| normally | Under normal conditions or circumstances; usually; most of the time | en |
| normally | In the expected or customary manner | en |
| normally | If you do something normally, you do it in the usual or conventional way. She would apparently eat normally and then make herself sick. failure of the blood to clot normally | en |
| normally | usually, most of the time | en |
| normally | If you say that something normally happens or that you normally do a particular thing, you mean that it is what usually happens or what you usually do. All airports in the country are working normally today Social progress is normally a matter of struggles and conflicts Normally, the transportation system in Paris carries 950,000 passengers a day | en |
| normally | under normal conditions; "usually she was late" | en |
| normally | In a normal manner | en |
| normally | under normal conditions; "usually she was late | en |
| Normal | norm | en |
| Normal | importance | en |
| Normal | ortho | en |
| normal | According to an established norm, rule, or principle; conformed to a type, standard, or regular form; performing the proper functions; not abnormal; regular; natural; analogical | en |
| normal | According to a square or rule; perpendicular; forming a right angle | en |
| normal | Denoting a solution of such strength that every cubic centimeter contains the same number of milligrams of the element in question as the number of its molecular weight | en |
| normal | According to norms or rules | en |
| normal | whose cosets form a group | en |
| normal | in which every monomorphism is normal | en |
| normal | Standard; original; exact; typical | en |
| normal | which is the splitting field of a family of polynomials in K | en |
| normal | Denoting certain hypothetical compounds, as acids from which the real acids are obtained by dehydration; thus, normal sulphuric acid and normal nitric acid are respectively S(OH)6, and N(OH)5 | en |
| normal | conforming with or constituting a norm or standard or level or type or social norm; not abnormal; "serve wine at normal room temperature"; "normal diplomatic relations"; "normal working hours"; "normal word order"; "normal curiosity"; "the normal course of events" | en |
| normal | A straight line or plane drawn from any point of a curve or surface so as to be perpendicular to the curve or surface at that point | en |
| normal | regular; standard; usual, common sıfat | en |
| normal | Cf | en |
| normal | which is the kernel of some morphism | en |
| normal | Denoting that series of hydrocarbons in which no carbon atom is united with more than two other carbon atoms; as, normal pentane, hexane, etc | en |
| normal | Specifically: Of or pertaining to a normal | en |
| normal | of relating to, or being a solution containing one equivalent weight of solute per litre of solution | en |
| normal | In which all parts of an object vibrate at the same frequency; See normal mode | en |
| normal | Pertaining to a school to teach teachers how to teach | en |
| normal | whose digits, in any base representation, enjoy a uniform distribution | en |
| normal | which has a very specific bell curve shape | en |
| normal | which is strictly monotonically increasing and continuous with respect to the order topology | en |
| normal | A line or vector that is perpendicular to another | en |
| normal | in which disjoint closed sets can be separated by disjoint neighborhoods | en |
| normal | which commutes with its conjugate transpose | en |
| normal | (informal, pejorative towards homosexuals) Heterosexual | en |
| normal | Any perpendicular | en |
| normal | which is the cokernel of some morphism | en |
| normal | which is pre-compact | en |
| normal | which commutes with its adjoint | en |
| normal | Healthy; not sick or ill | en |
| normal | Perpendicular to a tangent line or derivative of a surface in Euclidean space | en |
| normal | which is a normal epimorphism or a normal monomorphism | en |
| normal | being approximately average or within certain limits in e | en |
| normal | Perpendicular If one line is normal to another, then they are at right angles to each other | en |
| normal | The line which is perpendicular to a point on a surface There's a diagram, too | en |
| normal | To understand whether precipitation and temperature is above or below normal for seasons and longer timescales, normal is defined as the average weather over 30 years These averages are recalculated every ten years The National Weather Service has just recalculated the baseline period for normal from 1961 to 1990 to 1971 to 2000 Since the cool decade of the 1960's has been replaced with the mild 1990's, normal temperatures in many areas have increased | en |
| normal | (a ) Perpendicular (n ) A normal vector | en |
| normal | Iso- | en |
| normal | The recognized standard value of a meteorological element as it has been averaged in a given location over a fixed number of years Normals are concerned with the distribution of data within limits of common occurrence The parameters may include temperatures (high, low, and deviation), pressure, precipitation (rain, snow, etc ), winds (speed and direction), thunderstorms, amount of clouds, percent relative humidity, etc | en |
| normal | A line drawn perpendicular to a line or surface | en |
| normal | The normal at the point P of a curve C is the line through P perpendicular to the tangent at P | en |
| normal | A normal is a vector that is perpendicular to a surface | en |
| normal | A normal person has no serious physical or mental health problems. Statistics indicate that depressed patients are more likely to become ill than are normal people Will the baby be normal? = healthy. the usual state, level, or amount | en |
| normal | Something that is normal is usual and ordinary, and is what people expect. He has occasional injections to maintain his good health but otherwise he lives a normal life The two countries resumed normal diplomatic relations Some of the shops were closed but that's quite normal for a Thursday afternoon Life in Israel will continue as normal | en |
| normal | perpendicular; vertical; regular, usual isim | en |
| normal | something regarded as a normative example; "the convention of not naming the main character"; "violence is the rule not the exception"; "his formula for impressing visitors" | en |
| normal | being approximately average or within certain limits in e g intelligence and development; "a perfectly normal child"; "of normal intelligence"; "the most normal person I've ever met" | en |
| normal | (1) (adj ) Perpendicular or orthogonal At right angles to another line segment, object, or plane (2) (n ) A surface normal The vector perpendicular to a surface at a specific point | en |
| normal | forming a right angle | en |
| normal | Direction perpendicular to a surface | en |
| normal | A matrix is normal if A AH = AH A, where AH is the conjugate transpose of A For real A this is equivalent to A AT = AT A Note that a complex matrix is normal if and only if there is a unitary Q such that QH A Q is diagonal | en |
| normal | (adj or n) A term describing a direction perpendicular to a planar surface, or a vector representing a perpendicular direction Normals are used to calculate the orientation of a surface with respect to a light source or view point | en |
| normal | a solution concentration of one gram equivalent per liter of solution | en |
| normal | The word "normal" is used in mathematics to mean "perpendicular " | en |
| normal | A general term applied to behavior or abilities that fall within the average range; that which is considered acceptable, not exceptional | en |
| normal | intelligence and development; "a perfectly normal child"; "of normal intelligence"; "the most normal person I've ever met" | en |
| normal | intelligence and development; "a perfectly normal child"; "of normal intelligence"; "the most normal person I've ever met" in accordance with scientific laws | en |
| normal | in accordance with scientific laws | en |
| normal | Perpendicular | en |
| normal | A line at right angles to a surface, usually a mirror or glass block | en |
| normal | an imaginary line perpendicular to a surface; used in determining the direction taken by reflected or refracted light | en |
| normal | The long-term average value of a meteorological element for a certain area For example, "temperatures are normal for this time of year " Usually averaged over 30 years | en |
| normal | This is a slippery, dangerous term, because what's normal to one person at one time is abnormal to another person, another time The use of "normal" to describe brake reach is a very common source of confusion and trouble | en |
| normal | A normal to a face or plane is a vector perpendicular to that face or plane | en |
| normal | A central value (such as arithmetic average or median) of annual quantities for a 30-year period ending with an even 10-year, thus 1921-50; 1931-60, and so forth This definition accords with that recommended by the Subcommittee on Hydrology of the Federal Inter-Agency Committee on Water Resources | en |
| normal | at right angles, perpendicular The line that is normal to the plane is a right angles to any line that lies in the plane | en |
| normal | A ray that is perpendicular to, and points away from a solid | en |
| normal | That positional relationship of a vertebral segment, the skull, or pelvis in which these structures are aligned to the vertical axis, and in which the resultant of all acting forces is zero and the sum of all torques about their axes of motion is zero | en |