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21 textura
f.texture.* * *1 (textil) texture2 (minerales) structure* * *noun f.* * *SF texture* * *femenino texture* * *= graininess, textura, texture, weave.Ex. The limits are set by the graininess of the film, the excellence of the optical system, and the efficiency of the light sources employed.Ex. Textura, the type of the first printed books, was derived from a formal book hand written with a minimum of curves.Ex. The fruits of Mr. Kilgour's labors and creations have substantially altered the texture of contemporary America library service = Los frutos de los trabajos y creaciones del Sr. Kilgour han alterado sustancialmente la naturaleza del servicio bibliotecario de la América contemporánea.Ex. Cloth styles began to change in the 1920s with the introduction of plain uncalendered materials that made a virtue of showing the pattern of the weave.----* con textura = textured.* de color y textura parecidos al carbón = carbonaceous.* de la textura = textural.* de textura = textured.* de textura fina = fine grain, fine-grained.* * *femenino texture* * *= graininess, textura, texture, weave.Ex: The limits are set by the graininess of the film, the excellence of the optical system, and the efficiency of the light sources employed.
Ex: Textura, the type of the first printed books, was derived from a formal book hand written with a minimum of curves.Ex: The fruits of Mr. Kilgour's labors and creations have substantially altered the texture of contemporary America library service = Los frutos de los trabajos y creaciones del Sr. Kilgour han alterado sustancialmente la naturaleza del servicio bibliotecario de la América contemporánea.Ex: Cloth styles began to change in the 1920s with the introduction of plain uncalendered materials that made a virtue of showing the pattern of the weave.* con textura = textured.* de color y textura parecidos al carbón = carbonaceous.* de la textura = textural.* de textura = textured.* de textura fina = fine grain, fine-grained.* * *1 (de un tejido) texture, weave2 (de un mineral) texture, structure3 (de una obra literaria) texture* * *
textura sustantivo femenino
texture
textura sustantivo femenino
1 Tex texture
2 (tacto) feel
3 Geol structure
' textura' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
fibra
- lisa
- liso
- terrosa
- terroso
English:
even
- sliminess
- texture
* * *textura nf1. [de superficie, tela, material] texture2. [de texto, discurso] texture* * *f texture* * *textura nf: texture* * *textura n texture -
22 kiunzi
------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] kiunzi[Swahili Plural] viunzi[English Word] frame (wooden)[English Plural] frames[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 7/8[Derived Language] Swahili[Derived Word] -unda------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] kiunzi[Swahili Plural] viunzi[English Word] scaffolding[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 7/8[Derived Language] Swahili[Derived Word] -unda------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] kiunzi[Swahili Plural] viunzi[English Word] wooden structure[English Plural] wooden structures[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 7/8[Derived Language] Swahili[Derived Word] -unda------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] kiunzi[Swahili Plural] viunzi[English Word] quail plover[English Plural] quail plovers[Taxonomy] Ortyxelos meiffrenii[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 7/8an[Terminology] ornithology------------------------------------------------------------ -
23 majenzi
------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] majenzi[English Word] architecture[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] majenzi[English Word] building installation[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] majenzi[English Word] style of building[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] majenzi[English Word] construction[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] majenzi[English Word] erection[English Plural] erections[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 6[Derived Word] jenga------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] majenzi[English Word] structure[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga------------------------------------------------------------ -
24 mjengo
------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] mjengo[Swahili Plural] mijengo[English Word] building (act of)[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga V------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] mjengo[Swahili Plural] mijengo[English Word] style of building[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga V------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] mjengo[Swahili Plural] mijengo[English Word] structure[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga V------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] mjengo[Swahili Plural] mijengo[English Word] building[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga V------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Item(s) below have not yet been grouped within the headword mjengo[Swahili Word] mjengo[Swahili Plural] mijengo[English Word] style of building[Part of Speech] noun[Derived Word] jenga V------------------------------------------------------------ -
25 Mathematics
