Определение split} в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
- split
- Comprising half decaffeinated and half caffeinated espresso
- split
- to separate or break up
Republicans appear split on the centerpiece of Mr. Obama's economic recovery plan.
- split
- Simple past tense and past participle of split
- split
- A result of a first throw that leaves two or more pins standing with one or more pins between them knocked down
- split
- Having the middle group equal to the direct product of the others
- split
- See split
- split
- A unit of measure used for champagne or other spirits: 18.75 centiliter or 1/4 quarter of a standard .75 liter bottle. Commercially comparable to 1/20th gallon, which is 1/2 of a fifth
- split
- A bottle of wine containing 0.375 liters, 1/2 the volume of a standard .75 liter bottle; a demi
- split
- A dessert or confection resembling a banana split
- split
- To leave
Let's split this scene and see if we can find a real party.
- split
- The elapsed time at specific intermediate point(s) in a race
In the 3000m race, his 800m split was 1:45.32.
- split
- The acrobatic feat of spreading the legs flat on the floor 180 degrees apart, either sideways to the body or with one leg in front and one behind
- split
- To share; to divide
We split the money among three people.
- split
- A tear resulting from tensile stresses
- split
- A split-finger fastball
He’s got a nasty split.
- split
- Of something solid, to divide fully or partly along a more or less straight line
He has split his lip.
- split 7
- A seven inch vinyl phonograph record with a different band on either side
- split an infinitive
- To produce a split infinitive
- split antigen
- In the testing of cell surface antigens, an antigen that has a more refined or specific cell surface reaction relative to a broad antigen.(Example: HLA-B51 and HLA-B52 are split antigens of HLA-B5)Okimoto K, Juji T, Ishiba S, Maruyama H, Tohyama H, Kosaka K. HLA--Bw54 (Bw22-J, J-1) antigen in juvenile onset diabetes mellitus in Japan. Tissue Antigens 1978 11(5): 418–22 pmid=694905
- split cameras
- An assembly of two cameras disposed at a fixed overlapping angle relative to each other. (JP 1-02)
- split end
- A player playing the position of split end
The split end ran deep.
- split end
- A hair which has split at the end, usually from dryness or innutrition. (Usually in plural)
I've got so many split ends – I think I must be working too hard.
- split end
- The position which lines up wide and on the offensive line of scrimmage whose primary job is to serve as a receiver
Jones played split end.
- split ends
- plural form of split end
- split hairs
- Tedious details; minutiae
The Microsoft trial had been in danger of slipping out of the public eye. Its endless procession of less-than-riveting economics professors and forgetful executives, mixed with scads of legal and technical split hairs, just hasn't made for gripping headlines.
- split hairs
- To consider or argue about fine details; to worry about minutiae
Let’s get everything sorted into the right drawers and not split hairs about subdividing it further yet.
- split horizon
- a method of preventing routing loops in distance-vector routing protocols by prohibiting a router from advertising a route back onto the interface from which it was learned
- split infinitive
- an infinitive with one or more modifiers inserted between the to and the verb
Did you ever have to finally decide? (Did You Ever Have to Make Up Your Mind? by the Lovin' Spoonful, 1965).
- split infinitives
- plural form of split infinitive
- split level
- A single level of a split-level house
Confined to a wheelchair, she was effectively reduced to living in one split level, one-third of their split-level house.
- split level
- Alternative spelling of split-level
- split off
- To break apart, on one's own rather than as part of the group
- split one's sides
- To laugh hysterically
Madcap Ciss with her golliwog curls. You had to laugh at her sometimes. For instance when she asked you would you have some more Chinese tea and jaspberry ram and when she drew the jugs too and the men's faces on her nails with red ink make you split your sides.
- split personalities
- plural form of split personality
- split personality
- the supposed psychological syndrome in which two or more personalities exist in the same person
- split pot
- A hand where two or more players have hands of equal value, and the chips in the pot are split equally between them
- split pot
- Referring to a split pot, or the possibility of one
There are quite a few split pot possibilities with these two hands.
