Clv
Constant Linear Velocity
constant linear velocity
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- Clwyd
[kloo-id] /ˈklu ɪd/ noun 1. a county in N Wales. 937 sq. mi. (2426 sq. km). /ˈkluːɪd/ noun 1. a former county in NE Wales, formed in 1974 from Flintshire, most of Denbighshire, and part of Merionethshire; replaced in 1996 by Flintshire, Denbighshire, Wrexham county borough, and part of Conwy county borough
- Clyde
[klahyd] /klaɪd/ noun, Slang. 1. (sometimes initial capital letter) a stupid, inept, or boorish person. 2. the brain or mind. [klahyd] /klaɪd/ noun 1. a river in S Scotland, flowing NW into the Firth of Clyde. 106 miles (170 km) long. 2. Firth of, an inlet of the Atlantic, in SW Scotland. 64 miles (103 […]
- Clx
library, graphics The Common Lisp library providing a low-level interface to the X Window System, equivalent to Xlib. Graphics toolkits can be built on top of CLX, e.g. McCLIM, Garnet, CLUE and CLIO. Various LISP implementors have independently ported CLX to their own platforms, fixing bugs and, in some cases, adding features in the process. […]
- Clydebank
[klahyd-bangk] /ˈklaɪdˌbæŋk/ noun 1. a city in SW Scotland, on the Clyde River. /ˌklaɪdˈbæŋk; ˈklaɪdˌbæŋk/ noun 1. a town in W Scotland, in West Dunbartonshire on the north bank of the River Clyde. Pop: 29 858 (2001)
- Clydesdale
[klahydz-deyl] /ˈklaɪdzˌdeɪl/ noun 1. one of a Scottish breed of strong, hardy draft horses, having a feathering of long hairs along the backs of the legs. /ˈklaɪdzˌdeɪl/ noun 1. a heavy powerful breed of carthorse, originally from Scotland “breed of heavy draught horses,” 1786, so called because they were bred in the valley of the […]