| | slovo | definícia |  | python (mass)
 | python - pytón
 |  | python (encz)
 | python,hroznýš	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  | python (encz)
 | python,krajta	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  | python (encz)
 | Python,programovací jazyk	n: [it.]		web |  | Python (gcide)
 | Python \Py"thon\, n. [NL., fr. L. Python the serpent slain near Delphi by Apollo, Gr. ?.]
 1. (Zool.) Any species of very large snakes of the genus
 Python, and allied genera, of the family Pythonid[ae].
 They are nearly allied to the boas. Called also {rock
 snake}.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: The pythons have small pelvic bones, or anal spurs, two
 rows of subcaudal scales, and pitted labials. They are
 found in Africa, Asia, and the East Indies.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. A diviner by spirits. "[Manasses] observed omens, and
 appointed pythons." --4 Kings xxi. 6 (Douay version).
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | python (wn)
 | python n 1: large Old World boas
 2: a soothsaying spirit or a person who is possessed by such a
 spirit
 3: (Greek mythology) dragon killed by Apollo at Delphi
 |  | python (foldoc)
 | Python 
 1.  A simple, high-level interpreted language
 invented by Guido van Rossum  in 1991.  Python
 combines ideas from ABC, C, Modula-3 and Icon.  It
 bridges the gap between C and shell programming, making it
 suitable for rapid prototyping or as an extension language
 for C applications.  It is object-oriented and supports
 packages, modules, classes, user-defined exceptions, a
 good C interface, dynamic loading of C modules and has no
 arbitrary restrictions.
 
 Python is available for many platforms, including Unix,
 Windows, DOS, OS/2, Macintosh and Amoeba.
 
 (http://python.org/).
 
 Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.lang.python.
 
 (2007-02-21)
 
 2.  A compiler for CMU Common LISP.  Python is
 more sophisticated than other Common Lisp compilers.  It
 produces better code and is easier to use.  The programming
 environment based on the Hemlock editor is better integrated
 than GNU Emacs based environments.
 
 (1997-02-27)
 
 |  | python (jargon)
 | Python /pi:'thon/
 
 In the words of its author, “the other scripting language” (other than {
 Perl}, that is). Python's design is notably clean, elegant, and well
 thought through; it tends to attract the sort of programmers who find Perl
 grubby and exiguous. Some people revolt at its use of whitespace to define
 logical structure by indentation, objecting that this harks back to the
 horrible old fixed-field languages of the 1960s. Python's relationship with
 Perl is rather like the BSD community's relationship to Linux — it's
 the smaller party in a (usually friendly) rivalry, but the average quality
 of its developers is generally conceded to be rather higher than in the
 larger community it competes with. There's a Python resource page at http:/
 /www.python.org. See also Guido, BDFL.
 
 Q
 
 | 
 | | podobné slovo | definícia |  | pythoness (encz)
 | pythoness,věštkyně	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  | reticulated python (encz)
 | reticulated python,	n: |  | rock python (encz)
 | rock python,	n: |  | subfamily pythoninae (encz)
 | subfamily Pythoninae,	n: |  | Python (gcide)
 | Python \Py"thon\, n. [NL., fr. L. Python the serpent slain near Delphi by Apollo, Gr. ?.]
 1. (Zool.) Any species of very large snakes of the genus
 Python, and allied genera, of the family Pythonid[ae].
 They are nearly allied to the boas. Called also {rock
 snake}.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: The pythons have small pelvic bones, or anal spurs, two
 rows of subcaudal scales, and pitted labials. They are
 found in Africa, Asia, and the East Indies.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. A diviner by spirits. "[Manasses] observed omens, and
 appointed pythons." --4 Kings xxi. 6 (Douay version).
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Python molurus (gcide)
 | Rock \Rock\, n. [OF. roke, F. roche; cf. Armor. roc'h, and AS. rocc.]
 1. A large concreted mass of stony material; a large fixed
 stone or crag. See Stone.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Come one, come all! this rock shall fly
 From its firm base as soon as I.      --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. (Geol.) Any natural deposit forming a part of the earth's
 crust, whether consolidated or not, including sand, earth,
 clay, etc., when in natural beds.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. That which resembles a rock in firmness; a defense; a
 support; a refuge.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The Lord is my rock, and my fortress. --2 Sam. xxii.
 2.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. Fig.: Anything which causes a disaster or wreck resembling
 the wreck of a vessel upon a rock.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. (Zool.) The striped bass. See under Bass.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: This word is frequently used in the formation of
 self-explaining compounds; as, rock-bound, rock-built,
 rock-ribbed, rock-roofed, and the like.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Rock alum. [Probably so called by confusion with F. roche a
 rock.] Same as Roche alum.
 
