slovodefinícia
chp
(encz)
CHP,kombinace topení a výroby energie [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač
podobné slovodefinícia
catchphrase
(mass)
catchphrase
- frázy
archpriest
(encz)
archpriest,arcikněz Zdeněk Brož
catchpenny
(encz)
catchpenny,bezcenný adj: Zdeněk Brožcatchpenny,brak n: Zdeněk Brož
catchphrase
(encz)
catchphrase,reklamní heslo Zdeněk Brož
chp/dh
(encz)
CHP/DH,kombinace topení a výroby energie při městském
vytápění [eko.] RNDr. Pavel Piskač
hotchpotch
(encz)
hotchpotch,směsice n: Zdeněk Brož
launchpad
(encz)
launchpad,odpalovací plocha Milan Svoboda
linchpin
(encz)
linchpin,opora linchpin,osa linchpin,základní pilíř
lunchpack
(encz)
lunchpack,
lynchpin
(encz)
lynchpin,základní pilíř Zdeněk Brož
marchpane
(encz)
marchpane,marcipán n: Zdeněk Brož
matchplay
(encz)
matchplay,druh hry v golfu Zdeněk Brož
scratchpad
(encz)
scratchpad, n:
sketchpad
(encz)
sketchpad,desky na nákresy Zdeněk Brožsketchpad,skicák n: Zdeněk Brož
touchpaper
(encz)
touchpaper,dráždit v: Zdeněk Brož
Archprelate
(gcide)
Archprelate \Arch`prel"ate\, n. [Pref. arch- + prelate.]
An archbishop or other chief prelate.
[1913 Webster]
Archpresbyter
(gcide)
Archpresbyter \Arch`pres"by*ter\, n.
Same as Archpriest.
[1913 Webster]
Archpresbytery
(gcide)
Archpresbytery \Arch`pres"by*ter*y\, n. [Pref. arch- +
presbytery.]
The absolute dominion of presbytery. --Milton.
[1913 Webster]
Archpriest
(gcide)
Archpriest \Arch`priest"\, n.
A chief priest; also, a kind of vicar, or a rural dean.
[1913 Webster]
Archprimate
(gcide)
Archprimate \Arch`pri"mate\, n. [Pref. arch- + primate.]
The chief primate. --Milton.
[1913 Webster]
Catchpenny
(gcide)
Catchpenny \Catch"pen*ny\, a.
Made or contrived for getting small sums of money from the
ignorant or unwary; as, a catchpenny book; a catchpenny show.
-- n. Some worthless catchpenny thing.
[1913 Webster]
Catchpoll
(gcide)
Catchpoll \Catch"poll`\, n. [OF. chacepol, chacipol.]
A bailiff's assistant.
Cich-pea
(gcide)
Cich-pea \Cich"-pea`\, n.
The chick-pea. --Holland.
[1913 Webster]
Hotchpot
(gcide)
Hotchpot \Hotch"pot`\, Hotchpotch \Hotch"potch`\, n. [F.
hochepot, fr. hocher to shake + pot pot; both of Dutch or
German origin; cf. OD. hutspot hotchpotch, D. hotsen, hutsen,
to shake. See Hustle, and Pot, and cf. Hodgepodge.]
1. A mingled mass; a confused mixture; a stew of various
ingredients; a hodgepodge.
[1913 Webster]

A mixture or hotchpotch of many tastes. --Bacon.
[1913 Webster]

2. (Law) A blending of property for equality of division, as
when lands given in frank-marriage to one daughter were,
after the death of the ancestor, blended with the lands
descending to her and to her sisters from the same
ancestor, and then divided in equal portions among all the
daughters. In modern usage, a mixing together, or throwing
into a common mass or stock, of the estate left by a
person deceased and the amounts advanced to any particular
child or children, for the purpose of a more equal
division, or of equalizing the shares of all the children;
the property advanced being accounted for at its value
when given. --Bouvier. Tomlins.
[1913 Webster]

Note: This term has been applied in cases of salvage. Story.
It corresponds in a measure with collation in the civil
and Scotch law. See Collation. --Bouvier. Tomlins.
[1913 Webster]
Hotchpotch
(gcide)
Hotchpot \Hotch"pot`\, Hotchpotch \Hotch"potch`\, n. [F.
hochepot, fr. hocher to shake + pot pot; both of Dutch or
German origin; cf. OD. hutspot hotchpotch, D. hotsen, hutsen,
to shake. See Hustle, and Pot, and cf. Hodgepodge.]
1. A mingled mass; a confused mixture; a stew of various
ingredients; a hodgepodge.
[1913 Webster]

A mixture or hotchpotch of many tastes. --Bacon.
[1913 Webster]

