It's not the dictionary term I may or may not vaguely remember, which was not a German compound. |
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But after subjecting the images to dictionary attacks, not a single hidden message was discovered. |
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In fact, our unabashed dictionary describes a road as a strip of metalled surface connecting potholes. |
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If you're fortunate enough to have missed Computer Science 101, a dictionary is the name of the abstract data type that maps keys to values. |
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In my dictionary it is violence used to put pressure on a government or society. |
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Founded by Cardinal Richelieu in 1635, its purpose was to produce a dictionary that would define all significant words of the French language. |
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If you can't use a dictionary to puzzle things out in a script, you are in trouble as an actor. |
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According to the great dictionary compiler, Hemacandra, Vedanta refers to the purport of the Upanishads and the Brahmana portion of the Vedas. |
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The latest dictionary contains new words and phrases that sum up life in the UK today. |
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Often he would search for minutes in his Arabic-English dictionary for the exact word he wanted. |
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We had to get up at one point and look up a word in the dictionary because he didn't believe me that it existed. |
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The software uses a standard dictionary, designed by Kiran, to accomplish the task. |
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I keep turning to the dictionary and the thesaurus, not for a reference, simply to read words at random. |
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Group 1 selected equivalents for a test item on a multiple-choice test by using only the monolingual English dictionary. |
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Save for a brief quotation from a dictionary of folklore, I have so far neglected Anglo-Saxon attitudes. |
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He is thought to have used an interleaved copy of his dictionary as a foundation word list and had the help of some half a dozen amanuenses. |
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Check out the books also on the lighter side of the English language and also the dictionary of word origins. |
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Don't rush to make good the deficiency by consulting a dictionary of national biographies. |
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We could consult an American biographical dictionary, in case Burdett left a lasting mark. |
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It uses a myriad of hacking tools as well as a 340-million-word dictionary to unlock passwords. |
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If it finds something in your text that isn't in the dictionary, you are offered a list of alternatives you can include instead. |
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I wanted to remove the misspelled word from the dictionary, but couldn't figure out how to do it. |
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Sadly, by the time you reach middle age even good spellers like myself start reaching for the dictionary more and more. |
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The built-in dictionary and thesaurus is its own application, but its real shining moments are as a service. |
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This is not really helpful unless you also know how this same dictionary defines the word, religious. |
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My advice is to go out and buy a dictionary of art terms and then visit the fair, its outstations and a few commercial galleries. |
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It is a cheap paperback reprint of the second edition of a dictionary, of English as spoken in Jamaica. |
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Group 3 read the short story with the tested vocabulary and used the monolingual English dictionary while taking the same multiple-choice test. |
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I have to confess that my English wasn't good enough to know the meaning of this word so I had to look it up in the dictionary. |
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I had to check the dictionary to discover that Boeotians were inhabitants of a city-state northwest of Attica, reputed to be dull and stupid. |
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A dip into the dictionary reveals something about passing a solvent through a semi-permeable partition into a more concentrated solution. |
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My dictionary defines a pedagogue as a pedantic or dogmatic teacher and there is a lot of that about Waters. |
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For this, the dictionary has 80,000 words and phrases with over 10,000 phrasal verbs and idioms highlighted. |
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The Frisian Academy sponsors scholarly publications on Frisian history and culture, including a definitive historical dictionary. |
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I can remember my schoolteacher telling me to look a word up in the dictionary. |
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Thompson adopted the stage name Black Francis and the group named themselves The Pixies after flipping through a dictionary. |
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According to dictionary definitions and everyday usage, a fountain is a jet of water that spurts up into the air. |
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Grabbing an old paperback dictionary she'd been using to keep her desk legs balanced, she ripped pages out to feed the fire. |
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The dictionary definition of the word is to ride on or along a wave on a board. |
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And admittedly once you have to pull out the public policy dictionary on these bozos they've pretty much fought you to a draw in political terms. |
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I also bought a modern Welsh-English dictionary, far more useable than my old one. |
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After amassing a collection of sonograms, scientists can build a dictionary of sounds and search for patterns. |
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And I just want to know, since when did dictionary writers become our moral arbiters, our dispensers of justice? |
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For example, the content of a curriculum vita was reformatted to look like a letter, a dictionary and so on. |