- split pots
- plural form of split pot
- split screen
- An instance of using the technique on the graphics of a screen
- split screen
- A display technique that consists into subdiving graphics that appear on a screen into nonmovable adjacent areas
- split screens
- plural form of split screen
- split shot
- A type of lead shot cut part-way through the diameter, used as a line weight in angling
- split shot
- comprising half-caffeinated and half-decaffeinated espresso
I ordered a split shot latte.
- split shots
- plural form of split shot
- split single
- A music single featuring songs by more than one artist
- split slab
- A method of construction using two separate concrete slabs: the first placed as a slab on grade or suspended slab and covered with waterproofing and a drainage system; the second, or topping slab, placed over the underlying slab and waterproofing
- split tender
- Two or more different forms of payment in a single transaction; typically cash and credit card
- split the house
- A strategy of drawing to a different area of the house to prevent your opponent from taking out both stones
- split ticket
- A ballot cast for candidates of more than one political party
Sally voted a split ticket for a Democrat and a Republican.
- split up
- separate, disassociate, cause to come apart
The brothers never behaved in class when they were together, so we had to split them up for the exam.
- split up
- Cease to be together, break apart from the group
The soldiers split up into smaller squadrons to to search the building.
- split-finger fastball
- A moderate rotation speed backspin pitch thrown with a ball gripped between the index finger and middle finger; it has good velocity, may have a precessing spin, and sinks as it approaches the plate
His strikeout pitch was his split-finger fastball.
- split-finger fastballs
- plural form of split-finger fastball
- split-level
- A building built with rooms on levels separated by stairs of less than a full storey
- split-level
- Describing such a building
- 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
- split-second
- The nick of time; a brief moment
Luckily, no other cars were nearby, and the fire engine's driver was able to swerve into another lane a split second before striking the SUV, Baker said.
- split-shot
- Alternative spelling of split shot. :
- split-squad
- Describing a situation in which a team is split into two to play two games simultaneously
- split-squad
- A team that has been split for this reason
- split
- being divided or separated; "split between love and hate
- split
- {v} to divide, break in pieces, dash, crack
- split-half
- (İstatistik) Relating to or denoting a technique of splitting a body of supposedly homogeneous data into two halves and calculating the results separately for each to assess their reliability
- Split
- A port of Croatia
- split
- a promised or claimed share of loot or money; "he demanded his split before they disbanded"
- split
- The division of the outstanding shares of a corporation into a larger number of shares A 3-for-1 split by a company with 1 million shares outstanding results in 3 million shares outstanding Each holder of 100 shares before the 3-for-1 split would have 300 shares, although the proportionate equity in the company would remain the same; 100 parts of 1 million are the equivalent of 300 parts of 3 million Ordinarily, splits must be voted by directors and approved by shareholders
- split
- The multiplication of the outstanding number of shares of a corporation into a larger number of shares A two-for-one split by a company with one million shares outstanding results in two million shares outstanding Holders of 100 shares before the split would have 200 shares after the split
- split
- A spare leave in which the headpin is down and the remaining combination of pins have an intermediate pin down immediately ahead of or between them (hole, railroad)
- split
- a dessert of sliced fruit and ice cream covered with whipped cream and cherries and nuts an old Croatian city on the Adriatic Sea a lengthwise crack in wood; "he inserted the wedge into a split in the log"
- split
- If two or more people split something, they share it between them. I would rather pay for a meal than watch nine friends pick over and split a bill All exhibits are for sale, the proceeds being split between Oxfam and the artist. see also splitting. A city of southwest Croatia on the Dalmatian coast of the Adriatic Sea. Founded as a Roman colony, it later grew around a palace built by Diocletian in the early fourth century Population: 200,459. ancient Spalatum Seaport (pop., 2001: 188,694), Dalmatia, Croatia. The Romans established the colony of Salonae nearby in 78 BC, and the emperor Diocletian lived at Split until his death in AD 313. After the Avars sacked the town in 615, the inhabitants built a new town within Diocletian's 7-acre (3-hectare) palace compound; this "old town" has been continuously inhabited since that time. Split came under Byzantine rule in the 9th century, shifted to Venetian control in 1420, and was held by Austria in the 18th and 19th centuries. It came under Yugoslavian rule in 1918, finally becoming part of independent Croatia in 1992. The port facilities were destroyed in World War II, but the old city was little-damaged, and repairs were subsequently made. Split is a commercial, educational, and tourist centre. Collectively with the historic royal residences, fortifications, and churches in the city, the palace was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1979
