burners in the Oxford-Paravia Italian Dictionary

Translations for burners in the English»Italian Dictionary

burner [Brit ˈbəːnə, Am ˈbərnər] N

gas burner [ˈɡæsˌbɜːnə(r)] N

pilot burner [ˌpaɪlətˈbɜːnə(r)] N

hay burner [ˈheɪˌbɜːnə(r)] N

incense burner [ˈɪnsensˌbɜːnə(r)] N

charcoal burner [Am ˈtʃɑrˌkoʊl ˈbərnər] N

back burner [Am ˈbækˌbərnər] N

Bunsen [ˈbʌnsn], Bunsen burner [ˌbʌnsnˈbɜːnə(r)] N

burners in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for burners in the English»Italian Dictionary (Go to Italian»English)

Translations for burners in the Italian»English Dictionary (Go to English»Italian)

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Commercial griddles are often required to have pilot protection (also known as flame safety) to prevent the unregulated flow of gas if the griddle pilot burners are somehow extinguished.
en.wikipedia.org
An airport spokesperson said in 2009 that 15,000 burners arrive to the event via the airport annually, making it the second-busiest time for them.
en.wikipedia.org
The science laboratories were not spared as kerosene stoves became bunsen burners.
www.vanguardngr.com
Upon hearing the news of rich silver deposits miners, traders, charcoal burners and vagabonds quickly poured into this, at that time, inhospitable area.
en.wikipedia.org
From about 1977 all models used a steel pan type solid fuel burner, although the older steel pan meths burners still fitted.
en.wikipedia.org
Even glass bead-making torches, which are essentially bunsen burners with an added air pump, can only achieve temperatures of.
en.wikipedia.org
They are cheap and consumable and originally used for such mundane tasks as lighting bunsen burners.
en.wikipedia.org
The first traffic cones were used during its construction, replacing red lantern paraffin burners.
en.wikipedia.org
He was a salesman for gas and oil burners and an insurance agent there.
en.wikipedia.org
You'll also find frankincense, produced in the south of the country, which you can buy with little ceramic burners: the best (and most expensive) is silvery-white; the cheapest, yellowy-brown.
www.telegraph.co.uk

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