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Angle of incidence
Angle of incidence Angle of incidence (A["e]ronautics)
The angle between the chord of an a["e]rocurve and the
relative direction of the undisturbed air current.
Angle of incidenceIncidence In"ci*dence, n. [Cf. F. incidence.]
1. A falling on or upon; an incident; an event. [Obs.] --Bp.
Hall.
2. (Physics) The direction in which a body, or a ray of light
or heat, falls on any surface.
In equal incidences there is a considerable
inequality of refractions. --Sir I.
Newton.
Angle of incidence, the angle which a ray of light, or the
line of incidence of a body, falling on any surface, makes
with a perpendicular to that surface; also formerly, the
complement of this angle.
Line of incidence, the line in the direction of which a
surface is struck by a body, ray of light, and the like. CoincideCoincide Co`in*cide", v. i. [imp. & p. p. Coincided; p. pr.
& vb. n. Coinciding.] [L. co- + incidere to fall on; in +
cadere to fall: cf. F. co["i]ncider. See Chance, n.]
1. To occupy the same place in space, as two equal triangles,
when placed one on the other.
If the equator and the ecliptic had coincided, it
would have rendered the annual revoluton of the
earth useless. --Cheyne.
2. To occur at the same time; to be contemporaneous; as, the
fall of Granada coincided with the discovery of America.
3. To correspond exactly; to agree; to concur; as, our aims
coincide.
The rules of right jugdment and of good
ratiocination often coincide with each other.
--Watts. CoincidedCoincide Co`in*cide", v. i. [imp. & p. p. Coincided; p. pr.
& vb. n. Coinciding.] [L. co- + incidere to fall on; in +
cadere to fall: cf. F. co["i]ncider. See Chance, n.]
1. To occupy the same place in space, as two equal triangles,
when placed one on the other.
If the equator and the ecliptic had coincided, it
would have rendered the annual revoluton of the
earth useless. --Cheyne.
2. To occur at the same time; to be contemporaneous; as, the
fall of Granada coincided with the discovery of America.
3. To correspond exactly; to agree; to concur; as, our aims
coincide.
The rules of right jugdment and of good
ratiocination often coincide with each other.
--Watts. Coincidence
Coincidence Co*in"ci*dence, n. [Cf. F. co["i]ncidence.]
1. The condition of occupying the same place in space; as,
the coincidence of circles, surfaces, etc. --Bentley.
2. The condition or fact of happening at the same time; as,
the coincidence of the deaths of John Adams and Thomas
Jefferson.
3. Exact correspondence in nature, character, result,
circumstances, etc.; concurrence; agreement.
The very concurrence and coincidence of ao many
evidences . . . carries a great weight. --Sir M.
Hale.
Those who discourse . . . of the nature of truth . .
. affirm a perfect coincidence between truth and
goodness. --South.
Coincident
Coincident Co*in"ci*dent, a. [Cf. F. co["i]ncident.]
Having coincidence; occupying the same place;
contemporaneous; concurrent; -- followed by with.
Christianity teaches nothing but what is perfectly
suitable to, and coincident with, the ruling principles
of a virtuous and well-inclined man. --South.
Coincident
Coincident Co*in"ci*dent, n.
One of two or more coincident events; a coincidence. [R.]
``Coincidents and accidents.' --Froude.
Coincidental
Coincidental Co*in`ci*den"tal, a.
Coincident.
Coincidently
Coincidently Co*in"ci*dent*ly, adv.
With coincidence.
Coincider
Coincider Co`in*cid"er, n.
One who coincides with another in an opinion.
CoincidingCoincide Co`in*cide", v. i. [imp. & p. p. Coincided; p. pr.
& vb. n. Coinciding.] [L. co- + incidere to fall on; in +
cadere to fall: cf. F. co["i]ncider. See Chance, n.]
1. To occupy the same place in space, as two equal triangles,
when placed one on the other.
If the equator and the ecliptic had coincided, it
would have rendered the annual revoluton of the
earth useless. --Cheyne.
