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-ism -bâvari, -gerâyi, -geravi, -gari, -mandi, etc. Fr.: -isme A suffix denoting several senses, including state or condition, devotion or adherence, principle, doctrine, act, process. From Gk. -ismos, -isma noun suffixes, often directly, often through L. -ismus, -isma, sometimes through Fr. -isme, Ger. -ismus (all ultimately from Gk.); → -ist. |
absenteeism apâsgari, apâstgerâyi Fr.: absentéisme Voluntary non attendance at work, without valid reason. Absenteeism means either habitual evasion of work, or willful absence as in a strike action. It does not include involuntary or occasional absence due to valid causes, or reasons beyond one's control, such as accidents or sickness (BusinessDictionary.com). |
activism žireš-gari, žireš-bâvari Fr.: activisme 1) The doctrine or practice of vigorous action or involvement as a
means of achieving political or other goals, sometimes by
demonstrations, protests, etc. (Dictionary.com). See also
→ activist. |
angle of prism zâviye-ye manšur Fr.: angle de prisme → prism angle. |
anisoplanatism anizobirâhi, anizobirâhmandi Fr.: anisoplanatisme In an imaging system, the dependence of its performance on field angle. In other words, the spatial variability of the → point spread function for off-axis sources. → an- + → isoplanatism. |
antiferromagnetism pâd-âhanmeqnâtmandi Fr.: antiferromagnétisme A property possessed by some → metals, → alloys, and salts of transition elements in which there is a lack of → magnetic moment due to the antiparallel or spiral arrangement of atomic → magnetic moments. → anti- + → ferromagnetism. |
Antikythera mechanism sâzokâr-e Antikythera Fr.: machine d'Anticythère A unique Greek geared device, constructed around the end of the second century BC to display the movement of the Sun, the Moon, and possibly the planets around the Earth, and predict the dates of future eclipses. It measures about 32 by 16 by 10 cm and contains at least 30 interlocking gear-wheels, all of them having triangular teeth, from 15 to 223 in number. This device is one of the most stunning artefacts remained from antiquity, revealing an unexpected degree of technical creativity for the period. Nothing close to its technological sophistication appears again for well over a millennium, when astronomical clocks appear in the medieval Europe. It was discovered in 1901 in a sunken ship just off the coast of Antikythera, an island between Crete and the Greek mainland. Its significance and complexity were not understood until decades later. After lots of study involving several research fields, a copy of the device has recently been constructed. See, e.g., Freeth et al. 2006, Nature 444, 587. Named after the Greek island in the Ionia Sea from which the fragments of the device were discovered in 1901 by sponge divers, who found a sunken Roman ship. Several pieces of evidence indicate that the Roman ship carrying the device wrecked sometime shortly after 85 BC. The ship also contained an enormous booty of bronzes, glassware, jewelry and pottery; → mechanism. |
aplanatism nâbirâhi Fr.: aplanétisme Freedom from spherical aberration and coma. Aplanatism, from aplanatic, from a- "negation prefix" + Gk. plane "wandering," from planasthai "to wander" + -tic adjective-forming suffix. Nâbirahi, from nâ- "negation prefix" + birah "a devious path; a wanderer, who deviates, errs," + -i noun affix. |
apochromatism apâfâmi Fr.: apochromatisme The capacity of an optical system to bring three widely separated wavelengths of light into a single focus. → apochromatic; → -ism. |
asterism axtargân Fr.: astérisme A group of stars in the sky which are traditionally imagined to present a pattern within a → constellation. Examples include the → Big Dipper, the → Northern Cross, the → Square of Pegasus, and → Orion's Belt. Gk. asterismos "a marking with stars, constellation," from aster, → astro- + → -ism. Axtargân, from axtar "star" → astro- + -gân suffix denoting collective nature. |
asteroseismologic axtarlarzešenâsi, axtarlarzešenâsik Fr.: astérosismologique Of or relating to → asteroseismology. → spectropolarimetry; → -ic. |
asteroseismology axtarlarzešenâsi Fr.: astérosismologie The study of the → internal structure of stars through the interpretation of their pulsation periods (→ stellar pulsation). The radial pulsations are the result of → sound waves resonating in the stars interior. Different → pulsation modes penetrate to different depths inside a star. If a large number of pulsation modes occurs, then the stellar interior, which is not directly observable, can be probed from oscillation studies because the modes penetrate to various depths inside the star. Using a complex mathematical analysis, very detailed investigations of the structure of the star's interior can be carried out. Applied to the Sun, it is called → helioseismology. From → astero- "star," from aster-, → astro-, + → seismology. Axtarlarzešenâsi, from axtar "star," → astro-, + larzešenâsi, → seismology. |
astigmatism 1) nâgerâvari, 2) nâgerâbini Fr.: astigmatisme 1) An imperfection in an optical system whereby light from
a point source is formed into an image as a straight line,
ellipse, or circle. The rays of light in two perpendicular planes
appear as two lines at right angles. From astigmatic, from Gk. → a- "without" + stigmatos, from stigma "a mark, spot, puncture." 1) Nâgerâvari, from nâ- "without, un" + gerâ,
stem of gerâyidan "to converge," + -var, agent forming
suffix, + -i, noun forming suffix.
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atheism yazdân-nâbâvari, xodâ-nâbâvari, a-yazdân-bâvari Fr.: athée 1) The doctrine or belief that there is no → God. |
authoritarianism dâtârgânvarzi Fr.: autoritarisme 1) The enforcement or advocacy of strict obedience to authority at the
expense of personal freedom. → authoritarian; → -ism. |
automorphism xod-rixtmandi Fr.: automorphisme An → isomorphism between an → object and itself. |
bijective morphism rixtšenâsi-ye došâni Fr.: morphisme bijectif Same as → isomorphism. |
bismuth bismut (#) Fr.: bismuth A white, crystalline, brittle metallic chemical element with a pinkish tinge; symbol Bi. → Atomic number 83; → atomic weight 208.9804; → melting point 271.3°C; → boiling point about 1,560°C; → specific gravity 9.75 at 20°C; → valence +3 or +5. Bismuth is the most → diamagnetic of all metals. Its thermal conductivity is lower than any metal, except → mercury. There is only one naturally occurring → isotope of bismuth, 209Bi. Bismuth is used in a number of very different applications, chiefly in bismuth alloys, and in pharmaceuticals and chemicals. From Ger. Bismuth, Wismut, Wissmuth, probably from weisse Masse "white mass," indicating how the element appears in nature. |
bistability mechanism sâzokâr-e do-pâydâri Fr.: mécanisme de bistabilité The mechanism that accounts for the → bistability jump. → bistability; → mechanism. |
Blaauw mechanism sâzokâr-e Blaauw Fr.: mécanisme de Blaauw A mechanism aimed at explaining the → disruption of a → binary system. As one component loses mass dramatically, the resulting loss of → gravitational attraction changes the orbit of, or ejects completely, the → companion star. Adriaan Blaauw (1914-2010), 1961, Bull. Astron. Inst. Netherlands 15, 265; → mechanism. |
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