contact - определение. Что такое contact
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Что (кто) такое contact - определение

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Contact (Motion Picture); Contact (movie); Contact! (album); Contact (song); Contact us; Contact (album); Contact (disambiguation); Contact film; Contact (game); Cotanct; Contact (film); Contact (1997 film); The Contact (film); The Contact; The Contact (disambiguation); Contact!
Найдено результатов: 522
contact         
(contacts, contacting, contacted)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
Contact involves meeting or communicating with someone, especially regularly.
Opposition leaders are denying any contact with the government in Kabul...
He forbade contacts between directors and executives outside his presence.
N-UNCOUNT: also N in pl, oft N with/between n
2.
If you are in contact with someone, you regularly meet them or communicate with them.
He was in direct contact with the kidnappers...
We do keep in contact.
PHRASE: usu v-link PHR, oft PHR with n
3.
If you contact someone, you telephone them, write to them, or go to see them in order to tell or ask them something.
Contact the Tourist Information Bureau for further details...
When she first contacted me Frances was upset.
VERB: V n, V n
4.
If you come into contact with someone or something, you meet that person or thing in the course of your work or other activities.
The college has brought me into contact with western ideas.
N-UNCOUNT: into N with n
5.
If you make contact with someone, you find out where they are and talk or write to them.
Then, after she had become famous, he tried to make contact with her.
PHRASE: V inflects, PHR with n, pl-n V
6.
If you lose contact with someone who you have been friendly with, you no longer see them, speak to them, or write to them.
Though they all live nearby, I lost contact with them really quickly...
Mother and son lost contact when Nicholas was in his early twenties.
PHRASE: V inflects, PHR with n, pl-n V
7.
When people or things are in contact, they are touching each other.
They compared how these organisms behaved when left in contact with different materials...
The cry occurs when air is brought into contact with the baby's larynx...
There was no physical contact, nor did I want any...
N-UNCOUNT: oft in/into N with n
8.
Radio contact is communication by means of radio.
...a technical problem reported by the pilot moments before he lost contact with the control tower.
N-UNCOUNT
9.
A contact is someone you know in an organization or profession who helps you or gives you information.
Their contact in the United States Embassy was called Phil.
N-COUNT
10.
to make eye contact: see eye
contact         
n.
Touch, juxtaposition, junction, contiguity, close union.
Contact         
·noun The plane between two adjacent bodies of dissimilar rock.
II. Contact ·noun A close union or junction of bodies; a touching or meeting.
III. Contact ·noun The property of two curves, or surfaces, which meet, and at the point of meeting have a common direction.
contact         
n.
being together
connection
1) to come in, into contact; to establish, make contact
2) to maintain, stay in contact
3) to bring into contact
4) to break off; lose contact
5) (electrical) to break contact
6) close, intimate; direct; eye; face-to-face; indirect contact
7) cultural; personal; radar; radio contact (the control tower was in radar contact with the plane)
8) contact with (to establish contact with one's relatives; to stay in contact with friends)
9) in contact (have they been in contact?)
10) on contact (the bomb exploded on contact with the ground)
11) a point of contact
acquaintance
tie
12) business; professional; international; social contacts
contact         
¦ noun 'k?ntakt
1. the state or condition of physical touching.
[as modifier] caused by or operating through physical touch: contact dermatitis.
2. the action of communicating or meeting.
a communication or relationship.
a person whom one may ask for information or assistance.
a person who has associated with a patient with a contagious disease.
3. a connection for the passage of an electric current from one thing to another.
4. (contacts) contact lenses.
¦ verb 'k?ntakt, k?n'takt
1. get in touch or communication with.
2. touch.
Derivatives
contactable adjective
Origin
C17: from L. contactus, from contact-, contingere 'touch, grasp, border on', from con- 'together with' + tangere 'to touch'.
