Meaning Generation
What does Generation mean? Here you find 80 meanings of the word Generation. You can also add a definition of Generation yourself

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Generation


The formation of hydrocarbons from a source rock as bitumen forms from kerogen and accumulates as oil or gas. Generation depends on three main factors: the presence of organic matter rich enough to yi [..]
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

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Generation


Relationships Related Term:  copy (also copy status), n. ~ 1. A class characterized by the number of reproduction cycles between a copy and the original. - 2. Something that reflects a significant dev [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

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Generation


  The process of producing electric energy by transforming other forms of energy; also, the amount of electric energy produced, expressed in kilowatthours.
Source: eia.gov

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Generation


A group of living things that were born along the same time
Source: petmd.com

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Generation


1 [countable] all the people who were born at about the same time the younger/older generation My generation has grown up without the experience of a world war. I often wonder what future generations [..]
Source: oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com

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Generation


early 14c., "body of individuals born about the same period" (historically 30 years but in other uses as few as 17), on the notion of "descendants at the same stage in the line of desce [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Generation


/ˌʤɛnəˈreɪʃən/ noun plural generations generation /ˌʤɛnəˈreɪʃən/ noun plural generations Learner's definition of GENERATION 1  [count] a  : a group of people born and living during the same t [..]
Source: learnersdictionary.com

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Generation


The form of Interconnection Agreement applicable to an Interconnection Request pertaining to a Generating Facility processed under the interconnection procedures set forth in Appendix Y. For a Large G [..]
Source: caiso.com

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Generation


This covers the production of electricity at power stations. At present the main fuels used are gas, nuclear and coal, although there is now a growing use of renewable forms of energy, such as wind po [..]
Source: edfenergy.com

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Generation


The process of producing electricity by transforming other forms of energy such as steam, heat or falling water. Also, the amount of electricity produced, expressed in kilowatt-hours (kWh) or megawatt [..]
Source: platts.com

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Generation


Generation [S] Genesis 2:4 , "These are the generations," means the "history." 5:1 , "The book of the generations," means a family register, or history of Adam 37:2 , &qu [..]
Source: biblestudytools.com

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Generation


time between an organism's birth and the time it reproduces.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Generation


group in a species made up of members that are roughly the same age.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Generation


The total amount of electric energy produced by a generating station as measured at the generator terminals.
Source: nrc.gov (offline)

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Generation


The gross amount of electric energy produced by a generating station, minus the amount used to operate the station. Net generation is usually measured in watthours (Wh).
Source: nrc.gov (offline)

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Generation


Final release at the end of a cycle. [D04730]
Source: maxwideman.com

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Generation


coevals: all the people living at the same time or of approximately the same age group of genetically related organisms constituting a single step in the line of descent the normal time between succes [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Generation


In audio and video analog recording, pertaining to the number of duplication steps between an original recording and a given copy. Note 1: A second generation duplicate is a copy of the original master and a third generation duplicate is a copy of a copy of the original master, etc. Note 2: Relative to digital duplication, the copy is almost always [..]
Source: atis.org (offline)

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Generation


A generation is the number of years between the birth of the parents and the birth of their children. Different studies use different numbers of years per generation. At Family Tree DNA we use 25 year [..]
Source: familytreedna.com

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Generation


usually refers to the number of times a videotape has been copied; third generation means three steps away from the original media master  
Source: filmsite.org

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Generation


Gen. 2:4, "These are the generations," means the "history." 5:1, "The book of the generations," means a family register, or history of Adam. 37:2, "The generations o [..]
Source: biblegateway.com

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Generation


In the long-lived patriarchal age a generation seems to have been computed at 100 years, (Genesis 15:16) comp. Genesis15:13 and Eccl 12:40 But subsequently the reckoning was the same which has been ad [..]
Source: biblegateway.com

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Generation


This covers the production of electricity at power stations. At present the main fuels used are gas, nuclear and coal, although there is now a growing use of renewable forms of energy, such as wind po [..]
Source: energy-services.co.uk

