realms

listen to the pronunciation of realms
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
dünya
replace realms
(Bilgisayar) alanları değiştir
realm
diyar
realm
bölge
realm
{i} alan: This is not within the realm of possibility. Bunun imkânı yok. realm of authority yetki alanı. 4
realm
(Bilgisayar) erişim alanı
realm
(Bilgisayar) yetki alanı
realm
dünya
realm
alan

Son zamanlarda, bilgisayar kullanımında artan çeşitlilik, ofis alanlarının çok ötesine uzandı. - Recently, the increasing diversity of computer use has extended far beyond the realms of the office.

realm
ülke

Kralın ülkesi bir ejderha tarafından terörize edildi. - The king's realm was terrorized by a dragon.

beyond the realms of possibility
İmkân dahilinde olmayan, imkânsız
realm
the realm of fancy hayal âlemi
realm
{i} ülke, memleket
realm
{i} alem
realm
üIke
realm
{i} krallık
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
plural of realm
realm
The domain of a certain abstraction

One thing more which the scientific man does is to accord primacy to that realm of truth which is primary in importance.

realm
An abstract sphere of influence, real or imagined

At home in Moscow, Mikhail Sergeyevitch Gorbachev, who had launched a campaign to rejuvenate the Soviet realm.

realm
A territory or state, as ruled by a specific power, and particularly those territories ruled by a king

Then seeing his life was threatened he fled the realm and crossed over to Flanders,.

realm
{n} a state, kingdom, kingly government
beyond the realms of possibility
Not possible
Realm
reaume
Realm
rewme
Realm
reume
Realm
reme
Realm
reame
realm
Hence, in general, province; region; country; domain; department; division; as, the realm of fancy
realm
If you say that something is not beyond the realms of possibility, you mean that it is possible. A fall of 50 per cent or more on prices is not beyond the realms of possibility
realm
A realm is another reality on Earth Strictly speaking, a realm refers to the area on Earth that is under the influence of an alternate reality For example, The Nile Empire is a realm, not Terra, the world in which Nile Empire's reality originated Not to be confusing, but the Nile Empire can also be used to refer to Terra
realm
the logical network served by a single Kerberos database and a set of Key Distribution Centers By convention, realm names are generally all uppercase letters, to differentiate the realm from the internet domain
realm
a region of the Earth that harbors similar groups of species based on a shared biogeographical history For example, while primates are found in many parts of the world, all monkeys found with prehensile tails are only found in the Neotropic realm The Earth is made up of eight realms
realm
a knowledge domain that you are interested in or are communicating about; "it was a limited domain of discourse"; "here we enter the region of opinion"; "the realm of the occult"
realm
The authority that holds the identification and credentials for authenticating a user (P&M)
realm
A logical sub division of a domain A web site may be split into realms, with access controlled to each realm of the web site
realm
A unique name given to each protected area on a server, whether it be a single document or an entire server
realm
In SD-UX security, the scope of the authority by which the principal is authenticated
realm
You can use realm to refer to any area of activity, interest, or thought. the realm of politics
realm
a domain in which something is dominant; "the untroubled kingdom of reason"; "a land of make-believe"; "the rise of the realm of cotton in the south"
realm
A royal jurisdiction or domain; a region which is under the dominion of a king; a kingdom
realm
the domain ruled by a king or queen
realm
A term used in HTTP and proxy access authorization that helps the user identify which part of the system is requesting an HTTP or proxy user name and password
realm
A sphere of activity or influence; a field, domain or province
realm
{i} kingdom; domain, sphere; region, area
realm
A set of hosts that share the same Kerberos /k database
realm
A group of users and groups assigned by an authentication scheme to regulate access to specific files or directories
realm
noun [George Olshevsky] - A hyperplane of three dimensions; 4d analog of point in 1d, line in 2d, and plane in 3d A realm intersects 4d space into two parts, just as a plane intersects 3d space into two parts
realm
A realm is a country that has a king or queen. Defence of the realm is crucial
realm
An artificial administrative boundary that uses one set of kerberos authentication servers to manage and deploy a single set of unique identifiers  A realm is a unique login space
realm
the collection of all information devices sharing a common channel specification
realm
A set of hosts that share the same Kerberos database
realm
One of the three types of "place" Underhill A Realm is the domain of a Lord, and is made up of Liths See Underhill Geography
realm
(InterConnect User's Guide)
realm
A kingdom (now mainly in Law); a territory or state, as ruled by a specific power
realm
A database of users, groups, and access control lists Used to specify which users have access to the resources of a specific service (for example, to the Web Page Service)
realm
the name (in all uppercase) of the logical network served by a single Kerberos database and a number of Key Distribution Centers Kerberos domains are often similar to DNS domains (such as the Kerberos realm "UPENN EDU" and the DNS domain "upenn edu"), but they are not technically related to eachother
realm
A term sometimes used for domain, in this case to refer to user domains established for security reasons, not Internet domains For password-protected files, the name of the protected resource or area on the server If the user tries to access the protected resource while browsing, the name of the realm usually appears in the dialog box that asks for a user name and password
realm
~ Another word for Dimension, Kingdom or Layer
realms

    Турецкое произношение

    relmz

    Произношение

    /ˈrelmz/ /ˈrɛlmz/

    Этимология

    [ 'relm ] (noun.) 13th century. Middle English realme, from Old French reialme, alteration of reiame, from Latin regimen rule; more at REGIMEN.
Избранное