scale (n) teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Antoniadi scale
- a scale of seeing conditions used by amateur astronomers. Its categories are:
- Arabic scale
- quarter tone scale, or 24 tone equal temperament
- Arabic scale
- major locrian scale, a scale similar to locrian
- Arabic scale
- double harmonic scale, a scale with two augmented seconds
- Arabic scale
- 17 equal temperament, a tuning dividing the octave into 17 equal steps
- Baumé scale
- The original scale used on the Baumé type of densimeter to quantify the density of liquids
- Beaufort scale
- An empirical measure for the intensity of the wind based mainly on the state of the sea or wave conditions
- Fujita scale
- A scale used to rate the intensity of a tornado
- Kelvin scale
- A scale for measuring temperature, with zero defined as absolute zero, with kelvins as the units (equivalent to degrees Celsius)
The Kelvin scale is the standard scale for many scientific fields, but the related Celsius scale is handier for everyday life on Earth.
- Planck scale
- The scale at which quantum-mechanical effects become significant to depicting spacetime & other gravitational phenomena, typically defined as being on the order of one Planck length (~10-35 m)
- Richter scale
- A logarithmic scale used to express the energy released by an earthquake, each increase of 1 representing a 32-fold increase in energy
- Richter scale
- A value on the Richter scale
The students also faced and experienced earthquakes at various Richter scales.
- Scoville scale
- A measure for the piquancy of various peppers, indicating the level of capsaicin
- Shepard scale
- A series of Shepard tones constructed to give the illusion of a continuously rising (or falling) series of notes
- Torino scale
- A scale used to rate the power and likelihood of an asteroid strike onto the planet Earth
- blues scale
- A scale used in the blues, generally consisting of tonic, major second, minor third, fourth, fifth, major sixth and minor seventh, in which notes, particularly the third, fourth and fifth may be bent
- check scale
- A scale used in a filling operation to indicate the proper filling level has been reached
- chromatic scale
- A scale including all twelve semitones in an octave
- communicable scale
- A tool used to describe a situation and or event in numerical or graphical data
Example: “Joseph has traveled 50% of his 26 hour journey between Florida and Maine.” “Joseph is in the middle of his trip”.
- communicable scale
- A model of designation about comparing an activity through oral descriptions
- cosmological scale
- The order of magnitude of time and space in the universe
- diatonic scale
- A seven note musical scale of five tones and two semitones
- dynamic scale
- A device, often part of a conveyor belt system, that weighs a product while it is in motion
- economies of scale
- : The characteristics of a production process in which an increase in the scale of the firm causes a decrease in the long run average cost of each unit
- full-scale
- Thorough; complete; not lacking in any detail
The business consultants performed a full-scale analysis of current market conditions.
- full-scale
- Of the same size, scale, or proportions as an original object
The museum has a full-scale replica of a Viking ship.
- large-scale
- Large in amount, scope or extent
- large-scale
- Drawn large so as to show detail
- leaf-scale
- A scale on the stem of a plant that turns into a leaf
- long scale
- A system of numeric names in which every new term greater than million is 1,000,000 times the previous term. (i.e., a billion is a million million.)
- major scale
- One of the diatonic scales; a group of notes or musical pitches in a particular pattern, used to make melodies. The pattern for a major scale is:
tone - tone - semitone - tone - tone - tone - semitone.
- minor scale
- A diatonic scale based upon a relative major scale by changing its tonic note by three semitones
- modal scale
- A tonal scale used in most forms of Western music
- musical scale
- A set of musical notes, typically ordered in pitch
- ordinal scale
- A scale whose values can be compared; formally, a scale whose set of values is totally ordered
- pentatonic scale
- a scale having five notes per octave
- scale
- A device to measure mass or weight
After the long, lazy winter I was afraid to get on the scale.
- scale
- A means of assigning a magnitude
The magnitude of an earthquake is measured on the open-ended Richter scale.
- scale
- The ratio of depicted distance to actual distance
This map uses a scale of 1:10.
- scale
- To climb to the top of
At last I came to the great barrier-cliffs; and after three days of mad effort--of maniacal effort--I scaled them. I built crude ladders; I wedged sticks in narrow fissures; I chopped toe-holds and finger-holds with my long knife; but at last I scaled them. Near the summit I came upon a huge cavern.
- scale
- Size; scope
There are some who question the scale of our ambitions.
- scale
- A pine nut of a pinecone
- scale
- To become scaly; to produce or develop scales
The dry weather is making my skin scale.
- scale
- To change the size of something whilst maintaining proportion; especially to change a process in order to produce much larger amounts of the final product
We should scale that up by a factor of 10.
- scale
- Scale mail (as opposed to chain mail)
- scale
- The flaky material sloughed off heated metal
- scale
- An ordered numerical sequence used for measurement
Please rate your experience on a scale from 1 to 10.
- scale
- A flake of skin of an animal afflicted with dermatitis
- scale
- Part of an overlapping arrangement of many small, flat and hard pieces of keratin covering the skin of an animal, particularly a fish or reptile
- scale
- Either of the pans, trays, or dishes of a balance or scales
- scale
- A series of notes spanning an octave, tritave, or pseudo-octave, used to make melodies
- scale
- Limescale
- scale
- A small piece of pigmented chitin, many of which coat the wings of a butterfly or moth to give them their color
- scale
- To remove the scales of
Please scale that fish for dinner.
