shunter

listen to the pronunciation of shunter
İngilizce - Türkçe
makasçı
manevracı
makas değiştirici
{i} manevracı (tren)
{i} makasçı (tren)
shunt
sönt
shunt
(Biyokimya) yanyol
shunt
paralel bağlama
shunt
makas değiştirmek
shunt
makas değiştirme
shunt
paralel
shunt
(Biyoloji) şant
shunt
yan hat
shunt
{f} yakasını sıyırmak
shunt
{i} yol değiştirme
shunt
{i} yan yol
shunt
(Tıp) Bir yana döndürmek, çevirmek, saptırmak
shunt
{f} yerini değiştirmek
shunt
cereyanı
shunt
cereyanın bir kısmını diğer bir telden geçirmek
shunt
{f} hat değiştirmek
shunt
{f} d.y. (vagonu/katarı) bir hattan başka hatta geçirmek; (vagonu/katarı) barınma hattına veya manevra hattına almak
shunt
(fiil) yolunu değiştirmek, hat değiştirmek, yan yola geçmek, yerini değiştirmek, paralel bağlamak (elek.), yakasını sıyırmak, başından atmak
shunt
bir yana dönmek
shunt
{f} (önemli bir yerden)
shunt
(Tıp) İki damar arasında damar arasında anormal olarak bulunan ve birinden diğerine kan akımını sağlayan iştirak
İngilizce - İngilizce
A person who carries out shunting operations
A railway locomotive used for shunting; a switcher
{i} locomotive engine used to move train cars within the train yard; person or thing that shunts
A person employed to shunt cars from one track to another
a small locomotive used to move cars around but not to make trips
shunt
A connection used as an alternative path between parts of an electric circuit
shunt
To turn away or aside
shunt
A passage between body channels constructed surgically as a bypass
shunt
A switch on a railway
shunt
To divert electric current by providing an alternative path
shunt
To move data in memory to a physical disk
shunt
Movement of blood through a congenitally abnormal or surgically created connection and communication between two circuits, at the level of the atria, ventricles, or great vessels "Shunt" is a physiologic term, in contrast to "connection" which is an anatomic term
shunt
A connector that allows blood to flow between two locations
shunt
a natural or artificially created passageway between two parts of the heart
shunt
To have a minor collision, especially in a motor car
shunt
A soft magnetic material used to by-pass, divert, or redirect the magnetic flux from the air gap of a magnet
shunt
To move a train from one track to another, or to move carriages etc from one train to another
shunt
{f} shift, divert; alter the course of; move onto a side track (of a train or car); create a channel in order to divert bodily fluids away from a particular body part (Medicine)
shunt
A minor collision
shunt
A turning off to a side or short track, that the principal track may be left free
shunt
The shifting of the studs on a projectile from the deep to the shallow sides of the grooves in its discharge from a shunt gun
shunt
This is a catheter like device which is usually surgically implanted within the head or body area It allows excess CSF to drain into another part of the body, usually the abdomen
shunt
A passage made artificially, between two areas of the body, usually placed to drain liquid
shunt
To turn off to one side; especially, to turn off, as a grain or a car upon a side track; to switch off; to shift
shunt
1) Deliberately shorting a portion of an electric circuit 2) A device for shorting an electric circuit See Short Circuit
shunt
A crash
shunt
transfer to another track, of trains provide with or divert by means of an electrical shunt
shunt
To marshal vehicles in a given order to form a train consist
shunt
To provide with a shunt; as, to shunt a galvanometer
shunt
To cause to move suddenly; to give a sudden start to; to shove
shunt
A calibrated low resistance connected in parallel with the input terminals of a voltmeter in order to enable measurements of large currents It can be internal or external, and typically voltage drops across external shunts are 50 mV or 100 mV
shunt
To divert the flow of a body fluid using surgery
shunt
When railway engines shunt wagons or carriages, they push or pull them from one railway line to another. The GM diesel engine shunted the coaches to Platform
shunt
an act of moving a train or railway carriage to a different track
shunt
In respiratory physiology, a passageway for blood to bypass an organ In a right-to-left shunt, blood passes from systemic veins to systemic arteries bypassing the pulmonary capillaries (so that it does not exchange oxygen or carbon dioxide with the alveoli)
shunt
transfer to another track, of trains
shunt
An abnormal flow pattern of blood through the chambers of the heart or through the large arteries leaving the heart A "left-to-right" shunt results in extra blood flow entering the lungs, while a "right-to-left" shunt results in decreased blood flow to the lungs, low oxygen levels and cyanosis A surgically created connection designed to increase the delivery of blood to the lungs The most common types of shunts are named for the physicians who popularized them (Blalock-Taussig, Waterston, Potts, Glenn) A "modified" shunt may involve the use of artificial material, such as Gore-tex®
shunt
{i} act of turning aside, act of diverting; bypass, device used to divert an electrical current (Electricity); railroad switch; channel created to divert bodily fluids away from a particular part of the body (Surgery)
shunt
a tube, surgically implanted, that relieves fluid buildup in the brain
shunt
a special tube that is put into the ventricles to help drain the cerebrospinal fluid from the brain into the belly
shunt
a tube implanted in the cranium to balance the flow of cerebrospinal fluid - used in the treatment of hydrocephalus
shunt
a passage by which a bodily fluid (especially blood) is diverted from one channel to another; "an arteriovenus shunt"
shunt
A thin, flexible, straw-like device which is implanted in the fluid cavities of the brain to control the build-up of cerebrospinal fluid Shunts most commonly run under the skin from the head to the abdominal cavity
shunt
An electrical bypass circuit that proportionally divides current flow between the shunt and the shunted equipment It also allows high current measurements with low-current equipment
shunt
provide with or divert by means of an electrical shunt
shunt
a resistive load through which electricity is diverted Often the resistance of a shunt is known precisely and is used to determine amperage by measuring the voltage across it and using Ohm's law (I = V/R)
shunt
a conductor having low resistance in parallel with another device to divert a fraction of the current
shunt
implant consisting of a tube made of plastic or rubber; for draining fluids within the body a conductor having low resistance in parallel with another device to divert a fraction of the current a passage by which a bodily fluid (especially blood) is diverted from one channel to another; "an arteriovenus shunt"
shunt
a connector to allow blood flow between two locations
shunt
This generally means parallel connection
shunt
disapproval If a person or thing is shunted somewhere, they are moved or sent there, usually because someone finds them inconvenient. He has spent most of his life being shunted between his mother, father and various foster families
shunt
To go aside; to turn off
shunt
Also called shorting bars or tie bars These can either be rigid or foam shapes designed to electrically short device leads and reduce the possibility of ESD damage
shunt
A conducting circuit joining two points in a conductor, or the terminals of a galvanometer or dynamo, so as to form a parallel or derived circuit through which a portion of the current may pass, for the purpose of regulating the amount passing in the main circuit
shunt
To shun; to move from
shunt
a drainage system Spinal fluid flows from a ventricle into a body cavity via a tube Used to relieve increased intracranial pressure caused by brain tumors that block the flow of spinal fluid
shunt
to shift or move rolling stock
shunt
System of tubing, most likely including pressure valve and reservoir, used to drain CSF fluid from the ventricles or sub-arachnoid space of the brain into another part of the body, normally the peritoneal space or occasionally the heart
shunt
A tube or device implanted in the body (usually made of Silastic) to redivert excess CSF away from the brain to another place in the body
shunt
implant consisting of a tube made of plastic or rubber; for draining fluids within the body
shunter