Morse
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İngilizce - Türkçe
morse teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- Mors {i}
Örnek Cümle:
O İngilizce, Çince, Esperanto ve Mors Kodu bilir.
-She knows English, Chinese, Esperanto and Morse Code.
Örnek Cümle:
Sinyal lambaları mors alfabesini iletmek için kullanılır.
-Signal lamps are used to transmit Morse code.
- (isim) Mors
- Morse code
- Mors alfabesi
Sinyal lambaları mors alfabesini iletmek için kullanılır.
-Signal lamps are used to transmit Morse code.
- morse taper
- (Mühendislik) mors konikliği
- morse alphabet
- (isim) mors alfabesi
- morse alphabet
- {i} mors alfabesi
- morse code
- (Askeri) MORS KODU: Bak. "international morse code"
- morse lights
- (Askeri) mors lambaları
- morse telegraph
- mors sistemi
- morse test
- mors deneyi
- morse theory
- mors teorisi
- morse code
- (Telekom) morse kodu
- Morse code
- Mors
O İngilizce, Çince, Esperanto ve Mors Kodu bilir.
-She knows English, Chinese, Esperanto and Morse Code.
Sinyal lambaları mors alfabesini iletmek için kullanılır.
-Signal lamps are used to transmit Morse code.
- international morse code
- (Askeri) uluslararası mors kodu
- international morse code
- (Askeri) MİLLETLERARASI MORS KODU: Harf ve numaraları hat ve nokta grupları ile ifade eden muhabere sistemi. Milletlerarası Mors Kodu, özellikle telsiz, telgraf ve pırıldak muhaberesinde kullanılır. Buna kısaca (morse code) da denir
İlgili Terimler
İngilizce - İngilizce
morse teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- A surname, variant of Morris, from the given name Maurice
- A clasp used to fasten a cape in the front, usually decorative
- A Walrus
Örnek Cümle:
Then we passed through a great deale of small ice, and sawe, upon some peices, two morses, and upon some, one; and also diuers seales, layeing upon peices of ice.
- the river-horse, a species of walrus {n}
- American painter and inventor. A portraitist whose subjects included Lafayette, he refined (1838) and patented (1854) the telegraph and developed the telegraphic code that bears his name. Mary Morse Baker Morse code Morse Carlton E. Morse Samuel Finley Breese
- family name; Samuel Finley Breese Morse (1791-1872), inventor and developer of the first successful telegraph; code language made of dots and dashes transmitted over wires by radio waves, Morse code; town in Saskatchewan (Canada); large buckle on the ceremonial robe worn by a priest {i}
- United States portrait painter who patented the telegraph and developed the Morse code (1791-1872)
- a telegraph code in which letters and numbers are represented by strings of dots and dashes (short and long signals)
- A clasp for fastening garments in front
- decorative fastener for a cope
- A clasp
- a telegraph code in which letters and numbers are represented by strings of dots and dashes (short and long signals) United States portrait painter who patented the telegraph and developed the Morse code (1791-1872)
- decorative brooch used to join the sides of the cope at the neck
- The walrus
- fastening of cloak
- Morse code
- A character code represented by dots and dashes (or short and long pulses), originally used to send messages by telegraph, later by flashes of light or by radio
- Morse function
- A real-valued function on a differentiable manifold such that, at each point in its domain where the function's differential is zero, the function's Hessian is nonsingular
- Morse functions
- plural form of Morse function
- Morse theory
- The study of differentiable functions, the domain of each of which is a manifold and the codomain is the real line
- Morse code
- method of coding language using pulses and transmitted by radio waves and over wires
- Morse key
- explanation of the symbols which make up Morse code
- morse alphabet
- or by sounds, flashes of light, etc
- morse alphabet
- A telegraphic alphabet in very general use, inventing by Samuel F
- morse alphabet
- Morse, the inventor of Morse's telegraph
- morse alphabet
- (B), -
- morse alphabet
- with greater or less intervals between them
- morse alphabet
- - (A), -
- morse alphabet
- {i} telegraphic alphabet invented by Samuel Finley Breese Morse
- morse alphabet
- The letters are represented by dots and dashes impressed or printed on paper, as
- morse alphabet
- (D)
- morse alphabet
- (R), (T), etc
- morse alphabet
- (O)
- morse alphabet
- (E)
- morse code
- the same Morse Code once used for telegraphs is now used as a method of keyboard input Individuals use switches to spell in conjunction with software that translates the Morse Code into standard keyboard input (letters) Morse Code can also be used to access environmental controls and mobility aids such as power wheelchairs
- morse code
- Morse code or morse is a code used for sending messages. It represents each letter of the alphabet using short and long sounds or flashes of light, which can be written down as dots and dashes. n. Either of two codes used for transmitting messages in which letters of the alphabet and numbers are represented by various sequences of dots and dashes or short and long signals. a system of sending messages in which the alphabet is represented by signals made of dots (=short signals) and dashes (=long signals) in sound or light in Morse code. System for representing letters, numerals, and punctuation marks by a sequence of dots, dashes, and spaces. It is transmitted as electrical pulses of varied lengths or analogous mechanical or visual signals, such as flashing lights. The original system was invented by Samuel F.B. Morse in 1838 for his telegraph; the International Morse Code, a simpler and more precise variant with codes for letters with diacritic marks, was devised in 1851. With minor changes, this code has remained in use for certain types of radiotelegraphy, including amateur radio
