WIND vs CURVE: NOUN
- Vain self-importance; pomposity.
- Speech or writing empty of meaning; verbiage.
- Information, especially of something concealed; intimation.
- A tendency; a trend.
- Something that disrupts or destroys.
- Woodwinds.
- Wind instruments or their players considered as a group.
- The brass and woodwinds sections of a band or orchestra.
- Gas produced in the stomach or intestines during digestion; flatulence.
- Breath, especially normal or adequate breathing; respiration.
- Moving air carrying sound, an odor, or a scent.
- A movement of air coming from one of the four cardinal points of the compass.
- The direction from which a movement of air comes.
- A movement of air generated artificially, as by bellows or a fan.
- Moving air, especially a natural and perceptible movement of air parallel to or along the ground.
- A single turn, twist, or curve.
- The act of winding.
- An indication of potential opportunity
- A reflex that expels intestinal gas through the anus
- A musical instrument in which the sound is produced by an enclosed column of air that is moved by the breath
- Air moving (sometimes with considerable force) from an area of high pressure to an area of low pressure
- A tendency or force that influences events
- Empty rhetoric or insincere or exaggerated talk
- Breath
- The act of winding or twisting
- The attractive shape of a woman's body.
- A one-dimensional continuum.
- An algebraic curve; a polynomial relation of the planar coordinates.
- A one-dimensional figure of non-zero length; the graph of a continuous map from a one-dimensional space.
- A continuous map from a one-dimensional space to a multidimensional space.
- A grading system based on the scale of performance of a group used to normalize a right-skewed grade distribution (with more lower scores) into a bell curve, so that more can receive higher grades, regardless of their actual knowledge of the subject.
- A simple figure containing no straight portions and no angles; a curved line.
- A gentle bend, such as in a road.
- A curve such that when a plane passes through three points of the curve, it passes through all the other points of the curve. Any other curve is called a curve of double curvature, or a twisted curve.
- The process of determining the shape, location, singular points, and other peculiarities of a curve from its equation.
- See Brachystochrone.
- See under Axis.
- A line described according to some low, and having no finite portion of it a straight line.
- A bending without angles; that which is bent; a flexure.
- In base-ball, the course of a ball so pitched that it does not pass in a straight line from the pitcher to the catcher, but makes a deflection in the air other than the ordinary one caused by the force of gravity: as, it was difficult to gage the curves of the pitcher.
- A draftsman's instrument for forming curved figures.
- Anything continuously bent.
- A continuous bending; a flexure without angles; usually, as a concrete noun, a one-way geometrical locus which may be conceived as described by a point moving along a line round which as axis turns a plane, while the line rotates in the plane round the point.
- Something that is unexpected or designed to trick or deceive.
- A curve ball.
- The graph of the solutions to any equation of two variables.
- The intersection of two surfaces in three dimensions.
- The graph of a function on a coordinate plane.
- A graphic representation showing the relative performance of individuals as measured against each other, used especially as a method of grading students in which the assignment of grades is based on predetermined proportions of students.
- A trend derived from or as if from such a graph.
- A line representing data on a graph.
- A relatively smooth bend in a road or other course.
- Something characterized by such a line or surface, especially a rounded line or contour of the human body.
- A surface that deviates from planarity in a smooth, continuous fashion.
- A line that deviates from straightness in a smooth, continuous fashion.
- The property possessed by the curving of a line or surface
- Curved segment (of a road or river or railroad track etc.)
- The trace of a point whose direction of motion changes
- A line on a graph representing data
- A baseball thrown with spin so that its path curves as it approach the batter
WIND vs CURVE: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Bent without angles; crooked; curved.
WIND vs CURVE: VERB
- Raise or haul up with or as if with mechanical help
- Catch the scent of; get wind of
- To move or cause to move in a sinuous, spiral, or circular course
- Form into a wreath
- Wrap or coil around
- Coil the spring of (some mechanical device) by turning a stem
- Extend in curves and turns
- To grade on a curve (bell curve of a normal distribution).
- To bend; to crook.
- Turn sharply; change direction abruptly
- Form an arch or curve
- Bend or cause to bend
- Form a curl, curve, or kink
- Extend in curves and turns
WIND vs CURVE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To become wound.
- To proceed misleadingly or insidiously in discourse or conduct.
- To be twisted or whorled into curved forms.
- To be coiled or spiraled.
- To move in or have a spiral or circular course.
- To move in or have a curving or twisting course.
- To lift or haul by means of a windlass or winch.
- To remove or unwind (thread, for example), as from a spool.
- To coil (thread, for example), as onto a spool or into a ball.
