slovo | definícia |
27 (gcide) | 27 \27\ adj.
1. denoting a quantity consisting of twenty-seven items or
units; -- representing the number twenty-seven as Arabic
numerals
Syn: twenty-seven, xxvii
[WordNet 1.5 +PJC] |
27 (wn) | 27
adj 1: being seven more than twenty [syn: twenty-seven, 27,
xxvii]
n 1: the cardinal number that is the sum of twenty-six and one
[syn: twenty-seven, 27, XXVII] |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
27th (encz) | 27th,dvacátý sedmý Zdeněk Brož |
fuel system icing inhibitor (mil-i-27686) (czen) | Fuel System Icing Inhibitor (MIL-I-27686),FSII[zkr.] [voj.] Zdeněk Brož
a automatický překlad |
27th (gcide) | 27th \27th\ adj.
1. coming next after the twenty-sixth in a series
Syn: twenty-seventh
[WordNet 1.5 +PJC] |
C15H27N (gcide) | Valeritrine \Va*ler"i*trine\, n. [Valeric + tropine + -ine.]
(Chem.)
A base, C15H27N, produced together with valeridine, which
it resembles.
[1913 Webster] |
C18H27O3N (gcide) | Pepper \Pep"per\ (p[e^]p"p[~e]r), n. [OE. peper, AS. pipor, L.
piper, fr. Gr. pe`peri, pi`peri, akin to Skr. pippala,
pippali.]
1. A well-known, pungently aromatic condiment, the dried
berry, either whole or powdered, of the Piper nigrum.
[1913 Webster]
Note: Common pepper, or black pepper, is made from the
whole berry, dried just before maturity; white pepper
is made from the ripe berry after the outer skin has
been removed by maceration and friction. It has less of
the peculiar properties of the plant than the black
pepper. Pepper is used in medicine as a carminative
stimulant.
[1913 Webster]
2. (Bot.) The plant which yields pepper, an East Indian woody
climber (Piper nigrum), with ovate leaves and apetalous
flowers in spikes opposite the leaves. The berries are red
when ripe. Also, by extension, any one of the several
hundred species of the genus Piper, widely dispersed
throughout the tropical and subtropical regions of the
earth.
[1913 Webster]
3. Any plant of the genus Capsicum (of the Solanaceae
family, which are unrelated to Piper), and its fruit;
red pepper; chili pepper; as, the bell pepper and the
jalapeno pepper (both Capsicum annuum) and the
habanero pepper (Capsicum chinense); . These contain
varying levels of the substance capsaicin (C18H27O3N),
which gives the peppers their hot taste. The habanero is
about 25-50 times hotter than the jalapeno according to a
scale developed by Wilbur Scoville in 1912. See also
Capsicum and http://www.chili-pepper-plants.com/.
[1913 Webster + PJC]
Note: The term pepper has been extended to various other
fruits and plants, more or less closely resembling the
true pepper, esp. to the common varieties of
Capsicum. See Capsicum, and the Phrases, below.
[1913 Webster]
African pepper, the Guinea pepper. See under Guinea.
Cayenne pepper. See under Cayenne.
Chinese pepper, the spicy berries of the {Xanthoxylum
piperitum}, a species of prickly ash found in China and
Japan.
Guinea pepper. See under Guinea, and Capsicum.
Jamaica pepper. See Allspice.
Long pepper.
(a) The spike of berries of Piper longum, an East Indian
shrub.
(b) The root of Piper methysticum (syn. {Macropiper
methysticum}) of the family Piperaceae. See Kava.
Malaguetta pepper, or Meleguetta pepper, the aromatic
seeds of the Amomum Melegueta, an African plant of the
Ginger family. They are sometimes used to flavor beer,
etc., under the name of grains of Paradise.
Red pepper. See Capsicum.
Sweet pepper bush (Bot.), an American shrub ({Clethra
alnifolia}), with racemes of fragrant white flowers; --
called also white alder.
Pepper box or Pepper caster, a small box or bottle, with
a perforated lid, used for sprinkling ground pepper on
food, etc.
Pepper corn. See in the Vocabulary.
Pepper elder (Bot.), a West Indian name of several plants
of the Pepper family, species of Piper and Peperomia.
Pepper moth (Zool.), a European moth (Biston betularia)
having white wings covered with small black specks.
Pepper pot, a mucilaginous soup or stew of vegetables and
cassareep, much esteemed in the West Indies.
Pepper root. (Bot.). See Coralwort.
pepper sauce, a condiment for the table, made of small red
peppers steeped in vinegar.
Pepper tree (Bot.), an aromatic tree (Drimys axillaris)
of the Magnolia family, common in New Zealand. See
Peruvian mastic tree, under Mastic.
[1913 Webster]Capsicum \Cap"si*cum\ (k[a^]p"s[i^]*k[u^]m), n. [NL., fr. L.
capsa box, chest.] (Bot.)