 Rock barnacle (Zool.), a barnacle (Balanus balanoides)
 very abundant on rocks washed by tides.
 
 Rock bass. (Zool.)
 (a) The stripped bass. See under Bass.
 (b) The goggle-eye.
 (c) The cabrilla. Other species are also locally called
 rock bass.
 
 Rock builder (Zool.), any species of animal whose remains
 contribute to the formation of rocks, especially the
 corals and Foraminifera.
 
 Rock butter (Min.), native alum mixed with clay and oxide
 of iron, usually in soft masses of a yellowish white
 color, occuring in cavities and fissures in argillaceous
 slate.
 
 Rock candy, a form of candy consisting of crystals of pure
 sugar which are very hard, whence the name.
 
 Rock cavy. (Zool.) See Moco.
 
 Rock cod (Zool.)
 (a) A small, often reddish or brown, variety of the cod
 found about rocks andledges.
 (b) A California rockfish.
 
 Rock cook. (Zool.)
 (a) A European wrasse (Centrolabrus exoletus).
 (b) A rockling.
 
 Rock cork (Min.), a variety of asbestus the fibers of which
 are loosely interlaced. It resembles cork in its texture.
 
 
 Rock crab (Zool.), any one of several species of large
 crabs of the genus C, as the two species of the New
 England coast (Cancer irroratus and Cancer borealis).
 See Illust. under Cancer.
 
 Rock cress (Bot.), a name of several plants of the cress
 kind found on rocks, as Arabis petraea, Arabis lyrata,
 etc.
 
 Rock crystal (Min.), limpid quartz. See Quartz, and under
 Crystal.
 
 Rock dove (Zool.), the rock pigeon; -- called also {rock
 doo}.
 
 Rock drill, an implement for drilling holes in rock; esp.,
 a machine impelled by steam or compressed air, for
 drilling holes for blasting, etc.
 
 Rock duck (Zool.), the harlequin duck.
 
 Rock eel. (Zool.) See Gunnel.
 
 Rock goat (Zool.), a wild goat, or ibex.
 
 Rock hopper (Zool.), a penguin of the genus Catarractes.
 See under Penguin.
 
 Rock kangaroo. (Zool.) See Kangaroo, and Petrogale.
 
 Rock lobster (Zool.), any one of several species of large
 spinose lobsters of the genera Panulirus and
 Palinurus. They have no large claws. Called also {spiny
 lobster}, and sea crayfish.
 
 Rock meal (Min.), a light powdery variety of calcite
 occuring as an efflorescence.
 
 Rock milk. (Min.) See Agaric mineral, under Agaric.
 
 Rock moss, a kind of lichen; the cudbear. See Cudbear.
 
 Rock oil. See Petroleum.
 
 Rock parrakeet (Zool.), a small Australian parrakeet
 (Euphema petrophila), which nests in holes among the
 rocks of high cliffs. Its general color is yellowish olive
 green; a frontal band and the outer edge of the wing
 quills are deep blue, and the central tail feathers bluish
 green.
 
 Rock pigeon (Zool.), the wild pigeon (Columba livia) Of
 Europe and Asia, from which the domestic pigeon was
 derived. See Illust. under Pigeon.
 
 Rock pipit. (Zool.) See the Note under Pipit.
 
 Rock plover. (Zool.)
 (a) The black-bellied, or whistling, plover.
 (b) The rock snipe.
 
 Rock ptarmigan (Zool.), an arctic American ptarmigan
 (Lagopus rupestris), which in winter is white, with the
 tail and lores black. In summer the males are grayish
 brown, coarsely vermiculated with black, and have black
 patches on the back.
 
 Rock rabbit (Zool.), the hyrax. See Cony, and Daman.
 
 Rock ruby (Min.), a fine reddish variety of garnet.
 
 Rock salt (Min.), cloride of sodium (common salt) occuring
 in rocklike masses in mines; mineral salt; salt dug from
 the earth. In the United States this name is sometimes
 given to salt in large crystals, formed by evaporation
 from sea water in large basins or cavities.
 
 Rock seal (Zool.), the harbor seal. See Seal.
 
 Rock shell (Zool.), any species of Murex, Purpura, and
 allied genera.
 
 Rock snake (Zool.), any one of several large pythons; as,
 the royal rock snake (Python regia) of Africa, and the
 rock snake of India (Python molurus). The Australian
 rock snakes mostly belong to the allied genus Morelia.
 
 
 Rock snipe (Zool.), the purple sandpiper ({Tringa
 maritima}); -- called also rock bird, rock plover,
 winter snipe.
 
 Rock soap (Min.), a kind of clay having a smooth, greasy
 feel, and adhering to the tongue.
 
 Rock sparrow. (Zool.)
 (a) Any one of several species of Old World sparrows of
 the genus Petronia, as Petronia stulla, of Europe.
 (b) A North American sparrow (Pucaea ruficeps).
 
 Rock tar, petroleum.
 
 Rock thrush (Zool.), any Old World thrush of the genus
 Monticola, or Petrocossyphus; as, the European rock
 thrush (Monticola saxatilis), and the blue rock thrush
 of India (Monticola cyaneus), in which the male is blue
 throughout.
 
 Rock tripe (Bot.), a kind of lichen ({Umbilicaria
 Dillenii}) growing on rocks in the northen parts of
 America, and forming broad, flat, coriaceous, dark fuscous
 or blackish expansions. It has been used as food in cases
 of extremity.
 
 Rock trout (Zool.), any one of several species of marine
 food fishes of the genus Hexagrammus, family Chiradae,
 native of the North Pacific coasts; -- called also {sea
 trout}, boregat, bodieron, and starling.
 
 Rock warbler (Zool.), a small Australian singing bird
 (Origma rubricata) which frequents rocky ravines and
 water courses; -- called also cataract bird.
 
 Rock wren (Zool.), any one of several species of wrens of
 the genus Salpinctes, native of the arid plains of Lower
 California and Mexico.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Python regia (gcide)
 | Rock \Rock\, n. [OF. roke, F. roche; cf. Armor. roc'h, and AS. rocc.]
 1. A large concreted mass of stony material; a large fixed
 stone or crag. See Stone.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Come one, come all! this rock shall fly
 From its firm base as soon as I.      --Sir W.
 Scott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. (Geol.) Any natural deposit forming a part of the earth's
 crust, whether consolidated or not, including sand, earth,
 clay, etc., when in natural beds.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. That which resembles a rock in firmness; a defense; a
 support; a refuge.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 The Lord is my rock, and my fortress. --2 Sam. xxii.
 2.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. Fig.: Anything which causes a disaster or wreck resembling
 the wreck of a vessel upon a rock.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. (Zool.) The striped bass. See under Bass.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: This word is frequently used in the formation of
 self-explaining compounds; as, rock-bound, rock-built,
 rock-ribbed, rock-roofed, and the like.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Rock alum. [Probably so called by confusion with F. roche a
 rock.] Same as Roche alum.
 
 Rock barnacle (Zool.), a barnacle (Balanus balanoides)
 very abundant on rocks washed by tides.
 
