Port etymology. The meaning of the word "Port

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

PORT, noun. Locality, which has such a complex

PORT, noun. Same as airport

PORT, noun. Sea. a hermetically sealed cut-out in the side of the vessel, intended for cargo operations, for the entry and exit of passengers, or for firing from side guns

PORT, noun. Comp. device, as well as its connector, with which the computer is connected to peripheral equipment

PORT, noun. Program same as I/O port; a cell in a computer that has a specific address and is designed to exchange information between a computer program and external device via port

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

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

Explanatory Dictionary of Ushakov

PORT, port, about the port, in the port, pl. ports and (colloquial) ports, m. (fr. port). 1. a place with a closed body of water, specially equipped for parking, loading and unloading ships, a harbor. Enter the port. Sea port. River port. military port. trade port. || trans. Seaport. 2. A hole in the side of the ship for guns (marine). A natural port is a place suitable for anchoring ships under natural conditions. Air port - a place specially equipped for mooring and parking of airplanes, airships.

Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

PORT, m. Pier, harbor, place for the arrival and parking of ships. Military port or commercial port. Port manager. Port city. port officials. | Port, ship's embrasure, a window in the side, for letting the cannon muzzle out. In heavy seas, the lower ports are closed. | Portico, semi-portico, small windows in the side of the ship, for light. Porto Franco avg. unwilling. a port to which overseas goods are admitted duty-free; a free harbor.

Modern explanatory dictionary

PORT (French port, from Latin portus - harbor, pier), a section of the coast of the sea, lake or river with an 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.

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

Wise words

Whatever word you say is the answer you will hear.

Ship embrasure, a window in the side, for letting the cannon muzzle out. In heavy seas, the lower ports are closed. | Portico, semi-portico, small windows in the side of the ship, for light. French port avg. unwilling. a port to which overseas goods are admitted duty-free; a free harbor.

In Ozhegov's dictionary

PORT, -a, about the port, in the port, pl, -s and -s, -ov, m. 1. A place with a protected water space, specially equipped for parking, loading, unloading and repairing ships, and a city by the sea with so equipped water area. Marine settlement. Rechnoy settlement. Trading settlement. P. destination (the one to which the ship is sent). 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. Port captain (head of the port). 3. The same as the airport. Air port - airport. || adj. port, th, oh. P. city (with a seaport).

In the dictionary of Ephraim

In the Fasmer Max Dictionary

I I "coarse fabric (hemp, linen)", trousers pl., ports pl. "pants made of coarse linen", old, tailor, Ukrainian, blr. port "hemp or linen thread; linen scarf", other Russian. part "a piece of cloth, clothes, coverlet", party of wines. pl. "trousers" (Dan. Zat., 12th century, 31; see also Srezn. II, 1754 et seq.), st.-glor. prtishte ῥάκος (Supr.), Russian-tslav. prut ἱμάτιον (Georg. Amart.), Bolg. partushina "worn clothes", Serbohorv. p̏ten "linen", Slovenian. pr̀t, genus. n. pŕta "canvas", Czech. prt, Polish. part "coarse cloth, linen".
Praslav. *ръrtъ is associated with smack; see Meillet, Ét. 351; Converter II, 111; Mladenov 539; Petersson, Ar. arm. Stud. 131. Borrowing from the Türkic is less likely, cf. tour. rurtyu "worn, torn dress, rags" (Radlov 4, 1313), which Denis suggests (Mél. Voyer 98 et seq.). The rapprochement with lit. spartas "string", contrary to Matzenauer (LF 14, 168 et seq.).
II II, genus. n. -a "harbour, landing place, wharf", for the first time by Shafirov, 1702 (Smirnov 233). Loans. through English. port or it. Port (already in the Middle Ages; see Schulz-Basler 2, 597) from the French. port from lat. portus.

In the dictionary D.N. Ushakov

PORT, port, about the port, in the port, pl. ports and ( simple) ports, ·husband. (French port).
1. A place with a closed body of water, specially equipped for parking, loading and unloading ships, a harbor. Enter the port. Sea port. River port. Military ·port. trade ·port.
| trans. Seaport.
2. A hole in the side of the ship for guns (mar.).
A natural port is a place suitable for anchoring ships under natural conditions. Air port - a place specially equipped for mooring and parking of airplanes, airships.

