-
1 геометрическое расположение базовых элементов
Automation: feature-form geometry (изделия)Универсальный русско-английский словарь > геометрическое расположение базовых элементов
-
2 форма
1) General subject: blue, build, configuration, conformation, dress, fashion, figuration, fitness, form (таксономическая единица), forma (таксономическая единица), make, making, matrices, matrix, mode, mould, shape (охраняется в качестве товарного знака в некоторых странах), state, the outer seeming, turn, uniform, block, form, pro-forma (например, Форма № 1-пп = Pro-Forma No. 1-pp), (документа, например, 86-У или 4-ОПП) reference form2) Geology: habit (кристалла)3) Medicine: cast, contour, mold (для отливки искусственного зуба), shape4) American: olive drabs5) Obsolete: hue6) Sports: kit9) Agriculture: type10) Chemistry: former11) Construction: block mould, cast (для отливок), form (для литья, формовки изделий), former (для приготовления образцов испытываемого грунта), moulding box, position12) Mathematics: formation, quantic13) Railway term: figure, mould (для отливки)14) Automobile industry: feature15) Architecture: mould (I)16) Gastronomy: pan17) Metallurgy: casting box, habitus, mold box, molding box, pattern, profile, mould cassette19) Psychology: semblance, similitude20) Textile: board (для отделки чулок), cloth (обмундирование)21) Electronics: envelope22) Jargon: G.I., GI (General or Governmental issue)23) Oil: mold (для изготовления алмазного долота)25) Astronautics: physical envelope26) Food industry: baking tin, hind, retainer, tin27) Silicates: mold block, proplasm28) Drilling: matrice material29) Programming: flavor (напр. синтаксическая)30) Automation: (металлическая) die31) Quality control: presentation32) Plastics: die33) Robots: format (представления)34) Aviation medicine: writing35) Makarov: blank (бланк установленного образца), die (металлическая), form (бланк установленного образца), form (как таксономическая единица), frame (для заливки геля), make-up, mode (вид, тип процесса), mold (литейная), notation, shape (тары), template (для заливки геля)36) Electrochemistry: mold (матрица, полученная отпечатком в пластмассе), mould (матрица, полученная отпечатком в пластмассе)37) Drugs: product -
3 darstellen
(trennb., hat -ge-)I v/t1. (schildern) describe; (Tatsachen etc.) present; falsch darstellen misrepresent; Fakten verzerrt darstellen distort facts; negativ darstellen portray in a negative light2. grafisch etc.: represent; MATH. describe; in Umrissen: outline, sketch; in einem Diagramm darstellen draw a graph of3. künstlerisch: show, depict, portray; was soll dieses Bild darstellen? what is this picture supposed to represent?5. (bedeuten) be, represent, constitute; was stellt das eigentlich dar? what is it supposed to be?; was stellt dieses Zeichen dar? what does this symbol stand for ( oder represent)?; dieses Ereignis stellt einen großen Fortschritt dar this event is a major step forward; er stellt etwas dar umg., fig. he’s somebody, Brit. auch he looks the partII v/refl Sache: present itself, appear; Person: present ( oder portray) o.s.; sich darstellen als (sich erweisen als) show o.s. to be* * *to represent; to picture; to impersonate* * *dar|stel|len ['daːɐ-] sep1. vt1) (= abbilden) to show; (= ein Bild entwerfen von) to portray, to depict; (THEAT) to portray; Rolle to play; (= beschreiben) to describe; (auf Bildschirm) to display, to showetw in einem möglichst günstigen Licht dárstellen — to show sth in the best possible light
etw kurz or knapp dárstellen — to give a short description of sth
was sollen diese verworrenen Striche dárstellen? — what are these confused lines supposed to show or (in Zeichnung) be?
