acceleration

intermediateB1

/əkˌsɛləˈreɪʃən/ · ac-cel-er-a-tion

The rate of change of velocity of an object with respect to time.

Meanings

nountechnical

The rate of change of velocity of an object with respect to time.

کسی جسم کی رفتار میں وقت کے لحاظ سے تبدیلی کی شرح۔

تسرع

tasarru'

Formal: تسرع

Synonyms

Antonyms

decelerationslowing downآہستگیرفتار میں کمی

Common Collocations

  • acceleration of time
  • acceleration due to gravity
  • uniform acceleration

Example Sentences

The car's acceleration was impressive during the race.

گاڑی کی تسرع ریس کے دوران متاثر کن تھی۔

Gaari ki tasarru' race ke dauran mutasir kun thi.

Scientists measure acceleration using various instruments.

سائنسدان تسرع کو مختلف آلات کی مدد سے ماپتے ہیں۔

Scientists tasarru' ko mukhtalif aalaat ki madad se maapte hain.

Acceleration can be calculated using the formula a = (v_f - v_i) / t.

تسرع کو فارمولے a = (v_f - v_i) / t کی مدد سے حساب کیا جا سکتا ہے۔

Tasarru' ko formula a = (v_f - v_i) / t ki madad se hisaab kiya ja sakta hai.

Easily Confused With

deceleration:Deceleration refers to the process of slowing down or decreasing speed, as opposed to acceleration.

Word Family

accelerate
verbتیز کرنا
accelerator
nounتیزی کا پُر زور
accelerating
adjectiveتیز ہو رہا

See Also

💡 Memory Tip

Acc-eleration is like adding 'acc' in front of 'celeration' to go faster.

Imagine a race car zooming down the track, illustrating the concept of acceleration.

✍️ Urdu Poetry

دیکھو تو یہ تسرع کیسا ہے، کہ زمانے کی گردش بھی مانگتی ہے۔

Dekho to ye tasarru' kaisa hai, ke zamane ki gardish bhi maangti hai.

Look how amazing this acceleration is, that even the orbit of time begs for it.

Unknown, Unverified

* Poetry attribution is AI-generated and may require verification.

🗣️ Urdu Proverb

آہستہ چلو، پر صحیح راستے پر چلو۔

Aahista chalo, par sahih raaaste par chalo.

Walk slowly, but walk on the right path.

📖 Etymology

Origin: Latin "accelerationem" — increase of speed

First known use: 19th century

The term 'acceleration' has its roots in Latin, from 'accelerare' which means 'to hasten' or 'to move faster'. It was adapted into English in the early 19th century.