| intersect | A set operation on rows of data from two SELECT statements Only rows that are in both statements will be retrieved See UNION | en |
| intersect | cut across, pass over or through, cross, bisect; come together at a certain point, converge fiil | en |
| intersect | To cut, or divide an object by crossing it with a line, or plane | en |
| intersect | meet at a point | en |
| intersect | To cut into one another; to meet and cross each other; as, the point where two lines intersect | en |
| intersect | to cross each other; to cut each other | en |
| intersect | two sets intersect if and only if they have at least one common element | en |
| intersect | To cut into or between; to cut or cross mutually; to divide into parts; as, any two diameters of a circle intersect each other at the center | en |
| intersect | The topological integration of two spatial data sets that preserves features that fall within the spatial extent common to both input data sets See also identity and union | en |
| intersect | DIN to pass information among multiple networks at a single node | en |
| intersect | If a place, area, or surface is intersected by things such as roads or lines, they cross it. The city is intersected by three main waterways. = cross | en |
| intersect | One of eight relational algebra operators - when an INTERSECT is done on two tables the result table will contain all records that appear in both of the original tables - any record that is in only one of the original tables will not be in the result table | en |
| intersect | If two or more lines or roads intersect, they meet or cross each other. You can also say that one line or road intersects another. The orbit of this comet intersects the orbit of the Earth The circles will intersect in two places | en |
| intersect | The topological integration of two spatial data sets that preserves features that fall within the area common to both input data sets See also identity and union | en |
| intersect | If one thing intersects with another or if two things intersect, the two things have a connection at a particular point. the ways in which historical events intersect with individual lives Their histories intersect. = overlap | en |
| intersect | An overlay method that preserves only those features that fall within the area extent common to the input and overlay maps | en |
| intersect | SQL set operation Select common elements from two different select statements E g: select * from table_A INTERSECT select * from table_B | en |
| intersect | The topological integration of two spatial data sets that preserves features that fall within the spatial extent common to both input data sets | en |
| intersected | past of intersect | en |
| intersecting | present participle of intersect | en |
| intersecting | crossed or intersected in the form of an X | en |
| intersecting | cutting across, passing over or through, bisecting; coming together at a certain point, converging sıfat | en |
| intersects | third-person singular of intersect | en |