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Definition of Accelerated
1. Adjective. Speeded up, as of an academic course. "In an accelerated program in school"
Definition of Accelerated
1. Verb. (past of accelerate) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Accelerated
1. accelerate [v] - See also: accelerate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Accelerated
Literary usage of Accelerated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Analytical Mechanics for Engineers by Fred B. Seely, Newton Edward Ensign (1921)
"Uniformly accelerated Rectilinear Motion. — Many examples of straight-line motion
with constant acceleration occur in engineering practice, ..."
2. Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences by Galileo Galilei (1914)
"[197] NATURALLY accelerated MOTION The properties belonging to uniform motion
have been discussed in the preceding section; but accelerated motion remains ..."
3. The Economic Theory of the Location of Railways: An Analysis of the by Arthur Mellen Wellington (1914)
"THE LAWS OF accelerated AND RETARDED MOTION, AND THE EFFECT THEREOF ON THE MOVEMENT
OF TRAINS. 368. We cannot go into the general theory of this question as ..."
4. Elements of Physics; Or, Natural Philosophy, General and Medical: Comoprised by Neil Arnott (1856)
"It will first be shown here, how the great classes of accelerated, retarded, ...
"accelerated Motion from Gravity.99 Owing to the inertia of matter, ..."
5. Mechanics, Molecular Physics and Heat: A Twelve Weeks' College Course by Robert Andrews Millikan (1903)
"Its motion is said to be uniformly accelerated . when it makes equal gains ...
LAWS OF UNIFORMLY accelerated MOTION.—The following laws are derived at once ..."
6. Laboratory Physics: A Students Manual for Colleges and Scientific Schools by Dayton Clarence Miller (1903)
"LAWS OF accelerated MOTION WITH A FALLING TUNING FORK Verify the laws of ...
accelerated Motion.—A tuning fork is attached to a frame arranged to fall ..."
7. The English Works of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury by Thomas Hobbes (1839)
"OF MOTION accelerated AND UNIFORM, AND OF MOTION BY CONCOURSE. 1. The velocity
of any body, in what time soever it be computed, is that which is made of the ..."