by+indirect+reference
1indirect reference — netiesioginė nuoroda statusas T sritis radioelektronika atitikmenys: angl. indirect reference vok. indirecte Bezugnahme, f rus. косвенная ссылка, f pranc. référence indirecte, f …
2make indirect reference — index allude Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
3indirect reference — a clear statement that the description of a taxon for which a new name is given has been effectively published in an earlier work …
4indirect — UK US /ˌɪndɪˈrekt/ adjective ► not done or communicated in a direct way: »We decided to take an indirect approach to tackling the problem of absenteeism. »He made only an indirect reference to what had happened at the meeting. ► happening in… …
5Reference counting — In computer science, reference counting is a technique of storing the number of references, pointers, or handles to a resource such as an object or block of memory. It is typically used as a means of deallocating objects which are no longer… …
6référence indirecte — netiesioginė nuoroda statusas T sritis radioelektronika atitikmenys: angl. indirect reference vok. indirecte Bezugnahme, f rus. косвенная ссылка, f pranc. référence indirecte, f …
7Indirect self-reference — describes an object referring to itself indirectly .For example, define the function f such that f(x) = x(x) . Any function passed as an argument to f is invoked with itself as an argument, and thus in any use of that argument is indirectly… …
8Indirect election — is a process in which voters in an election do not actually choose between candidates for an office but rather elect persons who will then make the choice. It is one of the oldest form of elections and is still used today for many upper houses… …
9reference — ref·er·ence / re frəns, fə rəns/ n 1: an act of referring; specif: mention or citation of one document (as a statute) in another a municipality may adopt by reference all or a part of this title Alaska Statutes see also incorporate 2 …
10indirect discrimination — A type of discrimination that occurs where A applies to B (a member of a protected group) an apparently neutral provision, criterion or practice that A would apply equally to others; but which puts members of the protected group (including B) at… …