radiate from

  • 31radiate — ra·di·ate || reɪdɪeɪt v. glow, beam; emit light or radiation; convey joy or happiness; spread out from a central point …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 32Sound from ultrasound — Contents 1 Parametric array 2 Applications 2.1 Commercial advertising …

    Wikipedia

  • 33Barbarous radiate — Barbarous radiates are imitations of the antoninianus, a type of coin issued during the Roman Empire, which are so named due to their crude style and prominent radiate crown worn by the emperor. Barbarous radiates were issued privately primarily… …

    Wikipedia

  • 34Ligament — A ligament is a tough band of connective tissue that connects various structures such as two bones. Ligament is a fitting term; it comes from the Latin ligare meaning to bind or tie. * * * 1. A band or sheet of fibrous tissue connecting two or… …

    Medical dictionary

  • 35echinoderm — /i kuy neuh derrm , ek euh neuh /, n. any marine animal of the invertebrate phylum Echinodermata, having a radiating arrangement of parts and a body wall stiffened by calcareous pieces that may protrude as spines and including the starfishes, sea …

    Universalium

  • 36Coaxial cable — RG 59 flexible coaxial cable composed of: A: outer plastic sheath B: woven copper shield C: inner dielectric insulator D: copper core Coaxial cable, or coax, has an inner conductor surrounded by a flexible, tubular insulating layer, surrounded by …

    Wikipedia

  • 37radiation — 01. Some of the people who died in Hiroshima were killed by [radiation], rather than the actual bomb blast. 02. Workers at the nuclear power plant were exposed to [radiation] during the leak. 03. [Radiation] spread throughout large parts of… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 38Bucharest — Bukarest redirects here. For the Deutsche Levant Line ship, see MV Bukarest. Bucharest Bucureşti (Romanian)   Municipality   …

    Wikipedia

  • 39heat — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 being hot/level of temperature ADJECTIVE ▪ burning, fierce (esp. BrE), great, intense, searing, terrible, tremendous ▪ The soil is baked dry by the fierce …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 40ray — I. noun Etymology: Middle English raye, from Anglo French raie, from Latin raia Date: 14th century any of an order (Rajiformes) of usually marine cartilaginous fishes (as stingrays and skates) having the body flattened dorsoventrally, the eyes on …

    New Collegiate Dictionary