kanal, yatak/oluk/kanal, radyo, TV kanal, (Mecâzen) Ruhani bir varlıkla veya ölmüş bir insanın ruhuyla iletişim yapılan kanal, yönlendirmek, hat, yön, akak, geçit, savak, bağlantı, akanak, maceraya sevketmek, yol, yatak, kanal yolu, su yolu, suyolu, oluk, kanal açmak, kanala dökmek, nehir yatağı, iletişim, palasarte, nehir yatağı, akak, mecra, mahreç, KANAL:Bir sistem veya devre üzerinde müstakilen haberleşme sağlayan bir yol. Bir sistem veya devre üzerinde (frekans bölümünü çoğalma veya zaman bölümünü çoğaltma usulleriyle meydana gelen) müstakil kanal miktarı, bunun temin edilebileceği müstakil haberleşme yollarının miktarı ile ölçülür, yol; su yolu; boğaz, İrc de tartısma ve konusma alanlarına verilen ad . Kanal, Tüp veya boru şeklindeki oluşumun içinden geçen yol, kanat, geçit, yöneltmek, çevirmek, mecraya sevketmek, oymak, kanal aç/yönlendir, bir su yolunun derin kısıml, palasartalar, geniş boğaz, yatak kanal, Kanalize, yönlendirme, kanallar, oluklama, kanallık, kanallasma, kanal açma, kanallama, oluklanim, oluklanım, emir ve komuta kanalı, EMİR VE KOMUTA KANALI:bkz: "channel", Manş denizi,
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kanal
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yatak/oluk/kanal
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radyo, TV kanal isim
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(Mecâzen) Ruhani bir varlıkla veya ölmüş bir insanın ruhuyla iletişim yapılan kanal
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yönlendirmek
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hat
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yön
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akak
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geçit İnşaat
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savak İnşaat
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bağlantı
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akanak
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maceraya sevketmek
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yol
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yatak
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kanal yolu
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su yolu
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suyolu
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oluk
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kanal açmak
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kanala dökmek
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nehir yatağı
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iletişim
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palasarte Askeri
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nehir yatağı, akak, mecra isim
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mahreç
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KANAL:Bir sistem veya devre üzerinde müstakilen haberleşme sağlayan bir yol. Bir sistem veya devre üzerinde (frekans bölümünü çoğalma veya zaman bölümünü çoğaltma usulleriyle meydana gelen) müstakil kanal miktarı, bunun temin edilebileceği müstakil haberleşme yollarının miktarı ile ölçülür Askeri
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yol; su yolu; boğaz isim
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İrc de tartısma ve konusma alanlarına verilen ad . Kanal
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Tüp veya boru şeklindeki oluşumun içinden geçen yol, kanat, geçit Tıp
the English Channel, The part that connects a data source to a data sink, A path for conveying electrical or electromagnetic signals, usually distinguished from other parallel paths, A single path provided by a transmission medium via physical separation, such as by multipair cable, The narrow conducting portion of a MOSFET transistor, A narrow body of water between two land masses, The natural or man-made deeper course through a reef, bar, bay, or any shallow body of water, The navigable part of a river, A single path provided by a transmission medium via spectral or protocol separation, such as by frequency or time-division multiplexing, A connection between initiating and terminating nodes of a circuit, A specific radio frequency or band of frequencies used for transmitting television, An obsolete means of delivering up-to-date Internet content, To direct the flow of something, To assume the personality of another person, typically a historic figure, in a theatrical or paranormal presentation, A particular area for conversations on an IRC network, analogous to a chatroom and often dedicated to a specific topic, A channel of distribution, The portion of a storage medium, such as a track or a band, that is accessible to a given reading or writing station or head, The way in a turbine pump where the pressure is built up, The physical confine of a river or slough, consisting of a bed and banks, A specific radio frequency or band of frequencies, usually in conjunction with a predetermined letter, number, or codeword, and allocated by international agreement, ch, chan, A channel is the object or person through which a spirit communicates information, chan‚”, Generically refers to the user access channel across which frame relay data travels Within a given T1 or E1 physical line, a channel can be one of the following, depending of how the line is configured, In communications, a medium for transferring information, which is also called a line or circuit Depending on its type, a communications channel can carry information in analog or digital form A communications channel can be a physical link, such as a cable that connects two stations in a network, or it can consist of some electromagnetic transmission, (watercourse) An open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically or continuously contains moving water, or which forms a connecting link between two bodies of water River, creek, run, branch, anabranch, and tributary are some of the terms used to describe natural channels Natural channels may be single or braided (see Braiding of river channels) Canal and floodway are some of the terms used to describe artificial channels, send from one person or place to another; "transmit a message", direct the flow of; "channel infomartion towards a broad audience", A channel is a route used by boats, A channel is a band of radio waves on which radio messages can be sent and received, If you do something through a particular channel, or particular channels, that is the system or organization that you use to achieve your aims or to communicate. The Americans recognise that the UN can be the channel for greater diplomatic activity Moscow and the Baltic republics are re-opening channels of communication, If you channel money or resources into something, you arrange for them to be used for that thing, rather than for a wider range of things. Jacques Delors wants a system set up to channel funds to the poor countries, A channel is a television station. the only serious current affairs programme on either channel. the presenter of Channel 4 News. = station, chan·nel channels channelling channelled in AM, use channeling, channeled, In ordinary language, a channel is a path for passing data In MIDI, channels are used to separate different sections of a song that are going to play together Each channel is assigned to a single instrument in any particular instant of time One channel is usually reserved for a percussion voice To channelize means to move to another channel, canal; station; television station and its programs; (Computers) group chat on the Internet, conference, chat room on the Internet, If you channel your energies or emotions into something, you concentrate on or do that one thing, rather than a range of things. Stephen is channelling his energies into a novel called Blue, A channel is a passage along which water flows. Keep the drainage channel clear, a bodily passage or tube lined with epithelial cells and conveying a secretion or other substance; "the tear duct was obstructed"; "the alimentary canal"; "poison is released through a channel in the snake's fangs", a way of selling a