In the dictionary of synonyms

sea ​​gate, river gate, pier

In the Encyclopedia Dictionary

(French port, from Latin portus - harbor, pier), a section of the coast of the sea, lake or river with an 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 .---Mart (b. 1922), Estonian architect, people's architect of the USSR (1978). The layout of the residential areas of Mustamäe (1963-74), Lasnamäe (1964), Väike-Õismäe (1986; State Prize of the USSR), the Viru Hotel (1972; all in Tallinn), the general plan of Tallinn (approved in 1971) (all - from co-authors).

In the dictionary Synonyms 4

abadan, outport, agadir, adelaide, acaba, acapulco, bay, baltimore, belfast, boston, bristol, valparaiso, vancouver, varna, vladivostok, wroclaw, würzburg, harbour, le harbour, halifax, hamilton, hanover, kaohsiung, hydroport, glasgow, davao, dhaka, dammam, dar es salaam, jeddah, doha, duala, dubai, dudinka, durban, dusseldorf, eysk, zanzibar, igarka, izmir, incheon, yokohama, kawasaki, kagoshima, kazan, calcutta, cagliari, kansas City, Cardiff, Castries, Quebec, Cape Town, Cologne, Kerch, Kyiv, 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, Oil Port, Nizhnevartovsk, Nizhnekamsk, Nizhny Novgorod, Nice , new orleans, norfolk, nouakchott, nuku'alofa, new york, newport news, new haven, odessa, auckland, omsk, osaka, oslo, ostende, ottawa, ochakov, pavlodar, palermo, panama, pantelleria, paramaribo, pert, pechora, pnom-stump, poronaisk, portland, port moresby, porto-novo, port-au-prince, port-of-spain, port- Said, Porto Alegre, Praia, Pier, Providence, Busan, Puerto, Reykjavik, Range, Recife, Riverport, Riga, Rio de Janeiro, Rosario, Rostov-on-Don, Rostock, Rotterdam, Saithe, Salvador, Thessaloniki, samara, san diego, santo domingo, san francisco, san juan, saratov, sevastopol, severomorsk, semipalatinsk, sendai, st. john, st. , Sydney, Shimizu, Shimonoseki, Seattle, Sochi, Istanbul, Stockholm, Strasbourg, Suva, Surabaya, Surat, Surgut, Sukhumi, Syzran, Taganrog, Tallinn, Tampa, Tanjungpriok, Tangier, Tartu, Tver, Tiba, Tobolsk, Tolyatti, Tomsk , trade port, toronto, trieste, tripoli, tuapse, toulon, toulouse, tunisia, turkmenbashi, tyumen, tianjin, ujungpandang, ulyanovsk, wuhan, fao, feodosia, philadelphia, fortaleza, frankfurt an der oder, freetown, fukuoka , Funafuti, Fuzhou, Khabarovsk, Hyderabad, Haifa, Hanoi, Khanty-Mansiysk, Hangzhou, Khark, Helsinki, Kherson, Hiroshima, Honiara, Houston, Qingdao, Cincinnati, Charleston, Cheboksary, Cherepovets, Cherkasy, Chernihiv, Zhenjiang, Chicago, Chittagong , Chongqing, Shanghai, Szczecin, Edinburgh, El Kuwait, Engels, Yakutsk, Yalta, Yangon, Yaroslavl, Yatsushiro

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

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

See also `Port` in other dictionaries

1. Mayakovsky's poem.
2. A ship is assigned to him.
3. In a personal computer, there can be a maximum of three parallel and four serial.
4. Sea gates.
5. Parking place for ships.
6. The story of Vl.Nabokov.
7. Cable connection channel at the computer.

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

Russian word stress. - M.: ENAS. M.V. Zarva. 2001 .

Port

I.

