twain

listen to the pronunciation of twain
Englisch - Türkisch
ikili
{i} iki kişi
{i} iki parça
iki kimse veya şey
on iki kadem
iki

Sözleriniz kalbimi ikiye böldü. - Your words split my heart in twain.

iki kulaç
üç buçuk metre
two
iki

Evliyim ve iki çocuğum var. - I am married and have two children.

İki yılda ilk kez bir film izledim. - I saw a movie for the first time in two years.

two
{i} ikili

Linda'nın kocası ona karşı ikili oynuyordu. - Linda's husband was two-timing her.

Tom ikili bir hayat sürdü. Birbirleriyle ilgili hiçbir şey bilmeyen iki ailenin babasıydı. - Tom led a double life. He was the father of two families who knew nothing about each other.

two
{i} iki, iki rakamı (2, II)
two
iki rakamı
in twain
ikişerli olarak
in twain; asunder
ikişerli olarak; ayrı ayrı
cleave in twain
ikiye ayırmak (kesmek)
exit twain
(Bilgisayar) twaın'dan çık
in twain
ikili olarak
two
(isim) ikili
two
{i} isk. ikili
Englisch - Englisch
two

Is pleasant;.

O Hamlet, you have broken my heart in two. - O Hamlet, thou hast cleft my heart in twain.

{a} two, both; ad.in two parts, asunder
See Samuel Langhorne Clemens. Two
{i} family name; Mark Twain, pen name of Samuel Clemens (1835-1910, American author, author of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn")
("Technology without an interesting name") Developed by a consortium of imaging hardware and software manufacturers, TWAIN is a cross-platform interface for acquiring pictures captured by TWAIN - compliant scanners, digital cameras, and still-frame video capture boards In FrontPage, you can transfer pictures onto pages directly from TWAIN-compliant devices
A protocol for exchanging information between applications and devices such as scanners and digital cameras TWAIN makes it possible for digital cameras and software to "talk" with one another on PCs
An industry-standard for scanners and software Using a TWAIN-compliant scanner with a TWAIN-compliant program, you can initiate a scan from within the program
Nothing to do with turgid, radio-friendly country rawk TWAIN is the standard means by which a PC can send commands and retrieve data to an external device, most commonly a scanner or digital camera Most advanced graphics programs suppoer TWAIN, and so will work with your scanner immediately
A standard of communication between scanners, imaging devices, digital cameras and the computer software According to some, TWAIN is an acronym that stands for "Toolkit Without An Interesting Name" According to others, TWAIN is an acronym that stands for "Translator Without An Interesting Name" According to the TWAIN Working Group, TWAIN stands for TWAIN since they have never officially expanded its name to a long form
An acquire interface developed by a consortium of software developers as a standard for communications between scanners, imaging devices and now digital cameras and the computer software
two items of the same kind
Technology Without An Interesting (Important?) Name
The TWAIN working group (www twain org) is a non-for-profit organisation which represents the imaging industry, whose purpose is to provide and foster a universal public standard which links applications and image acquisition devices TWAIN is often loosly referred to as an interface standard for image acquisition devices
An interface that regulates communication between software applications and imaging devices It is used for acquiring images captured by scanners and digital cameras
Stands for Technology Without An Interesting Name I like this, I found it on another site
is a scanning interface standard developed to address the need for consistent, easy integration of scanners with document imaging programs Software programs that are written to support the TWAIN standard are capable of controlling any TWAIN compliant scanner
A software use to control the communication between scanners and image processing software
Software industry standard allowing software applications and hardware imaging devices such as a scanner to communicate directly with TWAIN compliant programs like Photoshop According to the Twain Working Group (scanner and software developers), Twain is not intended to be an acronym, although it is sometimes called "Technology Without An Important Name"
Two; nearly obsolete in common discourse, but used in poetry and burlesque
The protocol for exchanging information between applications and devices, such as scanners and digital cameras TWAIN makes it possible for digital cameras and software to "talk" with one another on PCs
TWAIN defines a standard software protocol and application programming interface (API) for communication between software applications and image acquisition devices such as Scanners and Digital cameras
TWAIN is an open public scanning interface developed by a coalition of imaging hardware and software manufacturers TWAIN defines the way in which a scanner, or other image acquisition device, communicates with an application program With TWAIN, an application program can acquire images through any device that complies with its specification (for example, a scanner or camera) It is the standard for low-end scanners and comes in 16 and 32 bit versions Imaging for Windows Professional Edition supports the 32-bit version
A protocol developed by leading imaging hardware and software companies to make it easier to integrate input peripherals and applications
Image acquisition device driver standard Most imaging devices provide a Twain interface that allows most image editing software to directly acquire images from that device More than one imaging device can be connected to your computer Twain is not an acronym, it is just a name For more information, go to the official Twain web site
A small file that's dropped into the 'acquire' folder of programs such as Photoshop Then you would go to Twain>Acquire and the computer would connect to the scanner or frame grabber and operate it from within the program
Short for Technology Without An Interesting Name Standard scanner interface TWAIN links the scanner to the software that produces the scan A TWAIN driver makes the scanner compatible with all software that supports TWAIN
Developed by a consortium of imaging hardware and software manufacturers, TWAIN is a cross-platform interface for acquiring electronic images captured by TWAIN-compliant scanners, digital cameras, and still-frame video capture boards
[No present expansion] In the past: Tool (Technology) Without An Interesting Name
Technology Without An Interesting Name No, really
twain cloud
same as cumulo-stratus
in twain
in halves; into two parts; asunder

