random
41random — ● ►en cde. adj. ►CMDE De l ancien français aller à random , désignant un cheval emballé. Aléatoire. Nom de la commande permettant dans de nombreux langages d obtenir un nombre pseudo aléatoire (pseudo car un ordinateur est parfaitement… …
42random — [14] The antecedents of random are somewhat murky. It originally meant ‘impetuosity, sudden speed, violence’, and only in the mid 17th century emerged as an adjective meaning ‘haphazard’. It was borrowed from Old French randon, which was probably …
43random — 1) a dismissive description of an uninteresting and unimportant person... can also be used to describe an odd or amusing situation Person A: How was that party last night? Person B: Ehh, it was okay...it was mostly a bunch of randoms. Or, What… …
44random — 1) a dismissive description of an uninteresting and unimportant person... can also be used to describe an odd or amusing situation Person A: How was that party last night? Person B: Ehh, it was okay...it was mostly a bunch of randoms. Or, What… …
45random — 1) n, adj American (a person who is) unfashionable, unat tractive, mediocre, unwanted or excluded from fashionable circles. The term was popular among adolescents, particularly female, on college and high school campuses in the US during the… …
46random — adj 1. haphazard, casual, arbitrary, hit or miss, desultory; chance, fortuitous, serendipitous, aleatory, Inf. fluky; careless, slapdash, willy nilly, thrown or slapped together, Inf. scratch; unarranged, unsystematic, unmethodical, disorganized …
47random — adjective Syn: unsystematic, unmethodical, arbitrary, unplanned, chance, casual, indiscriminate, non specific, haphazard, stray, erratic Ant: systematic, deliberate Phrases: at random …
48random — atsitiktinis statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. random vok. regellos; statistisch verteilt; wahllos; zufällig rus. случайный pranc. aléatoire …
49random — See at random …
50random — [14] The antecedents of random are somewhat murky. It originally meant ‘impetuosity, sudden speed, violence’, and only in the mid 17th century emerged as an adjective meaning ‘haphazard’. It was borrowed from Old French randon, which was probably …