Definition von v-ring im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
- Flieringa ring
- A stainless steel ring sutured to the sclera to support the globe during difficult eye operations
- Fomalhaut dust ring
- A toroidal ring of dust and debris around the star Fomalhaut
- O-ring
- A circular gasket, usually made of rubber
- Ring
- A surname for a maker of rings as jewelry or as in harness
- Ring of Fire
- An area of frequent earthquakes and volcanic activity, around the Pacific Ocean
- annual ring
- The layer of wood, observed as one of many concentric rings when cut, formed during one year of a plant's growth
- boxing ring
- A space, usually square, with elastic ropes around the edge, in which a boxing match is competed
- brass ring
- Figuratively, a prize or goal. Often used with respect to employment goals e.g. promotion, better job, etc
He's going for the brass ring.
- bull ring
- A place where bullfighting is practiced
- calamari ring
- A circular slice of squid, usually one of several, deep-fried as an antipasto
- circus ring
- a round area inside a circus where circus acts are displayed
- class ring
- A ring (for one's finger) that shows what school one attended and one's year of graduation
- claw ring
- a fitting on the boom of a yacht to take the main sheet when roller reefing is used
- cock ring
- a band worn around the base of the penis to slow down the flow of blood into the penile tissue
- diamond ring
- A finger ring on which is mounted a diamond, often a symbol of engagement or marriage
Daddy’s going to buy me a bottle of wine.
- division ring
- A ring with 0 ≠ 1, such that every non-zero element a has a multiplicative inverse, meaning an element x with ax = xa = 1
- egg ring
- a round metal ring, approximately 1 cm high, used when cooking to prevent an egg spreading across the cooking surface
- engagement ring
- A ring given to someone one's fiancé, signifying a promise to wed
- fairy ring
- A ring of fungi marking the periphery of the perennial underground growth of the mycelium
- fairy ring
- A mythical place where fairies are thought to congregate in a ring
- finger ring
- A ring (often ornamental and/or precious) designed to be worn on a finger
Signets and seal rings are functional, emblematic finger rings.
- front ring
- The 12-foot diameter circle outermost in the house
- give a ring
- Call (someone) on the telephone
If you're town, give me a ring and I'll arrange to meet up with you.
- go for the gold ring
- Alternative form of go for the gold
- group ring
- Given ring R with identity not equal to zero, and group G = \{g_1, g_2, ..., g_n\}, the group ring RG has elements of the form a_1 g_1 + a_2 g_2 + ... + a_n g_n (where a_i \isin R ) such that the sum of a_1 g_1 + a_2 g_2 + ... + a_n g_n and b_1 g_1 + b_2 g_2 + ... + b_n g_n is (a_1 + b_1) g_1 + (a_2 + b_2) g_2 + ... + (a_n + b_n) g_n and the product is \sum_{k=1}^n \left ( \sum_{g_i g_j = g_k} a_i b_j \right ) g_k
- growth ring
- Any of the concentric rings formed in the trunk of a tree by the annual growth of wood
- let freedom ring
- A statement that the ideals of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness should be spread across the Earth and allowed to flourish
- limbal ring
- A dark ring around the outside of the iris
- local ring
- A commutative ring with a unique maximal ideal, or a noncommutative ring with a unique maximal left ideal or (equivalently) a unique maximal right ideal
- local ring
- The non-routing segment of a token ring network
- make the welkin ring
- To celebrate or revel
- make the welkin ring
- To make a loud noise
- mancude-ring system
- Any organic compound, in the form of a ring, that has the maximum number of noncumulative double bonds; e.g. benzene or indole
- mood ring
- A ring (piece of jewellery) containing a thermochromic element that changes colour in response to the body temperature (and supposedly the emotional state) of its wearer
- neck ring
- A metal ring worn around one's neck, used as jewelry
- nose ring
- A ring worn on a person's nose, for jewelry
- nose ring
- A ring affixed to the snout of cattle, to make them follow immediately when a chain is attached to the ring
- oath-ring
- A silver or gold arm ring on which oaths are sworn in Heathenry
- oath-ring
- A silver, gold, or iron temple ring or altar ring on which oaths are sworn
- onion ring
- A food consisting of onions deep-fried in batter and shaped into rings
- piscatory ring
- A ring worn by popes, representing the first pope and Christian apostle Peter, who had been a fisherman. Also known as the Pescatorio or Ring of the Fisherman
- piston ring
- a ring or seal that fits around a piston, sealing between the piston and the bore in which it slides
- planetary ring
- a ring of dust and small particles that orbits a planet (such as Saturn) as a flat disc; gaps in the ring are due to the presence of shepherd moons
- red ring
- To suffer a general hardware fault, the red ring of death
My 360 red ringed and I had to ship it to Texas to get it fixed.
