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)

  1. 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.

Etymology 2

Origin uncertain. Compare Russian ???? (morž, walrus), Sami morša, Finnish mursu (all attested later).

Noun

morse (plural morses)

  1. (now rare) A walrus. [from 15th c.]
    • 18801881: 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.

Anagrams

  • Mores, Moser, Romes, meros, mesor, moers, mores, omers, s'more, smore, somer

Breton

Adverb

morse

  1. never

Synonyms

  • nepred

Related terms

  • biken

Dutch

Pronunciation

Verb

morse

  1. (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)

  1. walrus
See also
  • otarie f
  • phoque m

Etymology 2

Noun

morse m (uncountable)

  1. 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

  1. plural of morsa

Verb

morse

  1. third-person singular past historic of mordere

morse f

  1. plural of morso

Anagrams

  • merso

Latin

Participle

morse

  1. vocative masculine singular of morsus

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From English Morse, after the American inventor Samuel Morse.

Noun

morse m (definite singular morsen) (uncountable)

  1. Morse or Morse code

Synonyms

  • morsealfabet

Derived terms

  • morsenøkkel

Verb

morse (imperative mors, present tense morser, simple past and past participle morsa or morset)

  1. (sende morse) to transmit Morse code
  2. to die

Usage notes

Using morse to signify die instead of the more common 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)

  1. 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)

  1. 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

  1. 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)

  1. 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.
  2. (logic) Concerning logic whose subject matter concerns binary states.
  3. (arithmetic, computing) Concerning numbers and calculations using the binary number system.
  4. 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.
  5. (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.
  6. (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.
  7. (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)

  1. 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.
  2. (mathematics, computing, uncountable) The bijective base-2 numeral system, which uses only the digits 0 and 1.
  3. (computing) An executable computer file.
  4. (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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