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1 physiological zero
The English-Russian dictionary general scientific > physiological zero
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2 physiological zero
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3 physiological zero
1) Биология: физиологический нуль2) Экология: начальная точка развития, физиологический порог3) Макаров: физиологический порог (т-ра, ниже которой прекращается обмен в-в в клетке, органе или организме) -
4 physiological zero
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5 zero
zero:physiological zero физиологический нуль, начальная точка развитияphysiological zero физиологический нуль, порог температуры, ниже которого прекращается обмен веществ в клетке, органе или организмеtemperature zero температурный нуль (температура, ниже которой физиологические процессы прекращаются или замедляются)English-Russian dictionary of biology and biotechnology > zero
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6 zero
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7 физиологический нуль
Russian-english psychology dictionary > физиологический нуль
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8 начальная точка развития
Русско-английский биологический словарь > начальная точка развития
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9 физиологический нуль
Русско-английский биологический словарь > физиологический нуль
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10 физиологический нуль
[lang name="Russian"]дрейф нуля; сдвиг нуля — zero drift
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11 нуль
zero, nil, nullабсолютный нуль температуры — absolute zero (см. также абсолютный)
Порог температуры, ниже которого прекращается обмен веществ в клетке.
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12 физиологический порог
1) Ecology: physiological zero2) Aviation medicine: physiological threshold3) Makarov: physiological zero (т-ра, ниже которой прекращается обмен в-в в клетке, органе или организме)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > физиологический порог
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13 الصفر الفيزيولوجي
1) physiological zero 2) physiologic zero -
14 начальная точка развития
Ecology: physiological zeroУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > начальная точка развития
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15 физиологический нуль
Biology: physiological zeroУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > физиологический нуль
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16 порог температуры, ниже которого прекращается метаболизм в клетке
= порог температуры, ниже которого прекращается метаболизм в органе, = порог температуры, ниже которого прекращается метаболизм в организме physiological zeroRussian-english psychology dictionary > порог температуры, ниже которого прекращается метаболизм в клетке
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17 solution
1) решение
2) раствор
3) разрешение
4) растворение
5) разрешающий
6) растворяющий
– admit a solution
– alcoholic solution
– alkaline solution
– antifreezing solution
– aqueous solution
– buffer solution
– colloidal solution
– dilute solution
– electrolytic solution
– equilibrium solution
– equimolecular solution
– equivalent solution
– etching solution
– eutectic solution
– exhaust solution
– existence of a solution
– foam solution
– form solution
– freezing solution
– gaseous solution
– hypereutectic solution
– hypoeutectic solution
– in solution
– incapable of solution
– liquid solution
– molar solution
– non-freezing solution
– non-saturated solution
– non-trivial solution
– normality of a solution
– numerical solution
– particular solution
– physiological solution
– pickling solution
– pseudo-principal solution
– replenish solution
– salt solution
– saturate solution
– Schryver's solution
– singular solution
– solid solution
– solution by inspection
