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Inversion.Uni version Diversion. Multi version

Monopolistic Game of Life

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Whose game is this 4D chess ♟️ game I hear everyone talking about?

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noun

Definition of inversion

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  • Inversion of the two words changes the meaning of the sentence.
  • With its twists, high speeds, dips, corkscrews and inversions, the ride won’t be for the timid.
    — John Sharp | Jsharp@al.com, AL.com, 21 July 2017 
  • The steep drops don’t seem to affect me like the inversions do.
    — Dr. Keith Roach, oregonlive, 2 Aug. 2023 
  • The inversion of the yield curve also could hurt banks.
    — Paul R. La Monica, CNN, 10 Apr. 2022 
  • As the wildfires burned on, and nights grew longer and colder, the inversions grew stronger.
    — Nora Saks, Washington Post, 27 Feb. 2018 
  • One of those flips, a corkscrew at 197 feet above the ground, sets a world record for highest inversion.
    — Susan Glaser, cleveland.com, 11 July 2019 
  • That’s kind of a wild inversion of what our values are and what our track record is.
    — Steven Levy, Wired, 7 Aug. 2020 
  • The financial world has been atwitter about the inversion of the yield curve.
    — Neil Irwin, New York Times, 15 Aug. 2019 
  • More than a year of inversion in the yield curve between 2-year and 10-year Treasurys.
    — Karen Langley, WSJ, 25 July 2023 
  • For many Southerners, the arrival of Etheridge and his men was the inversion of that sight.
    — New York Times, 14 Feb. 2022 
  • If the launch speed wasn’t enough, Maxx Force has the world’s fastest inversion as passengers flip in the air at 60 mph.
    — Nic Napier, The Indianapolis Star, 16 Aug. 2023 
  • The Cardinals been an inversion of the Chiefs through the season thus far.
    — Dana Scott, The Arizona Republic, 21 Dec. 2021 
  • There was a strong capping inversion in place — a layer of warm air in place about a mile above the ground.
    — Matthew Cappucci, Washington Post, 17 May 2018 
  • The cold air mass is shallow, with an inversion height around 7000′ msl.
    — Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Newsweek, 4 Feb. 2025 
  • Last week, the inversion on yields reached its widest level since the early 1980s.
    — Jj Kinahan, Forbes, 13 Feb. 2023 
  • The good news is that a winter storm is expected to break up the inversion next week.
    — Scott D. Pierce, The Salt Lake Tribune, 27 Jan. 2022 
  • In May and June, cool, moist air gets trapped below that inversion.
    — Robert Krier, sandiegouniontribune.com, 10 May 2018 
  • The inversion should start on Tuesday and hang around for most of the week, until Jan. 11, Colin said.
    — Angela Palermo, Idaho Statesman, 2 Jan. 2025 
  • The inversion—which last reached these levels a decade ago—has caught traders and investors off guard.
    — Sebastian Pellejero, WSJ, 9 Mar. 2021 
  • In a canny act of inversion, we, the ones watching, are winked at and ogled alongside her.
    — Sophie Gilbert, The Atlantic, 12 Feb. 2021 
  • The storm will scour out the inversion and pollution in Utah’s valleys.
    — Scott D. Pierce, The Salt Lake Tribune, 23 Dec. 2021 
  • And there’s a fascinating inversion of the film-noir trope of the femme fatale.
    — Vulture, 7 Apr. 2022 
  • This inversion is a key signal that a downturn may be on its way.
    — Anne Sraders, Fortune, 11 July 2019 
  • But in the wind’s place has come an inversion that has trapped a thick layer of smoke over much of Douglas County.
    — oregonlive, 11 Sep. 2020 
  • Climbing to the top of the first loop, the train navigates a slow barrel roll at nearly 150 feet in the air that ranks as one of the world’s tallest inversions.
    — Brady MacDonald,sandiegouniontribune.com, 10 May 2018 
  • And Kamala Harris’ tax policies are, in fact, the inversion of that.
    — CBS News, 15 Sep. 2024 
  • The deeper the inversion of the curve, the closer the cycle is to its end, and, barring a soft landing, recession.
    — James MacKintosh, WSJ, 24 Mar. 2022 
  • The inversion is limiting the normal mixing of the air mass.
    — oregonlive, 2 Oct. 2020 
  • This gene, called ESR1, is located inside the region of chromosome 2 that corresponds to the location of the inversions.
    — Donna L. Maney, Scientific American, 18 Feb. 2025 
  • The perplexing question of Greenland illustrates the inversion of populism that Trump represents.
    — Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Newsweek, 4 Feb. 2025
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How to Use data mining in a Sentence

