تعريف l-point في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- Brownie point
- Credit or praise for good work or a good deed, often for the express purpose of currying favor
You're really going to get some brownie points from the teacher for that fantastic essay!.
- Feynman point
- An anomaly in pi starting at the 762nd digit after the decimal point where there are six consecutive nines
- Lagrange point
- a point an the orbital configuration of a two-body system where a small object affected only by gravity can theoretically be stationary relative to the two larger objects
- Lagrangian point
- Alternative form of Lagrange point
- McBurney's point
- A point of the skin one-third of the distance from the ASIS to the umbilicus
- Trojan point
- the L4 and L5 Lagrange points of the Sun-Jupiter orbital configuration
- Trojan point
- by extension, any L4 and L5 Lagrange points
- West Point
- The United States Military Academy, in West Point, NY
- West Point
- Any of several towns in the United States and elsewhere
- access point
- A device, such as a WLAN or Internet modem, that permits wireless devices to connect to a network
- accidental point
- A point on the horizon at which two parallel lines appear to meet
- accumulation point
- A point such that in each of its punctured neighborhoods there is a point of a given set or sequence
- at this point in time
- right now
While we are not able to assist you at this point in time, we will be sure to call you if an opportunity arises.
- axial point
- nodal point
- axial point
- Any point that lies on any of the axes of a coordinate system
- ball-point pen
- Alternative spelling of ballpoint pen
- ball-point pens
- plural form of ball-point pen
- basis point
- One hundredth of one percent
- beside the point
- Irrelevantly, off the topic
Judges in the British law courts used to tell lawyers who spoke beside the point or quoted irrelevant cases that they might as well say that Robin Hood in Barnsdale stood.
- beside the point
- Irrelevant, moot
His many charitable donations are beside the point. They do not make up for the fact that he stole the money to begin with.
- boiling point
- The temperature at which a liquid boils, with the vapor pressure equal to the given external pressure
- break point
- A situation in which if the receiver wins the next point, (s)he will win the game (but not the set or match)
- break-even point
- The point where total costs equal total sales revenue and the company neither makes a profit nor suffers a loss. Often abbreviated as BEP
- breakdown point
- The number or proportion of arbitrarily large or small extreme values that must be introduced into a batch or sample to cause the estimator to yield and arbitrarily large result
- breakeven point
- Alternative spelling of break-even point
- brownie point
- Alternative spelling of Brownie point
- bullet point
- An item of a bullet list
- cardinal point
- Any of the four principal compass directions - north, south, east and west
- case and point
- Common misconstruction of case in point
Information dissemination about the destruction of the Khamisiyah munitions depot in Iraq is a case and point.
- case in point
- An example that illustrates a point
- cases in point
- plural form of case in point
- closest point of approach
- An estimated point in which the distance between two objects, of which at least one is in motion, will reach its minimum value; abbreviated CPA. The estimate is used to evaluate the risk of a collision of e.g. two ships
- cloud point
- The temperature at which one component of a mixture of liquids begins to solidify (or a mixture of liquids starts to become immiscible) on cooling, resulting in visible cloudiness; as for example in diesel fuel in freezing temperatures; the consolute point
- code point
- A numerical offset in a character set, etc., as opposed to the character or item it represents
In UTF-8, the number of bytes used to write a character to a file depends on the Unicode code point.
- coincidence point
- Of two mappings, a point in the domain of both mappings that has same image under both
- commit point
- In a DBMS, a point in time at which all updates to a database, or group of records in a database, are guaranteed to have been written to disk, and the journal or log records of that action have also been so committed. Future updates may be undone to that point if necessary
- compass point
- Any of the horizontal directions indicated on a compass. There may be 4, 8, 16 or 32 compass points on a compass, depending on its size and accuracy
- consolute point
- cloud point
- cover point
- a fielding position between cover and point, about 15° forward of square; a fielder in this position
- critical point
- A juncture at which time a critical decision must be made
- critical point
- A maximum, minimum or point of inflection on a curve; a point at which the derivative of a function is zero or undefined
- critical point
- The temperature and pressure at which the vapour density of the gas and liquid phases of a fluid are equal, at which point there is no difference between gas and liquid
- data point
- the data that the mark represents
I think the third data point is inaccurate. Let's measure it again.