- split
- The split may be in any ratio, as a two-for-one split; a three-for-two split
- split
- The division of the outstanding shares of a corporation usually into a larger number of shares
- split
- extending the legs at right angles to the trunks (one in front and the other in back) an increase in the number of outstanding shares of a corporation without changing the shareholders' equity; "they announced a two-for-one split of the common stock"
- split
- Specif Leather Manuf
- split
- A breach or separation, as in a political party; a division
- split
- A split is a long crack or tear. The plastic-covered seat has a few small splits around the corners
- split
- Divided so as to be done or executed part at one time or price and part at another time or price; said of an order, sale, etc
- split
- {f} divide; cleave; partition; separate; be divided; be separated; be cleaved; go away (Slang)
- split
- extending the legs at right angles to the trunks (one in front and the other in back)
- split
- A separation of the celluloid covering of a button, usually found on the outer edge of the curl where the celluloid is stretched over the shell backing
- split
- If an organization splits or is split, one group of members disagrees strongly with the other members, and may form a group of their own. Yet it is feared the Republican leadership could split over the agreement Women priests are accused of splitting the church. Split is also an adjective. The Kremlin is deeply split in its approach to foreign policy
- split
- Of a short exact sequence, such that the middle group is the direct product of the others
- split
- The form split is used in the present tense and is the past tense and past participle of the verb
- split
- To divulge a secret; to betray confidence; to peach
- split
- To separate into parties or factions
- split
- one of the sections of a skin made by dividing it into two or more thicknesses
- split
- The feat of going down to the floor so that the legs extend in a straight line, either with one on each side or with one in front and the other behind
- split
- having a long rip or tear; "a split lip"
- split
- To separate two checkers which are together on a point (typically the twenty-four point) and leave them as blots
- split
- Divided; cleft
- split
- A split between two things is a division or difference between them. a split between what is thought and what is felt
- split
- Procedure where a company increases its number of shares outstanding After a split, the shares' market value will remain unchanged but each share will decline in price For example, if a firm with 20 million outstanding shares selling at $100 a share executes a 2-for-1 split, it will end up with 40 million shares selling for $50 each Splits are generally a publicity event and a method by which companies keep share prices at levels where many small investors can trade without needing to execute an "odd lot" order Only a few companies, such as Berkshire Hathaway, avoid stock splits altogether (See "Reverse Split")
- split
- A small bottle (containing about half a pint) of some drink; so called as containing half the quantity of the customary smaller commercial size of bottle; also, a drink of half the usual quantity; a half glass
- split
- The division of the outstanding shares of a corporation into either a larger or smaller number of shares, without any immediate impact in individual shareholder equity For example, a 3-for-1 forward split by a company with 1 million shares outstanding results in 3 million shares outstanding Each holder of 100 shares before the split would have 300 shares worth less, although the proportionate equity in the company would stay the same A reverse split would reduce the number of shares outstanding and each share would be worth more
- split
- Any of the three or four strips into which osiers are commonly cleft for certain kinds of work; usually in pl
- split
- A unit of measure used for champagne or other spirits (18.75 cl or 1/20th gallon or one quarter of a standard sized bottle, .750 liters)
- split
- discontinue an association or relation; go different ways; "The business partners broke over a tax question"; "The couple separated after 25 years of marriage"; "My friend and I split up"
- split
- an opening made forcibly as by pulling apart; "there was a rip in his pants"; "she had snags in her stockings"
- split
- separate or cut with a tool, such as a sharp instrument; "cleave the bone"
- split
- division of a group into opposing factions; "another schism like that and they will wind up in bankruptcy"
