Interchange

listen to the pronunciation of Interchange
İngilizce - Türkçe
{f} takas etmek
değişme
yer değişmek
{f} değiştirmek
değiştirme
takas
değiş tokuş etmek
(Otomotiv) alt geçit
değiş tokuş yapmak
değiştokuş etmek
(Otomotiv) üst geçit
değişim
arasında değişim
değiş tokuş etme
alış veriş
karşılıklı değişme
nöbetleşme
değiş-tokuş
aktarma
aktarmak
yerlerini değiştirmek
değiş tokuş
yer değiştirme
araçların giriş ya da dönüş yapabildiği ve bir hız yoluyla diğer bir yolun kesiştiği kavşak
{f} değiştir

Kadınlar sürekli aynı zevk için değiştirilebilir enstrümanlardır. - Women are interchangeable instruments for a constantly identical pleasure.

Bu iki parça değiştirilebilir. - These two parts are interchangeable.

değiş tokuş,v.değiştir: n.değiştirme
{i} kavşak
(Askeri) AKTARMA ETMEK: Tek konşimento ile yapılan bir taşıttan, seyir hattı kısmen veya tamamen müşterek olan, diğer bir taşıta nakletmek
değişim (arasında)
yerlerini değiştir
vasıtaların trafiği aksatmadan giriş veya dönüş yapabildiği ve bir hız yoluyla diğer bi
kavşak/değiş tokuş
köprülü kavşak
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
(Askeri) Amerika Standart Bilgi Mübadelesi Kodu
Defense Freight Railway Interchange Fleet
(Askeri) Savunma Nakliye Demiryolu Aktarma Filosu
İngilizce - İngilizce
to switch (each of two things)
to mutually give and receive (something); to exchange
A connection between two or more lines, services or modes of transport; a station at which such a connection can be made

Holborn tube station is the only interchange between the London Underground Central and Piccadilly Lines.