- data point
- A socket for connecting to a phone line or other electronic network
I sat on the end of the row so I could use the data point.
- data point
- A mark on a graph or chart corresponding to a piece of data
Could you make all the yellow data points bigger?.
- datum point
- A point which serves as a reference or base for the measurement of other quantities
- decimal point
- A decimal place
- decimal point
- A point (.) used to separate the fractional part of a decimal from the whole part
- decimal point
- A decimal mark, any symbol used to separate the fractional part of a decimal from the whole part
- deep point
- A fielding position on the off side, square of the batsman's wicket and near the boundary; a fielder in that position
- demerit point
- A point subtracted from a person's driver's license upon conviction of a driving offense, the accumulation of which may lead to additional penalties and/or loss of driving privileges
- dew point
- The temperature at which the air becomes saturated and water vapor condenses to form dew
- dew-point
- Attributive form of dew point, noun
- double point
- A point on a curve at which there are two tangents (because it touches itself, or has a cusp)
- dropping point
- Temperature at which a grease passes from a semi-solid to liquid state under specific test conditions
- dry point
- an acid-free etching created by direct incision into a metal or clear acrylic plate with an etching scribe
- entry point for the eye
- The first spot in a particular print advertisement noticed by the reader
We thought the entry point for the eye in this ad would be the actress’ face, but it was actually her legs.
- eutectic point
- The point in a phase diagram indicating the lowest melting point of a eutectic
- exclamation point
- The symbol ! (an exclamation mark)
- experience point
- Singular form of experience points
- extra point
- after a touchdown, an attempt to kick the ball through the goal posts to gain another point
- far point
- The most distant point at which the eye can focus (usually infinity, but nearer for a myopic eye)
- far point
- The most distant point under consideration in any situation
- fess point
- The exact centre of the shield
- first point of Aries
- One of the two places in the heavens when the great circle of the ecliptic crosses the celestial equator
- fixed point
- A value which is unchanged by a function or other mapping. Formally: a value x for which f(x) = x.W
- fixed point
- Pertaining to fixed point representations or operations
- fixed point
- A fractional-number representation with a fixed number of digits after the decimal point. Compare floating point and integer
- fixed-point
- Being or using an internal number representation with a fixed number of decimal places (as opposed to floating-point)
- flash point
- A hotspot; a dangerous place of violent political unrest
- flash point
- The lowest temperature at which a liquid can form an ignitable mixture in air near the surface of the liquid
- floating point
- of the internal representation of such a number as a pair of integers
- floating point
- of a number, written in two parts as a mantissa (the value of the digits) and characteristic (the power of a number base) e.g. 0.314159 x 101
- floating point operation
- any simple operation, such as addition, multiplication or division, that a particular computer can perform using a single operation
- floating point operations
- plural form of floating point operation
- floating-point number
- A real number held as a pair of integers, one representing the mantissa and the other representing the exponent. The base is normally 10, 16 or 256 depending on the computing system
- floating-point number
- A number written in the form a x bc e.g. 3.75 x 103
- floating-point unit
- A microprocessor that performs floating-point arithmetic. In older models of computer the FPU was not integrated into the central processing unit, but rather as a coprocessor if included at all
- floating-point units
- plural form of floating-point unit
- focal point
- A feature that attracts particular attention
- focal point
- A focus; a point at which rays of light or other radiation converge
- focal point
- The centre of any activity
- freezing point
- the temperature at which a liquid freezes, and the solid and liquid phases are in equilibrium; normally the same as the melting point
- game point
- A situation where if one of the two players wins the next point, he or she will win the game (but not the set)
- game-point
- Attributive form of game point
game-point situation.
- get the point
- To understand; to interpret correctly
He just doesn't get the point that this is not a race.
- get to the point
- To state (something) directly; as opposed to in a long-winded way
- gets to the point
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of get to the point
- getting to the point
- Present participle of get to the point
- got to the point
- Simple past tense and past participle of get to the point
- grade point average
- A method of computing a numerical value for letter grades received in school by assigning each a numeric value and averaging the numbers
- high point
- A climax; the best time in a given period
This has been the high point of my life.
