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Etymology: [ or-&-k&l, är- ] (noun.) 15th century. From Old French oracle.
Synonyms: prophet, expert, answer, apocalypse, augury, canon, commandment, divination, edict, fortune, law, prediction, prognostication, revelation, vision

kâhin, Bilicilik, ilham, keramet, uzman, iş bilen kimse, vahiy, kehanet, torpil, kehanette bulunmak, ayrıcalık, kahin, oracle,

1 kâhin     ts
2 Bilicilik     ts
3 ilham     ts
4 keramet  isim     ts
5 uzman  isim     ts
6 iş bilen kimse  isim     ts
7 vahiy     ts
8 kehanet     ts
9 torpil     ts
10 kehanette bulunmak     ts
11 ayrıcalık  isim     ts
12 kahin     ts
13the oracle oracle     ts
More results

A shrine dedicated to some prophetic deity, A prophetic response, often enigmatic or allegorical, so given, A person such as a priest through whom the deity is supposed to respond with prophecy or advice, A person considered to be a source of wisdom, (in Computers) Orcale Corporation, second-largest software company in the world, manufacturer of database software, A wise sentence or decision of great authority, To utter oracles, Any person reputed uncommonly wise; one whose decisions are regarded as of great authority; as, a literary oracle, a shrine where an oracular god is consulted a prophecy (usually obscure or allegorical) revealed by a priest or priestess; believed to be infallible, source of wise counsel; wise counsel; conveyor of divine messages; spiritual medium or channel; prophet, predictor; temple of a god (Mythology); divine message; prophecy or prediction; sacred inner court of the temple (Judaism), One who communicates a divine command; an angel; a prophet, From the Latin orare, to speak or pray, a statement or prophecy uttered at a cultic shrine through a recognized intermediary (prophet, priest, shaman), often in the form of an enigmatic statement or allegory, Oracles in the Library All Library entries have an Oracle these days, although some of them still say nothing Even peripheral Library constituents -- a glossary, say -- often contain Oracular content For example, today's oracle might look like this: This afternoon's oracle: (For Sat Apr 18 17:01:39 1998 ; Source: Yow) I feel like I am sharing a ``CORN-DOG'' with NIKITA KHRUSCHEV See also: Entry for November 30, 1997, A major commercial RDBMS, The answer of a god, or some person reputed to be a god, to an inquiry respecting some affair or future event, as the success of an enterprise or battle, A software company specializing in database software, The communications, revelations, or messages delivered by God to the prophets; also, the entire sacred Scriptures usually in the plural, Hence: The deity who was supposed to give the answer; also, the place where it was given, A Database Management System Software designed specifically for managing information within a computer, The sanctuary, or Most Holy place in the temple; also, the temple itself, 1 (esp in the ancient world) a shrine at which inquiries are made of a particular deity through a means of divination b the agency by which the inquiry is answered, as a priest or priestess c the typically terse, ambiguous response of the deity 2 a person who delivers authoritative and usu influential pronouncements 3 any utterance regarded as authoritative, unquestionably wise, or infallible, Oracle is the most popular relational database management system (RDBMS) It was developed by Larry Ellison's Oracle Corporation in the late 1970s, A mechanism to produce the predicted outcomes to compare with the actual outcomes of the software under test [4] (after Adrion), A "sub-component" S of an adversary A living its own life independent of the adversary; A interacts with the oracle but cannot control its behavior Typically, S takes some parameters as input and outputs some other parameters (such as a bit string) For example, S can be a random oracle or a decryption oracle simulating the decryption primitive, A person through which otherworldly entities can be communicated with, similar to channeling People often see oracles to ask questions or to be given insights to their future, Based in Redwood, California, Oracle Corporation is the largest software company whose primary business is database products Historically, Oracle has targeted high-end workstations and minicomputers as the server platforms to run its database systems Its relational database was the first to support the SQL language, which has since become the industry standard, Headquartered in Redwood Shores, California, Oracle provides relational database products, development tools, and client/server applications For more information, see the Oracle homepage, In ancient Greece, an oracle was a priest or priestess who made statements about future events or about the truth. Source of a