Queue-fourche
adjective, Heraldry.
1.
(of a lion) having a single tail divided in two partway along its length so as to have two complete ends.
Read Also:
- Queuers
[kyoo] /kyu/ noun 1. a braid of hair worn hanging down behind. 2. a file or line, especially of people waiting their turn. 3. Computers. a FIFO-organized sequence of items, as data, messages, jobs, or the like, waiting for action. verb (used with or without object), queued, queuing. 4. to form in a line while […]
- Queuing
[kyoo] /kyu/ noun 1. a braid of hair worn hanging down behind. 2. a file or line, especially of people waiting their turn. 3. Computers. a FIFO-organized sequence of items, as data, messages, jobs, or the like, waiting for action. verb (used with or without object), queued, queuing. 4. to form in a line while […]
- Queuing-theory
noun 1. a theory that deals with providing a service on a waiting line, or queue, especially when the demand for it is irregular and describable by probability distributions, as processing phone calls arriving at a telephone exchange or collecting highway tolls from drivers at tollbooths. noun 1. a mathematical approach to the rate at […]
- Quevedo y villegas
/kɛˈveɪðəʊiː vɪlˈjeɪɡæs/ noun 1. Francisco Gómez de. 1580–1645, Spanish poet and writer, noted for his satires and the picaresque novel La historia de la vida del Buscón (1626)
- Quey
[kwey] /kweɪ/ noun, plural queys. Scot. and North England. 1. a heifer. n. “young cow,” Scottish and Northern English dialect, late 14c., from Old Norse kviga, apparently from ku “cow” (see cow (n.)).