| TÜRKÇE |
İNGİLİZCE |
| pilot |
The heading or excavation of relatively small dimensions, first made in the driving of a larger tunnel. |
| pilot |
Release strategy in which a module is put into production in a limited and very controlled environment; usually involves people, hardware, and software working together with the express intent of using the pilot period to learn what works and what does no |
| pilot |
A person who is employed to steer a boat or ship through a river channel River pilots are very knowledgeable about a particular river or channel Bar pilots are very knowledgeable about a particular ocean entrance. |
| pilot |
A person who aids the Master in ship navigation, usually in confined waters. |
| pilot |
driver , pilot. |
| pilot |
One who flies, or is qualified to fly, a balloon, an airship, or a flying machine. |
| pilot |
pilot. aviator. flyer. |
| pilot |
A large scale administration of an assessment, usually with several classes of students if not all students in a grade The purpose of the pilot is to detect any flaws in the assessment before the assessment is considered 'done' and is fully implemented. |
| pilot |
someone who is licensed to operate an aircraft in flight. a person qualified to guide ships through difficult waters going into or out of a harbor. a program exemplifying a contemplated series; intended to attract sponsors. an original model on which some |
| pilot |
A person whose office or occupation is to steer ships, particularly along a coast or into and out of a harbor. |
| pilot |
The person who actually steers the ship A good Pilot is familiar with the waters they are navigating, and can avoid hidden dangers, such as snags and sandbars A Captain, on the other hand, has the foremost authority and responsibility of a vessel On small |
| pilot |
A pretest or trial run of a program, evaluation instrument, or sampling procedure for the purpose of correcting any problems before it is implemented or used on a larger scale Topic areas:Accountability and Evaluation, Operations Management and Leadership |
| pilot |
Another name for a pioneer ball Often used to indicate a ball at your next hoop, whereas pioneer is used for a ball at your next-but-one hoop The differentiation is not made in this text. the introductory programming phase in ROBOLAB software It uses an e |
| pilot |
Independent navigational advisor at times of entering/leaving port, etc. |
| pilot |
One employed to steer a vessel; a helmsman; a steersman. |
| pilot |
Specifically, a person duly qualified, and licensed by authority, to conduct vessels into and out of a port, or in certain waters, for a fixed rate of fees. |
| pilot |
aviator. pilot. |
| pilot |
This is the process of refining the assessment procedures and developing the moderation processes for a syllabus within a restricted select group of schools. |
| pilot |
A partial roll out of a Solution for the purpose of testing and validation. |
| pilot |
A small test run of a system or production process to verify its acceptance and capabilities before going full-scale. |
| pilot |
An instrument for detecting the compass error. |
| pilot |
To direct the course of, as of a ship, where navigation is dangerous. |
| pilot |
Figuratively: To guide, as through dangers or difficulties. |
| pilot |
The front rider of a tandem, also called 'captain' or 'steersman'. |
| pilot |
To fly, or act as pilot of. someone who is licensed to operate an aircraft in flight a person qualified to guide ships through difficult waters going into or out of a harbor. |
| pilotluk |
piloting. flying. |
| pilot |
Figuratively: A guide; a director of another through a difficult or unknown course. |
| pilotluk |
being a pilot. piloting. |
| pilot |
The cowcatcher of a locomotive. |
| pilot |
pilot. pilot. aircraftman. aviator. birdman. flyer. flier. |
| pilot |
A short plug at the end of a counterbore to guide the tool. |
| pilot |
Pilots are sometimes made interchangeable. |
| pilot |
A person who navigates a vessel Historically another name for Navigator, usually different from the Master or Captain Today a Pilot navigates the ship in specific bodies of water. 1 A person who handles the controls of an aircraft or spacecraft from withi |
| pilot |
A person who likes planes but usually does not jump out of them. |
| pilot |
A person who is qualified to assist the master of a ship to navigate when entering or leaving a port. |
| pilot |
A small, preliminary test, dress rehearsal or trial run This should be a mirror image of the research evaluation to be done only on a much smaller scale Interviews, questionnaires, sampling and initial analysis should all be considered More associated wit |
| pilot |
Where research is conducted in advance of the actual study to assess the logistics of the study The aim is to highlight any areas of weakness which can then be eradicated in the actual study. |
| pilot bölge |
pilot region. |