Meaning Event
What does Event mean? Here you find 95 meanings of the word Event. You can also add a definition of Event yourself

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Event


A set of outcomes. Cardiovascular events might include a heart attack and gastrointestinal events a GI bleed. The use of the term "event" in medicine comes from probability theory.
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)

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In pharmacology, an unexpected or dangerous reaction to a drug.
Source: medicinenet.com (offline)

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Any significant occurrence in the system or an application that triggers a notification. In Microsoft Dynamics CRM, an event is typically a system or user action that is detected and acted upon by the [..]
Source: msdn.microsoft.com

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An appearance of seismic data as a diffraction, reflection, refraction or other similar feature produced by an arrival of seismic energy. An event can be a single wiggle within a trace, or a consisten [..]
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

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A planned, non-emergency activity. ICS can be used as the management system for a wide range of events, e.g., parades, concerts or sporting events. 
Source: nwcg.gov

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Something that happens at a specific place and/or time
Source: isaca.org

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An event is one or more outcomes of an experiment.
Source: mathgoodies.com

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An action that causes something to happen.
Source: code.org

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An event is an observable occurrence in a system or network.
Source: sans.org

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Any outcome or specified set of outcomes of a random variable.
Source: cfainstitute.org (offline)

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An occurrence that may or may not become a claim. Some claims-made coverages allow for reporting of events.
Source: irmi.com

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1570s, "the consequence of anything" (as in in the event that); 1580s, "that which happens;" from Middle French event, from Latin eventus "occurrence, accident, event, fortune [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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one outcome in a probability experiment. • a subset of the sample space of the experiment. • Each event is denoted by a capital letter, e.g. A, B, C, ...
Source: amathsdictionaryforkids.com

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Event management (as well as log management and fault management) tools are used to collect, report and help with diagnosis of problems (faults) identified in the environment. This segment also includ [..]
Source: gartner.com

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An event is a significant occurrence or happening. As applicable to pipeline safety, an event could be an accident, abnormal condition, incident, equipment failure, human failure, or release.
Source: pipelineawareness.org (offline)

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In probability, a set of outcomes.
Source: math.com

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A point in time when certain conditions have been fulfilled, such as the start or completion of one or more activities. [D00634]
Source: maxwideman.com

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Network message indicating operational irregularities in physical elements of a network or a response to the occurrence of a significant task, typically the completion of a request for information. See also alarm and traps.
Source: wildpackets.com (offline)

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something that happens at a given place and time a special set of circumstances; "in that event, the first possibility is excluded"; "it may rain in which case t [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Something that happens to or with a person
Source: health.gov.au

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An event is a subset of outcome space. An event determined by a random variable is an event of the form A=(X is in A). When the random variable X is observed, that determines whether or not A occurs: [..]
Source: stat.berkeley.edu

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something that happens
Source: eenglish.in

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An occurrence or happening, usually significant to the performance of a function, operation, or task. 2. In Integrated Services Digital Networks (ISDN), an instantaneous occurrence that changes at least one of the attributes of the global status of a managed object. Note: An event (a) may be persistent or temporary, thus allowing for functions, suc [..]
Source: atis.org (offline)

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Internet Glossary An action or occurrence detected by a program. Events can be user actions, such as clicking a mouse button or pressing a key, or system occurrences, such as running out of memory. Most modern applications, particularly those that run in Macintosh and Windows environments, are said to be event-driven, because they are designed to r [..]
Source: comptechdoc.org (offline)

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A notice emitted onto an event bus. Events are often driven by requests for actions to occur on a minion or master and the results of those actions. See also: Salt Reactor.
Source: docs.saltstack.com (offline)

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This article needs a technical review. How you can help. This article needs an editorial review. How you can help. Events are things generated by DOM elements and can be handled by a Javascript code. [..]
Source: developer.mozilla.org

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In probability, a set of outcomes.
Source: mathway.com

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(1) An action or occurrence detected by a program. Events can be user actions, such as clicking a mouse button or pressing a key, or system occurrences, such as running out of memory. Most modern appl [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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1. The occurence of phenomena with a beginning and end. 2. Probablitity theory.Any nameable thing resulting from a trial of chance.
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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An occurrence, such as a birth, marriage, or death, in a person's life.
Source: familysearch.org

