tree- teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- <span class="word-self">treespan>-hugging
- Supporting of environment concerns such as combatting pollution, deforestation, etc
He could have developed his oil wells if it wasn't for those pesky tree-hugging hippies.
- <span class="word-self">treespan>-line
- the edge of the habitat at which trees are capable of growing; the timberline
- <span class="word-self">treespan>-ring
- Alternative spelling of tree ring
- <span class="word-self">treespan>-shrew
- Alternative spelling of tree shrew
- <span class="word-self">treespan>-covered
- forested, filled with trees, woodsy
- <span class="word-self">treespan>-lined
- A tree-lined road or street has trees on either side. the broad, tree-lined avenues. a tree-lined road has trees on both sides
- <span class="word-self">treespan>-top
- top part of the tree
- 3-on-the-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternative spelling of three-on-the-tree
- 3-on-the-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- On an automobile (especially those produced from 1939 through the mid-1970s), a three-speed manual transmission whose gearshift lever is mounted on the steering column
Mother and Father learned to drive in a car with a 3-on-the-tree.
- B-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- An indexed data structure suitable for storage of a large number of items in a balanced fashion, with very few disk hits required for locating the correct record block
- Charlie Brown <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A Christmas tree considered undesirable by normal standards, often small and sparse. Usually, this is a term of endearment
She liked to think of it as a Charlie Brown tree, worthy of pity, not just a plain old ugly tree.
- Christmas <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The collection of valves sometimes found at the top of a working oil well
- Christmas <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A pole with lights, similar to a traffic signal, used for signalling the start of an automobile race
- Christmas <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A pattern of muscles visible in the lower back, shaped to look like a conifer
- Christmas <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A conifer used during the Christmas holiday season, typically decorated with lights and ornaments and often a star or angel at its tip
- Christmas <span class="word-self">treespan> bill
- A bill consisting of many riders that attracts many, often unrelated, floor amendments, which may provide special benefits to various groups or interests
- Christmas <span class="word-self">treespan> bills
- plural form of Christmas tree bill
- Jesse <span class="word-self">Treespan>
- A symbolic tree, used as a common figure in medieval art, whose branches represent religious genealogies
- Joshua <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A yucca, Yucca brevifolia, of the southwestern U.S. with spiky leaves
- Judas <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A small deciduous tree, Cercis siliquastrum, noted for its prolific display of deep-pink flowers in spring
- Pará rubber <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Hevea brasiliensis, the rubber tree
- Yule <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A yuletide decoration comprising of a potted tree decorated with ribbons and religions symbols used by modern pagans, especially followers of Heathenry
- apple does not fall far from the <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A child grows up to be very similar to its parents, both in behavior and in physical characteristics
It's important that I know what diseases affect other members of your immediate family, because the apple does not fall far from the tree..
- apple never falls far from the <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternative form of apple does not fall far from the tree
- apple <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any cultivar of the Malus domestica tree
- bark up the wrong <span class="word-self">treespan>
- To do, believe, or pursue something wrong or inappropriate; to take the wrong approach; to follow a false lead; to blame or rebuke the wrong person
After three failed marriages I realised that I may have been barking up the wrong tree and should abandon the search for the perfect wife.
- barking up the wrong <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Present participle of bark up the wrong tree
- binary <span class="word-self">treespan>
- a data structure in which each node has at most two children, each node but the root has one parent, and there are no cycles
- bo <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A fig tree regarded as sacred by Hindus and Buddhists
- bodhi <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The Indian fig tree, Ficus religiosa, that is sacred to Buddhism
- bodhi <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The specific fig tree under which the Buddha sat when he attained enlightenment; the descendant of that tree on the same spot at Bodh Gaya
- boron <span class="word-self">treespan>
- a binary tree
- box <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any of several trees, of the genus Buxus, often used as a hedge and as a source of boxwood
- cat <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A structure of platforms and scratching posts designed for a cat to play on
- caterpillar <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree consisting of only a path (the spine or stalk of the tree) and vertices directly connected to (i.e. one edge away from) that path; a tree whose vertices with a degree of at least 3 are all surrounded by at most two vertices of degree two or greater
- caterpillar <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Catalpa bignonioides; the Southern catalpa tree, a deciduous tree of family Bignoniaceae growing in Southeastern U.S., which is the host plant for the catawba worms, caterpillars that are popular fishing bait
- chaste <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A shrub native to the Mediterranean region (Vitex agnus-castus)
- cherry <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree of the subgenus Cerasus, the members of which are valued agriculturally for their fruit, the cherry. The wood of the tree, cherrywood, is also valued in woodworking
- chestnut <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree that bears chestnuts; a tree of the genus Castanea
- clothes <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A pole with pegs for temporary storage of clothing
- coat <span class="word-self">treespan>
- An upright pole having hooks on which to hang coats or other clothing
- computation <span class="word-self">treespan> logic
- A particular modal logic of branching time with operators "next", "globally", "finally" or "eventually", "until", and "weak until"
- coral <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The collective term for plants of the genus Erythrina
- cow-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any of various South American trees which, when wounded, exude a rich milky liquid
- cumball <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternate name for the Osage Orange tree. See cumball for derivation
- dead <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree that is still standing, but no longer alive. (compare: log, stump)
- dead <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A quantity of paper; a collection of paper such as a book or newspaper
come out of this wicked, evil world and her seductive, dogmatic, heretical religious systems, all of whom seek to prove their righteousness by manipulating colored marks written on a dead tree.