PORT I a, m. port m., eng. port, German port . A place near the coast, usually with a protected body of water, specially equipped for the mooring of ships. BAS-1. Today, apart from the port of Arkhangelsk, there is no place where it is possible to transport municipalities by ship, so that for the sake of profit it would be possible for the people to have the opportunity to trade in other ports. 1711. AC 4 13. As long as they suspect our close connection here, they will not cancel this proclamation and make it difficult for our squadron to enter the local ports. 1786. AB 9 473. A country with ports (seaside piers). Stroynovsky 1817...

Port

a place for building, parking, equipping, loading and unloading or repairing marine or river vessels, sheltered from the wind, waves, as well as ice drift. P. can be natural, in bays, estuaries of rivers 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 by artificial structures. The main conditions for good portability are ease of entry and exit, a sufficiently spacious water area, sufficient depth for ships with the greatest draft, convenient embankments equipped with devices for loading and unloading, warehouses for storing goods, convenient rail tracks, devices for repairing ships, pulling them out from water and inspection - boathouses and docks, and other devices that contribute to unhindered ...

Port E and C noun cm. _Annex II

About the port; in the port pl. ports And ports And ports by ports about, in ports

Ringing from the bells

Herald of joy, not disasters,

And over Paboutmouth like a heavy groan,

There is a roar of delight and cheers.

...

Port I

Mart Janovich (born January 4, 1922, Pärnu), Soviet architect, Honored Art Worker of the Estonian SSR (1965). He studied at the Tallinn Polytechnic Institute (1940-41 and 1945-50). He 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 Mustamäe residential areas (1963-1974) and Lasnamäe (since 1964), the building of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Estonian SSR (1968), the Viru Hotel (1972; State Prize of the Estonian SSR, 1972) - all with co-authors, in Tallinn; general plan of Tallinn (with co-authors; approved in 1971). Awarded 2 orders and medals.

word">Port `Explanatory Dictionary of Dmitriev`

port

[construction] noun, m., use comp. often

Morphology: (no) what? port, what? porto, (see) what? port, how? port, about what? about the port And in the 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: "Full accentuated paradigm according to A. A. Zaliznyak")


PORT

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

sea ​​or river body of water specially equipped for mooring, loading, unloading and repair of ships.

m. pier, harbor, place for the arrival and parking of ships. Military port or commercial port. Port manager. Port city. port officials. | Port, ship's embrasure, a window in the side, for letting the cannon muzzle out. In heavy seas, the lower ports are closed. | Portico, semi-portico, small windows in the side of the ship, for light. Porto Franco avg. unwilling. a port to which overseas goods are allowed duty-free; a free harbor.

port

-but , suggestion about the port , in the port , pl. ports , -ov , m.

Specially equipped place for parking, loading, unloading and repair of ships.

Sea port. River port. Trade port.

In the port and in the city, an unusual revival for a weekday. Stepanov, Port Arthur.

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

PORT (French port - from Latin portus - harbor, pier), a section of the coast of the sea, lake or river with an 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.

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

Port PORT, -but, PORTV BUT GIN, -but, PORTVESH ABOUT TO, -shk but, P ABOUT RTVIK, -but, PORTV I W, -but, PORTYASH ABOUT TO, -shk but, P ABOUT RTIK, -but, PORTOG BUT Z, -but, m. , PORTV BUT GO, non-cl. , cf, PORTV I GA, -And, PORT I GA, -And, well. Port wine.

Dictionary of Russian Argo. - GRAMOTA.RU. V. S. Elistratov. 2002 .

port

sea ​​gate, river gate, pier

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 parking ships, warehousing and processing cargo.

Port sea ​​or river body of water specially equipped for mooring, loading, unloading and repair of ships.

hermetically sealed cutouts in the sides of ships.

port

PORT

1. PORT, -but, suggestion about the port, in the port; pl. ports, -ov; m.[French] port] A specially equipped place for parking, loading, unloading and repair of ships. Sea, river Trade p. military p. Come to p. Large p. Ships are loaded in the port. The ship left the port. P. ship registration(the one in which it is based). P. destination(the one where the ship is heading). // Seaside city with such a specially equipped place for parking, loading, unloading and repair of ships.