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Collect nice whole leaves and press them between two clean sheets of paper in a large book like a phone book or dictionary. |
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The prejudging judgment might be as broad as the spoken English language, or the dictionary, or some other code or convention. |
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His own grammar fills 13 double-column folio pages in his two-volume dictionary. |
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A dictionary is also a good resource for the proper pronunciation of words. |
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His approach to the pronunciation of Taiwanese was to use the National Phonetic Symbols for Mandarin to compose and systemize his dictionary. |
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The verb base is what you look up in the dictionary when you want to know how to say something. |
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Why not just remove the ghost words if they're not actually content that the dictionary cares to have in it? |
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According to the dictionary, abaft can be used adverbially or prepositionally. |
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The problem is that my French vocabulary is so poor that I end up having to look up every other word in a dictionary so it takes ages. |
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It also catches dictionary and thesaurus sites and sends back deliberate misspellings, antonyms instead of synonyms, etc. |
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The Australian English dictionary we brought from home, and similar ones on the internet have been a godsend. |
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There is not a word in the English dictionary to really describe this pre-meditated act of evil and wickedness. |
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She began to catch up after those wasted years and read books and consulted the dictionary constantly. |
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Seeing the problems his students faced, Mr. Silman has created the first comprehensive strategic guide in dictionary form. |
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This field actually is a Python dictionary indexed by the name of the channel. |
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In the narrow sense, it is a dictionary that is the lexical tool of information and retrieval systems. |
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WordNet is a big lexical dictionary heavily used by this community for creation of natural language systems. |
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It is as if everyone has been given a dictionary of war rhetoric to make us believe we are fighting for a reason. |
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In addition the German missionaries also produced Tulu lexicon and Tulu-English dictionary. |
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Not every dictionary or thesaurus acknowledges the opposite of feminism and feminist. |
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She also started compiling a dictionary of youth slang first used by the transvestite community. |
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It seems like someone could do a mashup of Wikipedia, a dictionary, and a little other online content and have a pretty popular site. |
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We're calling the film Incubus because we looked the word up in the dictionary and thought it sounded enigmatic. |
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Without commenting, Craig asked one student to look the word up in a dictionary and another student to find the word in a thesaurus. |
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All the time she muttered that someone had to get a copy that wasn't mistakable for a dictionary. |
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He wrote a viciously disparaging blog post about the company's rejection of a dictionary app. |
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Language is a good reflection of culture, and a dictionary provides a snapshot of the language. |
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On the surface, both are among the simplest of words in the French dictionary. |
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Here's a list of nonce words in my colourful vocabulary that have not yet found their way into any dictionary. |
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The plates from the earlier work are used frequently as illustrations in this dictionary of materials and techniques in the decorative arts. |
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Seventy years ago, the Philological Society had resolved to publish a completely new English dictionary. |
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To promote the transition from dictionary articles to such further reading is no mean achievement. |
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The dictionary as a mode of literature is the antithesis of automatic writing, that disembodied burbling of the unconscious. |
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According to the dictionary, collocation is the way words combine in a language to produce natural sounding speech and writing. |
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Of course, a dictionary does not represent the lexicographer's own language use. |
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Indeed, it is more a work of hopeful multicultural idealism than a dictionary in the lexicographer's sense. |
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Having thrown the dictionary into the nearest skip in a rage of apoplexy at its inadequacy, however, I resolve to plough on nonetheless. |
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The dictionary is amply illustrated and contains useful and informative entries on every aspect of popular music as well as classical. |
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Later reference to a dictionary illuminated the answer, but by that stage all had been revealed. |
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When the last fascicle was published in April 1928, it completed a ten-volume dictionary documenting over 400,000 words and phrases. |
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When I was a kid, I used to enjoy doing something very much like this by following cross-references in the unabridged dictionary at the library. |
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Look up the following newish open compounds in a modern dictionary to see if they are yet recorded as lexemes in English. |
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And no doubt it is part of our middle western definition of community, writ in the dictionary of our hearts, not scrawled on some public wall. |
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The methods are secure against off-line dictionary attack and incorporate an otherwise unauthenticated public key distribution system. |