company's product either directly or via distributors; "possible distribution channels are wholesalers or small retailers or retail chains or direct mailers or your own stores", a long narrow furrow cut either by a natural process (such as erosion) or by a tool (as e g a groove in a phonograph record), The Channel or the English Channel is the narrow area of water between England and France. the English Channel. stream channel Beagle Channel Bristol Channel Channel Islands Channel Tunnel English Channel the Channel Mozambique Channel Robeson Channel Saint George's Channel, convey through a particular medium, send through a channel; direct, refer, transmit or serve as the medium for transmission; "Sound carries well over water"; "The airwaves carry the sound"; "Many metals conduct heat", An open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically or continuously contains moving water or which forms a connecting link between two bodies of water River, creek, run, branch, anabranch, and tributary are some of the terms used to describe natural channels Natural channels may be single or braided Canal and floodway are some of the terms used to describe artificial channels (4), Communication path Multiple channels can be multiplexed over a single cable in certain environments In IBM, the specific path between large computers (such as mainframes) and attached peripheral devices Specific frequency allocation and bandwidth Downstream channels are used for television in the United States are 6 MHz wide, A pattern comprising two parallel lines that circumscribe a price trend The parallel comprise a support (the lower line) and a resistance (the upper line) The channel gives rise to presumption that price will not pass the support or resistance But ultimately, all channels break Thus the predictive value of a channel is subject to rules of interpretation which give a probability of turn or breakout depending on the relative term of the channel and the geometric patterns, if any, that are contained within the channel, A generic term for a communications path on a given medium; multiplexing techniques allow providers to put multiple channels over a single medium See also multiplexer, (n ) A point-to-point connection between two processes through which messages can be sent Programming systems that rely on channels are sometimes called connection-oriented, to distinguish them from the more widespread connectionless systems in which messages are sent to named destinations rather than through named channels See also CSP, channel mask, The basic unit of discussion on IRC Once one joins a channel, others read everything one types on that channel Channels can either be named with numbers or with strings that begin with a `#' sign and can have topic descriptions (which are generally irrelevant to the actual subject of discussion), (1) The smallest subdivision of a transmission system by means of which a single type of communication service is provided, for example, a voice channel or a data channel (2) A communications path via a carrier or microwave radio (3) In data communications, a path for electrical transmission between two or more points (4) Within a computer, the electronic paths along which data flows between the input-output units of a computer and the customer premises equipment (CPU) Synonym: circuit, facility, line, link or path, In wireless, a designated radio frequency available for use by the transmitter and receiver In audio, the circuit path for a specific signal, or a functional unit that is designed to independently process a signal, A dynamic information-delivery source A web site becomes a web channel when it dynamically broadcasts its content to users who have expressed an interest in receiving that information Users can select channels they want to receive so they do not have to type the address for each site every time they want that information It's ready for them when they want it, stored in a cache for easy viewing offline See also Push, An archaic term used to describe an autonomous hardware feature that controls a sequence of "channel commands" which direct blocks of data to move between a computer's memory and IO devices The channel interprets the commands, signals the IO device and moves the data Channels (at least by that name) perhaps arose first on the IBM 709 in 1958 and continue today by that name in the IBM 390 as well as other big iron A channel includes the function of modern DMA, Channel refers to a set of hardware in a receiver that detects, locks on and continuously tracks the signal from a single navigation satellite The more receiver channels available, the greater number of satellite signals a receiver can simultaneously lock-on and track, The set of all samples of the same kind within an image; for example, all the blue samples in a truecolor image (The term "component" is also used, but not in this specification ) A sample is the intersection of a channel and a pixel, One signal path, such as one of the two composing a stereo signal or one of the three containing the bass, midrange and treble segments of an audio signal Also, a broadcast frequency as in TV and CB transmission, (1) A natural or artificial waterway of perceptible extent which either periodically or continuously contains moving water, or which forms a connecting link between two bodies of water (2) The part of a body of water deep enough to be used for navigation through an area otherwise too shallow for navigation (3) The deepest portion of a stream, bay, or strait through which the main volume of current of water flows (4) An open conduit for water either naturally or artificially created, but does not include artificially created irrigation, return flow or stockwatering channels, The frequency number used by the transmitter to send signals to the receiver If radios transmit on the same frequency, or channel, glitching will occur in the active receiver on that channel This is due to conflicting signals sent by the two radios Flying sites should have a frequency control system to ensure that only one radio operates on any given channel at one time This is usually a board with some type of marker for each channel If the marker is not available, someone else is using that channel Do not use your radio unless you are sure you are the only one on the frequency, (l) A defect in cement quality which prevents zone isolation, usually in the form of void space in the annulus behind cemented casing The channel constitutes a conduit for fluid flow between a completed interval and other permeable strata (2) A course or perceptible depression where surface water has traveled (3) In a pulse height analyzer, an energy gate in which only pulses occurring within a specific energy range are registered The difference between the upper and lower limits is the width of the channel The detail of the spectrum thus produced is related to the width and number of channels in the instrument (4) A path along which digital or other information may flow in a computer (5) An allocated frequency or time segment in a data multiplexing system; one of a stream of data bands (6) The position in a frame or sequence of data on magnetic tape that represents a specific measurement, An open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically, or continuously contains moving water, or forms a connecting link between two bodies of water River, creek, run, branch, anabranch, and tributary are some of the terms used to describe natural channels Natural channels may be single or braided Canal and floodway are some of the terms used to describe artificial channels, A dedicated communication connection between a transmitting and receiving device Channel is also used to identify an I/O port in mini- and mainframe computers, A method, provided by Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI), for sending messages to an individual device within a MIDI setup There are 16 MIDI channel numbers Devices in a MIDI setup can be directed to respond only to messages marked with a channel number specific to the device, The end-to-end transmission path connecting any two points at