تعريف k-value في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- thermal conductivity; the time of rate of heat flow through a unit area of a homogeneous material in a direction perpendicular to isothermal planes induced by a unit temperature gradient. In English (inch-pound) units of measurement; it is the number of BTUs that pass through a 1 inch thickness of a square foot sample of material in 1 hour with a temperature difference between the two sufraces of 1 degree F
- Shapley value
- A real number determined for the player i as
given a coalitional game with a set N of n players and a worth function v \; : \; \mathcal{P}(N) \; \to \Re .
- U-value
- thermal transmittance or thermal conductance
- Value at Risk
- A widely used measure of the risk of loss on a specific portfolio of financial assets. For a given portfolio, probability and time horizon, VaR is a threshold value such that the probability that the mark-to-market loss on the portfolio over the given time horizon exceeds this value (assuming normal markets and no trading) is the given probability level
- absolute value
- For a complex number, the square root of the sum of the squares of its real and imaginary parts
- absolute value
- For a real number, its numerical value without regard to its sign; formally, -1 times the number if the number is negative, and the number unmodified if it is zero or positive
- add value
- To make a product or service more desirable
The new Web site will really add value for our customers.
- aged R-value
- thermal resistance value established by utilizing artificial conditioning procedures for a prescribed period of time
- article of extraordinary value
- A transported item with a value exceeding 100 USD per imperial pound
- book value
- The price for which an item or service should be bought or sold, usually as related in a printed collection of prices for similar items or services
- book value
- The value of an asset as reflected on an entity's accounting books, without accounting for appreciation or depreciation
- call value
- The amount that must be paid by the issuer to a bondholder to call the bond before its maturity
The 2020s sell at 104, have a good yield, but are callable in 2010 with a call value of 103.
- call-by-value
- An evaluation strategy in which the arguments to a function are evaluated first, and the result is passed into the function
- calorific value
- The amount of energy available from an item of food when digested, mostly from carbohydrates and fats
- calorific value
- The amount of heat produced by the complete combustion of a material or fuel. Measured in units of energy per amount of material. eg: Btu/m³
- expected value
- Of a discrete random variable, the sum of the probability of each possible outcome of the experiment multiplied by the outcome value (or payoff)
- face value
- The amount or value listed on a bill, note, stamp, etc.; the stated value or amount
- face value
- No more or less than what is stated; a literal or direct meaning or interpretation
Please take this comment at face value and don't try to read anything into it.
- face-value
- Alternative spelling of face value
- fair market value
- The price at which the buyer and seller are willing to do business
- good value
- Friendly; easy-going
- good value
- Funny; humorous
- intermediate value theorem
- a statement that claims that for each value between the least upper bound and greatest lower bound of the image of a continuous function there is a corresponding point in its domain that the function maps to that value
- market value
- The price which a seller or insurer might reasonably expect to fetch for goods, services or securities on the open market
- mean value theorem
- a statement that claims that given an arc of a differentiable curve, there is at least one point on that arc at which the derivative of the curve is equal to the average derivative of the arc
- net present value
- The present value of a project or an investment decision determined by summing the discounted incoming and outgoing future cash flows resulting from the decision
- note value
- A musical notation that indicates the relative duration of a note, using the color or shape of the note head, the presence or absence of a stem, and the presence of flags
- par value
- The amount or value listed on a bill, note, stamp, etc.; the stated value or amount
- production value
- A method, material, or stagecraft skill used in the production of a motion picture or artistic performance; the technical quality of such a method, material, or skill
The New York publicity people asked the studio people if the films were to be shot in colour or not so as to decide if whether to feature that production value in the promotional campaigns.
- r-value
- Resistance-value - A measure of thermal resistance used in domestic insulation
- rateable value
- An official estimate of the value of a property used as a basis of local taxation
- replay value
- The entertainment value obtained by playing a computer game more than once; replayability
- sentimental value
- The personal value of an object, derived from the personal memories associated with it
- singular value decomposition
- A particular type of factorisation of a matrix into a product of three matrices, of which the second is a diagonal matrix that has as the entries on its diagonal the singular values of the original matrix
- store of value
- An asset such as money or gold that is purchased or accepted as payment for goods and services for its ability to purchase other assets in the future without rapidly losing its purchasing power
- surplus value
- The part of the new value made by production that is taken by enterprises as generic gross profit
- tax value
- The services a tax payer receives in return for paying taxes to support school, municipal, county, state and federal budgets. Tax Value is stated in services per dollar
- truth value
- A value indicating to what extent a statement is true; in classical logic, these are the values "true" and "false"
- value
- The amount (of money or goods or services) that is considered to be a fair equivalent for something else
He tried to estimate the value of the produce at normal prices.
