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connector hâbandgar Fr.: connecteur A person or thing that connects. |
conquer hanânidan Fr.: conquérir 1) To acquire by force of arms; to overcome by force. From O.Fr. conquerre "conquer, defeat, vanquish," from V.L. *conquaerere, L. conquirere "to search for, procure by effort," from → com- + quaerere "to seek, gain." Hanânidan, from Av. hanānī, han- "to conquer;" cf. Skt. sani "to win, gain;" Gk. hanutein "to complete, accomplish;" OHG sinnan "to strive after something" (Cheung 2007). |
conqueror hanânandé Fr.: conquérant A person who conquers a place or people. |
conquest hanâneš Fr.: conquête 1) The act or process of conquering. Ultimately related to → conquer. |
conscious hâsan Fr.: conscient 1) Aware of one's own existence, sensations, thoughts, surroundings, etc. From L. conscius "knowing, aware," from conscire "to be (mutually) aware," from → com- "with," or "thoroughly" + scire "to know," → science. Hâsan, from hâ- intensive and nuance prefix, → com-, + san variant of zan-, zân- (farzâné), dân- (dânestan), šen- (šenâxtan), → know, → science; cf. Kurd. nâsin "to know, recognize," O.Khotanese (+ *aua-) vaysān- "to recognize," (+ *pati-) paysān- "to recognize," (+ *ui-) biysen- "to wake up." |
consciousness hâsani Fr.: conscience 1) The state of being conscious; awareness of one's own existence, sensations,
thoughts, surroundings, etc. |
consensus hamrâyân Fr.: consensus General agreement or concord. From L. consensus "agreement, accord," p.p. of consentire, → consent. Hamrâyân, from hamrây "of the same mind, of equal opinion," → consent, + plurality and situation suffix -ân. |
consent 1) hamrâyi (#); 2) hamrâyi kardan (#) Fr.: 1) consentement; 2) consentir 1a) Agreement in sentiment, opinion, a course of action, etc. M.E. consenten, from O.Fr. consentir "agree, comply," from L. consentire "feel together," from → com- "with" + sentire, "to feel," → sense. Hamrâyi, from hamrây "of the same mind, of equal opinion," from ham-, → com-, + rây "opinion, consult," → reason. |
consequence peyâmad (#) Fr.: conséquence A phenomenon that follows and is caused by some previous phenomenon. From O.Fr. consequence "result," from L. consequentia, from consequentem (nom. consequens), prp. of consequi "to follow after," from &arr; com- "with" + sequi "to follow," (cf. Skt. sacate "accompanies, follows," Av. hacaiti, Gk. hepesthai "to follow"), from PIE base *sekw- "to follow". Peyâmad, from pey "after; footstep; foot" (Mid.Pers. pay "step, after," O.Pers. nipadiy "on the track of, close after," from ni-, → ni- (PIE), + padiy, from pad- "foot", Av. paδa- "step, footstep," Skt. padá- "step, foorstep;" cf. Gk. pos, L. pes; PIE root *pod-/*ped-) + âmad "to come, arrive," shortened infinitive of âmadan, Mid.Pers. âmatan, O.Iranian *āgmatani, O.Pers., Av. gam- "to come; to go," Av. jamaiti "goes," Skt. gamati "goes," Gk. bainein "to go, walk, step," L. venire "to come," Tocharian A käm- "to come," O.H.G. queman "to come," E. come; PIE root *gwem- "to go, come." |
consequent peyây, peyâyandé Fr.: conséquent Logic: In a → conditional proposition, the → clause which follows then. See also → antecedent. → consequence. |
conservation patâyâneš, patâyeš Fr.: conservation, préservation The act or an instance of conserving. Verbal noun of → conserve. |
conservation law qânun-e patâyeš Fr.: loi de conservation A general statement that a → physical quantity,
such as → energy,
→ mass,
→ momentum, or
→ electric charge
is unchanged in an → interaction
occurring within a → closed system.
See also: → conservation; → law. |
conservation of charge patâyeš-e bâr Fr.: conservation de charge In any given → frame of reference, → electric charge is neither created nor destroyed. This → law must not be confused with → charge invariance. → conservation; → charge. |
conservation of energy patâyeš-e kâruž Fr.: conservation d'énergie The → principle whereby the → total energy of a → closed system remains → constant. This means that energy can neither be created nor destroyed. See also the → first law of thermodynamics. → conservation; → energy. |
conservation of mass patâyeš-e jerm Fr.: conservation de masse A → principle of → classical physics whereby → matter can be neither created nor destroyed. Matter can, however, be → converted into → energy, as predicated by the theory of → special relativity. Also called → conservation of matter. → conservation; → mass. |
conservation of mass and energy patâyeš-e jerm o kâruž Fr.: conservation de masse et d'énergie A principle, resulting from Einstein's theory of → special relativity whereby in any → closed system the sum of mass and energy remains → constant. → conservation; → mass; → energy. |
conservation of matter patâyeš-e mâddé Fr.: conservation de matière Same as → conservation of mass. → conservation; → matter. |
conservation of momentum patâyeš-e jonbâk Fr.: conservation de quantité de mouvement A fundamental law of physics which states that the momentum of a → physical system does not change in the course of time if there are no external forces acting on the system. It is embodied in → Newton's first law. This principle shows that the interaction of bodies composing a → closed system leads only to an exchange in momentum between the bodies but does not affect the motion of the system as a whole. More specifically, interactions between the composing bodies do not change the velocity of the system's → center of mass. → conservation; → momentum. |
conservation of probability -patâyeše šavânâyi, pâyandegi-ye ~ Fr.: conservation de probabilité A principle according to which the sum of probabilities of all possible states that might come out of an initial state equals the probability of the initial state. → conservation; → probability. |
conservatism patâyešgerâyi Fr.: conservatisme The disposition, or political philosophy, to preserve the existing or traditional order and oppose radical change. → conservative; → -ism. |
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