Глоссарий





Новости переводов

01 августа, 2023

სამეცნიერო სტატიის გამოსაცემად მომზადება: მონაცემთა დუბლირება

28 ноября, 2018

მიულოცეთ თქვენს კოლეგებს

22 декабря, 2017

თარგმანის სტანდარტული გვერდი

15 ноября, 2017

ქართული ენა სომხებისათვის

11 ноября, 2017

სომხური და ქართული ხელნაწერების გამოფენა ჩინეთში

25 декабря, 2012

საქართველოში „ენის პოლიციის“ შექმნის წინადადებას აყენებენ

22 августа, 2012

ინგლისური საქართველოში მეორე არაოფიციალური ენა ხდება



Глоссарии и словари бюро переводов Фларус

Поиск в глоссариях:  

აგება, აშენება

Англо-грузинский словарь


    Construct, английский
    1. V составлять (предложе- ние)

    2. A hypothetical variable or system which does not purport to accurately represent or model given observations but has a heuristic or interpretative value concerning them. constructs may be (1) ideal types as the economist`s concept of rational behavior. rationality can be formalized, leads to elaborate constructions for the motivation of economic behavior and stimulates empirical inquiries into why actual behavior does not quite conform to it. constructs maybe (2) hypothetical entities, processes or mechanisms which would explain the connections between observed causes and consequences if those entities, processes or mechanisms existed. human memory is such a construct. it bridges the gap between past experiences and current behavior. psychological examples are the freudian id, ego, and super ego for which physiological evidence is principally unavailable. finally, constructs may be (3) the algorithms capable of generating (->generative) a certain process or product without evidence for whether this rather than another computational procedure is followed in practice. computer simulation of an economy exemplifies the case where the computer algorithm is known to be entirely different from (but in the aggregate (->aggregation) not incompatable with) the reasoning that may go on in the marketplace. theory in computational linguistics similarly aims to construct mental processes algorithmically.

    3. A structured piece of code formed from various syntax elements. examples are expressions (try … with, if…then…else, etc.), function definitions (let … = …), and type declarations (type … = …).




    Consult, английский
    1. Consultar

    2. Обращаться за справкой; консультироваться

    3. To confer with the call recipient before transferring a call or adding the call recipient to a conference call.


    Construct, английский
    1. V составлять (предложе- ние)

    2. A hypothetical variable or system which does not purport to accurately represent or model given observations but has a heuristic or interpretative value concerning them. constructs may be (1) ideal types as the economist`s concept of rational behavior. rationality can be formalized, leads to elaborate constructions for the motivation of economic behavior and stimulates empirical inquiries into why actual behavior does not quite conform to it. constructs maybe (2) hypothetical entities, processes or mechanisms which would explain the connections between observed causes and consequences if those entities, processes or mechanisms existed. human memory is such a construct. it bridges the gap between past experiences and current behavior. psychological examples are the freudian id, ego, and super ego for which physiological evidence is principally unavailable. finally, constructs may be (3) the algorithms capable of generating (->generative) a certain process or product without evidence for whether this rather than another computational procedure is followed in practice. computer simulation of an economy exemplifies the case where the computer algorithm is known to be entirely different from (but in the aggregate (->aggregation) not incompatable with) the reasoning that may go on in the marketplace. theory in computational linguistics similarly aims to construct mental processes algorithmically.

    3. A structured piece of code formed from various syntax elements. examples are expressions (try … with, if…then…else, etc.), function definitions (let … = …), and type declarations (type … = …).