The world of mathematics, which you contemn, is really a beautiful world; it has nothing to do with life and death and human sordidness, but is eternal, cold and passionless. To me pure mathematics is one of the highest forms of art; it has a sublimity quite special to itself, and an immense dignity derived from the fact that its world is exempt from change and time. I am quite serious in this....athematics is the only thing we know of that is capable of perfection; in thinking about it we become Gods. (Russell [to Helen Thomas, 30 December 1901], 1992, Letter No. 98, p. 224)One of the deepest problems of nature is the success of mathematics as a language for describing and discovering features of physical reality. In short, why does mathematics work?...We humans have stripped back the clouds that cloak our understanding of our cosmic beginning and our current persistence to the stage that exposes the mathematical structure of the world more clearly than it has ever been observed before.... Furthermore, the attention of seriously equipped thinkers, those thinkers we call scientists, is at last beginning to turn to that other great conundrum of being: consciousness.... If we can understand why that supreme construct of the human intellect, that archdisembodiment of intellect, mathematics, works as a description of the world, then maybe we shall have an insight into cognition....The name deep structuralism is intended to convey the idea that the physical world has the same logical structure as mathematics. By implication, the reason why mathematics works as a description of physical reality is that they share the same logical structure.... By weak deep structuralism I shall mean that mathematics and physical reality merely share the same logical structure and mathematics is a mirror that can be held up to nature. By strong deep structuralism I shall mean that mathematics and physical reality do not merely share the same logical structure but are actually the same. In other words, according to the hypothesis of strong deep structuralism, physical reality is mathematics and mathematics is physical reality.... The reason why we may be conscious of the world, including the inner, introspective world of emotion and intellect, may be that our brains are material portrayals of the same deep structure. That may also be the reason why brains can generate the mathematics that we need to comprehend the world. (Atkins, 1992, pp. 99-101, 109-111)Historical dictionary of quotations in cognitive science > Mathematics
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26 ansiedad
f.1 anxiety.con ansiedad anxiously2 nervous tension (Psi).* * *1 anxiety2 MEDICINA nervous tension\con ansiedad anxiously* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (=preocupación) anxiety, worry2) (Med) anxiety, nervous tension* * *a) ( preocupación) anxietyb) (Med, Psic) anxiety* * *= anxiety, stress, distress, solicitude.Ex. There is a concern that when presented too many information options, the individual begins to avoid being informed, and to relieve the anxiety, makes an uninformed decision.Ex. Flexibility of course does not mean that the structure is flexible and will bend or move under stress.Ex. The reason for his distress seemed to have been twofold: he derived comfort from reading the roll and he would have found it very embarassing to admit at the end of his journey that he had lost it.Ex. There were moments when he could be almost affectionate, moments when his thoughts did not seem to be turned inward upon his own anxious solicitudes.----* aliviar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* ansiedad causada por la tecnología = technostress.* ansiedad en el trabajo = job anxiety, work anxiety.* ansiedad provocada por la biblioteca = library anxiety.* ansiedad social = social anxiety.* aplacar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* ataque de ansiedad = panic attack, anxiety attack.* calmar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* causar ansiedad = cause + anxiety.* con ansiedad = eagerly, with bated breath.* contra la ansiedad = anti-anxiety.* esperado durante tiempo y con ansiedad = long-and-expectantly-awaited.* esperar con ansiedad = hope for, hold + Posesivo + breath.* esperar con ansiedad (+ Infinitivo) = look forward to (+ Gerundio).* que produce ansiedad = anxiety-producing.* sensación de ansiedad = sinking feeling.* sentir ansiedad = feel + anxiety.* síndrome de ansiedad = anxiety disorder.* trastorno de ansiedad = anxiety disorder, panic disorder.* * *a) ( preocupación) anxietyb) (Med, Psic) anxiety* * *= anxiety, stress, distress, solicitude.Ex: There is a concern that when presented too many information options, the individual begins to avoid being informed, and to relieve the anxiety, makes an uninformed decision.
Ex: Flexibility of course does not mean that the structure is flexible and will bend or move under stress.Ex: The reason for his distress seemed to have been twofold: he derived comfort from reading the roll and he would have found it very embarassing to admit at the end of his journey that he had lost it.Ex: There were moments when he could be almost affectionate, moments when his thoughts did not seem to be turned inward upon his own anxious solicitudes.* aliviar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* ansiedad causada por la tecnología = technostress.* ansiedad en el trabajo = job anxiety, work anxiety.* ansiedad provocada por la biblioteca = library anxiety.* ansiedad social = social anxiety.* aplacar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* ataque de ansiedad = panic attack, anxiety attack.* calmar la ansiedad = allay + anxiety.* causar ansiedad = cause + anxiety.* con ansiedad = eagerly, with bated breath.* contra la ansiedad = anti-anxiety.* esperado durante tiempo y con ansiedad = long-and-expectantly-awaited.* esperar con ansiedad = hope for, hold + Posesivo + breath.* esperar con ansiedad (+ Infinitivo) = look forward to (+ Gerundio).* que produce ansiedad = anxiety-producing.* sensación de ansiedad = sinking feeling.* sentir ansiedad = feel + anxiety.* síndrome de ansiedad = anxiety disorder.* trastorno de ansiedad = anxiety disorder, panic disorder.* * *1 (preocupación) anxietyesperábamos con ansiedad alguna noticia sobre su paradero we anxiously awaited news of his whereabouts* * *
ansiedad sustantivo femenino
b) (Med, Psic) anxiety
ansiedad sustantivo femenino anxiety: espera con ansiedad noticias de su hijo, she's anxiously awaiting news about her son
' ansiedad' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
zozobra
English:
anxiety
- beside
- bated
- eagerly
* * *ansiedad nf1. [inquietud] anxiety;esperan los resultados con ansiedad they are anxiously waiting for the results2. Psi nervous tension* * *f anxiety* * *ansiedad nf: anxiety* * * -
27 datos en propiedad
(n.) = property dataEx. The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.* * *(n.) = property dataEx: The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.
