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1 cross out
شَطَبَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cross off: to take sth. off a list, by marking it: My name has been crossed off. cross out: to draw a line through sth.: Cross out that sentence and start again. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. scratch: to strike out one’s own name from a list of competitors; to say that one cannot play: We had to scratch (the match) because half our team were ill. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also لغى (لَغَى) -
2 cross out
to draw a line through:يضَع خَطـاً تَحْتHe crossed out all her mistakes.
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3 cross off
شَطَبَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cross off: to take sth. off a list, by marking it: My name has been crossed off. cross out: to draw a line through sth.: Cross out that sentence and start again. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. scratch: to strike out one’s own name from a list of competitors; to say that one cannot play: We had to scratch (the match) because half our team were ill. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also لغى (لَغَى) -
4 cross
m. s.&pl.1 cross-country race (sport) (carrera).2 cross-country running, cross-country race.* * *[kros]SM INV1) (Atletismo) (=deporte) cross-country running; (=carrera) cross-country race2) (Motociclismo) (=deporte) moto(r)cross; (=carrera) moto(r)cross race* * *[kros]a) ( deporte - en atletismo) cross-country running; (- en motociclismo) motocrossb) ( carrera - a pie) cross country, cross-country race; (- en moto) motocross race* * *[kros]a) ( deporte - en atletismo) cross-country running; (- en motociclismo) motocrossb) ( carrera - a pie) cross country, cross-country race; (- en moto) motocross race* * */kros/1 (deporte — en atletismo) cross country, cross-country running; (— en motociclismo) motocross, scrambling ( BrE)/kros/motocross bike, scrambling bike ( BrE)* * *
cross /kros/ sustantivo masculino
(— en motociclismo) motocross
(— en moto) motocross race
' cross' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
adelantar
- anticipar
- atravesar
- bizca
- bizco
- bizquear
- calentar
- calvario
- campo
- cantero
- cariño
- corte
- cruce
- cruzar
- crucero
- cruz
- cruzada
- cruzado
- cruzarse
- cuestación
- ser
- esquí
- fondo
- formón
- franquear
- magín
- molesta
- molesto
- mosqueada
- mosqueado
- ojo
- pasar
- perfil
- persignarse
- por
- precaución
- rebote
- reventar
- salvar
- santiguarse
- sección
- surcar
- tachar
- transversal
- traspasar
- vía crucis
- aspa
- bies
- cabeza
- centrar
English:
bridge
- cross
- cross off
- cross out
- cross-country
- cross-examine
- cross-eyed
- cross-legged
- cross-reference
- cross-section
- cross-stitch
- double-cross
- form
- hold on
- path
- picket-line
- see
- Southern Cross
- square
- unsafe
- against
- bar
- cut
- double
- finger
- get
- pass
- red
- shape
- span
- squint
- two
* * *cross [kros] nm invDep1. [carrera] cross-country race2. [deporte] cross-country (running)* * * -
5 Cross, Charles Frederick
[br]b. 11 December 1855 Brentwood, Middlesex, Englandd. 15 April 1935 Hove, England[br]English chemist who contributed to the development of viscose rayon from cellulose.[br]Cross was educated at the universities of London, Zurich and Manchester. It was at Owens College, Manchester, that Cross first met E.J. Bevan and where these two first worked together on the nature of cellulose. After gaining some industrial experience, Cross joined Bevan to set up a partnership in London as analytical and consulting chemists, specializing in the chemistry and technology of cellulose and lignin. They were at the Jodrell laboratory, Kew Gardens, for a time and then set up their own laboratory at Station Avenue, Kew Gardens. In 1888, the first edition of their joint publication A Textbook of Paper-making, appeared. It went into several editions and became the standard reference and textbook on the subject. The long introductory chapter is a discourse on cellulose.In 1892, Cross, Bevan and Clayton Beadle took out their historic patent on the solution and regeneration of cellulose. The modern artificial-fibre industry stems from this patent. They made their discovery at New Court, Carey Street, London: wood-pulp (or another cheap form of cellulose) was dissolved in a mixture of carbon disulphide and aqueous alkali to produce sodium xanthate. After maturing, it was squirted through fine holes into dilute acid, which set the liquid to give spinnable fibres of "viscose". However, it was many years before the process became a commercial operation, partly because the use of a natural raw material such as wood involved variations in chemical content and each batch might react differently. At first it was thought that viscose might be suitable for incandescent lamp filaments, and C.H.Stearn, a collaborator with Cross, continued to investigate this possibility, but the sheen on the fibres suggested that viscose might be made into artificial silk. The original Viscose Spinning Syndicate was formed in 1894 and a place was rented at Erith in Kent. However, it was not until some skeins of artificial silk (a term to which Cross himself objected) were displayed in Paris that textile manufacturers began to take an interest in it. It was then that Courtaulds decided to investigate this new fibre, although it was not until 1904 that they bought the English patents and developed the first artificial silk that was later called "rayon". Cross was also concerned with the development of viscose films and of cellulose acetate, which became a rival to rayon in the form of "Celanese". He retained his interest in the paper industry and in publishing, in 1895 again collaborating with Bevan and publishing a book on Cellulose and other technical articles. He was a cultured man and a good musician. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1917.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1917.Bibliography1888, with E.J.Bevan, A Text-book of Papermaking. 1892, British patent no. 8,700 (cellulose).Further ReadingObituary Notices of the Royal Society, 1935, London. Obituary, 1935, Journal of the Chemical Society 1,337. Chambers Concise Dictionary of Scientists, 1989, Cambridge.Edwin J.Beer, 1962–3, "The birth of viscose rayon", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 35 (an account of the problems of developing viscose rayon; Beer worked under Cross in the Kew laboratories).C.Singer (ed.), 1978, A History of Technology, Vol. VI, Oxford: Clarendon Press.RLHBiographical history of technology > Cross, Charles Frederick
