تعريف numbers في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- The Book of Numbers, the fourth of the Books of Moses in the Old Testament of the Bible, the fourth book in the Torah
For in the book of Numbers is it writ, when the man dies, let the inheritance descend unto the daughter.
- plural form of number
- Many individuals as a group
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of number
- {n} the fourth book of the Old Testament
- {i} fourth book of the Old Testament (Biblical)
- A player's score after the subtraction of his or her handicap from the Gross Score is the Net Score Adding strokes for each Mulligan yields the True Score If whiffs and fluffs are also counted, the resulting tabulation is the Real Score If strokes for lost balls, improved lies, and shots hit out of bounds are included as well, the grand total is the Actual Score This number, when adjusted upward to reflect all gimme putts, becomes the Correct Score When all the strokes made in sand traps and around obstructions are tacked on, this larger sum is the Absolute, Final, Honest-to-Goodness Score, which is usually only a halfdozen or so strokes lower than the total number of shots the player in fact made
- plural of number
- third-person singular of number
- of Number
- pl
- Bemidbar In the Desert
- Spell out numbers from one to ten except for these situations: When a sentence begins with a number When the numbers have technical significance or need to stand out for quick comprehension (such as tables, statistical material, money amounts, clock time, proportions and ratios, percentages, sports scores, academic grades, highway designations, abbreviations and symbols, technical reference to age, periods of time, page numbers, lists of recipe ingredients, and numbers referred to as numbers) When a range of two or more related numbers are used, at least one of which is higher than ten (example: from 6 to 15 people attended)
- the fourth book of the Old Testament; contains a record of the number of Israelites who followed Moses out of Egypt
- The fourth book of the Pentateuch, containing the census of the Hebrews
- 7 n in math, an indefinite whole number 8 n the fourteenth in a series 9 n a Roman numeral for 90
- 1, 2, 3, etc
- O T
- October Listopad
- 00-11-01 Diseases/Causes of Death00-11-01 Military Terminology00-11-01 Titles/Occupations00-11-01
- an illegal daily lottery
- representations of integers, rationals, approximation to the reals by floating point
- make qualitative statements and are therefore between myth and reality, partly discovered and partly invented 1-10 are archetypes Mediators of human and higher world
- Num
- numbers game
- An illegal lottery in which the bettor attempts to pick a number of digits that will match those randomly drawn the following day
- numbers games
- plural form of numbers game
- numbers juggling
- The act of juggling large numbers of props as oppose to a smaller number of props with longer and/or more varied patterns
- numbers needed to harm
- plural form of number needed to harm
- numbers racket
- Alternative form of numbers game
- numbers game
- 1. disapproval If you say that someone is playing the numbers game, you think that they are concentrating on the aspects of something which can be expressed in statistics, usually in order to mislead people. Regrettably, he resorts to the familiar numbers game when he boasts that fewer than 300 state enterprises currently remain in the public sector. see also number. A lottery in which bets are made on an unpredictable number, such as a daily stock quotation
- numbers pool
- an illegal daily lottery
- 0800 numbers
- plural form of 0800 number
- 800 numbers
- plural form of 800 number
- 900 numbers
- plural form of 900 number
- Betti numbers
- plural form of Betti number
- E numbers
- plural form of E number
- Fibonacci numbers
- plural form of Fibonacci number
- Frobenius numbers
- plural form of Frobenius number
- Froude numbers
- plural form of Froude number
- Greek numbers
- plural form of Greek number
- Keith numbers
- plural form of Keith number
- PIN numbers
- plural form of PIN number
- RSA numbers
- plural form of RSA number
- abstract numbers
- plural form of abstract number
- abundant numbers
- plural form of abundant number
- algebraic numbers
- plural form of algebraic number
- amicable numbers
- A pair of numbers having the property that the sum of the divisors of each, excluding itself, is equal to the other number
The factors of 220, excluding 220 itself, are 1, 2, 4, 5, 10, 11, 20, 22, 44, 55 and 110 and sum to 284; the factors of 284, excluding 284 itself, are 1, 2, 4, 71, and 142, and sum to 220; hence 220 and 284 are amicable numbers.
