Meaning Closure
What does Closure mean? Here you find 50 meanings of the word Closure. You can also add a definition of Closure yourself

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Closure


The vertical distance from the apex of a structure to the lowest structural contour that contains the structure. Measurements of both the areal closure and the distance from the apex to the lowest clo [..]
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

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Closure


 A perceptual organizing process that leads individuals to see incomplete figures as complete.
Source: apa.org (offline)

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Closure


An administrative action limiting or prohibiting access to a specific geographic or jurisdictional area for the purposes of reducing wildfire or the risk it poses to life, property, and/or resources. [..]
Source: nwcg.gov

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Closure


The period of time after a landfill has reached its permitted capacity but before it has received certification of closure from a state regulatory agency. During the closure period, certain activities [..]
Source: wm.com

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Closure


late 14c., "a barrier, a fence," from Old French closure "enclosure; that which encloses, fastening, hedge, wall, fence," also closture "barrier, division; enclosure, hedge, f [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Closure


Legal restriction, but not necessarily elimination of specified activities such as smoking, camping, or entry that might cause fires in a given area.
Source: fs.fed.us (offline)

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Closure


A sale resulting from following up on an inquiry from dir- ect mail advertising.
Source: smartbiz.com (offline)

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Closure


The bringing to an end, finish or conclusion, typically in discussions or debates. [D02471]
Source: maxwideman.com

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Closure


a way of ending a debate and causing a vote to be taken straight away on the matter being discussed, even though some members may still wish to speak
Source: aph.gov.au

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Closure


closing: approaching a particular destination; a coming closer; a narrowing of a gap; "the ship's rapid rate of closing gave them little time to avoid a collision&quot [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Closure


See macroeconomic closure.
Source: www-personal.umich.edu

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Closure


the act of closing, the act of ending parliamentary debate
Source: eenglish.in

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Closure


Synonym splice closure.
Source: atis.org (offline)

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Closure


The binding which defines the scope of execution. In JavaScript, functions create a closure context. Learn more General knowledge
Source: developer.mozilla.org

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Closure is a Gestalt principle of perceptual organization that explains how humans fill in visual gaps in order to perceive disconnected parts as a whole object. For example, can you tell what shape t [..]
Source: alleydog.com

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Closure


Supplementary or short length units used at corners or jambs to maintain bond patterns.
Source: selectstone.com

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Closure


(from social networks literature) Can be seen as the opposite of structural holes. The degree of likelihood that everyone in a network knows everyone else in the network, or the likelihood that if A knows B and B knows C that A knows C. Can also see this as the degree of connectedness of a social network.
Source: hks.harvard.edu (offline)

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Closure


The procedure by which a debate may be terminated by a majority decision of the house, even though all members wishing to speak may not have had the opportunity to do so.
Source: ontla.on.ca (offline)

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Closure


Closure is a term used in media analysis, including film studies, to indicate restriction on the range of meanings potentially available from a text. Cluster analysis: Cluster analysis is a multivaria [..]
Source: qualityresearchinternational.com

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Closure


Closures are something like C callbacks, a pointer to a function that you can pass as a parameter. In addition to the method, some context around that method is snapshotted to go along with it in the [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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Closure


A procedure preventing further adjournment of debate on any motion or on any stage of a bill and requiring that the motion come to a vote at the end of the sitting in which it is invoked. After a que [..]
Source: parliament.gov.gy

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Closure


(n) approaching a particular destination; a coming closer; a narrowing of a gap(n) a rule for limiting or ending debate in a deliberative body(n) a Gestalt principle of organization holding that there [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Closure


The experience of completion or finality. Points of closure typically occur at the ends of works, with lesser points of closure occuring at phrase boundaries. In speech, the closure of spoken phrases is known to be influenced by five factors: (1) the presence of a silent pause at the phrase boundary, (2) lengthening of the final stressed syllable, [..]
Source: music-cog.ohio-state.edu (offline)

