EUdict



Croatian

EUdict :: English-English dictionary

Results for: demilitarized zone, demilitarized zonemilitary-free area, area from which military forces have been removed; (Computers) server that acts asTranslations 1 - 30 of 2843
English EnglishEnglish English
(about an area of land or a source of information) able to be mined (excavated, searched)minable
(about program code) able to handle several simultaneous or interleaved requests (Computers)reentrant
(AD 37-100?, born as Joseph Ben Matthias) Jewish historian and military man who participated in the Jewish rebellion against Rome, author of "History of the Jewish War"Josephus Flavius
(Arabic) holy warriors; military opposition groups which fought against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (1979-89)mujahedin
(Archaic) military commander in Slavic countries; local governor of a town or province in a Slavic country (esp. Poland, Moldavia, Transylvania & Wallachia)voivode
(archaic) shirt that soldiers wear over their uniform as to be able to recognize one another during a night attack; surprise military attack carried out at night by soldiers wearing "camisados", surprise attackcamisado
(Biology) of a centromere, relating to a centromere (area of a chromosome)centromeric
(born 1945) Commander in Chief of the United States Central Command, four-star general in charge of American military troops carrying out Operation Iraqi FreedomGeneral Tommy R. Franks
(born 1956 as David Seth Kotkin) American magician famous for his acts of grand illusion; novel written by Charles Dickens (published in 1850)David Copperfield
(British) area painted in a building, painted surfacespaintwork
(British) noncommissioned military officer ranked above a corporal or airman first class; police office ranked below a captain or lieutenant (also sergeant)serjeant
(British) not burdened, free of encumbrance; starved, weak, famished, glance at in a sly or malicious manner; look at in a lecherous manner, lascivious look, look lasciviously, sly or malicious glance; lascivious look; glass furnaceleer
(British) transfer of a military officer to another postsecondment
(Chemistry) illinium (former name of the metallic element promethium); extension for an Internet address of a person or site located in Israel (Computers)Il
(commonly used in its plural form: graffiti) drawing or writing which has been written or painted on a wall or other surface (usually in a public area), ancient inscription, written mark on wallgraffito
(Computers and Communications) nickname for people who live on the edge of modern society (controlled by media and technology) who fight and defeat the establishment, futuristic science fictioncyberpunk
(Computers) ability to carry out more than one process simultaneously; parallel processing, simultaneous use of several computers for processing tasks, use of multiple computer programming unitsmultiprocessing
(Computers) Alt key (keyboard key pressed in combination with other keys to execute commands)Alt
(Computers) American standard for encoding data that uses a private key algorithm (encodes data in a manner that is extremely difficult to crack)Data Encryption Standard
(Computers) any type of storage medium that can only be written to once but can be read an unlimited number of times (such as a CD-ROM)Write Once Read Many
(Computers) audio player developed by Mediascience, Inc. for listening to various types of computer audio files (such as Windows media files, MP3, WAV, MOD, audio CDs, etc.)Sonique
(Computers) built-in, permanently connected, cannot be changed or adjusted (i.e. of a function or program)hardwired
(Computers) characters that do not appear in a printed document (such as carriage return, tabs, line feed, etc.)whitespace
(Computers) communications port, device in DOS and Windows which relates to the serial ports in a computer; COM file, file which can be operated in DOSCOM
(Computers) composing, preparing of a multimedia display; writing of hypertext and its preparation, writing of computer programsauthoring
(Computers) connected, connected to another computer or to the Internet; available through the Internet, connected via a computer, directly connected to a measurable process, ongoing, on-line, see also:off-line, while connected to a computeronline
(Computers) correction of jagged appearances in graphic objects by filling in the jagged areas with intermediate colors (like antialiasing)oversampling
(Computers) data fed into a computer or received from a computeri/o (input/output)
(Computers) digital interface for musical instruments, standard for information transfer between electronic musical instruments and computersMIDI
(Computers) document used as a foundation for new documents having a uniform style; cutting tool, master, master molecule, pattern, short beamtemplate
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About EUdict

EUdict is a collection of online dictionaries for the languages spoken mostly in the European Community. These dictionaries are the result of the work of many authors who worked very hard and finally offered their product free of charge on the internet thus making it easier to all of us to communicate with each other. For more information about the authors see Credits.

Some of the dictionaries have only a few thousand words, others have more than 250,000. There are 400 language pairs and over 10.6 million translations in total. Some of the words may be incorrectly translated or mistyped. Look at the list of available language pairs. EUdict is online since May 9, 2005 and English<>Croatian dictionary on tkuzmic.com since June 16, 2003.

Options

There are several ways to use this dictionary. The most common way is by word input (you must know which language the word is in) but you can also use your browser's search box and bookmarklets (or favelets). There are two Japanese-English (and Japanese-French) dictionaries and one contains Kanji and Kana (Kana in English and French pair due to improved searching). For the same reason the Chinese dictionary contains traditional and simplified Chinese terms on one side and Pinyin and English terms on the other.
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New: Version for smartphones and tablets now also in Croatian! Improved printing of the page!

Mobile version

There is version of EUdict optimized for mobile devices like iPhone and other smartphones (phone that runs complete operating system, e.g. Android, Windows Mobile, Blackberry, Symbian, Palm webOS...). You can find Mobile EUdict at eudict.com/mobile. For older mobile phones, please visit eudict.com/m.

Browser integration

Perhaps the best way to enable dictionary search is through integration into the search field of your browser. To add EUdict alongside Google, Yahoo!, Amazon and other search engines in Mozilla Firefox or Internet Explorer, simply click on link below with appropriate language pair and confirm your decision. And you're ready to go; select EUdict from the drop-down list (on the right side of navigation tool-bar) input a word and press Enter. Internet Explorer 8+ users can also use accelerators. For Firefox and IE users there are browser's search plugins.

In Opera things are little more complicated. To add a search, select the desired language pair from the drop-down at the top of this page (e.g. "English=>Croatian"), then right-click (Ctrl-Click on Mac) in the text search field next to the drop-down and select "Create Search" from the menu. Enter a name for your search (e.g. "English=>Croatian [EUdict.com]") and a keyword (e.g. "engcro"), then click OK. After integration, Opera offers more ways of searching. You can input a word into the toolbar's search field, you can search just with the mouse by double-clicking a word and selecting the menu option "Search With", or just with the keyboard, by typing "engcro SEARCH TERM" into the address bar.

Bookmarklets

To enable word translation from any page, use bookmarklets. A bookmarklet is a small JavaScript script stored as a bookmark in you browser.

Tips and tricks

If you want to type a character which isn't on your keyboard, simply select it from the drop-down list. For this option – and also bookmarklets – to work, JavaScript must be enabled in your browser. For quick access to text input field press Alt + I (in Internet Explorer and Firefox 1.x), Alt + Shift + I (in Firefox) and Shift + Esc + I (in Opera). If you are unable to add a bookmarklet in Mozilla Firefox according to the instructions above, there is another way; right click on a link and select "Bookmark this link...". Now you can drag this link from Bookmarks to the Bookmarks Toolbar.
If no word is submitted an alphabetical list will choose a random word from English-Croatian dictionary. Why not add a EUdict search form to your web site? Webmasters, feel free to use the following HTML code.