- atomic numbers
- plural form of atomic number
- back numbers
- plural form of back number
- binary numbers
- plural form of binary number
- by the numbers
- to do something exactly, precisely, or in a formulaic way
- by-the-numbers
- Done in a predictable manner; formulaic
- cardinal numbers
- plural form of cardinal number
- chromatic numbers
- plural form of chromatic number
- collective numbers
- plural form of collective number
- color by numbers
- Alternative form of color by number
- color by numbers
- plural form of color by number
- complex numbers
- plural form of complex number
- composite numbers
- plural form of composite number
- coordination numbers
- plural form of coordination number
- crunch numbers
- To figure; to do the math
Before you buy a car, spend some time crunching numbers and make sure you can afford it.
- decimal numbers
- plural form of decimal number
- defective numbers
- plural form of defective number
- deficient numbers
- plural form of deficient number
- excessive numbers
- plural form of excessive number
- figurate numbers
- plural form of figurate number
- harmonic numbers
- plural form of harmonic number
- hexadecimal numbers
- plural form of hexadecimal number
- house numbers
- plural form of house number
- hypercomplex numbers
- plural form of hypercomplex number
- imaginary numbers
- plural form of imaginary number
- irrational numbers
- plural form of irrational number
- law of large numbers
- The statistical tendency toward a fixed ratio in the results when an experiment is repeated a large number of times; law of averages
- magic numbers
- plural form of magic number
- matching numbers
- corresponding serial numbers on both the removable bolt and the frame of the rifle
- mesh numbers
- plural form of mesh number
- natural numbers
- The set of positive integers, {1, 2, 3, ...}
- natural numbers
- The set of non-negative integers, ℕ = {0, 1, 2, 3, ...}, being the smallest such that:
n∈ℕ⇒ succ(n)∈ℕ.
- neutron numbers
- plural form of neutron number
- number
- To label (items) with numbers; to assign numbers to (items)
Number the baskets so that we can find them easily.
- number
- Comparative form of numb: more numb
- number
- A member of one of several classes: natural numbers,integers, rational numbers, real numbers, complex numbers, quaternions
The equation e^{i\pi}+1=0 includes the most important numbers: 1, 0, \pi, i, and e.
- number
- An item of clothing, particularly a stylish one
I doubt the sexy number you wore earlier tonight fell from the sky..
- number
- A sequence of digits and letters used to register people, auotmobiles, and various other items
- number
- Poetic metres; verses, rhymes
Griefe brought to numbers cannot be so fierce, / For, he tames it, that fetters it in verse.
- number
- Quantity
His army is vast in number.
- number
- A marijuana cigarette, or joint; also, a quantity of marijuana bought form a dealer
Back at his place again, Doc rolled a number, put on a late movie, found an old T-shirt, and sat tearing it up into short strips .
- number
- A person
He had to focus on the mission, staying alive and getting out, not on the sexy number rubbing up against him.
- number
- Indicating the position of something in a list or sequence. Abbreviations: No or No., no or no. (in each case, sometimes written with a superscript "o", like Nº or №). The symbol "#" is also used in this manner
Horse number 5 won the race.
- number
- A telephone number
When I agreed to go surfing with him he said, “Great, can I have your number?” Well, I don’t give my number to guys I don’t know.
- number
- To total or count; to amount to
I don’t know how many books are in the library, but they must number in the thousands.
- number
- A numeral: a symbol for a non-negative integer
The number 8 is usually made with a single stroke.
- octane numbers
- plural form of octane number
- opposite numbers
- plural form of opposite number
- ordinal numbers
- plural form of ordinal number
- paint by numbers
- To complete a painting by numbers kit
- paint-by-numbers
- Made from a painting by numbers kit
- paint-by-numbers
- By rote, without thought or creativity
This is not a cookbook full of passive recipes, nor is it a paint-by-numbers approach to teaching. Instead, it provides the fresh clay, the carving tools, and the spirited inspiration to form the clay to match our intent.
- painting by numbers
- A recreation in which a board containing a picture to be painted is made up of numbered areas, each number corresponding to a colour of paint to be applied
- perfect numbers
- plural form of perfect number
- phone numbers
- plural form of phone number
- practical numbers
- plural form of practical number
- premium-rate telephone numbers
- plural form of premium-rate telephone number
- prime numbers
- the set of numbers which are prime
- prime numbers
- plural form of prime number
- proton numbers
- plural form of proton number
- purely imaginary numbers
- plural form of purely imaginary number
- pyramidal numbers
- plural form of pyramidal number
- random numbers
- plural form of random number
- rational numbers
- The set of numbers that can be expressed as a ratio of integers (fraction) m/n, where n is not zero. In set-builder notation, it is defined as {m/n|m∈ℤ,n∈ℕ}
- rational numbers
- plural form of rational number
- real numbers
- The smallest set containing all limits of convergent sequences of rational numbers
- regnal numbers
- plural form of regnal number
- repfigit numbers
- plural form of repfigit number
- round numbers
- plural form of round number
- safety in numbers
- The purported decrease in likelihood that one is to be the victim of an attack, accident, or some other bad event due to being surrounded by people
- serial numbers
- plural form of serial number
- sociable numbers
- A sequence of numbers having the property that the sum of the divisors of each, excluding itself, is equal to the next number in the sequence; in the case of the last number of the sequence, the sum of the divisors, excluding that number, is equal to the first number of the sequence
The numbers in the sequence are sociable numbers.
