ellipse

listen to the pronunciation of ellipse
English - Turkish
elips
{i} eksilti
{i} eksik fakat anlaşılır tümce kullanma
(Matematik) katinakis
(Askeri) ELİPS (HV.): Sabit iki nokta (odak) etrafında çevrilen bir eğri. Bu eğri o şekilde çizilmiştir ki eğri üzerindeki bir nokta ile odaklar arasındaki mesafe toplamı yine eğri üzerindeki başka bir nokta ile odak arasındaki mesafe toplamına eşittir. (Bir gezegen veya uydu yörüngesinde, sabit noktalardan biri esas cismin (primary body) -güneş veya arz- merkezi olduğuna göre yörüngede merkeze en yakın nokta, elipsin) büyük ekseninde en uzak noktadan 180 dir
bir gezegenin dönencesi
ellipse border
(Bilgisayar) elips kenarlık
ellipse of stress
gerilme elipsi
ellipse tool
(Bilgisayar) elips aracı
hollow ellipse
içi boş elips
hollow ellipse
içi boş oval
hollow ellipse
(Bilgisayar) boş elips
filled ellipse
(Bilgisayar) dolu elips
major axis of ellipse
elipsin büyük çapı
major axis of ellipse
elipsin büyük ekseni
minor axis ol ellipse
elipsin küçük çapı
minor axis ol ellipse
elipsin küçük ekseni
tidal current ellipse
(Askeri) gel-git akıntı elipsi
transfer ellipse
(Askeri) YÖRÜNGE DEĞİŞTİRME ELİPSİ; İNTİKAL ELİPSİ: Bir eliptik yörüngeden diğerine geçen cismin takip ettiği yol. Hareket ve varış yörüngelerini geniş açıda kesen yörünge değiştirme elipsi en çok enerji sarfına ihtiyaç gösterir
vertices of an ellipse
(Matematik) elipsin tepe noktaları
English - English
A closed curve, the locus of a point such that the sum of the distances from that point to two other fixed points (called the foci of the ellipse) is constant; equivalently, the conic section that is the intersection of a cone with a plane that does not intersect the base of the cone
To remove from a phrase a word which is grammatically needed, but which is clearly understood without having to be stated

In the exchange:- (A.Would you like to go out?, B.I'd love to), the ellipsed words are go out.

