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I babysit for children and I'm helping the 7year old with his home work and I don't know what a high-level word is. He has to read a Home Story and they ask questions at the end. I feel like an idiot.

2007-02-15 08:09:42 · 2 answers · asked by brennaboo 2 in Education & Reference Primary & Secondary Education

2 answers

Not really sure. Could be something related specifically to his class. Could this be it, see below:

The process of defining machine code words and "high level" words is formally analagous to "axioms" and "theorems" of such formally built up mathematical systems as Euclidean geometry or Bertrand Russell and Albert North Whitehead's Principal Mathematica. Analagous questions of which axioms are essential, and whether it is necessary to add an axiom to allow a previously undefined operation to take place at all are considered in the design of the Forth dictionary. In this sense, adding a new machine code word that enables, for example, TCP/IP communications that could not be made to occur using a structure based on the previous set of machine code words is seen as adding a "TCP/IP communications axiom" to the dictionary.

2007-02-15 08:16:42 · answer #1 · answered by Golden Smile 4 · 0 0

Words like,
A, about, all, and, an, go going, got had, has, me, mom, my, no, not, now, then, them there, these they, this. Are just a few examples.

Type in your search bar: high level words
It will take you there.

2007-02-15 16:22:05 · answer #2 · answered by Samantha 4 · 0 0

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