Associations to the word «Decomposition»
Noun
- Bender
- Optimization
- Duality
- Integer
- Matrice
- Distillation
- Recourse
- Tensor
- Matrix
- Approximation
- Manifold
- Subspace
- Algorithm
- Methane
- Nitrate
- Graph
- Bb
- Ozone
- Convergence
- Biomass
- Ammonium
- Weathering
- Nutrient
- Nitrogen
- Microorganism
- Stabilization
- Ammonia
- Cellulose
- Dioxide
- Polynomial
- Keyword
- Theorem
- Permutation
- Oxidation
- Relaxation
- Litter
- Fourier
- Electrolyte
- Oxide
- Carbonate
- Landfill
- Hydroxide
- Algebra
- Hydrolysis
- H2o
- Blending
- Hydrogen
- Microbe
- Electro
- Catalyst
- Variance
- Residue
- Oxygen
- Peat
- Manure
- Sulfide
- Organic
- Routing
- Alkali
- Digestion
Adjective
- Stochastic
- Orthogonal
- Quadratic
- Microbial
- Nonlinear
- Thermal
- Organic
- Singular
- Algebraic
- Primal
- Nutrient
- Linear
- Gaussian
- Symmetric
- Convex
- Spectral
- Gaseous
- Hierarchical
- Catalytic
- Nitric
- Unitary
- Additive
- Polynomial
- Optimal
- Manifold
- Constrained
- Invariant
- Reactive
- Maximal
- Diagonal
- Inorganic
- Triangular
- Sequential
- Alkaline
- Conditional
- Melting
Wiktionary
DECOMPOSITION, noun. A biological process through which organic material is reduced to e.g. compost
DECOMPOSITION, noun. The act of taking something apart, e.g. for analysis
DECOMPOSITION, noun. The splitting (of e.g. a matrix, an atom, or a compound) into constituent parts
DECOMPOSITION POTENTIAL, noun. (chemistry) (in electrolysis) The electrode potential at which current begins to increase appreciably, and electrolysis occurs
Dictionary definition
DECOMPOSITION, noun. The analysis of a vector field.
DECOMPOSITION, noun. In a decomposed state.
DECOMPOSITION, noun. (chemistry) separation of a substance into two or more substances that may differ from each other and from the original substance.
DECOMPOSITION, noun. (biology) the process of decay caused by bacterial or fungal action.
DECOMPOSITION, noun. The organic phenomenon of rotting.
Wise words
Language is a process of free creation; its laws and
principles are fixed, but the manner in which the principles
of generation are used is free and infinitely varied. Even
the interpretation and use of words involves a process of
free creation.