data mining 

noun

Definition of data mining

  • Roper’s job is to bring new tools to the Air Force, and in this age that means data mining.
    — Joe Pappalardo, Popular Mechanics, 23 Jan. 2019 
  • These days, with the power of data mining on the Internet, sealing a record may not shut the books on one’s past.
    — cleveland, 18 Dec. 2020 
  • Our lives are turned into a profit source through data mining.
    — Recode Staff, Recode, 13 June 2018 
  • Regardless of your point of view, that type of data mining is not supposed to happen to our children.
    — Sandee Lamotte, CNN, 8 Sep. 2020 
  • The move follows growing caution amongst users in the U.S. about data mining and privacy concerns from the apps.
    — Chelsey Sanchez, Harper’s BAZAAR, 18 Sep. 2020 
  • This could be due to data mining, or maybe the strategy does work, but enough people copy it to reduce its returns.
    — Simon Moore, Forbes, 28 Sep. 2021 
  • From my perspective, data mining your own stats is key.
    — Judy Herbst, Forbes, 17 Mar. 2022 
  • The data mining found that ACE2 is also expressed in the nose’s olfactory cells.
    — Sharon Begley, STAT, 26 June 2020 
  • One of the first things in social media data mining is to detect and separate racist, sexist or abusive posts from the other ones.
    — Naveen Joshi, Forbes, 10 Sep. 2021 
  • Experts suggest the new tool has been created to comply with standards on data mining in Europe’s new AI Act.
    — Diane Brady, Fortune, 9 May 2024 
  • The ever increasing tyranny and hubris of our tech overlords demands that someone lead the fight against data mining, and for the protection of free speech online.
    — Alexis Benveniste, CNN, 15 Nov. 2020 
  • And that’s how the data mining works and identifies those exposures that are likely causing these outbreaks.
    — IEEE Spectrum, 21 Dec. 2021 
  • The effort sparked concerns over data mining and privacy.
    — Molly Sauter, The Atlantic, 13 Feb. 2018 
  • And other deep learning methods are far better than a DNC at logical data mining tasks.
    — Carl Engelking, Discover Magazine, 14 Oct. 2016 
  • The system described in the new patent would involve an even more sophisticated level of data mining.
    — Adi Robertson, The Verge, 15 Nov. 2018 
  • In Pseudoworld, lots of data mining is still available to companies and governments.
    — Jonathan Zittrain, The Atlantic, 7 Feb. 2020 
  • These days, tracking and data mining extends way beyond a single browser and a single device.
    — David Nield, Wired, 2 Aug. 2020 
  • But how does data mining resolve the corruption problem?
    — Naveen Joshi, Forbes, 19 Sep. 2021 
  • But that was all surface fluff compared to the real story about surveillance and data mining underneath.
    — Rachel King, Fortune, 6 July 2018 
  • In other cases, the data mining is more labor intensive.
    — John Jurgensen, WSJ, 12 July 2017 
  • Some people work hard to find ways around that, opting to pay for extra privacy or use alternatives focused on users, not data mining.
    — Kim Komando, USA TODAY, 26 Jan. 2023 
  • Facebook, which admitted to being aware of the widespread data mining issue in 2015, banned the analytics firm from its website one day prior.
    — Jason Murdock, Newsweek, 21 Mar. 2018 
  • These standards are now free to access, with additional rights for all types of reuse, including full text and data mining, and analysis.
    — IEEE Spectrum, 1 Oct. 2020 
  • In other words, not only researchers but also advertisers and hackers could use data mining methods to access all of the posts by any school with a Facebook account.
    — Joshua Rosenberg, The Conversation, 16 July 2021 
  • Basically: Westworld is the data mining goldmine that corporate dreams are made of.
    — Todd Vanderwerff, Vox, 30 Apr. 2018 
  • If data mining isn’t its primary revenue stream, as Metropolis seems to insist, what is?
    — Los Angeles Times, 9 Nov. 2021 
  • Welcome to the unnerving world of data mining, the fine art (some might say black art) of extracting important or sensitive pieces from the growing cloud of information that surrounds almost all of us.
    — Elizabeth Svoboda, Discover Magazine, 8 Jan. 2010 
  • The 2002 novel presciently tackled ideas of consumerism run amok, data mining and American decay.
    — Borys Kit, The Hollywood Reporter, 7 Oct. 2022 
  • However, given the potential power of data mining and machine learning models, this is not an impossible task.
    — Karen Firestone, CNBC, 29 Sep. 2024 
  • Emotions will never be fully understood through complex data mining.
    — Expert Panel®, Forbes, 7 Oct. 2024