akıbüküm,büküm

listen to the pronunciation of akıbüküm,büküm
Турецкий язык - Английский Язык
(Nükleer Bilimler) buckling
A young male domestic goat of between one and two years.Technical Development Committee of the National Veterinary Association of Great Britain and Ireland, The Husbandry and Diseases of Goats, published 1950, page 6: “Goatling’ refers to a female yearling; ‘buckling’ to a male yearling.” “buckling” in Robert Alan Lewis, CRC Dictionary of Agricultural Sciences, CRC Press (2002), ISBN 0-8493-2327-4, page 220: “a male goat, 1 to 2 years of age”. W. A. Greig and George Amos Banham, Banham’s The Veterinary Surgeons’ Vade Mecum (formerly Veterinary Posology and Other Information), Baillière, Tindall and Cox (1952), page 166: “a male between one and two years of age”

I milk the goats and put wethers (the castrated bucklings) in the freezer with ducks, chickens, rabbits, and lambs.

Smoked herring
The action of collapsing under pressure or stress
The bending of a building material as a result of wear and tear or contact with a substance such as water
Bowing or lateral deflection of compression springs when compressed, related to the slenderness ration (L/D)
Lateral Deflection; to Bend or Warp under an External Load
present participle of buckle
sudden out-of-plane deformation of slender members or thin-walled structures under compressive loading
A failure usually characterized by fiber deflection rather than breaking because of compressive action
Structural failure by gross lateral deflection of a slender element under bending stress, such as the sideward buckling of a long, slender column or the buckling of a beam in the lower center of its span
Mode of failure under compression of a structural component that is thin (see shell structure) or much longer than wide (e.g., post, column, leg bone). Leonhard Euler first worked out in 1757 the theory of why such members buckle. The definition by Thomas Young of the elastic modulus significantly propelled building construction science forward. The elastic theory formed the basis of structural analysis until World War II, when the behaviour of bomb-damaged buildings forced the modification of some of the theory's underlying assumptions. See also post-and-beam system
bowing or lateral deflection of compression springs when compressed, related to the slenderness ratio (L/D)
A mode of structural response characterized by an out-of-plane material deflection due to compressive action on the structural element involved In advanced composites, buckling may take the form not only of conventional general instability and local instability but also a micro-instability of individual fibers
A failure mode usually characterized by fiber deflection rather than breaking under compressive action
A folding into hills and valleys
Wavy; curling, as hair
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