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Syntactic sugar





Encyclopedia results for Syntactic sugar

  1. Syntactic sugar

    Syntactic sugar is a computer science term that refers to syntax within a programming language that is designed to make things easier to read or to express, while alternative ways of expressing them exist. It makes the language sweeter for humans to use things can be expressed more clearly, more concisely, or in an alternative style that some may prefer. Specifically, a construct in a language is called syntactic sugar if it can be removed from the language without any effect on what the language can do Function engineering functionality and expressive power will remain the same. All applications of the construct can be systematically replaced with equivalents that do not use it. For instance, in imperative programming language s, for loop s can be systematically replaced with while loop s, which in turn can be systematically replaced with goto s. More generally, the term is used to characterize ... C , the property computer science property construct may be called syntactic sugar it is roughly ... broadly, programming languages have been called By whom date July 2010 machine code with a lot of syntactic sugar , which is actually incorrect since the concept of syntactic sugar is applied within a programming ... syntax in order to save typing have been characterized as syntactic sugar . ref http bugs.sun.com ... to Curly bracket programming language bracket delimited languages , that syntactic sugar causes cancer of the semicolon . See Epigrams on Programming . Derivative terms Syntactic salt The metaphor has been extended by coining the term syntactic salt , which indicates a feature designed to make it harder to write bad code. Specifically, syntactic salt is a hoop programmers must jump ... http www.retrologic.com jargon S syntactic sugar.html The Jargon File v4.4.7 syntactic sugar ref Notes ... programmers consider required type declarations to be syntactic salt. In VB.NET , a requirement to write ... 2011 syntactic salt. Citation needed date December 2008 Syntactic saccharin Another extension is syntactic ...   more details



  1. Syntactic closure

    In computer science , syntactic closures are an implementation strategy for a hygienic macro system. The actual arguments to a macro call are closed in the current environment, such that they cannot inadvertently reference bindings introduced by the macro itself. See also Syntax rules Syntax case External links ftp ftp.cs.utexas.edu pub garbage carl msthesis.ps Syntactic exposures A Lexically Scoped Macro Facility for Extensible Compilers http community.schemewiki.org ?syntactic closures syntactic closures at Schemewiki Category Computer science Compu prog stub ...   more details



  1. Syntactic category

    Unreferenced date March 2007 A syntactic category is either a phrasal category , such as noun phrase or verb phrase , which can be decomposed into smaller syntactic categories, or a lexical category , such as noun or verb , which cannot be further decomposed. The three criteria used in defining syntactic categories are The type of meaning it expresses The type of affixes it takes The structure in which it occurs In terms of phrase structure rules , phrasal categories can occur to the left side of the arrow while lexical categories cannot. The lexical categories are traditionally called the part of speech parts of speech . They include nouns, verbs, adjective s, and so on. See also Syntax Phrase Clause Sentence linguistics Lexical category Phrase structure rules DEFAULTSORT Syntactic Category Category Syntactic categories Syntax stub es Categor a sint ctica nl Syntactische categorie ...   more details



  1. Syntactic monoid

    In mathematics and computer science , the syntactic monoid M L of a formal language L is the smallest monoid that recognizable language recognizes the language L . Syntactic quotient Given math S subset M math of a monoid M , one may define sets that consist of formal left or right Inverse element In an unital magma inverses of elements in S . These are called string operations quotients , and one may define right or left quotients, depending on which side one is concatenating. Thus, the right quotient of S by an element math m in M math is the set math S m u in M vert um in S . math Similarly, the left quotient is math m setminus S u in M vert mu in S . math Syntactic equivalence The syntactic quotient induces an equivalence relation on M , called the syntactic relation , or syntactic equivalence or syntactic congruence induced by S . The right syntactic equivalence is the equivalence relation math sim S s,t in M times M , vert S s S t . math Similarly, the left syntactic relation is math , S sim s,t in M times M , vert s setminus S t setminus S . math A double sided congruence may be defined as math u sim S v Leftrightarrow forall x, y in M xuy in S Leftrightarrow xvy in S . math Syntactic monoid The syntactic quotient is compatible with concatenation in the monoid, in that one has math M s t M ts math for all math s,t in M math and similarly for the left quotient . Thus, the syntactic quotient is a monoid morphism , and induces a quotient monoid math M S M sim S. math It can be shown that the syntactic monoid of S is the smallest monoid that recognizable language recognizes S that is, M S recognizes S , and for every monoid N recognizing S , M S is a quotient of a submonoid of N . The syntactic monoid of S is also the transition monoid of the minimal automaton of S . Equivalently ... to compute the syntactic monoid of S . Examples The bicyclic monoid is the syntactic monoid ... of a syntactic monoid. References Jean Eric Pin, http www.liafa.jussieu.fr jep PDF HandBook.pdf Syntactic ...   more details



