| surfaced | past of surface | en |
| surface | the outermost level of the land or sea; "earthquakes originate far below the surface"; "three quarters of the Earth's surface is covered by water" | en |
| surface | come to the surface on the surface; "surface materials of the moon | en |
| surface | The top or bottom side of the platter that is coated with the magnetic material for recording data On some drives one surface may be reserved for positioning information | en |
| surface | the extended two-dimensional outer boundary of a three-dimensional object; "they skimmed over the surface of the water"; "a brush small enough to clean every dental surface"; "the sun has no distinct surface" | en |
| surface | a superficial aspect as opposed to the real nature of something; "it was not what it appeared to be on the surface" | en |
| surface | To work over the surface or soil of, as ground, in hunting for gold | en |
| surface | the outer boundary of an artifact or a material layer constituting or resembling such a boundary; "there is a special cleaner for these surfaces"; "the cloth had a pattern of red dots on a white surface" | en |
| surface | person can read words phonetically but has problems with whole word recognition (i e yacht - yatchet) | en |
| surface | the entire area of a coin, although often used to indicate the field areas only | en |
| surface | That which has length and breadth only | en |
| surface | A two-dimensional area | en |
| surface | Element of System Having no Independent Existence Outside the System | en |
| surface | The outside or exterior boundary of any substance | en |
| surface | Syn: Dress, plane In machining, plane one or more sides of a board, plank, timber, or other sawed material | en |
| surface | A representation of geographic information as a set of continuous data in which the map features are not spatially discrete; that is, there is an infinite set of values between any two locations There are no clear or well-defined breaks between possible values of the geographic feature Surfaces can be represented by models built from regularly or irregularly spaced sample points on the surface See also surface model | en |
| surface | That part of the side which is terminated by the flank prolonged, and the angle of the nearest bastion | en |
| surface | To give a surface to; especially, to cause to have a smooth or plain surface; to make smooth or plain | en |
| surface | To come out of hiding | en |
| surface | For information or facts to become known | en |
| surface | To rise to the surface | en |
| surface | To work a mine near the surface | en |
| surface | To provide something with a surface | en |
| surface | To apply a surface to something | en |
| surface | The up-side of a flat object such as a table | en |
| surface | The outside hull of a tangible object | en |
| surface | Hence, outward or external appearance | en |
| surface | A magnitude that has length and breadth without thickness; superficies; as, a plane surface; a spherical surface | en |
| surface | the upper face; superficies; the outside; as, the surface of the earth; the surface of a diamond; the surface of the body | en |
| surface | The exterior part of anything that has length and breadth; one of the limits that bound a solid, esp | en |
| surface | The locus of an equation (especially one with exactly two degrees of freedom) in a more-than-two-dimensional space | en |
| surface | A small plane or surface, usually capable of adjustment but not of manipulation, for preserving lateral balance in an aëroplane or flying machine | en |
| surface | exterior or upper boundary of a thing, external part or layer; outward appearance isim | en |
| surface | A 3D geometric construction that can partition space, but cannot enclose a volume | en |
| surface | information that has become public; "all the reports were out in the open"; "the facts had been brought to the surface" | en |
| surface | When someone surfaces, they appear after not being seen for some time, for example because they have been asleep. What time do you surface?. In geometry, a two-dimensional collection of points (flat surface), a three-dimensional collection of points whose cross section is a curve (curved surface), or the boundary of any three-dimensional solid. In general, a surface is a continuous boundary dividing a three-dimensional space into two regions. For example, the surface of a sphere separates the interior from the exterior; a horizontal plane separates the half-plane above it from the half-plane below. Surfaces are often called by the names of the regions they enclose, but a surface is essentially two-dimensional and has an area, while the region it encloses is three-dimensional and has a volume. The attributes of surfaces, and in particular the idea of curvature, are investigated in differential geometry. Outermost layer of a material or substance. Because the particles (atoms or molecules) on the surface have nearest neighbours beside and below but not above, the physical and chemical properties of a surface differ from those of the bulk material; surface chemistry is thus a branch of physical chemistry. The growth of crystals, the actions of catalysts and detergents, and the phenomena of adsorption, surface tension, and capillarity are aspects of behaviour at surfaces. The appearance of the surface, whether achieved with electroplating, paint, oxidation-reduction, bleaching (see bleach), or another means, is aesthetically important | en |
