of, relating to, or composed in the musical modi by which an octave is divided, associated with emotional moods in Ancient - and in medieval ecclesiastical music
In grammar, a modal or a modal auxiliary is a word such as `can' or `would' which is used with a main verb to express ideas such as possibility, intention, or necessity. a modal verb
(as contrasted to modeless) a modal form requires you to finish with it before you can access other forms or the main menu (within the same application)
to execute a procedure, a window is opened Modal means: the window must first be closed again before a new function can be executed outside of the open window Non-modal means that procedures can be executed in parallel in several windows
A restrictive or limiting interaction because of operating in a mode Modal often describes a secondary window that restricts a user's interaction with other windows A secondary window can be modal with respect to its primary window or to the entire system Compare modeless
A system of harmony in which the chords do not relate to any specific key center Each new chord seems to come from a different key and suggest the use of a different scale
Of, relating to, or constituting a grammatical form or category characteristically indicating prediction of an action or state in some manner other than as is a simple fact
A type of auxiliary verb that is always the first word(s) in a verb phrase The most common modals are can, could, may, might, must, ought, shall, should, will and would: He should hit the ball over the fence
Having to do with modes; this term is applied most particularly to music that is based upon the Gregorian modes, rather than to music based upon the major, minor, or any other scale Miles Davis was a pioneer of modal jazz with the seminal 'Kind of Blue' Search Google com for Modal
A verb characteristically used with other verbs to express mood or tense. In English, the modal auxiliaries are can, may, must, ought, shall, should, will, and would. Also called modal. a modal verb
Formal systems incorporating modalities such as necessity, possibility, impossibility, contingency, strict implication, and certain other closely related concepts. The most straightforward way of constructing a modal logic is to add to some standard nonmodal logical system a new primitive operator intended to represent one of the modalities, to define other modal operators in terms of it, and to add axioms and/or transformation rules involving those modal operators. For example, one may add the symbol L, which means "It is necessary that," to classical propositional calculus; thus, Lp is read as "It is necessary that p." The possibility operator M ("It is possible that") may be defined in terms of L as Mp = Lp (where means "not"). In addition to the axioms and rules of inference of classical propositional logic, such a system might have two axioms and one rule of inference of its own. Some characteristic axioms of modal logic are: (A1) Lp p and (A2) L(p q) (Lp Lq). The new rule of inference in this system is the Rule of Necessitation: If p is a theorem of the system, then so is Lp. Stronger systems of modal logic can be obtained by adding additional axioms. Some add the axiom Lp LLp; others add the axiom Mp LMp
1) The proportion of total person trips that uses each of various specified modes of transportation 2) The process of separating total person trips into the modes of travel used 3) A term that describes how many people use alternative forms of transportation It is frequently used to describe the percentage of people who use private automobiles, as opposed to the percentage who user public transportation
1 The proportion of total person trips that uses each of the various specified modes of transportation 2 The process of separating total person trips into the modes of travel used 3 A term that describes how many people use alternative forms of transportation It is used frequently to describe the percentage of people who use private automobiles in comparison to the percentage who use public transportation Also: A term which describes how many people use alternative forms of transportation Frequently used to describe the percentage of people using private automobiles as opposed to the percentage using public transportation
A term which describes how many people use alternative forms of transportation Frequently used to describe the percentage of people using private automobiles as opposed to the percentage using public transportation
one of these verb forms: can, could, may, might, shall, should, will, would, must, ought to, used to, need, had better, and dare. They are all used with other verbs to express ideas such as possibility, permission, or intention auxiliary verb
The essive-modal case. In the Hungarian language this case can express the state, capacity, task in which somebody is or which somebody has (essive case, e.g. "as a reward", "for example"), or the manner in which the action is carried out, or the language which somebody knows (modal case, e.g. "unexpectedly", "speak English")