– solution crystallization
– solution injection
– solution mining
– solution of an equation
– solution recovery
– solution space
– solution strength
– solution tension
– spent solution
– standard solution
– strong solution
– supersaturate solution
– tanning solution
– thicken solution
– time of solution
– titrating solution
– toning solution
– trivial solution
– unique solution
– weak solution
– zero solution
ammonia solution applicator — машина для внесения аммиакатов
analytically tractable solution — аналитически находимое решение
existence and uniqueness of solution — существование и единственность решения
standard test solution — <energ.> раствор модельный
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18 authentication
аутентификация, установление подлинности (идентичности) (личности, документа, объекта), отождествлениеАнгло-русский словарь по компьютерной безопасности > authentication
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19 σάρξ
σάρξ, σαρκόςGrammatical information: f., often pl. (Hom almost only).Meaning: `flesh, piece(s) of meat' (Il.); on the number Schw.-Debrunner 43, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 2,30.Other forms: Aeol. σύρκες pl. H., EM; on the phonetics Schwyzer 308.Compounds: Many compp., e.g. σαρκο-φάγος `eating flesh' (Arist.), λίθος σαρκοφάγος des. of a stone broken near Assos (Troas), which was used for funeral monuments and would have eaten the corpse (Poll. 10, 150, Plin. a. o.); on the debated physiological-chemical proces s. R. Müller in Kretschmer Glotta 22, 265; from there `coffin' (inscr.), Lat. LW [loanword] sarcophagus, OHG sarch etc.; ἄ-σαρκος `without flesh, thin' (IA.); on the 2. member extens. Sommer Nominalkomp. 94 f.Derivatives: 1. σαρκ-ίον (Hp., Arist. a. o.), - ίδιον (Arist. etc.) n. `piece of flesh', - ίς f. `meat, food' (late pap.); - ῖτις f. name of a stone (Plin.; after the colour, Redard 60). 2. σάρκ-ινος (Att. etc.), - ικός (hell. a. late), - ειος (late) `fleshy, made of flesh'; - ώδης `flesh-like' (Hp., X. etc.), - ήρης `consisting of flesh' ( Trag. Adesp.). 3a σαρκ-ίζω `to scrape clean of flesh' (Hdt.; on the privative meaning Hudson-Williams ClassRev. 26, 122f.; not correct Schwyzer 736), περι- σάρξ with - ισμός (medic.), ἐκ- σάρξ (LXX); b. - όω ( περι-, ἐκ- a. o.) `to make fleshy, to change into flesh' with - ωμα, - ωσις, - ωτικός (medic. a. o.); c. - άζω s. v.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1102] *tu̯r̥ḱ- `cut'Etymology: Acc. to a general, very acceptable view (since v. Bradke ZDMG 40, 752) to Av. ʮwarǝs-, pres. ʮwǝrǝsaiti prop. `cut' ( upa-, us- a. o.), as simplex `shape, create, destine etc.', IE tu̯r̥ḱ- (WP. 1, 751, Pok. 1102); so prop. *'slice' as Lat. carō `(piece) of meat' = Umbr. karu `pars, piece of meat' to κείρω `cut' etc. Other argumentation by Risch Sprache 7, 93 ff. (where also Hitt. tuekkaš `body' [with assumed loss of r before k] is discussed; s. however on σάκος): to ʮwarǝs- in the (clearly secondary) meaning `create, build'; so "flesh as what gives the human body shape and form"; certainly not to be preferred. -- Thus also Lubotsky, Sprache 36 (1994) 94-102, who shows that Skt. tvaṣṭar- contains a zero grade (with a \< r̥), like Av. ʮwōrǝštar- (from * ʮwǝrǝštar-). OIr. torc `boar' has the same origin, for which he reconstructs *turḱos. L. discusses also the rise of - αρ-, - υρ- (rejecting a reconstr. *tu̯orḱ-). - From σάρξ Alb. šark `flesh of a fruit' (Jokl IF 44, 13 ff.).Page in Frisk: 2,679-680Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σάρξ
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20 σαρκός
