تعريف flow flow في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- Knudsen flow
- The flow of a gas in which the mean free path of its molecules is much longer than the characteristic dimension of the tube etc that it is flowing through
- cash flow
- The sum of cash revenues and expenditures over a period of time
- cash flow
- A statement of such transactions
- cash-flow
- Alternative spelling of cash flow
- cash-flow
- Alternative spelling of cashflow
- data flow
- The transfer of data between the components of a computer
- data flow
- The route between origin, via nodes, to a destination taken by a packet of data
- data flow diagram
- A type of flow chart; a description of data and the manual and machine processing performed on the data as it moves and changes from one stage to the next. It also includes the locations where the data are placed in permanent storage (disk, tape, etc.)
- data flow diagrams
- plural form of data flow diagram
- discontinuity in the flow
- an abrupt drop in audience attention to the visuals of a commercial as seen in the Flow of Attention results
The ad was sent back for re-editing after a discontinuity in the flow was identified in the Flow of Attention results.
- ebb and flow
- A large flowing out and in
- ebb and flow
- The flowing out and in of the tide
- ebb and flow
- To alternately ebb and flow
As true we are as flesh and blood can be: / The sea will ebb and flow, heaven show his face.
- flow
- The amount of a fluid that moves or the rate of fluid movement
Turn on the valve and make sure you have sufficient flow.
- flow
- The movement of a fluid
- flow
- To move or match smoothly, gracefully, or continuously
The writing is grammatically correct, but it just doesn't flow.
- flow
- Smoothness or continuity
The room was small, but it had good symmetry and flow.
- flow
- To move as a fluid from one position to another
- flow
- the state of being at one with
- flow
- The rising movement of the tide
- flow cell
- A part of a flow cytometer in which a stream of cells is aligned to pass one at a time through a light beam
- flow chart
- A schematic representation of how the different stages in a process are interconnected
- flow control
- A process of managing the rate of data transmission between two nodes to prevent a fast sender from outrunning a slow receiver
- flow control
- Laws, regulations, and economic incentives or disincentives used by waste managers to direct waste generated in a specific geographic area to a designated landfill, recycling, or waste-to-energy facility
- flow control
- A practice of holding aircraft on the ground in anticipation of congestion at destination airspace and airports
- flow cytometer
- A cytometer used in flow cytometry
- flow cytometry
- A technique used to sort and classify cells by using fluorescent markers on their surface
- flow diagram
- flow chart
- flow field
- The distribution of the density and velocity of a fluid over space and time
- flow of attention
- A research technique that deconstructs the cognitive processes of the audience’s selective perception filter
- flow of attention
- Research results that plot the audience’s level of attention, moment-by-moment, through a commercial
The Flow of Attention results showed us where we were losing the audience so we edited those few spots and had a better commercial.
- flow of emotion
- A research technique that deconstructs the dramatic structure of a commercial in terms of emotional response to the advertisement rather than the rational response to the messaging
- flow of emotion
- Research results that plot the audience’s level and type of emotional response, moment-by-moment, through a commercial
It was easy to see in the flow of emotion results that people had strong negative emotions toward the voice-over, so we had the announcer read the copy less sarcastically and people loved the ad.
- flow variable
- A variable whose value depends on a period of time rather than an instant, example being the gross domestic product
- flow variables
- plural form of flow variable
- free cash flow
- Net income plus depreciation and amortization, less changes in working capital, less capital expenditure
Free cash flow can be very negative for profitable, fast-growing businesses and very positive for unprofitable, declining ones.
- go with the flow
- To act as others are acting, conforming to common behavior patterns with an attitude of calm acceptance
- isentropic flow
- the compressible flow of a fluid, such as in a shock wave, in which entropy remains constant throughout the flow, or throughout a particular streamline
- isocratic flow
- In liquid chromatography, a mobile phase of constant composition. In contrast to this is the so called "gradient elution", which is a separation where the mobile phase changes its composition during a separation process
Operating an isocratic flow of 2 mL min.
- laminar flow
- A smooth, streamline type of viscous flow in which the fluid behaves as a system of orderly layers, with no eddies or irregular fluctuations
- mass flow
- the net movement of material matter from one location to another
- off-flow
- A flow from something (or somewhere) to something (or somewhere) else
What percentage of claimant off-flows from jobseeker's allowance were due to the claimant claiming incapacity benefit?.
- page flow
- a directory of Web app files that work together to implement a UI feature
- peak flow
- The largest measure of air respired from the lungs
- peak flow
- The largest volume of water discharged from a stream or river
- peak flow meter
- An instrument that monitors the peak expiratory flow rate of air from a person's bronchi; used to manage asthma
- plastic flow
- any fluid flow in which movement is proportional to the applied force (above the yield value)
- plastic flow
- any deformation caused by a sustained force
- pyroclastic flow
- A flow of volcanic ash, dust, rocks and debris that cascades down the slope of a volcano during an eruption. Pyroclastic flows are very dangerous, reaching speeds greater than 60 miles per hour and temperatures in excess of 800 degrees Fahrenheit
- return flow
- Surface or subsurface water that leaves the field following application of irrigation water
- transverse flow effect
- vibration in the rotor of a helicopter due to differential drag
- wake flow
- The turbulent flow, with many eddies, downstream of a blunt body
- flow
- {i} act of flowing; movement of a liquid; something which flows; steady progression (of things, events, etc.); outpouring, outflow; rate of flowing; flood, overflowing; menstruation; (Slang) act of performing rap music
- mass flow
- or convection In physiology, the mechanism responsible for movement of air from the atmosphere into the lungs and for movement of blood between the lungs and the tissues. It is one of two principal mechanisms of exchange by which oxygen and carbon dioxide move between the environment and the tissues, the other being diffusion. Local flows (e.g., through skeletal muscles during exercise) can be increased selectively, increasing the exchange of gases between tissue cells and the capillaries
- flow
- {n} a rise of water, run, plenty, sudden plenty
- flow
- {v} to pour in as water, run, overflow, melt
- flow stress
- Flow stress is defined as a specific value of the shear stress indicating the strength of a certain material. The flow stress value indicates the stress required to cause plastic deformation in a solid
- inertial flow
- (Bilim, İlim) (fluid mechanics) Flow in which no external forces are exerted on a fluid
- inviscid flow
- Inviscid flow is a fluid flow where viscous (friction) forces are small in comparison to inertial forces, i.e. a flow with a Reynolds number . The assumption that viscous forces are negligible can be used to simplify the Navier-Stokes equations to the Euler equations
- money flow
- (Ekonomi) Money flow in technical analysis is typical price multiplied by volume, a kind of approximation to the dollar value of a day's trading
- two-phase flow
- In fluid mechanics, two-phase flow occurs in a system containing gas and liquid with a meniscus separating the two phases