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Definition of Kinematic
1. a. Of or pertaining to kinematics.
Definition of Kinematic
1. Adjective. (context: physics) Of or relating to motion or to kinematics. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Kinematic
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Kinematic
Literary usage of Kinematic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mechanism by Robert McArdle Keown (1912)
"7 is a simple four-linked kinematic chain consisting of four turning pairs, ...
A compound kinematic chain is one in which one or more of the links has more ..."
2. Mechanism by Robert McArdle Keown (1912)
"7 is a simple four-linked kinematic chain consisting of four turning pairs, ...
A compound kinematic chain is one in which one or more of the links has more ..."
3. Catalogue of Scientific Papers, 1800-1900: Subject Indexby Royal Society (Great Britain), Herbert McLeod by Royal Society (Great Britain), Herbert McLeod (1908)
"8420 kinematic geometry. (See ako Mechanics 0420.) Mannheim, A. Camb. ...
and tangents of conic sections, kinematic construction for. ..."
4. Elements of Dynamic: An Introduction to the Study of Motion and Rest in by William Kingdon Clifford (1887)
"As all parts of the body move alike, we may confine our attention to any one of
them, however small; for this reason that part of kinematic which treats of ..."
5. The Kinematics of Machinery: Outlines of a Theory of Machines by Franz Reuleaux (1876)
"138- General Nature of kinematic Synthesis. HAVING now examined at some length
and through a great variety of cases tlio problems of kinematic analysis, ..."
6. Robot Manipulators: Mathematics, Programming, and Control : the Computer by Richard P. Paul (1981)
"We are concerned here with obtaining a solution to the kinematic equations obtained
in Chapter 2 and we will start by obtaining solutions to some of the ..."
7. Applied Mechanics: An Elementary General Introduction to the Theory of by James Henry Cotterill (1906)
"These pieces, like the rest, occur in pairs, and may be described as such, though
the pairing is not necessarily kinematic. First, one or more perform the ..."