A, about the port, in the port, pl, -s and -s, -ov, m. space. Marine settlement. Rechnoy settlement. Trade settlement. P. destination (the one to which the ship is sent). 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. Port captain (head of the port). 3. The same as the airport. Air port - airport. II adj. port, th, oh. P. city (with a seaport).

port Loans. in the Petrine era from the French. language, in which port lat. portus- so. Cm. porch. School etymological dictionary of the Russian language. Origin of words. - M.: Bustard N. M. Shansky, T. A. Bobrova 2004

port, about the port, in the port, pl. ports and (colloquial) ports, m. (fr. port). 1. a place with a closed body of water, specially equipped for parking, loading and unloading ships, a harbor. Enter the port. Sea port. River port. military port. trade port. || trans. Seaport. 2. A hole in the side of the ship for guns (marine). A natural port is a place suitable for anchoring ships under natural conditions. Air port - a place specially equipped for mooring and parking of airplanes, airships.

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

portus- "harbor", "pier") - a place on the coast of the sea or river, arranged for the parking of ships and vessels and having a complex of facilities for their maintenance.

Geography

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

Personalities

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

A computer

A port is a connection (physical or logical) through which data is received and sent in a computer.

  • A hardware port is a connector in a computer designed to connect certain types of equipment.
  • I / O port - an interface for the interaction of the processor and peripheral equipment.
  • Port is a numeric 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 - a slang name for a ported program - its modifications and / or compilation to work in a different hardware and software environment

Other

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

see also

  • Port system - a medical device designed for the introduction of drugs, drainage, blood sampling, etc.
  • Porta - accepted in the history of diplomacy and international relations, the name of the government (the office of the grand vizier and the divan) of the Ottoman Empire.
  • Ports are the same as trousers.
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An excerpt characterizing the Port (disambiguation)

“Well, goodbye, Marie,” said Natasha. - You know, I am often afraid that we do not talk about him (Prince Andrei), as if we are afraid to humiliate our feelings, and forget.
Princess Mary sighed heavily, and with that sigh she acknowledged the truth of Natasha's words; but in words she did not agree with her.
– Is it possible to forget? - she said.
- It was so good for me today to tell everything; and hard, and painful, and good. Very well, - said Natasha, - I'm sure that he definitely loved him. From that I told him… nothing that I told him? – suddenly blushing, she asked.
- Pierre? Oh no! How beautiful he is,” said Princess Mary.
“You know, Marie,” Natasha suddenly said with a playful smile, which Princess Mary had not seen on her face for a long time. - He became somehow clean, smooth, fresh; just from the bath, you understand? - morally from the bath. Truth?
“Yes,” said Princess Marya, “he won a lot.
- And a short frock coat, and cropped hair; for sure, well, for sure from the bathhouse ... dad, it happened ...
“I understand that he (Prince Andrei) did not love anyone as much as he did,” said Princess Mary.
- Yes, and he is special from him. They say that men are friendly when they are very special. It must be true. Doesn't he really look like 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 sleep for a long time that day; he walked up and down 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 then he was jealous of her past, then he reproached, then he forgave himself for it. It was already six o'clock in the morning, and he kept walking around the room.
“Well, what to do. If you can't live without it! What to do! So it must be so,” he said to himself, and, hastily undressing, went to bed, happy and excited, but without doubts or indecisions.
“It is necessary, strange as it may seem, no matter how impossible this happiness is, everything must be done in order to be husband and wife with her,” he said to himself.
A few days before this, Pierre had appointed the day of his departure for Petersburg on Friday. When he woke up on Thursday, Savelich came to him for orders to pack things for the journey.
“How to Petersburg? What is Petersburg? Who is in Petersburg? – involuntarily, though to himself, he asked. “Yes, something long, long ago, even before this happened, for some reason I was going to go to Petersburg,” he recalled. - From what? I will go, maybe. What a kind, attentive, how he remembers everything! he thought, looking at Savelich's old face. And what a nice smile! he thought.