develop lines

  • 1develop — verb Etymology: French développer, from Old French desveloper, desvoluper to unwrap, expose, from des de + envoloper to enclose more at envelop Date: 1750 transitive verb 1. a. to set forth or make clear by degrees or in detail ; …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 2lines of flight —    by Tamsin Lorraine   Throughout A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari develop a vocabulary that emphasises how things connect rather than how they are , and tendencies that could evolve in creative mutations rather than a reality that is… …

    The Deleuze dictionary

  • 3lines of flight —    by Tamsin Lorraine   Throughout A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari develop a vocabulary that emphasises how things connect rather than how they are , and tendencies that could evolve in creative mutations rather than a reality that is… …

    The Deleuze dictionary

  • 4Lines of Action — Infobox Game title = Lines of Action subtitle = image link = image caption = The board and pieces at the beginning of a game. designer = Claude Soucie illustrator = publisher = players = 2 ages = setup time = < 5 minutes playing time = random&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 5Lines — This usual name is one of the metronymic forms of the name Line , or Lina , a medieval female given name which was short form of such women s names as Cateline , Adeline , and Emmeline , containing the Anglo Norman surnames, derived from the name …

    Surnames reference

  • 6develop — To process an exposed photographic or radiographic film in order to turn the latent image into a permanent one. [O.Fr. desveloper, to unwrap, fr. voloper, to wrap] * * * de·vel·op di vel əp vt 1 a) to make active or promote the growth of&#8230; …

    Medical dictionary

  • 7dynamic lines — lines in the facial skin that develop as a result of repetitious right angled pull on the skin by the muscles of expression and are often considered signs of aging; types include laugh lines, glabellar lines, worry lines, and crow s feet …

    Medical dictionary

  • 8Source lines of code — (SLOC) is a software metric used to measure the size of a software program by counting the number of lines in the text of the program s source code. SLOC is typically used to predict the amount of effort that will be required to develop a program …

    Wikipedia

  • 9Sajama Lines — 333px The Sajama Lines of western Bolivia are a network of thousands (possibly tens of thousands) of nearly perfectly straight paths etched into the ground continuously for more than 3,000 years by the indigenous people living near Nevado Sajama …

    Wikipedia

  • 10Bavarian branch lines — comprised nearly half the total railway network in Bavaria, a state in the southeastern Germany that was a kingdom in the days of the German Empire. The construction era for branch lines lasted from 1872, when the first route, from Siegelsdorf to …

    Wikipedia