- hit point
- A unit of damage, used to specify the amount of damage a character can withstand before it is defeated
- hollow point
- A bullet with a small hole drilled or molded in the tip, designed to expand when it hits its target and therefore cause more damage
- hypercritical point
- A point in the domain of a mathematical function at which the second derivative of the function is either zero or undefined
- in point
- appropriate, relevant, pertinent
- in point of fact
- actually
- inflection point
- a point of inflection
- initial point
- In surveying, the point where the principal meridian crosses the baseline
- interior point
- A point in a set S that has a neighbourhood which is contained in S
- interrogation point
- A question mark
What often happens is combat teams are mixed between English and French soldiers from across Canada, orders are given in English and the French guys don't understand. Or, the orders are given in French and the English guys don't understand. . . . nd they walk out with a big interrogation point on their face..
- interrogation-point
- Alternative spelling of interrogation point
- isoelectric point
- the pH of a colloidal suspension or of an ampholyte at which the solute does not move in an electrophoretic field
- join point
- In aspect-oriented programming, a point at which advice (additional code) is triggered (a set of these constituting a pointcut)
- lattice point
- gridpoint
- limit point
- a point which lies in the closure of A\{x} of a set A
- magic point
- An indicator of how much magical energy or power a character has in a role-playing game. Abbreviated MP
- make a point
- To take care in doing something of something; to pay attention or ensure that something is done
Make a point to carry your calendar with you at all times.
- make a point
- To argue or promote an idea
I suppose the people who wrote that stuff on the wall were trying to make a point, but they mainly made a mess.
- mana point
- magic point
- match point
- A state in a game where a player can win the entire match by winning the next point. Often used in tennis
He made it to matchpoint three times and still lost, but you can't come much closer than that.
- melting point
- The temperature at which the solid and liquid phases of a substance are in equilibrium; it is relatively insensitive to changes in pressure
- miss the point
- To fail to grasp the meaning of an utterance
Do you know what I mean, or are you missing my point?.
- moot point
- An issue that is subject to, or open for discussion or debate; originally, one to be definitively determined by an assembly of the people
Exactly which of the songs on Small Change originated in London is a moot point.
- moot point
- An issue regarded as potentially debatable, but no longer practically applicable. Although the idea may still be worth debating and exploring academically, and such discussion may be useful for addressing similar issues in the future, the idea has been rendered irrelevant for the present issue
Until we rebuild downtown, whether we build more parking spaces is a moot point.
- mute point
- Common misspelling of moot point
- nick point
- A point at which a river suffers a break of slope in its long profile; the current point of rejuvenation working upstream
- nine-point circle
- That circle which passes through the feet of the altitudes of a given triangle
- nine-point circles
- plural form of nine-point circle
- nip point
- A point of convergence between two rolling parts, or a rolling part and a stationary part, where all or part of the human body could become trapped and injured
- nombril point
- A point mid-way between the bottom and centre of the shield.An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Heraldry, Julian Franklyn and John Tanner, Pergamon Press, 1970, ISBN 0-08-013297-9
- not to put too fine a point on it
- used to apologise for a possibly impolite statement one is making
En route to his taciturn and, not to put too fine a point on it, not yet perfectly sober companion Mr Bloom.
- nul point
- Misspelling of nul points
The teams are the only three still on nul point, a fact that belies a mixture of poor performance and even worse luck in the opening three rounds. Crash.net news, 9 May 06.
- on point
- Having a direct application to the case or topic under consideration
His historical discussions always appear on point, well researched, and indicate a great deal of care.
- on the point of
- Very nearly; imminent; close
The old building seemed to be on the point of collapse.
- pedal point
- a sustained bass pitch
- pinch point
- A point in between moving and stationary parts of a machine where an individual's body part or body may be placed such that when the machine is operating the body part may become caught, leading to an injury; including, possibly, fracture, amputation, or death
- point
- A sharp extremity
cricket A fielding position square of the wicket on the off side, between gully and cover.
- point
- To draw attention to something or indicate a direction
- point
- To repair mortar
It's rude to point at other people.
- point
- To direct requests sent to a domain name to the IP address corresponding to that domain name
- point
- To repair by removing and replacing loose mortar
- point
- A discrete division of something
UK An electric power socket.
