To turn over; to put upside down; to upset; to place in a contrary order or direction; to reverse; as, to invert a cup, the order of words, rules of justice, etc.
To convert; to reverse; to decompose by, or subject to, inversion. See Inversion, n., 10.
To undergo inversion, as sugar.
Subjected to the process of inversion; inverted; converted; as, invert sugar.
to turn inside out. A reversal of positions of the inner and outer surfaces.
The term generally used to describe any error where one portion of the design is inverted in relation to the other portion(s). An overprint applied upside down is also an invert.
To turn upside down; to turn end for end. The bottom or inverted arch of a sewer or tunnel.
When you go upside down on the ramp and do a handstand.
stamp or item of postal stationery on which one portion of the design is upside down in relation to the rest of the design. Inverts can only be produced when the production process requires at least two independent passes through a press. Inverts are errors.
make an inversion (in a musical composition); "here the theme is inverted"
turn inside out or upside down
Turn upside down, as in "invert 2/3 = 3/2."
to reverse the order of something or turn it upside down. In grammar this refers to changing the order of words in questions and statements (e.g. Statement: They were there yesterday. Question: Were they there yesterday?)
The central design ('vignette') or portion of a stamp printed upside-down in relation to the frame, or vice versa.
A stamp which has part of the design upside down in relation to the rest of the design.
Term used when the measurement span is reversed from 4-20 mA or 20-4 mA.
Two-colored stamp with a portion of the design printed upside down.
When the rider goes upside down while in the air, it's called an Invert.
To reverse an image's tones to its opposite value: to make a negative.
Reverses the way an image looks (makes a positive image into a negative and vice versa). An item on the Maps submenu (Maps is an item on the Image menu).
To reverse an image's light and dark values and/or colours.
A trick jump where the rider is upside down.
1) To reverse something or change it to its opposite. For example, to invert the colors on a monochrome display means to change light to dark and dark to light. 2) In a digital electrical signal, to replace a high level by a low level and vice versa. This type of operation is the electronic equivalent of a Boolean NOT operation. garagalchuu View