The act of paying farmers in order not to grow crops on areas of land, or land of this type

(SAVE)

to save for a particular purpose:

He sets aside some time every day to read to his children.

After melting the chocolate, set it aside and beat the eggs.

(IGNORE)

to decide not to consider something:

We need to set aside our differences and begin to cooperate.

To set aside a legal decision or a judgment is to state that it is no longer in effect:

The court of appeals set aside his conviction.

Facetˈ fAs·ɪt/ грань

She has so many facets to her personality.

Flicker to shine with a light that is sometimes bright and sometimes weak:

I felt a cold draft and the candle started to flicker.

to appear for a short time or to make a sudden movement:

A smile flickered across her face.

He'd been in a coma for weeks, when all of a sudden he flickered an eyelid.

Flickeringadjective

a flickering candle/fire

a flickering hope

noun a situation in which a light is sometimes bright and sometimes weak:

the soft flicker of candlelight

a feeling or expression of an emotion or quality that does not last very long:

There was a flicker of hope in his eyes.

few doubt(даут)(мало кто сомневался в) its importance at the heart of the world's most widely available software platform: the web.

But few doubt that the authorities will intervene wherever they feel threatened. Few would doubt Australia's economy is in a better position than the US's today. But in such a situation, few doubt that the defence minister would give the order.\ In the ancient world few doubted strange powers existed and were used.

Beget/bɪˈɡet/ present participle begetting, past tense begotor begat, past participle begotten or begot

old use to be the father of:

In the Bible it says that Adam begat Cain and Abel.

to cause:

Poverty begets hunger, and hunger begets crime.

Put simplyPut simply, it was an offer we couldn’t refuse. \ Put simply, if the tokenizer were to invoke stateful parsing rules to figure out whether a should be considered a distinct token or just part of another token, that would be lexing.

Mire/maɪr/ (WET EARTH)

[ C usually singular ] an area of deep, wet, sticky earth

Miry майри adjective

Verb to cause something to sink in deep, wet, sticky earth, or fig. to cause someone or an activity to become trapped in a difficult situation:

fig. At the time the country was mired in the Great Depression.

Where we get mired in the muck of politics is in finding solutions to the problems.

Don't get mired down(погрязнуть) in the same thing your whole life if you can avoid it.

They get mired in the details and take too long to get to the point.

Redundant/rɪˈdʌn.dənt/

Redundancy noun C2 (especially of a word, phrase, etc.) unnecessary because it is more than isneeded:

In the sentence "She is a single unmarried woman", the word "unmarried" is redundant. \ there are certainly steps to optimize the performance of the execution, including collapsing redundant elements, etc.

Mercilessadjective having or showing no mercy:

There are reports of merciless attacks on innocent civilians.

There was no shelter from the merciless (= very strong) heat.

collapse collapseverb(FALL)

[ I/T ] to fall down suddenly, or to cause to fall down:

[ I ] A piece of the wall collapsed on top of him.

collapseverb(FAIL)

[ I ] to be unable to continue or to stay in operation; fail:

Talks between management and unions collapsed today.

noun [ C/U ] an inability to continue or to stay in operation:

[ U ] the collapse of the Soviet empire

Collapse can also refer to an attack of extreme physical weakness or unconsciousness in a person:

[ U ] Toward the end of the race he was near collapse.

broad strokesSo, I'm painting only with broad strokes here. President Barack Obama described the operation in broad strokes Sunday night. \ This is what Romney proposes, in broad strokes, for both income and corporate taxes

traverse to move or travel through an area:

Moving sidewalks traverse the airport.\ Stanley traversed the continent from west to east.

predominant/prɪˈdɒm.ɪ.nənt/ (преобладающих)more noticeable or important, or larger in number, than others:

Research forms the predominant part of my job.

Dancers have a predominant role in this performance. There are two predominant models for how scope works.

There's no getting around(обойти) the fact that without the optimizations, code runs slower.

Наши рекомендации