- curve´less
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Curve (band) — Origin England Genres Alternative rock Electronica Electronic rock Shoegazing Dream pop Years active 1991–1994 1996–2005 … Wikipedia
Curve (группа) — Curve … Википедия
Curve — For other uses, see Curve (disambiguation). A parabola, a simple example of a curve In mathematics, a curve (also called a curved line in older texts) is, generally speaking, an object similar to a line but which is not required to be straight.… … Wikipedia
Curve orientation — In mathematics, a positively oriented curve is a planar simple closed curve (that is, a curve in the plane whose starting point is also the end point and which has no other self intersections) such that when traveling on it one always has the… … Wikipedia
curve — Cleveland Dialect List a small waggon, wheel less but having iron runners, in use in the coal pits … English dialects glossary
behind the curve — ► less advanced, or developing, understanding something, or reaching a point more slowly than other things or people: »The latest price indices are well behind the curve and have not yet picked up dramatic changes in consumer confidence. Main… … Financial and business terms
Yield curve — This article is about yield curves as used in finance. For the term s use in physics, see Yield curve (physics). Not to be confused with Yield curve spread – see Z spread. The US dollar yield curve as of February 9, 2005. The curve has a typical… … Wikipedia
The Bell Curve — For other uses, see Bell curve (disambiguation). The Bell Curve … Wikipedia
Phillips curve — The Phillips curve is a historical inverse relation between the rate of unemployment and the rate of inflation in an economy. Stated simply, the lower the unemployment in an economy, the higher the rate of increase in wages paid to labor in that… … Wikipedia
Lévy C curve — In mathematics, the Lévy C curve is a self similar fractal that was first described and whose differentiability properties were analysed by Ernesto Cesàro in 1906 and G. Farber in 1910, but now bears the name of French mathematician Paul Pierre… … Wikipedia