Port etymology. Associations to the word “Port. In the dictionary Complete accentuated paradigm according to A. A. Zaliznya

See also `Port` in other dictionaries

1. Poem by Mayakovsky.
2. The ship is assigned to it.
3. In a personal computer there can be a maximum of three parallel and four sequential.
4. Sea Gate.
5. Place for mooring of vessels.
6. Story by Vl.Nabokov.
7. Cable connection channel for the computer.

Port port, p about the mouth, about the port, in the port; pl. mouths, -o in

Russian word stress. - M.: ENAS.

M.V. Zarva.

2001.

Port I. PORT I a, m. port m., English. port, German Port

. A place near the shore, usually with protected water space, specially equipped for mooring ships

. BAS-1. Nowadays, except for the Arkhangelsk port, there is no place where it is possible to transport ship's muniments, so it would be very profitable for people to have the opportunity to trade to other ports. 1711. AK 4 13. As long as they suspect our close connection here, they will not cancel this proclamation and will make it difficult for our squadron to enter the local ports. 1786. AB 9 473. A country with ports (seaside marinas). Stroynovsky 1817... Port a place for building, mooring, equipping, loading and unloading or repairing marine or river boats, sheltered from wind, waves, and ice drift. Pools can be natural, in bays, river mouths and other places protected from sea waves, or artificial, when part of the water area near the coast is protected from the action of waves or wind artificial structures. The main conditions for a good boat are ease of entry and exit, a sufficiently spacious water area, and sufficient depth for vessels with

deepest draft , convenient embankments equipped with facilities for loading and unloading, warehouses for storing goods, convenient rail tracks, facilities for repairing ships, pulling them out of the water and inspecting them - slipways and docks, and other devices that facilitate unhindered... Port E and C noun

cm. _Appendix II About the port; in Port pl. ports pl. And

ports ports ports ports

ports by ports oh, in ports

The bells are ringing, The harbinger of joy, not disaster,And overP O

mouth

...

. A place near the shore, usually with protected water space, specially equipped for mooring ships I.

, like a heavy groan, A roar of delight and greetings can be heard.(1965). He studied at the Tallinn Polytechnic Institute (1940-41 and 1945-50). Teaches at the Art Institute of the Estonian SSR (since 1961). Chairman of the Union of Architects of the Estonian SSR (since 1955). Works: planning of residential areas of Mustamäe (1963-1974) and Lasnamäe (since 1964), building of the Central Committee Communist Party Estonian SSR (1968), Viru Hotel (1972; State Prize of the Estonian SSR, 1972) - all with co-authors, in Tallinn; master plan of Tallinn (with co-authors; approved in 1971). Awarded 2 orders and medals.

word">Port `Dmitriev's Explanatory Dictionary`

port

[building] noun, m., used compare often

Morphology: (no) what? port, what? port, (see) what? port, how? port, about what? about the port And in Port; pl. What? ports And ports, (no) what? ports And ports, what? ports And ports, (see) what? ports And ports, how? ports And ports, about what? about ports ...

1 . port,

ports,

2 . port,

ports,

(Source: “Complete accentuated paradigm according to A. A. Zaliznyak”)


PORT

(French port, from Latin portus - harbor, pier) - 1) a section of the coast with the adjacent water area and a complex of structures and devices for loading and unloading ships, supplying them with fuel, water, etc., repairs and other services. services. Distinguish sea ​​ports, river ports, combined ports and ports of refuge. There are trade items (see Art. Merchant navy) and military. Trade ships are divided into cargo (general purpose and specialized for certain cargoes) and passenger (often combined with cargo). Points are characterized by: throughput capacity, cargo or passenger turnover, depth at the approaches and at the berths, length of the berth line, number, carrying capacity and productivity of transshipment facilities, degree of mechanization of port operations, availability of storage facilities for cargo, volume of technical equipment. about...

a sea or river body of water specially equipped for the parking, loading, unloading and repair of ships.

m. pier, harbor, place for the arrival and mooring of ships. Military port or commercial port. Head of the port. port city. Port officials. | A port, a ship's embrasure, a window in the side to allow a cannon barrel to pass through. In case of strong waves, the lower ports close. | Portico, semi-portico, small windows on the side of the ship for light. Portofranco avg. inclined a port into which overseas goods are admitted duty-free, a free pier.

port

-A , sentence about the port , in Port , pl. ports , -ov , m.

