S: (n) correlation table (a two-way tabulation of the relations between correlates; row headings are the scores on one variable and column headings are the scores on the second variables and a cell shows how many times the score on that row was associated with the score in that column)
S: (n) calendar (a tabular array of the days (usually for one year))
S: (n) perpetual calendar (a chart or mechanical device that indicates the days of the week corresponding to any given date over a long period of years)
S: (n) file allocation table (the part of a floppy disk or hard disk where information is stored about the location of each piece of information on the disk (and about the location of unusable areas of the disk))
S: (n) periodic table ((chemistry) a tabular arrangement of the chemical elements according to atomic number as based on the periodic law)
S: (n) matrix ((mathematics) a rectangular array of quantities or expressions set out by rows and columns; treated as a single element and manipulated according to rules)
S: (n) determinant (a square matrix used to solve simultaneous equations)
S: (n) Latin square (a square matrix of n rows and columns; cells contain n different symbols so arranged that no symbol occurs more than once in any row or column)
S: (n) magic square (a square matrix of n rows and columns; the first n^2 integers are arranged in the cells of the matrix in such a way that the sum of any row or column or diagonal is the same)
S: (n) bank (an arrangement of similar objects in a row or in tiers) "he operated a bank of switches"
S: (n) spectrum (an ordered array of the components of an emission or wave)
S: (n) absorption spectrum (the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation that has passed through a medium that absorbed radiation of certain wavelengths)
S: (n) action spectrum (the efficiency with which electromagnetic radiation produces a photochemical reaction plotted as a function of the wavelength of the radiation)
S: (n) atomic spectrum ((physics) a spectrum of radiation caused by electron transitions within an atom; the series of spectrum lines is characteristic of the element)
S: (n) line spectrum (a spectrum in which energy is concentrated at particular wavelengths; produced by excited atoms and ions as they fall back to a lower energy level)
S: (n) mass spectrum (a distribution of ions as shown by a mass spectrograph or a mass spectrometer)
S: (n) radio spectrum, radio-frequency spectrum (the entire spectrum of electromagnetic frequencies used for communications; includes frequencies used for radio and radar and television)
S: (n) extended order (a military formation for skirmishing; as widely separated as the tactical situation permits)
S: (n) sick call, sick parade (the daily military formation at which individuals report to the medical officer as sick)
S: (n) backfield (the offensive football players who line up behind the linemen)
S: (n) secondary (the defensive football players who line up behind the linemen)
S: (n) line (a formation of people or things one behind another) "the line stretched clear around the corner"; "you must wait in a long line at the checkout counter"
S: (n) diagonal (an oblique line of squares of the same color on a checkerboard) "the bishop moves on the diagonals"
S: (n) line (a formation of people or things one beside another) "the line of soldiers advanced with their bayonets fixed"; "they were arrayed in line of battle"; "the cast stood in line for the curtain call"
S: (n) rivet line (a line of rivets at a seam) "the fuselage cracked along the rivet line"
S: (n) row (an arrangement of objects or people side by side in a line) "a row of chairs"
S: (n) serration (a row of notches) "the pliers had serrations to improve the grip"
S: (n) terrace (a row of houses built in a similar style and having common dividing walls (or the street on which they face)) "Grosvenor Terrace"
S: (n) rank (a row or line of people (especially soldiers or police) standing abreast of one another) "the entrance was guarded by ranks of policemen"
S: (n) center (the middle of a military or naval formation) "they had to reinforce the center"
S: (n) flank, wing (the side of military or naval formation) "they attacked the enemy's right flank"
S: (n) head (the front of a military formation or procession) "the head of the column advanced boldly"; "they were at the head of the attack"
S: (n) rear (the back of a military formation or procession) "infantrymen were in the rear"
S: (n) ordering, order, ordination (logical or comprehensible arrangement of separate elements) "we shall consider these questions in the inverse order of their presentation"
S: (n) genetic code (the ordering of nucleotides in DNA molecules that carries the genetic information in living cells)