divine communication delivered in response to a petitioner's request. Ancient Greece and Rome had many oracles. The most famous was that of Apollo at Delphi, where the medium was a woman over 50 called the Pythia. After bathing in the Castalian spring, she apparently would descend into a basement cell, mount a sacred tripod, and chew the leaves of the laurel, sacred to Apollo. Her utterances, which were often highly ambiguous, were interpreted by priests. Other oracles, including those at Claros (Apollo), Amphicleia (Dionysus), Olympia (Zeus), and Epidaurus (Asclepius), were consulted through various other methods; for example, the oldest of the oracles, that of Zeus at Dodona, spoke through the whispering of the leaves of a sacred oak. At some shrines, the inquirer would sleep in the holy precinct and receive an answer in a dream, an authoritative person who divines the future, a prophecy (usually obscure or allegorical) revealed by a priest or priestess; believed to be infallible, a shrine where an oracular god is consulted, Test Oracle: a mechanism to produce the predicted outcomes to compare with the actual outcomes of the software under test [fromBS7925-1], A mechanism to produce the predicted outcomes to compare with the actual outcomes of the software under test After [adrion], The name of the supplier (Oracle Corporation) from whom the RIAS application software has been purchased, a mechanism to produce the expected outcomes to compare with the expected outcomes of the Software Under Test (SUT), A software company, best known for Database software, A person through which otherworldly entities speak, similar to channeling Classically the oracle goes into a trance The word also refers to the message received People often see oracles to ask questions or to be given insights to their future In ancient Greece, the voices or mediums of the oracles were sybils, women priests, who lived in caves regarded as the shrines of deities The most famous Roman oracles were at Dodua, where Zeus was thought to give answers through the rustling of the oak leaves, and at Delphi, where Apollo supposedly spoke through a priestess In both cases, oracular responses came in such ambiguous ways that it was difficult to prove them wrong A famous Roman oracle was at Cumae, where the sibyl was said to have drawn inspiration from Apollo Oracles may also be dreams and visions The Urim and Thummim is called an oracle, Oracle is a relational database management system (RDBMS) developed and copyrighted by the Oracle Corporation Oracle is the RDBMS used by BANNER, Oracle is the world's leading supplier of software for information management Their relational database products use SQL See www oracle com for more details of their products, A character in the WorldsAway Dreamscape who is responsible for facilitation of rules and culture Acts as a priest or priestess of the Dreamscape, The proprietary name of the underlying database used by both the PMIS and Finance One Information is stored in the database and is retrieved from it using an application such as 'Finance One', 'Concept' or SQL, An information processing operation that can be applied A use of the oracle is called a ``query'' In the oracle model of computation, a standard model is extended to include the ability to query an oracle Each oracle query is assumed to take one time unit Queries can reduce the resources required for solving problems Usually, the oracle implements a function or solves a problem not efficiently implementable by the model without the oracle Oracle models are used to compare the power of two models of computation when the oracle can be defined for both models For example, in 1994, D Simon showed that quantum computers with a specific oracle could efficiently solve a problem that had no efficient solution on classical computers with access to the classical version of At the time, this result was considered to be the strongest evidence for an exponential gap in power between classical and quantum computers, Also called "black box " An imaginary device that solves some computational problem immediately Note: An oracle is specified by the answers it gives to every possible question you could ask it So in some contexts, 'oracle' is more or less synonymous with 'input' - but usually an input so long that the algorithm can only examine a small fraction of it, plural of oracle, Oracles are the divine revelations given to God's people God's method of communicating these oracles varied from dreams and visions (Num 12:6-8), to wisdom (Prov 30:1), and even the Urim and Thummim (Num 27:21; 1 Sam 14:3-37) 1, Shamans or priests in Chinese society who foretold the future through interpretations of animal bones cracked by heat; inscriptions on bones led to Chinese writing (p 63), books of the Bible,

