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cryell
(verb)
The act of crying and yelling at the same time.

#newwords #definitions

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smad
(adjective)
The state of being sad and mad at the same time.

#newwords #definitions

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The Registry The Registry is a sophisticated social network and profile system prevalent in Northern countries, designed to integrate seamlessly with a vast array of virtual reality environments and electronic devices. It functions as a comprehensive digital platform where all individuals are registered, and can voluntarily list their boundaries and preferences, specifically their hard and soft limits, regarding sexual activities and interactions. 

Discover the secrets of Priceless Gemstones BDSM Erotica. #pricelessgemstones #erotica #lorebook #bdsm #kink #Priceless #Gemstones #Lore #Book #Definitions #Articles

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If #religions and #ethnicities and #cultures lead to what we have now, then obliterate the lot of it. Eliminate all #definitions of #division. Are you a human and is that good enough? Did you get dropped here just like everybody else? Fucking really don't know shit? That's right. Human rights are...

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Revisiting General principles of learning progressions by Charlotte Waters (2021): research.acer.edu.au/rc21-30/rc20...

#definitions #features #challenges

Interested in learning progressions? --> research.acer.edu.au/rc21-30/rc20...

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WORD MAN: MENDICANT Learn English Words - MENDICANT - Meaning, Vocabulary with Pictures and Examples I just found the word MENDICANT in the John D. McDonald ...

#words WORD MAN: MENDICANT #mendicant #pedantic #arroyo #silicosis #wordman #dictionary #definitions #meanings #dictionaries
tg-editor-proofreader.blogspot.com/2026/03/word...

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Do you know the three distinct meanings of "hardcore" when used in a sexual context? Find out at prowank.com/hardcore - It's an all free and complete website. #Enjoy! ( #hardcore, #sex, #hardcoreSex, #sexual, #definitions, #sexualDefinition, #sexTalk)

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WORD MAN: CIVISM What does civism mean? So far, Isaac Asimov has twice used civism  so far in the novel The Caves of Steel . Meaning of civism: the virtues...

#words WORD MAN: CIVISM #civism #dictionary #definitions #meanings #dictionaries
tg-editor-proofreader.blogspot.com/2026/03/word...

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✨Snippets from a PhD ✨

#283/? : contemporaneous meaning
📸 29 November 2025 12:57:37
#phdlife #sgsah #universityofedinburgh #eca #research #academia #performanceart #definitions #academicwriting

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WORD MAN: STENTORIAN Stentorian Meaning I found a new word in an Agatha Christie novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles . The word is stentorian , which means ...

#words WORD MAN: STENTORIAN #stentorian #impecunious #dictionary #definitions #meanings #dictionaries
tg-editor-proofreader.blogspot.com/2026/02/word...

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Original post on simonwillison.net

Andrej Karpathy talks about "Claws" Andrej Karpathy talks about "Claws" Andrej Karpathy tweeted a mini-essay about buying a Mac Mini ("The apple store person told me they are se...

#definitions #ai #andrej-karpathy #generative-ai #llms #ai-agents #openclaw #agentic-engineering

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Original post on simonwillison.net

Deep Blue We coined a new term on the Oxide and Friends podcast last month (primary credit to Adam Leventhal) covering the sense of psychological ennui leading into existential dread that many soft...

#definitions #careers #ai #generative-ai #llms #ai-assisted-programming #oxide #bryan-cantrill […]

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Original post on simonwillison.net

How Generative and Agentic AI Shift Concern from Technical Debt to Cognitive Debt How Generative and Agentic AI Shift Concern from Technical Debt to Cognitive Debt This piece by Margaret-Anne Store...

#definitions #ai #generative-ai #llms #ai-assisted-programming #vibe-coding

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MEANING: GOBBLEDYGOOK Learn WEIRD English Words - GOBBLEDYGOOK - Meaning, Vocabulary with Pictures and Examples I just looked up the word gobbledygook , and it d...

#words MEANING: GOBBLEDYGOOK #dictionary #definitions #meanings #gobbledygook #dictionaries
tg-editor-proofreader.blogspot.com/2025/04/mean...

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WORD MAN: Junoesque How to Pronounce Junoesque FOUND IN AN AGATHA CHRISTIE NOVEL: She was a handsome young woman, built on Junoesque lines, with dark flashing...

#wordman WORD MAN: JUNOESQUE #Junoesque #words #definitions #dictionary #meanings
tg-editor-proofreader.blogspot.com/2026/02/word...

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No, she Literally doesn't.

#Linguistics #definitions

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WORD MAN: SHAMBOLIC How to Use a Dictionary WORD MAN: I just found the word SHAMBOLIC on YouTube. I'd heard the song SHAMBALA by Three Dog Night, but I'd nev...