er stellt etwas/nichts dar (fig) — he has a certain air/doesn't have much of an air about him
dárstellende Geometrie — projective geometry
3) (= bedeuten) to constitute, to represent2. vr(= Eindruck vermitteln) to appear (jdm to sb); (= sich erweisen) to show oneselfdie Sache stellte sich ( als) sehr fragwürdig dar —
bei dem Talentwettbewerb stellte er sich als begabter Sänger dar — at the talent competition he showed himself to be a gifted singer
* * *1) (to give or have a part (especially an important one): That film features the best of the British actresses.) feature2) (to copy the behaviour etc of or pretend to be (another person), sometimes in order to deceive: The comedian impersonated the prime minister.) impersonate3) (to be a sign, symbol, picture etc of: In this play, the man in black represents Death and the young girl Life.) represent* * *dar|stel·len[ˈda:ɐ̯ʃtɛlən]I. vt1. (wiedergeben)etw blau/rot \darstellen to depict sth in blue/red formwas sollen diese Zeichen \darstellen? what do these symbols mean? [or stand for?2. THEAT▪ jdn \darstellen to portray [or play the part of] sbeine Rolle \darstellen to play a roleetw ausführlich/kurz [o knapp] \darstellen to give a detailed/brief description of sth4. (bedeuten)nichts \darstellen (keinen Eindruck machen) to be a nobodynichts im Leben \darstellen to be nothing in life5. CHEM▪ etw \darstellen to obtain sthII. vr1. (zeigen)die Sache stellt sich als sehr schwierig dar the matter appears [to be] very difficult2. (ausgeben als)* * *1.transitives Verb1) depict; portray2) (verkörpern) play; act2.etwas/nichts darstellen — make [a bit of] an impression/not make any sort of an impression; < gift etc.> look good/not look anything special
reflexives Verb1) (sich erweisen, sich zeigen) prove [to be]; turn out to besich jemandem als... darstellen — appear to somebody as...
* * *darstellen (trennb, hat -ge-)A. v/tfalsch darstellen misrepresent;Fakten verzerrt darstellen distort facts;negativ darstellen portray in a negative lightin einem Diagramm darstellen draw a graph of3. künstlerisch: show, depict, portray;was soll dieses Bild darstellen? what is this picture supposed to represent?5. (bedeuten) be, represent, constitute;was stellt das eigentlich dar? what is it supposed to be?;was stellt dieses Zeichen dar? what does this symbol stand for ( oder represent)?;dieses Ereignis stellt einen großen Fortschritt dar this event is a major step forward;sich darstellen als (sich erweisen als) show o.s. to be* * *1.transitives Verb1) depict; portray2) (verkörpern) play; actetwas/nichts darstellen — make [a bit of] an impression/not make any sort of an impression; <gift etc.> look good/not look anything special
4) (sein, bedeuten) represent; constitute2.reflexives Verb1) (sich erweisen, sich zeigen) prove [to be]; turn out to besich jemandem als... darstellen — appear to somebody as...
2) (sich selbst schildern) portray oneself* * *v.to depict v.to personate v.to picture v.to represent v. -
4 рельеф местности
1) General subject: relief, the lay of the land, the lie of the ground2) Geology: lay of land3) Naval: configuration of terrain, lay-of-the-land4) Military: configuration of the ground, configuration of the terrain, ground form, ground relief, terrain features5) Engineering: accidents of the ground, accidents of the terrain, lay of the ground, relief of the terrain, topography6) Agriculture: feature7) Railway term: surface relief8) Mining: topographic features9) Astronautics: surface geometry10) Cartography: conformation11) Geophysics: terrain relief, topographical relief12) Ecology: land configuration, land topography, landscape, surface topography13) Drilling: terrain14) Makarov: lie of the ground -
