Etymology: [ 'folt, in poetry also ' ] (noun.) 14th century. From Middle English faulte, faute, from Anglo-Norman faute, faulte, from Old French faute, faulte, from Vulgar Latin *fallita (“shortcoming”), from Latin falsus, perfect passive participle of fallō (“deceive”). Displaced native Middle English schuld, schuild (“fault”) (from Old English scyld (“fault”)), Middle English lac (“fault, lack”) (from Middle Dutch lak (“lack, fault”)), Middle English last (“fault, vice”) (from Old Norse lǫstr, löstr (“fault, vice, crime”)).
Blame; the responsibility for a mistake, A fracture in a rock formation causing a discontinuity, A minor offense, A weakness of character, A mistake or error, An illegal serve, A defect; something that detracts from perfection, To commit a mistake or error, To fracture, To criticize, blame or find fault with something or someone, An abnormal connection in a circuit, Failure to serve the ball into the proper court, as, the coal beds are badly faulted, To interrupt the continuity of (rock strata) by displacement along a plane of fracture; chiefly used in the p, defect, flaw; mistake, error; guilt, blame, To err; to blunder, to commit a fault; to do wrong, A lost scent; act of losing the scent, To charge with a fault; to accuse; to find fault with; to blame, that lands outside the prescribed area; "he served too many double faults", "it took much longer to find the fault than to fix it", A dislocation of the strata of the vein, (electronics) equipment failure attributable to some defect in a circuit (loose connection or insulation failure or short circuit etc, responsibility for a bad situation or event; "it was John's fault", A dislocation caused by a slipping of rock masses along a plane of facture; also, the dislocated structure resulting from such slipping, (sports) a serve that is illegal (e, A defective point in an electric circuit due to a crossing of the parts of the conductor, or to contact with another conductor or the earth, or to a break in the circuit, (geology) a crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one side with respect to the other; "they built it right over a geological fault, A moral failing; a defect or dereliction from duty; a deviation from propriety; an offense less serious than a crime, Anything that fails, that is wanting, or that impairs excellence; a failing; a defect; a blemish, Defect; want; lack; default, In coal seams, coal rendered worthless by impurities in the seam; as, slate fault, dirt fault, etc, (electronics) equipment failure attributable to some defect in a circuit (loose connection or insulation failure or short circuit etc ); "it took much longer to find the fault than to fix it", (sports) a serve that is illegal (e g , that lands outside the prescribed area); "he served too many double faults", an imperfection in a device or machine; "if there are any defects you should send it back to the manufacturer", a wrong action attributable to bad judgment or ignorance or inattention; "he made a bad mistake"; "she was quick to point out my errors"; "I could understand his English in spite of his grammatical faults", put or pin the blame on, A crack or break in the crust of a planet along which slippage or movement can take place, A fracture or zone of fractures in rocks of mappable size along which there has been displacement of one side relative to the other, A fracture or zone of fractures along which there has been displacement of the sides relative to one another, parallel to the fracture, A fracture along which the blocks of crust on either side have moved relative to one another parallel to the fracture Strike-slip faults are vertical (or nearly vertical) fractures where the blocks have mostly moved horizontally If the block opposite an observer looking across the fault moves to the right, the slip style is termed right lateral; if the block moves to the left, the motion is termed left lateral Dip-slip faults are inclined fractures where the blocks have mostly shifted vertically If the rock mass above an inclined fault moves down, the fault is termed normal, whereas if the rock above the fault moves up, the fault is termed reverse (or thrust) Oblique-slip faults have significant components of both slip styles, the quality of being inadequate or falling short of perfection; "they discussed the merits and demerits of her novel"; "he knew his own faults much better than she did", emphasis If you say that someone has a particular good quality to a fault, you are emphasizing that they have more of this quality than is usual or necessary. Jefferson was generous to a fault Others will tell you that she is modest to a fault, funny, clever and warm. to criticize someone or something for a mistake. In geology, a fracture in the rocks of the Earth's crust, where compressional or tensional forces cause the rocks on the opposite sides of the fracture to be displaced relative to each other. Faults range in length from a few inches to hundreds of miles, and displacement may also range from less than an inch to hundreds of miles along the fracture surface (the fault plane). Most, if not all, earthquakes are caused by rapid movement along faults. Faults are common throughout the world. A well-known example is the San Andreas Fault near the western coast of the U.S. The total movement along this fault during the last few million years appears to have been several miles, A fault in someone or something is a weakness in them or something that is not perfect. His manners had always made her blind to his faults. a short delay due to a minor technical fault = failing, flaw, A fault is a mistake in what someone is doing or in what they have done. It is a big fault to think that you can learn how to manage people in business school. = error, mistake, If a bad or undesirable situation is your fault, you caused it or are responsible for it. There was no escaping the fact: it was all his fault A few borrowers will find themselves in trouble with their repayments through no fault of their own, find fault, complain; make a mistake, err, If you cannot fault someone, you cannot find any reason for criticizing them or the things that they are doing. You can't fault them for lack of invention It is hard to fault the way he runs his own operation, A fault is a large crack in the surface of the earth. the San Andreas Fault, If you find fault with something or someone, you look for mistakes and complain about them. I was disappointed whenever the cook found fault with my work, If someone or something is at fault, they are to blame or are responsible for a particular situation that has gone wrong. He could never accept that he had been at fault, that lands outside the prescribed