(isim) disko

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Turkish - English
disco
A short form of discotheque, a place for dancing
To dance disco-style dances
To go to discotheques
a public dance hall for dancing to recorded popular music
A type of music popular in discotheques
Disconnection from the server
Company or entity responsible for distributing to the public the electricity produced by the generating company (genco) Electric power is transmitted over the system operated by a grid company (gridco), also known as a wires company
A kind of dance music that was very popular in the United States in the late 1970's Although there were several disco stars--such as the Bee Gees and Donna Summer--for the most part the performers remained relatively anonymous, since this was music for the discotheque, not the rock concert The real star, perhaps, was the discotheque's disc jockey, who blended together recordings expertly Derided as much as adored, disco flamed out by about 1980
Whether you want to admit it or not, dance music owes a huge debt to the music of the 70s, and it is still a strong influence in many of the styles listed here Full songs, full bands, real instruments like strings and horns mixed with synthetic dance floor beats
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Defense Industrial Security Clearance Office, Cleveland, OH
A disco is a place or event at which people dance to pop music. Style of dance music that arose in the mid-1970s, characterized by hypnotic rhythm, repetitive lyrics, and electronically produced sounds. Disco (short for discotheque) evolved largely from New York City underground nightclubs, in which disc jockeys would play dance records for hours without interruption, taking care to synchronize the beats so as to make a seamless change between records. Artists such as Donna Summer, Chic, and the Bee Gees had many hits in the genre, which peaked with the release of the film Saturday Night Fever (1977). Disco faded quickly after 1980, but its powerful influence, especially its sequenced electronic beats, still continues to affect much of pop music
{i} night club where customers drink and dance to disco music; popular style of dance music characterized by electronic instrumentation and a heavy beat
—An Microsoft-created XML protocol used for discovering Web Services Much of DISCO is now a subset in the newer, more universal protocol UDDI It is expected that DISCO will become obsolete in favor of UDDI
Discovery of Web Services ( DISCO) provides a way to discover and retrieve an SDL or SCL description of services on remote machines Using the Discovery Document Format (which is also an XML grammar), one can send a discovery document to a remote server and, if any SOAP enabled services (AKA web service) exist, receive back an SDL or SCL description of the services provided Read more about DISCO
(isim) disko
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