| -scope |
The boundaries of a project expressed in some combination of geography, organization, applications and/or business functions.
Ãâó: www.georgetown.edu/uis/ia/dw/GLOSSARY0816.html
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| -scope |
Specification of the boundary within which system resources can be used.
Ãâó: www.sabc.co.za/manual/ibm/9agloss.htm
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| -scope |
in logic, the shortest propostional fucntion in which a logical operator occurs. Scope ambiguities are common in ordinary language but are eliminable during formalization.
Ãâó: www.filosofia.net/materiales/rec/glosaen.htm
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| -scope |
An instrument for viewing or examining. The mucosa of the bowel can be viewed with either a sigmoidoscope or a colonoscope, the latter allowing visualization of the entire colon
Ãâó: cancernetwork.com/myths/colon/Col10.htm
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| -scope |
The set of quantifiable job characteristics that ascribe value to a job. Typical characteristics include number of subordinates, size of budget managed, and sales volume of the organization.
Ãâó: www.washington.edu/admin/hr/ocpsp/ps.research/comp...
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