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They fire back and forth witty, erudite rhymes like a comedy double act advertising a dictionary. |
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A spokeswoman also said that in 100 years, the pocket dictionary had almost doubled in size, reflecting the expansion in the language. |
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It sounds like someone has swallowed a dictionary and is trying to justify a wishy wash outlook. |
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Your browser loads a page from an online dictionary with the definition of the word. |
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They are allowed to take the Regents Exam in their native language, with a bilingual dictionary, and all the time they need. |
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I met a German lady who sat in the piazza with a dictionary so that she could write a long letter to me. |
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Is that really the tiny study where Noah Webster penned his definitive dictionary? |
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Hulme seems to have swallowed a dictionary and the results are arch and self-congratulatory. |
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Moves are afoot to include some mobile phone textspeak in the official dictionary of the game beloved by generations. |
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Finally Tully, my keeper of the dictionary, both you and your efficient secretary are still unable to pick up your spelling boo-boos. |
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It's as unintelligible a piece of artspeak and psychobabble as I have ever stumbled through, and a dictionary is not supplied. |
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We have no comprehensive dictionary, no etymological dictionary, no dictionaries of regionalisms, no modern thesaurus. |
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Even worse, it was a 1960s dictionary and defined the words in ways very different from the law. |
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This sent me to see how this word is defined in the dictionary and how it has been used. |
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The standard Latin dictionary in fact points out that the word Graecitas does not occur until the post-classical period. |
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Here was a maximalist in a landscape of ascetics, an inclusivist in love with the dictionary and world. |
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There is one bookcase in the room, its shelves filled with identical copies of the dictionary. |
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The dictionary definition of arrogance suggests overbearing behavior based on inappropriate views. |
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And after heated arguments and manic flicking through the pages of the dictionary, I lost the game, and sulked. |
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Can you please tell the brainiacs and intellectuals that not everyone is a walking dictionary? |
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Note that fixed passwords remain vulnerable to guessing, dictionary attacks and social engineering, as already indicated by Morris and Thompson. |
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Essentially this is a form of dictionary attack, which Microsoft argues violates federal laws including the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. |
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This site lists all sorts of password crackers that run dictionary attacks against a variety of encryption products. |
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The Australian National Dictionary is a historical dictionary of some 10,000 Australianisms. |
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On the Internet, password security is actually much better than that, because dictionary attacks work best offline. |
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It is more likely that the key was stored in some temporary file on the disk somewhere, or fell to a dictionary attack. |
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Brute force dictionary attacks attempt to compromise this authentication procedure by methodically testing every possible password. |
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Unfortunately, many of the password crackers use the replacement of letters with numbers in the dictionary attacks. |
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To use a dictionary in a translation paper is a different kind of test from the customary idea of unseens. |
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Now, your idea of a dictionary attack is interesting, except that as I pointed out above, most people don't go looking for an 8 character word. |
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Both WEP and WPA-PSK use a key that is susceptible to offline brute-force dictionary attacks. |
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Also on the counter is a dictionary and a monster exercise book buffed brown, rusting staples losing grip against a stuffing of clippings, brochures and postcards. |
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Later, he dispensed with objects and photographs and concentrated on language itself, enlarging words and their dictionary definitions in black-and-white photostats. |
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Jespersen later supplied phonetic transcriptions of the entries in Brynildsen's English and Dano-Norwegian Dictionary, which was the century's first pronouncing dictionary. |
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I try to limit pop-culture references and colloquial clues to a handful within each puzzle and in general each clue is some form of a dictionary definition. |
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Mrs. Murray made him write down the definition for all the words in the dictionary that began with the letters Y and X and than put each word in a sentence correctly. |
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Why am I starting a news program with a dictionary definition? |
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I looked the word magazine up in the dictionary and the definition is a holder in or on a gun for cartridges to be fed into the gun chamber automatically. |
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Like any other comparable dictionary worth its name, it does contain words, pronunciations, parts of speech, meanings and examples, which form the core of the volume. |
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If my good colleagues at Merriam-Webster want headwords they need to add to the 12 th edition of their college dictionary, I can send them a list. |
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A machine for weaving cloth, programmed by a punched card, had already been perfected by the end of the 18th century by Jacquard, whose name is now a dictionary word. |
