1 |
freezeRelationships Related Term: frozen records hold order v. ~ To suspend the scheduled destruction of records because of special circumstances, such as litigation, investigation, audit, or merger. Notes [..]
|
2 |
freezeA freeze is when the surface air temperature is expected to be 32°F or below over a widespread area for a climatologically significant period of time. Use of the term is usually restricted to advectiv [..]
|
3 |
freeze1 [countable] economics an official decision to prevent any increase in the number, level, or rate of somethinga pay/wage/price freezefreeze on: There has been a freeze on the number of police officer [..]
|
4 |
freeze"freezing conditions," c. 1400, from freeze (v.).
|
5 |
freezealteration of freese, friese, from Middle English fresen, from Old English freosan (intransitive) "turn to ice" (class II strong verb; past tense freas, past participle froren), from Proto-G [..]
|
6 |
freezeA condition occurring over a widespread area when the surface air temperature remains below freezing for a sufficient time to damage certain agricultural crops. A freeze most often occurs as cold air is advected into a region, causing freezing conditions to exist in a deep layer of surface air. Also called advection frost.
|
7 |
freezeweather pattern of temperatures below 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit).
|
8 |
freezeChange from a liquid to a solid.
|
9 |
freezeA condition where plant temperatures below 32 F. result from the inflow of masses of air below this temperature, so that the air is colder than plants or ground.
|
10 |
freezethe withdrawal of heat to change something from a liquid to a solid stop moving or become immobilized; "When he saw the police car he froze" change to ice; "The [..]
|
11 |
freezeAlso known as Lock up Definition This term is used to signify when your computer gets locked up. The computer no longer recognizes your keyboard and mouse commands and you need to manually reboot the [..]
|
12 |
freezeto become hard because of the cold, as when water turns into ice
|
13 |
freezev. To lock an evolving software distribution or document against changes so it can be released with some hope of stability. Carries the strong implication that the item in question will `unfreeze' [..]
|
14 |
freeze(or freeze-frame) an optical printing effect in which a single frame image is identically repeated, reprinted or replicated over several frames; when projected, a freeze frame gives the illusion of a [..]
|
15 |
freezeA cessation in the hiring of new personnel or the payment of funds, usually necessitated by budgetary constraints. In most cases, normal operations resume after the cause of the problem is resolved. A [..]
|
16 |
freezefroze fro·zen freez·ing 1 : to cause to become fixed, immovable, unavailable, or unalterable [ interest rates] 2 : to immobilize (as by government regulation or the action of a financial ...
|
17 |
freezeTo preserved food by placing it in temperatures below 32?F (0?C) so that the moisture solidifies.
|
18 |
freezeSee Hiring Freeze.
|
19 |
freezeA period of intensely cold weather. (curling) A precise draw weight shot where a delivered stone comes to a stand-still against a stationary stone, making it nearly impossible to knock out. (finance) [..]
|
20 |
freezeSituation in which computer programs cannot be accessed, usually characterized by a computer screen that cannot be changed and an inoperable cursor (mouse action).
|
21 |
freezeWhen an application, system software, or both cannot understand the software programming code and stop functioning. They can appear to "freeze" and fail to respond to keyboard or mouse commands.
|
22 |
freeze(n) the withdrawal of heat to change something from a liquid to a solid(n) weather cold enough to cause freezing(n) an interruption or temporary suspension of progress or movement(n) fixing (of prices [..]
|
23 |
freezeOccurs when the surface air temperature is expected to be 32 degrees Fahrenheit or below over a widespread area for a significant period of time. In Australia, the term “freeze” is defined as the ch [..]
|
24 |
freezecongelo
|
25 |
freezeTo prevent or restrict the exchange, withdrawal, liquidation, or use of assets or bank accounts by governmental action. As defined by FATF’s “General Glossary” as they relate to the revised Recommenda [..]
|
26 |
freezeWill cause an image to be fixed (not live).
|
27 |
freezeA form of a draw shot that stops directly up against another stone.
|
28 |
freezeDirective to designated helicopter(s) to hover in place (cancelled by "THAW").
|
29 |
freezeto subject food to a temperature below 32*F (0*C) so that the moisture in the food solidifies; used as a preservation method.
|
30 |
freezeto subject food to a temperature below 32*F (0*C) so that the moisture in the food solidifies; used as a preservation method.
|
31 |
freezePreserve food by refrigerating below freezing point or using blast freeze equipment.
|
32 |
freezeIt is when the surface air temperature is expected to be 32°F or below over a widespread area for a climatologically significant period of time. Use of the term is usually restricted to advective situations or to occasions when wind or other conditions prevent frost. Adjectives such as "killing", "severe", or &am [..]
|
33 |
freezeA draw that finishes touching or nearly touching another rock.
|
34 |
freezeA freeze is when the surface air temperature is expected to be 32°F or below over a widespread area for a climatologically significant period of time. Use of the term is usually restricted to advective situations or to occasions when wind or other conditions prevent frost. "Killing" may be used during the growing season when the temperatu [..]
|
35 |
freezeTo suspend normal disposition activity on those records and other materials needed for legal or regulatory actions or other extraordinary circumstances.
|
36 |
freezeThe phase change of a liquid to solid.
|
37 |
freezeA condition occurring over a widespread area when the surface air temperature remains below freezing for a sufficient time to damage certain agricultural crops.
|
38 |
freezeA condition occurring over a large area when the surface air temperature remains below 32 degrees Fahrenheit for an extended period of time.
|
39 |
freezeOccurs when the surface air
|
40 |
freezeTerm which refers to the point in the design process …
|
41 |
freezeIn the context of confiscation and provisional measures (e.g., Recommendations 4, 32 and 38), the term freeze means to prohibit the transfer, conversion, disposition or movement of any property, equip [..]
|
42 |
freezeWhen the temperature at or near the surface is expected to be 32 or below, during the growing season. Adjectives, such as "killing,' "severe," or "hard," are used when appropriate. A freeze may or may not be accompanied by the formation of frost.
|
43 |
freezeOccurs when the surface air temperature is expected to be 32 degrees Fahrenheit or below over a widespread area for a significant period of time Freezing
|
44 |
freezeA freeze is when the surface air temperature is expected to be 32?Ǭ?F or below over a widespread area for a climatologically significant period of time. Use of the term is usually restricted to advec [..]
|
45 |
freezeUP
|
46 |
freeze
(intransitive) Especially of a liquid, to become solid due to low temperature.
* '''1855''', , '''', Book XX: ''The Famine'',
*: Ever thicker, thicker, thicker / Froze the ice on lake and river,
[..]
|
<< front end | Freedom of Information Act >> |