- social security numbers
- plural form of social security number
- sphenic numbers
- plural form of sphenic number
- superparticular numbers
- plural form of superparticular number
- telephone numbers
- plural form of telephone number
- tone numbers
- plural form of tone number
- transcendental numbers
- plural form of transcendental number
- transfinite numbers
- plural form of transfinite number
- triangular numbers
- plural form of triangular number
- vanity numbers
- plural form of vanity number
- whole numbers
- plural form of whole number
- wrong numbers
- plural form of wrong number
- number
- {v} to count, tell over, reckon, add
- number
- {n} many units added, poetry, harmony
- painting by numbers
- (Oyunlar) Paint by number (or painting by numbers) are kits, popularized in the 1950s, by Max Klein and the Palmer Paint Company, among others. Included in the kits is a number board or canvas with corresponding paints to be filled in. Dan Robbins who worked for Klein as an artist is often incorrectly credited with inventing the genre, which predates his 1951 involvement. Michelangelo has been credited by some with the original idea by assigning colors to various areas of the Sistine Chapel for assistants to fill in over some 500 years ago
- Book of Numbers
- fourth book of the Bible
- Fibonacci numbers
- infinite series of numbers in which every member is the sum of the two preceding numbers when the first two numbers are 0 and 1 (named after an Italian mathematician)
- Internet Corporation for Assigned Names Numbers
- company that regulates Internet domain name and address registration (formed in 1998 in an effort decentralize and privatize these services)
- Law of Large Numbers
- principle which determines that as the trial group grows larger the results will get more statistically reliable (in Probability)
- NUMBER
- beaufort
- Number
- dai
- algebraic numbers
- numbers used in algebraic equations (Mathematics)
- binary numbers
- representation of symbols based on the number 2 using the digits 0 and 1
- broken numbers
- fractions (Mathematics)
- complex numbers
- number which is a combination of real and imaginary numbers, non-concrete numbers (Mathematics)
- consecutive numbers
- successive numbers
- force of numbers
- by means of greater numbers
- irrational numbers
- numbers that cannot be represented as a ratio of two integers (Mathematics)
- law of large numbers
- The rule or theorem that the average of a large number of independent measurements of a random quantity tends toward the theoretical average of that quantity. Also called Bernoulli's law
- natural numbers
- whole numbers from 1 and up
- number
- You can refer to a short piece of music, a song, or a dance as a number. `Unforgettable', a number that was written and performed in 1951 Responsibility for the dance numbers was split between Robert Alton and the young George Balanchine
- number
- one of a series published periodically; "she found an old issue of the magazine in her dentist's waitingroom"
- number
- A numeric-valued data object Modern @command{awk} implementations use double-precision floating-point to represent numbers Very old @command{awk} implementations use single-precision floating-point
- number
- place a limit on the number of enumerate; "We must number the names of the great mathematicians"
- number
- A numeric-valued data object Modern awk implementations use double-precision floating-point to represent numbers Very old awk implementations use single-precision floating-point
- number
- A number is the series of numbers that you dial when you are making a telephone call. Sarah sat down and dialled a number. a list of names and telephone numbers My number is 414-3925 `You must have a wrong number,' she said. `There's no one of that name here.'