When old winder split the rocks in twain.

Mark Twain
pen name of Samuel Clemens (1835-1910, American writer, author of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn")
Mark Twain
a US writer best known for his novels The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and for his descriptions of life on the Mississippi River. His real name was Samuel Langhorne Clemens (1835-1910). orig. Samuel Langhorne Clemens born Nov. 30, 1835, Florida, Mo., U.S. died April 21, 1910, Redding, Conn. U.S. humorist, writer, and lecturer. He grew up in Hannibal, Mo., on the Mississippi River. At age 13 he was apprenticed to a local printer. In 1856 he signed on as an apprentice to a steamboat pilot. He plied the Mississippi for almost four years before going to Nevada and California. In 1863 he took his pseudonym, the riverman's term for water "two fathoms deep." In a California mining camp he heard the story that he would make famous as "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" (1865). He traveled widely, using his travels as subject matter for lectures and books, including the humorous narratives The Innocents Abroad (1869) and Roughing It (1872). He won a worldwide audience for his stories of youthful adventures, especially Tom Sawyer (1876), The Prince and the Pauper (1881), Life on the Mississippi (1883), and Huckleberry Finn (1884), one of the masterpieces of American fiction. The satirical A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889) and increasingly grim works including Pudd'nhead Wilson (1894) and The Man Who Corrupted Hadleyburg (1900) followed. In the 1890s financial speculations bankrupted him, and his eldest daughter died. After his wife's death (1904), he expressed his pessimism about human character in such late works as the posthumously published Letters from the Earth (1962)
Shania Twain
(born 1965 as Eileen Regina Twain) Canadian-Indian country music singer
twain

    Silbentrennung

    Twain

    Türkische aussprache

    tweyn

    Aussprache

    /ˈtwān/ /ˈtweɪn/

    Etymologie

    () From Middle English tweyne, tweien, twaine, from Old English feminine of twēġen (“two”) from Proto-Germanic *twai, from Proto-Indo-European *dwó. Compare the word two. The word outlasted the breakdown of gender in Middle English and survived as a secondary form of two, then especially in the cases where the numeral follows a noun. Its continuation into modern times was aided by its use in KJV, the Marriage Service, in poetry (where it's commonly used as a rhyme word), and in oral use where it is necessary to be clear that two and not "to" or "too" is meant.

    Videos

    ... rather like the great story about Mark Twain painting the fence in persuading ...
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