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Page "Shortwave radio" ¶ 37
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Some Related Sentences

context and amateur
In this context the term " professional " ( used for the first category ) as opposed to " amateur " ( used for the second and third ) refers only to the professionalism of the used medium, and not to the professionalism of the language itself or its creator.

context and radio
Examples include Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels ( 1998 ) ( wherein the slang is translated via subtitles in one scene ); The Limey ( 1999 ); Sexy Beast ( 2000 ); Snatch ( 2000 ); Ocean's Eleven ( 2001 ); and Austin Powers in Goldmember ( 2002 ); It's All Gone Pete Tong ( 2004 ), after BBC radio disc jockey Pete Tong whose name is used in this context as rhyming slang for " wrong "; Green Street Hooligans ( 2005 ).
In the SETI context, the name has been used for radio telescopes in fiction ( Arthur C. Clarke, " Imperial Earth "; Carl Sagan, " Contact "), was the name initially used for the NASA study ultimately known as " Cyclops ," and is the name given to an omnidirectional radio telescope design being developed at the Ohio State University.
The term DXing, in the context of listening to radio signals of any user of the shortwave band, is the activity of monitoring distant stations.
" The small-scale radio context meant that it was originally scored for a small chamber orchestra.
Its cryptographic processor could not change context fast enough to keep several radio conversations on the air at once.
In this context, ' Pirate ' radio thus refers to stations that do advertise and plug various gigs and raves.
It was created for and is still most frequently used in reference to electromagnetic energy, especially in the context of radio astronomy.
Opposition to the Algerian War and the Vietnam War, to laws allowing or encouraging racial segregation and to laws which overtly discriminated against women and restricted access to divorce, increased use of marijuana and hallucinogens, the emergence of pop cultural styles of music and drama, including rock music and the ubiquity of stereo, television and radio helped make these changes visible in the broader cultural context.
In the context of broadcasting, backhaul refers to uncut program content that is transmitted point-to-point to an individual television station or radio station, broadcast network or other receiving entity where it will be integrated into a finished TV show or radio show.
In a comedic context, the same play on words, additionally incorporating the name " Pete ", is known to have been used as early as 1930 on the radio program " Empire Builders ".
In Ireland, Community Radio has been active since the late 1970s however it took until 1994 before the Independent Radio and Television Commission established an 18-month community radio pilot project to explore and evaluate the potential offered by community broadcasting in an Irish context.
The music industry may use other types of promotional compilations within a business-to-business context to promote artists to media concerns ( radio stations, music supervisors for TV, film or video games for synchronization )
The studio audience was shown the answer in advance and Maguire based his answer on the audience's reaction ; during the 1940s, New York radio studio audiences included many Brooklynites, and they cheered wildly whenever Brooklyn was mentioned in any context.
Amateur radio operators nearly always use frequencies rather than channel numbers, since there is no regulatory or operating requirement for fixed channels in this context.
Accurately the term in the context of radio used to describe only those station branding elements which are musical, or sung.
* An IRD is an integrated receiver-decoder, in other words a complete digital satellite TV or radio receiver ; " decoder " in this context refers not to decryption but to the decompression and conversion of MPEG video into displayable format.
Nude weather reports are weather reports performed in the nude, either on television or on radio, or in any other context.
In the World War II context, huff-duff applied to direction-finding of radio communications transmitters, typically operating at high frequency ( HF ).
From the Kennedys of Castleross on radio to The Riordans on television, RTÉ had focused heavily on rural life as a context for its soap operas.
His autobiography was published on 31 May 2007-while the previous year another book, ' Johnnie Walker-Cruisin ' The Formats ', put his radio work in the context of radio development over 40 years.