 Rock bass. (Zool.)
 (a) The stripped bass. See under Bass.
 (b) The goggle-eye.
 (c) The cabrilla. Other species are also locally called
 rock bass.
 
 Rock builder (Zool.), any species of animal whose remains
 contribute to the formation of rocks, especially the
 corals and Foraminifera.
 
 Rock butter (Min.), native alum mixed with clay and oxide
 of iron, usually in soft masses of a yellowish white
 color, occuring in cavities and fissures in argillaceous
 slate.
 
 Rock candy, a form of candy consisting of crystals of pure
 sugar which are very hard, whence the name.
 
 Rock cavy. (Zool.) See Moco.
 
 Rock cod (Zool.)
 (a) A small, often reddish or brown, variety of the cod
 found about rocks andledges.
 (b) A California rockfish.
 
 Rock cook. (Zool.)
 (a) A European wrasse (Centrolabrus exoletus).
 (b) A rockling.
 
 Rock cork (Min.), a variety of asbestus the fibers of which
 are loosely interlaced. It resembles cork in its texture.
 
 
 Rock crab (Zool.), any one of several species of large
 crabs of the genus C, as the two species of the New
 England coast (Cancer irroratus and Cancer borealis).
 See Illust. under Cancer.
 
 Rock cress (Bot.), a name of several plants of the cress
 kind found on rocks, as Arabis petraea, Arabis lyrata,
 etc.
 
 Rock crystal (Min.), limpid quartz. See Quartz, and under
 Crystal.
 
 Rock dove (Zool.), the rock pigeon; -- called also {rock
 doo}.
 
 Rock drill, an implement for drilling holes in rock; esp.,
 a machine impelled by steam or compressed air, for
 drilling holes for blasting, etc.
 
 Rock duck (Zool.), the harlequin duck.
 
 Rock eel. (Zool.) See Gunnel.
 
 Rock goat (Zool.), a wild goat, or ibex.
 
 Rock hopper (Zool.), a penguin of the genus Catarractes.
 See under Penguin.
 
 Rock kangaroo. (Zool.) See Kangaroo, and Petrogale.
 
 Rock lobster (Zool.), any one of several species of large
 spinose lobsters of the genera Panulirus and
 Palinurus. They have no large claws. Called also {spiny
 lobster}, and sea crayfish.
 
 Rock meal (Min.), a light powdery variety of calcite
 occuring as an efflorescence.
 
 Rock milk. (Min.) See Agaric mineral, under Agaric.
 
 Rock moss, a kind of lichen; the cudbear. See Cudbear.
 
 Rock oil. See Petroleum.
 
 Rock parrakeet (Zool.), a small Australian parrakeet
 (Euphema petrophila), which nests in holes among the
 rocks of high cliffs. Its general color is yellowish olive
 green; a frontal band and the outer edge of the wing
 quills are deep blue, and the central tail feathers bluish
 green.
 
 Rock pigeon (Zool.), the wild pigeon (Columba livia) Of
 Europe and Asia, from which the domestic pigeon was
 derived. See Illust. under Pigeon.
 
 Rock pipit. (Zool.) See the Note under Pipit.
 
 Rock plover. (Zool.)
 (a) The black-bellied, or whistling, plover.
 (b) The rock snipe.
 
 Rock ptarmigan (Zool.), an arctic American ptarmigan
 (Lagopus rupestris), which in winter is white, with the
 tail and lores black. In summer the males are grayish
 brown, coarsely vermiculated with black, and have black
 patches on the back.
 
 Rock rabbit (Zool.), the hyrax. See Cony, and Daman.
 
 Rock ruby (Min.), a fine reddish variety of garnet.
 
 Rock salt (Min.), cloride of sodium (common salt) occuring
 in rocklike masses in mines; mineral salt; salt dug from
 the earth. In the United States this name is sometimes
 given to salt in large crystals, formed by evaporation
 from sea water in large basins or cavities.
 
 Rock seal (Zool.), the harbor seal. See Seal.
 
