Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • abbreviation tablespoon
  • abbreviation tablespoonful
  • abbreviation Football tackle
  • abbreviation temperature
  • abbreviation tenor
  • abbreviation tesla
  • abbreviation Thursday
  • abbreviation thymine
  • abbreviation time reversal
  • abbreviation township
  • abbreviation Tuesday
  • abbreviation Sports turnover
  • The symbol for the isotope tritium.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun The twentieth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet.
  • noun Symbol for tesla, the SI unit of magnetic flux density.
  • noun Symbol for the prefix tera-
  • noun genetics IUPAC 1-letter abbreviation for thymine
  • noun biochemistry IUPAC 1-letter abbreviation for threonine
  • noun mathematics matrix transpose
  • abbreviation teen
  • abbreviation finance taxable
  • abbreviation Tuesday
  • abbreviation stock symbol AT&T
  • abbreviation rail transport, in multiple unit formations trailer car.
  • abbreviation Popular term for the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, or MBTA; specifically, referring to the subway or train. E.g.: "I'm going to take the T"
  • abbreviation sports The sports statistic for ties in a given period under a given criteria
  • abbreviation basketball technical foul
  • abbreviation American Library Association Abbreviation of twentieth, a book size range (12.5-15 cm in height).
  • abbreviation transgender (TG) or transsexual (TS) (used in contrast to cisgender M or F)
  • noun The twentieth letter of the English alphabet, called tee and written in the Latin script.
  • noun The ordinal number twentieth, derived from this letter of the English alphabet, called tee and written in the Latin script.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • From the B-Theorist perspective, perhaps when we talk about redemption, we really mean that the temporal part of a person at some time T is morally better than the temporal part of a person at some earlier time T*.

    God and Time James F. McGrath 2010

  • In fact if we carry out this construction not just for a single structure A but for a family of models of a theory T, always using the same defining formulas, then the resulting structures will all be models of a theory T² that can be read off from T and the defining formulas.

    Model Theory Hodges, Wilfrid 2009

  • Then a state is operationally separated with respect to T if T's application does not change the result of applying the state to any element of the other subalgebra: it is operationally separable with respect to T if it is operationally separated, either with respect to T, or with respect to some other operation T* that coincides with the action of T on the other subalgebra.

    Holism and Nonseparability in Physics Healey, Richard 2008

  • Rather he suggests a lot of special reduction relations which can be combined appropriately to connect two theories T and T².

    Structuralism in Physics Schmidt, Heinz-Juergen 2008

  • Thus, Schaffner (1976, p. 618) holds that T reduces T² if and only if there is a corrected version of T², call it T²* such that

    Intertheory Relations in Physics Batterman, Robert 2007

  • T, and the terms of T² are understood to have approximately the same meanings that they have in T, then Nagel calls the reduction of T² by T

    Intertheory Relations in Physics Batterman, Robert 2007

  • There is nothing wrong with the VS observation about the fact that the variance of an estimate T* in an inverse regression is less than the variance of the target T, i.e.

    Variability: von Storch et al [2004] « Climate Audit 2005

  • T produces a second theory, T*, which has the same theoretical virtues as T but a smaller set of ontological commitments.

    Simplicity Baker, Alan 2004

  • Occam's Razor may be formulated as an epistemic principle: if theory T is simpler than theory T*, then it is rational (other things being equal) to believe T rather than T*.

    Simplicity Baker, Alan 2004

  • Let T be the total science of the time, and let T* be a theory empirically equivalent to T with respect, not to their observational consequences, but with respect to their consequence regarding the phenomena in D.

    Scientific Realism Boyd, Richard 2002

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  • Boy

    January 2, 2010