Humped

  • 21single-humped — adjective having one hump a one humped camel • Syn: ↑one humped • Pertains to noun: ↑hump, ↑hump (for: ↑one humped) …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 22double-humped — adjective having two humps • Syn: ↑two humped • Pertains to noun: ↑hump, ↑hump (for: ↑two humped) …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 23two-humped — adjective having two humps • Syn: ↑double humped • Pertains to noun: ↑hump (for: ↑double humped), ↑hump …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 24double-humped resonance — dvismailis rezonansas statusas T sritis radioelektronika atitikmenys: angl. double humped resonance vok. Doppelhöckerresonanzkurve, f rus. двугорбый резонанс, m pranc. résonance à deux crêtes, f …

    Radioelektronikos terminų žodynas

  • 25red-humped caterpillar — ˈ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷ noun : a variably but predominantly black and yellow striped gregarious caterpillar with the head and dorsally humped fourth body segment bright red that is the larva of a notodontid moth (Schizura concinna) and is an important pest on …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 26one-humped camel — camel that only has one hump on its back …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 27two-humped camel — camel with two humps on its back …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 28gibbous — Humped; humpbacked; denoting a sharp angle in the flexion of the spine. [L. gibbosus] * * * gib·bous jib əs, gib adj 1) marked by swelling or convexity esp. on one side: PROTUBERANT 2) having a hump: HUMPBACKED * * * …

    Medical dictionary

  • 29nuclear fission — fission (def. 2). [1885 90] * * * Division of a heavy atomic nucleus into two fragments of roughly equal mass, accompanied by the release of a large amount of energy, the binding energy of the subatomic particles. The energy released in the… …

    Universalium

  • 30gēu-, gǝu-, gū- (*sgēu-) —     gēu , gǝu , gū (*sgēu )     English meaning: to bend, curl; a kind of vessel     Deutsche Übersetzung: “biegen, krũmmen, wolben”     Note: Root gēu , gǝu , gū : to bend, curl; a kind of vessel probably derived from Root (s)keu 2, (s)keu̯ǝ :… …

    Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary