تعريف pair في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- A pair of breasts
She's got a gorgeous pair.
- To bring two (animals, notably dogs) together for mating
- A poker hand that contains of two cards of identical rank, which cannot also count as a better hand
- To group into sets of two
The wedding guests were paired boy-girl and groom's party-bride's party.
- A couple of working animals attached to work together, as by a yoke
A pair is harder to drive than two mounts with separate riders.
- Two people in a relationship, partnership (especially sexual) or friendship
Spouses should make a great pair.
- Used with binary nouns (often in the plural to indicate multiple instances, since such nouns are plurale tantum)
but not a pair of cymbals.
- A score of zero runs (a duck) in both innings of a two-innings match
- Two similar or identical things taken together; often followed by of
I couldn't decide which of the pair of designer shirts I preferred, so I bought the pair.
- A doubleheader, two games played on the same day between the same teams
The Pirates took a pair from the Phillies.
- A double play, two outs recorded in one play
They turned a pair to end the fifth.
- {v} to join in couples, couple, unite, suit
- {n} two things suiting one another, a couple
- a poker hand with 2 cards of the same value
- [Now mostly or quite disused, except as to stairs
- " Macaulay
- Two of a sort; a span; a yoke; a couple; a brace; as, a pair of horses; a pair of oxen
- Any adjacent duo of stones
- "A pair of beads
- - pair (of breasts) - shes got a gorgeous pair
- arrange in pairs; "Pair these numbers"
- Two wires, grouped (usually twisted) together and marked with reciprocal color coding
- Two cards of the same face or number value
- To put (two people or things) together
- Some objects that have two main parts of the same size and shape are referred to as a pair, for example a pair of trousers or a pair of scissors. a pair of faded jeans. a pair of binoculars
- Chaucer
- Two unseparated stamps
- ] Two things of a kind, similar in form, suited to each other, and intended to be used together; as, a pair of gloves or stockings; a pair of shoes
- A union of two conductors, as bars or wires of dissimilar metals joined at their extremities, for producing a thermoelectric current
- Two cards of the same rank If you hold AAKJ3, you have a pair See also top pair, middle pair, bottom pair, and two pair
- "Four pair of stairs
- See phrase below
- Two unseparated stamps Pane Section of sheet of stamps with gutter margin or leaf from a stamp booklet Perfins Initial letters or symbols perforating the body of a stamp
- A poker hand that contains of two cards of identical rank which cannot also count as a better hand
- A couple of stamps that have not been separated POSTMARK - Any mark tapped on mail by postal officials for any postal purposes PERFORATIONS - The small holes pushed around the sides of each stamps on a sheet to separate without damaging them PHILATELY - Collecting, studying and advancement of postage stamps and other stamped matters
- Macaulay
- two of a kind, as in: I need a new pair of shoes
- A pair of things are two things of the same size and shape that are used together or are both part of something, for example shoes, earrings, or parts of the body. a pair of socks. trainers that cost up to 90 pounds a pair 72,000 pairs of hands clapped in unison to the song
- To suit; to fit, as a counterpart
- Two similar or identical things taken together
- Protection and Advocacy for Individual Rights
- To unite in couples; to form a pair of; to bring together, as things which belong together, or which complement, or are adapted to one another
- occur in pairs form a pair or pairs; "The two old friends paired off
- a poker hand with 2 cards of the same value two people considered as a unit a set of two similar things considered as a unit arrange in pairs; "Pair these numbers"
- A group of two adjacent 1s on a Karnaugh map These 1s may be horizontally or vertically aligned
- two items of the same kind
- A bird pair is two birds, one male and one female that make a nest together When scientists are counting wild birds, they like to know how many pairs there are If there are lots of pairs then there are lots of birds starting a family!