  1. Syntactic pivot

    Unreferenced date March 2010 Linguistic typology topics The syntactic pivot is the verb argument around which Sentence linguistics sentence s revolve , in a given language . This usually means the following If the verb has more than zero arguments, then one argument is the syntactic pivot. If the verb agrees with at least one of its arguments, then it agrees with the syntactic pivot. In coordinated propositions, in languages where an argument can be left out, the omitted argument is the syntactic pivot. The first two characteristics have to do with simple morphosyntax , and from them it is quite obvious the syntactic pivot in English language English and most other European languages is what we call the subject grammar subject . An English verb cannot lack a subject even in the imperative mood , the subject is implied to be you and is not ambiguous or unspecified , and cannot have just a direct object grammar object and no subject and at least in the present tense, and for the verb to be it agrees partially with the subject. The third point deserves an explanation. Consider the following sentence I shot the deer and killed it. There are two coordinated propositions, and the second proposition lacks an explicit subject, but since the subject is the syntactic pivot, then the second proposition is assumed to have the same subject as the first one. One cannot do this with a direct object in English . The result would be either ungrammatical or with a different meaning nowiki nowiki I shot the deer and I killed. it deliberately deleted The syntactic pivot is a feature of the morphosyntactic alignment of the language. In nominative accusative language s the syntactic pivot is the so called subject the argument marked with the nominative case . In ergative absolutive language s the syntactic pivot may be the argument marked with the absolutive case , but this is not always so ... the default syntactic pivot to shift its semantic role from agent to patient in a coordinated proposition ...   more details



  1. Syntactic change

    Multiple issues tone March 2010 context March 2010 To the extent that a language is vocabulary cast into the mould of a particular syntax and that the basic structure of the Sentence linguistics sentence is held together by functional items , with the lexical items filling in the blanks, syntactic change is no doubt what modifies most deeply the physiognomy of a particular language. Syntactic change affects grammar in its morphological and syntactic aspects and is seen as gradualism Linguistics and language change gradual , the product of chain reaction s and subject to Frequency cyclic drift . ref Henri Wittmann 1983 . Les r actions en cha ne en morphologie diachronique. Actes du Colloque de la Soci t internationale de linguistique fonctionnelle 10.285 92. http homepage.mac.com noula ling 1983c morphodia.pdf ref The view that creole languages are the product of catastrophism is heavily disputed. Notes reflist Category Syntax Category Historical linguistics ling stub ...   more details



  1. Syntactic web

    Syntactic Web is a phrase meant to describe the current, mostly HTML based World Wide Web , in order to distinguish it from the Semantic Web , a concept in which web pages carry information that can be read and understood by machines in a systematic way. The term stems from the contrast between syntax , which is the mechanics of a language used to convey information, and semantics , which is the actual meaning of that information. On a syntactic web page, which is any document on the web that does not contain special tagging to convey meaning, meaning is difficult to parse by a computer program . An example is a site that gives the weather for any city in the world, in HTML form. Even though the site offers dynamic, database driven information, it is presented in a purely syntactic way. One could imagine a computer program that tried to retrieve this weather information through text parsing or web scraping . Though it would be possible to do, if the creators of the site ever decide to change around the layout or HTML of the site, the computer program would most likely need to be rewritten in some way. In contrast, if the weather site published its data semantically, the program could retrieve that semantic data, and the site s creators could change the look and feel of the site without affecting that retrieval ability. See also Pragmatic web External links http www.ecs.soton.ac.uk harnad Hypermail Syntactic.Web Syntactic Web Discussion List Archive Category Semantic Web ...   more details



  1. Syntactic methods

    Orphan date May 2010 Refimprove date May 2007 In software engineering , syntactic methods are techniques for developing correct software Computer program programs . The techniques attempt to detect, and thus prevent, certain kinds of defects computer bug bugs by examining the structure of the code being produced at its syntactic rather than semantic level. Usage Syntactic methods are often used when formal methods are not an option, and are often a simpler and, more importantly, cheaper alternative. In non mission critical systems, formal methods may prove to be too expensive for the benefit they provide. The costs of modelling, personnel, execution and development may often outweight the benefits gained by preventing possible failures. This approach revolves around the use of an abstract dependency graph which is created from the system in question. An abstract dependency graph is a directed graph , a graph of vertex graph theory vertices connected by one way edges. Most often, the vertices and edges of the graph represent the inputs and outputs of functions in or components of the system. By inspecting the created abstract dependency graph, the developer can detect syntactic anomalies or Preece anomalies in the system. While anomalies are not always defects, they often provide clues to finding defects in a system. Therefore, the anomalies in a system help point the developer in the right ... more semantic than syntactic. When formal methods prove too costly, a system can be checked ... Syntactic theory of software architecture. Dean, Thomas R., Cordy, James R. IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering 21 4 , pp.  302 313 1995 Syntactic type abstraction Grossman, D., Morrisett ... and Evolution 10 6 , pp.  415 441 Reverse engineering of embedded software using syntactic ... hamburg.de TGI forschung projekte asmics eng.html Project Algebraic and Syntactic ... Syntactic Methods in Computer Graphics by Pavel Slavik DEFAULTSORT Syntactic Methods Category Formal ...   more details



  1. Syntactic foam

    Unreferenced date December 2008 Image Syntacticfoam.JPG 300px thumb Syntactic foam, shown by Scanning electron microscope scanning electron microscopy , consisting of glass microsphere s within a matrix of epoxy resin. Syntactic foams are composite material s synthesized by filling a metal , polymer or ceramic matrix with hollow particles called microballoon s, syntactic meaning put together . ref name lm2 Cite web url http www.crgrp.net technology materialsportfolio syntactics.shtml title What is Syntactic Foam? accessdate 2009 08 07 publisher Cornerstone Research Group ref The presence of hollow particles results in lower density, higher strength, a lower coefficient of thermal expansion , and, in some cases, radar or sonar stealth technology transparency . Tailorability is one of the biggest advantages of these materials. The matrix material can be selected from almost any metal, polymer or ceramic. A wide variety of microballoons are available, including cenosphere s, glass microsphere s, and carbon and polymer microballoons. The most widely used and studied foams are glass microballoon epoxy , glass microballoon aluminium and cenosphere aluminium. Facts date December 2008 The compression physical compressive properties of syntactic foams primarily depend on the properties of microballoons, whereas the tension physics tensile properties depend on the matrix material that holds the microballoons together. There are two main ways of adjusting the properties of these materials. The first method is to change the volume fraction of microballoons in the syntactic foam structure. The second method is to use microballoons of different wall thickness. In general, the compressive ... www.sampe.org store paper.aspx?pid 943 title Novel Processing of High Performance Structural Syntactic ... year 2002 first G last Karst ref Current applications for syntactic foam include buoyancy modules ... DEFAULTSORT Syntactic Foam Category Composite materials Category Foams fr Mousse syntactique nl Synthetisch ...   more details



