quark
See also: Quark
English
Etymology 1
First used in 1963 by one of the theorists who postulated the existence of quarks, Murray Gell-Mann. Gell-Mann coined the name for these new particles. The literary connection to James Joyce's Finnegans Wake was asserted later; see the Quark Wikipedia article.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: kwôk, IPA(key): /kwɔːk/; enPR: kwäk, IPA(key): /kwɑːk/
- (General American) enPR: kwôrk, IPA(key): /kwɔɹk/; enPR: kwärk, IPA(key): /kwɑɹk/
- Rhymes: -ɔː(ɹ)k, Rhymes: -ɑː(ɹ)k
Noun
quark (plural quarks)
- (physics) In the Standard Model, an elementary subatomic particle that forms matter. Quarks have never been found alone as of this writing, They combine to form hadrons, such as protons and neutrons.
- 1993, Gell-Mann won the linguistic battle once again: his choice, a croaking nonsense word, was "quark". (After the fact, he was able to tack on a literary antecedent when he found the phrase "Three quarks for Muster Mark" in Finnegans Wake, but the physicists quark was pronounced from the beginning to rhyme with "cork".) — James Gleick, Genius: Richard Feynman and Modern Physics
- 2012 March-April, Jeremy Bernstein, “A Palette of Particles”, in American Scientist, volume 100, number 2, page 146:
- There were also particles no one had predicted that just appeared. Five of them […, i]n order of increasing modernity, […] are the neutrino, the pi meson, the antiproton, the quark and the Higgs boson.
- (computing, X Window System) An integer that uniquely identifies a text string.
- 2012, Keith D. Gregory, Programming with Motif (page 453)
- Two functions are provided to convert between strings and quarks:
XrmStringToQuark
andXrmQuarkToString
[…]
- Two functions are provided to convert between strings and quarks:
- 2012, Keith D. Gregory, Programming with Motif (page 453)
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Translations
(physics) In the Standard Model, an elementary subatomic particle which forms matter
|
|
Etymology 2
.jpeg.webp)
German quark.
Borrowed from German Quark, from late Middle High German twarc, from a West Slavic language (compare Polish twaróg), from Proto-Slavic *tvarogъ.
Doublet of tvorog.
Noun
quark (uncountable)
- A soft creamy cheese, eaten throughout northern, central, and eastern Europe, very similar to cottage cheese except that it is usually not made with rennet.
Translations
soft creamy cheese
|
|
See also
Etymology 3
Onomatopoeic, from the sound of the squawk.
Noun
quark (plural quarks)
- (Falkland Islands, informal) The black-crowned night heron, Nycticorax nycticorax.
Dutch
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kwaʁk/
Audio (Paris) (file)
Galician
Italian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkwark/
- Stress: quàrk
Derived terms
Portuguese
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkwarɡ/, [ˈkwarɣ]
Hypernyms
Hyponyms
- (quarks) quark; quark arriba, quark abajo, quark encantado, quark extraño, quark cima, quark fondo (Category: es:Quarks)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.