- point
- To direct the central processing unit to seek information at a certain location in memory
- point
- To extend the index finger in the direction of something in order to show where it is or to draw attention to it
- point
- To direct or encourage (someone) in a particular direction
If he asks for food, point him toward the refrigerator.
- point bar
- A ridge, formed from the accretion of sand or gravel, on the inside curve of a meander
- point bars
- plural form of point bar
- point blank
- The distance between a gun and a target such that it requires minimal effort in aiming it. In particular no allowance needs to be made for effects of gravity, target movement or wind in aiming the projectile
- point blank
- Directly; bluntly; without pretense or caution
I asked him point blank whether he was cheating on his wife.
- point blank
- Horizontally (as the angle at which a projectile is launched); directly or straight (at the target)
- point break
- In surfing, where a wave breaks as it hits a point of land jutting out from the coastline
- point cloud
- A series of points in 3D space, defined in X, Y, Z format, which collectively describe the geometry of a physical object
- point clouds
- plural form of point cloud
- point duty
- Traffic control by a police officer stationed at an intersection
- point function
- Any function whose values are points
- point functions
- plural form of point function
- point group
- a group of isometries leaving a fixed point
- point groups
- plural form of point group
- point guard
- A guard specializing in handling the ball, distributing it to the other players and generally running the team's offense
Many coaches are former point guards.
- point man
- By extension, a most trusted assistant or associate; the person to whom one would most rely upon
- point man
- In combat, the soldier who takes point; the soldier who assumes the first and most exposed position in a combat military formation; the lead soldier/unit advancing through hostile or unsecured territory
- point mass
- A theoretical point with mass assigned to it
- point masses
- plural form of point mass
- point men
- plural form of point man
- point mutation
- A mutation that involves the replacement, addition or deletion of a small number of bases (especially just one) at a specific site within a gene
- point mutations
- plural form of point mutation
- point of articulation
- place of articulation
- point of contact
- : A specific intersection; a contact point
- point of contact
- A person who is associated with a defined Internet entity
- point of contact
- The single person who represents an organization, for a specific task
- point of inevitability
- In sexual intercourse or masturbation, a level of sexual arousal in the male that results in orgasm and ejaculation, i.e., climax. It is that point at which ejaculating becomes inevitable
- point of inflection
- a point on a curve at which the sign of the curvature changes; at this point the second derivative of the underlying function will be zero, but positive on one side and negative on the other
- point of interest
- A point on an engineering drawing that has been added to make the layout of the part easier. It is usually the intersection of the tangent lines of a curve
- point of no return
- The point in an aircraft's flight when there is insufficient fuel to reverse direction and return to the place of origin
- point of no return
- The point in any journey, process, or sequence of events when it is no longer possible to reverse course or stop the process
A record loss of sea ice in the Arctic this summer has convinced scientists that the northern hemisphere may have crossed a critical threshold beyond which the climate may never recover.
- point of order
- A motion calling attention to a breach of order of the rules
- point of pride
- Something which produces a feeling of self-satisfaction, especially an admirable personal characteristic or accomplishment
It is a point of pride for us, military and civilian alike, that we take the utmost care to avoid collateral damage..
- point of purchase
- A place where a product or service may be or has been purchased
- point of reference
- A particular point in space which is used as an endpoint to measure a distance from or chart a map from
- point of reference
- An unique intellectual datum used to relate other ideas
- point of sail
- A sailing vessel's course in relation to the wind direction
- point of sale
- In an establishment that sells goods or services, the location at which payment for goods is made
- point of view
- A position from which something is seen; outlook; standpoint
From an economist's point of view, business is all about money.
- point of view
- The perspective from which a narrative is related
The storyline in the film The Usual Suspects is presented from the point of view of an unreliable narrator.
- point of view
- An attitude, opinion, or set of beliefs
His point of view is that there is only one true religion.
- point out
- To identify among a group of similar subjects, or in a scene where the subject might not be readily seen or noticed, with a gesture of the body
She pointed out the two drummers in the class.
- point out
- To tell, remind, indicate
I would just like to point out that we need to finish our meeting by 9 o'clock.
