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1 fraction
['frækʃən]1) (a part; not a whole number eg 1/4, 3/8, 7/6 etc.) fracţie2) (a small part: She has only a fraction of her brother's intelligence.) mică parte• -
2 fraction
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3 fraction stroke
(mat, poligr) linie de fracţie -
4 improper fraction
(a fraction which is larger than 1: 7/5 is an improper fraction.) fracţie supraunitară -
5 decimal fraction
(a fraction expressed as so many tenths, hundredths, thousandths etc and written with a decimal point, like this: 0.1 (= 1/10), 2.33 (= 233/100).) fracţie zecimală -
6 bar of fraction
(mat, poligr) linie de fracţie -
7 close-cut fraction
(chim) fracţiune îngustă -
8 common fraction
(mat) fracţie simplă -
9 cut fraction
(petr) fracţiune -
10 decimal fraction
(mat) fracţie zecimală -
11 head fraction
(chim) frunte, fracţiune de frunte -
12 irrational fraction
(mat) fracţie iraţională -
13 light fraction
(chim, petr) fracţiune uşoară -
14 lube cut / fraction
(petr) fracţie / fracţiune uleioasă -
15 molar fraction
(fiz) fracţie molară -
16 partial fraction
(mat) fracţie elementară -
17 proper fraction
(mat) fracţie exactă -
18 tail fraction
(chim) fracţiune terminală de distilare -
19 vulgar fraction
(mat) fracţie ordinară -
20 decimal
['desiməl] 1. adjective(numbered by tens: the decimal system.) zecimal2. noun(a decimal fraction: Convert these fractions to decimals.) zecimală- decimalise
- decimalization
- decimalisation
- decimal currency
- decimal fraction
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
fraction — [ fraksjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1187; « rupture » v. 1400; bas lat. fractio, de frangere « briser » I ♦ Liturg. La fraction du pain : action de rompre le pain eucharistique avant de communier. II ♦ 1 ♦ (1538) Math. Nombre rationnel, élément de l ensemble Q … Encyclopédie Universelle
Fraction — Frac tion, n. [F. fraction, L. fractio a breaking, fr. frangere, fractum, to break. See {Break}.] 1. The act of breaking, or state of being broken, especially by violence. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] Neither can the natural body of Christ be subject to … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fraction — Fraction. subst. fem. Action par laquelle on rompt. En ce sens il n a d usage qu en certaines phrases consacrées. Les Pelerins d Emaüs connurent nostre Seigneur à la fraction du pain. le corps de Jesus Christ n est point rompu par la fraction de… … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
fraction — frac‧tion [ˈfrækʆn] noun [countable] a very small amount of something: • Generic versions of the drug sell for a fraction of the branded price. * * * fraction UK US /ˈfrækʃən/ noun [C, usually singular] ► a small part or amount of something:… … Financial and business terms
fraction — in general use means ‘a very small part’: • Teaching loads at white schools often are only a fraction the size of those at black schools Saturday Review, AmE 1971. This use is idiomatic despite the pedantic objection occasionally heard that a… … Modern English usage
Fraction — Frac tion, v. t. (Chem.) To separate by means of, or to subject to, fractional distillation or crystallization; to fractionate; frequently used with out; as, to fraction out a certain grade of oil from pretroleum. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
fraction — [n1] part bite, chunk, cut, division, end, fragment, half, piece, portion, section, share, slice; concept 835 Ant. entirety, total, whole fraction [n2] incomplete number bit, division, fragment, part, partial, piece, portion, quotient, ratio,… … New thesaurus
Fraction — (v. lat.), 1) Bruch; 2) das Brechen; 3) in den parlamentarischen Parteien die kleineren Unterabtheilungen od. Gruppen, welche in einzelnen Principienfragen von der Hauptpartei abweichen … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Fraction — Fraction, lat. fractio, Brechung, Bruch; Partei. Fractur, Knochenbruch; in der Buchdruckerei die eckige deutsche Schrift; in der Kalligraphie die Kanzleischrift, die nachgeahmte deutsche Druckschrift … Herders Conversations-Lexikon
fraction — index constituent (part), element, installment, member (constituent part), modicum, moiety, part … Law dictionary
fraction — late 14c., originally in the mathematical sense, from Anglo Fr. fraccioun (O.Fr. fraccion, 12c., breaking ) and directly from L.L. fractionem (nom. fractio) a breaking, especially into pieces, noun of action from pp. stem of L. frangere to break … Etymology dictionary