A highway junction in which traffic may change from one road to another without crossing a stream of traffic
An act of interchanging
to alternate
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) Interchange (or, colloquially, the bench or interchange bench) is a team position in Australian rules football, consisting of players who are part of the selected team but are not currently on the field of play
cause to change places; "interchange this screw for one of a smaller size"
Where two highways meet and intersect
to swap or change places
Alternate succession; alternation; a mingling
{i} act of placing one thing in the place of another; alternate giving and receiving; exchange; alternation; system for routing traffic on and off highways
If you interchange one thing with another, or you interchange two things, each thing takes the place of the other or is exchanged for the other. You can also say that two things interchange. She likes to interchange her furnishings at home with the stock in her shop Your task is to interchange words so that the sentence makes sense. the point where the illusions of the stage and reality begin to interchange. Interchange is also a noun. the interchange of matter and energy at atomic or sub-atomic levels
The discrete transmission of the set of data sent at one time, such as order or shipment data sent between trading partners
The exchange of information, transaction data and money among banks Interchange systems are managed by Visa and MasterCard associations according to their requirements and are very standardized so banks and merchants worldwide can use them
To cause to follow alternately; to intermingle; to vary; as, to interchange cares with pleasures
Fee that an acquirer pays to an association (or credit card company) to compensate the issuer for risks associated with accepting and funding the cardholder's account This fee comes out of the discount rate charged to the merchant
mutual interaction; the activity of interchanging or reciprocating
An interchange on a motorway, freeway, or road is a place where it joins a main road or another motorway or freeway. = junction. to put each of two things in the place of the other, or to be exchanged in this way
a grade separated intersection with one or more turning roadways (or ramps) for travel between the through roads
Electric power or energy that flows from one entity to another Some forms of interchange are
The domestic and international systems operated by VISA and MasterCard for authorization, settlement and the passing through of interchange and other fees, as well as other monetary and non-monetary information related to bankcard activities
The data transmitted between a sender and receiver in a single transmission
an interchange is the junction of a freeway and another road To provide access control, interchanges keep the traffic flowing on the freeway, but there may be some restrictions on the connecting routes A complete interchange provides for movements in all directions; a partial interchange has some missing connections There are a wide variety of interchanges, including cloverleads, stacks, single point urban, and trumpets
The flow of information between issuers and acquirers, e g transactions, retrieval requests, chargebacks
reverse (a direction, attitude, or course of action)
Capability of media to function properly in various systems
The act of mutually changing; the act of mutually giving and receiving; exchange; as, the interchange of civilities between two persons
Exchange of railcars between connecting railroads at specified junction points Glossary Top
Transfer of freight from one carrier to another
The exchange of information, transaction data and money among banks Interchange systems are managed by Visa and MasterCard associations and are very standardized so banks and merchants worldwide can use them
give to, and receive from, one another; "Would you change places with me?"; "We have been exchanging letters for a year"
In EDI, the exchange of electronic information between companies Also, the group of transaction sets transmitted from one sender to one receiver at one time Delineated by interchange control segments
Your credit card processor is required to pay "Interchange" to the card issuer Interchange rates vary depending on the type of card presented; how it is processed; and the type of merchant accepting the credit card More on Interchange
The mutual exchange of commodities between two persons or countries; barter; commerce
mutual interaction; the activity of interchanging or reciprocating a junction of highways on different levels that permits traffic to move from one to another without crossing traffic streams reverse (a direction, attitude, or course of action)
The standardized electronic exchange of financial and non-financial data associated with sale and credit data between merchant acquirers and card issuers on various types of MasterCard and Visa transactions
A grade-separated over-pass or under-pass of two or more major highways that allows more traffic at greater speeds than a traffic light controlled intersection Federal Interstate Highway design standards mandate complete limited access via grade-separated interchanges
Transfer of a container from one party to another
The interconnection of roadways with one or more grade separations providing for safe and efficient exchange of traffic
Interchange is the fee paid by acquirers to card issuers for each transaction The fee is determined by the nature of the business and the processing procedures followed Rates are determined by the card schemes who assess the level of risk and expense involved in processing a transaction
To make an interchange; to alternate
Point of entry/exit for trucks delivering and picking up containerized cargo Point where pickups and deposits of containers in storage area or yard are assigned
The exchange of Authorization requests, Transaction records, funds, or information between an Acquirer and CAS through an intermediate Network or other facility
a junction of highways on different levels that permits traffic to move from one to another without crossing traffic streams
If there is an interchange of ideas or information among a group of people, each person talks about his or her ideas or gives information to the others. What made the meeting exciting was the interchange of ideas from different disciplines = exchange
{f} exchange, trade; place one thing in the place of another; alternate; alternately give and receive
– the system of grade-separated ramps connecting two or more roadways
a highway intersection or junction in which traffic may change from one road to another without crossing a stream of traffic
To put each in the place of the other; to give and take mutually; to exchange; to reciprocate; as, to interchange places; they interchanged friendly offices and services
- A system of vertically separated roads, interconnecting with one or more turning roadways (or ramps) for travel between through roads
reciprocal transfer of equivalent sums of money especially the currencies of different countries; "he earns his living from the interchange of currency"
ınterchange
{v} to exchange, barter, succeed to
ınterchange
{n} an exchange
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A 7-bit character set and character encoding, abbreviated ASCII. Based on the Roman alphabet as used in modern English, the code is employed almost universally on computing machinery
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
