تعريف seeding في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- The arrangement of positions in a tournament
- Present participle of seed
- (Bilgisayar) When a file is new, much time can be wasted because the seeding client might send the same file piece to many different peers, while other pieces have not yet been downloaded at all. Some clients, like ABC, Vuze, BitTornado, TorrentStorm, and µTorrent have a "super-seed" mode, where they try to only send out pieces that have never been sent out before, theoretically making the initial propagation of the file much faster. However the super-seeding becomes less effective and may even reduce performance compared to the normal "rarest first" model in cases where some peers have poor or limited connectivity. This mode is generally used only for a new torrent, or one which must be re-seeded because no other seeds are available
- Placing of good players in tournament competition so that they do not meet in early round play
- Purchase seed at least 1 week before planting and germinate it in your refrigerator
- Deliberately placing dummy names on your mailing list to track its usage
- 1 The introduction of atoms, such as sodium, with a low ionization potential into a hot gas for the purpose of increasing the electrical conductivity
- Process in electroless copper deposition, where the sensitised board is dipped into an acidic solution of palladium chloride
- {i} act of sowing seeds, act of planting seeds
- {s} producing seeds, bearing seeds
- The special case of initiation of ice crystal formation in undercooled water or aqueous solutions by the introduction of ice crystals
- A system of ranking players entering a tournament so that the best players do not play against each other immediately This prevents the most skilled players from being eliminated too early in the competition
- Racing : Lineup order for the main event
- A source of development for growth
- A method for ensuring that two or more routers agree about which physical networks correspond to which network numbers and zone names There are three options: non-seeding, soft seeding, and hard seeding Seeding can often be set separately for each router port See also hard seeding, non-seeding, seed router, and soft seeding
- Planting of dummy names in a mailing list to check usage, delivery, or unauthorized reuse
- seeding machine
- machine that scatters seeds, machine that plants seeds
- cloud seeding
- The act of firing munitions containing silver iodide at passing clouds to make them more likely to produce rain
- cloud-seeding
- Alternative spelling of cloud seeding
- mast seeding
- An intermittently-occurring, synchronous production of large amounts of seed by a population of plants
- seed
- To allocate a seeding to a competitor
- seed
- Offspring, descendants, progeny
Next him king Leyr in happie peace long raind, / But had no issue male him to succeed, / But three faire daughters, which were well vptraind, / In all that seemed fit for kingly seed .
- seed
- A fertilized grain, initially encased in a fruit, which may grow into a mature plant
If you plant a seed in the spring, you may have a pleasant surprise in the autumn.
- seed
- First. The initial state, condition or position of a changing, growing or developing process; the ultimate precursor in a defined chain of precursors
The qualifying match determines the seed position one will have in the final competition.
- seed
- The initial state, condition or position of a changing, growing or developing process; the ultimate precusor in a defined chain of precusors
The latest seed has attracted a lot of users in our online community.
- seed
- Held in reserve for future growth
Don’t eat your seed corn.
- seed
- To be able to compete (especially in a quarter-final/semi-final/final)
The tennis player seeded into the quarters.
- seed
- To start; to provide, assign or determine the initial resources for, position of, state of
The programmer seeded fresh, uncorrupted data into the database before running unit tests.
- seed
- To plant or sow an area with seeds
I seeded my lawn with bluegrass.
