| dependent v. |
in a mathematical equation or relationship between two or more variables, a variable whose value depends on those of others; e.g., in the formula x = 3y + z2, x is the dependent variable.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| dependency |
a condition in which a country becomes part of the economy of a larger country, providing one or two products for export. For example, Honduras produces almost nothing but bananas for export. The economy and prosperity of such countries are at the mercy of the market for that product. (Contrast SELF-SUFFICIENCY.)
Ãâó: www.naiadonline.ca/book/01Glossary.htm
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| dependent |
Child up to 19 years of age unless a full-time student and then the child may be eligible for coverage until 23 years of age. A child who marries or a child who is no longer the employee's responsibility for support is not eligible for coverage.
Ãâó: www.okccc.edu/humanresources/Glossary.html
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| dependent variable |
The selected behaviour which is measured to try to gauge the effect of the independent variable in an experimental design.
Ãâó: psy.st-andrews.ac.uk/resources/glossary.shtml
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| dependency |
When one instruction or program statement requires the result of another as its input, and so depends on the completion of the other. A loop contains a dependency when one iteration of the loop requires the result of a prior iteration; such loops cannot be parallelized. In a superscalar CPU, an instruction cannot complete until its dependencies are satisfied by the completion of the instructions that prepare its operand values.
Ãâó: techpubs.sgi.com/library/tpl/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi
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