Приклади вживання Lazy dog Англійська мовою та їх переклад на Українською
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The Lazy Dog.
Move it, you lazy dogs!
The Lazy Dog in automatic door.
Two designs of the Lazy Dog bomb.
The Lazy Dog program was still ongoing in the late 1950s.
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.".
Wow, I have seen some lazy dogs before, but this GSD takes the cake.
Lazy Dog projectiles could be dropped from almost any kind of flying vehicle.
FEAF immediately ordered 16,000 Lazy Dog weapon systems.
Lazy Dog munitions had precursors in air-dropped flechettes dating from World War I.
A variant version of the"Lazy Dog" projectile was developed for the recoilless rifle.
Lazy Dog projectiles were used primarily during the Korean and the Vietnam Wars.
AD-5N Skyraider, BuNo 132521, Lazy Dog dispenser, China Lake, 13 Apr 1961.
Lazy Dog anti-personnel missiles were designed to spray enemy troops with small projectiles with three times the force of standard air-burst bombs.
Description this is a cute Lazy dog, it is enjoying Summer, you love dogs. .
Project Lazy Dog continued throughout 1952 to determine the optimum characteristics for stable dispersion containers and the feasibility of substituting a Lazy Dog warhead for the explosive nose of the Matador missile.
I heard all tail sectioners were lazy dogs that slept all day their own shit.
Experimental Lazy Dog projectiles of various shapes and sizes were tested at Air Proving Ground, Eglin AFB, Florida, in late 1951 and early 1952.
In the Englishlanguage,the best-known pangram is"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog", although the one that makes a more economical use of the alphabet is"Pack my box with five dozen liquor jugs".
Shape 5, an improved basic Lazy Dog slug, had the force of a .50 caliber bullet and could penetrate 24 inches(61 cm) of packed sand.[4] Shape 2 could penetrate 12 inches(30 cm) of sand- twice as much as a .45 caliber slug fired point blank.[4].
They contained no explosive charge but as they fell they would develop significant kinetic energy[2] making them lethal and able to easily penetrate soft cover such as jungle canopy,several inches of sand or light armor.[3] Lazy Dog munitions were simple and cheap; they could be dropped in huge numbers in a single pass.[3] Like many other weapons, however, their effects were often gruesome and indiscriminate.
Shape 5, an improved basic Lazy Dog slug, had the force of a .50 caliber bullet and could penetrate 24 inches(61 cm) of packed sand.
During the Korean and Vietnam Wars,there was limited use of the Lazy Dog bomb, a kinetic projectile shaped like a conventional bomb but only about 25.4 mm(1") long and 9.525 mm(3/8") diameter.
A Lazy Dog(sometimes called a Red Dot Bomb or Yellow Dog Bomb[1]) is a small, unguided kinetic projectile typically about 1.75 inches(44 mm) in length, 0.5 inches(13 mm) in diameter, and weighing about 0.7 ounces(20 g).[1].
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" is an English-language pangram- a sentence that contains all of the letters of the alphabet.
Originally an Armament Laboratory program codenamed Lazy Dog, the weapon's development involved Delco Products Corporation, F&F Mold and Die Works, Inc., Haines Designed Products, and Master Vibrator Company of Dayton.[4] The project objective was to design and test free-fall missiles and their dispensing units for use in bombers and fighters.
Regardless of how they were released into the air, each"Lazy Dog" projectile would develop an enormous amount of kinetic energy as it fell, penetrating nearly any material upon hitting the ground.
Originally an Armament Laboratory program codenamed Lazy Dog, the weapon's development involved Delco Products Corporation, F&F Mold and Die Works, Inc., Haines Designed Products, and Master Vibrator Company of Dayton.