(Askeri) KABA AYAR TERTİBATI: Belirli tipteki nişangahlar üzerinde bulunan ve kaba ayarları yapmaya yarayan ayarlama tertibatı. İnce ayar, tabura denilen bir tertibat vasıtasıyla yapılır
If something such as an activity, process, or cost plateaus or plateaus out, it reaches a stage where there is no further change or development. Evelyn's career is accelerating, and mine is plateauing out a bit The shares plateaued at 153p. if something plateaus, it reaches and then stays at a particular level. Extensive area of flat upland, usually bounded by an escarpment on all sides but sometimes enclosed by mountains. Plateaus are extensive, and together with enclosed basins they cover about 45% of the Earth's land surface. The essential criteria for a plateau are low relative relief and some altitude. Low relief distinguishes plateaus from mountains, although their origin may be similar. Plateaus, being high, often create their own local climate; the topography of plateaus and their surroundings often produce arid and semiarid conditions. High Plateau Cumberland Plateau oceanic plateau submarine plateau Ozark Plateau Plateau Indian
A temporary or more permanent leveling off in the recovery or rehabilitation process
(1) (Geographical) an elevated plain, tableland or flat-topped region of considerable extent (2) (Oceanographical) an ELEVATION from the bottom of the OCEAN with a more or less flat top and steep sides
A flat area which is raised above the level of the surrounding land e g the Cairngorm mountains have lots and lots of them!
An elevated area of mostly level land, sometimes containing deep canyons From the top of the plateau you can see for miles around
A period of time, at least 2 to 4 weeks, whereby a Bandster maintains, instead of losing weight It is common for post-ops 4-10 weeks out to experience a plateau before getting their first fill Many Bandsters take a plateau at any point as a sign that they need to get another fill Some people feel that bodies tend to plateau at weights they had previously maintained for some period of time in the past, but this is only been shown through anecdotal evidence at this point
If you say that an activity or process has reached a plateau, you mean that it has reached a stage where there is no further change or development. The US heroin market now appears to have reached a plateau
A leveling off period that some people hit when trying to become fit, usually because the body is not being challenged anymore at the current intensity of exercise A re-evaluation is needed, in terms of exercise and nutrition Usually one needs to increase activity intensity to overcome a plateau
A plateau is a large, flat area of land that is higher than the surrounding land
Normal phase in which the body holds on to weight, the scale doesn't budge downward (and may actually move up a pound or so), in order to readjust Most people lose inches during this phase May hit at any time and last for a varying period of time Some people have reported plateaus of a month when they are a few weeks out of surgery They do pass
Any member of various North American Indian peoples that inhabited the high plateau between the Rocky Mountains on the east and the Cascade Range on the west. The Plateau culture was not stable. By AD 1200-1300 the "classic" phase had emerged, characterized by permanent winter villages with semi-subterranean earth lodges along the main rivers and by summer camps with mat-covered conical lodges in the meadows. During the centuries that followed, the Plateau area was influenced by cultural elements from the highly specialized Northwest Coast culture. Part of this diffusion was possibly brought about by a Chinook group, the Wishram, who migrated from the coast into the Cascade Mountains. During the 18th century there were influences from the east. The Shoshone had acquired horses by that time and furnished their closest neighbours on the Plains and the Plateau with horses. Other elements of Plains culture, such as beaded dresses, warbonnets, and tepees, came with the horse. Among this group were the Coeur d'Alene, Flathead, Klamath, Kutenai, Modoc, Nez Percé, Spokan, Thompson, and Salish
The southwest section of the Appalachian Mountains, extending northeast to southwest from southern West Virginia through Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee into northern Alabama. Tableland in the U.S. that forms the western section of the Appalachian Mountains and a part of the Allegheny Plateau. It extends southwest for 450 mi (725 km) from southern West Virginia to northeastern Alabama, averages 50 mi (80 km) in width, and is 2,000-4,145 ft (600-1,263 m) high. The roughest and highest portion is a narrow ridge about 140 mi (225 km) long that forms its eastern margin in eastern Kentucky and northeastern Tennessee; the name Cumberland Mountains is generally applied to this area, which includes the Cumberland Gap National Historical Park. The plateau has large deposits of coal, limestone, and sandstone
A plateau region of eastern Canada extending from the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence River northward to the Arctic Ocean. The highland formation also covers much of Greenland and forms the Adirondack Mountains in the United States
a large plateau south and west of the Rocky Mountains; abuts mountains on the north and east and ends in an escarpment overlooking lowlands to the south and west; the Grand Canyon is carved out of the southwestern corner
or submarine plateau Large submarine elevation rising sharply at least 660 ft (200 m) above the surrounding seafloor and having an extensive, relatively flat or gently tilted summit. Most plateaus are steplike interruptions of the continental slopes. Some, however, occur well beyond the continental margins. They stand alone, high above the surrounding seafloor, and are believed to be fragments of continents that were isolated during continental drift and seafloor spreading