stereophonic reproduction - определение. Что такое stereophonic reproduction
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Что (кто) такое stereophonic reproduction - определение

HUMAN REPRODUCTION IN WHICH DNA OR GESTATION IS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY OR DONOR
Third party reproduction; Donor-assisted reproduction
Найдено результатов: 335
stereophonic         
  • Label for 2.0 sound (stereo)
  • A-B stereo microphone placement
  • Domestic]] stereo system, having two speakers
  •  Label and sleeve from [[Audio Fidelity Records]]' second stereo demonstration record, ca. 1958
  • Bell Labs binaural demonstration at World's Fair
  • 250px
  • Mid-Side stereo microphone technique
  •  [[ORTF]] stereo microphone technique
  • [[HH Scott]] Model 350, ca. 1961: the first FM multiplex stereo tuner sold in the U.S.
  • Diagram of Clément Ader's [[théatrophone]] prototype at the Opera during the World Exhibition in Paris (1881)
  • Two microphones set up to record a piano simultaneously, which creates a stereo sound
  • X-Y stereo microphone placement
  • "Wandering Dragon Plays with Phoenix" Part One of Twelve, possibly the earliest "accidental stereo", made as a [[field recording]] by [[Berthold Laufer]] for [[Franz Boaz]] in 1901
METHOD OF SOUND REPRODUCTION USING TWO AUDIO CHANNELS
Stereophonic; Stereophony; Intensity stereo; Stereo system; Stereophonic Sound System; Stereo sound; Stereo separation; Stereo; Two-channel stereo; 2.0ch; Crossfeed; Stereo channel; Stereo audio; Stereo mix; Stereo seperation; 2.0 stereo; Spaced pair; Coincident pair; Audio balance; Sound balance; Stereophonic recording; Stereo speakers; Stereophonic audio; True stereo; Stereo record; Balance (stereo); Stereo microphone
[?st?r??(?)'f?n?k, ?st??r??(?)-]
¦ adjective (of sound recording and reproduction) using two or more channels so that the reproduced sound seems to surround the listener and to come from more than one source. Compare with monophonic.
Derivatives
stereophonically adverb
stereophony -'?f(?)ni noun
Crossfeed         
  • Label for 2.0 sound (stereo)
  • A-B stereo microphone placement
  • Domestic]] stereo system, having two speakers
  •  Label and sleeve from [[Audio Fidelity Records]]' second stereo demonstration record, ca. 1958
  • Bell Labs binaural demonstration at World's Fair
  • 250px
  • Mid-Side stereo microphone technique
  •  [[ORTF]] stereo microphone technique
  • [[HH Scott]] Model 350, ca. 1961: the first FM multiplex stereo tuner sold in the U.S.
  • Diagram of Clément Ader's [[théatrophone]] prototype at the Opera during the World Exhibition in Paris (1881)
  • Two microphones set up to record a piano simultaneously, which creates a stereo sound
  • X-Y stereo microphone placement
  • "Wandering Dragon Plays with Phoenix" Part One of Twelve, possibly the earliest "accidental stereo", made as a [[field recording]] by [[Berthold Laufer]] for [[Franz Boaz]] in 1901
METHOD OF SOUND REPRODUCTION USING TWO AUDIO CHANNELS
Stereophonic; Stereophony; Intensity stereo; Stereo system; Stereophonic Sound System; Stereo sound; Stereo separation; Stereo; Two-channel stereo; 2.0ch; Crossfeed; Stereo channel; Stereo audio; Stereo mix; Stereo seperation; 2.0 stereo; Spaced pair; Coincident pair; Audio balance; Sound balance; Stereophonic recording; Stereo speakers; Stereophonic audio; True stereo; Stereo record; Balance (stereo); Stereo microphone
Crossfeed is the process of blending the left and right channels of a stereo audio recording. It is generally used to reduce the extreme channel separation often featured in early stereo recordings (e.
stereo         
  • Label for 2.0 sound (stereo)
  • A-B stereo microphone placement
  • Domestic]] stereo system, having two speakers
  •  Label and sleeve from [[Audio Fidelity Records]]' second stereo demonstration record, ca. 1958
  • Bell Labs binaural demonstration at World's Fair
  • 250px
  • Mid-Side stereo microphone technique
  •  [[ORTF]] stereo microphone technique
  • [[HH Scott]] Model 350, ca. 1961: the first FM multiplex stereo tuner sold in the U.S.
