A classification of asthma that means the asthma symptoms are not caused by exposure to allergens Aspirin-sensitive asthma is one kind of intrinsic asthma (The term "intrinsic asthma" is not used much any more )
Genus: The source of an attribute Differentia: The attribute is inherent in the entity Comment: Intrinsic means the attribute exists without relation to another object
An adjective applied to types, operations, assignment statements, and procedures that are defined by Fortran 90 and can be used in any scoping unit without further definition or specification
1) Originating or due to causes within something 2) Originating and occurring wholly within something
Inward; internal; hence, true; genuine; real; essential; inherent; not merely apparent or accidental; opposed to extrinsic; as, the intrinsic value of gold or silver; the intrinsic merit of an action; the intrinsic worth or goodness of a person
situated within or belonging solely to the organ or body part on which it acts; "intrinsic muscles" belonging to a thing by its very nature; "form was treated as something intrinsic, as the very essence of the thing"- John Dewey
situated within or belonging solely to the organ or body part on which it acts; "intrinsic muscles"
Anything that the language defines is intrinsic There are intrinsic data types, procedures, and operators You may use these freely in any scoping unit Fortran programmers may define types, procedures, and operators; these entities are not intrinsic
Describes entities defined by the Fortran 95/90 language (such as data types and procedures) Intrinsic entities can be used freely in any scoping unit
Included wholly within an organ or limb, as certain groups of muscles; opposed to extrinsic
Identifies the member as an event Sub in a class or form, or a predefined Property of a form Overloads Overloads the member of the same name in the inherited-from base class [Visual Basic 7]
If something has intrinsic value or intrinsic interest, it is valuable or interesting because of its basic nature or character, and not because of its connection with other things. The paintings have no intrinsic value except as curiosities + intrinsically in·trin·si·cal·ly Sometimes I wonder if people are intrinsically evil. being part of the nature or character of someone or something (intrinsèque, from intrinsecus)
(adj ) applied to types, operations, assignment statements and procedures that are defined in the Fortran 90 standard and may be used in any scoping unit without further definition or specification
belonging to a thing by its very nature; "form was treated as something intrinsic, as the very essence of the thing"- John Dewey
The brightness a star would have if not attenuated by distance or intervening gas or dust. As opposed to apparent brightness which it has as measured at a distance
A protein (or group of proteins) permanently attached to a biological membrane by interactions between its hydrophobic dimer units and the phospholipids of the membrane
(Elektrik, Elektronik) An intrinsic semiconductor, also called an undoped semiconductor or i-type semiconductor, is a pure semiconductor without any significant dopant species present. The number of charge carriers is therefore determined by the properties of the material itself instead of the amount of impurities. In intrinsic semiconductors the number of electrons and the number of holes are equal. n = p
a substance produced by the mucosa of the stomach and intestines that is essential for the absorption of vitamin B12; "lack of intrinsic factor can result in pernicious anemia
(Ticaret) A forecast based on factors internal to an organization, such as past shipment demand patterns, instead of external factors such as economic indicators or projections
fraud (as by use of forged documents or false claims or perjury) that misleads a court or jury and induces a finding for the one perpetrating the fraud
motivation that seems inherent in an activity itself, as when we engage in an activity for its own sake or merely because it is fun introversion preoccupation with oneself and accompanying reduction of interest in the outside world; contrast to extroversion isolation a defense mechanism operating unconsciously central to obsessive-compulsive phenomena in which the affect is detached from an idea and rendered unconscious, leaving the conscious idea colorless and emotionally neutral