0 to go somewhere quickly or be somewhere for only a short time:
1 to press something quickly and quite hard between two objects, especially sharp objects such as teeth or nails:
Josie's hamster nipped me.
2 If there is a nip in the air, the air outside is quite cold:
5 an offensive word for a Japanese person
6 to press something hard between two often sharp objects, such as teeth or the nails on fingers:
This is perhaps not surprising since, though the flux through the nip is different, the film-splitting behaviour (equation 1.1) is the same.
Two large floes were grinding and the ship was nipped twice and lifted several feet.
He imposed both ingoing film thicknesses in terms of the total flux through the nip and an inlet film thickness ratio.
By exploiting the thin-layer limit suggested by the geometry of the nip, the problem is reduced to a nonlinear convection-diffusion equation with one free boundary.
The distribution of pressure, velocity and felt porosity in the nip have therefore traditionally been matters of great debate.
Guided by the above literature, we propose an ensemble-averaged multiphase model which will be applied to the flow in a roll press nip.
The guide rolls collapse the film from a tubular shape and the nip rolls seal the top edge of the bubble.
Fortunately the air was calm; a nip in this heavy ice might have been fatal.
中文繁体
快速去, 快走, 去一會兒…
More中文简体
快速去, 快走, 去一会儿…
MoreEspañol
mordisquear, ir rápidamente, ir corriendo…
MorePortuguês
mordiscar, dar uma saída rápida…
More日本語
軽くかむ, (人)がちょっと出かけてくる…
MoreTürk dili
hafifçe ısırmak, çimdiklemek, dişlemek…
MoreFrançais
mordiller, faire un saut, pincer…
MoreCatalan
mossegar, anar ràpidament…
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