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counter šomârgar (#) Fr.: compteur Generally,a device for indicating a number or amount. M.E. countour, from O.Fr. conteor, from L. computator, from computa(re) "to compute" + → -tor suffix forming personal agent nouns mainly from verbs. Šomârgar, from šomâr present tense stem of šomârdan "to count," → count + agent suffix -gar. |
counter- pâd- (#) Fr.: contre- A prefix used with the meanings "against, contrary, opposite." → contra-. M.E. countre-, from O.Fr. contre-, from L. contra "opposite, against;" PIE base *kom- "beside, near, by, with." Pâd- "contrary to; against; opposing," variants pâ- (pâsox, pâzahr, pâhang, → response), paž- (pažvâk, → echo, pažâvand "the bar of a door or a gate, door lock"), baž- (bažkam, → forbidden), pat- (patvâz, → correspond), pa- (panâh, padid), from Mid.Pers. pât-, from O.Pers. paity "agaist, back, opposite to, toward, face to face, in front of," Av. paiti, akin to Skt. práti "toward, against, again, back, in return, opposite," Pali pati-, Gk. proti, pros "face to face with, toward, in addition to, near;" PIE *proti. |
counterbalance pâtarâz Fr.: contrebalance An equal weight, power, or influence acting in opposition. |
counterclockwise pâdsâ'atsu (#) Fr.: en sens inverse des aiguilles d'une montre In a direction opposite to the rotating hands of a clock. From counter- "contrary; opposite; opposing," + → clockwise. Pâdsâ'atsu, from pâd-, → counter-, + sâ'atsu, → clockwise. |
counterexample pâdnemuné Fr.: contre-exemple Logic: An individual case or instance that falsifies a universal generalization. A counterexample to an → argument is a situation in which the → premises are → true, but the → conclusion is → false. For example, "All dogs are mammals" (true). "All cats are mammals" (true). "Therefore, all cats are dogs." (false). |
counterflow pâdtacân Fr.: contreflot The movement of a fluid in the opposite direction to a fluid flowing in the same cross section of a turbulent medium. |
counterglow pâdforuq Fr.: gegenschein Same as → gegenschein. |
counterpart hamtâ (#) Fr.: contrpartie A person or thing that corresponds to or has the same function as another
person or thing in a different place or situation (OxfordDictionaries.com). M.E., from O.Fr. contrepartie, from contre "facing, opposite," → counter-, + partie "copy of a person or thing," originally feminine p.p. of partir "to divide." Hamtâ "counterpart, resembling, equal," from ham- "together, with; same, equally, even," → com-, + tâ "fold, plait, ply; piece, part," also a multiplicative suffix; Mid.Pers. tâg "piece, part." |
counterweight pârsang (#) Fr.: contrepoids A weight that balances another weight. Pârsang "a make-weight," from pâr-, a variant of pâd-, → counter-, + sang a variant of sanj, sanjidan "to measure; compare, put in balance," → object; alternatively, pârsang "a piece of stone," from pâr, short for pâré "piece, part," + sang, → stone, meaning "weight." |
country 1) kešvar (#); 2) rustâ (#) Fr.: pays 1) A nation or state; the territory of a nation or state. M.E. contre, contree, from O.Fr. contree, from V.L. (terra) contrata "(land) lying opposite," or "(land) spread before)," derived from L. contra "against, opposite," → contra-. 1) Kešvar "country; clime;" Mid.Pers. kišwar
"region, clime, continent;" Av. karšvar-, from
karš- "to furrow," karšu- "tilled ground." |
countryside rustâ (#) Fr.: campagne A rural area; he inhabitants of a countryside. Rustâ, from Mid.Pers. rôstâk, rôtastâk "village, district, river-bed;" loaned into Armenian rotstak, ərotastak "district." |
couple 1) joft (#), 2) joftniru (#); 3) joftidan (#), jafsar kardan Fr.: 1, 2) couple; 3) coupler 1) General: Two items of the same kind; a pair; something that joins or connects
two things together; a link. 1) joft "pair, couple," Lori, Laki jeft, Qâyeni jof, Tabari
jeft, Mid.Pers. yuxt "pair, couple," Av. yuxta-
"a team of horses," from yaog- "to yoke, harness, put to; to join, unite,"
infinitive yuxta,
Mid.Pers. jug, ayoxtan "to join, yoke,"
Mod.Pers. yuq "yoke,"
cf. Skt. yugam "yoke,"
Gk. zygon "yoke," zeugnyanai "to join, unite,"
L. jugare "to join," from jugum "yoke,"
P.Gmc. *yukam, E. yoke;
PIE *yeug- "to join." |
coupled jafsar, joftidé Fr.: couplé Joined together, connected by a link. → coupled system, → charge-coupled device. Adj. from → couple. Jafsar "connected, joined pair," in Tâleši, from jaf, variant of joft, as above + sar "head," literally "joined by head" (Mid.Pers. sar, Av. sarah- "head," Skt. siras- "head," Gk. kara "head," keras "horn," Mod.Pers. sarun "horn," L. cerebrum "brain;" PIE *ker- "head, horn"); joftidé adj./p.p. from joftidan, → couple. |
coupled systems râžmânhâ-ye jafsar, ~ joftidé Fr.: systèmes couplés A set of two or more mechanical vibrating systems connected so that they interact with one another. |
coupling jafsari, jofteš Fr.: couplage The act of linking together or forming couples; a connection between two things so they
move together. |
coupling coefficient hamgar-e jafsari Fr.: coefficient de couplage A parameter that indicates the strength of the interaction between two systems. → coupling; → coefficient. |
coupling constant pâyâ-ye jafsari Fr.: constante de couplage In nuclear physics, a constant that indicates a measure of how strongly two particles interact. |
courage pordeli (#), deliri (#), darš Fr.: courage The quality of mind or spirit that enables a person to face difficulty, danger, pain, etc. M.E. corage, from O.Fr., derivative of cœur "heart," from L. cor, cognate with Pers. del and E. → heart Pordeli, deliri, from pordel, delir,
→ courageous. |
courageous pordel (#), delir (#), daršmand Fr.: courageux Having or characterized by courage. M.E., from O.Fr. corageus, corajos, from → courage. Pordel, literally "greathearted," from por,
→ full, + del, → heart.
Delir "brave, courageous," from del "heart," as above. |
cousin tarzâ Fr.: cousin 1) The son or daughter of an uncle or aunt. M.E. cosin, from O.Fr. cusin, cosin, from L. consobrinus, from → com- + sobrinussoror, → sister. Tarzâ, from tar, from Baluci teru "uncle, aunt," tri "aunt;" cf. Av. tuiriia- "uncle," + zâ "son/daughter of; born," → birth. |
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