This article profiles and explains the words, phrases, rules, exceptions, and devices that define the English language in its modern form.
In the article on parts of speech, we learned that words have categories (nouns, verbs, adjectives, etc.). And I have repeatedly warned you: "Parts of speech (word types)" and "sentence elements ...
This study examines the object complement in Arabic and compares it with its equivalent structures in French from a contrastive grammatical perspective. The research focuses on the definition, types, ...
In 2023, a U.S. Air National Guard F-16CM shot down a UAP, or unidentified aerial phenomenon, over Lake Huron. Newly released footage appears to show that the object was likely a balloon. On Feb. 12, ...
Drawn from the UB Poetry Collection and UB Art Galleries Collection in celebration of Creeley’s centenary year, this exhibition explores Robert Creeley’s various approaches to collaborative artmaking, ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Thirteen fighter jets were scrambled to chase down an unidentified ...
Abstract: Detecting objects remains one of computer vision and image understanding applications’ most fundamental and challenging aspects. Significant advances in object detection have been achieved ...
Cutie is a video object segmentation framework -- a follow-up work of XMem with better consistency, robustness, and speed. This repository contains code for standard video object segmentation and a ...
The most distant and rewarding sights in the night sky are also the faintest. Here’s what deep-space objects are, what optics you’ll need to see them and how to plan your observing. When you purchase ...
Abstract: Tiny object detection in the field of remote sensing has always been a challenging and interesting topic. Despite many researchers working on this problem, it has not been well-solved due to ...
How does that sound to you? Gen Z and Gen Alpha have been using “aesthetic” as an adjective or a one-word compliment on social media for a few years now. But to older ears, it still sounds strange.