σάρξ, σαρκόςGrammatical information: f., often pl. (Hom almost only).Meaning: `flesh, piece(s) of meat' (Il.); on the number Schw.-Debrunner 43, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 2,30.Other forms: Aeol. σύρκες pl. H., EM; on the phonetics Schwyzer 308.Compounds: Many compp., e.g. σαρκο-φάγος `eating flesh' (Arist.), λίθος σαρκοφάγος des. of a stone broken near Assos (Troas), which was used for funeral monuments and would have eaten the corpse (Poll. 10, 150, Plin. a. o.); on the debated physiological-chemical proces s. R. Müller in Kretschmer Glotta 22, 265; from there `coffin' (inscr.), Lat. LW [loanword] sarcophagus, OHG sarch etc.; ἄ-σαρκος `without flesh, thin' (IA.); on the 2. member extens. Sommer Nominalkomp. 94 f.Derivatives: 1. σαρκ-ίον (Hp., Arist. a. o.), - ίδιον (Arist. etc.) n. `piece of flesh', - ίς f. `meat, food' (late pap.); - ῖτις f. name of a stone (Plin.; after the colour, Redard 60). 2. σάρκ-ινος (Att. etc.), - ικός (hell. a. late), - ειος (late) `fleshy, made of flesh'; - ώδης `flesh-like' (Hp., X. etc.), - ήρης `consisting of flesh' ( Trag. Adesp.). 3a σαρκ-ίζω `to scrape clean of flesh' (Hdt.; on the privative meaning Hudson-Williams ClassRev. 26, 122f.; not correct Schwyzer 736), περι- σαρκός with - ισμός (medic.), ἐκ- σαρκός (LXX); b. - όω ( περι-, ἐκ- a. o.) `to make fleshy, to change into flesh' with - ωμα, - ωσις, - ωτικός (medic. a. o.); c. - άζω s. v.Origin: IE [Indo-European] [1102] *tu̯r̥ḱ- `cut'Etymology: Acc. to a general, very acceptable view (since v. Bradke ZDMG 40, 752) to Av. ʮwarǝs-, pres. ʮwǝrǝsaiti prop. `cut' ( upa-, us- a. o.), as simplex `shape, create, destine etc.', IE tu̯r̥ḱ- (WP. 1, 751, Pok. 1102); so prop. *'slice' as Lat. carō `(piece) of meat' = Umbr. karu `pars, piece of meat' to κείρω `cut' etc. Other argumentation by Risch Sprache 7, 93 ff. (where also Hitt. tuekkaš `body' [with assumed loss of r before k] is discussed; s. however on σάκος): to ʮwarǝs- in the (clearly secondary) meaning `create, build'; so "flesh as what gives the human body shape and form"; certainly not to be preferred. -- Thus also Lubotsky, Sprache 36 (1994) 94-102, who shows that Skt. tvaṣṭar- contains a zero grade (with a \< r̥), like Av. ʮwōrǝštar- (from * ʮwǝrǝštar-). OIr. torc `boar' has the same origin, for which he reconstructs *turḱos. L. discusses also the rise of - αρ-, - υρ- (rejecting a reconstr. *tu̯orḱ-). - From σάρξ Alb. šark `flesh of a fruit' (Jokl IF 44, 13 ff.).Page in Frisk: 2,679-680Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > σαρκός
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См. также в других словарях:
physiological zero — n a temperature that is felt by the skin as neither warm nor cold and that under ordinary conditions usu. falls at about 85° to 90°F (29° to 32°C) … Medical dictionary
physiological zero — fiziologinis nulis statusas T sritis ekologija ir aplinkotyra apibrėžtis Temperatūra, kuriai esant oda nejunta nei šaltumo, nei šiltumo (29–32 °C). atitikmenys: angl. physiological zero vok. physiologische Null, f rus. физиологический нуль, m … Ekologijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas
physiological zero — noun : a temperature that is felt by the skin as neither warm nor cold and that under ordinary conditions usually falls at about 85° to 90° F … Useful english dictionary
fiziologinis nulis — statusas T sritis ekologija ir aplinkotyra apibrėžtis Temperatūra, kuriai esant oda nejunta nei šaltumo, nei šiltumo (29–32 °C). atitikmenys: angl. physiological zero vok. physiologische Null, f rus. физиологический нуль, m … Ekologijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas
physiologische Null — fiziologinis nulis statusas T sritis ekologija ir aplinkotyra apibrėžtis Temperatūra, kuriai esant oda nejunta nei šaltumo, nei šiltumo (29–32 °C). atitikmenys: angl. physiological zero vok. physiologische Null, f rus. физиологический нуль, m … Ekologijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas
физиологический нуль — fiziologinis nulis statusas T sritis ekologija ir aplinkotyra apibrėžtis Temperatūra, kuriai esant oda nejunta nei šaltumo, nei šiltumo (29–32 °C). atitikmenys: angl. physiological zero vok. physiologische Null, f rus. физиологический нуль, m … Ekologijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas
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