- red ring of death
- A fatal hardware exception in the Microsoft Xbox 360 video game console characterised by 3 or 4 red indicator LEDs around the power button. Abbreviation: RRoD
- ring
- To surround or enclose
The inner city was ringed with dingy industrial areas.
- ring
- An exclusive group of people, usually involving some unethical or illegal practices; as a crime ring
- ring
- To make an incision around; to girdle
They ringed the trees to make the clearing easier next year.
- ring
- A formation of various pieces of material orbiting around a planet
- ring
- An algebraic structure which consists of a set with two binary operations, addition and multiplication, such that the set is an abelian group under addition and a monoid under multiplication
The set of integers, \mathbb{Z}, is the prototypical ring.
- ring
- To make a (church) bell produce sound
The deliveryman rang the doorbell to drop off a parcel.
- ring
- A diacritical mark in the shape of a hollow circle placed above or under the letter
- ring
- An algebraic structure as above, but only required to be a semigroup under multiplication, that is, there need not be a multiplicative identity element
The definition of ring without unity allows, for instance, the set 2\mathbb{Z} of even integers to be a ring.
- ring
- Of something spoken or written, to appear to be, to seem, to sound
That does not ring true.
- ring
- A planar geometrical figure included between two concentric circles
- ring
- To attach a ring to, especially for identification
We managed to ring 22 birds this morning.
- ring
- A hierarchical level of privilege in a computer system, usually at hardware level, used to protect data and functionality (also protection ring)
Kernel Mode processes run in ring 0, and User Mode processes run in ring 3.
- ring
- An old English measure of corn equal to the coomb or half a quarter
The ring is common in the Huntingdonshire accounts of Ramsey Abbey. It was equal to half a quarter, i.e., is identical with the coomb of the eastern counties. —.
- ring
- A bird band, a round piece of metal put around a bird's leg used for identification and studies of migration
- ring
- A circumscribing object, (roughly) circular and hollow, looking like an annual ring, earring, finger ring etc
- ring
- The resonant sound of a bell, or a sound resembling it
The ring of hammer on anvil filled the air.
- ring
- A pleasant or correct sound
The name has a nice ring to it.
- ring
- To produce the sound of a bell or a similar sound
Whose mobile phone is ringing?.
- ring
- A piece of food in the shape of a ring, as in onion ring
- ring
- to resound, reverberate, echo
It is instructive for us to learn as well as to ponder on the fact that the very men who looked down with delight, when the sand of the arena reddened with human blood, made the arena ring with applause when Terence in his famous line: ‘Homo sum, Nihil humani alienum puto’ proclaimed the brotherhood of man..
- ring
- A round piece of (precious) metal worn around the finger
- ring
- a large circular prehistoric stone construction such as Stonehenge
- ring
- A place where some sports or exhibitions take place; notably a circular or comparable arena, such as a boxing ring or a circus ring; hence the field of a political contest
- ring
- To telephone someone
I will ring you when we arrive.
- ring
- A telephone call
I’ll give you a ring when the plane lands.
- ring a bell
- To spark a previously forgotten memory
- ring a bell
- To seem at least vaguely familiar
His face rings a bell. I wonder if I know him from somewhere.
- ring around
- To call a number of people by phone, usually a circle of friends, to organise something
- ring back
- To make another phone call to the same person
I had to ring you back because I forgot to ask you something important.
- ring back
- To return a phone call
John called. He asked for you to ring him back as soon as you arrived.
- ring binder
- A folder in which punched pieces of paper may be held by means of clamps running through the holes in the paper
- ring binders
- plural form of ring binder
- ring cadence
- The ringing pattern heard by the dialer before the called party picks up the call
- ring dove
- a species of dove with the taxonomic classification Streptopelia risoria
- ring false
- To seem to be incorrect, or implausible
His excuse about his car breaking down again rings false, to me.
- ring field
- an attacking ring of infielders, square and in front of the wicket - point, cover, mid off, mid on, midwicket, square leg
- ring finger
- Finger between middle finger and little finger; the "third finger" (UK) or the "fourth finger" (US), especially of the left hand. (The ring finger is the left hand; a ring finger is either hand.)
