[permalink] [id link]
** Reserved code elements under ISO 3166-1 " Codes for the representation of names of countries and their subdivisions – Part 1: Country codes ", available on request from ISO 3166 / MA
from
Wikipedia
Some Related Sentences
** and Reserved
** and code
** genetic structure: DNA — DNA replication — nucleosome — genetic code — codon — transcription factor — transcription — translation — RNA — histone — telomere
** Decoder unit-converts binary code into " decimal " numbers which can be displayed on the display unit.
** ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 – two-letter country codes which are the most widely used of the three, and used most prominently for the Internet's country code top-level domains ( with a few exceptions ).
** 7bit – up to 998 octets per line of the code range 1 .. 127 with CR and LF ( codes 13 and 10 respectively ) only allowed to appear as part of a CRLF line ending.
** The same code is also used to reach Scott Base in Antarctica and the United States base McMurdo Station nearby.
** 64-bit external databus doubles the amount of information possible to read or write on each memory access and therefore allows the Pentium to load its code cache faster than the 80486 ; it also allows faster access and storage of 64-bit and 80-bit x87 FPU data.
** Separation of code and data caches lessens the fetch and operand read / write conflicts compared to the 486.
** Componentization breaks code down into reusable semantic units which present clear, well-defined, simple-to-use interfaces.
** and elements
** Heterogeneous aggregate data types () allow related data elements to be accessed, for example assigned, as a unit.
** In particular, let A be a set of size n, and consider the set of subsets of A containing no more than m elements.
** or by additional elements ( such as " link " or " meta " in HTML and XHTML ) within their own attributes,
** Illuminati Crime Lords, a mafia-based variation on Illuminati which combines gameplay elements of the original Illuminati and INWO.
** The terrestrial region, according to Aristotle, consisted of concentric spheres of the four elements — earth, water, air, and fire.
** 96. curium, Cm, named after Pierre and Marie Curie, famous scientists who separated out the first radioactive elements ( 1944 ).
** 101. mendelevium, Md, named after the Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev, credited for being the primary creator of the periodic table of the chemical elements ( 1955 ).
** 103. lawrencium, Lr, named after Ernest O. Lawrence, a physicist best known for development of the cyclotron, and the person for whom the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory ( which hosted the creation of these transuranium elements ) are named ( 1961 ).
** Planning, Training, and Exercise Support ( PTE )-Our mission is to ensure NCS readiness, enhance partnerships within government and industry, coordinate telecommunications operational planning among NCS elements, develop emergency response requirements, and to provide skilled civilians and reservists during crises and emergencies.
** Unique factorization domain, an integral domain in which every non-zero element can be written as a product of irreducible elements in essentially a unique way
** Atomic domain, an integral domain in which every non-zero non-unit is a finite product of irreducible elements
** GCD domain, an integral domain in which every two non-zero elements have a greatest common divisor
Proto-Celtic is reconstructed as having * werbā-' blister ' in its lexicon and the name may be a suffixed form of this lexeme meaning “ blistered one .” On the other hand, the root of the name may represent a Celtic reflex of the Proto-Indo-European root * wer-bhe-‘ bend, turn ,’ cognate with Modern English warp, followed by the durative suffix *- j-and the feminine suffix *- ā-and so might have meant “ she who is constantly bending and turning .” Another possibility is that the name is a compound of Romano-British reflexes of the Proto-Celtic elements ** Uφer-bej-ā-( upper-strike-F ) “ the upper striker .”
0.704 seconds.