| podobné slovo | definícia |
.45 caliber (encz) | .45 caliber, adj: |
.45 calibre (encz) | .45 calibre, adj: |
george smith patton (1885-1945) (czen) | George Smith Patton (1885-1945),Pattonn: [jmén.] americký generál Petr
Prášek |
CuSO45H2O (gcide) | Water \Wa"ter\ (w[add]"t[~e]r), n. [AS. w[ae]ter; akin to OS.
watar, OFries. wetir, weter, LG. & D. water, G. wasser, OHG.
wazzar, Icel. vatn, Sw. vatten, Dan. vand, Goth. wat[=o], O.
Slav. & Russ. voda, Gr. 'y`dwr, Skr. udan water, ud to wet,
and perhaps to L. unda wave. [root]137. Cf. Dropsy,
Hydra, Otter, Wet, Whisky.]
1. The fluid which descends from the clouds in rain, and
which forms rivers, lakes, seas, etc. "We will drink
water." --Shak. "Powers of fire, air, water, and earth."
--Milton.
[1913 Webster]
Note: Pure water consists of hydrogen and oxygen, H2O, and
is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, transparent
liquid, which is very slightly compressible. At its
maximum density, 39[deg] Fahr. or 4[deg] C., it is the
standard for specific gravities, one cubic centimeter
weighing one gram. It freezes at 32[deg] Fahr. or
0[deg] C. and boils at 212[deg] Fahr. or 100[deg] C.
(see Ice, Steam). It is the most important natural
solvent, and is frequently impregnated with foreign
matter which is mostly removed by distillation; hence,
rain water is nearly pure. It is an important
ingredient in the tissue of animals and plants, the
human body containing about two thirds its weight of
water.
[1913 Webster]
2. A body of water, standing or flowing; a lake, river, or
other collection of water.
[1913 Webster]
Remembering he had passed over a small water a poor
scholar when first coming to the university, he
kneeled. --Fuller.
[1913 Webster]
3. Any liquid secretion, humor, or the like, resembling
water; esp., the urine.
[1913 Webster]
4. (Pharm.) A solution in water of a gaseous or readily
volatile substance; as, ammonia water. --U. S. Pharm.
[1913 Webster]
5. The limpidity and luster of a precious stone, especially a
diamond; as, a diamond of the first water, that is,
perfectly pure and transparent. Hence, of the first water,
that is, of the first excellence.
[1913 Webster]
6. A wavy, lustrous pattern or decoration such as is imparted
to linen, silk, metals, etc. See Water, v. t., 3,
Damask, v. t., and Damaskeen.
[1913 Webster]
7. An addition to the shares representing the capital of a
stock company so that the aggregate par value of the
shares is increased while their value for investment is
diminished, or "diluted." [Brokers' Cant]
[1913 Webster]
Note: Water is often used adjectively and in the formation of
many self-explaining compounds; as, water drainage;
water gauge, or water-gauge; waterfowl, water-fowl, or
water fowl; water-beaten; water-borne, water-circled,
water-girdled, water-rocked, etc.
[1913 Webster]
Hard water. See under Hard.
Inch of water, a unit of measure of quantity of water,
being the quantity which will flow through an orifice one
inch square, or a circular orifice one inch in diameter,
in a vertical surface, under a stated constant head; also
called miner's inch, and water inch. The shape of the
orifice and the head vary in different localities. In the
Western United States, for hydraulic mining, the standard
aperture is square and the head from 4 to 9 inches above
its center. In Europe, for experimental hydraulics, the
orifice is usually round and the head from 1/2 of an inch
to 1 inch above its top.
Mineral water, waters which are so impregnated with foreign
ingredients, such as gaseous, sulphureous, and saline
substances, as to give them medicinal properties, or a
particular flavor or temperature.
Soft water, water not impregnated with lime or mineral
salts.
To hold water. See under Hold, v. t.
To keep one's head above water, to keep afloat; fig., to
avoid failure or sinking in the struggles of life.
[Colloq.]
To make water.
(a) To pass urine. --Swift.
(b) (Naut.) To admit water; to leak.
Water of crystallization (Chem.), the water combined with
many salts in their crystalline form. This water is
loosely, but, nevertheless, chemically, combined, for it
is held in fixed and definite amount for each substance
containing it. Thus, while pure copper sulphate, CuSO4,
is a white amorphous substance, blue vitriol, the
crystallized form, CuSO4.5H2O, contains five molecules
of water of crystallization.
Water on the brain (Med.), hydrocephalus.
Water on the chest (Med.), hydrothorax.
[1913 Webster]
Note: Other phrases, in which water occurs as the first
element, will be found in alphabetical order in the
Vocabulary.