5 linea
I.Lit.:B.nectere lineas, restes, funes,
Varr. R. R. 1, 23, 6:linia longinqua per os religata,
Plin. 9, 17, 26, § 59:ligato pede longā lineā gallina custoditur,
Col. 8, 11, 15:linea margaritarum triginta quinque,
Dig. 35, 2, 26; cf.:lineae duae ex margaritis,
ib. 34, 2, 40; and ib. 9, 2, 27 fin.:linea dives (of the strings of pearls which were thrown among the people at the public games),
Mart. 8, 78, 7 (cf. Suet. Ner. 11).—In partic.1.In a net, the threads which form the meshes:b.licia difficile cernuntur: atque ut in plagis lineae offensae, praecipitant in sinum (of spiders' webs),
Plin. 11, 24, 28, § 82.—Transf., a net, Plin. 9, 43, 67, § 145:2.si feras lineis et pinna clusas contineas,
Sen. Clem. 1, 12, 5.—A fishing-line:3.tremulāve captum lineā trahit piscem,
Mart. 3, 58, 27; 10, 30, 18.—Hence, prov.: mittere lineam, to cast a line, to fish for, try to catch a person, Plaut. Most. 5, 1, 22.—A plumbline of masons and carpenters:b.perpendiculo et lineā uti,
Cic. Q. Fr. 3, 1, 1; cf.:ad regulam et lineam,
Vitr. 7, 3; 5, 3; Pall. 3, 9.—Hence,Ad lineam and rectā lineā, in a straight line, vertically, perpendicularly:4.solida corpora ferri suo deorsum pondere ad lineam,
Cic. Fin. 1, 6, 18; Plin. 19, 8, 42, § 147;of the layers of stone in a wall: saxa, quae rectis lineis suos ordines servant,
Caes. B. G. 7, 23:(ignis) rectis lineis in caelestem locum subvolat,
Cic. Tusc. 1, 17, 40.—A region, tract:5.linea tam rectum mundi ferit illa Leonem,
that region lies directly under the lion, Luc. 10, 306.—A bowstring, Ter. Maur. praef. v. 19.—II.Transf., a thread-like stroke or mark made with a pen, pencil, etc., a line:2.Apelli fuit perpetua consuetudo, numquam tam occupatam diem agendi, ut non, lineam ducendo, exerceret artem, quod ab eo in proverbium venit (namely, the proverb: nulla dies sine linea),
Plin. 35, 10, 36, § 84:lineam cinere ducere,
id. 18, 33, 76, § 327:candida per medium folium transcurrens,
id. 27, 11, 77, § 102:serra in praetenui linea premente harenas (of sawing marble),
id. 36, 6, 9, § 51:nec congruebant ad horas ejus lineae (of the sundial),
id. 7, 60, 60, § 214; Pers. 3, 4.—In geometry, a line: linea a nostris dicitur, quam grammên Graeci nominant. Eam M. Varro ita definit:Linea est, inquit, longitudo quaedam sine latitudine et altitudine,
Gell. 1, 20, 7:locorum extremae lineae,
Quint. 1, 10, 39:lineae, quae emittuntur ex centro,
Plin. 2, 65, 65, § 165; 2, 16, 13, § 64:linea circumcurrens,
a circular line, circle, Quint. 1, 10, 41.—In partic.(α).A boundary-line which consisted of a narrow path between fields, Hyg. de Limit. p. 151; 152 Goes. —(β).In gen., a way, path:b.dedit sequendam calle recto lineam,
Prud. Cath. 7, 48.—A barrier or line in the theatre, by which the seats were separated from each other:c.quid frustra refugis? cogit nos linea jungi,
Ov. Am. 3, 2, 19; id. A. A. 1, 139:lineas poscere,
Quint. 11, 3, 133.—A feature, lineament:B.adulti venustissimis lineis,
Arn. 5, 179 al. —Trop.1.A line of descent or kindred, lineage (post-class.): stemmata cognationum directo limite in duas lineas separantur, quarum altera est superior, altera inferior, Dig. 38, 10, 9:2.clara gentis Linea,
Stat. S. 3, 3, 43:primo gradu superioris linea continentur pater, mater,
Paul. Sent. 4, 11, 1.—An outline, sketch, design (a fig. borrowed from painting):3.quidam materias latius dicendo prosequebantur... alii, cum primas modo lineas duxissent,
Quint. 2, 6, 2; cf. id. 4, 2, 120: ea quae in Platonis oratione demiramur, non aemulari quidem, sed lineas umbrasque facere ausi sumus, Gell. 17, 20, 8.—A boundary-line, bound, limit, end, goal:cum poëtae transilire lineas impune possint,
