Meaning Source
What does Source mean? Here you find 115 meanings of the word Source. You can also add a definition of Source yourself

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A device that provides energy for acquisition of seismic data, such as an air gun, explosive charge or vibrator.
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

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A point, line, or area, at which mass or energy is added to a system, either instantaneously or continuously. Examples of sources in the context of air pollution are as follows: a smoke stack is a poi [..]
Source: nwcg.gov

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A source is the organisational unit responsible for implementing an administrative decision or a statistical law.
Source: stats.oecd.org

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mid-14c., "support, base," from Old French sourse "a rising, beginning, fountainhead of a river or stream" (12c.), fem. noun taken from past participle of sourdre "to rise, sp [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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"obtain from a specified source," 1972, from source (n.). Related: Sourced; sourcing.
Source: etymonline.com

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The business or organization that supplied certain information that appears on the credit report.
Source: experian.com

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The originator of a thought or idea subsequently transmitted to others in the communication process. [D] Originator of a message. [IRW]
Source: jyu.fi

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beginning of a stream, river, or other flow of water. Read more in the NG Education Encyclopedia
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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any thing or place from which something comes, arises, or is obtained.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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The source is the term for the released forces that generate acoustic or seismic waves, also called the earthquake source.
Source: earthquake.usgs.gov

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(1) An earlier work of literature or folklore used as the basis of a later work. Scholars use the term source only when it is clear that one of the manuscripts or one piece of oral transmission influe [..]
Source: web.cn.edu

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A point of origin for information or for procurement. A firsthand observation, or document as a primary reference work [D03286]
Source: maxwideman.com

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The node or process transmitting information.
Source: wildpackets.com (offline)

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Anything that produces light, whether Natural, Artificial, Incandescent, Discharge, Flash, Constant-Source, lightning, or a firefly.
Source: lowel.tiffen.com (offline)

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a firsthand document or primary reference work; place in which a quotation can be verified, or where a quotation came from — e.g. an author, a book or a speech. Spanglish:
Source: quotegarden.com (offline)

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beginning: the place where something begins, where it springs into being; "the Italian beginning of the Renaissance"; "Jupiter was the origin of the radiation&am [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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In communications, that part of a system from which messages are considered to originate.
Source: atis.org (offline)

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the start point of a stream or river.
Source: itseducation.asia

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Any written or non-written materials that can be used to investigate the past. A source becomes 'evidence' (see evidence) when it is used to support or refute a viewpoint or contributes to a [..]
Source: syllabus.bostes.nsw.edu.au

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Celestial object which emits electromagnetic radiation.
Source: sci2.esa.int (offline)

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Definition Where revenues, products and services, or financing comes from.
Source: investorwords.com

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(1) A place from which data is taken. Many computer commands involve moving data. The place from which the data is moved is called the source, whereas the place it is moved to is called the destinatio [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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The original file uploaded into Kaltura.
Source: deakin.edu.au (offline)

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Australian Electoral Commission and democracy.org.au
Source: sbs.com.au (offline)

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Any document that provides information sought by a writer, researcher, library user, or person searching an online catalog or bibliographic database. Also refers to a document that provides informatio [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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1 : a point of origin [the of the conflict] 2 : one that supplies information [held the reporter in contempt for refusing to reveal her ]
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

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poems, stories, newspapers, books, artefacts, diaries, personal experiences, songs, visual art, film clips or anything a pretext is sourced from.
Source: artsonline2.tki.org.nz

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A source is the beginning of a river.
Source: enchantedlearning.com

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An individual who provides information for a story.
Source: journalism.co.uk (offline)

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a place or thing from which something originates (like a spring).
Source: seafriends.org.nz

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(1) Where information comes from, usually a person who gives a journalist information. (2) In live television, the signal from a camera.
Source: thenewsmanual.net

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A specific location or enterprise from where goods will be obtained.
Source: logisuite.com

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where the stream begins: usually where there is a spring, and quite high up
Source: primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk

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The source (i.e. start) of a river is where it originates, e.g. a spring or a lake.
Source: oxnotes.com

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Where a river begins.
Source: year7geo.com

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 Any process or activity that results in the net release of greenhouse gases, aerosols, or precursors of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
Source: c2es.org

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The origin, or the infrastructure of the origin, of a workload portability operation (such as a physical machine, a virtual machine, or a PlateSpin Image). Compare with
Source: netiq.com

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place where a river or stream begins.
Source: alanpedia.com

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[1] also known as the focus; the initiation point of an earthquake rupture; [2] the origin of crustal fluids—meteoric, magmatic or connate, including groundwater; [3] the origin of hydrocarbons leading to the formation of oil and gas reservoirs; [4] the location of the original material making up a rock
Source: gns.cri.nz (offline)

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An event that triggers a failure. illustration
Source: idcon.com

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 :
Source: axpheykhan.wordpress.com

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An individual who provides information for a story.
Source: topofthefold.wordpress.com

