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Tenses: chains, chaining, chained

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administrative chain..
a heavy iron chain s..
albert chain
Albert chain
anchor chain
ball and chain
bicycle chain
binary chain
block chain
bra chain
bucket chain dredger
camshaft drive chain
chain-smoke
chain-smoking
chain accident
chain adjusting scre..
chain and bucket
chain armor
chain armour
chain belt
chain block
chain bolt
chain bridge
chain bucket
chain cable
chain case
chaincase
chain code
chain complex
chain complexes
chain compressor
chain conveyor
chain coupling
chain drill
chain drive
chain drive hub
chain driven
chain drum
chain gang
chain gangs
chain gun
chain guns
chain hotel
chain hotels
chain island
chain islands
chain ladder
chain ladder method
chain letter
chain letters
chain lifter
chain lightning
chainlink fence
chain lockers
chain mail
chainmail
chainman
chain of
chain of command
chain of custody
chain of events
chain of evidence
chain of production
chain of thought
chain of title
chain pickerel
chainplate
chain pump
chain reaction
chain reactions
chain restaurant
chainring
chain rule
chain saw
chainsaw
chain saws
chain shot
chain smoke
chainsmoking
chain stitch
chain store
chain stores
chain story
chain tower
chain towers
chain wheel
daisy-chain
daisy chain
food chain
green chain
Gunter's chain
heterochain
hogchain
homochain
interchain
intrachain
keychain
key chain
Markov chain
megachain
mountain chain
off the chain
retail chain
sidechain
side chain
signifying chain
snow chain
subchain
supply chain
toolchain
waist chain
 
chainadd into favorites/ˈʧeːjn/
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Etymology: [ 'chAn ] (noun.) 14th century. From Old French chaeine (French: chaîne), from Latin catena.
Synonyms: alternation, catena, concatenation, conglomerate, consecution, continuity, group, order, progression, row, sequence, set, string, syndicate, train, trust, bond, bracelet, cable

zincir, boyunduruk, sınırlama, zincir takmak, zincirlemek, kayıt altına almak, silsile, silsile (dağ), bağ, seri, ölçme zinciri ile ölçmek, zincirle bağla, dizi, zincire vurmak, ölçme zinciri, zincirleme, yatay eksen, elini kolunu bağlamak, irtibat, kolye, zincirle bağlamak, chain gang prangalı mahkumlar takımı, chain armor zincirden örülmüş zırh, öIçme zinciri, KOD SERİSİ:bkz: "net, chain, cell system", zincirle, chain lightning yılankavi şekilde görünen şimşek, chain belt zincir kayış, silsile bağ, chain letter zincirleme mektup, kod serisi, chain of command komu, zinciri, zincirle(mek),

1 zincir  isim     ts
2 boyunduruk  isim     ts
3 sınırlama  isim     ts
4 zincir takmak     ts
5 zincirlemek  fiil     ts
6 kayıt altına almak  fiil     ts
7 silsile  isim     ts
8 silsile (dağ)  isim     ts
9 bağ     ts
10 seri     ts
11 ölçme zinciri ile ölçmek  fiil     ts
12 zincirle bağla  fiil     ts
13 dizi     ts
14 zincire vurmak  fiil     ts
15 ölçme zinciri  isim     ts
16 zincirleme     ts
17 yatay eksen  Dilbilim     ts
18 elini kolunu bağlamak     ts
19 irtibat  Havacılık     ts
20 kolye     ts
21 zincirle bağlamak     ts
22 chain gang prangalı mahkumlar takımı     ts
23 chain armor zincirden örülmüş zırh     ts
24 öIçme zinciri     ts
25 KOD SERİSİ:bkz: "net, chain, cell system"  Askeri     ts
26 zincirle  fiil     ts
27 chain lightning yılankavi şekilde görünen şimşek     ts
28 chain belt zincir kayış     ts
29 silsile bağ     ts
30 chain letter zincirleme mektup     ts
31 kod serisi  Askeri     ts
32 chain of command komu     ts
33chain of zinciri     ts
34chained zincirle(mek)     ts
More results

A unit of length equal to 22 yards. The length of a commonly used surveying chain. The length of a cricket pitch. Equal to 17.85 metres. Equal to 4 rods, A sequence of linked house purchases, each of which is dependent on the preceding and succeeding purchase (said to be "broken" if a buyer or seller pulls out), To fasten something with a chain, To link multiple items together, A series of interconnected links of known length, used as a measuring device, A number of atoms in a series, which combine to form a molecule, A series of interconnected rings or links usually made of metal, A series of interconnected things, A series of stores or businesses with the same brand name, To secure someone with fetters, A long measuring tape, To obstruct the mouth of a river etc with a chain, To measure a distance using a 66-foot long chain, as in land surveying, To load and automatically run (a program), To be chained to another data item, To relate data items with a chain of pointers, a series of (usually metal) rings or links fitted into one another to make a flexible ligament a necklace made by a stringing objects together; "a string of beads"; "a strand of pearls"; anything that acts as a restraint a number of similar establishments (stores or restaurants or banks or hotels or theaters) under one ownership a series of things depending on each other as if linked together; "the chain of command"; "a complicated concatenation of circumstances", A series of things linked together; or a series of things connected and following each other in succession; as, a chain of