| Gatling gun | An American machine gun, consisting of a cluster of barrels which, being revolved by a crank, are automatically loaded and fired. The improved Gatling gun can be fired at the rate of 1,200 shots per minute. Origin: From the inventor, R.J. Gatling. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| gatten tree | <botany> A name given to the small trees called guelder-rose (Viburnum Opulus), cornel (Cornus sanguinea), and spindle tree (Euonymus Europaeus). Origin: Cf. Prov. E. Gatter bush. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
Synonyms : GATA Binding Protein 5, GATA-5 Protein, GATA5 Protein, GATA 5 Protein, Transcription Factor, GATA5
Synonyms : GATA-6 Transcription Factor, Transcription Factor GATA-6, Transcription Factor GATA6, Factor GATA6, Transcription, Factor, GATA-6 Transcription, GATA 6 Transcription Factor, GATA-6, Transcription Factor, GATA6, Transcription Factor, Transcription Factor GATA 6
Synonyms : Blood-Pool Scintigraphy, Equilibrium Radionuclide Angiocardiography, Gated Equilibrium Blood Pool Scintigraphy, Angiocardiographies, Equilibrium Radionuclide, Angiocardiography, Equilibrium Radionuclide, Angiographies, Equilibrium Radionuclide
Synonyms :
| gate |
1) The basic digital logic element - where the binary value of the output depends on the values of the inputs. 2) The primary control terminal of a field effect transistor.
Ãâó: www.st.com/stonline/press/news/glossary/g.htm
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| gate |
In hydrologic terms, a device in which a leaf or member is moved across the waterway from an external position to control or stop flow. There are many different kinds of gates used on a dam
Ãâó: weather.gov/glossary/glossary.php
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| gate |
(circuit/computer) A circuit having an output and one or more inputs, so designed that the output is energized when - and only when - a certain combination of inputs is energized. Used in digital computers.
Ãâó: connectors.tycoelectronics.com/glossary/glossary-g...
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| gatekeeping |
A process of choosing certain items for inclusion in news programmes and rejecting others.
Ãâó: freespace.virgin.net/brendan.richards/glossary/glo...
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| gatekeeper |
A sociological concept. All groups have gatekeepers, people to decide (wholly or partly) who or what forms part of a given subculture. Thus, prospective gang members are checked out by existing leaders. Possible university students have an interviewer who decides whether or not to "open the gate". In the same way, gatekeepers decide who is a scientist, by controlling access to jobs, to research money and to publication in journals. ...
Ãâó: freespace.virgin.net/john.hewitt1/pg_gloss.htm
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| GAT | someone who gets in (to a party) without an invitation or without paying |
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| GAT | an oversize page that is folded in to a book or magazine |
| GAT | a house built at a gateway |
| GAT | someone who guards the entrance to a building |
| GAT | either of two posts that bound a gate |
| GAT | United States computer entrepreneur whose software company made him the youngest multi-billionaire in the history of the United States (born in 1955) |
| GAT | a large national park in Alaska featuring the Great Mendenhall Glacier |
| GAT | an entrance that can be closed by a gate |
| GAT | the largest city in Missouri |
| GAT | the act of gathering something |
| GAT | sewing consisting of small folds or puckers made by pulling tight a thread in a line of stitching |
| GAT | collect or gather |
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