What is the meaning of DATA. Phrases containing DATA
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Medial Articular Nerve
Business Partnership Working Group
Plum Brook Ordnance Works
Garden State Chiropractic Society
General Appropriation Act
coefficient of error
Southern Regional Testing Agency
Total Conveyor Service Distributor
Web Services Invocation Framework
Chungchong North Province
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v. t.
An opinion or judgment of the worth, extent, or quantity of anything, formed without using precise data; valuation; as, estimations of distance, magnitude, amount, or moral qualities.
a.
Relating to, or resulting from, experience, or experiment; following from empirical methods or data; -- opposed to nativistic.
n.
The office or employment of a datary.
pl.
of Datum
v. t.
To judge and form an opinion of the value of, from imperfect data, -- either the extrinsic (money), or intrinsic (moral), value; to fix the worth of roughly or in a general way; as, to estimate the value of goods or land; to estimate the worth or talents of a person.
a.
That may be dated; having a known or ascertainable date.
n. pl.
See Datum.
n.
An officer in the pope's court, having charge of the Dataria.
n.
Formerly, a part of the Roman chancery; now, a separate office from which are sent graces or favors, cognizable in foro externo, such as appointments to benefices. The name is derived from the word datum, given or dated (with the indications of the time and place of granting the gift or favor).
n.
A book or table, containing a calendar of days, and months, to which astronomical data and various statistics are often added, such as the times of the rising and setting of the sun and moon, eclipses, hours of full tide, stated festivals of churches, terms of courts, etc.
a.
A section of memory in a computer used for temporary storage of data, in which the last datum stored is the first retrieved.
n.
One of the necessary data or values upon which a system of calculations depends, or general conclusions are based; as, the elements of a planet's orbit.
n.
A publication giving the computed places of the heavenly bodies for each day of the year, with other numerical data, for the use of the astronomer and navigator; an astronomical almanac; as, the "American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac."
n.
That branch of applied geometry which gives rules for finding the length of lines, the areas of surfaces, or the volumes of solids, from certain simple data of lines and angles.
a.
That can be derived; obtainable by transmission; capable of being known by inference, as from premises or data; capable of being traced, as from a radical; as, income is derivable from various sources.
v. t.
To from an opinion of, as to amount,, number, etc., from imperfect data, comparison, or experience; to make an estimate of; to calculate roughly; to rate; as, to estimate the cost of a trip, the number of feet in a piece of land.
n.
The doctrine that the existence of a personal Deity, an unseen world, etc., can be neither proved nor disproved, because of the necessary limits of the human mind (as sometimes charged upon Hamilton and Mansel), or because of the insufficiency of the evidence furnished by physical and physical data, to warrant a positive conclusion (as taught by the school of Herbert Spencer); -- opposed alike dogmatic skepticism and to dogmatic theism.
a.
A data structure within random-access memory used to simulate a hardware stack; as, a push-down stack.
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