  • Diagram of Clément Ader's [[théatrophone]] prototype at the Opera during the World Exhibition in Paris (1881)
  • Two microphones set up to record a piano simultaneously, which creates a stereo sound
  • X-Y stereo microphone placement
  • "Wandering Dragon Plays with Phoenix" Part One of Twelve, possibly the earliest "accidental stereo", made as a [[field recording]] by [[Berthold Laufer]] for [[Franz Boaz]] in 1901
METHOD OF SOUND REPRODUCTION USING TWO AUDIO CHANNELS
Stereophonic; Stereophony; Intensity stereo; Stereo system; Stereophonic Sound System; Stereo sound; Stereo separation; Stereo; Two-channel stereo; 2.0ch; Crossfeed; Stereo channel; Stereo audio; Stereo mix; Stereo seperation; 2.0 stereo; Spaced pair; Coincident pair; Audio balance; Sound balance; Stereophonic recording; Stereo speakers; Stereophonic audio; True stereo; Stereo record; Balance (stereo); Stereo microphone
(stereos)
1.
Stereo is used to describe a sound system in which the sound is played through two speakers. Compare mono
.
...loudspeakers that give all-around stereo sound.
ADJ
2.
A stereo is a cassette or CD player with two speakers.
N-COUNT
stereo         
  • Label for 2.0 sound (stereo)
  • A-B stereo microphone placement
  • Domestic]] stereo system, having two speakers
  •  Label and sleeve from [[Audio Fidelity Records]]' second stereo demonstration record, ca. 1958
  • Bell Labs binaural demonstration at World's Fair
  • 250px
  • Mid-Side stereo microphone technique
  •  [[ORTF]] stereo microphone technique
  • [[HH Scott]] Model 350, ca. 1961: the first FM multiplex stereo tuner sold in the U.S.
  • Diagram of Clément Ader's [[théatrophone]] prototype at the Opera during the World Exhibition in Paris (1881)
  • Two microphones set up to record a piano simultaneously, which creates a stereo sound
  • X-Y stereo microphone placement
  • "Wandering Dragon Plays with Phoenix" Part One of Twelve, possibly the earliest "accidental stereo", made as a [[field recording]] by [[Berthold Laufer]] for [[Franz Boaz]] in 1901
METHOD OF SOUND REPRODUCTION USING TWO AUDIO CHANNELS
Stereophonic; Stereophony; Intensity stereo; Stereo system; Stereophonic Sound System; Stereo sound; Stereo separation; Stereo; Two-channel stereo; 2.0ch; Crossfeed; Stereo channel; Stereo audio; Stereo mix; Stereo seperation; 2.0 stereo; Spaced pair; Coincident pair; Audio balance; Sound balance; Stereophonic recording; Stereo speakers; Stereophonic audio; True stereo; Stereo record; Balance (stereo); Stereo microphone
['st?r???, 'st??r???]
¦ noun (plural stereos)
1. stereophonic sound.
2. a stereophonic CD player, record player, etc.
3. Printing short for stereotype.
¦ adjective
1. stereophonic.
2. stereoscopic.