 Rock shell (Zool.), any species of Murex, Purpura, and
 allied genera.
 
 Rock snake (Zool.), any one of several large pythons; as,
 the royal rock snake (Python regia) of Africa, and the
 rock snake of India (Python molurus). The Australian
 rock snakes mostly belong to the allied genus Morelia.
 
 
 Rock snipe (Zool.), the purple sandpiper ({Tringa
 maritima}); -- called also rock bird, rock plover,
 winter snipe.
 
 Rock soap (Min.), a kind of clay having a smooth, greasy
 feel, and adhering to the tongue.
 
 Rock sparrow. (Zool.)
 (a) Any one of several species of Old World sparrows of
 the genus Petronia, as Petronia stulla, of Europe.
 (b) A North American sparrow (Pucaea ruficeps).
 
 Rock tar, petroleum.
 
 Rock thrush (Zool.), any Old World thrush of the genus
 Monticola, or Petrocossyphus; as, the European rock
 thrush (Monticola saxatilis), and the blue rock thrush
 of India (Monticola cyaneus), in which the male is blue
 throughout.
 
 Rock tripe (Bot.), a kind of lichen ({Umbilicaria
 Dillenii}) growing on rocks in the northen parts of
 America, and forming broad, flat, coriaceous, dark fuscous
 or blackish expansions. It has been used as food in cases
 of extremity.
 
 Rock trout (Zool.), any one of several species of marine
 food fishes of the genus Hexagrammus, family Chiradae,
 native of the North Pacific coasts; -- called also {sea
 trout}, boregat, bodieron, and starling.
 
 Rock warbler (Zool.), a small Australian singing bird
 (Origma rubricata) which frequents rocky ravines and
 water courses; -- called also cataract bird.
 
 Rock wren (Zool.), any one of several species of wrens of
 the genus Salpinctes, native of the arid plains of Lower
 California and Mexico.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Python Sebae (gcide)
 | Snake \Snake\, n. [AS. snaca; akin to LG. snake, schnake, Icel. sn[=a]kr, sn?kr, Dan. snog, Sw. snok; of uncertain origin.]
 (Zool.)
 Any species of the order Ophidia; an ophidian; a serpent,
 whether harmless or venomous. See Ophidia, and Serpent.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Note: Snakes are abundant in all warm countries, and much the
 larger number are harmless to man.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Blind snake, Garter snake, Green snake, King snake,
 Milk snake, Rock snake, Water snake, etc. See under
 Blind, Garter, etc.
 
 Fetich snake (Zool.), a large African snake ({Python
 Sebae}) used by the natives as a fetich.
 
 Ringed snake (Zool.), a common European columbrine snake
 (Tropidonotus natrix).
 
 Snake eater. (Zool.)
 (a) The markhoor.
 (b) The secretary bird.
 
 Snake fence, a worm fence (which see). [U.S.]
 
 Snake fly (Zool.), any one of several species of
 neuropterous insects of the genus Rhaphidia; -- so
 called because of their large head and elongated neck and
 prothorax.
 
 Snake gourd (Bot.), a cucurbitaceous plant ({Trichosanthes
 anguina}) having the fruit shorter and less snakelike than
 that of the serpent cucumber.
 
 Snake killer. (Zool.)
 (a) The secretary bird.
 (b) The chaparral cock.
 
 Snake moss (Bot.), the common club moss ({Lycopodium
 clavatum}). See Lycopodium.
 
 Snake nut (Bot.), the fruit of a sapindaceous tree
 (Ophiocaryon paradoxum) of Guiana, the embryo of which
 resembles a snake coiled up.
 
