| 释义 |
passimenUK
pas·sim P0098200 (păs′ĭm)adv. Throughout or frequently; here and there. Used in textual annotation to indicate that something, such as a word or passage, occurs frequently in the work cited. [Latin, from passus, past participle of pandere, to scatter, spread out; see petə- in Indo-European roots.]passim (ˈpæsɪm) adv (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) here and there; throughout: used to indicate that what is referred to occurs frequently in the work citedpas•sim (ˈpæs ɪm) adv. here and there (used in bibliographic references). [1795–1805; < Latin, =pass(us), past participle of pandere to spread out, extend + -im adv. suffix; compare pace1] passimA Latin word meaning scattered, used to mean that something referred to occurs frequently in a text.Thesaurus| Adv. | 1. | passim - used to refer to cited worksthroughout | Translations
PASSIM
PASSIMA simulation language based on Pascal.
["PASSIM: A Discrete-Event Simulation Package for Pascal", D.HUyeno et al, Simulation 35(6):183-190 (Dec 1980)].passimenUK
Passim[Latin, Everywhere.] A term frequently used to indicate a general reference to a book or legal authority. AcronymsSeePASSpassimenUK
Synonyms for passimadv used to refer to cited worksSynonyms |