scopes

listen to the pronunciation of scopes
English - Turkish

Definition of scopes in English Turkish dictionary

scope
{i} kapsam

Bu kez test kapsamı o kadar geniş olmayacak mı? - This time the scope of the test won't be so broad?

Bu konu bizim çalışma kapsamında değildir. - This subject is not within the scope of our study.

scope
faaliyet alanı
scopes trial
kapsamları deneme
scope
{i} olanak
scope
{i} k.dili. teleskop; mikroskop
scope
(Hukuk) saha
scope
kavrama gücü
scope
{i} ufuk
scope
olanak/alan
scope
konu

Bu konu bizim çalışma kapsamında değildir. - This subject is not within the scope of our study.

scope
(Askeri) DÜRBÜN: Bak. "telescope"
scope
dili teleskop
scope
gözlem aygıtı
scope
gidim
scope
niyet
scope
amaç
scope
alan
scope
(İnşaat) işin çapı
scope
(Pisikoloji, Ruhbilim) skop
scope
(Askeri) bildiri kapsamı
scope
osiloskop
scope
(Ticaret) içerik
scope
etki alanı
scope
hareket serbestliği
scope
anlama yeteneği
scope
fırsat
scope
çevre sorunları bilimsel komitesi
select scopes
(Bilgisayar) kapsam seç
total scopes
(Bilgisayar) toplam kapsam sayısı
English - English
{i} family name; John T. Scopes (1900-1970), high school science teacher from Tennessee who was tried and found guilty of teaching the theory of evolution (he was later acquitted)
American teacher who violated a state law by teaching the theory of evolution in a Tennessee high school. His trial (July 1925) was a highly publicized confrontation between defense attorney Clarence Darrow and the director of the prosecution, William Jennings Bryan. Scopes was found guilty and fined a nominal sum, but his conviction was later reversed on technical grounds
plural of scope
Tennessee highschool teacher who violated a state law by teaching evolution; in a highly publicized trial in 1925 he was prosecuted by William Jennings Bryan and defended by Clarence Darrow (1900-1970)
Scopes Monkey Trial
1925 trial of Tennessee teacher John Scopes for violating state laws and teaching the theory of evolution in a public school (Scopes was found guilty but later acquitted)
Scopes trial
a famous US court case in which John Scopes, a biology teacher, was taken to a court of law in 1925 for teaching Darwin's theory of Evolution, because this was against the law in the state of Tennessee, where the story of the creation as told in the Old Testament of the Bible had to be taught in state schools. He was defended by the lawyer Clarence Darrow, but was found guilty. (July 10-21, 1925) Widely publicized trial (called the "Monkey Trial") in Dayton, Tenn. John T. Scopes (1900-70), a high-school teacher, was charged with teaching Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, which violated a state law prohibiting the teaching of any doctrine that denied the divine creation of humans. The trial was broadcast live on radio and attracted worldwide interest. The prosecutor was William Jennings Bryan; the defense attorney was Clarence Darrow. The judge limited arguments to the basic charge to avoid a test of the law's constitutionality and a discussion of Darwin's theory. Scopes was found guilty and fined $100; he was later acquitted on the technicality that he had been fined excessively. The law was repealed in 1967
scopes trial
a highly publicized trial in 1925 when John Thomas Scopes violated a Tennessee state law by teaching evolution in high school; Scopes was prosecuted by William Jennings Bryan and defended by Clarence Darrow; Scopes was convicted but the verdict was laterreversed
scope
The breadth, depth or reach of a subject; a domain
scope
The region of program source in which an identifier is meaningful
scope
a range of action or view
scope
Extended area
scope
Room or opportunity for free outlook or aim; space for action; amplitude of opportunity; free course or vent; liberty; range of view, intent, or action
scope
{n} a drift, intention, liberty, room, sally
John T. Scopes
(1900-1970) United States high school science teacher from Tennessee who was tried and found guilty of teaching the theory of evolution (he was later acquitted)
scope
The scope of an identifier is the region of a program source within which it represents a certain thing
scope
The ratio between the length of an anchor rope and the depth of the water in which a vessel is anchored
scope
The scope of an activity, topic, or piece of work is the whole area which it deals with or includes. Mr Dobson promised to widen the organisation's scope of activity. scope out to look at something or someone to see what they are like
scope
a magnifier of images of distant objects
scope
A variable's scope is the areas of a program in which it can be accessed, according to the rules of the programming language
scope
A characteristic of an identifier that determines where the identifier can be used Scope is determined by visibility modifiers: private, public, and protected Protected is essentially the default visibility modifier Most identifiers in the JavaTM programming environment have either class or local scope Instance and class variables and methods have class scope; they can be used outside the class and its subclasses only by prefixing them with an instance of the class or (for class variables and methods) with the class name All other variables are declared within methods and have local scope
scope
Area served by a program Note: Most programs in the inventory are statewide in scope However, some programs focus more narrowly, such as on regions or communities The primary inclusion criterion for programs of any scope is involvement in some capacity by the state department of health
scope
A short version of periscope, or telescope or oscilloscope
scope
To perform arthroscopic surgery
scope
Defines the visibility of a variable, procedure, or object Variables declared in functions are visible only within the function and lose their value between calls
scope
A scope defines the level of advertisement for an address The level is a level of a peer group in the PNNI routing hierarchy
scope
Scope consists of the range of actions, alternatives, and impacts the USFS determines will be considered in an environmental document (either EA or EIS)
scope
(Ticaret) A measurable definition of the goals, resources, timing and desired outcome of an implementation project or activity
