释义 |
Definition of affined in English: affinedadjective əˈfʌɪndəˈfaɪnd archaic Related or connected. Example sentencesExamples - The Malabar forms are closely affined to Malay types as a rule, although some are peculiar.
- A predetermined action is affined with a free current of space; therefore, the fluidic currents combine with the free currents, drawing them into their own propulsive flow.
- With this scheme it is possible to have a case where a ready real time task will not get an idle cpu, however, this should only happen if the task has affined itself to some other cpu (s).
- On the other hand, resources of a species affined to Acorum calamus L. have been discovered.
- These findings were largely confirmed for OAS-TL in the plant cysteine synthase complex, where SAT became more affined to its substrates and OAS-TL almost inactivated in the complex, causing OAS to leave the complex.
Origin Late 16th century: from Latin affinis 'related' (see affinity) + -ed1. Rhymes behind, bind, blind, find, hind, humankind, interwind, kind, mankind, mind, nonaligned, resigned, rind, unaligned, unassigned, unconfined, undefined, undersigned, undesigned, unlined, unrefined, unsigned, wynd Definition of affined in US English: affinedadjectiveəˈfaɪndəˈfīnd archaic Related or connected. Example sentencesExamples - The Malabar forms are closely affined to Malay types as a rule, although some are peculiar.
- With this scheme it is possible to have a case where a ready real time task will not get an idle cpu, however, this should only happen if the task has affined itself to some other cpu (s).
- These findings were largely confirmed for OAS-TL in the plant cysteine synthase complex, where SAT became more affined to its substrates and OAS-TL almost inactivated in the complex, causing OAS to leave the complex.
- A predetermined action is affined with a free current of space; therefore, the fluidic currents combine with the free currents, drawing them into their own propulsive flow.
- On the other hand, resources of a species affined to Acorum calamus L. have been discovered.
Origin Late 16th century: from Latin affinis ‘related’ (see affinity) + -ed. |