mountains; a chain of events or ideas, An instrument which consists of links and is used in measuring land, That which confines, fetters, or secures, as a chain; a bond; as, the chains of habit, A series of links or rings, usually of metal, connected, or fitted into one another, used for various purposes, as of support, of restraint, of ornament, of the exertion and transmission of mechanical power, etc, any path in a manifold is a chain, Iron links bolted to the side of a vessel to bold the dead-eyes connected with the shrouds; also, the channels, The warp threads of a web, To measure with the chain, To unite closely and strongly, To keep in slavery; to enslave, To fasten, bind, or connect with a chain; to fasten or bind securely, as with a chain; as, to chain a bulldog, To relate data items with a chain of pointers; to be chained to another data item, using a chain; comprising of a chain, a series of hills or mountains; "the valley was between two ranges of hills"; "the plains lay just beyond the mountain range", British biochemist (born in Germany) who isolated and purified penicillin, which had been discovered in 1928 by Sir Alexander Fleming (1906-1979), a unit of length, anything that acts as a restraint, metal shackles; for hands or legs, a necklace made by a stringing objects together; "a string of beads"; "a strand of pearls", An operation repeated in a sequence, such that each result depends upon the previous result, or an initial value One example is the CBC operating mode, Modern bicycles use roller chain to connect the cranks to the rear wheel Chain drives are among the most efficient means of power transmission known Chain size is specified by pitch and width The pitch is the distance between rollers (1/2" on all modern bicycle chain) The width is the internal width where the sprocket teeth fit in Bicycle chain comes in two basic widths: 1/8" chain is used on most single-speed bicycles, and bicycles with internal gearing 3/32" chain is used on derailer equipped bicycles that have more than 3 speeds Chains for derailer applications also come in various external widths Newer clusters which have more sprockets use chain with thinner side plates and flush rivets For more information on chains, see my article on Chain Maintenance, Unit of length equal to 66 feet, used especially in the U S public land surveys The original measuring instrument (Gunter's chain) was literally a chain consisting of 100 iron links, each 7 92 inches long Steel-ribbon tapes began to supersede chains around 1900, but surveying tapes are often still called "chains" and measuring with a tape is often called "chaining " The chain is a convenient unit in cadastral surveys because 10 square chains equal 1 acre, fasten or secure with chains; "Chain the chairs together", a number of similar establishments (stores or restaurants or banks or hotels or theaters) under one ownership, a series of (usually metal) rings or links fitted into one another to make a flexible ligament, If prisoners are in chains, they have thick rings of metal round their wrists or ankles to prevent them from escaping. He'd spent four and a half years in windowless cells, much of the time in chains, A chain consists of metal rings connected together in a line. His open shirt revealed a fat gold chain The dogs were leaping and growling at the full stretch of their chains, series of metal rings which are linked together; mountain range; group of (stores, banks, etc.) under one management; device used to measure distances (made up of a series of links measuring 20 meters), imprison, place in fetters, tie down; make a chain, If a person or thing is chained to something, they are fastened to it with a chain. The dog was chained to the leg of the one solid garden seat She chained her bike to the railings We were sitting together in our cell, chained to the wall. Chain up means the same as chain. I'll lock the doors and chain you up All the rowing boats were chained up, A chain of things is a group of them existing or arranged in a line. a chain of islands known as the Windward Islands Students tried to form a human chain around the parliament, (chemistry) a series of linked atoms (generally in an organic molecule), To protect by drawing a chain across, as a harbor, A chain of events is a series of them happening one after another. the bizarre chain of events that led to his departure in January 1938. = series see also food chain. German-born British biochemist. He isolated and purified penicillin; for this achievement he shared a 1945 Nobel Prize with Sir Alexander Fleming, who discovered penicillin in 1928. chain silicate Pennine Chain chain drive chain mail chain reaction Chain Sir Ernst Boris food chain polymerase chain reaction, A chain of shops, hotels, or other businesses is a number of them owned by the same person or company. a large supermarket chain. Italy's leading chain of cinemas, In real estate measurements (surveying), a chain is 66 feet long or 100 links, each link being 7 92 inches The measurement may change when used in fields other than surveying, a series of things depending on each other as if linked together; "the chain of command"; "a complicated