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单词 q
释义

q


Q

abbr.1. a. quarter (of a year)b. quarterly2. Games queen3. question

q 1

or Q C0794500 (kyo͞o)n. pl. q's or Q's also qs or Qs 1. The 17th letter of the modern English alphabet.2. Any of the speech sounds represented by the letter q.3. The 17th in a series.4. Something shaped like the letter Q.5. Q A hypothetical lost manuscript, consisting largely of sayings of Jesus, that is believed to have been the source of those passages in Matthew and Luke that bear close similarity to each other but not to parallel passages in Mark.
[Sense 5, probably from German Q(uelle), source.]

q 2

Physics The symbol for charge.

q

(kjuː) or

Q

n, pl q's, Q's or Qs1. (Linguistics) the 17th letter and 13th consonant of the modern English alphabet2. (Phonetics & Phonology) a speech sound represented by this letter, in English usually a voiceless velar stop, as in unique and quick

q

symbol for (Units) quintal

Q

symbol for 1. (Chess & Draughts) chess queen 2. (Law) question 3. (General Physics) physics heat abbreviation for (Telecommunications) text messaging queue

Q, q

(kyu)

n., pl. Qs Q's, qs q's. 1. the 17th letter of the English alphabet, a consonant. 2. any spoken sound represented by this letter. 3. something shaped like a Q. 4. a written or printed representation of the letter Q or q.

Q


Symbol. 1. the 17th in order or in a series. 2. Biochem. glutamine. 3. Physics. heat.

Q.

1. quarto. 2. Queen. 3. question. 4. quetzal.

q.

1. farthing. [< Latin quadrāns] 2. quart. 3. query. 4. question. 5. quintal. 6. quire.

Q

Question
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:Switch to new thesaurus
Noun1.q - the 17th letter of the Roman alphabetLatin alphabet, Roman alphabet - the alphabet evolved by the ancient Romans which serves for writing most of the languages of western Europealphabetic character, letter of the alphabet, letter - the conventional characters of the alphabet used to represent speech; "his grandmother taught him his letters"
Translations

Q

1 q [kjuː] N (= letter) → Q, q f
Q for QueenQ de Quebec

Q

2 ABBR1. =Queen2. =questionP

Q

q [ˈkjuː] n (= letter) → Q, q m
Q for Queen → Q comme Quintal

Q

, q nQ nt, → q nt ? P

Q

q [kjuː] n (letter) → Q, q f or m inv
Q for Queen → Q come Quarto
See mind one's p's and q's

mind one's p's and q's

(redirected from Q)

mind (one's) p's and q's

To be polite and well behaved; to mind one's manners. Be sure to mind your p's and q's when you visit your aunt this weekend! The mother reminded her young children to mind their p's and q's when they went over to their friends' houses for play dates.See also: and, mind

mind one's p's and q's

Practice good manners, be precise and careful in one's behavior and speech, as in Their grandmother often told the children to mind their p's and q's. The origin of this expression, first recorded in 1779, is disputed. Among the more interesting theories advanced is that bartenders kept track of customers' consumption in terms of pints (p's) and quarts (q's) and the phrase referred to an honest accounting; that schoolchildren were taught to be careful in distinguishing the letters p and q; and that French dancing masters cautioned pupils about the correct performance of the figures pieds and queues (either abbreviated or mispronounced in English as p's and q's). See also: and, mind

mind one's p's and q's, to

To be very particular about one’s words and/or behavior. The original meaning of p and q has been lost, and there are various theories, ranging from “pints and quarts” in the bartender’s accounts, to children confusing the two letters in learning their alphabet, to the French dancing master’s pieds and queues, figures that must be accurately performed. The term was used from the seventeenth century on but is heard less often today.See also: and, mind

Q


Q,

17th letter of the alphabetalphabet
[Gr. alpha-beta, like Eng. ABC], system of writing, theoretically having a one-for-one relation between character (or letter) and phoneme (see phonetics). Few alphabets have achieved the ideal exactness.
..... Click the link for more information.
, corresponding to the koppa of western Greek alphabets. U must follow the letter in English (e.g., queen, question), and the combination properly represents a sound much like the true voiceless labiovelar stop (also represented by the combination kw).

Q:

see Quiller-Couch, Sir Arthur ThomasQuiller-Couch, Sir Arthur Thomas
, pseud. Q, 1863–1944, English author. Among the novels of his native Cornwall are Dead Man's Rock (1887) and Hetty Wesley (1903), which are romantic in spirit yet distinguished for their clear and colorful style.
..... Click the link for more information.
.