- To coil the spring of (a mechanism) by turning a stem or cord, for example.
- To turn (a crank, for example) in a series of circular motions.
- To introduce in a disguised or devious manner; insinuate.
- To proceed on (one's way) with a curving or twisting course.
- To go along (a curving or twisting course).
- To wrap or encircle (an object) in a series of coils; entwine.
- To wrap (something) around a center or another object once or repeatedly.
- To bend or turn gradually from a given direction.
- To grade (students, for example) on a curve.
- To pitch (a ball) with a curve.
- To cause to curve.
- To move in or take the shape of a curve.
WIND vs CURVE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To expose to free movement of air; ventilate or dry.
- To bend; to crook; ; to cause to swerve from a straight course.
WIND vs CURVE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Get wind of
- Catch the scent of
- Arrange or or coil around
- Arrange or coil around
- Change direction abruptly
- Turn sharply
- A pitch of a baseball that is thrown with spin so that its path curves as it approaches the batter
- Bending; crooked; curved.
- To have or assume a curved or flexed form: as, to curve inward.
- To bend; cause to take the shape of a curve; crook; inflect.
WIND vs CURVE: RELATED WORDS
- Roll, Jazz, Farting, Hint, Lift, Weave, Scent, Nothingness, Lead, Steer, Wrap, Meander, Fart, Hoist, Curve
- Slew, Slue, Cut, Sheer, Arch, Arc, Wind, Bender, Veer, Curl, Trend, Curvature, Kink, Swerve, Bend
WIND vs CURVE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Twist, Nose, Roll, Jazz, Hint, Weave, Scent, Nothingness, Lead, Steer, Wrap, Meander, Fart, Hoist, Curve
- Slew, Slue, Cut, Sheer, Arch, Arc, Wind, Bender, Veer, Curl, Trend, Curvature, Kink, Swerve, Bend
WIND vs CURVE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The Oceana NAS, Virginia Aviation Weather Report Forecast, Wind Speed, Wind Direction and Temperatures.
- The wind speed at which a wind turbine begins to generate electricity.
- God prepared the wind, tempest, fish, gourd, worm, and an east wind.
- Parameters measured include: wind speed, wind directions, temperature, humidity, pressure and precipitation.
- Set Wind Alerts The weather station provides the option to set Wind Speed Hi alert and Wind Gust Hi alert.
- Greening the Wind: Environmental and Social Considerations for Wind Power Development.
- Perth City wind speed and wind direction latest readings.
- RVV Wind WIND TWO SIX ZERO AT ONE WIND TWO NINER ZERO AT ONE TWO WIND VARIABLE WIND THREE ZERO ZERO AT EIGHT.
- WIND SHEAR Wind shears are rapid, localized changes in wind direction, which can occur vertically as well as horizontally.
- Wind: wind energy is captured by wind turbines or windmills.
- In a typical elliptic curve cryptosystem, elliptic curve point multiplication is the most computationally expensive component.
- This is consistent withcompetitive conditions, a stable demand curve, and a horizontal andstable supply curve.
- As we motioned, shifts of the demand curve and the supply curve can happen simultaneously.
- Curve consists of its two end Points; the boundary of a closed Curve is empty.
- But typically, the actual system curve isslightly different than the design curve.
- The curve may also be defined as a traverse of chords around the curve.
- Arc length of the curve: if a curve is described by parametric equations and.
- It justifies our depiction of the AD curve as a downward sloping curve.
- What is the Curve of Statical Stability or GZ Curve?
- When something other than price changes, the demand curve or the supply curve will shift relative to the other curve.
WIND vs CURVE: QUESTIONS
- How much wind power will offshore wind add to the world?
- What wind speed do wind turbines need to work efficiently?
- What are the models of Xzeres wind Skystream wind turbine?
- How does a wind turbine convert wind energy into electricity?
- What wind characteristics are pertinent to wind turbines?
- How is wind deflation different from wind abrasion?
- How do wind turbines turn wind energy into electricity?
- How do wind farms affect wind speed and temperature?
- How are wind turbines tested under different wind speeds?
- How are wind turbine blades transported in wind farms?
- What are the default values for curve (add = Na) and curve (add = true)?
- Why do both firms have the same learning curve (green curve)?
- How do I move a curve without affecting the other curve?
- Why does marginal revenue curve lie below the demand curve?
- Why is the oxygen dissociation curve an S shaped curve?
- What type of curve does the average cost curve follow?
- Which curve is the unknown curve in Euler's method?
- How do I find the curve curve intersection component?
- Does an irreducible curve always have a birational curve?
- Why is the curve of a titration curve asymmetrical?