- dead <span class="word-self">treespan>
- made of or pertaining to paper, especially as opposed to a digital alternative
It used to be that SuSE Linux was available in personal and professional; editions, and that the Pro edition came with additional dead tree documentation.
- dead <span class="word-self">treespan> edition
- Paper version of a publication that can be found online
dead-tree edition Derogatory cyberspeak for the paper version of a periodical.
- dead <span class="word-self">treespan> editions
- plural form of dead tree edition
- dead-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternative spelling of dead tree
- decision <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A visualization of a complex decision-making situation in which the possible decisions and their likely outcomes are organized in the form of a graph that resembles a tree
- dragon <span class="word-self">treespan>
- any of several trees, of the genus Dracaena, having a thick trunk, sword-shaped leaves and orange fruit, especially Dracaena draco from the Canary Islands - the source of dragon's blood
- family <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A diagrammatic representation of a pedigree
- family <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The totality of someone's ancestors
- flame <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any one of several trees or shrubs with yellow or bright red flowers
its scarlet-flowered cousin the maple leaved Sterculia, or Australian flame-tree, which we grow in California for ornament, too, is a tough waterproof fiber a couple of inches thick, that is good material for cordage and mats.
- fruit of the poisonous <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Evidence that has been obtained as the result of an illegal act on the part of law enforcement personnel (such as a warrantless search, or continued questioning of a witness who has invoked the right of counsel), and which is therefore excluded from being admitted as evidence in a trial
- fruit <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree that bears a crop of edible fruit on a regular basis
- fruit-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- Attributive form of fruit tree, noun
- fruits of the poisonous <span class="word-self">treespan>
- plural form of fruit of the poisonous tree
- hat <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A hat rack; hatstand
- hedge <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternate name for the Osage Orange tree, referring to its use as barrier vegetation on the Great Plains of the US
- hemp <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Another name of the chaste tree
- jellyfish <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A rare tree, Medusagyne oppositifolia, indigenous to the island of Mahé in the Seychelles
- make like a <span class="word-self">treespan> and leave
- to leave, depart
- mantle-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- A beam of wood over the opening of an open fireplace, from which items were hung
To honour thee, my little parlsey crown.
- money <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A Malabar chestnut (Pachira aquatica)
- money <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A kind of holy tree which can bring money and good fortune
- money <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A cocoa tree. (Theobroma cacao)
- money <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A jade plant (Crassula ovata)
- money <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A cheap, basic kind of tree sculpture, decorated with currency, used as a raffle prize because it would be illegal to offer a cash prize
- nail Jell-O to a <span class="word-self">treespan>
- To do something that is impossible or very difficult, with connotations of “pointless”
They are asking us to nail Jell-O to a tree if they insist on having everything done in three days.
- oak <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree of the genus Quercus, bearing acorns and having lobed leaves
- olive <span class="word-self">treespan>
- An evergreen tree, Olea europaea, that produces olives as fruit
- order <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A set that is the union of subsets (called segments), each of which is totally ordered, such that the segments fit together a certain way
- palm <span class="word-self">treespan>
- common name for a tree of the genus Arecaceae usually characterised by having a single stem or trunk, directly from which sprout several leaves or fronds giving a shape like an outstretched hand
- palm <span class="word-self">treespan> justice
- A pragmatic approach to justice that is entirely discretionary and transcends legal rights or precedent, enabling the court to make such order as it thinks fair and just in the circumstances of the case
vary agreed or established rights to property in an endeavor to achieve a kind of palm tree justice.