Q (electricity)

Often called the quality factor of a circuit, Q is defined in various ways, depending upon the particular application. In the simple RL and RC series circuits, Q is the ratio of reactance to resistance, as in Eqs. (1), (1) where XL is the inductive reactance, XC is the capacitive reactance, and R is the resistance. An important application lies in the dissipation factor or loss angle when the constants of a coil or capacitor are measured by means of the alternating-current bridge.

Q has greater practical significance with respect to the resonant circuit, and a basic definition is given by Eq. (2), (2)  where Q0 means evaluation at resonance. For certain circuits, such as cavity resonators, this is the only meaning Q can have.

For the RLC series resonant circuit with resonant frequency f0, Eq. (3) (3) holds, where R is the total circuit resistance, L is the inductance, and C is the capacitance. Q0 is the Q of the coil if it contains practically the total resistance R. The greater the value of Q0, the sharper will be the resonance peak.

The practical case of a coil of high Q0 in parallel with a capacitor also leads to Q0 = 2&pgr;f0L/R. R is the total series resistance of the loop, although the capacitor branch usually has negligible resistance.

In terms of the resonance curve, Eq. (4) holds, (4)  where f0 is the frequency at resonance, and f1 and f2 are the frequencies at the half-power points.

Q

(pop culture)The being known only as “Q” was first encountered by the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise-D in the year 2364 near the outer space station called Farpoint. Although he appeared as a human male in a 1987 TV episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation (played by actor John DeLancie, who also voiced the character in the computer game, Star Trek: Borg), Q claimed to be a member of a race called the “Q,” immortal beings possessing nearly omnipotent powers, residing in the Q Continuum. Other members of the Q also appear humanoid, with varying features of either gender, though they are actually noncorporeal beings. The Q feel immensely superior to human beings; Q considers humankind “grievously savage,” and takes great delight in testing the nerve and will of these inferior beings. Q also made the mechanized, hive-like collective called the “Borg” aware of the existence of humanity, initiating a series of attempts by the Borg to subjugate and assimilate humankind. Despite this, the Q seem to have an unending curiosity about humankind, and, at times, even a concern for the welfare of the species, though this is never couched in such amiable terms. Q once suggested that eventually the humankind might advance beyond the level of the Q. The episode “Death Wish” of Star Trek: Voyager (1995–2001) features the first recorded visit by outsiders to the Q Continuum, and in “The Q and the Grey,” Q proclaims his desire to have a child with U.S.S. Voyager Captain Katherine Janeway. Q also appeared in a handful of episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993–1999), including “Q-Less,” in which Commander Benjamin Sisko punches Q in the face, an experience both Picard and Janeway must have envied. Q has also appeared in a number of novels including Encounter at Farpoint (by David Gerrold, 1987), a novelization of the first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation; and original titles such as Q-in- Law (1991) and Q-Squared (1993), both by Peter David, I,Q by John DeLancie and Peter David (2000), and the Q Continuum trilogy: Q-Space, Q-Zone and QStrike, all by Greg Cox in 1998. Q is the narrator of Q's Guide to the Continuum, by Michael Jan Friedman and Robert Greenberger (1998). In 1999, Alien Voices, a producer of audio books, released Spock vs. Q, in which actors Leonard Nimoy and John DeLancie, respectively, played their famous Star Trek characters in their first meeting. This project was followed up in 2000 with the release of Spock vs. Q: The Sequel, with the same cast.

Q

(nuclear physics) disintegration energy (physics) A measure of the ability of a system with periodic behavior to store energy equal to 2π times the average energy stored in the system divided by the energy dissipated per cycle. Also known as Q factor; quality factor; storage factor. (thermodynamics) A unit of heat energy, equal to 1018British thermal units, or approximately 1.055 × 1021 joules.

Q

(language)A very high level language by Per Bothner basedon lazy generalised sequences. Q has lexical scope, andsome support for logic programmingnd constraintprogramming. The language includes small subsets of Common Lisp and Scheme.

Q was a test-bed for programming language ideas. Where APLuses arrays for looping, Q uses generalised sequences whichmay be infinite and may be stored or calculated on demand. Ithas macros, primitives to run programs, and aninteractive command language.

Q is implemented in C++, and comes with an interpreter,compiler framework, libraries, and documentation. It runson Linux and SUN-4 and should work on any 32-bit Unix.

Latest version: 1, as of 1993-06-07. Development stopped in1994.

http://kelso.bothner.com/~per/software/#Q .

E-mail: Per Bothner .

