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compelling vâdârgar Fr.: 1) puissant, percutant; 2) irréfutable, convaincant 1) Tending to compel, as to force or push toward a course of action; overpowering. |
compensate pâhangidan Fr.: compenser To reduce or balance the effect of something unwanted by exerting an opposite force or effect. From L. compensatus, p.p. of compensare "to weigh one thing (against another)," thus, "to counterbalance," from → com- "with"+ pensare, frequentative of pendere "to weigh, to hang." Pâhangidan, from pâhang (Dehxodâ) "that which is put in a balance scale to equalize the weights," from pâ- variant of pâd-, → counter-, + hangidan variant of sanjidan "to measure; compare, put in balance," → object. |
compensator pâhangandé Fr.: compensateur One who, or that which, compensates. → compensate; → -or. |
compensator plate tiqe-ye pâhangandé Fr.: compensatrice A transparent plate inserted in one of the arms of an interferometer, in particular the → Michelson interferometer, to compensate for a longer → optical path in the other arm. Its function is to ensure that the beams transverse the same total thickness of glass in both arms of the interferometer. This is not essential for producing → interference fringes in monochromatic light. The compensator plate is of the same glass and the same thickness as the → beam splitter plate. → compensator; → plate. |
compete hâjuyidan Fr.: concourir, rivaliser To strive to outdo another for acknowledgment, a prize, supremacy, profit, etc.; engage in a contest (Dictionary.com). M.E., from M.Fr. compéter, from L.L. competere "to strive in common," from → com- "together" + petere "to strive, go forward, seek," from PIE base *pet- "to fly, rush" (cf. Av. pat- "to fly, fall, rush," patarəta- "winged;" Mid.Pers. patet "falls," opastan "to fall;" Mod.Pers. oftâdan "to fall;" Skt. patati "he flies, falls," pátra- "wing, feather, leaf;" Gk. piptein "to fall," pterux "wing;" O.E. feðer "feather;" L. penna "feather, wing"). Hâjuyidan, from hâ-, variant of ham-, → com-, + juyidan "to strive for, seek," Parthian Mid.Pers. ywdy- "to strive for," Khotanese juv- "to fight," Av. yūd- (yaoda-) "to fight, struggle," yūdiieiti "fights," cf. Skt. yodh- "to fight," yúdh- "fight," Gk. hysmine "battle, fight," Lith. judus "belligerent." |
competition hâjuyeš Fr.: compétition 1) The act of competing; rivalry for supremacy, a prize, etc. 2) A contest for some prize, honor, or advantage (Dictionary.com). |
competitive hâjuyeši, hâjuyâné Fr.: compétitif 1) Of, pertaining to, involving, or decided by competition. |
competitive accretion model model-e farbâl-e hâjuyeši Fr.: modèle d'accrétion compétitive A scenario for → massive star formation whereby developing → protostars in their natal → molecular clouds compete with each other to gather mass. The protostars → accrete mass with a rate which depends on their location within the protocluster. They use the same reservoir of gas to grow. Therefore those protostars nearest the center, where the potential well is deep, and gas densities are higher, have the highest → accretion rates. The competitive accretion model explains the observational fact that the most massive stars are generally found in cluster cores. It accounts also for the distribution of stellar masses. In this model the accretion process depends on the content of the cluster. In clusters where gas dominates the potential (e.g. at initial stages of cluster formation), the accretion process is better modeled by using the → tidal radius as the accretion radius. In contrast, when the stars dominate the cluster potential and are virialized, the accretion is better modeled by → Bondi-Hoyle accretion (Bonnell et al. 1997, MNRAS 285, 201; 2001, MNRAS 323, 785). → competitive; → accretion; → model. |
competitiveness hâjuyandegi Fr.: compétivité The state of being competitive. → competitive; → -ness. |
competitor hâju Fr.: compétiteur A person, team, company, etc., that competes; rival (Dictionary.com). |
compilation hâtaleš Fr.: compilation The act of compiling; something compiled. |
compile hâtalidan Fr.: compiler 1) To put together (documents, selections, or other materials) in one book or work. M.E., from O.Fr. compiler "compile, collect," from L. compilare "to plunder, rob," probably originally "bundle together, heap up;" from → com- "together" + pilare "to fix firmly, accumulate." Hâtalidan, from hâ- variant of ham-, → com-, + tal, → pile, + -idan suffix of infinitives. |
compiler hâtalgar Fr.: compilateur A → software program that compiles program source code files into an executable program. |
complain garzidan Fr.: se plaindre To express dissatisfaction, pain, uneasiness, censure, resentment, or grief; find fault (Dictionary.com). M.E. compleinen, from O.Fr. complaindre "to lament" from V.L. *complangere, originally "to beat the breast," from L. → com- an intensive prefix + plangere "to strike, beat the breast." Mid.Pers. garz- "to weep, lament," garzišn "complaint;" Mod.Pers. geristan, geryidan "to weep," gelé "gripe, complaint, lamentation;" Kurd (Kurm.) girižin/giriž- "to be grumpy, growl;" Av. gərəz- "to lament, weep;" cf. Skt. grah "to complain;" Proto-Ir. *garz- "to lament, weep." |
complaint garzeš Fr.: plaint An expression of discontent, regret, pain, censure, resentment, or grief; lament; faultfinding (Dictionary.com). M.E. compleynte, from O.Fr. complainte "complaint, lament," noun from complaindre "to lament," → complain. Verbal noun of garzidan, → complain. |
complement osporân Fr.: complément 1) Math., logic: With reference to any set A, conceived as a subset
of some larger set U, all the elements of U that are not contained
in A. From O.Fr. complement, from L. complementum "that which fills up or completes," from complere "fill up," → complete. Osporân, from ospor present tense stem of osporidan "to → complete." |
complementarity osporandegi Fr.: complémentarité The state or quality of being → complementary. From → complementary + → -ity. From osporandé, → complementary, + -gi, same as -i noun suffix. |
complementarity principle parvaz-e osporandegi Fr.: principe de complémentarité Physical principle, put forward by Niels Bohr in 1928, that a complete knowledge of phenomena on atomic dimensions requires a description of both wave and particle properties. → complementarity; → principle. |
complementary osporandé Fr.: complémentaire Forming or serving as a complement; completing. From → complement. |
complementary angle zâviyé-ye osporandé Fr.: angle complémentaire Any angle that when added to another one creates a 90° angle. → complementary; → angle. |
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