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geshenish
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

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An occurrence involving a process that is caused by equipment performance or human action or by an occurrence external to the process.
Source: aiche.org

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1 : something that happens : occurrence 2 : the issue or outcome of a legal action or proceeding as finally determined
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

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(n) - the name used to describe the occurrence of a change in the environment
Source: sherwoodrocks.net (offline)

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An arranged occasion, examples include meeting, convention, exhibition, conference, special event, gala dinner, etc.  All of which can be professionally organised by The Conference People
Source: confpeople.co.uk

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Organized function, such as a conference, congress, tradeshow, gala dinner, meeting, incentive, etc., which can involve different yet related activities. See Function.
Source: eventplannerspain.com

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the consequence of an action; the conclusion; the upshot.
Source: econlib.org

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Examples: a scheduled nonemergency activity (e.g., sporting event, concert, parade, training exercise, large convention, fair, large gathering, etc.). (Source: Introduction to the Incident Command Sys [..]
Source: remm.nlm.gov

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What occurs when two particles collide or a single particle decays. Particle theories predict the probabilities of various possible events occurring when many similar collisions or decays are studied. [..]
Source: aleph.web.cern.ch

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An occurrence of social or personal importance. (physics) A point in spacetime having three spatial coordinates and one temporal coordinate
Source: allwords.com

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I wrote an essay on JDK 1.0.2 events. for the Java Developer’s Journal. I wrote a similar essay on JDK 1.1+ events . The essays track the life cycle of an event from creation to cremation. Have a look [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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State that triggers further actions. The user causes or delivers input for these actions by pressing certain keys, clicking or positioning the mouse pointer over a certain area.
Source: netlexikon.org

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Any logged or recorded action that has a specific date and time assigned to it by either the browser or server.
Source: technologymultipliers.com

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Any network incident that prompts some kind of log entry or other notification.
Source: watchguard.com

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(n) something that happens at a given place and time(n) a special set of circumstances(n) a phenomenon located at a single point in space-time; the fundamental observational entity in relativity theor [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Source: oceannetworks.ca

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 - In the digital world an event is any information acquired or produced by the digital control system.
Source: youngco.com (offline)

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A notification by a program or operating system that "something has happened." An event may be fired (or raised) in response to the occurrence of a pre-defined action (e.g., a window getting [..]
Source: developer.com

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Used in two different senses: (1) learning event and (2) system event.
Source: e-chemia.pl

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An action or the result of an action. Events are often logged and monitored for security purposes.
Source: solutionsreview.com (offline)

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Facebook events can be created by a page or profile, and are used for parties, business events, planned chats, etc.
Source: trafficsafetymarketing.gov

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any logged or recorded action that has a date and time assigned to it by either the browser or server. Examples include a click, a mouseover, a video play, a key press, and many others. Events can be [..]
Source: towcenter.gitbooks.io

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Any accident, incident, or planned occurance that affects transportation system performance. A primary role of Transportation Management Centers is to expediciously resolve events.
Source: its.uci.edu

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See “Alarm Event.”
Source: vectorsecurity.com (offline)

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A planned, non-emergency activity. ICS can be used as the management system for a wide range of events, e.g., parades, concerts, or sporting events.
Source: usda.gov (offline)

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Includes both planned and unplanned events run by, or on behalf of, a New Zealand government agency.
Source: protectivesecurity.govt.nz (offline)

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A transaction that occurs within your organization, such as hiring or terminating an employee.
Source: workday-irsc.weebly.com

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A structured activity testing the conformation, training, or instinctive abilities of purebred dogs.
Source: akc.org

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A single event or a series of events which have the same cause.
Source: state.co.nz

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Source: musicrepo.com

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An occurrence meeting specified conditions, e.g. damage, a threshold wave height or a threshold water level.
Source: pursuetheoutdoors.com

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What precipitates a play. For example, Big Daddy's birthday is the event in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.
Source: screenwriting.info

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The 64 matches involving the 32 qualified national teams who will compete for the FIFA World Cup Trophy at the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia™.
Source: hbs.tv (offline)