  1. Syntactic gemination

    Syntactic gemination , or syntactic doubling , is an external sandhi phenomenon in Italian language Italian and some other Italo Western languages . It consists in the lengthening gemination of the initial consonant after words of certain categories. The phenomenon is variously referred to in the English language as word initial gemination , phonosyntactic consonantal gemination , as well as under the native Italian terms raddoppiamento sintattico RS , raddoppiamento fonosintattico RF , raddoppiamento iniziale, rafforzamento iniziale della consonante In standard Italian, syntactic doubling occurs after the following words with exceptions described below all stressed strong monosyllable s monosillabi forti and many unstressed weak monosyllables , e, o, a, da, fra, che, se, ma, pi , pu , gru, gnu, re, blu, tre, ci , s , gi , gi , l , l , qua, qui, n , sci, t Example Andiamo a c asa IPA an dja mo ak ka sa , Let s go home all polysyllables stressed on the final vowel this and the previous types are called oxytone words Example Parigi una citt b ellissima IPA pa ri d i una t it tabbel lissima ... 0415942071 ref Syntactic means that gemination spans word boundaries, as opposed to the ordinary geminated consonants as e.g., in grappa . ref name borelli The emergence of syntactic doubling has ... more recent research also pays attention to wikt synchronic synchronic aspects. ref name borelli Syntactic ... substratum . Syntactic doubling usually is not reflected in spelling, unless a new word is produced ... transcription, e.g., in the Zingarelli dictionary, the words that lead to syntactic doubling have an asterisk ... subject to complicated lexical, syntactic, and phonological prosody linguistics prosodic conditions. References reflist http www.locuta.com edoubling.html Syntactic Doubling Robert A. Hall, Jr. Initial Consonants and Syntactic Doubling in West Romance , Language , Vol. 40, No. 4 1964 , pp.  ... , Monash University . DEFAULTSORT Syntactic Doubling Category Phonetics Category Italian language ...   more details



  1. Syntactic predicate

    A syntactic predicate specifies the syntactic validity of applying a production in a formal grammar and is analogous ... of an LL parser by providing arbitrary lookahead. In their original implementation, syntactic predicates had the form ? and could only appear on the left edge of a production. The required syntactic condition could be any valid context free grammar fragment. More formally, a syntactic predicate ..., syntactic predicates implicitly order the productions so that predicated productions specified ... Programmers date 2007 page 328 isbn 354063293X ref Overview Terminology The term syntactic ... Semantic and Syntactic Predicates to LL k parsing pred LL k , Army High Performance Computing ... semantic predicate s also discussed in that paper . Syntactic predicates have been called multi step ... below. This article uses the term syntactic predicate throughout for consistency and to distinguish ... empty intersection is aaabbbccc . Other Considerations In most formalisms that use syntactic predicates ... this example of a syntactic predicate stat declaration ? declaration expression which is intended ... error. In the first production of rule stat, the syntactic predicate declaration ? indicates that declaration is the syntactic context that must be present for the rest of that production to succeed ... declaration, the rule declaration will be recognized twice once as syntactic predicate and once during ... Form of Syntactic Predicate Although by no means an exhaustive list, the following parsing parsers and formal grammar grammar Formal system formalisms employ syntactic predicates ANTLR Parr & Quong As originally implemented, ref name Parr&Quong1993 syntactic predicates sit on the leftmost edge of a production ... if the syntactic predicate first accepts the next portion of the input stream. Although ordered ... , Vol. 25, No. 7, pp. 789 810, July 1995. ref Augmented Pattern Matcher Balmas Balmas refers to syntactic ... to further rules. Parsing expression grammar s Ford Ford s PEGs have syntactic predicates expressed ...   more details



  1. Syntactic hierarchy

    orphan date May 2010 Refimprove date April 2007 Syntactics, or syntax, is concerned with the way sentences are constructed from smaller parts, such as words and phrases. Two steps can be distinguished in the study of syntactics. The first step is to identify different types of units in the stream of speech and writing. In natural languages, such units include sentences, phrases, and words. In artificial languages, lexemes, tokens, and formulas are usually found among the basic units. The second step is to analyse how these units build up larger patterns, and in particular to find general rules that govern the construction of sentences. http people.dsv.su.se vadim cmnew chapter2 ch2 21.htm The syntactic hierarchy from smaller to larger units is as follows Morpheme Word Phrase Sentence linguistics Sentence clause Written language Text The term morphosyntax morpho syntactic hierarchy is a synonym. See also Semiotics Syntax Further reading Moles, Robert N. http netk.net.au LegalTheory ComputersStamper.asp Legal Theory lecture Ronald Stamper and Norm based systems on the Networked Knowledge web site. Category Hierarchy Category Syntax syntax stub ...   more details