concatenation of circumstances", A unit of measure equal to 66 feet (20 meters), A measurement of horizontal distance, 66 feet Areas expressed in square chains can immediately be converted to acres by dividing by 10, A unit of surveying measurement When Kansas was originally surveyed the method of measurement was with a 66 foot "chain" divided into 100 links Can also be the procedure of measuring a line using a calibrated steel tape today, A learned sequence of behaviors that are usually performed in the same order; all behaviors tend to be performed once the first behavior in the chain is completed Getting dressed in the morning is an example, (n ) A topology in which every processor is connected to two others, except for two end processors that are connected to only one other See also Hamiltonian, ring, A series of merchant locations which are managed/owned by the same entity, (chemistry) a series of linked atoms (generally in an organic molecule) British biochemist (born in Germany) who isolated and purified penicillin, which had been discovered in 1928 by Sir Alexander Fleming (1906-1979) a unit of length fasten or secure with chains; "Chain the chairs together", connect or arrange into a chain by linking, Unit of length equal to 66 feet, - In real estate measurements (surveying), a chain is 66 feet long or 100 links, each link being 7 92 inches The measurement may change when used in field other than surveying, A non-metric measure of distance common to land surveying, forestry and fire management One chain equals 66 feet, Chain pharmacies, such as Pharma Plus and Lawtons, employ pharmacy managers who are salaried employees of head office Head office directs all marketing, merchandising, buying, professional programs, etc An individual or corporation must own five or more stores to be considered a chain A chain is not necessarily a member of the Canadian Association of Chain Drug Stores, Some computer devices support chaining, the ability to string multiple devices in a sequence plugged into just one computer port Often, but not always, such a chain will require some sort of terminator to mark the end For an example, a SCSI scanner may be plugged into a SCSI CD-ROM drive that is plugged into a SCSI hard drive that is in turn plugged into the main computer For all these components to work properly, the scanner would also have to have a proper terminator in use Device chaining has been around a long time, and it is interesting to note that C64/128 serial devices supported it from the very beginning Today the most common low-cost chainable devices in use support USB while the fastest low-cost chainable devices in use support FireWire, unit of measure in land survey, equal to 66 feet (20 meters) (80 chains equal one mile) Commonly used to report fire perimeters and other fireline distances, chains can be easily converted to acreage (e g , 10 square chains equal one acre), a directed nonbranching sequence of nonintersecting line segments and (or) arcs bounded by nodes, not necessarily distinct, at each end Area chain, complete chain, and network chain are special cases of chain, and share all characteristics of the general case as defined above, A movement in which dancers pass each other, either to cross the set or to move half way or all the way around the set They pass on alternate sides, first passing R to R, then L to L and so on Three different holds may be used - hand, arm and elbow The hand hold is a light handshake hold below waist level For the arm hold, each dancer lightly grips the inside elbow of the other so that the two forearms lie alongside each other The elbow hold is achieved by hooking the other dancer's arm inside elbow to inside elbow, Unit of linear measure (length) commonly used in forestry and equal to 66 feet (80 chains = 1 mile), A unit of measurement used by surveyors A chain consists of 100 links equal to 66 feet, a measuring tape, 50 m or 75 m in length, used to measure distances This term is derived from an old unit of measurement: (80 Ch=1 mile), In real estate measurements (surveying), a chain is ll feet long or 100 links, each link being 7 92 inches The measurement may change when used in fields other than surveying, A unit of linear measurement; 66 feet, A unit of linear measurement equal to 66 feet, linked in a chain, bound with chains, Simple past tense and past participle of chain, Present participle of chain, The act or process by which something is chained, past of chain, bound with chains; "enchained demons strained in anger to gnaw on his bones"; "prisoners in chains", restrained; connected, linked (related items), bound with chains; "enchained demons strained in anger to gnaw on his bones"; "prisoners in chains, If you say that someone is chained to a person or a situation, you are emphasizing that there are reasons why they cannot leave that person or situation, even though you think they might like to. At work, he was chained to a system of boring meetings, For 0-1 integer variables only, if one variable is forced to a bound, a number of variables may be forced into one bound or the other These variables are said to be chained, A mode of interaction