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Page "Numeral (linguistics)" ¶ 33
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term and score
A few artists still managed to score disco hits in the early 1980s, but the term " disco " became unfashionable in the new decade and was eventually replaced by " dance music ", " dance pop ", and other identifiers.
For Americans the term is most known from the opening of the Gettysburg Address: " Four score and seven years ago, our forefathers ...".
However, in spite of its initial short term success and critical reaction, as represented by a review in La Gazzetta privilegiata which stated that " A new masterwork has been added to Italian music ..... Belisario not only pleased and delighted, but also conquered, enflamed and ravished the full auditorium ", in the long run, had " Donizetti poured music of the calibre of his Lucia di Lammermoor into the score of Belisario the shortcomings of its wayward plot and dramatic structure would matter less ".
Hector Berlioz, who coined the term " choral symphony ", built on this concept in his " dramatic symphony " Roméo et Juliette while explaining his intent in the five-paragraph introduction in that work's score ( Berlioz 1857, 1 ).
In the top division, the term kachikoshi means a score of 8 – 7 or better, as opposed to makekoshi which indicates a score of 7 – 8 or worse.
The term " score " is used in exactly the sense that one uses the term to describe a music score: a series of notes that allow anyone to perform the work, an idea linked both to what Nam June Paik labeled the " do it yourself " approach and to what Ken Friedman termed " musicality.
The term is less frequently applied to film music, with such music being referred to instead as the " film score " or " soundtrack ".
The pageant originated as a beauty contest in 1921, but now prefers to avoid this term since Swimsuit and Evening Wear comprise only 35 percent of the overall score used to judge contestants.
The modern Hungarian term for this special script ( coined in the 19th century ) rovás derives from the verb róni (' to score ') which is derived from old Uralic, general Hungarian terminology describing the technique of writing ( írni ' to write ', betű ' letter ', bicska ' knife ( also: for carving letters )') derive from Turkic, which supports the theory of transmission via Turks further.
; Old Market: In Bristol skittles the term Old Market refers to the felling of the front pin, the middle pin and the back pin with one ball and is considered slightly bad luck because the remaining frame of pins offers less chance for a decent frame score with the middle column of pins felled.
* Any Old How: the term used to describe a ball that has missed its intended target, but has knocked over quite a few pins that count towards the score.
* Net promoter score, a term relating to customer loyalty research
The term " shutout " is not in common usage in European sport, and thus is not applied to European rugby, and there is no alternative term for the occurrence of a team achieving a no score, except to say that the team scored " nil ".
As the UDF list, led by Simone Veil, obtained a very good result compared with RPR's score, the quarrels between the two parties and the rivalry between Giscard d ' Estaing and Chirac contributed, in 1981, to the defeat of the incumbent UDF president who ran for a second term.
In India, where a large number of movies are produced as musicals, the term ' music director ' is commonly used for the composer and music producer of the songs and score used in the film.
In this paper, he also introduced TF-IDF, or term-frequency-inverse-document frequency, a model in which the score of a term in the a document is the ratio of the number of terms in that document divided by the frequency of the number of documents in which that term occurs.
The term try comes from try at goal, signifying that originally, grounding the ball only gave the opportunity to try to score with a kick at goal.
For example, a lower-order batsman is sometimes sent in at number 3 with instructions to pinch-hit ( playing aggressively in an attempt to score more runs in fewer balls-a term borrowed from baseball ) to score quick runs and shield better players, as his wicket ( as a less accomplished lower-order batsman ) is less valuable anyway.

term and originates
The term ' ballroom dancing ' is derived from the word ball, which in turn originates from the Latin word ballare which means ' to dance ' ( a ballroom being a large room specially designed for such dances ).
The term Big Brother originates from George Orwell's novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four.
The term capital originates from the Latin capitalis, literally " regarding the head " ( referring to execution by beheading ).
The term " bowl " originates from the shape of the Rose Bowl stadium in Pasadena, California, which was built in 1923 and resembled the Yale Bowl, built in 1915.
The term originates from the ( dēmokratía ) " rule of the people ", which was coined from δῆμος ( dêmos ) " people " and κράτος ( kratos ) " power ", around 400 BCE, to denote the political systems then existing in Greek city-states, notably Athens.
The dumpster diving term originates from the best-known manufacturer of commercial trash bins, Dempster, who use the trade name " Dumpster " for their bins, and the fanciful image of someone leaping head first into a dumpster as if it were a swimming pool.
The term dolmen originates from the expression taol maen, which means " stone table " in Breton, and was first used archaeologically in Théophile Corret de la Tour d ' Auvergne's Origines gauloises.
The term originates from English common law where felonies were originally crimes which involved the confiscation of a convicted person's land and goods ; other crimes were called misdemeanors.
The term originates from the bedroom at the time of childbirth.
The term originates in the United Kingdom general elections for the House of Commons.
The term comb originates from the similarities between simple harmonicas and a hair comb.
The word originates from the Latin loco – " from a place ", ablative of locus, " place " + Medieval Latin motivus, " causing motion ", and is a shortened form of the term locomotive engine, first used in the early 19th century to distinguish between mobile and stationary steam engines.
This term originates from the thread-like topological defects observed in nematics, which are formally called ' disclinations '.
The term originates from joining mono ( one ) and rail, from as early as 1897, possibly from German engineer Eugen Langen who called an elevated railway system with wagons suspended the Eugen Langen One-railed Suspension Tramway ( Einschieniges Hängebahnsystem Eugen Langen ).
Although meritocracy as a term is a relatively recent invention, the concept of a government based on standardized examinations originates from the works of Confucius, along with other Legalist and Confucian philosophers.
The term originates from a 1906 address by William James entitled The Moral Equivalent of War, subsequently published in essay form in 1910.
The term " nibble " originates from the fact that the term " byte " is a homophone of the English word " bite ".
The term originates from a 1981 show, " New York / New Wave ", curated by artist Diego Cortez.
The term itself originates from Greek: παλαιός ( palaios ) meaning " old, ancient ," ὄν, ὀντ-( on, ont -), meaning " being, creature " and λόγος ( logos ), meaning " speech, thought, study ".
The title originates in the term " pr-aa " which means " great house " and it describes the royal palace.
The term conflict of laws itself originates from situations where the ultimate outcome of a legal dispute depended upon which law applied, and the common law courts manner of resolving the conflict between those laws.
The term originates from the meaning " alongside ", and psychology.
The term " profane " originates from classical Latin " profanus ", literally " before ( outside ) the temple ".

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