  1. Syntactic Structures

    infobox Book name Syntactic Structures title orig translator image include the file and the image size ... 1st Edition english pub date media type pages 117 isbn oclc preceded by followed by Syntactic Structures ... 1957 15 ref The publishing of Syntactic Structures is believed by many academics to be a watershed ..., linguist Robert Lees linguist Robert Lees wrote cquote Chomsky s book on syntactic structures ... would not be published as a book until almost 20 years later in 1975. Publication It was not LSLT , but Syntactic ... mountco 18.htm ref and a revised version of these notes were published as Syntactic Structures in the first ... appeared in 1957, under the title Syntactic Structures . In a more recent interview Dillinger & Pal cio ... of Syntactic Structures course notes for undergraduate science students published by accident ... from fellow American linguists, like Lees 1957 above, made Syntactic Structures visible on the linguistic .... ref Searle 1972 and Newmeyer 1996 ref Overview of topics in Syntactic Structures In Syntactic ... of the basic problems of syntactic structure. ref Chomsky 1957 17 ref Grammar models Assuming that a set ... of phoneme s. In Syntactic Structures , Chomsky invented the term generative and used it in a particular ... Paul Postal wrote in 1964 that most of the syntactic conceptions prevalent in the United States ... upon the current linguistic theory than Chomsky s Syntactic Structures . ref Lyons 1966 ref Prominent historian of linguistics R. H. Robins wrote in 1967 that the publication of Chomsky s Syntactic ... historian of linguistics Frederick Newmeyer considers Syntactic Structures revolutionary for two ... Newmeyer 1996 24 26 ref Syntactic Structures also introduced Chomsky s Mentalism philosophy mentalist ... study of language . Before Syntactic Structures , psychologists treated human language in terms ... language using separate syntactic and semantic components inside the mind, and presented TGG as a coherent ... in the following decades. Syntactic Structures also initiated an interdisciplinary dialog between Philosophy ...   more details



  1. Syntactic ambiguity

    for philosophical considerations of ambiguity ambiguity Syntactic ambiguity is a property of Sentence linguistics sentence s which may be reasonably interpreted in more than one way, or reasonably interpreted to mean more than one thing. Ambiguity may or may not involve one word having two parts of speech or homonym s. Syntactic ambiguity arises not from the range of meanings of single words, but from the relationship between the words and clauses of a sentence, and the sentence structure implied thereby. When a reader can reasonably interpret the same sentence as having more than one possible structure, the text is equivocal and meets the definition of syntactic ambiguity. In legal disputes, court s may be asked to interpret the meaning of syntactic ambiguities in statutes or contracts. In some instances, arguments asserting highly unlikely interpretations have been deemed frivolous . Syntactic and semantic ambiguity In syntactic ambiguity, the same sequence of words is interpreted as having different syntactic structures. In contrast, in semantic ambiguity, the structure remains the same, but the individual words are interpreted differently. ref Layman E. Allen Some Uses of Symbolic Logic in Law Practice 1962J M.U.L.L. 119, at 120 ref ref L.E. Allen & M.E. Caldwell Modern Logic and Judicial Decision Making A Sketch of One View in H.W. Baade ed. Jurimetrics Basic Books Inc., New York, USA, 1963, 213, at 228 ref In headlines Newspaper headline s are written in a telegraphic style headlinese which often Zero copula omits the copula and therefore lends itself to syntactic ambiguity, usually of the garden path sentence garden path type. The name crash blossoms was proposed for these ambiguous headlines by Dan Bloom and Mike O Connell in the Testy Copy Editors discussion group ... them syntactic ambiguities, while other linguistic theories consider them semantic ambiguities ... 63B6C5E2ABB6A511CA25714C000CFF37 file syntactic.pdf A detailed discussion of syntactic ambiguity ...   more details