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Generation


1. Act of reproduction. 2. Offspring that are at the same stage of descent from a common ancestor. 3. Average time interval between the birth of parents and the birth of their offspring.
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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Generation


Each succeeding stage in reproduction from original copy.
Source: neenahpaper.com

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Generation


dor
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

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Generation


In reprography, the degree to which a copy is removed from the original document. In microfilm, the master negative developed from film taken of the original image is first-generation, print masters m [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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Generation


One of the three parts that make up the electric grid.
Source: power2switch.com

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Generation


The process of producing electric energy by transforming other forms of energy. The amount of energy produced is expressed in watthours.
Source: cmegroup.com (offline)

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Generation


A set of one of each charge type of quark and lepton, grouped by mass. The first generation contains the up and down quarks, the electron and the electron neutrino.
Source: aleph.web.cern.ch

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Generation


The act of generating or begetting; procreation, as of animals. Origination by some process, mathematical, chemical, or vital; production; formation; as, the of sounds, of gases, of curves, etc That w [..]
Source: allwords.com

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Generation


(n) all the people living at the same time or of approximately the same age(n) group of genetically related organisms constituting a single step in the line of descent(n) the normal time between succe [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Generation


The large-scale production of electricity in a central plant. A power plant consists of one or more units. Each unit includes an individual turbine generator. Turbine generators (turbines directly connected to electric generators) use steam, wind, hot gas or falling water to generate power.
Source: mge.com (offline)

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Generation


The production of electricity.
Source: psc.state.md.us (offline)

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Generation


The process of changing other forms of energy, such as fossil fuels, nuclear or renewable energy, into electricity.
Source: legacyenergy.com

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Generation


A period of time characteristic of an animal species and/or population that can be calculated as: The average age of parents in the population (used in the criteria for the new (1996) IUCN Red Data Li [..]
Source: animaldiversity.org

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Generation


The production of electricity. In Texas, electricity is produced by a number of methods, including natural gas, coal, nuclear power, wind, water and solar energy.
Source: electricitytexas.com (offline)

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Generation


 The process of producing electric energy by transforming other forms of energy; also, the amount of electric energy produced, expressed in watthours (Wh).
Source: sunflower.net (offline)

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Generation


The process of changing other forms of energy, such as fossil fuels, nuclear or renewable energy, into electricity.
Source: poweroptions.org (offline)

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Generation


The process of transforming one form of energy, such as heat or falling water, into electric energy. Generation usually is measured in kilowatts (kW) or megawatts (MW).
Source: srpnet.com (offline)

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Generation


The process of making electricity. May also refer to energy supply.
Source: nhec.com (offline)

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Generation


The act or process of producing electricity from other forms of energy, such as steam, heat, or falling water.  The term also refers to the amount of electric energy produced.
Source: ppcpdx.org (offline)

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Generation


The process by which thermal, mechanical, chemical or nuclear energy is converted into electrical energy, using an energy source, which may include natural gas, coal, nuclear fuel, wind, water (hydroe [..]
Source: burstenergy.ca

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Generation


The act of converting various forms of energy input (thermal, mechanical, chemical and/or nuclear energy) into electric power.  Also the amount of electric energy produced, usually expressed in kilowa [..]
Source: psegtransmission.com

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Generation


The process of producing electrical energy. Generation may also refer to the amount of electrical energy produced, usually expressed in watt–hours, kilowatt–hours (kWh), or megawatt hours (MWh).
Source: libertypowercorp.com

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Generation


The production of electricity. Electricity in Texas is generated from natural gas, nuclear, coal, wind, water, and solar energy.
Source: trieagleenergy.com

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Generation


production or the means of producing power.
Source: price-electric.com (offline)

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Generation


A first generation image is the original; second generation is made from the original; third generation is made from the second generation. Print on this page is fourth generation: type (first), negative (second), plate (third), print (fourth).
Source: e-printing.co.uk (offline)

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Generation


Production of electricity. The process of producing electrical energy from other forms of energy; also, the amount of electric energy produced, usually expressed in kilowatt-hours (kWh) or megawatt-ho [..]
Source: constellation.com