#words WORD MAN: SHAMBOLIC #shambolic #meanings #dictionary #definitions
tg-editor-proofreader.blogspot.com/2026/02/word...

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Alternative #Dictionary #Definitions

Polyglot - a tropical disease that afflicts the parrot species.

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astroturf 1. involving the publishing of opinions or comments on the internet, in the…

#Definitions #WordoftheDay

dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionar...

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What a Taxonomy is Not Although taxonomies have become increasingly common within enterprises and on websites, they are not always well understood. Taxonomies are sometimes confused with other knowledge organizations systems, such as classification systems, website navigation schemes, business glossaries, or ontologies. A taxonomy is a controlled, structurally organized set of unambiguous concepts, which may describe content, information, or data, and which users may be interested in querying about. A taxonomy links users to the information they seek by bringing together various users’ terms with the terms that occur in the content or data. Prior to the emergence of modern taxonomies in applications for digital information, indexes at the back of printed books had been serving a similar role (and they still do). I have already written a blog post on Taxonomy Definition, so to further clarify what taxonomies are, it is also useful to explain what taxonomies are _not_. Taxonomies are not the same as **classification systems/schemes** (such as industrial classification codes for economic analysis or medical classifications for health data collection or health insurance purposes), as the latter have mutually exclusive classes to which items are assigned for non-redundant analysis. Classification thus allows comparison, analysis, identification, location, and other actions associated with things based on their class. Taxonomies are organized sets of concepts tagged to content or associated with data, where the taxonomy organization serves merely for finding the desired concept or providing context for tagging. Thus, a concept may have more than one broader concept and thus appear in more than one place in the taxonomy hierarchy. Taxonomies are not the same as **navigation systems** , which are common in websites or web applications. A taxonomy is more similar to an index, while a navigation system is more similar to a table of contents. Menu labels in a navigation can link to only one page, whereas concepts in a taxonomy are tagged to multiple pages, content items, or data records. Navigation systems are only used in browsing, but taxonomies may be both browsed and searched for their concepts. Navigation systems reflect paths and established links to content, whereas taxonomies comprise concepts that become metadata when tagged to content. Navigation systems, like classification systems, are not frequently or easily changed, whereas taxonomies can grow and change continuously, as needed. Taxonomies are not the same as **business glossaries** , which are lists of terms of relevance to an organization’s business along with their definitions, although there is usually considerable overlap between the terms an organization gathers for its glossary(s). Not only is there usually the difference of a taxonomy’s hierarchical structure (although categories could be assigned to glossary terms), but the ultimate objectives differ, resulting in differences of scopes of term inclusion. A business glossary includes all terms of importance to the business but may not be understood by everyone, so definitions need to be provided. There could be terms of importance, that need no definition, such as Marketing, so they are not included in the glossary. Technical terms and acronyms are usually included. A taxonomy, on the other hand, includes only the terms/concepts of which there are sufficient documents, pages, or content items to be tagged for retrieval. Sufficient content on a subject is a leading criteria for including a concept in a taxonomy. Finally, taxonomies are not the same as **ontologies**. The confusion between the two may arise because taxonomies and ontologies are increasingly used in combination, and software (now referred to as TOMS for taxonomy-ontology management system) allows you to create a taxonomy and ontology as a single project or knowledge model. An ontology can be an upper-level model of a knowledge domain, but domain-specific ontologies may include multiple hierarchical levels of subclasses, and thus include what are essentially taxonomies. A taxonomy, however, can stand on its own without an ontology and serve the functions of tagging and retrieval via browsing and/or searching without the extension of an ontology. Ontologies support complex, multi-part queries involving reactions, and they support reasoning and inference, which taxonomies do not. Each utilizes different data models: SKOS for taxonomies and RDFS and OWL for ontologies. Prior blog posts I have written that compare taxonomies to other knowledge organization systems in more detail are: * Taxonomies vs. Ontologies * Taxonomies vs. Thesauri * Taxonomies vs. Thesauri: Practical Implementations * Navigation Schemes vs. Taxonomies * Classification Systems vs. Taxonomies * Subject Headings vs. Taxonomies

What a Taxonomy is Not Although taxonomies have become increasingly common within enterprises and on websites, they are not always well understood. Taxonomies are sometimes confused with other know...

