I think the most appropriate word here is intermittent. As defined by Merriam-Webster, intermittent means coming and going at intervals. Whether a natural phenomenon or something occurring by design, something that happens occasionally is intermittent. Your program, then, would work intermittently.

I have been searching for a word, which I'm beginning to doubt exists at all, that describes a person or thing that changes from one state to the opposite of that state frequently, i.e. an adjective describing the binary oscillation of some particular state.


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The closest word I have found is bipolar but, as this refers primarily to a mental disorder, I feel its application to things like the weather or someone's cooking is too poetic. I want a word that is more literal.

Bipolar seems to best suggest switching between extremes along the same line or element, the association with mental illness is a consequence of the word bipolar being a good fit because depression and mania are considered polar to each other, like north and south poles in the axis of the earth, etc. Common usage like applying it to mental health does not eliminate the function of the base word, no more than than the issue of being gay has taken on additional meaning over time.

The words fluctuating, vacillating, oscillating, flip-flopping and (constantly) [wavering between X and Y] (as well as their respective nouns and verbs) are also good candidates, as already suggested by others. However, it all boils down to the context in which you want to use the word. Still, the above are good general answers.

According to Wikipedia, the word "Human" refers to all species in the Genus "Homo" of which only Homo Sapiens are extant... however, over the course of prehistorical life, there were possibly 18 different species of within the "Homo" genus.

In Law, the word "Human" is rarely used as modern law already deals with non-human legal entities, such as corporations, governments, and other legal entities that may not be human in nature. Thus the law will usually refer to "legal persons" which covers a singular individual, or collective entity. More archaeic but terms would refer to "people" such as in the U.S. Constitution, where "people" referred to the body of ordinary citizens in all instances of use in the original document AND the Bill of Rights. This distinction in law that ignores biological humanity already makes the law and legal rights of non-humans much easier to protect, since you already do not have to be a human to participate (for example, the U.S. government routinely sues for violations of civil law, and in general legal theory, only the legal entity of "the state" may bring up criminal charges against a criminal defendant (only a legal entity who is actually a human may be penalized with jail time, but all legal persons can suffer fines for criminal behavior).

This can also be an expression of language differences, as happens already in real life where languages may not use the same words when describing nationalities. For example, in the English Language "American" refer to someone or something that is from the United States, however, in most of Spanish speaking, the translated word of "American" refers to someone or something that is of the American Continents (North America, Central, Caribbean, and South America) and "estadounidense" refers to those who are from the United States of America (It's literal translation is United Statesian). On the other side, in the English-speaking world, the word "German" is used to denote people or things from Germany, but in the German Language, the equivalent word is "Deutsh", and the equivalent country is "Deutschland".

Similarly, in your setting, each race could have a race centric name for humans in their own language and their own language uses their race as the basis for all others, so the elvish word for "humanoid" is effectively "elvenoid" and the Orcish word for humanoid is "Orcoid". Since English is a human language, when elves and orcs speak English, they would use humanoid because that is the correct term. One problem bound to arise is that a human suffering from "Dwarfism" is still referred to as a Dwarf in real life, so you might have to work with a member of the actual Dwarf species being offended by this, but the easy work around is that the stereotypical Dwarf culture would not see anything associated with a Dwarf as an insult.

So let's tone that down a little. In a lot of fiction, both fantasy and scifi, people don't talk about species. Instead we tend to use the (technically inaccurate) word "race" to describe other people, even if we don't share compatible genetics. OK, in a lot of fantasy fiction hybrids (half-orcs, half-elves, etc.) are fairly common, so perhaps "race" is technically accurate in those cases, but you get the point.

This encapsulates the important parts without "dehumanizing" (for our meaning of the word; perhaps "depersoning" might be a better fit?) anyone. Using "race" implies that there is a fundamental commonality between all of the included people; whether or not we can breed with them, they're just another type of person who happen to have radically different phenotypes. The elves are a race of tall, delicate people who live a long time. Orcs are a race of strong, brutish people with green blood and emotional control problems. But both are people in those descriptions, not animals, not monsters and definitely not things.

In a world that contains many creatures such as humans, elves, dwarves, orcs, merfolks, etc., there will inevitably exist many, many words describing different subcategories of creatures, depending on how inclusive or how racist (specist?) the speaker is.

Some other terms will be more technical / scientific, or simply more vivid, and thus will be less ambiguous. For instance, "hybrid" or "taur" refers to all creatures which look half-human half-animal, like merfolk and centaurs. But maybe some creatures consider the word "hybrid" to be offensive, because it suggests that a mermaid would be the offspring of a human mating with a fish, whereas obviously that's not the case (or is it?).

If you just need it rarely in a general throwaway manner like in your example, without having any need to draw any attention to it, then the word "people" or something similar would be the best choice.

However, if the differences between your sentient humanoids and non-sentient or semi-sentient beasts is an important part of the setting, or if the similarities between your humanoids is an important plot point, then it might be useful to make up a fictional word to use it in your setting.

I have tried to get a grasp of what "word" means and I have looked in the wiki and the definition is vague. So my question is what is "word size"? Is it the length of the data bus, address bus?

"Word size" refers to the number of bits processed by a computer's CPU in one go (these days, typically 32 bits or 64 bits). Data bus size, instruction size, address size are usually multiples of the word size.

One answer is -- not as much as it used to. Way back when, computers could only load/store full "words" of memory, which would be 16/24/32/36/48 bits each (depending on the particular machine). One would have to carefully structure their program design around the word size of the target machine.

But any more computers can access individual bytes or can access strings of data dozens of bytes long, with one relatively seamless operation. Much more significant than the technical word size is the memory buss width, which determines how many bytes can be transferred between CPU and memory in one memory "cycle".

Word Processing refers to the act of using a computer to create, edit, save and print documents. In order to perform word processing, specialized software (known as a Word Processor) is needed. One example of a Word Processor is Microsoft Word, but other word processing applications are also widely used. Examples include: Microsoft Works Word Processor, Open Office Writer, Word Perfect and Google Drive Document..

These programs allow users to create a wide variety of documents including (but certainly not limited to) reports, letters, memos, newsletters and brochures. In addition to typing text, the word processor allows you to add content such as pictures, tables, and charts to your documents as well as decorative items including borders and clipart.

The editing and formatting capabilities of the word processor demonstrate the application's true power. Text can be inserted, edited, moved, copied or deleted within your document and the appearance of the text can be modified in numerous ways. Most word processors also give your the ability to check your spelling and grammar and many have built in dictionaries and other tools to assist you in your writing.

The remainder of this lesson will introduce you to a few of the basic concepts and functions of Word Processing and then provide you with links to tutorials which will assist you in expanding your skills using Microsoft Word, the standard word processing software application at Broome Community College.

In computer architecture, a word is a unit of data of a defined bit length that can be addressed and moved between storage and the computer processor. Usually, the defined bit length of a word is equivalent to the width of the computer's data bus so that a word can be moved in a single operation from storage to a processor register. For any computer architecture with an 8-bit byte, the word size is some multiple of 8 bits. In IBM's System/360 mainframe architecture, a word is 32 bits, or four contiguous 8-bit bytes. In Intel's PC processor architecture, a word is 16 bits, or two contiguous 8-bit bytes.

Some computer processor architectures support a half word, which is half the number of bits in a word, and a double word, which is two contiguous words. Intel's processor architecture also supports a quad word, or two contiguous double words, and a double quad word, or two contiguous quad words. Figure 1 depicts examples of an 8-bit byte, 8-bit word and 16-bit double word. 006ab0faaa

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