- seed
- A fertilized ovule, containing an embryonic plant
- seed
- bear seeds help (an enterprise) in its early stages of development by providing seed money
- seed
- {v} to produce feed, to shed or sow seed
- seed
- {n} what produces plants and animals, an original, generation, offspring, race, extraction
- seed
- inoculate with microorganisms sprinkle with silver iodide particles to disperse and cause rain; "seed clouds"
- super-seeding
- (Bilgisayar) When a file is new, much time can be wasted because the seeding client might send the same file piece to many different peers, while other pieces have not yet been downloaded at all. Some clients, like ABC, Vuze, BitTornado, TorrentStorm, and µTorrent have a "super-seed" mode, where they try to only send out pieces that have never been sent out before, theoretically making the initial propagation of the file much faster. However the super-seeding becomes less effective and may even reduce performance compared to the normal "rarest first" model in cases where some peers have poor or limited connectivity. This mode is generally used only for a new torrent, or one which must be re-seeded because no other seeds are available
- cloud seeding
- A technique of stimulating or enhancing precipitation by distributing dry ice crystals or silver iodide particles over developing storm clouds in a specific area of the atmosphere
- seed
- Semen
- seed
- If you seed a piece of land, you plant seeds in it. Men mowed the wide lawns and seeded them The primroses should begin to seed themselves down the steep hillside. his newly seeded lawns
- seed
- A precursor
- seed
- To shed the seed
- seed
- go to seed; shed seeds; "The dandelions went to seed"
- seed
- By germination it produces a new plant
- seed
- The mature, fertilized ovule It contains the plant embryo and the endosperm, typically protected by a seed coat Seeds can be almost microscopic to over an inch long; their variety is evident in their various colors, shapes, and textures A magnolia seed germinated from an archaeological site over 2000 years old, but many are viable for only 1-5 years Saving seed is the most economical (and satisfying) way to prepare for next year's garden, but if you do buy seeds, buy them from a reputable dealer and watch that you don't buy seeds treated with fungicides and pesticides Many seeds should be pretreated before they are sown, and most prefer warm temperatures to germinate (see hotbed)
- seed
- The generative fluid of the male; semen; sperm; not used in the plural
- seed
- To grow to maturity, and produce seed
- seed
- To sprinkle with seed; to plant seeds in; to sow; as, to seed a field
- seed
- Structure that develops following fertilization of an ovule
- seed
- If vegetable plants go to seed or run to seed, they produce flowers and seeds as well as leaves. If unused, winter radishes run to seed in spring
- seed
- sprinkle with silver iodide particles to disperse and cause rain; "seed clouds"
- seed
- To cover thinly with something scattered; to ornament with seedlike decorations
- seed
- If you say that someone or something has gone to seed or has run to seed, you mean that they have become much less attractive, healthy, or efficient. He was a big man in his forties; once he had a lot of muscle but now he was running to seed. Reproductive structure in plants that consists of a plant embryo, usually accompanied by a supply of food (endosperm, which is produced during fertilization) and enclosed in a protective coat. Seed embryos contain one or more cotyledons. In typical flowering plants, seed production follows pollination and fertilization. As seeds mature, the ovary that enclosed the ovules develops into a fruit containing the seeds. Most seeds are small, weighing less than a gram; the smallest contain no food reserve. At the opposite extreme, the seed of the double coconut palm may weigh up to about 60 lb (27 kg). Seeds are highly adapted to transportation by animals, wind, and water. When circumstances are favorable, water and oxygen penetrate the seed coat, and the new plant begins to grow (see germination). The longevity of seeds varies widely: some remain viable for only about a week; others have been known to germinate after hundreds or even thousands of years
- seed
- a mature fertilized plant ovule consisting of an embryo and its food source and having a protective coat or testa
- seed
- In sports such as tennis or badminton, a seed is a player who has been ranked according to his or her ability. Pete Sampras, Wimbledon's top seed and the world No.1
- seed
- An initial value supplied to a random-number algorithm with which the algorithm can generate a unique sequence of pseudo-random numbers
- seed
- The seed is an encoded representation of a design model Seeds are sometimes described as genes or genotypes, making reference to their biological counterparts A generative process will map a seeds to its associated design model When compared to the design model, seeds are highly compact in that the amount of information A simple example of a seed and a design model are fractal growth systems such as Lindenmeyer Systems In this case, a short sequence of ccharacters such as "F[-B]+B" gets mapped into a complex line drawing, through recursivley applying a set of rules
- seed
- A typically random bit sequence used to generate another, usually longer pseudo-random bit sequence
- seed
- Sparta Educational Enrichment Development for students in grades 4&5 who have been identified as academically gifted
- seed
- {i} ovule of a plant; grain, kernel; sperm; source, origin; offspring, progeny; ranked player or competitor (Sports)
