different between morse vs binary
morse
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /m??s/
Etymology 1
From Middle French mors, from Latin morsus (“bite; clasp”), from mordere (“to bite”).
Noun
morse (plural morses)
- A clasp or fastening used to fasten a cope in the front, usually decorative. [from 15th c.]
- 1890, Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray, ch. XI:
- The morse bore a seraph's head in gold-thread raised work.
- 1890, Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray, ch. XI:
Etymology 2
Origin uncertain. Compare Russian ???? (morž, “walrus”), Sami morša, Finnish mursu (all attested later).
Noun
morse (plural morses)
- (now rare) A walrus. [from 15th c.]
- 1880–1881: Clements R Markham (editor), The Voyages of William Baffin, 1612-1622:
- Then we passed through a great deale of small ice, and sawe, upon some peices, two morses, and upon some, one; and also diuers seales, layeing upon peices of ice.
- 1880–1881: Clements R Markham (editor), The Voyages of William Baffin, 1612-1622:
Anagrams
- Mores, Moser, Romes, meros, mesor, moers, mores, omers, s'more, smore, somer
Breton
Adverb
morse
- never
Synonyms
- nepred
Related terms
- biken
Dutch
Pronunciation
Verb
morse
- (archaic) singular present subjunctive of morsen
Anagrams
- smore
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /m??s/
Etymology 1
From Russian ???? (morž), from Northern Sami.
Noun
morse m (plural morses)
- walrus
See also
- otarie f
- phoque m
Etymology 2
Noun
morse m (uncountable)
- Morse code
Anagrams
- mores
Further reading
- “morse” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Italian
Noun
morse f
- plural of morsa
Verb
morse
- third-person singular past historic of mordere
morse f
- plural of morso
Anagrams
- merso
Latin
Participle
morse
- vocative masculine singular of morsus
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
From English Morse, after the American inventor Samuel Morse.
Noun
morse m (definite singular morsen) (uncountable)
- Morse or Morse code
Synonyms
- morsealfabet
Derived terms
- morsenøkkel
Verb
morse (imperative mors, present tense morser, simple past and past participle morsa or morset)
- (sende morse) to transmit Morse code
- to die
Usage notes
Using morse to signify die instead of the more common dø is a special usage found among health workers. The use of the term in this way is unknown in the general population.
References
- “morse” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Alternative forms
- morsa (a infinitive)
Etymology
From English Morse, named after Samuel Morse (1791–1872).
Noun
morse m (definite singular morsen, uncountable)
- Morse code
Derived terms
- morsealfabet
- morsekode
Verb
morse (present tense morsar, past tense morsa, past participle morsa, passive infinitive morsast, present participle morsande, imperative mors)
- to transmit Morse code
References
- “morse” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Swedish
Etymology
From Old Swedish morghons. From morgon + -s (“adverbial suffix”). Compare the development of afse (from afton).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /²m?rse/
Adverb
morse
- adverbial genitive form of morgon; a past morning
Usage notes
- Only found in the expression i morse (“the morning of today”), and related expressions, e.g. i går morse (”yesterday morning”), i måndags morse (”last Monday morning”).
See also
- afse
morse From the web:
- what morse code
- what morse code sounds like
- what morse code looks like
- what morse taper do i have
- what morse code is used for
- what's morse code for sos
- what's morse code for i love you
- what's morse's first name
binary
English
Etymology
From Late Latin b?n?rius (“consisting of two”), from Latin b?n? (“two-by-two, pair”).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /?ba?.n?.?i/, /?ba?.n??.i/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?ba?.n?.??/
- Rhymes: -a?n??i, -a?n??i
Adjective
binary (comparative more binary, superlative most binary)
- Being in a state of one of two mutually exclusive conditions such as on or off, true or false, molten or frozen, presence or absence of a signal.
- Binary states are often represented as 1 and 0 in computer science.
- (logic) Concerning logic whose subject matter concerns binary states.
- (arithmetic, computing) Concerning numbers and calculations using the binary number system.
- Having two equally important parts; related to something with two parts.
- Two ingredients are combined in a binary poison.
- A binary statistical distribution has only two categories.
- (mathematics, programming, computer engineering) Of an operation, function, procedure, or logic gate, taking exactly two operands, arguments, parameters, or inputs; having domain of dimension 2.
- Division of reals is a binary operation.
- (computing) Of data, consisting coded values (e.g. machine code) not interpretable as plain or ASCII text (e.g. source code).
- He downloaded the binary distribution for Linux, then burned it to DVD.
- (comparable) Focusing on two mutually exclusive conditions.
- He has a very binary understanding of gender.
Synonyms
- (arity, adicity, rank): dyadic
- (logic of binary states): Boolean
- (related to something with two parts): double, twin; see also Thesaurus:dual
- (of calculations with binary numbers): base-2
Antonyms
- non-binary
- (arbitrary data): ASCII, text
Derived terms
Related terms
- binarily
- binarity
Translations
See also
- unary
- ternary
Noun
binary (countable and uncountable, plural binaries)
- A thing which can have only (one or the other of) two values.
- 2012, Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee, Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation (?ISBN), page 51:
- The correlation between warmth and cold is an internal one where the existence of one depends on and is defined by the other. Hence, the yin-yang binary as a correlative binary of light-shade or warmth-cold [...]
- 2012, Scott L. Baugh, Latino American Cinema (?ISBN):
- The “in” versus “out” of this sociological model certainly carries to the admittedly simplistic binary of “good” versus “bad” of stereotypes in fictional works and the scholarly approaches to them.
- 2012, Li-Hsiang Lisa Rosenlee, Confucianism and Women: A Philosophical Interpretation (?ISBN), page 51:
- (mathematics, computing, uncountable) The bijective base-2 numeral system, which uses only the digits 0 and 1.
- (computing) An executable computer file.
- (astronomy) A satellite system consisting of two stars or other bodies orbiting each other.
Synonyms
- (base 2 numeral system): base 2
- (system of two stars): binary star, double star
Antonyms
- (computing): non-binary
Derived terms
- binary-coded decimal
- visual binary
- X-ray binary
Related terms
- binarism (see there for more)
Translations
See also
- -ary
- decimal
- hexadecimal
- octal
Anagrams
- brainy
binary From the web:
- what binary mean
- what binary fission
- what binary code
- what binary trading
- what binary options
- what binary code represents 3
- what binary number is 0101
- what binary pattern represents 65
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