marked feature
51Martínez Sierra, Gregorio — ▪ Spanish dramatist born May 6, 1881, Madrid died Oct. 1, 1947, Madrid poet and playwright whose dramatic works contributed significantly to the revival of the Spanish theatre. Martínez Sierra s first volume of poetry, El poema del… …
52Vedas — • Sacred books of ancient India Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Vedas Vedas † Catho …
53Common Law — Common Law † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Common Law (Lat. communis, general, of general application; lex, law) The term is of English origin and is used to describe the juridical principles and general rules regulating the possession …
54Masters of the Ancient Wisdom (Theosophy) — Part of a series on Theosophy Founders of the T. S. Helena Blavatsky · …
55MONACHISM — or MONASTICISM is an institution in which individuals devote themselves, apart from others, to the cultivation of spiritual contemplation and religious duties, and which has constituted a marked feature in Pre Christian Jewish asceticism,… …
56literacy — In a Ministry of Education Survey of 1993 the rate of illiteracy was given as 3.5 percent. This figure compares with a figure of 32 percent, or by some estimates even 40 percent in 1930, and is evidence of the concern of successive regimes to… …
57characteristic — I. a. 1. Special, peculiar, distinctive. 2. In keeping with one s character, thoroughly illustrative. II. n. Peculiarity, marked feature, distinguishing trait …
58staminose — staminose, a. Bot. (ˈstæmɪnəʊs) [ad. mod.L. stāminōsus, f. L. stāmin stamen: see ose.] Applied to a flower ‘when the stamens form a marked feature of the flower’ (B. D. Jackson Gloss. Bot. Terms 1900). = stamineal a …
59Maximally stable extremal regions — Feature detection Output of a typical corner detection algorithm …
60markedly — marked ► ADJECTIVE 1) having a visible mark or other identifying feature. 2) clearly noticeable. 3) singled out as a target for attack: a marked man. DERIVATIVES markedly adverb markedness noun …