context and operators
Boolean search engines typically only return items which match exactly without regard to order, although the term boolean search engine may simply refer to the use of boolean-style syntax ( the use of operators AND, OR, NOT, and XOR ) in a probabilistic context.
This was often the case in a historical context, and is still true in the developing world, where operators as diverse as taxi drivers and undertakers may operate this service.
Photographers who produce moving rather than still pictures are often called cinematographers, videographers or camera operators, depending on the commercial context.
( See Feshbach – Fano partitioning method for the context where such operators appear in scattering theory ).
Sometimes operators that have a similar purpose, especially in the context of list processing, are pronounced " cons ".
In a typical context where L is acting by infinitesimal transformations, the elements of U ( L ) act like differential operators, of all orders.
Continuations captured using delimited operators thus only represent a slice of the program context.
The evaluation of an expression is dependent on the definition of the mathematical operators and on the system of values that is its context.
( Sometimes they are known as noise operators or error operators, especially in the context quantum information processing where the quantum operation represents the noisy, error-producing effects of the environment.
In the context of the quantum harmonic oscillator, we reinterpret the ladder operators as creation and annihilation operators, adding or subtracting fixed quanta of energy to the oscillator system.
These operators exist in the context called " CHOPs " for which Side Effects won a Technical Achievement Academy Award in 2002.
Bunched logic is a variety of substructural logic that, like linear logic, has classes of multiplicative and additive operators, but differs from usual proof calculi in having a tree-like context of hypotheses instead of a flat list-like structure ; it is thus a calculus of deep inference.
But variations of 50 % on this figure are reported by operators and others depending on local context.
* Differential algebra for a definition of pseudo-differential operators in the context of differential algebras and differential rings.
In the wider context, multiplier operators are special cases of spectral multiplier operators, which arise from the functional calculus of an operator ( or family of commuting operators ).
In such cases, a variable bound by an anterior variable-binding operator occurs within a non-extensional context such as that created by a ' that ' clause, or, alternatively, by propositional attitude or modal operators.
In this context, the parental solutions, through the aid of genetic operators, are not able to generate offsprings that are superior to their parents.
There is a well-developed theory for linear differential operators, due to Lars Gårding, in the context of microlocal analysis.
Thus, it maps on the quantum density matrix in the map between real phase-space functions and Hermitian operators introduced by Hermann Weyl in 1927, in a context related to representation theory in mathematics ( cf.

context and term
The use of multi-defined words requires the author or speaker to clarify their context, and sometimes elaborate on their specific intended meaning ( in which case, a less ambiguous term should have been used ).
The term is often used in the entertainment business, especially in a business context, for musicians and other performers ( less often for actors ).
Most often, the term describes those who create within a context of the fine arts or ' high culture ', activities such as drawing, painting, sculpture, acting, dancing, writing, filmmaking, photography, and music — people who use imagination, talent, or skill to create works that may be judged to have an aesthetic value.
The term is the Old Norse / Icelandic translation of, a neologism coined in the context of 19th century romantic nationalism, used by Edvard Grieg in his 1870 opera Olaf Trygvason.
The term " Islamic " refers not only to the religion, but to any form of art created in an Islamic culture or in an Islamic context.
The Big Book ( from Alcoholics Anonymous ) states that once a person is an alcoholic, they are always an alcoholic, but does not define what is meant by the term " alcoholic " in this context.
The intent is usually clear from the context, although the term " official at bat " is sometimes used to explicitly refer to an at bat as distinguished from a plate appearance.
* Business Context Diagram, a computing term for a schema illustrating the context of an application in a business environment.
The term black people is used in some socially-based systems of racial classification for humans of a dark-skinned phenotype, relative to other racial groups represented in a particular social context.
Because these two definitions can be transformed simply by into the other, some formulae have this alternatingly (- 1 )< sup > n </ sup >- term and others not depending on the context, but it is not possible to decide in favor of one of these definitions to be the correct or appropriate or natural one ( for the abstract Bernoulli numbers ).
When used in a historical context, the term Boer may refer to an inhabitant of the Boer Republics as well as those who were cultural Boers.
Computing also has other meanings that are more specific, based on the context in which the term is used.
In recent usage, especially in the context of environmental policy, the term " climate change " often refers only to changes in modern climate, including the rise in average surface temperature known as global warming.
The first established use of the term in a political context was by François-René de Chateaubriand in 1819, following the French Revolution.
Wincenty Kadłubek ( Vincent Kadlubo, 1160 – 1223 ) used for the first time the original Latin term res publica in the context of Poland in his " Chronicles of the Kings and Princes of Poland.
In an Australian context, the term " Commonwealth " ( capitalised ) thus refers to the federal government and " Commonwealth of Australia " is the official name of the country.
" In this antiquated context, chemical affinity is sometimes found synonymous with the term " magnetic attraction ".
The unqualified term " chauvinism " is far more likely to refer to a male chauvinism than female chauvinism in the context of chauvinism as sexism.
Microsoft's guidelines call for always using the term context menu, and explicitly deprecate shortcut menu.
Though the term " democracy " is typically used in the context of a political state, the principles also are applicable to private organizations.
The term " deed ", also known in this context as a " specialty ", is common to signed written undertakings not supported by consideration: the seal ( even if not a literal wax seal but only a notional one referred to by the execution formula, " signed, sealed and delivered ", or even merely " executed as a deed ") is deemed to be the consideration necessary to support the obligation.
The term Eastern Danish is occasionally used for Bornholmian, but including the dialects of Scania ( particularly in a historical context ).
* Down payment, a term used in the context of the purchase of items
" This term, which was variously used by other Chinese philosophers ( including Confucius, Mencius, Mozi, and Hanfeizi ), has special meaning within the context of Daoism, where it implies the essential, unnamable process of the universe.
Agnieszka Weinar ( 2010 ) notes the widening use of the term, arguing that recently, " a growing body of literature succeeded in reformulating the definition, framing diaspora as almost any population on the move and no longer referring to the specific context of their existence ".

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