| complete | write all the required information onto a form; "fill out this questionnaire, please!"; "make out a form" | en |
| complete | having come or been brought to a conclusion; "the harvesting was complete"; "the affair is over, ended, finished"; "the abruptly terminated interview" | en |
| complete | complete a pass having every necessary or normal part or component or step; "a complete meal"; "a complete wardrobe"; "a complete set pf the Britannica"; "a complete set of china"; "a complete defeat"; "a complete accounting" | en |
| complete | To bring to a state in which there is no deficiency; to perfect; to consummate; to accomplish; to fulfill; to finish; as, to complete a task, or a poem; to complete a course of education | en |
| complete | perfect and complete in every respect; having all necessary qualities; "a complete gentleman"; "consummate happiness"; "a consummate performance | en |
| complete | having all four whorls or principal parts--sepals and petals and stamens and carpels (or pistils); "complete flowers" | en |
| complete | (v ) cUlanA, choylahnay | en |
| complete | adj lengkap | en |
| complete | A chemical compound or a blend of compounds that contains significant quantities of all three primary nutrients, N, P, and K It may contain other plant nutrients | en |
| complete | bring to a whole, with all the necessary parts or elements; "A child would complete the family" | en |
| complete | (C) - Materialized view is completely refreshed from the masters | en |
| complete | bring to a whole, with all the necessary parts or elements; "A child would complete the family" come or bring to a finish or an end; "He finished the dishes"; "She completed the requirements for her Master's Degree"; "The fastest runner finished the race in just over 2 hours; others finished in over 4 hours" write all the required information onto a form; "fill out this questionnaire, please!"; "make out a form" complete a pass having every necessary or normal part or component or step; "a complete meal"; "a complete wardrobe"; "a complete set pf the Britannica"; "a complete set of china"; "a complete defeat"; "a complete accounting" having all four whorls or principal parts--sepals and petals and stamens and carpels (or pistils); "complete flowers" having come or been brought to a conclusion; "the harvesting was complete"; "the affair is over, ended, finished"; "the abruptly terminated interview" perfect and complete in every respect; having all necessary qualities; "a complete gentleman"; "consummate happiness"; "a consummate performance | en |
| complete | Finished; ended; concluded; completed; as, the edifice is complete | en |
| complete | To finish; to make done; to reach the end | en |
| complete | whole, perfect; finished sıfat | en |
| complete | choate | en |
| complete | total | en |
| complete | With everything included | en |
| complete | in which every Cauchy sequence converges | en |
| complete | Having all the parts or organs which belong to it or to the typical form; having calyx, corolla, stamens, and pistil | en |
| complete | total, full | en |
| complete | Filled up; with no part or element lacking; free from deficiency; entire; perfect; consummate | en |
| complete | in which every set with a lower bound has a greatest lower bound | en |
| complete | come or bring to a finish or an end; "He finished the dishes"; "She completed the requirements for her Master's Degree"; "The fastest runner finished the race in just over 2 hours; others finished in over 4 hours" | en |
| complete | To make whole or entire | en |
| complete | If you complete something, you finish doing, making, or producing it. Peter Mayle has just completed his first novel. the rush to get the stadiums completed on time. + completion completions com·ple·tion The project is nearing completion House completions for the year should be up from 1,841 to 2,200 | en |
| complete | If something is complete, it has been finished. The work of restoring the farmhouse is complete It'll be two years before the process is complete. incomplete | en |
| complete | If you complete something, you do all of it. She completed her degree in two years This book took years to complete. = finish | en |
| complete | If you complete a form or questionnaire, you write the answers or information asked for in it. Simply complete the coupon below Use the enclosed envelope to return your completed survey. = fill in | en |
| complete | complete or carry out; "discharge one's duties" | en |
| complete | If one thing comes complete with another, it has that thing as an extra or additional part. The diary comes complete with a gold-coloured ballpoint pen | en |
| complete | The complete works of a writer are all their books or poems published together in one book or as a set of books. the Complete Works of William Shakespeare | en |
