| Threshold | threshfold | en |
| Threshold | threshwold | en |
| threshold | The minimum-sized market for an economic activity The activity will not be successful until it can reach a population larger than this threshold size | en |
| threshold | The dose or exposure below which no deleterious effect is expected to occur | en |
| threshold | A molding designed for the purpose of completing an installation around or next to sliding glass door tracks, fireplaces, carpeting, ceramic tile, and other objects so as to maintain a proper expansion space next to Hartco floors and to obtain a good transition Threshold is 2" wide x 78" long and prefinished in urethane to blend with the floor or available unfinished | en |
| threshold | A "floor" below which a dose does not cause a disease | en |
| threshold | The level of magnitude of a system process at which sudden or rapid change occurs | en |
| threshold | During excitation of the laser medium, this is the point where lasing begins | en |
| threshold | a point at which an effect can be seen For example, the threshold voltage of a transistor is the minimum voltage that must be applied to the base before any current will flow through the transistor; a test value | en |
| threshold | The minimum and vital market size required to support a given type of economic activity A mean number of passengers per trip can be identified to sustain profitability of a coach line, for example A threshold thus rests on a level of demand and can play a determining role in organizing both freight and passenger transport structures on the basis of demographic dynamics, geographic relations to markets and intensity of economic activities | en |
| threshold | (n ) In image processing, a specified gray level used for producing a binary image See also thresholding | en |
| threshold | A very low concentration of a substance in water The term is sometimes used to indicate the concentration which can just be detected | en |
| threshold | The smallest input value to a sensor which will cause the sensor to respond Commonly used with mechanical wind sensors to describe the wind speed necessary to cause the anemometer and wind vane to turn | en |
| threshold | The outset of an action or project | en |
| threshold | The start of the landing area of a runway | en |
| threshold | The wage or salary at which income tax becomes due | en |
| threshold | th | en |
| threshold | The bottom-most part of a doorway that one crosses to enter; a sill | en |
| threshold | The quantitative point at which an action is triggered, especially a lower limit | en |
| threshold | a term used to describe the level of liability genes and environmental triggers needed to cause expression of a disorder in multifactorial inheritance; the level may differ between males and females | en |
| threshold | The minimum level at which a signal of any kind can be detected, either by the human senses or by using any electronic instrumentation | en |
| threshold | An entrance | en |
| threshold | A strip of wood or other material with a beveled edge applied to the transition area between a floor and the sill plate of a door Also called a transition | en |
| threshold | Applied to Frequency The value of the 1st minimum in the frequency distribution of a word in the analysed OMIM entries Words are selected as 'potential keywords' if the distribution presents such a minimum, and as 'selected keywords' if the frequency in the abstracts of a given OMIM entry is above that minimum (see the entry for Keyword above) | en |
| threshold | If you are on the threshold of something exciting or new, you are about to experience it. We are on the threshold of a new era in astronomy | en |
| threshold | the starting point for a new state or experience; "on the threshold of manhood" | en |
| threshold | the smallest detectable sensation | en |
| threshold | the entrance (the space in a wall) through which you enter or leave a room or building; the space that a door can close; "he stuck his head in the doorway" | en |
| threshold | A threshold is an amount, level, or limit on a scale. When the threshold is reached, something else happens or changes. She has a low threshold of boredom and needs the constant stimulation of physical activity Fewer than forty per cent voted -- the threshold for results to be valid | en |
| threshold | The threshold of a building or room is the floor in the doorway, or the doorway itself. He stopped at the threshold of the bedroom | en |
| threshold | The place or point of entering or beginning, entrance; outset; as, the threshold of life | en |
| threshold | the smallest detectable sensation the starting point for a new state or experience; "on the threshold of manhood | en |
| threshold | The plank, stone, or piece of timber, which lies under a door, especially of a dwelling house, church, temple, or the like; the doorsill; hence, entrance; gate; door | en |
| threshold | doorstep, doorway, entrance; brink, verge, beginning isim | en |
| threshold | the sill of a door; a horizontal piece of wood or stone that forms the bottom of a doorway and offer support when passing through a doorway | en |
| threshold | a region marking a boundary | en |
| threshold | The Envelope Follower's threshold is an amplitude level used to gate the Envelope Follower's output All amplitude envelope values below the specified threshold percentage will be greatly attenuated; amplitude envelope values above the threshold will be unchanged Generally the threshold is set to 0%, making it inactive | en |
| threshold | A strip of wood or metal with beveled edges used over the finish floor and the sill of exterior doors | en |
| threshold | Generally, the minimum value of a signal that can be detected by the system or sensor under consideration | en |
| threshold | Continuous tone that establishes a reference point for tuning the detector to ground balance it The thresh- old tone also establishes the minimum sound level for deep targets in the discriminate mode | en |
| threshold | population the minimum number of people necessary before a particular good or service will be provided in an area Typically a low-order shop (such as a grocer or newsagent; see hierarchy) may require only 800 or so customers, whereas a higher-order store such as Marks and Spencer may need a threshold of 70,000 to be profitable, and a university 350,000 to be viable throughflow the seepage, or percolation, of water through soil In the hydrological, or water, cycle it is one of the processes responsible for he movement of water from the land to the oceans tidal energy renewable energy derived from the tides | en |
| threshold | The number of events that satisfy certain criteria Administrators define threshold rules to determine how notifications are to be delivered | en |
| threshold | (of a system of symbols, of "another world to live in"): An entryway whereby one crosses the boundary from being outside the "other world" of a tradition to being inside it Though it may be symbolized by a physical threshold (as to a temple or shrine), it essentially refers to a shift of consciousness from focally attending to a tradition's symbols to subsidiarily attending from them to what they symbolize, which is to say coming to dwell within them | en |
| threshold | For the joystick interface, the amount, in device units, that the stick coordinates must change before the application is notified of the movement A high threshold reduces the number of joystick messages sent to an application, but it also reduces the sensitivity of the joystick | en |
| threshold | Fig | en |
| threshold | When the amount of energy available exceeds a certain level (threshold), neurons are excited and the psychological experience of sensation occurs Sensory judgments are more complex and are based on signal strength and the observer's decision processes (Solso) | en |
| threshold | a term used to describe the level of predisposing genes and environmental triggers needed to cause expression of a disorder in multifactorial inheritance; the level may differ between males and females | en |
| thresholds | Plural of threshold | en |