 Tree snake (Zool.), any one of numerous species of
 colubrine snakes which habitually live in trees,
 especially those of the genus Dendrophis and allied
 genera.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Python tigris (gcide)
 | Anaconda \An`a*con"da\, n. [Of Ceylonese origin?] (Zool.) A large South American snake of the Boa family ({Eunectes
 murinus}), which lives near rivers, and preys on birds and
 small mammals. The name is also applied to a similar large
 serpent (Python tigris) of Ceylon.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Pythoness (gcide)
 | Pythoness \Pyth"o*ness\, n. [L. pythonissa: cf. F. pythonisse. See Pythian.]
 1. (Gr. Antiq.) The priestess who gave oracular answers at
 Delphi in Greece.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. Any woman supposed to have a spirit of divination; a sort
 of witch. --Bp. Hall.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Pythonic (gcide)
 | Pythonic \Py*thon"ic\, a. [L. pythonicus, Gr. ?. See Pythian.] Prophetic; oracular; pretending to foretell events.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Pythonism (gcide)
 | Pythonism \Pyth"o*nism\, n. The art of predicting events after the manner of the
 priestess of Apollo at Delphi; equivocal prophesying.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Pythonist (gcide)
 | Pythonist \Pyth"o*nist\, n. A conjurer; a diviner.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Pythonomarpha (gcide)
 | Mosasauria \Mos`a*sau"ri*a\, n. pl. [NL. See Mosasaurus.] (Paleon.)
 An order of large, extinct, marine reptiles, found in the
 Cretaceous rocks, especially in America. They were
 serpentlike in form and in having loosely articulated and
 dilatable jaws, with large recurved teeth, but they had
 paddlelike feet. Some of them were over fifty feet long. They
 are, essentially, fossil sea serpents with paddles. Called
 also Pythonomarpha, and Mosasauria.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | Pythonomorpha (gcide)
 | Pythonomorpha \Pyth`o*no*mor"pha\, n. pl. [NL. See Python, and -morphous.] (Paleon.)
 Same as Mosasauria.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | amethystine python (wn)
 | amethystine python n 1: a python having the color of amethyst
 |  | family pythonidae (wn)
 | family Pythonidae n 1: in some classifications a family separate from Boidae
 comprising Old World boas [syn: Pythonidae, {family
 Pythonidae}]
 |  | genus python (wn)
 | genus Python n 1: Old World boas
 |  | indian python (wn)
 | Indian python n 1: very large python of southeast Asia [syn: Indian python,
 Python molurus]
 |  | python molurus (wn)
 | Python molurus n 1: very large python of southeast Asia [syn: Indian python,
 Python molurus]
 |  | python reticulatus (wn)
 | Python reticulatus n 1: of southeast Asia and East Indies; the largest snake in the
 world [syn: reticulated python, Python reticulatus]
 |  | python sebae (wn)
 | Python sebae n 1: very large python of tropical and southern Africa [syn:
 rock python, rock snake, Python sebae]
 |  | python variegatus (wn)
 | Python variegatus n 1: Australian python with a variegated pattern on its back
 [syn: carpet snake, Python variegatus, {Morelia
 spilotes variegatus}]
 |  | pythoness (wn)
 | pythoness n 1: a witch with powers of divination
 2: (Greek mythology) the priestess of Apollo at Delphi who
 transmitted the oracles [syn: Pythia, Pythoness]
 |  | pythonidae (wn)
 | Pythonidae n 1: in some classifications a family separate from Boidae
 comprising Old World boas [syn: Pythonidae, {family
 Pythonidae}]
 |  | pythoninae (wn)
 | Pythoninae n 1: Old World boas: pythons; in some classifications considered
 a separate family from Boidae [syn: Pythoninae,
 subfamily Pythoninae]
 |  | reticulated python (wn)
 | reticulated python n 1: of southeast Asia and East Indies; the largest snake in the
 world [syn: reticulated python, Python reticulatus]
 |  | rock python (wn)
 | rock python n 1: very large python of tropical and southern Africa [syn:
 rock python, rock snake, Python sebae]
 |  | subfamily pythoninae (wn)
 | subfamily Pythoninae n 1: Old World boas: pythons; in some classifications considered
 a separate family from Boidae [syn: Pythoninae,
 subfamily Pythoninae]
 | 
 |