seyrisefer

listen to the pronunciation of seyrisefer
Turkish - English
(Ticaret) navigation
The theory, practice and technology of charting a course for a ship, aircraft or a spaceship
A canal
Traffic or travel by vessel, especially commercial shipping
{n} the act or art of passing by water
The art and science of conducting a boat safely from one point to another
1 Navigation can mean switching your reference point from one file to another 2 Navigation can also mean moving your cursor around a terminal display or a document using cursor keys and other commands
Navigation refers to the technical process of moving from one feature to another in an online module The navigation system for Academy modules allows students to follow a critical path, but also to exercise flexibility when they wish to vary from the normal path of progressing through a module
It helps to have consistent navigation on every page of your site so that visitors will find their way around your site It is also helpful to include a link to the home page from every page in your site so that you don't have "orphan" pages It is advisable to keep the amount of clicking to a minimum Ideally, a site's home page has direct links to all of its sub-pages so visitors only need to click 2 or 3 times from the home page to get to any page within the site If this is not the case, you may want to consider restructuring your web site Finally, keep the amount of scrolling required on each page to a minimum
A system of text or image links on a web page which enable visitors to find their way around the site
the work of a sailor
Ships in general
{i} act of navigating (planning and directing the course of a naval vessel or aircraft); seafaring, use of the sea for commerce or travel; work of a sailor; passage of sea vessels
You can refer to the movement of ships as navigation. Pack ice around Iceland was becoming a threat to navigation. see also navigate. Science of directing a craft by determining its position, course, and distance traveled. Early mariners followed landmarks visible on shore and studied prevailing winds for clues to direction. The Phoenicians and Polynesians sailed out of sight of land and used the stars to set their course. The compass (first used by the Chinese 1100) was the first navigational aid that gave a constant reference point, though its accuracy was limited, especially in heavy seas. Modern compasses are stabilized by gyroscopes and housed in binnacles that compensate for the craft's motion. Ship speed was first calculated by dropping overboard a log attached to a reel of line knotted at regular intervals; the number of knots exposed while the log drifted and a sandglass emptied gave the vessel's speed in knots (nautical mph). Charts are another essential navigational tool. Fixing a position requires charts detailing known locations, together with instruments that calculate a vessel's bearing relative to them. The earliest instrument for determining latitude was the quadrant, which measured the altitude of the polestar or the noonday sun. Other early instruments included the sextant and the astrolabe. Longitude (used for navigation with increasing success in the 17th-18th century) was fixed using chronometers and tables showing positions of celestial bodies throughout the year. In the 20th century, radio beacons and satellite networks allowed aircraft and ships to determine their position. Dead reckoning uses an accurate history of a vessel's headings and speeds drawn from gyroscopes and from computerized measurements of the craft's acceleration. See also Global Positioning System
the science or art of conducting ships or vessels from one place to another, including, more especially, the method of determining a ship's position, course, distance passed over, etc
ship traffic; "the channel will be open to navigation as soon as the ice melts"
A system of hypertext paths set up on a Web page to enable visitors to find their way around the site
The purpose of the Navigation package is to aid navigation of the event and detector object structures The navigation objects are transient, that is to say they are created as necessary and are not stored permanently The idea is that designers of the event and detector object structures provide code to create the navigation objects on demand The end user sees a uniform interface via these navigation objects and can select and sort without needing write access to the underlying structures
The term that is used for finding your way around the Web, both from one web site to another and within a web site There isn't any map of the World Wide Web (although many sites have local maps), so just like being on the roads it is fine if what you want is signposted but tough if it isn't
The process of traveling from one place to another and knowing where you are in relation to your desired course
seyrisefer
Favorites