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There will be a long list of services to choose from, but it's usually only written in Turkish, so have handy a pocket dictionary before you make your choice. |
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The Telegraph reports on the publication of a new dictionary of Italian neologisms, which includes dozens of coinages based on the names of political leaders. |
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Webster's perennial dictionary defines fad as a hobby, freak, or a whim. |
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Eravalu Padakosha, a dictionary of loan words that have been naturalised in Kannada, runs to 250 pages and it does not include words of Sanskrit and Prakrit origin. |
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Ten to one you've had to go to the dictionary to find out what that means. |
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For example, the undulating pattern of bold word and definition signal a dictionary while the juxtapositioning of date, address and salutation denote a letter. |
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I love how when you look up flotsam in the dictionary it says jetsam. |
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Both free verse and rhymed poetry styles are studied, including cinquain, haiku, tanka, rhopalic, echo and refrain poems, acrostics, alphabet and dictionary poems. |
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The range of the word would be the definitions contained in the dictionary, and the field would be all the synonyms and antonyms that might be found in a thesaurus. |
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Navigating this brave new world is the inventively-named Anana, an employee at a soon to be obsolete print dictionary. |
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A dictionary, a thesaurus or synonym finder, a good grammar book and language tapes are good investments for anyone wishing to develop or maintain language skills. |
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Often only some of the codes of an allograph to be recognized correspond to a sequence of codes from the dictionary, and the allograph is not recognized with certainty. |
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A bigot, according to one dictionary, is one who is strongly partial to one's own group, religion, race, or politics and is intolerant of those who differ. |
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Another dictionary I looked at actually states that an architect is a person who plans, devises, or contrives the achievement of a desired result. |
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It used to be that an unabridged dictionary and an encyclopedia would be kept accessible in middle-class homes, for settling questions of language or fact. |
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As a monolingual traveler in a foreign land carrying only a bilingual dictionary knows, a fluent traveling companion would be a much more valuable aid. |
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And if you really want to get philosophical, bring a pocket dictionary. |
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This wonderful beast comes from South Africa and through its peculiar name, which comes from the Afrikaans language, it is the first animal in the dictionary. |
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Search for any word in the dictionary and what is the first Google Image that comes up? |
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That's according to the author of said book, Susie Dent, dictionary mistress on Countdown and general lexicographical bod referred to in a report in today's Guardian. |
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A dictionary hack would crack that password in a few moments. |
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Although this proposal came to nothing, it reawakened the interest of Furnivall and others in the Philological Society's own lapsed project for a new historical dictionary. |
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I felt like a talking dictionary explaining the meaning of the word. |
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If it appears in any electronic list, including census information, dictionaries, thesaurus or phone books your password will not withstand a basic dictionary attack. |
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Both tools are written for Linux systems and perform a brute-force dictionary attack against WPA-PSK networks in an attempt to determine the shared passphrase. |
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In the past, dictionary attacks on Hotmail, attempts to harvest thousands of emails at once, were originating from servers operated by American spammers in Beijing. |
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Stegdetect and Stegbreak, developed by Niels Provos, for example, allow you to detect the technology in images and launch a dictionary attack, respectively. |
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A button can also convert a number between Imperial and metric units, or look up a word in the dictionary, or fetch data from a database or Web site. |
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Taberah was reading the bilingual dictionary with rapt concentration. |
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For his castaway book he picks a dictionary of flora and fauna. |
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In all its myriad manifestations, the language of anti-Semitism through the ages is a dictionary of non-sequiturs and antonyms, a thesaurus of illogic and inconsistency. |
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I am umbilically attached to my dictionary because my spelling is so bad. |
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They would just never consider looking it up in a dictionary or a lexicon. |
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Do us a favour, get a dictionary and look up what a gradient is. |
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It wasn't very good anyway, being based, it seems, on an American kindergarten dictionary and thus any word over 2 syllables or seven letters was automatically flagged. |
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We gave our new dictionary a work out to the amusement of the staff. |
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But an empty notebook can also be a sketch book, a novel, an exercise book, a dictionary, or an infinite variety of other things, depending entirely on content. |
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Collins dictionary allows berretta with a double r as an alternative. |
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This research started with Orsman's 1951 thesis and continued with his editing this dictionary. |
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Always know the meaning of those big words with Google dictionary. |
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The dictionary content in Oxford Dictionaries focuses on current English and includes modern meanings and uses of words. |