area); "he served too many double faults" responsibility for a bad situation or event; "it was John's fault" (electronics) equipment failure attributable to some defect in a circuit (loose connection or insulation failure or short circuit etc, A fracture in rock along which there has been an observable amount of displacement Faults are rarely single planar units; normally they occur as parallel to sub-parallel sets of planes along which movement has taken place to a greater or lesser extent Such sets are called fault or fracture-zones, A fault in tennis is a service that is wrong according to the rules, [BSG] A processor generated exception causing a diversion of control through a fault vector, for any reason except an interrupt Page faults, segfaults, bad instructions or out-of-bounds references and the like are all common faults (There is no notion of "failure"), A fracture or fracture zone in the Earth's crust along which slippage of adjacent Earth material has occurred at some time, A surface or zone of rock fracture along which there has been displacement, from a few centimeters to a few kilometers in scale, A break in the continuity of rock formation caused by shifting in the earth's crust, An invalid service attempt It is a fault if the serve fails to land in the receiver's service court; if the server swings and misses the ball entirely; or if the serve is made from beyond the baseline or from the wrong side of the center mark See also double fault; foot fault; serve, component of a SOAP message that contains error information SOAP endpoints return faults within the Body of a response to provide detailed error information to the client, A fracture in the Earth's crust accompanied by a displacement of one side of the fracture, a break in the sub-surface strata where there is displacement relative to the original position of strata, ); "it took much longer to find the fault than to fix it" (geology) a crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one side with respect to the other; "they built it right over a geological fault, A fracture separating 2 parts of a once continuous rock body with relative movement along the fault plane Geology Ref JJ, A break in the rocks of the earth's crust along which movement may occur, causing earthquakes, A fracture in the Earth's crust along which rock units were displaced relative to one another, In the virtual-memory system, faults are the mechanism for initiating page-in activity They are interrupts that occur when code tries to access data at a virtual address that is not mapped to physical memory Soft faults happen when the referenced page is resident in physical memory but is unmapped Hard (or page) faults occur when the page has been swapped out to backing store See also page; virtual memory, A fracture or break along which rocks slip Faults can vary from almost horizontal surfaces to vertical They may break through the ground surface, or be deep within the earth, A crack or fracture in the earth's surface Movement along the fault can cause earthquakes or, in the process of mountain-building, can release underlying magma and permit it to rise to the surface, In a geological sense, a break or fracture zone along which there has been movement that results in the displacement of one side relative to the other, A fracture in the ground surface or fracture zone along which there has been displacement of one side with respect to the other, A discrete surface across which rocks move relative to each other; a planar break in the rocks, A fault is an exception that is generated when the current instruction needs help before it can be executed For example, supposed in a virtual memory system, a memory access is made to a page that is not in memory In this case, a fault is generated which vectors to an isr that will read in the page The fault exception is different in the way it returns from interrupt in that control is returned to the instruction that caused the fault, not the following instruction as with a normal interrupt This allows the instruction to access the memory again, and this time succeed, a fracture plane in rocks, along which the rock-mass on the one side has been moved relative to the rock-mass on the other side, A plane of weakness within a rock body along which separation and differential movement occurs, Without fault; free from defect or error, leap, past of fault, A mechanism used by WebObjects to increase performance whereby destination objects of relationships are not fetched until they are explicitly accessed, present participle of fault, - A fracture in the earth's crust (fault) that causes the land on one side of the fault to be raised above the land on the other side, the cracking and displacement of adjacent blocks of rock as a result of the severe stresses set up by tectonic activity, The state or condition of being faulted; the process by which a fault is produced, Land mass fracturing and displacement in the earth's crust, the breaking and displacement (movement) of rock layers, Without fault; not defective or imperfect; free from blemish; free from incorrectness, vice, or offense; perfect; as, a faultless poem, without fault or error; "faultless logic"; "speaks impeccable French"; "timing and technique were immaculate"; "an immaculate record, without fault, blameless, perfect, without defect, Something that is faultless is perfect and has no mistakes at all. Mary Thomson's faultless and impressive performance on the show Hans's English was faultless. = flawless + faultlessly fault·less·ly Howard was faultlessly dressed in a dark blue suit. having no mistakes = perfect, without fault or error; "faultless logic"; "speaks impeccable French"; "timing and technique were immaculate"; "an immaculate record", without a fault; in a faultless manner; "he solved all the problems faultlessly, In a faultless manner, without a fault; in a faultless manner; "he solved all the problems faultlessly", blamelessly, without fault, perfectly, blamelessness; perfection; guiltlessness, The quality of being faultless, An area with a surface or subsurface fault system or earthquake faults on or near the site, plural of fault, Can be corrected, program can restart, crack in the earth's crust, Major and minor problems in dog performance Breaking or hard mouth are examples of major faults Refusing one whistle on a blind retrieve would be a minor fault , where two tectonic plates slide past each other favela Brazilian makeshift housing or shanty town fertilizer substance containing some or all of a range of about 20 chemical elements necessary for healthy plant growth, used to compensate for the deficiencies of poor or depleted soil - fetch the distance of open water over which wind can blow to create waves The greater the fetch, the more potential power waves have when they hit the coast, Faults are the errors or operating problems detected by the controller, Penalty points added to a score The most common penalties are, Fractures along which there is displacement of the rock parallel to the fracture plane Once-continuous rock bodies that have been displaced by movement in the earth's crust, Faults are "points" given for each pole or jump that is knocked over There is usually 4 or 7 faults for each jump/pole In speed/timed competitions, 5 seconds is usually added to the final finishing time,