#Taxonomy #definitions

Origin | Interest | Match

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Although taxonomies have become increasingly common within enterprises and on websites, they are not always well understood. Taxonomies are sometimes confused with other knowledge organizations systems, such as classification systems, website navigation schemes, business glossaries, or ontologies. A taxonomy is a controlled, structurally organized set of unambiguous concepts, which may describe content, information, or data, and which users may be interested in querying about. A taxonomy links users to the information they seek by bringing together various users’ terms with the terms that occur in the content or data. Prior to the emergence of modern taxonomies in applications for digital information, indexes at the back of printed books had been serving a similar role (and they still do). I have already written a blog post on Taxonomy Definition, so to further clarify what taxonomies are, it is also useful to explain what taxonomies are _not_. Taxonomies are not the same as **classification systems/schemes** (such as industrial classification codes for economic analysis or medical classifications for health data collection or health insurance purposes), as the latter have mutually exclusive classes to which items are assigned for non-redundant analysis. Classification thus allows comparison, analysis, identification, location, and other actions associated with things based on their class. Taxonomies are organized sets of concepts tagged to content or associated with data, where the taxonomy organization serves merely for finding the desired concept or providing context for tagging. Thus, a concept may have more than one broader concept and thus appear in more than one place in the taxonomy hierarchy. Taxonomies are not the same as **navigation systems** , which are common in websites or web applications. A taxonomy is more similar to an index, while a navigation system is more similar to a table of contents. Menu labels in a navigation can link to only one page, whereas concepts in a taxonomy are tagged to multiple pages, content items, or data records. Navigation systems are only used in browsing, but taxonomies may be both browsed and searched for their concepts. Navigation systems reflect paths and established links to content, whereas taxonomies comprise concepts that become metadata when tagged to content. Navigation systems, like classification systems, are not frequently or easily changed, whereas taxonomies can grow and change continuously, as needed. Taxonomies are not the same as **business glossaries** , which are lists of terms of relevance to an organization’s business along with their definitions, although there is usually considerable overlap between the terms an organization gathers for its glossary(s). Not only is there usually the difference of a taxonomy’s hierarchical structure (although categories could be assigned to glossary terms), but the ultimate objectives differ, resulting in differences of scopes of term inclusion. A business glossary includes all terms of importance to the business but may not be understood by everyone, so definitions need to be provided. There could be terms of importance, that need no definition, such as Marketing, so they are not included in the glossary. Technical terms and acronyms are usually included. A taxonomy, on the other hand, includes only the terms/concepts of which there are sufficient documents, pages, or content items to be tagged for retrieval. Sufficient content on a subject is a leading criteria for including a concept in a taxonomy. Finally, taxonomies are not the same as **ontologies**. The confusion between the two may arise because taxonomies and ontologies are increasingly used in combination, and software (now referred to as TOMS for taxonomy-ontology management system) allows you to create a taxonomy and ontology as a single project or knowledge model. An ontology can be an upper-level model of a knowledge domain, but domain-specific ontologies may include multiple hierarchical levels of subclasses, and thus include what are essentially taxonomies. A taxonomy, however, can stand on its own without an ontology and serve the functions of tagging and retrieval via browsing and/or searching without the extension of an ontology. Ontologies support complex, multi-part queries involving reactions, and they support reasoning and inference, which taxonomies do not. Each utilizes different data models: SKOS for taxonomies and RDFS and OWL for ontologies. Prior blog posts I have written that compare taxonomies to other knowledge organization systems in more detail are: * Taxonomies vs. Ontologies * Taxonomies vs. Thesauri * Taxonomies vs. Thesauri: Practical Implementations * Navigation Schemes vs. Taxonomies * Classification Systems vs. Taxonomies * Subject Headings vs. Taxonomies

Although taxonomies have become increasingly common within enterprises and on websites, they are not always well understood. Taxonomies are sometimes confused with other knowledge organizations sy...