which application specific equipment is connected Equipment and work area cables are included in the channel, A single range of the electromagnetic spectrum as detected by a sensor The name Channel refers to the transmission to earth of the data sampled from that band See also Band, direct the flow of; "channel infomartion towards a broad audience, The hollow bed where a stream of water runs or may run, where the main current flows, or which affords the best and safest passage for vessels, The deeper part of a river, harbor, strait, etc, A strait, or narrow sea, between two portions of lands; as, the British Channel, The distribution or marketing segmentation of products, customers and geographic areas into common groups that are supplied, serviced and measured in similar ways, That through which anything passes; means of passing, conveying, or transmitting; as, the news was conveyed to us by different channels, A gutter; a groove, as in a fluted column, a path over which electrical signals can pass; "a channel is typically what you rent from a telephone company", (often plural) a means of communication or access; "it must go through official channels"; "lines of communication were set up between the two firms", a deep and relatively narrow body of water (as in a river or a harbor or a strait linking two larger bodies) that allows the best passage for vessels; "the ship went aground in the channel", a television station and its programs; "a satellite TV channel"; "surfing through the channels"; "they offer more than one hundred channels", a passage for water (or other fluids) to flow through; "the fields were crossed with irrigation channels"; "gutters carried off the rainwater into a series of channels under the street", Flat ledges of heavy plank bolted edgewise to the outside of a vessel, to increase the spread of the shrouds and carry them clear of the bulwarks, To form a channel in; to cut or wear a channel or channels in; to groove, To course through or over, as in a channel, Simple past tense and past participle of channel, Having a vehicle's height reduced by lowering the body with respect to the frame rails, Third-person singular simple present indicative form of channel, plural form of channel, Formal lines of command and procedure, A practice based on the belief that dead people can communicate with living people by making their spirit enter a living person’s body and speaking through them, (mediumistic), a term used in reference to the claimed process of receiving messages or inspiration from invisible beings or spirits, (Physics) Channeling is the process that constrains the path of a charged particle in a crystalline solid, (insurance, legal), a term used to indicate a contractual or legal redirection of responsibilities from an organization to another, When a host (channel) serves as a vocal conduit for a so-called intelligent being or spirit that temporarily inhabits the channel, past of channel, The act or process of forming a channel or channels, The phenomenon observed among gear lubricants and greases when they thicken due to cold weather or other causes, to such an extent that a groove is formed through which the part to be lubricated moves without actually coming in full contact with the lubricant A term used in percolation filtration; may be defined as: a preponderance of flow through certain portions of the clay bed, A channel or a system of channels; a groove, The illegal practice of directing people to, or away from, certain areas or neighborhoods because of minority status; Steering See Fair Housing, Cutting, chipping or routing a prescribed sectional area in a linear pattern on any surface, usually in concrete or plaster return to top, Bringing in messages from the other side Channelers convey messages from angels, ascended masters, guides and the deceased, though the latter are usually called "mediums ", Channeling is the act of receiving a communication from a spirit guide, an entity of higher wisdom Everyone has the capacity to be a channel, also referred to as a medium Spirit guides are beings who communicate through channels to help humans on their path in life, A method similar to that used by Spiritists in which a spirit of a long dead individual is conjured up However, while Spiritists generally believe that one's soul remains relatively unchanged after death, most channelers believe that the soul evolves to higher planes of existence They usually try to make contact with a single, spiritually evolved being That being's consciousness is channeled through the medium and relays guidance and information to the group, through the use of the medium's voice Channeling has existed since the 1850's and many groups consider themselves independent of the New Age movement The popular book, A Course in Miracles, was channeled by Jesus through a New Age psychologist, Dr Helen Schucman over an 8 year period, The phenomenon in which a metabolite 'I', product of an enzyme 'E1', is directly transferred to the next enzyme 'E2', which uses it as a substrate Thus in such a short pathway, the complex E1 I is a better substrate for E2, compared to the freely diffusible small molecule 'I' Both the following reactions may occur and compete: Direct transfer (channeling): E1 I + E2 --> E1 I E2 --> E1 + E2 I --> Release/rebinding ('normal'): E1 I --> E1+ I and then E2 + I --> E2 I -->, in New Age thought, "the growing awareness of any part of the one Being that it can access any of the rest of itself" (Van Rheenen 1996a, 161), Mediumship; a word for an entity talking through a human to convey a message to the physical plane, Channeling is a process where information from an external source of consciousness is accessed and expressed People can channel entities, their Higher Self or energy We are all connected at an energy level, in a deep and intimate way Channeling is the activity of consciously connecting to specific energies that we don't normally see in this reality It is an opening of the lines of communication between us and the Angelic Realm, the Kingdoms of Nature, Other Souls (some who have become Teachers and Guides) and to information that may assist us in our growth It is about listening to Spirit, "Channeling the sole, making a riggett in the outersole for the wax thread to be lain" [Holme, 1688] Cutting or incising the channel in the outsole "Riggett" is a variation of Riggot, a groove or channel, The flow of water or other solution through a limited number of passages in a filter or ion exchanger bed, instead of distributed flow through all passages in the bed May be due to fouling of the bed and plugging of many passages, poor distributor design, flow rates which are too low, faulty operational procedures, or other causes, present participle of channel, Communication with guides and others from the other side, Cutting, chipping or routing a prescribed sectional area in a linear pattern on any surface, usually in concrete or plaster, To convey through, as in channeling forces through a structure, When a medium apparently allows a spirit to communicate through them, the process of a person speaking the words of a discarnate entity who uses the person as a medium, instrument, vessel, or channel, A New Age word for mediumship, channeling involves allowing a spirit entity to speak through the chaneller The process is virtually impossible to prove and therefore does not enjoy a particularly good reputation, formation of a channel in lubricating grease by a lubricated element, such as a gear or rolling contact bearing, leaving shoulders of grease that serve as a seal and reservoir This phenomenon is usually desirable, although a channel that is too deep or permanent could cause lubrication failure, the practice of bringing information from higher dimensions into the third dimension - a spiritual or psychic medium channels information, the New Age name for the act of spiritism or mediumship, Designing the plan's incentives to encourage plan members to use network providers, A grooved or furrowed effect, (a form of communication of spirit or ones higher self through human form), A new age practice where a person goes