PTS
PTS or Pts can refer to:
In academics:
- Palmer Trinity School, an Episcopal middle and high school in Palmetto Bay, Florida, USA
- Peace Theological Seminary & College of Philosophy, institution of the Movement of Spiritual Inner Awareness, Los Angeles, USA
- Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, a Presbyterian seminary in Pennsylvania, USA
- Princeton Theological Seminary, a Presbyterian seminary in Princeton, New Jersey, USA
- Pure type system in mathematical logic
In communications and economics:
- Spanish pesetas, abbreviated Pts., Ptas., or with the symbol ₧
- abbreviation for the plural of pint, a unit of capacity
- Pacific Telemanagement Services, an independent payphone operator
- Paid to surf
- Post- och telestyrelsen, the Swedish postal and telecommunications regulator
- Public Television Service, public broadcaster in Taiwan
In religion:
- Protestant Truth Society, founded in the UK in 1889.
In science:
- PTS (gene), a gene encoding the 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase enzyme in humans
- Peroxisomal targeting signal, an amino acid sequence
- Phosphotransferase system or PTS, another name for PEP group translocation
In medicine:
- Post-thrombotic syndrome, a long-term complication of deep vein thrombosis
In politics:
- Partido de los Trabajadores Socialistas, the Socialist Workers' Party in Argentina
- Partido Trabalhista Santomense, São Toméan Workers Party in São Tomé and Príncipe
- Personal Track Safety, UK qualification for rail workers
- Potential Trouble Source, in Scientology
In technology:
- Phoronix Test Suite, a cross-platform benchmark
- Point (typography) (plural), a measurement of printed type size
- Presentation time stamp, metadata in MPEG video or other streams
- Product Transfer Security, a wireless identification system in the petrochemical industry
- PTS (amphibious vehicle), a Soviet vehicle, also known as Ob'yekt 65
- ptmx or pts, a pseudoterminal master and slave
In social services:
- PTS (community centre), a queer community centre in Ottawa, Canada.
Points decision
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.