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My dictionary says that lepid comes from the Latin lepidus. Should I think flitting like a butterfly or leaping like a rabbit? |
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On 12 May 1860, Coleridge's dictionary plan was published and research was started. |
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During the 1870s, the Philological Society was concerned with the process of publishing a dictionary with such an immense scope. |
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He retired in 2013 and was replaced by Michael Proffitt, who is the eighth chief editor of the dictionary. |
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This widely available dictionary gave short definitions of words like genius and taste, and was clearly influenced by the Enlightenment movement. |
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It's worth keeping a dictionary around in case you come across an unfamiliar word. |
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I didn't know what a mitochondrion was until I looked it up in a dictionary. |
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The learning ability of language learners can be more reliable with the influence of the a dictionary. |
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He complained that the English language lacked structure and argued in support of the dictionary. |
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Initialize lemmatizer by providing dictionary file. If unknown, leave as non lemmata not found. |
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Other words in the dictionary are skorts, shoots, mandals, meggings and mace. |
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In contrast, speakers in the Netherlands of Low Saxon varieties similar to Westphalian would instead consult a dictionary of Standard Dutch. |
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Max Planck repeatedly advocated for the dictionary and funding was eventually taken up by the Emergency Association of German Science. |
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Other laws, such as the aptly named dictionary Act, expressly do so. |
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I had no prior knowledge of linguistics, but that didn't stop me from writing a dictionary. |
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In style and method, the dictionary bore little resemblance to earlier editions. |
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Wiktionary is meant to be both a defining dictionary and a translating dictionary. |
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I read through the dictionary five times to extract an extensive lexicon of univocal words containing only one of the five vowels. |
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For them, a mnemotechnical dictionary constructed by Felix and William Berol in 1918 might fill the bill. |
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Everything on earth has an end, for your mortally thin dictionary, the tropical, American weevil, the Zyzzyva. |
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The 1483 copy of Catholicon Anglicumis, a Middle English-Latin dictionary is the only one of its kind in existence. |
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Missing for some reason from Webster's Third, angor may be found in the Random House unabridged dictionary, among others. |
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Which animal, also known as the ant bear, is the first whose name appears in a dictionary? |
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The lemmata of the dictionary are alphabetically arranged Proto-Slavic etyma. |
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The Tyneside word charver became national currency last year when it was included for the first time in the Collins' English dictionary. |
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They can create personal word lists that include recent dictionary look-ups and saved favorite words, for ongoing practice. |
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Generally, the sensitive zones of electronic dictionary are the LCD screen, power zone, loudhailer, keystroke zone and crust. |
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Trying to read Manchu in Taiwan, Norman cut up a Manchu-Japanese dictionary and pasted in English translations for the words. |
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Pura in Jammu, has spent ten years of his life to the process of creating a dictionary of his indigenous Pahari language. |
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More than just a simple terminology dictionary, TALK THE TALK offers a history of language's modern evolution. |
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The initialism PC is being published more and more nowadays, albeit only one 1990s dictionary defines it. |
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For example, the term partial-birth abortion, which was used in the House and Senate bills, is not found any medical dictionary or textbook. |
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The newly added dictionary attack allows unlocking information protected with strong passwords faster. |
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The two major concerns that are addressed when standardizing the triple-DES modes are matching ciphertext attack and dictionary attack. |
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Since the dictionary are aggressively cleaned from stopword, they are less likely stopword. |
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The dictionary has separated proclitic prepositions and preposition clusters occurring with nouns into subentries and individual lexemes. |
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An integrated multimedia dictionary is included so students can get a context-sensitive definition of the word or phrase. |
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A thief can't readily decipher these hashes, but can mount what's called an automated offline dictionary attack. |
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But because of the way WPA is designed, it takes a particularly long time to pull off a dictionary attack against a WPA network. |
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De Hackers can precalculate the encrypted forms of all words in a dictionary. |
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Epiclesis is not even in my 45-year-old dictionary, and it sounds like some eye disease. |
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Snackable and mkay, joined the online dictionary after gaining widespread use, along with beer o'clock, bants, awesomesauce and bruh. |
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When I visited Professor Hong at the Han-Nom Institute, he showed me the manuscript for his dictionary of Nom. |
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I was memorising the dictionary, as you do, when I came across a strange word that I hadn't seen before. |
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Which reminds me that I have never remembered from that hour to consult the dictionary upon a selvage. |
