Data comes from the Latin, meaning things that are given, in this case pieces of information.
Data comes from the Latin, meaning things that are given, in this case pieces of information.
four letter word for facts: data (also info, but that's an abbreviation)
I don't know of a specific scientific meaning. It can mean a transfer of data from one place to another, or it can be a word used for 'meaning' e.g. 'the import of this data is that there is a connection between the variables' .
Data are physical files, for example, some picture files, word files on your computer. Information is the meaning of those data, for example, your company's finance information in the word file.
the word application means all your data u collected during your project
It could possibly be Dadaphobia, coming from the greek word Data, meaning torch, and phobia meaning fear. it could also be Faxmetus, fax being the latin word for torch and Metus meaning fear.
Michael Gasser has written: 'The Grounding of Word Meaning Data & Models'
meaning of data capture technique
a meaning
Structured data.
Data is the plural of the Latin word 'datum', meaning something that is given (Donation comes from the same root). So data is a plural noun, meaning things that are given. Nowadays it usually means information put into a computer. * A spreadsheet program can take data and turn it into a graph. * Some of the data you gave me was from last year. * You can find all the census data online. There is a problem with this answer. It doesn't answer my question and contradicts itself. In other words, I still don't know how to use data in a sentence. You say that the word data is plural, yet your second sentence, "data you gave me was from last year" suggests that data is singular. i.e. data was, not data were I'm not trying to be persnickety or pedantic, I'd just like to know for sure.
The word Vontu is the name of a company that was acquired by Symantec in 2007. The company offers things such as storage data loss prevention and end data loss prevention.