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Page "High-level programming language" ¶ 8
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:; and When
:; Ace: When a player hits the ball directly from the tee into the hole with one stroke.
:; Attend ( the flag-stick ): When a player holds and removes the flag-stick for another player.
:; Bare Lie: When the ball lies directly on hard ground without any grass to buoy the ball up, ( i. e. ), where there is no grass creating a gap between ball and the ground.
:; Closed face: When ( in relation to the target-line ) the club-face is angled toward the player's body, i. e., angled left for right-handed players.
:; Closed stance: When a player's front foot is set closer to the target-line.
:; Goldie Bounce: When the ball strikes a tree deep in the rough and bounces out onto the fairway.
:; Good-good: When both players in a match agree to concede each others ' putts.
:; Open face: When ( in relation to the target line ) the club-face is angled away from the player's body, ie angled right for right-handed players.
:; Open stance: When a player's front foot is drawn backwards further from the target line.
:; Sand save: When a player achieves par by getting up and down from a green-side bunker.
:; Scramble: When a player misses the green in regulation, but still makes par or better on a hole.
:; Through line: When putting, the imaginary path that a ball would travel on if the putted ball goes past the hole.

:; and is
:; square: a rectangle that is a rhombus and a rhombus that is a rectangle.
:; General purpose use: Prepackaged software is very often expected to be executed on a variety of machines and CPUs that may share the same instruction set, but have different timing, cache or memory characteristics.
:; Special-purpose use: If the software is compiled to be used on one or a few very similar machines, with known characteristics, then the compiler can heavily tune the generated code to those specific machines ( if such options are available ).
:; Turnout: Instead of a complete spiral volute, a turnout is a quarter-turn rounded end to the handrail.
:; Gooseneck: The vertical handrail that joins a sloped handrail to a higher handrail on the balcony or landing is a gooseneck.
:; Rosette: Where the handrail ends in the wall and a half-newel is not used, it may be trimmed by a rosette.
:; its arithmetic genus is zero.
:; Pars distalis: The pars distalis, or " distal part ", comprises the majority of the anterior pituitary and is where the bulk of pituitary hormone production occurs.
:; Pars intermedia: The pars intermedia, or " intermediate part ", sits between the pars distalis and the posterior pituitary and is often very small in humans.
A Japa mala or mala ( Sanskrit :;, meaning garland ) is a set of beads commonly used by Hindus and Buddhists, usually made from 108 beads, though other numbers, usually divisible by 9, are also used.
:; Popularity: Poida is arguably one of the most popular characters of Full Frontal and is also arguably the most popular of the characters played by Bana.
:; All square: In match play, a match is all square ( tied ) when both players or teams have won the same number of holes.
:; Ambrose: A system of team play whereby each player takes a tee shot, after which the most favorable ball position is chosen.
:; Away: Describing the golfer whose ball is farthest from the hole.
:; Ball: A small sphere used in playing golf, which is intended to be struck by a player swinging a club.
:; Blade: ( i ) A type of iron where the weight is distributed evenly across the back of the club-head as opposed to mainly around the perimeter ( see cavity back ).
:; Bump and run: A low-trajectory shot that is intended to get the ball rolling along the fairway and up onto the green.
:; < span id =" Bunker "> Bunker </ span >: A depression in bare ground that is usually covered with sand.
:; Cavity back: Any iron whose design characteristic is such that the weight is distributed primarily around the outer edges of the club-head in order to maximize forgiveness on off-center hits.
:; Chip: A short shot ( typically played from very close to and around the green ), that is intended to travel through the air over a very short distance and roll the remainder of the way to the hole.

:; and can
:; Cor pulmonale: Untreated cor pulmonale can cause right heart failure from chronic pulmonary hypertrophy.
:; Gimme: Refers to a putt that the other players agree can count automatically without actually being played ( under the tacit assumption that the putt would not have been missed ).
:; Mud ball: A golf ball that has soil or other debris stuck to it which can affect its flight.
:; Pro shop: A shop at a golf club, run by the club professional, where golf equipment can be purchased.
:; Rowan Matchplay: A form of singles Matchplay which can be played by 3 or more players.
:; Unplayable: A player can declare his ball unplayable at any time when it is in play ( other than at a tee ), and can drop the ball either within two club-lengths, or further from the hole in line with the hole and its current position, or where they played his last shot.
:; Data format: Data must be stored in a format which can be meaningfully accessed now and in the future.

:; and be
:; Debugging: While writing an application, a programmer will recompile and test often, and so compilation must be fast.
:; Expanded Suffrage: The Jacksonians believed that voting rights should be extended to all white men.
:; Manifest Destiny: This was the belief that white Americans had a destiny to settle the American West and to expand control from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific and that the West should be settled by yeoman farmers.
:; In contention: A player with a chance of winning a tournament is said to be " in contention ".
:; Local rule: An addition to the rules of golf applying to abnormal conditions that may be found on a particular golf course.
:; Member's bounce: Any favorable bounce of the golf ball that improves what initially appeared to be an errant shot.
:; Pace: The speed at which a putt must be struck to get to the hole.
:; Preferred lies: A Local rule that allows the ball in play to be lifted, cleaned and moved on the fairway during adverse course conditions.
:; Tap-in: Often called a " gimme ", a tap-in is a ball that has come to rest very close to the hole, leaving only a very short putt to be played.
:; Tee: A small peg, usually made of wood or plastic, placed in the ground upon which the golf ball may be placed prior to the first stroke on a hole.
:; Technology reliance: If data requires a special program to view it, say, as an image, then software must also be available to both interpret the basic data file and also render it appropriately.
:; Reproducibility: Digital information must be able to be reproduced as originally intended or available.

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