- palm-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternative spelling of palm tree
- pear <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree of the genus Pyrus, which bears the pears as fruits
A partridge in a pear tree - The Twelve Days of Christmas.
- pencil <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A shrub found in semi-arid tropical climates
- phylogenetic <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A graph illustrating evolutionary relationships among various entities (most often taxonomic groups) that are known to share a common ancestor
- phylogenetic <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree diagram that represents hypothesised phylogenetic (not tokogenetic) relationships between groups of organisms
- pine <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any coniferous tree in the genus Pinus
- poison <span class="word-self">treespan> bears poison fruit
- Unethical actions in the service of good intentions will have immoral or unethical consequences
- rain <span class="word-self">treespan>
- an ornamental tropical American tree (of uncertain taxonomy) having bipinnate leaves, globose clusters of flowers with crimson stamens, and sweet-pulp pods eaten by cattle
- red-black <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A type of self-balancing binary search tree, typically used to implement associative arrays
- regression <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A data-analysis method that recursively partitions data into sets each of which are simply modeled using regression methods
- regression <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A classification and regression tree
- rubber <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tropical South American tree, Hevea brasiliensis, that is the source of latex
- saddle <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The base on which the rest of the saddle is built. Usually based on wood or a similar synthetic material, It is eventually covered in leather or a leatherlike synthetic. The tree size determines its fit on the horse's back as well as the size of the seat for the rider
- saddle-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternative spelling of saddle tree
- saddle-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternative spelling of saddletree
- search <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree (data structure) set up to facilitate searching
Google came up with a red-black tree, a balanced binary search tree that has quite fast insert and delete operations and is always sorted.
- service <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Either of two rare Old World deciduous trees, Sorbus domestica and Sorbus torminalis
- shake the pagoda <span class="word-self">treespan>
- to find a source of easy enrichment; to become absurdly rich in a short time
- shoe <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A device approximating the shape of a foot that is placed inside a shoe when it is being stored to preserve its shape and extend the life of the shoe
- skill <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A hierarchal visual representation of customizations a player can make to their character. Skill trees can either branch out or eventually fold back to a single point depending on the game. Typically some form of skill point is used as opposed to spending experience points
- strawberry <span class="word-self">treespan>
- an evergreen shrub or small tree in the family Ericaceae, native to the Mediterranean region and western Europe north to western France and Ireland
- suffix <span class="word-self">treespan>
- a radix tree containing all suffixes of the string
- sulfur <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any tree whose branches are covered with yellow club moss spores
- sulphur <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternative spelling of sulfur tree
- sweet gum <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree, Liquidambar styraciflua, found in the southern US
- tea <span class="word-self">treespan>
- a shrub or small tree native to New Zealand and southeast Australia
- technology <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A hierarchical representation of technology that may be researched and implemented for the whole faction by the player, most often in real-time strategy games
- the apple doesn't fall far from the <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Alternative form of apple does not fall far from the tree
- three-on-the-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- On an automobile (especially those produced from 1939 through the mid-1970s), a three-speed manual transmission whose gearshift lever is mounted on the steering column
In driver's education, they used to teach students to drive in cars with a three-on-the-tree, but now the cars all have automatic transmission.
- three-on-the-<span class="word-self">treespan>
- On an automobile, describing the gearshift lever of a steering column-mounted three-speed manual transmission
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any structure or construct having branches akin to (1)
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any plant that is reminiscent of the above but not classified as a tree in the strict botanical sense: for example the banana "tree"
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The structural frame of a saddle
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A large plant, not exactly defined, but typically over four meters in height, a single trunk which grows in girth with age and branches (which also grow in circumference with age)
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- To chase (an animal or person) up a tree
The dog treed the cat.
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A connected graph with no cycles or, equivalently, a connected graph with n vertices and n-1 edges
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A display or listing of entries or elements such that there are primary and secondary entries shown, usually linked by drawn lines or by indenting to the right
We’ll show it as a tree list.
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A recursive data structure in which each node has zero or more nodes as children
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A device used to hold or stretch a shoe open
He put a shoe tree in each of his shoes.