- split
- go one's own away; move apart; "The friends separated after the party"
- split
- a dessert of sliced fruit and ice cream covered with whipped cream and cherries and nuts
- split
- Sometimes, companies split their outstanding shares into larger number of shares If a company with one million shares did a two-for-one split, the company would have two million shares An investor, for example, with 100 shares before the split would hold 200 shares after the split The investor's percentage of equity in the company remains the same
- split
- Clicking on this button will split the left box horizontally so that the upper half displays the dictionary's output and the bottom half the thesaurus's
- split
- If something such as wood or a piece of clothing splits or is split, a long crack or tear appears in it. The seat of his short grey trousers split Twist the mixture into individual sausages without splitting the skins
- split
- The market price of the stock usually drops in proportion to the increase in outstanding shares of stock
- split
- An increase in the total number of shares outstanding This increase in the number of shares results in the proportionate decrease of share price For example, a company declares a "3 for 1" stock split, the price of the stock is currently $60 a share, a shareholder with 100 shares before the split would have 300 shares after the split with a value of $20 a share The shareholders' equity does not change A 'reverse split' is where the total number of shares is decreased and the stock price increases proportionally As in a split the total stock holders equity remains the same
- split
- Any of the air currents in a mine formed by dividing a larger current
- split
- (1) A single layer from a hide or skin that has been separated over its whole area into two or more layers The layers thus obtained are termed: (a) grain split (outer split); (b) flesh split (inner split); (c) in heavy hides there can also be a middle split (2) Leather made from the flesh split or middle split Note: If the name of the animal whence it originates,or the word "hide" or "skin", is included in the description, then the word "split", in this sense, must be used as a noun, e g pig split, butt split The word "split" must not be used as an adjective, unless the grain layer is described as in "split pigskin"
- split
- a bottle containing half the usual amount
- split
- Of quotations, given in sixteenth, quotations in eighths being regular; as, 10&frac3x16; is a split quotation
- split
- Divided deeply; cleft
- split
- Sometimes, companies split their outstanding shares into a larger number of shares If a company with 1 million shares did a two-for-one split, the company would have 2 million shares An investor with 100 shares before the split would hold 200 shares after the split The investor's percentage of equity in the company remains the same, and the price of the stock he owns is one-half the price of the stock on the day prior to the split
- split
- Designating ordinary stock that has been divided into preferred ordinary and deferred ordinary
- split
- Short for Split shot or stroke
- split
- A bottle of wine containing 0.375 liters of fluid, 1/2 the volume of a standard bottle; a demi
- split
- A position in which one leg is extended forward, the other backward, with the feet and thighs at the surface The lower back is arched and the hips, shoulders and head are in a vertical line in the water
- split
- The dividing of a company's shares, creating a greater number of shares, while halving the price per share The most common is a 2-1 split Sometimes this creates more opportunities for a buyer, due to being less expensive Example you own 100 shares at $10 00 each the invested amount equals $1000 00 The company announce's they are splitting the share's 2-1 Meaning the price per share is now $10 00/2=$5 00, The 100 shares you owned equal 100*2=200 share's now owned The dollar investment is still the same 200 share's times $5 00 =$1000 00
- split
- The division of outstanding shares of a corporation into a larger number of shares For example: in a 3-for-1 split, each holder of 100 shares before would have 300 shares, although the proportionate equity in the company would remain the same A reverse split occurs when the company reduces the total number of outstanding shares, but each share is worth more
- split
- To part asunder; to be rent; to burst; as, vessels split by the freezing of water in them
- split
- an old Croatian city on the Adriatic Sea
- split
- A split is when a company's board of directors and the shareholders agree to increase the number of shares outstanding The shareholders' equity does not change; instead, the number of shares increases while the value of each share decreases proportionally For example, in a 2-for-1 split, a shareholder with 100 shares prior to the split would now own 200 shares The price of the shares, however, would be cut in half; shares that cost $40 before the split would be worth $20 after the split
- split
