What is the name meaning of DENSI. Phrases containing DENSI
See name meanings and uses of DENSI!DENSI
DENSI
Girl/Female
Indian
Girl/Female
Tamil
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
People who Give
DENSI
DENSI
Boy/Male
Tamil
Daybreak
Girl/Female
Greek
Lover of horses.
Boy/Male
Shakespearean Welsh
King Henry the Sixth, Part III' and 'King John' Earl of Pembroke.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Name of Lord Murugan
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian
Wise
Girl/Female
Hindu
Earthly
Girl/Female
Anglo Saxon
Little wealthy one.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Capable to do anything
Girl/Female
Indian
Destroyer of poverty
Boy/Male
Danish, German, Swedish
Man
DENSI
DENSI
DENSI
DENSI
DENSI
n.
An instrument for ascertaining the specific gravity or density of a substance.
n.
The change in the direction of ray of light, heat, or the like, when it enters obliquely a medium of a different density from that through which it has previously moved.
n.
A specific gravity bottle; a standard flask for measuring and comparing the densities of liquids.
n.
The state or quality of being solid; density; consistency, -- opposed to fluidity; compactness; fullness of matter, -- opposed to openness or hollowness; strength; soundness, -- opposed to weakness or instability; the primary quality or affection of matter by which its particles exclude or resist all others; hardness; massiveness.
n.
A line or surface passing through those points in a medium, at which the density is the same.
n.
The quality or state of being porous; -- opposed to density.
n.
The quality or state of being rare; rareness; thinness; as, the rarity (contrasted with the density) of gases.
a.
Having equal density, as different regions of a medium; passing through points at which the density is equal; as, an isopycnic line or surface.
n.
A measure of weight, being a thousand grams, equal to 2.2046 pounds avoirdupois (15,432.34 grains). It is equal to the weight of a cubic decimeter of distilled water at the temperature of maximum density, or 39¡ Fahrenheit.
n.
The tendency in fluids to mix, or become equably diffused, when in contact. It was first observed between fluids of differing densities, and as taking place through a membrane or an intervening porous structure. The more rapid flow from the thinner to the thicker fluid was then called endosmose, and the opposite, slower current, exosmose. Both are, however, results of the same force. Osmose may be regarded as a form of molecular attraction, allied to that of adhesion.
n.
A form of hydrometer, specially graduated, for finding the density of milk, and thus discovering whether it has been mixed with water or some of the cream has been removed.
n.
A list of substances and their properties; especially, a list of the elementary substances with their atomic weights, densities, symbols, etc.
n.
An instrument for determining the strength or purity of wine by measuring its density.
n.
The science of the determination of the density of vapors and gases.
n.
The curve formed by a rope or chain of uniform density and perfect flexibility, hanging freely between two points of suspension, not in the same vertical line.
n.
A vessel for separating liquids of different densities.
n.
The unit of weight in the metric system. It was intended to be exactly, and is very nearly, equivalent to the weight in a vacuum of one cubic centimeter of pure water at its maximum density. It is equal to 15.432 grains. See Grain, n., 4.
n.
To break the natural course of, as rays of light orr heat, when passing from one transparent medium to another of different density; to cause to deviate from a direct course by an action distinct from reflection; as, a dense medium refrcts the rays of light as they pass into it from a rare medium.