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28 datos privados
(n.) = property dataEx. The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.* * *(n.) = property dataEx: The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.
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29 fotofísica
= photophysics.Ex. The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.* * *= photophysics.Ex: The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.
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30 fotoquímica
adj.&f.feminine of FOTOQUÍMICO.f.photochemistry, actinochemistry.* * *Ex. The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.* * *Ex: The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.
* * *fotoquímica nfphotochemistry -
31 información privada
(n.) = property data, private informationEx. The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.Ex. The author discusses the influence of technology on the processing of personal and private information.* * *(n.) = property data, private informationEx: The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.
Ex: The author discusses the influence of technology on the processing of personal and private information. -
32 química para la radiación
(n.) = radiation chemistryEx. The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.* * *(n.) = radiation chemistryEx: The author describes the design, structure, and use of numeric data bases for property data derived from photochemistry, photophysics, and radiation chemistry.
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33 Sullivan, Louis Henry
SUBJECT AREA: Architecture and building[br]b. 3 September 1856 Boston, Massachusetts, USAd. 14 April 1924 Chicago, Illinois, USA[br]American architect whose work came to be known as the "Chicago School of Architecture" and who created a new style of architecture suited specifically to steel-frame, high-rise structures.[br]Sullivan, a Bostonian, studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Soon he joined his parents, who had moved to Chicago, and worked for a while in the office of William Le Baron Jenney, the pioneer of steel-frame construction. After spending some time studying at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, in 1875 Sullivan returned to Chicago, where he later met and worked for the Danish architect Dankmar Adler, who was practising there. In 1881 the two architects became partners, and during the succeeding fifteen years they produced their finest work and the buildings for which Sullivan is especially known.During the early 1880s in Chicago, load-bearing, metal-framework structures that made lofty skyscrapers possible had been developed (see Jenney and Holabird). Louis H.Sullivan initiated building design to stress and complement the metal structure rather than hide it. Moving onwards from H.H.Richardson's treatment of his Marshall Field Wholesale Store in Chicago, Sullivan took the concept several stages further. His first outstanding work, built with Adler in 1886–9, was the Auditorium Building in Chicago. The exterior, in particular, was derived largely from Richardson's Field Store, and the building—now restored—is of bold but simple design, massively built in granite and stone, its form stressing the structure beneath. The architects' reputation was established with this building.The firm of Sullivan \& Adler established itself during the early 1890s, when they built their most famous skyscrapers. Adler was largely responsible for the structure, the acoustics and function, while Sullivan was responsible for the architectural design, concerning himself particularly with the limitation and careful handling of ornament. In 1892 he published his ideas in Ornament in Architecture, where he preached restraint in its quality and disposition. He established himself as a master of design in the building itself, producing a rhythmic simplicity of form, closely related to the structural shape beneath. The two great examples of this successful approach were the Wainwright Building in St Louis, Missouri (1890–1) and the Guaranty Building in Buffalo, New York (1894–5). The Wainwright Building was a ten-storeyed structure built in stone and brick and decorated with terracotta. The vertical line was stressed throughout but especially at the corners, where pilasters were wider. These rose unbroken to an Art Nouveau type of decorative frieze and a deeply projecting cornice above. The thirteen-storeyed Guaranty Building is Sullivan's masterpiece, a simple, bold, finely proportioned and essentially modern structure. The pilaster verticals are even more boldly stressed and decoration is at a minimum. In the twentieth century the almost free-standing supporting pillars on the ground floor have come to be called pilotis. As late as the 1920s, particularly in New York, the architectural style and decoration of skyscrapers remained traditionally eclectic, based chiefly upon Gothic or classical forms; in view of this, Sullivan's Guaranty Building was far ahead of its time.[br]BibliographyArticle by Louis H.Sullivan. Address delivered to architectural students June 1899, published in Canadian Architecture Vol. 18(7):52–3.Further ReadingHugh Morrison, 1962, Louis Sullivan: Prophet of Modern Architecture.Willard Connely, 1961, Louis Sullivan as He Lived, New York: Horizon Press.DY -
34 key
1) (криптографический) ключ2) ключ к замку или запирающему устройству, механический ключ- base key- candidate key- card key- code key- data key- DES key- fake key- file key- good key- hex key- host key- link key- lost key- node key- numeric key- numerical key- pass key- PRN key- safe key- seed key- test key- true key- used key- user key- weak key- work key- zone key -
35 ujenzi
------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] ujenzi[English Word] architecture[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] jenga v------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] ujenzi[English Word] building (act of)[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] jenga V------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] ujenzi[Swahili Plural] majenzi[English Word] style of building[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 11/6------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] ujenzi[Swahili Plural] ujenzi[English Word] construction[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] jenga V------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] ujenzi[Swahili Plural] majenzi[English Word] erection[English Plural] erections[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 11/6------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] ujenzi[Swahili Plural] majenzi[English Word] installation[English Plural] installations[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 11/6------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] ujenzi[Swahili Plural] majenzi[English Word] structure[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 11/6------------------------------------------------------------ -
