ac
Kelime Anlamı :
1. dalgalı akım.
2. alternating current.
3. Faal Unsur; uçak komutanı; alternatif akım (Active Component; aircraft commander; alternating current).
4. Alternatif akım.
5. klima.
6. account.
7. alternatif akim.
8. aktinyum asetat.
9. bk. Alternating Current.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1.
but.
2. account; money of account
3. acre
4. air conditioning
5. alicyclic
6. alternating current
7. ante cibum, before meals
2. account; money of account
3. acre
4. air conditioning
5. alicyclic
6. alternating current
7. ante cibum, before meals
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
1.
an electric current that reverses direction sinusoidally. alternative to
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
1.
etc. points of flexure in the heating curves of iron and steel. the point ac1 on heating is the same as ar1 on cooling, etc.
2. the early form of oak, preserved (through the shortening of the vowel before two consonants) in certain place-names (whence surnames): as, Acton [⟨ as. Āctū n], literally, oak-town, or dwelling among the oaks: Acley or Ackley, also Oakley [⟨ as. Ācleá], literally, oak-lea.
3. A prefix, assimilated form of ad- before c and q, as in accede, acquire, etc.; also an accommodated form of other prefixes, as in accurse, accloy, accumber, etc. see these words.
4. an adjective-suffix of greek or latin origin, as in cardiac, maniac, iliac, etc. it is always preceded by -i- and, like -ic, may take the additional suffix -al.
2. the early form of oak, preserved (through the shortening of the vowel before two consonants) in certain place-names (whence surnames): as, Acton [⟨ as. Āctū n], literally, oak-town, or dwelling among the oaks: Acley or Ackley, also Oakley [⟨ as. Ācleá], literally, oak-lea.
3. A prefix, assimilated form of ad- before c and q, as in accede, acquire, etc.; also an accommodated form of other prefixes, as in accurse, accloy, accumber, etc. see these words.
4. an adjective-suffix of greek or latin origin, as in cardiac, maniac, iliac, etc. it is always preceded by -i- and, like -ic, may take the additional suffix -al.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia