simplifier การใช้
- He is the great simplifier, whose speed and skill transform foreign tactics into universal art.
- I stumbled upon a perfect life-simplifier : a garlic press that requires no garlic-peeling.
- The library must cover not only the needs of the users, but also the needs of the simplifier.
- Showing them a controller that looks like an amazingly complicated keyboard, Johnson tells the couple, " This is the great simplifier ."
- Constraint handling rules can be seen as a form of concurrent constraint logic programming, but are used for programming a constraint simplifier or solver rather than concurrent processes.
- The government is moving towards a more business friendly environment by setting up a special task force to facilitate business called PEMUDAH, which means " simplifier " in Malay.
- Microsoft, the Redmond, Wash ., giant that has sold 7 million copies of Windows 95 since it debuted in August, has no complaints with the simplifier programs.
- HotFax Menu, a $ 19 simplifier program made by SmithMicro Software of Aliso Viejo, Calif ., saves two mouse clicks by allowing the user to directly access a fax menu from the main bar on the left-hand corner of a computer screen.
- :From the French Wikipedia for Go閘and : " " En r閍lit? il n'y a gu鑢e que la langue fran鏰ise ?faire cette distinction de nomenclature entre ?mouettes ?et ?go閘ands ?: pour simplifier, dans la nomenclature normalis閑, un go閘and est une grosse mouette, et inversement . " " See also Mouette for comparison.
- The linguist Antoine Meillet said, " Sans que l'aspect ext閞ieur de la langue se soit beaucoup modifi? le Latin est devenu au cours de l'epoque imp閞iale une langue nouvelle ", " without the exterior appearance of the language being much modified, Latin became in the course of the imperial epoch a new language " and " Servant en quelque sorte de lingua franca ?un grand empire, le Latin a tendu ?se simplifier, ?garder surtout ce qu'il avait de banal . . . . " " Serving as some sort of lingua franca to a large empire, Latin tended to become simpler, to keep above all what it had of the ordinary . . . ."