A specially equipped place for parking, loading, unloading and repairing ships.

Sea port. River port. Trade port.

The port and the city are unusually lively for a weekday. Stepanov, Port Arthur.

We are going to the port - a huge harbor, docks, shipyards, dozens of steamships and hundreds of small fishing boats at the pier. M. Koltsov, Spanish diary.

PORT (French port - from Latin portus - harbor, pier), a section of the seashore, lake or river with an adjacent water area (water area), usually protected from the effects of waves and equipped for ship parking, cargo storage, loading and unloading and other works

1) wallet, 2) briefcase, 3) leather coat

M.V. Zarva. Port, -A, PORTV A GIN, -A, PORTVES ABOUT TO, -shk A, P ABOUT RTVIK, -A, PORTV I Sh, -A, PORTVIASH ABOUT TO, -shk A, P ABOUT RTIC, -A, PORTOG A Z, -A, m. , PORTV A GO, several , Wed, PORTV I GA, -And, PORT I GA, -And, and. Port wine.

Dictionary of Russian argot. - GRAMOTA.RU.

port

V. S. Elistratov.

2002.

sea ​​gate, river gate, pier

. A place near the shore, usually with protected water space, specially equipped for mooring ships Dictionary of Russian synonyms

Harbor, pier - a section of the seashore or lake, river with an adjacent water area, usually protected from the effects of waves, equipped for the parking of ships, warehousing and processing of goods.

a sea or river body of water specially equipped for the parking, loading, unloading and repair of ships.

Port

1. Port hermetically sealed cutouts in the sides of ships. port, -A, pl. proposal m. about the port, in the port; ports, -ov; [French port] A specially equipped place for parking, loading, unloading and repairing ships. Sea, river village Torgovy p. Military item Come to the village Large p. Steamships are loading at the port. The ship left the port. P. ship's registration(the one in which it is based). // P. destination

(the one where the ship is heading).

port A seaside city with such a specially equipped place for parking, loading, unloading and repairing ships. A, about the port, in the port, pl, -y and -y, -ov, m. 1. A place with a protected water space, specially equipped for parking, loading, unloading and repair of ships, as well as a city by the sea with such equipped water space. Morskoy village. Rechnoy village. Torgovy village. The ship's home address (the one in which it is based). Destination destination (the one to which the ship departs). P. Odessa. 2. A complex of services and facilities involved in the reception and dispatch, unloading, loading and repair of ships. Work in the port. Harbor captain (port manager). 3. Same as airport. Air port - airport. II adj. port, -aya, oh. P. city (with a seaport). Borrowing in the Peter the Great era from the French. language in which port lat. portus. - tzh. Cm. porch 2004

port, about the port, in the port, pl. ports and (colloquially) ports, m. (French port). 1. a place with an enclosed water space, specially equipped for parking, loading and unloading of ships, harbor. Enter the port. Sea port. River port. Military port. Trading port. || trans. Seaport. 2. A hole in the side of the ship for guns (naval). A natural port is a place suitable for the mooring of ships due to natural conditions. An air port is a place specially equipped for berthing and parking of airplanes and airships.

(from lat. portus). 1) pier, harbor, a place protected from storms and convenient for ships to anchor. 2) any coastal city in which commercial ships are built. 3) a hole in the side of the ship for a cannon muzzle. 4) a shutter covering this hole.

PORT, noun. A complex of specially equipped coastal facilities for mooring, loading, unloading and servicing ships (in this meaning, declination type 1e is used)

PORT, noun. Locality, having such a complex

PORT, noun. Same as airport

PORT, noun. Morsk. a hermetically sealed opening in the side of a ship, intended for cargo operations, for the entry and exit of passengers, or for firing from onboard guns

PORT, noun. Comp. device, as well as its connector, through which the computer connects to peripheral equipment

PORT, noun. Prog. same as I/O port; a cell in a computer that has a specific address and is intended for exchanging information between a computer program and an external device via a port

PORT, noun. Rough fabric (hemp, linen)?

HOME PORT, Stable combination. Morsk. port where the ship is registered

Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary

PORT, port, about the port, in the port, many. ports and (colloquially) ports, m. (French port). 1. a place with an enclosed water space, specially equipped for parking, loading and unloading of ships, harbor. Enter the port. Sea port. River port. Military port. Trading port. || trans. Seaport. 2. A hole in the side of the ship for guns (naval). A natural port is a place suitable for the mooring of ships due to natural conditions. An air port is a place specially equipped for berthing and parking of airplanes and airships.

Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

PORT, m. pier, harbour, place for the arrival and mooring of ships. Military port or commercial port. Head of the port. Port city. Port officials. | A port, a ship's embrasure, a window in the side to allow a cannon barrel to pass through. In case of strong waves, the lower ports close. | Portico, semi-portico, small windows on the side of the ship for light. Portofranco avg. inclined a port into which overseas goods are admitted duty-free, a free pier.

Modern explanatory dictionary

PORT (French port, from Latin portus - harbor, pier), a section of the seashore, lake or river with an adjacent water area (water area), usually protected from the effects of waves and equipped for ship parking, cargo storage, loading and unloading and other works

PORT Mart (b. 1922), Estonian architect, People's Architect of the USSR (1978). Layout of the residential areas of Mustamäe (1963-74), Lasnamäe (1964), Väike-Õismäe (1986; USSR State Prize), Viru Hotel (1972; all in Tallinn), general plan of Tallinn (approved in 1971) (all with co-authors).

Wise words

Whatever word you say is what you will hear in response.

portus- “harbour”, “pier”) - a place on the seashore or river bank, arranged for the parking of ships and vessels and having a complex of structures for their maintenance.

Geography

  • The port is the fourth largest island of the Kerguelen archipelago.
  • Port is a village in Kominternovsky district Odessa region Ukraine.
  • The town of "Port" is a microdistrict of the city of Ochamchira, Abkhazia.
  • Port is a microdistrict of the city of Rzhev, Tver region, Russia.
  • Port is a district of the city of Turku, Finland.

Personalities

  • Port, Valentin (born 1990) - French handball player.
  • Port, Jacques Andre (fr. Jacques André Porte; 1715-1787) - Swiss francophone scientist, professor.
  • Port, Mart Yanovich (Estonian Mart Port; 1922-2012) - Soviet and Estonian architect.
  • Port, Richie Richard Porte; genus. 1985) is an Australian professional road cyclist.

Computer

Port - a connection (physical or logical) through which data is received and sent on a computer.

  • A hardware port is a connector on a computer designed to connect equipment of a certain type.
  • I/O port - an interface for interaction between the processor and peripheral equipment.
  • Port is a digital number that is a parameter of transport protocols (such as TCP and UDP). Allows different programs on the same host to receive data in IP packets independently of each other.
  • Port - slang name for a ported program - its modification and/or compilation for work in a different software and hardware environment

Other

  • Port - a rectangular cutout in the side of a ship (vessel), cut for access; gun port, passenger port, loading port, etc.
  • Airport is a complex of structures designed for receiving, sending, and basing aircraft and air transport services.
  • A spaceport is a complex of structures designed for receiving, sending, basing spacecraft and servicing space transportation.
  • “Port” is a feature film by the Odessa Film Studio (1975) about saving the Odessa port from destruction by the Nazis.

see also

  • A port system is a medical device designed for administering drugs, draining, drawing blood, etc.
  • Porta is the name of the government (office of the grand vizier and divan) of the Ottoman Empire, accepted in the history of diplomacy and international relations.
  • Portas are the same as trousers.
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Excerpt characterizing the Port (meanings)

“Well, goodbye, Marie,” Natasha said. – You know, I’m often afraid that we don’t talk about him (Prince Andrei), as if we are afraid to humiliate our feelings and forget.
Princess Marya sighed heavily and with this sigh acknowledged the truth of Natasha’s words; but in words she did not agree with her.
- Is it possible to forget? - she said.
“It felt so good to tell everything today; and hard, and painful, and good. “Very good,” said Natasha, “I’m sure he really loved him.” That's why I told him... nothing, what did I tell him? – suddenly blushing, she asked.
- Pierre? Oh no! How wonderful he is,” said Princess Marya.
“You know, Marie,” Natasha suddenly said with a playful smile that Princess Marya had not seen on her face for a long time. - He became somehow clean, smooth, fresh; definitely from the bathhouse, do you understand? - morally from the bathhouse. Is it true?
“Yes,” said Princess Marya, “he won a lot.”
- And a short frock coat, and cropped hair; definitely, well, definitely from the bathhouse... dad, it used to be...
“I understand that he (Prince Andrei) did not love anyone as much as he did,” said Princess Marya.
– Yes, and it’s special from him. They say that men are friends only when they are very special. It must be true. Is it true that he doesn't resemble him at all?
- Yes, and wonderful.
“Well, goodbye,” Natasha answered. And the same playful smile, as if forgotten, remained on her face for a long time.