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Blame; the responsibility for a mistake
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A fracture in a rock formation causing a discontinuity
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A minor offense
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A weakness of character
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A mistake or error
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An illegal serve
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A defect; something that detracts from perfection
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To commit a mistake or error
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To fracture
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To criticize, blame or find fault with something or someone
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An abnormal connection in a circuit
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Failure to serve the ball into the proper court
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as, the coal beds are badly faulted
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To interrupt the continuity of (rock strata) by displacement along a plane of fracture; chiefly used in the p
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defect, flaw; mistake, error; guilt, blame isim
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To err; to blunder, to commit a fault; to do wrong
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A lost scent; act of losing the scent
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To charge with a fault; to accuse; to find fault with; to blame
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that lands outside the prescribed area; "he served too many double faults"
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"it took much longer to find the fault than to fix it"
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A dislocation of the strata of the vein
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(electronics) equipment failure attributable to some defect in a circuit (loose connection or insulation failure or short circuit etc
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responsibility for a bad situation or event; "it was John's fault"
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A dislocation caused by a slipping of rock masses along a plane of facture; also, the dislocated structure resulting from such slipping
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(sports) a serve that is illegal (e
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A defective point in an electric circuit due to a crossing of the parts of the conductor, or to contact with another conductor or the earth, or to a break in the circuit
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(geology) a crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one side with respect to the other; "they built it right over a geological fault
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A moral failing; a defect or dereliction from duty; a deviation from propriety; an offense less serious than a crime
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Anything that fails, that is wanting, or that impairs excellence; a failing; a defect; a blemish
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Defect; want; lack; default
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In coal seams, coal rendered worthless by impurities in the seam; as, slate fault, dirt fault, etc
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(electronics) equipment failure attributable to some defect in a circuit (loose connection or insulation failure or short circuit etc ); "it took much longer to find the fault than to fix it"
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(sports) a serve that is illegal (e g , that lands outside the prescribed area); "he served too many double faults"
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an imperfection in a device or machine; "if there are any defects you should send it back to the manufacturer"
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a wrong action attributable to bad judgment or ignorance or inattention; "he made a bad mistake"; "she was quick to point out my errors"; "I could understand his English in spite of his grammatical faults"
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put or pin the blame on
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A crack or break in the crust of a planet along which slippage or movement can take place
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A fracture or zone of fractures in rocks of mappable size along which there has been displacement of one side relative to the other
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A fracture or zone of fractures along which there has been displacement of the sides relative to one another, parallel to the fracture
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A fracture along which the blocks of crust on either side have moved relative to one another parallel to the fracture Strike-slip faults are vertical (or nearly vertical) fractures where the blocks have mostly moved horizontally If the block opposite an observer looking across the fault moves to the right, the slip style is termed right lateral; if the block moves to the left, the motion is termed left lateral Dip-slip faults are inclined fractures where the blocks have mostly shifted vertically If the rock mass above an inclined fault moves down, the fault is termed normal, whereas if the rock above the fault moves up, the fault is termed reverse (or thrust) Oblique-slip faults have significant components of both slip styles
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the quality of being inadequate or falling short of perfection; "they discussed the merits and demerits of her novel"; "he knew his own faults much better than she did"