- A division of a stake happening when two cards of the kind on which the stake is laid are dealt in the same turn
- split
- {i} act of splitting; breach between people; share, portion; dessert of ice cream topped with fruit and other toppings; half pint
- split
- having been divided; having the unity destroyed; "Congress gave the impression of a confusing sum of disconnected local forces"-Samuel Lubell; "a league of disunited nations"- E B White; "a fragmented coalition"; "a split group"
- split
- the substitution of more than one share of a corporation's stock for one share
- split
- Any of the dents of a reed
- split
- the division by a player of one hand of blackjack into two hands, allowed when the first two cards dealt to a player have the same value; the player is usually obliged to increase the amount wagered by placing a sum equal to the original bet on the new hand thus created
- split
- To divide lengthwise; to separate from end to end, esp
- split
- a bottle containing half the usual amount broken or burst apart longitudinally; "after the thunderstorm we found a tree with a split trunk"; "they tore big juicy chunks from the heart of the split watermelon"
- split
- (especially of wood) cut or ripped longitudinally with the grain; "we bought split logs for the fireplace"
- split
- A crack, or longitudinal fissure
- split
- an increase in the number of outstanding shares of a corporation without changing the shareholders' equity; "they announced a two-for-one split of the common stock"
- split
- To burst; to rupture; to rend; to tear asunder
- split
- Performance type in which the keyboard is divided in two sections Each section usually plays one instrument For example, the keyboard can be split to play an electric bass sound on the lower register and a piano sound on the upper register See Also performance
- split
- break open or apart suddenly; "The bubble burst"
- split
- To divide or separate into components; often used with up; as, to split up sugar into alcohol and carbonic acid
- split
- To be broken; to be dashed to pieces
- split
- (tenpin bowling) a divided formation of pins left standing after the first bowl; "he was winning until he got a split in the tenth frame"
- split
- {s} divided; separated; broken apart
- split
- being divided or separated; "split between love and hate"
- split
- The inner layer of the leather cut from the top grain portion
- split
- a lengthwise crack in wood; "he inserted the wedge into a split in the log"
- split
- To increase or decrease the shares outstanding requiring stockholder approval (A 2 for 1 split would double the outstanding shares)
- split
- by force; to divide in the direction of the grain layers; to rive; to cleave; as, to split a piece of timber or a board; to split a gem; to split a sheepskin
- split
- The division of a corporation's outstanding shares into either a larger or smaller (reverse split) number of shares without any impact on shareholder equity
- split
- To burst with laughter
- split
- A split in an organization is a disagreement between its members. They accused both radicals and conservatives of trying to provoke a split in the party
- split
- the act of rending or ripping or splitting something; "he gave the envelope a vigorous rip"
- split
- A piece that is split off, or made thin, by splitting; a splinter; a fragment
- split up
- get a divorce; formally terminate a marriage; "The couple divorced after only 6 months"
- split up
- become separated into pieces or fragments; "The figurine broke"; "The freshly baked loaf fell apart"
- split up
- separate into parts or portions; "divide the cake into three equal parts"; "The British carved up the Ottoman Empire after World War I"
- split up
- an increase in the number of outstanding shares of a corporation without changing the shareholders' equity; "they announced a two-for-one split of the common stock"
- split up
- discontinue an association or relation; go different ways; "The business partners broke over a tax question"; "The couple separated after 25 years of marriage"; "My friend and I split up"
- split a bottle of wine with
- drink a bottle of wine together with -
- split a vote
- vote for candidates from different parties
- split bar
- bar which separates two parts of a window in a graphical operating system
- split decision
- a boxing decision in which the judges are not unanimous
- split decision
- A decision declaring the winner of a boxing match in which the judges and referee are not unanimous in their opinions
- split down
- a decrease in the number of outstanding shares of a corporation without changing the shareholders' equity
- split dynamometer
- An electric dynamometer having two coils so arranged that one carries the primary current, and the other the secondary current, of a transformer
- split end
- A receiver who lines up several yards away from the next player along the line of scrimmage
- split end
- The wide receiver who lines up on the weakside Often referred to as the "X" receiver
- split end
- (football) an offensive end who lines up at a distance from the other linemen
- split end