Pierre could not fall asleep for a long time that day; He walked back and forth around the room, now frowning, pondering something difficult, suddenly shrugging his shoulders and shuddering, now smiling happily.
He thought about Prince Andrei, about Natasha, about their love, and was either jealous of her past, then reproached her, then forgave himself for it. It was already six o'clock in the morning, and he was still walking around the room.
“Well, what can we do? If you can’t do without it! What to do! So, this is how it should be,” he said to himself and, hastily undressed, went to bed, happy and excited, but without doubts and indecisions.
“We must, strange as it may be, no matter how impossible this happiness is, we must do everything in order to be husband and wife with her,” he said to himself.
Pierre, a few days before, had set Friday as the day of his departure for St. Petersburg. When he woke up on Thursday, Savelich came to him for orders about packing his things for the road.
“How about St. Petersburg? What is St. Petersburg? Who's in St. Petersburg? – he asked involuntarily, albeit to himself. “Yes, something like that a long time ago, long ago, even before this happened, I was planning to go to St. Petersburg for some reason,” he remembered. - From what? I'll go, maybe. How kind and attentive he is, how he remembers everything! - he thought, looking at Savelich’s old face. “And what a pleasant smile!” - he thought.

A ship's embrasure, a window in the side, for allowing a cannon barrel to pass out. In case of strong waves, the lower ports close. | Port IR, semi-portico, small windows on the side of the ship for light. Port offranco avg. inclined a port into which overseas goods are admitted duty-free, a free pier.

In Ozhegov's dictionary

PORT, -a, about the port, in port, plural, -s and -s, -ov, m. 1. Place with protected water space, specially equipped for parking, loading, unloading and repair of ships, and city by the sea with such equipped water space. Nautical Rechnoy village, Torgovy village, the ship's home address (the one in which it is based). Destination destination (the one to which the ship departs). P. Odessa. 2. A set of services and facilities involved in the reception and dispatch, unloading, loading and repair of ships. To work in port. Harbor captain (port manager). 3. Same as airport. Air port - airport. || adj. port, -aya, oh. P. city(with seaport).

In Efremova's dictionary

In Vasmer Max's dictionary

I. I “coarse fabric (hemp, linen)”, trousers pl., ports pl. "pants made of rough linen", old, tailor, Ukrainian, blr. port "hemp or linen thread; linen scarf", other Russian. pirt "piece of fabric, clothing, bedspread", pent wines. pl. “pants” (Dan. Zat., XII century, 31; see also Srezn. II, 1754 et seq.), Old Slav. prishte ῥάκος (Supr.), Russian-tslav. prътъ ἱμάτιον (Georg. Amart.), Bulgarian. partushina "worn clothes", Serbohorvian. prten "linen", Slovenian. pr̀t, gen. n. pŕta "canvas", Czech. prt, Polish part "coarse cloth, linen".
Praslav. *ръrtъ is associated with flogging; see Meillet, Ét. 351; Convert II, 111; Mladenov 539; Petersson, Ar. Arm. Stud. 131. Less probably borrowing from Turk., Wed. tour. pirtu "worn out, torn dress, rags" (Radlov 4, 1313), which suggests Denis(Mél. Boyer 98 et seq.). Unreliable Also rapprochement from lit. spartas "tie", contrary to Matzenauer (LF 14, 168 et seq.).
II II, b. p. -a "harbour, place landings, pier", first from Shafirov, 1702 (Smirnov 233). Borrowed through English port or German Port (already in the Middle Ages; see Schulz-Basler 2, 597) from French. port from Latin portus.

In the dictionary D.N. Ushakova

PORT, port, about the port, in the port, many. ports and ( simple ) ports, (·husband. French
1. port). Nautical A place with an enclosed body of water, specially equipped for parking, loading and unloading of ships, harbor. Enter the port. port. A place with an enclosed body of water, specially equipped for parking, loading and unloading of ships, harbor. Enter the port. River Military ·port. Military
| trade trans. Port
2. city. Hole
on board the ship for guns (marine). Natural

port - a place suitable for the mooring of ships due to natural conditions. An air port is a place specially equipped for berthing and parking of airplanes and airships.