Varr. L. L. 9, § 5 Müll.; Cassiod. Var. 3, 50:si quidem est peccare tamquam transire lineas,
to go beyond the mark, pass the prescribed limits, Cic. Par. 3, 1, 20:mors ultima linea rerum est,
Hor. Ep. 1, 16, 79:admoveri lineas sentio,
Sen. Ep. 49.—Hence, prov.: amare extremā lineā, to love at a distance, i. e. to see the beloved object only at a distance, not be able to speak to her, Ter. Eun. 4, 2, 12. -
6 linia
I.Lit.:B.nectere lineas, restes, funes,
Varr. R. R. 1, 23, 6:linia longinqua per os religata,
Plin. 9, 17, 26, § 59:ligato pede longā lineā gallina custoditur,
Col. 8, 11, 15:linea margaritarum triginta quinque,
Dig. 35, 2, 26; cf.:lineae duae ex margaritis,
ib. 34, 2, 40; and ib. 9, 2, 27 fin.:linea dives (of the strings of pearls which were thrown among the people at the public games),
Mart. 8, 78, 7 (cf. Suet. Ner. 11).—In partic.1.In a net, the threads which form the meshes:b.licia difficile cernuntur: atque ut in plagis lineae offensae, praecipitant in sinum (of spiders' webs),
Plin. 11, 24, 28, § 82.—Transf., a net, Plin. 9, 43, 67, § 145:2.si feras lineis et pinna clusas contineas,
Sen. Clem. 1, 12, 5.—A fishing-line:3.tremulāve captum lineā trahit piscem,
Mart. 3, 58, 27; 10, 30, 18.—Hence, prov.: mittere lineam, to cast a line, to fish for, try to catch a person, Plaut. Most. 5, 1, 22.—A plumbline of masons and carpenters:b.perpendiculo et lineā uti,
Cic. Q. Fr. 3, 1, 1; cf.:ad regulam et lineam,
Vitr. 7, 3; 5, 3; Pall. 3, 9.—Hence,Ad lineam and rectā lineā, in a straight line, vertically, perpendicularly:4.solida corpora ferri suo deorsum pondere ad lineam,
Cic. Fin. 1, 6, 18; Plin. 19, 8, 42, § 147;of the layers of stone in a wall: saxa, quae rectis lineis suos ordines servant,
Caes. B. G. 7, 23:(ignis) rectis lineis in caelestem locum subvolat,
Cic. Tusc. 1, 17, 40.—A region, tract:5.linea tam rectum mundi ferit illa Leonem,
that region lies directly under the lion, Luc. 10, 306.—A bowstring, Ter. Maur. praef. v. 19.—II.Transf., a thread-like stroke or mark made with a pen, pencil, etc., a line:2.Apelli fuit perpetua consuetudo, numquam tam occupatam diem agendi, ut non, lineam ducendo, exerceret artem, quod ab eo in proverbium venit (namely, the proverb: nulla dies sine linea),
Plin. 35, 10, 36, § 84:lineam cinere ducere,
id. 18, 33, 76, § 327:candida per medium folium transcurrens,
id. 27, 11, 77, § 102:serra in praetenui linea premente harenas (of sawing marble),
id. 36, 6, 9, § 51:nec congruebant ad horas ejus lineae (of the sundial),
id. 7, 60, 60, § 214; Pers. 3, 4.—In geometry, a line: linea a nostris dicitur, quam grammên Graeci nominant. Eam M. Varro ita definit:Linea est, inquit, longitudo quaedam sine latitudine et altitudine,
Gell. 1, 20, 7:locorum extremae lineae,
Quint. 1, 10, 39:lineae, quae emittuntur ex centro,
Plin. 2, 65, 65, § 165; 2, 16, 13, § 64:linea circumcurrens,
a circular line, circle, Quint. 1, 10, 41.—In partic.(α).A boundary-line which consisted of a narrow path between fields, Hyg. de Limit. p. 151; 152 Goes. —(β).In gen., a way, path:b.dedit sequendam calle recto lineam,
Prud. Cath. 7, 48.—A barrier or line in the theatre, by which the seats were separated from each other:c.quid frustra refugis? cogit nos linea jungi,
Ov. Am. 3, 2, 19; id. A. A. 1, 139:lineas poscere,
Quint. 11, 3, 133.—A feature, lineament:B.adulti venustissimis lineis,
Arn. 5, 179 al. —Trop.1.A line of descent or kindred, lineage (post-class.): stemmata cognationum directo limite in duas lineas separantur, quarum altera est superior, altera inferior, Dig. 38, 10, 9:2.clara gentis Linea,
Stat. S. 3, 3, 43:primo gradu superioris linea continentur pater, mater,
