符号 は英語で
sign
英語の定義
符号 | |
1. n. sign, symbol, mark |
その他の翻訳と定義
sign | |||
1. 名詞. 記号、符号。 | |||
phonetic signs. - 音声記号。 | |||
2. 名詞. 標識。 | |||
a traffic sign. - 交通標識。 | |||
3. 名詞. 合言葉。 | |||
4. 名詞. 身振り。 | |||
5. 名詞. しるし。様子。 | |||
6. 名詞. 足跡。 | |||
7. 名詞. 奇跡、神のお告げ。 | |||
8. 名詞. 宮(=star sign; →zodiac)。 | |||
9. 動詞. (他動詞)に署名する、サインする。 | |||
I signed my name to the signature column. | |||
私は署名欄にサインした。 | |||
10. 動詞. (他動詞)契約して正式に雇う。 | |||
11. 動詞. (他動詞)(に~するよう)合図する。 | |||
12. 動詞. (自動詞) 署名する。署名によって契約する。 | |||
13. 動詞. (自動詞) 合図する。 |
sign | |||
1. n. (sometimes also used uncountably) A visible indication. | |||
Their angry expressions were a clear sign they didn't want to talk. | |||
Those clouds show signs of raining soon. | |||
Those clouds show little sign of raining soon. | |||
Signs of disease are objective, whereas symptoms are subjective. | |||
The sharp sign indicates that the pitch of the note is raised a half step. | |||
I gave them a thumbs-up sign. | |||
2. n. (North America, AU) Physical evidence left by an animal. | |||
The hunters found deer sign at the end of the trail. | |||
3. n. A clearly visible object, generally flat, bearing a short message in words or pictures. | |||
The sign in the window advertised a room for rent. | |||
I missed the sign at the corner so I took the wrong turn. | |||
4. n. A wonder; miracle; prodigy. | |||
5. n. (astrology) An astrological sign. | |||
Your sign is Taurus? That's no surprise. | |||
6. n. (mathematics) Positive or negative polarity. (Note: it is improper to place a sign on the number zero) | |||
I got the magnitude right, but the sign was wrong. | |||
7. n. A specific gesture or motion used to communicate by those with speaking or hearing difficulties; now specifically, a linguistic unit in sign language equivalent to word in spoken languages. | |||
8. n. Sign language in general. | |||
Sorry, I don't know sign very well. | |||
9. n. An omen. | |||
"It's a sign of the end of the world," the doom prophet said. | |||
10. n. (medicine) A property of the body that indicates a disease and, unlike a symptom, is unlikely to be noticed by the patient. | |||
11. n. A military emblem carried on a banner or standard. | |||
12. v. To make a mark | |||
13. v. (transitive, now rare) To seal (a document etc.) with an identifying seal or symbol. | |||
The Queen signed her letter with the regal signet. | |||
14. v. To mark, to put or leave a mark on. | |||
15. v. To validate or ratify (a document) by writing one's signature on it. | |||
16. v. More generally, to write one's signature on (something) as a means of identification etc. | |||
I forgot to sign that letter to my aunt. | |||
17. v. (transitive or reflexive) To write (one's name) as a signature. | |||
Just sign your name at the bottom there. | |||
I received a letter from some woman who signs herself ‘Mrs Trellis’. | |||
18. v. (intransitive) To write one's signature. | |||
Please sign on the dotted line. | |||
19. v. (intransitive) To finalise a contractual agreement to work for a given sports team, record label etc. | |||
20. v. To engage (a sports player, musician etc.) in a contract. | |||
It was a great month. I managed to sign three major players. | |||
21. v. To make the sign of the cross | |||
22. v. To bless (someone or something) with the sign of the cross; to mark with the sign of the cross. | |||
23. v. (reflexive) To cross oneself. | |||
24. v. To indicate | |||
25. v. (intransitive) To communicate using a gesture or signal. | |||
26. v. To communicate using gestures to (someone). | |||
He signed me that I should follow him through the doorway. | |||
27. v. (intransitive) To use sign language. | |||
28. v. To furnish (a road etc.) with signs. |
symbol | ||
1. 名詞. シンボル、象徴 | ||
2. 名詞. 記号 |
symbol | ||
1. n. A character or glyph representing an idea, concept or object. | ||
$ is the symbol for dollars in the US and some other countries. | ||
Chinese people use word symbols for writing. | ||
The lion is the symbol of courage; the lamb is the symbol of meekness or patience. | ||
2. n. Any object, typically material, which is meant to represent another (usually abstract) even if there is no meaningful relationship. | ||
The dollar symbol has no relationship to the concept of currency or any related idea. | ||
3. n. (linguistics) A type of noun whereby the form refers to the same entity independently of the context; a symbol arbitrarily denotes a referent. See also icon and index. | ||
4. n. A summary of a dogmatic statement of faith. | ||
The Apostles, Nicene Creed and the confessional books of Protestantism, such as the Augsburg Confession of Lutheranism are considered symbols. | ||
5. n. Visible traces or impressions, made using a writing device or tool, that are connected together and/or are slightly separated. Sometimes symbols represent objects or events that occupy space or things | ||
6. n. (crystallography) The numerical expression which defines a plane's position relative to the assumed axes. | ||
7. n. (obsolete) That which is thrown into a common fund; hence, an appointed or accustomed duty. | ||
8. n. (obsolete) Share; allotment. | ||
9. n. (programming) An internal identifier used by a debugger to relate parts of the compiled program to the corresponding names in the source code. | ||
10. v. To symbolize. |
code | ||
1. コード, 符号 | ||
2. 暗号 |
code | ||
1. n. A short symbol, often with little relation to the item it represents. | ||
This flavour of soup has been assigned the code WRT-9. | ||
2. n. A body of law, sanctioned by legislation, in which the rules of law to be specifically applied by the courts are set forth in systematic form; a compilation of laws by public authority; a digest. | ||
3. n. Any system of principles, rules or regulations relating to one subject. | ||
The medical code is a system of rules for the regulation of the professional conduct of physicians. | ||
The naval code is a system of rules for making communications at sea by means of signals. | ||
4. n. A set of rules for converting information into another form or representation. | ||
5. n. By synecdoche: a codeword, code point, an encoded representation of a character, symbol, or other entity. | ||
The ASCII code of "A" is 65. | ||
6. n. A message represented by rules intended to conceal its meaning. | ||
7. n. (cryptography) A cryptographic system using a codebook that converts words or phrases into codewords. | ||
8. n. (programming) Instructions for a computer, written in a programming language; the input of a translator, an interpreter or a browser, namely: source code, machine code, bytecode. | ||
Object-oriented C++ code is easier to understand for a human than C code. | ||
I wrote some code to reformat text documents. | ||
This HTML code may be placed on your web page. | ||
9. n. (scientific programming) A program. | ||
10. n. (linguistics) A particular lect or language variety. | ||
11. v. (computing) To write software programs. | ||
I learned to code on an early home computer in the 1980s. | ||
12. v. To categorise by assigning identifiers from a schedule, for example CPT coding for medical insurance purposes. | ||
13. v. (cryptography) To encode. | ||
We should code the messages we send out on Usenet. | ||
14. v. (genetics, intransitive) To encode a protein. | ||
15. v. (medicine) To call a hospital emergency code. | ||
coding in the CT scanner | ||
16. v. (medicine) Of a patient, to suffer a sudden medical emergency (a code blue) such as cardiac arrest. |
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