mean for

  • 121for´tu|nate|ness — for|tu|nate «FR chuh niht», adjective. 1. having good luck; lucky: »You are fortunate in having such a fine family. 2. bringing good luck; having favorable results: »a fortunate occurrence. ╂[< Latin fortūnātus, past participle of fortūnāre… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 122for´tu|nate|ly — for|tu|nate «FR chuh niht», adjective. 1. having good luck; lucky: »You are fortunate in having such a fine family. 2. bringing good luck; having favorable results: »a fortunate occurrence. ╂[< Latin fortūnātus, past participle of fortūnāre… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 123for|tu|nate — «FR chuh niht», adjective. 1. having good luck; lucky: »You are fortunate in having such a fine family. 2. bringing good luck; having favorable results: »a fortunate occurrence. ╂[< Latin fortūnātus, past participle of fortūnāre give (good)… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 124for|bid´der — for|bid «fuhr BIHD», verb, bade or bad, bid|den or bid, bid|ding. –v.t. 1. to not allow; say one must not do something; make a rule against; prohibit; …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 125for|bid — «fuhr BIHD», verb, bade or bad, bid|den or bid, bid|ding. –v.t. 1. to not allow; say one must not do something; make a rule against; prohibit; …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 126Mean free path — In physics, the mean free path is the average distance covered by a moving particle (such as an atom, a molecule, a photon) between successive impacts (collisions) [1] which modify its direction or energy or other particle properties. Contents 1… …

    Wikipedia

  • 127Mean squared error — In statistics, the mean squared error (MSE) of an estimator is one of many ways to quantify the difference between values implied by a kernel density estimator and the true values of the quantity being estimated. MSE is a risk function,… …

    Wikipedia

  • 128mean — I UK [miːn] / US [mɪn] verb [transitive] Word forms mean : present tense I/you/we/they mean he/she/it means present participle meaning past tense meant UK [ment] / US past participle meant *** Get it right: mean: When you want to say what… …

    English dictionary