into an altered state of consciousness and allows another spirit or entity to enter him/her in order to communicate to us According to New Age teaching, this spirit or entity can be from another dimension, the spirit realm, or from another part of the galaxy or universe, is the New Age name for mediumship, formation of a "groove" in grease (or in oil too viscous to flow readily under existing conditions) Channels are cut by the motion of a lubricated element, such as a gear or the rolling member of an anti-friction bearing The amount of channelling can be controlled to a large extent by the consistency or viscosity of the lubricant While some degree of channelling is desirable to prevent excessive churning of the lubricant, particularly in high speed rolling element bearings, a channel so permanent as to preclude further movement of lubricant to the contacting surfaces might cause equipment failure due to lack of lubricant, A system of grooves cut into binding boards to carry the cords that attach the boards to quires The use of channels meant that the cords would not stand proud on the inside of the boards, a practice based on the belief that dead people can communicate with living people by making their spirit enter a living person's body and speaking through them, The media through which information flows, Latest evolution of the "Push" technology Channels allow users to have select content sent to their desktops automatically Most channels contain data that's updated daily, A 'Chat Room' on IRC, or Internet Relay Chat, Boards to hold chain-plates and shroud away from the side of the ship, A system for delivering regular, updated content from a web site to a 'subscribing' browser, official routes of communication; "you have to go through channels, third-person singular of channel, plural of channel, one of 16 different data paths that are available to carry messages in MIDI, A bed or stream of a waterway, Power Macs iMac Channel iBook/PowerBook MacInSchoolComputer Profiles iMac Power Mac PowerBook/iBook Performas Mac Clones Older Macs Lisa NeXTEditorial ArchiveMac Daniel's AdviceEmail ListsLEMchat (uses AIM)Message BoardsOnline Tech JournalConsumer advice, reviews guides, dealsSoftwareApple HistoryBest of the Web Best of the Mac Web surveysMiscellaneous Links Best Used Mac Buys Used Mac Dealers Video Cards Mac OS X Mac Linux Macspeak RAM UpgradesAbout Low End MacSite Contacts, Each image is divided up into separate channels and then recombined before being sent to the output device An output device is most usually a screen The channels that are used when rendering images to a screen are Red, Green, and Blue Other output devices may use different channels Channels can be useful when working on images that need adjustment to one particular color If, for example, the removal of "red-eye" is the goal, work on the Red channel is most obviously a ready solution Channels can be seen as masks that allow or restrict the output of the color that the channel represents By running filters against this channel information, many varied and subtle effects can be put in to play by the experienced GIMP user, Web pages or other content to which you may "subscribe" so that your browser (or some other software supplied by the channel provider) will periodically fetch new information from the channel provider, These are images in a hologram which change abruptly from one to another as the viewer passes by They can also fade or overlap as they change Animated holograms are essentially made up of hundreds of image channels, An Internet technology based upon server push which broadcasts information to Web browsers so that users can view the information passively, as with television, rather than interactively as in traditional Web use, Energy channels into which the X-ray counts are accumulated The RÖNTEC software displays 1024 energy channels for EDX spectra They determine the width and height of a spectrum, Television broadcasts use particular areas of radiofrequency spectrum, which have been set aside for the purpose There are two areas - known as the VHF (very high frequency) and UHF (ultra high frequency) bands used in Australia In Australia, each band is divided into a number of equal width channels, each 7 MHz wide The channels in the bands are numbered sequentially (VHF is divided into channels 1-12, UHF channels 28-69) Each broadcaster uses a channel for its main transmitter and might use other channels for smaller, local area transmitters, official routes of communication; "you have to go through channels", An individual UMTS radio channel is defined in the IMT 2000 standard as having a bandwidth of 5 MHz This means that an individual UMTS radio channel, for example, ranges from 1900 to 1905 MHz How many radio channels a UMTS provider can make available to customers depends on which frequency spectrum has been won in the auctioning of UMTS mobile phone frequencies Each radio channel can transport more than one connection So that more than one subscriber can use the same channel, multiple access methods such as W-CDMA (FDD), TD-CDMA (TDD) or cdma2000 are used for 3G networks It nevertheless depends on the service profile of the connection how many connections per channel can be managed at the same time It is also true that in the planning of the radio network, the effect of cellular respiration for CDMA should be considered, Independent streams of audio For example, monophonic recordings contain a single channel of audio whereas stereo recordings contain two channels, left and right The number of channels affects the file size; stereo files are twice as large as mono files, E g 32 channel, 24 channel - refers to the number of separate audio controls available to the sound man or the monitor man Note: more than one microphone could be connected to one channel Each channel typically controls the sound of one instrument, or one vocalist Submitted by Karl Kuenning RFL from Roadie Net, Virtual circuits inside "paths" The objective behind paths and channels is to "gang" channels together and get quick switching at lower cost, forms of communication with other players gossip- an open/ public communication channel say- communication heard only within the same virtual " room" tell- to say something to a particular individual, heard only by them page- a tell message which sends an audible "beep" to the receiver team- a channel heard only by members of the same team Socials- commands which demonstrate emotion/ action which cannot otherwise be demonstrated/enacted in a 2 dimensional setting, such as smiling, laughing, nodding,etc Client- software that is used that accesses gaming sites, such as Telnet-basic DOS based client which allows a person to create an open link rather than a standard internet connection which retrieves data and then closes/ terminates ZMUD- popular gaming client which has all the triggers, whistles, and bells, (meridians) paths the chi flows within the body, In the Bradley model, the elements through which messages are transmitted 11 5b, Channels (sometimes described as netcasting) enable users to subscribe to particular sites on the Internet, in much the same way that one might subscribe to a newspaper or magazine The use of channels allows both the user and the information provider to select the information to be sent and schedule its transmission, There are two types of "channels" when talking about R/C One is the channel the Tx transmits on, the other is how many control surfaces a Tx can control, A range of wavelength intervals selected from the electromagnetic spectrum, (or Nadis) Subtle energy paths through which the chi flows The three main channels are the central channel (sushumna), the left (ida) and the right (pingala) channels which run parallel to and in front of the spinal column, body of water that connects the North Sea with the Atlantic Ocean and separates France and the United Kingdom, English Channel,
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the English Channel
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The part that connects a data source to a data sink - "A channel stretches between them."
