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(more+accurate)+en

  • 101 compare

    [kəm'peə]
    1) (to put (things etc) side by side in order to see to what extent they are the same or different: If you compare his work with hers you will find hers more accurate; This is a good essay compared with your last one.) srovnat s, porovnat
    2) (to describe as being similar to: She compared him to a monkey.) přirovnat
    3) (to be near in standard or quality: He just can't compare with Mozart.) rovnat se
    - comparative
    - comparatively
    - comparison
    * * *
    • porovnávat
    • porovnat
    • srovnávat
    • srovnat

    English-Czech dictionary > compare

  • 102 compare

    [kəm'peə]
    1) (to put (things etc) side by side in order to see to what extent they are the same or different: If you compare his work with hers you will find hers more accurate; This is a good essay compared with your last one.) porovnať
    2) (to describe as being similar to: She compared him to a monkey.) prirovnať
    3) (to be near in standard or quality: He just can't compare with Mozart.) rovnať sa
    - comparative
    - comparatively
    - comparison
    * * *
    • zrovnávat
    • prirovnávat
    • porovnávat
    • porovnat

    English-Slovak dictionary > compare

  • 103 compare

    [kəm'peə]
    1) (to put (things etc) side by side in order to see to what extent they are the same or different: If you compare his work with hers you will find hers more accurate; This is a good essay compared with your last one.) a compara
    2) (to describe as being similar to: She compared him to a monkey.) a compara (cu)
    3) (to be near in standard or quality: He just can't compare with Mozart.) a se compara
    - comparative
    - comparatively
    - comparison

    English-Romanian dictionary > compare

  • 104 Ограничение

    The approximations used by discretization modules are more accurate with the constraints of machine arithmetic

    Русско-английский словарь по прикладной математике и механике > Ограничение

  • 105 уточнённый

    прич. и прил.
    (more) accurate; finalized

    уточнённый дохо́д фин.adjusted income

    Новый большой русско-английский словарь > уточнённый

  • 106 compare

    [kəm'peə]
    1) (to put (things etc) side by side in order to see to what extent they are the same or different: If you compare his work with hers you will find hers more accurate; This is a good essay compared with your last one.) συγκρίνω, παραβάλλω
    2) (to describe as being similar to: She compared him to a monkey.) παρομοιάζω
    3) (to be near in standard or quality: He just can't compare with Mozart.) παραβάλλομαι, συγκρίνομαι
    - comparative
    - comparatively
    - comparison

    English-Greek dictionary > compare

  • 107 demonically

    [dɪ'mɔnɪklɪ]
    нареч.
    1) демонически, дьявольски
    2) сверхъестественно, необыкновенно; гениально

    He danced divinely. Perhaps it were more accurate to say demonically. — Он танцевал божественно. Может быть, правильнее было бы сказать дьявольски хорошо.

    Англо-русский современный словарь > demonically

  • 108 уточнять

    to make more accurate / precise; (выяснять) to find out exactly, to verify

    Russian-english dctionary of diplomacy > уточнять

  • 109 уточнить

    сов; несов - уточня́ть
    specify ['spe-], make (it) more accurate/precise

    Американизмы. Русско-английский словарь. > уточнить

  • 110 fools rush in where angels fear to tread

    посл.
    "дураки спешат туда, куда ангелы и ступить боятся"; ≈ дуракам закон не писан [выражение создано А. Попом (A. Pope, 1688-1744):...there they'll talk you dead; For fools rush in where angels fear to tread. (‘Essay on Criticism’ part III, 1707)]; см. тж. right smart of smth.

    I have heard that fools rush in where angels fear to tread, but in the case of my brother Theodore it would be more accurate to say that he leaps in where God Almighty crawls! (Th. Wolfe, ‘The Hills Beyond’, ch. V) — Я слышал пословицу: дураки спешат туда, куда ангелы и ступить боятся. А про моего брата я бы сказал: он сломя голову мчит туда, куда и господь-то на карачках ползет.

    Large English-Russian phrasebook > fools rush in where angels fear to tread

  • 111 caecias

    caecĭas, ae, m., = kaikias, the northeast wind (acc. to more accurate nautical designation, north-east by east), Plin. 2, 47, 46, § 120 sq.; 18, 34, 77, § 334; Vitr. 1, 6; Gell. 2, 22, 24 (written as Greek, Sen. Q. N. 5, 16, 4).

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > caecias

  • 112 compare

    [kəmˈpeə] verb
    1) to put (things etc) side by side in order to see to what extent they are the same or different:

    This is a good essay compared with your last one.