| surface | a device that provides reactive force when in motion relative to the surrounding air; can lift or control a plane in flight | en |
| surface | come to the surface | en |
| surface | appear or become visible; make a showing; "She turned up at the funeral"; "I hope the list key is going to surface again" | en |
| surface | put a coat on; cover the surface of; furnish with a surface; "coat the cake with chocolate" | en |
| surface | When something such as a piece of news, a feeling, or a problem surfaces, it becomes known or becomes obvious. The paper says the evidence, when it surfaces, is certain to cause uproar = emerge | en |
| surface | If someone or something under water surfaces, they come up to the surface of the water. He surfaced, gasping for air | en |
| surface | of or pertaining to a surface, external; superficial sıfat | en |
| surface | provide with a surface; make smooth or even; appear on the surface, rise up to the surface; appear fiil | en |
| surface | The surface of something is the flat top part of it or the outside of it. Ozone forms a protective layer between 12 and 30 miles above the Earth's surface. tiny little waves on the surface of the water Its total surface area was seven thousand square feet | en |
| surface | A work surface is a flat area, for example the top of a table, desk, or kitchen cupboard, on which you can work. It can simply be left on the work surface | en |
| surface | Surface is used to describe the parts of the armed forces which travel by ship or by land rather than underwater or in the air. In contrast with its surface fleet, Britain's submarine force was relatively small | en |
| surface | When you refer to the surface of a situation, you are talking about what can be seen easily rather than what is hidden or not immediately obvious. Back in Britain, things appear, on the surface, simpler Social unrest, never far below the surface in Brazil, has erupted over the last few days | en |
| surface | on the surface; "surface materials of the moon" | en |
| surface | involving a surface only; "her beauty is only skin-deep"; "superficial bruising"; "a surface wound" | en |
| surface | The material that layers the top of the court Tennis court surfaces are often made of concrete, clay or grass | en |
| surface | or area or plane, two dimensions | en |
| surface | a sheet of paper has two surfaces Homogenous paper has surfaces which are identical or closely similar, differentiated paper has surfaces which are easily distinguished from each other | en |
| surface | this is always actually what you see - so it is a mistake, and a lost opportunity, not to make full use of it and the qualities (texturing, toolmarks etc) you can give it as a carver | en |
| surface | The reverse and obverse of a coin; can also refer to the fields only | en |
| surface | RWX command setting surface lighting properties, with ambient, diffuse and specular components | en |
| surface | A solid and vacuum, solid and air, or solid and liquid interface which is under study Depth of analysis depends on the analytical technique being used: Auger, XPS, ToFSIMS: The analysis depth ranges from 5A to 50A EDAX: The analysis depth varies from 100A to 10,000A (1mm) | en |
| surface | The ability of the CAD software to recognize that a closed geometric shape represents a surface of a part Includes recognition of wireframes | en |
| surface | (n) A finite portion of a plane, or the outer face of an object, bounded by an identifiable perimeter A surface represents the path of a moving straight or curved line, called a generatrix The path that the generatrix travels is the directrix In a 3-D model, the topological equivalent of a surface is a face | en |
| surface | A 2D region in 3D space (Technically, a surface may reside in any space with two or more dimensions, but in the context of computer graphics, it is almost always three ) In Radiance, surfaces are modeled with cones, spheres, and polygons | en |
| surface | The conceptual object created by the function values of a continuous single-valued function of two variables | en |
| surface | The surface is an irregularly shaped two-dimensional object on which all the stencils have to be placed | en |
| surface | A surface is a place in memory to draw a screen before blitting To avoid tearing finish a surface before you blit it | en |
| surface | Refers to the texture, both shine and hardness, of a bowling ball | en |
| surface | The texture, both finish and hardness, of a bowling ball | en |