Nylon – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
nylon
n.
synthetic material used in industrial manufacturing (e.g. of hosiery, fishing line, rubber products, etc.)
NYLON
The
portmanteau NYLON, also spelled
NYLon or, less often,
NY-Lon, starts with the concept of
New York City, USA, and
London,
England, as
twin cities — the
financial and
cultural capitals of the
Anglo-American 'world' — and takes the concept a step further, treating the two cities as "a single city separated by an ocean". There is a community of high-earning professionals who commute with extreme frequency — sometimes several days in a given week — between New York and London on its particular
transatlantic air route. As a result, the term "NYLon" can be used either to refer in a sense to the concept of the two cities being 'intertwined' or easily traversable generally, or in a more micro form, as a specific
noun — as in
"s/he is a NYLon" to refer to a person who travels extensively between the two and treats each as equal senses of "home".
Nylon
Nylon is a generic designation for a family of
synthetic polymers, more specifically aliphatic or semi-aromatic
polyamides. They can be melt-processed into fibers, films or shapes. The first example of nylon (nylon 66) was produced on February 28, 1935, by
Wallace Carothers at
DuPont's research facility at the
DuPont Experimental Station. Nylon polymers have found significant commercial applications in fibers (apparel, flooring and rubber reinforcement), in shapes (molded parts for cars, electrical equipment, etc.), and in films (mostly for food packaging)
nylon
Noun
1. a thermoplastic polyamide; a family of high-strength resilient synthetic materials
(hypernym) man-made fiber, synthetic fiber
2. a synthetic fabric
(hypernym) fabric, cloth, material, textile
Nylon (das)
n.
nylon, synthetic material used in industrial manufacturing (e.g. of hosiery, fishing line, rubber products, etc.)
nylon
nm.
nylon, synthetic material used in industrial manufacturing (e.g. of hosiery, fishing line, rubber products, etc.)