- seed
- A typically random bit sequence used to generate another, usually longer pseudorandom bit sequence
- seed
- self-electro-optic-effect devices
- seed
- A precursor, especially in a process without a defined initial state
- seed
- the thick white fluid containing spermatozoa that is ejaculated by the male genital tract
- seed
- An amount of fertilized grain that cannot be readily counted
- seed
- beginning of a new plant, as in: The seed of an avocado can be planted in soil or water
- seed
- To seed means to remove the seeds of fruits or vegetable
- seed
- First. The initial state, condition or position of a changing, growing or developing process; the ultimate precusor in a defined chain of precusors
- seed
- A ripened ovule, consisting of an embryo with one or more integuments, or coverings; as, an apple seed; a currant seed
- seed
- place (seeds) in or on the ground for future growth; "She sowed sunflower seeds"
- seed
- When a player or a team is seeded in a sports competition, they are ranked according to their ability. In the UEFA Cup the top 16 sides are seeded for the first round He is seeded second, behind Brad Beven The top four seeded nations are through to the semi-finals
- seed
- The cells a side starts with
- seed
- distribute swimmers among the required number of heats and/or lanes, based on submitted times Seeding can be "deck-seeded" (seeded at the meet) or "pre-seeded" Seeded prior to the meet
- seed
- a small hard fruit
- seed
- Before a tournament, certain players are ranked, based on their ability and recent performances The process is called seeding, the rankings are called seeds, and the top-ranked player is called the top seed Matches are then arranged so that the top-seeded players will not meet until the later rounds of the tournament
- seed
- anything that provides inspiration for later work
- seed
- A seed is the small, hard part of a plant from which a new plant grows. I sow the seed in pots of soil-based compost. sunflower seeds
- seed
- inoculate with microorganisms
- seed
- one of the outstanding players in a tournament
- seed
- Race; generation; birth
- seed
- That part of the fruit capable of germinating and producing a new plant
- seed
- 1 A CDP-enabled device used as a starting point for discovery For example, by adding a seed device (or set of seed devices), the neighbors of the seed device are discovered using CDP 2 A device that is not CDP-enabled, or that does not support CDP For example, if the device you want to manage does not support CDP, you must set that device as a seed You can specify multiple seed devices to: Shorten the initial discovery period Discover "disconnected" networksif you want to discover devices across links on which you have disabled CDP or where the devices are outside the firewall Discover devices that are not CDP-enabled
- seed
- Progeny; offspring; children; descendants; as, the seed of Abraham; the seed of David
- seed
- The unit of sexual reproduction developed from a fertilized ovule; an embryo closed in the testa which is derived from the integument(s)
- seed
- {f} plant or sow seeds; produce seeds; remove seeds; rank players or competitors (Sports)
- seed
- help (an enterprise) in its early stages of development by providing seed money
- seed
- The initial value, or starting point, for a sequence of random numbers
- seed
- a mature fertilized plant ovule consisting of an embryo and its food source and having a protective coat or testa a small hard fruit remove the seeds from; "seed grapes"
- seed
- A value (which can be assigned to a variable) that is required in order to properly determine the result of a calculation; for example, the argument i in the random number generator (RAN) function syntax: y = RAN (i)
- seed
- distribute (players or teams) so that outstanding teams or players will not meet in the early rounds
- seed
- distribute (players or teams) so that outstanding teams or players will not meet in the early rounds go to seed; shed seeds; "The dandelions went to seed"
- seed
- In the successive adjustment method, a seed is a product of powers of the first k primes, for some small value of k
- seed
- To sow seed
- seed
- One of about 30 to 70 small (3 cm x 1 5 cm) purple seeds in each Cacao fruit pod
- seed
- shows the positions in a page to which comments can be sent, indicates where to click to initiate the sending of a new comment (soemtimes appears as an envelope see above)
- seed
- You can refer to the seeds of something when you want to talk about the beginning of a feeling or process that gradually develops and becomes stronger or more important. He raised questions meant to plant seeds of doubts in the minds of jurors
- seed
- That from which anything springs; first principle; original; source; as, the seeds of virtue or vice
- seed
- remove the seeds from; "seed grapes"
- seed
- bear seeds
- seed
- The principle of production
- seed
- Fertilized ovule of a plant that contains an embryo and food products for germination Once germinated, the embryo can grow into a mature individual
- seed
- A swimmer's preliminary ranking for an event in a swim meet Also, the process of assigning swimmers to heats and lanes in a swimming event based on their submitted entry times
- seed
- An initial value used to generate pseudorandom numbers For example, the Randomize statement creates a seed number used by the Rnd function to create unique pseudorandom number sequences
- seed
- Any small seedlike fruit, though it may consist of a pericarp, or even a calyx, as well as the seed proper; as, parsnip seed; thistle seed