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  • 15:34, 19 February 2024Idiosyncracy (hist | edit) ‎[523 bytes]Helpful (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<!-- Idiosyncratic perhaps most widely means unusual and/or distinctive habits. When about a person, people, idiosyncracies are the peculiar habits or features of that person, eccentric or not. In linguistics, idiosyncratic symbols can refer words that have meanings specific to specific people. When you say "collocations are statistically idiosyncratic sequences of words", you say that you would not expect them to occur together that much, and they probably ha...")
  • 12:45, 19 February 2024Triplets (hist | edit) ‎[426 bytes]Helpful (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<!-- In music, * a regular (part of a) beat made of three parts In knowledge bases * semantic triplets, e.g. in RDF In linguistics * etymological triplets * minimal triplets, an extension of the idea of minimal pairs * sometimes a reference to n-grams for n=3 (3-grams) In programming, sometimes a reference to a 3-tuple, e.g. as in "rgb triplet" -->")
  • 12:38, 19 February 2024Words and meanings (hist | edit) ‎[8,774 bytes]Helpful (talk | contribs) (Created page with " {{stub}} ==Lexicology== {{stub}} '''Lexicology''' is the general and objective study of words and their meanings. In some ways, it is the lexical part of philology. In other ways it is closely related to etymology, phraseology, and semantics. '''Lexicography''' can be said to be the applied part of lexicology, as it studies the use of words. 'Lexicography' is also and is often used to refer to the compilation of a lexicon. Note that lexicogr...")
  • 01:40, 18 February 2024Instance methods, static methods, class methods (hist | edit) ‎[2,833 bytes]Helpful (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<!-- For context, most functions defined on a class will be considered '''instance methods''': they will work on an instance of that same class. Calling them will always take. (exactly how explicitly it is in the ''definition'' of this function may vary with the language) They will accept one, and do so implicitly somehow - some languages make you write out the object reference ('self' or 'this' turns up around here), others have it implied. That is not the only...") originally created as "Static method"
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