-hugging - significado y definición. Qué es -hugging
Diclib.com
Diccionario en línea

Qué (quién) es -hugging - definición

RADAR CLASS
Ground hugging; Terrain hugging; Terrain following radar; Terrain Following Radar; Terrain-following

-hugging      
-hugging combines with nouns to form adjectives which describe an item of clothing that fits very tightly and clearly reveals the shape of your body.
...a figure-hugging dress.
COMB in ADJ: usu ADJ n
hug         
  • A [[Yoruba]] bride and mother
  • A group hug among young men.
FORM OF ENDEARMENT, UNIVERSAL IN HUMAN COMMUNITIES, IN WHICH TWO OR MORE PEOPLE PUT THEIR ARMS AROUND THE NECK, BACK, OR WAIST OF ONE ANOTHER AND HOLD EACH OTHER CLOSELY
Hugging; Cuddling; Cuddle; Grouphug; Group Hug; Friendship hug; Group hug; 🤗; 🫂; Cuddle bug; Hugs
(hugs, hugging, hugged)
1.
When you hug someone, you put your arms around them and hold them tightly, for example because you like them or are pleased to see them. You can also say that two people hug each other or that they hug.
She had hugged him exuberantly and invited him to dinner the next day...
We hugged and kissed.
= embrace
V-RECIP: V n (non-recip), pl-n V
Hug is also a noun.
Syvil leapt out of the back seat, and gave him a hug.
N-COUNT
2.
If you hug something, you hold it close to your body with your arms tightly round it.
Shaerl trudged toward them, hugging a large box...
She hugged her legs tight to her chest...
VERB: V n, V n adv/prep
3.
Something that hugs the ground or a stretch of land or water stays very close to it. (WRITTEN)
The road hugs the coast for hundreds of miles...
VERB: V n
4.
see also bear hug
hug         
  • A [[Yoruba]] bride and mother
  • A group hug among young men.
FORM OF ENDEARMENT, UNIVERSAL IN HUMAN COMMUNITIES, IN WHICH TWO OR MORE PEOPLE PUT THEIR ARMS AROUND THE NECK, BACK, OR WAIST OF ONE ANOTHER AND HOLD EACH OTHER CLOSELY
Hugging; Cuddling; Cuddle; Grouphug; Group Hug; Friendship hug; Group hug; 🤗; 🫂; Cuddle bug; Hugs
¦ verb (hugs, hugging, hugged)
1. embrace (someone) tightly.
hold (something) tightly against one's body: he hugged his knees to his chest.
2. keep close to: a few craft hugged the shore.
¦ noun an act of hugging.
?a squeezing grip in wrestling.
Derivatives
huggable adjective
hugger noun
Origin
C16: prob. of Scand. origin.

Wikipedia

Terrain-following radar

Terrain-following radar (TFR) is a military aerospace technology that allows a very-low-flying aircraft to automatically maintain a relatively constant altitude above ground level and therefore make detection by enemy radar more difficult. It is sometimes referred to as ground hugging or terrain hugging flight. The term nap-of-the-earth flight may also apply but is more commonly used in relation to low-flying military helicopters, which typically do not use terrain-following radar.

TFR systems work by scanning a radar beam vertically in front of the aircraft and comparing the range and angle of the radar reflections to a pre-computed ideal manoeuvring curve. By comparing the distance between the terrain and the ideal curve, the system calculates a manoeuvre that will make the aircraft clear the terrain by a pre-selected distance, often on the order of 100 metres (330 ft). Using TFR allows an aircraft to automatically follow terrain at very low levels and high speeds.

Terrain-following radars differ from the similar-sounding terrain avoidance radars; terrain avoidance systems scan horizontally to produce a map-like display that the navigator then uses to plot a route that avoids higher terrain features. The two techniques are often combined in a single radar system, the navigator uses the terrain avoidance mode to choose an ideal route through lower-altitude terrain features like valleys, and then switches to TFR mode which then flies over that route at a minimum altitude.

The concept was initially developed at the Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory in the 1950s. It was first built in production form starting in 1959 by Ferranti for use with the TSR-2 aircraft, flying for the first time in an English Electric Canberra testbed in 1962. While the TSR-2 project was ultimately abandoned, the concept was widely deployed in 1960s and 70s strike aircraft and interdictors, including the General Dynamics F-111, Panavia Tornado and Sukhoi Su-24 "Fencer". The wider introduction of stealth aircraft technologies through the 1990s has led to a reduction in low-altitude flight as a solution to the problem of avoiding anti-aircraft weapons and the technique is no longer common. Most aircraft of this class have since retired although the Su-24 and Tornado remain in use in some numbers.

Ejemplos de pronunciación para -hugging
1. Hugging.
Rebuild the Dream _ Van Jones _ Talks at Google
2. hugging the cat.
Create a Language in Just One Hour _ David J. Peterson _ Talks at Google
3. is hugging you.
Create a Language in Just One Hour _ David J. Peterson _ Talks at Google
4. There hugging each other.
Mindset - How to Pivot and Reinvent _ Apolo Anton Ohno _ Talks at Google
5. tree-hugging environmentalist's state.
Richard Wolfson _ Nuclear Energy - One Environmentalist’s Perspective _ Talks at Google
Ejemplos de uso de -hugging
1. Much less a couple hugging –– and they really are hugging.
2. Hugging, particularly hugging another man, is the kind of casual yet intimate PDA that such men shy from.
3. "Sweetheart, you‘re okay!" she said, hugging her.
4. Before the pregnancy, tiny Christina wears a figure–hugging gown The pop princess, 27, was wearing a thigh–skimming, figure–hugging sliver dress.
5. "There has not been a double burial found in the Neolithic period, much less two people hugging – and they really are hugging," she told Reuters news agency.