- ring fingers
- plural form of ring finger
- ring game
- A game where the chips directly represent money and players are free to leave at any time, in contrast to a poker tournament
- ring games
- plural form of ring game
- ring hollow
- To seem to be false or implausible; to be unconvincing
In his own ears the words he spoke rang hollow, awkward, even impertinent. He could say nothing which did not seem hideously supercilious.
- ring in
- To make a phone call to one's usual place of work
John has just rung in sick. He won't be back til Monday, he says.
- ring of truth
- The trust-inspiring sound, tenor, or impression of being truthful
It is fiction. But it has the absolute ring of truth.
- ring off
- to finish a telephone conversation and disconnect
- ring off the hook
- Of a telephone, to ring constantly or excessively
I placed the advertisement yesterday, and the phone has been ringing off the hook ever since.
- ring one's bell
- To strike or bump one's own head with a strong blow, especially with concussive force
- ring out
- To make a phone call from an internal phone system to a general telephone network number
You can ring out if you dial 9 first and wait for the tone before dialling the number.
- ring out
- To sound very loudly
A terrifying volley of pistol-shots rings out—cracks sharply; ripples spread— silence laps smooth over sound.
- ring pulls
- plural form of ring pull
- ring rat
- A promiscuous person, often a young female, who attends professional wrestling events primarily to seek sexual liaisons with wrestlers and other performers
- ring road
- A circumferential highway around a town, city, or other conurbation
- ring round
- To call a number of people by phone, usually a circle of friends, to organise something
- ring someone's bell
- To physically traumatize someone with a strong blow, especially a concussive blow to the head
Redman took Kenny Lofton's left shoulder on his jaw and saw every color of the rainbow but teal. That sent me down. I was kinda dizzy, Redman said . . . You take a shot like that, it's going to ring your bell a bit..
- ring species
- A biological species consisting of overlapping subgroups, each of which can interbreed with the next, but which cannot freely interbreed when taken as a whole
Ring species demonstrate that can interbreed with is not transitive.
- ring stand
- An item of laboratory equipment which consists of a metal pole with a solid, firm base, used to hold, or clamp, laboratory glassware and other equipment in place, so that they do not fall down or come apart
- ring sting
- Irritation of the anus ("ring") as a result of eating spicy food
- ring system
- The combined system or structure formed by all of the rings orbiting a planet
- ring the changes
- To make patterned sound sequences on bells, starting and ending on the same tone
- ring the changes
- To enliven by varying combinations
- ring the changes
- To run through possible variations
- ring the changes
- To substitute bad money for good
- ring theoretic
- Having to do with ring theory
- ring theoretical
- Having to do with ring theory
- ring theorist
- An algebraist who specializes in ring theory
- ring theorists
- plural form of ring theorist
- ring theory
- The branch of mathematics dealing with the algebraic structure of rings
- ring topologies
- plural form of ring topology
- ring topology
- A network topology in which, in the physical case, every node of a network is connected to exactly two other nodes: one node designated as upstream and the other as downstream. A given node receives data from its upstream node and sends data to its downstream node
- ring true
- To seem to be correct, or plausible
His excuse about his daughter being ill again rings true, to me.
- ring up
- To telephone, to call someone on the telephone
- ring up
- To enter a payment into a cash register, or till in a shop
- ring-bark
- To girdle a tree; to kill a tree by removing a ring of bark
Six or eight inches above this graft the stem should be ring-barked, but leaves above the ring-bark left for shade for two or three weeks .
- ring-bark
- The area of the tree from which the bark has been removed by ring-barking
- ring-bark
- The bark removed by ring-barking
- ring-finger
- Alternative spelling of ring finger
- ring-in
- A replacement, made at the last minute, usually in a sporting context
- ring-in
- An outsider
But I couldn't get into an underground contract party because I'm a ring-tail, or ring-in. That means an outsider, one not born in Broken Hill.