scope
[n] the range of subjects or types of collections in which the Museum is interested (the scope is determined from the Museum's mission)
scope
{i} range; extent; sphere, area; space, expanse; opportunity or room for action and thought
scope
The region of a program in which a variable is defined and can be referenced
scope
The scope or context is the range, usually surrounded by braces, that a variable or function is available or usable in
scope
The scope of a variable defines whether or not it can be accessed In a variable has global scope then it can be accessed everywhere If it has local scope then it can only be accessed in the block it is defined, and all inner blocks
scope
A combining form usually signifying an instrument for viewing (with the eye) or observing (in any way); as in microscope, telescope, altoscope, anemoscope
scope
NCL: The range or area within a program in which an identifier is meaningful
scope
In programming, the extent to which an identifier, such as a constant, data type, variable, or routine, can be referenced within a program Scope can be global or local Scope can also be affected by redefining identifiers, such as by giving the same name to both a global variable and a local variable
scope
A language's scope rules determine how widely variables, methods and classes are visible within a class or program Local variables have a scope limited to the block in which they are defined, for instance Private methods and variables have class scope, limiting their accessibility to their defining class Java provides private, package, protected and public visibility
scope
Length; extent; sweep; as, scope of cable
scope
Each project has five areas of influence that can be viewed from a specific emphasis, or scope These five scopes are financial (budget and cost flow), logical (business rules, analysis, design, and implementation), organizational (personnel and managerial responsibility), temporal (schedules, task breakdowns, and durations), and deliverable scopes (all outputs of the system and process used to develop it)
scope
To perform a cursory investigation, as to scope out
scope
Scope is the way that we describe the boundaries of the project It defines what the project will deliver and what it will not deliver For larger projects, it can include the organizations affected, the transactions affected, the data types included, etc See 5 1 1 Defining Scope for more information
scope
a device used in aiming a projectile, through which the person aiming looks at the intended target
scope
Defines the visibility of a variable, procedure, or object For example, a variable declared as Public is visible to all procedures in all modules Variables declared in procedures are visible only within the procedure and lose their value between calls
scope
an area in which something acts or operates or has power or control: "the range of a supersonic jet"; "the ambit of municipal legislation"; "within the compass of this article"; "within the scope of an investigation"; "outside the reach of the law"; "in the political orbit of a world power"
scope
electronic equipment that provides visual images of varying electrical quantities
scope
That at which one aims; the thing or end to which the mind directs its view; that which is purposed to be reached or accomplished; hence, ultimate design, aim, or purpose; intention; drift; object
scope
the state of the environment in which a situation exists; "you can't do that in a university setting"
scope
A characteristic of an identifier that determines where the identifier can be used Most identifiers in the Java language have either class or local scope Instance and class variables and methods have class scope; they can be used outside the class and its subclasses only by prefixing them with an instance of the class or (for class variables and methods) with the class name All other variables are declared within methods and have local scope; they can be used only within the enclosing block
scope
The ratio of the length of an anchor line, from a vessel's bow to the anchor, to the depth of the water
scope
(n ) that part of an executable program within which a lexical token has a single interpretation It may be an executable program, a scoping unit, a single statement, or a part of a statement
scope
A scope delimits logically independent sections The scope delimiters in the STAR grammar are data blocks and the save frames Multiple data blocks may occur within a single file, but the definitions and declarations in different data blocks are logically independent Similarly, save frames delimit sections of independent scope within a data block The mmCIF dictionary is organized as a collection of save frames within a single data block Each save frame holds a different definition, and this set of related definitions is arranged in a single data block
scope
If there is scope for a particular kind of behaviour or activity, people have the opportunity to behave in this way or do that activity. He believed in giving his staff scope for initiative Banks had increased scope to develop new financial products
scope
The combination of all project goals and tasks and the work required to accomplish them There are two aspects to scope, business scope and technical scope (back to top)
scope
That part of a source program in which a variable is visible
scope
There are 4 types of scope: local - names local to the current block; function - labels can be used anywhere in the function they are declared; file - name declared outside all blocks and classes and therefore gobal; class - the name of a class member is local to its own class and can't be used outside of that class
scope
The scope of a quantifier is the range in which its corresponding variable is bound It begins with the left parenthesis which precedes the quantifier, and ends with the matching right parenthesis
scope
compass
scopes

    Hyphenation

    Scopes

    Turkish pronunciation

    skōps

    Pronunciation

    /ˈskōps/ /ˈskoʊps/

    Etymology

    [ 'skOp ] (noun.) circa 1555. Italian scopo purpose, goal, from Greek skopos; akin to Greek skeptesthai to watch, look at; more at SPY.
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