S: (n) triplet code (the normal version of the genetic code in which a sequence of three nucleotides codes for the synthesis of a specific amino acid)
S: (n) genome (the ordering of genes in a haploid set of chromosomes of a particular organism; the full DNA sequence of an organism) "the human genome contains approximately three billion chemical base pairs"
S: (n) series (similar things placed in order or happening one after another) "they were investigating a series of bank robberies"
S: (n) Stations, Stations of the Cross ((Roman Catholic Church) a devotion consisting of fourteen prayers said before a series of fourteen pictures or carvings representing successive incidents during Jesus' passage from Pilate's house to his crucifixion at Calvary)
S: (n) chain, concatenation (a series of things depending on each other as if linked together) "the chain of command"; "a complicated concatenation of circumstances"
S: (n) catena (a chain of connected ideas or passages or objects so arranged that each member is closely related to the preceding and following members (especially a series of patristic comments elucidating Christian dogma))
S: (n) daisy chain ((figurative) a series of associated things or people or experiences)
S: (n) cordon (a series of sentinels or of military posts enclosing or guarding some place or thing)
S: (n) course, line (a connected series of events or actions or developments) "the government took a firm course"; "historians can only point out those lines for which evidence is available"
S: (n) stream, flow, current (dominant course (suggestive of running water) of successive events or ideas) "two streams of development run through American history"; "stream of consciousness"; "the flow of thought"; "the current of history"
S: (n) cycle (a series of poems or songs on the same theme) "Schubert's song cycles"
S: (n) electromotive series, electromotive force series, electrochemical series (a serial arrangement of metallic elements or ions according to their electrode potentials determined under specified conditions; the order shows the tendency of one metal to reduce the ions of any other metal below it in the series)
S: (n) hierarchy (a series of ordered groupings of people or things within a system) "put honesty first in her hierarchy of values"
S: (n) arithmetic progression ((mathematics) a progression in which a constant is added to each term in order to obtain the next term) "1-4-7-10-13- is the start of an arithmetic progression"
S: (n) geometric progression ((mathematics) a progression in which each term is multiplied by a constant in order to obtain the next term) "1-4-16-64-256- is the start of a geometric progression"
S: (n) harmonic progression ((mathematics) a progression of terms whose reciprocals form an arithmetic progression)
S: (n) rash, blizzard (a series of unexpected and unpleasant occurrences) "a rash of bank robberies"; "a blizzard of lawsuits"
S: (n) sequence (serial arrangement in which things follow in logical order or a recurrent pattern) "the sequence of names was alphabetical"; "he invented a technique to determine the sequence of base pairs in DNA"
S: (n) gene, cistron, factor ((genetics) a segment of DNA that is involved in producing a polypeptide chain; it can include regions preceding and following the coding DNA as well as introns between the exons; it is considered a unit of heredity) "genes were formerly called factors"
S: (n) dominant gene (gene that produces the same phenotype in the organism whether or not its allele identical) "the dominant gene for brown eyes"
S: (n) allele, allelomorph ((genetics) either of a pair (or series) of alternative forms of a gene that can occupy the same locus on a particular chromosome and that control the same character) "some alleles are dominant over others"
S: (n) dominant allele, dominant (an allele that produces the same phenotype whether its paired allele is identical or different)
S: (n) recessive allele, recessive (an allele that produces its characteristic phenotype only when its paired allele is identical)
S: (n) genetic marker (a specific gene that produces a recognizable trait and can be used in family or population studies)
S: (n) homeotic gene (one the genes that are involved in embryologic development)
S: (n) homeobox, homeobox gene (one of various similar homeotic genes that are involved in bodily segmentation during embryonic development)
S: (n) lethal gene (any gene that has an effect that causes the death of the organism at any stage of life)
S: (n) linkage group, linked genes (any pair of genes that tend to be transmitted together) "the genes of Drosophila fall into four linkage groups"
S: (n) string (a linear sequence (as of characters, words, proteins, etc.))
