containers

listen to the pronunciation of containers
الإنجليزية - التركية
konteynerler

Şu konteynerlerde ne olduğunu biliyor musun? - Do you know what's in those containers?

Bu konteynerler hava geçirmezler. - These containers are airtight.

kaplar
container
{i} kap

Bu kaplar oldukça ucuzdur. - These containers are pretty inexpensive.

Bu kap tamamen su geçirmez. - This container is completely watertight.

container
konteyner

Tom konteyneri kazara vincinden düşürdü. - Tom accidentally dropped the container from his crane.

Bu konteynerler hava geçirmezler. - These containers are airtight.

container
(Çevre) taşınabilir muhafaza
container
(Jeoloji) taşıyıcı
container
sandık
container
muhafaza
container
(Askeri) muhafaza kabı
container
(Otomotiv) konteynır

Sami bir nakliye konteynırında yaşıyordu. - Sami lived in a shipping container.

Tom evini nakliye konteynırlarından inşa etti. - Tom built his house out of shipping containers.

container
kutu
container
konteynir
container
(kutu/şişe/vb.) kap
container
kabı
container
kapta
prefabricated containers
prefabrik konteynırlar
aluminium transport containers
(Tekstil) alüminyum sevk sandığı
container
konteyner/kap
container
(Nükleer Bilimler) muhafaza kabı,taşıma kabı
container
{i} (kutu, şişe v.b.) kap
container
(Askeri) KAP: İçine yiyecek maddeleri vesaire konan çuval, kutu, sandık, küfe gibi şeyleri ifade eden genel terim/konteyner
container
{i} yük sandığı
container
Kapsayıcı
container
(Tekstil) toplayıcı kap
container
koyacak
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
a Container Any portable device in which a material is stored, transported, disposed of or otherwise handled, including those whose last content was a hazardous or an acutely hazardous material, waste, or substance
Containers refer to the area enclosed by <start> and </stop> tags where the commands take effect Some tags, such as <HTML> enclose the entire document, others enclose lists, and others can enclose a single world One of the more common problems in writing HTML is when one forgets to add a stop tag and clse of the container, thus leaving the tag to effect the rest of the document So try and keep track of each container that you create
Containers are designed to give maximum protection against weather, damage, and theft They can be moved inland on their own chassis and can be loaded at the shippers premises Basic sizes for containers are 20, 35, and 40 feet in length, 8 feet wide and 8 feet high
Widgets that can group or contain other interface elements See also interface elements and widgets
Rigid bottles and tubs With the exception of packing ³peanuts,² our system assessment survey form asks only about containers, not films, bags, or disposable plastic items (like toys and razors)
Encoded, transportable form of location data and content OGC has developed two related specifications: XML-based Geography Markup Language (GML) Location Organizer Folders (LOF) Both are applicable to the OpenLS Testbed The location services market presents new requirements for location-based content These requirements will lead to new specifications that will be produced under this testbed, namely: the 'MicroGML x' family of content standards, and the MicroLOF, a generalized version of the LOF for mobile subscribers MicroGML x and MicroLOF both inherit the GML 2 x namespace
plural of container
container
A very large, typically metal, box used for transporting goods (also cargo container)
container
An item in which objects, materials or data can be stored or transported
container
someone who holds people in their seats or in a (reasonably) calm state
container
Standard-sized rectangular box used to transport freight by ship, rail and highway International shipping containers are 20 or 40 feet long, conform to International Standards Organization (ISO) standards and are designed to fit in ships' holds Containers are transported on public roads atop a container chassis towed by a tractor Domestic containers, up to 53 feet long and of lighter construction, are designed for rail and highway use only
container
One who, or that which, contains
container
A container is a very large metal or wooden box used for transporting goods so that they can be loaded easily onto ships and lorries
container
The element of the parachute that houses the canopies Technically, the Harness/Container but usually just referred to as the container
container
{i} receptacle, anything that can contain another substance; mobile compartment in which cargo or furniture is placed to move conveniently
container
Metal box structure of standard design, used to carry cargo in units Containers can be 20 or 40 foot in length The standard measure of a container is a TEU (20-foot equivalent unit) Container ships are specially designed to carry containers in slots (or cells) Containers are stacked and restrained (lashed) at all four corners by vertical posts Some shipping lines now charter container slots on vessels operated by different companies
container
This term is Objectivity-specific A container is a logical grouping of persistent objects Persistent objects within a container are physically clustered together in memory and on disk A container is also a unit of locking: when one object is locked, the whole container is locked
container
An item of equipment as defined by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) for transport purposes It must be of: a)a permanent character and accordingly strong enough to be suitable for repeated use b)specially designed to facilitate the carriage of goods, by one or more modes of transport without intermediate reloading c)fitted with devices permitting its ready handling, particularly from one mode of transport to another d)so designed as to be easy to fill and empty e)having an internal volume of 1 m3 or more The term container includes neither vehicles nor conventional packing Synonym: Freight Container
