-
21 subdue
قَهَرَ \ oppress: to govern roughly and unjustly; cause to suffer and become weak: The people were oppressed by severe laws. overcome: to deal successfully with (a fault or difficulty); conquer. overwhelm: to defeat completely, with much larger or stronger forces; have such a strong effect on sb. that he feels completely helpless: Her kindness overwhelmed the poor old man. repress: to keep under control (feelings, etc.); prevent (sb.) from acting naturally: She repressed her anger. He tried to repress his tears. The prisoners are repressed by the severe prison rules. subdue: to conquer; bring under control: Napoleon subdued several European states. vanquish: to conquer. \ See Also كبت (كَبَتَ)، غمر (غَمَرَ)، كبح (كَبَحَ)، طغى (طَغَى) -
22 vanquish
قَهَرَ \ oppress: to govern roughly and unjustly; cause to suffer and become weak: The people were oppressed by severe laws. overcome: to deal successfully with (a fault or difficulty); conquer. overwhelm: to defeat completely, with much larger or stronger forces; have such a strong effect on sb. that he feels completely helpless: Her kindness overwhelmed the poor old man. repress: to keep under control (feelings, etc.); prevent (sb.) from acting naturally: She repressed her anger. He tried to repress his tears. The prisoners are repressed by the severe prison rules. subdue: to conquer; bring under control: Napoleon subdued several European states. vanquish: to conquer. \ See Also كبت (كَبَتَ)، غمر (غَمَرَ)، كبح (كَبَحَ)، طغى (طَغَى) -
23 valve
[vælv] noun1) a device for allowing a liquid or gas to pass through an opening in one direction only.صِمام2) a structure with the same effect in an animal body:صِمام القَلْبValves in the heart control the flow of blood in the human body.
3) a type of electronic component found in many, especially older, types of television, radio etc.صِمام الراديو او التلفِزْيون -
24 عام
عَامٌّ \ broad: general; not covering small points: The broad idea is to train more teachers. common: general; not special: the common people. general: (as part of a title) having a wide control; being concerned with the whole of sth. (a country, a public body, etc.): the Secretary-General of the United Nations; the Governor-General of Australia, concerning all, or nearly all; common; not special or particular The general public, general daily use. public: general; concerning everyone: a public holiday, open to everyone; not private a public meeting, open to everyone (if he pays, if there is room) a public bus; a public performance at a cinema, owned by the local government and open to everyone (on payment if necessary) public gardens; public baths. sweeping: having a wide effect: sweeping changes. universal: concerning everyone and everything; widespread: Food is a universal need. The young leader gained universal support. \ عَامٌ \ year: any period from 1st January to 31st December: the year 1974. \ See Also سنة (سَنَة) -
25 نفوذ
نُفُوذ \ influence: the power to have an effect on sb.: Some leaders of industry have great political influence. power: control of government: Their party came into power in 1951 and remained in power till 1964. prestige: the honour and respect that are won by splendid success or famous high qualities: the prestige of Rolls-Royce cars. \ See Also سلطة (سُلْطَة)، مكانة (مَكانَة) -
26 broad
عَامٌّ \ broad: general; not covering small points: The broad idea is to train more teachers. common: general; not special: the common people. general: (as part of a title) having a wide control; being concerned with the whole of sth. (a country, a public body, etc.): the Secretary-General of the United Nations; the Governor-General of Australia, concerning all, or nearly all; common; not special or particular The general public, general daily use. public: general; concerning everyone: a public holiday, open to everyone; not private a public meeting, open to everyone (if he pays, if there is room) a public bus; a public performance at a cinema, owned by the local government and open to everyone (on payment if necessary) public gardens; public baths. sweeping: having a wide effect: sweeping changes. universal: concerning everyone and everything; widespread: Food is a universal need. The young leader gained universal support. -
27 common
عَامٌّ \ broad: general; not covering small points: The broad idea is to train more teachers. common: general; not special: the common people. general: (as part of a title) having a wide control; being concerned with the whole of sth. (a country, a public body, etc.): the Secretary-General of the United Nations; the Governor-General of Australia, concerning all, or nearly all; common; not special or particular The general public, general daily use. public: general; concerning everyone: a public holiday, open to everyone; not private a public meeting, open to everyone (if he pays, if there is room) a public bus; a public performance at a cinema, owned by the local government and open to everyone (on payment if necessary) public gardens; public baths. sweeping: having a wide effect: sweeping changes. universal: concerning everyone and everything; widespread: Food is a universal need. The young leader gained universal support. -
28 general
عَامٌّ \ broad: general; not covering small points: The broad idea is to train more teachers. common: general; not special: the common people. general: (as part of a title) having a wide control; being concerned with the whole of sth. (a country, a public body, etc.): the Secretary-General of the United Nations; the Governor-General of Australia, concerning all, or nearly all; common; not special or particular The general public, general daily use. public: general; concerning everyone: a public holiday, open to everyone; not private a public meeting, open to everyone (if he pays, if there is room) a public bus; a public performance at a cinema, owned by the local government and open to everyone (on payment if necessary) public gardens; public baths. sweeping: having a wide effect: sweeping changes. universal: concerning everyone and everything; widespread: Food is a universal need. The young leader gained universal support. -
29 public