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Students of cynology can trace in the dictionary the dog's remarkable rise in the public esteem in this century. |
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To find the meaning of a word, your first port of call should be a decent dictionary. |
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When it will be finished, the DGE will be the largest and most reliable dictionary of antique graecity. |
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Since 2000, a third edition of the dictionary has been underway, approximately a third of which is now complete. |
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Despite its impressive size, the OED is neither the world's largest nor the earliest exhaustive dictionary of a language. |
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On 7 January 1858, the Society formally adopted the idea of a comprehensive new dictionary. |
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In the late 1870s, Furnivall and Murray met with several publishers about publishing the dictionary. |
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However, the English language continued to change and, by the time 20 years had passed, the dictionary was outdated. |
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By the time the new supplement was completed, it was clear that the full text of the dictionary would now need to be computerized. |
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A new approach was called for, and for this reason it was decided to embark on a new, complete revision of the dictionary. |
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Instead, it was an entirely new dictionary produced with the aid of corpus linguistics. |
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When I saw the new dictionary, I couldn't resist the impulse to browse through it. |
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See here what it says in the dictionary. So, you were in the wrong about the meaning of that word. |
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In dictionary entries, the term subcontinent signifies a large, distinguishable subdivision of a continent. |
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A judge's normal aids include access to all previous cases in which a precedent has been set, and a good English dictionary. |
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The dictionary is also officially used in the Italian province of South Tyrol. |
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The manifold meanings of the simple English word 'set' are infamous among dictionary makers. |
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In 1746, a group of publishers approached Johnson with an idea about creating an authoritative dictionary of the English language. |
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But there are some simple, basic words that appear in Molina that are not attested in any of the sources for this dictionary. |
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I have a hard time looking up words in the dictionary, even when there are guide words. |
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He stuffed a copy of Confucius and a Chinese dictionary in his pocket before he was taken to their headquarters in Chiavari. |
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Bello's dictionary is Borgesian in both its randomness and its inconsistencies with regards to the very idea of a definition. |
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If the database is to be printed out in the form of a dictionary, non-lemmas can be generated from the items contained in these fields. |
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The Welsh Books Council and the offices of the standard historical dictionary of Welsh, Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru, are also located in the town. |
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The first Breton dictionary, the Catholicon, was also the first French dictionary. |
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Of course, Gosnell did not suggest that DA or any other dictionary include a subentry for coke to accompany that for the trademark. |
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The main Dutch dictionary is the Van Dale groot woordenboek der Nederlandse taal, which contains some 268,826 headwords. |
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It has published Finlandssvensk ordbok, a dictionary about the differences between Swedish in Finland and Sweden. |
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The German term Landsgemeinde itself is attested from at least the 16th century, in the 1561 dictionary of Pictorius. |
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The dictionary, as far as it was worked on by Grimm himself, has been described as a collection of disconnected antiquarian essays of high value. |
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New research projects began in 2004 to expand and update the oldest parts of the dictionary to modern academic standards. |
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This widely available dictionary gave short definitions of words like genius and taste and was clearly influenced by the Enlightenment movement. |
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A hybrid attack is used to find passwords that are a dictionary word with combinations of characters prepended or postpended to it. |
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To date, no encyclopedia or encyclopedic dictionary refers to the Pomor as a separate ethnic group. |
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The Kangxi Emperor ordered the creation of the Kangxi Dictionary, the most complete dictionary of Chinese characters that had been compiled. |
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This could be achieved by means of an authoritative dictionary of the English language. |
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Johnson's dictionary was not the first English dictionary, nor even among the first dozen. |
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Though it contained only 2,449 words, and no word beginning with the letters W, X, or Y, this was the first monolingual English dictionary. |
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Johnson's dictionary was the first to comprehensively document the English lexicon. |
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In spite of its shortcomings, the dictionary was far and away the best of its day. |
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Johnson's dictionary was made when etymology was largely based on guesswork. |
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In 1806, Webster published his first dictionary, A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language. |
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Webster completed his dictionary during his year abroad in January 1825 in a boarding house in Cambridge, England. |
