slovodefinícia
bto
(encz)
BTO,sestavený na zakázku [zkr.] built to order Adam Nohejl
bto
(vera)
BTO
Build-To-Order
podobné slovodefinícia
subtotal
(mass)
subtotal
- medzisúčet
btobd
(encz)
BTOBD,Be There Or Be Dead [zkr.]
combtooth blenny
(encz)
combtooth blenny, n:
debtor
(encz)
debtor,debitor Zdeněk Broždebtor,dlužník n: [fin.] mamm
debtor country
(encz)
debtor country,
debtor position
(encz)
debtor position,
net debtor countries
(encz)
net debtor countries,
net debtor fuel exporters
(encz)
net debtor fuel exporters,
net debtor position
(encz)
net debtor position,
subtonic
(encz)
subtonic, n:
subtopia
(encz)
subtopia, n:
subtopic
(encz)
subtopic,bod v obsahu Zdeněk Brož
subtotal
(encz)
subtotal,mezisoučet Zdeněk Brož
british trust for ornithology bto
(czen)
British Trust for Ornithology BTO,British Trust for
Ornithology[eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač
bto british trust for ornithology
(czen)
BTO British Trust for Ornithology,British Trust for
Ornithology[eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač
obtok
(czen)
obtok,bypassn: Zdeněk Brož
obtočit
(czen)
obtočit,wreathev: PetrV
obtočit dokola
(czen)
obtočit dokola,lapv: Petr Prášek
Debtor
(gcide)
Debtor \Debt"or\, n. [OE. dettur, dettour, OF. detor, detur,
detour, F. d['e]biteur, fr. L. debitor, fr. debere to owe.
See Debt.]
One who owes a debt; one who is indebted; -- correlative to
creditor.
[1913 Webster]

[I 'll] bring your latter hazard back again,
And thankfully rest debtor for the first. --Shak.
[1913 Webster]

In Athens an insolvent debtor became slave to his
creditor. --Mitford.
[1913 Webster]

Debtors for our lives to you. --Tennyson.
[1913 Webster]
Doubtous
(gcide)
Doubtous \Doubt"ous\, a. [OF. dotos, douteus, F. douteux.]
Doubtful. [Obs.] --Chaucer.
[1913 Webster]
Subtonic
(gcide)
Subtonic \Sub*ton"ic\, a. (Phonetics)
Applied to, or distinguishing, a speech element consisting of
tone, or proper vocal sound, not pure as in the vowels, but
dimmed and otherwise modified by some kind of obstruction in
the oral or the nasal passage, and in some cases with a
mixture of breath sound; -- a term introduced by Dr. James
Rush in 1833. See Guide to Pronunciation, [sect][sect]155,
199-202.
[1913 Webster]Subtonic \Sub*ton"ic\, n.
1. (Phonetics) A subtonic sound or element; a vocal
consonant, as b, d, g, n, etc.; a subvocal.
[1913 Webster]

2. (Mus.) The seventh tone of the scale, or that immediately
below the tonic; -- called also subsemitone.
[1913 Webster]
Subtorrid
(gcide)
Subtorrid \Sub*tor"rid\, a.
Nearly torrid.
[1913 Webster]
Web-toed
(gcide)
Web-toed \Web"-toed`\, a.
Having the toes united by a web for a considerable part of
their length.
[1913 Webster]
combtooth blenny
(wn)
combtooth blenny
n 1: small usually scaleless fishes with comb-like teeth living
about rocky shores; are territorial and live in holes
between rocks [syn: blenny, combtooth blenny]
debtor
(wn)
debtor
n 1: a person who owes a creditor; someone who has the
obligation of paying a debt [syn: debtor, debitor]
[ant: creditor]
subtonic
(wn)
subtonic
n 1: (music) the seventh note of the diatonic scale [syn:
subtonic, leading tone]
subtopia
(wn)
subtopia
n 1: monotonous urban sprawl of standardized buildings
subtotal
(wn)
subtotal
n 1: the sum of part of a group of numbers
btoa
(foldoc)
btoa

/B too A/ A binary
to ASCII conversion utility.

btoa is a uuencode or base 64 equivalent which addresses
some of the problems with the uuencode standard but not as
many as the base 64 standard. It avoids problems that some
hosts have with spaces (e.g. conversion of groups of spaces
to tabs) by not including them in its character set, but may
still have problems on non-ASCII systems (e.g. EBCDIC).

btoa is primarily used to transfer binary files between
systems across connections which are not eight-bit clean,
e.g. electronic mail.

btoa takes adjacent sets of four binary octets and encodes
them as five ASCII octets using ASCII characters '!' through
to 'u'. Special characters are also used: 'x' marks the
beginning or end of the archive; 'z' marks four consecutive
zeros and 'y' (version 5.2) four consecutive spaces.