- number
- the number is used in calling a particular telephone; "he has an unlisted number"
- number
- The reader may decide to spend a pleasant half-hour studying the multitude of definitions in an unabridged dictionary Here, we are concerned only with numbers as they appear on notes and other syngraphic documents Since even this leaves us with a multitude of similar, hence sometimes confusing, things to discuss, we have put it all into the following table
- number
- give numbers to; "You should number the pages of the thesis"
- number
- An abstract entity used to describe quantity
- number
- If you refer to the numbers game, the numbers racket, or the numbers, you are referring to an illegal lottery or illegal betting. see also numbers game
- number
- equals from to
- number
- If there are a number of things or people, there are several of them. If there are any number of things or people, there is a large quantity of them. I seem to remember that Sam told a number of lies There must be any number of people in my position
- number
- an item of merchandise offered for sale; "she preferred the black nylon number"; "this sweater is an all-wool number" a clothing measurement; "a number 13 shoe" the property possessed by a sum or total or indefinite quantity of units or individuals; "he had a number of chores to do"; "the number of parameters is small"; "the figure was about a thousand" the grammatical category for the forms of nouns and pronouns and verbs that are used depending on the number of entities involved (singular or dual or plural); "in English the subject and the verb must agree in number" a numeral or string of numerals that is used for identification; "she refused to give them her Social Security number" a select company of people; "I hope to become one of their number before I die" a concept of quantity derived from zero and units; "every number has a unique position in the sequence" place a limit on the number of enumerate; "We must number the names of the great mathematicians" give numbers to; "You should number the pages of the thesis
- number
- A numeric valued data object The gawk implementation uses double precision floating point to represent numbers Very old awk implementations use single precision floating point
- number
- Quite simply, the number a road has Roads in the UK come in two basic types, classified and unclassified If it's classified, that means it has a number, and its number will be prefixed by a letter - A, B or M Road numbers provide a simple way to refer to a road and to describe a journey through the network Each road number is unique through the network - though a different letter prefix means a different road For example, there exist an A621, B621 and M621 and all are different roads in different parts of the country See A-roads; B-roads; C-roads; motorway; Ax(M); unclassified; zones; "misplaced" number
- number
- The state or quality of being numerable or countable
- number
- {f} count; assign a number; equal in amount; limit, allot; be included in (a specific group); total, add up to
- number
- The singular number includes the plural, and the plural the singular
- number
- place a limit on the number of
- number
- A real number is either a rational number or an irrational number In general, we may represent a real number on the number line
- number
- the total population of a species or classification category in a delineated unit, a measure of its abundance
- number
- give numbers to; "You should number the pages of the thesis
- number
- The distinction of objects, as one, or more than one (in some languages, as one, or two, or more than two), expressed (usually) by a difference in the form of a word; thus, the singular number and the plural number are the names of the forms of a word indicating the objects denoted or referred to by the word as one, or as more than one
- number
- Of a word or phrase, the state of being singular, dual or plural, shown by inflection
- number
- A collection of many individuals; a numerous assemblage; a multitude; many
- number
- To amount; to equal in number; to contain; to consist of; as, the army numbers fifty thousand
- number
- That which is regulated by count; poetic measure, as divisions of time or number of syllables; hence, poetry, verse; chiefly used in the plural
- number
- a clothing measurement; "a number 13 shoe"
- number
- The value must be a number, and is represented textually in the customization buffer
- number
- a numeral or string of numerals that is used for identification; "she refused to give them her Social Security number"
- number
- A symbol for a non-negative integer; a numeral
- number
- A numeral; a word or character denoting a number; as, to put a number on a door
- number
- {i} mathematical value or its symbol; identifying numeral (e.g. of a house); indefinite amount, quantity of; sum, tally; act in a performance, musical piece; unit in a series; mathematics; quantity (Grammar); unique thing or person (Informal)
- number
- To count; to reckon; to ascertain the units of; to enumerate
- number
- You use numbers to say how many things you are referring to or where something comes in a series. No, I don't know the room number Stan Laurel was born at number 3, Argyll Street The number 47 bus leaves in 10 minutes
- number
- The number of non-null values found in the data selected
- number
- A performance; especially, a single song or song and dance routine within a larger show
- number
- enumerate; "We must number the names of the great mathematicians"
- number
- One or more arithmetical symbols representing a quantity calculated in units Example: 2, 97, XV
- number
- Numerousness; multitude
- number
- determine the number or amount of; "Can you count the books on your shelf?"; "Count your change"
- number
- char Number, see comment; V=Vyssotsky number; U=UGPMF number; W=white dwarf (EG or Gr number) Remarkschar Additional identifications and remarks Go back to main index webmaster@ucolick org A Service of the Computing Support Group UCO/Lick Observatory University of California Santa Cruz, CA 95064 Tel: +1 408 459 2630 Fax: +1 408 454 9863
- number
