f., bak. eat

listen to the pronunciation of f., bak. eat
التركية - الإنجليزية
ate
simple past of eat
Japanese term for "smashing"
Striking To strike
Automatic Test Equipment; computer controlled equipment used in the production testing of packaged ICs Test voltage sequences (test pattern) are applied and responses compared to data on file or to a known-to-be-good IC
Automatic (or Automated) Test Equipment
(Gk- blindness; ruin; pron aw'-tay): in ancient Greek culture this term was used for criminal folly or reckless ambition of a man beyond his proper sphere; it can refer both to blind ambition, and also to that moral blindness which lacks the courage and humility to admit wrong and to ask forgiveness; in the Iliad, Book 9, Agamemnon confesses: "Mad, blind I was!" (IX 134) and Achilles' old friend Phoenix warns him about being "stiff-necked and harsh blinded" (IX 621); in Greek mythology there was a goddess Ate (often translated "Ruin") who personified the fatal blindnesss and recklessness which produces crime, and the divine punishment which follows it and punishes it; Homer said that Ate was the eldest daughter of Zeus, "that maddening goddess who blinds us all," and that Zeus cast her out of heaven after she once blinded even him (XIX 106-158; see also Fagles, Intro , p 54)
Automated Test Equipment
pinpoint strike, smash
ATM Terminating Equipment
Ate is the past tense of eat. Past tense of eat. the past tense of eat
Equipment that automatically tests populated circuit boards and can be used to program Lattice ISP devices
(eat, ate, eaten)
Acronym: Automatic Test Equipment Also known simply as "the tester" Computer driven hardware designed to test integrated circuits
As an ending of participles or participial adjectives it is equivalent to - ed; as, situate or situated; animate or animated
It is also used in the case of certain basic salts
It also sometimes marks the office or dignity; as, tribunate
as, to propitiate (to make propitious); to animate (to give life to)
The goddess of mischievous folly; also, in later poets, the goddess of vengeance
Automatic Test Equipment
An immediate threat to capture; a single liberty remains A verbal warning is often issued when placing an opponent into ate