Cite
61cite — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. mention, bring forward, quote; arraign, summon; commend. See evidence, demonstration, repute. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To summon] Syn. call, arraign, order, subpoena; see summon 1 . 2. [To refer to… …
62cite — [15] Latin ciēre or cīre meant ‘move’ (it was related to Greek kīnein ‘move’, source of English kinetic and cinema). From its past participle, citus, was formed the verb citāre, meaning ‘cause to move’, and hence ‘call, summon’. This passed into… …
63Cité — Sp Sitė nkt. Ap Cité L s. Senos u. Paryžiuje …
64cite — verb 1) cite the passage in full Syn: quote, reproduce 2) he cited the case of Roe v. Wade Syn: refer to, make reference to, mention, allude to, adduce, instance; specify, name 3) …
65cite — verb 1) cite the passage in full Syn: quote, reproduce, excerpt 2) he cited the case of Leigh v. Gladstone Syn: refer to, allude to, instance, specify, mention, name …
66cite — citata statusas T sritis informatika apibrėžtis Gauto ↑elektroninio laiško tekstas, įtrauktas į atsakymo laišką. ↑Elektroninio pašto programos dažniausiai pačios įterpia originalaus laiško tekstą į ↑atsakymą (1), kai į laišką atsakoma komandomis… …
67cite — citata statusas T sritis informatika apibrėžtis Tekstas, parašytas tarp citavimui skirtų hiperteksto ženklinimo↑ HTML kalbos ↑gairių. Peržiūrint tokį tekstą ↑naršyklėje, jis išskiriamas kitokiu šriftu, pavyzdžiui, kursyvu, pabraukiamas.… …
68cite — 1. L. Fr. City; a city. Cite de Loundr , city of London 2. verb To summon; to command the presence of a person; to notify a person of legal proceedings against him and require his appearance thereto. To read or refer to legal authorities, in an… …
69cite — 1. L. Fr. City; a city. Cite de Loundr , city of London 2. verb To summon; to command the presence of a person; to notify a person of legal proceedings against him and require his appearance thereto. To read or refer to legal authorities, in an… …
70cite — [15] Latin ciēre or cīre meant ‘move’ (it was related to Greek kīnein ‘move’, source of English kinetic and cinema). From its past participle, citus, was formed the verb citāre, meaning ‘cause to move’, and hence ‘call, summon’. This passed into… …