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The structure or wooden frame used in the construction of a saddle used in horse riding
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- An object made from a tree trunk and having multiple hooks or storage platforms
He had the choice of buying a scratching post or a cat tree.
- <span class="word-self">treespan> bark
- all the tissues of a tree external to the vascular cambium; includes epidermis, cortex and phloem
- <span class="word-self">treespan> farm
- A privately-owned farm where trees are grown for eventual harvest, usually softwoods
- <span class="word-self">treespan> farms
- plural form of tree farm
- <span class="word-self">treespan> fern
- Any of many tropical plants, of the families Cyatheaceae and Dicksoniaceae, that have tall trunks topped with fronds
- <span class="word-self">treespan> frog
- Tree frogs are frogs of the family Hylidae. They are of small size and more elegant in form than the true frogs (family Ranidae). Many tree frogs have bright coloration
- <span class="word-self">treespan> frogs
- plural form of tree frog
- <span class="word-self">treespan> house
- a recreational structure built among the branches of a tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan> house
- a tropical residence built in a tree, or on stilts
- <span class="word-self">treespan> houses
- plural form of tree house
- <span class="word-self">treespan> hugger
- An environmental campaigner, especially one who aims to restrict logging
Let's go now, tree-hugger, gasped one of them. The show's over. Everybody beat it, ordered the other.
- <span class="word-self">treespan> huggers
- plural form of tree hugger
- <span class="word-self">treespan> kangaroo
- Any of several Australian macropods, of the genus Dendrolagus, adapted for life in the trees
- <span class="word-self">treespan> kangaroos
- plural form of tree kangaroo
- <span class="word-self">treespan> kingfisher
- the most numerous family, Halcyonidae, of kingfishers; they are widely distributed in Africa, Asia and Australia
- <span class="word-self">treespan> kingfishers
- plural form of tree kingfisher
- <span class="word-self">treespan> lawn
- The grassy area between the sidewalk and the street
- <span class="word-self">treespan> line
- A division in altitude above which trees tend not to grow on mountains
- <span class="word-self">treespan> of heaven
- an Asiatic tree (Ailanthus altissima) having foliage similar to that of the sumacs and ill-scented staminate flowers, much used in traditional Chinese medicine, but considered invasive and often subject to control efforts
- <span class="word-self">treespan> pangolins
- plural form of tree pangolin
- <span class="word-self">treespan> pipit
- A small passerine bird, Anthus trivialis
- <span class="word-self">treespan> pipits
- plural form of tree pipit
- <span class="word-self">treespan> rat
- A squirrel
- <span class="word-self">treespan> rats
- plural form of tree rat
- <span class="word-self">treespan> ring
- The annual growth ring in the trunk of a tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan> sap
- the fluid that circulates within the phloem of a tree to distribute water and nutrients
- <span class="word-self">treespan> shrew
- A small mammal native to the tropical forests of Southeast Asia, resembling the shrew and classified scientifically as order Scandentia
- <span class="word-self">treespan> traversal
- The process for accessing each node of a tree (data structure) in a systematic, hierarchical manner
- <span class="word-self">treespan> traversals
- plural form of tree traversal
- <span class="word-self">treespan> trunk
- the main structural member of a tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan> trunks
- plural form of tree trunk
- trestle <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A structure attached to a mast to support the top and the heel of a topmast
- tulip <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A North American tree, Liriodendron tulipfera, that has squarish leaves, cone-shaped fruit and an aromatic odour
- tung <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any of several East Asian trees, of the genus Aleurites, cultivated for their seeds which are a source of tung oil
- ℝ-order <span class="word-self">treespan>
- An order tree whose segments are homeomorphic to segments of the real line and that is the union of countably many segments
- <span class="word-self">treespan> stump
- stump: the base part of a tree that remains standing after the tree has been felled
- evolutionary <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A phylogenetic tree or evolutionary tree is a branching diagram or "tree" showing the inferred evolutionary relationships among various biological species or other entities based upon similarities and differences in their physical and/or genetic characteristics
- phylogenetic <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A phylogenetic tree or evolutionary tree is a branching diagram or "tree" showing the inferred evolutionary relationships among various biological species or other entities based upon similarities and differences in their physical and/or genetic characteristics
- pulmonary <span class="word-self">treespan>
- (Nükleer Bilimler) The trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles of the lungs, which together resemble an upside-down tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan> hollow
- A void in a branch or trunk, which may provide habitat for animals
- plane <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any of several trees of the genus Platanus, having ball-shaped fruit clusters and, usually, outer bark that flakes off in patches. a large tree with broad leaves that is often planted along streets. Any of ten species of large trees that make up the genus Platanus, sole genus of the family Platanaceae, native to North America, eastern Europe, and Asia. Plane trees are planted widely in cities for their resistance to diseases and to air pollution and because they grow rapidly and furnish quick shade. They are characterized by scaling bark; large, deciduous, usually lobed leaves; and globular heads of flower and seed. Ball-shaped smooth or bristly seed clusters, which dangle singly and often persist after leaf fall, are key identifiers. Winter bark is patchy and picturesque; as the outer bark flakes off, inner bark shows shades of white, gray, green, and yellow
