прилагательное 1) относящийся к третьему рангу, классу, ступени, третий Например: tertiary road [американский вариант английского языка] — дорога третьего класса tertiary education — высшее образование 2) относящийся к сфере услуг 3) [геология] третичный Например: tertiary era — кайнозойская эра 4) [медицина] третичный (о стадии сифилиса) 5) [религия] терциарий (член "Третьего ордена", братства мирян при монастырях францисканцев, доминиканцев и некоторых других орденов) 6) [искусство] основанный на смешении двух красок (о третьей краске)
1) третичный 2) терциарный
третичная обмотка
I. noun (plural -ries) 1. [Medieval Latin tertiarius, from Latin, of a third] a member of a monastic third order especially of lay people 2. capitalized the Tertiary period or system of rocks II. adjective Etymology: Latin tertiarius of or containing a third, from tertius third 1. a. of third rank, importance, or value b. chiefly British of, relating to, or being higher education c. of, relating to, or constituting the third strongest of the three or four degrees of stress recognized by most linguists (as the stress of the third syllable of basketball team) 2. capitalized of, relating to, or being the first period of the Cenozoic era or the corresponding system of rocks marked by the formation of high mountains (as the Alps, Caucasus, and Himalayas) and the dominance of mammals on land — see geologic time table 3. a. involving or resulting from the substitution of three atoms or groups Example: a tertiary salt Example: tertiary amine b. being or containing a carbon atom having bonds to three other carbon atoms Example: an acid containing a tertiary carbon Example: tertiary alcohols c. of, relating to, or being the normal folded structure of the coiled chain of a protein or of DNA or RNA 4. occurring in or being a third stage: as a. being or relating to the recovery of oil and gas from old wells by means of the underground application of heat and chemicals b. being or relating to the purification of wastewater by removal of fine particles, nitrates, and phosphates