optionally used by a DSA that cannot perform an operation itself The DSA chains by invoking an operation of another DSA and then relaying the outcome to the original requester, A method used in certain transfer systems (mostly for securities) for processing instructions, A way of joining several conditional statements in sequence, An instructional technique that transforms a learned response into a stimulus for the next desired response, (n ) The linking of one item to another so that the two are dependent on one another This can refer to files, programs, or data storage, A process of linking instructions together to save register storage time Each instruction passes its results to the next linked instruction so that several operations may be done in approximately the same amount of time as one operation, A method of attaching programmers to desks to speed up output, chaining is the learning of a sequence of responses through shaping, Vegetation removal that is accomplished by hooking a large anchor chain between two bulldozers; as the dozers move through the vegetation, the vegetation is knocked to the ground Chaining kills a large percentage of the vegetation, and is often followed a year or two later by burning and/or seeding, (n ) The ability to take the results of one vector operation and use them directly as input operands to a second vector instruction, without the need to store to memory or registers the results of the first vector operation Chaining (or linking as it is sometimes called) can significantly speed up a calculation, A mechanical method of land clearing (or possible type conversion) to reduce or eliminate undesirable vegetation (e g , reduce the number of juniper trees to enhance herbage production for livestock use) With this method, a heavy chain is dragged between two tractors for the purpose of uprooting the undesirable vegetation, 1- General : A process of linking together radar target reports (plots and tracks) and other information relating to one particular object 2- SASS-C : All plots relating to the same target object are associated (chained) using the Object Correlator (OC) The chaining process allocates the same aircraft identity number (ACID) to each plot which relates to one target object Any plots which cannot be correlated to a target object are classified as unchained and are allocated a negative aircraft identification, A method of linking multiple ISA Server computers together Individual ISA Server and proxy computers and arrays or any combination can be chained Communication is in an upstream, hierarchical order, similar to ties but linked together They can be cut to any length and place force between the teeth to draw them together along the archwire or rotate them, Third person singular simple present of to chain, A number of faceted glass drops linked by metal chandelier pins The drops are sometimes graded in size, Plural of chain, the--Companies that own many individual bookstores The two biggest in bookselling are Barnes & Noble and Borders They contrast with the independents (see below), An introduction to chains is linked to FirstView See also numbers for how to count the total number of chains WARNING: the "Number of Chains" reported in the message box is incorrect, There are 80 chains in a mile, each one being 22 yards,

35 A unit of length equal to 22 yards. The length of a commonly used surveying chain. The length of a cricket pitch. Equal to 17.85 metres. Equal to 4 rods     ts
36 A sequence of linked house purchases, each of which is dependent on the preceding and succeeding purchase (said to be "broken" if a buyer or seller pulls out)     ts
37 To fasten something with a chain     ts
38 To link multiple items together     ts
39 A series of interconnected links of known length, used as a measuring device     ts
40 A number of atoms in a series, which combine to form a molecule - "When examined, the molecular chain included oxygen and hydrogen."     ts
41 A series of interconnected rings or links usually made of metal - "He wore a gold chain around the neck."     ts
42 A series of interconnected things - "This led to an unfortunate chain of events."     ts
43 A series of stores or businesses with the same brand name - "That chain of restaurants is expanding into our town."     ts
44 To secure someone with fetters     ts
45 A long measuring tape     ts
46 To obstruct the mouth of a river etc with a chain     ts
47 To measure a distance using a 66-foot long chain, as in land surveying     ts
48 To load and automatically run (a program) - "Recent versions of AntiSpam no longer use the Config file but have a Settings file instead, so when I updated the Config file to chain SpamStamp it had no effect as it was a redundant file."     ts
49 To be chained to another data item     ts
50 To relate data items with a chain of pointers     ts
51 a series of (usually metal) rings or links fitted into one another to make a flexible ligament a necklace made by a stringing objects together; "a string of beads"; "a strand of pearls"; anything that acts as a restraint a number of similar establishments (stores or restaurants or banks or hotels or theaters) under one ownership a series of things depending on each other as if linked together; "the chain of command"; "a complicated concatenation of circumstances"     ts
