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synopsis hanvin Fr.: synopsis, résumé, précis A brief and condensed summary giving the major points and a general view of a topic. L.L. synopsis "a synopsis," from Gk. synopsis "general view," from a stem of synoran "to see altogether, all at once," from → syn- "together" + horan "to see, view." Hanvin, from han- variant of ham-, → syn- + vin variant bin present stem of didan "to see," → phenomenon. |
synoptic hanvini Fr.: synoptique In general, pertaining to or affording an overall view. M.L. synopticus, from Gk. synoptikos, from synop-, → synopsis, + -tikos. |
synoptic map naqše-ye hanvini Fr.: carte synoptique 1) Sun: A map that displays positions of certain events
(e.g., → sunspots, → faculae,
→ filaments, etc.) observed during one solar rotation. |
syntactics amrâžik Fr.: syntactique The study of the grammatical relationships among signs, independently of their meaning (→ semantics. See also → syntax. |
syntax amrâž Fr.: syntaxe 1) Linguistics: The branch of → semiotics dealing with the
ways in which words
are arranged to show connections within the sentence. From Fr. syntaxe, from L.L. syntaxis, from Gk. syntaxis "a putting together or in order, arrangement," from syntassein "to put in order," from → syn- "together" + tassein "to arrange;" PIE base *tāg- "to put in order." Amrâž, from am-, variant of ham-, → syn-, + râž from Av. rāz- "to direct, put in line, set," rasman- "the lines or files of the army," razan "rule, order;" cf. raj, raž, rak, râk, rezg (Lori), radé, râdé "line, rule, row," rasté, râsté "row, a market with regular ranges of shops;" ris, risé "straight," râst "right, true; just, upright, straight," → system. |
synthesis handâyeš Fr.: synthèse The combining of the constituent elements of separate materials or
abstract entities into a single or unified entity; opposite of
→ analysis.
→ aperture synthesis;
→ nucleosynthesis.
From L. synthesis "collection, set," from Gk. synthesis "composition," from syntithenai "put together, combine," from → syn- "together" + tithenai "to put, place," from PIE base *dhe- "to put, to do," cf. Pers. dâdan "to give," as below. Handâyeš, from han-, variant ham- "together," → syn- + O.Pers./Av. dā- "to give, grant, put," dadāiti "he gives;" Mid.Pers./Mod.Pers. dâdan "to give, put" (cf. Skt. dadáti "he gives;" Gk. tithenai "to place, put, set," didomi "I give;" L. dare "to give, offer;" Rus. delat' "to do;" O.H.G. tuon, Ger. tun, O.E. don "to do;" PIE base *dhe- "to put, to do") + -y- epenthetic vowel + -eš verbal noun suffix, → synthesize. |
synthesize handâyidan Fr.: synthétiser To form a material or abstract entity by combining parts or elements; opposite of
→ analysis. Handâyidan, verbal form of handâyeš, → synthesis. |
synthesizer handâgar Fr.: synthétiseur A person or thing that synthesizes. Agent noun from → synthesize. |
synthetic handâyi, handâyeši Fr.: synthétique 1) Of, pertaining to, proceeding by, or involving synthesis; opposed to analytic. Adj. from synthesize. |
synthetic division baxš-e handâyeši Fr.: division synthétique A method of dividing a polynomial in the special case of dividing by a linear factor. Synthetic division allows one to do long division problems much quicker. It is related to the → Ruffini-Horner method. |
synthetic language zabân-e handâyeši Fr.: langue synthétique A language in which the phrase meaning is determined by case endings of individual words and not by the relation between the words. Old English was a highly synthetic language. Compare with → analytic language. |
Syrtis Major Sirtis Mâyor Fr.: Syrtis Major A dark triangular plateau near the Martian equator, located in the boundary between the northern lowlands and southern highlands of Mars. Syrtis Major is centered near at 8.4°N 69.5°E, extends some 1,500 km north from the planet's equator, and spans 1,000 from west to east. From the classical Roman name Syrtis maior "the Gulf of Sidra" on the coast of Cyrenaica (today Libya) |
system râžmân Fr.: système 1a) An assemblage or combination of things or parts forming
a complex or unitary whole. From L.L. systema "an arrangement, a whole consisting of several parts," from Gk. systema "arrangement, organized whole," from sy-, variant of syn- "together" + ste- variant stem of histanai "to cause to stand" (from PIE base *sta- "to stand;" cf. Pers. ist, istâdan "to stand;" Mid.Pers. êstâtan; O.Pers./Av. sta- "to stand, stand still; set;" Av. hištaiti; cf. Skt. sthâ- "to stand;" Gk. histemi "put, place, weigh," stasis "a standing still;" L. stare "to stand;" Lith. statau "place;" Goth. standan; PIE base *sta- "to stand") + -ma nominal suffix denoting result of action. Râžmân, from raž, from Av. rāz- "to direct, put in line, set," rasman- "the lines or files of the army," razan "rule, order" (variants raj, râž, rak, râk, rezg (Lori), radé, râdé "line, rule, row," rasté, râsté "row, a market with regular ranges of shops;" ris, risé "straight"), related to râst "right, true; just, upright, straight;" Mid.Pers. râst "true, straight, direct," rây-, râyênitan "to arrange;" Sogdian rəšt "right;" O.Pers. rāsta- "straight, true," rās- "to be right, straight, true;" cf. Skt. raj- "to direct, stretch," rjuyant- "walking straight;" Gk. orektos "stretched out;" L. regere "to lead straight, guide, rule," p.p. rectus "right, straight;" PIE base *reg- "move in a straight line," hence, "to direct, rule;" + -mân verbal noun suffix used with present and past stems, as in zâymân, câymân, sâxtemân, goftemân. |
system manager gonârgar-e râžmân Fr.: administrateur de système A person in charge of the configuration and administration of a multi-user computer system inside a network. |
system noise nufe-ye râžmân Fr.: bruit de système The noise in a radio telescope, composed of the receiver noise and the sky noise. |
systematic râžmânmand Fr.: systématique Having, showing, or involving a system, method, or plan. L.L., from Gk. systematikos; → system; → -ic. Râžmânvâr, râžmânmand, from râžmân, → system, + -mand suffix of possession. |
systematic error irang-e râžmânmand Fr.: erreur systématique The error that is constant in a series of repetitions of the same experiment or observation. Usually, systematic error is defined as the expected value of the overall error. opposite of → random error. → systematic; → error. |
systematics râžmânmandik Fr.: systématique, taxinomie Biology: The science that deals with the systematic naming and classification of all kinds of organisms. From → systematic + → -ics. |
systemic râžmâni Fr.: systémique Relating to or affecting a system as a whole. |
systems theory negare-ye râžmân Fr.: théorie des systèmes An interdisciplinary field of science which deals with the nature of complex systems in nature, society, and science, and studies complex parts of reality as systems. |
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