14 A shrine dedicated to some prophetic deity     ts
15 A prophetic response, often enigmatic or allegorical, so given     ts
16 A person such as a priest through whom the deity is supposed to respond with prophecy or advice     ts
17 A person considered to be a source of wisdom     ts
18 (in Computers) Orcale Corporation, second-largest software company in the world, manufacturer of database software  isim     ts
19 A wise sentence or decision of great authority     ts
20 To utter oracles     ts
21 Any person reputed uncommonly wise; one whose decisions are regarded as of great authority; as, a literary oracle     ts
22 a shrine where an oracular god is consulted a prophecy (usually obscure or allegorical) revealed by a priest or priestess; believed to be infallible     ts
23 source of wise counsel; wise counsel; conveyor of divine messages; spiritual medium or channel; prophet, predictor; temple of a god (Mythology); divine message; prophecy or prediction; sacred inner court of the temple (Judaism)  isim     ts
24 One who communicates a divine command; an angel; a prophet     ts
25 From the Latin orare, to speak or pray, a statement or prophecy uttered at a cultic shrine through a recognized intermediary (prophet, priest, shaman), often in the form of an enigmatic statement or allegory     ts
26 Oracles in the Library All Library entries have an Oracle these days, although some of them still say nothing Even peripheral Library constituents -- a glossary, say -- often contain Oracular content For example, today's oracle might look like this: This afternoon's oracle: (For Sat Apr 18 17:01:39 1998 ; Source: Yow) I feel like I am sharing a ``CORN-DOG'' with NIKITA KHRUSCHEV See also: Entry for November 30, 1997     ts
27 A major commercial RDBMS     ts
28 The answer of a god, or some person reputed to be a god, to an inquiry respecting some affair or future event, as the success of an enterprise or battle     ts
29 A software company specializing in database software     ts
30 The communications, revelations, or messages delivered by God to the prophets; also, the entire sacred Scriptures usually in the plural     ts
31 Hence: The deity who was supposed to give the answer; also, the place where it was given     ts
32 A Database Management System Software designed specifically for managing information within a computer     ts
33 The sanctuary, or Most Holy place in the temple; also, the temple itself     ts
34 1 (esp in the ancient world) a shrine at which inquiries are made of a particular deity through a means of divination b the agency by which the inquiry is answered, as a priest or priestess c the typically terse, ambiguous response of the deity 2 a person who delivers authoritative and usu influential pronouncements 3 any utterance regarded as authoritative, unquestionably wise, or infallible     ts
35 Oracle is the most popular relational database management system (RDBMS) It was developed by Larry Ellison's Oracle Corporation in the late 1970s     ts
36 A mechanism to produce the predicted outcomes to compare with the actual outcomes of the software under test [4] (after Adrion)     ts
37 A "sub-component" S of an adversary A living its own life independent of the adversary; A interacts with the oracle but cannot control its behavior Typically, S takes some parameters as input and outputs some other parameters (such as a bit string) For example, S can be a random oracle or a decryption oracle simulating the decryption primitive     ts
38 A person through which otherworldly entities can be communicated with, similar to channeling People often see oracles to ask questions or to be given insights to their future     ts
39 Based in Redwood, California, Oracle Corporation is the largest software company whose primary business is database products Historically, Oracle has targeted high-end workstations and minicomputers as the server platforms to run its database systems Its relational database was the first to support the SQL language, which has since become the industry standard     ts
40 Headquartered in Redwood Shores, California, Oracle provides relational database products, development tools, and client/server applications For more information, see the Oracle homepage     ts
41 In ancient Greece, an oracle was a priest or priestess who made statements about future events or about the truth. Source of a divine communication delivered in response to a petitioner's request. Ancient Greece and Rome had many oracles. The most famous was that of Apollo at Delphi, where the medium was a woman over 50 called the Pythia. After bathing in the Castalian spring, she apparently would descend into a basement cell, mount a sacred tripod, and chew the leaves of the laurel, sacred to Apollo. Her utterances, which were often highly ambiguous, were interpreted by priests. Other oracles, including those at Claros (Apollo), Amphicleia (Dionysus), Olympia (Zeus), and Epidaurus (Asclepius), were consulted through various other methods; for example, the oldest of the oracles, that of Zeus at Dodona, spoke through the whispering of the leaves of a sacred oak. At some shrines, the inquirer would sleep in the holy precinct and receive an answer in a dream     ts
