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container parbangar, parbanandé Fr.: container 1) Anything that contains or can contain something, as a carton, box, crate, or can. |
contemplate darnegaristan (#) Fr.: contempler 1) To look at with continued attention. From L. contemplatus, from contemplari "to gaze attentively, observe," from → com- + templum "space marked out for observation of auguries." Darnegaristan "contemplate, think deeply," from prefix dar- "→ in-, into," + negaristan "to look," → theory. |
contemplation darnegareš (#) Fr.: contemplation The act of contemplating; thoughtful observation. Verbal noun of → contemplate. |
content parbané Fr.: contenu 1) Something that is contained. M.E., from L. contentum from p.p. of continere, → contain. |
contest 1) hâbard; 2) hâbardidan Fr.: combat, lutte; contester, disputer 1a) A race, conflict, or other competition between rivals, as for a prize. From Fr. contester "to dispute, oppose," from M.Fr., from L. contestari "to call to witness, bring action," from → com- "together" + testari "to bear witness," from testis "a witness." Hâbard, from hâ-, variant ham- "together," → com-, + bard "to fight, to struggle," cf. nabard, nibard "fight, struggle, war," variants nâvard, âvard, ultimately from Proto-Ir. *part- "to fight, to struggle." |
context bâftâr (#) Fr.: contexte The parts of a written or spoken statement that precede or follow a specific word or passage, usually influencing its meaning or effect (Dictionary.com). From L. contextus "a joining together," originally p.p. of contexere "to weave together," from → com- "together" + texere "to weave, to make", → texture. Bâftâr, verbal noun from bâftan "to weave," → texture. |
Conti scenario senâryo-ye Conti Fr.: scénario de Conti A scenario according to which the existence of peculiar → Wolf-Rayet
stars could be explained by intense → mass loss
that characterizes → massive stars.
An → O-type star loses
a significant amount of mass via → stellar winds,
revealing first the CNO-burning products at its surface, and subsequently the
→ helium burning products. These two stages
are spectroscopically identified with the → WN Wolf-Rayet
and → WC Wolf-Rayet phases. A version of
the scenario would be: Peter S. Conti, 1976, Mem. Soc. R. Sci. Liège, 6, Ser. 9, 193; scenario, from It. scenario, from L.L. scenarius "of stage scenes," from L. scena "scene." |
continent qâré (#) Fr.: continent Any of the large, continuous land areas of the Earth. They are usually considered to be seven: Europe, Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Australia, and Antarctica. Contraction of L. terra continens "continuous land," from continens, pr.p. of continere "to hold together," from → com- "together" + tenere "to hold, to keep, to maintain" from PIE root *ten- "to stretch;" → tension. Qâré, from Ar. qârrat. |
continental qâre-yi (#) Fr.: continental Of or of the nature of a continent. |
continental crust puste-ye qâre-yi (#) Fr.: croûte continentale The part of the → Earth's crust which underlies the → continents. Continental crust is more silica-rich and thicker than → oceanic crust, and is on average older. However, it is highly variable in all of these respects. The average thickness of the continental crust is about 40km, but beneath parts of the Andes and the Himalaya mountain ranges the crust is more than 70 km thick. Continental crust is continuously being eroded and turned into sediment. Some of this sediment ends up on the ocean floor where it can be returned to the → Earth's mantle at → subduction zones. The oldest parts of the continental crust include some rocks that are nearly 4 billion years old. New continental crust is produced by the destruction of oceanic crust at subduction zones, a process that continues today. → continental; → crust. |
continental drift delek-e qârehâ Fr.: dérive de continents A hypothesis proposed by Alfred Wegener (1912) suggesting that the → continents are not stationary, but drift through time. Wegener's hypothesis has since been developed and included in a new theory called → plate tectonics. → continental; → drift. |
contingency âmarsâni Fr.: contingence In logic, a → proposition that may be either true or false, and is not necessarily one or the other. Noun of → contingent. |
contingent âmarsân Fr.: contigent 1) Dependent for existence, occurrence, character, etc., on something not yet
certain; conditional. M.E., from M.Fr. contingent and directly from L. contingentem (nominative contingens) "happening, touching," pr.p. of contingere "to touch," → contact. Âmarsân, agent noun from *âmarsidan "to touch," related to parmâsidan "to touch, feel," → contact, Mid.Pers. marz "contact, touching," marzitan "to touch," Mod.Pers. mâlidan "to rub," Av. marəz- "to rub, wipe," marəza- "border, district," Mod.Pers. marz "border;" ultimately from Proto-Ir. *Hmars- "to touch." |
continuation peydâšt; peydâd Fr.: continuation The act or state of continuing; the state of being continued. |
continue 1) peydâštan; 2) peydâdan Fr.: continuer 1) (v.intr) To go on or keep on without interruption as in some course or action. M.E. contynuen, from O.Fr. continuer, from L. continuare "to make all one, join together, make or be continuous," from continuus "uninterrupted," from continere "to be uninterrupted," literally "to hold together," from → con- + tenere "to hold," cognate with Pers. tanidan, → tension. 1) Peydâštan,
from pey "after; pursuit; track; step," → tracking,
+ dâštan "to have, hold, maintain," → access. |
continued peydâšté Fr.: continue Continuing to happen or exist for a long time. Occurring many times. Past participle of → continue. |
continued fraction barxe-ye peydâšté Fr.: fraction continue In mathematics, a fraction whose numerator is an integer and whose denominator is an integer plus a fraction whose numerator is an integer and whose denominator is an integer plus a fraction and so on. |
continuous peyvasté (#) Fr.: continu 1) General: Uninterrupted in extent, sequence, or time. From L. continuus "uninterrupted," from contin(ere) "to hold together, retain," → continue, + -uus verbal adj. suffix. Peyvasté "continous," peyvastan "to connect, join," Mid.Pers. paywastan, from *pati-basta-, from suffix pati- (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) + basta- "tied, shut" (Av./O.Pers. band- "to bind, fetter," banda- "band, tie," Skt. bandh- "to bind, tie, fasten," PIE *bhendh- "to bind," cf. Ger. binden, E. bind), cf. Skt. prati-bandh- "to tie." |
continuous data dâdehâ-ye peyvasté Fr.: données continues Data that can take any value along a continuum (e.g. air temperature between two upper and lower boundaries) as opposed to → discrete data, which can only take integer values. → continuous; → data. |
continuous function karyâ-ye peyvasté Fr.: fonction continue The function y = f(x) is called continuous at the point x = x0 if it is defined in some neighborhood of the point x0 and if lim Δy = 0 when Δx → 0. → continuous; → function. |
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