carlo

listen to the pronunciation of carlo
English - Turkish

Definition of carlo in English Turkish dictionary

monte carlo method
(Bilgisayar) monte carlo yöntemi
monte carlo method
(Nükleer Bilimler) monte carlo metodu
monte carlo method
(Askeri,Bilgisayar) monte karlo yöntemi
monte carlo method
(Askeri) MONTE KARLO YÖNTEMİ: MONTHLY DEPOT SPACE AND OPERATING REPORT: AYLIK DEPO SAHASI VE İŞLETME RAPORU
monte carlo technique
(Çevre) monte carlo tekniği
English - English
A male given name of Italian origin. English equivalents: Charles, Carl

Charles, come here and be presented to your cousin, Mabel Earnshaw. His name is Carlo, but I couldn't possibly call him by it; it sounds like a dog. At least, pronounced in my English fashion. And I can't roll my r's.

Carlo Broschi Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Blasis Carlo Carlo Alberto Cherubini Luigi Carlo Zanobi Salvadore Maria Crivelli Carlo Gesualdo Carlo prince of Venosa Giulini Carlo Maria Goldoni Carlo Menotti Gian Carlo Monte Carlo method Monte Carlo Sforza Carlo Count
{i} male first name
Carlo Blasis
born Nov. 4, 1803, Naples, Kingdom of Naples died Jan. 15, 1878, Cernobbio, Italy Italian ballet teacher and writer on the technique, history, and theory of dance. He danced briefly at the Paris Opéra before being appointed director of the ballet school at Milan's La Scala in 1837, where he would train many of the most brilliant dancers of the 19th century. Among his many innovations, Blasis discovered the technique of spotting (focusing on one spot and snapping one's head around faster than one's body) to prevent dizziness when turning. Many of his teachings still form the basis of classical ballet
Carlo Collodi
{i} pen name of Carlo Lorenzini (1826-1890), Italian author and prolific journalist, author of the famous children story "The Adventures of Pinocchio
Carlo Count Sforza
born Sept. 25, 1873, Montignoso di Lunigiana, Italy died Sept. 4, 1952, Rome Italian diplomat. He entered the diplomatic service in 1896 and served in embassies worldwide. He served as minister for foreign affairs (1920-21) and as Italy's ambassador to France (1922), but he resigned after refusing to serve under Benito Mussolini. A strong antifascist, he lived in voluntary exile in Belgium until 1939 and in the U.S. (1940-43). He returned to Italy after World War II to serve in various government posts, including minister of foreign affairs (1947-51)
Carlo Crivelli
born 1430/35, Venice, Republic of Venice died 1493/95 Italian painter. The son of a painter, he worked mainly in the Marches, a provincial region of central Italy. All his works were of religious subjects, done in an elaborate, old-fashioned style reminiscent of the linearism of Andrea Mantegna. Characterized by heavy ornamentation, sharp outlines, and exaggerated facial expressions, his paintings are closer to the religious intensity of Gothic art than to the rationalism of the Renaissance
Carlo Goldoni
born Feb. 25, 1707, Venice died Feb. 6, 1793, Paris, France Italian playwright. He practiced law but preferred to write plays, beginning with Belisario (1734). He renovated the commedia dell'arte form by replacing its masked stock figures with realistic characters, its repetitive action with tightly constructed plots, and its predictable farce with spontaneity in plays such as Pamela (1750), based on Samuel Richardson's novel. His comedy of manners La locandiera (1753) is still performed (as Mine Hostess). When rivals ridiculed his innovations, he took his realistic comedy to Paris, where he directed the Comédie-Italienne and wrote many plays in French. He later rewrote them for Italian audiences, and The Fan (1763) became one of his greatest successes
Carlo Maria Giulini
born May 9, 1914, Barletta, Italy Italian conductor. He studied viola and composition at Santa Cecilia in Rome and, after years as a violist, became a conductor in 1944. That same year he was appointed musical director for Italian Radio. In 1950 he organized the Milan Radio Orchestra. After several years at La Scala in Milan, he left opera at the peak of his international career in 1967; he thereafter devoted his time to conducting symphony orchestras. His recordings of operas and choral works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Giuseppe Verdi were widely acclaimed, and he subsequently held important orchestral posts in Chicago (1968-78), Vienna (1973-76), and, his last, Los Angeles (1978-84)
Carlo prince of Venosa Gesualdo
born March 8, 1566, Venosa died Sept. 8, 1613, Naples Italian composer. Nobly born, he was a passionate musical dilettante. In 1590 he had his first wife and her lover (a duke) murdered, which earned him great notoriety but no punishment. His later marriage to the duke of Ferrara's niece made the cosmopolitan Ferrara court his second home. His steadily deepening melancholia was reflected in his music, which included some 125 madrigals and about 75 sacred vocal works. His six books of madrigals were published between 1594 and 1611 in part-books and in 1613 in score. Those in the last two books are unusual for their dramatic exclamations, discontinuous texture, and harmonic license. His extreme chromaticism and abrupt changes in tempo and dynamics, exaggerating such traits in the madrigals of his time, would have no rival until the 20th century
Carlos
A male given name of Spanish and Portuguese origin. English equivalent: Charles
Monte Carlo
A part of Monaco famous for its casinos
Monte Carlo
A method of simulating random outcomes, used many fields (finance, molecular modelling, etc.)
Monte Carlo
A commonly served drink consisting of beer and grenadine
Monte Carlo
An informal dance competition, where contestants in one quarter of the floor are eliminated by a randomly chosen card representing the corner
Monte Carlo fallacy
the fallacy, most often believed by gamblers, that a past random event influences the outcome of a future random event, that is, that a run of even numbers at roulette means that there is a greater chance of an odd number next time
Monte Carlo method
Any of a class of techniques for estimating the solution of a numerical mathematical problem by means of an artificial sampling experiment that simulates the problem
Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo
Ballet company formed in Monte Carlo in 1932. The name derived from Sergey Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, which dissolved after his death in 1929. Under René Blum and Col. W. de Basil, the company presented works by Léonide Massine and George Balanchine and featured Alexandra Danilova, André Eglevsky, and David Lichine. In 1938 clashes split the company into two groups: the Original Ballet Russe (led by de Basil), which toured internationally before dissolving in 1948; and the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo (led by Massine), which toured mainly in the U.S. with Danilova, Alicia Markova, and Maria Tallchief until 1963
Carlos
A male given name of Spanish or Portuguese origin. English equivalent: Charles
Carlos
Buell Don Carlos Casals Pablo Carlos Salvador Defilló Céspedes y Borja del Castillo Carlos Manuel de Chávez y Ramírez Carlos Antonio de Padua Finlay Carlos Juan Fuentes Carlos Hearn Patricio Lafcadio Tessima Carlos Ibáñez del Campo Carlos Jobim Antonio Carlos Juan Carlos I Mariátegui José Carlos Menem Carlos Saúl Pérez Rodríguez Carlos Andrés Prestes Luís Carlos Salinas de Gortari Carlos Saura Atarés Carlos Williams William Carlos
Carlos
{i} male first name
Gian Carlo Menotti
born July 7, 1911, Cadegliano, Italy Italian-born U.S. composer, librettist, and stage director. Having written an opera by age 10, he spent his early teens absorbing the repertoire at La Scala. Arturo Toscanini recommended study at the Curtis Institute; there he met Samuel Barber, who would become his lifelong companion. In 1939 he produced the radio opera The Old Maid and the Thief; The Island God (1942) was an unsuccessful commission for the Metropolitan Opera. The Medium (1946) had a Broadway run, and The Consul (1950, Pulitzer Prize) was also successful. The highly popular Amahl and the Night Visitors (1951), for television, was followed by The Saint of Bleecker Street (1955, Pulitzer Prize). In 1958 he founded the Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto, Italy; it enjoyed great success, and in 1977 he founded a New World counterpart in Charleston, S.C
Luigi Carlo Zanobi Salvadore Maria Cherubini
born Sept. 14, 1760, Florence died March 15, 1842, Paris, France Italian-French composer. Born into a musical family, the precocious youth had written dozens of works before he was 20 years old. In 1786 he settled permanently in Paris. He enjoyed operatic successes in the 1790s, and Napoleon expressed his particular admiration. He became co-superintendent of the royal chapel in 1816 and in 1822 director of the Paris Conservatoire, where he would remain the rest of his life. Ludwig van Beethoven called Cherubini his greatest contemporary. His counterpoint text (1835) was used widely for a century. Of his nearly 40 operas, the most popular were Lodoïska (1791), Médée (1797), and Les Deux Journées (1800). His other important works include a symphony (1815), six string quartets, requiems in C minor and D minor (1816, 1836), and nine surviving masses
