"Tachyphemic" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Tachyphemic refers to speaking or speaking overly quickly, often to the point of being difficult to understand. It comes from the Greek words "tachy," meaning "swift" or "rapid," and "phemic," meaning "having to do with words."
Tachymetry is the measurement of the lengths, heights, and depth of objects, especially in surveying, via means of either simple: stadia: ( tachometrico-_) means two, "of speed", initially by measuring the time it takes for an object to travel through its frame of measurement in a given direction – like pacing with a watch; or by the timing of respectively more and less distant readings of the same object via angular measurement of the same, useful for accurately measuring or surveying uneven terrain; or by calculating speed due to the stuttering, uneven, brief (proportional and partial) film or video image display record - generally while we readout tacheometric.<br><br>Tachymetry measures distances by ageing time or the rate of speed; many times used in mobile application and construction, however substitute surveys and tape measures.
A tachyon is a hypothetical particle or a disturbance that travels faster than the speed of light. The term was coined by physicist Gerald Feinberg in 1967. <br><br>According to theory, if tachyons exist, they would have imaginary mass and negative rest energy. However, there is currently no scientific evidence to support their existence. Tachyons are often used in science fiction to create plot devices and mechanisms, often violating the laws of physics and the speed of light limit, which remains an unbreachable barrier in our current understanding of the universe.
Tachyonic: <br><br>Relating to or characteristic of something that always travels faster than light. In physics, tachyons are hypothetical particles that have a property that allows them to move at speeds greater than the speed of light, which is the fastest speed at which any object or information can travel in a vacuum. The concept of tachyons is generally considered to be highly speculative and is a topic of ongoing research in theoretical physics.<br><br>Deriving from the Greek word "tachys" meaning "swift," "tachyonic" was first proposed in the 1960s by physicist Gerald Feinberg as a term to describe a hypothetical form of matter.
A tachyzoite is a parasitic stage of a protozoan, particularly Toxoplasma gondii, a parasite that infects humans and other mammals.<br><br>The tachyzoite is one of the two main stages of the parasite's life cycle, the other being the bradyzoite. Tachyzoites are the rapidly multiplying form of the parasite, and are responsible for causing the acute symptoms of toxoplasmosis, such as fever, headache, and swollen lymph nodes.