- A single thing, composed of two pieces fitted to each other and used together; as, a pair of scissors; a pair of tongs; a pair of bellows
- Used in the names of some objects and garments that have two similar parts or halves
- & Fl
- bring two objects, ideas, or people together; "This fact is coupled to the other one"; "Matchmaker, can you match my daughter with a nice young man?"; "The student was paired with a partner for collaboration on the project"
- Also called two of a kind This is a hand where the player's best hand is made up of 2 cards of the same rank
- To be joined in paris; to couple; to mate, as for breeding
- {i} match; whole consisting of two parts; couple, two people who are connected in a relationship (i.e. engaged, married, dating); two people who are working partners in a project; two animal that are joined for mating or working
- Two; a couple of
- two people considered as a unit
- To impair
- If you say that someone is or has a safe pair of hands, you mean that they are reliable and will not make any serious mistakes. He has now held five cabinet posts and remains a safe pair of hands
- Two adjacent stones of the same color with no friendly stones at either end This formation is subject to atari and enemy capture
- In a mechanism, two elements, or bodies, which are so applied to each other as to mutually constrain relative motion
- one partnership; two players acting as partners; North-South or East-West
- If one thing is paired with another, it is put with it or considered with it. The trainees will then be paired with experienced managers. + pairing pair·ing the pairing of these two fine musicians. see also au pair
- Two people in a relationship, partnership or friendship
- Two stamps joined together, either vertically or horizontally, by their perforations
- Two cards of the same value such as a (A,A)
- an arrangement between parties whereby two members from opposing sides of a house do not vote on a particular occasion, so that one or both can be absent without affecting the result of the vote
- A number of things resembling one another, or belonging together; a set; as, a pair or flight of stairs
- You can refer to two people as a pair when they are standing or walking together or when they have some kind of relationship with each other. A pair of teenage boys were smoking cigarettes
- " Chaucer
- To engage (one's self) with another of opposite opinions not to vote on a particular question or class of questions
- pair bond
- a relationship, often permanent, formed between a male and female animal; initiated during courtship and maintained after mating
- pair of compasses
- A tool used to draw circles, usually consisting of two arms joined at one end in such a way that the arms can be opened and closed; one of the arms is pointed at its free end while the other holds a pencil, pencil lead or some other implement for making marks
- pair of eyeglasses
- A pair of lenses set in a frame worn on the nose and ears in order to correct deficiencies in eyesight or to ornament the face
- pair of glasses
- A pair of lenses set in a frame worn on the nose and ears in order to correct deficiencies in eyesight or to ornament the face
- pair of pants
- A single garment that covers one's legs individually with sleeves, and also covers the pelvis
- pair of pants
- The orientable surface of genus two having three boundary components
- pair of specs
- A pair of lenses set in a frame worn on the nose and ears in order to correct deficiencies in eyesight or to ornament the face
- pair of spectacles
- A pair of lenses set in a frame worn on the nose and ears in order to correct deficiencies in eyesight or to ornament the face
- pair of stairs
- A flight of stairs
The lines snaked around the block and down a pair of stairs, into a large exhibition hall.
- pair of underwear
- An item of clothing that is worn under one's trousers or pants
Have you seen my black pair of underwear? I swear I had it yesterday.
