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weight the vertical force exerted by a mass as a result of gravity sports equipment used in calisthenic exercises and weightlifting; it is not attached to anything and is raised and lowered by use of the hands and arms the relative importance granted to something; "his opinion carries great weight"; "the progression implied an increasing weightiness of the items listed" an artifact that is heavy an oppressive feeling of heavy force; "bowed down by the weight of responsibility" system of weights: a system of units used to express the weight of something weight unit: a unit used to measure weight; "he placed two weights in the scale pan" burden: weight down with a load (statistics) a coefficient assigned to elements of a frequency distribution in order to represent their relative importance slant: present with a bias; "He biased his presentation so as to please the share holders"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
weighting weight: (statistics) a coefficient assigned to elements of a frequency distribution in order to represent their relative importance
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
weightlessness lightness: the property of being comparatively small in weight; "the lightness of balsa wood"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
weight Given a set S of complex matrices, each of which is diagonalizable and any two of which commute under multiplication, it is always possible to diagonalize all the elements of S simultaneously. In basis-free terms, for any set of mutually commuting semisimple operators on a finite-dimensional complex vector space V there exists a basis of V consisting of simultaneous eigenvectors of all elements of S. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weight_(Lie_algebra)
weightlessness Weightlessness is the experience (by people and objects) during freefall, of having no apparent weight. This condition is also known as microgravity (see below). Weightlessness in common spacecrafts is not due to an increased distance to the earth; the acceleration due to gravity at an altitude of, say, 100 km is only 3% less than at the surface of the earth. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weightlessness
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