Monte Carlo
{i} city in Monaco famous for its gambling casinos
Monte Carlo
the main town of Monaco where many wealthy people live or visit. It has many casinos and is famous for a car rally and the Monaco Grand Prix car race, which are held there every year
Monte Carlo method
Statistical method of approximating the solution of complex physical or mathematical systems. The method was adopted and improved by John von Neumann and Stanislaw Ulam for simulations of the atomic bomb during the Manhattan Project. Because the method is based on random chance, it was named after a gambling resort
Monte Carlo methods
methods of estimating the size of an unknown variable
Monte Carlo simulation
(Ticaret) A method that estimates possible outcomes from a set of random variables by simulating a process a large number of times and observing the outcomes
Monte-Carlo
Resort (pop., 1990: 14,702), one of the four quarters of Monaco. It is situated northeast of Nice on the French Riviera. In 1856 Charles III of Monaco granted a charter allowing a joint-stock company to build a casino, which opened in 1861. The district around it, called Monte-Carlo, became a luxurious playground for the world's rich. The government took over the casino's operating company in 1967
carlos
Venezuelan master terrorist raised by a Marxist-Leninist father; trained and worked with many terrorist groups (born in 1949)
monte carlo
a town and popular resort in the principality of Monaco; world-famous for its gambling casino
monte carlo
Instead of sequencing through all theoretically possible combinations of a function (all inputs, states, and outputs), generate random reasonable input sequences, often collecting just statistics on the resulting series of outputs This method provides fast coverage of many situations, surfacing unexpected yet reasonable exceptions (e g , catastrophic combinations not conceived by designers) and allowing trends to be deduced N NPF Network Processing Forum (www npforum org)
monte carlo
A technique that is used especially in weather forecasting, in which simulations are performed and compared Each simulation is like a different roll of dice The simulations are compared, and if each states the same thing, like it’s going to be a hot day, then it probably will be If the simulations come up different, the weather forecast isn’t quite so certain A new distributed computing project, Casino-21, will be using this method See also: Casino-21
monte carlo
Random sampling techniques applied in computer simulations and modeling to obtain approximate solutions in problems where exact solutions do not exist (SM*)
monte carlo
An approach in which many independent trials are used to evaluate integrals, with trial parameters chosen randomly
monte carlo
A technique for producing estimates of "true" outcomes of stochastic processes by simply running many iterations of the model process and averaging the outcomes together Results are given as statistics, e g mean and standard deviation of variable X
monte carlo
(adj ) Making use of randomness A simulation in which many independent trials are run independently to gather statistics is a Monte Carlo simulation A search algorithm that uses randomness to try to speed up convergence is a Monte Carlo algorithm
monte carlo
In physics the Monte Carlo is used to describe processes that calculate an average by a random sampling The name comes from the city Monte Carlo which is famous for gambling -- which also uses random events like the tossing of dice Monte Carlo is in the principality of Monaco which is on the coast of the Mediterranean, near Nice in France
monte carlo
Random (i e , stochastic) sampling in the context of an integration or averaging problem Monte Carlo inversion is the process of determining the appropriate random variable for a desired weighting function so that the final sample weights are equal In the absence of better information or techniques, this results in the most efficient sampling pattern
Turkish - English

Definition of carlo in Turkish English dictionary

monte carlo metodu
monte carlo method
monte carlo tekniği
(Çevre) monte carlo technique
monte carlo yöntemi
(Bilgisayar) monte carlo method
carlo

    Hyphenation

    Car·lo

    Turkish pronunciation

    kärlō

    Pronunciation

    /ˈkärlō/ /ˈkɑːrloʊ/

    Etymology

    [ "män-ti-'kär-(")lO ] (adjective.) 1949. Monte Carlo, Monaco, famous for its gambling casino.
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