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A path for conveying electrical or electromagnetic signals, usually distinguished from other parallel paths - "We are using one of the 24 channels."
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A single path provided by a transmission medium via physical separation, such as by multipair cable - "The channel is created by bonding the signals from these four pairs."
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The narrow conducting portion of a MOSFET transistor
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A narrow body of water between two land masses - "The English Channel lies between France and England."
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The natural or man-made deeper course through a reef, bar, bay, or any shallow body of water - "A channel was dredged to allow ocean-going vessels to reach the city."
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The navigable part of a river - "We were careful to keep our boat in the channel."
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A single path provided by a transmission medium via spectral or protocol separation, such as by frequency or time-division multiplexing - "Their call is being carried on channel 6 of the T-1 line."
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A connection between initiating and terminating nodes of a circuit - "The guard-rail provided the channel between the downed wire and the tree."
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A specific radio frequency or band of frequencies used for transmitting television - "NBC is on channel 11 in San Jose."
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An obsolete means of delivering up-to-date Internet content - "To access channels in Windows 98, you don't have to go any farther than your desktop."
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To direct the flow of something - "We will channel the traffic to the left with these cones."
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To assume the personality of another person, typically a historic figure, in a theatrical or paranormal presentation - "When it is my turn to sing Karaoke, I am going to channel Ray Charles."
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A particular area for conversations on an IRC network, analogous to a chatroom and often dedicated to a specific topic
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A channel of distribution
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The portion of a storage medium, such as a track or a band, that is accessible to a given reading or writing station or head - "This chip in this disk drive is the channel device."
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The way in a turbine pump where the pressure is built up - "The liquid is pressurized in the lateral channel."
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The physical confine of a river or slough, consisting of a bed and banks - "The water coming out of the waterwheel created a standing wave in the channel."
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A specific radio frequency or band of frequencies, usually in conjunction with a predetermined letter, number, or codeword, and allocated by international agreement - "KNDD is the channel at 107.7 MHz in Seattle."
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ch
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chan
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A channel is the object or person through which a spirit communicates information
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chan‚”
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Generically refers to the user access channel across which frame relay data travels Within a given T1 or E1 physical line, a channel can be one of the following, depending of how the line is configured
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In communications, a medium for transferring information, which is also called a line or circuit Depending on its type, a communications channel can carry information in analog or digital form A communications channel can be a physical link, such as a cable that connects two stations in a network, or it can consist of some electromagnetic transmission
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(watercourse) An open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically or continuously contains moving water, or which forms a connecting link between two bodies of water River, creek, run, branch, anabranch, and tributary are some of the terms used to describe natural channels Natural channels may be single or braided (see Braiding of river channels) Canal and floodway are some of the terms used to describe artificial channels
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send from one person or place to another; "transmit a message"
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direct the flow of; "channel infomartion towards a broad audience"
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A channel is a route used by boats
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A channel is a band of radio waves on which radio messages can be sent and received
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If you do something through a particular channel, or particular channels, that is the system or organization that you use to achieve your aims or to communicate. The Americans recognise that the UN can be the channel for greater diplomatic activity Moscow and the Baltic republics are re-opening channels of communication
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If you channel money or resources into something, you arrange for them to be used for that thing, rather than for a wider range of things. Jacques Delors wants a system set up to channel funds to the poor countries
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A channel is a television station. the only serious current affairs programme on either channel. the presenter of Channel 4 News. = station
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chan·nel channels channelling channelled in AM, use channeling, channeled
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In ordinary language, a channel is a path for passing data In MIDI, channels are used to separate different sections of a song that are going to play together Each channel is assigned to a single instrument in any particular instant of time One channel is usually reserved for a percussion voice To channelize means to move to another channel
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canal; station; television station and its programs; (Computers) group chat on the Internet, conference, chat room on the Internet isim
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If you channel your energies or emotions into something, you concentrate on or do that one thing, rather than a range of things. Stephen is channelling his energies into a novel called Blue
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A channel is a passage along which water flows. Keep the drainage channel clear
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a bodily passage or tube lined with epithelial cells and conveying a secretion or other substance; "the tear duct was obstructed"; "the alimentary canal"; "poison is released through a channel in the snake's fangs"
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a way of selling a company's product either directly or via distributors; "possible distribution channels are wholesalers or small retailers or retail chains or direct mailers or your own stores"
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a long narrow furrow cut either by a natural process (such as erosion) or by a tool (as e g a groove in a phonograph record)
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The Channel or the English Channel is the narrow area of water between England and France. the English Channel. stream channel Beagle Channel Bristol Channel Channel Islands Channel Tunnel English Channel the Channel Mozambique Channel Robeson Channel Saint George's Channel
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convey through a particular medium, send through a channel; direct, refer fiil
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transmit or serve as the medium for transmission; "Sound carries well over water"; "The airwaves carry the sound"; "Many metals conduct heat"
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An open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically or continuously contains moving water or which forms a connecting link between two bodies of water River, creek, run, branch, anabranch, and tributary are some of the terms used to describe natural channels Natural channels may be single or braided Canal and floodway are some of the terms used to describe artificial channels (4)
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Communication path Multiple channels can be multiplexed over a single cable in certain environments In IBM, the specific path between large computers (such as mainframes) and attached peripheral devices Specific frequency allocation and bandwidth Downstream channels are used for television in the United States are 6 MHz wide
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A pattern comprising two parallel lines that circumscribe a price trend The parallel comprise a support (the lower line) and a resistance (the upper line) The channel gives rise to presumption that price will not pass the support or resistance But ultimately, all channels break Thus the predictive value of a channel is subject to rules of interpretation which give a probability of turn or breakout depending on the relative term of the channel and the geometric patterns, if any, that are contained within the channel
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A generic term for a communications path on a given medium; multiplexing techniques allow providers to put multiple channels over a single medium See also multiplexer