- point source
- a source of pollution, radiation, waves, fluid or other substance that has one specific location (and negligible physical extent, distinguishing a point source from other source geometries). In simulations they can often be approximated using mathematical point sources
- point source
- the abstract concept of a singularity emitting a flux or flow. A source with infinitesimal dimensions in space
- point sources
- plural form of point source
- point taken
- Indicates comprehension on the part of the speaker regarding a specific observation or objection raised by another
- point the bone
- To place a curse on another person by pointing a bone at that person
They were preparing to point the bone at him. The act of pointing the bone was, of course, merely a theatrical show, having a psychological effect.
- point the bone
- To blame someone
- point the finger
- to accuse; to direct or imply blame
That is a serious accusation, so make sure you have plenty of evidence before you point the finger at someone.
- point the finger at
- to accuse or blame
It seems like everyone always tries to point the finger at somebody else.
- point-and-click
- With which the user interacts by pointing and clicking, using a mouse or similar device
Carrying on the Sierra On-Line tradition of point-and-click adventure, Roberta Williams and Jane Jensen created two classics of the interactive movie genre.
- point-and-shoot
- Designed for quick, simple use with minimal configuration
The Instamatic was typical of second generation point-and-shoot cameras in that it incorporated artificial illumination and was designed to use color film.
- point-blank
- In a direct manner, without hesitation
- point-blank
- Disconcertingly straightforward or blunt
- point-blank
- the distance between a firearm and a target where a projectile in flight is expected to strike the centre of the target without adjusting the elevation of the firearm
- point-blank
- very close; not touching but not more than a few metres (yards)
- point-in-line
- An established threat made with the extended arm
- point-set topology
- The general field of topology, not restricting attention to specific classes of spaces, and not using algebraic topology
- power point
- A wall socket by which electricity is provided to electrical devices
- pressure point
- A specific small area of the body targeted, due to a cluster of nerves being close to the skin, usually not protected by bone
For this strike, if your thumb is tucked correctly, you should hit the pressure point where their arm meets their shoulder.
- price point
- The price of an item, especially seen as one of a number of pricing options
- price point
- A price, viewed as one of a number of prices for related retail goods
The big-box stores are selling our $120 price-point items at $99 or less.
- projectile point
- The head or tip of a shaft that is thrown (that is, projected away from the user) as a weapon
- radix point
- The character used to separate the integer and fractional part of a number in a digital representation of a number, regardless of the base used
- raised point
- · (the Greek punctuation mark used in place of a semicolon in English)
- reference point
- Alternative form of point of reference
- rogue access point
- An unauthorized access point (AP) installed on a WLAN
- saddle point
- A point in the range of a smooth function every neighborhood of which contains points on each side of its tangent plane
- saddle point
- Such a point in the graphical representation of the possible outcomes of a game
- saddle-point
- Attributive form of saddle point
saddle-point strategy.
- saturation point
- the point in time at which saturation is reached
- save point
- A location found in video games that allows the player to save their game, often found in non-overworld areas such as towns and dungeons, where saving anywhere is not allowed. Gameplay resumes from the save point used
- seal point
- A dark brown area of fur on the ears, face, legs, and tail of a Siamese cat
- see someone's point
- To comprehend the meaning that someone is trying to convey
Yes, I see your point. Let me double-check that and get back with you.
- selling point
- The property or characteristic of a good that most attracts purchasers
But for Zellweger, the major selling point was the script. It was such a great read, says the actress.
- set point
- A situation where if one of the two players wins the next point, (s)he will win the set (but not the match)
- set point
- A setting or location that is fixed
- silly point
- A fielding position, on the off side, square of the batsman's wicket, and very near the batsman; a fielder in this position
- single point of failure
- a component in a device, or a point in a network, that, if it were to fail would cause the entire device or network to fail; normally eliminated by adding redundancy
- single-point urban interchange
- An interchange between a highway (free-flowing) and a street (with traffic signals) which allows traffic to proceed from either direction on each road to either direction on the other, and which is governed by only one set of traffic signals
- skill point
- A system of points allocated to a player character, often when leveling up, to purchase abilities on their skill tree
- skill point
- A system of renewable energy points that may be used along side magic points, to separate magical and physical abilities
- skill point
- In some games it is synonymous with magic points
- smoke point
- The temperature at which an oil or shortening begins to produce smoke. Oils with a high smoke point are suitable for frying in; attempting to fry in a low smoke point oil would be a fire hazard and result in offensive tastes and odors in addition to making the air unbreathable