dom
81dom — 1dòm s.m.inv. TS eccl. titolo dato in Francia e in Spagna ad alcuni religiosi dell ordine benedettino o certosino {{line}} {{/line}} DATA: sec. XX. ETIMO: dal fr. dom, lat. tardo domnus padrone, signore , var. di dominus. 2dòm s.m.inv. OB var. →… …
82Dom — Domm esistausimDom=esistSchluß.MitdemWort»Dom«kannsowohldieKathedralealsauchderDommarkt(HamburgerVolksfest)gemeintsein.DieRedensartscheintgegen1850vonHamburgausgegangenundinsRheinischegewandertzusein …
83DOM — Document Object Model, vom W3C empfohlene plattformunabhängige Schnittstelle. Das DOM von JavaScript bietet dem Programmierer die Möglichkeit, einzelne Elemente einer Webseite zu verändern, auch wenn sie bereits geladen ist. Dadurch ist es… …
84-dom — suffix forming nouns: 1》 denoting a state or condition: freedom. 2》 denoting rank or status: earldom. 3》 denoting a domain: fiefdom. 4》 denoting a class of people or attitudes associated with them: officialdom. Origin OE dōm, orig. meaning decree …
85Dom — Sp Mišãbelis Ap Mischabel Sp Dòmas Ap Dom L kk. Šveicarijoje (Peninų Alpėse) …
86-dom — aff. a suffix forming nouns that refer to domain (kingdom), collection of persons (officialdom), rank or station (earldom), or general condition (freedom) • Etymology: ME; OE dōm; c. ON dōmr, G tum; see doom …
87dömələmməx’ — (Cəbrayıl) bir işi könülsüz və ya yavaş yavaş görmək. – Tez ol ye, nə dömələnirsən …
88DOM — dokumento objektų modelis statusas T sritis informatika apibrėžtis Nuo programavimo kalbos ir ↑platformos nepriklausoma ↑sąsaja, naudojama programose ir ↑scenarijuose hiperteksto dokumentų objektais dinamiškai manipuliuoti – pasiekti ir… …
89dom — From Latin dominus, ‘lord’. A title given to certain Roman Catholic dignitaries and to the members of some monastic orders, such as the Benedictines. In Thirteen Days, by Ian Jefferies, ‘Dom’ on its own is used almost as a friendly term of… …
90-dom — suffix forming nouns denoting: 1 state or condition (freedom). 2 rank or status (earldom). 3 domain (kingdom). 4 a class of people (or the attitudes etc. associated with them) regarded collectively (officialdom). Etymology: OE dom, orig. = DOOM …