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| cali |
| Cali |
| cali | (n) city in southwestern Colombia in a rich agricultural area |
| calibrate | (v) make fine adjustments or divide into marked intervals for optimal measuring, Syn. fine-tune, graduate, Example: calibrate an instrument; graduate a cylinder |
| calibrate | (v) mark (the scale of a measuring instrument) so that it can be read in the desired units, Example: he calibrated the thermometer for the Celsius scale |
| calibrate | (v) measure the caliber of, Example: calibrate a gun |
| calibration | (n) the act of checking or adjusting (by comparison with a standard) the accuracy of a measuring instrument, Syn. standardisation, standardization, Example: the thermometer needed calibration |
| cali cartel | (n) a drug cartel that seized control of cocaine production in Colombia in 1993; adopted techniques used by terrorist organizations (small cells and sophisticated communications equipment and close ties with politicians etc.) |
| caliche | (n) crust or layer of hard subsoil encrusted with calcium-carbonate occurring in arid or semiarid regions, Syn. hardpan |
| caliche | (n) nitrate-bearing rock or gravel of the sodium nitrate deposits of Chile and Peru |
| caliche-topped | (adj) covered with caliche, a hard calcium-carbonate encrusted soil |
| calico | (n) coarse cloth with a bright print |
| Cali | ‖n. (Hindoo Myth.) The tenth avatar or incarnation of the god Vishnu. |
| Calibrate | v. i. To ascertain the caliber of, as of a thermometer tube; also, more generally, to determine or rectify the graduation of, as of the various standards or graduated instruments. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Calibration | n. The process of estimating the caliber a tube, as of a thermometer tube, in order to graduate it to a scale of degrees; also, more generally, the determination of the true value of the spaces in any graduated instrument. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Calibre | The caliber of empty tubes. Reid. [ 1913 Webster ] A battery composed of three guns of small caliber. Prescott. [ 1913 Webster ] ☞ The caliber of firearms is expressed in various ways. Cannon are often designated by the weight of a solid spherical shot that will fit the bore; as, a 12-pounder; pieces of ordnance that project shell or hollow shot are designated by the diameter of their bore; as, a 12 inch mortar or a 14 inch shell gun; small arms are designated by hundredths of an inch expressed decimally; as, a rifle of .44 inch caliber. [ 1913 Webster ]
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| Calice | n. [ See Calice. ] See Chalice. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| caliche | n. |
| caliche-topped | adj. covered with caliche{ 2 }, a hard calcium-carbonate encrusted soil. [ WordNet 1.5 ] |
| Calicle | n. [ L. caliculus a small cup, dim. of calicis, a cup. Cf Calycle. ] (Zool.) |
| Calico | n.; The importation of printed or stained colicoes appears to have been coeval with the establishment of the East India Company. Beck (Draper's Dict. ). [ 1913 Webster ] ☞ In the United States the term calico is applied only to the printed fabric. [ 1913 Webster ]
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| Calico | a. Made of, or having the appearance of, calico; -- often applied to an animal, as a horse or cat, on whose body are large patches of a color strikingly different from its main color. [ Colloq. U. S. ] [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Cali (Stadt in Kolumbien) | Cali (city in Colombia) [Add to Longdo] |
| Calicut; Kozhikode (Stadt in Indien) | Calicut; Kozhikode (city in India) [Add to Longdo] |
| Californium (Kalifornium) { n } [ chem. ] | californium [Add to Longdo] |