Reproduction (journal)         
SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL
J Reprod Fertil; Journal of Reproduction and Fertility; J. Reprod. Fertil.; J. Reprod. Fert.; Society of Reproduction and Fertility; Society for Reproduction and Fertility; Journal of reproduction and fertility; Reviews of Reproduction; J. Reproduction Fertil.; J Reproduction Fertil; Rev. Reproduction; Rev Reproduction; Journal of Reproduction and Fertility Supplement; J. Reproduction Fertil. Suppl.; J Reproduction Fertil Suppl; J. Reprod. Fertil. Suppl.; J Reprod Fertil Suppl; Journal of Reproduction and Fertility. Supplement; Society of Reproduction and Fertility Supplement; Soc. Reprod. Fertil. Suppl.; Soc Reprod Fertil Suppl; Journal of Reproduction & Fertility; Journal of Reproduction & Fertility. Supplement; Journal of Reproduction & Fertility Supplement; Journal of reproduction & fertility; Society for Reproduction & Fertility; Society of Reproduction & Fertility; Society of Reproduction & Fertility Supplement; Reproduction (Cambridge, England); Rev. Reprod.; Rev Reprod; Reproduction (Cambridge, England) Supplement
Reproduction is a monthly peer-reviewed medical journal covering the cellular and molecular biology of reproduction, including the development of gametes and early embryos in all species; developmental processes such as cell differentiation, morphogenesis and related regulatory mechanisms in normal and disease models, assisted reproductive technologies in model systems and in a clinical environment, and reproductive endocrinology, immunology and physiology. Emerging topics including cloning, the biology of embryonic stem cells, environmental effects on reproductive potential and health, and epigenetic effects on reproductive and developmental processes are also covered.
reproduce         
  • Illustration of the ''twofold cost of sexual reproduction''. If each organism were to contribute to the same number of offspring (two), ''(a)'' the population remains the same size each generation, where the ''(b)'' asexual population doubles in size each generation.
  • Hoverflies]] mating in midair flight
PRODUCTION OF NEW INDIVIDUALS THAT CONTAIN SOME PORTION OF GENETIC MATERIAL INHERITED FROM ONE OR MORE PARENT ORGANISMS
Reproductive strategy; Procreation; Procreative; Reporduction; Procreate; Reproduce; Babymaking; Lottery principle; THE LOTTERY PRINCIPLE; Reproductive behavior; Reproduction (animal); Reproduction (plant); Reproductive Behaviour; Polycyclic spawning; Monocyclic spawning; Reproducing; Biological reproduction; Vertical gene transfer; Procreating; Same-sex reproduction; Reproductivity; Reproduction (biology); Vertical transfer; Reproduction strategies; Reproduction strategy; Reproductive behaviour; Reproductive strategies
v. (D; tr.) to reproduce from (to reproduce a photograph from an old negative)
reproduce         
  • Illustration of the ''twofold cost of sexual reproduction''. If each organism were to contribute to the same number of offspring (two), ''(a)'' the population remains the same size each generation, where the ''(b)'' asexual population doubles in size each generation.
  • Hoverflies]] mating in midair flight
PRODUCTION OF NEW INDIVIDUALS THAT CONTAIN SOME PORTION OF GENETIC MATERIAL INHERITED FROM ONE OR MORE PARENT ORGANISMS
Reproductive strategy; Procreation; Procreative; Reporduction; Procreate; Reproduce; Babymaking; Lottery principle; THE LOTTERY PRINCIPLE; Reproductive behavior; Reproduction (animal); Reproduction (plant); Reproductive Behaviour; Polycyclic spawning; Monocyclic spawning; Reproducing; Biological reproduction; Vertical gene transfer; Procreating; Same-sex reproduction; Reproductivity; Reproduction (biology); Vertical transfer; Reproduction strategies; Reproduction strategy; Reproductive behaviour; Reproductive strategies
(reproduces, reproducing, reproduced)
1.
If you try to reproduce something, you try to copy it.
I shall not try to reproduce the policemen's English...
The effect has proved hard to reproduce.
VERB: V n, V n
2.
If you reproduce a picture, speech, or a piece of writing, you make a photograph or printed copy of it.
