is an abreviation for the measure of brightness properly called candela per meter square (cd/m2)
a creator, Worshiped at Sais, Nit has creation, war, and weaving influences She also serves a protective funerary role, sometimes taking the place that Nebthet serves in Wesir's funerary preparation Nit is also sought out for wisdom in myth, during the contendings of Heru (Horus) and Set, where she adjudicates that the throne of Wesir go to his son and Heir, Heru-Sa-Aset Further reading on Nit: • The House of Netjer's Glossary of Names
a luminance unit equal to 1 candle per square meter measured perpendicular to the rays from the source
egg or young of an insect parasitic on mammals especially a sucking louse; often attached to a hair or item of clothing a luminance unit equal to 1 candle per square meter measured perpendicular to the rays from the source
A unit of luminance (photometric brightness) equal to one candela per square meter
egg or young of an insect parasitic on mammals especially a sucking louse; often attached to a hair or item of clothing
Network Information Table An information table which is transmitted along with TV programs and the other digital information
disapproval If you refer to someone as a nit, you think they are stupid or silly. I'd rather leave the business than work with such a nit. = nitwit, twit. A unit of illuminative brightness equal to one candle per square meter, measured perpendicular to the rays of the source
The empty egg shell of the head louse left stuck to a hair shaft after the insect has hatched
the egg of a head lous, usually found attached to the hair within 1cm of the scalp
A small and inconsequential detail, fact, statistic or variance, usually associated with system or universe of data analysis. Nit-noids can be troublesome to dismiss as statistically insignificant and are hence often irritating to those that must deal with them
() Middle English nite, from Old English hnitu, from Proto-Germanic *xnitz (cf. Dutch neet, German Nisse, Norwegian nit), from Proto-Indo-European *k̑(o)nid- (cf. Scottish Gaelic sneadh, Lithuanian glìnda, Polish gnida, Albanian thëri, Ancient Greek κονίς (konís))