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Generation


The process of creating electricity at a power station.
Source: powerswitch.org.nz

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Generation


The production of electricity or heat.
Source: justenergy.com

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Generation


The actual production of electricity in a power plant.
Source: oeui.org

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Generation


Generic term for trip generation.
Source: its.uci.edu

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Generation


The process of producing electric energy from other forms of energy; also, the amount of electric energy produced.
Source: greenbriarcapitalcorp.com (offline)

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Generation


The process of producing electricity.
Source: serayaenergy.com.sg (offline)

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Generation


Producing electricity by power plant or machine.
Source: greatriverenergy.com (offline)

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Generation


The total amount of electric energy produced by the generating units at a generating station or stations, measured at the generator terminals.
Source: greatriverenergy.com (offline)

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Generation


Gross generation less the kilowatt-hours consumed to operate the generating station.
Source: greatriverenergy.com (offline)

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Generation


Producing energy.
Source: nordicenergy-us.com

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Generation


The process of producing electric energy by transforming other forms of energy.
Source: senokoenergy.com (offline)

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Generation


Production of active electricity.
Source: rmdservice.com

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Generation


Generation describes both the process of producing electrical energy from other forms of energy (e.g., a power plant burning coal or a windmill turning moving air into energy) as well as the amount of [..]
Source: pjm.com

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Generation


The production of electricity using fuels such coal, natural gas, oil, and uranium or from renewable sources such as a biomass, geothermal, hydro, hydrokinetic (ocean wave and tidal), solar, or wind.
Source: basinelectric.com (offline)

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Generation

Source: workfamily.sas.upenn.edu (offline)

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Generation


Individuals not yet in existence to whom obligations may be owed.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Generation


The group of individuals of a given species that have been reproduced at approximately the same time; the group of individuals of the same genealogical rank. Geniculate.
Source: earthlife.net

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Generation


A group of offspring that are born together and live at the same time. Some insect species have more than one generation in a year. For example, a pair of ladybugs may give birth to one generation of [..]
Source: www2.fcps.edu

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Generation


When the children of one population replace their parents in that population. Where some part of the original population is retained, as in steady state GAs,
Source: www0.cs.ucl.ac.uk (offline)

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Generation


A generation is an iteration of the genetic algorithm. Conventionally, the initial random generation is known as generation zero.
Source: stumptown.com

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Generation


The number of "steps" between a vampire and the mythical Caine; how far descended from the First Vampire a given vampire is. Gehenna
Source: chicagowod.tripod.com

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Generation


The number of steps between a vampire and Caine. Cain being the only one of the first generation.
Source: thecamarilla.tripod.com

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Generation


Process of producing electric energy by transforming other forms of energy.
Source: hi-energy.org.uk (offline)

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Generation


A group which includes all people born during the same time period. For instance, the baby boomer generation includes all people born between 1946 to 1965.
Source: finance.alberta.ca (offline)

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Generation


The process of producing electric energy by transforming other forms of energy such as steam, heat or falling water. Also, the amount of electric energy produced, expressed in kilowatt-hours (kWh) or megawatt-hours (mWh).
Source: spectraenergy.com (offline)

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Generation


The act of producing electrical energy from other forms of energy (such as thermal, mechanical, chemical or nuclear); also, the amount of electric energy produced, usually expressed in kilowatthours ( [..]
Source: ferc.gov

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Generation


Stages of reproduction from original copy. A first generation reproduction yields the best quality.
Source: nexcards.com (offline)

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Generation


A term used to describe the number of times that the recorded audio signal has been copied.
Source: testing1212.co.uk

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Generation


The process of producing electrical energy by transforming non electrical forms of energy.
Source: elect.mrt.ac.lk (offline)

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Generation


generation
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Generation


lang=en 1600s=1678 |1800s=1813
1843 * '''1678''' — . ''''. *: And first they had him into the study, where they showed him records of the greatest antiquity; in which, as I remember my dream, t [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org





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