2. (Law) A blending of property for equality of division, as
when lands given in frank-marriage to one daughter were,
after the death of the ancestor, blended with the lands
descending to her and to her sisters from the same
ancestor, and then divided in equal portions among all the
daughters. In modern usage, a mixing together, or throwing
into a common mass or stock, of the estate left by a
person deceased and the amounts advanced to any particular
child or children, for the purpose of a more equal
division, or of equalizing the shares of all the children;
the property advanced being accounted for at its value
when given. --Bouvier. Tomlins.
[1913 Webster]

Note: This term has been applied in cases of salvage. Story.
It corresponds in a measure with collation in the civil
and Scotch law. See Collation. --Bouvier. Tomlins.
[1913 Webster]
Inchpin
(gcide)
Inchpin \Inch"pin\, n. [Written also inchipin, inche-pinne,
inne-pinne.] [Cf. Gael. inne, innidh, bowel, entrail.]
The sweetbread of a deer. --Cotgrave.
[1913 Webster]
launchpad
(gcide)
launchpad \launchpad\ n. (Rocketry)
a platform from which rockets or space craft are launched.

Syn: launching pad, launch pad, launch area, pad.
[WordNet 1.5]
Linchpin
(gcide)
Linchpin \Linch"pin`\ (l[i^]nch"p[i^]n`), n. [AS. lynis the
axletree; akin to D. luns linchpin, OS. lunisa, LG. lunse, G.
l["u]nse, OHG. lun peg, bolt.]
A pin used to prevent the wheel of a vehicle from sliding off
the axletree.
[1913 Webster]
Marchpane
(gcide)
Marchpane \March"pane`\, n. [Cf. It. marzapane,Sp. pan,.
massepain, prob. fr. L. maza frumenty (Gr. ma^za) + L. panis
bread; but perh. the first part of the word is from the name
of the inventor.]
A kind of sweet bread or biscuit; a cake of pounded almonds
and sugar. Called also marzipan. [Obs.] --Shak.
[1913 Webster]
Pinchpenny
(gcide)
Pinchpenny \Pinch"pen`ny\, n.
A miserly person.
[1913 Webster]
Touch-paper
(gcide)
Touch-paper \Touch"-pa`per\, n.
Paper steeped in saltpeter, which burns slowly, and is used
as a match for firing gunpowder, and the like.
[1913 Webster]
Trench-plough
(gcide)
Trench-plow \Trench"-plow"\, Trench-plough \Trench"-plough`\
(-plou`), v. t.
To plow with deep furrows, for the purpose of loosening the
land to a greater depth than usual.
[1913 Webster]
Trench-plow
(gcide)
Trench-plow \Trench"-plow"\, Trench-plough \Trench"-plough`\
(-plou`), v. t.
To plow with deep furrows, for the purpose of loosening the
land to a greater depth than usual.
[1913 Webster]
archpriest
(wn)
archpriest
n 1: a senior clergyman and dignitary [syn: archpriest,
hierarch, high priest, prelate, primate]
catchpenny
(wn)
catchpenny
adj 1: designed to sell quickly without concern for quality;
"catchpenny ornaments"
catchphrase
(wn)
catchphrase
n 1: a phrase that has become a catchword [syn: catchphrase,
catch phrase]
hotchpotch
(wn)
hotchpotch
n 1: a motley assortment of things [syn: odds and ends,
oddments, melange, farrago, ragbag, mishmash,
mingle-mangle, hodgepodge, hotchpotch, gallimaufry,
omnium-gatherum]
2: a stew (or thick soup) made with meat and vegetables
launchpad
(wn)
launchpad
n 1: a platform from which rockets or space craft are launched
[syn: launching pad, launchpad, launch pad, {launch
area}, pad]
linchpin
(wn)
linchpin
n 1: a central cohesive source of support and stability; "faith
is his anchor"; "the keystone of campaign reform was the
ban on soft money"; "he is the linchpin of this firm" [syn:
anchor, mainstay, keystone, backbone, linchpin,
lynchpin]
2: pin inserted through an axletree to hold a wheel on [syn:
linchpin, lynchpin]
lynchpin
(wn)
lynchpin
n 1: a central cohesive source of support and stability; "faith
is his anchor"; "the keystone of campaign reform was the
ban on soft money"; "he is the linchpin of this firm" [syn:
anchor, mainstay, keystone, backbone, linchpin,
lynchpin]
2: pin inserted through an axletree to hold a wheel on [syn:
linchpin, lynchpin]
marchpane
(wn)
marchpane
n 1: almond paste and egg whites [syn: marzipan, marchpane]
scratchpad
(wn)
scratchpad
n 1: (computer science) a high-speed internal memory used for
temporary storage of preliminary information
scratchpad i
(foldoc)
Scratchpad I

A general-purpose language originally for
interactive symbolic mathematics by Richard Jenks, Barry
Trager, Stephen M. Watt and Robert S. Sutor of IBM Research,
ca 1971. It features abstract parametrised data types,
multiple inheritance and polymorphism. There were
implementations for VM/CMS and AIX.

["Scratchpad User's Manual", RA 70, IBM (June 1975)].

(1994-12-15)
scratchpad ii
(foldoc)
Scratchpad II

See Scratchpad I, AXIOM.

["Scratchpad II Programming Language Manual", R.D. Jenks et
al, IBM, 1985].

[Scratchpad II Newsletter: Computer Algebra Group, TJWRC, Box
218, Yorktown Hts, NY 10598].
sketchpad
(foldoc)
Sketchpad

A program that allowed users to draw on a screen with a {light
pen}. It supported constraints (e.g. drawing a constrained
ellipse produced a circle). It also had some {computer aided
design} features (e.g. computing loads on beams).

Sketchpad was the subject of Ivan E. Sutherland's 1963 MIT
PhD thesis, which opened the field of computer graphics. It
was the progenitor of computer drawing packages like MacDraw
or Adobe Illustrator. There is a film of Sketchpad in
action.

It solved constraints using value inference and introduced
the "ring" list structure.

["Sketchpad: A Man-Machine Graphical Communication System",
I.e. Sutherland, MIT Lincoln Lab, TR 296 (Jan 1963)].

[Sammet 1969, p. 678].

(1995-02-14)
touchpad
(foldoc)
touchpad
trackpad

(Or "trackpad") A stationary pointing device used
mainly on laptop computers. Touchpads provide a small, flat
surface that you slide your finger over using the same
movements as you would a mouse. They were originally
developed to provide a more natural and intuitive connection
for the computer user than the mouse.

Touchpads use a principle called coupling capacitance, and
requires a conductive pointer such as a finger. They
contain a two-layer grid of electrodes which are connected
to an integrated circuit (IC) mounted under the pad. The
upper layer contains vertical electrode strips while the lower
layer is composed of horizontal electrode strips. Capacitance
from each of the horizontal electrodes to each of the vertical
electrodes is measured by the IC. A finger near the
intersection of two electrodes modifies the capacitance
between them, since a finger has very different dielectric
properties than air. The position of the finger is precisely
determined based on these changes at various locations.

According to one correspondent, you can use any part of your
body, which is not surprising, but not a McDonalds Chicken
McCrispy. You can use reheated Pizza Hut Christmas Pizza
though.

Synaptics (http://synaptics.com/product.htm).

(2000-11-01)
chpe
(vera)
CHPE
Compiled Hybrid Portable Executable
nchpc
(vera)
NCHPC
National Consortium for High Performance Computing (org., HPC,
USA)
CATCHPOLE
(bouvier)
CATCHPOLE, officer. A name formerly given to a sheriff's deputy, or to a
constable, or other officer whose duty it is to arrest persons. He was a
sort of serjeant. The word is not now in use as an official designation.
Minshew ad verb.

HOTCHPOT
(bouvier)
HOTCHPOT, estates. This homely term is used figuratively to signify the
blending and mixing property belonging to different persons, in order to
divide it equally among those entitled to it. For example, if a man seised
of thirty acres of land, and having two children, should, on the marriage of
one of them, give him ten acres of it, and then die intestate seised of the
remaining twenty; now, in order to obtain his portion of the latter, the
married child, must bring back the ten acres he received, and add it to his
father's estate, when an equal division of the whole will take place, and
each be entitled to fifteen acres. 2 Bl. Com. 190. The term hotchpot is also
applied to bringing together all the personal estate of the deceased, with
the advancements he has made to his children, in order that the same may be
divided agreeably to the provisions of the statute for the distribution of
intestate's estates. In bringing an advancement into hotchpot, the donee is
not required to account for the profits of the thing given; for example, he
is not required to bring into hotchpot the produce of negroes, nor the
interest of money. The property must be accounted for at its value when
given. 1 Wash. R. 224; 17 Mass. 358; 2 Desaus. 127.; 3 Rand. R. 117; 3 Pick.
R. 450; 3 Rand. 559; Coop. Justin. 575.
2. In Louisiana the term collation is used instead of hotchpot. The
collation of goods is the supposed or real return to the mass of the
succession, which an heir makes of property which he received in advance of
his share or otherwise, in order that such property maybe divided, together
with the other effects of the succession. Civ. Code of Lo. art. 1305; and
vide from that article to article 1367. Vide, generally, Bac. Ab.
Coparceners, E; Bac. Ab. Executors, &c., K; Com. Dig. Guardian, G 2,
Parcener, C 4; 8 Com. Dig. App. tit. Distribution, Statute of, III. For the
French law, see Merl. Repert. mots Rapport a succession.

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