Paul. Sent. 4, 11, 1.—An outline, sketch, design (a fig. borrowed from painting):3.quidam materias latius dicendo prosequebantur... alii, cum primas modo lineas duxissent,
Quint. 2, 6, 2; cf. id. 4, 2, 120: ea quae in Platonis oratione demiramur, non aemulari quidem, sed lineas umbrasque facere ausi sumus, Gell. 17, 20, 8.—A boundary-line, bound, limit, end, goal:cum poëtae transilire lineas impune possint,
Varr. L. L. 9, § 5 Müll.; Cassiod. Var. 3, 50:si quidem est peccare tamquam transire lineas,
to go beyond the mark, pass the prescribed limits, Cic. Par. 3, 1, 20:mors ultima linea rerum est,
Hor. Ep. 1, 16, 79:admoveri lineas sentio,
Sen. Ep. 49.—Hence, prov.: amare extremā lineā, to love at a distance, i. e. to see the beloved object only at a distance, not be able to speak to her, Ter. Eun. 4, 2, 12.
См. также в других словарях:
Geometry — (Greek γεωμετρία ; geo = earth, metria = measure) is a part of mathematics concerned with questions of size, shape, and relative position of figures and with properties of space. Geometry is one of the oldest sciences. Initially a body of… … Wikipedia
Feature recognition — The term feature does not imply the same meaning in different engineering disciplines. This has resulted in several ambiguous definitions for feature. A feature, in computer aided design (CAD) software, can be called a region of a part with some… … Wikipedia
geometry — /jee om i tree/, n. 1. the branch of mathematics that deals with the deduction of the properties, measurement, and relationships of points, lines, angles, and figures in space from their defining conditions by means of certain assumed properties… … Universalium
Scale-invariant feature transform — Feature detection Output of a typical corner detection algorithm … Wikipedia
Greek arithmetic, geometry and harmonics: Thales to Plato — Ian Mueller INTRODUCTION: PROCLUS’ HISTORY OF GEOMETRY In a famous passage in Book VII of the Republic starting at Socrates proposes to inquire about the studies (mathēmata) needed to train the young people who will become leaders of the ideal… … History of philosophy
Conformal geometry — In mathematics, conformal geometry is the study of the set of angle preserving (conformal) transformations on a space. In two real dimensions, conformal geometry is precisely the geometry of Riemann surfaces. In more than two dimensions,… … Wikipedia
Memory geometry — In the design of modern personal computers, memory geometry describes the internal structure of random access memory. Memory geometry is of concern to consumers upgrading their computers, since older memory controllers may not be compatible with… … Wikipedia
Differential form — In the mathematical fields of differential geometry and tensor calculus, differential forms are an approach to multivariable calculus that is independent of coordinates. Differential forms provide a better[further explanation needed] definition… … Wikipedia
Whitehead's point-free geometry — In mathematics, point free geometry is a geometry whose primitive ontological notion is region rather than point. Two axiomatic systems are set out below, one grounded in mereology, the other in mereotopology and known as connection theory… … Wikipedia
Hyperbolic geometry — Lines through a given point P and asymptotic to line R. A triangle immersed in a saddle shape plane (a hyperbolic paraboloid), as well as two diverging ultraparall … Wikipedia
Duality (projective geometry) — A striking feature of projective planes is the symmetry of the roles played by points and lines in the definitions and theorems, and (plane) duality is the formalization of this metamathematical concept. There are two approaches to the subject of … Wikipedia