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The terms and expressions program 3DS Max. English-Russian dictionary. 2014.
The terms and expressions program 3DS Max. English-Russian dictionary. 2014.
browse — [brauz] v [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: Probably from early French brouster, from broust bud, shoot ] 1.) to look through the pages of a book, magazine etc without a particular purpose, just looking at the most interesting parts browse through ▪ Jon… … Dictionary of contemporary English
browse — [ brauz ] verb * 1. ) intransitive or transitive COMPUTING to look for information on a computer, especially on the Internet: cell phones that can browse the Web a ) to look at a Web site on the Internet: an excellent graphical interface for… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Browse Happy — is a website created by the Web Standards Project in August 2004 to convince internet users to use a web browser other than Microsoft s Internet Explorer. It focuses on security issues in Internet Explorer and suggests four alternatives: Mozilla… … Wikipedia
browse — index peruse Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 browse v. To move from website to websit … Law dictionary
browse — 1520s, feed on buds, from M.Fr. brouster, from O.Fr. broster to sprout, bud, from brost young shoot, twig, probably from P.Gmc. *brustjan to bud. Lost its final t in English on the mistaken notion that it was a pp. inflection. Figurative… … Etymology dictionary
browse — ► VERB 1) survey goods or text in a leisurely way. 2) Computing read or survey (data files) via a network. 3) (of an animal) feed on leaves, twigs, etc. ► NOUN ▪ an act of browsing. DERIVATIVES browsable adjective … English terms dictionary
Browse wrap — What is a Browse Wrap License?A browse wrap license is part of the web site and the user assents to the contract when the user visits the website. [Ian A. Rambarran, Are Browse Wrap Agreements All They Are Wrapped Up to Be? (November 25,2006).… … Wikipedia
browse — [[t]bra͟ʊz[/t]] browses, browsing, browsed 1) VERB If you browse in a shop, you look at things in a fairly casual way, in the hope that you might find something you like. I stopped in several bookstores to browse... She browsed in an up market… … English dictionary
Browse — This interesting surname is either of Norman or Anglo Saxon origin. If the former it is a locational name from Briouse in Orne, in Normandy which probably gets its name from a Gaulish word meaning muddy, or the Old French breuil marshy woodland.… … Surnames reference
browse — I. verb (browsed; browsing) Etymology: Middle English brouusen, probably from Anglo French brouts Date: 15th century transitive verb 1. a. to consume as browse b. graze 2. to look over casually … New Collegiate Dictionary
browse — [16] Although the noun has now largely died out, browse was originally both a verb and a noun, and appears to come from Old French broust, brost ‘young shoots, twigs’ (hence the verb meant originally ‘feed on such shoots’). The source of the… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins