ge

listen to the pronunciation of ge
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
(Askeri) genel istihkam (general engineering)
Gaia
(Mitoloji) Toprak. Bütün tanrıların soylarının çıktığı en eski ve ilk tanrıça. Kocasız olarak Uranus'u doğurdu. Onun hem annesi hem de karısı oldu
Турецкий язык - Турецкий язык
Türk alfabesinin sekizinci harfinin adı, okunuşu
On kadar Güney Amerika yerli dilini kapsayan dil öbeği
Germanyum elementinin simgesi
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
General Electric
A group of aboriginal languages of Brazil
giant elliptical galaxy
large American company, leading manufacturer of electrical appliances and electronic instruments
Gaia
Downward
(Greek mythology) goddess of the earth and mother of Cronus and the Titans in ancient mythology
Ground Environment
Genetically engineered
Dagger-axe
conj: and 25
General Electric One of the partners affiliated with SourceNB
Abbreviation for germanium Generally used in detectors Good for most fiber optic wavelengths (e g , 800-1600 nm) Performance is inferior to InGaAs
Chemical symbol for Germanium
gigabit Ethernet
> GRE (preferred); Gradient echo
plural personal pronoun, you
General Electric Medical Systems Home page
An Anglo-Saxon prefix
a brittle gray crystalline element that is a semiconducting metalloid (resembling silicon) used in transistors; occurs in germanite and argyrodite
(Republic of) Georgia (in Internet addresses). The symbol for the element germanium
General Electric One of the partners affiliated with SourceCAN
Germany
ZE DE BE PE
General Electric Co Manufactured toasters, jet engines, nuclear power plants, and, for a while, computers GE sold its computer division to Honeywell in 1970, in an event referred to as the "merger " Joke from that time: GE executives had a big meeting in Florida (Story: "Shangri-La and the Paris 645") to decide how to become number two in the computer business (this was in the days when it was "IBM and the seven dwarfs") The solution they came up with: buy IBM and manage it for 6 months
ge

    Произношение

    Этимология

    (combining form.) Middle English geo-, from Middle French and Latin; Middle French, from Latin, from Greek gE-, geO-, from gE.
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