complete 1) ospor; 2) osporidan Fr.: 1) complet; 2) compléter 1a) General: Having all necessary parts, elements, or steps. From O.Fr. complet "full," from L. completus, p.p. of complere "to fill up," from → com- + plere "to fill," PIE *pelu- "full," from *pel- "to be full;" cf. O.Pers. paru- "much, many," Av. parav-, pauru-, pouru-, par- "to fill," Mod.Pers. por "full," Skt. puru-, Gk. polus. 1) Ospor, from Mid.Pers. uspurr "complete, entire," from
prefix us-, os-, → ex-, + por "full,"
O.Pers. paru- "much, many," Av. parav-, pauru-, pouru-,
par- "to fill," PIE *pelu- "full," from *pel-
"to be full;" cf. Skt. puru-, Gk. polus,
O.E. full "completely, full," from P.Gmc.
*fullaz, O.H.G. fol, Ger. voll, Goth. full. |
complete graph negâre-ye ospor Fr.: graphe complet In → graph theory, a simple graph with an → edge between every pair of → vertices. |
complete set hangard-e ospor Fr.: ensemble complet Quantum mechanics: A set of states such that any state can be represented as a superposition of them. |
completeness ospori Fr.: complétude 1) The state of being complete and entire. |
completeness magnitude borz-e ospori Fr.: magnitude de complétude In photometric studies of a → population of astronomical objects (usually stars or galaxies), the magnitude that represents the faintest members of the population. → completeness; → magnitude. |
incompleteness nâ-ospori Fr.: incomplétude The state of being incomplete, for example in photometric studies of a population of stars when the faintest members of the population are lacking. → completeness Negative of → completeness. |