Q


Q:

see Quiller-Couch, Sir Arthur ThomasQuiller-Couch, Sir Arthur Thomas
, pseud. Q, 1863–1944, English author. Among the novels of his native Cornwall are Dead Man's Rock (1887) and Hetty Wesley (1903), which are romantic in spirit yet distinguished for their clear and colorful style.
..... Click the link for more information.
.

Q,

17th letter of the alphabetalphabet
[Gr. alpha-beta, like Eng. ABC], system of writing, theoretically having a one-for-one relation between character (or letter) and phoneme (see phonetics). Few alphabets have achieved the ideal exactness.
..... Click the link for more information.
, corresponding to the koppa of western Greek alphabets. U must follow the letter in English (e.g., queen, question), and the combination properly represents a sound much like the true voiceless labiovelar stop (also represented by the combination kw).

Q (electricity)

Often called the quality factor of a circuit, Q is defined in various ways, depending upon the particular application. In the simple RL and RC series circuits, Q is the ratio of reactance to resistance, as in Eqs. (1), (1) where XL is the inductive reactance, XC is the capacitive reactance, and R is the resistance. An important application lies in the dissipation factor or loss angle when the constants of a coil or capacitor are measured by means of the alternating-current bridge.

Q has greater practical significance with respect to the resonant circuit, and a basic definition is given by Eq. (2), (2)  where Q0 means evaluation at resonance. For certain circuits, such as cavity resonators, this is the only meaning Q can have.

For the RLC series resonant circuit with resonant frequency f0, Eq. (3) (3) holds, where R is the total circuit resistance, L is the inductance, and C is the capacitance. Q0 is the Q of the coil if it contains practically the total resistance R. The greater the value of Q0, the sharper will be the resonance peak.

The practical case of a coil of high Q0 in parallel with a capacitor also leads to Q0 = 2&pgr;f0L/R. R is the total series resistance of the loop, although the capacitor branch usually has negligible resistance.

In terms of the resonance curve, Eq. (4) holds, (4)  where f0 is the frequency at resonance, and f1 and f2 are the frequencies at the half-power points.

Q

(pop culture)The being known only as “Q” was first encountered by the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise-D in the year 2364 near the outer space station called Farpoint. Although he appeared as a human male in a 1987 TV episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation (played by actor John DeLancie, who also voiced the character in the computer game, Star Trek: Borg), Q claimed to be a member of a race called the “Q,” immortal beings possessing nearly omnipotent powers, residing in the Q Continuum. Other members of the Q also appear humanoid, with varying features of either gender, though they are actually noncorporeal beings. The Q feel immensely superior to human beings; Q considers humankind “grievously savage,” and takes great delight in testing the nerve and will of these inferior beings. Q also made the mechanized, hive-like collective called the “Borg” aware of the existence of humanity, initiating a series of attempts by the Borg to subjugate and assimilate humankind. Despite this, the Q seem to have an unending curiosity about humankind, and, at times, even a concern for the welfare of the species, though this is never couched in such amiable terms. Q once suggested that eventually the humankind might advance beyond the level of the Q. The episode “Death Wish” of Star Trek: Voyager (1995–2001) features the first recorded visit by outsiders to the Q Continuum, and in “The Q and the Grey,” Q proclaims his desire to have a child with U.S.S. Voyager Captain Katherine Janeway. Q also appeared in a handful of episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993–1999), including “Q-Less,” in which Commander Benjamin Sisko punches Q in the face, an experience both Picard and Janeway must have envied. Q has also appeared in a number of novels including Encounter at Farpoint (by David Gerrold, 1987), a novelization of the first episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation; and original titles such as Q-in- Law (1991) and Q-Squared (1993), both by Peter David, I,Q by John DeLancie and Peter David (2000), and the Q Continuum trilogy: Q-Space, Q-Zone and QStrike, all by Greg Cox in 1998. Q is the narrator of Q's Guide to the Continuum, by Michael Jan Friedman and Robert Greenberger (1998). In 1999, Alien Voices, a producer of audio books, released Spock vs. Q, in which actors Leonard Nimoy and John DeLancie, respectively, played their famous Star Trek characters in their first meeting. This project was followed up in 2000 with the release of Spock vs. Q: The Sequel, with the same cast.

Q

(nuclear physics) disintegration energy (physics) A measure of the ability of a system with periodic behavior to store energy equal to 2π times the average energy stored in the system divided by the energy dissipated per cycle. Also known as Q factor; quality factor; storage factor. (thermodynamics) A unit of heat energy, equal to 1018British thermal units, or approximately 1.055 × 1021 joules.

