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By And By: BY AND BY In the sense of "immediately" is the King James Version translation of exautes, of Mark 6:25 (the American Standard Revised Version "forthwith"); of euthus, Matthew 13:21 (the American Standard Revised Version "straightway"); of eutheos, Luke ... [100%] 1915-01-01
Tournament: A tournament is a competition involving at least three competitors, all participating in a sport or game. More specifically, the term may be used in either of two overlapping senses: These two senses are distinct. (Sports event with a number of teams) [98%] 2024-01-10 [Tournament systems]
Tournament: Tournament, or Tourney, the name popularly given in the middle ages to a species of mock fight, so called owing to the rapid turning of the horses (Skeat). Of the several medieval definitions of the tournament given by Du Cange ... [98%] 2022-09-02
Tournament: An oriented graph (cf. also Graph, oriented) without loops, each pair of vertices of which are joined by an arc in exactly one direction. (Mathematics) [98%] 2023-10-17 [Graph theory]
Tournament: The term, tournament, originally referred to the meeting of two teams of knights in quasi-combat. It was commonly called "hastilude" ("game with spears") as against the joust which was a contest between individuals (although teams were often formed.) They ... [98%] 2023-03-02 [English History] [Medieval History]...
Tournament (graph theory): A tournament is a directed graph (digraph) obtained by assigning a direction for each edge in an undirected complete graph. That is, it is an orientation of a complete graph, or equivalently a directed graph in which every pair of ... (Graph theory) [98%] 2024-05-18 [Directed graphs]
Tournament (medieval): A tournament, or tourney (from Old French torneiement, tornei), was a chivalrous competition or mock fight that was common in the Middle Ages and Renaissance (12th to 16th centuries), and is a type of hastilude. Tournaments included mêlée, hand-to ... (Medieval) [98%] 2024-06-24 [Medieval tournament] [History of sports]...
Tournament (graph theory): A tournament is a directed graph (digraph) obtained by assigning a direction for each edge in an undirected complete graph. That is, it is an orientation of a complete graph, or equivalently a directed graph in which every pair of ... (Graph theory) [98%] 2024-11-01 [Directed graphs]
Courser: The coursers are a group of birds which together with the pratincoles make up the family Glareolidae. They have long legs, short wings and long pointed bills which curve downwards. (Biology) [97%] 2023-11-03 [Glareolidae]
Course: In medicine the term course generally takes one of two meanings, both reflecting the sense of "path that something or someone moves along...process or sequence or steps": A patient may be said to be at the beginning, the middle ... (Medicine) [94%] 2023-11-03 [Medical terminology] [Pharmacodynamics]...
Curses (video game): Curses is an interactive fiction computer game created by Graham Nelson in 1993. Appearing in the beginning of the non-commercial era of interactive fiction, it is considered one of the milestones of the genre. (Software) [94%] 2023-11-03 [Single-player video games]
Course (sail): In sailing, a course is a type of square sail. It is the sail set on the lowest yard on a mast. (Sail) [94%] 2023-09-25 [Sailing rigs and rigging]
Curses (programming library): curses is a terminal control library for Unix-like systems, enabling the construction of text user interface (TUI) applications. The name is a pun on the term "cursor optimization". (Software) [94%] 2023-11-02 [Curses (programming library)] [Unix software]...
Course: COURSE kors (from Latin cursus, "a running," "race," "voyage," "way"): (1) euthudromeo, "forward or onward movement," as of a ship: "We made a straight course" (Acts 16:11; compare Acts 21:1); "We had finished our course." (the Revised Version ... [94%] 1915-01-01
Course (music): A course, on a stringed musical instrument, is either one string or two or more adjacent strings that are closely spaced relative to the other strings, and typically played as a single string. The strings in each multiple-string course ... (Music) [94%] 2024-03-01 [String instruments]