| congestion | A period of scrappy undecided trade around a support / resistance level | en |
| congestion | This occurs when there are too many callers using the same BTS at once, and the call is rejected | en |
| congestion | is defined by Caltrans as, reduced speeds of less than 35 mile per hour for longer than 15 minutes | en |
| congestion | Condition in which a link has too many packets waiting to be sent This condition could be caused by the failure of an element in the network Possible levels are None, Low, High, and Very High, which correspond roughly to equivalent ANSI and ITU congestion levels | en |
| congestion | Traffic conditions on roads, highways, or freeways which do not permit movement at optimal legal speeds | en |
| congestion | A state occurring in a part of a network when the message traffic is so heavy that it slows down network response time | en |
| congestion | An excessive accumulation of blood or other fluid in a body part or blood vessel In congestive fever the internal organs become gorged with blood | en |
| congestion | An excessive or abnormal accumulation of blood or other fluid in a body part or blood vessel | en |
| congestion | in any locality or organ (often producing other morbid symptoms); local hyperæmia, active or passive; as, arterial congestion; venous congestion; congestion of the lungs | en |
| congestion | An excess of mucus or fluid in the respiratory system; congestion of the lungs, or nasal congestion | en |
| congestion | An excess of traffic etc | en |
| congestion | Overfullness of the capillary and other blood vessels, etc., in any locality or organ (often producing other morbid symptoms); local hyper/mia, active or passive; as, arterial congestion; venous congestion | en |
| congestion | The act of gathering into a heap or mass; accumulation | en |
| congestion | Overfullness of the capillary and other blood vessels, etc | en |
| congestion | excessive crowding; "traffic congestion" excessive accumulation of blood or other fluid in a body part | en |
| congestion | excessive crowding; "traffic congestion" | en |
| congestion | Restriction of flow on a line to meet the technical requirements of the network, taking into account the performance and behaviour of the equipment | en |
| congestion | excessive accumulation of blood or other fluid in a body part | en |
| congestion | A condition in which a packet sent through a network experiences excessive delays because the network is overloaded with packets Protocol software has to detect this condition and take action to prevent the network from collapsing because of excessive overhead Congestion usually happens at specific points along a network path, and routing protocols can reroute data to use less congested paths and control congestion(to a degree) | en |
| congestion | Congestion occurs when the offered load exceeds the capacity of a data communication path | en |
| congestion | Density of traffic when the load exceeds the capacity of a data communication path | en |
| congestion | (1) A market situation in which shorts attempting to cover their positions are unable to find an adequate supply of contracts provided by longs willing to liquidate or by new sellers willing to enter the market, except at sharply higher prices; (2) in technical analysis, a period of time characterized by repetitious and limited price fluctuations | en |
| congestion | Congestion occurs when the offered load exceeds the capacity of a data communication path [Source: RFC1392] | en |
| congestion | Congestion occurs when the offered load exceeds the capacity of a data communication path -- When the bandwidth is nearly all used | en |
| congestion | overcrowding; abnormal accumulation (of blood, fluid, etc.) isim | en |
| congestion | If there is congestion in a place, the place is extremely crowded and blocked with traffic or people. The problems of traffic congestion will not disappear in a hurry | en |
| congestion | Congestion in a part of the body is a medical condition in which the part becomes blocked. nasal congestion | en |
| congestion | Congestion is the term used to describe the situation that occurs when telecommunications traffic cannot be transferred to its destination because of a shortage of circuits en route The network or a particular switching center or traffic route is then said to be congested | en |
| congestion | The realization of the potential of over subscription A congested link is one on which multiple devices actually are contending for bandwidth | en |
| congestion | The relation between traffic flow and roadway capacity As the traffic flow approaches capacity, the route becomes more congested | en |
| congestion | As defined by Caltrans, reduced speeds of less than 35 miles per hour for longer than 15 minutes | en |
| congestion | Traffic in excess of network capacity | en |
| congestion | in traffic, the overcrowding of a route, leading to slow and inefficient flow In 1991 in the UK there were about 10 million cars and lorries, and the congestion that they cause is estimated to cost between £2 billion and £5 billion a year | en |
| congestion | A traffic situation in which there are so many vehicles on an open road or highway that motorists travel well below the speed limit (e g , 5 to 10 mph less than the limit) For purposes of this survey, congestion is due to the presence of many other vehicles - rather than to the presence of signal lights, for example | en |
| congestion | What occurs when the load exceeds the capacity of a data communication path You may be experiencing congestion when any of the following happens: you get a busy signal when you dial into a modem pool, the response from the server or host you are trying to reach is slow, or you get an error message telling you that no ports are available for the service or host you want to use | en |
| congestion | an excessive or abnormal accumulation of blood or other fluid in a body part | en |
| congestion | Accumulation of vessels at a port to the extent that vessels arriving to load or discharge are obliged to wait for a vacant berth | en |
| congest | To overfill or overcrowd | en |
| congest | clog, crowd, fill overly full; become congested, become clogged; cause congestion fiil | en |
| congest | To cause an overfullness of the blood vessels esp | en |
| congest | To collect or gather into a mass or aggregate; to bring together; to accumulate | en |
| congest | become or cause to become obstructed; "The leaves clog our drains in the Fall"; "The water pipe is backed up" | en |
| congest | the capillaries of an organ or part | en |