- A non-negative integer with an entire range limited by the range of a C language signed integer (2,147,483,647 on a machine with 32 bit integers) Its acceptable value might further be limited by the context in which it is used
- number
- If a group of people or things numbers a particular total, that is how many there are. They told me that their village numbered 100 This time the dead were numbered in hundreds, not dozens
- number
- stores number data with many different decimal and floating point subtypes
- number
- the number of a noun or noun phrase generally corresponds to the number of real world entities referred to (e g singular NPs denote single individuals ( a table), plural NPs denote collections of individuals ( two tables) However the relationship between real number and grammatical number is not always straightforward - trousers is plural in form yet denotes a singular entity (as in the committee are considering that question this afternoon) and some nouns do not have distinct singular and plural forms ( sheep, salmon)
- number
- safety in numbers: see safety. Basic element of mathematics used for counting, measuring, solving equations, and comparing quantities. They fall into several categories. The counting numbers are the familiar 1, 2, 3 . . . ; whole numbers are the counting numbers and zero; integers are the whole numbers and the negative counting numbers; and the rational numbers are all possible quotients formed by integers, including fractions. These numbers can be symbolically represented by terminating or repeating decimals. Irrational numbers cannot be represented by fractions of integers or repeating decimals and must be represented by special symbols such as SquareRoot(2), e, and . Together, the rational and irrational numbers constitute the real numbers, which form an algebraic field (see field theory), as do the complex numbers. While the counting numbers and rational numbers come about as the means of counting, calculating, and measuring, the others arose as means of solving equations. See also transcendental number. atomic number Avogadro's number complex number imaginary number International Standard Book Number irrational number number system number theory prime number rational number real number Reynolds number transcendental number
- number
- In computer operations, (a) amount of units by count, (b) a magnitude or quantity represented by group of digits
- number
- You use number with words such as `large' or `small' to say approximately how many things or people there are. Quite a considerable number of interviews are going on I have had an enormous number of letters from single parents Growing numbers of people in the rural areas are too frightened to vote
- number
- A number is a word such as `two', `nine', or `twelve', or a symbol such as 1, 3, or
- number
- Quantity, regarded as made up of an aggregate of separate things
- number
- If you number something, you mark it with a number, usually starting at
- number
- If someone or something is numbered among a particular group, they are believed to belong in that group. The Leicester Swannington Railway is numbered among Britain's railway pioneers He numbered several Americans among his friends
- number
- A numeric valued data object The gawk implementation uses double precision floating point to represent numbers
- number
- He cut his paper up into tiny squares, and he numbered each one see also opposite number, prime number, serial number
- number
- A numeric valued data object The awk implementation uses double precision floating point to represent numbers
- number
- add up in number or quantity; "The bills amounted to $2,000"; "The bill came to $2,000"
- number
- an item of merchandise offered for sale; "she preferred the black nylon number"; "this sweater is an all-wool number"
- number
- a concept that answers how many -- " the number one is usually written as a simple vertical bar " (11)
- number
- To give or apply a number or numbers to; to assign the place of in a series by order of number; to designate the place of by a number or numeral; as, to number the houses in a street, or the apartments in a building
- number
- If you say that someone's or something's days are numbered, you mean that they will not survive or be successful for much longer. Critics believe his days are numbered because audiences are tired of watching him
- number
- That which admits of being counted or reckoned; a unit, or an aggregate of units; a numerable aggregate or collection of individuals; an assemblage made up of distinct things expressible by figures
- number
- To reckon as one of a collection or multitude
- number
- put into a group; "The academy counts several Nobel Prize winners among its members"
- number
- a quality attached to a noun or pronoun that indicates a category of how many individuals are being referred to Both English and Welsh have two numbers: singular (one individual) and plural (more than one individual)
- number
- a short theatrical performance that is part of a longer program; "he did his act three times every evening"; "she had a catchy little routine"; "it was one of the best numbers he ever did"
- number
- A nonnegative integer with an entire range limited by the range of a C language signed integer (2,147,483,647 on a machine with 32-bit integers) Its acceptable value might further be limited by the context in which it is used
- number
- tests whether its argument is a number
- number
- the grammatical category for the forms of nouns and pronouns and verbs that are used depending on the number of entities involved (singular or dual or plural); "in English the subject and the verb must agree in number"
- number
- a select company of people; "I hope to become one of their number before I die"
- number
- a symbol used to represent a number; "he learned to write the numerals before he went to school"
- number
- You can refer to someone's or something's position in a list of the most successful or most popular of a particular type of thing as, for example, number one or number two. the world number one, Tiger Woods Before you knew it, the single was at Number 90 in the US singles charts