- ring-man
- the ring finger
- ring-neck
- having (a) colored ring(s) around the neck, notably said of animal species
- ring-necked parakeet
- a species of parakeet, Psittacula krameri, prevalent in Asia and famous for escaping domestication and establishing wild populations in Britain
- ring-pull
- Alternative spelling of ring pull
- ring-tailed
- carrying its flexible tail in a circular or spiraling form
- ring-tailed
- having a tail marked with differently colored rings
- ring-tailed lemur
- a species of lemur, Lemur catta, from Madagascar; it has a black-and-white ringed tail
- ring-tailed macauco
- The ring-tailed lemur
- ring-tailed macaucos
- plural form of ring-tailed macauco
- ring-theoretic
- Attributive form of ring theoretic
- ring-theoretical
- Attributive form of ring theoretical
- rubber ring
- a ring or tube made of rubber, in particular a circular air-filled tube used as an aid to swimming
- saddle ring
- a small metal ring on the side of a firearm, allowing it to be hung on a saddle hook or attached to a lanyard
- seal ring
- A finger ring with an engraved (often heraldic) seal, fit for sealing documents by pressing it in sealing wax or a similar substance
- slip ring
- A component of an electromechanical device which, in combination with brushes, provides a continuous electrical connection between stationary and rotating conductors
- smoke ring
- A smoking trick where one blows or exhales rings of smoke
A smoke ring persists for a surprisingly long time, illustrating the slow rate at which viscosity dissipates the energy of a vortex.
- snap ring
- A circular spring, having a small break in its circumference, used as a fastener; a circlip
- split-ring resonator
- A metamaterial component composed of pair of concentric annular rings with splits in them at opposite ends. The rings are made of nonmagnetic metal like copper and have a small gap between them
- split-ring resonators
- plural form of split-ring resonator
- spy ring
- A spy network
the Russian spy ring.
- star ring
- a network topology consisting of a physical star and a logical ring
- synonym ring
- A group of data elements that are considered semantically equivalent for the purposes of information retrieval
- throw one's hat in the ring
- To announce one's candidacy in a contest
At that time her chances had been excellent. But then two other people had thrown their hats in the ring, Joan Voller and Sidney Hamilton, and both of them were colleagues on State Executive.
- throw one's hat into the ring
- Alternative form of throw one's hat in the ring
- toe ring
- A round piece of metal worn around the toe
- token ring
- A network standard invented by IBM and later defined by the 802.5 subcommittee of the IEEE which provides for a network with a star ring topology, and which operates by passing a token frame around the logical ring
- tongue ring
- A ring that is pierced through one's tongue
- tree ring
- The annual growth ring in the trunk of a tree
- tree-ring
- Alternative spelling of tree ring
- vaginal ring
- A contraception device consisting of a flexible ring held in the vagina which provides a controlled release of drugs
- wedding ring
- One of a pair or rings exchanged by bride and groom in a wedding ceremony; symbolizes continuous fidelity
- have a ring to it
- (Ev ile ilgili) (never in continuous tenses) If a word or idea has a ring to it, it sounds interesting or attractive
- three-ring circus
- a public spectacle, especially one with little substance
his attempt at a dignified resignation turned into a three-ring circus.
- ring
- {v} to fit with rings, strike a bell, tinkle, clink, sound, make a noise, echo, resound
- ring
- {n} a circle, ornament, sound, set of bells
- give someone a ring
- (deyim) Call someone by phone
- life ring
- A life preserver in the form of a ring of buoyant material, life buoy, lifesaver, life belt
- ring a ring a roses
- (Oyunlar) Children's singing game, known throughout the English-speaking world, and with many continental analogues. Nowadays, the game tends to be one of the first taught to children by adults, rather than being learnt from other children, and is therefore considered babyish by school-age children. The first known published versions are from the 1880s, although an American forerunner (Ring a ring a rosie A bottle full of posie All the girls in our town Ring for little Josie) is reported from 1790.The belief that the rhyme originated with the Great *Plague is now almost universal, but has no evidence to support it and is almost certainly nonsense. Early writers on the Plague do not mention the rhyme or, indeed, sneezing as a symptom of the disease, and the rhyme only appears 200 years later. The earlier folklore collectors do not make the connection between the rhyme and the Plague, and the idea appears to date only from the 1960s, but is now so widely believed as to be unshakable.See also *SNEEZING. Opie and Opie, 1985: 220-7; Gomme, 1898: ii. 108-11
- Ring a Ring O'Roses
- {i} nursery rhyme; game played by children in which the players dance around in a circle to the tune of a nursery rhyme and when they hear the lyrics "all fall down" they all crouch down low
- Ring a ring o' roses
- a children's singing game in which the children join hands and dance round in a circle singing: Ring a ring o'roses/A pocket full of posies/A-tishoo! A-tishoo!/We all fall down. People believe it comes from the time when there was a plague in London (=a very serious infectious disease, quickly causing death to large numbers of people), because when people coughed and sneezed, saying 'atishoo', it was a sign that they had caught the plague