  1. Syntactic movement

    Syntactic movement is a fact that must be expressed somehow by every grammar of human languages and was first captured by structuralist linguists who called it discontinuous constituents other terms are displacement , or simply movement cf. Graffi 2001 . It aims at capturing the fact that certain constituents appear to have been displaced from the position where they receive important features of interpretation cf. Carnie 2006 . Types of movements A typical example is the following 1 which story does John told Peter that Mary knows of? The phrase which story is interpreted as the object of knows of rather than the object of told , although it is closer to the latter verb. There can be different pieces of empirical evidence to support this intuition, based on pronoun interpretation or morphological case. For example, the possibility for a preverbal interrogative pronoun to be marked Accusative can only be explained if one assumes that it was moved from the postverbal object position, witness the ungrammaticality of 3 2 whom does he love? 3 whom loves her? Within generative grammar it has been traditionally proposed that there are two instances of movement. Argumental movement A movement displacing a phrase in a position where a fixed grammatical function is assigned, such as in movement of the object to subject position in passives 4 the book was read Non Argumental movement A bar movement displacing a phrase in a position where a fixed grammatical function is not assigned, such as movement of the subject or the object to preverbal position in interrogatives 5 who do you think loves Mary? 6 whom do you think Mary loves? A different partition among types of movements is phrasal vs. head movement. In fact, not only a phrase can be displaced, but also the head of a phrase, such as for example ... arrive tomorrow? Constraints on movement Since it was first proposed, the theory of syntactic ..., Massachusetts. Category Syntactic transformation he ...   more details



  1. Sugar

    pp semi protected small yes Other uses Sugar disambiguation For the common table sugar, see sucrose . Image Sugar 2xmacro.jpg right thumb Magnification of grains of sucrose , the most common sugar. nutritionalvalue name Sugar, granulated kJ 1619 protein 0 g fat 0 g carbs 99.98 g sugars 99.91 g fiber ... usda 1 right 1 Sugar is a term for a class of edible crystal line carbohydrate s, mainly sucrose ... flavor . In food , sugar almost exclusively refers to sucrose, which primarily comes from sugar cane and sugar beet . Other sugars are used in industrial food preparation, but are usually known by more specific names glucose , fructose or fruit sugar, high fructose corn syrup , etc. Currently, Brazil has the highest per capita production of sugar. ref name consumption International sugar statistics http www.illovosugar.com World of sugar Sugar Statistics International.aspx ref Sugar, because ... levels more quickly than starch , but results from more than twenty studies demonstrate that sugar ... Many experts believe that eating too much sugar does not cause diabetes mellitus diabetes , ref American ... 3Did 26ItemID 3D11129 26libID 3D11127 myth sugar diabetes site eatright.org&hl en&gl us&pid bl&srcid ... sugar can lead to obesity , which may increase the risk of diabetes. ref name dietetic ref name ... of type 2 diabetes ref Vasanti S. Malik et al., 2010, Sugar Sweetened Beverages and Risk of Metabolic ... sugar sweetened beverages may increase the risk of metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes not only ... url http jada.ada.org cgi reprint 140 suppl 1 25S ref History Main History of sugar Sugar has been ... . ref name Sharpe cite web url http www.siu.edu ebl leaflets sugar.htm title Sharpe, Peter 1998 . Sugar Cane Past and Present . Illinois Southern Illinois University. ref However, sugar remained relatively .... Page 311. ref Crystallized sugar was discovered by the time of the Gupta dynasty Imperial Guptas ... butter and sugar, carried sugar by various trade routes . ref name Adas Traveling Buddhist monks ...   more details



  1. No Sugar

    unreferenced date March 2010 Unreferenced date December 2009 No Sugar is a play written by Jack Davis playwright Jack Davis which is intended to expose Australia n racism . It is a story set during the Great Depression , in Northam, Western Australia , Moore River Native Settlement and Perth, Western Australia Perth . The play focuses on the Millimurras, an Australian Aboriginal family and their attempts at subsistence. The play explores the marginalisation of women and Aborigines within 1920s and 1930s Australian society. The pivotal themes in the play include racism, white empowerment superiority, Aboriginal disempowerment, the materialistic values held by the white Australians, Aboriginal dependency on whites and the value held by the Aborigines of family. A. O. Neville , the Chief Protector of Aborigines during the period in which the play is set, appears as a character. The play was first performed by the Playhouse Company in association with the Australian Theatre Trust , for the Festival of Perth on 18 February 1985. Perambulant model The perambulant model is a technique used in drama to dislocate the audience involving multiple points of focus. Throughout No Sugar it is employed to convey a sense of displacement to the audience, representative of the isolation felt by the Aboriginal people unable and unwilling to assimilate to White Culture. Characters Jimmy Munday, the protagonist, is an Aboriginal man who despises the fact he is not equal in society and is not regarded as a person by the government. He has a heart condition which leads to his death after arguing with Mr Neville at the Australia Day celebrations. Gran Munday, Jimmy s mother, a traditional Aboriginal woman, she dislikes the new white mans ways and strongly believes in the importance of family. She is the matriarch of the family and supports her son and daughter and grandchildren. Gran is a supporting ... 2010 DEFAULTSORT No Sugar Play Category Plays by Jack Davis Category 1985 plays Category Stolen ...   more details