42 an authoritative person who divines the future     ts
43 a prophecy (usually obscure or allegorical) revealed by a priest or priestess; believed to be infallible     ts
44 a shrine where an oracular god is consulted     ts
45 Test Oracle: a mechanism to produce the predicted outcomes to compare with the actual outcomes of the software under test [fromBS7925-1]     ts
46 A mechanism to produce the predicted outcomes to compare with the actual outcomes of the software under test After [adrion]     ts
47 The name of the supplier (Oracle Corporation) from whom the RIAS application software has been purchased     ts
48 a mechanism to produce the expected outcomes to compare with the expected outcomes of the Software Under Test (SUT)     ts
49 A software company, best known for Database software     ts
50 A person through which otherworldly entities speak, similar to channeling Classically the oracle goes into a trance The word also refers to the message received People often see oracles to ask questions or to be given insights to their future In ancient Greece, the voices or mediums of the oracles were sybils, women priests, who lived in caves regarded as the shrines of deities The most famous Roman oracles were at Dodua, where Zeus was thought to give answers through the rustling of the oak leaves, and at Delphi, where Apollo supposedly spoke through a priestess In both cases, oracular responses came in such ambiguous ways that it was difficult to prove them wrong A famous Roman oracle was at Cumae, where the sibyl was said to have drawn inspiration from Apollo Oracles may also be dreams and visions The Urim and Thummim is called an oracle     ts
51 Oracle is a relational database management system (RDBMS) developed and copyrighted by the Oracle Corporation Oracle is the RDBMS used by BANNER     ts
52 Oracle is the world's leading supplier of software for information management Their relational database products use SQL See www oracle com for more details of their products     ts
53 A character in the WorldsAway Dreamscape who is responsible for facilitation of rules and culture Acts as a priest or priestess of the Dreamscape     ts
54 The proprietary name of the underlying database used by both the PMIS and Finance One Information is stored in the database and is retrieved from it using an application such as 'Finance One', 'Concept' or SQL     ts
55 An information processing operation that can be applied A use of the oracle is called a ``query'' In the oracle model of computation, a standard model is extended to include the ability to query an oracle Each oracle query is assumed to take one time unit Queries can reduce the resources required for solving problems Usually, the oracle implements a function or solves a problem not efficiently implementable by the model without the oracle Oracle models are used to compare the power of two models of computation when the oracle can be defined for both models For example, in 1994, D Simon showed that quantum computers with a specific oracle could efficiently solve a problem that had no efficient solution on classical computers with access to the classical version of At the time, this result was considered to be the strongest evidence for an exponential gap in power between classical and quantum computers     ts
56 Also called "black box " An imaginary device that solves some computational problem immediately Note: An oracle is specified by the answers it gives to every possible question you could ask it So in some contexts, 'oracle' is more or less synonymous with 'input' - but usually an input so long that the algorithm can only examine a small fraction of it     ts
57oracles plural of oracle     ts
58oracles Oracles are the divine revelations given to God's people God's method of communicating these oracles varied from dreams and visions (Num 12:6-8), to wisdom (Prov 30:1), and even the Urim and Thummim (Num 27:21; 1 Sam 14:3-37) 1     ts
59oracles Shamans or priests in Chinese society who foretold the future through interpretations of animal bones cracked by heat; inscriptions on bones led to Chinese writing (p 63)     ts
60oracles books of the Bible  isim     ts
More results

the oracle,

61 the oracle     ts
 


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Günün Kelimesi




Sözlük . Dictionary . Wörterbuch . λεξικό . Diccionario . 字典 . словарь . Dictionnaire . القاموس . Dizionario . מילון . Matokeo . واژه نامه . 辞書
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada oracle kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. oracle kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan oracle kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.

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