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- {n} the largest of plants, with a ligneous stem and branches
- Monkey Puzzle <span class="word-self">treespan>
- (Botanik, Bitkibilim) Araucaria araucana (popularly called the monkey puzzle tree or monkey tail tree) is an evergreen tree growing to 40 metres (130 ft) tall with a 2 metres (7 ft) trunk diameter. The tree is native to central and southern Chile, western Argentina, and southern Brazil. Araucaria araucana is the hardiest species in the conifer genus Araucaria. Because of the species's great age it is sometimes described as a living fossil
- decision <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree diagram which is used for making decisions in business or computer programming and in which the branches represent choices with associated risks, costs, results, or probabilities
- <span class="word-self">treespan> rat
- (Hayvan Bilim, Zooloji) (colloq.) the grey squirrel
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Something constructed in the form of, or considered as resembling, a tree, consisting of a stem, or stock, and branches; as, a genealogical tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Mathematically, an acyclic (cycle-free) line graph Used to represent the evolutionary history of a set of taxa, with the leaves (or terminal branches) representing contemporary taxa and the internal branches representing hypothesised ancestors (see also rooted tree, unrooted tree)
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- If you say that someone is barking up the wrong tree, you mean that they are following the wrong course of action because their beliefs or ideas about something are incorrect. Scientists in Switzerland realised that most other researchers had been barking up the wrong tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- English actor and theatrical producer noted for his lavish productions of Shakespeare (1853-1917)
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree is a tall plant that has a hard trunk, branches, and leaves. I planted those apple trees. a variety of shrubs and trees. see also Christmas tree, family tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A group of nodes that contains no cycles, also called a directed acyclic graph or DAG Trees typically represent decision-making structures, such as the progression from a directory to a subdirectory to a document
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A physical topology consisting of a hierarchy of master-slave connections between a concentrator and other FDDI nodes (including subordinate concentrators)
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A woodyplant, generally single-stemmed, that reaches a height of more 15 feet at maturity A tree has three major parts: roots, trunk and the crown
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree is a graph which contains no cycles We can visualize a tree by drawing it with a root at the top with the vertices below leading to the leaves at the lowest If the vertices are placed on levels, higher level vertices are referred to the parents of the vertices directly below them, while the lower vertices are similarly referred to as their children A Tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A large woody plant that has a trunk which supports branches and leaves
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A graphical diagram used to display the hierarchical structure of the directories on a disk The Windows 95 Explorer allows the disk to be viewed this way
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- See Tree, n
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any perennial woody plant of considerable size (usually over twenty feet high) and growing with a single trunk
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A woody plant usually having one or more perennial stems, a more or less definitely formed crown of foliage, and a height of al least 12 feet at maturity
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- {f} force to climb on a tree; put in a difficult situation; put a shoe on a shoetree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- a figure that branches from a single root; "genealogical tree"
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- {i} plant with wood stem from which branches grow at some height above the ground; bush or shrub similar in appearance to a tree; pole, beam
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- chase a bear up a tree with dogs and kill it
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- This is the metaphor used to describe hierarchies
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Any tall plant, including many conifers and flowering plants, as well as extinct lycophytes and sphenophytes
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- To drive to a tree; to cause to ascend a tree; as, a dog trees a squirrel
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A tree is a graph which is connected but contains no circuits
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- a tall perennial woody plant having a main trunk and branches forming a distinct elevated crown; includes both gymnosperms and angiosperms
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A data structure similar to a linked list, except that each element carries with it the address of two or more other elements, rather than just one Trees are an efficient way of storing items which must be searched for and retrieved quickly