Contact a Family         
BRITISH CHARITABLE ORGANIZATION
Contact a family
Contact (registered as Contact a Family) is a UK-based registered charity for families with disabled children offering support, advice and information regardless of the child's medical condition or situation. As well as supporting families the charity supports those who assist the families, including medical and educational professionals, local government workers and health workers.
contacts         
  • In 1888, [[Adolf Gaston Eugen Fick]] was the first to successfully fit contact lenses, which were made from blown glass
  • CLARE (''contact lens associated red eye'') is a group of inflammatory complications from lens wear
  • One-day [[disposable]] contact lenses with blue handling tint in blister-pack packaging
  • Woman wearing a cosmetic type of contact lens; enlarged detail shows the grain produced during the manufacturing process. Curving of the lines of printed dots suggests these lenses were manufactured by printing onto a flat sheet then shaping it.
  • Inserting a contact lens
  • Young woman removing contact lenses from her eyes in front of a mirror
  • Putting contacts in and taking them out
  • Contact lenses soaking in a hydrogen peroxide-based solution. The case is part of a "one-step" system and includes a catalytic disc at the base to neutralise the peroxide over time.
  • Contact lenses, other than the cosmetic variety, become almost invisible once inserted in the eye. Most corrective contact lenses come with a light "handling tint" that renders the lens slightly more visible on the eye. Soft contact lenses extend beyond the cornea, their rim sometimes visible against the sclera.
  • Leonardo's]] method for neutralizing the refractive power of the cornea
  • Dracula]]'' (1958) in one of the first uses of contact lens with makeup in films
  • Lens case to store contacts
  • Diameter and base curve radius
  • [[Otto Wichterle]] (pictured) and [[Drahoslav Lím]] introduced modern soft hydrogel lenses in 1959.
  • Scleral lens, with visible outer edge resting on the sclera of a patient with severe dry eye syndrome
  • editor1-last=John Wiley & Sons, Inc }}</ref>
VERY THIN PLASTIC LENS WORN DIRECTLY ON THE EYE TO CORRECT VISUAL DEFECTS
Contact lenses; Contact lense; Contact Lenses; Contact Lens; Contact lens solution; Thoric lens; Contacts; Contact lens prescription; Corneal neutralization; Colored contact lens; Colored contact lenses; Piggybacked contact lens; RGP contact lenses; Monovision; Disposable contact lens lid; Corneal Neutralization; Multifocal contact lens; Soft contact lens; Bandage contact lens; Decorative contact lens; History of contact lenses; Soft contact lenses; Contact lens solutions
contact lenses.
Contact (amateur radio)         
EXCHANGE OF INFORMATION BETWEEN TWO AMATEUR RADIO STATIONS
Amateur Radio contact; Amateur radio contact
An amateur radio contact, more commonly referred to as simply a "contact", is an exchange of information between two amateur radio stations. The exchange usually consists of an initial call, a response by another amateur radio operator at an amateur radio station, and a signal report.
contact lens         
  • In 1888, [[Adolf Gaston Eugen Fick]] was the first to successfully fit contact lenses, which were made from blown glass
  • CLARE (''contact lens associated red eye'') is a group of inflammatory complications from lens wear
  • One-day [[disposable]] contact lenses with blue handling tint in blister-pack packaging
  • Woman wearing a cosmetic type of contact lens; enlarged detail shows the grain produced during the manufacturing process. Curving of the lines of printed dots suggests these lenses were manufactured by printing onto a flat sheet then shaping it.
  • Inserting a contact lens
  • Young woman removing contact lenses from her eyes in front of a mirror
  • Putting contacts in and taking them out
  • Contact lenses soaking in a hydrogen peroxide-based solution. The case is part of a "one-step" system and includes a catalytic disc at the base to neutralise the peroxide over time.
  • Contact lenses, other than the cosmetic variety, become almost invisible once inserted in the eye. Most corrective contact lenses come with a light "handling tint" that renders the lens slightly more visible on the eye. Soft contact lenses extend beyond the cornea, their rim sometimes visible against the sclera.
