Winch

हातरहाटाने वर ओढणे किंवा काढणे
definition
verb
Dramatic television footage showed rescue workers winching the nine survivors one-by-one from the roof of the restaurant as flames and smoke poured from the upper floors of the building in Taichung City in central Taiwan.
hoist or haul with a winch.
noun
They do the work of motorized winches - haul logs, or move stuck tractors, raise towers, and so on - but with the deftness of a human hand.
a hauling or lifting device consisting of a rope, cable, or chain winding around a horizontal rotating drum, turned by a crank or by motor or other power source; a windlass.
My primary role on the boat is called a ‘grinder’, and I provide power for the winches [the circular wheels which wind the boat's sails up and down].
the crank of a wheel or axle.
translation of 'winch'
हाताने किंवा विजेच्या साहाय्याने कळ दाबून चालवण्याचा पाणी काढण्याचा रहाट,
हातरहाटाने वर ओढणे किंवा काढणे,
ओढण्यासाठी किंवा उचलण्यासाठी असलेले रहाटासारखे यंत्र
example
an attempt to 'winch' survivors of the wreck into a helicopter
The evil ones quickly pulled it tight and then attached a large bag on a 'winch' to the ropes and then pulled the bag over the castle wall.
The anchor 'winch' has a large drum on the back, with its axis along the wreck.
Forward of the boilers there is little but scraps of metal, except for the anchor 'winch' , chains and anchors.
To haul one of his traps, Glen uses a gaff to grab its buoy, then wraps the attached rope around a hydraulic 'winch' that brings the trap from its resting place, typically in two to six fathoms of water, to boat-side.
I'd say it was an ex-fishing boat because it's got a drum 'winch' on the front.
The raised forecastle has all the normal anchor handling gear as well as a huge single 'winch' used for hauling loads out of the fish hold.
Ropes and pulleys and an electric 'winch' were used for the job.
We came out through a hatch onto the stern deck, next to the main 'winch' from which ropes and netting seemed to disappear in all directions.
Driving down hill was the most dangerous, so shoes were fitted to the wheels and a wire rope attached to a 'winch' on the engine was sometimes used to control movement on a steep gradient.
Lucia was going to need a 'winch' to haul me around everyday.
The cage was lowered by 'winch' and wire rope to a depth of 5m, just deep enough to escape the surface surge and swell.
Mark grabs it and attaches it to the winch as Gerry starts the 'winch' motor.
Three people had to be 'winched' to safety by helicopter and two more had to abandon their car after it got stuck in sand in a busy weekend for the water rescue services in Sligo Bay.
But remember, all those ropes and 'winches' and seafaring clutter have an important function, and the crew will certainly need to be able to get to them (sometimes in a hurry).
At 7.30 pm, Crewman Walters requested a rescue helicopter to help the fourth person and the lifeboat provided cover while this person was 'winched' to safety.
The inexperienced sailors were 'winched' to safety.
Instead, an RAF rescue helicopter was scrambled from Chivenor in Devon and she was 'winched' up from the beach and flown to Withybush hospital.
I wish she had seen the elderly nursing home residents being 'winched' off rooftops on to a helicopter, wrapping sheets around their heads as they were too scared to look down.
Having botched the attempt, and learnt Cleopatra was still alive, he is supposed to have been carried to the mausoleum and 'winched' by the women up through a window to expire after a fine speech in his lover's arms.
North Yorkshire Fire and rescue crews released Mr Brader using specialist 'winches' and airbags to lift up the tractor.
Indian papers have been publishing pictures of women being 'winched' to the bottom of wells to scoop up muddy liquid from what looks like puddles.
Two canoeists from Galway city had a lucky escape on Lough Corrib yesterday when a helicopter 'winched' them to safety after they took shelter on one of the lake's islands.
Sometimes it will be plucking shivering, shocked survivors from a sunken vessel out of lift rafts, from the sea or 'winching' the crew off a vessel that is going to go down.
The company, which has divisions in the Blue Toon, Aberdeen and Old Deer, makes hydraulic equipment such as 'winches' and cranes, for the fishing and offshore industries.
Instead the 30-year-old woman from Whitby had to be airlifted to hospital by a team from RAF Leconfield who 'winched' her to safety.
I used a set of 'winchers' for over 10 years.
They do the work of motorized 'winches' - haul logs, or move stuck tractors, raise towers, and so on - but with the deftness of a human hand.
One elderly woman was 'winched' from Hawnby, which was cut off, after suffering a suspected heart attack and was flown to the Friarage Hospital in Northallerton.
While he held his machine steady and followed the sprinting animals, the on-board sniper darted the last two heifers and the helicopter 'winched' them back to dry land.
Credits: Google Translate