عَامٌّ \ broad: general; not covering small points: The broad idea is to train more teachers. common: general; not special: the common people. general: (as part of a title) having a wide control; being concerned with the whole of sth. (a country, a public body, etc.): the Secretary-General of the United Nations; the Governor-General of Australia, concerning all, or nearly all; common; not special or particular The general public, general daily use. public: general; concerning everyone: a public holiday, open to everyone; not private a public meeting, open to everyone (if he pays, if there is room) a public bus; a public performance at a cinema, owned by the local government and open to everyone (on payment if necessary) public gardens; public baths. sweeping: having a wide effect: sweeping changes. universal: concerning everyone and everything; widespread: Food is a universal need. The young leader gained universal support. -
30 sweeping
عَامٌّ \ broad: general; not covering small points: The broad idea is to train more teachers. common: general; not special: the common people. general: (as part of a title) having a wide control; being concerned with the whole of sth. (a country, a public body, etc.): the Secretary-General of the United Nations; the Governor-General of Australia, concerning all, or nearly all; common; not special or particular The general public, general daily use. public: general; concerning everyone: a public holiday, open to everyone; not private a public meeting, open to everyone (if he pays, if there is room) a public bus; a public performance at a cinema, owned by the local government and open to everyone (on payment if necessary) public gardens; public baths. sweeping: having a wide effect: sweeping changes. universal: concerning everyone and everything; widespread: Food is a universal need. The young leader gained universal support. -
31 universal
عَامٌّ \ broad: general; not covering small points: The broad idea is to train more teachers. common: general; not special: the common people. general: (as part of a title) having a wide control; being concerned with the whole of sth. (a country, a public body, etc.): the Secretary-General of the United Nations; the Governor-General of Australia, concerning all, or nearly all; common; not special or particular The general public, general daily use. public: general; concerning everyone: a public holiday, open to everyone; not private a public meeting, open to everyone (if he pays, if there is room) a public bus; a public performance at a cinema, owned by the local government and open to everyone (on payment if necessary) public gardens; public baths. sweeping: having a wide effect: sweeping changes. universal: concerning everyone and everything; widespread: Food is a universal need. The young leader gained universal support. -
32 influence
نُفُوذ \ influence: the power to have an effect on sb.: Some leaders of industry have great political influence. power: control of government: Their party came into power in 1951 and remained in power till 1964. prestige: the honour and respect that are won by splendid success or famous high qualities: the prestige of Rolls-Royce cars. \ See Also سلطة (سُلْطَة)، مكانة (مَكانَة) -
33 power
نُفُوذ \ influence: the power to have an effect on sb.: Some leaders of industry have great political influence. power: control of government: Their party came into power in 1951 and remained in power till 1964. prestige: the honour and respect that are won by splendid success or famous high qualities: the prestige of Rolls-Royce cars. \ See Also سلطة (سُلْطَة)، مكانة (مَكانَة) -
34 prestige
نُفُوذ \ influence: the power to have an effect on sb.: Some leaders of industry have great political influence. power: control of government: Their party came into power in 1951 and remained in power till 1964. prestige: the honour and respect that are won by splendid success or famous high qualities: the prestige of Rolls-Royce cars. \ See Also سلطة (سُلْطَة)، مكانة (مَكانَة)
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Control reversal — is an adverse effect on the controllability of aircraft. The flight controls reverse themselves in a way that is not intuitive, so pilots may not be aware of the situation and therefore provide the wrong inputs; in order to roll to the left, for… … Wikipedia
Control of respiration — Control of ventilation refers to the physiological mechanisms involved in the control of physiologic ventilation. Gas exchange primarily controls the rate of respiration. The most important function of breathing is gas exchange (of oxygen and… … Wikipedia
Control chart — One of the Seven Basic Tools of Quality First described by Walter A. Shewhart … Wikipedia
Control — Con*trol , n. [F. contr[^o]le a counter register, contr. fr. contr r[^o]le; contre (L. contra) + r[^o]le roll, catalogue. See {Counter} and {Roll}, and cf. {Counterroll}.] 1. A duplicate book, register, or account, kept to correct or check… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
control group — Control Con*trol , n. [F. contr[^o]le a counter register, contr. fr. contr r[^o]le; contre (L. contra) + r[^o]le roll, catalogue. See {Counter} and {Roll}, and cf. {Counterroll}.] 1. A duplicate book, register, or account, kept to correct or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Effect size — In statistics, an effect size is a measure of the strength of the relationship between two variables in a statistical population, or a sample based estimate of that quantity. An effect size calculated from data is a descriptive statistic that… … Wikipedia
Control flow — Not to be confused with Flow control. In computer science, control flow (or alternatively, flow of control) refers to the order in which the individual statements, instructions, or function calls of an imperative or a declarative program are… … Wikipedia
control theory — Field of applied mathematics relevant to the control of certain physical processes and systems. It became a field in its own right in the late 1950s and early 60s. After World War II, problems arising in engineering and economics were recognized… … Universalium
Control table — This simple control table directs program flow according to the value of the single input variable. Each table entry holds a possible input value to be tested for equality (implied) and a relevant subroutine to perform in the action column. The… … Wikipedia
control system — Means by which a set of variable quantities is held constant or caused to vary in a prescribed way. Control systems are intimately related to the concept of automation but have an ancient history. Roman engineers maintained water levels in… … Universalium
Control theory — For control theory in psychology and sociology, see control theory (sociology) and Perceptual Control Theory. The concept of the feedback loop to control the dynamic behavior of the system: this is negative feedback, because the sensed value is… … Wikipedia