high elevations for a short range
A mortar is a big gun which fires missiles high into the air over a short distance. He was killed in a mortar attack
A high angle crew served weapon that fired exploding rounds of various sizes U S mortars used in Vietnam were 60mm, 81mm, and 4 2 inch, called a "four duece " NVA used 60mm, 82mm, and 140mm mortars
at high angles of elevation, as 45°, and even higher; so named from its resemblance in shape to the utensil above described
The tube used to fire an aerial shell, or mine Mortars can be constructed from paper, plastic, GRP or metal
A mortar and pestle is a tool used to crush, grind, and mix substances. The pestle is a heavy stick whose end is used for pounding and grinding, and the mortar is a bowl. The substance is ground between the pestle and the mortar
A mortar board is a stiff black cap which has a flat square top with a bunch of threads attached to it. In Britain, mortar boards are sometimes worn on formal occasions by university students and teachers. In the United States, mortar boards are worn by students at graduation ceremonies at high schools, colleges, and universities
Buildings and property for the conduct of business, particularly in the sale of retail goods to the general public. Used to contrast an internet-based sales operation that lacks customer-oriented store fronts and a "traditional" one for which most capital investment might be in the building infrastructure
E-commerce is not the kiss of death for big, traditional brick-and-mortar business. - Judy Kong (2000), in a report on the ICE Conference. Retrieved 2005-03-05.
Refers to traditional, physical, as opposed to digital, structures and vehicles-factories, warehouses, trucks, and retail outlets A brick-and-mortar company is one with little or no significant Web presence
Buildings and property for the conduct of business, particularly in the sale of retail goods to the general public. Used to contrast an internet-based sales operation that lacks customer-oriented store fronts and a "traditional" one for which most capital investment might be in the building infrastructure
Buildings and property for the conduct of business, particularly in the sale of retail goods to the general public. Used to contrast an internet-based sales operation that lacks customer-oriented store fronts and a "traditional" one for which most capital investment might be in the building infrastructure
(Ticaret) Bricks-and-clicks is a business model by which a company integrates both offline (bricks) and online (clicks) presences. It is also known as click-and-mortar or clicks-and-bricks, as well as bricks, clicks and flips, flips referring to catalogs
A traditional business operation that commonly deals with its customers face-to-face in an office or store that the business owns or rents (e g a retail store or a bank branch) Web-based businesses usually have lower costs and greater flexibility than brick-and-mortar operations
refers to a company with real assets, such as buildings, which are made out of bricks and mortar Often refers to "old economy" companies with factories and shops Contrasts with Clicks and mortar and Bricks and clicks, which are old economy companies with an internet presence
Slang referring to businesses that exist in the real world, as opposed to just the cyber world Examples include bricks-and-mortar retail outlets, bricks-and-mortar warehouses, and bricks-and-mortar law firms
{i} building material comprising of bricks laid with mortar; company that has physical plant and facilities for running its business in the sale of retail merchandise to the public; business site that has a physical business or retail premises in the real world (as opposed to only a virtual site on the Internet)
Slang describing a business that has successfully integrated its online cyber-world existence with its offline real-world existence For instance, an online appliance store that allows customers to schedule repair visits at its Web site would be an example of a clicks-and-mortar application