52 A series of things linked together; or a series of things connected and following each other in succession; as, a chain of mountains; a chain of events or ideas     ts
53 An instrument which consists of links and is used in measuring land     ts
54 That which confines, fetters, or secures, as a chain; a bond; as, the chains of habit     ts
55 A series of links or rings, usually of metal, connected, or fitted into one another, used for various purposes, as of support, of restraint, of ornament, of the exertion and transmission of mechanical power, etc     ts
56 any path in a manifold is a chain     ts
57 Iron links bolted to the side of a vessel to bold the dead-eyes connected with the shrouds; also, the channels     ts
58 The warp threads of a web     ts
59 To measure with the chain     ts
60 To unite closely and strongly     ts
61 To keep in slavery; to enslave     ts
62 To fasten, bind, or connect with a chain; to fasten or bind securely, as with a chain; as, to chain a bulldog     ts
63 To relate data items with a chain of pointers; to be chained to another data item     ts
64 using a chain; comprising of a chain  sıfat     ts
65 a series of hills or mountains; "the valley was between two ranges of hills"; "the plains lay just beyond the mountain range"     ts
66 British biochemist (born in Germany) who isolated and purified penicillin, which had been discovered in 1928 by Sir Alexander Fleming (1906-1979)     ts
67 a unit of length     ts
68 anything that acts as a restraint     ts
69 metal shackles; for hands or legs     ts
70 a necklace made by a stringing objects together; "a string of beads"; "a strand of pearls"     ts
71 An operation repeated in a sequence, such that each result depends upon the previous result, or an initial value One example is the CBC operating mode     ts
72 Modern bicycles use roller chain to connect the cranks to the rear wheel Chain drives are among the most efficient means of power transmission known Chain size is specified by pitch and width The pitch is the distance between rollers (1/2" on all modern bicycle chain) The width is the internal width where the sprocket teeth fit in Bicycle chain comes in two basic widths: 1/8" chain is used on most single-speed bicycles, and bicycles with internal gearing 3/32" chain is used on derailer equipped bicycles that have more than 3 speeds Chains for derailer applications also come in various external widths Newer clusters which have more sprockets use chain with thinner side plates and flush rivets For more information on chains, see my article on Chain Maintenance     ts
73 Unit of length equal to 66 feet, used especially in the U S public land surveys The original measuring instrument (Gunter's chain) was literally a chain consisting of 100 iron links, each 7 92 inches long Steel-ribbon tapes began to supersede chains around 1900, but surveying tapes are often still called "chains" and measuring with a tape is often called "chaining " The chain is a convenient unit in cadastral surveys because 10 square chains equal 1 acre     ts
74 fasten or secure with chains; "Chain the chairs together"     ts
75 a number of similar establishments (stores or restaurants or banks or hotels or theaters) under one ownership     ts
76 a series of (usually metal) rings or links fitted into one another to make a flexible ligament     ts
77 If prisoners are in chains, they have thick rings of metal round their wrists or ankles to prevent them from escaping. He'd spent four and a half years in windowless cells, much of the time in chains     ts
78 A chain consists of metal rings connected together in a line. His open shirt revealed a fat gold chain The dogs were leaping and growling at the full stretch of their chains     ts
79 series of metal rings which are linked together; mountain range; group of (stores, banks, etc.) under one management; device used to measure distances (made up of a series of links measuring 20 meters)  isim     ts
80 imprison, place in fetters, tie down; make a chain  fiil     ts
81 If a person or thing is chained to something, they are fastened to it with a chain. The dog was chained to the leg of the one solid garden seat She chained her bike to the railings We were sitting together in our cell, chained to the wall. Chain up means the same as chain. I'll lock the doors and chain you up All the rowing boats were chained up     ts
82 A chain of things is a group of them existing or arranged in a line. a chain of islands known as the Windward Islands Students tried to form a human chain around the parliament     ts
83 (chemistry) a series of linked atoms (generally in an organic molecule)     ts
84 To protect by drawing a chain across, as a harbor     ts
85 A chain of events is a series of them happening one after another. the bizarre chain of events that led to his departure in January 1938. = series see also food chain. German-born British biochemist. He isolated and purified penicillin; for this achievement he shared a 1945 Nobel Prize with Sir Alexander Fleming, who discovered penicillin in 1928. chain silicate Pennine Chain chain drive chain mail chain reaction Chain Sir Ernst Boris food chain polymerase chain reaction     ts
