English to Arabic Dictionary accidental

accidental

عرضي
definition
noun
Students learn to move out of position, cross over, play scale patterns and deal with accidentals , eighth notes, harmonic intervals, switching melody between hands and playing hands together.
a sign indicating a momentary departure from the key signature by raising or lowering a note.
adjective
a verdict of accidental death
happening by chance, unintentionally, or unexpectedly.
the location is accidental and contributes nothing to the tension between the characters in the poem
incidental; subsidiary.
translation of 'accidental '
noun
علامة التحويل الموسيقي,
عرض صفة غير جوهرية
adjective
غير مقصود,
عرضي,
اتفاقي,
مصادفة,
غير جوهري
example
He wouldn't have had any chance to escape if it hadn't been for an 'accidental' meeting with Carrie.
But this ersatz quality is not some 'accidental' by-product or unintentional residue of Smyth's working methods.
‘Every single random, 'accidental' death is something that should upset a faith bound up with comfort and ready answers,’ he wrote.
Bacon believed that after 'accidental' correlations had been excluded in this way, only essential correlations would remain.
Almost every entrepreneur who has made it will recall that first break, an 'accidental' happening which somehow turned the tide and made success possible.
Having heard the evidence, there was a most regrettable set of circumstances but I believe this was an 'accidental' death.
Ibn Sina's denial of the passage view of motion results from his understanding of motion as an 'accidental' property of physical bodies.
Returning a verdict of 'accidental' death, the jury recommended that South Dublin County Council investigate the accident and consider additional signage in the area.
Clarke steadfastly maintained that matter has neither an essential nor an 'accidental' power of self-motion.
No longer are you creatures of an 'accidental' happening in an obscure corner of a randomly evolving cosmos.
On this picture, of course, substantial and 'accidental' forms are both ‘layers of the onion’ in exactly the same sense.
If existence were 'accidental' , then a thing could be without its existence, which seems absurd.
A jury at Manchester Coroner's Court yesterday returned verdicts of 'accidental' death caused by dangerous driving in the cases of both men, who were lifelong friends from Failsworth.
The attempt to see which parts of our past were somehow essential and which were 'accidental' has now shifted to comparison between our past and the present development of Third World countries.
If we could learn to see mind as an essential rather than 'accidental' aspect of the universe, a whole new sense of the cosmos and of ourselves would follow.
The addition of ammonium nitrate to dynamite further decreased the chances of 'accidental' explosions.
The father of a window cleaner critically injured after falling from his ladder said he will take ‘legal advice’ after an inquest ruled his son's death was 'accidental' .
The immediate act of the mover gives the concept of motion as an 'accidental' property.
We have had some 'accidental' deaths, but no direct no casualties from direct fighting.
This tendency towards fallacy is not 'accidental' , but intrinsic.
The inner essences of things were identified in their definitions, and distinguished in that way from 'accidental' properties they exhibited under various circumstances.
Jurgis moves downtown to look for a job and gets a chance through an 'accidental' meeting of an old union buddy on his way to work at a machine factory.
It was the usual 'accidental' pregnancy, and we had the usual high school romance.
Having said this, however, Aquinas freely admitted that existence was indeed 'accidental' to substance.
‘It is tragic that a momentary lapse of concentration can have such consequences,’ said Mr Singleton, who recorded a verdict of 'accidental' death.
But clearly not all changes are 'accidental' changes.
Such 'accidental' properties were, like material causes, of secondary status in the Aristotelian view.
The statue continues to exist, but receives a form which is 'accidental' to it; it might lose that form without going out of existence.
Its 'accidental' properties, by contrast, are those that it just happens to have but might well have lacked.
If so, isn't it possible that art is in decline not as part of some grand narrative, but as a 'accidental' and possibly fleeting phenomenon?
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