Each group of four octets is processed as a 32-bit integer.
Call this 'I'. Let 'D' = 85^4. Divide I by D. Call this
result 'R'. Make I = I - (R * D) to avoid overflow on the
next step. Repeat, for values of D = 85^3, 85^2, 85 and 1.
At each step, to convert R to the output character add decimal
33 (output octet = R + ASCII value for '!'). Five output
octets are produced.

btoa provides some integrity checking in the form of a line
checksum, and facilities for patching corrupted downloads.

The algorithm used by btoa is more efficient than uuencode
or base 64. ASCII files are encoded to about 120% the size of
their binary sources. This compares with 135% for uuencode or
base 64.

C source (ftp://hpux.csc.liv.ac.uk/hpux/Misc/btoa-5.2/).
(version 5.2 - ~1994).

Pre-compiled MS-DOS versions are also available.

(1997-08-08)
btos
(foldoc)
Convergent Technologies Operating System
BTOS
STARSYS

(CTOS, BTOS, STARSYS) /see-toss/ A modular,
message-passing, multi-process based operating system.

Convergent Technologies' first product was the IWS
(Integrated Workstation) based on the Intel 8086, which had
CTOS as its operating system. It is a modular operating
system with built-in local area networking. CTOS supports
multiple processes or threads and message-based
inter-process communication.

Companies which licensed CTOS included Burroughs (BTOS) and
Bull (STARSYS). The largest customer was Unisys, with
whom Convergent Technologies merged to become one company in
1988. CTOS had over 800,000 users worldwide.

CTOS ran on Intel Pentium computers, and could run
concurrently with Microsoft Windows NT.

Support for existing customers lasted at least until 2001.
Major customers included police forces, banks and airlines.

["Exploring CTOS", Miller E., Crook J., Loy J. - Prentice
Hall, ISBN 0-13-297342-1, 1991].

(1996-09-24)
btoa
(vera)
BTOA
Binary TO ASCII (ASCII)
DEBTOR
(bouvier)
DEBTOR, contracts. One who owes a debt; he who may be constrained to pay
what he owes.
2. A debtor is bound to pay his debt personally, and all the estate he
possesses or may acquire, is also liable for his debt.
3. Debtors are joint or several; joint, when they all equally owe the
debt in solido; in this case if a suit should be necessary to recover the
debt, all the debtors must be sued together or, when some are dead, the
survivors must be sued, but each is bound for the whole debt, having a right
to contribution from the others; they are several, when each promises
severally to pay the whole debt; and obligations are generally binding on
both or all debtors jointly and severally. When they are severally bound
each may be sued separately, and on the payment of debt by one, the others
will be bound to contribution, where all had participated in the money or
property, which was the cause of the debt.
4. Debtors are also principal and surety; the principal debtor is bound
as between him and his surety to pay the whole debt. and if the surety pay
it, he will be entitled to recover against the principal. Vide Bouv. Inst.
Index, h.t.; Vin. Ab. Creditor and Debtor; Id. Debt; 8 Com. Dig. 288; Dig.
50, 16, 108 Id. 50, 16, 178, 3; Toull. liv. 2, n. 250.

Nenašli ste slovo čo ste hľadali ? Doplňte ho do slovníka.

na vytvorenie tejto webstránky bol pužitý dictd server s dátami z sk-spell.sk.cx a z iných voľne dostupných dictd databáz. Ak máte klienta na dictd protokol (napríklad kdict), použite zdroj slovnik.iz.sk a port 2628.

online slovník, sk-spell - slovníkové dáta, IZ Bratislava, Malé Karpaty - turistika, Michal Páleník, správy, údaje o okresoch V4