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(n ) A point-to-point connection between two processes through which messages can be sent Programming systems that rely on channels are sometimes called connection-oriented, to distinguish them from the more widespread connectionless systems in which messages are sent to named destinations rather than through named channels See also CSP, channel mask
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The basic unit of discussion on IRC Once one joins a channel, others read everything one types on that channel Channels can either be named with numbers or with strings that begin with a `#' sign and can have topic descriptions (which are generally irrelevant to the actual subject of discussion)
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(1) The smallest subdivision of a transmission system by means of which a single type of communication service is provided, for example, a voice channel or a data channel (2) A communications path via a carrier or microwave radio (3) In data communications, a path for electrical transmission between two or more points (4) Within a computer, the electronic paths along which data flows between the input-output units of a computer and the customer premises equipment (CPU) Synonym: circuit, facility, line, link or path
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In wireless, a designated radio frequency available for use by the transmitter and receiver In audio, the circuit path for a specific signal, or a functional unit that is designed to independently process a signal
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A dynamic information-delivery source A web site becomes a web channel when it dynamically broadcasts its content to users who have expressed an interest in receiving that information Users can select channels they want to receive so they do not have to type the address for each site every time they want that information It's ready for them when they want it, stored in a cache for easy viewing offline See also Push
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An archaic term used to describe an autonomous hardware feature that controls a sequence of "channel commands" which direct blocks of data to move between a computer's memory and IO devices The channel interprets the commands, signals the IO device and moves the data Channels (at least by that name) perhaps arose first on the IBM 709 in 1958 and continue today by that name in the IBM 390 as well as other big iron A channel includes the function of modern DMA
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Channel refers to a set of hardware in a receiver that detects, locks on and continuously tracks the signal from a single navigation satellite The more receiver channels available, the greater number of satellite signals a receiver can simultaneously lock-on and track
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The set of all samples of the same kind within an image; for example, all the blue samples in a truecolor image (The term "component" is also used, but not in this specification ) A sample is the intersection of a channel and a pixel
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One signal path, such as one of the two composing a stereo signal or one of the three containing the bass, midrange and treble segments of an audio signal Also, a broadcast frequency as in TV and CB transmission
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(1) A natural or artificial waterway of perceptible extent which either periodically or continuously contains moving water, or which forms a connecting link between two bodies of water (2) The part of a body of water deep enough to be used for navigation through an area otherwise too shallow for navigation (3) The deepest portion of a stream, bay, or strait through which the main volume of current of water flows (4) An open conduit for water either naturally or artificially created, but does not include artificially created irrigation, return flow or stockwatering channels
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The frequency number used by the transmitter to send signals to the receiver If radios transmit on the same frequency, or channel, glitching will occur in the active receiver on that channel This is due to conflicting signals sent by the two radios Flying sites should have a frequency control system to ensure that only one radio operates on any given channel at one time This is usually a board with some type of marker for each channel If the marker is not available, someone else is using that channel Do not use your radio unless you are sure you are the only one on the frequency
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(l) A defect in cement quality which prevents zone isolation, usually in the form of void space in the annulus behind cemented casing The channel constitutes a conduit for fluid flow between a completed interval and other permeable strata (2) A course or perceptible depression where surface water has traveled (3) In a pulse height analyzer, an energy gate in which only pulses occurring within a specific energy range are registered The difference between the upper and lower limits is the width of the channel The detail of the spectrum thus produced is related to the width and number of channels in the instrument (4) A path along which digital or other information may flow in a computer (5) An allocated frequency or time segment in a data multiplexing system; one of a stream of data bands (6) The position in a frame or sequence of data on magnetic tape that represents a specific measurement
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An open conduit either naturally or artificially created which periodically, or continuously contains moving water, or forms a connecting link between two bodies of water River, creek, run, branch, anabranch, and tributary are some of the terms used to describe natural channels Natural channels may be single or braided Canal and floodway are some of the terms used to describe artificial channels
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A dedicated communication connection between a transmitting and receiving device Channel is also used to identify an I/O port in mini- and mainframe computers
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A method, provided by Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI), for sending messages to an individual device within a MIDI setup There are 16 MIDI channel numbers Devices in a MIDI setup can be directed to respond only to messages marked with a channel number specific to the device
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The end-to-end transmission path connecting any two points at which application specific equipment is connected Equipment and work area cables are included in the channel
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A single range of the electromagnetic spectrum as detected by a sensor The name Channel refers to the transmission to earth of the data sampled from that band See also Band
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direct the flow of; "channel infomartion towards a broad audience
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The hollow bed where a stream of water runs or may run
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where the main current flows, or which affords the best and safest passage for vessels
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The deeper part of a river, harbor, strait, etc
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A strait, or narrow sea, between two portions of lands; as, the British Channel
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The distribution or marketing segmentation of products, customers and geographic areas into common groups that are supplied, serviced and measured in similar ways Ticaret
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That through which anything passes; means of passing, conveying, or transmitting; as, the news was conveyed to us by different channels
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A gutter; a groove, as in a fluted column
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a path over which electrical signals can pass; "a channel is typically what you rent from a telephone company"
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(often plural) a means of communication or access; "it must go through official channels"; "lines of communication were set up between the two firms"
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a deep and relatively narrow body of water (as in a river or a harbor or a strait linking two larger bodies) that allows the best passage for vessels; "the ship went aground in the channel"
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a television station and its programs; "a satellite TV channel"; "surfing through the channels"; "they offer more than one hundred channels"
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a passage for water (or other fluids) to flow through; "the fields were crossed with irrigation channels"; "gutters carried off the rainwater into a series of channels under the street"
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Flat ledges of heavy plank bolted edgewise to the outside of a vessel, to increase the spread of the shrouds and carry them clear of the bulwarks
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To form a channel in; to cut or wear a channel or channels in; to groove
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To course through or over, as in a channel
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channeled
Simple past tense and past participle of channel
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channeled
Having a vehicle's height reduced by lowering the body with respect to the frame rails - "He later bought a '33 Ford coupe, chopped and channeled it and installed a Mercury engine."
