(Din) The 99 Names of God, (Arabic: أسماء الله الحسنى ʾasmāʾ allāh al-ḥusnā), are the Names of God (specifically, attributes) by which Muslims regard God and which are described in the Qur'an, and Sunnah, amongst other places. There is, according to hadith, a special group of 99 names but no enumeration of them. Thus the exact list is not agreed upon, and the Names of God (as adjectives, word constructs, or otherwise) exceed 99 in the Qur'an and Sunnah. According to a hadith narrated by Abdullah ibn Mas'ud some of the names of God have been hidden from mankind, therefore there are not only 99 names of God but there are more
(Din) The 99 Names of God, (Arabic: أسماء الله الحسنى ʾasmāʾ allāh al-ḥusnā), are the Names of God (specifically, attributes) by which Muslims regard God and which are described in the Qur'an, and Sunnah, amongst other places. There is, according to hadith, a special group of 99 names but no enumeration of them. Thus the exact list is not agreed upon, and the Names of God (as adjectives, word constructs, or otherwise) exceed 99 in the Qur'an and Sunnah. According to a hadith narrated by Abdullah ibn Mas'ud some of the names of God have been hidden from mankind, therefore there are not only 99 names of God but there are more
(Reklam) There are three basic categories of brand (or corporate) name: Descriptive name A name which describes the product or service for which it is intended, e.g., TALKING PAGES. Associative name A name which alludes to an aspect or benefit of the product or service, often by means of an original or striking image or idea, e.g., VISA. Freestanding name A name which has no link to the product or service but which might have meaning of its own, e.g., PENGUIN. Abstract name A name which is entirely invented and has no meaning of its own, e.g., ZENECA. Abstract names are a sub-set of freestanding names because they also have no link to the product of service. Coined name Any name which is in some way invented. Coined names can be descriptive (CO-CREATE), associative (IMATION) and freestanding/abstract (ZENECA)
Part of a Host's address / URL A name that identifies one or more IP addresses For example, the domain name microsoft com represents about a dozen IP addresses Domain names are used in URLs to identify particular Web pages
All servers on the Internet have a TCP-IP address that consists of a set of four numbers like 124 32 9 76 By assigning a name to the TCP-IP address - or vice versa - the Web becomes easier to use URL addresses (domain names) are obtainable from many sources Anyone can own a domain name The real quest is finding one no one owns yet
Domain names identify the host computer or server on the Internet that has the information you want to access (e g www fsu edu) See Netscape Navigator: URLs handout available at the Strozier Library Reference Desk for more information
The domain name identifies the site you are visiting The domain name usually consists of the name of the organisation, or an abbreviation of it, and the type of organisation that it is For instance, "bnz co nz" tells us that there is a domain name, called "bnz", that is a registered business ( co), that is probably located in New Zealand ( nz)
A domain name is simply an internet address The domain name in these examples is jcn com which is to the right of the "@" sign in an email address: "info@jcn com" In a web page address, the domain name is at the beginning of the page address (URL) as in: "http: //www jcn com/gloss html" Deciding whether or not your company wants a domain name is one of the first steps in getting on the internet If you don't want a domain name, then your email address with JCN could be "acme_info@jcn com" If you do choose to have a domain name, then your email address could be "info@acme com" For a little more info on domain names go to JCN's beginner's FAQ The time taken to process a domain names varies greatly from week to week Currently new " com" names are taking less than 1-2 weeks
are the unique name that identifies an Internet site Domain Names always have 2 or more parts, separated by dots The part on the left is the most specific, and the part on the right is the most general A given machine may have more than one Domain Name but a given Domain Name points to only one machine Usually, all of the machines on a given Network will have the same thing as the right-hand portion of their Domain Names It is also possible for a Domain Name to exist but not be connected to an actual machine This is often done so that a group or business can have an Internet e-mail address without having to establish a real Internet site In these cases, some real Internet machine must handle the mail on behalf of the listed Domain Name (See http: //www matisse net/files/glossary html)
A domain name tells you the name of the specific computer you have accessed on the Internet For example, the domain name of the WWW server I use is www srl rmit edu au There are various levels to the domain The two worth noting are the last two levels In the example above, this would be edu au edu tells us what class the host computer is For example : edu - educational com - commercial gov - government org - non-profit organisation net - public network au tells us what country the host computer is in For example : at - Austria au - Australia ca - Canada ch - Switzerland de- Germany es - Spain fi - Finland il - Israel it - Italy jp - Japan kr - Korea se - Sweden tw - Taiwan uk - United Kingdom us - United States Note that if there is no two letter code at the end, the host computer is in the United States
The names and words that companies designate for their registered Internet Web site addresses, such as the "Forbes" name in the URL http: //www forbes com Trademark disputes arise when more than one company tries to use the same domain name, or one company appropriates another company's brand or product name for its URL
This is the address or locations assigned to your website so that Internet users can easily find your website It is usually your business or brand name such as yourname co nz or starthere co nz
A name may be up to 20 characters long and may include the characters A to Z, a to z, 0 to 9 and the underscore (_) The underscore is always displayed as a space As CL4 databases, men files, ent files and enc files are UNIX files, they follow the UNIX file naming conventions Database names are limited to 11 characters
used to refer to values Association between name and value created in two ways: (define x 1) (permanent) or (define (absolute-value x) ), where x is temporarily associated with some value for the duration of the activation of the procedure
Must be included for any Jewish victims, always avoid names for Muslim or Christian victims but use numbers in stead (remember in the passive voice, e g 2 Palestinians died in clashes)
are the identifiers of data records Because GEMIS 4 0 is multilingual, names are always entered in a country language (e g German) and the fixed system language (English)
Functions for finding out about available/valid names/classes/etc PRINTS ALL CURRENTLY AVAILABLE VARIABLES/FUNCTIONS/OBJECTS: PrintGlobalNames() PRINTS ALL CURRENTLY AVAILABLE CLASSES/TYPES: PrintClassNames() PRINTS ACCESSIBLE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS DEFINED BY classname: PrintClassMembers( string classname )
HDF5 object names are a slash-separated list of components A name which begins with a slash is an absolute name which is accessed beginning with the root group of the file while all other relative names are accessed beginning with the specified group