The closed oval-like curve wherein the sum of the distances from any point on the curve to both foci is a constant When the foci are together at one point, the ellipse is a circle The farther apart the foci, the more eccentric the ellipse
a two-dimensional figure that is formed in a two-dimensional scatterplot when both bands plotted have normal distributions The ellipse is defined by the standard deviations of the input bands Ellipse plots are often used to test signatures before classification
A curve for which the sum of the distances from each point on the curve to two fixed points is equal
A closed curve that is formed from two foci or points in which the sum of the distances from any point on the curve to the two foci is a constant Johannes Kepler first discovered that the orbits of the planets are ellipses, not circles; he based his discovery on the careful observations of Tycho Brahe
A closed curve resembling a flattened circle (the shadow of a circle tilted towards the light is an ellipse) May be defined
An oval figure, like the path of the earth around the sun You can make an ellipse by tying a loop of string loosely around two drawing pins and placing a pencil in the loop Pull the string tight and trace with the pencil
An ellipse is a closed curve with two interior fixed points called foci, and in which the sum of the distances of any point on the curve and the two foci is a constant The shape of an ellipse can be seen by projecting a circle at an angle Less precisely, an ellipse is an elongated circle The circle is a special case of the ellipse in which the foci are coincident in one point called the center All planets orbit in ellipses, a fact that is known as Kepler's First Law
An ellipse is a shape that has two foci Foci is the fancy word for focuses The deal with an ellipse is that if you add the distances from any point on the curvy part to both of the foci, the sum is always the same You can do this by using a thumb tack for each focus, and a string to make sure the distance is always the same A circle is a special kind of ellipse where both tacks, or foci, are in exactly the same place
An ellipse looks like a slightly flattened circle A plane curve Orbits take the form of ellipses
A two-dimensional curve defined by an origin (that is, the center of the ellipse) and two perpendicular vectors that define the major and minor radii of the ellipse Defined by the TQ3EllipseData data type
A closed curve drawn so that the sum of the distances from a point on the curve to two fixed points is always constant A symmetrical oval
An oval Johannes Kepler first discovered that the orbits of the planets are ellipses, not circles; he based his discovery on the careful observations of Tycho Brahe
elongated circle, oval technical def: the locus of all points such that the sum of the distances from 2 fixed points (foci) is constant and equals 2a
A curve for which the sum of the distances from any point on the ellipse to two points inside (called the foci) is always the same
A set of points, the sum of whose distance from two fixed points (the foci) is constant An ellipse is essentially a circle that has been stretched out of shape When describing ellipses, the eccentricity defines how "stretched out" it is
Oval path of a planet around the sub, with the sun at one of the two foci
A closed curve in the form of a symmetrical oval
a closed plane curve resulting from the intersection of a circular cone and a plane cutting completely through it; "the sums of the distances from the foci to any point on an ellipse is constant"
a curved line with the sum of the distances from imaginary points (foci) to each point on the curve is constant
Omission
A geometric figure defined by the distance of any point on the curve from two fixed points, called the foci; if o and b are the two distances, then o + b = constant
oval The orbits of the planets are ellipses, not circles This was first discovered by Johannes Kepler based on the careful observations by Tycho Brahe
squashed circle that tapers at both ends The total of the distance between any point on the ellipse and one focus + the distance from the point to the other focus = a constant It is the shape of bound orbits
The greatest diameter of the ellipse is the major axis, and the least diameter is the minor axis
The technical description is 'the cross section of a cone at any angle other than at right angles with the axis ' Ellipse routing jigs are available for fitting to portable routers
The elliptical orbit of a planet
(n) A single-curved line primitive An ellipse is a conic section produced when a plane is passed through a right circular cone oblique to the axis and at a greater angle with the axis than the elements An ellipse also describes a circle or circular arc viewed at any angle other than normal (perpendicular)
{i} oval, elongated circle, egg-like shape
See Conic section, under Conic, and cf
Focus
Conic section formed by passing a plane through a right cone at an angle An ellipse is the path of a point that moves in such a way that the sum of the distances from two focal points is a constant
An ellipse is an oval shape Johannes Kepler discovered that the orbits of the planets were elliptical in shape rather than circular
An oval or oblong figure, bounded by a regular curve, which corresponds to an oblique projection of a circle, or an oblique section of a cone through its opposite sides
An ellipse is an oval shape similar to a circle but longer and flatter. The Earth orbits in an ellipse. a curved shape like a circle, but with two slightly longer and flatter sides oval (ellipsis; ELLIPSIS). Closed curve, one of the conic sections of analytic geometry, consisting of all points whose distances from each of two fixed points (foci) add up to the same value. The midpoint between the foci is the center. One property of an ellipse is that the reflection off its boundary of a line from one focus will pass through the other. In an elliptical room, a person whispering at one focus is easily heard by someone at the other. An oval may or may not fit the definition of an ellipse
ellipses
plural form of ellipse
ellipses
plural form of ellipsis
An ellipse
ellipsis
ellipses
three spaced periods indicating the omission of text
ellipses
plural of ellipsis
ellipses
Three dots (…) that indicate an omission
ellipses
plural of ellipse
ellipses
dots used to indicate that material has been deleted from a quotation Ellipses should be avoided or used extremely carefully by debaters lest there be suspicion that crucial material has been left out
ellipse

    Hyphenation

    el·lipse

    Turkish pronunciation

    îlîps

    Synonyms

    oval

    Pronunciation

    /əˈləps/ /ɪˈlɪps/

    Etymology

    () From French ellipse.

    Videos

    ... a perfect ellipse.  It's moving in an inverse square force field.  I've been tracking it ...
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