- morse code
- Morse
- morse code
- An international system that uses a series of dots and dashes to represent letters, punctuation and numbers When an AAC user uses this system, the dots and dashes are translated into orthographic letters and numbers (Beukelman & Mirenda, 1992)
- morse code
- An early character-coding scheme in which characters were represented by variable numbers of bits with a space between the characters See Morse Code and Phonetic Alphabets, KO6YQ's Introduction to Morse Code, Google Search Morse Code Compare ASCII, EBCDIC, and Unicode On the early history of pre-electric telegraph, see, e g , R Victor Jones, Edelcrantz Telegraph System and Chappe Telegraph System
- morse code
- In length, or duration, one dash is theoretically equal to three dots; the space between the elements of a letter is equal to one dot; the interval in spaced letters, as O
- morse code
- A system of dots, dashes, and spaces which are used to represent messages in telegraphy or signaling
- morse code
- a telegraph code in which letters and numbers are represented by strings of dots and dashes (short and long signals)
- morse code
- is equal to three dots
- morse code
- A communications system consisting of letters coded into dots and dashes, and used in telegraphs
- morse code
- the same Morse Code once used for telegraphs is now used as a method of keyboard input  Individuals use switches to spell in conjunction with software that translates the Morse Code into standard keyboard input (letters) Morse Code can also be used to access environmental controls and mobility aids such as power wheelchairs
- morse code
- There are no spaces in any letter composed wholly or in part of dashes
- morse code
- The telegraphic code, consisting of dots, dashes, and spaces, invented by Samuel B
- morse code
- The Alphabetic code which is in use in North America is given below
- morse code
- A system of dots and dashes that can stand for the letters of the alphabet, numerals and punctuation, produced through a single or multiple switch
- Carlton E. Morse
- born June 4, 1901, Jennings, La., U.S. died May 24, 1993, Sacramento, Calif. U.S. radio writer and producer. He worked as a newspaper reporter before joining NBC radio as a writer in 1930. Morse wrote, directed, and produced many radio programs, including the highly popular soap opera One Man's Family (1932-59; television, 1949-52), the drama I Love a Mystery (1939-44, 1949-52), and the soap opera The Woman in My House (1951-59)
- Inspector Morse
- Morse, Inspector. a character in books written by Colin Dexter, and in British television programme based on these books. Morse is a police officer in Oxford, who rarely smiles and sometimes has a rather unfriendly manner
- Samuel F B Morse
- born April 27, 1791, Charlestown, Mass., U.S. died April 2, 1872, New York, N.Y. U.S. painter and inventor. The son of a distinguished geographer, he attended Yale University and studied painting in England (1811-15). He returned home to work as an itinerant painter; his portraits still rank among the finest produced in the U.S. He cofounded the National Academy of Design and served as its first president (1826-45). Independent of similar efforts in Europe, he developed an electric telegraph (1832-35), believing his to be the first. He developed the system of dots and dashes that became known internationally as Morse code (1838). Though denied support from Congress for a transatlantic telegraph line, he received congressional support for the first U.S. telegraph line, from Baltimore to Washington; on its completion in 1844 he sent the message "What hath God wrought!" His patents brought him fame and wealth
- Samuel F. B. Morse
- {i} (1791-1872) inventor and developer of the first successful telegraph, developer of the Morse code
- Samuel Finley Breese Morse
- born April 27, 1791, Charlestown, Mass., U.S. died April 2, 1872, New York, N.Y. U.S. painter and inventor. The son of a distinguished geographer, he attended Yale University and studied painting in England (1811-15). He returned home to work as an itinerant painter; his portraits still rank among the finest produced in the U.S. He cofounded the National Academy of Design and served as its first president (1826-45). Independent of similar efforts in Europe, he developed an electric telegraph (1832-35), believing his to be the first. He developed the system of dots and dashes that became known internationally as Morse code (1838). Though denied support from Congress for a transatlantic telegraph line, he received congressional support for the first U.S. telegraph line, from Baltimore to Washington; on its completion in 1844 he sent the message "What hath God wrought!" His patents brought him fame and wealth
- international Morse code
- A form of Morse code having no spaces between the dot and dash elements, commonly used for telegraphic communication outside the United States and Canada. Also called continental code
İlgili Terimler
Türkçe - İngilizce
morse teriminin Türkçe İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- morse kodu
- (Telekom) morse code
İlgili Terimler
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