| aberrant ventricular conduction | Abnormal intraventricular conduction of a supraventricular beat, especially where surrounding beats are normally conducted. Synonym: ventricular aberration. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| aberrate | To go astray; to diverge. "Their own defective and aberrating vision." (De Quincey) Origin: L. Aberratus, p.pr. Of aberrare; ab + errare to wander. See Err. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| aberration | 1. <ophthalmology> Any error that results in image degradation. Such errors may be chromatic, spherical, astigmatic chromatic, distortion, or curvature of field: and can result from design or execution, or both. 2. <physics> Failure of an optical or electron-optical lens to produce exact geometrical (and chromatic) correspondence between an object and its image. In a video camera tube or cathode-ray tube, aberrations are when the (electrostatic or electromagnetic) lens does not bring the electron beam to sharply focused points uniformly on the target or screen, or to correct geometrical positions, as the beam is deflected. 3. <zoology> A term which, if used to denote a number of individuals within a species, unequivocally signifies infrasubspecific rank. See: aberration, chromatic, aberration, spherical. (09 Jan 1998) |
| aberration, chromatic | <optics> A defect in a lens or optical system due to the greater refraction of shorter wavelengths over that of loner ones at a lens surface. Hence the focal length of a simple lens is shorter for blue than for red rays. This dispersion of the wave-lengths will cause colour fringes in the image field of a lens with such an aberration. (05 Aug 1998) |
| aberration, spherical | <optics> A lens defect whereby image forming rays of one colour, passing through the outer zones of a lens come to focus at a different distance from the lens than do those of more central rays. With a simple spherical (or plano-spherical) lens the outer rays always meet the axis closer to the lens than do more central rays and the lens is uncorrected or undercorrected. When the reverse is true the lens has been overcorrected. (05 Aug 1998) |
| aberrometer | An instrument for measuring optical aberration or any error in experimentation. Origin: L. Aberratio, aberration, + G. Metron, measure (05 Mar 2000) |
| aberrant |
Created by White Wolf Game Studio in 1999, Aberrant is a superhero-based role-playing game set in 2008AD in a world where super-powered humans started appearing one day in 1998 out of the blue. The game deals with how the players' meta-human characters (called novas) fit into a mundane world when they most definitely are not mundane, as well as how the mundane populace react to the sudden emergence of novas. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aberrant_(game)
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| aberration |
Irrational thought is called aberration. It originally means "crooked line". Going from A to B becomes a complicated matter (see also 'Via').
Ãâó: www.geocities.com/clearbirds/study/glosstudy.htm
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| aberrant |
different than the accepted normal
Ãâó: www.geocities.com/shavano08/herpdictionary.html
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| aberrant duct |
any duct that is not usually present or that takes an unusual course or direction, such as the ductulus aberrans superior.
Ãâó: www.merckmedicus.com/pp/us/hcp/thcp_dorlands_conte...
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| aberrant |
Deviating from the usual type of its group; abnormal, straying, different.
Ãâó: www.fish.washington.edu/naturemapping/mollusks/glo...
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| ABER | diverge from the expected |
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| ABER | an optical phenomenon resulting from the failure of a lens or mirror to produce a good image |
| ABER | a disorder in one's mental state |
| ABER | a state or condition markedly different from the norm |
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