Not+on

  • 41NOT — /not/, n. a Boolean operator that returns a positive result if its operand is negative and a negative result if its operand is positive. * * * …

    Universalium

  • 42Not. — Not.     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Ecclesiastical Abbreviations     ► Abbreviation in general use, chiefly Ecclesiastical     Notitia ( Knowledge ) The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Nihil Obstat …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 43not — not, nóturi, s.n. (înv. şi reg.) înot. Trimis de blaurb, 25.04.2007. Sursa: DAR …

    Dicționar Român

  • 44Not — Nom de personne d origine germanique, pour lequel il faut envisager deux hypothèses. Soit la forme Nodo (nod = nécessité). Soit, en pays catalan, une forme N Ot, avec la particule de politesse en (n devant voyelle), utilisée au Moyen Âge pour… …

    Noms de famille

  • 45Not... — Not... [Aufbauwortschatz (Rating 1500 3200)] Auch: • Notfall Bsp.: • Drücken Sie im Notfall auf den Knopf …

    Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • 46nōt-, nǝt- —     nōt , nǝt     English meaning: back, behind     Deutsche Übersetzung: “Hinterbacke, Hinterer, Rũcken”?     Material: Gk. νῶτος, νῶτον “back”, changing through ablaut with Lat. nůtis f., mostly pl. natēs “buttock, backside”?     References:… …

    Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary

  • 47not up — (tennis) Called when the ball bounces twice before the player manages to hit it • • • Main Entry: ↑up …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 48not — [[t]nɒ̱t[/t]] ♦ (Not is often shortened to n t in spoken English, and added to the auxiliary or modal verb. For example, did not is often shortened to didn t .) 1) NEG You use not with verbs to form negative statements. The sanctions are not… …

    English dictionary

  • 49not — adverb 1 used to make a word or expression negative: “Can we go to the park?” “No, not today, dear.” | Lorna was not a tidy child and left toys everywhere. | The store is open all week but not on Sundays. | Sally will not eat meat. | You were… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 50Not — Aus der Not eine Tugend machen: eine schlimme Lage geschickt ausnutzen. Am frühesten bezeugt ist die Redensart in lateinischer Form bei dem Kirchenvater Hieronymus (etwa 331 420). Er sagt in seiner Schrift ›Adversus libros Rufini‹ (III,2): »Facis …

    Das Wörterbuch der Idiome