- value
- To fix or determine the value of; assign a value to, as of jewelry or art work
- value
- The relative duration of a musical note
The value of a crotchet is twice that of a quaver.
- value
- The degree of importance you give to something
The value of my children's happiness is second only to that of my wife.
- value
- To regard highly; think much of; place importance upon
Gold was valued highly among the Romans.
- value
- To estimate the cost of; judge the worth of something
I will have the family jewels valued by a professional.
- value
- The quality (positive or negative) that renders something desirable or valuable
The Shakespearean Shylock is of dubious value in the modern world.
- value
- To hold dear
I value these old photographs.
- value
- The relative darkness or lightness of a color in (a specific area of) a painting etc
I establish the colors and principal values by organizing the painting into three values--dark, medium...and light. -Joe Hing Lowe.
- value
- Numerical quantity measured or assigned or computed
The exact value of pi can never be computed.
- value added tax
- A tax levied on the added value that results from the exchange of goods and services
- value adds
- plural form of value add
- value bet
- To bet with the intention of being called in order to extract more money from a likely worse hand
- value bet
- A bet placed with the intention of being called in order to extract more money from a likely worse hand
- value bets
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of value bet
- value bets
- plural form of value bet
- value betting
- Present participle of value bet
- value date
- Settlement date on which interest payments are credited or debited to the customer's bank account; interest payments are made from this date onwards
- value dates
- plural form of value date
- value domain
- The set of allowed values for a data element
- value judgement
- Alternative spelling of value judgment
- value judgment
- A judgment of the rightness or wrongness of something, based on a particular set of values or on a particular value system
- value over replacement player
- A statistical measure which evaluates the relative performance of a batter or pitcher compared to a hypothetical replacement player of average fielding skill and below average hitting or pitching
- value proposition
- The benefit (such as profit or convenience) offered by an organisation's product or service
- value propositions
- plural form of value proposition
- value raise
- To raise with the intention of being called in order to extract more money from a likely worse hand
- value raise
- A raise made with the intention of being called in order to extract more money from a likely worse hand
- value raised
- Simple past tense and past participle of value raise
- value raises
- plural form of value raise
- value raises
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of value raise
- value raising
- Present participle of value raise
- value statement
- An organisation's statement of its ethical values, complementary to mission statement and vision statement
- value statement
- A non-descriptive statement
- value system
- A hierarchy of values that all moral agents possess, demonstrated by their choices. Most people's value systems differ, making the imposition of a singular value system by the state a source of constant social warfare. This is an individualistic concept. One's value system is molded by one's virtues or vices
- value system
- A person's standards and self-discipline set, based on the common sense and wisdom of knowing what the proper moral rules and discipline are, and the amount of willingness to see themselves and others abide by them
- value theory
- A theory of how people positively and negatively value things and concepts, the reasons they use in making their evaluations, and the scope of applications of legitimate evaluations across the social world
- value voter
- One who participates in elections and makes decisions based on issues such as religion, abortion, capital punishment and same-sex marriage
- value-add
- Something that adds value; a benefit or enhancement
- value-added network
- A communications network that had additional functions such as error correction, protocol conversion and message storing
- value-added reseller
- a company that adds some feature(s) to an existing product(s), then resells it (usually to end-users) as an integrated product or complete turn-key solution
- value
- (Reklam) "Value" has different interpretations: from a marketing or consumer perspective it is "the promise and delivery of an experience"; from a business perspective it is "the security of future earnings"; from a legal perspective it is "a separable piece of intellectual property." Brands offer customers a means to choose and enable recognition within cluttered markets
- non value-added
- (Ticaret) Activities and costs that can be eliminated without reducing performance, function or value as perceived by the customer
- value
- {v} to fix a price, rate, apprise, esteem
- value
- {n} a price, worth, rate, esteem
- fair market value
- (Ekonomi) Fair market value (FMV) is an estimate of the market value of a property, based on what a knowledgeable, willing, and unpressured buyer would probably pay to a knowledgeable, willing, and unpressured seller in the market. An estimate of fair market value may be founded either on precedent or extrapolation. Fair market value differs from the intrinsic value that an individual may place on the same asset based on their own preferences and circumstances
- value-free
- Making or having no value judgments. "value-free distinctions", "value-free instruction"