DECODES - traduzione in arabo
Diclib.com
Dizionario ChatGPT
Inserisci una parola o una frase in qualsiasi lingua 👆
Lingua:

Traduzione e analisi delle parole tramite l'intelligenza artificiale ChatGPT

In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
  • opzioni di traduzione delle parole
  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

DECODES - traduzione in arabo


DECODES         
GENUS OF INSECTS

الفعل

فَكَّ رُمُوزَ الشَّفْرَة

ترجم رسالة شفرية      
decode
DECODE         
BIOPHARMACEUTICAL COMPANY BASED IN REYKJAVÍK, ICELAND
DeCODE Genetics; Íslensk Erfðagreining; DeCODE; Icelandic DNA database; National icelandic DNA database; National icelandic database; Decode Genetics; Islensk Erfdagreining; DeCODEme

الفعل

فَكَّ رُمُوزَ الشَّفْرَة

Wikipedia

Decodes
Decodes is a genus of moths in the family Tortricidae.
Esempi dal corpus di testo per DECODES
1. Kopkow‘s name cropped up on the decodes relating to movements of captured parachutists or saboteurs.
2. Karzai closed his speech by fearfully saying that Afghanistan was «again standing on its feet, after decodes of war and occupation»—Agencies
3. While Kopkow‘s name meant nothing at first to war–crimes hunters, it was widely known by senior intelligence staff who had access during the war to signals decodes, known as Ultra, taken from German police traffic.
4. He goes on to claim that the laydeez aren‘t coming up with the goods because his reputation as a playboy/lothario/manwhore (you see what I was saying about nuance and connotation?) means they don‘t want to be "like all the other girls". Many might interpret this female sentiment as a sign that they do not wish to become another notch on the bedpost, but he, presumably with the help of the poetic sensibility that has made him such a master lyricist, decodes it differently.
5. BLINK: THE POWER OF THINKING WITHOUT THINKING, by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown, $23.'5) New Yorker writer Malcolm Gladwell decodes the science of rapid cognition in this work in which he analyzes snap judgments – the split second decisions we so often make with only the subtlest of clues. (1/4/05) WHEN COMPUTERS WERE HUMAN, by David Alan Grier (Princeton University Press, $35) For two centuries before the development of computers, there was a class of workers – mostly women – who served as the human drudges of mathematical calculation.