| transition | passage, change, transformation, period in which something goes througha change and passes from one form or phase to another; (Musice) musical passage that connects two sections of a musical composition; (Grammar) word or passage or phrase that connects a subject to one that follows | en | (isim) | en |
| transition | mak change, make transition; (Sports) change from defense to offense or offense to defense | en | (fiil) | en |
| transition | Passage from one place or state to another; charge; as, the transition of the weather from hot to cold | en | en |
| transition | A direct or indirect passing from one key to another; a modulation | en | en |
| transition | A passing from one subject to another | en | en |
| transition | Change from one form to another | en | en |
| transition | a passage that connects a topic to one that follows a musical passage moving from one key to another a change from one place or state or subject or stage to another | en | en |
| transition | Transition is the process in which something changes from one state to another. The transition to a multi-party democracy is proving to be difficult. a period of transition | en | en |
| transition | If someone transitions from one state or activity to another, they move gradually from one to the other. Most of the discussion was on what needed to be done now as we transitioned from the security issues to the challenging economic issues There was a significant decline in the size of the business as the company transitioned to an intellectual property company. when something changes from one form or state to another transition from sth to sth | en | en |
| transition | the act of passing from one state or place to the next | en | en |
| transition | an event that results in a transformation | en | en |
| transition | a change from one place or state or subject or stage to another | en | en |
| transition | a musical passage moving from one key to another | en | en |
| transition | a passage that connects a topic to one that follows | en | en |
| transition | Refers to the demographic change that is occurring in developing countries as they move to lower rates of fertility and mortality Many factors contribute to transition including: improved health services, greater access to education and improved social and economic conditions Several developing countries in Asia are now in the later stages of transition, while many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa are in the early stages of transition Demographic transition is complete when fertility has reached replacement level, which is the case in most industrial countries | en | en |
| transition | A visual effect used when changing the screen from one display to another e g when moving from one slide to another in a PowerPoint presentation, from one card to the next in a HyperStudio stack, or between different clips combined into a single video file | en | en |
| transition | In a signal, the changing from one significant condition to another Note: Examples of transitions are the changing from one voltage level to another in a data stream, the shifting from one phase position to another in phase-shift keying, and the translation from one frequency to another in frequency-shift keying [From Weik '89] | en | en |
| transition | Any change from one surface to another, such as from permanent to annual ice or from dirt to any kind of ice The two most traversed transitions are on the road to Willy Field and onto the sea ice below Crary Lab on way to the Ice Runway | en | en |
| transition | The "gradient" between the thin and thick part of the curved strokes of a font which has contrast, i e how sharply the strokes cut away from thick to thin The gradient is not the same as the axis of a font, but is obviously affected by the degree of contrast | en | en |
| transition | refers to movement or change from one condition, place, or activity to another "Transition" is often used to describe the process involved as a child moves from the Babies Can't Wait system at age 3 years to the next appropriate education program (public schools, pre-K programs, private child development or kindergarten programs, etc) | en | en |
| transition | Commonly used to refer to the change from secondary school to postsecondary programs, work, and independent living typical of young adults Also used to describe other periods of major change such as from early childhood to school or from more specialized to mainstreamed settings | en | en |
| transition | The objective of transition is to reintroduce the renovated code to the production environment This phase includes merging any production source code changes with the year 2000 renovated code | en | en |
| transition | A mutation that consists of the replacement of one purine by another purine or one pyrimidine by another pyrimidine | en | en |
| transition | A Clause that constrains the values of Variables between one Time Step and the next Time Step A rule for changing a Mode TransitionVariable from one value (the "from" state) to another value (the "to" state) The event is conjunction of Clauses The Rank of the Transition specifies the relative plausibility that the value is the "to" state There are several ways of partitioning Transitions A ternary partition, based on implementation, is: Autonomous Transition CommandedTransition Idle Transition And a binary partition, based on semantics, is: Nominal Transition Failure Transition | en | en |
| transition | A nucleotide substitution from one purine to another purine (e g , A->G), or from one pyramidine to another pyramidine (e g , T->C) | en | en |
| transition | The movement from offense to defense, or viceversa, when the ball changes hands | en | en |
| transition | A mutation from G to A or A to G (purine to purine) or C to T or T to C (pyrimidine to pyrimidine) In coding DNA, transitions are more likely to conserve the sequence of the resulting protien molecule | en | en |
| transition | any period in the education process when individuals move from one stage or sector to another | en | en |
| transition | Movement across a threshold into another phase as the result of the interaction of relevant factors during the previous phase | en | en |
| transition | A relationship between two states indicating that an object in the first state will perform certain specified actions and enter the second state when a specified event occurs and specified conditions are satisfied On such a change of state the transition is said to fire | en | en |
| transition | A type of nucleotide-pair substitution involving the replacement of a purine with another purine, or of a pyrimidine with another pyrimidine for example GC with AT See transversion | en | en |
| transition | Is a coordinated set of activities for a student with a disability that is designed with an outcome_oriented process, that promotes movement from school to post_school activities, including postsecondary education, vocational training, integrated employment (including supported employment), continuing and adult education, adult services, independent living, or community participation | en | en |
| transition | A word or words used to connect one sentence to another, or one paragraph to another Transitions helpto maintain the flow of writing: Paul hit the ball over the fence As a result, he couldn't find it again | en | en |
| transition | Passage from one stage to another | en | en |
| transition | Organize connection between dance movements that maintains flow and continuity in the dance | en | en |
| transition | the process through which a developer turns over control of a community association to the owners This process usually occurs after a certain percentage of units or lots have been occupied by owners | en | en |
| transition | The process of changing from one state to another In terms of PLANT COMMUNITIES the term is applied to the zone where one type of vegetation grades into another (e g SCRUB grading into grassland) | en | en |
| transition | Movement from one state to another | en | en |
| transition | The process of bridging the time and environments between two settings, programs, or life situations (e g , from home to school, school to school, or from school/ home to employment /independent living) | en | en |