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emphasis If you say that someone has a particular good quality to a fault, you are emphasizing that they have more of this quality than is usual or necessary. Jefferson was generous to a fault Others will tell you that she is modest to a fault, funny, clever and warm. to criticize someone or something for a mistake. In geology, a fracture in the rocks of the Earth's crust, where compressional or tensional forces cause the rocks on the opposite sides of the fracture to be displaced relative to each other. Faults range in length from a few inches to hundreds of miles, and displacement may also range from less than an inch to hundreds of miles along the fracture surface (the fault plane). Most, if not all, earthquakes are caused by rapid movement along faults. Faults are common throughout the world. A well-known example is the San Andreas Fault near the western coast of the U.S. The total movement along this fault during the last few million years appears to have been several miles
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A fault in someone or something is a weakness in them or something that is not perfect. His manners had always made her blind to his faults. a short delay due to a minor technical fault = failing, flaw
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A fault is a mistake in what someone is doing or in what they have done. It is a big fault to think that you can learn how to manage people in business school. = error, mistake
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If a bad or undesirable situation is your fault, you caused it or are responsible for it. There was no escaping the fact: it was all his fault A few borrowers will find themselves in trouble with their repayments through no fault of their own
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find fault, complain; make a mistake, err fiil
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If you cannot fault someone, you cannot find any reason for criticizing them or the things that they are doing. You can't fault them for lack of invention It is hard to fault the way he runs his own operation
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A fault is a large crack in the surface of the earth. the San Andreas Fault
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If you find fault with something or someone, you look for mistakes and complain about them. I was disappointed whenever the cook found fault with my work
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If someone or something is at fault, they are to blame or are responsible for a particular situation that has gone wrong. He could never accept that he had been at fault
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that lands outside the prescribed area); "he served too many double faults" responsibility for a bad situation or event; "it was John's fault" (electronics) equipment failure attributable to some defect in a circuit (loose connection or insulation failure or short circuit etc
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A fracture in rock along which there has been an observable amount of displacement Faults are rarely single planar units; normally they occur as parallel to sub-parallel sets of planes along which movement has taken place to a greater or lesser extent Such sets are called fault or fracture-zones
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A fault in tennis is a service that is wrong according to the rules
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[BSG] A processor generated exception causing a diversion of control through a fault vector, for any reason except an interrupt Page faults, segfaults, bad instructions or out-of-bounds references and the like are all common faults (There is no notion of "failure")
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A fracture or fracture zone in the Earth's crust along which slippage of adjacent Earth material has occurred at some time
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A surface or zone of rock fracture along which there has been displacement, from a few centimeters to a few kilometers in scale
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A break in the continuity of rock formation caused by shifting in the earth's crust
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An invalid service attempt It is a fault if the serve fails to land in the receiver's service court; if the server swings and misses the ball entirely; or if the serve is made from beyond the baseline or from the wrong side of the center mark See also double fault; foot fault; serve
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component of a SOAP message that contains error information SOAP endpoints return faults within the Body of a response to provide detailed error information to the client
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A fracture in the Earth's crust accompanied by a displacement of one side of the fracture
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a break in the sub-surface strata where there is displacement relative to the original position of strata
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); "it took much longer to find the fault than to fix it" (geology) a crack in the earth's crust resulting from the displacement of one side with respect to the other; "they built it right over a geological fault
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A fracture separating 2 parts of a once continuous rock body with relative movement along the fault plane Geology Ref JJ
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A break in the rocks of the earth's crust along which movement may occur, causing earthquakes
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A fracture in the Earth's crust along which rock units were displaced relative to one another
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In the virtual-memory system, faults are the mechanism for initiating page-in activity They are interrupts that occur when code tries to access data at a virtual address that is not mapped to physical memory Soft faults happen when the referenced page is resident in physical memory but is unmapped Hard (or page) faults occur when the page has been swapped out to backing store See also page; virtual memory
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A fracture or break along which rocks slip Faults can vary from almost horizontal surfaces to vertical They may break through the ground surface, or be deep within the earth
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A crack or fracture in the earth's surface Movement along the fault can cause earthquakes or, in the process of mountain-building, can release underlying magma and permit it to rise to the surface