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Closure


A mathematical term which says that if you operated on any two real numbers A and B with +, -, * or /, you get a real number.
Source: shodor.org (offline)

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Closure


The procedure a landfill operator must follow when a landfill reaches its legal capacity for solid waste: ceasing acceptance of solid waste and placing a cap on the landfill site. No more waste can be [..]
Source: environmentallawyers.com

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Closure


The procedure a landfill operator must follow when a landfill reaches its legal capacity for solid ceasing acceptance of solid waste and placing a cap on the landfill site.
Source: infohouse.p2ric.org

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Closure


The procedure a landfill operator must follow when a landfill reaches its legal capacity for solid ceasing acceptance of solid waste and placing a cap on the landfill site.
Source: ehso.com

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Closure


Methods to repair breaks in abdominal Tissues caused by Trauma or to close surgical incisions during abdominal Surgery.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Closure


The closing of any Health Facility, e.g., Health centers, Residential Facilities, and Hospitals.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Closure


Therapeutic closure of spaces caused by the extraction of Teeth, the congenital absence of Teeth, or the excessive space between Teeth.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Closure


The tendency to perceive an incomplete pattern or object as complete or whole. This includes the Gestalt Law of Closure.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Closure


A term used to describe a metal or molded cap which effects a primary seal when properly applied to a container.
Source: alphap.com

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Closure


Closure indicates that a firm has closed or plans to close permanently.
Source: hoosierdata.in.gov

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Closure


An anonymous subroutine that, when a reference to it is generated at run time, keeps track of the identities of externally visible lexical variables even after those lexical variables have supposedly gone out of scope. They're called "closures" because this sort of behavior gives mathematicians a sense of closure.
Source: archive.oreilly.com (offline)

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Closure


A function object that captures free variables, and is said to be “closed” over the variables visible at the time it is created.
Source: docs.scala-lang.org

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Closure


An anonymous
Source: perldoc.perl.org

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A method that closes over some local variables. The closure can access the local variables which existed when the closure was created. The ability to dynamically create and return closures that can ac [..]
Source: opendylan.org

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Closure


Closure is based on the design of genetic operators to ensure the validity of functions generated by the genetic program. If closure is achieved, the functions will not cause errors, regardless of the [..]
Source: stumptown.com

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Closure


n. "enclosure, fence," s.v. closure OED. KEY: closure@n
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Closure


n 1 closure 1
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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Closure


object representing a context. C++ does not have general closures, but function objects can be efficiently used to hold specific parts of a context relevant to a computation. TC++PL 22.4.7, 18.4.
Source: stroustrup.com

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Closure


Relative velocity of one aircraft in relation to another.
Source: f-16.net

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Closure


relative rate of approaching aircraft
Source: northcentralwis.net

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Closure


Relative velocity of one aircraft in relation to another.
Source: voodoo-world.cz

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Closure


Any activities which help students summarize key points learned and how the new knowledge relates to the objectives to be learned.
Source: beesburg.com

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Closure


or more properly structural closure is a term geologists use to define the volume of rock in which oil, or gas, can accumulate. Closure is based on the shape of a geological structure and is usually defined as a specific depth. In some reservoirs oil can accumulate outside of structural closure and such reservoirs are referred to as having their hy [..]
Source: hurricaneenergy.com (offline)

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Closure


The area within the lowest closing contour of a structure, also, a closed structure. See four-way dip closure. 
Source: gas2grid.com (offline)

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Closure


The point at which all corrective actions have been completed for resolved audit recommendations (USAID Automated Directives System - ADS - Chapter 591, 592).
Source: developmentwork.net

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Closure


The process by which a landfill stops accepting wastes and is closed under Federal and/or State guidelines to ensure the long-term protection of the public and the environment.
Source: contaminatedsite.com (offline)

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Closure


An event or occurrence that signifies an ending. A feeling of completeness; the experience of an emotional conclusion, usually to a difficult period. A device to facilitate temporary and repeata [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org





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