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a person who talks to a reporter on the record, for attribution in a news story
Source: isabelperez.com

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Person, record, document or event that provides the
Source: cssforum.com.pk

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An individual who provides information for a story.
Source: cssforum.com.pk

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A radioactive material that produces radiation for experimental or industrial use.
Source: www2.lbl.gov

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Any process, activity or mechanism that releases a heat-trapping gas (greenhouse gas), an aerosol or a precursor of a greenhouse gas or aerosol into the atmosphere.
Source: climatehotmap.org

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A D/A converter output channel
Source: dataphysics.com

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 A person who gives information to a journalist
Source: thetab.com

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a person, written article, book, song, video or film from which to get information
Source: snn-rdr.ca

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Source code is what the programmer writes, the *.java files. It is for programmer-to-computer and programmer-to-programmer communication. Javac.exe converts it into class file the java.exe JVM (Java V [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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 UCLA IT Glossary
Source: safetynet-inc.com

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The origin of the course on the student’s academic record.
Source: mcgill.ca

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(n) the place where something begins, where it springs into being(n) a document (or organization) from which information is obtained(n) anything that provides inspiration for later work(n) a facility [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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usually means a source or giver of electrical energy in a circuit, so it is a general term for something that has an emf. It could also mean the source of a signal, but signal sources also have emf. When current rather, than emf, is important one may refer to a current source, but a source is still a source.
Source: physics.usyd.edu.au (offline)

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A point in a transmission system where a generator is located.  For contrast, see “sink.”
Source: ppcpdx.org (offline)

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The Dublin Core element used to designate a reference to a resource from which the present resource is derived. The present resource may be derived from the Source resource in whole or part. Recommend [..]
Source: dublincore.org

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Refers to a transfer institution or transfer course
Source: tada.uic.edu

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Pollution: Pollution that enters water from dispersed and uncontrolled sources rather than through pipes. Nonpoint sources (e.g., surface runoff, on-site sewage disposal and recreational boats) contribute pathogens, suspended solids and nutrients. The cumulative effects of nonpoint source pollution can be significant.  
Source: bbp.ocean.edu (offline)

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      General term to describe devices that provides electrical energy at their output terminals to operate a circuit.  Examples: battery, solar cell, generator and alternator, or power supply.
Source: nwscc.edu (offline)

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A source means a place at which vehicles are inserted into the street network
Source: sumo.dlr.de

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The origin of radiation; an x-ray tube or a radioisotope.
Source: nde-ed.org

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Part of communications system which transmits information. Source Route
Source: e-ratecentral.com

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The bus, buses, company, or pool supplying the energy used to evaluate ATC transfers for a given path using generation or load changes, or the point of delivery of the energy in a PJM InSchedule contr [..]
Source: pjm.com

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 The channel of sale that produced a subscription, or the single-copy sales channel. On circulation reports, the source is shown either by key (see definition) or agency designation. Source includes both mini-source (individual keys) and maxi-source (keys grouped together in a planned way).  
Source: magazine.org (offline)

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n. fuente
Source: trelliscompany.org

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A text used largely for informational purposes, as in research.
Source: ldonline.org

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The publication, recording or archive in which the song chosen for the collection was found.
Source: kodaly.hnu.edu

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Any process or activity which releases a greenhouse gas (or its precursor) into the atmosphere.
Source: nature.ca

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Most definitions are from IMDb.com Actor
Source: ldsfilm.com

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Electric Power Supply devices which convert biological energy, such as chemical energy of Metabolism or mechanical energy of periodic Movements, into electrical energy.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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A text used largely for informational purposes, as in research.
Source: colorincolorado.org

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a text used largely for informational purposes, as in research.
Source: commoncore.scholastic.com (offline)

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A text used largely for informational purposes, as in research.
Source: readingrockets.org

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© Copyright Barron's Educational Services, Inc. 1995 based on THE FOOD LOVER'S COMPANION, 2nd edition, by Sharon Tyler Herbst.
Source: recipebits.com (offline)

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Mayhew, Lawrence, “Humic Substances in Biological Agriculture,” Acres
Source: healthysoil.com

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A source may be considered as the origin of the pathogen (causative agent), for example the cow on the farm or the vehicle that brought the pathogen into the premises, for example, the milk
Source: thefoodsafetysystem.com

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A kind of place that pub can get packages from. A source isn’t a specific place like pub.dartlang.org or some specific Git URL. Each source describes a general procedure for accessing a package in som [..]
Source: dartlang.org

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A Glossary of Words and Phrases used in Antrim and Down (London: Trübner & Co., for the English Dialect Society)
Source: ulsterscotsacademy.com

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Any place or object from which air pollutants are released. Sources that are fixed in space are stationary sources
Source: arb.ca.gov