  1. Sugar, Sugar

    For the Baby Bash song, see Suga Suga Infobox single Name Sugar, Sugar Cover Sugar, sugar.jpg Artist The Archies Album Everything s Archie Released July 26, 1969 Recorded 1969 Length 2 48 Genre Bubblegum pop Label RCA Records Calendar 1969 1970 br RCA Records RCA post 1970 Writer Andy Kim br Jeff Barry Producer Jeff Barry Last single Feelin So Good S.K.O.O.B.Y. D.O.O br 1969 This single Sugar, Sugar br 1969 Next single Jingle Jangle br 1969 Audiosample Upper caption Audio sample Audio file Sugar, Sugar by The Archies.ogg Sugar, Sugar is a pop song written by Jeff Barry and Andy Kim . It was a four week 1969 number one hit single by fictional characters The Archies . Produced by Jeff Barry , the song was originally released on the album Everything s Archie. The album is the product of a group of studio musician s managed by Don Kirshner . Ron Dante s lead vocals were accompanied by those of Toni ... morning cartoon series. The Archies Sugar, Sugar was the 1969 Billboard Year End number one single ... 27 ref On February 5, 2006, Sugar, Sugar was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame , as co ... Hills hotel refusing to do Sugar, Sugar. ref Kirshner interview on Popular Song Soundtrack of the Century ... may instead actually have been offered a tune called Sugar Man , but with the passage of time the parties involved simply mis remembered it as being Sugar, Sugar , in large part because it made a better ... relied on record companies correctly compiling and supplying sales information, and Sugar, Sugar ... 16 April 2008 ref Nevertheless, following the introduction of music download s in 2004, Sugar, Sugar ..., Sugar, Sugar was RIAA certification classified by the RIAA as a gold record in August 1969, ref ... 12 November 2010 ref Former President George W. Bush has said Sugar, Sugar is one of his favorite ... jbptitbpp gdl indrapradh 33488 Gulaku Sugar Sugar Indonesia Advertisement Archie Comics IOM Category ... Songs written by Jeff Barry de Sugar, Sugar it Sugar, Sugar pt Sugar, Sugar ...   more details



  1. Syntactic pattern recognition

    Syntactic pattern recognition or structural pattern recognition is a form of pattern recognition , in which each object can be represented by a variable cardinality set of symbolic, nominal data nominal features. This allows for representing pattern structures, taking into account more complex interrelationships between attributes than is possible in the case of flat, numerical feature vector s of fixed dimensionality, that are used in statistical classification . Syntactic pattern recognition can be used instead of statistical pattern recognition if there is clear structure in the patterns. One way to present such structure is by means of a String computer science strings of symbols from a formal language . In this case the differences in the structures of the classes are encoded as different formal grammar grammars . An example of this would be diagnosis of the heart with Electrocardiogram ECG measurements. ECG waveform s can be approximated with diagonal and vertical line segments. If normal and unhealthy waveforms can be described as formal grammars, measured ECG signal can be classified as healthy or unhealthy by first describing it in term of the basic line segments and then trying to parse the descriptions according to the grammars. Another example is tessellation of tiling patterns. A second way to represent relations are Graph mathematics graphs , where nodes are connected if corresponding subpatterns are related. An item can be labeled as belonging to a class if its graph representation is isomorphic with prototype graphs of the class. Typically, patterns are constructed from simpler sub patterns in a hierarchical fashion. This helps in dividing the recognition task into easier subtask of first identifying sub patterns and only then the actual patterns. Structural methods provide description of items, which may useful on its own right. For example, syntactic ... isbn 0 471 55238 0 cite book last Bunke first Horst title Structural and syntactic pattern recognition ...   more details