A genus of plants of many species, producing capsules or dry
berries of various forms, which have an exceedingly pungent,
biting taste, and when ground form the red or Cayenne pepper
of commerce.
[1913 Webster]
Note: The most important species are Capsicum baccatum or
bird pepper, Capsicum fastigiatum or chili pepper,
Capsicum frutescens or spur pepper (from which
tabasco is obtained), Capsicum chinense, which
includes the fiery-hot habanero pepper, and {Capsicum
annuum} or Guinea pepper, which includes the bell
pepper, the jalapeno pepper, the cayenne pepper, and
other common garden varieties. The fruit is much used,
both in its green and ripe state, in pickles and in
cookery. These contain varying levels of the substance
capsaicin (C18H27O3N), which gives the peppers
their hot taste. The habanero is about 25-50 times
hotter than the jalapeno according to a scale developed
by Wilbur Scoville in 1912. See also Cayenne pepper,
pepper and http://www.chili-pepper-plants.com/.
[1913 Webster + PJC]
3. Any plant of the genus Capsicum (of the Solanaceae
family, which are unrelated to Piper), and its fruit;
red pepper; chili pepper; as, the bell pepper and the
jalapeno pepper (both Capsicum annuum) and the
habanero pepper (Capsicum chinense); .
[1913 Webster + PJC] |
C27H30O14 (gcide) | morindin \mo*rin"din\, n. (Chem.)
A yellow dyestuff (C27H30O14) extracted from the root bark
of an East Indian plant (Morinda citrifolia) or from the
bark of Coprosma australis. The substance is also found in
the fruit of the Morinda citrifolia, called noni, which is
touted by some merchants to have a stimulatory effect on the
immune system. It is a disaccharide derivative of
anthracenedione.
[1913 Webster +PJC] |
C27H55 (gcide) | Ceryl \Ce"ryl\, n. [L. cera wax + -yl.] (Chem.)
A radical, C27H55 supposed to exist in several compounds
obtained from Chinese wax, beeswax, etc.
[1913 Webster] Cesarean |
C27H55OH (gcide) | Cerotin \Cer"o*tin\, n. [See Cerotene.] (Chem.)
A white crystalline substance, C27H55.OH, obtained from
Chinese wax, and regarded as an alcohol of the paraffin
series; -- called also cerotic alcohol, ceryl alcohol.
[1913 Webster] |
CH3CH25CHOHCH2CHCHCH27COOH (gcide) | ricinoleic acid \ric`in*o"le*ic ac"id\, n. (Chem.)
An organic acid (C18H34O3) obtained from the castor-oil
plant (Ricinus communis, or Palma Christi) and other
species of the family Euphorbiaceae; chemicaly it is
d-12-hydroxyoleic acid
(CH3(CH2)5.CH(OH).CH2.CH=CH.(CH2)7COOH). Formerly called
palmic acid.
[1913 Webster +PJC] |
27th (wn) | 27th
adj 1: coming next after the twenty-sixth in position [syn:
twenty-seventh, 27th] |
atomic number 27 (wn) | atomic number 27
n 1: a hard ferromagnetic silver-white bivalent or trivalent
metallic element; a trace element in plant and animal
nutrition [syn: cobalt, Co, atomic number 27] |
2780 (foldoc) | Binary Synchronous Transmission
2780
3780
bisync
(Bisynch) An IBM link protocol, developed in
the 1960 and popular in the 1970s and 1980s.
Binary Synchronous Transmission has been largely replaced in
IBM environments with SDLC. Bisync was developed for
batch communications between a System 360 computer and the
IBM 2780 and 3780 Remote Job Entry (RJE) terminals. It
supports RJE and on-line terminals in the CICS/VSE
environment. It operates with EBCDIC or ASCII {character
sets}. It requires that every message be acknowledged (ACK)
or negatively acknowledged (NACK) so it has high
transmission overhead. It is typically character oriented and
half-duplex, although some of the bisync protocol flavours
or dialects support binary transmission and full-duplex
operation.
(1997-01-07)
|
3270 (foldoc) | IBM 3270
3270
A class of terminals made by IBM known as
"Display Devices", normally used to talk to IBM
mainframes. The 3270 attempts to minimise the number of
I/O interrupts required by accepting large blocks of data,
known as datastreams, in which both text and control (or
formatting functions) are interspersed allowing an entire
screen to be "painted" as a single output operation. The
concept of "formatting" in these devices allows the screen to
be divided into clusters of contiguous character cells for
which numerous attributes (color, highlighting, {character
set}, protection from modification) can be set. Further,
using a technique known as 'Read Modified' the changes from
any number of formatted fields that have been modified can be
read as a single input without transferring any other data,
another technique to enhance the terminal throughput of the
CPU.