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- [/tree Mother [D1 Dn]] The elements are set as a tree, with daughters aligned vertically along their tops Horizontally, the mother appears centred over the midpoint of the centre daughter (if there are an odd number of daughters) or over the a point midway between the midpoints of the two centre daughters (if there are an even number of daughters) Note that midpoint need not correspond to one half of the x-dimension for a particular subtree Rather, it is defined in terms of the position of the mother of the subtree, which is itself dependent on the subtree's daughters' positions There are no restrictions on the elements that constitute the nodes of the tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- If someone can't see the wood for the trees in British English, or can't see the forest for the trees in American English, they are very involved in the details of something and so they do not notice what is important about the thing as a whole
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- a woody plant 12 or more feet (four or more meters) tall with a single main stem (trunk) and a more or less distinct crown of leaves
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- a very large plant that is at least 20 feet tall, it has only one main trunk (stem) that grows in circumference (around) every year The stem is persistent (it does not die back), and the stem lives for many, many years The stem also has a vascular system - it has cells that look and act like straws
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- See Lead tree, under Lead
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- the top of the tree: see top. British actor and producer who founded the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (1904). Woody perennial plant. Most trees have a single self-supporting trunk containing woody tissues, and in most species the trunk produces secondary limbs called branches. Trees provide many valuable products, especially wood, one of the world's chief building materials, and wood pulp, used in papermaking. Wood is also a major fuel source. Trees supply edible fruits and nuts. In addition, trees take in carbon dioxide and release oxygen during photosynthesis. Their root systems help retain water and soil, preventing floods and erosion. Trees and forests provide habitats for a wide variety of animals, and they beautify both natural and altered landscapes. Growth rings in the trunk indicate the age of most trees. The tallest trees are the Pacific coast redwoods; the oldest are the bristlecone pines, some of which are over 4,000 years old. See also conifer; deciduous tree; evergreen; forest; shrub; softwood. big tree bodhi tree bo tree Christmas tree deciduous tree Joshua Tree National Park monkey puzzle tree phylogenetic tree plane tree rubber tree tree fern tree frog tree toad tree of heaven Tree Sir Herbert Draper Beerbohm tulip tree world tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- English actor and theatrical producer noted for his lavish productions of Shakespeare (1853-1917) a tall perennial woody plant having a main trunk and branches forming a distinct elevated crown; includes both gymnosperms and angiosperms a figure that branches from a single root; "genealogical tree"
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Wood; timber
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- The set of cells in a koutline that share a common root cell, including the root cell
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A mass of crystals, aggregated in arborescent forms, obtained by precipitation of a metal from solution
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- In communications networks, a physical topology consisting of a hierarchy of master-slave connections between a concentrator and other FDDI nodes (including subordinate concentrators)
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A restricted type of directed acyclic graph in which there is only one root node, and in which each node has at most one parent
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A woody plant usually having one or more perennial stems, a more or less definitely formed crown of foliage, and a height of at least 12 feet at maturity
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A cross or gallows; as Tyburn tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Indented hierarchical structure (branches, leaves) with multiple uses in PeopleSoft; for example, use to define an organization structure or chart of accounts, or use to display reporting relationships or dependencies
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Woody plants having one erect perennial stem or trunk at least 3 inches d b h , a more or less definitely formed crown of foliage, and a height of at least 13 feet (at maturity)
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A piece of timber, or something commonly made of timber; used in composition, as in axletree, boottree, chesstree, crosstree, whiffletree, and the like
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A rigging stand that sits on the floor that can lift a bar of lights up to a certain height Also known as 'winch ups' due to the fact the stand is usually telescoped up by operating a hand winch attached to the side of the tree
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- Directory Tree is the structure used to store, retreive, locate files and directories All directroy trees begin at a single root location and branch out from there
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- A large, woody plant having one or several self-supporting stems or trunks and numerous branches that reach a height of at least 20 feet at maturity
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- b A data structure consisting of nodes which may contain other nodes via its branches Unlike a tree in nature, the root node is usually represented at the top of the structure and does not have a parent node All other nodes have a single parent Nodes having no child nodes are called leaf nodes An XML document represents a tree structure
- <span class="word-self">treespan>
- To place upon a tree; to fit with a tree; to stretch upon a tree; as, to tree a boot