The technique of bridging between two holds with hands and/or feet, applying forces to each in opposing directions in order to brace oneself in position
In keyword searching, word endings are automatically removed (lines becomes line); searches are performed on the stem + common endings (line or lines retrieves line, lines, line's, lines', lining, lined) Not very common as a practice, and not always disclosed Can usually be avoided by placing a term in " "
Process of chopping off the ending of a search term to allow matching other variations of that term, e g removing "ing" and "ed" endings Search engines may do this automatically to search terms
Stemming describes the action of the defensive backs when they move around after appearing to be settled in their alignments prior to the offense's snap of the ball By stemming, they attempt to fool the quarterback and force him into making a bad decision about where to throw the football The most successful stemming ploy by the secondary is to give the quarterback the impression that they're playing in man-to-man coverage when they're really playing a zone
The use of a stem [i e root] of a word to search words that are derived from it For example, "child" would retrieve information on child, children, childhood, childless and so on
the action performed by a search engine where it takes the stem of a keyword and delivers similar results For example, a keyword "run" may return results for "running" or "runner"
also known as truncation, using part of a word to search for words that are derived from it For example, "home" would return information on homeowners, homeless, homey, homestead, etc
A method of mapping a linguistic stem to all matching words For example, in English, the stem "buy" matches "bought," "buying," and "buys "
The reduction of a word to a base form so that the search mechanism can find plurals, possessives, etc
Search algorithm that tries various endings for known words; oil, for example, also checks oiler, oils, oiling, and so forth
A process for removing the inflexional, and sometimes derivational, affixes from words
A function of some search engines and directories which allows results to be returned from some or all keywords based on the same stem as the keyword entered as a search term For example, when stemming is switched on, a search for the word dance will return matches for any word whose stem is danc-, matching the keywords dance, dancer and dancing
Some databases automatically search for all of the words that come from the same "stem" word (also called "root" word) unless you indicate that you only want the word you entered An example would be if you entered computer, the database would also search for computing, computers, computation, etc Stop Words: Stop words are small, frequently occurring words that are often ignored when typed into a database or search engine search Some examples: THE, AN, A, OF If a stop word is typed at the beginning of a title search, this will often stop the search entirely
In informational retrieval, reduction of morphological variants of a word to a common stem
The ability for a search to include the "stem" of words For example, stemming allows a user to enter "swimming" and get back results also for the stem word "swim "
türemiş ya da değişmiş bir kelimenin orijinal haline (köküne) indirgeme
Silbentrennung
tü·re·miş ya da de·ğiş·miş bir ke·li·me·nin o·ri·ji·nal ha·li·ne (kö·kü·ne) in·dir·ge·me