slovo | definícia |
edison (encz) | Edison,Edison n: [jmén.] příjmení, město - Spojené státy americké Zdeněk
Brož a automatický překlad |
edison (czen) | Edison,Edisonn: [jmén.] příjmení, město - Spojené státy americké Zdeněk
Brož a automatický překlad |
edison (wn) | Edison
n 1: United States inventor; inventions included the phonograph
and incandescent electric light and the microphone and the
Kinetoscope (1847-1931) [syn: Edison, Thomas Edison,
Thomas Alva Edison] |
edison (foldoc) | Edison
1. (Named after the American inventor Thomas Edison
(1847-1931))
A simplified Pascal by Per Brinch Hansen with modules and
concurrency (cobegin/coend).
["Edison - A Multiprocessor Language", P. Brinch Hansen, CS
Dept, USC, Sep 1980].
["Programming a Personal Computer", Brinch Hansen, P-H 1977].
2. A language which adds an OPS5-like rete-based
production system system to C. It is implemented as a C
preprocessor.
["Edison, A Unix and C Friendly Rete Based Production System",
B. Thirion, SIGPLAN Notices 27(1):75-84 (Jan 1992)].
(1994-12-08)
|
| podobné slovo | definícia |
edison (encz) | Edison,Edison n: [jmén.] příjmení, město - Spojené státy americké Zdeněk
Brož a automatický překlad |
edison (czen) | Edison,Edisonn: [jmén.] příjmení, město - Spojené státy americké Zdeněk
Brož a automatický překlad |
Edison lamp (gcide) | Incandescent \In`can*des"cent\, a. [L. incandecens, -entis, p.
pr. of incandescere to become warm or hot; pref. in- in +
candescere to become of a glittering whiteness, to become red
hot, incho. fr. candere to be of a glittering whiteness: cf.
F. incandescent. See Candle.]
White, glowing, or luminous, with intense heat; as,
incandescent carbon or platinum; hence, clear; shining;
brilliant.
[1913 Webster]
Holy Scripture become resplendent; or, as one might
say, incandescent throughout. --I. Taylor.
[1913 Webster]
Incandescent lamp, Incandescent light, {Incandescent
light bulb} (Elec.), a kind of lamp in which the light is
produced by a thin filament of conducting material, now
usually tungsten, but originally carbon, contained in a
vacuum or an atmosphere of inert gas within a glass bulb,
and heated to incandescence by an electric current. It was
inventerd by Thomas Edison, and was once called the
Edison lamp; -- called also incandescence lamp, and
glowlamp. This is one of the two most common sources of
electric light, the other being the fluorescent light,
fluorescent lamp or fluorescent bulb.
[1913 Webster +PJC] |
edison (wn) | Edison
n 1: United States inventor; inventions included the phonograph
and incandescent electric light and the microphone and the
Kinetoscope (1847-1931) [syn: Edison, Thomas Edison,
Thomas Alva Edison] |
thomas alva edison (wn) | Thomas Alva Edison
n 1: United States inventor; inventions included the phonograph
and incandescent electric light and the microphone and the
Kinetoscope (1847-1931) [syn: Edison, Thomas Edison,
Thomas Alva Edison] |
thomas edison (wn) | Thomas Edison
n 1: United States inventor; inventions included the phonograph
and incandescent electric light and the microphone and the
Kinetoscope (1847-1931) [syn: Edison, Thomas Edison,
Thomas Alva Edison] |
edison (foldoc) | Edison
1. (Named after the American inventor Thomas Edison
(1847-1931))
A simplified Pascal by Per Brinch Hansen with modules and
concurrency (cobegin/coend).
["Edison - A Multiprocessor Language", P. Brinch Hansen, CS
Dept, USC, Sep 1980].
["Programming a Personal Computer", Brinch Hansen, P-H 1977].
2. A language which adds an OPS5-like rete-based
production system system to C. It is implemented as a C
preprocessor.
["Edison, A Unix and C Friendly Rete Based Production System",
B. Thirion, SIGPLAN Notices 27(1):75-84 (Jan 1992)].
(1994-12-08)
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