container
A large standard size metal box into which cargo is packed for shipment aboard specially configured oceangoing containerships and designed to be moved with common handling equipment enabling high-speed intermodal transfers in economically large units between ships, railcars, truck chassis, and barges using a minimum of labor The container, therefore, serves as the transfer unit rather than the cargo contained therein
container
an object that stores other objects, controlling their allocation, deallocation, and access Similar to C++ containers, the most important POOMA containers are Arrays and Fields See Also: Array, DynamicArray, Field, Tensor, TinyMatrix, Vector
container
An entity that provides life cycle management, security, deployment, and runtime services to components Each type of container (EJB, web, JSP, servlet, applet, and application client) also provides component-specific services
container
The part of a Rig which contains the Main and Reserve Parachutes Skydive Birmingham's containers are modern, well made, and provide the highest level of safety available
container
an item in which objects or materials can be stored or transported
container
A uniform, sealed, reusable metal box in which merchandise is shipped by vessel, truck or rail Standard lengths include 10, 20, 30 and 40 feet (40 foot lengths are generally able to hold about 40,000 pounds) Containers of 45 and 48 feet are also used, as well as containers for shipment by air
container
Receptacle that resembles a truck trailer that is lifted onto flatcars without the chassis Most containers are 20, 45, 48 or 53 feet in length Glossary Top
container
Steel container used for shipping your belongings oversease, can be used for sea, road or rail shipments
container
A "chunk" of storage space on a physical resource, typically a tape drive, which is retrieved in its entirety whenever an entity or object in that container is accessed Primarily used for data which is infrequently accessed, or for subsets of data that are typically accessed together
container
A specialized component that contains and manages other components
container
An object or application that can create or manipulate compound documents For example, Internet Explorer is a container for ActiveX objects
container
standard-sized metal box into which goods are packed The use of containers means that time and money are saved in transferring cargo between different means of transport; for example, from ship to train Special terminals and equipment are needed to handle such containers (for example, break-of-bulk points)
container
The Openwings container provides an environment for executing Openwings services Key functionality for Container Services can be found in the Container Services section of the Openwings Introduction How we can utilize container functionality is done through Context Services We use a default policy, the Installable Component Descriptor Policy for an executable component to be run on a container in Openwings And the policy loader in Container Services is what we use to support dependency substitution should a user want to use Openwings property settings from the properties txt file
container
Any bag, barrel, bottle, box, can, cylinder, drum, reaction vessel, storage tank or the like that contains a hazardous chemical For purposes of the Right to Know program, pipes or piping systems are not considered to be containers
container
Any bag, barrel, bottle, box, can, cylinder, drum, reaction vessel, storage tank, or the like that contains a hazardous chemical Under the Hazard Communication Standard pipes or piping systems, and engines, fuel tanks, or other operating systems in a vehicle are not considered to be containers
container
Container in logistics refers to the specific types of containers used for intermodal transportation, often referred to as "Ocean Containers" Standard external dimensions for containers are 8 ft wide, 8' 6" or 9' 6" tall, and 20, 40, or 45ft long
container
1 An object that exists to contain other objects, and that provides operations to access or iterate over its contents For example, arrays, sets, dictionaries 2 A component that exists to contain other components
container
a very large, typically metal, box used for transporting goods
container
any object that can be used to hold things (especially a large metal boxlike object of standardized dimensions that can be loaded from one form of transport to another)
container
An abstract data type whose sole purpose is to contain other objects Different containers differ in the way the elements are accessed Examples of containers are: set, stack, queue, double-ended queue, priority queue, dictionary, etc
container
Any device in which hazardous waste can be stored, handled, treated, transported, recycled, or disposed of, and is designed to be portable when it is empty Note: Oil filters are not considered containers (Title 22 CCR §66261 7) and their required management is described in Title 22 §66266 130
container
A uniform, sealed, reusable metal "box" (generally 40 feet in length, able to hold about 40,000 pounds) in which goods are shipped by vessel or rail The use of containers (or containerization) in trade is generally thought to require less labor and reduce losses due to breakage, spoilage, and pilferage than more traditional shipment methods
container
In the Exchange Administrator program, an object that contains other objects For example, the Recipients container is composed of recipient objects
container
A container is something such as a box or bottle that is used to hold or store things in. the plastic containers in which fish are stored and sold
containers
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