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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. |
inconsistency nâhânesgâri Fr.: incohérence, inconsistance 1) Lack of consistency or agreement; incompatibility; an inconsistent
feature or quality. → in-; → consistency. |
inconsistent nâhânesgâr Fr.: incohérent, inconsistant 1) Lacking in consistency, agreement, or compatibility; at variance. → in-; → consistent. |
information content parbane-ye azdâyeš Fr.: contenu d'information The → negative of the → logarithm of the → probability that a particular → message or → symbol will be emitted by a → source. → information; → content. |
insistence darist Fr.: insistance The act or fact of insisting; the quality of being insistent. Verbal noun of → insist. |
insistent daristandé Fr.: insistant Earnest or emphatic in dwelling upon, maintaining, or demanding something; persistent; pertinacious (Dictionary.com). Adjective from → insist. |
intense dartanu Fr.: intense Existing or occurring in a high or extreme degree. See also → tense. From M.Fr. intense, from L. intensus "stretched, strained, tight," originally p.p. of intendere "to stretch out, strain," from in- "toward" + tendere "to stretch;" from PIE base *ten- "to stretch;" cf. Pers. tanidan "to spin, twist, weave," as below. âtanu, from â- affirmative prefix + tanu "stretched, strained," from tan + -u suffix of excess. The middle element tan, from tanidan "to spin, twist, weave" (Mid.Pers. tanitan; Av. tan- to stretch, extend;" cf. Skt. tan- to spin, stretch;" tanoti "stretches," tantram "loom;" Gk. teinein "to stretch, pull tight;" L. tendere "to stretch;" PIE base *ten- "to stretch"), Pers. târ "string," tân "thread," tur "fishing net, net, snare," and tâl "thread" (Borujerdi dialect) belong to this family; variants tanta "cobweb," tanadu, tafen, kartané, kârtané, kâtené, Pashtu tanistah "cobweb;" cf. Skt. tantu- "cobweb, thread, string"). |
intensification dartanuyeš Fr.: intensification The action of making or becoming stronger or more extreme. verbal noun of → intensify. |
intensifier dartanugar Fr.: intensificateur 1) Something that intensifies. Agent noun of → intensify. |
intensify dartanuyidan Fr.: intensifier To make intense or more intense. From → intense + -ify variant of -fy after a consonant, from O.Fr. fier, from L. -ficare "to do, make." |
intensity dartanuyi Fr.: intensité General: The quality or condition of being intense. Dartanuyi state, condition noun of dartanu, → intense. |
intensity of a line dartanuyi-ye xatt Fr.: intensité de raie The height of a spectral line above the continuum base. |
intensity of radiation datanuyi-e tâbeš Fr.: intensité de rayonnement The rate of emitted energy from unit surface area through unit solid angle. The radiation from a surface has different intensities in different directions. |
intensive dartanuyimand Fr.: intensif 1) Of, pertaining to, or characterized by intensity. |
intensive prefix pišvand-e dartanuyimand Fr.: préfixe intensif A prefix that highly emphasizes roots of words to which it is attached. In other words, intensive prefixes heighten the force of the primary meanings of words. These prefixes can effectively be translated as "thoroughly" to highlight their intensive function. For example the prefixes → re-, → de-, and → com-. |
intermittency raftomând (#) Fr.: intermittence A property of a turbulent dynamical system which is characterized by chaotic, irregular behavior occurring between quiet (or less irregular) periods. In other words, a → turbulent flow having a large → Reynolds number undergoes a phenomenon in which its turbulent activity at a fixed location stops from time to time and starts again. In fact → turbulence never completely disappears, but it can become extremely weak interrupted irregularly by bursts of strong turbulence (see also → developed turbulence). For intermittent flows → probability density functions are not → Gaussian. Turbulent intermittency plays a fundamental role in fields ranging from combustion physics, chemical engineering, meteorology, to astrophysical systems, more specifically the → interstellar medium. From L. intermittent, pr.p. of intermittere "to leave a space between, drop (for a while), leave off," from → inter- + mittere "to send, let go." Raftomând, literally "to go and to stop," from raft past stem of raftan "to go, walk, proceed" (present stem row-); Mid.Pers. raftan, raw-, Proto-Iranian *rab/f- "to go; to attack") + -o- euphonic infix + mând past stem of mândan "to remain, stay, relinquish, leave" (Mid.Pers. mândan "to remain, stay," mân "house, home;" O.Pers. mān- "to remain, dwell;" Av. man- "to remain, dwell; to wait;" cf. Gk. menein "to remain;" L. manere "to stay, remain, abide," mansio "a staying, a remaining, night quarters, station" (Fr. maison, ménage; E. manor, mansion, permanent; PIE *men- "to remain, wait for"). |
intermittent raftomândi (#) Fr.: intermittent Alternately ceasing and beginning again; adj. of → intermittency. Adjective of → intermittency. |
intermittent current jarayân-e raftomândi Fr.: courant intermittent A unidirectional electric current that flows and ceases to flow at irregular or regular intervals. → intermittent; → current. |
ionization potential tavande yoneš Fr.: potentiel d'ionisation The energy required to remove an electron from an isolated atom or molecule. The ionization potential for hydrogen is 13.6 eV, which corresponds to an ultraviolet ionizing photon with a wavelength of 912 A. Also called → ionization energy. → ionization; → potential. |
kinetic potential tavand-e jonbešik Fr.: potentiel cinétique Same as → Lagrangian function. |
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