    يُقارِن
    2) to describe as being similar to:

    She compared him to a monkey.

    يُشبّـه
    3) to be near in standard or quality:

    He just can't compare with Mozart.

    يُوازي، يُشَبِّه

    Arabic-English dictionary > compare

  • 113 compare

    [kəm'peə]
    1) (to put (things etc) side by side in order to see to what extent they are the same or different: If you compare his work with hers you will find hers more accurate; This is a good essay compared with your last one.) comparer
    2) (to describe as being similar to: She compared him to a monkey.) comparer (à)
    3) (to be near in standard or quality: He just can't compare with Mozart.) se comparer
    - comparative - comparatively - comparison

    English-French dictionary > compare

  • 114 compare

    [kəm'peə]
    1) (to put (things etc) side by side in order to see to what extent they are the same or different: If you compare his work with hers you will find hers more accurate; This is a good essay compared with your last one.) comparar
    2) (to describe as being similar to: She compared him to a monkey.) comparar
    3) (to be near in standard or quality: He just can't compare with Mozart.) comparar(-se)
    - comparative - comparatively - comparison

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > compare

  • 115 bodàti

    bodàti Grammatical information: v. Proto-Slavic meaning: `stab, sting'
    Page in Trubačev: II 122-122
    Russian:
    bodát' `butt' [verb], bodáju [1sg]
    Czech:
    bodati `stab, pierce' [verb]
    Slovak:
    bodat' `stab' [verb]
    Slovene:
    bọ̑dati `sting, stitch' [verb], bọ̑dam [1sg]
    Bulgarian:
    bodá `stab, feel a sharp pain' [verb]
    Lithuanian:
    badýti `butt, prick' [verb], bãdo [3ps]
    Indo-European reconstruction: bʰodʰ-
    IE meaning: stab
    Page in Pokorny: 113
    Comments: The ESSJa mentions forms reflecting * bodati under * badati because the o-vocalism is assumed to be analogical. Since in general *bodàti is also semantically closer to bostì (the meaning `investigate' is limited to bādàti) and in some languages occurs alongside *bādàti, it is perhaps more accurate to say that it is a recent formation.
    Other cognates:
    Lat. fodiō `dig' [verb]

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > bodàti

  • 116 computer-aided design

    Ops
    the use of a computer to assist with the design of a product. Computer graphics, modeling, and simulation are used to represent a product on screen, so that designers can produce more accurate drawings than is possible on paper alone and to perform calculations easily, thereby optimizing designs for production.

    The ultimate business dictionary > computer-aided design

  • 117 Chapelon, André

    [br]
    b. 26 October 1892 Saint-Paul-en-Cornillon, Loire, France
    d. 29 June 1978 Paris, France
    [br]
    French locomotive engineer who developed high-performance steam locomotives.
    [br]
    Chapelon's technical education at the Ecole Centrale des Arts et Manufactures, Paris, was interrupted by extended military service during the First World War. From experience of observing artillery from the basket of a captive balloon, he developed a method of artillery fire control which was more accurate than that in use and which was adopted by the French army.
    In 1925 he joined the motive-power and rolling-stock department of the Paris-Orléans Railway under Chief Mechanical Engineer Maurice Lacoin and was given the task of improving the performance of its main-line 4–6–2 locomotives, most of them compounds. He had already made an intensive study of steam locomotive design and in 1926 introduced his Kylchap exhaust system, based in part on the earlier work of the Finnish engineer Kyläla. Chapelon improved the entrainment of the hot gases in the smokebox by the exhaust steam and so minimized back pressure in the cylinders, increasing the power of a locomotive substantially. He also greatly increased the cross-sectional area of steam passages, used poppet valves instead of piston valves and increased superheating of steam. PO (Paris-Orléans) 4–6–2s rebuilt on these principles from 1929 onwards proved able to haul 800-ton trains, in place of the previous 500-ton trains, and to do so to accelerated schedules with reduced coal consumption. Commencing in 1932, some were converted, at the time of rebuilding, into 4–8–0s to increase adhesive weight for hauling heavy trains over the steeply graded Paris-Toulouse line.
    Chapelon's principles were quickly adopted on other French railways and elsewhere.
    H.N. Gresley was particularly influenced by them. After formation of the French National Railways (SNCF) in 1938, Chapelon produced in 1941 a prototype rebuilt PO 2–10–0 freight locomotive as a six-cylinder compound, with four low-pressure cylinders to maximize expansive use of steam and with all cylinders steam-jacketed to minimize heat loss by condensation and radiation. War conditions delayed extended testing until 1948–52. Meanwhile Chapelon had, by rebuilding, produced in 1946 a high-powered, three-cylinder, compound 4–8–4 intended as a stage in development of a proposed range of powerful and thermally efficient steam locomotives for the postwar SNCF: a high-speed 4–6–4 in this range was to run at sustained speeds of 125 mph (200 km/h). However, plans for improved steam locomotives were then overtaken in France by electriflcation and dieselization, though the performance of the 4–8–4, which produced 4,000 hp (3,000 kW) at the drawbar for the first time in Europe, prompted modification of electric locomotives, already on order, to increase their power.
    Chapelon retired from the SNCF in 1953, but continued to act as a consultant. His principles were incorporated into steam locomotives built in France for export to South America, and even after the energy crisis of 1973 he was consulted on projects to build improved, high-powered steam locomotives for countries with reserves of cheap coal. The eventual fall in oil prices brought these to an end.
    [br]
    Bibliography
    1938, La Locomotive à vapeur, Paris: J.B.Bailière (a comprehensive summary of contemporary knowledge of every function of the locomotive).
    Further Reading
    H.C.B.Rogers, 1972, Chapelon, Genius of French Steam, Shepperton: Ian Allan.
    1986, "André Chapelon, locomotive engineer: a survey of his work", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 58 (a symposium on Chapelon's work).
    Obituary, 1978, Railway Engineer (September/October) (makes reference to the technical significance of Chapelon's work).
    PJGR