  1. List of syntactic phenomena

    A list of phenomena in syntax . Anaphora linguistics Anaphora Agreement linguistics Agreement Antecedent contained deletion Differential Object Marking Grammatical case Case Clitic s Argument control Control Dummy pronoun s Ergative verb Existential clause s Expletive Syntactic expletives Expletives Heavy NP shift Inverse copula Inverse copula sentences Movement paradox es Parasitic gap s Pro drop language Pro drop Raising Reciprocal grammar Reflexive pronoun s Reflexive verb s Unaccusative verb s Wh movement Category Linguistics lists Category Syntax ...   more details



  1. Sugar (disambiguation)

    wiktionarypar sugar Sugar is a class of edible substances. Sugar may also refer to TOCright Chemistry The monosaccharide, disaccharide, or oligosaccharide forms of carbohydrates Computing Syntactic sugar ... providing customer relationship management CRM software Sugar desktop environment , used on the OLPC Music Sugar musical Sugar musical Sugar American band Sugar Korean band Sugar Aloha album Sugar Aloha album Sugar Tokio album Sugar Tokio album Sugar Tonic album Sugar Tonic album Sugar Stanley Turrentine album Sugar Stanley Turrentine album Sugar Ladytron song Sugar Ladytron song Sugar Maceo Pinkard song Sugar Maceo Pinkard song Sugar Flo Rida song Sugar Flo Rida song Sugar System of a Down song Sugar System of a Down song Sugar Armand Van Helden song Sugar Armand Van Helden song Sugar, Sugar , a song by The Archies Sugar Music , a record label Sugar Nancy Sinatra album Sugar Nancy Sinatra album , by Nancy Sinatra Sugar , a song by Bikini Kill on the album Pussy Whipped Film and television Sugar 2004 film Sugar 2004 film , a romantic drama Sugar 2008 film Sugar 2008 film , a baseball drama Sugar TV series Sugar TV series , a Canadian cooking show hosted by Anna Olson Sugar, a Batman Forever character Sugar, an A Little Snow Fairy Sugar character People Stephanie Beard born 1981 , Canadian actress, stage name Sugar Rashad Evans born 1979 , American mixed martial artist, nicknamed Sugar Jessica Kiper born 1979 , Survivor contestant, nicknamed Sugar Sugar Ray Leonard born 1956 , American boxer Shane Mosley born 1971 , American boxer, nicknamed Sugar Ray Seales born 1952 , U.S. Virgin Islands born American boxer, nicknamed Sugar Sugar Ray Robinson 1921 1989 , American boxer Alan Sugar born 1947 , English entrepreneur and TV personality Ronald Sugar born 1949 , American businessman Other uses Sugar Magazine , a girls Teen magazine Sugaring epilation , a method of hair removal See also Sugaar , a Basque deity Sugar soap , a cleaning material Sugarland disambiguation disambig ...   more details



  1. Sugar Grove

    Sugar Grove is the name of some places in the United States Sugar Grove, Illinois Sugar Grove, Ohio Sugar Grove, Pennsylvania Sugar Grove, Virginia , in Smyth County Sugar Grove, Montgomery County, Virginia Sugar Grove, West Virginia Sugar Grove Township disambiguation , name of different townships disambig de Sugar Grove it Sugar Grove nl Sugar Grove pl Sugar Grove pt Sugar Grove vo Sugar Grove ...   more details



  1. Sugar Refiner

    A sugar refiner is a company that refines sugarcane or sugar beet into sugar . Sugar Refiner may also refer to SS Sugar Refiner SS Sugar Refiner , a ship owned by Silvertown Services Ltd . disambig ...   more details



  1. Sugar Ridge

    Sugar Ridge can refer to Sugar Ridge Township, Clay County, Indiana Sugar Ridge, Ohio disambig ...   more details



  1. Sugar River

    Sugar River can refer to one of several rivers in the United States The Sugar River Michigan The Sugar River New Hampshire The Sugar River New York The Sugar River Illinois The Sugar River Wisconsin It might also refer to The Sugar River State Trail in Wisconsin. geodis ...   more details




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