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6 cross-examine
نَاقَشَ \ argue: to give different opinion: They were arguing about the rules of football.. cross-examine: to question sb. closely (esp. in court) in relation to answers that he has already given: The lawyer cross-examined the prisoner to find out whether he had been lying. debate: to consider and talk about a question: We were debating whether to invite him or not. discuss: to talk about: We were discussing what to do next. talk sth. over: to talk about sth. carefully: We must talk this matter over before you reach a decision. \ See Also باحث (بَاحَثَ)، جادل (جَادَلَ)، استجوب (اِسْتَجْوَبَ) -
7 cross-examine
اِسْتَجْوَبَ \ cross-examine: to question sb. closely (esp. in court) in relation to answers that he has already given: The lawyer cross-examined the prisoner to find out whether he had been lying. examine: (in a law court) to question sb.. interrogate: to question closely, esp. about a crime: The police interrogated the prisoner. question: to ask sb. serious questions; examine sb. (concerning a crime, etc.): The police questioned the dead man’s neighbours. -
8 cut out
حَذَفَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. elide: to leave out a letter or sound: In the word ‘haven’t’, the letter ‘o’ has been elided. eliminate: remove or take out: He eliminated a few phrases from the speech he had written. leave out: not to put in; not to include: He left out one letter and wrote ‘heat’ instead of ‘heart’. miss out: not include; to leave out (by mistake or on purpose): My name was missed out from the list. omit: leave out (by mistake or on purpose); fail to include: Her name was omitted from the list. skip: to miss sth. on purpose; not read (sth. dull, etc.): We’ll skip the next few pages. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also ألغى (أَلْغَى)، أهمل (أَهْمَلَ)، ترك (تَرَكَ)، شطب (شَطَبَ) -
9 leave out
حَذَفَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. elide: to leave out a letter or sound: In the word ‘haven’t’, the letter ‘o’ has been elided. eliminate: remove or take out: He eliminated a few phrases from the speech he had written. leave out: not to put in; not to include: He left out one letter and wrote ‘heat’ instead of ‘heart’. miss out: not include; to leave out (by mistake or on purpose): My name was missed out from the list. omit: leave out (by mistake or on purpose); fail to include: Her name was omitted from the list. skip: to miss sth. on purpose; not read (sth. dull, etc.): We’ll skip the next few pages. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also ألغى (أَلْغَى)، أهمل (أَهْمَلَ)، ترك (تَرَكَ)، شطب (شَطَبَ) -
10 miss out
حَذَفَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cut out: to leave out: You can cut out the last sentence. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. elide: to leave out a letter or sound: In the word ‘haven’t’, the letter ‘o’ has been elided. eliminate: remove or take out: He eliminated a few phrases from the speech he had written. leave out: not to put in; not to include: He left out one letter and wrote ‘heat’ instead of ‘heart’. miss out: not include; to leave out (by mistake or on purpose): My name was missed out from the list. omit: leave out (by mistake or on purpose); fail to include: Her name was omitted from the list. skip: to miss sth. on purpose; not read (sth. dull, etc.): We’ll skip the next few pages. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also ألغى (أَلْغَى)، أهمل (أَهْمَلَ)، ترك (تَرَكَ)، شطب (شَطَبَ) -
11 strike out
يَحْذِف، يَمْحوHe read the essay and struck out a word here and there.
2) to start fighting:يُسَدِّدُ الضَّرباتHe's a man who strikes out with his fists whenever he's angry.
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12 Leave One Out Cross-validation
Statistics: LOOCVУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Leave One Out Cross-validation
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13 вычеркивать
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14 strege ud
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15 strika (út)
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16 skreślić
• cross out -
17 wykreślić
• cross out -
18 вычеркивать
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19 vyškrtat
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20 перечеркнуть
См. также в других словарях:
cross out — ► cross out/through delete (a word or phrase) by drawing a line through it. Main Entry: ↑cross … English terms dictionary
cross out — index deface, delete, edit, expunge, expurgate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
cross out — verb remove from a list Cross the name of the dead person off the list • Syn: ↑cross off, ↑strike out, ↑strike off, ↑mark • Hypernyms: ↑take away, ↑take out … Useful english dictionary
cross out — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms cross out : present tense I/you/we/they cross out he/she/it crosses out present participle crossing out past tense crossed out past participle crossed out to draw an X or a line through writing because it is… … English dictionary
cross-out — /kraws owt , kros /, n. a word, line, etc., that has been crossed out. [n. use of v. phrase cross out] * * * … Universalium
cross out — PHRASAL VERB If you cross out words on a page, you draw a line through them, because they are wrong or because you want to change them. [V P n (not pron)] He crossed out fellow subjects , and instead inserted fellow citizens . [Also V n P] Syn:… … English dictionary
cross-out — /kraws owt , kros /, n. a word, line, etc., that has been crossed out. [n. use of v. phrase cross out] … Useful english dictionary
cross out — phr verb Cross out is used with these nouns as the object: ↑word … Collocations dictionary
cross out — eliminate by drawing a line through something Please cross out that amount and put in the correct amount … Idioms and examples
Cross Out the Eyes — Song by Thursday from the album Full Collapse Genre Post hardcore, screamo Length 4:08 Label Vic … Wikipedia
cross out/through — ► cross out/through delete (a word or phrase) by drawing a line through it. Main Entry: ↑cross … English terms dictionary