diurnal

listen to the pronunciation of diurnal
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Said of a flower open, or releasing its perfume during daylight hours, but not at night
A diary or journal
A daily news publication
Published daily
Happening or occurring during daylight, or primarily active during that time

Most birds are diurnal.

Done once every day; daily, quotidian
A flower that opens only in the day
A book containing canonical offices performed during the day, hence not matins
Having a daily cycle that is completed every 24 hours, usually referring to tasks, processes, tides, or sunrise to sunset
daily
{n} a daybook, journal, daily account
{a} daily, performed or done in a day
Primarily active during the day
Throughout the day, daily
prime, tierce, sext, nones, vespers, and compline
Pertaining to the daylight portion of the 24-h day
Active during the day See crepuscular, nocturnal
A diurnal bird or insect
Having a daily cycle, or recurring every day
Literally þof the dayþ, but here meaning having a period or a þtidal dayþ, i e about 24 8 hours
Pertaining to actions or events that occur during a twenty-four hour cycle or recurs every twenty-four hours Meteorological elements that are measured diurnally include clouds, precipitation, pressure, relative humidity, temperature, and wind
Recurring every day or having daily a daily cycle
Occurring daily
active in daytime
belonging to or active during the day; "diurnal animals are active during the day"; "diurnal flowers are open during the day and closed at night
viz
Daily; related to actions which are completed in the course of a calendar day, and which typically recur every calendar day (e g , diurnal temperature rises during the day, and diurnal falls at night)
daily, or the daily cycle A diurnal plot is usually a representative midnight-to-midnight graph of values measured at a smaller time interval (e g , hourly or 5-minute values)
belonging to or active during the day; "diurnal animals are active during the day"; "diurnal flowers are open during the day and closed at night"
having a daily cycle or occurring every day; "diurnal rhythms"; "diurnal rotation of the heavens"; "the diurnal slumber of bats" belonging to or active during the day; "diurnal animals are active during the day"; "diurnal flowers are open during the day and closed at night
Relating to the daytime; belonging to the period of daylight, distinguished from the night; opposed to nocturnal; as, diurnal heat; diurnal hours
A small volume containing the daily service for the "little hours,"
Open during daylight hours, closed at night
having a daily cycle or occurring every day; "diurnal rhythms"; "diurnal rotation of the heavens"; "the diurnal slumber of bats"
A book containing canonical offices but not matins
Active during daylight hours
Daily; recurring every day; performed in a day; going through its changes in a day; constituting the measure of a day; as, a diurnal fever; a diurnal task; diurnal aberration, or diurnal parallax; the diurnal revolution of the earth
(d r' n'l) An animal that is active during the daytime
A small volume containing the daily service for the "little hours," viz
Opening during the day, and closing at night; said of flowers or leaves
Diurnal means happening or active during the daytime. Kangaroos are diurnal animals. nocturnal
Active during the day
Repeated or recurring daily. Having a daily cycle of completed actions in 24 hours and recurring every 24 hours. Thus, most reference is made to diurnal tasks, cycles, tides, or sunrise to sunset
Daily Of, or belonging to, the daytime
Tidal system having one high tide per tidal day (24 hours, 50 minutes) Such systems are less common than semidiurnal systems Commonly, diurnal systems are microtidal, but macrotidal, diurnal systems can occur (see Archer, 1995)
{s} daily, of the day; of the daytime; active during the day (i.e. animals)
An animal typically active during the daylight hours
Active during the daylight hours
Relating to the daytime; occurring during daylight hours (Morris 1992) A mammal that is active mostly during daylight hours is said to be diurnal Voles tend to be diurnal rather than nocturnal which refers to the night
Having a period or cycle of approximately one tidal day Thus, the tide is said to be diurnal when only one high water and one low water occur during a tidal day, and the tidal current is said to be diurnal when there is a single flood and a single ebb period of a reversing current in the tidal day A rotary current is diurnal if it changes its direction through all points of the compass once each tidal day A diurnal constituent is one which has a single period in the constituent day The symbol for such a constituent is the subscript 1 See stationary wave theory and type of tide
A daybook; a journal
Used to describe birds that are active during the day Most birds are diurnal
Active during the daytime Daily
of the daytime or active during the day
Active by day; applied especially to the eagles and hawks among raptorial birds, and to butterflies (Diurna) among insects
Active during the daytime rather than at night
Usually active during daylight hours
diurnal arc
the path followed by a planet, point, or degree from its rising point to its setting point
diurnal arcs
plural form of diurnal arc
diurnal variation
fluctuations that occur during each day
diurnally
Every daytime
diurnally
By daylight
diurnally
{a} daily, every day, day by day
diurnally
Daily; every day
diurnally
daily
diurnally
each day; by day
التركية - الإنجليزية
diurnal
diurnal

    الواصلة

    di·ur·nal

    التركية النطق

    dayırnıl

    المترادفات

    circadian

    المتضادة

    nocturnal, nightly

    النطق

    /dīˈərnəl/ /daɪˈɜrnəl/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    () From Latin diurnālis, from diēs (“day”). Cognate with journal.
المفضلات