We are grateful to you for permission to reproduce this article.
VERB: V n
3.
If you reproduce an action or an achievement, you repeat it.
If we can reproduce the form we have shown in the last couple of months we will be successful.
= repeat
VERB: V n
4.
When people, animals, or plants reproduce, they produce young.
...a society where women are defined by their ability to reproduce...
We are reproducing ourselves at such a rate that our numbers threaten the ecology of the planet.
VERB: V, V pron-refl
reproduction
Genes are those tiny bits of biological information swapped in sexual reproduction.
N-UNCOUNT
procreate         
  • Illustration of the ''twofold cost of sexual reproduction''. If each organism were to contribute to the same number of offspring (two), ''(a)'' the population remains the same size each generation, where the ''(b)'' asexual population doubles in size each generation.
  • Hoverflies]] mating in midair flight
PRODUCTION OF NEW INDIVIDUALS THAT CONTAIN SOME PORTION OF GENETIC MATERIAL INHERITED FROM ONE OR MORE PARENT ORGANISMS
Reproductive strategy; Procreation; Procreative; Reporduction; Procreate; Reproduce; Babymaking; Lottery principle; THE LOTTERY PRINCIPLE; Reproductive behavior; Reproduction (animal); Reproduction (plant); Reproductive Behaviour; Polycyclic spawning; Monocyclic spawning; Reproducing; Biological reproduction; Vertical gene transfer; Procreating; Same-sex reproduction; Reproductivity; Reproduction (biology); Vertical transfer; Reproduction strategies; Reproduction strategy; Reproductive behaviour; Reproductive strategies
(procreates, procreating, procreated)
When animals or people procreate, they produce young or babies. (FORMAL)
Most young women feel a biological need to procreate.
= reproduce
VERB: V
procreation
Early marriage and procreation are no longer discouraged there.
= reproduction
N-UNCOUNT
procreate         
  • Illustration of the ''twofold cost of sexual reproduction''. If each organism were to contribute to the same number of offspring (two), ''(a)'' the population remains the same size each generation, where the ''(b)'' asexual population doubles in size each generation.
  • Hoverflies]] mating in midair flight
PRODUCTION OF NEW INDIVIDUALS THAT CONTAIN SOME PORTION OF GENETIC MATERIAL INHERITED FROM ONE OR MORE PARENT ORGANISMS
Reproductive strategy; Procreation; Procreative; Reporduction; Procreate; Reproduce; Babymaking; Lottery principle; THE LOTTERY PRINCIPLE; Reproductive behavior; Reproduction (animal); Reproduction (plant); Reproductive Behaviour; Polycyclic spawning; Monocyclic spawning; Reproducing; Biological reproduction; Vertical gene transfer; Procreating; Same-sex reproduction; Reproductivity; Reproduction (biology); Vertical transfer; Reproduction strategies; Reproduction strategy; Reproductive behaviour; Reproductive strategies
v. a.
Generate, engender, beget, breed, propagate.
Cultural reproduction         
MECHANISMS BY WHICH EXISTING CULTURAL FORMS, VALUES, PRACTICES, AND SHARED UNDERSTANDINGS (I.E., NORMS) ARE TRANSMITTED FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION
Cultural reproduction, a concept first developed by French sociologist and cultural theorist Pierre Bourdieu,Jenks, Christopher. 1993.

Википедия

Third-party reproduction

Third-party reproduction or donor-assisted reproduction is any human reproduction in which DNA or gestation is provided by a third party or donor other than the one or two parents who will raise the resulting child. This goes beyond the traditional father–mother model, and the third party's involvement is limited to the reproductive process and does not extend into the raising of the child. Third-party reproduction is used by couples unable to reproduce by traditional means, by same-sex couples, and by men and women without a partner. Where donor gametes are provided by a donor, the donor will be a biological parent of the resulting child, but in third party reproduction, he or she will not be the caring parent.