Q

(language)A very high level language by Per Bothner basedon lazy generalised sequences. Q has lexical scope, andsome support for logic programmingnd constraintprogramming. The language includes small subsets of Common Lisp and Scheme.
Q was a test-bed for programming language ideas. Where APLuses arrays for looping, Q uses generalised sequences whichmay be infinite and may be stored or calculated on demand. Ithas macros, primitives to run programs, and aninteractive command language.
Q is implemented in C++, and comes with an interpreter,compiler framework, libraries, and documentation. It runson Linux and SUN-4 and should work on any 32-bit Unix.
Latest version: 1, as of 1993-06-07. Development stopped in1994.
http://kelso.bothner.com/~per/software/#Q .
E-mail: Per Bothner .

Q


q

 1. symbol for (1) the long arm of a chromosome or (2) the frequency of the rarer allele of a pair.2. the long arm of a chromosome.

Q

Symbol for coulomb; quantity; quaternary; glutamine; glutaminyl; radiant energy; pseudouridine; coenzyme Q; electric charge; the second product formed in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction; radiant energy.

q

1. In cytogenetics, symbol for long arm of a chromosome (in contrast to p for the short arm). 2. Abbreviation for [L.] quodque, each; every. 3. q. Symbol for heat; specific humidity.

q

Abbreviation for specific humidity.

Q

1. Abbreviation for coulomb; quantity; quaternary;glutamine;glutaminyl;pseudouridine;coenzyme Q; electric charge. 2. The second product formed in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction.

q

1. cytogenetics Long arm of a chromosome (in contrast to p for the short arm). 2. Abbreviation for [L.] quodque, each, every. 3. Symbol for heat. 4. Abbreviation for quodque.

Blood flow.
See: flow (3)
[quantity + an overdot denoting the time derivative]

Q

abbrev. GLUTAMINE.

Q

Abbreviation for quaternary.

Patient discussion about Q

Q. Q. I want to know about urine protein creatine ratio in diagnosing nephrotic syndrome. Please explain interms of unit such as mg/mg or mmol/mg. Normal range, nephrotic range with good referrence.A. Nephrotic syndrome is defines as a damage to the kidneys, in which there is a leak of large amounts of protein (over 3.5 grams of protein / 24 hours urine output) from the blood to the urine. Protein loss causes low protein count in the blood (hypoalbuminemia) and edemas (excess fluid in the interstitial cavity which is between the cells, causes leg swelling most often, and also in the adbomen and around the eyes).

More discussions about Q

Q


q

 1. symbol for (1) the long arm of a chromosome or (2) the frequency of the rarer allele of a pair.2. the long arm of a chromosome.

Q

Symbol for coulomb; quantity; quaternary; glutamine; glutaminyl; radiant energy; pseudouridine; coenzyme Q; electric charge; the second product formed in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction; radiant energy.

q

1. In cytogenetics, symbol for long arm of a chromosome (in contrast to p for the short arm). 2. Abbreviation for [L.] quodque, each; every. 3. q. Symbol for heat; specific humidity.

q

Abbreviation for specific humidity.

Q

1. Abbreviation for coulomb; quantity; quaternary;glutamine;glutaminyl;pseudouridine;coenzyme Q; electric charge. 2. The second product formed in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction.

q

1. cytogenetics Long arm of a chromosome (in contrast to p for the short arm). 2. Abbreviation for [L.] quodque, each, every. 3. Symbol for heat. 4. Abbreviation for quodque.

Blood flow.
See: flow (3)
[quantity + an overdot denoting the time derivative]

Q

abbrev. GLUTAMINE.

Q

Abbreviation for quaternary.

Patient discussion about Q

Q. Q. I want to know about urine protein creatine ratio in diagnosing nephrotic syndrome. Please explain interms of unit such as mg/mg or mmol/mg. Normal range, nephrotic range with good referrence.A. Nephrotic syndrome is defines as a damage to the kidneys, in which there is a leak of large amounts of protein (over 3.5 grams of protein / 24 hours urine output) from the blood to the urine. Protein loss causes low protein count in the blood (hypoalbuminemia) and edemas (excess fluid in the interstitial cavity which is between the cells, causes leg swelling most often, and also in the adbomen and around the eyes).

More discussions about Q

Q


q

 1. symbol for (1) the long arm of a chromosome or (2) the frequency of the rarer allele of a pair.2. the long arm of a chromosome.

