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Ardois system
Ardois system Ar`dois" sys"tem (Naut.)
A widely used system of electric night signals in which a
series of double electric lamps (white and red) is arranged
vertically on a mast, and operated from a keyboard below.
Autokinetic system
Autokinetic system Autokinetic system
In fire-alarm telegraphy, a system so arranged that when one
alarm is being transmitted, no other alarm, sent in from
another point, will be transmitted until after the first
alarm has been disposed of.
Automixte systemAutomixte system Au`to*mixte" system (Mach.)
A system (devised by Henri Pieper, a Belgian) of driving
automobiles employing a gasoline engine and an auxiliary
reversible dynamo. When there is an excess of power the
dynamo is driven by the engine so as to charge a small
storage battery; when there is a deficiency of power the
dynamo reverses and acts as an auxiliary motor. Sometimes
called Pieper system. -- Automixte car, etc. Bell system of controlBell system of control Bell system of control (A["e]ronautics)
See Cloche. Bertillon system
Bertillon system Ber`til`lon" sys"tem [After Alphonse
Bertillon, French anthropologist.]
A system for the identification of persons by a physical
description based upon anthropometric measurements, notes of
markings, deformities, color, impression of thumb lines, etc.
Block systemBlock system Block system (Railroads)
A system by which the track is divided into short sections,
as of three or four miles, and trains are so run by the
guidance of electric, or combined electric and pneumatic,
signals that no train enters a section or block until the
preceding train has left it, as in
absolute blocking, or that a train may be allowed to follow
another into a block as long as it proceeds with excessive
caution, as in
permissive blocking. Cascade systemCascade system Cascade system (Elec.)
A system or method of connecting and operating two induction
motors so that the primary circuit of one is connected to the
secondary circuit of the other, the primary circuit of the
latter being connected to the source of supply; also, a
system of electric traction in which motors so connected are
employed. The cascade system is also called
tandem, or concatenated, system; the connection a
cascade, tandem, or concatenated, connection, or
a concatenation; and the control of the motors so obtained
a
tandem, or concatenation, control.
Note: In the cascade system of traction the cascade
connection is used for starting and for low speeds up
to half speed. For full speed the short-circuited motor
is cut loose from the other motor and is either left
idle or (commonly) connected direct to the line. Case system
Case system Case system (Law)
The system of teaching law in which the instruction is
primarily a historical and inductive study of leading or
selected cases, with or without the use of textbooks for
reference and collateral reading.
Cental systemCental Cen"tal, n.
Relating to a hundred.
Cental system, the method of buying and selling by the
cental, or hundredweight. Chautauqua system of education
Chautauqua system of education Chau*tau"qua sys"tem (of
education)
The system of home study established in connection with the
summer schools assembled at Chautauqua, N. Y., by the
Methodist Episcopal bishop, J. H. Vincent.
Conduit system
Conduit system Con"duit sys"tem (Elec.)
A system of electric traction, esp. for light railways, in
which the actuating current passes along a wire or rail laid
in an underground conduit, from which the current is ``picked
up' by a plow or other device fixed to the car or electric
locomotive. Hence
Conservative system 2. Tending or disposed to maintain existing institutions;
opposed to change or innovation.
3. Of or pertaining to a political party which favors the
conservation of existing institutions and forms of
government, as the Conservative party in England; --
contradistinguished from Liberal and Radical.
We have always been conscientiously attached to what
is called the Tory, and which might with more
propriety be called the Conservative, party.
--Quart. Rev.
(1830).
Conservative system (Mech.), a material system of such a
nature that after the system has undergone any series of
changes, and been brought back in any manner to its
original state, the whole work done by external agents on
the system is equal to the whole work done by the system
overcoming external forces. --Clerk
Maxwell. Continental systemContinental system Continental system (Hist.)
The system of commercial blockade aiming to exclude England
from commerce with the Continent instituted by the
Berlin decree, which Napoleon I. issued from Berlin Nov.
21, 1806, declaring the British Isles to be in a state of
blockade, and British subjects, property, and merchandise
subject to capture, and excluding British ships from all
parts of Europe under French dominion. The retaliatory
measures of England were followed by the
Milan decree, issued by Napoleon from Milan Dec. 17, 1807,
imposing further restrictions, and declaring every ship
going to or from a port of England or her colonies to be
lawful prize. Continental systemContinental Con`ti*nen"tal, a.
1. Of or pertaining to a continent.
2. Of or pertaining to the main land of Europe, in
distinction from the adjacent islands, especially England;
as, a continental tour; a continental coalition.
--Macaulay.
No former king had involved himself so frequently in
the labyrinth of continental alliances. --Hallam.
3. (Amer. Hist.) Of or pertaining to the confederated
colonies collectively, in the time of the Revolutionary
War; as, Continental money.
The army before Boston was designated as the
Continental army, in contradistinction to that under
General Gage, which was called the ``Ministerial
army.' --W. Irving.
Continental Congress. See under Congress.
Continental system (Hist.), the blockade of Great Britain
ordered by Napoleon by the decree of Berlin, Nov. 21,
1806; the object being to strike a blow at the maritime
and commercial supremacy of Great Britain, by cutting her
off from all intercourse with the continent of Europe. Contract system
Contract system Con"tract sys"tem
1. The sweating system.
2. The system of employing convicts by selling their labor
(to be performed inside the prison) at a fixed price per
day to contractors who are allowed to have agents in the
prison to superintend the work.