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Those occurrences, including social, psychological, and environmental, which require an adjustment or effect a change in an individual's pattern of living.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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A structured activity testing the conformation, training, or instinctive abilities of purebred dogs.
Source: cats-and-dogs-on-the-web.com

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An incident or situation, which occurs in a particular place during a particular interval of time.
Source: crottyinsurance.ie

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An event is an action launched by an external hardware device and manipulated by software code. Events allow objects to notify client objects about important activities. Events provide tremendous flex [..]
Source: techopedia.com

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An event in MLS may be any one of the following types:
Source: hoosierdata.in.gov

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An event is the insertion of a particular transgene into a specific location on a chromosome. The term "event" is often used to differentiate genetically engineered crop varieties.
Source: agbiosafety.unl.edu

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"Event" means a boxing, mixed martial arts or entertainment wrestling match, contest, exhibition or performance.
Source: oregonlaws.org

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Events are generated in ftrack when entities are changed or certain actions are performed. See also Events
Source: ftrack.rtd.ftrack.com (offline)

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An object broadcast to zero or more subscriber callables during normal Pyramid system operations during the lifetime of an application. Application code can subscribe to these events by using the subs [..]
Source: docs.pylonsproject.org

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Any observable occurrence in a system and/or network. Events sometimes provide indication that an incident is occurring.
Source: ise.gov (offline)

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An event is an action (such as clicking the mouse or pressing a key on the keyboard) that a program detects and uses as input. Event
Source: codehs.com

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Events are used in modeling discrete transitions in a system’s state caused by its internal time dependence. Generally each system which undergoes such transitions schedule events for itself, and only [..]
Source: mza.com

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"Some occurrance that may cause the state
Source: getobjects.com

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is a change in the state of an object at a particular instant of time.
Source: acm-sigsim-mskr.org (offline)

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Anything that happens or is regarded as happening.
Source: speaking-tips.com

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An item created in the Events module, which has a defined start and end time and/or a recurrence pattern. related: calendar, events
Source: help.ekklesia360.com

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A contest of one or more sessions in duplicate bridge played to determine a winner.
Source: acbl.org

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A contest of one or more sessions in duplicate bridge played to determine a winner.
Source: bridgeguys.com

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Temporary occasion in a game, for example the recurring wheel of fortune in Goodgame Empire, where players can win items for the game.
Source: goodgamestudios.com

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Events are asynchronous messages sent to clients. They can be triggered by operations (as side effect) or raised (as main purpose of an operation) and are identified by an event code. The origin is identified as ActorNumber.
Source: doc.photonengine.com (offline)

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One of the card types. Both player's event cards are shuffled together at the beginning of a duel and 2 are placed in play. They are then cycled every Supply phase. Players can use activated Events during their action phase, while ongoing events are always active while they are in play.
Source: duelofchampions.com (offline)

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A method to trigger audio in game using an action or series of actions, such as play, mute, and pause, that have been applied to one or more Wwise objects.
Source: audiokinetic.com

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When an apnea or hypopnea happens, it is called an "event."
Source: resmed.com (offline)

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Any subset of outcomes drawn from a sample is called an event. Those subsets containing a single outcome are called simple events. In rolling a die, there are six simple events: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6.
Source: decisionanalyst.com

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Any observable occurrence in a network or system.
Source: iowaehealth.org (offline)

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Any formal activity that involves the dissemination or exchange of trade, business, professional, or technical information with employees or peers
Source: commons.lbl.gov

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A point in spacetime; that is, a location in space at a specific moment of time. Alternatively, something that happens at a point in spacetime, for example, the explosion of a firecracker.
Source: andersoninstitute.com

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occurrence happening that attracts tourists.
Source: witiger.com

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An event is any significant occurrence in a system or application that requires users to be notified or an entry to be added to a log file.
Source: glossary.westnetinc.com (offline)

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A single instructional or assessment activity within the curriculum, such as a lecture, lab, tutorial, exam, etc. "Events" might commonly be referred to as course or clerkship sessions
Source: aamc.org (offline)

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Another term for a race, tournament, match or any betting contest.
Source: pinnacle.com

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A trigger or stimulus that takes place in a system’s environment that leads to a system reponse, such as a functional behavior or a change in state.
Source: processimpact.com (offline)





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