A line that separates particle type-clusters on two-dimensional dot plots.
Doorway, opening, or passage in a fence or wall.
The gap between a batsman's bat and pad.
The waste piece of metal cast in the opening; a sprue or sullage piece. Also written geat and git.
A street; now used especially as a combining form to make the name of a street e.g. "Briggate" (a common street name in the north of England meaning "Bridge Street") or Kirkgate meaning "Church Street".
Passageway (as in an air terminal) where passengers can embark or disembark.
The controlling terminal of a field effect transistor (FET).
The channel or opening through which metal is poured into the mould; the ingate.
A logical pathway made up of switches which turn on or off. Examples are and, or, nand, etc.
A doorlike structure outside a house.
A tally mark consisting of four vertical bars crossed by a diagonal, representing a count of five.
The amount of money made by selling tickets to a concert or a sports event.
Movable barrier.
A location which serves as a conduit for transport, migration, or trade.
A mechanism, in a film camera and projector, that holds each frame momentarily stationary behind the aperture.
In a lock tumbler, the opening for the stump of the bolt to pass through or into.
A way, path.
To keep something inside by means of a closed gate.
To turn (an image intensifier) on and off selectively as needed, or to avoid damage from excessive light exposure. See autogating.
To open a closed ion channel.
To furnish with a gate.
To punish, especially a child or teenager, by not allowing them to go out.
A topological space which represents some graph (ordered pair of sets) and which is constructed by representing the vertices as points and the edges as copies of the real interval [0,1] (where, for any given edge, 0 and 1 are identified with the points representing the two vertices) and equipping the result with a particular topology called the graph topology.
A set of vertices (or nodes) connected together by edges; (formally) an ordered pair of sets (V,E), where the elements of V are called vertices or nodes and E is a set of pairs (called edges) of elements of V. See also Graph (discrete mathematics) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
A graphical unit on the token-level, the abstracted fundamental shape of a character or letter as distinct from its ductus (realization in a particular typeface or handwriting on the instance-level) and as distinct by a grapheme on the type-level by not fundamentally distinguishing meaning.
A data chart (graphical representation of data) intended to illustrate the relationship between a set (or sets) of numbers (quantities, measurements or indicative numbers) and a reference set, whose elements are indexed to those of the former set(s) and may or may not be numbers.
A set of points constituting a graphical representation of a real function; (formally) a set of tuples (x_1,x_2,…,x_m,y)∈ R ᵐ⁺¹, where y=f(x_1,x_2,…,x_m) for a given function f: R ᵐ→ R . See also Graph of a function on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
A morphism 𝛤_f from the domain of f to the product of the domain and codomain of f, such that the first projection applied to 𝛤_f equals the identity of the domain, and the second projection applied to 𝛤_f is equal to f.
To draw a graph of a function.
To draw a graph.