  • Leonardo's]] method for neutralizing the refractive power of the cornea
  • Dracula]]'' (1958) in one of the first uses of contact lens with makeup in films
  • Lens case to store contacts
  • Diameter and base curve radius
  • [[Otto Wichterle]] (pictured) and [[Drahoslav Lím]] introduced modern soft hydrogel lenses in 1959.
  • Scleral lens, with visible outer edge resting on the sclera of a patient with severe dry eye syndrome
  • editor1-last=John Wiley & Sons, Inc }}</ref>
VERY THIN PLASTIC LENS WORN DIRECTLY ON THE EYE TO CORRECT VISUAL DEFECTS
Contact lenses; Contact lense; Contact Lenses; Contact Lens; Contact lens solution; Thoric lens; Contacts; Contact lens prescription; Corneal neutralization; Colored contact lens; Colored contact lenses; Piggybacked contact lens; RGP contact lenses; Monovision; Disposable contact lens lid; Corneal Neutralization; Multifocal contact lens; Soft contact lens; Bandage contact lens; Decorative contact lens; History of contact lenses; Soft contact lenses; Contact lens solutions
(contact lenses)
Contact lenses are small plastic lenses that you put on the surface of your eyes to help you see better, instead of wearing glasses.
N-COUNT: usu pl
Contact lens         
  • In 1888, [[Adolf Gaston Eugen Fick]] was the first to successfully fit contact lenses, which were made from blown glass
  • CLARE (''contact lens associated red eye'') is a group of inflammatory complications from lens wear
  • One-day [[disposable]] contact lenses with blue handling tint in blister-pack packaging
  • Woman wearing a cosmetic type of contact lens; enlarged detail shows the grain produced during the manufacturing process. Curving of the lines of printed dots suggests these lenses were manufactured by printing onto a flat sheet then shaping it.
  • Inserting a contact lens
  • Young woman removing contact lenses from her eyes in front of a mirror
  • Putting contacts in and taking them out
  • Contact lenses soaking in a hydrogen peroxide-based solution. The case is part of a "one-step" system and includes a catalytic disc at the base to neutralise the peroxide over time.
  • Contact lenses, other than the cosmetic variety, become almost invisible once inserted in the eye. Most corrective contact lenses come with a light "handling tint" that renders the lens slightly more visible on the eye. Soft contact lenses extend beyond the cornea, their rim sometimes visible against the sclera.
  • Leonardo's]] method for neutralizing the refractive power of the cornea
  • Dracula]]'' (1958) in one of the first uses of contact lens with makeup in films
  • Lens case to store contacts
  • Diameter and base curve radius
  • [[Otto Wichterle]] (pictured) and [[Drahoslav Lím]] introduced modern soft hydrogel lenses in 1959.
  • Scleral lens, with visible outer edge resting on the sclera of a patient with severe dry eye syndrome
  • editor1-last=John Wiley & Sons, Inc }}</ref>
VERY THIN PLASTIC LENS WORN DIRECTLY ON THE EYE TO CORRECT VISUAL DEFECTS
Contact lenses; Contact lense; Contact Lenses; Contact Lens; Contact lens solution; Thoric lens; Contacts; Contact lens prescription; Corneal neutralization; Colored contact lens; Colored contact lenses; Piggybacked contact lens; RGP contact lenses; Monovision; Disposable contact lens lid; Corneal Neutralization; Multifocal contact lens; Soft contact lens; Bandage contact lens; Decorative contact lens; History of contact lenses; Soft contact lenses; Contact lens solutions
Contact lenses, or simply contacts, are thin lenses placed directly on the surface of the eyes. Contact lenses are ocular prosthetic devices used by over 150 million people worldwide, and they can be worn to correct vision or for cosmetic or therapeutic reasons.

Википедия

Contact