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In a geological sense, a break or fracture zone along which there has been movement that results in the displacement of one side relative to the other
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A fracture in the ground surface or fracture zone along which there has been displacement of one side with respect to the other
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A discrete surface across which rocks move relative to each other; a planar break in the rocks
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A fault is an exception that is generated when the current instruction needs help before it can be executed For example, supposed in a virtual memory system, a memory access is made to a page that is not in memory In this case, a fault is generated which vectors to an isr that will read in the page The fault exception is different in the way it returns from interrupt in that control is returned to the instruction that caused the fault, not the following instruction as with a normal interrupt This allows the instruction to access the memory again, and this time succeed
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a fracture plane in rocks, along which the rock-mass on the one side has been moved relative to the rock-mass on the other side
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A plane of weakness within a rock body along which separation and differential movement occurs
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faultless
Without fault; free from defect or error
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A fault
leap
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faulted
past of fault
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faulting
A mechanism used by WebObjects to increase performance whereby destination objects of relationships are not fetched until they are explicitly accessed
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faulting
present participle of fault
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faulting
- A fracture in the earth's crust (fault) that causes the land on one side of the fault to be raised above the land on the other side
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faulting
the cracking and displacement of adjacent blocks of rock as a result of the severe stresses set up by tectonic activity
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faulting
The state or condition of being faulted; the process by which a fault is produced
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faulting
Land mass fracturing and displacement in the earth's crust
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faulting
the breaking and displacement (movement) of rock layers
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faultless
Without fault; not defective or imperfect; free from blemish; free from incorrectness, vice, or offense; perfect; as, a faultless poem
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faultless
without fault or error; "faultless logic"; "speaks impeccable French"; "timing and technique were immaculate"; "an immaculate record
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faultless
without fault, blameless, perfect, without defect sıfat
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faultless
Something that is faultless is perfect and has no mistakes at all. Mary Thomson's faultless and impressive performance on the show Hans's English was faultless. = flawless + faultlessly fault·less·ly Howard was faultlessly dressed in a dark blue suit. having no mistakes = perfect
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faultless
without fault or error; "faultless logic"; "speaks impeccable French"; "timing and technique were immaculate"; "an immaculate record"
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faultlessly
without a fault; in a faultless manner; "he solved all the problems faultlessly
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faultlessly
In a faultless manner
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faultlessly
without a fault; in a faultless manner; "he solved all the problems faultlessly"
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faultlessly
blamelessly, without fault, perfectly sıfat
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faultlessness
blamelessness; perfection; guiltlessness isim
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faultlessness
The quality of being faultless
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faults
An area with a surface or subsurface fault system or earthquake faults on or near the site
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faults
plural of fault
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faults
Can be corrected, program can restart
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faults
crack in the earth's crust
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faults
Major and minor problems in dog performance Breaking or hard mouth are examples of major faults Refusing one whistle on a blind retrieve would be a minor fault
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faults
where two tectonic plates slide past each other favela Brazilian makeshift housing or shanty town fertilizer substance containing some or all of a range of about 20 chemical elements necessary for healthy plant growth, used to compensate for the deficiencies of poor or depleted soil - fetch the distance of open water over which wind can blow to create waves The greater the fetch, the more potential power waves have when they hit the coast
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faults
Faults are the errors or operating problems detected by the controller
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faults
Penalty points added to a score The most common penalties are
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faults
Fractures along which there is displacement of the rock parallel to the fracture plane Once-continuous rock bodies that have been displaced by movement in the earth's crust
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faults
Faults are "points" given for each pole or jump that is knocked over There is usually 4 or 7 faults for each jump/pole In speed/timed competitions, 5 seconds is usually added to the final finishing time
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 fault kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. fault kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan fault kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.