[1913 Webster] |
.45 caliber (wn) | .45 caliber
adj 1: of or relating to the bore of a gun (or its ammunition)
that measures forty-five hundredths of an inch in
diameter [syn: .45 caliber, .45-caliber, {.45
calibre}, .45-calibre] |
.45 calibre (wn) | .45 calibre
adj 1: of or relating to the bore of a gun (or its ammunition)
that measures forty-five hundredths of an inch in
diameter [syn: .45 caliber, .45-caliber, {.45
calibre}, .45-calibre] |
.45-caliber (wn) | .45-caliber
adj 1: of or relating to the bore of a gun (or its ammunition)
that measures forty-five hundredths of an inch in
diameter [syn: .45 caliber, .45-caliber, {.45
calibre}, .45-calibre] |
.45-calibre (wn) | .45-calibre
adj 1: of or relating to the bore of a gun (or its ammunition)
that measures forty-five hundredths of an inch in
diameter [syn: .45 caliber, .45-caliber, {.45
calibre}, .45-calibre] |
145 (wn) | 145
adj 1: being five more than one hundred forty [syn: {one hundred
forty-five}, 145, cxlv] |
145th (wn) | 145th
adj 1: the ordinal number of one hundred forty-five in counting
order [syn: hundred-and-forty-fifth, 145th] |
15 august 1945 (wn) | 15 August 1945
n 1: the date of Allied victory over Japan, World War II [syn:
V-J Day, 15 August 1945] |
45th (wn) | 45th
adj 1: the ordinal number of forty-five in counting order [syn:
forty-fifth, 45th] |
8 may 1945 (wn) | 8 May 1945
n 1: the date of Allied victory in Europe, World War II [syn:
V-E Day, 8 May 1945] |
atomic number 45 (wn) | atomic number 45
n 1: a white hard metallic element that is one of the platinum
group and is found in platinum ores; used in alloys with
platinum [syn: rhodium, Rh, atomic number 45] |
16450 (foldoc) | 16450
A UART with a one-byte FIFO buffer. The 16450
is a higher speed, fixed version of the 8250. It was
superseded by the 16550.
The 16450 was used for the IBM PC AT and PS/2 but will not
work in a IBM PC XT.
(2004-03-21)
|
4510 (foldoc) | 4510
A 65CE02 with two 6526 IO controllers.
Used in the Commodore 65.
(1996-04-06)
|
8450 (foldoc) | 8450
A serial IO chip with a one-byte FIFO. The
8450 was introduced with the Intel 8080.
(2004-03-21)
|
ge-645 (foldoc) | GE-645
A computer built by General Electric, the
successor to the GE-635, designed to provide the extra CPU
features required by the Multics project.
The GE-645 was designed in 1965 by John Couleur and Edward
Glaser at MIT. It had several security levels and
instructions for handling virtual memory. Addressing used
an 18-bit segment in addition to the 18-bit address,
dramatically increasing the theoretical memory size and making
virtual memory easier to support.
Design of the GE-645's successor, the GE-655, started in 1967.
(2006-09-24)
|
motorola 14500b (foldoc) | Motorola 14500B
(MC14500B) A 1-bit ICU from Motorola.
Probably the limit in small processors, the 14500B had a 4-bit
instruction and controlled a single data read/write line, used
for application control. It had no address bus - that was an
external unit that was added on. Another CPU could be used
to feed control instructions to the 14500B in an application.
It had only 16 pins, less than a typical RAM chip, and ran
at 1 MHz.
(1994-11-30)
|
rfc 1445 (foldoc) | RFC 1445
The RFC defining the administrative
model for SNMP v2.
(rfc:1445).
(1997-11-23)
|
rfc 1450 (foldoc) | RFC 1450
The RFC defining MIB for SNMP v2.
(rfc:1450).
(1997-11-23)
|
rfc 1451 (foldoc) | RFC 1451
The RFC defining {Manager to Manger
MIB}.
(rfc:1451).
(1997-11-23)
|
rfc 1452 (foldoc) | RFC 1452
The RFC describing coexistance
between SNMP v1 and SNMP v2.
(rfc:1452).
(1995-02-15)
|
rfc 2045 (foldoc) | RFC 2045
One of the RFCs defining MIME.
(rfc:2045).
(1999-10-29)
|
rj-45 (foldoc) | RJ-45
A serial connector which looks very much like a
standard telephone connector, except it houses eight wires
instead of four.
RJ-45s are typically found on computers either integrated
into the mother board or on a NIC. Because they are so
small they are often used on devices such as {terminal
servers} that have many ports.
Ethernet (10baseT) and Token Ring sometimes use four
wires of an RJ-45 plug, 100baseVG uses all eight.
100BaseTX uses the same four wires of the RJ-45 connector as
10baseT but the wire must be category 5 instead of {category
3}.
[Would the cable normally be shielded twisted pair or
unshielded twisted pair?]
(2004-05-22)
|
rj45 (vera) | RJ45
Registered Jack 45 (cable)
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