- A pass receiver that lines up several yards away from the player closest to him
- split ends
- If you have split ends, some of your hairs are split at the ends because they are dry or damaged. a condition of someone's hair in which the ends have split into several parts
- split ends
- singed edges of hair
- split hairs
- debate, make tiny distinctions
- split infinitive
- A split infinitive is a structure in which an adverb is put between `to' and the infinitive of a verb, as in `to really experience it'. Some people think it is incorrect to use split infinitives. The split infinitive has been present in English ever since the 14th century, but it was not until the 19th century that grammarians labeled and condemned the usage. The only rationale for condemning the construction is based on a false analogy with Latin. The thinking is that because the Latin infinitive is a single word, the equivalent English construction should be treated as if it were a single unit. But English is not Latin, and distinguished writers have split infinitives without giving it a thought. Noteworthy splitters include John Donne, Daniel Defoe, George Eliot, Benjamin Franklin, Abraham Lincoln, William Wordsworth, and Willa Cather. Still, those who dislike the construction can usually avoid it without difficulty. The sense of the sentence To better understand the miners' plight, he went to live in their district is just as easily expressed by To understand the miners' plight better, he went to live in their district. However, one must take care not to ruin the rhythm of the sentence or create an unintended meaning by displacing an adverb.·When choosing to retain split infinitives, one should be wary of constructions that have more than one word between to and the verb. The Usage Panel is evenly divided on the one-adverb split infinitive. Fifty percent accept it in the sentence The move allowed the company to legally pay the employees severance payments that in some cases exceeded $30,000. But only 23 percent of the panel accepts the split infinitive in the sentence We are seeking a plan to gradually, systematically, and economically relieve the burden. In some contexts, the split infinitive is unavoidable, as in the sentence We expect our output to more than double in a year.·Excessive zeal in avoiding the split infinitive may result in an awkward placement of adverbs in constructions involving the auxiliary verbs be and have. Infinitive phrases in which the adverb precedes a participle, such as to be rapidly rising, to be clearly understood, and to have been ruefully mistaken, are not split and should be acceptable to everybody. By the same token, there are no grounds for objecting to the position of the adverb in the sentence He is committed to laboriously assembling all of the facts of the case. What is "split" here is not an infinitive but a prepositional phrase. a phrase in which you put an adverb or other word between 'to' and a verb, as in 'to easily win'. Some people think this is incorrect English
- split infinitive
- an infinitive with an adverb between `to' and the verb e
- split infinitive
- `to boldly go'
- split infinitive
- A simple infinitive with to, having a modifier between the verb and the to; as in, to largely decrease
- split key
- A key split at one end like a split pin, for the same purpose
- split level
- that has two stories, with two levels
- split level house
- {i} house with with two levels
- split lot
- (Ticaret) The division of a single original manufacturing lot or batch into two or lots due to processing or lead time reduction considerations, or the requirement to modify part of the original batch into another form
- split off
- divide; be divided
- split off
- If people split off from a group, they stop being part of the group and become separated from it. Somehow, Quentin split off from his comrades. the Youth Wing which split off the National Liberal party earlier this year
- split on a rock
- fail, make a major error
- split one's sides
- burst with laughter, laugh uncontrollably
- split personality
- If you say that someone has a split personality, you mean that their moods can change so much that they seem to have two separate personalities. a condition in which someone has two very different ways of behaving
- split personality
- personal disorder in which someone believes that they are two different and independent individuals
- split personality
- a relatively rare dissociative disorder in which the usual integrity of the personality breaks down and two or more independent personalities emerge
- split pin
- divided pin
- split rail
- a rail that is split from a log
- split run
- two or more advertisements of same product or service inserted, in equal numbers, in the same issue or run of a newspaper or magazine, usually in equal space and position; used to test copy by removing all variables except the copy to be tested; may be used to test factors other than copy
- split run
- Placing an ad in a specific publication to achieve coverage of a specific audience/area, i e GP/FP/Psych/IM or Orlando, LA, San Diego
