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Webartefacts
webartefacts [Zapilou]
Signature de qualité des produits Zapilou signalant leur respect des standards W3c ainsi que leur compatibilité multi-plateforme.
artefact ou artéfact (artefakt). n. m (mot angl., du lat. artis facta, effets de lart). [Grand LAROUSSE]
1. Structure ou phénomène dorigine artificielle ou accidentelle qui altère une expérience ou un examen portant sur un phénomène naturel.
2. En anthropologie, produit ayant subi une transformation, même minime, par lhomme, et qui se distingue ainsi dun autre provoqué par un phénomène naturel.
artefact (artefakt). n. m (lat. artis facta, effet de lart).[Dictionnaire FLAMMARION de la langue française]
Biol. Phénomène accidentel dû non pas à la nature mais à une intervention, volontaire ou involontaire, de lhomme. Par ext. Désigne tout phénomène factice dû à une manipulation.
artefact ou artéfact (artefakt). n. m (lat. artis facta, effet de lart). [Dictionnaire petit LAROUSSE]
Phénomène dorigine artificielle ou accidentelle, rencontré au cours dune observation ou dune expérience.
artefact (artefakt). n. m (1905 ; mot angl., aussi artifact (1821), du lat. artis factum fait de lart). [Dictionnaire petit ROBERT]
Didact. Phénomène dorigine humaine, artificielle (dans létude des faits naturels).
Méd. Toute altération produite artificiellement lors dun examen de laboratoire (par ex. , examen microscopique dun tissu, électroencéphalographie, électrocardiographie, etc).
Inform. Signal parasite.
ar.te.fact (ärt¶.fakt) n. artifact.
ar.ti.fact (ärt¶.fakt) n. [Random House Compact Unabridged Dictionary]
1. any object made by human beings, esp. with a view to subsequent use.
2. a handmade object, as a tool, or the remains of one, as a shard of pottery, characteristic of an earlier time or cultural stage, esp. such an object found at an archaeological excavation.
3. any mass-produced, usually inexpensive object reflecting contemporary society or popular culture : artifacts of the pop generation.
4. a substance or structure not naturally present in the matter being observed but formed by artificial means, as during preparation of a microscope slide.
5. a spurious observation or result arising from preparatory or investigative procedures.
6. any feature that is not naturally present but is a product of an extrinsic agent, method, or the like : statistical artifacts that make the infltion rate seem greater than it is.
Also, artefact (1815-25; var. of artefact (arte factum) something made with skill.
ar.ti.fact (ärt¶.fakt) n. [Longman Dictionary of American English]
Anything made by man, esp. something useful.
ar.ti.fact, arte- (ärt¶.fakt) n. [Funk & Wagnalls Dictionary]
Anything made by human work or skill.
artefact. [Fowlers Modern English Usage]
This is now the normal spelling of the word in BrE. In AmE it varies with artifact, the latter being the more usual spelling (Her recorder, a stylish artifact of high-density plastic produced in Japan_New Yorker, 1988). Etymologically, artefact is the better form as the word is derived from arte (art) + factum (to make), but artifact, perhaps formed by analogy with artifice and artificial, has been recorded in British as well as American sources for more than a century.
Signature de qualité des produits Zapilou signalant leur respect des standards W3c ainsi que leur compatibilité multi-plateforme.
artefact ou artéfact (artefakt). n. m (mot angl., du lat. artis facta, effets de lart). [Grand LAROUSSE]
1. Structure ou phénomène dorigine artificielle ou accidentelle qui altère une expérience ou un examen portant sur un phénomène naturel.
2. En anthropologie, produit ayant subi une transformation, même minime, par lhomme, et qui se distingue ainsi dun autre provoqué par un phénomène naturel.
artefact (artefakt). n. m (lat. artis facta, effet de lart).[Dictionnaire FLAMMARION de la langue française]
Biol. Phénomène accidentel dû non pas à la nature mais à une intervention, volontaire ou involontaire, de lhomme. Par ext. Désigne tout phénomène factice dû à une manipulation.
artefact ou artéfact (artefakt). n. m (lat. artis facta, effet de lart). [Dictionnaire petit LAROUSSE]
Phénomène dorigine artificielle ou accidentelle, rencontré au cours dune observation ou dune expérience.
artefact (artefakt). n. m (1905 ; mot angl., aussi artifact (1821), du lat. artis factum fait de lart). [Dictionnaire petit ROBERT]
Didact. Phénomène dorigine humaine, artificielle (dans létude des faits naturels).
Méd. Toute altération produite artificiellement lors dun examen de laboratoire (par ex. , examen microscopique dun tissu, électroencéphalographie, électrocardiographie, etc).
Inform. Signal parasite.
ar.te.fact (ärt¶.fakt) n. artifact.
ar.ti.fact (ärt¶.fakt) n. [Random House Compact Unabridged Dictionary]
1. any object made by human beings, esp. with a view to subsequent use.
2. a handmade object, as a tool, or the remains of one, as a shard of pottery, characteristic of an earlier time or cultural stage, esp. such an object found at an archaeological excavation.
3. any mass-produced, usually inexpensive object reflecting contemporary society or popular culture : artifacts of the pop generation.
4. a substance or structure not naturally present in the matter being observed but formed by artificial means, as during preparation of a microscope slide.
5. a spurious observation or result arising from preparatory or investigative procedures.
6. any feature that is not naturally present but is a product of an extrinsic agent, method, or the like : statistical artifacts that make the infltion rate seem greater than it is.
Also, artefact (1815-25; var. of artefact (arte factum) something made with skill.
ar.ti.fact (ärt¶.fakt) n. [Longman Dictionary of American English]
Anything made by man, esp. something useful.
ar.ti.fact, arte- (ärt¶.fakt) n. [Funk & Wagnalls Dictionary]
Anything made by human work or skill.
artefact. [Fowlers Modern English Usage]
This is now the normal spelling of the word in BrE. In AmE it varies with artifact, the latter being the more usual spelling (Her recorder, a stylish artifact of high-density plastic produced in Japan_New Yorker, 1988). Etymologically, artefact is the better form as the word is derived from arte (art) + factum (to make), but artifact, perhaps formed by analogy with artifice and artificial, has been recorded in British as well as American sources for more than a century.