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channels
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of channel
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channels
plural form of channel
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channels
Formal lines of command and procedure - "I'd love to be able to help you, but you'll have put that request through channels."
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channeling
A practice based on the belief that dead people can communicate with living people by making their spirit enter a living person’s body and speaking through them
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channeling
(mediumistic), a term used in reference to the claimed process of receiving messages or inspiration from invisible beings or spirits
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channeling
(Physics) Channeling is the process that constrains the path of a charged particle in a crystalline solid
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channeling
(insurance, legal), a term used to indicate a contractual or legal redirection of responsibilities from an organization to another
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Channeling
When a host (channel) serves as a vocal conduit for a so-called intelligent being or spirit that temporarily inhabits the channel
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channeled
past of channel
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channeling
The act or process of forming a channel or channels
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channeling
The phenomenon observed among gear lubricants and greases when they thicken due to cold weather or other causes, to such an extent that a groove is formed through which the part to be lubricated moves without actually coming in full contact with the lubricant A term used in percolation filtration; may be defined as: a preponderance of flow through certain portions of the clay bed
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channeling
A channel or a system of channels; a groove
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channeling
The illegal practice of directing people to, or away from, certain areas or neighborhoods because of minority status; Steering See Fair Housing
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channeling
Cutting, chipping or routing a prescribed sectional area in a linear pattern on any surface, usually in concrete or plaster return to top
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channeling
Bringing in messages from the other side Channelers convey messages from angels, ascended masters, guides and the deceased, though the latter are usually called "mediums "
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channeling
Channeling is the act of receiving a communication from a spirit guide, an entity of higher wisdom Everyone has the capacity to be a channel, also referred to as a medium Spirit guides are beings who communicate through channels to help humans on their path in life
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channeling
A method similar to that used by Spiritists in which a spirit of a long dead individual is conjured up However, while Spiritists generally believe that one's soul remains relatively unchanged after death, most channelers believe that the soul evolves to higher planes of existence They usually try to make contact with a single, spiritually evolved being That being's consciousness is channeled through the medium and relays guidance and information to the group, through the use of the medium's voice Channeling has existed since the 1850's and many groups consider themselves independent of the New Age movement The popular book, A Course in Miracles, was channeled by Jesus through a New Age psychologist, Dr Helen Schucman over an 8 year period
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channeling
The phenomenon in which a metabolite 'I', product of an enzyme 'E1', is directly transferred to the next enzyme 'E2', which uses it as a substrate Thus in such a short pathway, the complex E1 I is a better substrate for E2, compared to the freely diffusible small molecule 'I' Both the following reactions may occur and compete: Direct transfer (channeling): E1 I + E2 --> E1 I E2 --> E1 + E2 I --> Release/rebinding ('normal'): E1 I --> E1+ I and then E2 + I --> E2 I -->
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channeling
in New Age thought, "the growing awareness of any part of the one Being that it can access any of the rest of itself" (Van Rheenen 1996a, 161)
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channeling
Mediumship; a word for an entity talking through a human to convey a message to the physical plane
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channeling
Channeling is a process where information from an external source of consciousness is accessed and expressed People can channel entities, their Higher Self or energy We are all connected at an energy level, in a deep and intimate way Channeling is the activity of consciously connecting to specific energies that we don't normally see in this reality It is an opening of the lines of communication between us and the Angelic Realm, the Kingdoms of Nature, Other Souls (some who have become Teachers and Guides) and to information that may assist us in our growth It is about listening to Spirit
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channeling
"Channeling the sole, making a riggett in the outersole for the wax thread to be lain" [Holme, 1688] Cutting or incising the channel in the outsole "Riggett" is a variation of Riggot, a groove or channel
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channeling
The flow of water or other solution through a limited number of passages in a filter or ion exchanger bed, instead of distributed flow through all passages in the bed May be due to fouling of the bed and plugging of many passages, poor distributor design, flow rates which are too low, faulty operational procedures, or other causes
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channeling
present participle of channel
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channeling
Communication with guides and others from the other side
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channeling
Cutting, chipping or routing a prescribed sectional area in a linear pattern on any surface, usually in concrete or plaster
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channeling
To convey through, as in channeling forces through a structure
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channeling
When a medium apparently allows a spirit to communicate through them
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channeling
the process of a person speaking the words of a discarnate entity who uses the person as a medium, instrument, vessel, or channel
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channeling
A New Age word for mediumship, channeling involves allowing a spirit entity to speak through the chaneller The process is virtually impossible to prove and therefore does not enjoy a particularly good reputation
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channeling
formation of a channel in lubricating grease by a lubricated element, such as a gear or rolling contact bearing, leaving shoulders of grease that serve as a seal and reservoir This phenomenon is usually desirable, although a channel that is too deep or permanent could cause lubrication failure
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channeling
the practice of bringing information from higher dimensions into the third dimension - a spiritual or psychic medium channels information
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channeling
the New Age name for the act of spiritism or mediumship
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channeling
Designing the plan's incentives to encourage plan members to use network providers
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channeling
A grooved or furrowed effect
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channeling
(a form of communication of spirit or ones higher self through human form)
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channeling
A new age practice where a person goes into an altered state of consciousness and allows another spirit or entity to enter him/her in order to communicate to us According to New Age teaching, this spirit or entity can be from another dimension, the spirit realm, or from another part of the galaxy or universe
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channelling
is the New Age name for mediumship
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channelling
formation of a "groove" in grease (or in oil too viscous to flow readily under existing conditions) Channels are cut by the motion of a lubricated element, such as a gear or the rolling member of an anti-friction bearing The amount of channelling can be controlled to a large extent by the consistency or viscosity of the lubricant While some degree of channelling is desirable to prevent excessive churning of the lubricant, particularly in high speed rolling element bearings, a channel so permanent as to preclude further movement of lubricant to the contacting surfaces might cause equipment failure due to lack of lubricant
