| Hubbard tank | <apparatus> A large tank, usually filled with warm water, used for therapeutic exercises in a program of physiotherapy. (05 Mar 2000) |
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| hubner | <chemical> A mineral of brownish black colour, occurring in columnar or foliated masses. It is native manganese tungstate. Origin: After Hubner, who analyzed it. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| Hubrecht's protochordal knot | A local thickening of the blastoderm at the cephalic end of the primitive streak of the embryo. Synonym: Hensen's knot, Hensen's node, Hubrecht's protochordal knot, primitive knot, protochordal knot. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Hubrecht, Ambrosius | <person> Dutch zoologist and comparative anatomist, 1853-1915. See: Hubrecht's protochordal knot. (05 Mar 2000) |
| hub |
the central part of a car wheel (or fan or propeller etc) through which the shaft or axle passes a center of activity or interest or commerce or transportation; a focal point around which events revolve; "the playground is the hub of parental supervision"; "the airport is the economic hub of the area"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| Hubel |
United States neuroscientist noted for his studies of the neural basis of vision (born in 1926)
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| hub |
Leonard "Hub" Hubbard of The Roots has been playing bass for the Philadelphia outfit since 1987. He has played on all of their records including 1999's "Things Fall Apart" and 2004's "The Tipping Point". He is known for always having a chew stick in his mouth, on and off the stage. Hub's smooth basslines and distinct style make The Roots stand out in their field of music. Formed The Roots in 1987 with Ahmir-Khalib Thompson (?uestlove) and Tariq Trotter (Black Thought). ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hub_(bassist)
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| hub |
An Ethernet hub or concentrator is a device for connecting multiple twisted pair or fiber optic Ethernet devices together, making them act as a single segment. It works at the physical layer of the OSI model, repeating the signal that comes into one port out each of the other ports. If a signal comes into two ports at the same time a collision occurs, so every attached device shares the same collision domain. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hub_(computer)
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| hub |
A device used to create a small-scale network by providing a common connection to all devices on the network.
Ãâó: https://iomega-eu-en.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/iomega_e...
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| hub | the central part of a car wheel (or fan or propeller etc) through which the shaft or axle passes |
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| hub | the center of a city |
| hub | state capital and largest city of Massachusetts |
| hub | large football-shaped winter squash with a warty gray-green rind |
| hub | any of several winter squash plants producing large grayish-green football-shaped fruit with a rough warty rind |
| hub | United States astronomer who discovered that (as the universe expands) the speed with which nebulae recede increases with their distance (1889-1953) |
| hub | (cosmology) the ratio of the speed of recession of a galaxy (due to the expansion of the universe) to its distance from the observer |
| hub | (astronomy) the generalization that the speed of recession of distant galaxies (the red shift) is proportional to their distance from the observer |
| hub | (cosmology) the ratio of the speed of recession of a galaxy (due to the expansion of the universe) to its distance from the observer |
| hub | (astronomy) the generalization that the speed of recession of distant galaxies (the red shift) is proportional to their distance from the observer |
| hub | a pipe with a long flexible tube connected to a container where the smoke is cooled by passing through water |
| hub | loud confused noise from many sources |
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