| complete | emphasis You use complete to emphasize that something is as great in extent, degree, or amount as it possibly can be. The rebels had taken complete control It shows a complete lack of understanding by management The resignation came as a complete surprise He was the complete opposite of Raymond. = total, absolute partial + completely com·plete·ly Dozens of flats had been completely destroyed something completely different. = totally | en |
| complete | make whole, perfect; finish fiil | en |
| complete | emphasis You can use complete to emphasize that you are referring to the whole of something and not just part of it. A complete tenement block was burnt to the ground The job sheets eventually filled a complete book. = entire, whole | en |
| complete | If something is complete, it contains all the parts that it should contain. The list may not be complete. a complete dinner service + completeness com·plete·ness the accuracy and completeness of the information obtained | en |
| complete | To complete a set or group means to provide the last item that is needed to make it a full set or group. the stickers needed to complete the collection | en |
| complete | complete a pass | en |
| complete | having every necessary or normal part or component or step; "a complete meal"; "a complete wardrobe"; "a complete set pf the Britannica"; "a complete set of china"; "a complete defeat"; "a complete accounting" | en |
| complete | The proof is now complete: I can't finish it | en |
| complete | One of the VDX system "authorization statuses " Removes the request record from the Web Client view The request is not deleted but it is marked for archiving Used to designate that the request has come to the end of it's 'life cycle ' Should only be used in specific instances, i e when the responder has actioned (responded) to a "Cancel" message with a "Cancel Reply Yes" Under some configurations certain actions can trigger auto-completes See Auto-completes | en |
| complete | In the context of general equities, to fill an order | en |
| complete | With respect to an instruction, when its result is both available to another instruction and can be retired, and it is past the point where the it can cause an exception Compare retire | en |
| complete | (see Full and accurate records) | en |
| complete | A language L is complete for a language class C with respect to polynomial-time reductions if L ∈ C and L′ ≤P L for all L′ ∈ C (See page 994) | en |
| complete | A problem is complete for a complexity class if (1) it's in the class, and (2) everything in the class can be reduced to it (under some notion of reduction) So, if you can solve the complete problems for some class, then you can solve every problem in the class The complete problems are the hardest | en |
| complete | highly skilled; "an accomplished pianist"; "a complete musician" | en |
| complete | perfect and complete in every respect; having all necessary qualities; "a complete gentleman"; "consummate happiness"; "a consummate performance" | en |
| complete | without qualification; used informally as (often pejorative) intensifiers; "an arrant fool"; "a complete coward"; "a consummate fool"; "a double-dyed villain"; "gross negligence"; "a perfect idiot"; "pure folly"; "what a sodding mess"; "stark staring mad"; "a thoroughgoing villain"; "utter nonsense" | en |
| complete | Mature, with good follow-through on the palate, satisfying mouth-feel and firm aftertaste | en |
| complete | Completes the entering of information about a Purchase Request and sends it to a cosigner for authorization/approval before being sent to Purchasing for processing, or alternately sends the request directly to Purchasing for processing Accessible from: the Item Information, Order Information, Basis for Vendor Selection, and Review screens | en |
| complete | The line item has been shipped and invoiced | en |
| Completely | flat | en |
| Completely | all | en |
| To complete | complement | en |
| To complete | turn | en |
| completed | Analysis documentation done | en |
| completed | finished | en |
| completed | caught; "a completed forward pass" | en |
| completed | projects completed at various stages of the R&D spectrum, namely: basic research, applied research, experimental development, and pilot testing | en |
| completed | successfully completed or brought to an end; "his mission accomplished he took a vacation"; "the completed project"; "the joy of a realized ambition overcame him" | en |
| completed | past of complete | en |
| completed | (of a marriage) completed by the first act of sexual intercourse after the ceremony | en |
| completely | stone | en |
| completely | totally | en |
| completely | out and out | en |
| completely | to a complete degree or to the full or entire extent (`whole' is often used informally for `wholly'); "he was wholly convinced"; "entirely satisfied with the meal"; "it was completely different from what we expected"; "was completely at fault"; "a totally new situation"; "the directions were all wrong"; "it was not altogether her fault"; "an altogether new approach"; "a whole new idea" | en |
| completely | to the greatest degree possible = totally | en |
