satellite

  • 41satellite — /ˈsætəlaɪt / (say satuhluyt) noun 1. a small body which revolves round a planet; a moon. 2. an attendant upon a person of importance. 3. a subservient or obsequious follower. 4. a country under the domination or influence of another. 5. a device …

  • 42satellite — n. 1) to launch; orbit a satellite 2) an artificial (earth); communications; spy; weather satellite * * * [ sæt(ɪ)laɪt] communications orbit a satellite spy weather satellite to launch an artificial (earth) …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 43satellite TV — noun a television system in which the signal is transmitted to an orbiting satellite that receives the signal and amplifies it and transmits it back to earth • Syn: ↑satellite television • Hypernyms: ↑television, ↑television system * * *… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 44SATELLITE — s. m. On appelle ainsi Tout homme armé qui est aux gages et à la suite d un autre, comme le ministre et l exécuteur de ses violences. Il se fait toujours accompagner de deux ou trois satellites. Il vint avec tous ses satellites. Il ne se prend qu …

    Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 7eme edition (1835)

  • 45Satellite FC — Football club infobox clubname = Satellite FC fullname = Satellite Football Club nickname = founded = 2000 ground = Stade 28 Septembre Conakry, Guinea capacity = 25,000 chairman = manager = league = Guinée Championnat National season = 2006/07… …

    Wikipedia

  • 46satellite — {{hw}}{{satellite}}{{/hw}}A s. m. 1 (lett.) Guardia del corpo, sgherro. 2 (est.) Seguace, persona di fiducia | (spreg.) Chi sta continuamente al fianco di una persona autorevole e potente tributandogli cieca obbedienza. 3 (astron.) Corpo celeste… …

    Enciclopedia di italiano

  • 47satellite — noun 1》 an artificial body placed in orbit round the earth or another planet to collect information or for communication.     ↘[as modifier] using or relating to satellite technology.     ↘satellite television. 2》 Astronomy a celestial body… …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 48satellite — [16] Satellite comes via French satellite from Latin satelles ‘attendant, escort’, which itself probably went back to Etruscan satnal. Its use for a ‘body orbiting a planet’ is first recorded in English in 1665, and comes from the astronomer… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 49satellite TV — /sætəlaɪt ti ˈvi/ (say satuhluyt tee vee) noun a television service in which a signal is transmitted via an artificial satellite to a satellite dish and then to the television set of a householder …

  • 50satellite — palydovas statusas T sritis automatika atitikmenys: angl. satellite vok. Satellit, m rus. спутник, m pranc. satellite, m …

    Automatikos terminų žodynas