- pair programming
- A software development technique, part of extreme programming, in which two programmers work together at a single keyboard, one coding while the other observes and reviews. The roles are switched at regular intervals
- pair up
- To get into pairs; to join together to make a group of two
- pair up
- To put into pairs; to put into a group of two
- pair bond
- The temporary or permanent association formed between a female and male animal during courtship and mating.pair bonding n
- pair of boots
- set of shoes which extend over the ankle
- pair of compasses
- pair of calipers, dividers
- pair of gloves
- two matching gloves
- pair of jeans
- pants made out of jeans fabric, jeans
- pair of opposites
- two contradictory things, pair of things which are reversals of each other
- pair of scissors
- scissors
- pair of shoes
- two matching shoes, set of shoes
- pair of trousers
- pants, trousers
- pair off
- The netting of cash and securities in the settlement of two trades in the same securities for the same value date Pairing off allows for settlement of net differences
- pair off
- arrange in groups of two; marry; perform a marriage
- pair off
- From applicable formations (usually a Squared Set, Facing Lines, or Eight Chain Thru) Walk forward if necessary to meet the facing dancer, then Face Out (individually turn 1/4 to face away from the center of the set)
- pair off
- form a pair or pairs; "The two old friends paired off"
- pair off
- When people pair off or are paired off, they form a pair, often in order to become girlfriend and boyfriend. I knew she wouldn't be able to resist pairing me off with someone The squad members paired off to find places to eat and sleep
- pair off
- 1 To offset a position in the GNMA forward market by buying an issue previously sold or selling an issue previously bought Both buy and sell side must be in the same delivery month and both must be for the same guaranteed coupon
- pair production
- The simultaneous creation of a subatomic particle and its antiparticle from another form of energy, especially the production of a positron and an electron from a gamma ray photon in a strong electric field, such as that surrounding a nucleus. Formation of an electron and a positron from high-energy electromagnetic radiation traveling through matter, usually in the vicinity of an atomic nucleus. It is a direct conversion of radiant energy into matter in accordance with the equation E = mc^2, where E is the amount of energy, m is the mass, and c is the speed of light. It is one of the principal ways in which high-energy gamma rays are absorbed in matter. The positrons quickly disappear by being reconverted into photons in the process of annihilation with other electrons. Pair production may sometimes refer to the formation of other particle/antiparticle pairs as well
- pair production
- the transformation of a gamma-ray photon into an electron and a positron when the photon passes close to an atomic nucleus
- pair up
- If people pair up or are paired up, they form a pair, especially in order to do something together. They asked us to pair up with the person next to us and form teams Men and teenage girls pair up to dance Smokers and nonsmokers are paired up as roommates
- Cooper pair
- a pair of electrons, of opposite spin, that are thought to be the basis of superconductivity according to BCS theory
- au pair
- A single girl (or, rarely, a boy) who helps a host family with childcare and/or housework while staying as a guest with a host family and generally receiving a small allowance (or pocket money)
- base pair
- In molecular biology, two nucleotides on opposite complementary DNA or RNA strands that are connected via hydrogen bonds
- base-pair breathing
- The transient, lateral opening of a base pair in a nucleic acid molecule as a result of thermal motion or the presence of a defect
- conjugate acid-base pair
- two molecular entities, one of which (the acid) can readily transfer a proton to the other (the base)
- coxless pair
- A race in which such craft participate
- coxless pair
- A boat, used in competitive rowing, having two rowers, each with a single oar
- electron pair
- Two electrons having opposite spin but all other quantum numbers the same; i.e two electrons in the same atomic orbital or molecular orbital, especially such electrons that function in concert to form a covalent bond
- extra pair of hands
- The assistance of another person
Do you need an extra pair of hands to help you pass out slices of cake and to clean up after the party is over?.
- grow a pair
- To be brave; to show some courage, especially in a situation in which one has so far failed to do so
- have a pair
- To be manly
Sound off like you got a pair! (drill sergeant in Full Metal Jacket).
- homologous pair
- Two chromosomes that are identical, with the same genes
- inversion pair
- a pair of integers (i,j) is an inversion pair of some permutation \sigma if i but \sigma(i)>\sigma(j)
- kilobase pair
- One thousand base pairs in succession
- king pair
- The score of zero runs, having been out on the first ball faced in each innings of a two-innings match; a golden duck in each innings
- linear pair
- The two supplementary adjacent angles formed by two intersecting lines
- live pair
- An informal agreement between two members of Congress who would have otherwise cast opposing votes whereby one announces the couple is a live pair and registers his or her own vote as present rather than for or against. Although not recognized or recorded in vote tallies, the effect is to allow the other member to be absent without affecting the outcome of the vote
- lone pair
- a pair of electrons in the valence shell of an atom that does not participate in bonding
- minimal pair
- A pair of words differing by only one phonetic segment or suprasegment, used to prove the validity of a proposed phoneme, toneme, or chroneme
beach and bitch and bun and ban are examples of minimal pairs.