#Taxonomy #definitions

Origin | Interest | Match

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What a Taxonomy is Not Although taxonomies have become increasingly common within enterprises and on websites, they are not always well understood. Taxonomies are sometimes confused with other knowledge organizations systems, such as classification systems, website navigation schemes, business glossaries, or ontologies. A taxonomy is a controlled, structurally organized set of unambiguous concepts, which may describe content, information, or data, and which users may be interested in querying about. A taxonomy links users to the information they seek by bringing together various users’ terms with the terms that occur in the content or data. Prior to the emergence of modern taxonomies in applications for digital information, indexes at the back of printed books had been serving a similar role (and they still do). I have already written a blog post on Taxonomy Definition, so to further clarify what taxonomies are, it is also useful to explain what taxonomies are _not_. Taxonomies are not the same as **classification systems/schemes** (such as industrial classification codes for economic analysis or medical classifications for health data collection or health insurance purposes), as the latter have mutually exclusive classes to which items are assigned for non-redundant analysis. Classification thus allows comparison, analysis, identification, location, and other actions associated with things based on their class. Taxonomies are organized sets of concepts tagged to content or associated with data, where the taxonomy organization serves merely for finding the desired concept or providing context for tagging. Thus, a concept may have more than one broader concept and thus appear in more than one place in the taxonomy hierarchy. Taxonomies are not the same as **navigation systems** , which are common in websites or web applications. A taxonomy is more similar to an index, while a navigation system is more similar to a table of contents. Menu labels in a navigation can link to only one page, whereas concepts in a taxonomy are tagged to multiple pages, content items, or data records. Navigation systems are only used in browsing, but taxonomies may be both browsed and searched for their concepts. Navigation systems reflect paths and established links to content, whereas taxonomies comprise concepts that become metadata when tagged to content. Navigation systems, like classification systems, are not frequently or easily changed, whereas taxonomies can grow and change continuously, as needed. Taxonomies are not the same as **business glossaries** , which are lists of terms of relevance to an organization’s business along with their definitions, although there is usually considerable overlap between the terms an organization gathers for its glossary(s). Not only is there usually the difference of a taxonomy’s hierarchical structure (although categories could be assigned to glossary terms), but the ultimate objectives differ, resulting in differences of scopes of term inclusion. A business glossary includes all terms of importance to the business but may not be understood by everyone, so definitions need to be provided. There could be terms of importance, that need no definition, such as Marketing, so they are not included in the glossary. Technical terms and acronyms are usually included. A taxonomy, on the other hand, includes only the terms/concepts of which there are sufficient documents, pages, or content items to be tagged for retrieval. Sufficient content on a subject is a leading criteria for including a concept in a taxonomy. Finally, taxonomies are not the same as **ontologies**. The confusion between the two may arise because taxonomies and ontologies are increasingly used in combination, and software (now referred to as TOMS for taxonomy-ontology management system) allows you to create a taxonomy and ontology as a single project or knowledge model. An ontology can be an upper-level model of a knowledge domain, but domain-specific ontologies may include multiple hierarchical levels of subclasses, and thus include what are essentially taxonomies. A taxonomy, however, can stand on its own without an ontology and serve the functions of tagging and retrieval via browsing and/or searching without the extension of an ontology. Ontologies support complex, multi-part queries involving reactions, and they support reasoning and inference, which taxonomies do not. Each utilizes different data models: SKOS for taxonomies and RDFS and OWL for ontologies. Prior blog posts I have written that compare taxonomies to other knowledge organization systems in more detail are: * Taxonomies vs. Ontologies * Taxonomies vs. Thesauri * Taxonomies vs. Thesauri: Practical Implementations * Navigation Schemes vs. Taxonomies * Classification Systems vs. Taxonomies * Subject Headings vs. Taxonomies

What a Taxonomy is Not Although taxonomies have become increasingly common within enterprises and on websites, they are not always well understood. Taxonomies are sometimes confused with other know...

#Taxonomy #definitions

Origin | Interest | Match

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MSC – Mobile Switching Center » tmack Mobile Switching Center is the heart of mobile communication, managing everything from call setup to user mobility. Its role is crucial in ensuring that we can stay connected, making it a fundamental component of the telecommunications landscape.

MSC stands for Mobile Switching Center. It is responsible for routing voice calls and SMS as well as other services (such as conference calls, FAX, and circuit switched data).
Learn the basics here: 1bluebass.com/2025/1... #Definitions #ITAcronyms #Learning

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Do you know the three distinct meanings of "hardcore" when used in a sexual context? Find out at prowank.com/hardcore - It's an all free and complete website. #Enjoy! ( #hardcore, #sex, #hardcoreSex, #sexual, #definitions, #sexualDefinition, #sexTalk)

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definitions: vacuums (a new dmtt poem) | Joz Varlo aka MX Kelly Get more from Joz Varlo aka MX Kelly on Patreon

It's been a long time since I wrote a "definitions, manifestations, translations, transmissions" #dmtt #poem. I got this one the other night. Here is "definitions; vacuums"

#definitions #manifestations #translations #transmissions #poetry #shortpoetry #shortpoem

www.patreon.com/posts/defini...

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WORD MAN: USURY Word of the year for 2025 is "67," Dictionary.com announces WORD MAN: I just found Bernie Sanders using the word USURY  online. So I looked...

#words WORD MAN: USURY #usury #meanings #definitions #dictionaries
tg-editor-proofreader.blogspot.com/2026/01/word...

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#definitions #dictionary

www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/t...

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How to spot fascism
#Fascism #Definitions

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Original post on simonwillison.net

My answers to the questions I posed about porting open source code with LLMs Last month I wrote about porting JustHTML from Python to JavaScript using Codex CLI and GPT-5.2 in a few hours while als...

#definitions #open-source #ai #generative-ai #llms #ai-assisted-programming #ai-ethics […]

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Original post on simonwillison.net

My answers to the questions I posed about porting open source code with LLMs Last month I wrote about porting JustHTML from Python to JavaScript using Codex CLI and GPT-5.2 in a few hours while als...

#definitions #open-source #ai #generative-ai #llms #ai-assisted-programming #ai-ethics

Origin […]

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