- scale
- To tolerate significant increases in throughput or other potentially limiting factors
That architecture won't scale to real-world environments.
- scale
- A line or bar associated with a drawing, used to indicate measurement when the image has been magnified or reduced
Even though precision can be carried to an extreme, the scales which now are drawn in (and usually connected to an appropriate figure by an arrow) will allow derivation of meaningful measurements.
- scale down
- To reduce the cost of a process, or the amount spent on something
- scale down
- To reduce the size of something whilst maintaining proportion
- scale invariance
- a feature of objects or laws that do not change if length scales (or energy scales) are multiplied by a common factor
- scale mail
- A kind of mail (armour for the torso) made of overlapping metal plates, resembling the scales of a fish
- scale mails
- plural form of scale mail
- scale model
- A three-dimensional copy or representation of something in which all parts have dimensions in the same proportion to that of the original
- scale ruler
- A ruler marked with a range of calibrated scales (ratios) for drawing and measuring from reduced scale drawings, such as blueprints and floor plans
- scale up
- To change a process in order to allow for greater quantities
- scale up
- To increase the size of something whilst maintaining proportion
- short scale
- A system of numeric names in which every new term greater than million is 1,000 times the previous term. (i.e., a billion is a thousand million.)
- small-scale
- Drawn or constructed too small for much detail
- small-scale
- Having a modest scope or extent
- time scale
- a series of events used as a rough measure of duration
- time-scale
- Alternative spelling of time scale
- tip the scale
- To change the fortunes, either positively or negatively
- tip the scale
- To weigh (have a certain weight)
- to scale
- such that each dimension has the same proportion to the original
The one-metre-long model of the Bismark was built exactly to scale, with moving turrets.
- tone scale
- A subjective appraisal of a person's spiritual aliveness, usually given by an auditor, ranging from 'total failure' to 'serenity of beingness'
- go off the scale
- (Ev ile ilgili) Exceed the normal standards, good or bad, for something
- scale back
- To scale back means the same as to scale down. Despite current price advantage, UK manufacturers are still having to scale back production. = reduce
- Beafurt scale
- The Beaufort scale is an empirical measure that relates wind speed to observed conditions at sea or on land. Its full name is the Beaufort wind force scale, although it is a measure of wind speed and not of "force" in the scientific sense of the word
- Beafurt wind force scale
- The Beaufort scale is an empirical measure that relates wind speed to observed conditions at sea or on land. Its full name is the Beaufort wind force scale, although it is a measure of wind speed and not of "force" in the scientific sense of the word
- Scale-out storage
- (Antika) A new category of storage system that addresses the storage challenges created by legacy systems
- scale
- {v} to scrape off scales, pare, peel, mount
- scale
- {n} a part of the covering of a fish, crust, balance, regular gradation, gamut, line of distances, degree of a circle, ladder, scalade
- Beaufort Scale
- (Meteoroloji) The Beaufort Scale is an empirical measure for describing wind speed based mainly on observed sea conditions. Its full name is the Beaufort Wind Force Scale
- bench scale
- (Mühendislik) On a small scale, such as on a laboratory worktable
- bench scale testing
- (Mühendislik) Testing of materials, methods, or chemical processes on a small scale, such as on a laboratory worktable
- diseconomy of scale
- (Ekonomi) Diseconomies of scale are the forces that cause larger firms to produce goods and services at increased per-unit costs. They are less well known than what economists have long understood as "economies of scale", the forces which enable larger firms to produce goods and services at reduced per-unit costs
- economy of scale
- The decrease in unit manufacturing cost that is due to mass production
- full scale
- (Elektrik, Elektronik) In electronics and signal processing, full scale or full code represents the maximum amplitude a system can present
- leverage scale
- Leverage scale is business exec doublespeak for growing a business by adding money or some other viable stimulus to the process of making more money. It is often used in refererence to separate business ventures that join forces to cut costs, borrow more aggressively or otherwise streamline or improve their practices to achieve a mutually sought-after goal
- manifest anxiety scale
- (Tıp, İlaç) A true-false questionnaire made up of items believed to indicate anxiety, in which the subject answers verbally the statement that describes him or her
- octatonic scale
- (Muzik) The diminished scale is a musical scale the pitches of which ascend in alternating whole tones and semitones. It is called the diminished scale because it can be conceived as a combination of two interlocking diminished seventh chords, just as the augmented scale can be conceived as a combination of two interlocking augmented triads. In classical theory, in contradistinction to jazz theory, it is more commonly called the octatonic scale, although there are forty-two other non-enharmonically equivalent, non-transpositionally equivalent eight-tone sets possible. The term ("octatonic pitch collection") was introduced by Arthur Berger in 1963 (van den Toorn 1983)
- red scale
- Aonidiella aurantii and Chrysomphalus aonidum, which infest orange trees (also California red scale)
- scale
- measure with or as if with scales; "scale the gold"
- spring scale
- spring balance