Superimpose
101Evelyn Beatrice Hall — Portrait d Evelyn Beatrice Hall, superimposé de la phrase latine Au nom de la justice …
102overlay — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. superimpose, cover. See covering, layer. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To burden] Syn. overload, cram, encumber; see burden 1 , load 1 . 2. [To overlap] Syn. extend, superimpose, cover; see overlap . III… …
103lay over — verb 1. interrupt a journey temporarily, e.g., overnight (Freq. 1) We had to stop over in Venezuela on our flight back from Brazil • Syn: ↑stop over • Derivationally related forms: ↑stopover (for: ↑stop over), ↑ …
104Super- — Su per [L. super over, above; akin to Gr. ?, L. sub under, and E. over. See {Over}, and cf. {Hyper }, {Sub }, {Supra }, {Sur }.] 1. A prefix signifying above, over, beyond, and hence often denoting in a superior position, in excess, over and… …
105superpose — transitive verb ( posed; posing) Etymology: probably from French superposer, back formation from superposition, from Late Latin superposition , superpositio, from Latin superponere to superpose, from super + ponere to place more at position Date …
106overlay — I. transitive verb (overlaid; laying) Date: 14th century 1. a. to lay or spread over or across ; superimpose b. to prepare an overlay for 2. overlie 2 II. noun …
107superimposable — adjective see superimpose …
108superimposition — noun see superimpose …
109Continuum mechanics — Continuum mechanics …
110Civil war — This article is about the definition of the specific type of war. For civil wars in history, see List of civil wars. For other uses, see Civil war (disambiguation). Warfare …