| completely | In a complete manner; fully; totally; utterly | en |
| completely | from start to finish | en |
| completely | so as to be complete; with everything necessary; "he had filled out the form completely"; "the apartment was completely furnished | en |
| completely | totally, entirely | en |
| completely | In a complete manner; fully | en |
| completely | so as to be complete; with everything necessary; "he had filled out the form completely"; "the apartment was completely furnished" | en |
| completeness | The state of being complete | en |
| completeness | the state or condition of being complete | en |
| completeness | the degree to which all necessary parts of a work product exist and are included | en |
| completeness | wholeness, perfection, state of being complete; state of being completed isim | en |
| completeness | How much of the newspaper consumers read in an average weekday and Sunday One of three elements comprising the Reader Behavior Score, along with time and frequency | en |
| completeness | is the amount of valid data actually obtained as a fraction of that which could have been obtained (GVRD, 1993) | en |
| completeness | Concept of the adequacy of a formal system that is employed both in proof theory and in model theory (see logic). In proof theory, a formal system is said to be syntactically complete if and only if every closed sentence in the system is such that either it or its negation is provable in the system. In model theory, a formal system is said to be semantically complete if and only if every theorem of the system is provable in the system | en |
| completeness | A measure of the amount of valid data obtained from a measurement system compared to the amount that was expected to be obtained under routine operating conditions | en |
| completeness | "The amount of valid data obtained compared to the planned amount, and [it is] usually expressed as a percentage; a data quality indicator" (QAMS 1993, 6) | en |
| completeness | A measure of the amount of valid data obtained from a measurement system compared to the amount that was expected to be obtained under correct, normal conditions | en |
| completeness | A characteristic of information quality measuring the degree to which all required data is known (1) Fact completeness is a measure of data definitions quality expressed as a percentage of the attributes about an entity type that need to be known to assure that they are defined in the model and implemented in the database (2)Value completeness is a measure of data content quality expressed as a percentage of the columns or fields of a table or file that should have values in them, in fact do so | en |
| completeness | A (logical) language is said to be complete if and only if all the formulas in the language that must be true (in any world in which the axioms of the language are true) can be proved from the axioms Godel's incompleteness theorem shows that any language in which the truths of basic arithmetic can be formualted cannot be complete (unless the number of axions is infinite) | en |
| completeness | Used to score a UP A complete UP will have a conditions phrase, stem, Key Verb Phrase, Purpose, Fuzzy situation parameters and a conditions phrase | en |
| completeness | the state of being complete and entire; having everything that is needed | en |
| completeness | (logic) an attribute of a logical system that is so constituted that a contradiction arises if any proposition is introduced that cannot be derived from the axioms of the system | en |
| completeness | An indication of how much of a published run is held Completeness is indicated in ranges, for example, Complete (95% 100% held), Incomplete (50%-94% held), Scattered (less than 50% held) | en |
| completeness | A promise made by a system that it will supply all true (or relevant) information Trivially (and not very interestingly) accomplished by providing all information, whether true or not Contrast soundness | en |
| completer | someone or something which finishes or concludes isim | en |
| completer | A student who receives a degree, diploma, certificate or other formal award | en |
| completer | CCC student who received either a Basic/Advanced/Technical certificate or an Associate degree, completed the TGECC, or completed at least 12 CCC credits and requested transfer to another post-secondary institution | en |
| completer | One who completes something | en |
| completer | A machine instruction field used to specify instruction options Typical options include address modification, address indexing, precision of operands, and conditions to be tested to determine whether to nullify the following instruction | en |
| completer | TOP A student who is enrolled in a CIP Coded CATE program and completes that specified program | en |
| completes | third-person singular of complete | en |
| completing | acting as or providing a complement (something that completes the whole) | en |
| completing | present participle of complete | en |