- near-minimal pair
- A pair of words differing by a few (but more than one) phonetic segments or suprasegments, used to suggest a proposed phoneme, toneme, or chroneme may be valid
- on a pair
- Describing the status of a batsman who has made a duck in the first innings, and is yet to score in the second
- ordered pair
- A set containing exactly two elements in a fixed order, so that, when the elements are different, exchanging them gives a different set. Notation: (a, b) or \langle a, b\rangle
- paired
- Simple past tense and past participle of pair. To group into sets of two
- pairing
- The combination or union of two things
The seeds were adjusted to make sure that there were good pairings for the tennis tournament.
- pigeon pair
- A pair of twins, one male and one female
- pocket pair
- Two hole cards of the same value
Pocket aces is the best possible pocket pair.
- shielded twisted pair
- A pair of twisted wires which is surrounded by a metal shield in order to protect from EMI
- show a clean pair of heels
- to run away quickly; to make an escape quickly; to outpace
- strap on a pair
- To be brave; to show some courage, especially in a situation where one has so far failed to do so
Somebody clearly needed to strap on a pair and say what needed to be said. Forget the flowery words and sensitivity training.
- two pair
- A hand which contains two pairs
- base pair
- (Biyoloji) The pair of nitrogenous bases, consisting of a purine linked by hydrogen bonds to a pyrimidine, that connects the complementary strands of DNA or of hybrid molecules joining DNA and RNA. The base pairs are adenine-thymine and guanine-cytosine in DNA, and adenine-uracil and guanine-cytosine in RNA
- minimal pair
- Two linguistic units that differ in a single distinctive feature or constituent (as voice in the initial consonants of bat and pat)
- twisted pair
- (Elektrik, Elektronik) Twisted pair cabling is a form of wiring in which two conductors are wound together for the purposes of canceling out electromagnetic interference (EMI) from external sources, electromagnetic radiation from the UTP cable, and crosstalk between neighboring pairs
- A pair
- geminal
- au pair
- An au pair is a young person from a foreign country who lives with a family in order to learn the language and who helps to look after the children. a young person, usually a woman, who stays with a family in a foreign country to learn the language, and looks after their children for a small wage
- au pair
- a young foreigner who lives with a family in return for doing light housework
- au pair
- (French) nursemaid, nanny, caretaker for a baby (usually lives in the home of the family)
- au pair girl
- a foreign girl serving as an au pair
- au pair girl
- (French) girl who works as a nursemaid, nanny, caretaker for a baby (usually living in the home of the family)
- base pair
- = (1962): one of the pairs of chemical bases composed of a purine on one strand of DNA joined by hydrogen bonds to a pyrimidine on the other that hold together the two complementary strands much like the rungs of a ladder and include adenine linked to thymine or sometimes to uracil and guanine linked to cytosine See Base-Pair for more information and pictures
- base pair
- Two nucleotide bases on different strands of the nucleic acid molecule that bond together The bases can pair in only one way: adenine with thymine (DNA) or uracil (RNA), and guanine with cytosine
- base pair
- Two nitrogeneous bases (adenine and thymine) or (guanine and cytosine) held together in DNA by weak bonds forming a double helix
- base pair
- The basic units of DNA and RNA, base pairs are chemical structures made up of the chemicals adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine, which are designated by the letters A, T, G and C, respectively Adenine always pairs with thymine and guanine always pairs with cytosine, creating the pairs or nucleotides in which genetic information is found
- base pair
- Two complementary nucleotides which form a one rung of the DNA ladder
- base pair
- The basic units of DNA, base pairs are chemical structures made up of the chemicals adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine, which are designated by the letters A, T, G and C, respectively Adenine always pairs with thymine and guanine always pairs with cytosine, creating the pairs or nucleotides in which genetic information is found In RNA, uracil (U) substitutes for thymine (CNN & BIO)
- base pair
- The two complementary, nitrogen-rich molecules held together by weak chemical bonds Two strands of DNA are held together in the shape of a double helix by the bonds between their base pairs (See chemical base )