S: (n) extension, filename extension, file name extension (a string of characters beginning with a period and followed by one or more letters; the optional second part of a PC computer filename) "most applications provide extensions for the files they create"; "most BASIC files use the filename extension .BAS"
S: (n) ablative absolute (a constituent in Latin grammar; a noun and its modifier can function as a sentence modifier)
S: (n) immediate constituent (a constituent of a sentence at the first step in an analysis: e.g., subject and predicate)
S: (n) construction, grammatical construction, expression (a group of words that form a constituent of a sentence and are considered as a single unit) "I concluded from his awkward constructions that he was a foreigner"
S: (n) adjunct (a construction that can be used to extend the meaning of a word or phrase but is not one of the main constituents of a sentence)
S: (n) coordinate clause (a clause in a complex sentence that is grammatically equivalent to the main clause and that performs the same grammatical function)
S: (n) subordinate clause, dependent clause (a clause in a complex sentence that cannot stand alone as a complete sentence and that functions within the sentence as a noun or adjective or adverb)
S: (n) restrictive clause (a subordinate clause that limits or restricts the meaning of the noun phrase it modifies)
S: (n) relative clause (a clause introduced by a relative pronoun) "`who visits frequently' is a relative clause in the sentence `John, who visits frequently, is ill'"
S: (n) complement (a word or phrase used to complete a grammatical construction)
S: (n) involution (a long and intricate and complicated grammatical construction)
S: (n) phrase (an expression consisting of one or more words forming a grammatical constituent of a sentence)
S: (n) term (one of the substantive phrases in a logical proposition) "the major term of a syllogism must occur twice"
S: (n) subject ((logic) the first term of a proposition)
S: (n) predicate ((logic) what is predicated of the subject of a proposition; the second term in a proposition is predicated of the first term by means of the copula) "`Socrates is a man' predicates manhood of Socrates"
S: (n) referent (the first term in a proposition; the term to which other terms relate)
S: (n) relatum (a term in a proposition that is related to the referent of the proposition)
S: (n) categorem, categoreme (a categorematic expression; a term capable of standing alone as the subject or predicate of a logical proposition) "names are called categorems"
S: (n) major term (the term in a syllogism that is the predicate of the conclusion)
S: (n) minor term (the term in a syllogism that is the subject of the conclusion)
S: (n) middle term (the term in a syllogism that is common to both premises and excluded from the conclusion)
S: (n) Fibonacci sequence (a sequence of numbers in which each number equals the sum of the two preceding numbers)
S: (n) codon (a specific sequence of three adjacent nucleotides on a strand of DNA or RNA that specifies the genetic code information for synthesizing a particular amino acid)
S: (n) string, train (a sequentially ordered set of things or events or ideas in which each successive member is related to the preceding) "a string of islands"; "train of mourners"; "a train of thought"
S: (n) succession (a group of people or things arranged or following in order) "a succession of stalls offering soft drinks"; "a succession of failures"
S: (n) cascade (a succession of stages or operations or processes or units) "progressing in severity as though a cascade of genetic damage was occurring"; "separation of isotopes by a cascade of processes"
S: (n) parade (an extended (often showy) succession of persons or things) "a parade of strollers on the mall"; "a parade of witnesses"
S: (n) streak, run (an unbroken series of events) "had a streak of bad luck"; "Nicklaus had a run of birdies"
S: (n) arrangement, organization, organisation, system (an organized structure for arranging or classifying) "he changed the arrangement of the topics"; "the facts were familiar but it was in the organization of them that he was original"; "he tried to understand their system of classification"
S: (n) placement, arrangement (the spatial property of the way in which something is placed) "the arrangement of the furniture"; "the placement of the chairs"
S: (n) musical arrangement, arrangement (a piece of music that has been adapted for performance by a particular set of voices or instruments)