- cosine, cos
- Electrical Engineeringகாசைன்
English-Tamil dictionary. 2014.
English-Tamil dictionary. 2014.
Cos-1 — Cos 1, cos−1 or cos 1 may refer to: cos−1 (or arccos), an inverse trigonometric function of cosine Cos 1, one of two commonly used COS cell lines This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an … Wikipedia
cos. — 1. companies. 2. consul. 3. consulship. 4. counties. * * * cos «kos, ks», noun, or cos lettuce, = romaine. (Cf. ↑romaine) ╂[< Greek Côs, an island in the Aegean, from which it was introduced] … Useful english dictionary
Cosine similarity — is a measure of similarity between two vectors by measuring the cosine of the angle between them. The cosine of 0 is 1, and less than 1 for any other angle. The cosine of the angle between two vectors thus determines whether two vectors are… … Wikipedia
Cos — Cos, COS or CoS, may refer to: Contents 1 Maths, science and technology 2 Places 3 Roles 4 Organizations, societies and churches … Wikipedia
cos — Ⅰ. cos [1] ► NOUN ▪ a variety of lettuce with crisp narrow leaves that form a tall head. ORIGIN named after the Greek island of Cos, where it originated. Ⅱ. cos [2] ► ABBREVIATION ▪ cosine … English terms dictionary
cos — (because) kÉ’s conj. for that reason (Slang) kÉ’s n. romaine (variety of lettuce) cos (cosine) kÉ’s n. sine of the complement of a given angle (Trigonometry) … English contemporary dictionary
cos — cos1 [käs, kôs] n. [after COS1, whence orig. imported] ROMAINE: also cos lettuce cos2 abbrev. 1. cash on shipment 2. companies 3. Trigonometry cosine … English World dictionary
cos — abbreviation cosine … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
COS — Cosine (Academic & Science » Mathematics) *** Church Of Scientology (Community » Religion) ** KosinüS (International » Turkish) ** Class Of Service (Computing » Networking) * Chief Of Staff (Governmental » Military) * Corsican (Regional »… … Abbreviations dictionary
cos — • cosine … Maritime acronyms and abbreviations
cosine — noun Etymology: New Latin cosinus, from co + Medieval Latin sinus sine Date: 1635 1. a trigonometric function that for an acute angle is the ratio between the leg adjacent to the angle when it is considered part of a right triangle and the… … New Collegiate Dictionary