course

  • 51course — 1. noun /kɔː(ɹ)s,kɔː(ɹ)s,koʊɹs,kɜːs/ a) A path, sequence, development, or evolution. The normal course of events seems to be just one damned thing after another. b) A normal or customary sequence. His illness ran its course. 2. verb… …

    Wiktionary

  • 52course — i. The intended direction of flight. The aircraft heading as measured in the horizontal plane in degrees clockwise from the north. The course is indicated by a single arrow in the air plot. ii. The ILS (instrument landing system) localizer signal …

    Aviation dictionary

  • 53course — n 1. progression, headway, progress, march, advance, furtherance; proceeding, development, rise. 2. route, way, run, road, lane, avenue, passage, track, trail; direction, channel, tack, cut, pass; runway, fairway, approach; path, line, trajectory …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 54course — n.f. Ne pas être dans la course, ne pas s adapter à son temps, à une situation. / Course à l échalote, jeu ( ?) qui consiste à faire courir l adversaire en le tenant par le col et le fond du pantalon. Poursuite en touchant presque la voiture qui… …

    Dictionnaire du Français argotique et populaire

  • 55Course — In a joust, to run a single pass with lances or swords was a course. Barber and Barker suggest in their tournaments book that a course might also have been a bout ; a single fight determined in a variety of manners counted blows struck or… …

    Medieval glossary

  • 56course — The direction of a line run with a compass or transit and with reference to a meridian. 12 Am J2d Bound § 10. Progression in order; a way in which something moves, as a race course. See holder in due course …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 57Course — This surname is of French origins, and is habitational for one who resides at an enclosure in a wood. The origination is the Latin cohors , through the medieval courte , the name appearing in England probably as a result of the Flemish Weavers ,… …

    Surnames reference

  • 58course — [13] Etymologically, course denotes ‘running’. It comes via Old French cours from Latin cursus, a derivative of the verb currere ‘run’ (from which English gets current and a wide range of other words, from courier to occur). Its earliest meaning… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 59Course —  Der Course ist die gesamte Bahn über 18 Löcher, welche ein Golfspieler zu gehen hat …

    Golf lexikon

  • 60course — kursas statusas T sritis Gynyba apibrėžtis Taikinio arba bet kurio judančio objekto (pvz., tanko, orlaivio, laivo) judėjimo kryptis. atitikmenys: angl. course rus. курс …

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