- split run
- a print run of a newspaper during which some articles or advertisements are changed to produce a different edition
- split run
- The printing of different material in same position within the same issue, but in different copies of a publication
- split run
- Different images, such as advertisements, printed or bound in different editions of a publication Also, two or more binding methods used on the same print run
- split run
- Printing two or more variations of a mailing for testing purposes An AB split divides labels so adjacent names on a list go on different versions of the mailing
- split run
- (1) Different images, such as advertisements, printed in different editions of a publication (2) Printing of a book that has some copies bound one way and other copies bound another way
- split run
- Two or more different forms of an advertisement which are ran simultaneously in different copies of the same publication, used to test the effectiveness of one advertisement over another to appeal to regional or other specific markets
- split run
- Printing of two or more variants of a promotional ad run on an Nth or AB split throughout the entire edition Use of geographical segments of a publication for testing of variants
- split screen
- a method of showing different scenes or pieces of information at the same time on a film, television, or computer screen
- split screen
- method of working in which a screen is split into several windows with different documents in each window
- split second
- fraction of a second, very short period of time
- split second
- A split second is an extremely short period of time. Her gaze met Michael's for a split second. An instant; a flash. an extremely short period of time for a split second
- split second
- a very short time (as the time it takes the eye blink or the heart to beat); "if I had the chance I'd do it in a flash"
- split shift
- a working shift divided into two periods of time with several hours in between
- split shift
- A working shift divided into two or more periods of time, such as morning and evening, with a break of several hours between them. a period of work that is divided into two or more parts on the same day
- split shot
- In croquet, etc
- split shot
- a shot or stroke in which one drives in different directions one's own and the opponent's ball placed in contact
- split stitch
- A stitch used in stem work to produce a fine line, much used in old church embroidery to work the hands and faces of figures
- split straws
- argue about trivial details
- split stuff
- Timber sawn into lengths and then split
- split switch
- = Point switch
- split system
- A refrigeration or air conditioning system that consists of a "hot" side, or the condensing unit-including the condensing coil, the compressor and the fan-which is situated outside your home The hot side is connected to the "cold" side-located inside your home-via supply and return refrigerant lines The cold side consists of an expansion valve and a cold coil, and it is usually part of the furnace or some type of air handler The furnace blows air through an evaporator coil, which cools the air Then this cool air is routed throughout your home by means of a series of air ducts This type of set up is also used with heat pump installations
- split system
- This describes an air conditioning or heat pump system that is split into two sections - an outdoor section and an indoor section It won't work without the outdoor section plus an indoor section to move the air
- split system
- Any system with an indoor and outdoor section, or one that is "split"
- split system
- -Refers to an air conditioner or heat pump that has components in two locations Usually, one part of the system is located inside (evaporator coil) and the other is located outside your home (condenser coil)
- split system
- A combination heat pump or air conditioner with indoor components such as a furnance or blower coil To maximize effectiveness, Split Systems should be matched
- split system
- A combination Heat Pump or AC unit with indoor components such as a furnace or blower coil
- split system
- An air conditioner or heat pump consisting of two or more major components which are not enclosed in one cabinet For a split system, a compressor and condenser are generally installed outside the building and the cooling coil is generally installed within the building
- split system
- A combination heat pump or air conditioner with indoor components such as a furnace or blower coil Split systems should be matched for optimum efficiency
- split system
- A heat pump or central air conditioning system with components located both inside and outside of a building -- the most common types installed in homes
- split system
- Refrigeration or air conditioning installation, which places condensing unit outside or away from evaporator
- split system
- A central air conditioning or heat pump system in which some components are located inside the home and others outside This is the most common type of home system