Toto sú slová examples súvisiace s encapsulate. Kliknutím na ľubovoľné slovo prejdete na stránku s podrobnosťami jeho slova. Alebo, prejdite na definíciu encapsulate.
This replaces an accumulated literature of patterns corresponding to words, sentences, paragraphs, chapters, and books that encapsulates meaning from human experience and life.
If not, then the objects of such a class are encapsulated.
Of course, in the case of visual selection by the breeder, the assessment encapsulates yielding ability, disease resistance and agronomic type.
Because the grammar rules encapsulate the feasible additions that can be made, the automation is based simply on choosing a series of applicable rules.
Finally, encapsulating a whole transitive relationship in a single manual action is not the same thing as exhibiting genuine language syntax.
The interface part expresses the behavioural semantics of objects in terms of methods encapsulated in an object.
It is often feasible to produce a succinct, holistic view that encapsulates the essentials of the space-form of an acousmatic work.
Either unsafe features have to be exploited, or operations like constant time array updates have to be encapsulated in a monad.
This pervasive spatial metaphor encapsulates local notions of identity and authenticity.
It is possible to encapsulate a broad spectrum of well-known biocides and control their release by the composition and structure of the composite layers.
These encapsulate information about the surface-tension-driven flow that can be used in the hyperbolic conservation law representing the limit of vanishing surface tension.
This distribution supports a gradual notion of the consistency of a given assignment, encapsulating preferences among the set of assignments.
In fact, it is doubtful that any typological endeavour, no matter how sophisticated, can encapsulate these complexities.
It is surely no accident that this particular formulation, 'amor de lonh', has come to encapsulate the basic experience of 'courtly love'.
It encapsulates a popular view that headlines are just eye-catching words crammed together to create the maximum shock-horror effect.