The 3270 had twelve, and later twenty-four, special Programmed
Function Keys, or PF keys. When one of these keys was
pressed, it would cause the device to generate an I/O
interrupt and present a special code identifying which key
was pressed. Application program functions such as
termination, page-up, page-down or help could be invoked by a
single key-push, thereby reducing the load on very busy
processors.
A version of the IBM PC called the "3270 PC" was released in
October 1983. It included 3270 terminal emulation.
tn3270 is modified version of Telnet which acts as a 3270
terminal emulator and can be used to connect to an IBM
computer over a network.
See also broken arrow.
(1995-02-07)
|
amd 29027 (foldoc) | AMD 29027
The FPU for the AMD 29000.
(1995-01-16)
|
ibm 2741 (foldoc) | IBM 2741
golf ball printer
A slow, letter-quality printing device and
terminal based on the IBM Selectric typewriter. The
print head was a little sphere resembling a golf ball, bearing
reversed embossed images of 88 different characters arranged
on four parallels of latitude; one could change the font by
changing the golf ball. The device communicated at 134.5 bits
per second, half duplex. When the computer transmitted, it
physically locked the keyboard.
This was the technology that enabled APL to use a
non-EBCDIC, non-ASCII, and in fact completely non-standard
character set. This put it 10 years ahead of its time -
where it stayed, firmly rooted, for the next 20, until
character displays gave way to programmable bit-mapped
devices with the flexibility to support other character sets.
(2006-08-04)
|
ibm 3270 (foldoc) | IBM 3270
3270
A class of terminals made by IBM known as
"Display Devices", normally used to talk to IBM
mainframes. The 3270 attempts to minimise the number of
I/O interrupts required by accepting large blocks of data,
known as datastreams, in which both text and control (or
formatting functions) are interspersed allowing an entire
screen to be "painted" as a single output operation. The
concept of "formatting" in these devices allows the screen to
be divided into clusters of contiguous character cells for
which numerous attributes (color, highlighting, {character
set}, protection from modification) can be set. Further,
using a technique known as 'Read Modified' the changes from
any number of formatted fields that have been modified can be
read as a single input without transferring any other data,
another technique to enhance the terminal throughput of the
CPU.
The 3270 had twelve, and later twenty-four, special Programmed
Function Keys, or PF keys. When one of these keys was
pressed, it would cause the device to generate an I/O
interrupt and present a special code identifying which key
was pressed. Application program functions such as
termination, page-up, page-down or help could be invoked by a
single key-push, thereby reducing the load on very busy
processors.
A version of the IBM PC called the "3270 PC" was released in
October 1983. It included 3270 terminal emulation.
tn3270 is modified version of Telnet which acts as a 3270
terminal emulator and can be used to connect to an IBM
computer over a network.
See also broken arrow.
(1995-02-07)
|
iso 8327 (foldoc) | session layer
ISO 8326
ISO 8327
layer 5
X.215
X.225
The third highest protocol layer (layer 5) in the
OSI
seven layer model. The session layer uses the {transport
layer} to establish a connection between processes on
different hosts. It handles security and creation of the
session. It is used by the presentation layer.
Documents: ITU Rec. X.225 (ISO 8327), ITU Rec. X.215 (ISO
8326).
[Examples?]
(1997-12-07)
|
rfc 2279 (foldoc) | RFC 2279
The RFC defining UTF-8.
(rfc:2279).
(1998-07-29)
|
rfc 2795 (foldoc) | RFC 2795
The RFC describing The {Infinite
Monkey Protocol Suite }.
(rfc:2795).
|
tn3270 (foldoc) | tn3270
A program, similar to telnet, used to connect to remote
IBM mainframe hosts, many of which do not understand
telnet. The program emulates a 3270-type terminal.
For many tn3270 versions, the "clear screen" function is
activated by typing Control-Z. When logged on to an IBM host
and "HOLDING" or "MORE..." appears at the lower right corner
of the screen, the "clear screen" function must be entered to
display the next screen. tn3270 emulations usually include
function key definitions.
(1994-11-03)
|
v.27 ter (foldoc) | V.27 ter
An ITU-T modem protocol which
allowed 4800 bps communications with fall back to 2400
bps. V27.ter was used by Fax machines.
(2004-07-26)
|
x.227 (foldoc) | Association Control Service Element
ACSE
ISO 8649
ISO 8650
X.217
X.227
(ACSE) The OSI method for establishing a call
between two application programs. ACSE checks the
identities and contexts of the application entities, and could
apply an authentication security check.
Documents: ITU Rec. X.227 (ISO 8650), X.217 (ISO 8649)
(1997-12-07)
|
map27 (vera) | MAP27
Mobile Access Protocol [for MPT 1327] (MPT 1327), "MAP 27"
|
mpt1327 (vera) | MPT1327
[British] Ministry of Post and Telecommunications [standard] 1327
|
|