meshes

listen to the pronunciation of meshes
Englisch - Englisch
third person singular of mesh
plural of mesh
mesh
A polygon mesh
mesh
The engagement of the teeth of wheels, or of a wheel and rack
mesh
A structure made of connected strands of metal, fiber, or other flexible/ductile material, with evenly spaced openings between them
mesh
A measure of fineness (particle size) of ground material. A powder that passes through a sieve having 300 openings per linear inch but does not pass 400 openings per linear inch is said to be -300 +400 mesh
mesh
to fit in, to come together
polygon meshes
plural form of polygon mesh
mesh
Medical Subject Headings The thesaurus or controlled vocabulary for Medline
mesh
{v} to catch or take in a net, to insnare
mesh
{n} the space between the threads of a net
mesh
The opening or space enclosed by the threads of a net between knot and knot, or the threads enclosing such a space
mesh
entangle or catch in (or as if in) a mesh
mesh
contact by fitting together; "the engagement of the clutch"; "the meshing of gears"
mesh
An any-to-any network in which a node is connected to virtually any other node in a collection of cross-connect links, implemented using OXCs This can allow very efficient routing, but can be expensive to implement
mesh
Grading of particle size according to passage through a standard sieve with a known number of filaments per inch Substances graded at 80/100 mesh are those which pass through a screen with 80 filaments per inch but are retained by a screen with 100 filaments per inch
mesh
(expanded metal) - This is the nominal distance from the mid-point of one bond in expanded metal to the mid-point of the next bond measured across the SWD Mesh is expressed in inches
mesh
Medical Subject Headings; an alphabetic and categorized list of subject descriptors created by the National Library of Medicine to analyze biomedical literature
mesh
{i} open spaces in a net or screen; material (threads, wires, or cords, etc.) used to make an object with open spaces in it; something made from a woven material; something that catches or traps; that which fits together like gears
mesh
Medical Subject Headings, the thesaurus for Medline; a controlled vocabulary providing consistent terminology for concepts covered by the database
mesh
the topology of a network whose components are all connected directly to every other component
mesh
work together in harmony
mesh
an open fabric of string or rope or wire woven together at regular intervals
mesh
coordinate in such a way that all parts work together effectively
mesh
A type of fabric characterized by its net-like open appearance, and the spaces between the yarns Mesh is available in a variety of constructions including wovens, knits, laces, or crocheted fabrics
mesh
(n ) A topology in which nodes form a regular acyclic d-dimensional grid, and each edge is parallel to a grid axis and joins two nodes that are adjacent along that axis The architecture of many multicomputers is a two or three dimensional mesh; meshes are also the basis of many scientific calculations, in which each node represents a point in space, and the edges define the neighbours of a node See also hypercube, torus
mesh
A mesh is a series of polygons grouped to form a surface
mesh
keep engaged; "engaged the gears"
mesh
A collection of vertices, faces, and edges that represent a topological polyhedron Defined by the TQ3Mesh data type
mesh
To engage with each other, as the teeth of wheels
mesh
Medical Subject Headings Controlled vocabulary designed by the National Library of Medicine to search MEDLINE and other health sciences databases
mesh
the act of interlocking or meshing; "an interlocking of arms by the police held the crowd in check"
mesh
Similar to a pique knit, but with a more open texture for increased breathability Larger knit than Cool Weave
mesh
A system of subject headings related to the medical fields These will be seen most often in catalog records for items found at the Veterinary Medicine Library
mesh
Fabric made of either fiberglass or aluminum, used in the making of screens
mesh
the number of opening per inch of a screen; measures size of particles; "a 100 mesh screen"; "100 mesh powdered cellulose"
mesh
the finite elements
mesh
Network architecture in which each node has a dedicated connection to all other nodes
mesh
The National Library of Medicine's (NLM's) controlled vocabulary thesaurus
mesh
Any fabric, knitted or woven, with an open texture, fine, or coarse
mesh
(1) a uniformly spaced arrangement of interlaced or interlocked strands of thread or wire; screen fabric; (2) the open space between the threads of a woven screen fabric
mesh
Mesh is material like a net made from wire, thread, or plastic. The ground-floor windows are obscured by wire mesh
mesh
One of the openings or spaces in a screen or woven fabric The value of the mesh is usually given as the number openings per inch This value does not consider the diameter of the wire or fabric; therefore, the mesh number does not always have a definite relationship to the size of the hole
mesh
The opening or space inclosed by the threads of a net between knot and knot, or the threads inclosing such a space; network; a net
mesh
the act of interlocking or meshing; "an interlocking of arms by the police held the crowd in check" the number of opening per inch of a screen; measures size of particles; "a 100 mesh screen"; "100 mesh powdered cellulose" work together in harmony
mesh
To catch in a mesh
mesh
a Field's map from indices to geometric values such as cell size, edge length, and cell normals In other words, it specifies a Field's "spatial extent" See Also: Field, cell, cell size, corner position, layout
mesh
{f} interweave, fit in, combine together; interweave or coordinate internally; entangle; become entangled; capture, take prisoner, ensnare in a net; match, fit, coordinate one thing with another
mesh
refers to the number of openings in a lineal inch measured from the center of one wire to a point one inch distant Definition of Mesh & Space-->
mesh
A set of subject term and associated thesaurus used to describe medical research, maintained by the National Library of Medicine
mesh
The lines and points which make up the structure ("geometry") of a 3-D model
mesh
If two things or ideas mesh or are meshed, they go together well or fit together closely. Their senses of humor meshed perfectly This of course meshes with the economic philosophy of those on the right Meshing the research and marketing operations will be Mr. Furlaud's job
mesh
(n ) A graphics object composed of, typically, triangles or quadrilaterals that share vertexes and edges, and thus can be transmitted in a compact format to a graphics accelerator
Türkisch - Englisch

Definition von meshes im Türkisch Englisch wörterbuch

mesh
annointing
meshes

    Türkische aussprache

    meşîz

    Aussprache

    /ˈmesʜəz/ /ˈmɛʃɪz/

    Etymologie

    [ 'mesh ] (noun.) 14th century. Middle English, probably from Middle Dutch maesche; akin to Old High German masca mesh, Lithuanian mazgos knot.

    Videos

    ... the specification. But, like, the 3D meshes. That currently exists as a 3D mesh. I think ...
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