- base pair
- One unit of DNA composed of two complementary nucleic acid molecules (nucleotides) on opposing strands of DNA The base adenosine always pairs with thymidine; the base guanidine pairs with cytidine
- base pair
- A unit of nucleic acid length, based on the number of paired bases (adenine and thymine, guanine and cytosine) in a DNA double helix
- base pair
- In double-stranded nucleic acids, a "base pair" is the structure formed between two complementary nucleotides by hydrogen bonding In DNA, adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T) and cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G) In RNA, adenine (A) pairs with uracil (U) and cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G) See the Figure at NHGRI
- base pair
- A pair of the complementary bases making up DNA In the spiral ladder (double helix) structure of DNA, adenosine always pairs with thymine and cytosine with guanine The size of genes or genomes is often measured by the number of base pairs they contain
- base pair
- Two bases - one on each strand of a double helix, - which interact via hydrogen bonds to maintain DNA in a double-stranded configuration Normally, cytosine forms base pairs with guanine and adenine forms base pairs with thymine
- base pair
- two complementary nucleotides in a piece of DNA joined together by a chemical link The complementary base pairs are: adenine and thymine; guanine and cytosine
- base pair
- one of the pairs of chemical bases joined by hydrogen bonds that connect the complementary strands of a DNA molecule or of an RNA molecule that has two strands; the base pairs are adenine with thymine and guanine with cytosine in DNA and adenine with uracil and guanine with cytosine in RNA
- base pair
- Two nitrogenous bases (adenine and thymine or guanine and cytosine) held together by weak bonds Two strands of DNA are held together in the shape of a double helix by the bonds between base pairs
- base pair
- A pair of complementary nitrogenous bases in a DNA molecule--adenine-thymine and guanine-cytosine Also, the unit of measurement for DNA sequences
- base pair
- Two bases which form a "rung of the DNA ladder " A DNA nucleotide is made of a molecule of sugar, a molecule of phosphoric acid, and a molecule called a base The bases are the "letters" that spell out the genetic code 1
- base pair
- Two bases, linked by noncovalent forces, that pair in double-stranded DNA or RNA molecules
- base pair
- Two nucleotide bases (A: T or G: C) held together by weak hydrogen bonds
- lovely pair
- lovely couple, perfect match
- nice pair of legs
- attractive legs, legs which are in good physical shape
- ordered pair
- two numbers used to locate a point in a plane -- " a given pair of numbers is sometimes called an ordered pair " (263)
- ordered pair
- An ordered pair, (x,y), is a point in the rectangular coordinate system
- ordered pair
- written (x,y), the x represents a value on the horizontal axis and the y represents a value on the vertical axis, while (x,y) represents a point on the graph
- ordered pair
- A list of two elements, such as (father, son) or (5, 2)
- ordered pair
- A two-element set of numbers in the format (x,y) where (a,b) is not the same as (b,a)
- paired
- mated sexually
- paired
- of leaves etc; growing in pairs on either side of a stem; "opposite leaves"
- paired
- Existing in a pair, in tandem
- paired
- {s} coupled; matched; mated
- paired
- Past tense of to pair, to group into sets of two
- paired
- used of gloves, socks, etc
- pairing
- See To pair off, under Pair, v
- pairing
- the action of the verb to pair
- pairing
- Two people, especially sports players, actors, or musicians, who are working together as a pair can be referred to as a pairing. In first place we now find the Belgian pairing of Nancy Feber and Laurence Courtois. = pair
- pairing
- {i} act of putting in pairs; coupling; mating
- pairing
- a method by which subjects are selected so that two subjects with similar characteristics (for example, weight, smoking habits) are assigned to a set, but one receives Treatment A and the other receives Treatment B
- pairing
- Members of Congress who are going to be absent for an important vote will often "pair" with another member who would have voted for the opposite side, on matters where a two-thirds' majority is required, two members in the affirmative pair with one in the negative Pairing is recorded in the Congressional ~Record but is not included in the voting results A "live" part of a live pair occurs when a paired member is on the floor and votes "present " House rules provide guidelines for pairing The Senate considers the practice a voluntary arrangement among Senators and the "live" pair is counted for purposes of deter mining whether a quorum is present and business may be conducted
