beş noktanın düzeni

listen to the pronunciation of beş noktanın düzeni
Türkisch - Englisch
quincunx
{n} a fort of plantation, order, five twelfths of any thing
A set of five objects arranged with one at each corner of a square, and the fifth in the center
an arrangement of five objects, usually trees, with one at each corner of a rectangle and one at the center; this basic structural unit is often multiplied to create a larger pattern, and plantations of trees in this pattern may be identified by the same term
An arrangement of five units in a pattern corresponding to the five-spot on dice, playing cards, or dominoes
A spindle, or spool, as of reed or wood, upon which the thread for the woof is wound in a shuttle
An anti-aliasing technique, developed by nVidia, which uses a sampling pattern that looks like the five side of a die This dot pattern is called a quincunx
See Quincuncial, 2
A bronze coin minted during the Roman Republic, valued at five-twelfths of an as
A hollow spindle
The position of planets when distant from each other five signs, or 150°
A roll of dried bark; as, a quill of cinnamon or of cinchona
To plaint in small cylindrical ridges, called quillings; as, to quill aruffle
an arrangement of five things in a square or rectangle with one at each corner and one in the middle Think of the Purina "checkerboard" logo, or the pattern of dots on the side of a die when you roll a five
The bark of a rosaceous tree (Quillaja Saponaria), native of Chili
A quincuncial arrangement, as of the parts of a flower in æstivation
An angle of five-twelfths of a circle, or 150°, between two objects
An arrangement of five objects in a sqaure or rectangle, with one at each corner and one in the middle, like the five spots on dice Prunts and other motifs are soemtimes arranged in a quincunx pattern
To wind on a quill, as thread or yarn
A tool that creates frequency distributions Beads tumble over numerous horizontal rows of pins, which force the beads to the right or left After a random journey, the beads are dropped into vertical slots After many beads are dropped, a frequency distribution results In the classroom, quincunxes are often used to simulate a manufacturing process The quincunx was invented by English scientist Francis Galton in the 1890s