86 A chain of shops, hotels, or other businesses is a number of them owned by the same person or company. a large supermarket chain. Italy's leading chain of cinemas     ts
87 In real estate measurements (surveying), a chain is 66 feet long or 100 links, each link being 7 92 inches The measurement may change when used in fields other than surveying     ts
88 a series of things depending on each other as if linked together; "the chain of command"; "a complicated concatenation of circumstances"     ts
89 A unit of measure equal to 66 feet (20 meters)     ts
90 A measurement of horizontal distance, 66 feet Areas expressed in square chains can immediately be converted to acres by dividing by 10     ts
91 A unit of surveying measurement When Kansas was originally surveyed the method of measurement was with a 66 foot "chain" divided into 100 links Can also be the procedure of measuring a line using a calibrated steel tape today     ts
92 A learned sequence of behaviors that are usually performed in the same order; all behaviors tend to be performed once the first behavior in the chain is completed Getting dressed in the morning is an example     ts
93 (n ) A topology in which every processor is connected to two others, except for two end processors that are connected to only one other See also Hamiltonian, ring     ts
94 A series of merchant locations which are managed/owned by the same entity     ts
95 (chemistry) a series of linked atoms (generally in an organic molecule) British biochemist (born in Germany) who isolated and purified penicillin, which had been discovered in 1928 by Sir Alexander Fleming (1906-1979) a unit of length fasten or secure with chains; "Chain the chairs together"     ts
96 connect or arrange into a chain by linking     ts
97 Unit of length equal to 66 feet     ts
98 - In real estate measurements (surveying), a chain is 66 feet long or 100 links, each link being 7 92 inches The measurement may change when used in field other than surveying     ts
99 A non-metric measure of distance common to land surveying, forestry and fire management One chain equals 66 feet     ts
100 Chain pharmacies, such as Pharma Plus and Lawtons, employ pharmacy managers who are salaried employees of head office Head office directs all marketing, merchandising, buying, professional programs, etc An individual or corporation must own five or more stores to be considered a chain A chain is not necessarily a member of the Canadian Association of Chain Drug Stores     ts
101 Some computer devices support chaining, the ability to string multiple devices in a sequence plugged into just one computer port Often, but not always, such a chain will require some sort of terminator to mark the end For an example, a SCSI scanner may be plugged into a SCSI CD-ROM drive that is plugged into a SCSI hard drive that is in turn plugged into the main computer For all these components to work properly, the scanner would also have to have a proper terminator in use Device chaining has been around a long time, and it is interesting to note that C64/128 serial devices supported it from the very beginning Today the most common low-cost chainable devices in use support USB while the fastest low-cost chainable devices in use support FireWire     ts
102 unit of measure in land survey, equal to 66 feet (20 meters) (80 chains equal one mile) Commonly used to report fire perimeters and other fireline distances, chains can be easily converted to acreage (e g , 10 square chains equal one acre)     ts
103 a directed nonbranching sequence of nonintersecting line segments and (or) arcs bounded by nodes, not necessarily distinct, at each end Area chain, complete chain, and network chain are special cases of chain, and share all characteristics of the general case as defined above     ts
104 A movement in which dancers pass each other, either to cross the set or to move half way or all the way around the set They pass on alternate sides, first passing R to R, then L to L and so on Three different holds may be used - hand, arm and elbow The hand hold is a light handshake hold below waist level For the arm hold, each dancer lightly grips the inside elbow of the other so that the two forearms lie alongside each other The elbow hold is achieved by hooking the other dancer's arm inside elbow to inside elbow     ts
105 Unit of linear measure (length) commonly used in forestry and equal to 66 feet (80 chains = 1 mile)     ts
106 A unit of measurement used by surveyors A chain consists of 100 links equal to 66 feet     ts
107 a measuring tape, 50 m or 75 m in length, used to measure distances This term is derived from an old unit of measurement: (80 Ch=1 mile)     ts
108 In real estate measurements (surveying), a chain is ll feet long or 100 links, each link being 7 92 inches The measurement may change when used in fields other than surveying     ts
109 A unit of linear measurement; 66 feet     ts
110 A unit of linear measurement equal to 66 feet     ts
111chained linked in a chain     ts