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channelling
A system of grooves cut into binding boards to carry the cords that attach the boards to quires The use of channels meant that the cords would not stand proud on the inside of the boards
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channelling
a practice based on the belief that dead people can communicate with living people by making their spirit enter a living person's body and speaking through them
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channels
The media through which information flows
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channels
Latest evolution of the "Push" technology Channels allow users to have select content sent to their desktops automatically Most channels contain data that's updated daily
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channels
A 'Chat Room' on IRC, or Internet Relay Chat
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channels
Boards to hold chain-plates and shroud away from the side of the ship
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channels
A system for delivering regular, updated content from a web site to a 'subscribing' browser
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channels
official routes of communication; "you have to go through channels
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channels
third-person singular of channel
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channels
plural of channel
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channels
one of 16 different data paths that are available to carry messages in MIDI
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channels
A bed or stream of a waterway
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channels
Power Macs iMac Channel iBook/PowerBook MacInSchoolComputer Profiles iMac Power Mac PowerBook/iBook Performas Mac Clones Older Macs Lisa NeXTEditorial ArchiveMac Daniel's AdviceEmail ListsLEMchat (uses AIM)Message BoardsOnline Tech JournalConsumer advice, reviews guides, dealsSoftwareApple HistoryBest of the Web Best of the Mac Web surveysMiscellaneous Links Best Used Mac Buys Used Mac Dealers Video Cards Mac OS X Mac Linux Macspeak RAM UpgradesAbout Low End MacSite Contacts
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channels
Each image is divided up into separate channels and then recombined before being sent to the output device An output device is most usually a screen The channels that are used when rendering images to a screen are Red, Green, and Blue Other output devices may use different channels Channels can be useful when working on images that need adjustment to one particular color If, for example, the removal of "red-eye" is the goal, work on the Red channel is most obviously a ready solution Channels can be seen as masks that allow or restrict the output of the color that the channel represents By running filters against this channel information, many varied and subtle effects can be put in to play by the experienced GIMP user
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channels
Web pages or other content to which you may "subscribe" so that your browser (or some other software supplied by the channel provider) will periodically fetch new information from the channel provider
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channels
These are images in a hologram which change abruptly from one to another as the viewer passes by They can also fade or overlap as they change Animated holograms are essentially made up of hundreds of image channels
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channels
An Internet technology based upon server push which broadcasts information to Web browsers so that users can view the information passively, as with television, rather than interactively as in traditional Web use
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channels
Energy channels into which the X-ray counts are accumulated The RÖNTEC software displays 1024 energy channels for EDX spectra They determine the width and height of a spectrum
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channels
Television broadcasts use particular areas of radiofrequency spectrum, which have been set aside for the purpose There are two areas - known as the VHF (very high frequency) and UHF (ultra high frequency) bands used in Australia In Australia, each band is divided into a number of equal width channels, each 7 MHz wide The channels in the bands are numbered sequentially (VHF is divided into channels 1-12, UHF channels 28-69) Each broadcaster uses a channel for its main transmitter and might use other channels for smaller, local area transmitters
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channels
official routes of communication; "you have to go through channels"
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channels
An individual UMTS radio channel is defined in the IMT 2000 standard as having a bandwidth of 5 MHz This means that an individual UMTS radio channel, for example, ranges from 1900 to 1905 MHz How many radio channels a UMTS provider can make available to customers depends on which frequency spectrum has been won in the auctioning of UMTS mobile phone frequencies Each radio channel can transport more than one connection So that more than one subscriber can use the same channel, multiple access methods such as W-CDMA (FDD), TD-CDMA (TDD) or cdma2000 are used for 3G networks It nevertheless depends on the service profile of the connection how many connections per channel can be managed at the same time It is also true that in the planning of the radio network, the effect of cellular respiration for CDMA should be considered
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channels
Independent streams of audio For example, monophonic recordings contain a single channel of audio whereas stereo recordings contain two channels, left and right The number of channels affects the file size; stereo files are twice as large as mono files
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channels
E g 32 channel, 24 channel - refers to the number of separate audio controls available to the sound man or the monitor man Note: more than one microphone could be connected to one channel Each channel typically controls the sound of one instrument, or one vocalist Submitted by Karl Kuenning RFL from Roadie Net
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channels
Virtual circuits inside "paths" The objective behind paths and channels is to "gang" channels together and get quick switching at lower cost
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channels
forms of communication with other players gossip- an open/ public communication channel say- communication heard only within the same virtual " room" tell- to say something to a particular individual, heard only by them page- a tell message which sends an audible "beep" to the receiver team- a channel heard only by members of the same team Socials- commands which demonstrate emotion/ action which cannot otherwise be demonstrated/enacted in a 2 dimensional setting, such as smiling, laughing, nodding,etc Client- software that is used that accesses gaming sites, such as Telnet-basic DOS based client which allows a person to create an open link rather than a standard internet connection which retrieves data and then closes/ terminates ZMUD- popular gaming client which has all the triggers, whistles, and bells
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channels
(meridians) paths the chi flows within the body
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channels
In the Bradley model, the elements through which messages are transmitted 11 5b
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channels
Channels (sometimes described as netcasting) enable users to subscribe to particular sites on the Internet, in much the same way that one might subscribe to a newspaper or magazine The use of channels allows both the user and the information provider to select the information to be sent and schedule its transmission
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channels
There are two types of "channels" when talking about R/C One is the channel the Tx transmits on, the other is how many control surfaces a Tx can control
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channels
A range of wavelength intervals selected from the electromagnetic spectrum
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channels
(or Nadis) Subtle energy paths through which the chi flows The three main channels are the central channel (sushumna), the left (ida) and the right (pingala) channels which run parallel to and in front of the spinal column
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the Channel
body of water that connects the North Sea with the Atlantic Ocean and separates France and the United Kingdom, English Channel
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 channel kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. channel kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan channel kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.