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His book contained seventy thousand words, of which twelve thousand had never appeared in a published dictionary before. |
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Though it now has an honored place in the history of American English, Webster's first dictionary only sold 2,500 copies. |
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Because of its style and word coverage, Webster's Second is still a popular dictionary. |
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He pulled out a well-thumbed dictionary and began searching for a translation. |
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In 1894, Zamenhof published the first Esperanto dictionary, Universala Vortaro, which had a larger set of roots. |
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It is a specialist, scholarly dictionary, but is not without interest to the general public. |
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The English actor and linguist John Walker uses the spelling ar to indicate the long vowel of aunt in his 1775 rhyming dictionary. |
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An idiom is a phrase where the words together have a meaning that is different from the dictionary definitions of the individual words. |
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In idioms, usually English learners would have a hard time understanding the real meaning if they did not have an English idioms dictionary. |
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One important goal of lexicography is to keep the lexicographic information costs incurred by dictionary users as low as possible. |
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The modern encyclopedia was developed from the dictionary in the 18th century. |
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A dictionary is a linguistic work which primarily focuses on alphabetical listing of words and their definitions. |
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Thus, a dictionary typically provides limited information, analysis or background for the word defined. |
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Thus, while dictionary entries are inextricably fixed to the word described, encyclopedia articles can be given a different entry name. |
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As such, dictionary entries are not fully translatable into other languages, but encyclopedia articles can be. |
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In particular, dictionary entries often contain factual information about the thing named by the word. |
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Watching Backslang a DVD made by members of the youth club he was given a beginner's dictionary on how to talk street. |
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This is the southernmost limit of the Umbrian Apennines, according to the dictionary. |
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I like my old Roget's for much the same reason as I like my old dictionary. |
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What schoolboy of us has not rummaged his Greek dictionary in vain for a satisfactory account! |
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Being the only one among the three of us who had even a smattering of Spanish meant that I became a walking dictionary. |
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When Harry and I went to Central Australia, we met linguists in the Tanami desert who sat down with Warlpiri people to compile a dictionary. |
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Access time is critical in an application like an encyclopedia, dictionary or database where the drive spends most of its time searching data. |
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Root word meanings were sampled from Dale and O'Rourke's dictionary of elementary and high school levels. |
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While working on a second volume of his dictionary, Webster died in 1843, and the rights to the dictionary were acquired by George and Charles Merriam. |
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The revision is expected to roughly double the dictionary in size. |
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The policemen severally presented him with a pipe, a tin of tobacco, two boxes of matches and a dictionary, and then they withdrew leaving him to his own devices. |
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Well-known for its extreme length, 45 letters, is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis This is the longest solidly-spelled word in the dictionary. |
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Onomatopoeic interjections listed in the dictionary are allowed in Scrabble and now players can add exclamations such as augh, blech, eew, grr, waah and yeesh to their game. |
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To locate any term, and to facilitate use of the dictionary by a national of any of the three languages, alphabetical indices are appended in English, French and German. |
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They were published in 1972, 1976, 1982, and 1986 respectively, bringing the complete dictionary to 16 volumes, or 17 counting the first supplement. |
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In 1850 Blackie and Son in Glasgow published the first general dictionary of English that relied heavily upon pictorial illustrations integrated with the text. |
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The 125th and last fascicle covered words from Wise to the end of W and was published on 19 April 1928, and the full dictionary in bound volumes followed immediately. |
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Early printings of this dictionary contained the famous dord. |
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It was another 50 years before the entire dictionary was complete. |
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Des Capper blinked, as if he has been hit with a dictionary. But he was unputdownable, at the same time giving the impression that he was registering all the snubs. |
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Elizabeth knows so many words that they call her the walking dictionary. |
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A false positive can be returned on a password checking algorithm when the password is tested against a dictionary but the password does not contain a dictionary word. |
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Trademark Owners will nevertheless try to dictate how their marks are to be represented, but dictionary publishers with spine can resist such pressure. |
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An abridged dictionary can be further condensed to pocket size. |
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Let's collaborate on this dictionary, and get it finished faster. |
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In 1998, Oxford University Press produced a Canadian English dictionary, after five years of lexicographical research, entitled The Oxford Canadian Dictionary. |
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