36 functor
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37 fuko
------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko butu[Swahili Plural] mafuko butu[English Word] golden mole[English Plural] golden moles[Taxonomy] Chlorotalpa sp.[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6an[Terminology] zoology------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] mole rat[English Plural] mole rats[Taxonomy] Tachyoryctes sp.; Heterocephalus glaber[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6an[Terminology] zoology------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] hole (dug out)[English Plural] holes[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] pit[English Plural] pits[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] ditch[English Plural] ditches[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] trench[English Plural] trenches[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] excavation[English Plural] excavations[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] dam[English Plural] dams[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] embankment[English Plural] embankments[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] mole[English Plural] moles[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia[English Definition] a protective structure of stone or concrete; extends from shore into the water to prevent a beach from washing away------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] pier[English Plural] piers[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Related Words] -fukia------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] womb[English Plural] wombs[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Note] rare------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] fuko[Swahili Plural] mafuko[English Word] bag (large)[English Plural] bags[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Derived Language] Swahili[Derived Word] mfuko------------------------------------------------------------ -
38 ukono
[Swahili Word] ukono[Swahili Plural] kono[English Word] tendril[English Plural] tendrils[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 11/10[Derived Language] Swahili[Derived Word] mkono[English Definition] slender stemlike structure by which some twining plants attach themselves to an object for support------------------------------------------------------------ -
39 uundaji
------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] uundaji[English Word] construction[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] uundaji[English Word] organization[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] uundaji[English Word] structure[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] uundaji wa bei[English Word] price mechanism[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] unda V, bei N------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] uundaji wa tabaka[Swahili Plural] uundaji wa matabaka[English Word] class formation[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] unda V, tabaka N------------------------------------------------------------ -
40 story
------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story[English Plural] stories[Swahili Word] hadithi[Swahili Plural] hadithi[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 9/10[English Example] If you tell him a <b>story</b>, the child will fall sleep.[Swahili Example] Ukimwambia <b>hadithi</b>, mtoto atasinzia.------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story[English Plural] stories[Swahili Word] hekaya[Swahili Plural] hekaya[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 9/10[Derived Language] Arabic------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story[English Plural] stories[Swahili Word] kisa[Swahili Plural] visa[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 7/8[Swahili Example] Subira alikumbuka kisa cha wahalifu wawili [Sul]------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story[English Plural] stories[Swahili Word] ngano[Swahili Plural] ngano[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 9/10[Terminology] literary------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story[English Plural] stories[Swahili Word] simulizi[Swahili Plural] masimulizi[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6[Derived Word] simulia V------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story (of a building)[English Plural] stories[Swahili Word] gorofa[Swahili Plural] gorofa[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 9/10[Swahili Definition] shehemu ya nyumba iliyojengwa juu ya nyingine[English Example] a four-story house.------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story (of a building)[Swahili Word] orofa[Swahili Plural] orofa[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 9/10[English Example] a four-story house.[Swahili Example] nyumba ya orofa nne------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story (or a building)[Swahili Word] ghorofa[Swahili Plural] ghorofa[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 9/10[Swahili Definition] shehemu ya nyumba iliyojengwa juu ya nyingine[English Example] a four-story house.------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] story (upper floor)[English Plural] stories[Swahili Word] ghorofa[Swahili Plural] ghorofa[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 9/10[English Definition] Structure consisting of a room or set of rooms comprising a single level of a multilevel building------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] tell a story[Swahili Word] -simulia hadithi[Part of Speech] verb[Swahili Definition] eleza habari za mambo yaliyotukia; eleza kisa, ngano, masimulizi, riwaya------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] upper story[English Plural] upper stories[Swahili Word] gorofa[Swahili Plural] gorofa[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6------------------------------------------------------------
См. также в других словарях:
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