ASCII is a standard seven-bit code that was proposed by ANSI in 1963, and finalized in 1968 Standard ASCII assigns the numbers 0-127 to different alphabetic and control characters Extended ASCII, extends this character set to 256 to include non-English and graphic characters
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A standard character-to-number encoding widely used in the computer industry Plain text, Postscript files, and BinHex files are among the types of data that are transferred in ASCII format Spreadsheets, compiled programs, and graphics are transferred across the net in binary format In addition, the computer community has extended the ASCII character set so it includes control and other characters This change allowed for e-mail, "8-bit clean" data transmission, essential for the development of workstation TCP/IP applications This lets users turn their home computers into Internet hosts
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
The code numbers used by computers to represent all the upper and lower-case Latin letters, numbers, punctuation, etc A plain text document with no other formatting is also called an ASCII file
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A seven bit encoding scheme (8 bits including parity check) that describes a coded character set used for the iformation interchange among data processing and communication systems The character set includes control and graphical characters
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
(ASCII) is a code for representing English characters as numbers, with each character assigned a number from 0-127 ASCII file A text file in which each byte represents one character according to the ASCII code ASCII files are sometimes called plain text files
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
ASCII - Alphanumeric characters are represented by numbers from 0 to 127 and translated into a 7-bit binary code ASCII allows for easy transfer of text-only files between different kinds of computers
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A seven-bit binary code standardized by ANSI for use by personal computers and some mainframes to represent alphanumeric and graphical characters
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
ASCII standard, standard character set for letters and symbols
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
The character-oriented code widely used in data processing and data communications systems
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A scheme that provides standard numeric values to represent letters, numbers, punctuation marks and other characters The use of standard values allows computers and computer programs to exchange data
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A 7-bit binary code, providing 128 different binary combinations for standard American keyboards ASCII is used to encode all 26 letters of the alphabet (upper and lower case), all ten decimal digits (0 to 9), punctuation marks, standard graphics, and special control codes into machine language Although ASCII has 128 different codes, only 7 bits are needed for each different code ASCII characters are generally stored inside 8-bit bytes, providing room for the 128 ASCII codes plus another 128 codes, totaling 256 characters This 8-bit code is referred to as EXTENDED ASCII
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A code with seven information signals plus one parity check signal, designed for interworking between computers (i e , the transmittal of text) The most popular coding method used by computers for converting letters, numbers, punctuation and control codes with digital form
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A 7-bit binary code standardized by American National Standards Institute (ANSI) for use by personal computers (PCs) and some mainframes to represent alphanumeric and graphical characters An additional bit is included to form an 8-bit character (byte)
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
Pronounced 'ask-ee', a code used by computers to represent alphanumeric characters and some punctuation marks Each character is represented by a 7-digit binary number, 0000000 to 1111111, giving a total character set of 128 E-mail messages sent over the Internet take ASCII form, meaning that some kind of conversion is often required
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
(ASCII) The primary encoding character set used in computers The current version has 7 bits per character 8-bit "words" or character codes provide a bit that can be used as a check bit to help verify that the remaining 7 bits are correct
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
Basic computer characters accepted by all American machines and many foreign ones
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
ASCII is also sometimes called TTY because of its heritage in the teletype industry ASCII is used to represent characters, numbers, and control codes It is the most commonly recognized standard among the general PC and minicomputer users
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A standard character-to-number encoding widely used in the computer industry
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
ASCII (pronounced ass-key) is the standard character set displayed by most computers; it's what you see in e-mail messages Thus the somewhat redundant phrase "plain ascii" to denote text that has no special fonts or graphics elements
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
The character set used by most American computers Supersets of ASCII contain non-English characters
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
The predominant character set encoding of present-day computers ASCII uses 7 bits for each character It does not include accented letters or any other letter forms not used in English (such as the German sharp-S or the Norwegian ae-ligature) Compare to Unicode
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A standard code used in data transmission in which 128 symbols are each represented by a binary number
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A standard character-to-number encoding widely used in the computer industry See also: EBCDIC [Source: RFC1392]
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A coding scheme using 7 or 8 bits that assigns numeric values up to 256 characters, including letters, numerals, punctuation marks, control characters, and other symbols ASCII was developed in 1968 to standardize data transmission among disparate hardware and software systems and is built into most minicomputers and all personal computers
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A set of 128 alphanumeric and special control characters ASCII files are also known as plain text files This is the de-facto world-wide standard for the code numbers used by computers to represent all the upper and lower-case Latin letters, numbers, punctuation marks, etc
American Standard Code for Information Interchange
A common method of numbering characters so they can be processed For instance, the letter A is number 65 It is slowly being replaced by the ANSI character set table and the use of international code pages that can display foreign characters
Audio Interchange File Format
(Computers) format for storing high quality music and audio samples (developed by Apple, used on both Macintosh and PC)
Electronic Data Interchange
transmission of standard electronic documents between computer systems of companies or business organizations, EDI
Graphics Interchange Format
format of a graphic file
Interchange