- pairing
- the act of pairing a male and female for reproductive purposes; "the casual couplings of adolescents"; "the mating of some species occurs only in the spring"
- pairing
- The finishing operation in which individual socks are inspected and made into pairs prior to folding and packaging
- pairing
- The act or process of uniting or arranging in pairs or couples
- pairing
- present participle of pair
- pairing
- In a Sylver Coinage position, two legal moves are said to be paired if each wins against the other
- pairing
- A favourable interaction of two electrons with opposite m , values in the same orbital
- pairing
- The union of two insulated single conductors through twisting
- pairing
- the act of grouping things or people in pairs
- pairs
- Proposal and Award Information Retrieval System
- pairs
- Third-person singular simple present of to pair
- pairs
- a duplicate-bridge tournament among partnerships
- pairs
- Plural of pair
- pairs
- The racing system usually used in long track competition, with two competitors skating the track at the same time Both are electronically timed The winner of the race is the skater with the fastest time after all the pairs have skated
- show a clean pair of heels
- flee, escape, run away quickly
- that is another pair of shoes
- that is an entirely separate issue, that is a different subject altogether
- the happy pair
- happy couple, happily married husband and wife
- twisted pair
- Twisted pair, or 10BaseT, cabling looks similar to a standard RJ-11 modular phone jack The primary difference is that a 10BaseT cable has an RJ-45 connector which is the same basic shape but slightly larger than a phone cable 10BaseT transceivers (the box or internal card that connects to the ethernet network) have a "Link Light" -- a green LED that shines if the transceiver both has power and has made positive contact with another network device (hub or switch) A shining link light means that the connection to the network is active This does not rule out the possibility that there might be a physical problem with the user's specific network connection, but it does mean that such a problem is somewhat less likely to be the cause of a network failure 10BaseT transmits data at 10 Mbits/sec 100BaseT, aka "Fast Ethernet" has a bandwidth of 100Mb/s
- twisted pair
- A type of cable in which pairs of conductors are twisted together to produce certain electrical properties U
- twisted pair
- Cable made up of a pair of insulated copper wires wrapped around each other to cancel the effects of electrical noise
- twisted pair
- Insulated wire in which pairs are twisted together Commonly used for telephone connections, and LANs because it is inexpensive
- twisted pair
- A two-wire cable that reduces coupled noise effects by making them a common-mode signal Twisting the two wires equalizes their average distances from radiating noise sources to equalize the noise pick up of the two Noise common to the two wires does not affect the differential coupling of the desired signal Without the twisted configuration, differing separation distances between the noise sources and the two wires would result in unequal noise coupling that would add to the intended signal
- twisted pair
- A type of data communications cable that consists of pairs of insulated wires which have been twisted together in a regular spiral pattern A relatively low-speed transmission medium which is commonly used for telephone and, increasingly, for data networks See also 10BaseT
- twisted pair
- The type of wire used by the phone company to wire telephones -- at least over distances like between your house and the central office It has two conductors, which are twisted The twists are important: they give it electrical characteristics which allow some kinds of communications otherwise not possible Ordinary telephone cables are not shielded (see "Shielded twisted Pair")
- twisted pair
- Telephone system cabling that consists of copper wires loosely twisted around each other to help cancel out any induced noise in balanced circuits
- twisted pair
- Two insulated copper wires twisted together with the "twists" or "lays" varied in length to reduce potential signal interference between the pairs Where cables comprise more than 25 pairs, they are usually bundled together and wrapped in a cable sheath Twisted pair is the most commonly used medium for connecting telephones, computers and terminals to PABXs, supporting speeds up to 64kbits/sec
