@ is also sometimes used (e.g. in articles about missing persons, obituaries, brief reports) to denote an alias after a person's proper name; for instance: "John Smith @ Jean Smyth" (a possible abbreviation of aka ). link »
In Malay , it is called alias when it is used in name link »
It is also commonly used to abbreviate atau which means or or either . link »
![c(i, j) = \left(\text{LineWidth}-(j-i)\cdot\text{OneSpaceWidth}-\sum_{k=i}^j \text{WidthOf}(\text{Word}[k])\right)^P.](http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/7/2/d/72debb2b089c75e265331fa05e41306f.png)
en.wikipedia.org/
gifts are never "free" link »
so sue me link »
not necessarily old enough to legally consent to the behavior. link »
as a collaborative tool, e.g. to discuss the contents of a certain resource. link »
e.g. in a classroom environment, where important parts of a passage can be highlighted link »
SharedCopy - AJAX-based web annotation with cache and shorten url with easy sharing functions. link »
Modal dialog boxes are those which tem porarily halt the program in the sense that the user cannot continue until the dialog has been closed link »
Modal dialogs are generally regarded as bad design solutions by usability practitioners, since they are prone to produce mode errors . link »
synesthesia, known as grapheme → color synesthesia , letters or numbers are perceived as inherently colored, while in ordinal linguistic personification , numbers, days of the week and months of the year evoke personalities. link »
cross-sensory metaphors (e.g., "loud shirt", "bitter wind" or "prickly laugh") are sometimes described as "synesthetic", true neurological synesthesia is involuntary. link »
The automatic and ineffable nature of a synesthetic experience means that the pairing may not seem out of the ordinary. This involuntary and consistent nature helps define synesthesia as a real experience. link »
"'Until one day,' I said to my father, 'I realized that to make an R all I had to do was first write a P and draw a line down from its loop. And I was so surprised that I could turn a yellow letter into an orange letter just by adding a line'" link »
I remember in elementary school remembering how to spell the word 'priority' because the color scheme, in general, was darker than many other words. I would know that an 'e' was out of place in that word because e's were yellow and didn't fit. link »