Crofton system
Crofton system Crof"ton sys"tem [After Sir Walter Crofton,
Irish penologist.] (Penology)
A system of prison discipline employing for consecutive
periods cellular confinement, associated imprisonment under
the mark system, restraint intermediate between imprisonment
and freedom, and liberation on ticket of leave.
Cumbrian systemCumbrian Cum"bri*an (k?m"br?-a]/>n), a.
Pertaining to Cumberland, England, or to a system of rocks
found there.
Cumbrian system (Geol.), the slate or graywacke system of
rocks, now included in the Cambrian or Silurian system; --
so called because most prominent at Cumberland. Delsarte system
Delsarte Del*sarte", n., or Delsarte system Delsarte system
A system of calisthenics patterned on the theories of
Fran[,c]ois Delsarte (1811 -- 71), a French teacher of
dramatic and musical expression.
Dissipative systemDissipative Dis"si*pa*tive, a.
Tending to dissipate.
Dissipative system (Mech.), an assumed system of matter and
motions in which forces of friction and resistances of
other kinds are introduced without regard to the heat or
other molecular actions which they generate; -- opposed to
conservative system. Funding systemFunding Fund"ing, a.
1. Providing a fund for the payment of the interest or
principal of a debt.
2. Investing in the public funds.
Funding system, a system or scheme of finance or revenue by
which provision is made for paying the interest or
principal of a public debt. ganancial systemGanancial Ga*nan"cial, a. [Sp., pertaining to gain, held in
common, fr. ganancia gain.] (Law)
Designating, pertaining to, or held under, the Spanish system
of law (called
ganancial system) which controls the title and disposition
of the property acquired during marriage by the husband or
wife. Ganz system
Ganz system Ganz system
A haulage system for canal boats, in which an electric
locomotive running on a monorail has its adhesion materially
increased by the pull of the tow rope on a series of inclined
gripping wheels.
Hexagonal systemHexagonal Hex*ag"o*nal, a. [Cf. F. hexagonal.]
Having six sides and six angles; six-sided.
Hexagonal system. (Crystal.) See under Crystallization. Homosystemic
Homosystemic Ho`mo*sys*tem"ic, a. [Homo- + systemic.] (Biol.)
Developing, in the case of multicellular organisms, from the
same embryonic systems into which the secondary unit
(gastrula or plant enbryo) differentiates.
Isotonic systemIsotonic I`so*ton"ic, a. [Iso- + tonic.]
Having or indicating, equal tones, or tension.
Isotonic system (Mus.), a system consisting of intervals,
in which each concord is alike tempered, and in which
there are twelve equal semitones. Linnaean systemLinnaean Lin*n[ae]"an, Linnean Lin*ne"an (l[i^]n*n[=e]"an),
a.
Of or pertaining to Linn[ae]us, the celebrated Swedish
botanist.
Linn[ae]an system (Bot.), the system in which the classes
are founded mainly upon the number of stamens, and the
orders upon the pistils; the artificial or sexual system. Marconi system
Marconi system Mar*co"ni system (Elec.)
A system or wireless telegraphy developed by G. Marconi, an
Italian physicist, in which Hertzian waves are used in
transmission and a coherer is used as the receiving
instrument.
Masonic systemsScotch rite Scotch rite (Freemasonry)
The ceremonial observed by one of the
Masonic systems, called in full the Ancient and Accepted
Scotch Rite; also, the system itself, which confers
thirty-three degrees, of which the first three are nearly
identical with those of the York rite. Metric systemMetric system Met"ric sys"tem
See Metric, a.
Meaning of Syste from wikipedia
- 2024). "Armenia to
purchase 90
Indian 155mm
Advanced Towed Artillery Gun
Syste". www.armyrecognition.com.
Retrieved 4
October 2024. "Indian Army to buy...
- at
least 3
months upon arrival. Lebanon Visa
required Pre
examination syste Tourist visa on arrival, up to 30 days,
requires first sending an email...
-
information Birth name
Daniel Baranowsky Also
known as
Danny B dB
Soundworks SysteManiac Born (1984-04-05)
April 5, 1984 (age 40) Mesa, Arizona, U.S. Genres...
- IRMNG: 1345354 ITIS: 500582 NCBI: 1214373 Open Tree of Life: 540160 PLANTS:
SYSTE POWO: urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:925204-1 Tropicos: 40037675 WFO: wfo-4000037374...
- com/media-centre/press-releases/2004/01/Pages/stora-enso-launches-a-joint-transport-supply-
syste.aspx
Stora Enso
launches a
joint Transport Supply System for the Nordic...
-
Series race-ready carburetors.
During this time
Holley also
introduced SysteMAX®
engine kits that
included matched cylinder heads,
intakes and cams....
- and
northern nahiyes of
Jabal Ajlun. They
instituted the
customary khuwwa syste whereby the
villages would contribute to the
tribe a
share of
their grain...
-
Society Monographs (4): p. 1. BARRANDE, J. 1846.
Notice pre Âliminaire sur le
syste Áme
silurien et les
trilobites de Bohême. Leipzig, 97 pp. Hicks, H. 1872...
-
Natural History, 4, 89-115. BARRANDE, J. 1846.
Notice pre Âliminaire sur le
syste Áme
silurien et les
trilobites de Bohême. Leipzig, 97 pp. SNAJDR, M. 1958...
-
squared for that system. The
dimension indicates the
dimensionality of the
systes: 1D (chain), 2D (plane) and 3D lattices. It can be
extended up to any number...