In the Dictionary of Synonyms

sea ​​gate, river gate, pier

In the Encyclopedia Dictionary (French port, from Latin portus - harbor, pier), plot shores seas, lakes or rivers with the adjacent water area (water area), usually protected

from the effects of waves and equipped for parking ships, storing cargo, loading and unloading and other works. --- March (b. 1922), Estonian architect, People's Architect of the USSR (1978). Layout of the residential areas of Mustamäe (1963-74), Lasnamäe (1964), Väike-Õismäe (1986; USSR State Prize), Viru Hotel (1972; all in Tallinn), general plan of Tallinn (approved in 1971) (all with co-authors).

abadan, outport, agadir, adelaide, aqaba, acapulco, bay, baltimore, belfast, boston, bristol, valparaiso, vancouver, varna, vladivostok, wroclaw, wurzburg, harbour, le Havre, halifax, hamilton, hanover, kaohsiung, seaport, glasgow, Davao, Dhaka, Dammam, Dar es Salaam, Jeddah, Doha, Douala, Dubai, Dudinka, Durban, Dusseldorf, Yeysk, Zanzibar, Igarka, Izmir, Incheon, Yokohama, Kawasaki, Kagoshima, Kazan, Calcutta, Cagliari, Kansas city, Cardiff, Castries, Quebec, Cape Town, Cologne, Kerch, Kiev, Kinshasa, Klaipeda, Cleveland, Kobe, Colombo, Conakry, Constanta, Copenhagen, Krasnoyarsk, Kronstadt, Lagos, Liverpool, Lima, Linz, Lyon, Lisbon, Lome, Losport, Luanda, Lubeck, Madras, Malaga, Malacca, Male, Manchester, Maputo, Maracaibo, Marseille, Melbourne, Minneapolis, Mogadishu, Montreal, Montevideo, Moscow, Murmansk, Nanjing, Naples, Nefteport, Nizhnevartovsk, Nizhnekamsk, Nizhny Novgorod, Nice, New Orleans, Norfolk, Nouakchott, Nuku'alofa, New York, Newport News, New Haven, Odessa, Auckland, Omsk, Osaka, Oslo, Ostend, Ottawa, Ochakov, Pavlodar, Palermo, Panama, Pantelleria, Paramaribo, Perth, Pechora, Phnom Penh, Poronaysk, Portland, Port Moresby, Porto Novo, Port-au-Prince, Port of Spain, Port Said, Porto Alegre, Praia, Marina, Providence, Busan, Puerto, Reykjavik, range , Recife , riverport , Riga , Rio de Janeiro , Rosario , Rostov-on-Don , sprout , Rotterdam , pollock , Salvador , Thessaloniki , Samara , San Diego , Santo Domingo , San Francisco , San Juan , Saratov , Sevastopol , Severomorsk , Semipalatinsk , sendai , Saint John , Saint John With, st george's, st. , Tver, Tiba, Tobolsk, Tolyatti, Tomsk, tradeport, Toronto, Trieste, Tripoli, Tuapse, Toulon, Toulouse, Tunisia, Turkmenbashi, Tyumen, Tianjin, Ujungpandang, Ulyanovsk, Wuhan, FAO, Feodosia, Philadelphia, Fortaleza, Frankfurt -Odere, Freetown, Fukuoka, Funafuti, Fuzhou, Khabarovsk, Hyderabad, Haifa, Hanoi, Khanty-Mansiysk, Hangzhou, Kharkiv, Helsinki, Kherson, Hiroshima, Honiara, Houston, Qingdao, Cincinnati, Charleston, Cheboksary, Cherepovets, Chernigov, ov , Zhenjiang, Chicago, Chittagong, Chongqing, Shanghai, Szczecin, Edinburgh, Kuwait City, Engels, Yakutsk, Yalta, Yangon, Yaroslavl, Yatsushiro

In the dictionary Complete accentuated paradigm according to A. A. Zaliznya

1 . port,
ports,
port,
ports,
port,
ports,
port,
ports,
port,
ports,
port,
ports
2 . port,
ports,
port,
ports,
port,
ports,
port,
ports,
port,
ports,
port,
ports

 

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