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1 inverso
1. adj reverse2. m opposite* * *inverso agg.1 (opposto) opposite, contrary; (rovescio) reverse: disporre in ordine inverso, to put in reverse order; indice inverso, reverse index; in senso inverso, in the opposite (o contrary) direction (o contrarywise) // (ragioneria) metodo inverso, reverse method // (trib.) imposta sul reddito inversa, reverse income tax // (geol.) faglia inversa, reverse fault // (chim.) osmosi inversa, reverse osmosis2 (mat.) inverse, reciprocal: funzione inversa, inverse function; rapporto inverso, reciprocal ratio; proporzione inversa, inverse proportion3 (region.) (di cattivo umore) in a bad mood◆ s.m. opposite, contrary, inverse: è l'inverso di ciò che credi, it is the opposite of what you think; fa sempre l'inverso di quello che gli dico, he always does the opposite of what I tell him // all'inverso, the opposite direction (o way): ripercorrere una strada all'inverso, to go along a street in the opposite direction; tutto è andato all'inverso di come pensavo, everything went the opposite way to what I expected // (fis.) legge dell'inverso del quadrato (della distanza), inverse square law.* * *[in'vɛrso] inverso (-a)1. agg1) (direzione) oppositesi è scontrato con una macchina che veniva in senso inverso — he collided with a car coming in the opposite direction
2) Mat inverse2. sml'inverso — the opposite, the reverse, the contrary
* * *[in'vɛrso] 1.1) (opposto) [direzione, effetto] oppositein ordine inverso — in backward o reversed order
2) ling.3) mat. inverse2.sostantivo maschile (opposto)l'inverso — the opposite, the reverse
* * *inverso/in'vεrso/2 ling. costruzione -a converse proposition3 mat. inverse
См. также в других словарях:
Converse — Con verse, a. [L. conversus, p. p. of convertere. See {Convert}.] Turned about; reversed in order or relation; reciprocal; as, a converse proposition. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
converse — (kon vèr s ) adj. f. 1° Terme de logique. Proposition converse, proposition sur laquelle on opère la conversion, c est à dire dont on change l attribut en sujet et le sujet en attribut, sans qu elle cesse d être vraie. Nulle pierre n est homme… … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
converse — ● converse adjectif et nom féminin (latin conversa, de convertere, convertir) Dans la logique aristotélicienne, se dit d une proposition dont la place du sujet et la place de l attribut ont été interverties par rapport à une autre proposition.… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Converse — Con verse, n. 1. (Logic) A proposition which arises from interchanging the terms of another, as by putting the predicate for the subject, and the subject for the predicate; as, no virtue is vice, no vice is virtue. [1913 Webster] Note: It should… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
proposition — [ prɔpozisjɔ̃ ] n. f. • v. 1120 propositiun « action de faire connaître ses intentions »; lat. propositio 1 ♦ L action, le fait d offrir, de suggérer qqch. à qqn; ce qui est proposé. ⇒ offre. Proposition de paix. Faire des propositions… … Encyclopédie Universelle
converse — converse1 [kən vʉrs′; ] for n. [ kän′vʉrs΄] vi. conversed, conversing [ME conversen < OFr converser < L conversari, to live with, keep company with, freq. of convertere: see CONVERT] 1. to hold a conversation; talk 2. Obs. to consort;… … English World dictionary
Converse (logic) — In logic, the converse of a categorical or implicational statement is the result of reversing its two parts. For the implication P → Q, the converse is Q → P. For the categorical proposition All S is P, the converse is All P is S. In neither case … Wikipedia
CONVERSE — adj. et s. f. T. de Logique. On dit qu Une proposition est converse, est la converse d une autre, lorsque de l attribut de la première on fait le sujet de la seconde, et du sujet de la première, l attribut de la seconde, sans que la proposition… … Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 7eme edition (1835)
converse — converse1 converser, n. v. /keuhn verrs /; n. /kon verrs/, v., conversed, conversing, n. v.i. 1. to talk informally with another or others; exchange views, opinions, etc., by talking. 2. Archaic. to maintain a familiar association (usually fol.… … Universalium
converse — I. noun Etymology: Middle English convers, from Anglo French converse, from converser Date: 15th century 1. archaic social interaction 2. conversation II. intransitive verb (conversed; conversing) … New Collegiate Dictionary
converse# — conversation, converse communion, communication, *intercourse, commerce, traffic, dealings, correspondence Analogous words: conversing, talking or talk, speaking or speech (see corresponding verbs at SPEAK) converse vb talk, *speak Analogous… … New Dictionary of Synonyms