-
21 stimulus
noun, pl. stimuli2) (rousing effect) Anregung, die* * *['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) der Reiz2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) der Anreiz* * *stimu·lus<pl -li>[ˈstɪmjələs, pl -laɪ]nforeign investment has been a \stimulus to the industry ausländische Investitionen haben der Industrie Aufschwung gegeben* * *['stɪmjʊləs]n pl stimuli['stImjʊlaɪ] Anreiz m, Ansporn m; (= inspiration) Anregung f, Stimulus m; (PHYSIOL) Reiz m; (PSYCH) Stimulus mit gave the trade new stimulus — das hat dem Handel neuen Aufschwung gegeben
* * *stimulus [ˈstımjʊləs] pl -li [-laı; -liː] s1. Stimulus m:a) (An)Reiz m, Antrieb m, Ansporn m:under the stimulus of getrieben vonb) MED Reiz m:stimulus threshold Reizschwelle f3. BOT Nesselhaar n* * *noun, pl. stimuli2) (rousing effect) Anregung, die* * *n.(§ pl.: stimuli)= Anregung -en f.Auslöseimpuls m. -
22 stimulus
'stimjuləsplural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) estímulo2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) estímulostimulus n estímulotr['stɪmjələs]1 estímulo1) : estímulo m2) incentive: acicate mn.(§ pl.: stimuli) = estímulo s.m.• yesca s.f.'stɪmjələscount & mass noun (pl -li -laɪ) estímulo m['stɪmjʊlǝs]N (pl stimuli) [ˌ'stɪmjʊlaɪ] estímulo m, incentivo m* * *['stɪmjələs]count & mass noun (pl -li [-laɪ]) estímulo m -
23 stimulus
['stɪmjʊləs](pl. -i) nome1) fisiol. stimolo m.2) fig. (boost) stimolo m., impulso m., sprone m.3) fig. (incentive) stimolo m., incentivo m.* * *['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) stimolo2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) stimolo* * *stimulus /ˈstɪmjʊləs/ (lat.)n. [cu] (pl. stimuli)stimolo ( anche scient.); pungolo; incitamento; incentivo; impulso: the stimulus of hunger, lo stimolo della fame; a stimulus to competition, un incentivo alla concorrenza; to give stimulus to industry, dare impulso all'industria.* * *['stɪmjʊləs](pl. -i) nome1) fisiol. stimolo m.2) fig. (boost) stimolo m., impulso m., sprone m.3) fig. (incentive) stimolo m., incentivo m. -
24 stimulus
'stimjuləsplural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) spore, stimulans2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) insitament, stimuleringsubst. (fi) \/ˈst flertall: \/ˈstɪmjʊlaɪ\/ eller \/ˈstɪmjʊliˡ\/1) stimulans, ansporing, spore, incitament2) ( vitenskapelig) stimulusgive a stimulus to stimulere -
25 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) dražljaj2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) spodbuda* * *plural stimuli [stímjuləs, -mjulai]nounmedicine sredstvo za poživitev, poživilo; figuratively spodbuda; stimulus -
26 stimulus
n. uyarıcı, uyandırıcı, canlandırıcı, teşvik edici şey, ısırgan otu tüyü* * *1. stimulus 2. uyarı 3. uyarıcı* * *['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) uyarıcı2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) uyarım, teşvik -
27 stimulus
• impulssi• heräte• virkiste• virike• elvyke• alkusysäys• aihe• kiihoke• kiihotus• kiihote• kiihotin• kiihdyke• kannustin• stimulanssi• stimulus• sysäys• yllyke• ärsyke• piriste• piristysaine* * *'stimjuləsplural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) ärsyke2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) virike -
28 stimulus
n. stimulans; drivfjäder, sporre* * *['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) stimulus2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) sporre, drivjäder -
29 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) stimulus2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) stimulation -
30 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) áreiti, erting2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) örvun, hvatning; drifkraftur -
31 stimulus
élénkítőszer, ösztönző, inger, izgatószer* * *['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) inger2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) ösztönzés -
32 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) estímulo2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) estímulo* * *stim.u.lus[st'imjuləs] n (pl stimuli) 1 estímulo, incentivo. 2 aguilhão. -
33 stimulus
['stɪmjuləs]pl stimuli, nbodziec m* * *['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) bodziec2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) bodziec, zachęta -
34 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) stimuls2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) stimuls; pamudinājums* * *stimuls -
35 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) stimulas2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) paskata, akstinas -
36 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) podnět2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) hnací síla* * *• podnět• stimul -
37 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) podnet2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) hnacia sila, stimul* * *• spúštací impulz• stimul• dráždenie• hnacia sila• impulz• podráždenie• podnet• popud -
38 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) stimul2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) stimulent -
39 stimulus
['stimjuləs]plural - stimuli; noun1) (something that causes a reaction in a living thing: Light is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.) ερέθισμα2) (something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort: Many people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.) κίνητρο,έναυσμα -
40 stimulus
[ˈstɪmjuləs] plural ˈstimuli [-liː] noun1) something that causes a reaction in a living thing:باعِث، دافِعLight is the stimulus that causes a flower to open.