- twisted pair
- (TP) A common form of copper cabling used for telephony and data communications It consists of two copper lines twisted around each other; the twisting protects the communications from electromagnetic frequency and radio frequency interference See also unshielded twisted pair
- twisted pair
- Two copper wires twisted around each other The twists vary in length and reduce induction
- twisted pair
- The set of two copper wires used to connect a telephone customer with a switching office, loosely wrapped around each other to minimize interference from other twisted pairs in the same bundle Synonymous with 2-wire line
- twisted pair
- cable made of a pair of insulated copper wires wrapped around each other to cancel the effects of electrical noise It can transmit voice and data and, in some cases, low-grade video It is the most prevalent type of medium in PSTN's local loops The wire pair sizes typically range from 19-to-26 gauge Cables with as many as 2,700 pairs of 26-gauge wire are used in urban areas
- twisted pair
- Telephone system cabling that consists of copper wires loosely wrapped around each other for the purpose of canceling background noise
- twisted pair
- Cable consisting of at least two insulated wires that are intertwined to reduce electromagnetic interference
- twisted pair
- Two insulated copper wires twisted around each other to reduce interference from one wire to the other Twisted pair cable is the most common type of transmission cable and is necessary for Local Area Networks (LAN) Several sets of twisted pair wires may be enclosed in a single cable The twists are varied in length to reduce the potential for signal interference between pairs
- twisted pair
- A twisted pair is a pair of insulated wires that twist around each other repeatedly in a spiral pattern along the length of the wires Twisting them rather than running them side by side reduces electromagnetic interference Ordinary telephone cable in the house usually consists of two or three twisted pairs, with each wire coded in a different color insulation Twisted pairs surrounded by a shielding ground layer are known as shielded twisted pair Twisted pair is often used in ethernet LANs
- twisted pair
- In the telecommunications industry, wire is usually referred to in pairs rather than conductors With the introduction of data transmissions, crosstalk (interference between individual conductors) became problematic The fix is called Twisted Pair This refers to individual pairs of wire that are twisted randomly The twists create an inconsistent, ever changing EMF (ElectroMagnetic Field), thus preventing crosstalk This novel concept eliminates the need for shielding and is also referred to as UTP, or Unshielded Twisted Pair
- twisted pair
- Two insulated copper wires twisted around each other to reduce induction (thus interference) from one wire to the other The twists, or lays, are varied in length to reduce the potential for signal interference between pairs Several sets of twisted pair wires may be enclosed in a single cable In cables greater than 25 pairs, the twisted pairs are grouped and bound together
- twisted pair
- A multiple conductor cable whose component wires are paired together, twisted, and enclosed in a single jacket Each pair consists of two insulated copper wires twisted together When driven as a balanced line, the twisting reduces the susceptibility to external interference and the radiation of signal energy Most twisted-pair cabling contains either 2, 4, or 25 pairs of wires
- twisted pair
- A copper cable The pairs are twisted to avoid electrical interference
- twisted pair
- A type of cable in which pairs of conductors are twisted together to produce certain electrical properties
- twisted pair
- Network cabling that consists of four pairs of wires that are manufactured with the wires twisted to certain specifications Available in shielded and unshielded versions
- twisted-pair
- A twisted-pair cable consists of interwoven copper cables The twisting of the cables helps reduce noise and crosstalk Various standards have been introduced to specify types of twisted-pair cable The most famous of these is "Cat5" (Category 5) of which more information is available at the following websiteComputer Networking - Cat5 cabling
- twisted-pair
- Telephone system cabling that consists of copper wires loosely twisted around each other to help cancel out any induced noise in balanced circuits
- twisted-pair
- A cable with two conductors twisted as a pair