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Any place or object from which pollutants are released. A source can be a power plant, factory, dry cleaning business, gas station or farm. Cars, trucks and other motor vehicles are sources, and consumer products and machines used ir industry can be sources too. Sources that stay in one place are referred to as stationary sources; sources that move [..]
Source: airdynamics.net (offline)

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In materials handling and warehousing, the source describes the place of origin of goods.
Source: dpdhl.com (offline)

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 Dedicated members of the SRK Forums
Source: shoryuken.com (offline)

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In trademark law, a source is the unique manufacturer or service provider from whom a trademark originates.  When a consumer sees a trademark, he/she knows the product bearing that trademark is from t [..]
Source: marklaw.com

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The full citation for the journal or other publication in which the study appeared (e.g., title, volume, number, pages, and date for a journal citation).
Source: canarydatabase.org

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  The place where a chemical comes from, such as a landfill, pond, creek, incinerator, tank, or drum. Contaminant source is the first part of an Exposure Pathway.
Source: adph.org

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Based on GRI, G4 Implementation Manual
Source: ceowatermandate.org

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Adapted from GRI, G4 Sustainability Reporting Guidelines
Source: ceowatermandate.org

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GRI, G4 Sustainability Reporting Guidelines
Source: ceowatermandate.org

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CEO Water Mandate, Corporate Water Disclosure Guidelines
Source: ceowatermandate.org

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See cataloging source; cataloging source qualifier.
Source: oclc.org (offline)

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characteristic of organic-rich rocks to contain the precursors to oil and gas, such that the type and quality of expelled hydrocarbon can be assessed
Source: hurricaneenergy.com (offline)

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SEC Filings
Source: oilgasequity.com (offline)

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Any process, activity or mechanism that releases a greenhouse gas, an aerosol, or a precursor thereof into the atmosphere
Source: cgseurope.net

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The country from which a commodity is shipped to the cooperating country (or the cooperating country itself if the commodity is located therein at the time of the purchase) in the case of a commodity [..]
Source: developmentwork.net

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"In a second-order [linear difference equation] system, ... if both roots are positive and greater than one, then the system diverges monotonically to plus or minus infinity. If the roots are [..]
Source: econport.org

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a component of an extended element. the name of the individual or organization creating an extended element
Source: fgdc.gov

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Input mode on a tape machine where the meters and the output of the machine’s electronics will be the signal arriving at the input connector.
Source: testing1212.co.uk

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This is a term meaning different things to different people. To some lawyers and administrators, source refers to surface or very near surface causes or potential causes of groundwater contamination, such as drums, sludge or contaminated surface soil. To scientists and engineers operating in the context of conceptual models contamination in the sub [..]
Source: contaminatedsite.com (offline)

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The object that produces the waves or disturbance. The name given to them end of a two-wire transmission line that is connected to a source. The device which furnishes the electrical energy used by a [..]
Source: interfacebus.com

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The person, placepoetic * Swedish: (källa,c), (fontän,c) informant * Arabic: (???????,m) * Armenian: (???????) * Czech: (zdroj,m) * Danish: (kilde,c) * Dutch: (bron,c) * Finnish: (lähde) * French: ( [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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lang=en 1800s=1843 * '''1843''' — . ''''. *: At last, however, he began to think — as you or I would have thought at first; for it is always the person not in the predicament who knows what ought t [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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 The point and place from which a river originates.
Source: rgs.org (offline)

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Source or subsource may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Source is a 3D video game engine developed by Valve Corporation. It debuted as the successor to GoldSrc with Counter-Strike: Source in June 2004, followed shortly by Half-Life 2 in November, and has b [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In journalism, a source is a person, publication, or other record or document that gives timely information. Outside journalism, sources are sometimes known as "news sources". Examples of sources incl [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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In journalism, a source is a person, publication, or other record or document that gives timely information. Outside journalism, sources are sometimes known as "news sources". Examples of sources incl [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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The Source is a metaphysical concept created by writer/artist Jack Kirby for his Fourth World series of comic books. It first appeared in New Gods #1 (February 1971).
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Source magazine is a free bi-monthly magazine published by the John Brown Group on behalf of Greenbee, John Lewis, and Waitrose, all three of which are owned by the John Lewis Partnership, with articl [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Source is a quarterly photography magazine published in Belfast. It is distributed throughout the UK, Ireland and internationally. It is the longest running photographic review in the UK since the clo [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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source is a Unix command that evaluates the file following the command, as a list of commands, executed in the current context. Frequently the "current context" is a terminal window into which the use [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Source is an international information support centre and digital library, providing links to academic resources and articles related to disability, health and international development.
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Source or subsource may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Source is a public artwork by US artist Tony Smith, located in the Cleveland Museum of Art Donna and Stewart Kohl Sculpture Garden, which is in Cleveland, Ohio, United States. The sculpture is fabrica [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Spinnin' Records is a Dutch record label founded in 1999 by Eelko van Kooten and Roger de Graaf. The label, which specializes in electronic music, has over 23 million subscribers and 13 billion views [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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