2) something that rouses or encourages a person etc to action or greater effort:مُثير، حافِزMany people think that children need the stimulus of competition to make them work better in school.
См. также в других словарях:
Stimulus control — is the phenomenon of a stimulus increasing the probability of a behavior (operant response) because of a history of that behavior being differentially reinforced in the presence of the stimulus. In other words, stimulus control is basically… … Wikipedia
stimulus — stimulus, stimulant, excitant, incitement, impetus can all mean an agent that arouses a person or a lower organism or a particualr organ or tissue to activity. Only the first three words have definite and common technical use. Stimulus, in this… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Light-gated ion channel — Light gated ion channels are a group of transmembrane proteins that form ion channels; pores which open or close in response to light. Most light gated ion channels have been synthesized in the laboratory for study, though one naturally occurring … Wikipedia
Stimulus — Stim u*lus, n.; pl. {Stimuli}. [L., for stigmulus, akin to L. instigare to stimulate. See {Instigare}, {Stick}, v. t.] 1. A goad; hence, something that rouses the mind or spirits; an incentive; as, the hope of gain is a powerful stimulus to labor … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Light pollution — This article is about light pollution in the visible spectrum. For information on pollution in the radio spectrum, see radio spectrum pollution. This time exposure photo of New York City at night shows skyglow, one form of light pollution … Wikipedia
Light effects on circadian rhythm — Numerous organisms maintain inherent individual rhythms to biological processes, known as circadian rhythms, that assist the organism in maintaining functional periodicity relative to the 24 hour day/night cycle of the earth. These rhythms are… … Wikipedia
stimulus — 1. A stimulant. 2. That which can elicit or evoke action (response) in a muscle, nerve, gland or other excitable tissue, or cause an augmenting action upon any function or metabolic … Medical dictionary
light — That portion of electromagnetic radiation (between 390 and 770 nm) to which the retina is sensitive (wavelength range of 380–780 nm). SEE ALSO: lamp. [A.S. leoht] cold l. 1. SYN: bioluminescence (1). 2. fluorescent l. as opposed to incandescent l … Medical dictionary
Adequate stimulus — The adequate stimulus is a property of a sensory receptor that determines the type of energy to which a sensory receptor responds to with the initiation of sensory transduction.A sensory receptor s adequate stimulus is determined by the signal… … Wikipedia
Distal stimulus — The distal stimulus (or distal object), the proximal stimulus, and percept are three concepts used to describe perception.The distal stimulus is the stimulus of an object as it actually exists in the real world.The distal stimulus provides… … Wikipedia
heterologous stimulus — noun : a stimulus capable of affecting any available sensory end organ and thought to be further capable of being interpreted centrally as a stimulus of the kind to which the end organ is adapted to respond a blow on the eye acts as a… … Useful english dictionary