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Page "Turning" ¶ 14
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:; and generation
:; Machine code generation: Some compilers compile source code directly into machine code.

:; and for
:; Optical coherence tomography ( OCT ): Testing through the use of optical scattering for coronary artery disease.
:; Hard Disk recorder solutions for MIDI sequencers
:; Intermediate representations: When a language is compiled to an intermediate representation, that representation can be optimized or saved for later execution without the need to re-read the source file.
:; Volute: A handrail end element for the bullnose step that curves inward like a spiral.
:; Aim: Generally, the direction in which your target lies and the direction you intend for your ball to go.
:; Attend ( the flag-stick ): When a player holds and removes the flag-stick for another player.
:; Ball-washer: A device found on many tees for cleaning golf balls.
:; Cart: The four-wheeled electrical or gas-powered vehicle for use in transporting players and their equipment from hole to hole.
:; 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.
:; Clubhouse: A building on a golf course providing facilities for golfers, typically including changing rooms, bar, restaurant, offices for club officials and noticeboards with information about local rules, the conditions of the course, upcoming events etc.
:; Compression: The measurement for expressing the hardness of a golf ball, normally 90 compression.
:; Condor: A four-under par shot ; for example, a hole-in-one on a par 5.
:; Dead: TV-broadcaster slang for a shot in which there is no favorable outcome possible.
:; Dogleg: A hole where the fairway is straight for some distance and then bends to the left or right.
:; Double cross: A shot whereby a player intends for a fade and hits a hook, or conversely, intends to play a draw and hits a slice.
:; < span id =" Draw "> Draw </ span >: A shot that, for a right-handed golfer, curves to the left ; often played intentionally by skilled golfers.
:; < span id =" Fade "> Fade </ span >: A shot that, for a right-handed golfer, curves slightly to the right, and is often played intentionally by skilled golfers.
:; Fairway: The area of the course between the tee and the green that is well-maintained allowing a good lie for the ball
:; GCSAA: The American professional association for golf course superintendents.
:; Halfway house or Halfway hut: A building, generally between the 9th and 10th holes, providing light snacks and refreshments for golfers during their round.
:; Interlocking grip: Grip style where ( for right-handed players ) the pinkie finger of the right hand is hooked around the index finger of the left.
:; Marker: ( i ) A small metal or plastic disk used to mark the position of a ball on the green if it has been lifted for cleaning etc ( ii ) one who is appointed by the Committee to record a competitor ’ s score in stroke play.
:; Mashie niblick: Term used for a 6 / 7 iron in the early 1900s.
:; 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.

:; and turning
:; Tapered turning: a ) from the compound slide b ) from taper turning attachment c ) using a hydraulic copy attachment d ) using a C. N. C.
:;: Hard turning is a turning done on materials with a Rockwell C hardness greater than 45.

:; and shape
:; Banana-ball: The result of a severe fade that results in a trajectory in the shape of a banana.
:; Shrimp: A severe hook, named because it resembles the shape of a shrimp.
:; Wood: A type of club where the head is generally bulbous in shape except for the club-face.

:; 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.
:; 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.
:; 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.

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