[
UK
/nəʊtˈeɪʃən/
]
[ US /noʊˈteɪʃən/ ]
[ US /noʊˈteɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
- a technical system of symbols used to represent special things
- the activity of representing something by a special system of marks or characters
-
a comment or instruction (usually added)
his notes were appended at the end of the article
he added a short notation to the address on the envelope
How To Use notation In A Sentence
- In the first sentence, the ship is described as a frigate, which has a pretty strong military connotation. Superhero Nation: how to write superhero novels and comic books » The Five Page Challenge!
- I guess you can get the smart person award for the person who got that little denotation!
- He examines orders of elements and proves (although not in this notation) that there is a subgroup for every number dividing the order of a cyclic group.
- Caesarian deliveries were occasionally performed in the Middle Ages, but carried with them connotations of the devil, as the child would be not of woman born.
- Hence it became necessary to distinguish one from the other _by name_, and thus the notation from midnight gave rise, as I have remarked in one of my papers on Chaucer, to the English idiomatic phrase "of the clock;" or the reckoning of the clock, commencing at midnight, as distinguished from Roman equinoctial hours, commencing at six o'clock A.M. This was what Ben Jonson was meaning by attainment of majority at _six o'clock_, and not, as PROFESSOR DE M.RGAN supposes, "probably a certain sunrise. Notes and Queries, Number 214, December 3, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
- For example, the request variable is bound to the request zone, which means you can use a dot notation such as request.myData to access myData in the request zone.
- Musical notation for instruments, based on figures, letters, or other symbols instead of conventional staff notation.
- He made a notation on his engagement calendar.
- It has profoundly negative connotations. Times, Sunday Times
- Thus the new connotations and conceptualizations put forth by the Fathers revitalized the Church's memory of what the Apostles taught, and historical theology today would enable us to revitalize our memory of what the "unsurpassable" Fathers taught. Archive 2007-03-01