112chained bound with chains     ts
113chained Simple past tense and past participle of chain     ts
114chaining Present participle of chain     ts
115chaining The act or process by which something is chained     ts
116chained past of chain     ts
117chained bound with chains; "enchained demons strained in anger to gnaw on his bones"; "prisoners in chains"     ts
118chained restrained; connected, linked (related items)  sıfat     ts
119chained bound with chains; "enchained demons strained in anger to gnaw on his bones"; "prisoners in chains     ts
120chained If you say that someone is chained to a person or a situation, you are emphasizing that there are reasons why they cannot leave that person or situation, even though you think they might like to. At work, he was chained to a system of boring meetings     ts
121chaining For 0-1 integer variables only, if one variable is forced to a bound, a number of variables may be forced into one bound or the other These variables are said to be chained     ts
122chaining A mode of interaction optionally used by a DSA that cannot perform an operation itself The DSA chains by invoking an operation of another DSA and then relaying the outcome to the original requester     ts
123chaining A method used in certain transfer systems (mostly for securities) for processing instructions     ts
124chaining A way of joining several conditional statements in sequence     ts
125chaining An instructional technique that transforms a learned response into a stimulus for the next desired response     ts
126chaining (n ) The linking of one item to another so that the two are dependent on one another This can refer to files, programs, or data storage     ts
127chaining A process of linking instructions together to save register storage time Each instruction passes its results to the next linked instruction so that several operations may be done in approximately the same amount of time as one operation     ts
128chaining A method of attaching programmers to desks to speed up output     ts
129chaining chaining is the learning of a sequence of responses through shaping     ts
130chaining Vegetation removal that is accomplished by hooking a large anchor chain between two bulldozers; as the dozers move through the vegetation, the vegetation is knocked to the ground Chaining kills a large percentage of the vegetation, and is often followed a year or two later by burning and/or seeding     ts
131chaining (n ) The ability to take the results of one vector operation and use them directly as input operands to a second vector instruction, without the need to store to memory or registers the results of the first vector operation Chaining (or linking as it is sometimes called) can significantly speed up a calculation     ts
132chaining A mechanical method of land clearing (or possible type conversion) to reduce or eliminate undesirable vegetation (e g , reduce the number of juniper trees to enhance herbage production for livestock use) With this method, a heavy chain is dragged between two tractors for the purpose of uprooting the undesirable vegetation     ts
133chaining 1- General : A process of linking together radar target reports (plots and tracks) and other information relating to one particular object 2- SASS-C : All plots relating to the same target object are associated (chained) using the Object Correlator (OC) The chaining process allocates the same aircraft identity number (ACID) to each plot which relates to one target object Any plots which cannot be correlated to a target object are classified as unchained and are allocated a negative aircraft identification     ts
134chaining A method of linking multiple ISA Server computers together Individual ISA Server and proxy computers and arrays or any combination can be chained Communication is in an upstream, hierarchical order     ts
135chains similar to ties but linked together They can be cut to any length and place force between the teeth to draw them together along the archwire or rotate them     ts
136chains Third person singular simple present of to chain     ts
137chains A number of faceted glass drops linked by metal chandelier pins The drops are sometimes graded in size     ts
138chains Plural of chain     ts
139chains the--Companies that own many individual bookstores The two biggest in bookselling are Barnes & Noble and Borders They contrast with the independents (see below)     ts
140chains An introduction to chains is linked to FirstView See also numbers for how to count the total number of chains WARNING: the "Number of Chains" reported in the message box is incorrect     ts
141chains There are 80 chains in a mile, each one being 22 yards     ts
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Sözlük . Dictionary . Wörterbuch . λεξικό . Diccionario . 字典 . словарь . Dictionnaire . القاموس . Dizionario . מילון . Matokeo . واژه نامه . 辞書
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada chain kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. chain kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan chain kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.

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