    Biographical history of technology > Chapelon, André

  • 118 noch tausendfach genauer

    Deutsch-Englisches Wörterbuch > noch tausendfach genauer

  • 119 Display Color Calibration Wizard

    A wizard that guides users through a series of adjustments to their display to produce a more accurate rendering of sRGB color content.

    English-Arabic terms dictionary > Display Color Calibration Wizard

  • 120 Display Color Calibration

    A wizard that guides users through a series of adjustments to their display to produce a more accurate rendering of sRGB color content.

    English-Arabic terms dictionary > Display Color Calibration

См. также в других словарях:

  • Accurate — Ac cu*rate, a. [L. accuratus, p. p. and a., fr. accurare to take care of; ad + curare to take care, cura care. See {Cure}.] 1. In exact or careful conformity to truth, or to some standard of requirement, the result of care or pains; free from… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • more — [ mɔr ] function word, quantifier *** More is the comparative form of much and many and can be used in the following ways: as a determiner (followed by a noun): He wants to spend more time with his family. as a pronoun: I wish I could do more to… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • more like — phrase used for giving a number or amount that you think is more accurate than another one Profits look more like 39 per cent than the 61 per cent we predicted. Thesaurus: words used to describe numbershyponym Main entry: like * * * informal… …   Useful english dictionary

  • more of — used to say that one way of describing a person or thing is better or more accurate than another It s more of a guess than an estimate. No, I wouldn t call the color red–it s more of a maroon. • • • Main Entry: ↑more …   Useful english dictionary

  • more like … — more like… idiom used to give a number or an amount that is more accurate than one previously mentioned • He believes the figure should be more like $10 million. Main entry: ↑likeidiom …   Useful english dictionary

  • accurate — ac|cu|rate [ ækjərət ] adjective *** 1. ) correct or true in every detail: We need to get some more accurate information. Would it be more accurate to say that the plan failed? 2. ) able to do something in an exact way, without making a mistake:… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • accurate */*/ — UK [ˈækjʊrət] / US [ˈækjərət] adjective 1) correct or true in every detail We need to get an accurate estimate of what the new building will cost. Would it be more accurate to say that the plan failed? 2) able to do something in an exact way,… …   English dictionary

  • accurate — 01. I m not sure of the time; my watch doesn t seem to be very [accurate]. 02. The witness gave an [accurate] description of the criminal she even knew his eye color! 03. It was hard to get an [accurate] count of the number of people in the room… …   Grammatical examples in English

  • more */*/*/ — UK [mɔː(r)] / US [mɔr] adverb, determiner, pronoun Summary: More is the comparative form of much and many and can be used in the following ways: as a determiner (followed by a noun): He wants to spend more time with his family. as a pronoun: I… …   English dictionary

  • more like it — 1. more accurate or true. Chris said he was fascinated with her “madly in love” is more like it. They sit there thinking maybe hoping might be more like it that I can do something for them. 2. an improvement. “She thinks business may be better… …   New idioms dictionary

  • more like — used for giving a number or amount that you think is more accurate than another one Profits look more like 39 per cent than the 61 per cent we predicted …   English dictionary

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