Range queries help search through data within a set of bounds, for example, searching for crimes happened in London in the last month. Wildcard query uses * or ? operators to fetch results Fuzziness is the mechanism of employing Levenshtein’s edit distance to fetch similar looking words (or...
In other words, the BTD can decompose a tensor into the sum of multiple component tensors, and this process can be viewed as the CPD, while each component tensor decomposition is viewed as a Tucker decomposition. This overcomes the problem that each component tensor rank must be one in the...
hemoglobin(n.) alsohæmoglobin, coloring matter in red blood cells, 1862, shortening ofhæmatoglobin(1845), from Greekhaimato-, combining form ofhaima(genitivehaimatos) "blood" (see-emia) +globulin, a type of simple protein, fromglobule, formerly a word for "corpuscle of blood." ...
placed the capital, small capital, and accented letters, also figures, signs for reference to notes &c.; in the lower case the ordinary running letter, points for punctuation, spaces for separating the words, and quadrats for filling up the short lines. [The Literary Gazette, Jan. 29, ...
Term-level search is designed to work with structured data such as numbers, dates, IP address, enumerations, keyword types, and others. They help us find the answers but don't look at relevance. That is, they search for exact matches rather than how well the documents match the query. ...
Weekley notes as "curious" that Germanic uses a word essentially meaning "body" for the adverbial formation, while Romanic uses one meaning "mind" (as in Frenchconstammentfrom Latinconstanti mente). The modern English form emerged in late Middle English, probably from influence of Old Norse-...
Entries linking to eerily eerie (adj.) also eery, c. 1300, "timid, affected by superstitious fear," north England and Scottish variant of Old English earg "cowardly, fearful, wretched; slow, indolent, useless," from Proto-Germanic *arh- (source also of Old Frisian erg "evil, bad," Mid...
It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Latintangere"to touch,"taxare"to touch, assess,"tactus"touch,"integer"intact, whole, complete, perfect; honest;" Greektassein"to arrange,"tetagon"having seized;" Old Englishþaccian"stroke, strike gently." ...
alsoS.O.S., universal signal of extreme distress, 1910, from International Morse code letters chosen arbitrarily as being easy to transmit and difficult to mistake. Not an initialism (acronym) for "save our ship" or anything else. It won out over alternative suggestion C.Q.D., which is sa...
" from Greek gramma "that which is drawn; a picture, a drawing; that which is written, a character, an alphabet letter, written letter, piece of writing;" in plural, "letters," also "papers, documents of any kind," also "learning," from stem of graphein "to draw or write" (see ...