Q

Symbol for coulomb; quantity; quaternary; glutamine; glutaminyl; radiant energy; pseudouridine; coenzyme Q; electric charge; the second product formed in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction; radiant energy.

q

1. In cytogenetics, symbol for long arm of a chromosome (in contrast to p for the short arm). 2. Abbreviation for [L.] quodque, each; every. 3. q. Symbol for heat; specific humidity.

q

Abbreviation for specific humidity.

Q

1. Abbreviation for coulomb; quantity; quaternary;glutamine;glutaminyl;pseudouridine;coenzyme Q; electric charge. 2. The second product formed in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction.

q

1. cytogenetics Long arm of a chromosome (in contrast to p for the short arm). 2. Abbreviation for [L.] quodque, each, every. 3. Symbol for heat. 4. Abbreviation for quodque.

Blood flow.
See: flow (3)
[quantity + an overdot denoting the time derivative]

Q

abbrev. GLUTAMINE.

Q

Abbreviation for quaternary.

Patient discussion about Q

Q. Q. I want to know about urine protein creatine ratio in diagnosing nephrotic syndrome. Please explain interms of unit such as mg/mg or mmol/mg. Normal range, nephrotic range with good referrence.A. Nephrotic syndrome is defines as a damage to the kidneys, in which there is a leak of large amounts of protein (over 3.5 grams of protein / 24 hours urine output) from the blood to the urine. Protein loss causes low protein count in the blood (hypoalbuminemia) and edemas (excess fluid in the interstitial cavity which is between the cells, causes leg swelling most often, and also in the adbomen and around the eyes).

More discussions about Q
See Quadrant

Quadrant

(redirected from Q)

QUADRANT. In angular measures, a quadrant is equal to ninety degrees. Vide Measure.

Q


Q

Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying that it is in bankruptcy proceedings.

Q

A symbol appearing next to a stock listed on NASDAQ indicating that the stock represents a company currently in bankruptcy proceedings. All NASDAQ listings use a four letter abbreviation; if a Q follows the abbreviation this indicates that the security being traded is in bankruptcy.

Q


Q

Fifth letter of a Nasdaq stock symbol specifying that it is in bankruptcy proceedings.

Q

A symbol appearing next to a stock listed on NASDAQ indicating that the stock represents a company currently in bankruptcy proceedings. All NASDAQ listings use a four letter abbreviation; if a Q follows the abbreviation this indicates that the security being traded is in bankruptcy.

Q


AcronymDefinition
QQuestion
QQuit
QQ (character from Star Trek the Next Generation)
QQuick
QQuality
QQueen (chess)
QQuantity
QQuality Factor
QQuarter
QQueue
QQuiz
QQuery
QQuarterly
QQuake
QQuick (flash; nautical navigation)
QQueensland (Australia)
QCharge (physics)
QTorque
QParcel Post (Scott Catalogue prefix; philately)
QQuestionable (player's likelihood of participating)
QQwest Communications International Inc. (stock abbreviation, AMEX)
QCardiac Output
QResonance
QQuebec (aviation letter code)
QGlutamine (amino acid)
QDrone (US military aircraft designation; as in Q-3)
QTransistor
QQuintal
QQuartermaster
QQuadrature
QQuaker State (motor oil)
QQuetzalcoatl (the movie Q)
QUnmanned Aerial Vehicle (US Military aerospace vehicle)
QSquall (weather reports)
QQ code (see Radio Operators' Handbook)
QQuaque (Latin: each, every; used in medical prescriptions)
QUnknown Variable
QAphelion Distance (astronomy)
QQu'ran (the Koran)
QQuadrillion BTU (same As Quads)
QMajor Boothroyd (James Bond's armourer)
QFairchild Aircraft Division (US Navy)
QConstant Phase Element (impedance spectra)
QStinson Aircraft Corporation (US Navy)
QSet of Rational Numbers (math)
QBristol Aeronautical Corporation (US Navy aircraft designation)
QElectronic Countermeasures Missions (US Navy)
QQualified/Qualifying
QRanger-Lark Division (US Navy)
QStream flow or discharge (geologic term)
QUnit of Dynamic Pressure
QName of alien character (Star Trek NG and Star Trek Voyager TV program)
QQuality measurement of a tuned circuit in electronics
QLong Chromosomal Arm (in humans; refers to autosomes 1-22)
QUS DoT tire speed rating (99 mph)
QSecond Heartbeat Wave
QPriority rating given to PWs (now 'Total care')

q


  • noun

Words related to q

noun the 17th letter of the Roman alphabet

Related Words

  • Latin alphabet
  • Roman alphabet
  • alphabetic character
  • letter of the alphabet
  • letter
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