2. To occur at the same time; to be contemporaneous; as, the
fall of Granada coincided with the discovery of America.
3. To correspond exactly; to agree; to concur; as, our aims
coincide.
The rules of right jugdment and of good
ratiocination often coincide with each other.
--Watts. IncideIncide In*cide", v. t. [L. incidere; pref. in- in + caedere to
cut. See Concise, and cf. Incise.]
To cut; to separate and remove; to resolve or break up, as by
medicines. [Obs.] --Arbuthnot. IncidenceIncidence In"ci*dence, n. [Cf. F. incidence.]
1. A falling on or upon; an incident; an event. [Obs.] --Bp.
Hall.
2. (Physics) The direction in which a body, or a ray of light
or heat, falls on any surface.
In equal incidences there is a considerable
inequality of refractions. --Sir I.
Newton.
Angle of incidence, the angle which a ray of light, or the
line of incidence of a body, falling on any surface, makes
with a perpendicular to that surface; also formerly, the
complement of this angle.
Line of incidence, the line in the direction of which a
surface is struck by a body, ray of light, and the like. Incidency
Incidency In"ci*den*cy, n.
Incidence. [Obs.] --Shak.
Incident
Incident In"ci*dent, n. [Cf. F. incident.]
1. That which falls out or takes place; an event; casualty;
occurrence.
Incidently
Incidently In"ci*dent*ly, adv.
Incidentally. [Obs.]
Incoincidence
Incoincidence In`co*in"ci*dence, n.
The quality of being incoincident; want of coincidence. [R.]
Incoincident
Incoincident In`co*in"ci*dent, a.
Not coincident; not agreeing in time, in place, or principle.
Line of incidenceIncidence In"ci*dence, n. [Cf. F. incidence.]
1. A falling on or upon; an incident; an event. [Obs.] --Bp.
Hall.
2. (Physics) The direction in which a body, or a ray of light
or heat, falls on any surface.
In equal incidences there is a considerable
inequality of refractions. --Sir I.
Newton.
Angle of incidence, the angle which a ray of light, or the
line of incidence of a body, falling on any surface, makes
with a perpendicular to that surface; also formerly, the
complement of this angle.
Line of incidence, the line in the direction of which a
surface is struck by a body, ray of light, and the like. Noncoincidence
Noncoincidence Non`co*in"ci*dence, n.
Lack of coincidence.
Noncoincident
Noncoincident Non`co*in"ci*dent, a.
Not coincident.
Zincide
Zincide inc"ide, n.
A binary compound of zinc. [R.]
Meaning of Incid from wikipedia
-
Wormzinger /
Aardvark /
Chester / Egg / Ice Boar /
Incid Ape
Roger Craig Smith as Tree Frog /
Incid Ape / Play-N-Say Kari
Wahlgren as
Laura Palmtree /...
- to
regulate the
securities market and for
matters connected therewith or
incid thereto" The
management of
Board is run by its
members appointed by the...
-
describes the act of
publication Imp.
indicates the
printer Inc., inci.,
incid., incidit,
incidebat refer to him who "incised" or
engraved the
plate Inv...
- 6
narodnih popijevaka [6 Folksongs], chorus, 1927;
other folksong arrs.
Incid music,
music for Bosanquet's hmn, film
scores Prin****l publishers: Društvo...
- https://web.archive.org/web/20070930033529/http://www.tkb.org/Incident.jsp?
incID=21015 TKB
citing AP also
report that this day's car
bombing in Muradiya...
-
concert performance, Worcester, M****achusetts,
September 23, 1901
Everywoman (
incid music, W. Browne), New York,
Herald Square, 1911 The
Padrone (tragic op...
-
March 10, 2019. Source:
Spring over
Brooklyn (musical), 1952
Pygmalion (
incid music, G.B. Shaw), S, chbr chorus, ww qnt, 2 perc, 1955 La
folle de chaillot...
- 2012. "Dunya News: ****stan:-Karachi: Six more
killed in firing,
violence incid".
Dunya News.
Retrieved October 14, 2012. "Leading News
Resource of ****stan"...